Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday July 30, 2020
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For decades, the Chinese Communist Party has been waging a secret war on the United States. Its tactics range from stealing U.S. intellectual property to gaining control of life-saving drugs.
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AXIOS
Good Thursday morning! President Obama is expected to speak at today’s 11 a.m. ET funeral service for Rep. John Lewis at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta.
- Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,140 words … 4½ minutes.
The public’s view of almost every industry has improved since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, Sara Fischer writes from a new Axios/Harris poll.
- Industries with a prominent role in life under quarantine have seen especially big jumps.
Why it matters: Businesses in America were already undergoing a transformation from being solely focused on profits to also focusing on values.
The poll ranks the 100 most visible brands in America, based on Harris Poll research. Companies were rated by 34,026 U.S. adults, from June 24-July 6.
Leading the index are companies that have focused on solving problems related to the coronavirus:
- Grocers, including Publix, Wegmans and Kroger, are among the highest-ranking companies, as are delivery companies — FedEx, Amazon and UPS.
- Consumer packaged goods companies that focus on cleaning and kids — Clorox, Hershey’s, Disney, Procter & Gamble — ranked in the top 25.
- Streaming giants — Netflix, followed by Hulu and Disney — ranked in the top 25 due to their offerings for consumers stuck at home.
- Pharmacies, including Walgreens and CVS, also scored well on consumer trust, culture and ethics.
75% of respondents agree that during the shutdown, companies have been “more reliable than the federal government in keeping America running.”
What’s next: Consumers in the poll overwhelmingly approve of companies that address social and societal issues.
Americans really love Clorox right now.
The pandemic has ushered in a new wave of public approval for companies that have helped modernize and digitize the American household, Sara Fischer writes from our new Axios/Harris poll.
Virtual work and school needs are being supported by enterprise technology companies like Apple, IBM, Zoom and Microsoft, while social media technology companies rank last on the list.
- Remote health and fitness needs are being supported by companies like Peloton and Doordash.
- Home improvement retailers like Lowe’s and Home Depot have helped families remodel their living spaces.
President Trump during a news conference last week. Photo: Drew Angerer/Getty Images
The Trump administration is sending increased PPE, test kits and top health officials like Anthony Fauci and Deborah Birx to coronavirus hotspots as part of a campaign called the “Embers Strategy,” White House officials told Axios’ Alayna Treene.
- The name “Embers Strategy” is meant “to highlight the risk level of ’embers’ to decrease the likelihood of ‘fires,'” a senior White House official said.
Why it matters: The push is part of a larger effort to show President Trump is taking the pandemic seriously, something White House officials describe as a “renewed focus.”
- Administration health officials will appear on local and regional television and radio to educate the public on mitigation tactics, including wearing masks, practicing social distancing, frequent hand washing and staying home when ill.
Coronavirus infections in the U.S. are beginning to decline, after a summer of sharp increases. Some of the hardest-hit states are improving significantly, Axios’ Sam Baker and Andrew Witherspoon report.
- But we’re at the stage of this most recent outbreak where deaths can spike.
- Deaths passed 150,000 in the U.S. yesterday, and are still rising.
This week, the U.S. overall saw a 2.8% drop in new infections — within the range we classify as “holding steady.”
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
Yesterday’s House antitrust hearing didn’t nail a case that the Big Tech companies are monopolies. But lawmakers wrung some surprising admissions from the CEOs about how they wield their market power, Axios’ Kyle Daly writes.
- Why it matters: That could provide ammo for regulators now conducting investigations — and possibly a spur for Congress to strengthen antitrust law for the digital era.
Here’s where the House Judiciary antitrust subcommittee pressed each company hardest:
- Facebook: Panel Democrats said the social network’s acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp were plainly anticompetitive — that the company made the deals to stop Instagram from becoming a competitor to its main platform and WhatsApp from becoming a competitor to its messaging service. CEO Mark Zuckerberg said Facebook had no idea the two would become such juggernauts when it bought them.
- Google: Lawmakers homed in on the company’s acquisition of DoubleClick in 2007 as the watershed moment when its dominance of search combined with power over the levers of online ad targeting.
- Amazon faced tough questions about its role as both a massively successful online retailer and the proprietor of the biggest online marketplace for third-party sellers.
- Apple took sustained heat for its power over the its App Store, and the cut it takes from developers who sell digital products through their apps.
All the companies, subcommittee chair David Cicilline said, have become bottlenecks for distribution, using their chokehold over data to surveil potential competitors and their control over technologies to extend their power.
The bottom line: The CEOs dodged most of the bullets aimed at them.
🗞️ How it’s playing … N.Y. Times 1-column lead headline: “LAWMAKERS GIVE TECH ‘EMPERORS’ JABS FROM 2 SIDES … 5 HOURS OF TESTIMONY — Parrying Questions From House, 4 Chiefs Strike Humble Chord.”
The four tech CEOs, appearing together (remotely) for the hearing, “looked more like four guys dressed up in their first graduation suits — serious, sincere, a little uncomfortable — than the four horsemen of the digital apocalypse,” N.Y. Times chief fashion critic Vanessa Friedman writes (subscription).
- Apple’s Tim Cook, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, Sundar Pichai of Alphabet, Google’s parent and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg “didn’t even look all that big,” Friedman writes.
- Testifying by video “worked in their favor, serving to shrink their presence to human size”: “You want to channel Clark Kent of Smallville, rather than Superman.”
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Many colleges’ plans to bring students back to campus this fall are almost certain to crash and burn, Axios’ Caitlin Owens and Marisa Fernandez write.
- Nearly half of schools plan to bring students back for in-person classes. 13% will offer only online instruction, and 35% will offer a mixture of both, according to an analysis by the Chronicle of Higher Education.
Reality check: Before the fall semester has even begun at most schools, colleges’ reopening plans are already crumbling.
- Some schools are seeing cases spike among sports teams and fraternities.
Outdoor classes: Rice University in Houston plans to take some fall courses outside.
FBI Director Chris Wray and intelligence officials warned about China’s increased capability to interfere in U.S. elections in separate classified hearings with the Senate Intelligence Committee this week, Axios’ Alayna Treene reports.
- Why it matters: China is increasingly becoming a top threat to election security. “Our adversaries learn from one another,” a source familiar with one of the hearings told Axios.
What we’re hearing: Wray and other officials cited concerns that China is developing the ability to interfere with local election systems and target members of Congress to influence China policy, sources said.
- But intelligence officials still view Russia as the leading threat.
Photo: Matt McClain/Pool/Getty Images
Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced that House members must wear masks when voting, after Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-Texas), who often shunned them and was known to vote without one, tested positive. (AP)
- 🥊 Texas Tribune headline: “Colleagues feared [Gohmert] would catch COVID-19. Sure enough, he did.”
Gohmert told Texas TV station KETK from his D.C. office:
I can’t help but wonder if by keeping a mask on, and keeping it in place, … if I might have put some germs, some of the virus on t0 the mask and breathed it in.
Reality check: That’s not how it works, sir.
This was Nationals Park in D.C. on Tuesday night, during the seventh inning between the Washington Nationals and the Toronto Blue Jays, who won 5-1.
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THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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How CPS will decide if it’s safe to go back to school
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PRO TRUMP NEWS
THE HILL
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ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
There are big-ticket funding and philosophical differences between the parties on the next round of coronavirus relief, including on tax policy. But there’s a surprising amount of common ground on a handful of provisions that are likely to serve as the basis for eventual agreement. Read More…
Questioning of four top technology executives by the House Judiciary antitrust subcommittee yielded key insights about the direction of its ongoing investigation into potentially anti-competitive business practices by Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google. But the hearing seemed at times to take place in dual universes. Read More…
Trump in trouble revisits his tried-and-true — protecting your neighborhood from ‘them’
OPINION — As polls show his base stagnant and his poll numbers dropping, President Donald Trump has decided to replay an old favorite. While trying to strike fear of the invading “other” is right out of the 1968 playbook of both Richard Nixon and George Wallace, it’s also a tactic Trump honed at his father’s knee. Read More…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
‘My boss had a front-row seat’: Tulsi Gabbard on serving in the National Guard
There is no one quite like Tulsi Gabbard in Congress, and she felt that acutely when she first came to the Hill. She had just returned from Iraq and would soon leave again for Kuwait. In the meantime, she was working as an aide to Daniel K. Akaka, the legendary Hawaii senator. Read More…
Kennedy’s ‘spending porn’ quip demonstrates lack of buy-in, input from key senators
Louisiana Republican Sen. John Kennedy’s call to remove “spending porn” from a GOP COVID-19 relief package, including language on a White House construction project, raises questions about how the legislation was assembled. Read More…
If campaign Barbie wants to win, she needs a bigger staff
Barbie was incredibly selective when hiring her campaign staff this year. She brought on only two: a campaign manager and a “campaign fundraiser.” Their faces are as fresh as the morning dew. Their figures are trim and slim. And that’s sort of the problem. Read More…
Watch: Pelosi announces masks are required ‘at all times’ in the House
In Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s announcement Wednesday that masks would now be required on the House floor she reminded those present that “the speaker has the authority to direct the sergeant at arms to remove a member from the floor as a matter of decorum.” Read More…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2020 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
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POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: A peek inside the Playbook inbox: Boiling over with rage
DRIVING THE DAY
PEOPLE IN THE CAPITOL ARE SICK AND TIRED.
QUITE LITERALLY.
SICK: THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS — the legislature for the most powerful country on Planet Earth — has been allowing lawmakers to come into the Capitol without being tested for the deadly coronavirus. This week, a quirky Republican — Rep. LOUIE GOHMERT of Texas — walked in infected with the coronavirus, got in close proximity to a powerful member of the president’s Cabinet and found out he was positive only because he was slated to travel to the Lone Star State with President DONALD TRUMP. Otherwise, since the institution has no testing policy, he would’ve walked around the complex, and may have infected colleagues with whom he crossed paths.
TIRED: PEOPLE WHO WORK IN THE BUILDING — legislative aides, chiefs of staff, press assistants, members of Congress, career workers and maintenance men and women — are furious with an institution that does not have uniform rules or masking requirements, does not mandate testing and is run with minimal oversight.
PEOPLE FEEL UNSAFE and uncomfortable at work.
ON WEDNESDAY EVENING, after GOHMERT was found to have had Covid-19 after romping around the Capitol, Speaker NANCY PELOSI announced that lawmakers must wear masks in the House portion of the Capitol complex — office buildings included.
WE GRANTED AIDES, LAWMAKERS and Capitol workers anonymity to discuss the climate of working in a building with few rules, and a gaggle of lawmakers who doubt scientists and hold themselves out as experts on everything from disease hygiene to pharmacology. THE PEOPLE WHO EMAILED US are not the kinds of people who typically reach out to reporters.
— FROM A HOUSE DEMOCRATIC LAWMAKER: “[Pelosi] is getting hammered by everyone. People are really really mad. Ripshit might be a better word … [Gohmert] was in Judiciary, Natural Resources and on the floor. Doctor has told members who were near him yesterday to call for instructions, Members want masks made mandatory.”
— ONE SENIOR AIDE to a member who came in close contact with GOHMERT was told by the attending physician that they cannot get a test unless they are symptomatic.
— FROM A SCHEDULER TO A HOUSE REPUBLICAN MEMBER: “Our office has been required to be fully staffed since session resumed at the end of June (including an intern). While mask use isn’t banned, it’s also not encouraged, and has been derided on several occasions by the [chief of staff] and the member.”
— FROM AN AIDE TO A REPUBLICAN MEMBER WHO HAD COVID: “I’m obviously not allowed to speak on behalf of anyone but it may be worth looking into how many Republican offices are also requiring all staff and interns to come in to work while taking no precautions. Ridiculing people for wearing masks is also not uncommon. I think you’d find a lot of offices in the anti-mask brigade are forcing staff to report to work even if they have legitimate concerns about their health. I’m sure you also [could] find some are having staff … travel to districts in high risk areas and then not providing for quarantine afterwards. …
“THERE IS A GENERAL FEAR that saying anything critical of the current office policy – or lack of policy – will lead to retaliation.”
— FROM A HOUSE GOP STAFFER: “I work in a Republican House office and while we’re not encouraged to not wear a mask, we are essentially required to work in the office. We worked from home for a couple days when one of my coworkers was potentially exposed to Covid, but even then, many of my colleagues kept working in the office. We were told to report to work as normal even before the test came back negative because the results were taking too long. I was left feeling guilty for teleworking even though I have an underlying health condition.”
— FROM A CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICER TECH STAFFER: “If you asked me to give you a breakdown of mask usage in member offices, it’s nearly universal in Democratic offices based on my random observations; within Republican offices, it’s probably under 50%. And some GOP offices ask why you are wearing a mask, which puts our staff in an awkward position — do you say because of the pandemic and risk the office taking that as a political stand? Do you take it off to make them feel better?
“I USUALLY SAY SOMETHING LIKE ‘Well, they told us we had to or we’ll get fired or end up in HR or something,’ which generally satisfies most offices, and lets you dodge the political minefield that wearing a mask has become.”
— A HOUSE DEM AIDE NOTES: “I saw staffers today AVOIDING the members only elevators because they are trying to avoid being near members. That never happens!”
Good Thursday morning. JOHN LEWIS’ funeral is today in Atlanta. BARACK OBAMA will eulogize him. BILL CLINTON and GEORGE BUSH will attend.
FINAL WORDS — LEWIS WROTE AN OP-ED for the NYT “to be published upon the day of his funeral”: “When historians pick up their pens to write the story of the 21st century, let them say that it was your generation who laid down the heavy burdens of hate at last and that peace finally triumphed over violence, aggression and war. So I say to you, walk with the wind, brothers and sisters, and let the spirit of peace and the power of everlasting love be your guide.”
STARK MILESTONE: More than 150,000 AMERICANS have died from the coronavirus.
AND NOW ONTO COVID NEGOTIATIONS … THESE TALKS are going predictably horrible. They have totally stalled, and enhanced unemployment insurance runs out Friday. MARK MEADOWS said this Wednesday: “We’re nowhere close to a deal. … Enhanced unemployment insurance provisions will expire.”
AT THE MOMENT, THE DYNAMIC IS THIS: PELOSI and Senate Minority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER hold all the cards, mostly because they’re the only ones who have passed a bill and Republicans, as Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL put it, are all over the lot. MEADOWS and STEVEN MNUCHIN are fighting for a president who doesn’t mind big spending, but the WH chief of staff and Treasury secretary have to contend with the reality of divided government, and a Senate GOP Conference split in about 30 directions.
MEADOWS seems pretty bearish on a deal privately and publicly, while MNUCHIN is holding out hopes of working with Democrats.
WATCH FOR THIS TODAY: THE ADMINISTRATION will try to break the logjam with something — a public pronouncement that they are willing to move on unemployment insurance.
LOOK FOR A BUNCH OF NEW GOP offers today on unemployment insurance. Sen. MITT ROMNEY (R-Utah) has a proposal, which we laid out Wednesday night. Sen. RON JOHNSON (R-Wis.) is going to put out a proposal too, which would give 66% of wages or some amount less than $600.
A SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: “THERE’S A DEAL TO BE MADE a much greater number than where Senate Republicans are, and somewhat less than where House Democrats are on unemployment that can be reached by Friday. There’s a PPP extension satisfactory to Democrats, funding [community development financial institutions], renter eviction protection.”
DEMOCRATS, meanwhile, rightly note that Republicans have yet to find consensus.
BOTH SIDES are betting the other will cave. Dems think Republicans will give in to a big package, the GOP thinks Dems will back an unemployment proposal without a larger deal. Coverage: POLITICO … WaPo … NYT … WSJ
JOHN BRESNAHAN and MARIANNE LEVINE: “‘The odd couple’: Mnuchin and Meadows struggle to make a deal”: “On Tuesday afternoon, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows were getting grilled by GOP senators during a closed-door lunch in the Hart Senate Office Building.
“A number of Republicans … were pressing them about exactly how much federal money for a new coronavirus relief package they were willing to spend as part of bipartisan negotiations. Was the White House prepared to agree to a bill costing more than $1 trillion, the price tag of the newest Senate GOP proposal? And if so, how much more?
“Then Meadows stood up and told the senators he was OK with shutting down Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s most outrageous requests. ‘I’m comfortable saying “no” and being the skunk at the garden party,’ Meadows insisted. … [T]he self-described ‘odd couple’ have emerged as central players in a Washington drama that could decide whether Donald Trump can save his presidency, as well as how far the U.S. economy sinks amid the coronavirus pandemic.”
WAPO’S PAUL KANE: “Born-again fiscal conservatives are sign of Trump’s weakening hand in Congress”: “From the presidentially ambitious Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) and Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), to onetime deficit hawks like Sen. Patrick J. Toomey (R-Pa.), conservatives are abandoning the president as his top aides struggle with negotiations on a pandemic relief bill that is Trump’s last, best chance to pass legislation that could help his floundering reelection bid.
“Ignoring their own record of support for adding trillions of dollars to the national debt, these conservatives have signaled that they think, in a post-Trump Republican Party, that deficits will return to the forefront just as they did in the first years of the Obama administration.”
DRIVING TODAY: Secretary of State MIKE POMPEO will be on Capitol Hill for a hearing at Senate Finance at 8:30 a.m.
WSJ ED BOARD SLAPS TRUMP AROUND, AGAIN: “Trump’s Spite-Germany Plan”: “Beneath the din of media condemnation, it can be hard to sort the good from the bad in President Trump’s unorthodox foreign policy. Some initiatives scorned by foreign-policy elites have been wise, like pulling out of failing arms accords. Yet the Pentagon’s plan to withdraw almost 12,000 U.S. troops from Germany is far from a stroke of populist genius. It’s a blow to U.S. interests that won’t fulfill the cost-saving objective Mr. Trump claims to be concerned with. …
“Mr. Trump is legitimately impatient about Germany’s failure to meet its Nato defense commitments, its support for Russia’s gas pipeline, and its naivete about China. He might have emphasized the last point by announcing that the Indo-Pacific is now a more important theater than Europe and moving a few thousand U.S. troops to Asia to pressure Berlin.
“Instead he appears to be undermining America’s military position out of pique—moving U.S. forces to punish Germany, though many will go to countries that also aren’t pulling their weight. Oh, and in the middle of an election campaign he’s undermining the case, which he supported with action over three years, that he is tougher than Democrats on Mr. Putin. Mr. Trump’s erratic foreign-policy impulses remain the greatest risk of a second term.”
NEW — “A SOCIALLY DISTANCED CONVERSATION”: JOE BIDEN, who is speaking at the American Federation of Teachers’ virtual convention at 12:15 p.m. today, has released a new clip of him and OBAMA speaking with a middle school teacher from Denver about the challenges facing kids and schools amid the pandemic. The video, the first the campaign has released, is part of a number of calls Biden and Obama did last week. The call
— “Weingarten: Teacher strikes possible in Arizona, Florida, Texas,” by Juan Perez Jr.: “Teachers in states like Florida, Arizona and Texas are the most likely to strike in protest of unsafe working conditions amid the pandemic, union leader Randi Weingarten warned Wednesday.
“If governors and local leaders reopen schools in places where coronavirus cases are spiking — without first containing the spread or meeting demands for safety measures — teachers can’t surrender in negotiations leading up to the start of the school year, said Weingarten, who serves as president of the American Federation of Teachers, in an interview with POLITICO.”
— “Georgetown University reverses plans, will start fall semester online,” by WaPo’s Lauren Lumpkin
RBG LATEST … AP: “Ruth Bader Ginsburg undergoes medical procedure at hospital”: “Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has undergone a nonsurgical medical procedure in New York City and expects to be released from a hospital there by the end of the week, the Supreme Court said Wednesday night.
“The court said in a statement that the 87-year-old Ginsburg underwent a minimally invasive procedure to ‘revise a bile duct stent’ at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. The stent had originally been placed last August, when Ginsburg was treated for a cancerous tumor on her pancreas.
“The statement said that, according to Ginsburg’s doctors, ‘stent revisions are common occurrences and the procedure, performed using endoscopy and medical imaging guidance, was done to minimize the risk of future infection.’” AP
THE ECONOMY …
— AP: “U.S. is expected to report a record-breaking economic plunge,” by Martin Crutsinger: “A huge plunge in consumer spending as people stayed home and avoided shopping, traveling or gathering in crowds as the virus raged is estimated to have sent the economy sinking at a roughly 32% annual rate in the April-June quarter.
“That would be more than triple the previous worst quarterly economic fall, a 10% drop set in 1958. Depressed activity in such areas as business investment, home construction and government spending also likely contributed to the worst quarterly contraction on records dating to 1947.”
— BEN WHITE: “Trump’s dream of a V-shape rebound slowly slips away”: “The U.S. economy crashed in historic fashion this year as the coronavirus pandemic ravaged businesses and sent joblessness soaring. The question now for President Donald Trump — trailing in the polls and facing a daunting reelection effort — is just how much conditions can snap back in the months leading up to Election Day.
“At least for the moment, the spike in Covid-19 cases, the potential for fresh trouble this fall and a bitter fight over how to pump more federal money into the ailing economy suggest the sharp bounce-back Trump is counting on may not show up in a way he envisions.
“And the potential for another leg of the downturn hangs over a president who once counted the economy as by far his strongest selling point to voters.” POLITICO
— “Federal Reserve Leaves Rates Near Zero as Economic Recovery Sputters,” by NYT’s Jenna Smialek
VEEPSTAKES — “Dodd draws fire — and praise — as Biden VP vetter,” by Natasha Korecki and Christopher Cadelago
— AP/SANTA FE, N.M.: “Lujan Grisham builds profile as Biden looks to make VP pick,” by Morgan Lee: “Michelle Lujan Grisham has not received the attention of many higher-profile candidates under consideration to be Joe Biden’s running mate. But she has a resume that few of them can match.
“The New Mexico governor has executive experience and served in the U.S. House and as her state’s health secretary. Tested by the coronavirus pandemic, she has taken strong steps — including a mandatory face mask order and invoking the state’s riot act to isolate one city — that have been credited with saving lives.
“She’s taking an increasingly tough stand against President Donald Trump, who has sent federal agents to Albuquerque to combat violent crime despite local skepticism about the timing and intentions. … ‘The Latino and Hispanic vote will be essential,’ Lujan Grisham said last week at a fundraiser for Biden. ‘You know it. I know it. The occupant in the White House knows it.’”
TRUMP’S THURSDAY — The president will leave the White House at 2:35 p.m. en route to the American Red Cross national headquarters. He will arrive at 2:40 p.m. and receive a tour. At 3 p.m., Trump will participate in a roundtable on donating plasma. He will depart at 3:55 p.m. and return to the White House.
PLAYBOOK READS
JOHN HARRIS column: “Why Trump Might Quit”: “As it happens, the Trump Drops Out scenario is one I have trafficked to colleagues and sources for a couple years now, usually to dismissive grunts or quizzical stares. It is true that there is scant time left for the scenario to come to pass. It’s true also that, if I were a reliable predictor of Trump’s political fortunes, Hillary Clinton would now be running for re-election.
“But even if one doesn’t really think Trump will drop out of the race—as a proselytizer of the theory I acknowledge it is a stretch—it is worth examining the reasons he just might, as a way of illuminating the bleakness of his situation with just over three months to go before the general election.”
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PLAYBOOK METRO SECTION — “Maryland governor expands mask order, issues travel advisory,” by WaPo’s Ovetta Wiggins, Michael Brice-Saddler, Patricia Sullivan and Dana Hedgpeth: “Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan (R) on Wednesday expanded the state’s mandate for face coverings, requiring residents older than 5 to wear masks while indoors in public spaces and outdoors when social distancing is not possible.
“Hogan also warned against travel to states with high levels of novel coronavirus infections, ordering residents to be tested and quarantine until they receive results. The directives are the latest actions taken across the greater Washington region to slow the spread of the virus.” WaPo
BEYOND THE BELTWAY — “DeSantis touts the return of in-person classes as schools say they’ll go online,” by Andrew Atterbury in Tallahassee: “Florida’s largest school district will begin the fall semester with remote classes, joining others that are keeping campuses closed while the state works to beat back the coronavirus outbreak.
“Miami Dade County schools Superintendent Alberto Carvalho announced the move Wednesday, a day after nearby Monroe County said it would rely on digital instruction for the immediate future. School leaders in Broward and Palm Beach counties, which along with Miami are the state’s hottest Covid-19 spots, also intend to start the school year with online courses. Despite four large counties opting to shutter campuses, Gov. Ron DeSantis and Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran were unwavering in their confidence that brick-and-mortar schools will reopen their doors this fall.
“The DeSantis administration has said it will withhold state funding from schools that don’t physically open, but the Republican governor on Wednesday downplayed the possibility of districts actually losing funds. ‘I don’t think you’re going to have a school district in the state that is going virtual for the whole semester,’ DeSantis said during an education roundtable at a special needs school in Clearwater.” POLITICO
PLAYBOOKERS
Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.
IN MEMORIAM — “Turning Point USA co-founder dies of coronavirus-related complications,” by Daniel Lippman and Tina Nguyen: “[Bill] Montgomery, who started it in 2012 with young conservative star Charlie Kirk, died at the age of 80 on Tuesday from Covid-19 … Before starting Turning Point with Kirk, Montgomery, who lived in Illinois, worked in marketing, publishing, restaurants and was a business development consultant.” POLITICO
SPOTTED: Reps. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.) and Dean Phillips (D-Minn.) at Cava in Eastern Market on Wednesday night. Pic
TRANSITIONS — Lila Nieves-Lee is joining Autos Drive America as VP of government affairs. She previously was a policy adviser to Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) and staff director for the Senate Banking Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Protection. … Carly Cooperman is now CEO of Schoen Cooperman Research, which is rebranding from Schoen Consulting. She previously was a partner at the firm, and has recently been a top pollster for Mike Bloomberg’s presidential campaign and Everytown for Gun Safety.
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Mark Beatty, head of industry, elections and advocacy at Google. How he’s celebrating: “This is my first birthday as a dad! I’m looking forward to a low-key celebration at home in D.C. with my wife and daughter. She’s really close to taking her first steps, so maybe today will be the day.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (D-N.Y.) is 54 … NYT’s Jim Rutenberg … Dave Kochel … former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is 73 … Carl Lavin … CFTC’s Michael Short (h/t fiancee Natalie Strom) … Anita Hill is 64 … Shane Harris, WaPo intelligence and national security reporter … Michael Glassner … Mario H. Lopez, president of the Hispanic Leadership Fund … Eleanor Smeal is 81 … Rebecca Kutler, VP at CNN … Michelle Bernard … former CFTC Chair Tim Massad is 64 … Francesca Pigna … POLITICO’s Alexa Velickovich, Lauraine Genota and Tyler Weyant … Tony Maciulis … Jonathan Olsen, accounting manager for the RNC, is 4-0 (h/t Caroline Boothe) … Brad Jenkins … Bill O’Leary, partner at Heidrick & Struggles … Heidi Crebo-Rediker (h/ts Ben Chang) … Shailen Bhatt, president and CEO of the Intelligent Transportation Society of America (h/t Cathy St. Denis) … Micah Johnson … Suzanne Nossel, CEO of PEN America and author of a new book, “Dare to Speak” … Glen Chambers … Meredith Simpson …
… Jonathan Spalter, president and CEO of USTelecom (h/ts Brian Weiss and Teresa Vilmain) … Bob Bissen of Cannae Policy (h/t Chris McCannell) … Candace Randle Person … Alex Parker, senior tax correspondent at Law360, is 39 … Robert Gottheim … Ben Marter, director of comms at API … Rich Cohen … Sintia Radu, communications director at the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (h/t Randolph Court) … Kana Smith … former Rep. Quico Canseco (R-Texas) is 71 … former Rep. Pat Schroeder (D-Colo.) is 8-0 … former Rep. Wendell Bailey (R-Mo.) is 8-0 … Carolyn Freeman, digital strategist at Stand Up America (h/t Ryan Thomas) … Ines de La Cuetara … MSNBC’s Isaac-Davy Aronson … Garry Malphrus … Netflix’s Ashley Alman … Maggie Cutrell … Kate Harris … Lindsay Butcher … Colleen Murray … Salesforce’s Jim Green … Nora Langan … Nate Beeler … Dave Koenig is 61 … Paul Dickson … Courtney Asbill … Emily (Sanders) Elam … Furhawn Shah … Freeman Klopott … Chelsie Gosk of Airbnb … Robert Basmadjian
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The Morning Briefing: Never Trumpers Leg-Hump Every Leftist Narrative Just To Make Friends
Behold the Low-T Never Trump Embarrassment
Happy Thursday, dear brilliant readers of the Kruiser Morning Briefing.
We’re on a journey today to the not-too-distant past. A past when moderate squish Republicans could play nice with real conservatives just to thwart the Democrats.
A time, my friends, before Never Trump.
Yes, it was a brief union. When the Tea Party movement was started by real conservatives its success made it attractive to a host of moderate Republican grifters who wanted to hang out with us because we threw better parties. Grifters who would one day self-identify as “Never Trump.”
A sad little group, the Never Trump kids are. They go through life balling their fists, stomping their feet, and being mad at all the wrong things. They turn on their friends to hang out with the kids who they’ve ridiculously misidentified as the popular crowd.
Never Trump began in 2016 when a bunch of pasty and doughy Republican soy boys realized they weren’t ever going to get anyone to clap for Jeb! Bush. Their original intention was to derail any hope of Donald Trump getting elected. They were aiding and abetting the Hillary Clinton campaign and they were doing it under the false pretense of being principled.
In reality, the Never Trump crowd is one of the least principled groups in the history of American politics, which is a truly bottom-feeding feat. They’re all about the money, and they are making piles of it because there is a lot of gold in them thar turncoat hills.
I don’t begrudge them the money. I’m a real conservative so I never get mad at people who find a way to make an extra buck legally. What bothers me is the pretense of being more principled than I am that these Never Trump hustlers are trying to sell.
In American politics, there is a surefire way to determine the Republican and/or conservative credibility of someone. If the person in question is receiving mostly favorable coverage in the mainstream media then he or she is not even in the ballpark of Republican/conservative.
While he isn’t pictured in this post for legal reasons, I would like to focus for a moment on David French, formerly of the National Review and currently involved with a Never Trump tantrum site called The Dispatch.
French has been a particularly tedious little nit in the Never Trump era. I’d never even heard of the guy until he hit his Never Trump stride and I used to actually pay attention to the National Review. He’s a mundane writer full of not-so-hot Never Trump takes who, like his Never Trump cohorts, has found a financial groove in which to pimp his “principles.”
French’s latest “principled conservative” stand found him attacking pro-life Christians, which our old friend Ace brilliantly tore apart here.
In modern social media parlance, any variation of “you’re not really pro-life if…” is always issued by a leftist who really doesn’t care if any babies are killed.
David French just dug in with the baby killers.
Yeah, Davey, you’re a good friend to the pro-abort crowd now. You should be used to hanging out with your former enemies now that you’ve had almost four years of Never Trump tantrum experience.
As we get closer to the election all of the Never Trump types will be abasing themselves at the feet of their leftists masters in the hope of a higher place in the new kingdom.
If you pushed David French into a corner and demanded he defend his Never Trump “principles” he would decline. He rather fawn all over the Democrat running for president because he is full of daddy issues that make him act out and desperately beg for attention. This is probably true of all of the Never Trump crowd.
OK, not probably,
Worth It. Throw At These Cheaters All (Short) Season Long.
Makes Her Even Hotter
PJM Linktank
Why Does Amazon Blacklist Conservatives and Christians? Matt Gaetz Wants to Know
Seth Rogen: Israel Is ‘Ridiculous, Antiquated,’ And ‘Based on Lies About Other People’s Land’
She crazy. Ocasio-Cortez Gets Hysterical About ‘Unmarked’ Police Vehicle Arresting Wanted Criminal
Dems Yell ‘Put Your Mask On’ to Shut Up Jim Jordan. His Response Was Epic
#TrueStory ‘Big Tech Is Out to Get Conservatives,’ Jim Jordan Warns. He Gave 15 Examples
Pentagon Releases Plan for U.S. to Withdraw 12,000 Troops From Germany
When the Cancel Culture Becomes a Caricature of Itself
Barr is Eric Holder without the rap sheet. The Top Ten Epic Moments During the House Judiciary Committee Hearing With AG Barr
Biden’s Lies for Black (and White-Privilege Guilt) Votes
VodkaPundit: Insanity Wrap #16: Biden Gets Lost in a Gym, Plus Murder Hornets Mystery Solved
VDH: Our Summer of Cultural Suicide
1619 Project Founder Admits It’s ‘Not a History,’ But a Fight to ‘Control the National Narrative’
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Me: A Biden Victory Will Be Especially Awful for Beleaguered Law Enforcement Officers
Be Not Afraid. In the End, We Win, They Lose
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This is why you go Gold. LIVE NOW: VIP Gold Live Chat with VodkaPundit, Kruiser, and Preston
Mask Mandate Enforcement Exposes Futility Of Gun-Free Zones
From the Mothership and Beyond
Coronavirus: Samsung profits soar on work from home demand
St. Louis Couple Say Charges Are Politically Motivated, Want Prosecutor Off Case
So there’s that…Anti-Policing Group Says Cops Shouldn’t Have Pursued Murder Suspects
Sure, let’s go with that, paste-eaters: Politico Attacks Trump, Conservatives Over Chicago Violence
NYC Mayor Blames Court Closures For Crime Spike As Shootings Top 2019 Totals
Not in my ‘hood. Are Ammo Shortages The New Normal For 2020?
Schlichter: Democrat Liars Are Barely Even Trying to Fool Us Anymore
WATCH: Doctor on MSNBC Clearly Doesn’t Understand Why Americans Are Against Another Lockdown
Seattle Police Union Leader Responds to Mayor’s Conspiracy Theory About Martial Law
WATCH: Reporter’s Mail-In Ballot Experiment Exposes the Problem with Vote By Mail
Uh Oh: Sheriff Refuses to Respond to Library’s 911 Calls
COVID-19 Could Cause Long-Term Heart Damage
Seriously, Lady: PA Dem Who AG Barr Laughed at During Clown Show Hearing Took a Racial Swipe at Him
President Trump Thanks Oscar Winner for the Endorsement
Oh, So ESPN Peddled Some Fake News about the WNBA Players Walking Out During National Anthem
She is an awful human being. Report: Biden Allies Waging Secret Campaign Against Harris As VP?
ESPN: NBA Training Academies In China Were Physically Abusing Young Players (And The NBA Knew)
Uncertainty Over The Dakota Access Pipeline’s Future Has Oil Producers In ‘Holding Pattern’
Flashback – Biden To Oil And Gas Industry Workers: Learn To Code
Probs. BoJo To Britons: You Fat People Are Making The Pandemic Recession Worse
Kira: Trader Joe’s Decides Against Caving To The Mobs, Will Not Change Packaging
NEW: Gavin Newsom’s Undisclosed “Sweetheart” Bank Deals Gave Him $3.8 Million
Sen. Tammy Duckworth calls intel on Russian bounties ‘very credible’; Richard Grenell calls her out
‘Definitely’: Gov. Kristi Noem tells Fox News ‘our kids are going back to school on time’
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
I love listening to these things taking off over my house. My hometown plane.
Has anyone here ever tried a beer ice cream float? Asking for a friend.
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PJ Media Senior Columnist and Associate Editor Stephen Kruiser is the author of “Don’t Let the Hippies Shower” and “Straight Outta Feelings: Political Zen in the Age of Outrage,” both of which address serious subjects in a humorous way. Monday through Friday he edits PJ Media’s “Morning Briefing.” His columns appear twice a week.
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Tech Under Fire
Plus, did the NBA hide its knowledge of Uighur abuses in China to keep its access to the Chinese market?
The Dispatch Staff | 1 hr | 7 |
Happy Thursday!
A reminder: This is the version of TMD available to non-paying readers. We’re happy you’ve made The Dispatch part of your morning routine, and we hope you’re enjoying The Morning Dispatch and the rest of our free editorial offerings. If you do, we hope you’ll consider joining us as a paying member. In addition to the full version of TMD each day, you’ll get extra editions of French Press, the G-File, Vital Interests, and our other paid products. And members can engage with the authors and with one another in the discussion threads at the end of each of our articles and newsletters. If this appeals to you, we hope you’ll please join now.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The United States confirmed 77,611 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday, with 9.2 percent of the 839,868 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,473 deaths were attributed to the virus on Wednesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 150,708.
- Just days before the CARES Act’s $600-per-week unemployment insurance boost is set to expire, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows said that the administration and Democratic leaders are “nowhere close to a deal” on a new coronavirus stimulus bill.
- Defense Secretary Mark Esper shared plans to shift 12,000 of the 36,000 U.S. troops currently stationed in Germany out of the country in the coming weeks. The move—which Esper said will cost “single-digit” billions of dollars to pull off—comes after years of President Trump criticizing Germany for its inadequate contributions to NATO’s defense spending.
- Nancy Pelosi announced a rule requiring all representatives and their staff to wear masks on the House floor after Rep. Louie Gohmert of Texas—who is known for forgoing a face covering around the Capitol—tested positive for the coronavirus. Gohmert notified his staff during an in-person meeting.
- The Department of Justice announced plans to deploy federal agents to Cleveland, Detroit, and Milwaukee amid reported spikes in violent crime in each of the cities. “The Department of Justice’s assets will supplement local law enforcement efforts, as we work together to take the shooters and chronic violent criminals off of our streets,” Attorney General William Barr said in the statement.
- Lawmakers were briefed Tuesday by top intelligence officials on the growing threat to U.S. elections posed by China, according to Axios. It’s at least the second time in the last six weeks that members of Congress have been warned about potential China interference, sources tell The Dispatch. China’s cyber capabilities far outstrip those of other prospective threats, U.S. officials believe, but Russia is considered far more aggressive in its approach and more likely to pose a threat to the 2020 vote, now less than 100 days away.
Big Tech Under the Congressional Microscope
The CEOs of four Big Tech heavyweights—Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, Jeff Bezos of Amazon, Tim Cook of Apple, and Sundar Pichai of Alphabet (Google)—testified before the House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial, and Administrative Law on Tuesday. The hearing marked the culmination of a lengthy House investigation into potential issues posed by Silicon Valley’s increasing dominance over a number of different sectors of American society.
Big Tech has operated with relatively unregulated freedom for decades, but some lawmakers are seeking to reform Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act, which affords liability protection to companies for third-party content posted on websites. Meaning, you can’t sue Facebook over what other people are saying on the company’s platform.
But companies like the ones represented in yesterday’s hearing have come under fire in recent years, as a series of revelations and controversies have caused many in Washington to sour on the communication technologies and social media sector. Accusations that Facebook played a role in promoting misleading information leading up to the 2016 election, suspicions that both social media platforms and search engines like Google suppress or even censor conservative viewpoints, and a general feeling that companies like Facebook, Google, Apple, and Amazon—who collectively control about $5 trillion in market power—are monopolizing American markets and crowding out competition have all led to growing scrutiny from lawmakers.
The NBA’s New China Problem
Last fall, a lone tweet by an NBA executive in support of protesters in Hong Kong led to China pulling NBA games from its state television and jeopardizing a $5 billion revenue stream for the league. It’s hard to imagine what the fallout will be, then, from an ESPN story published Thursday afternoon that alleges abusive behavior by Chinese coaches in sports academies run in cooperation with the NBA, with an extensive history of coaches hitting players and throwing balls at them, and athletes being denied schooling while crammed into uncomfortable and overcrowded living accommodations.
The NBA has been active in China since 1979, but interest in the sport took off when the Houston Rockets selected Chinese player Yao Ming with the first pick of the 2002 NBA Draft. Yao played eight seasons for the Rockets and helped make the league even more popular in China. The ESPN story describes the launch of the academies as a mission to “Find another Yao.”
Will NeverTrump Get Its Revenge in 2020?
About 20 percent of Donald Trump’s voters in 2016 pulled the lever for him despite having an unfavorable opinion of the guy. That’s about 12.6 million voters. Trump won the Electoral College because 80,000 people broke his way in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania.
In a piece for the site , Declan spoke with the founders of two groups—the Lincoln Project and Republican Voters Against Trump (RVAT)—that are planning to bombard these voters with ads over the coming months to ensure Trump is a one-term president.
They share a goal—making Joe Biden the 46th commander-in-chief—but other than that, their approach and visions for the country could not be more different. RVAT is relying heavily on testimonial videos from Trump 2016 voters who have since changed their mind, while the Lincoln Project—which is, unlike RVAT, working to unseat incumbent Republican senators across the country—churns out ads designed to get inside Trump’s head and psych him out.
“Porn for MSNBC viewers” is how [GOP consultant Rob] Stutzman referred to the Lincoln Project and its political advertising. Current Republican operatives have taken tocalling the group a Democratic super PAC, citing its donor rolls, which, as of June 30, feature scores of prominent large-dollar Democratic donors in addition to its more grassroots fundraising. Its offerings are “wildly popular in Democrat Twitter, in places like MSNBC,” Stutzman continued, “because it’s so cathartic and satisfying. But I don’t know that it’s particularly persuasive to Republicans.”
The group’s ads buck nearly all the insights gleaned from Defending Democracy Together’s focus groups. They feature scary voice-overs, include plenty ofTrump mocking, and focus on inside-the-Beltway stories that don’t matter to voters. But RVAT staffers think their more aggressive peer is complementary to their own efforts, targeting a different slice of the electorate—and one person in particular.
The Lincoln Project characterizes itself as “having an audience of one, trying to get in Trump’s head,” [RVAT co-founder Sarah] Longwell said. “That’s what they’re doing. What we’re doing is we are narrowly focused on deep persuasion of our target audience.”
[Lincoln Project co-founder Steve] Schmidt did not reject the notion that his group engages in what Miller referred to as “PSYOPS” (psychological operations) against the president. “We were the first people to point out [Trump’s] stumbling down the ramp at West Point and drinking water. Fast forward to [his] Tulsa [rally], for 45 minutes he goes up and talks about drinking water and walking down the ramp, which makes him look deranged,” Schmidt said. “His taking of the dementia test is all rooted out of our advertising, right? Making fun of him and that stuff.”
Worth Your Time
- Shortly before he died, Rep. John Lewis wrote an op-ed to be published on the day of his funeral. “Ordinary people with extraordinary vision can redeem the soul of America by getting in what I call good trouble, necessary trouble. Voting and participating in the democratic process are key. The vote is the most powerful nonviolent change agent you have in a democratic society. You must use it because it is not guaranteed. You can lose it.”
- For all of our poll aficionados out there, this breakdown in the New York Times is a must-read. Nate Cohn walks us through the various criticisms of polling methodology to answer the question: Are polls systematically missing Trump voters? The answer, in contrast to 2016, seems to be “no.” Voter registration—which tends to be more fixed than party identification in polls—“offers evidence consistent with the basic proposition that Democrats outnumber Republicans, and probably significantly,” he writes. Cohn also contends that registered Republican voters might actually be more likely than registered Democrats to respond to pollsters, not the other way around. “Mr. Trump’s problem wasn’t the number of people who said they voted for him last time: It was that only 86 percent of those who said they voted for him last time said they would do so again.”
- Chinese President Xi Jinping has said time and time again that he wants the People’s Republic of China to lead the world in artificial intelligence by the next decade. “But Xi also wants to use AI’s awesome analytical powers to push China to the cutting edge of surveillance,” writes Ross Andersen in The Atlantic. “He wants to build an all-seeing digital system of social control, patrolled by precog algorithms that identify potential dissenters in real time.” Check out this inside scoop into China’s Orwellian attempt to build a system of complete social control that can “predict political resistance before it happens.”
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
Also Also Presented Without Comment
via Playbook: Joe Kennedy’s camp is brushing off the Globe endorsement of Ed Markey as “something we fully anticipated” & an example of the establishment protecting the status quo for the paper’s “disproportionately white, well-off, well-educated readers.” politico.com/newsletters/ma…
Toeing the Company Line
- As we noted yesterday, President Trump told Axios’s Jonathan Swan that he has never confronted Vladimir Putin about the Russian bounties reportedly offered to the Taliban to kill American troops. But we know from several credible reports that information was in the president’s daily intelligence briefing and that the U.S. government took several steps to respond to the intelligence, including new force-protection measures in Afghanistan. On this week’s episode of the Dispatch Podcast, Steve reminds us, “It’s been weeks since this was first reported, it’s been months since this was first briefed, and the president of the United States is officially silent on the fact that Russians are trying to kill our troops in Afghanistan.” Tune in to for the gang’s thoughts on this, the Republican Party/Burn It All Down Wars, and the latest updates in Biden’s veepstakes.
- On the topic of Russian bounties paid to Islamic insurgents in Afghanistan, it’s worth considering the kinds of questions the president should have asked Putin after he heard the intelligence. Even if you don’t believe the White House was provided the intelligence months ago—and it was—the president could have acted on the allegations because they appeared in the New York Times. But as Jonah argues in his Wednesday G-File (🔒), “What is clear is that Trump doesn’t want the story to be true, and even if it is true, he doesn’t want it to get in the way of his bromance with Putin.” So much for America First.
- We’ve written a lot about China in recent weeks—today’s TMD is no exception. The rise of China as an economic and military rival to the U.S. is one of the most important stories in the world—and will be for decades. Which makes Tom Joscelyn’s even more valuable. Be sure to read his Vital Interests newsletter (🔒) from yesterday that asks the question: Was President Nixon wrong to initiate America’s opening to China? “The prevailing narrative holds that Nixon’s opening to China was a bold and farsighted strategic move that changed the balance of power in the Cold War,” Joscelyn writes. “This is often stated as a truism with little to no critical examination of the underlying facts.”
Let Us Know
The tradeoff inherent in the business models of a lot of these Big Tech companies is that consumers (us) will get, objectively, really great products—two-day package delivery, unlimited cloud storage space that syncs across all your devices, the ability to message essentially any person in the world instantaneously—for little to no cost, while the tech companies get our data, and increasingly dominant market shares. Is this a fair deal? Who would benefit from a broken up Google or Facebook?
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Sarah Isgur (@whignewtons), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Nate Hochman (@njhochman), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
Photograph by Mandel Ngan/Pool/Getty Images.
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LEGAL INSURRECTION
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LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— President Trump recently indicated that he wants the 2020 census reapportionment of House seats to exclude undocumented immigrants from the calculation. — If undocumented immigrants are excluded, the 2020 reapportionment calculation will change, including changing the number of House seats allocated to the two largest states, California and Texas. — There are significant legal and logistical hurdles that probably will prevent undocumented immigrants from being excluded from congressional reapportionment calculations. IntroductionOn July 21, 2020, President Donald Trump addressed a memorandum to the U.S. Department of Commerce directing the Census Bureau to report to him, in addition to the 2020 Census population counts by state, the estimated numbers of undocumented immigrants by state. These data would be included in his report to the Congress on apportioning the U.S. House of Representatives for the 2022 elections. The New York Times reported that Trump’s “action directly conflicts with the traditional consensus interpretation of the Constitution and will almost surely be challenged in court, potentially delaying its effect if not blocking its enactment altogether.” Nevertheless, we explore here the implications of the president’s directive with respect to the 2020 apportionment of the U.S. House if undocumented immigrants are excluded. Which states would gain seats and which states would lose seats? Apportioning the House in 2010The main objective in apportioning the U.S. House is to assign equitably the 435 seats to the 50 states; the District of Columbia is not included in the apportionment. The first 50 seats are automatically assigned, one per state. The method of Equal Proportions is then used to divide up the remaining 385 seats among the states on the basis of the size of their populations. The method determines which states should receive second seats, which states should receive third seats, and so forth. The larger the population of a state, the more seats it receives. The method of Equal Proportions was first used to apportion the House in 1940 and has been used ever since. The apportionment population of a state is defined as all persons residing in the state as of April 1, plus all American military and civilian personnel of the federal government and their dependents from the state who were residing abroad; this latter group is known as the overseas population. Table 1: 2020 reapportionment projectionsApportioning the House after the 2020 censusFor this exercise, we have projected to 2020 the apportionment populations of the 50 states and then used the method of Equal Proportions to distribute among the states the remaining 385 House seats. Remember that every one of the 50 states first automatically receives a seat. We began with the estimated resident populations of the states for July 1, 2019 as produced by the U.S. Census Bureau; we then subtracted from these 2019 estimates their July 1, 2018 estimated counts. We then took three-fourths of the differences, and added them to the 2019 population estimates, to yield the projected April 1, 2020 counts of the resident populations of the states. To determine the overseas populations of the states, we calculated the proportion of each state’s 2010 overseas population to its 2010 resident population. We multiplied these 2010 overseas proportions by the 2020 resident population projections of the states to produce overseas estimates for 2020; we added them to the 2020 resident populations to produce projections of the 2020 apportionment populations. We then allocated the House seats to the states. We first gave each state its automatic first seat. We then used the method of Equal Proportions to assign the remaining 385 seats. The 2020 seat assignments are presented in column 3 of Table 1. We show that 10 states are projected to lose House seats in 2020: Alabama -1 (from 7 to 6), California -1 (from 53 to 52), Illinois -1 (from 18 to 17), Michigan -1 (from 14 to 13), Minnesota -1 (from 8 to 7), New York -1 (from 27 to 26), Ohio -1 (from 16 to 15), Pennsylvania -1 (from 18 to 17), Rhode Island -1 (from 2 to 1), and West Virginia -1 (from 3 to 2). As those states are poised to lose seats, seven states are projected to gain House seats in 2020. These are Texas +3 (from 36 to 39), Florida +2 (from 27 to 29), Arizona +1 (from 9 to 10), Colorado +1 (from 7 to 8), Montana +1 (from 1 to 2), North Carolina +1 (from 13 to 14), and Oregon +1 (from 5 to 6). These projections are illustrated in Map 1. Map 1: 2020 reapportionment projectionApportioning the House after 2020 excluding undocumented residentsTo gain an understanding of the possible effects of President Trump’s directive to exclude undocumented persons from the apportionment populations, we next developed for the 50 states population projections and U.S. House seat assignments for 2020 excluding their undocumented residents. We first obtained estimated numbers of undocumented immigrants residing in the states in 2017 produced last year by demographers Jeffrey S. Passel and D’Vera Cohn of the Pew Research Center. They used a residual method to estimate the number of undocumented immigrants residing in the 50 states in 2017, totaling approximately 10.5 million persons. We divided these 2017 undocumented estimates of the states by the 2017 Census Bureau estimates of their resident populations to obtain estimates of the proportion of undocumented immigrants in the states in 2017. We multiplied these proportions by the states’ projected 2020 resident populations and subtracted them from the 2020 resident populations. Finally, we added in our estimates of the states’ overseas populations, as discussed above, to produce 2020 apportionment counts for the states that exclude undocumented immigrants. We are assuming that the estimated proportions of undocumented immigrants in the states in 2017 are correct and will be the same proportions in 2020. We then used the method of Equal Proportions to apportion the House using these apportionment counts that exclude undocumented immigrants. The seat assignments are presented in column 4 of Table 1. How do these seat assignments based on 2020 counts excluding our estimated numbers of undocumented immigrants compare with 2020 seat assignments that do not exclude undocumented immigrants? Compare column 3 with column 4. Three states gain a seat in 2020 compared to the number of seats they are projected to receive in 2020 if undocumented persons are not excluded, and three states lose a seat: Alabama +1 (from 6 to 7), Minnesota +1 (from 7 to 8), and Ohio +1 (from 15 to 16); and California -1 (from 52 to 51), New Jersey -1 (from 12 to 11), and Texas -1 (from 39 to 38). Steven A. Camarota and Karen Zeigler of the Center for Immigration Studies published research late last year in which they also apportioned the House after excluding undocumented residents. Their results are the same as our results, except that they show New York, and not New Jersey, losing a seat. Finally, if the 2020 apportionment excludes undocumented immigrants, what will be the changes in seat assignments between 2010 and 2020? Compare column 2 with column 4. If undocumented persons are excluded in 2020, we predict that eight states will lose nine seats, namely, California -2 (from 53 to 51), Illinois -1 (from 18 to 17), Michigan -1 (from 14 to 13), New Jersey -1 (from 12 to 11), New York -1 (from 27 to 26), Pennsylvania -1 (from 18 to 17), Rhode Island -1 (from 2 to 1), and West Virginia -1 (from 3 to 2); and we predict that seven states will gain nine seats in 2020, namely, Texas +2 (from 36 to 38), Florida +2 (from 27 to 29), Arizona +1 (from 9 to 10), Colorado +1 (from 7 to 8), Montana +1 (from 1 to 2), North Carolina +1 (from 13 to 14), and Oregon +1 (from 5 to 6). This projection is shown in Map 2. Map 2: 2020 reapportionment projection excluding undocumented immigrantsTechnical and legal obstaclesOur estimates of the numbers of undocumented residents for the states would not be sufficient for use in the official apportionment. Moreover, it is not clear whether the Secretary of Commerce could produce acceptable numbers of undocumented residents according to the timetable the new memorandum requires. Last year, President Trump’s Executive Order 13880 instructed the Bureau to develop its “best citizenship” assessment for each enumerated person by linking that person with administrative records held by government agencies. Those data, however, were to be made available to the states for redistricting (not for apportionment) and are not due until March 31, 2021. Also, the Supreme Court has struck down the use of sampling data for the purpose of congressional apportionment, and a direct count is impossible because of the well-publicized absence of the citizenship question. Whether there is enough time by Jan. 1, 2021 to compare every census return with administrative data seems doubtful. Even if that gargantuan task could be accomplished, there are formidable obstacles both statutory and constitutional with respect to the exclusion of people who are “best guessed” not to be legally residing in the United States, according to Martin Lederman of the Georgetown University Law Center. Among these issues is that the only constitutionally established exclusion is for “Indians not taxed.” Also, the Constitution requires that apportionment be based on the actual number of inhabitants. Moreover, the president’s recent innovation in apportionment runs counter to the governing statute (2 U.S.C. §2a), which requires him to report “the whole number of persons in each state” and “the number of Representatives to which each state would be entitled . . . by the method known as the method of equal proportions.”
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House Primaries: A Little More Action This Year Than Usual If only one more incumbent loses, 2020 will match 1980’s high watermark for a non-redistricting year |
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By J. Miles Coleman Associate Editor, Sabato’s Crystal Ball |
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— As five sitting members of the House have already lost primaries — and some states have yet to vote — 2020 could see the most primary losers in a non-redistricting cycle since 1980. — The circumstances of some of this year’s primary losers are in some ways similar to past troubles that have undone incumbents in primaries. — Both parties have seen members lose primaries this cycle, but the Republicans’ electoral prospects have, on the whole, been more adversely affected. — There are a handful of other House incumbents who may be vulnerable as the primary season picks up again next week. Another 1980 parallelBack in April, we discussed some similarities between the 1980 election and this one. Down the ballot, there may be another connection between this year and the election four decades ago: An unusually high number of House incumbents may lose primaries, at least for a non-redistricting year. Usually, at the congressional level, turnover is highest in election years following redistricting, or in other words, years that end in “2” (1992, 2002, 2012, etc.). Between changes in apportionment — states losing or gaining seats — and partisan considerations, members of the same party can be thrown into common districts, which naturally increases the number of members who end up losing in primaries. Table 1 illustrates this dynamic. Note that the number of incumbent losses is often higher in redistricting years. Typically just a few House incumbents lose primaries in any given year. Table 1: House incumbents in primaries, 1946-2018Five incumbents have lost primaries out of the 278 races featuring incumbents that have been held so far this primary season. As the primary season resumes next week, another 117 House incumbents will seek renomination. When incumbents do lose primaries, there is usually a good reason why. Redistricting can be a key driver, as we see in years that end in 2 or when districts are altered in other years. Scandal can also be a factor. In 1980, the Abscam scandal helped end several careers in Washington, and it contributed to Florida Republican Richard Kelly’s primary loss (an unrelated scandal contributed to another one of the primary losses, that of California Democrat Charles Wilson). So is ideology: One of the 1980 losers was an Alabama Republican, John Buchanan, who primary voters deemed not conservative enough after Buchanan, elected thanks in large part to Barry Goldwater’s 1964 Southern strength, became markedly less conservative in the decade and a half following his initial victory. A perception that a long-time incumbent has lost touch with the district — another problem that can hurt incumbents — bedeviled Bob Duncan, an Oregon Democrat who ended up being defeated handily by Ron Wyden, who remains in Congress four decades later (albeit in the Senate). One other loser, Florida Democrat Ed Stack, won a 1978 primary victory against a damaged incumbent but then couldn’t defend his seat two years later. The sixth 1980 incumbent primary loser was an accidental congressman, Democrat Bennett Stewart of Chicago. Democratic machine leaders placed him on the ballot late in the 1978 cycle after the incumbent died. The following cycle, he was trounced by Harold Washington, a future Democratic mayor and opponent of the old-school Chicago Democratic machine. If just one more member fails to clinch renomination, 2020 would tie 1980 as the most recent non-redistricting election year where more than five members lost primaries. With that in mind, let’s consider how each of the losses of this cycle played out. Some of the problems that hurt incumbents four decades ago are reminiscent of some incumbent issues this year. Primary losers of the 2020 cycleWhile some of the primary losers this cycle suffered from self-inflicted gaffes, or just got lazy, the first primary loser was a rather open-and-shut case: in Chicagoland, Rep. Dan Lipinski (D, IL-3) was simply not in alignment with the increasingly liberal tendencies of his party’s electorate. Lipinski, a moderate Blue Dog, first won his seat in a way that could be described as a case study in Chicago machine politics. In the 2004 cycle, his father, then-Rep. Bill Lipinski, who had held the seat since the Reagan era, ran unopposed in the March primary, but withdrew from the ballot in August. A close ally of the state’s powerful House Speaker, Mike Madigan, Lipinski had his son put on the ballot as the party’s replacement nominee. In a way, this is reminiscent of Stewart’s ascension to Congress in 1978: Lipinski was able to become the Democratic nominee without actually having to win a primary. But unlike Stewart, Lipinski established a foothold in the district. Upon arriving in Congress, the younger Lipinski maintained that his voting record would be much like his father’s — in other words, voting close to the party line on fiscal matters, but with tradition in mind when it came to social issues. The 3rd District, which encompasses Chicago’s southwestern neighborhoods, had historically been working-class territory that was shaped by waves of white ethnic groups that immigrated there beginning in the mid-19th century — such as Poles, Irish, and Italians, though the area has a growing Hispanic population. A cultural unifier among these groups was Catholicism, so the Lipinski formula seemed to fit the area well. An ardent opponent of abortion, Lipinski voted against the Affordable Care Act in 2010, reasoning that its provision banning federal funding for abortion was insufficient. Though his abortion stance, and his perceived closeness to the Chicago machine, attracted some primary challengers throughout the years, he met his most serious primary opponent in 2018. Marie Newman, a political consultant, charged that Lipinski was too conservative for the district — it supported Hillary Clinton 55%-40% in 2016 — and she was endorsed by a laundry list of progressive groups. Lipinski won that 2018 primary, but by just a 51%-49% margin, and with a telling geographic divide. Lipinski carried the more working-class Chicago-proper part of the district by 13 points but lost the western, suburban parts of the district — areas that tend to have higher rates of educational attainment, and are likely more transient (Map 1). Map 1: 2018 IL-3 Democratic primaryStructurally, Lipinski benefited from the state’s open primary system. In fact, a key part of his campaign’s strategy was convincing Republicans to vote for him in the Democratic primary. In 2018, Lipinski’s strategy was successful. There was no contested Republican congressional primary in IL-3, and, as a conservative Democrat, he drew GOP partisans over into his primary. In 2020, Republicans had a three-way primary of their own, giving their voters less reason to participate in the other primary. Compounding that was Illinois being among the first states to vote after the COVID-19 pandemic became a national emergency — as most of its voters cast ballots in person on Election Day (as opposed to other states that relied more on mail-in voting), turnout was down across the board. With that turnout dynamic, it’s easy to see how the Democratic primary would have been driven by the loyal partisans. Newman won the primary 47%-45%. The general breakdown was similar to 2018, but Newman cut Lipinski’s margin in Chicago in half. A few months before the primary, Lipinski’s political instincts looked questionable, as he signed an amicus brief, along with over 200 Republican members of Congress, that urged the Supreme Court to reconsider its Roe v. Wade decision. Lipinski’s opposition to abortion was already known in the district, but it seemed to highlight the issue that he was most out of sync with the Democratic electorate on, and at the worst possible time. In South Texas, Rep. Henry Cuellar (D, TX-28) has a similarly pro-life record but didn’t sign the letter — he also faced a well-funded progressive challenger in a March primary, but held on, albeit narrowly. It wasn’t until June that another incumbent congressman lost a primary — though for political observers of all stripes, this member’s defeat seemed overdue. In northwestern Iowa, Rep. Steve King (R, IA-4) has had a penchant for controversial, if not outright racist, comments since his initial election, in 2002. Over his 18-year career, he had the luxury of representing the most Republican-leaning seat in Iowa, which helped insulate him from general election challenges. In 2012, Democrats were excited about their chances to beat King, as they recruited Christie Vilsack, the wife of Tom Vilsack, a popular former governor who served in the Obama administration. In the end, Vilsack didn’t attract much crossover support — King was reelected 53%-45%, matching Mitt Romney’s showing in the district. In the Trump era, King seemed to dial up the intensity of his remarks, to the point of wading into white nationalism. He received token opposition in the 2018 primary but faced another well-funded Democratic opponent in first-time candidate J. D. Scholten, who ended up outraising him by better than 3:1. Though King ended up winning, it became clear that his personal baggage was jeopardizing the GOP’s hold on the seat — while Gov. Kim Reynolds’ (R-IA) election hinged on her nearly 61% share of the (two-party) vote in the 4th District, King’s margin was just over 3%. King outperformed Reynolds in just one of the district’s roughly 500 precincts, and ran more than 20% behind her in many counties (Map 2). Map 2: Steve King’s 2018 underperformance in IA-4Leading up to the early June primary, King trailed badly in fundraising, an ominous sign for his prospects. Feenstra, who represents a deeply-red, ethnically Dutch senate district in the state’s northwestern corner, won the primary 46%-36%. Much of Feenstra’s margin came from his senate seat, which gave him nearly three-quarters of the vote. With King out of the picture, the Crystal Ball immediately upgraded the GOP’s chances in IA-4, moving it from Likely Republican to Safe Republican. Scholten is running again, and has over $1 million cash on hand, but Feenstra has a motivated base in northwestern Iowa, and Trump will probably carry the seat by a significant margin again (he won it 60%-33% in 2016). If King’s exit helped Republicans secure a red district, a result less than two weeks later, in the Crystal Ball’s home district, has loosened their hold on another. As we detailed in mid-June, Rep. Denver Riggleman (R, VA-5) lost a strange, drive-through convention to Bob Good, a local official in Campbell County. Riggleman, a libertarian-leaning Republican, drew the ire of some conservative activists by officiating a gay wedding in 2019 and otherwise not being sufficiently conservative for some, though he did earn the president’s endorsement. Good, by contrast, ran as a “Biblical conservative,” and, at a low-turnout convention, prevailed 58%-42%. Party conventions have long been a quirk of Virginia politics; local parties can choose to hold them, as opposed to traditional primaries. Given their smaller electorate, results are more often determined by hardcore partisan activists — this can produce candidates who are seen as less electable in general election settings. Since our look at the VA-5 last month, Democrats overwhelmingly nominated Dr. Cameron Webb, who may have a timely profile as a Black physician. Bob Good’s fundraising was objectively poor heading into the convention and, as of the end of the June, he still badly trails Webb. Though this is a red-leaning district — even Sen. Tim Kaine (D-VA) fell 2% short there in his landslide reelection, and it’s very likely to stick with Trump — national Republicans may need to put more effort into it than they should ordinarily have to. Had Riggleman’s fate been decided in a primary, it’s likely he’d have been renominated. Though the votes have been slow to come in, 16-term Rep. Eliot Engel (D, NY-16) conceded to his primary challenger, school principal Jamaal Bowman. Immediately after Election Day, Bowman had a 61%-35% lead — the result has narrowed as more votes have been counted, but he should still win convincingly. Engel, who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee, seemed like an incumbent whose campaign chops had just gotten rusty — another familiar problem with incumbents who lose primaries. As this is a heavily blue district, taking in parts of Westchester County and the Bronx, he rarely had serious opponents. In the heat of a competitive race, Engel questioned the need for his colleagues to get involved in primaries — a curious charge, considering he came to Congress himself in 1988 by ousting a scandal-plagued incumbent in the Democratic primary. Another ironic twist was that in the 2000 edition of the Almanac of American Politics, an Engel staffer was quoted saying, “The congressman says he likes primaries — they keep you sharp.” He also faced questions about how often he was back home in the district, particularly during the pandemic. There’s no question that NY-16, which Clinton carried three to one in 2016, will stay in Democratic hands. In another New York City district, Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D, NY-12), with her base in Manhattan, had a close primary call but appears to have held on — with ballots still being tallied, she has a tenuous, though growing, lead over college professor Suraj Patel. Maloney beat Patel by a much more comfortable 59%-41% in the 2018 primary. The most recent primary loser of the 2020 cycle appears to be an incumbent who was caught sleeping. Representing Colorado’s Western Slope since 2011, Rep. Scott Tipton (R, CO-3) lost by nine percentage points to first-time candidate Lauren Boebert. Tipton had Trump’s endorsement, but didn’t seem to be running an active campaign — for one thing, he spent nothing on advertising. Like the situation with VA-5, the result of the primary prompted the Crystal Ball to downgrade the GOP’s prospects — we moved both races from Likely Republican to Leans Republican. As 270towin author Drew Savicki detailed this week, CO-3 has a GOP lean: in 2018, Gov. Jared Polis (D-CO) won the state by 11%, but lost the district by 4%. Democrats renominated former state Rep. Diane Mitsch Bush, who lost to Tipton by 8% in 2018. Over the past decades, voters in the area have been supportive of some Democrats, though their most recent Democratic congressman, former Rep. John Salazar, cultivated something of an independent image — in 2010, the National Rifle Association endorsed his campaign. Looking forwardSo what’s been the overall effect of primary challenges this cycle? For Democrats, both IL-3 and NY-16 are firmly in the blue column, so their new nominees represent more of change in tone than substance — even with his socially conservative stances, Lipinski supported the Democratic Party on most major votes. Republicans have essentially taken one step forward but two steps back. Though booting King was long overdue, and moves his seat off the table, they’ve gone with riskier nominees in VA-5 and CO-3. It seems that, for a party that’s already struggling to take back the House, these developments could be problematic. On the horizon, there are still some House members who may be vulnerable in primaries, including a few who are on the ballot next Tuesday. In Kansas, first-term Rep. Steve Watkins (R, KS-2) was recently charged with voter fraud. Though he’s complained that the charges are politically motivated, his main primary opponent, state Treasurer Jake LaTurner, was quick to raise the issue. LaTurner’s internal polling, from immediately after the Watkins charges were announced, suggested that the congressman’s standing in the district had been damaged: while LaTurner and the likely Democratic nominee, Topeka Mayor Michelle De La Isla, were about tied, Watkins trailed De La Isla by 12 percentage points. Next door in Missouri, 10-term Rep. Lacy Clay (D, MO-1) is in a rematch with his 2018 primary opponent, activist Cori Bush. Clay won the primary by 20 points in 2018, but with primary day approaching — it’s on the same day as Kansas — he’s gone negative on Bush, which sometimes is a sign of vulnerability. Clay, just like Lipinski, succeeded his father in Congress. Clay did win his initial House primary, way back in 2000, but he has been pushed somewhat in recent primaries. Rep. Tom O’Halleran (D, AZ-1) also faces a primary challenge from the left on Tuesday, although he’d be a more surprising loser than the two others we’ve mentioned. Two members of the “Squad,” Reps. Rashida Tlaib (D, MI-13) and Ilhan Omar (D, MN-5), also face credible primary opposition next week and the week after, respectively, although both should be OK. Rep. Richard Neal (D, MA-1), a committee chairman like Engel (Neal chairs Ways and Means), also appears to be facing credible opposition, as does Rep. Stephen Lynch (D, MA-8), one of least liberal House Democrats. The Massachusetts primary is not until Sept. 1. There are a handful of others that may merit watching, and sometimes incumbent losses can come out of the blue (there wasn’t much advance warning that Tipton was in real danger, for instance). If even one of these members lose — or someone else not mentioned here — 2020 will match 1980’s previous high watermark for incumbent primary losses in a non-redistricting year. — Crystal Ball interns Ella Berg, Ellie Bowen, Tommy Dannenfelser, Halinta Diallo, Tanmay Gupta, Micah Rucci, Eva Surovell, Krishan Patel, and Bennett Stillerman helped research this piece. Read the fine printLearn more about the Crystal Ball and find out how to contact us here. Sign up to receive Crystal Ball e-mails like this one delivered straight to your inbox. Use caution with Sabato’s Crystal Ball, and remember: “He who lives by the Crystal Ball ends up eating ground glass!” |
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NOQ REPORT
NOQ Report Daily |
- Dr. Simone Gold responds to mainstream and social media’s war against Hydroxychloroquine
- Madonna shared Dr. Stella Immanuel’s video on Instagram. It didn’t stay up for long.
- Deception: The weapon of the New World Order agenda, with Dr Etienne Graves
- Former Democratic activist obsessed with Ivanka Trump torched AZ Dem. headquarters
- What’s to stop the far-left social-media giants from rigging the election with free-speech bans?
- There are consequences if the left is wrong about Hydroxychloroquine
- Joe Biden’s notes highlight likelihood of Kamala Harris as his VP pick
Dr. Simone Gold responds to mainstream and social media’s war against Hydroxychloroquine
Posted: 30 Jul 2020 01:00 AM PDT Thinking Americans and people around the world should be asking themselves a question. Why is there such an unprecedented concerted effort by mainstream media and Big Tech companies like Facebook, Twitter, and Google to end all discussion about Hydroxychloroquine? The debate is far from over in the real world as there are as many studies touting the efficacy of the drug to treat COVID-19 as there are that oppose it. Hydroxychloroquine has NOT been debunked as a treatment, at least not scientifically, but the self-appointed “arbiters of truth” have waged an all-out war on the drug and any doctors brave enough to defend its use. Dr. Simone Gold made a statement on Twitter that was honest and brutally exposed the unhinged attempt by these “arbiters of truth” to suppress the discussion. But before we get to her Twitter thread, let’s state something that does not get said enough. Whether you believe HCQ is effective against COVID-19 or not, its use has led to exactly ZERO deaths. None. The narrative that it is somehow dangerous is a false one whether you think it’s a good treatment or not. Here’s what Dr. Gold said on Twitter:
Mainstream and social media giants have a new message for the world: Only listen to doctors who abide by their agenda. Those who use science and experience to challenge the narrative must be quashed. Why? Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The post Dr. Simone Gold responds to mainstream and social media’s war against Hydroxychloroquine appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Madonna shared Dr. Stella Immanuel’s video on Instagram. It didn’t stay up for long.
Posted: 30 Jul 2020 12:18 AM PDT Instagram and their parent company, Facebook, have been at war with a video posted earlier this week showing doctors touting the benefits of Hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for COVID-19 and pushing back against the lockdowns. They went so far as to ban the video; we had our own 45-minute video with a 2-minute clip from the press conference removed ourselves. Now, Madonna has entered the fray when she shared the video as well. Her post on Instagram was first blurred to obscure viewing, then taken down altogether. According to Breitbart: In her post to 15.4 million followers, Madonna claimed that a proven vaccine had been available for months but it was being kept secret “to let the rich get richer and the poor and sick get sicker.” She attached a video of US physician Stella Immanuel who praised hydroxychloroquine as a miracle coronavirus cure. Various clips of Immanuel’s speech have spread rapidly on the internet in recent days, but hydroxychloroquine, an antimalarial drug, has not been proved effective against COVID-19. “We’ve removed this video for making false claims about cures and prevention methods for COVID-19,” a company spokeswoman for Facebook, which owns Instagram, told AFP on Wednesday. “People who reacted to, commented on, or shared this video, will see messages directing them to authoritative information about the virus.” Madonna’s post was deleted, but screengrabs showed it had earlier been blurred by Instagram and tagged “False Information — reviewed by independent fact-checkers” with a link to a page debunking the video. The ongoing battle between Big Tech and doctors supporting the use of Hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for COVID-19 has found some unexpected allies on the side of free speech. The public interest is best served when all of the data is available. Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The post Madonna shared Dr. Stella Immanuel’s video on Instagram. It didn’t stay up for long. appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Deception: The weapon of the New World Order agenda, with Dr Etienne Graves
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 09:26 PM PDT Dr Etienne Graves has a unique perspective on the current events we are seeing happen in America, with deception seeming to be everywhere we look. Whether it’s COVID-19, Black Lives Matter or anything being promoted on the Mainstream Media, deception is a weapon being used to manipulate each and every one of us. Dr Graves explains that the ultimate goal of all of this is to establish the New World Order. This push by Globalists such as Bill Gates, George Soros and many of the prominent Politicians, the chaos we are seeing sure seems to be implemented to usher in the NWO and, ultimately, the reign of the anti-christ. As we see the world falling apart all around us, it’s important that we stay true to what we believe and continue to fight hard for freedom and liberty for all. The Leftist push in American society is an attempt to establish socialism and Marxism, completely stripping away all of our Constitutional Rights. Do not be disheartened, but rise up and let’s push back and make a difference! Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The post Deception: The weapon of the New World Order agenda, with Dr Etienne Graves appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Former Democratic activist obsessed with Ivanka Trump torched AZ Dem. headquarters
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 09:08 PM PDT Police have arrested Matthew Egler after he admitted on social media that he torched the Arizona Democratic National Headquarters, causes extensive damage to the building. Egler was an activist who worked with the Arizona Democratic Party until last year when they banned him from activities over erratic behavior.
A scan of his Twitter profile reveals a deep obsession and serious delusions regarding Ivanka Trump, the daughter of the President. He claimed he got her pregnant and showed videos of recordings he made of his calls to the White House in which he tried to get her on the phone. He had messages sent to her through the White House hotline.
His claims of being the father of Ivanka Trump’s child aside, he also admitted multiple times on Twitter and through Periscope videos that he was the one who set the Arizona Democratic Party Headquarters on fire.
According to AZ Central: Police announced the arrest on Twitter, saying only 29-year-old Matthew Egler has been arrested in connection with the fire. They did not immediately provide more details about what led to the arrest. In a document released by the Maricopa County Superior Court, police cited in a probable cause statement Egler’s posts on social media admitting his involvement with the fire and his anger with the Maricopa County Democrats. He had been previously volunteering for the county Democrats, according to the probable cause statement, but had been banned from volunteering “due to the nature of his previous behaviors.” Egler reached out to the county Democrats about getting involved in his district, but was not allowed to volunteer. The Arizona Secretary of State’s Office confirmed Wednesday he is still a registered Democrat. Was it the Arizona Democratic Party who drove Matthew Egler to madness or was his madness drawn to the Arizona Democratic Party? His obsession with Ivanka Trump seems to point to the latter. Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The post Former Democratic activist obsessed with Ivanka Trump torched AZ Dem. headquarters appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
What’s to stop the far-left social-media giants from rigging the election with free-speech bans?
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 07:37 PM PDT Yesterday was one of those watershed moments of history that set out in stark relief why we and the cause of liberty are in such dire straits. You try to remain optimistic in these times. However, one of the dangers of knowing too much about the past is that it’s too easy to see how events will accelerate. We’re seeing blatant censorship at the macro and micro levels, with a news conference of America’s Frontline Doctors being suppressed while we were suspended from Twitter like many others. Censorship is akin to the victor in war writing the history books. The people who impose this on others get to tell the reason why – without rebuttal. This means they can simply lie about why someone’s free-speech was suppressed, and there is no one around to challenge the lie, hence the extreme danger. In the case of the news conference, ostensibly this was because of false information. But because there is no longer a two-way conversation, the falsity of the data is in the eye of those oppressing free speech. In the case of the twitter suspension, this could easily because of winning an argument – at least temporarily – with the left. The news this morning brings word of further acceleration in the destruction of liberty. It’s been reported that the chairwoman of Arizona’s Republican Party has had her Twitter account “temporarily limited” one week ahead of state primary. This on top of all the accelerating censorship elsewhere. Does everyone understand that events are accelerating?It’s becoming less and less shocking to witness these events. Therein lies the danger. We have grown accustomed to the suppression of liberty by those who only pretend to be liberal [flaming or otherwise]. A lot of this began in the aftermath of the Parkland mass murder tragedy with the censorship of the right of self-defense. In other cases, prominent YouTube celebrities were ‘de-platformed’. It was shocking only to those paying attention. Now that far-left has been able to do this with little in the way of repercussions, they’ve been pushing the envelope, becoming a little bit bolder with each step. History has taught us that tyranny only accelerates, it’s only going to get worse from now on, much worse. What’s to stop the nation’s far-left social media giants from banning free speech to rig the election?So, we’re back to the question of the year: What’s to stop the nation’s socialist left from simply banning the President and everyone else from social media at a critical time to rig the election for the left? Dr. Robert Epstein already has detailed the danger to the Republic in shifting millions of votes to the left. But recent events have shown that is only the tip of the iceberg. That kind of malfeasance doesn’t even take into account what would happen if whole swaths of the voices of the pro-liberty right were suddenly silenced. Depending on circumstances, this could either be perpetrated as a ‘happy accident’ – for the left – or it could be an unapologetic and outright suppression of free speech. The ‘sudden outage’ could hit every conservative outfit in the country, excused as a ‘software glitch’. Timed correctly when a good percentage of the country is making their voting decisions, it could easily change the history of the nation and the world. An outage at the right time, with an ‘inadvertent delay’ in finding and fixing the problem, could easily swing the results and rig the election. This could especially be the case if everything else the nation’s socialist left has done has failed to have the desired effect and they become desperate.
The sad fact is that as of now, nothing is stopping the nation’s socialist left from taking this step. They convinced themselves that they are ‘doing good’ and that they need to seize power ‘by any means necessary’ – with a group of far-left radicals taking that name for themselves. This means that they will do this unless we do something about it – now. Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The post What’s to stop the far-left social-media giants from rigging the election with free-speech bans? appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
There are consequences if the left is wrong about Hydroxychloroquine
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 08:17 AM PDT Cancel culture isn’t behind the recent quashing of America’s Frontline Doctors. The group that had their video taken down across Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube for touting Hydroxychloroquine while panning the coronavirus lockdown didn’t fall victim to the usual suspects of social justice warriors calling for their heads. Instead, it was Big Tech who took the first swing and then called on cancel culture to back their play. Now, they group of doctors face a new challenge after being cancelled by their website host.
This is scientific discrimination. If you’re unfamiliar with the phenomenon, ask climate scientists who question man-made global warning. They know all about it. Ask energy scientists who promote nuclear power. Ask psychologists who believe gender and sex are connected. Scientific discrimination is rampant, though not as common among medical doctors until now. In the latest episode of NOQ Report, JD examines the consequences of either side of the Hydroxychloroquine debate being wrong. If the doctors touting the drug as a treatment for COVID-19 are wrong, the consequences are minimal, nearly non-existent. Since there are no suitable treatments that Hydroxychloroquine would block, allowing doctors to prescribe the drug to patients will at worst have litle effect. The same cannot be said if political scientists denouncing Hydroxychloroquine are wrong. Their choice to block the drug as a treatment could cost people their lives. Whether to hurt President Trump, promote a vaccine, or both, the motives for suppressing a potentially life-saving treatment are heinous. The left often says we should listen to doctors, but what they mean is we should listen to doctors who back their agenda. Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The post There are consequences if the left is wrong about Hydroxychloroquine appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Joe Biden’s notes highlight likelihood of Kamala Harris as his VP pick
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 07:04 AM PDT Another clue pointing to Senator Kamala Harris as Joe Biden’s running mate came from an Associated Press image taken while he was taking questions from reporters yesterday. She was listed with notes that included “Do not hold grudges,” referring to their contentious relationship during the Democratic presidential primaries. She effectively called him a racist during the first debate and propelled herself within striking distance of then-frontrunners Biden and Bernie Sanders. But her star faded quickly as her ability to impress people became apparent. She started flip-flopping on her policies based on how the wind was blowing, oftentimes switching opinions at different points in the same day. Nevertheless, a leak from POLITICO yesterday seemed to indicate Harris is going to be announced as Biden’s running mate on Saturday. According to The Gateway Pundit: Yesterday Biden started his talk to a tiny group at a Delaware outing and forgot where he was. At the same briefing, Biden held notes that were spotted by the press. At the top of his list of notes, Biden reminds himself about Senator Kamala Harris. His first note to himself was not to hold a grudge: Biden had to remind himself not to hold a grudge against Kamala Harris, and other positive comments about Harris. Can you imagine any other candidate who has to remind himself of such a topic? You would never see such a note with President Trump for sure. Trump has more important things to note. Also listed on Biden’s notes about Harris were reminders she “campaigned with me and Jill,” is “talented,” has been a “great help to campaign,” and that Biden has “great respect for her.” At this point, it would behoove the GOP to get ahead of the announcement and start going after Kamala Harris now. If all of his is some trick and she’s not the running mate, no big deal. But assuming she is, the time to strike is now. Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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ARRA News Service (in this message: 18 new items) |
- The Supreme Court Imperils Parents’ Right to Pass Their Values on to Children
- Why Is Trump Divisive? Because He Is Supposed To Be Divisive.
- A Tale of Two Relief Bills…
- Trump Takes Action, Confronting Communist China, Biden’s Promise
- The Democratic Assault On The Rule Of Law
- Propaganda Media and Coronavirus Lies
- AG Barr: Portland Insurrection by Antifa on Federal Courthouse ‘An Assault on the U.S. Gov’t’
- Self-Cancel Culture
- The Private Space Race
- Barr Eats the Democrats’ Lunch
- Commie Dearest . . .
- Attorney General Barr Scorches Democrats
- Theft by Spray Paint
- Democrats Plan on Stealing the Election
- 6 Big Takeaways From the Attorney General’s Capitol Hill Testimony
- Government: When You’re a Hammer, Everything Looks Like a Nail
- The 60th Annual NDAA Supports A Robust U.S. Military
- This Is the Only Medal of Honor Recipient to Ever Give It Back
The Supreme Court Imperils Parents’ Right to Pass Their Values on to Children
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 08:52 PM PDT
by Melissa Moschella : The Supreme Court’s recent decision in Bostock v. Clayton, which ruled that the Title VII prohibition on sex discrimination in employment extends to discrimination based on sexual orientation and transgender status, is likely to have more widespread implications than many people realize. Many (including Justice Samuel Alito in his scathing dissent) warn that the ruling may undermine religious freedom and freedom of speech, as well as women’s athletics and women’s privacy in bathrooms and lockers rooms. Yet few have considered how Bostock may imperil the fundamental right of parents to educate their children in line with their values. The current culture already makes it difficult for parents to teach their children that, for instance, maleness and femaleness are grounded on objective biological reality rather than subjective self-perceptions, or that the purpose of human sexuality is not ultimately pleasure or self-expression, but to unite a man and woman in marriage and enable them to form a family. And whatever one’s beliefs about these issues, parents, not the state, should be the ones to decide what their children are taught about these controversial and sensitive matters. Many parents who seek to pass on a traditional understanding of sexuality send their children to private or religious schools where these values will be taught and modeled—or at least not directly undermined, as they are in an increasing number of public schools. But will private and religious schools be able to teach and model these traditional understandings of sexuality in the wake of Bostock? What happens when the first-grade teacher Ms. Clark announces that she is transgender and henceforth expects to be treated as Mr. Clark? According to Bostock, a school that fires Ms. Clark because her gender transition will confuse students and undermine the school’s mission would violate Title VII’s prohibition on sex discrimination. A religious school might be protected by Title VII’s exemption allowing religious institutions to make hiring decisions on the basis of religion, or by the Hosanna-Tabor ruling’s “ministerial exception,” which protects the right of religious institutions to choose their own ministers. The Bostock decision, however, doesn’t help matters. Thankfully, the Supreme Court just strengthened the ministerial exception in Our Lady of Guadalupe v. Morrissey Berru, offering a broad interpretation of who counts as a “minister” that likely extends to any teacher, and perhaps even other employees. But schools will have to fight for these protections in court when challenged, and the fight itself will be punishing. Further, what about private nonreligious schools that are not eligible for these exemptions? LGBT activists will also seek to get courts to apply Bostock’s expansive redefinition of the meaning of sex discrimination to Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in any school or educational program that receives federal financial assistance. Justice Neil Gorsuch’s majority opinion explicitly declines to address questions about bathrooms, locker rooms, women’s sports, and so on. But the logic of Bostock implies that it would violate Title IX, for example, to prevent a student with male anatomy who identifies as female from changing and showering in the girls locker room or competing on the girls track team. These implications of Bostock’s logic could also affect the many private and religious schools that receive federal financial support indirectly through states and school districts that fund things like busing, textbooks, or free meals for low-income students. If a second-grade boy at a Catholic school declares himself to be a girl and wants teachers and other students to treat him as such, will the school be forced to comply to avoid a lawsuit, regardless of whether this contradicts the school’s religious teachings? If, as is plausible, the answer to that question is yes, a growing number of parents will have no choice but to send their children into an educational environment that may sow profound confusion about the basic truths of human identity. Further, insofar as Bostock is interpreted (perhaps mistakenly) as affirming that sex is determined by a person’s inner sense of gender identity rather than by biology, parents of gender-confused children may find themselves unable to protect their children from the “gender-affirming” path of social transition, puberty blockers, and eventually cross-sex hormones and surgery. Never mind that the vast majority of gender-confused children naturally come to accept their biological sex if allowed to undergo puberty, or that the “gender-affirming” path has not been proven to resolve gender dysphoria in the long run, and results in permanent loss of fertility and serious long-term health risks. Such arguments were of no avail to the Ohio parents who lost custody of their teenage daughter because they would not allow her to begin hormone treatments to transition to a male gender identity. The combined legal and cultural impact of Bostock threatens to make such tragic cases increasingly common. The dangers of Bostock for parental rights are grave, but not entirely unavoidable. To avert these dangers, we need to take proactive steps to prepare for the challenges to come. Specifically, it is now more crucial than ever to oppose state and federal legislation like the Equality Act, which would further undermine the freedom of private and religious schools to hire in line with their mission and values, and mandate admittance to single-sex facilities and sports based on gender identity. Such legislation could even lead to court-mandated curricula promoting radical views of gender and sexuality in all public schools. Parents and all concerned citizens should tell their elected officials they want laws clarifying that single-sex sports and private facilities do not constitute discrimination, but rather are essential to maintain fairness and protect student privacy and safety. |
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Why Is Trump Divisive? Because He Is Supposed To Be Divisive.
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 08:34 PM PDT by Mario Murillo Ministries: Donald Trump is divisive. He has to be. He is divisive in the way that a surgeon ‘divides’ a cancer from a patient. He is divisive in the way that a cop ‘divides’ an innocent woman from her attacker. He has been placed in the White House to create a division between us and certain disaster. He is uncompromising because the other side wants to destroy the United States. The Democrat Party has erased any possibility of compromise because everything America stands for will simply not survive what they will do to us if they are not stopped. Yes, it is true, that fuzzy-thinking Christians want Trump to be more conciliatory toward his opponents. But it is his opponents, and not Trump, who have made that impossible. Under the current conditions, a good leader must be divisive. Jesus talked about being divisive: “Do not think that I have come to bring peace on the earth; I have not come to bring peace, but a sword [of division between belief and unbelief]. For I have come to set a man against his father, and a daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law; and a man’s enemies will be the members of his [own] household [when one believes, and another does not]” (Matthew 10:34-36). Jesus divided truth and error, light and darkness, slavery and liberty. The modern church has so blatantly neglected her duty to American culture up until now, that we have no choice. We must openly speak out against the agenda of the Democratic Party because they have forced our hand, and, more importantly, the hand of God. According to Gabrielle, we are only imagining the looting, burning and killings that have been running rampant in dozens of major cities. According to her, there is no nationwide crime wave. There are no leftist hordes wreaking havoc across America—there is no unhinged media propaganda campaign to smear our history—there is no educational brainwashing against American values. It is all in our minds. The worst part is that she believes that because he refuses to deny the existence of the ongoing leftist rampage, Trump is being divisive. Wow… It is imperative for Trump to divide us from the Democrat Party’s campaign to poison our history: One of Joe’s Biden’s potential picks for running mate is Tammy Duckworth. Here is what she said on CNN about President Trump’s speech at Mount Rushmore: “He spent all of his time talking about dead traitors.” Here’s the key point: Trump’s speech at Mount Rushmore wasn’t hysteria. It wasn’t tyrannical. It was American. That’s why they hated it. Another thing I am proud that President Trump is dividing us from is the wave of murders, violence, and destruction that is growing daily on every street in America. Tucker Carlson rightly labelled the masses of violent protesters the “armed militia of the Democrat Party.” That is exactly what they are. The top officials of the Democrat Party are more than sanctioning the fires, looting and killing going on in the streets. For Christians to be squeamish about Trump’s rightful divisiveness is tragic. I thank God that Donald Trump is wielding a sword. I thank God he is weathering both the insane onslaught of hatred from the Left and the apathy and outright antagonism coming from lukewarm Christians. Believe me, they are both equally painful to him. He would be horrified that we are blind to what is happening to our country. He would be dumbfounded to see us heading down the exact same road that China took when its people fell into lockstep with the anti-Christ Marxists who came down from the hills looting, burning and pulling down statues. He would be outraged at our apathy toward the chaos and tyranny. And he would be dumbfounded at our hesitation to oppose their godless agenda. Most of all, that man would be the first to praise the forceful way in which Trump is combating this evil. Yes, Trump is divisive. And thank God he is! |
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A Tale of Two Relief Bills…
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 08:09 PM PDT by Tony Perkins: These days, the two parties couldn’t be more different — and their latest attempts at virus relief certainly prove it. House leaders, who ditched the spirit of goodwill that got America through the first CARES Act, have already made it clear that they’re not serious about anything but the elections. Their proposal, which was basically a summary of every radical idea Democrats have ever had, passed in May. Now, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) says, it’s time to get down to business and consider something reasonable. Whether Democrats will is another story. “The Senate will not waste time with pointless partisanship,” McConnell warned when he unveiled his chamber’s plan. “There is a reason why even Speaker Pelosi and Leader Schumer themselves have publicly downplayed the multi-trillion-dollar socialist manifesto they published some weeks back, and have suggested the real, serious discussion would begin when Republicans released our outline.” Unlike House Democrats, the Senate majority doesn’t think taxpayer-funded abortion, cash for illegal immigrants, marijuana banking, state bailouts, rigged elections, and a redefinition of the family will do much about America’s real needs. So they’ve offered something else, the HEALS Act. “I hope this strong proposal will occasion a real response,” McConnell told reporters with an eye on the other chamber. “Not partisan cheap shots. Not the predictable, tired, old rhetoric as though these were ordinary times and the nation could afford ordinary politics.” Instead of the $3 trillion Pelosi’s camp wants to spend, Republicans have pared down their bill to $1 trillion — which, as conservatives have pointed out, is still a huge sum. Specifically, the money is divvied up between things like school funding, another round of stimulus checks and Paycheck Protection Program loans, unemployment benefits, vaccine trials, virus testing, and a handful of other things like liability protections for churches, nonprofits, schools, and businesses who shouldn’t have to worry about being sued for “spreading” the virus if they reopen safely. “There [are] a lot of vulnerable folks out there,” Senator James Lankford (R-Okla.) agreed on “Washington Watch.” The goal is to help keep them afloat with another round of checks that can cover things like rent and food. For businesses, several of which are struggling despite the Small Business Administration loans, there’s a chance to apply for a second round if they’re vulnerable. But one of the biggest changes from the previous versions of the virus relief is the focus on education. And not just public education — but every option for learning. Instead of debating it as a freestanding bill, the Senate decided to roll in the school choice initiative that Senators Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) and Tim Scott (R-S.C.) introduced last week. “We’re trying to do two things,” Lankford explained. “One is [funneling some of] the funds coming down to… private education. This [bill] isn’t just geared toward public education — this is geared toward parents. And so, we’re [setting aside] some of the dollars specifically for private education, but also giv[ing] greater latitude to parents to be able to make choices…” Specifically, the bill creates what are called Emergency Education Freedom Grants, which would send dollars to states in the form of scholarships. Those could be used for private school tuition, for example, or homeschooling expenses. If the states decide not to use the funds for scholarship organizations, they’ll be redistributed to states who will. Just as importantly, the language makes it clear that just because a state takes this money doesn’t mean the federal government will have any control over any aspect of that schooling. Meanwhile, to Democrats who claim the Senate’s version is “totally inadequate,” Lankford shook his head. “I don’t understand an argument about ‘let’s go spend more money.’ We should only spend what is absolutely essential to be able to get through it and get to the other side of it.” |
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Trump Takes Action, Confronting Communist China, Biden’s Promise
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 07:55 PM PDT
by Gary Bauer, Contributing Author: Trump Takes Action But China doesn’t have a good record when it comes to quality and safety. ABC News reported yesterday that 56% of counterfeit or fraudulent Covid-related products (masks, medications, etc.) were coming from China. One senior official said that 85% of all counterfeit goods intercepted by the government over the past five years originated in China. I could go on with a whole list of things, from tainted toothpaste, drywall and dog food, but you get the point. Thankfully, President Trump is taking action to reduce our dependence on communist China. This week, the administration announced that the iconic American film company Kodak had been awarded a major contract under the Defense Production Act to domestically produce as much as 25% of the active ingredients for the nation’s generic drug supply. As a result of this new contract, Kodak is creating hundreds of new jobs and expanding its facilities in Rochester, New York, and Saint Paul, Minnesota. In announcing the deal yesterday, President Trump declared: “When the China virus landed on our shores, it became clearer than ever before that restoring American manufacturing is a core matter of national security. We must never be reliant on a foreign nation for America’s medical or other needs. . . “This is just the beginning. In the coming months, we will continue the largest onshoring campaign in American history. We will bring back our jobs, and we will make America the world’s premier medical manufacturer and supplier.” Confronting Communist China Count me in that 53%. China’s communist bosses repeatedly lied about the severity of the outbreak. They punished doctors who spoke out. And they attempted to corner the market on vital medical supplies, while shipping unk products to other countries in desperate need. Meanwhile, there are disturbing new reports regarding Beijing’s war on faith. The Chinese Communist Party has banned the depiction of miracles in movies or television shows. The move is clearly designed to censor religious content. As one Chinese Christian filmmaker put it, “If we film the life of Jesus avoiding the content banned by the guidelines, we will only be presenting Jesus as an ordinary person, and this is unacceptable to Christians.” As further evidence of just how little respect the communist regime has for human rights, there are growing calls to investigate China’s forced harvesting of human organs. I was recently interviewed by Fox News about this outrageous practice. Read more here. Spreading Panic One of the world’s largest public relations companies recently surveyed 1,000 Americans about their views of the coronavirus. Perhaps the most shocking finding was the extreme difference between perception and reality. The survey found that most Americans believe 20% of the country has been infected with Covid-19. That’s 20 times higher than the CDC’s confirmed figures. They also believe that 9% of the country – roughly 30 million Americans – have died from Covid. That’s 225 times the number of confirmed deaths. If that’s what the American people believe, then clearly the media are failing to report the facts. All they are doing is spreading fear and panic. Biden’s Promise While “Uncle Joe” may say a lot of goofy things, he’s serious about this one. Socialist Bernie Sanders wrote much of his platform. From abortion on demand to taxpayer-funded sex changes, open borders and crushing religious liberty, a Biden presidency would destroy America as we know it. Biden also addressed the riots of recent weeks during yesterday’s rambling press conference, saying: “We should never let what’s done in a march for equal rights overcome what the reason for the march is. And that’s what these folks are doing. And they should be arrested — found, arrested and tried.” Sorry, Joe, but the violence is not wrong simply because it is detracting from the cause. For many so-called “progressives,” it seems violence is their cause! The violence is wrong because people are being killed. Businesses and livelihoods are being destroyed. Law enforcement officers are being injured and blinded. And the progressive movement that Joe Biden is leading wants to defund the police. It’s no wonder that more than 100 police departments are refusing to provide security at the Democrat National Convention next month! If any of the reporters at yesterday’s press conference were actual journalists and not just Democrat hacks, someone would have asked the obvious follow-up question: “Mr. Biden, will you condemn the progressive mayors and other politicians who are siding with anarchists and arsonists, and restraining the police from restoring order?” We can’t go back to the Obama/Biden malaise days. We must defeat the radical left! |
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The Democratic Assault On The Rule Of Law
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 07:21 PM PDT by E.P. Unum: Yesterday the nation was provided with a very sad, frustrating and troubling display by the House Judiciary Committee Chaired by Gerry Nadler (D) from New York. Billed in the liberal media as an extraordinary opportunity to hear from the Attorney General of the United States, William Barr, on a wide range of issues, the American people were treated to a well rehearsed, well orchestrated example of political assault on an individual whose background, reputation and experience and service to our nation under two Presidents deserved far better. It was certainly good that AG Barr was accorded the right to read his Opening Statement into the record at the outset because that is the only opportunity he had all day to testify about anything! An integral part of addressing and solving problems is to first acknowledge that problems are real, they exist and require a thoughtful solution. Therein lies the rub. Democrats to a person consider the rioting, looting, destruction of businesses, tearing down of monuments and statues, burning of and desecration of churches and houses of worship and the physical assault on police and federal agents as “peaceful protests”. Not one Democrat, in yesterday’s hearing or at any other time, has spoken out against all of the upheaval we have witnessed in cities like Portland, Seattle, Chicago, Detroit, Baltimore, Atlanta, Houston and others. Indeed, when asked about the role of Antifa in all of these cities, Gerry Nadler declared that “this is all a myth. Antifa does not exist except in the minds of people in Washington D.C” And, therein lies the central crux of the chaos we are seeing in our city streets. Democrats are in denial because it does not fit their narrative that “all is well and if there are any problems they are all due to President Trump.” Listening to Mr. Nadler articulate those tell-tale words and watching his behavior as Chair of the House Judiciary Committee yesterday and his total lack of respect…indeed, disdain…for Attorney General Barr, my thoughts ran back to another tragic stain on American Honor, the fiasco known as Benghazi. Recall, the words of then President Barack Obama who announced that Benghazi was the result of an obscure video (few people ever saw) made by an even more obscure individual that supposedly was “disrespectful” to the Prophet Mohammed. Susan Rice, another Obama acolyte chimed in with the same explanation as did Hillary Clinton. All greeted the families of the four heroes who fought for nine long hours defending our consulate and perished in the assault, echoing the same lie. We were told that Benghazi was a sudden, unexpected spontaneous protest and that there was no way we could have gotten aid to those defending against the assault. They never bothered to explain why we never tried to help nor to explain why the U.S. Southern Command General Carter Hamm was told to “stand down” as he was preparing to dispatch military assets to assist in the Benghazi attack. We are still today awaiting that explanation. All of these Pinocchio-like stories put forth by then President Obama, Hillary Clinton, Susan Rice and others were blatant falsehoods. Spontaneous protests don’t arise with protesters showing up with mortars, RPG’s, Machine guns, AK-47’s and grenades. And we did have assets available that could have been dispatched but were prohibited from doing so because of the “stand down” order. So, who has the juice to tell a four star combatant commander in the field to “stand down”? We have not heard a valid explanation on that point but the entire situation is a close parallel to what we have seen yesterday in the debacle that masked as a Judiciary Hearing It has to be the first time in recorded history when a witness was called, put under oath, and was denied the opportunity to fully respond to questions from Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee. And it is astounding that Democrats on the Committee all day long echoed the party line that there was no problem. “All the protests were peaceful.” Almost universally, when AG Barr was asked a question by a House Democrat, as he attempted to answer, he was summarily cut off from doing so and the words spoken by each Democrat were…”Reclaiming my time” or “This is my time Mr. Barr and you are not responding to my question” followed by, once again, “reclaiming my time”. I may be wrong, but it sure did appear that this was well rehearsed and well planned. The order of the day seemed to be “when AG Barr attempts to respond” interrupt him abruptly by saying “reclaiming my time”, then deflect attention by attacking him. Democrats did this brilliantly! But in doing so, they failed miserably in the Court of Public Opinion because Americans are way too smart to be fooled by this kind of rhetoric when they can see plainly for themselves what is happening and the carnage it has produced in our cities. Democrats were not interested in hearing from AG Barr as much as they were interested in trying to intimidate or attack him. Their “questions” were not for the purpose of acquiring knowledge but displaying it. They were political statements and in some cases, such as Ms. Talib, condescending, arrogant and insulting. More importantly, democrats universally refused to acknowledge that what was occurring in cities like Portland was anything but “peaceful protests”; in other words, there were no problems. Time after time, Democrats attempted to pass off the ridiculous contention that “if there were problems, it was only because Trump sent in federal troops to attack the protesters”. The fascinating thing for me is that Democrats actually believe that Americans are stupid and that they will believe the nonsense put forth by people like Gerry Nadler and that circus they called yesterday’s Judiciary Hearing. Democrats are desperate to put forth their narrative that there really are no problems; that people are just upset with President Trump and that once Joe Biden is elected, all the frustration and difficulties will go away. You have eyes and you have ears. You can see and hear what is going on. Is this what you want for your future? Lawlessness, constant fear, destruction of your property and businesses? Is this the future you want for your children? You have the power to avoid this in November. Act worthy of yourselves. |
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Propaganda Media and Coronavirus Lies
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 07:06 PM PDT by Newt Gingrich: Steve Krakauer has a remarkable outline of how misleading the propaganda media has been in its coverage of coronavirus. Krakauer, in his Fourth Watch newsletter, he points out, “Yes, the media’s obsession with COVID-19 cases – above any other metric – continues, and its anti-science crutch is hurting their coverage, and giving viewers a false idea of the coronavirus crisis in America.” Krakauer’s own belief is that tracking cases is unhelpful because the reporting and accuracy of case tracking is terrible. The current panic-stricken news coverage of Florida, Texas, California focuses on cases and not on deaths. There is a deep desire by the propaganda media to make Republican-led states look bad, and to protect Gov. Andrew Cuomo and the Democrat-led states. Yet, the facts about coronavirus deaths are unavoidable. Based on Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data (which is itself suspect because of various bureaucratic reporting problems), Krakauer reported:>dir>“New York has 32,688 reported deaths, and a per capita figure of 1,680 per million residents. California has just 8,449 total deaths, and 273 per millions. Florida meanwhile has just 5,855 total deaths and 273 per million. That’s between 6-8x fewer deaths.”He goes on to point out that New Jersey’s 1,787 deaths per million actually makes it the “hardest hit” state, Now, if you saw the headline “Florida Saving Lives at Six Times the Rate of New York and New Jersey,” Gov. Ron DeSantis would clearly appear more effective than Govs. Cuomo and Phil Murphy. But, of course, you won’t see that headline. DeSantis is a pro-Trump Republican, and Cuomo and Murphy are liberal Democrats. In fact, Cuomo’s liberalism protects him from any serious investigation into why so many more people died in New York – and how much he is responsible for the gigantic failure of policy. The propaganda media’s desire to hurt President Trump by panicking the American people over coronavirus is so great that scandalous errors and failures in disease reporting simply go unnoticed. After all, if the American people learned how erroneous and mistake-ridden the reports were, they would be less inclined to panic. That would hurt the propaganda media’s goal of defeating President Trump in November. CBS-12 News in West Palm Beach reported: “A 60-year-old man who died from a gunshot wound to the head. A 90-year-old man who fell and died from complications of a hip fracture. A 77-year-old woman who died of Parkinson’s disease. These are some of the deaths in Palm Beach County recently, and incorrectly, attributed to COVID-19 in medical examiner records.”If this kind of routine over-reporting were found around the country, the total number of COVID-19 deaths would be brought down significantly. The testing results are even more suspicious than the reported deaths. My daughter and son-in-law live in Key Biscayne, Florida. For weeks, they had been telling me about people who never got tested but receiving letter in the mail saying they had tested positive. A good friend, who also lives in Key Biscayne, had his own stories about phony positive tests. At first, I thought this must be a fluke. Then, I discovered that Gov. DeSantis was calling for an investigation into widespread testing fraud. If you search for “testing fraud in Florida,” you will be amazed how many stories show up. There were hospitals reported by the state as having 100 percent positive test results, when in fact the hospital said it had only 18 percent of people test positive. With this kind of widespread gap between bureaucratic paperwork and actual results, it is really impossible to say what the ground truth has been. That is one reason that deaths have been a more reliable indicator than cases. Yet, even reporting deaths from coronavirus has been wildly inaccurate. I was startled to learn that according to the CDC reports, the deaths from COVID-19 had dropped 98 percent in the last 12 weeks. I would have thought this would have led every newscast as a sign of progress. Here are the CDC weekly numbers: Week of 5/09/2020 – 11,029 Deaths Week of 5/16/2020 – 9,020 Deaths Week of 5/23/2020 – 7,047 Deaths Week of 5/30/2020 – 6,011 Deaths Week of 6/6/2020 – 4,868 Deaths Week of 6/13/2020 – 4,046 Deaths Week of 6/20/2020 – 3,580 Deaths Week of 6/27/2020 – 3,384 Deaths Week of 7/4/2020 – 3,689 Deaths Week of 7/11/2020 – 3,814 Deaths Weed of 7/18/2020 – 2,373 Deaths Week of 7/25/2020 – 257 DeathsHowever, the CDC website warns that death data is not immediately complete because of the lag between the death, the production of the death certificate, and the time it takes to report. Depending on where the death happened, this can take up to eight weeks. Given the CDC’s own statement of inaccuracy, I checked three other sources and the variance for just the week of July 25 is unbelievable: As of Monday, the CDC reported 257 deaths for the week of July 25 (with the one-to-eight-week lag time of data). Yet, The Washington Post had reported 6,298 for the week. The New York Times had reported 6,353 for the week. And the World Health Organization – 5,989 for the week. If in one week there can be a 184 percent difference in reporting (from 257 to 6353) on something as clear as death, no wonder we have had a hard time finding the right policies to defeat COVID-19. Remember: The next time you see a panic-inducing article about COVID-19 in the propaganda media, it may be accurate – or it may just be designed to frighten you and defeat President Trump. |
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AG Barr: Portland Insurrection by Antifa on Federal Courthouse ‘An Assault on the U.S. Gov’t’
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 06:51 PM PDT by Robert Romano: “What unfolds nightly around the courthouse cannot reasonably be called a protest; it is, by any objective measure, an assault on the Government of the United States.” That was Attorney General William Barr, pulling no punches on the two-months-long riot directed at the Mark O. Hatfield Federal Courthouse in Portland, Oreg. in testimony to the House Judiciary Committee on July 28. The riot, like so many others across the country, began following the tragic death of George Floyd in Minneapolis police custody in May, and is in part being directed by Antifa. Barr went on to describe the nightly mayhem, stating, “Every night for the past two months, a mob of hundreds of rioters has laid siege to the federal courthouse and other nearby federal property. The rioters arrive equipped for a fight, armed with powerful slingshots, tasers, sledgehammers, saws, knives, rifles, and explosive devices. Inside the courthouse are a relatively small number of federal law enforcement personnel charged with a defensive mission: to protect the courthouse, home to Article III federal judges, from being overrun and destroyed.” And it’s getting worse. From Barr, again, “In recent nights, rioters have barricaded the front door of the courthouse, pried plywood off the windows with crowbars, and thrown commercial-grade fireworks into the building in an apparent attempt to burn it down with federal personnel inside. The rioters have started fires outside the building, and then systematically attacked federal law enforcement officers who attempt to put them out—for example, by pelting the officers with rocks, frozen water bottles, cans of food, and balloons filled with fecal matter. A recent video showed a mob enthusiastically beating a Deputy U.S. Marshal who was trying to protect the courthouse – a property of the United States government funded by this Congress – from further destruction. A number of federal officers have been injured, including one severely burned by a mortar-style firework and three who have suffered serious eye injuries and may be permanently blind.” Barr is right. These are not peaceful protests, by wanton acts of political violence and an attempt to overthrow the federal government. Barr added, “we should all be able to agree that there is no place in this country for armed mobs that seek to establish autonomous zones beyond government control, or tear down statues and monuments that law-abiding communities chose to erect, or to destroy the property and livelihoods of innocent business owners. The most basic responsibility of government is to ensure the rule of law, so that people can live their lives safely and without fear.” For now, Barr is promising the Justice Department will do what it can to ensure the rule of law in Portland and across the country. So far, the U.S. Marshals Service have deployed about 100 deputy marshals to secure the perimeter around the building, but the size of the riot has grown to about 4,000 large on some nights according to some estimates, and it may be time to call in the National Guard. “It’s scary. You open those doors out, when the crowd is shaking the fence, and… on the other side of that fence are people that want to kill you because of the job we chose to do and what we represent,” said one Deputy U.S. Marshal who has been protecting the courthouse for weeks. President Trump blasted the violence on Twitter, stating, “The Fake News Media is trying to portray the Portland and Seattle ‘protesters’ as wonderful, sweet and innocent people just out for a little stroll. Actually, they are sick and deranged Anarchists & Agitators who our great men & women of Law Enforcement easily control, but who…….would destroy our American cities, and worse, if Sleepy Joe Biden, the puppet of the Left, ever won. Markets would crash and cities would burn. Our Country would suffer like never before. We will beat the Virus, soon, and go on to the Golden Age – better than ever before!” But at some point, if the City of Portland cannot restore order — Oregon Governor Kate Brown refuses to activate the National Guard and city has demanded the protective fence surrounding the building come down despite multiple arson attempts — a military attack like this should be met with a military response. Which, the President would be well within his power to do so. Under 10 U.S. Code § 252, “Whenever the President considers that unlawful obstructions, combinations, or assemblages, or rebellion against the authority of the United States, make it impracticable to enforce the laws of the United States in any State by the ordinary course of judicial proceedings, he may call into Federal service such of the militia of any State, and use such of the armed forces, as he considers necessary to enforce those laws or to suppress the rebellion.” Enacted in 1792 in response to the Whiskey Rebellion and updated in 1795, 1807 (when the Insurrection Act replaced it), 1861 and 1956, this provision of law was used by George Washington to put down the Whiskey Rebellion, by Abraham Lincoln to wage the Civil War and by Dwight Eisenhower in 1957 when Arkansas attempted to use the Arkansas National Guard to block Brown v. Board of Education and Eisenhower federalized the Guard to enforce it. In Lincoln and Eisenhower’s cases, neither intervention was at the request of state governors. This column had called for similar action against the autonomous zone established in Seattle before the city finally relented and had it disbanded. The federal government absolutely cannot afford to back down in this instance — or else risk the rebellion spreading even further. Barr and Trump are right. It’s time to get tough. |
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Self-Cancel Culture
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 06:32 PM PDT by Kerby Anderson: It should be obvious to just about anyone with a bit of common sense that the “cancel culture” has gone off the deep end. I have talked about J.K. Rowling, writer of the Harry Potter series, who has been attacked for saying things that are biologically true but contrary to the latest politically correct transgender ideology. Then there is the communications director of Boeing who was forced to resign because of an article he wrote a third of a century ago questioning the wisdom of placing women in combat roles. The latest example of cancel culture is what has now been dubbed the “self-cancel culture.” Yes, you read that right. Now anyone offending the sensibilities of the woke crowd is expected to self-cancel. Here is one good example. Alexandra Duncan had a novel coming out by Greenwillow, an imprint of HarperCollins. Parts of her book were written from the point of view of a black person from the Georgia and South Carolina Low Country. But there was a problem, the author is white. Some of her online acquaintances questioned the propriety of a white woman writing from the perspective of a black American. Therefore, she decided to cancel her book. It gets even more involved. Ms. Duncan explained in a statement that as a white person, she might not be able to responsibly depict someone from this culture. The trade magazine, Publishers Weekly, posted an article about her self-cancellation on its website. But you cannot read it. Publishers Weekly named the person whose critical queries caused Ms. Duncan to cancel her book. That person was then criticized for her comments on Twitter, which lead to Publishers Weekly killing the article about the book. If you want to understand the cancel culture, here it is. The author cancels her book, the magazine reports the cancellation, and the trade magazine then cancels the article about self-cancellation. Welcome to the self-cancel culture. |
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The Private Space Race
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 06:23 PM PDT
by John Stossel: This week, American astronauts returned to earth. Their trip to the space station was the first manned launch from the U.S. in 10 years. By NASA? No. Of course, not. This space flight happened because government was not in charge. An Obama administration committee had concluded that launching such a vehicle would take 12 years and cost $36 billion. But this rocket was finished in half that time — for less than $1 billion (1/36th the predicted cost). That’s because it was built by Elon Musk’s private company, Space X. He does things faster and cheaper because he spends his own money. “This is the potential of free enterprise!” explains aerospace engineer Robert Zubrin in my newest video. Of course, years ago, NASA did manage to send astronauts to the moon. That succeeded, says Zubrin, “because it was purpose-driven. (America) wanted to astonish the world what free people could do.” But in the 50 years since then, as transportation improved and computers got smaller and cheaper, NASA made little progress. Fortunately, President Obama gave private companies permission to compete in space, saying, “We can’t keep doing the same old things as before.” Competition then cut the cost of space travel to a fraction of what it was. Why couldn’t NASA have done that? Because after the moon landing, it became a typical government agency — overbudget and behind schedule. Zubrin says NASA’s purpose seemed to be to “supply money to various suppliers.” Suppliers were happy to go along. Zubrin once worked at Lockheed Martin, where he once discovered a way for a rocket to carry twice as much weight. “We went to management, the engineers, and said, ‘Look, we could double the payload capability for 10% extra cost.’ They said, ‘Look, if the Air Force wants us to improve the Titan, they’ll pay us to do it!'” NASA was paying contractor’s development costs and then adding 10% profit. The more things cost, the bigger the contractor’s profit. So contractors had little incentive to innovate. Even NASA now admits this is a problem. During its 2020 budget request, Administrator Jim Bridenstine confessed, “We have not been good at maintaining schedule and … at maintaining costs.” Nor is NASA good at innovating. Their technology was so out of date, says Zubrin, that “astronauts brought their laptops with them into space — because shuttle computers were obsolete.” I asked, “When (NASA) saw that the astronauts brought their own computers, why didn’t they upgrade?” “Because they had an entire philosophy that various components had to be space rated,” he explains. “Space rating was very bureaucratic and costly.” NASA was OK with high costs as long as spaceships were assembled in many congressmen’s districts. “NASA is a very large job program,” says Aerospace lawyer James Dunstan. “By spreading its centers across the country, NASA gets more support from more different congressmen.” Congressmen even laugh about it. Randy Weber, R-Texas, joked, “We’ll welcome (NASA) back to Texas to spend lots of money any time.” Private companies do more with less money. One of Musk’s cost-saving innovations is reusable rocket boosters. For years, NASA dropped its boosters into the ocean. “Why would they throw it away?” I ask Dunstan. “Because that’s the way it’s always been done!” he replies. Twenty years ago, at Lockheed Martin, Zubrin had proposed reusable boosters. His bosses told him: “Cute idea. But if we sell one of these, we’re out of business.” Zubrin explains, “They wanted to keep the cost of space launch high.” Thankfully, now that self-interested entrepreneurs compete, space travel will get cheaper. Musk can’t waste a dollar. Space X must compete with Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin, Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic, Boeing, Lockheed Martin and others. The private sector always comes up with ways to do things that politicians cannot imagine. Government didn’t invent affordable cars, airplanes, iPhones, etc. It took competing entrepreneurs, pursuing profit, to nurture them into the good things we have now. Get rid of government monopolies. For-profit competition brings us the best things in life. |
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Barr Eats the Democrats’ Lunch
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 06:13 PM PDT . . . House Democrats repeatedly tried to “reclaim their time” in order to “cancel” AG Barr — and for good reason. It’s unclear whether Keystone Staters knew they were sending a comedic genius to Congress, but that’s exactly what they did. How else to explain her straight-faced delivery of such a howler, a side-splitter, a spit-takingly hilarious remark? Dean was addressing Attorney General William Barr yesterday during his testimony before the House Judiciary Committee. And she, like every other Democrat on the committee, was far more interested in rubbing rhetorical feces on herself than in having a civil question-and-answer session. But that’s understandable, because each time they allowed Barr to speak, he left no doubt about who the adult in the room was. (For context, this is the same Democrat-controlled House Judiciary Committee on which Rep. Hank Johnson sits — the same Hank Johnson who once questioned a U.S. Navy admiral about the possibility that Guam will “tip over and capsize” due to the deployment of too many troops.) “The Barr hearing wasn’t very edifying,” wrote National Review’s Rich Lowry, “in large part because Democrats were utterly committed to keeping him from saying anything. One of them would make a sermonette, pause to ask Barr a hostile question, and then angrily interrupt him when he started to answer, accusing him of taking up valuable time. Then, the sermonette would start up again. … It’s a tribute to how good he is that Democrats were desperate never to get caught up in a genuine back-and-forth with him.” Clearly, the committee’s Democrats were coached up on how to interrupt a thoughtful witness who’s smarter than they are. “Reclaiming my time!” they explained. And explained. And explained. Take a look: Still, William Barr easily outclassed them. His six-page opening statement is masterful, a synopsis of which e provided yesterday. As for the hearing itself, the New York Post’s Michael Goodwin opined, “He came, he saw, he ate their lunch.” Throughout the day, one theme kept recurring: Barr’s interrogators doggedly tried to blame him and President Donald Trump for the utter breakdown of law and order in Democrat-controlled cities across our nation. As political analyst John Hinderaker pointed out, “The Democrats are committed to the view that what is happening in Portland, Seattle, Minneapolis, Atlanta and other cities is mere ‘peaceful protest.’ Thus, the Trump administration is unjustified in sending in federal officers to protect federal property, like courthouses. And to the extent that anything untoward happens, it is Donald Trump’s fault. This was the main theory that the Democrats tried to advance through their ‘questioning’ of Attorney General Barr.” Can we blame them? As a recent Harvard CAPS/Harris poll indicates, 77% of registered voters say they’re concerned about rising crime in our nation’s cities, while 46% said they’re concerned about rising crime in their own communities. So law and order is a campaign issue, and no one in their right mind views the Democrats as the law-and-order party. (Quick: Name a Republican-controlled city or town that’s currently under nightly siege by antifa or Black Lives Matter. We’ll wait.) “Excuse me, Mr. Barr, this is my time and I control it,” snapped Washington’s Pramila Jayapal in a typical exchange. “You are aware of certain kinds of protesters, but in Michigan, when protesters carry guns, and Confederate flags, and swastikas, and call for the governor of Michigan to be beheaded and shot and lynched, somehow, you’re not aware of it.” Setting aside the difficulty of lynching someone after they’ve been beheaded, Jayapal was being thoroughly dishonest in trying to compare more than 60 straight nights of very real leftist rioting in Portland to a couple of hours of peaceful afternoon protesting in Michigan. In the former instance, a federal courthouse is in danger of being torched; in the latter, a thin-skinned Caitlyn Jenner-looking governor’s feelings are in danger of being hurt. Somewhat lost amid all the rancor were the other issues covered during the hearing. Our friends at Daily Signal lists six highlights here, including Barr’s revelation of a separate probe into the Obama administration’s unmasking of former Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn and others connected with the Trump campaign, and the disgraceful comments of Tennessee Congressman Steve Cohen, who blamed Barr for the jailhouse death of sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and then hung the threat of impeachment over the AG. Also lost was an ongoing issue that seems obvious and yet isn’t being discussed: the relentless assassination by Democrats and their media henchmen of Barr’s good name and character. This concerted effort, it seems, is modeled after the Clinton administration’s treatment of Whitewater Special Prosecutor Kenneth Starr: Destroy the messenger, and you’ll destroy the message. One day in the future, Barr and U.S. Attorney John Durham will deliver a report on the findings of the criminal inquiry into the phony Russia investigation and all its components. And that report won’t reflect well on the Obama-Biden administration. If yesterday’s Barr hearings reminded us of any one thing, it’s that we’ll have a clear choice to make in the upcoming election: a choice between Donald Trump and Joe Biden. So when you see antifa hoodlums and Black Lives Matter thugs wrecking our cities, think “Biden voters.” Because that’s what they are. On November 3, it’s President Trump or the Mob. That’s the choice. |
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Commie Dearest . . .
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 05:46 PM PDT . . . Many say that the Wall of Moms protesters are just anti-American rioters with a change of clothing.
Tags: editorial cartoon, AF Branco, Commie Dearest, Wall of Moms protesters, just anti-American rioterswith a change of clothing To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Attorney General Barr Scorches Democrats
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 05:39 PM PDT . . . Congressional Dems get exposed on their treacherous enabling of orgies of violence. The Democratic Party officially endorsed Black Lives Matter in 2015 and has all but endorsed Antifa, the purported anti-fascists who embrace fascistic tactics in the name of combating fascism, a term they define promiscuously. President Donald Trump has vowed to designate Antifa as a domestic terrorist organization. Even the increasingly anti-American radicals at the New York Times, which gave birth to the hateful propaganda campaign known as the 1619 Project, have been forced to admit that many police have been injured in the violent nightly demonstrations that have raged for months. In a court filing July 22, the U.S. attorney’s office in Oregon disclosed that 28 federal law enforcement officers had been injured as of that date during the civil unrest in Portland. Another court filing said there are now 114 federal law enforcement officers in Portland, brought in from federal agencies such as Customs and Border Protection and the Federal Protective Service. Local police said separately that 59 officers had been injured. The deployment of federal agents to Portland began on the Fourth of July weekend. Reportedly, the crowds of angry subversives have since swelled from the hundreds to the thousands, as the radicals viewed the federal presence aimed at protecting federal property as a kind of invasion on their home turf. Industrial-grade mortar fireworks have reportedly been fired at police officers and federal agents, and on July 27 a bomb was detonated at the federal courthouse in Portland. “The most serious injury to an officer to date occurred when a protester wielding a two-pound sledgehammer struck an officer in the head and shoulder when the officer tried to prevent the protester from breaking down a door to the Hatfield Courthouse,” according to the filing. Among other injuries were “broken bones, hearing damage, eye damage, a dislocated shoulder, sprains, strains, and contusions.” In daily briefings, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security has reported that its agents have been burned by fireworks and a “caustic substance.” During his testimony, Barr zeroed in on the recent violent attacks by Antifa and Black Lives Matter supporters on the Mark O. Hatfield Federal Courthouse in Portland, Oregon, a hotbed of radical activity. Democrats won’t criticize the violence because their America-hating base supports it as a way of undermining President Trump. Democrats, he told the Democrat-run House Judiciary Committee July 28, have refused to condemn the various assaults on the courthouse and on police guarding it. And they have also accused President Trump of sending federal police to Portland as agents provocateurs and an invading federal army. They claim that Trump is using federal agents as props to assist him in his ongoing bid for reelection. They are echoing Sixties counterculture legal icon William Kunstler, who infamously said the police can be “an army of occupation” in the inner-city. Some of the more unhinged critics have even recently accused the federal personnel of kidnapping peaceful protesters off the streets and whisking them away to secret prisons. “What makes me concerned for the country is, this is the first time in my memory that the leaders of one of our great two political parties, the Democratic Party, are not coming out and condemning mob violence and the attack on federal courts,” Barr said at the hearing, as reported by Tyler O’Neil at PJMedia. “Why can’t we just say violence against federal courts has to stop? Could we hear something like that?” The federal government is required to defend U.S. government property such as the Portland courthouse, Barr said. It has a duty to protect “federal property, and specifically U.S. courthouses, which are the heart of federal property in all 93 jurisdictions in the United States. And we have the obligation to protect federal courts.” “Federal courts are under attack. Since when is it okay to burn down a federal court?” Barr asked. “If someone went down the street to the [E. Barrett] Prettyman Court here, that beautiful courthouse we have right at the bottom of the hill, and started breaking windows and firing industrial-grade fireworks in to start a fire, throw kerosene balloons in and start fires in the court, is that okay?” “Is that okay, now?” Barr asked. “No, U.S. marshals have a duty to stop that and defend the courthouse and that’s what we are doing in Portland. We are at the courthouse, defending the courthouse, we’re not out looking for trouble.” At the hearing, U.S. Rep. Steve Chabot, an Ohio Republican, listed some of the weapons the rioters have used to attack the courthouse and federal officers: “rifles, explosives, knives, saws, sledgehammers, tasers, slingshots, rocks, bricks, lasers …” “You have missed some things but that’s a good list,” Barr answered. He added, “powerful slingshots with ball bearings” and the use of “lasers to blind the marshals.” He also said rioters have started fires at the courthouse and “when the marshals come out to try to deal with the fire, they’re assaulted.” Some protesters have been peaceful, but “the particular violent opportunists who are involved here get into these crowds and engage in very violent activity and hijack it.” “Police casualties far exceed anything on the civilian side,” Barr added. Barr’s testimony came the day after U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw, a Texas Republican, went on Fox News Channel to accuse Democrats of providing cover for the violent protesters. “Whether it is sugarcoating their behavior as mostly peaceful or [House Judiciary Committee Chairman] Jerry Nadler saying Antifa is a myth. Remember [U.S. Rep.] Eric Swalwell said he’s never heard of antifa. Remember the governor of Washington refused to even acknowledge that CHAZ [occupation in Seattle] existed at first. There’s a pattern here.” “And here’s another thing,” he said. “You look at words from [House Speaker] Nancy Pelosi. What did she say? She says, you know, this is all Trump’s fault. If we were in power, none of this left-wing terrorism would be happening right now.” The last part of Pelosi’s statement is true. |
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Theft by Spray Paint
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 05:23 PM PDT by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: Graffiti is theft. That is how Heather Mac Donald puts it. “To a conservative,” she writes at City Journal, “graffiti is self-evidently abhorrent, a spirit-crushing blight on the public realm, and a theft of property by feckless individuals who avenge their mediocrity by destroying what others have built.” But that is not how “liberals” or “progressives” see it, she goes on to explain, for they regard marking up buildings and subways and streets and sidewalks as a “political statement,” referencing the New York Times recent characterization of spray-painting on property you don’t own as “a courageous strike against stultifying bourgeois values” representing “urban grit and resistance to corporate hegemony.” With each graffito, Ms. Mac Donald insists, progressives see an icon of “the city’s vibrant, anti-capitalist soul.” An interesting political divide. But this rumination on the “taggers’” art is not random. Mac Donald is aghast that New York Mayor Bill de Blasio has cancelled a graffiti-eradication program. This, she insists, will lead to more crime, worse crime than mere trespass paintings. It’s the Broken Windows idea, and she’s probably right. Allowing small crimes to go unchecked demonstrates a lack of respect for persons and property, and that trains a city’s population to go on to do worse things. But the program was cut for a reason. You see, de Blasio’s disastrous coronavirus response has put New York into the red. The city has to cut somewhere. Mac Donald, however, calls the $3 million saved a “rounding error” on the city’s $88 billion budget. She imputes to de Blasio and others a preference for crime rather than fighting crime. Maybe. And maybe we add law and order to health and commerce as casualties of the pandemic panic. This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. |
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Democrats Plan on Stealing the Election
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 05:13 PM PDT
by Stephen Kruiser: The Kinda/Sorta Election That May Never Be If today’s headline about election-stealing seems a bit over the top and incendiary, I can assure you that it was most intentional. Democrats and their flying media monkeys make outlandish claims like that about conservatives and Republicans all the time and are never held accountable for them. These are, after all, the lunatics who are referring to the presence of federal officers in burning riot cities as a portent of “martial law.” Well, more than one can play the hyperbole hysteria game. And when one is hurling outlandishness at Democrats, history tells us that there is a greater likelihood that it will be true (see how I’m warming up to this so quickly?). At present, the Democrats are attempting to unseat an incumbent president by devising a plan where their candidate doesn’t have to be seen in public for most of the general election campaign. They’re desperate to keep Joe Biden hidden until as many early and mail-in votes as possible are cast for him because they know that the first time he’s on his own in public he’s going to pull down his mask and start sniffing strangers, all the while barking, “Barack likes me!” On the rare occasions when the idiot in the basement is let off-leash by his wife and handlers, he’s babbling about President Trump trying to “steal” the election. He keeps saying it, too, most recently at a virtual fundraiser hosted by one of the celebrities Hillary Clinton thought would wish her to victory. “This president is going to try to indirectly steal the election by arguing that mail-in ballots don’t work. They’re not real. They’re not fair,” Biden said.In each one of these “steal the election” rants, Biden immediately rambles on about mail-in ballots. Again, that’s all they’ve got and they know it. That’s where the real election-stealing can happen and it’s not going to be done by the Republicans. The Democrats have shown — especially in the Trump era — that most of what they throw at the Republicans is just a bunch of twisted political psychological projection. For example, take the absurd notion that Dems have recycled from 2016. They are again insisting that President Trump won’t accept the election results, giving it a minor update, saying that he won’t leave the White House now that he’s the incumbent. This from the party whose vanquished alcoholic grandmother from 2016 is still going on television and saying that the election was stolen from her. Throw in Stacey Abrams and her ongoing psychotic break about being the real governor of Georgia and I think we can see which side has a difficult time accepting the results of an election. In fact, the violence we’re seeing now has more to do with hating Trump than it does with the death of George Floyd. The Democrats began their “peaceful protests” almost the moment Trump was elected and have been ranging back and forth between simple public incivility and violence ever since. It’s been one long tantrum about not accepting the 2016 election results. The Democrats will try to let COVID-19 keep Biden out of sight for as long as they can, but let’s face it, even with the plague’s help they’re going to need some kind of fraud-fest to win this election. Nobody is actually excited about Joe Biden. It looks like he may have a very difficult time pulling in the disaffected Bernie faithful who sort of thought they were owed this one after the DNC rigged 2016 for Granny Maojackets. Given the Democrats’ propensity for projection, all of their “steal the election” talk sure makes it seem as if they are spending a lot of time thinking about stealing an election. Just putting that out there. |
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6 Big Takeaways From the Attorney General’s Capitol Hill Testimony
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 03:28 PM PDT
by Fred Lucas: Attorney General William Barr announced a new investigation Tuesday while strongly defending the Justice Department’s actions in protecting the federal courthouse in Portland, Oregon. Barr’s comments came in testimony before the House Judiciary Committee, a hearing that not only was partisan as expected but characterized by rudeness by the panel’s Democrats. A Democrat would ask a question, but when Barr began to answer, he or she would interject, “Reclaiming my time” and continue speaking until the allotted time was up. Despite this tactic, Barr managed to make several points, though he sometimes had to wait for time reserved for Republicans so that he could answer questions posed by Democrats. Here are six highlights from the testimony of President Dnald Trump’s attorney general. 1. New Probe of ‘Unmasking’ Barr told the committee that he assigned U.S. Attorney John Bash of the Western District of Texas to conduct the probe separately from another prosecutor’s ongoing look into the origins of the FBI’s Russia-Trump investigation. Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, the top Republican on the committee, greeted this as breaking news, as did other Republican members. In the course of gathering information in surveilling foreign sources, U.S. intelligence agents routinely intercept communications with U.S. citizens. When that anonymous source is identified at the request of a government official, it’s called unmasking. In and of itself that may not be illegal, but using the person’s identity for political ends could constitute an abuse of power. Barr previously tasked Bash with this, but apparently that initially was part of the wider probe of the beginnings of the Russia-Trump matter by U.S. Attorney John Durham of Connecticut, rather than a separate investigation. “Thirty-eight people unmasked Michael Flynn’s name 49 times in a two-month timeframe,” Jordan said. “Seven people at the Treasury Department unmasked Michael Flynn’s name.” “Is this an issue that Mr. Durham is looking into?” the ranking member then asked. Barr responded: “I asked another U.S. attorney to look into the issue of unmasking because of the high number of unmaskings and some that do not readily appear to have been in the line of normal business.” Jordan: “I want to be clear. So, there is another investigation on that issue specifically going on at the Justice Department right now?” “Yes,” Barr said. Jordan: “So Mr. Durham is looking at how the whole Trump-Russia thing started. You have another U.S. attorney [investigating]. Can you give us that U.S. attorney’s name? Is that something you’re comfortable with doing?” Barr: “John Bash of Texas.” After some back and forth, Jordan said: “I appreciate that. That’s information the committee did not know.” 2. Video of ‘Peaceful Protests’ THE FULL VIDEO CHAIRMAN NADLER DOESN’T WANT YOU TO SEE! Why are you scared of the truth, @RepJerryNadler? — House Judiciary GOP (@JudiciaryGOP) July 28, 2020The video then went to mass riots in which participants set fires, looted stores, broke windows, and tore down fences. Jordan played the video days after Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., declared on camera that Antifa, an extremist group believed to be behind much of the violence, was a “myth.” Later in the hearing, Rep. David Cicilline, D-R.I., showed his own video of what he called peaceful protests that followed the police killing of a handcuffed black man, George Floyd, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The video then went to mass riots in which participants set fires, looted stores, broke windows, and tore down fences. Jordan played the video days after Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., declared on camera that Antifa, an extremist group believed to be behind much of the violence, was a “myth.” Later in the hearing, Rep. David Cicilline, D-R.I., showed his own video of what he called peaceful protests that followed the police killing of a handcuffed black man, George Floyd, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 3. ‘Cannot Reasonably Be Called Protest’ “Others have lost sight of the importance of civil rights law, but now we see the full force of the federal government brought to bear against citizens demonstrating for the advancement of their own civil rights,” Nadler said. “There is no precedent for the Department of Justice to actively seek out conflict with American citizens under such flimsy pretext or for such petty purposes.” Barr replied that the attacks on the Mark O. Hatfield U.S. Courthouse in Portland had no resemblance to peaceful protests. “In the wake of George Floyd’s death, violent rioters and anarchists have hijacked legitimate protests to wreak senseless havoc and destruction on innocent victims,” the attorney general told the committee. “The current situation in Portland is a telling example. Every night for the past two months, a mob of hundreds of rioters has laid siege to the federal courthouse.” Barr continued: The rioters have come equipped for a fight, armed with powerful slingshots, tasers, sledgehammers, saws, knives, rifles, and explosive devices. Inside the courthouse are a relatively small number of federal personnel charged with the defense of mission to protect the courthouse. What unfolds nightly around the courthouse cannot reasonably be called protest. It is by any objective measure an assault on the government of the United States. As elected officials of the federal government, every member of this committee, regardless of your political views and your feelings about the Trump administration, should condemn violence against federal officers and the destruction of federal property.3. ‘OK to Try to Burn Down a Federal Court?’ “Federal courts are under attack. Since when is it OK to try to burn down a federal court?” Barr said, adding: If someone went down the street to the Prettyman Courthouse, that beautiful courthouse we have right at the bottom of the hill, and started breaking windows and started firing industrial-grade fireworks in to start a fire, [throwing] kerosene balloons in [to] start fires in the court, is that OK? Is that OK? No, the U.S. Marshals have a duty to stop that and defend the courthouse. And that is what we are doing in Portland. We are at the courthouse defending the courthouse. We are not out looking for trouble.House Minority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La., asked about the weapons that rioters brought to the courthouse area in Portland. “As far as the weapons you mentioned, let me get this straight: My understanding is the people attacking the building had—among other things—rifles, explosives, knives, saws, sledgehammers, tasers, slingshots, rocks, bricks, lasers,” Scalise said. “Have I missed anything? Does that cover it?” Barr filled in some blanks and repeated some weapons. “You have missed some things, but that’s a good list. They have these powerful slingshots with ball bearings that they shoot. They’ve used pellet guns,” Barr said. “Those projectiles have penetrated marshals to the bone. They use the lasers to blind the marshals. They do start fires, if they can get the fire inside or through the windows. They start fires along the outside of the courthouse. When the marshals come out to try to deal with a fire, they are assaulted.” Later in the hearing, Rep. Doug Collins, R-Ga., asked if the courthouse question would extend to the U.S. Capitol, where Congress goes to work. “Do you think this body right here would rise up if they decided to go and paint the Capitol building?” Collins sasked. Barr responded: “This body, I’m not sure.” Collins: “I think this side would. The other side, I’m not so sure. It may be a ‘peaceful protest’ to burn down the Capitol. Maybe we’re back to 1812 again.” British troops set fire to the White House and the unfinished Capitol during the War of 1812. 4. Impeachment and Jeffrey Epstein Cohen said the word “conveniently” in describing Epstein’s death, as if to question whether it was really a suicide. “You’ve gone through the Fifth Amendment and just negated it, and the 10th Amendment, which leaves general policing to law enforcement, to the states, has been forgotten,” Cohen said. “Maybe what happened was your secret police were poorly trained,” he told Barr. “Just like your Bureau of Prisons guards were poorly trained and allowed the most notorious inmate in our nation’s last several years—Jeffrey Epstein—to conveniently commit suicide. Sad.” Cohen invoked the name of Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., a civil rights icon who died July 17 and whose body at the time was lying in state in the Capitol Rotunda. “Mr. Barr, John Lewis said to us, ‘If not me, who? If not now, when?’” Cohen said. “That’s why I introduced [a measure] which would require this committee to investigate your conduct as attorney general and determine whether you should be impeached.” 5. ‘What Enemies Have I Indicted?‘ “Your tenure has been marked by a persistent war against the department’s professional corps in an apparent attempt to secure favors for the president,” Nadler said. “In your time at the department, you have aided and abetted the worst failings of the president.” But Barr pushed back against such claims by Democrats that he is somehow a patsy for Trump. “The rule of law is, in essence, that we have one rule for everybody,” Barr said. “If you apply one rule to A, the same rule applies to B. I felt we didn’t have this previously at the department. We had strayed.” This was a gentle reference to the Justice Department during the eight years of Barack Obama’s presidency. Barr added: I would just ask people: I’m supposedly pushing the president’s enemies and helping his friends. What enemies have I indicted? Can you point to one indictment that has been under the department that you feel is unmerited, that you feel violates the rule of law? One indictment?No one offered an example. As for presidential friends, Barr addressed the cases of veteran GOP operative Roger Stone, whose prison sentence was commuted recently by Trump, and retired Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn. The Justice Department dropped the case against Flynn that arose from the FBI’s Russia-Trump probe. “Now, you say I help the president’s friends. The cases that are cited, the Stone case and the Flynn case, were both cases where I determined that some intervention was necessary to rectify the rule of law, to make sure people are treated the same,” Barr said. The attorney general took a somewhat different approach to Stone than Trump has, saying he wanted to see Stone go to jail, but with a reasonable sentence. “Stone was prosecuted under me. I said all along, I thought that was a righteous prosecution. I thought he should go to jail and I thought the judge’s sentence was correct,” Barr said. “But, the line prosecutors were trying to advocate for a sentence that was more than twice what anyone else in a similar position had ever served.” Barr continued: This is a 67-year-old man, first-time offender, no violence. They were trying to put him in jail for seven to nine years. I wasn’t going to advocate that, because that is not the rule of law. I agree the president’s friends don’t deserve special breaks. But they also don’t deserve to be treated more harshly than other people.6. Local Law Enforcement ‘Do Their Job’ “It’s one thing to fight crime with joint task forces. That involves the cooperation of state and local officials,” Lofgren said. “But the governor of Oregon and the mayor of Portland have asked that the federal troops leave because the reaction has actually been in reverse proportion. People are showing up because the troops are there. So many of them, I would say most of them, are nonviolent.” The federal government has not sent any military troops into Portland, only civilian law enforcement officers and agents from the Justice Department and the Department of Homeland Security assigned to protect federal buildings. Rep. Steve Chabot, R-Ohio, asked about local leaders. “If local elected officials, mayors and city councils and governors, did their jobs and kept the peace, would it even be necessary for federal law enforcement personnel to be there in the first place?” Chabot asked. “No. That is exactly the point,” Barr said, adding: Look around the country. Even where there are these kinds of riots occurring, we haven’t had to put in the reinforcements we have in Portland because the state and local law enforcement does their job and won’t allow rioters to just come and physically assault the courthouse. In Portland, that’s not the case. … If the state would come in and keep peace on the streets in front of the courthouse, we wouldn’t need additional people at the courthouse.This report has been corrected to say that British troops set fire to both the White House and the Capitol during the War of 1812. |
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Government: When You’re a Hammer, Everything Looks Like a Nail
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 03:04 PM PDT
by Seton Motley, Contributing Author: In this, the Age of Social Media, everything said – must be said curtly and quickly. It is tough to be subtle in less than 280 characters. And sadly, the combination of government schools and social media has rendered most of us stupid – with infinitesimal attention spans. To grab majority attention – one must be loud and brusque. Which works out quite well for the advocates of government. Government is a blunt force instrument. It is not an entity capable of nuance or subtlety. You can not ask government for precision. Government is either off – or all the way on. It is all hammers – all the time. But sometimes – you need a scalpel. Precision carving – rather than mass hammering. Government doesn’t have any scalpels in the bag. If government officials stick to aiming at nails – things remain reasonable. “Wisconsin Republican Congressman Mike Gallagher wants congressional hearings with Apple CEO Tim Cook and the NBA’s Adam Silver over dealings in China connected to forced labor of Uighur Muslims…. “‘Concentration camps, for instance, help make those Nike uniforms that the NBA wears,’ said Hawley. “They should pledge right now — Nike, the NBA, and all these American corporations, that they will not use forced slave labor.” Certainly no problem with any of that. We’ve repeatedly said much of the same about both. It’s very easy to hammer away at those nails. It’s either A or B. You are either for or against having slave Uighurs assemble iPhones and sew sneakers. And it ain’t hard to come up with about a million other, better places you can get those jobs done. But then Congressman Gallagher – overextended himself. He left the Land of Hammers and Nails – and entered Scalpel Land: “Gallagher went a step further and said that he does not think that companies, like the American microchip company Qualcomm, which supplies the Department of Defense and intelligence community, should be doing business with companies like Huawei and ZTE.” And it ain’t Congressman Gallagher alone: “The U.S. has led a worldwide campaign to convince foreign governments to bar Huawei from their advanced telecommunications networks, arguing that allowing them into those systems would lead to violations of their citizens’ privacy. “The U.S. has also threatened NATO and other allies with curtailments or suspensions in intelligence sharing and cooperation should they allow Huawei components or technology in their high-speed networks.” Except unlike with the manufacture of shoes and phones – there’s a bit of a problem with immediately dumping Huawei. China’s Huawei Bigfooted U.S. Companies in 5G Technology: “Trump wants to avoid business with Chinese tech firms, but no American company makes the same wireless equipment.” Why Doesn’t the U.S. Have Its Own Huawei? Why doesn’t anyone else? Because what China did – was for years subsidize the daylight out of Huawei’s hardware. Huawei undersold everyone else – and thereby drove everyone else out of this crucial link in the Internet chain. China’s subsidies – bought Huawei a monopoly. You want Uighurs to immediately stop making hightops? No problem. You can quickly move your factory to Incheon. Or, preferably, Indiana. You want Uighurs to immediately stop assembling Apple stuff? No problem. You can quickly move your factory to Bangalore. Or, preferably, Battle Ground, Michigan. But the entirety of the world’s Internet – has spent years building itself up and around Huawei’s hardware. And we have nothing with which to immediately replace it. Unlike Obamacare, you can’t repeal Huawei and replace it with nothing. And years of past stupidity – does not mean we should lurch forward stupidly. Fortunately, the cavalry is assembled – and is coming. A Tech Solution to a Communist China 5G Monopoly Problem 5G’s New Twist: Build with Software Instead of Hardware: “A new coalition of more than 30 tech companies launched Tuesday to advocate federal policies to fund research and development of open and interoperable 5G networks. “The White House has promoted the same approach because it wants to see 5G built out in the U.S. and abroad without using network gear made by China’s Huawei….” But we’re not there yet. Congressman Gallagher and his ilk need to temporarily stow their hammers. We first need the scalpels. |
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The 60th Annual NDAA Supports A Robust U.S. Military
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 02:49 PM PDT The Senate ‘Soundly Rejected’ A Radical Amendment Supported by Prominent Democrats To Slash Funding For Defense, And Then Advanced The Strong FY 2021 National Defense Authorization Act To Protect America, Give A Raise To Our Troops, And Respond To Challenges From Our Adversaries SENATE MAJORITY LEADER MITCH McCONNELL (R-KY): “This week, the Senate will pass the 60th annual National Defense Authorization Act. Every year, this legislation lets the Senate make our top priorities for protecting our homeland, our allies, and our global interests into law. And certainly, the recent behavior of our adversaries the world over shows why this task is as urgent as ever…. Amid these threats and many others, the American people and the entire free world look to the men and women of the U.S. military to preserve order and peace…. After years of cuts to our military that weakened readiness, imperiled modernization, and called into question our commitment to preserving our own global interests, we have reversed that tide. We’ve invested in strength. We built a new National Defense Strategy and are investing in rebuilding and modernizing our military to help achieve it. This legislation will carry the progress even further. More support for defense research and innovation… resources for military housing and healthcare… tools to deepen our commitments with regional partners in Europe and the Pacific.” (Sen. McConnell, Remarks, 7/22/2020) SEN. JIM INHOFE (R-OK), Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman: “[F]or 59 years in a row, Congress has passed the NDAA–almost always on a bipartisan basis. This year will be the 60th year in a row. I am proud to say the fiscal year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act continues in that long bipartisan tradition…. [Recently], I talked a little bit about how we are falling behind China and Russia and how those two countries are now our biggest threats. I think we all know how that happened. It happened in the last 5 years of the Obama administration…. Fortunately, we have a strategy to counter them. It is called the National Defense Strategy…. It came out in late 2018. At that time, the military services had been implementing this plan with the support of Congress in previous NDAAs. This is the third year now that we have that. What we did this year was speed up the implementation. We set America on a course to make sure that we are setting ourselves up for success no matter what threat comes our way. We do that by using this document, the NDS, the National Defense Strategy Commission report. What this says is that we need to create a credible military deterrent that tells Russia and China and anyone else who would do us harm: You just can’t win. We are going to win. We will beat you–no matter who you are out there. That is what this NDAA does. It says that we need to invest in the equipment, tools, weapons, resources, and training our troops need to succeed in their mission. We also make sure that they are in the right places and at the right time. That is what the NDAA … will do.” (Sen. Inhofe, Congressional Record, S.3640, 6/29/2020) The Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act Features A 3% Pay Raise For Our All-Volunteer Armed Forces, Hazard Pay For Those Assisting On Coronavirus Response, And ‘Policies That Improve The Well-Being And Resiliency Of Military Families’ “The FY21 NDAA supports the requested 3 percent pay raise for the military, and reauthorizes more than 30 types of bonuses and special pay.” (“Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act,” U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, 6/23/2020)
“[T]he FY21 NDAA prioritizes programs and policies that improve the well-being and resiliency of military families. The legislation continues efforts to promote professional development opportunities for military spouses, by authorizing $4 million to assist with the development of interstate compacts on licensed occupations for military spouses through the cooperative agreement with the Council of State Governments … continues efforts to provide military families with quality, affordable child care, adds funding for child development centers playground equipment and furniture to address safety issues … and authorizes additional funding to maintain the student-teacher ratios at DOD schools and increases funding for Impact Aid by a total of $70 million to support school districts educating military children, which includes $20 million for Impact Aid for children with severe disabilities.” (“Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act,” U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, 6/23/2020)
This Year’s Defense Authorization Bill Continues Implementing The National Defense Strategy And Rebuilding Our Armed Forces ‘To Attain And Maintain An Asymmetric Military Advantage’ “After years of sustained conflict, underfunding, and budgetary uncertainty, Congress focused on rebuilding the military in the past two NDAAs. Progress has been made, but the work is not yet done…. This year’s NDAA focused heavily on prioritizing available resources to address the most worrying shortfalls and imminent threats.” (“Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act,” U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, 6/23/2020)
The Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act Prioritizes Restoring And Enhancing American Advantages Over China And Russia And ‘Establishes The Pacific Deterrence Initiative (PDI) To Send A Strong Signal To The Chinese Communist Party That America Is Deeply Committed To Defending Our Interests’ “Our supremacy in the seas, in the skies, in space, in cyberspace, and on land must be protected, and as we look to the future of warfare, joint capabilities that ensure the protection of the joint force are essential. The FY21 NDAA ensures the United States fields a force of the optimal size, structure, and strategy, capable of supporting the conflicts envisioned by the [National Defense Strategy]. Unfortunately, in key technologies and capabilities, we’ve fallen behind our near-peer competitors. The FY21 NDAA accelerates innovation so we can compete effectively and regain our comparative advantage over China and Russia.” (“Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act,” U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, 6/23/2020) · “The FY21 NDAA directs investments and implements policies that will maintain or expand our comparative advantage over China and Russia for key capabilities and technologies…. [The bill e]ncourages the development of our hypersonic weapons, as well as defenses against the hypersonic weapons of our competitors – an area of intense technological competition between the United States, China, and Russia — a key element of the NDS …” (“Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act,” U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, 6/23/2020) · “Recognizing that a strong and secure nuclear deterrent will serve to counter threats from strategic competitors, the FY21 bill supports our nuclear triad, command and control, and infrastructure, and better aligns the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) and DOD budget processes.” (“Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act,” U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, 6/23/2020) “The FY21 NDAA establishes the Pacific Deterrence Initiative (PDI) to send a strong signal to the Chinese Communist Party that America is deeply committed to defending our interests in the Indo-Pacific. PDI will enhance budgetary transparency and oversight, focus resources on key military capability gaps, reassure U.S. allies and partners, and bolster the credibility of American deterrence in the Indo-Pacific. The bill authorizes $1.4 billion for PDI in FY21, including $188.6 million above the budget request for Indo-Pacific requirements, such as missile defense, enhancing forward posture, and improving interoperability with allies and partners. The bill also authorizes a PDI topline of $5.5 billion for FY22, and directs the Secretary of Defense to create a spend plan for these resources.” (“Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act,” U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, 6/23/2020) “Developing and strengthening mutually beneficial alliances and partnerships is a key tenet of the National Defense Strategy. As such, the NDAA includes numerous provisions to support America’s allies and partners, build new relationships, and ensure our global network is well-positioned to counter existing and emergent threats. The bill supports DOD’s security cooperation efforts to strengthen the capabilities of international partners, particularly in the Middle East, to combat terrorism so the United States can enhance its focus on NDS priorities.” (“Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act,” U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, 6/23/2020)
The Defense Authorization Bill For Fiscal Year 2021 Includes Provisions To Strengthen American Military Capabilities And Weapons And Seeks To Provide U.S. Superiority On Land, On The Sea, In The Air, In Space, And In Cyberspace “Supports Army prioritization of multi-domain capabilities, such as long-range precision fires and increased soldier lethality, Better enables operations within the Multi-domain Task Force to support planning for the future of warfare against near-peer competitors, to improve all-domain integration, and to better penetrate adversaries’ vulnerabilities, Increases investments in Future Long-Range Assault Aircraft, a top Army modernization priority ($5 million above the request), and support ongoing development of future vertical lift capabilities.” (“Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act,” U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, 6/23/2020) “Expresses a sense of the Senate on actions necessary to implement the national policy of the United States to have available as soon as practicable not fewer than 355 battle force ships. Authorizes $21.3 billion for shipbuilding — $1.4 billion above the request … Provides multi-ship contract authority for up to two Columbia -class submarines, three San Antonio-class amphibious ships, and one America-class amphibious ship …” (“Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act,” U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, 6/23/2020) “Establishes a minimum number of aircraft for each major mission area in the U.S. Air Force and prohibits the divestment of aircraft until the minima are reached to ensure that Air Force can meet NDS and combatant command requirements: Prohibits divestment of A-10 aircraft … Requires the Air Force to have no fewer than 386 available operational squadrons or equivalent organizational units … Provides dedicated Air Superiority aircraft in the EUCOM theater and limits divestment of F-15C aircraft in the theater … Authorizes $9.1 billion to procure 95 Joint Strike Fighter aircraft, an additional 14 aircraft above the administration’s request, enabling the forces to modernize and equip themselves with the most advanced and capable fifth-generation aircraft.” (“Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act,” U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, 6/23/2020) “Includes 11 recommendations from the Cyberspace Solarium Commission, established in the FY19 NDAA, including: Improving cyber resiliency of nuclear command and control systems, A modification to fortify the Strategic Cybersecurity program and further cyber vulnerability assessment of weapons systems … Improves cyber readiness … by: Improving the training and retention of highly qualified cyber personnel, including providing Cyber Command with the same hiring authority for technical talent as exists at DARPA, the Strategic Capabilities Office, and the Joint Artificial Intelligence Center, and by allowing for pay that is more competitive with commercial industry.” “Directs the Space Force to continue working with research institutions to establish critical research infrastructure and develop the future workforce, Encourages the establishment of a space training and readiness command … Continues development of the space technology base, including launch vehicles and responsive launch, and recognizes the maturity of reusable space launch capability, Authorizes increased funding for space domain awareness, launch development, and space-based surveillance capability …” (“Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act,” U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, 6/23/2020) “The FY21 NDAA authorizes increases for weapons procurement programs that will be used to support NDS requirements, for a total of $3.7 billion, which is $48.8 million above the request.” (“Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act,” U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, 6/23/2020) In Addition, The Bill Maintains Long-Standing Provisions Keeping Terrorist Detainees At Secure Facilities In Guantanamo Bay “The FY21 NDAA continues long-standing provisions that prohibit the use of DOD funds to: Transfer or release individuals detained at U.S. Naval Station Guantanamo Bay to the United States, Transfer or release individuals detained at U.S. Naval Station Guantanamo Bay to Libya, Somalia, Syria, or Yemen, Construct or modify facilities in the U.S. to house detainees transferred from U.S. Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, Close or abandon U.S. Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, Relinquish control of Guantanamo Bay to the Republic of Cuba, Implement a modification to the treaty that would close U.S. Naval Station Guantanamo Bay.” (“Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act,” U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, 6/23/2020) In Sharp Contrast, Senate Democratic Leaders And Former Democratic Presidential Candidates Backed An Extreme Amendment From Sen. Bernie Sanders To ‘Defund The Pentagon’ 23 Democrats voted for the Sanders amendment to slash the Pentagon budget by 10 percent. (S. 4049, Roll Call Vote #135: Amendment Rejected 23-77, R 0-53, D 22-23, I 1-1, 7/22/2020) · Senate Democratic Leadership members including Sens. Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Dick Durbin (D-IL), Patty Murray (D-WA), and Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) voted for the Sanders amendment. (S. 4049, Roll Call Vote #135: Amendment Rejected 23-77, R 0-53, D 22-23, I 1-1, 7/22/2020, Schumer, Durbin, Murray, and Baldwin Voted Yea) · Former 2020 presidential candidates Sens. Cory Booker (D-NJ), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) voted for the Sanders amendment. (S. 4049, Roll Call Vote #135: Amendment Rejected 23-77, R 0-53, D 22-23, I 1-1, 7/22/2020, Booker, Gillibrand, Klobuchar, Sanders, and Warren Voted Yea) SEN. BERNIE SANDERS (I-VT): “Defund the Pentagon: The Liberal Case” (Sen. Sanders, Op-Ed, “Defund the Pentagon: The Liberal Case,” Politico Magazine, 7/16/2020) · SEN. SANDERS: “It’s time to put #PeopleOverPentagon. I will be on the Senate floor today at 11:20 AM to fight for our amendment to defund the Pentagon …” (Sen. Sanders, @SenSanders, Twitter, 7/22/2020) SEN. CHUCK SCHUMER (D-NY): “Proud I fought alongside [Sen.] Sanders to ensure we vote in July on his amendment to cut $740B defense budget by 10% … I proudly support the amendment” (Sen. Schumer, @SenSchumer, Twitter, 7/10/2020) Leader McConnell: ‘Senator Sanders’ Amendment Would Literally Decimate The Defense Budget. It Would Rip 10 Percent Of It Right Out And Pour The Money Into All The Usual Socialist Fantasies’ “The Senate soundly rejected a stiff cut to military spending Wednesday — the second time in as many days that Congress has turned back a broad-based reduction backed by progressive lawmakers. The vote was 23-77 on an amendment from Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) to cut 10 percent from the $741 billion National Defense Authorization Act, S. 4049 (116). … Sanders’ measure, offered with several progressive Democrats, would redirect the money to a raft of education, health care, housing and other programs they argue need the money far more than the defense budget, which they slammed as bloated and unaccountable.” (“Senate Rejects 10 Percent Cut To Military Budget,” Politico, 7/22/2020) SENATE MAJORITY LEADER MITCH McCONNELL (R-KY): “For most Americans, investing in the greatest fighting force in world history is not controversial. It’s a no-brainer. But lest we forget, the radical energy on the far left is sparking some truly extraordinary behavior among our Democratic colleagues. Case in point. [T]oday, we [voted] on an amendment that was advertised in an opinion essay by the junior Senator from Vermont titled: ‘Defund the Pentagon: the liberal case.’ … We’ve moved on from defunding local police to defunding the United States Armed Forces…. Senator Sanders’ amendment would literally decimate the defense budget. It would rip 10 percent of it right out and pour the money into all the usual socialist fantasies — free rent, free college, free everything for everyone…. Defense spending demonstrates our will to defend ourselves and our interests in a dangerous world. Keeping our nation safe is our foremost constitutional duty. We cannot shirk it. My colleagues who profess concern over Putin’s efforts to interfere in our politics, or Xi’s efforts to rewrite the rules of the international system, must know that we will never be able to deter such behavior if we sell our own soldiers short and surrender our technological edge. I assure you, Beijing and Moscow will be watching this vote.” (Sen. McConnell, Remarks, 7/22/2020)
Tags: The 60th Annual NDAA, Supports, A Robust U.S. Military To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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This Is the Only Medal of Honor Recipient to Ever Give It Back
Posted: 29 Jul 2020 02:08 PM PDT
by Blake Stilwell: The Medal of Honor is the United States military’s highest honor. It is awarded for an act of valor that saves the lives of American troops in combat — often at the risk of one’s own. Charles Liteky’s Medal of Honor was no different, except in one respect. He renounced his medal 19 year later. Liteky, then a captain, was a Roman Catholic chaplain with the U.S. Army in Vietnam in December 1967. He was accompanying Company A, 4th Battalion, of the 199th Light Infantry, in Biên Hòa Province in South Vietnam when they suddenly found themselves ambushed and outnumbered. Two soldiers from the 199th were lying wounded on the ground just 50 feet from an enemy machine-gun nest. The chaplain threw his body on the two men in an effort to protect them from the deadly weapon. Once he realized they weren’t yet shot up, he dragged both back to the landing area to be extracted by helicopter. Wounded in two places, he returned to the fight, pulling out more wounded soldiers and issuing Last Rites to the men who were dead and dying. When he was unable to lift the men, he put them on his belly and crawled, belly-up, to the landing zone. Then, the helicopters began taking fire from the enemy. Liteky started directing medevac helos in and out of the ambush zone. Still wounded, the chaplain stayed with A Company until they could be relieved the next day. He rescued 23 soldiers from the ambush area, all while wounded himself. It was Liteky’s first time in combat. In November 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson presented Liteky with the Medal of Honor. Upon placing the medal on the chaplain, he told the chaplain, “Son, I’d rather have one of these babies than be president.”
“I was 100 percent behind going over there and putting those Communists in their place,” Liteky said. “I had no problems with that. I thought I was going there doing God’s work.” Liteky left the Army as a major in 1971, after a second tour in Vietnam. Just a few years later, in 1975, he left the priesthood and would soon marry his wife. She introduced him to refugees from Central America, specifically El Salvador. In the years that followed, he became a peace activist and anti-war protester because of the stories he learned from those refugees. He was especially concerned with American policies in Central America and U.S. support for Contra rebels in Nicaragua. He wanted the Army to shut down the School of the Americas at Fort Benning, Georgia, because South and Central American troops would use what they learned there on their own people. Liteky led a 47-day hunger strike to protest the school and was arrested for trespassing on Fort Benning in 1986. In 1990, he was sentenced to six months in federal prison for defacing portraits at the school with blood. He was sentenced to a year in prison for the same thing in 2000.
His motivation to march against conflict, the Reagan administration’s policies and the School of the Americas, in particular, he told the San Francisco Chronicle in 2000, is the same motivation that prompted him to run into the jungles of Vietnam and pull out 23 soldiers. He wanted to save lives. “The reason I do what I do now is basically the same,” he said. “It’s to save lives. In the case of the School of the Americas, it’s to stop training the military from the Third World, who take the training back and employ it in the oppression of their people.” To protest the ongoing policy, Liteky — who earned the Medal of Honor under the name Angelo Liteky, placed his award at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall in Washington, along with a letter to President Reagan, in 1986. He also renounced all the benefits and stipends that come with the award. The renunciation of the Medal of Honor caught the Army’s attention. Liteky was personally invited to attend a symposium on human rights by the then-commander of Fort Benning, Maj. Gen. John LeMoyne. The School of the Americas also changed its curriculum to include courses on democracy and international law. Liteky’s Medal of Honor was picked up by the National Parks Service and is currently in the collection of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History. He died in January 2017 at age 85. |
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NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Thursday, July 30, 2020
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Good morning, NBC News readers.
Talks on the next coronavirus relief package seem to have hit a wall just a day before emergency unemployment benefits expire. Civil rights icon John Lewis will be laid to rest after being honored by a former president, NASA heads to Mars and could scientists have solved one of the enduring mysteries of Stonehenge?
Here’s what we’re watching this morning.
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Trump push on short-term coronavirus aid draws frosty GOP reception
Facing bleak prospects for a coronavirus aid deal, President Donald Trump began pushing for a short-term patch Wednesday to protect renters and extend unemployment insurance.
Problem is, members of his own party aren’t going for it.
“There’s no consensus on anything,” Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said after a meeting with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows. “Just a lot of expression on views.”
A federal moratorium on evictions lapsed last week and the unemployment bonus of $600 per week expires on Friday. As of early Thursday, the prospects of a deal in Congress before the emergency unemployment benefits run out is close to nonexistent.
Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., said the problem with the larger package was that the White House was insisting on unrelated spending provisions, such nearly $2 billion for a new FBI building Trump wants.
“I asked the powers that be to take the spending porn out of the bills,” he said.
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‘It cost me everything’: Hispanic residents bear brunt of COVID-19 in Texas
As COVID-19 hammers Texas, Hispanic residents are dying at the highest rate.
In Texas’ largest county, a disproportionate share of new COVID-19 hospital patients — as high as 65 percent some weeks — have been Hispanic.
“Pretty much everyone who I know has had coronavirus or has a family member who’s been sick or is in the hospital,” said Valery Martinez, who by early this week could list 45 Hispanic friends, family members and acquaintances who’ve been sick with the virus in the Houston area — including four who had died.
Meantime, COVID-19 symptoms that can linger for weeks and months after a diagnosis may be wide-ranging — and include everything from joint pain and fevers, to hair loss and double vision.
In fact, those patients, self-nicknamed the long-haulers, reported experiencing 98 different symptoms in a survey released Wednesday.
“They’re not quite sick enough to be hospitalized, but they are suffering from very severe symptoms, sometimes for a very long time at home,” Natalie Lambert, an associate professor of medicine at the Indiana University School of Medicine, said.
Here are other coronavirus developments:
- Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, who until recently refused to wear a mask, tested positive for the coronavirus Wednesday shortly before he was expected to travel with Trump to Texas.
- Dr. Anthony Fauci said Wednesday that trials have shown “consistently” that hydroxychloroquine is “not effective” in treating the disease caused by the coronavirus. He added that the now-deleted video Trump promoted in which a doctor claimed that the drug was a “cure” for COVID-19 was really “a bunch of people spouting something that isn’t true.”
- Meantime, presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden slammed Trump for promoting false COVID-19 claims from “this crazy woman.”
- People with disabilities are more at risk during pandemic. The latest episode of our “Into America” podcast explores how they’re dealing with it.
- Track U.S. hot spots where COVID-19 infection rates are rising.
- The U.S. death toll from coronavirus has surpassed 151,000 according to NBC News’ tally.
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Tech industry ’emperors’ hold too much power, lawmakers allege during heated hearing
Google came under fire for limiting other websites’ traffic, Facebook faced questions about its purchase of Instagram and Amazon was accused of raising diaper prices as lawmakers held a rare congressional hearing Wednesday into whether tech executives have harmed the economy by operating monopolies.
Congress grilled the four major tech CEOs during the antitrust hearing, pressing for answers to allegations of anti-competitive behavior.
At one point, subcommittee Chairman David Cicilline, D-R.I., said the CEOs had become “emperors” on the internet.
While the high-profile hearing was an occasion for lawmakers to air a laundry list of pet peeves, what video call would be complete without a few glitches, snacks and theatrics?
Here are 10 highlights from the hearing you may have missed.
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‘I brought you here to work’: Farmworkers from Mexico lured to U.S. for no-pay jobs
Alberto Reyes was lured to America with the promise of a good job to support his family back home in Mexico.
Instead, he and 18 other workers in rural Georgia found themselves trapped in a nightmare: no pay, no food and forced labor.
The workers had come to the United States under a fast-growing visa program known as H-2A, which Trump has promoted heavily amid his crackdown on undocumented immigration.
But government oversight has not kept pace with the program’s growth, and some workers have faced horrific abuse.
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NASA launches new rover to look for ancient life on Mars
NASA is heading back to the Red Planet.
The agency is set to launch a new rover, a car-size robotic explorer named Perseverance, to Mars on an ambitious mission to scour the planet for evidence of ancient life.
The rover, scheduled to launch Thursday at 7:50 a.m. ET, is designed to study the geology and climate of Mars.
The six-wheel rover will carry a small helicopter, dubbed Ingenuity, to perform experimental test flights in Mars’ thin atmosphere, which, if successful, would mark a milestone in powered flight.
“For the first time ever, we’re going to fly a helicopter on another planet,” NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said during a news briefing earlier this week.
Watch the launch live on NBCNews.com and streaming on NBC News Now.
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Plus
- Former President Barack Obama will eulogize the late Rep. John Lewis at his funeral at Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church this morning.
- Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is resting comfortably in a New York hospital after undergoing a non-surgical procedure on Wednesday.
- Why the Vietnam War could upend a Trump Pentagon nominee.
- Beyond “he” and “she”: 1 in 4 LGBTQ youths use nonbinary pronouns, a new survey found.
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THINK about it
Trump’s horrendous “suburban” tweet is a blatant appeal to his base with its mix of racism and class issues. It also helps Democrats, cultural critic Noah Berlatsky writes in an opinion piece.
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Shopping
Check out Athleta’s new breathable exercise face mask.
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Mystery solved?
For thousands of years, Britain’s Stonehenge has held tight to many of its secrets.
Now, scientists say in a study published Wednesday they have uncovered one: The origin of many of the stones that make up the mysterious prehistoric stone circle thought to date from 2,500 BC.
Researchers believe the large stones — known as sarsens — that make up the main circle and inner horseshoe of the monument, originated 15 miles to the north of the prehistoric circle.
“Archaeologists and geologists have been debating where the sarsen stones used to build Stonehenge came from for more than four centuries,” lead researcher David Nash, a professor of physical geography at the University of Brighton, said.
“This significant new data will help explain more of how the monument was constructed and, perhaps, offer insights into the routes by which the 20- to 30-ton stones were transported,” he added.
Scientists have been trying to unlock the mysteries of Stonehenge since the Middle Ages. (Photo: Matt Cardy / Getty Images file)
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NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: For Biden’s VP, the safest pick might be the safe bet
With 18 days until the Democratic convention begins, it’s anyone’s guess whom Joe Biden picks as his running mate.
Kamala Harris? Elizabeth Warren? Karen Bass? Susan Rice? Val Demings? Someone else?
But at least if recent history is any guide, the safe bet is that Biden’s selection will be pretty conventional – when it comes to experience, qualifications and name ID.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
For the most part, candidates who are ahead in the presidential contest go with the safe, conventional choice – whether that ultimately works out for them or not.
(And by “conventional,” we mean “unsurprising” or “less politically risky.” If Biden picks a woman of color, it would make history, of course.)
Think Joe Biden for Barack Obama in 2008. Or Tim Kaine for Hillary Clinton in ’16.
And the candidates who are behind try SOMETHING else.
Consider Joe Lieberman for Al Gore in 2000. Or Sarah Palin for John McCain in 2008. Or even Paul Ryan for Mitt Romney in 2012, or Jack Kemp for Bob Dole in 1996.
Those nominees all tried to shake up the race in which they were clearly behind.
But that also brings us to one of our favorite lessons about veepstakes: Since we’ve all been covering American politics, the VP choice ultimately doesn’t matter in who wins or loses.
After all, if it truly did matter, then Michael Dukakis (with his pick of Lloyd Bentsen) would have beaten George H.W. Bush (with Dan Quayle).
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John Lewis’ final words
The late Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., wrote an essay for the New York Times that was requested to be published on the day of his funeral, which takes place today in Atlanta.
Here are Lewis’ final words:
“When historians pick up their pens to write the story of the 21st century, let them say that it was your generation who laid down the heavy burdens of hate at last and that peace finally triumphed over violence, aggression and war. So I say to you, walk with the wind, brothers and sisters, and let the spirit of peace and the power of everlasting love be your guide.”
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TWEET OF THE DAY: Who’s delivering eulogies — and who’s not
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DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers that you need to know today
4,377,969: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 70,016 more cases than yesterday morning.)
152,247: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 1,446 more than yesterday morning.)
53.83 million: The number of coronavirus TESTS that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
$8 billion: The amount in the Senate Republican coronavirus aid bill dedicated to military weaponry, prompting anger from Democrats.
More than $1,200: What President Trump says direct payments to Americans may end up being in the relief bill, although he’s facing resistance on that spending from within his own party.
570 percent: How much stock in Kodak soared after the administration announced a deal with the photography innovator to produce ingredients for generic drugs.
About 20 percent: The share of prisoners in New Jersey who could be freed to avoid the virus under new legislation
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2020 VISION: Democrats outline schedule for upcoming convention
The Democratic National Committee on Wednesday night outlined its agenda for the (mostly virtual) convention that begins on Aug. 17, per NBC’s Marianna Sotomayor.
MONDAY, Aug. 17: opening ceremonies, committee reports, select speakers
TUESDAY, Aug. 18: keynote address, nominating and seconding speeches, roll call vote for the nominee
WEDNESDAY, Aug. 19: vice presidential nomination, vice presidential speech
THURSDAY, Aug, 20: acceptance speech by presidential nominee
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AD WATCH from Ben Kamisar
Today’s Ad Watch is a bit of a breath of fresh air.
Kansas’ GOP Senate primary has been filled with high stakes, brutal attacks and some possible Democratic meddling. But this new ad from businessman Bob Hamilton forgets most of that for a moment.
The goofy spot starts with two men fishing talking about Hamilton, the “crazy, Trump supporting, America loving, flag-waving conservative,” only for the man himself to fly by to show off his waterskiing skills and love for Trump. Hamilton skis by them, waving an American flag with both hands and using only his foot to hold onto the rope, all while being towed by a boat flying a Trump flag.
It does include a brief dig at the frontrunners in the race, Roger Marshall and Kris Kobach. But the tone certainly stands out amid the tough attack ads that have blanketed the airwaves.
And it’s also a reminder that while Marshall and Kobach have taken center stage, Hamilton has actually spent more on the airwaves than both campaigns combined, according to Advertising Analytics. That’s been a bit of a thorn in the side of Marshall and his supporters, considering Hamilton has spent some of that money attacking the party establishment’s pick for the seat.
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Mask, please!
After Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, tested positive for the coronavirus on Wednesday – after refusing to wear a mask throughout the Capitol during the pandemic – a new mask mandate has been put into effect for the House.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced that effective Wednesday, all people who enter House office buildings will wear a face covering at all times. Additionally, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows told reporters that the White House is offering to supply rapid coronavirus testing to Congress. “If Leader McConnell and Speaker Pelosi look to that initiative, we’d be glad to help with that. I just talked to Leader McCarthy and offered the availability of some additional testing capacity so that members can conduct their business, since they have to be here on a on a regular basis.”
(And do check out the quotes in Politico from congressional aides who are outraged by the lack of masks and safety on Capitol Hill.)
As for negotiations on coronavirus relief, Republicans and Democrats aren’t close to a deal. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said that after their third day of talks with Democrats, “We don’t have an agreement on anything.” And the $600 weekly federal unemployment benefit expires on Friday.
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THE LID: Tech wreck
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at Americans’ growing wariness of Big Tech.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Joe Biden’s campaign is up on the TV airwaves in Ohio, NBC’s Mike Memoli reports.
And the Lincoln Project is calling Sen. Susan Collins a “Trump stooge” in a new ad campaign.
Trump wants a more generous coronavirus aid package for renters and the unemployed, but he’s getting a frosty reception from some Republicans.
Here’s the latest on the feds v. Portland.
Politico looks into Chris Dodd’s role as one of Biden’s top veep-vetters.
A founder of pro-Trump group Turning Point USA has died from complications related to coronavirus.
The Washington Post asks if Democrats are making the right investments to woo Latinos.
Justice Ginsburg is back in the hospital for a nonsurgical procedure.
The Boston Globe endorsed Ed Markey. Joe Kennedy’s not happy about it.
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