Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday August 27, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
August 27 2020
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Good morning from Washington. What’s going on in Portland, which continues to face unrest? Lora Ries joins the podcast to explain. Is Susan B. Anthony the next victim of the left’s war on history? Katharine Gorka hopes not. Plus: What back to school looks like in the COVID era, and an in-depth look at the different treatment the FBI gave to the Clinton and Trump campaigns. Can you spell “ |
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THE RESURGENT
THE EPOCH TIMES
Hillsdale College is preparing to launch its all-new Western Philosophy online course, in an effort to build a defense against dangerous ideologies and to prevent their spread. Claim your spot today!
“There is only one way to happiness and that is to cease worrying about things which are beyond the power of our will.”
EPICTETUS
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In our fast-moving digital age, too many people have forgotten how to reason and deliberate — which has serious consequences for our country, our citizens, and our relationships.
A good education in philosophy serves as a bulwark against ideas that are destructive to human life and freedom.
That’s why Hillsdale College is launching a new online course, “Introduction to Western Philosophy”, to help students understand how to pursue wisdom rooted in the most important ancient, medieval, and modern philosophers. This new course will also trace the history of philosophy.
Don’t wait—secure your spot today for this free online course!
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For the last four years, former Trump campaign advisor Carter Page has found himself at the center of the now-disproven Trump-Russia collusion allegations.
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DAYBREAK
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THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 8.27.20
Up and at ’em: Here’s your scoops and other stories driving the day in Florida politics.
Finding and buying a new home can be complicated (and sometimes frustrating), with several crucial factors — neighborhoods, schools, and other amenities — adding up to what, for many, is the biggest purchase of their lives.
As more people enter the market, homebuyers rely on real estate websites such as Zillow, Redfin and Realtor.com to learn relevant information about a prospective home. These sites have become indispensable tools for deciding which house to buy.
Yet, there had been one important piece of data missing from these sites — flood risk.
With a changing climate, damage from increasingly powerful hurricanes and other weather events can affect millions of homes, but most major real estate websites do not offer information on whether an area is (or could be) susceptible to flooding.
That is, until now. And it may signal a change in the way consumers perceive climate threats.
Realtor.com has become the first major real estate website to include information about a particular home’s flood risk, and how climate change could affect future hazards.
Other sites, such as Redfin, Zillow and Trulia, do not include this information in listings.
Harriet Festing is the co-founder of Higher Ground, an advocacy group that supports flood survivors.
“People are buying property with little knowledge of whether it’s going to flood or not,” Festing told NPR. “It ruins lives.”
Realtor.com will feature flood risk ratings on each of its listings, using data from First Street Foundation, a nonprofit research group that launched an interactive website showing risk factors for more than 142 million homes and properties across the country.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency classifies nearly 9 million U.S. properties as having substantial risk, which requires flood insurance to obtain a mortgage. First Street is listing 70% more, over 14.5 million properties, at a similar risk.
Showing flood risk poses a new set of challenges: the higher the risk, the more expensive it is to insure a home, which can then reduce a home’s value. Homes with higher flood risks tend to sell less quickly than others.
But accurate information from Realtor.com — including flood risk — can lead to improved buying decisions, mortgages and insurance, and possibly lower long-term costs for homeowners.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@Crimealytics: Slow news day today other than a cat 4 hurricane about to make landfall, NBA players boycotting playoff games, a 17-year-old allegedly murdering 2 protesters, the CDC revising guidelines for political purposes, and the pandemic claiming another 1,000+ American lives.
—@RealDonaldTrump: We will NOT stand for looting, arson, violence, and lawlessness on American streets. My team just got off the phone with Governor [Tony] Evers who agreed to accept federal assistance (Portland should do the same!) … TODAY, I will be sending federal law enforcement and the National Guard to Kenosha, WI to restore LAW and ORDER!
—@JoeBiden: Once again, a Black man — Jacob Blake — was shot by the police. In front of his children. It makes me sick. Is this the country we want to be? Needless violence won’t heal us. We need to end the violence — and peacefully come together to demand justice.
—@TomNamako: The Kenosha Sheriff, when asked why the shooter, after shooting 3 people and walking toward his deputies with his hands up, was not apprehended. His answer is essentially, it’s loud and police get “tunnel vision.”
—@DrAndrewThaler: I feel like the coverage of a pro-[Donald] Trump terrorist cell recruiting child soldier to murder Americans that are protesting state-sanctioned violence has yet to accurately reflect the gravity of this.
—@AndyVsTheWorld: Considering the Bucks have a player on the team that literarily got his neck knelt on and tazed by the police, I’m not shocked they the first team to boycott. Seems everyone forgot about the story too
—@KingJames: F*CK THIS MAN!!!! WE DEMAND CHANGE. SICK OF IT
—@HarryLylesJr: the players did this, not the NBA. the NBA wrote Black Lives Matter on the floor and had to *approve* messages on the back of jerseys in a “hey how about this? are we cool now?” effort. sponsored protest isn’t protest. the players took it back
—@ClayTravis: NBA players are now boycotting their own games. The NBA audience had already collapsed and now it will tank even more. This is get woke, go broke for all the world to see. Amazing.
—@WesleyLowery: A century of commissions and studies and reports would suggest that the best ways to stop rioting would be 1. for the police to stop killing Black people 2. for the country to address the conditions that leave millions of Black people functionally ghettoized
—@JosieTomkow: I am so proud of my mom for speaking on behalf of our industry tonight during the RNC! You are right, President Trump has not forgotten agriculture. He works every day to preserve the industry we love.
— DAYS UNTIL —
Rev. Al Sharpton’s D.C. March — 1; U.S. Open begins — 3; Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” rescheduled premiere in U.S. — 6; Rescheduled running of the Kentucky Derby — 9; Rescheduled date for French Open — 31; First presidential debate in Indiana — 33; “Wonder Woman 1984” premieres — 36; Preakness Stakes rescheduled — 37; Ashley Moody’s 2020 Human Trafficking Summit — 40; First vice presidential debate at the University of Utah — 41; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 46; Second presidential debate scheduled in Miami — 49; NBA draft — 50; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 50; NBA free agency — 53; Florida Chamber’s Future of Florida Forum — 54; Third presidential debate at Belmont — 56; 2020 General Election — 68; “Black Widow” premieres — 72; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 74; College basketball season slated to begin — 75; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 85; “No Time to Die” premieres — 85; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 98; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 164; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 176; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 309; New start date for 2021 Olympics — 330; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 337; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 435; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 533; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 575; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 617; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 770.
— SMOLDERING —
“Kenosha unrest tests political potency of Donald Trump’s ‘law and order’ convention message” via Eric Bradner of CNN — Unrest in Wisconsin following the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha has quickly turned into a political flashpoint in one of the nation’s most important swing states. Trump and the GOP are using this week’s Republican National Convention to shine a spotlight on violence and property damage that has resulted from some of the protests over racial injustice and police brutality this summer — as fires have raged in Kenosha on consecutive nights. The way voters in Wisconsin interpret Blake’s shooting and its aftermath could be central to November’s outcome in a state Trump won by fewer than 23,000 votes in 2016. Trump was the first Republican to carry Kenosha County in 44 years.
“Boycott: NBA playoff games called off amid player protest” via Brian Mahoney and Tim Reynolds of The Associated Press — All three NBA playoff games scheduled for Wednesday have been postponed, with players around the league choosing to boycott in their strongest statement yet against racial injustice. Called off: Games between Milwaukee and Orlando, Houston and Oklahoma City and the Los Angeles Lakers and Portland. The NBA said all three games would be rescheduled, yet did not say when. The dramatic series of moves began when the Bucks — the NBA’s team from Wisconsin, a state rocked in recent days by the shooting by police of Blake, a Black man — didn’t take the floor for their playoff game against the Magic. The teams were set to begin Game 5 of their series shortly after 4 p.m., with the Bucks needing a win to advance to the second round.
“The Kenosha shooting suspect was in the front row of a Trump rally in January” via Ellie Hall, Amber Jamieson and Tasneem Nashrulla of BuzzFeed News — The law enforcement-obsessed 17-year-old who was charged with shooting and killing two people and injuring another in Kenosha during protests for Blake appeared in the front row at a Trump rally in January. Kyle Rittenhouse’s social media presence is filled with him posing with weapons, posting “Blue Lives Matter,” and supporting Trump for President. Footage from the Des Moines, Iowa, rally on Jan. 30 shows Rittenhouse feet away from the President, in the front row, to the left of the podium. He posted a TikTok video from the event. Seven months later, Rittenhouse went with his rifle to the third night of Black Lives Matter in Kenosha.
“Kenosha Police Chief blames protesters for their own deaths, defends vigilante groups” via Jeremy Stahl of Slate — On Wednesday, 17-year-old Rittenhouse was arrested in Illinois on charges of first-degree murder after allegedly shooting and killing two protesters the night before during protests in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in response to the shooting of Jacob Blake earlier this week. During the Kenosha Police Department’s first news conference in response to the Blake shooting and subsequent protests, Chief Daniel Miskinis blamed the unidentified victims in Tuesday night’s shooting for their own deaths, saying the violence was the result of the “persons” involved violating curfew. Miskinis would not give the names of the “persons” who were the victims of Wednesday’s murders, but did say they were “a 26-year-old Silver Lake resident and a 36-year-old Kenosha resident.”
“George Floyd’s death sparks new activism among communities of color” via Felicia Fonseca, Deepti Hajela, and Janie Har of The Associated Press — When Washington, D.C.’s NFL team dropped the offensive reference to Native Americans from its name last month after decades of resistance, activist Frances Danger knew why: the Black Lives Matter movement. Danger said the change would never have happened without the massive marches to protest the death of an African American man under the knee of a white police officer in Minneapolis. “Unfortunately, George Floyd had to lose his life for this to happen,” Danger said. “That is too big a price, but I will forever be thankful to him because my grandkids are going to wake up in a world and maybe never hear the word ‘redskin’ in their life.” Kenosha, Wisconsin became the latest flashpoint this week with the police shooting of Jacob Blake, apparently in the back, as he leaned into his SUV while his three children sat in the vehicle.
“Facebook chose not to act on militia complaints before Kenosha shooting” via Russell Brandom of The Verge — In the wake of an apparent double murder in Kenosha, Facebook has faced a wave of scrutiny over posts by a self-proclaimed militia group called Kenosha Guard, which issued a “call to arms” to in advance of the protest. Facebook took down Kenosha Guard’s Facebook page Wednesday morning, identifying the posts as violating community standards. But while the accounts were ultimately removed, new evidence suggests the platform had ample warning about the account before the shooting brought the group to prominence. At least two separate Facebook users reported the account for inciting violence before the shooting, The Verge has learned. In each case, the group and its counterprotest event were examined by Facebook moderators and found not to be in violation of the platform’s policies.
“ACLU sues over federal action in Portland, Oregon, protests” via Gillian Flaccus of The Associated Press — The American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit on Wednesday alleging agents sent by Trump to protect a federal courthouse targeted by Black Lives Matter protesters used excessive force and illegal detentions to rob protesters of their freedom of speech and assembly. The lawsuit also alleges that the acting director of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Chad Wolf, did not have the authority to send more than 100 agents to Portland because he was improperly appointed. The federal agents exceeded the limits of their authority, making illegal arrests and using tear gas, rubber bullets, pepper spray and other tactics to squelch the protests, the lawsuit alleges.
“SPD: Rioters tried to trap officers inside burning precinct using rebar and concrete” via Gary Horcher of KIRO 7 News — Seattle police officers were forced to kick their way out of an East Precinct exit door Monday night, after rioters jammed it with boards and rebar, and attempted to seal the door closed with quick-dry cement. As the door was being jammed, surveillance video shows several other people building a fire outside the building near the exit door, in an attempt to set the building on fire. “I think what this shows you is that these people are intent on killing police officers,” said Mike Solan, president of the Seattle Police Guild, who called the act ‘”clear domestic terrorism.’” Solan said a short time later, the Guild headquarters also became the target of three firebombs.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Trump goes dark on TV as early voting looms” via Alex Isenstadt of POLITICO — Trump is getting pummeled on the TV airwaves, alarming Republicans and prompting the president’s allies to plead for outside help. August has been a blowout: Trump has been outspent on TV more than 2-to-1 over the past month, according to the media tracking firm Advertising Analytics. And in the last two weeks, Joe Biden is outpacing the president more than 5-to-1. The shortfall comes at a pivotal moment in the campaign, with Biden essentially monopolizing TV advertising in key battlegrounds before the start of early voting. The president is not slated to be on the airwaves anywhere during the final week of the month, as Republicans hold their convention.
“Targeting Joe Biden on faith, Republicans move to salvage religious voters for Trump” via Francesca Chambers and Michael Wilner of Impact 2020 — Amid signs that white Catholic voters in the Rust Belt, Jewish voters in Florida and evangelical voters across key battleground states could be souring on Trump, conservatives plan to spend almost $135 million to shore up support among the critical faith-based voting blocs. Democratic and Republican operatives increasingly view Trump’s ability to hold on to his evangelical base as a key to the outcome of the November election. A practicing Catholic, Biden has been chipping away at Republicans’ advantage with religious voters that propelled Trump into the White House four years ago. The Democratic presidential nominee is actively appealing to faith-motivated voters with pledges to advance racial equality and prevent mass coronavirus deaths. And he has made morality a centerpiece of his bid to defeat Trump.
“Former Trump campaign manager traveled to Cuba to meet ‘Castro’s son’, Senate report says” via Nora Gámez Torres of the Miami Herald — In early January 2017, when the Cuban government was looking for insights into the newly elected Trump, his former campaign chief, Paul Manafort, traveled to the island to meet with “Castro’s son,” according to a U.S. Senate report. The recently released Senate Intelligence Committee report on Russia’s interference in the 2016 presidential election states that Manafort claimed the meeting was arranged by Brad Zackson, the former exclusive broker for the properties of Trump’s late father, Fred Trump. Manafort left the Trump campaign in August 2016, mired in scandal over his undisclosed work as a lobbyist for a pro-Russian political party in Ukraine. As a result of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia, Manafort was sentenced to more than seven years in prison for tax and bank fraud. He is currently serving his sentence under house arrest.
“Fox News pulls teacher union ad criticizing Trump, Mitch McConnell on reopening schools” via Danielle J. Brown of Florida Phoenix — A 30-second political ad criticizing Trump and McConnell on the reopening of schools was supposed to air on the Fox News Channel during the Republican National Convention. But the ad by the American Federation of Teachers was pulled from its slot, according to a news release from the AFT. Fox News, at least in the past, had been a Trump favorite, though it has soured recently and described Fox as “fake news,” according to the Mediaite outlet. The AFT, a national teacher union, submitted the ad to both FOX News and CNN, to run prime time on Wednesday and Thursday of the convention.
— 2020 —
“Immigrants in Trump-led ceremony didn’t know they would appear at RNC” via Tarini Parti and Michael C. Bender of The Wall Street Journal — Sudha Narayanan and Neimat Awadelseid looked forward to Tuesday, the day, after a yearslong process, they would become U.S. citizens. They found out only minutes before the ceremony that Trump would attend, and they didn’t know it would be aired during the Republican convention that night. Narayanan and Awadelseid said they didn’t mind being featured in the convention, saying in interviews Wednesday that they were still celebrating their newly granted citizenship. But the video, in which the two women and three others received citizenship, has been faulted by Democrats and other administration critics who say Trump’s team politicized government functions by showing the naturalization ceremony, as well as another video in which he issued a pardon during the second night of the GOP convention. Several critics said in interviews that it was inappropriate not to tell the participants that they would be part of a political event, and noted that the Trump administration had sought to curb illegal and legal immigration.
“U.S. officials: No signs of foreign targeting of mail-in vote” via Eric Tucker and Christina Cassidy of The Associated Press — U.S. officials said Wednesday there has been no intelligence to suggest that foreign countries are working to undermine mail-in voting and no signs of any coordinated effort to commit widespread fraud through the vote-by-mail process, despite numerous claims made by Trump in recent months. The officials at multiple federal agencies stopped short of directly contradicting Trump, but their comments made it clear they had not seen evidence to support the president’s statements that voter fraud will be rampant in the upcoming election and that the expected surge in mail-in ballots due to the coronavirus pandemic leaves November’s presidential election especially vulnerable to foreign interference.
Assignment editors — Florida Trump Victory will host a MAGA Meet-Up at its field office in Miami, featuring Lt. Gov. Jeanette Núñez and Sen. Manny Diaz, Jr., 12:45 p.m. Eastern time, 1313 West 49th Street, Hialeah.
“Nikki Fried slams RNC speakers for describing pandemic in past tense” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — “If you watched the RNC Convention last night, you may have thought that the COVID-19 pandemic is over. It’s not,” Fried tweeted. She also took a swipe at Ron DeSantis, signaling that rivalry won’t let up any time soon. “Nearly 5,000 Floridians have died in the last month alone because of Gov. Ron DeSantis’ and Donald Trump’s disastrous policies,” she wrote. A speech by Trump economic adviser Larry Kudlow has drawn particularly scathing reviews. “Health and economic impacts were tragic. Hardship and heartbreak were everywhere,” Kudlow said. “But presidential leadership came swiftly and effectively with an extraordinary rescue for health and safety to successfully fight the COVID virus.”
“GOP has high hopes of taking down Stephanie Murphy” via Mike Synan of Florida Daily — If Republicans want to take back the U.S. House in November, they will likely need more than one Florida congressional seat to do it. One seat they hope to gain is the one currently held by U.S. Rep. Murphy, which includes all of Seminole County and the northern and eastern portion of Orange County. To win the seat, Republican voters picked Dr. Leo Valentin in a close primary earlier this month. “We’re really energized, and I think the sentiment that comes to mind is grateful for everyone that put their time and effort into achieving this victory,” Valentin said.
“Murphy accuses Republicans of giving socialism a good name” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Every time Republicans accuse mainstream Democrats or their basic economic plans of being socialist, Republicans actually make socialism look good, Murphy charged Monday. And that’s bad, she said. Murphy, the Winter Park congresswoman whose family endured failed socialist and communist programs in Vietnam, contended she knows firsthand there is a world of difference between socialism and the mainstream capitalism that she and most Democrats embrace. “To be clear, Democrats who accept the socialist label are few and far between,” she said. By calling popular Democratic initiatives socialist, Republicans are “normalizing” the notion of socialism for Americans when socialism actually is a harsh reality, she said.
“Charlie Crist is favored in CD 13 but Anna Paulina Luna plans a surprise” via Joe Henderson of Florida Politics — With the General Election just two months and odd days away, Crist has a lot of things in his favor as he tries to hold his CD 13 seat. But he also has a Republican challenger, Air Force veteran Luna, who overcame long odds to win her primary and is planning a repeat performance in November. Can it happen again? My initial reaction is that it won’t. But I’m not going to crawl out too far on that limb. Crist remains as affable as ever. He has money, name recognition, and the power of incumbency in a district that is at least a light shade of blue. Traditionally, that is enough to win — especially given the blue wave Democrats rode in 2018 to take control of the U.S. House. But Republicans think they can flip this district, and in Luna, they have an anti-establishment flag-bearer straight out of “Drain The Swamp.”
Crist announces women senior staff hires on Women’s Equality Day — U.S. Rep. Crist’s reelection campaign announced new hires Wednesday, rounding out a team of all women senior staff members on Women’s Equality Day. Amina Spahic is joining the campaign as the campaign’s press secretary. She most recently served as the campaign manager for Michele Rayner’s successful primary race in House District 70. Mhariel Summers is the new Black Engagement Coordinator and will focus on turning out the African American vote in Pinellas. “Congressman Crist is an ally to women; it’s reflected in how he votes, the issues he champions, and in his team,” Summers said. “I am excited to be joining the campaign, there’s never been a more important time to get out and vote.”
“Margaret Good says vote against child sex doll ban an accident” via Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Voting to keep sex dolls that resemble children legal is the kind of thing that’s certain to raise questions. Sarasota state Rep. Good said the answer is simple — it was an accident. Last year Florida lawmakers passed Senate Bill 160, which outlawed childlike sex dolls. Sen. Lauren Book sponsored the legislation, saying in a statement that “The impetus for this legislation comes from research that has found that use of child pornography increases the risk of recidivism” among people who prey on children. Good initially voted in favor of the sex doll ban, which passed the Florida House and Senate unanimously. But she later changed her vote to oppose the bill, a move that went unnoticed at the time but recently was reported by the Florida Politics website.
“Child advocates, political enemies pile on Good over sex doll vote” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Good offered an explanation for why she erroneously switched a vote on a child sex doll ban. That hasn’t stopped criticism for casting the only vote against a measure aimed at punishing potential child molesters. “Experts all agree that when sexual deviants use these replicas of young boys and girls, it normalizes the act of pedophilia and encourages these deviants to move from dolls to real victims,” said Kim Githler, a longtime child protection advocate in Sarasota. “Ms. Good now claims she made a mistake in her vote and didn’t intend to vote against the bill, but if that’s the case why has she not come out since last May to publicly denounce these insidious child sex dolls? This is a critical moral issue and she needs to acknowledge that pedophilia is a heinous and unacceptable crime.” Good switched her vote last year on SB 160, legislation signed into law by DeSantis banning the sale or possession of childlike sex dolls. The bill was sponsored by Sen. Book, a Plantation Democrat who long championed measures to stop sex abuse.
“Bob Cortes touts bipartisan appeal in bid to reclaim HD 30” via Jordan Kirkland of The Capitolist — Cortes continued to build momentum for his campaign to retake House District 30, announcing the endorsement from a former colleague from across the aisle. The latest endorsement to Cortes’ campaign comes from former Rep. Katie Edwards-Walpole. A Democratic member of the Florida House of Representatives, Edwards-Walpole represented the 98th District, which includes parts of Davie, Plantation, and Sunrise in southern Broward County, from 2012 to 2018. “During these uncertain times, we need strong, unwavering leaders who know how to achieve bipartisan solutions that put people first,” said Edwards-Walpole. “I endorse Bob Cortes because he is passionate about his community and will take pains to keep us safe while also working in smart ways to reboot our economy and increase access to better health care for all.”
— DOWN BALLOT —
“Daniella Levine Cava launches Spanish-language radio ad in bid for Miami-Dade Mayor” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Levine Cava is launching her first Spanish-language radio ad of the General Election campaign. Levine Cava is facing fellow Miami-Dade County Commissioner Esteban “Steve” Bovo. The two secured spots in the runoff election after placing in the top two during last week’s Primary Election. “Daniella Levine Cava: Our community voice, our leader ready to serve as our next Miami-Dade Mayor,” the ad’s narrator begins in Spanish. “Levine Cava is prepared to confront the challenges we face: Better health care, support our small businesses, grow our economy and put people back to work.” The ad then transitions to the candidate herself.
To hear the ad, click on the image below:
“Leader of Orange County’s Split Oak election to Osceola County’s opponents: ‘Get ready’” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — The man who drove efforts to place a proposal for Split Oak Forest protections onto the Orange County ballot in November issued a political warning Wednesday to the Osceola County Commissioners who voted Monday to sue to block that initiative. “Get ready,” Orlando lawyer James Auffant said Wednesday. A political war between the counties might be brewing over the Split Oak Forest Wildlife and Conservation Area that straddles the two counties over the road Osceola wants to extend through that preserve, the countywide election now planned in Orange County to block it, and the elections of Osceola County commissioners. Auffant suggested environmental activists who have been fighting to stop the road could join the battle. He said until now they’ve left Osceola County alone in the battles over the Split Oak road. But not anymore.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida reports another 155 people died from COVID-19; infections continue on downward trend” via Marc Freeman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Florida’s coronavirus pandemic report for Wednesday shows another 155 people died from COVID-19, and the state confirmed 3,220 newly infected people. Both totals are in line with recent trends of declining cases and fatalities, after a surge in June and July. The daily report from the Department of Health reflects COVID-19 deaths in recent weeks but just confirmed in the past 24 hours. The cases reported on a single day follow a lag between the collection of swabs over several days and the confirmation of positive results.
“Medical examiners no longer required to certify COVID-19 deaths in Florida” via Alessandro Marazzi Sassoon of Florida Today — From the start of the pandemic Florida’s medical examiners were tasked with tracking all coronavirus fatalities. A signature from a medical examiner’s office and their verification of a positive test were required for a death certificate that listed COVID-19 as a cause or contributory cause of death. But as deaths began to skyrocket through the month of July, medical examiners, especially in south Florida counties, found themselves overwhelmed and couldn’t certify deaths fast enough. As a result, the Medical Examiners Commission resolved to make reporting of COVID-19 deaths by medical examiners discretionary.
“Florida nursing homes can have visitors with no COVID-19 testing, task force recommends” via Kate Santich of the Orlando Sentinel — A Florida task force agreed Wednesday to support reopening long-term care facilities to visitors after nearly six months but visitors will have to follow a list of rules before going in. “This visitation is long overdue,” DeSantis said at a briefing held minutes after the decision. “At this point, we’ve got to get it done. We’ve got to get it done safely. But you can’t keep doing a half-measure to say you can see someone through a window only.” The task force will formalize its recommendations to the governor, likely in the coming days, after which he is expected to revise the mid-March emergency order that prompted the lockdown at more than 4,000 nursing homes, assisted living centers and group homes. The move was an effort to halt the spread of COVID-19 to a most vulnerable population.
“Convincing guests theme parks are safe is resorts’ next hurdle” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — While theme parks make the case that they are safe for visitors amid the COVID-19 pandemic, DeSantis traveled to Orlando to highlight the theme park reopening “success story.” Tourism makes up the backbone of much of Florida’s economy, particularly Central Florida’s, but pandemic fears have forced parks to close. Even as resorts reopened earlier this summer, they aren’t operating at full capacity, impacting local businesses and the state’s tourism tax dollars. “You have a ripple effect that can be very positive, obviously, when things are going well,” DeSantis said. “But when things slow down, when they stopped and then slowed down, the ripple effect went in the other direction, so that had a huge impact on employment in the area and on people’s small businesses.” During his visit to Universal Studios, Universal and Disney executives flanked the Governor, each hoping to share what precautions they have taken to make their parks safe for visitors.
— SURVEY SAYS —
After Leon Circuit Judge Charles Dobson granted a temporary injunction to block the state from forcing districts to reopen schools, Florida Watch and Progress Florida released a new poll showing Floridians agree it isn’t safe to reopen brick-and-mortar schools.
Conducted by Clarity Campaign Labs on behalf of the Florida Communications and Research Hub, the poll of 2,310 likely Florida voters shows 59% believe the risks of opening schools outweigh the benefits of in-person classes. Only 33% of respondents felt the need to reopen schools should override public health concerns. The online poll was taken Aug. 12-16.
Respondents were also broadly critical of DeSantis’ leadership:
— DeSantis’ disapproval is underwater 50 to 47%, with more than half of Floridians disapproving of his handling of coronavirus 52 to 45%.
— Florida voters list controlling the virus as more important than restarting economy by a 20-point margin, 56 to 36%.
— Floridians support a statewide mask mandate by 76 to 22%.
— And even more Floridians support an eviction moratorium, 80 to 12%.
“Gov. Ron DeSantis and Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran should listen to Judge Dobson — and a solid majority of Floridians — and abandon their reckless school reopening plan that endangers our children, teachers, school workers and their families,” said Josh Weierbach, Executive Director of Florida Watch.
“In light of Judge Dobson’s ruling, and the overwhelming public sentiment against the risky reopening plan being pushed by DeSantis and Corcoran, we call on state leaders to drop their appeal, quit playing politics with the lives of our teachers and students, and make health and safety the No. 1 priority so our kids can return to school safely,” said Progress Florida Executive Director Mark Ferrulo.
— BACK TO SCHOOL? —
“Schools can reopen, Germany finds, but expect a ‘roller coaster’” via Katrin Bennhold of The New York Times — On the Monday after summer vacation, Dirk Kwee was as nervous as he had ever been in 31 years of teaching. For the first time since the pandemic hit, all 900 students at his Berlin school were back, bursting with excitement. The dreaded call came just two days later: A girl in sixth grade had the coronavirus. Mr. Kwee hurried over to the gym where the other 31 students in her class were enjoying their first physical education session in five months. They were sent home — immediately. On Thursday, the whole class got tested. On Friday, all the tests came back negative. That may be what returning to school looks like for the foreseeable future.
“Hundreds in quarantine after Central Florida schools report dozens of COVID cases” via Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel — Less than two weeks into the new school year, at least 175 students and staff at Seminole County public schools are in quarantine because of possible exposure to the coronavirus, officials said. Cases of coronavirus also have been reported at six Lake County public schools, which started classes Monday; 19 Orange County public schools, which began in-person classes Friday; and at several schools in Osceola County, which also opened for face-to-face lessons Monday. The Osceola cases occurred mostly during teachers’ planning week and have not led to student quarantines. Orange County is the only school district in Central Florida that would not say how many people are in quarantine as a result of the positive cases.
“Department of Health orders Duval Schools to pause publishing COVID-19 numbers” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — Just five days into the new school year, Duval County Public Schools announced it will stop publishing school-related COVID-19 cases and district personnel say the health department is to blame. Going into a school year taking place during a global health pandemic, Duval County Public Schools touted transparency. Superintendent Diana Greene said the district was going the extra mile, working on its own dashboard with updated COVID-19 case numbers, that was expected to launch the first day of school. Instead, a static webpage the district started updating with confirmed cases Monday has been untouched for two days. District spokesman Tracy Pierce said that’s because on Tuesday, the Duval County Department of Health told the district it cannot publish “school-specific data related to COVID-19” without the state health department’s permission.
“Hillsborough Schools superintendent being questioned for 1-week online learning plan” via Jeff Patterson of WFLA — The actions of Hillsborough County Schools Superintendent Addison Davis are being questioned after he worked out a plan to bring students back to class after one week of online learning. The Hillsborough County School Board voted on Aug. 6 to have students spend the first four weeks of school with online learning. The board decided at that time to bring the health care professionals back a second time before taking another vote to bring the students back to class for face to face learning with teachers. However, some Hillsborough County School Board members are questioning if Davis had the authority to offer other plans to the state without approval from the elected members of the school board.
“Miami-Dade’s public schools start Monday. How ready is the new online platform?” via Colleen Wright of the Miami Herald — Less than a week out from a new school year, the new online platform adopted as the centerpiece of Miami-Dade County Public Schools’ teaching and learning experience has racked up complaints from educators. Education officials are questioning how ready the school district will be when 275,000 students log on Monday. “My opinion is that they’re not ready. They haven’t been ready,” said School Board chairwoman Perla Tabares Hantman. “I just feel that there’s too many complaints. Too many teachers complaining that it’s a new thing that they have to learn in a short amount of time.”
— CORONA LOCAL —
“As Miami-Dade restaurants reopen amid COVID-19, diners shouldn’t be dying to eat out” via the Miami Herald — On Tuesday, County Mayor Carlos Giménez, under pressure from financially strained restaurant owners, announced that limited indoor seating will be allowed at eateries starting Monday. The last time Miami-Dade reopened, a spike in COVID cases followed, as happened statewide. What will be different this time? It’s true that in the past few days, coronavirus infection numbers have been dropping. Hospitalizations are down; so is the number of new cases. The county’s infection rate hovered near the redline level of 10 percent.
— MORE LOCAL —
“Orlando man charged with hitting a Disney security guard during fight over COVID-19 mask rule” via Gabrielle Russon of the Orlando Sentinel — An Orlando man struck an Epcot security guard when he was reminded to follow the theme park’s mask rules, an Orange County sheriff’s report says, the first known crime report involving such a confrontation at Disney World. Enrico Toro is accused of hitting the guard in the head and threatening to kill him, which led to Toro’s arrest Aug. 14, the arrest affidavit said. He is charged with misdemeanor battery and doesn’t have an attorney listed, Orange Circuit Court records show. “We expect guests to treat our cast members with courtesy and respect, and while the vast majority of guests have adapted to our new measures, this unfortunate case required law enforcement,” Disney spokeswoman Andrea Finger said in a statement.
“Data shows spike of COVID-19 in children aged 10 and younger in Southwest Florida” via Liz Freeman of the Naples Daily News — Twenty-three children aged 10 and younger have reported positive for COVID-19 in Southwest Florida over two days, according to state data. Thirteen cases are in Collier County and 10 are in Lee; all are residents. Three of the cases in Collier involve infants and two in Lee are infants, according to the state Department of Health. The cases were reported Sunday and Monday. Officials at county health departments in both communities were not readily available for comment. State data shows 98 children aged 10 and younger in Collier have had positive tests for the disease since Aug. 1. That’s out of all 610 cases in Collier in that age group since March when the pandemic began.
“Largo man slaps, coughs on Ace Hardware employee when asked to wear mask, police say” via WFLA staff reports — A 51-year-old Largo man was charged with battery after coughing on and assaulting an Ace Hardware employee and customer over a face mask dispute. The Largo Police Department said Russell Wood entered an Ace Hardware Store in Largo without wearing a mask. While he was being asked to leave, witnesses said he turned around and coughed directly in the face of an employee. Police said Wood then took a small step back and slapped the employee with the backside of his hand. As the employee attempted to push Wood out of the store, officers said Wood struck a customer in the face. During the incident, police said Wood threatened to burn down the business. Wood fled the scene but was caught and arrested by police shortly after. Wood is charged with battery. The incident was captured on the store’s surveillance video.
— CORONA NATION —
“COVID-19 lockdowns blocked flu in some places but fall looms” via Andrew Meldrum, Magomatsi Magome, and Lauran Neergaard of The Associated Press — Winter is ending in the Southern Hemisphere and country after country — South Africa, Australia, Argentina — had a surprise: Their steps against COVID-19 also apparently blocked the flu. But there’s no guarantee the Northern Hemisphere will avoid twin epidemics as its own flu season looms while the coronavirus still rages. “This could be one of the worst seasons we’ve had from a public health perspective with COVID and flu coming together. But it also could be one of the best flu seasons we’ve had,” Dr. Robert Redfield, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. U.S. health officials are pushing Americans to get vaccinated against the flu in record numbers this fall, so hospitals aren’t overwhelmed with a dueling “twindemic.”
“DOJ may investigate blue states over COVID deaths at nursing homes” via Shannon Young of POLITICO — The Justice Department on Wednesday said it’s weighing whether to investigate if four Democratic-led states violated nursing home residents’ civil rights by admitting COVID-19 patients to the facilities — a policy critics say resulted in thousands of deaths. Federal officials are seeking coronavirus data from New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Michigan, which each issued contentious orders to admit patients who had tested positive, as long as they were medically stable, while hospitalizations spiked early in the pandemic. The DOJ request appears focused on state-run nursing homes. An industry source said it excludes privately run nursing homes, even if they are licensed by the state and accept payments under Medicaid.
“Anthony Fauci says he was in surgery when task force discussed CDC testing guidelines” via Sanjay Gupta of CNN — White House Coronavirus Task Force member Dr. Fauci said he was undergoing surgery and not part of the discussion during the Aug. 20 task force meeting when updated U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines were discussed. “I was under general anesthesia in the operating room and was not part of any discussion or deliberation regarding the new testing recommendations,” Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta. “I am concerned about the interpretation of these recommendations and worried it will give people the incorrect assumption that asymptomatic spread is not of great concern. In fact, it is,” he added.
“Revved by Sturgis Rally, COVID-19 infections move fast, far” via Stephen Groves of The Associated Press — The hundreds of thousands of bikers who attended the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally may have departed western South Dakota, but public health departments in multiple states are trying to measure how much and how quickly the coronavirus spread in bars, tattoo shops and gatherings before people traveled home to nearly every state in the country. From the city of Sturgis, which is conducting mass testing for its roughly 7,000 residents, to health departments in at least eight states, health officials are trying to track outbreaks from the 10-day rally which ended on Aug. 16. They face the task of tracking an invisible virus that spread among bar-hoppers and rallygoers, who then traveled to over half the counties in the United States.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Mark Meadows predicts no COVID-19 relief bill until after September” via Matthew Choi of POLITICO — White House Chief of Staff Meadows is not optimistic about reaching a new coronavirus relief deal before the end of September, predicting House Speaker Nancy Pelosi will use the government funding cliff at the end of next month as leverage to strike a deal on pandemic aid. Meadows said his staff had reached out to Pelosi’s office but added that he does not anticipate a response. The chief of staff said lawmakers from both parties have privately expressed to him a desire to make progress on coronavirus relief. The holdup, Meadows said he suspects, is that Pelosi is holding back her party’s rank and file in order to secure more Democratic priorities in any legislation.
“U.S. commercial-property prices fall with worst yet to come” via John Gittelsohn of Bloomberg — U.S. commercial real estate prices are falling as the economic toll of the COVID-19 pandemic worsens and the decline is just getting started. Indexes for office, retail and lodging properties all slipped year-over-year in July, data from industry tracker Real Capital Analytics Inc. show. Transaction volume plummeted to $14 billion across all sectors, down 69% from July 2019. “The worst is yet to come,” Real Capital Senior Vice President Jim Costello said in a telephone interview. “We’re not seeing the fallout yet of owners selling properties and taking a loss.” Hotel prices dropped 4.4% in the year through July, while retail declined 2.8% and offices fell 0.9%, according to Real Capital. Apartment building prices climbed 6.9%, and industrial values rose 8.3%, leading to a 1.5% gain for all property types in the period.
“Experts warn Florida tourism recovery after COVID-19 will be ‘slower than 9/11’” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Several experts, including a former Barack Obama administration official, warned that Florida’s tourism industry has a long road to recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic even as the hardest-hit parts of the state begin to reopen. “It’ll be slower than 9/11,” said Stacy Ritter, president of the Greater Fort Lauderdale Convention and Visitors Bureau. “Let’s remember 9/11 was a one-day event and as tragic as it was, people wanted to get back to travel as a sign of patriotism. That’s not the case here. This is a completely different animal.” Ritter and other experts were focused on South Florida during a Wednesday Zoom meeting with members of the region’s congressional delegation. At times, however, their warnings applied to the rest of the state as travelers weigh whether Florida is safe to visit as it attempts to keep coronavirus infections down.
“Sales taxes remain down in July as tourism suffers” via Jim Turner of The News Service of Florida — State general revenues came in just above a forecast amount in July, but the coronavirus pandemic continued to hammer sales-tax collections. Numbers released Wednesday by the Legislature’s Office of Economic & Demographic Research showed general revenues topping an earlier projection by $2.5 million, driven in part by the end of state-approved delays for corporate income tax payments. Meanwhile, sales-tax collections were $165.2 million below a January forecast. While down, that was an improvement over sales-tax collections that plummeted in April, May and June. “Nearly all of the sales-tax related loss is attributed to declines in the tourism and hospitality-related industries, dropping receipts 37.1 percent below estimate for the tourism sales tax category,” the July report said.
— MORE CORONA —
“As summer wanes in N.Y.C., anxiety rises over what fall may bring” via Michael Wilson of The New York Times — In March and April, as ambulances raced through neighborhoods and refrigerated trucks sat humming behind hospitals overwhelmed by the pandemic’s dead, summer seemed a distant fantasy. Then it arrived as promised: The city unveiled in a series of phases that brought its streets back to something closer to life. The coronavirus infections dropped, the curve flattened, dinner and drinks were served beneath the stars, and friends reunited in parks and on beaches as if home from war. But throughout the city, between the elbow bumps and happy hours, lurked deep and intense anxiety over what might lie ahead, as summer gave way to autumn and a new rash of frightening unknowns.
“Moderna coronavirus vaccine shows strong immune response in older adults” via Zachary Brennan and Sarah Wheaton of POLITICO — Moderna’s coronavirus vaccine candidate appears to be safe and produce a strong immune response in older adults, according to new data from an early trial presented by the company at a U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention meeting today. The study of 20 adults over the age of 55 found that almost two months after receiving the second of two vaccine doses, participants had antibody levels higher than those of people who have recovered from COVID-19. How well a coronavirus vaccine might work for older adults has been an open question, because the immune system’s ability to respond to threats declines with age. A vaccine that protects younger adults and children might not work for older adults.
“Why does the coronavirus hit men harder? A new clue” via Apoorva Mandavilli of The New York Times — The coronavirus may infect anyone, young or old, but older men are up to twice as likely to become severely sick and to die as women of the same age. Why? The first study to look at the immune response by sex has turned up a clue: Men produce a weaker immune response to the virus than do women, the researchers concluded. The findings, published in Nature, suggest that men, particularly those over age 60, may need to depend more on vaccines to protect against the infection. “Natural infection is clearly failing” to spark adequate immune responses in men, said Akiko Iwasaki, an immunologist at Yale University who led the work. Women mount faster and stronger immune responses, perhaps because their bodies are rigged to fight pathogens that threaten unborn or newborn children.
“Matt Gaetz builds national profile, but says focus is on Trump election” via Lindsey McPherson and Stephanie Akin of Roll Call — He recently starred in an HBO documentary, backed candidates in Florida primaries that beat the GOP leadership’s picks and used his signature snark to draw a contrast between Trump and Democratic nominee Biden on the opening night of the Republican National Convention. But Gaetz does not see the national profile he’s building as a steppingstone to higher office or a shot at the House Republican leadership, he said. Rather, he said his political moves are aimed at one thing: helping Trump win a second term.
— STATEWIDE —
“State legal fees pile up to defend felons voting law” via Dara Kam of The News Service Of Florida — Florida taxpayers have spent more than $1.7 million — and are on the hook for hundreds of thousands more — in the state’s defense of a 2019 law requiring felons to pay “legal financial obligations” to be eligible to vote. DeSantis’ administration has authorized more than $2.3 million in contracts with private lawyers, including a $265,000 agreement with Washington, D.C.-based Cooper & Kirk PLLC law firm, to represent the state in a federal appeals court, records show. “It’s a complete waste to defend such an unconstitutional system and, frankly, they knew going into the (2019) Legislative Session that they were going to be sued for it,” said Leah Aden, NAACP Legal Defense Fund deputy director of litigation.
“Mishaps with Florida’s unemployment system discounted before officials awarded $135m contract, transcripts show” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — During one of the final meetings before deciding which company to choose for a potential $135 million state contract, Florida’s assistant deputy secretary for Medicaid asked her colleagues for a show of hands. Who wanted to ask one of the finalists, Deloitte Consulting, about the company’s previous job building CONNECT, the state’s online unemployment system? By the time of the July 10 meeting, CONNECT had already earned weeks of national scorn for being unable to handle a record number of pandemic-related jobless claims, which left millions of Floridians without benefits. It got so bad, DeSantis ordered an investigation into what went wrong.
DOH approves edible medical marijuana — The state Department of Health Office of Medical Marijuana issued rules authorizing the production and sale of edible medical marijuana. As reported by Arek Sarkissian of POLITICO Florida, the rules go into effect immediately and apply to cannabis producers that are already licensed by the state. Medical marijuana industry lawyer John Lockwood said he was satisfied with the new policy. “It looks like the department was very thoughtful and deliberate with these rules,” he said. “I think there will be a lot of people who are pleased.”
“Florida OKs $4.65 million payout for beating by staff that paralyzed inmate Cheryl Weimar’” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — Weimar’s name is known in prison circles as an example of the few rights and little dignity inmates have in the Florida prison system. Weimar, 51, was brutally attacked by guards at Lowell Correctional Institution and paralyzed as a result. For the past year, Weimar has remained in prison, bound to a special hospital bed and dependent on catheters, mechanical breathing assistance, a tracheostomy and feeding tubes. Meanwhile, her attorneys were building a federal civil rights lawsuit on her behalf. On Tuesday, Weimar’s case was ordered closed. According to a settlement agreement provided to the Miami Herald by the Department of Financial Services, she will be paid $4.65 million, possibly the largest such settlement from the state of Florida. The family of Darren Rainey, the 50-year-old inmate with schizophrenia whose death in a rigged shower at Dade Correctional Institution led to sweeping reform, settled for $4.5 million.
“Judge faces discipline for trying to sway candidate” via The News Service of Florida — A Citrus County circuit judge could face a public reprimand from the Florida Supreme Court after an investigation into his attempt to dissuade an attorney from running against a fellow judge in this year’s elections. An investigative panel of the state Judicial Qualifications Commission recommended discipline for Judge Richard Howard. The panel said Howard last year tried to dissuade attorney Pamela Vergara from running against Circuit Judge George Angeliadis. Among other things, Howard tried to convince Vergara to run instead against Circuit Judge Mary Hatcher, who hears cases in Marion County, another part of the circuit.
“Accidents on Universal Orlando’s Volcano Bay waterslides bring 73 injury claims, court documents say” via Gabrielle Russon of the Orlando Sentinel — An insurance company argues that it shouldn’t owe money for injuries at Universal Orlando’s Volcano Bay, revealing in court documents there are 73 injury claims involving several slides since the water park opened three years ago. Out of those claims, at least nine people have sued Universal, including New York tourist James Bowen, who was paralyzed on a waterslide last year, and a South Florida man who needed a penile implant after he suffered a pelvis injury in 2017, according to an Orlando Sentinel review of Orange Circuit Court records. Volcano Bay is one of the busiest water parks in the world with an estimated more than 5 million visits since its grand opening on May 25, 2017, through 2019.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Miami Postal Workers union chief: Yes, your mail is being delayed. Here’s why” via Rob Wile of the Miami Herald — Brian Dixon is part of South Florida’s vast Amazon and eBay online retailer community. As a third-party seller of books and diet tea, Dixon sources his products from wholesalers, then sells them through the two tech giants’ digital marketplaces to earn a living. To ship his goods, Dixon relies on the U.S. Postal Service. But In the past month or two, Dixon — who says he had nearly perfect reviews on both websites — began receiving complaints from customers about late shipments. The complaints, he said, seemed to coincide with the appointment of a new U.S. Postmaster General, Louis DeJoy, in mid-June. “Within two weeks [of the appointment], I saw a significant slowdown in postage service,” Dixon said.
— POWER PLAY —
“NextEra offered $11 billion to buy JEA during last year’s sales negotiations” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — NextEra Energy offered $11.05 billion to buy JEA during last year’s sales negotiations, a bid that was far and away the largest offer on the table for the “crown jewel” of city government when the JEA board ended sales talks last December. The net proceeds to Jacksonville City Hall from NextEra’s offer would have been $6.452 billion, the biggest one-time infusion of cash in city history, dwarfing the $2.2 billion Better Jacksonville Plan after voters approved a half-cent sales tax in 2000. The amount of NextEra’s offer also would have meant a huge payday for JEA employees if JEA had continued its controversial incentive plan, according to the City Council Auditor’s Office.
___
The Florida Times-Union proved its worth during the JEA saga, exposing former CEO Aaron Zahn’s get-rich-quick-scheme for what it was — one of the worst public policy corruption schemes in decades.
Zahn was a tornado of trouble and had questionable judgment from the start. On that, the Times-Union and I agree.
But their stellar coverage seems to have clouded their vision, causing them to assume the bidding process for JEA was just as corrupt.
Regardless of Zahn’s antics, a dozen credible companies entered the JEA bid process in good faith, including Florida Power & Light.
The narrative at The Florida Times-Union is that FPL’s bid was a mere formality — it was destined for success from the moment the sale was pitched.
But, as it turns out, that’s not the case.
The Florida Times-Union’s David Bauerlein reported Wednesday that FPL offered to pay $11.05 billion for JEA during the bidding process.
In his words, it was “far and away the largest offer on the table before the JEA board ended sales talks in December.”
As the bid amounts show, the cold, hard truth is FPL offered the City of Jacksonville the best possible deal. Since when is that bad for taxpayers?
And with that, the “fix is in” story arc is wobbly.
— TOP OPINION —
“Ashley Moody: Women’s Equality Day — inspiration and honoring those who blazed trails, shattered ceilings” via Florida Politics — While we celebrate today, the anniversary of women’s suffrage taking place during the Republican National Convention, Florida and the Florida Republican Party has much to celebrate with respect to the women leaders it has fostered. I am honored to serve with Lt. Gov. Núñez and numerous other strong Florida women leaders. While there is much to celebrate on this historic anniversary, there is much more to do. Our responsibility is to lead by example, to offer inspiration for future generations, and to push young girls to reach higher.
— OPINIONS —
“Voting is the best way to honor generations of women who paved the way for me” via Kamala Harris for The Washington Post — One hundred years ago, the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was formally adopted. Courageous American women had been organizing and protesting for seven decades to be treated as equal participants in our democracy, and their hard work finally paid off. We cannot mark this day, now known as Women’s Equality Day, without remembering all the American women who were not included in that voting rights victory a century ago. Black activists such as Ida B. Wells had dealt with discrimination and rejection from White suffragists in their work to secure the vote. And when the 19th Amendment was ratified at last, Black women were again left behind: Poll taxes, literacy tests and other Jim Crow voter suppression tactics effectively prohibited most people of color from voting.
“To honor suffrage fight, exercise your right to vote” via Sen. Linda Stewart for the Orlando Sentinel — This month marks many important milestones in the long history of suffrage in the United States. Our right to vote is what makes this month so important. Aug. 26 marks the 100th anniversary of the adoption of the 19th Amendment to the constitution in 1920. This amendment guaranteed the right to vote for women by prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sex. It would be another long 45 years before women of color would gain full protection. I know that things may feel uncertain right now, but we must reflect on the lives and struggles of those who fought for this right we hold today. We must honor their legacies by casting our ballot no matter how uncertain or tumultuous our lives may seem.
“Republicans stage a norm-busting convention” via Jonathan Bernstein of Bloomberg — If political parties tell you who they are in their conventions, then the biggest message from Republicans on Tuesday night was that they have little respect for democratic norms. I’m willing to give Trump some leeway for using the White House as a backdrop for his appearances, given the pandemic and that he lives and works there. If it had just been the First Lady’s speech and the President’s own address on Thursday, I’d probably defend the idea. But Tuesday night Trump went way too far, staging first a pardon and then a naturalization ceremony. As for the rest of the night? The party offered almost nothing on the stuff most voters presumably have on their minds: the pandemic and ensuing recession.
“‘I fear that we are witnessing the end of American democracy’” via Thomas Edsall of The New York Times — The center-right political coalition in America — the Republican Party as it stands today — can be described as holding two overarching goals: First, deregulation and reductions in corporate and other tax liabilities and second the preservation of the status quo by stemming the erosion of the privileged status of white Christian America. The most important issue driving Trump’s ascendance, however, has not been the economy but race. Last week, I argued that for Democrats the importance of ethnicity and race has grown, not diminished, since the mid-1960s. The same thing is true for Republicans — and many of the least obvious, or least comprehensible, aspects of Republican political strategy have to do with the party’s desire to cloak or veil the frank racism of the contemporary Republican agenda.
“What Jerry Falwell Jr. taught me at Liberty University” via Kaitlyn Schiess of The New York Times — When I was a student at Liberty University, from 2012 to 2016, I had to take two semesters of a “Christian worldview” class. Yet the more powerful education we received was through thrice-weekly “convocations” — gatherings that frequently featured Republican pundits and politicians. All on-campus students were required to attend an hourlong meeting that included worship and a guest speaker. We sang songs about the power of the gospel, often followed by moving speeches about saving our country from socialists or protecting our borders from invading masses. What does all this have to do with the strange, sordid saga of Jerry Falwell Jr., his wife and a much younger man? A great deal.
“How neck gaiters became a metaphor for scientific discovery in coronavirus” via Elizabeth Dijinis of the Tampa Bay Times — When it comes to science, most laypeople prefer to deal in absolutes. But indisputable scientific laws can take years or decades to become, well, indisputable. The coronavirus isn’t offering that type of timeline. Important decisions must be made in a fog of conjecture and speculation. Enter what we’ll call the Neck Gaiter Debate. First, a Duke University study indicated that neck gaiters could be counterproductive. Then a New York Times article emerged a week later to announce that neck gaiters are probably safe. We saw the guidance change on wearing masks, too. First, the U.S. Surgeon General begged us not to buy masks. Now, masks are considered one of the most potent defenses against the virus.
“Hey, lawyer hopefuls: Florida Bar exam is rescheduled online for Oct. 13” via Sue Carlton of the Tampa Bay Times — Lawyer hopefuls can plan on taking the Florida Bar exam online Oct. 13, the Florida Supreme Court said in a news release. It’s been a bumpy road. Administering the test that is required to practice law in Florida has been complicated by coronavirus concerns, computer glitches and rescheduling. Before the pandemic hit, the exams were scheduled for July in Orlando and in Tampa, where thousands typically would sit for as long as two days of testing at the Tampa Convention Center. But health concerns about all those test-takers in close quarters for long hours got the exam moved online.
— TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Florida politicians (on both sides of the aisle) are trying to figure out how to lure tourists back to the Sunshine State. With that in mind, Gov. DeSantis hosted a roundtable discussion in Orlando about the theme parks of central Florida. The Governor says it’s safe to visit Disney, Universal or SeaWorld because of their emphasis on safety.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— DeSantis is also teasing a new PR campaign, teaming up with airlines to get more people to fly to Florida. He insists air travel is safe.
— Officials in South Florida are also grappling with the collapse of their tourism market, and unlike the Governor, they believe mandatory masking is a big part of the solution.
— The winter tourist season in South Florida usually starts in October, but many are worried 2020 could be a lost cause.
— Happy belated birthday to the 19th Amendment. Wednesday was Women’s Equality Day, but members of the Florida chapter of the National Organization for Women say the work is not done.
— A conversation with Mike Czin at the Congressional Integrity Project about their report on the finances of Florida’s junior Sen. Rick Scott, who refused to put his assets in a blind trust and increased his net worth by $55 million during his first year in Congress.
— Checking-in with the Florida Man in a Mohawk who stole a $6,000 Pomapoo, but left his ID at the pet store.
To listen, click on the image below:
— INSTAGRAM OF THE DAY —
— ALOE —
“‘West Wing’ reunion special set at HBO Max to promote voting in 2020 election” via Joe Otterson of Variety — The cast and creators of “The West Wing” are reuniting to perform together for the first time in nearly two decades in a special set at HBO Max, Variety has learned. “A West Wing Special to Benefit When We All Vote” will debut on the streamer this fall. It will feature a theatrical staging of the “Hartsfield’s Landing” episode from the show’s third season and will be shot at the Orpheum Theater in Los Angeles in early October. The special is meant to raise awareness for When We All Vote, a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization co-chaired by Michelle Obama which was founded to increase participation in every election in America.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Belated birthday wishes to Christian Camara, Joy Friedman, John Lux of Film Florida, Jonathan Rees of Anheuser-Busch, and Phillip Singleton. Celebrating today are former Lt. Gov. Jennifer Carroll, Charlie Dailey, Nicole Gomez of LSN Partners, smart guy Albie Kaminsky, state Rep. Wengay “Newt” Newton and Melissa Stone of Cavalry Strategies.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, A.G. Gancarski, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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AXIOS
🚨 Bulletin: Hurricane Laura roared ashore over southwestern Louisiana near the Texas border early today, with forecasters warning it could push a massive wall of water 40 miles inland, Reuters reports.
- With more than 290,000 homes and businesses without power in the two states, near-constant lightning provided the only light for some. The latest.
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
The most historic day in sports activism history began in an empty gym, Axios Sports editor Kendall Baker writes.
- The Milwaukee Bucks chose not to take the floor for Game 5 against the Magic, which led to all three NBA games being postponed — and most of the sports world following suit.
The backdrop: The Bucks’ landmark decision came three days after Jacob Blake, a 29-year-old Black man, was shot seven times in the back by police in Kenosha, Wis., 45 minutes south of Milwaukee.
- The Bucks said in a team statement (video): “Despite the overwhelming plea for change, there has been no action, so our focus today cannot be on basketball.”
Why it matters: Many NBA players decided to participate in the “bubble” because it offered a platform to bring awareness to social justice issues. That was enough, in their minds, to offset any concerns about sports being a distraction.
- But after the Blake shooting video surfaced, players began to question whether the anthem kneeling, “Black Lives Matter” T-shirts and pre-approved jersey causes were making a difference.
- Now, they’ve gone off script. And in doing so, they’ve taken the conversation about sports’ role in society to a place it’s never quite been before.
The big picture: The NBA’s postponement started a chain reaction.
- 🏀 WNBA: The six teams scheduled to compete yesterday chose not play. “We stand in solidarity with our brothers in the NBA,” the players’ union said.
- ⚾️ MLB: The Milwaukee Brewers were the first team to pull the plug on their game. Later, the Seattle Mariners and L.A. Dodgers did the same. While the NBA and WNBA are no strangers to political activism, this type of stance is new in baseball.
- ⚽️ MLS: Though the night’s first game between Orlando and Nashville was played as scheduled, the remaining five games were postponed as the players collectively decided not to take the field.
- 🎾 Tennis: After Naomi Osaka withdrew from the semifinals of the Western & Southern Open (scheduled for today), tournament organizers suspended all Thursday matches.
- 🏒 NHL: In a departure from other leagues, the NHL went ahead with both playoff games — one in Toronto and one in Edmonton.
In Palmetto, Fla., after the WNBA postponed games, the Washington Mystics wore T-shirts with seven bullets on the back, to protest the police shooting of Jacob Blake.
Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photos: Win McNamee/Getty Images and Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images
President Trump and Joe Biden are waging 2020 like it’s 1968, when the streets became battlegrounds, the culture was roiling, and Richard Nixon made a fear-based “law and order” appeal to a “silent majority,” Axios’ Hans Nichols writes.
- Both presidential campaigns are seizing on searing events to validate their theory of what a majority of Americans believe and want.
- “In 1968, there were Black leaders and protesters and activists still trying to get white America to understand what was going on in Black America,” said Mark Anthony Neal, chair of Duke’s Department of African & African American Studies.
Why it matters: Trump, like Nixon, is appealing to his base’s instincts — and trying to convince white, suburban voters that their safety is at risk.
- Biden is trying to convince those same suburban voters that a second Trump term would impede racial progress and encourage violence.
- “The big question is whether the Republicans can pull together a ‘law-and-order’ message that actually works in 2020 rather than 1968,” says Teddy Goff, Democratic strategist and cofounder of Precisions Strategies.
Trump has focused more on the protests than on the actions of police. In interviews and rallies, Trump accuses Biden and Democrats of letting lawlessness prevail.
- Trump hasn’t mentioned Jacob Blake’s name since he was shot by police Sunday.
Biden tweeted a video saying he’s spoken with members of Blake’s family, and that Blake’s shooting “makes me sick. Is this the country we want to be?”
- Biden released a statement in the hours after Blake’s shooting: “These shots pierce the soul of our nation … [W]e are at an inflection point. We must dismantle systemic racism. It is the urgent task before us.”
Flashback: Axios managing David Nather saw back in June that 1968 might be repeating itself. The conventions have deepened the parallels.
The bottom line: Neither campaign can control events driving America’s summer of unrest, so they’re trying to control the narrative.
Kyle Rittenhouse, 17, who “fancied himself a member of a militia aiming to protect life and property,” was charged with the shooting deaths of two protesters in Kenosha yesterday, reports the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Other developments:
- Rusten Sheskey, a seven-year veteran of the Kenosha Police Department, was named by the Wisconsin Department of Justice as the officer who shot Jacob Blake, a Black man, seven times in the back.
- “The DOJ also said Blake had a knife in his vehicle, although it did not say whether a determination had been made about whether Blake was going for it as he ignored police orders.”
- Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers announced that 500 National Guard troops would be sent to Kenosha, and President Trump tweeted he would be “sending federal law enforcement.”
Photo: Drew Angerer/Getty Images
At Fort McHenry in Baltimore, Vice President Pence briefly mentioned the Kenosha protests as he accepted his re-nomination: “Let me be clear: the violence must stop — whether in Minneapolis, Portland, or Kenosha.”
- “President Donald Trump and I will always support the right of Americans to peaceful protest, but rioting and looting is not peaceful protest.” Video.
- Trump made a “surprise” drop-by during Pence’s speech.
White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, leaving Trump’s West Wing after one of the longest runs of any top official, told the convention that the president has “elevated women to senior positions in business and in government”:
- “He picks the toughest fights and tackles the most complex problems. He has stood by me, and he will stand up for you.” Video.
White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany gave one of the most powerful speeches of the convention, sharing the story of her preventative mastectomy in 2018, and the support she received from Trump. Video.
- Why it matters, from Axios’ Alayna Treene: McEnany’s very personal speech was one of the few that spoke to Trump’s character.
- The Trump family has mostly talked about what he does for America, without sharing deeply personal anecdotes of the man behind the office.
The speaking slot for Richard Grenell, the former U.S. ambassador to Germany and acting director of national intelligence — prime time, right before Pence — highlights his stature in Trumpworld.
- Aides expect that if Trump is re-elected, Grenell will be at the front of the line for top jobs, perhaps even Secretary of State or national security adviser.
In the night’s most dramatic moment, Madison Cawthorn, a 25-year-old candidate in North Carolina who’d be the youngest member of Congress, told of the car accident at age 19 that left him paralyzed from the waist down.
- “Be a radical for freedom,” said Cawthorn, who was seated. “Be a radical for liberty,” he said, hoisting himself up. “And be a radical for our republic, for which I stand,” he said, straightening himself, “one nation under God.” Video.
New coronavirus infections fell by almost 15% over the past week, continuing a steady downward trend, Axios’ Sam Baker and Andrew Witherspoon write.
- Why it matters: The standard caveats still apply. Progress can always fall apart, the U.S. is climbing down from a very high number of cases, and this is far from over. But this is undeniably good news. Things are getting better.
Where it stands: The U.S. is averaging roughly 41,700 new confirmed cases per day, down from about 49,000 per day last week and 65,000 per day at the height of the summer outbreak.
- The pace of new infections fell in 20 states, including the summer hotspots of Arizona, Florida and Texas. California, which has been a stubborn holdout, finally saw a significant drop (31%) this week.
What we’re watching: Any number of things could undermine this progress, from widespread outbreaks on college campuses to complacency about the need to maintain social distancing.
- And the U.S. is continuing to pull back on testing. We averaged about 690,000 tests per day last week, down roughly 5% from the week before.
- Scaling back the number of tests has helped people get test results faster, which is important. And the drop in cases is significantly bigger than the drop in testing, suggesting that it’s real improvement and not just a function of testing.
- Still, as fewer asymptomatic people are able to get tested, there’s always a risk they’ll spread the virus.
Photo: Jesse Grant/Getty Images for Disney
Kevin Mayer resigned last night as CEO of TikTok, which has been ordered by President Trump to sell its U.S. operations to a domestic buyer amid China tensions, Axios’ Kia Kokalitcheva reports.
- In a note to colleagues, Mayer explains that the eventual changes from the sale won’t leave the role with the same global focus as it had when he took the job.
- His position as COO of Chinese-owned TikTok parent ByteDance also complicated matters.
The big picture: Mayer took the job just three months ago after 27 years on-and-off at Disney, and was long considered a potential successor to former CEO Bob Iger.
Tuesday’s close. Screenshot via CNBC
The tech-driven Nasdaq 100, amid a raging recession and plunge in profits, is on the brink of doubling in 20 months, Bloomberg points out.
- The index set another record yesterday, led by gains in media and software stocks.
- Facebook, Amazon, Microsoft, Apple and Alphabet each rose to an all-time high. Netflix had its best day in three years.
Why it matters: It’s a vivid sign of how disconnected the markets are from America’s economic reality.
💰 P.S. Jeff Bezos became the first human worth $200 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
- Elon Musk became a “centibillionaire,” Bloomberg writes, as Tesla gains propelled his net worth to $101 billion.
The merger of L.A.’s Broadway Federal Bank and Washington’s City First Bank, announced yesterday, “will create the nation’s largest Black-controlled bank and the first with assets of more than $1 billion,” reports the N.Y. Times’ Stacy Cowley.
- Why it matters: Both banks “are Community Development Financial Institutions, which are lenders that focus on low- and moderate-income areas and typically serve minority borrowers and entrepreneurs who lack the assets to get traditional loans.”
Photo: Eric Barabat/AFP via Getty Images
The White House was lit in gold and purple last night to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the certification of the 19th Amendment’s ratification, giving women the constitutional right to vote.
Tory Burch — the fashion founder, designer and executive chair — writes in USA Today that for American women, “casting a vote is as much about equal power … as it is about politics”:
History is prologue, and the long and arduous struggle for equality, freedom, and justice for all in the United States of America continues. This Aug. 26, in the year 2020, Americans are still petitioning, protesting, marching, braving violence and facing arrest. Again and still, we are fighting for the dream of an equal and free America. This summer, more than any other in my lifetime, I can feel the energy of women and people of color and all ages fighting for equality and demanding a place at the table.
Girl Scouts of the USA announced an update to the classic uniform that’s designed “to better reflect the young female changemakers of today and tomorrow”:
The redesigned official uniform includes a new khaki utility vest ($34) and pocket sash ($14) option made exclusively for Girl Scouts in sixth grade through high school. These pieces are a fresh take on the classic Girl Scout uniform. …
The sash, in four-way stretch woven twill, also has built-in hidden cellphone pockets for easy storage.
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THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Antioch teen arrested in Kenosha double murder is a high school dropout, Blue Lives Matter supporter
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PRO TRUMP NEWS
THE HILL
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ROLL CALL
POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: More than 100 Bush-McCain-Romney alums go for Biden
DRIVING THE DAY
IT’S THURSDAY, and President DONALD TRUMP will close the Republican convention this evening from the White House. And, as the GOP seeks to rally around TRUMP 68 DAYS before Election Day, here’s what the world looks like:
— MORE THAN 100 PROMINENT ALUMNI of the last three Republican nominees — GEORGE W. BUSH, JOHN MCCAIN and MITT ROMNEY — are endorsing JOE BIDEN. (More on that below)
— A GROUP OF IMMIGRANTS who were naturalized by TRUMP during the convention now says they had no idea they were being used as political props. WSJ’s Tarini Parti and Mike Bender
— MAJOR LEAGUE SPORTS have come to a screeching halt after a Black man was shot several times and grievously injured by a police officer in Kenosha, Wis. The Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Clippers — two of the best teams and contenders for the NBA championship — voted to boycott the rest of the season. WNBA and baseball teams sat games out, as well.
— A MASSIVE STORM has made landfall on the Louisiana coast, threatening major damage to the Gulf region of the United States. WAPO: “Hurricane Laura slammed ashore in southwestern coastal Louisiana early Thursday with a ferocity that this region has never previously endured. The storm made landfall at 1 a.m. near Cameron, La. about 35 miles east of the Texas border.”
N.Y. POST COVER: “WAR ZONE WISCONSIN: Riots escalate after shooting of Jacob Blake … 17yo vigilante charged with killing two”
NYT, FRONT PAGE: “G.O.P. Warnings of Chaos Resound in Wisconsin,” by Sabrina Tavernise and Ellen Almer Durston
NATASHA KORECKI in Kenosha, Wis.: “‘It’s playing into Trump’s hands’: Dems fear swing state damage from Kenosha unrest”: “Downtown buildings set ablaze by arsonists were still smoldering from the night before when Kirk Ingram started to paint an angel on his boarded-up store front. Ingram, a Democrat who runs a massage therapy business, said the war-zone images of his city on TV — armed people running through the streets, burned cars and broken windows — were bolstering President Donald Trump’s get-tough message. Maybe a few uplifting murals could start to tell a different story about Kenosha, Ingram said Wednesday.
“Trump has attempted to frame the violent unrest in the wake of Jacob Blake’s shooting as fallout from inept leadership and the inability of Democrats to take control of their cities. On Wednesday, he announced he would send in the National Guard, while criticizing Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers for not doing so, even though the Democrat had deployed guard troops on Monday and increased them on subsequent days.
“As this battleground state grapples with social unrest, some Democrats fear that the looting and rioting and clashes are feeding Trump’s argument that this is what life would be like under the so-called radical left. The worry is that especially among suburban swing voters, the more upheaval and violence they witness, the more their sympathy for peaceful Black Lives Matters protesters will wane.”
— AP: “17-year-old arrested after 2 killed during unrest in Kenosha,” by Stephen Groves and Scott Bauer in Kenosha
NYT … JEREMY PETERS, ANNIE KARNI and NICK CORASANITI: “How Trump’s Convention Has Become a Crucial Play for the Suburbs”: “Trump advisers said on Wednesday that they did not intend to change people’s minds about the president. Voter opinions about him have been remarkably impervious to the good and bad news about him, fluctuating little since he took office. Rather, the aides said, they were seeking to remind suburban voters of policies Mr. Trump has supported — like granting citizenship for legal immigrants and reducing harsh criminal statutes — that will give them something to hang onto in the voting booth in November.”
RYAN LIZZA: “Pence goes full MAGA”
HAPPENING THIS A.M. — JARED KUSHNER is joining us at 9 A.M. for our last “Plug in with Playbook” event of the GOP convention. Watch
COUNTERPROGRAMMING …
— NEW … BUSH 43 ALUMNI FOR BIDEN is releasing a letter this morning detailing why they are supporting BIDEN for president. “In order to emerge strong and ready to tackle the challenges before us, we must act. We must step up, get out of our comfort zone, and vote for Joe Biden. It is time for us to have initiative in our communities and networks to stand up for character, integrity, decency, and leadership,” the letter reads. Notable signers include: former Commerce Secretary CARLOS GUTIERREZ, Bush domestic policy adviser SALLY CANFIELD, former Ambassador JAMES K. GLASSMAN and former U.S. Treasurer ROSARIO MARIN. The letter
— “Romney 2012 staffers unite behind effort to elect Joe Biden,” by Max Cohen: “More than 30 former staffers from Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign are signing onto an effort to elect Joe Biden — the same man they worked to defeat during the 2012 campaign.
“The latest initiative launched by Republicans eager to unseat their party’s presidential nominee comes as Romney is increasingly viewed with scorn by President Donald Trump’s fervent base. In an open letter obtained by POLITICO, the group, which dubs itself ‘Romney Alumni for Biden,’ says Trump’s rhetoric and actions are antithetical to the Republican Party they believe in.”
— NYT’S JONATHAN MARTIN: “Over 100 Ex-Staff Members for John McCain Endorse Joe Biden”: “[Mark] Salter, who led the effort to gather signatures along with the former McCain aides Christian Ferry, Niki Christoff and Joe Donoghue, said they had confined their outreach to staff members, and did not seek out McCain family members.” The letter, with all the signatories
ALSO, THIS IS BIG … SCOOP via ALEX ISENSTADT: “Turmoil consumes Chamber of Commerce as it backs Democrats”: “The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is poised to endorse nearly two dozen freshmen House Democrats for reelection, triggering a revolt within the right-leaning organization and drawing fierce pushback from the group’s powerful GOP donors.
“‘The decision represents a sharp departure for the traditionally conservative Chamber, which has spent over $100 million backing Republican candidates over the past decade, and it threatens to further complicate the party’s prospects in the November election while driving a split in the business community.
“Chamber leaders — including president Suzanne Clark, chief executive officer Tom Donahue, and executive vice president Neil Bradley — have been pushing the proposal ahead of a Thursday committee vote to finalize a slate of 2020 endorsements. But the group’s donors and members are up in arms, with some threatening to pull funding and others openly venting their frustration. Some are raising the prospect that Chamber board members will quit in the weeks to come.
“There is particular concern the Democrats in question do not have the pro-business record an endorsement would convey. State Chamber of Oklahoma President Chad Warmington penned a letter Tuesday to national Chamber leaders fervently opposing the proposal to back Rep. Kendra Horn, perhaps the most vulnerable House Democrat in the country.”
— WHAT THIS MEANS: In endorsing Democrats, the Chamber seems to be seeking relevance in a Washington that’s shifted away from them. These Democrats they’re endorsing have views that are simply incompatible with where the Chamber has been for years. But many of them will be elected officials next Congress — and the Chamber could, theoretically, take a bit of credit for that and find itself some new allies on the left.
WHAT KEVIN MCLAUGHLIN IS READING … WSJ ED BOARD: “The More Important Election: Senate control will decide if change in 2021 is centrist or radical.”
DRAMA UNDER THE DOME … ROUGHLY 100 LANDMARKS, including the KENNEDY CENTER, the WHITE HOUSE and SMITHSONIANS on the National Mall, were lit in purple and gold Wednesday night as part of the “Forward into Light” campaign organized by the Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commission to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote.
ONE BUILDING NOT PARTICIPATING: The U.S. CAPITOL. Organizers had approached Speaker NANCY PELOSI and Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL to have the Capitol complex participate in the effort. Pelosi immediately signaled her support. A Pelosi spokesman said “the speaker is deeply disappointed the U.S. Capitol building is not participating in this historic event.” A McConnell spokesman declined to discuss senior staff-level discussions.
IT WOULD HAVE BEEN a historic decision to participate. The Capitol has not in recent memory been specially lit for any cause despite many asking, and McConnell was concerned about setting a new precedent. McConnell asked the speaker to take that into consideration and left the door open for continued discussion, we’re told.
ON PENCE … WAPO’S ROBIN GIVHAN: “Mike Pence had a few things to say at the convention: Trump is great. Trump is great. And Trump is great”: “There they were. A team as always: Vice President Pence and his wife, Karen. On the third night of the Republican National Convention, the couple walked out to the assembled audience at Fort McHenry in Baltimore holding hands. She took a seat and he stood framed by a red brick arch that was filled with American flags.
“The vice president was spit-shined for the occasion. His dark suit fit well enough. His white shirt was crisp. His glossy red tie matched the stripes in the flags behind him, and his close-cropped white hair had the immovable perfection of an action figure’s.
“Pence is a mediocre speaker. He mostly spends his time uttering the name of President Donald J. Trump in sentence after sentence. Diagram one of them and it’s likely: Noun, verb, adjective. Or more precisely: Trump. Is. Great. He likes staccato — a lazy form of emphasis.”
HAPPENING TONIGHT — “Trump’s big night: Expect talk of GOP progress, Dem anarchy,” by AP’s Jonathan Lemire and Kevin Freking: “Though he will promise national greatness, there was little expectation he would deliver a message designed to unify the divided electorate. In 2016, his message was ‘I alone can fix it.’ This time, while trailing in the polls, he will offer himself as the last remaining defense against radical forces threatening the American way of life.
“Aides have closely guarded details of the address, which was being revised the night before Trump was to speak from the White House South Lawn. While Trump has centered his recent stump speech on anarchists that he depicts overrunning city streets, aides signaled that Thursday’s speech will not be as dark as his infamous ‘American carnage’ inaugural address.
“Against a backdrop of patriotism, Trump will describe America as a work in progress, one that is not perfect but has achieved much. It’s an argument meant to offer a contrast with Democrats whom the president has described as not loving their country. In a similar vein, aides said, Trump would speak to progress made on combating the coronavirus, which has been treated as something of an afterthought during much of the convention although it is still killing 1,000 Americans a day.” AP
TRUMP’S THURSDAY — The president will depart the White House en route to the Trump International Hotel at 11:50 a.m. He will arrive at 11:55 a.m. and participate in a roundtable with supporters. The president will depart at 1 p.m. and return to the White House. Trump will deliver his acceptance speech for the GOP convention at 10:30 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
MICHAEL KRUSE: “How Trump Mastered the Art of Telling History His Way”: “[T]he rewriting (or even pre-writing) of his past is a lifelong Trump trademark. He is who he is, is where he is, is seen the way he’s seen by so many, because of it. He’s self-made! (He’s not.) He’s a businessman with a Midas touch! (He’s not.) He’s an outsider! (He was an insider — thanks to his father’s political connections — the day he was born.) ‘He is not who he says he is,’ former Trump casino executive Jack O’Donnell told me Wednesday. ‘He is,’ Trump biographer Michael D’Antonio said, ‘a walking lie.’
“Everybody does some version of this, of shading and shaping their personal stories, to present to others more flattering pictures, and politicians, it’s fair to say, maybe do it even a little bit more—so some of this is to be expected in any campaign and at any convention. But nobody, in the estimation of political strategists and historians, has ever done it with the bravado of Trump.
“What he understands, they say, is that most people don’t have the bandwidth to keep track of the nonstop glut of stacked-up facts that form any messy backstory—and who, anyway, really likes a constant, correcting scold? Trump’s stamina selling these tales laced with falsehoods wins out, almost always, over the work of the diligent nags trying to check him.”
NYT’S MAGGIE HABERMAN: “After rolling back transgender protections, the Trump campaign is courting the L.G.B.T.Q. vote”
VALLEY TALK — “TikTok CEO Kevin Mayer Quits as Trump Pushes Chinese App to Sell U.S. Business,” by WSJ’s Lisa Lin: “TikTok Chief Executive Kevin Mayer said he is leaving the social-media platform after being on the job for about three months, as the company comes under increasing pressure from the White House over its ties to China.
“In a letter to staff, Mr. Mayer said the political environment had sharply changed in recent weeks and the role of CEO at the hugely popular short-video app would be altered significantly after the expected sale of TikTok’s U.S. business.”
PLAYBOOKERS
Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.
TRANSITION — Natalie Edelstein is taking leave from Rep. Eric Swalwell’s (D-Calif.) office, where she’s deputy comms director, to join Jill Schupp’s campaign for Congress in Missouri as comms director.
ENGAGED — Tyler Levins, a research assistant for the Senate Commerce Committee, proposed to Taylor Hunt-Sowders, an intern for DOJ’s IG, at the Gulfport Visitor Center in Gulfport, Miss., on Aug. 20. They met in high school in Mississippi. Pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Jedd Rosche, senior Congress editor at CNN. What he’s been reading: “I finally got around to reading Patrick Radden Keefe’s ‘Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland’ in July. I couldn’t put it down, because, while it was extremely informative about recent history, it reads like a thriller from start to finish.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Roger Stone is 68 … Gary Cohn is 6-0 … New York Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul is 62 … Ashley Moir, booker and panel producer for Fox News’ “Special Report” … Rachel Racusen … Steve Clemons, editor-at-large at The Hill (h/t Ben Chang) … Jennifer Senior is 51 … POLITICO’s Darius Dixon and Megan Cassella … Lydia Jabin … Blake Sobczak, a deputy editor at E&E News … Morris Jones … Christopher LaPrade, senior manager of global relations at the American Chemical Society … Sarah Gamard … Josh Paciorek, comms director for Rep. Fred Upton (R-Mich.) … Peter Sterne … Brandt McCool, CTO at New Blue Interactive … Francesca McCrary … Jason Houser … Ty Matsdorf … Leah Daughtry … Benjamin Haas is 34 (h/t Morgan Dwyer) … Jeannette O’Connor … Vanessa Wruble is 46 … Kelsey Berg … Biruk Bekele …
… Pete Boyle, VP of public affairs at the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities … FDD’s Rich Goldberg is 37 … Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz … Mac Abrams … Josh Mankiewicz, correspondent for NBC’s “Dateline,” is 65 … former Sen. Bob Kerrey (D-Neb.) is 77 … former Sen. Robert Torricelli (D-N.J.) is 69 … Xavier Pugliese … Linda McKay … Marilyn Renner … Danielle Weisberg, co-CEO and co-founder of theSkimm … Jenn Sharkey … Edelman’s Polly Mingledorff … Christopher S. Brown … August Skamenca … Christine O’Donnell is 51 … Naomi LaChance … Katrina Salhioui … Melissa Sellers … Jim Osman … Sarah Schenning … Peter Rothfeld … Moutray McLaren … Jon Kinney is 7-0 … Donald St. Clair … Nicole Charalambous … Bill Hamilton … Mindy Tucker Fletcher … Ruth Harkin
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AMERICAN MINUTE
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CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: RNC Night 3—Powerful Lineup Forces LibMedia to Pathetic New Lows
Not Your Father’s RNC
Happy Thursday, my Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. The week is almost over and there are only 2,734 more left this year, so let’s enjoy wrapping up this one.
Night 3 of the RNC was impressive to even a jaded and dark guy like me. You could very well accuse me of merely cheerleading for the home team, but I am not comparing last night to this year’s DNC or those of the past, but to previous RNC gatherings.
Tyler’s wrap-up of RNC Night 3 is here.
Usually by the third night of a DNC or RNC, I’m just sitting around hoping for a chunk of my ceiling to break off and hit me in the head so I can feel something again. Despite being impressed with the first two nights of the convention, I was still not expecting much.
For the first time during this year’s conventions, I decided to join my colleagues for the liveblog that we are doing every night. As the evening wore on, I told them that this was the most impressive one-night speaker lineup I’d seen at a convention. It was sincere, and I have a lot of conventions under my belt.
As I mentioned yesterday, I like the way the Republicans have been staying on message. It’s not just that they’re doing it well, there is also the fact that messaging is powerful. Conventions past have hammered home messages that the party thought would resonate but didn’t. That was because the messaging was a product of what Beltway Republicans and the grifter consultant class thought would be good for the hoi polloi.
This oh-so-Trump RNC is speaking to the people, not at us.
Wednesday’s lineup was a perfect mix of familiar political faces and compelling voices unknown to the general public. It’s standard political fare, but this RNC continues to hit all the right notes in ways that its recent predecessors were unable to.
Early in the evening, Tennessee Sen. Marsha Blackburn made it clear that the Republican party is the one that is on the side of law enforcement. The “law and order” theme is all the more important given what’s going on in Wisconsin at the same time as the RNC this week.
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany was one of the familiar faces at Wednesday’s RNC installment. Known — and admired — for being a bit of an attack dog in her current role, McEnany gave a stunningly personal speech about deciding to have a preventative mastectomy.
Tera Myers was an unfamiliar face who, as Tyler wrote, “may have given the most powerful speech” at the RNC on Wednesday night. It was a moving pro-life story about her decision to give birth to and raise her son, who has Down Syndrome, despite being told that she should terminate the pregnancy.
The pro-life message had another strong advocate in Sister Deirdre Byrne, a Roman Catholic nun who is also a retired Army colonel and a surgeon. Joe Biden wouldn’t challenge her to a push-up contest.
The night must have been a success because the hacks in the mainstream media were either working overtime to ignore some of the speakers or just being generally awful.
I was watching two different broadcasts, one of which was ABC, which I had on in the background and muted. I wanted to see which speeches they were skipping. All the ones they did were telling.
The Democrats and their media monkeys like to go on about Republicans — and especially President Trump — being anti-woman. Wednesday’s RNC lineup featured several women, many of whom held positions of power. It ran counter to the preferred narrative, which would explain why ABC opted for panel discussions among their talking heads rather than airing the speeches of Gov. Kristi Noem, Rep. Elise Stefanik, and McEnany.
ABC also chose to ignore the speech of Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng. The purported news organization also happens to be owned by the same parent company as ESPN. Both broadcast NBA games.
Hmmm.
Now, the awful:
Yeah, they’re scum.
The RNC ended the night with Vice President Pence’s acceptance speech, which was another winner. Rarely is the incumbent vice president’s convention speech worth watching. Pence has a great public speaking delivery. His vocal inflections for emphasis are used sparingly and are always perfectly timed. The Ft. McHenry backdrop really made it pop.
My colleagues will be liveblogging the RNC conclusion tonight.
Really looking forward to the headliner.
So Much for Listening to Scientists
Am I Wrong?
PJM Linktank
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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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We will be discussing the Republican National Convention and its host state of North Carolina, the battle for the Senate, and more. If you have questions that you would like us to answer on air about these or other topics, just send us an email at goodpolitics@virginia.edu. We’ll try to get to as many reader questions as possible — and if your question doesn’t get answered this week, we may answer it in a future episode. You can watch via YouTube; while you’re there, subscribe to our University of Virginia Center for Politics YouTube channel (the name of the channel is UVACFP). The program will also be available at our YouTube channel (and at the original link) if you can’t tune in live. An audio-only version will also be posted at our podcast page. The podcast is also available on SoundCloud, and it will be on other podcast platforms soon. If you missed it, you can also find last week’s debut episode at our YouTube channel or directly at this link. We tackled the Democratic National Convention, the race to 270 electoral votes, the battleground state of Wisconsin, and more. If you would like to sign up for Thursday’s webinar and get e-mail alerts about future episodes, sign up at our Eventbrite page and select the “season pass” option. To support this series and the Center for Politics, text USAVOTES to 41444. |
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States of Play: North Carolina | ||||||||
By J. Miles Coleman and Bennett Stillerman Sabato’s Crystal Ball |
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— After President Obama’s narrow win there in 2008, light red North Carolina has proved elusive for Democrats — but it remains a target for both sides. — North Carolina’s politics are increasingly shaped by its growing bloc of unaffiliated voters. — Over the past decade, North Carolina’s traditional east-west divide has evolved into more of an urban-rural split — a pattern seen in many other states. — In a state known for volatile Senate races, 2020’s contest should be true to form, and further down the ballot, voters will weigh in on several statewide races. 2008 brings a closely-divided state into playAffectionately dubbed “The Tar Heel State,” North Carolina, with its divided electorate, is a highly-sought electoral prize. Its current swing status is somewhat of a new phenomenon; Barack Obama carried it, narrowly, in 2008. The state voted almost uniformly Democratic from the end of Reconstruction through 1964, as part of the Democrats’ Solid South. Then, following backlash to President Lyndon Johnson’s civil rights legislation, it stayed largely in the red column from 1968 until 2004, the one exception being when it supported southerner Jimmy Carter in 1976. Overall, Republicans have carried North Carolina in 11 of the last 13 elections — Obama’s victory by three-tenths of a percentage point in 2008 was the only break in what is otherwise a nearly four-decade Republican winning streak. With a sizable cache of 15 electoral votes up for grabs, both parties would be wise to invest in North Carolina — after the 2020 Census count, it’s expected to gain a congressional seat, which will increase its clout in the Electoral College. The state sports large metropolitan areas like Charlotte and Raleigh, which have diverse populations. These voters, along with a sizable contingent of rural Black residents scattered throughout the eastern part of the state, are the heart and soul of the Democratic coalition. However, their population is often not enough to outweigh strong GOP support from rural areas throughout the state. Republicans also find support in the exurbs of the major metro areas: Charlotte’s Union County and Raleigh’s Johnston County, for example, are becoming more influenced by their respective metro areas, but GOP candidates routinely clear 60% of the vote in each. Politically, the relative balance between metropolitan areas and rural communities helps account for the state’s marginal nature. In both the 2008 and 2012 presidential elections, it was the country’s second-closest state by percentage margin, and for 2016, it was among a handful of states that Trump carried with less than 50% the vote. This year, the outcome of the election should again rest on that tenuous balance between the urban cores and rural communities — so neither party can take much for granted. Not surprisingly, the Biden campaign has made significant expenditures in the state, while pro-Trump groups have also prioritized it. Without North Carolina, Trump doesn’t have many feasible routes to 270 electoral votes. Given its persistent light red hue, if Trump has lost there, states that are more “purple,” like Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, should already be in the Democratic column. For Biden, carrying North Carolina would likely be, from a purely mathematical standpoint, icing on the cake, though his campaign’s efforts there could boost down-ballot Democrats. The Crystal Ball currently has North Carolina rated as Toss-up, so we believe that neither party currently holds a clear edge there. Let’s next dive into key aspects of North Carolina’s electoral history and analyze the demographic and political changes that might give us a clue to which side the Tar Heel State will end up on this year. Unaffiliated voters reshape state political landscapeNorth Carolina voters have become increasingly disaffected with the major political parties, at least in terms of party registration. The dynamics of statewide elections are more dependent on which candidate Unaffiliated voters support — but this was not always the case. As part of the old Solid South, Democrats held an advantage in North Carolina voter registration, but that didn’t always equate to electoral success: As suggested above, Republicans have won 11 of the last 13 presidential contests there. How do we make sense of this? The answer is a simple intuition: Party registration does not equal party identification. With the advent of Richard Nixon’s Southern Strategy in 1968, the Democratic Party lost its stranglehold on southern politics. Nixon carried North Carolina with a 40% plurality — while independent George Wallace and Democrat Hubert Humphrey took about 30% apiece — and then he took close to 70% in his 1972 landslide. But voters were slower to change their registration to match their federal voting preferences. As of the 1974 Almanac of American Politics, 73% of the state’s voters were registered Democrats. So the disconnect between party registration and voting preference has factored into state elections for decades. When Obama carried the state in 2008, the composition of the electorate was considerably different than it is now. In short, things were more two-party: In Oct. 2008, Democrats claimed 46% of voters, while Republicans took 32% and the remaining 22% were Unaffiliated. Roughly a dozen years later, Unaffiliated voters have supplanted Republicans, and could potentially outnumber Democrats soon (Map 1). Map 1: NC voter registration by county, 2008-2020As of July 2020, 16 counties are plurality-Unaffiliated. They’re spread throughout the state but have some common characteristics. Generally, the green counties on Map 2 tend to be rapidly growing. In terms of population size, Wake County has long played second fiddle to Mecklenburg County, but after years of more robust population growth, Wake became the largest county in 2019. Perhaps not surprisingly, Wake is plurality-Unaffiliated. Some of the plurality-Unaffiliated counties contain public colleges: Buncombe (UNC-Asheville), Jackson (Western Carolina University), New Hanover (UNC-Wilmington), and Watauga (Appalachian State University) are examples. Wake County’s neighbor to the west, Chatham County, has seen an influx of new residents as communities closer to Raleigh have filled up, and it is just a few miles from both UNC-Chapel Hill and Duke University (those colleges sit in heavily-Democratic Orange and Durham counties, respectively). With that, it makes sense that, according to Carolina Demography, the state’s Unaffiliated voters are increasingly more likely to be millennials. Carolina Demography also notes that, since 2016, the state has added just over a million registered voters — members of minority groups such as Hispanics and Asians have tended to account for a disproportionate share of new Unaffiliated registrants. Perhaps as a consequence of these groups registering as Unaffiliated at a greater clip, the Democratic share of the registered voter pool has dropped faster than the Republican share. One conclusion may be that millennials, including younger minority voters, will vote blue in elections, but otherwise don’t much care to be associated with party politics. Michael Bitzer of Catawba College confirms this, noting that, “Democrats may see greater numbers and loyalty among these voters,” as millennial Unaffiliated voters swamp the electorate. Counties that have remained most faithful to the major parties are also heavily-minority, though their economic picture seems to play a role. In the northeastern corner of the state, Edgecombe (16%), Warren (20%), and Hertford (21%) counties have the lowest percentage shares of Unaffiliated voters in the state. Taken together, their aggregate population is nearly 60% Black, and each county is between 65%-70% Democratic by registration. However, they’re also three of the poorest and least transient counties in the state — the northeast has struggled to attract the type of new residents who have registered as Unaffiliated in large numbers in the booming metros. The influx of new voters into the ranks of the Unaffiliated bloc may change the group’s electoral behavior. Previously, Unaffiliated voters were part of more conservative generations, and thus skewed more Republican. Exit polling seems to confirm this: self-identified independent voters in North Carolina supported John McCain 60%-39%, Mitt Romney 57%-42%, and Trump 53%-37% (in the context of polling, the terms “independent” and “unaffiliated” are often used interchangeably). So Republican support among these voters has declined a bit, but what does this tell us about 2020? The polling in 2020 suggests that this trend has accelerated. A New York Times/Siena College poll conducted in mid-June pegged unaffiliated voters as pro-Biden by a 49%-31% margin. Public Policy Polling, a Democratic pollster which is based in the state, also found that unaffiliated voters support Biden, but by a much more narrow 47%-46%. Swings among unaffiliated and/or independent voters can certainly decide elections. Earlier this year, National Public Radio reported on the impact of unaffiliated voters in states like Colorado, Florida, and Arizona. It’s tempting to think about unaffiliated voters as a monolithic, anti-partisan group, but this would be an oversimplification. Monmouth University, a respected pollster, addressed this. Monmouth concluded that unaffiliated voters can rely on partisanship less when making decisions — that does not mean that their partisan leanings play no role, rather that other factors carry more weight with unaffiliated voters. This year, Trump’s divisive behavior and mismanagement of the coronavirus may be decisive in pushing unaffiliated voters to the Democratic Party. The last time there was a crisis of this magnitude during an election year, Barack Obama became the first Democrat to win North Carolina since 1976. East/west becomes urban/ruralHistorically, North Carolina featured something of a geographic tug-of-war: Democrats would rack up huge margins out east, while, if Republicans wanted to compete, they’d have a base in western counties — the Republican Party has had enduring strength in western North Carolina since the Civil War (both it and eastern Tennessee had a lot of pro-Union sentiment in the war). The 1960 presidential election illustrates this: as part of his razor-thin national margin, John F. Kennedy carried North Carolina by four percentage points. (Map 2) Map 2: 1960 presidential election in North CarolinaMap 3: 2008 presidential and gubernatorial elections in North CarolinaGoing forward, Obama’s winning coalition in 2008 may be instructive for Biden in 2020. Though Biden has very much run on his association with Obama, he likely won’t be able to replicate Obama’s historic levels of enthusiasm with Black voters — though perhaps running mate Kamala Harris, a Black candidate, could help. Still, Biden may be able to run up the score with another group: affluent white professionals. Often originally from other states, this group dominates North Carolina’s suburbs, like the South Charlotte area and Wake County’s Cary (it’s a running joke that the city’s name is an acronym for “Containment Area for Relocated Yankees”). As the 2018 midterms demonstrated, the GOP is going to have a tough time in 2020 if they continue to hemorrhage votes from suburban areas. In 2008, the state’s 9th Congressional District, which then centered on suburban neighborhoods in south Charlotte, was reflexively red at all levels of government — Republicans have since seen serious slippage in the area. It’s a good bet that Biden’s campaign will rely heavily on these voters. Another sure bet for 2020 is that state-level results will take on a more nationalized character. Again, let’s consider the ballad of Pat McCrory. After her 2008 victory, Perdue saw negative job approval ratings from essentially the start of her tenure. With Perdue struggling to make a positive impression on voters — in 2010, the legislature flipped Republican, further weakening her hand — it was an open secret that McCrory, who had a certain “I told you so” factor on his side, was going to run for a rematch. Perdue ended up retiring in 2012, and McCrory waltzed to an easy win that year. Once in office, the pragmatic McCrory was pushed rightward by an ideological legislature, as he ended up signing several conservative bills, ranging from voter ID legislation to tax cuts. In March 2016, he signed House Bill 2, which would become commonly known as the “Bathroom Bill.” The bill was seen as having anti-LGBT intent, and prompted some businesses to boycott the state — most notably, for a state where basketball is sacrosanct, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). Even before HB2 became a national story, McCrory had drawn a top-tier opponent in popular state Attorney General Roy Cooper (D-NC). It’s rare that statewide candidates, from either party, win with over 60% of the vote, but Cooper took 61% in his 2008 reelection and was unopposed in 2012. In a result that went to a recount, Cooper won the governorship by 10,000 votes, or two-tenths of a percentage point. For McCrory, it had to feel like a familiar situation: in both 2008 and 2016, he ran four percentage points behind his party’s presidential nominee. (Map 4) Map 4: McCrory vs GOP presidential nominees, 2008 and 2016Trump’s 29% deficit in Mecklenburg County made him the worst-performing Republican presidential nominee there since in 1944, and Charlotte’s “Mayor Pat” did only slightly better than Trump in the area. One of the more visible blows to McCrory’s hometown image was that, to protest HB2, the National Basketball Association pulled its 2017 All-Star game from Charlotte. Perhaps a more local factor that hurt McCrory in the northern precincts of the Charlotte region was his support for toll roads — something unpopular with commuters. As with McCrory, Cooper actually didn’t have much of a home region vote, either. Cooper hails from Nash County, which sits just east of Raleigh. Roughly 40% Black by composition, it’s one of the few true swing counties in the state, though it recently followed something of a countercyclical trend: it was one of about a dozen counties, nationally, that supported McCain in 2008 but then flipped to Obama for 2012. Lacking Obama’s historic Black support, Clinton lost Nash County, but by just 84 votes. Given the presidential margin, Cooper’s 52%-47% vote there seemed underwhelming. From 1987 to 2001, he represented it in the legislature, and during his three contested races for Attorney General, he never took less than 69% in his home county. In something of an irony, considering where he underperformed most in his original statewide run, McCrory ran ahead of Trump in much of eastern North Carolina. This was a historical anomaly, as recent GOP candidates for governor would struggle there, even while eastern counties had been supporting Republican presidential nominees for decades. Shortly before the 2016 election, Hurricane Matthew blew through the region, causing severe flooding. From an optics standpoint, McCrory earned some positive press during the storm’s aftermath — considering the final margin, it may have nearly saved him. Still, even considering any of Hurricane Matthew’s likely effects, it was clear that the old east/west electoral split in the state was done. If anything, McCrory’s underperformance in western North Carolina may be a sign that longer-term, the mountains may see more investment from Democrats than the Coastal Plain. This year, Cooper, in part due to his handling of the pandemic, is a clear favorite for reelection. More often than not, polls have found the governor with double-digit leads over his GOP opponent, Lt. Gov. Dan Forest (R-NC). With Cooper’s prospects looking strong, the Crystal Ball rates the race as Likely Democratic, and Democrats are hoping that his coattails will be enough to gain seats in the legislature. Republicans have controlled both chambers of the legislature since the 2010 elections, and they’re each at least somewhat in play. In contrast to Wisconsin — in our profile of the state last week, we noted that it has few major non-presidential races this year — North Carolina elects a slate of 10 statewide officials in presidential years, known collectively as the Council of State. Given the state’s Democratic heritage, the GOP didn’t hold any of the 10 offices after the 1996 elections. In 2000, then-state Rep. Cherie Berry (R) was elected Commissioner of Labor, which opened the floodgates for the GOP in the 21st century (Table 1). As an aside, though she’s retiring for 2020, Berry is something of a celebrity with local political observers — her picture is in every elevator in the state, which some research suggests has aided her in elections. Table 1: NC Council of State by party affiliationUnaffiliateds may decide Senate race, tooWhile North Carolina Democrats have, all things considered, benefited from the scheduling of statewide elections in presidential years — in the Obama era, the Black turnout he inspired also helped lift down-ballot Democrats — Republicans, on the whole, have gained from the timing of the state’s U.S. Senate seats. Both 2006 and 2018, two of the biggest Democratic wave years in recent decades, were “blue moon” years in North Carolina, meaning that there were no statewide executive or Senate races those years. If the state had a Class I seat — Crystal Ball Senior Columnist Louis Jacobson explored the composition of Senate classes in a recent article — it would have been easy to imagine a Democrat winning that seat in the anti-George W. Bush election of 2006, retaining it by running a few points ahead of Obama in 2012, and then enjoying a favorable national environment in 2018. Instead, the state’s senior senator, Richard Burr (R-NC) has kept a low profile for most of his tenure but won his three elections in years that were favorable to Republicans. In 2004 and 2016, he faced a presidential electorate, but was helped, to some extent, by his party’s nominees. In between those years, he drew a credible opponent in longtime Secretary of State Elaine Marshall (D-NC) in 2010, but in an anti-Obama midterm, the race wasn’t a priority for national Democrats. Favorable timing also helped the late Sen. Jesse Helms (R-NC). One of North Carolina’s most famous and polarizing national figures, Helms won five terms in the Senate. With a penchant for antagonizing liberals, he was swept into office in 1972 on Richard Nixon’s coattails. His closest race was in 1984, against then-Gov. Jim Hunt (D-NC), who was then concluding a successful eight-year tenure in Raleigh. In what was dubbed the ugliest campaign in the country, Helms pulled out a narrow win by constantly tying himself to President Reagan, who carried the state by 24% that year. Helms’ old seat is now held by first-term Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC). If Unaffiliated voters are going to decide the election, Tillis may have a tough battle for their support. Earlier this week, polling from Morning Consult gave Democrats’ nominee, former state Sen. Cal Cunningham (D-NC), a 47%-39% lead, which included a 41%-34% advantage with independents. Though GOP partisans may ultimately come home, Tillis must also work to shore up his right flank — while a near-unanimous 93% of Republicans are backing Trump in that poll, only 78% support Tillis. Polling has usually shown a high amount of undecided voters, especially compared to the presidential race, so the race may be fluid. In 2014, the year Tillis was elected, most polling had the late Sen. Kay Hagan (D-NC) with a small, but consistent leads throughout the campaign. Unfortunately for Hagan, most undecided voters broke for Tillis late in the cycle. This year, the North Carolina contest is one of just three Senate races that the Crystal Ball considers a Toss-up. Overall, no other state appears to have as many important and competitive races this year as does North Carolina. It is the only big state to feature competitive races for president, Senate, and governor. It also has new congressional and state legislative maps, which will allow Democrats to net at least two new U.S. House seats and could threaten GOP majorities in the state legislature. |
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What Happens After November 3? | ||||||||
By Gerald Pomper Guest Columnist, Sabato’s Crystal Ball |
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— The most critical moments in the 2020 election will come after Election Day, Nov. 3 — Millions of mail ballots induced by the coronavirus will delay final results in some states for several weeks after the election. — Congress is most likely to certify a Biden victory, but Trump (or Pelosi) might still win. The big questions after the votePolitical fanatics — including me — are now focused on the presidential contest between Donald Trump and Joe Biden. But the more interesting events may not actually happen on Election Day, Nov. 3. I now am convinced that former Vice President Joe Biden will win the popular vote by a significant margin and have a decisive Electoral College majority. Although the campaign will be the focus of most commentary, I think the Biden victory is very likely, as now evident in consistent polls as well as political science models. In the Crystal Ball of Aug. 4, renowned analyst Alan Abramowitz forecast a Biden victory within a range of 319 to 361 electoral votes. Those assessments aside, and even assuming that Biden wins, that vote must actually be cast, counted, and certified. For even a leading Biden, the days after Nov. 3 will not be the customary period of analysis, celebration, and calm preparation of a new administration. President Trump is nothing if not a believer in his own strength and inevitable success. He will make every effort, fair or foul, to remain in the White House. Unconstrained by commitment to established institutions, he will employ the extensive powers remaining in his hands for at least 78 days after the balloting, ally with his compliant Attorney General William Barr, Republican officeholders, legislators, and judges, perhaps even mobilize military forces at his command. Before there is a presidential inauguration, we may witness many scenarios unprecedented in American politics — novel, intriguing, and very scary. The first Trump effort was already launched last month, when Trump casually tweeted a suggestion that the election be delayed, to overcome the problems created by the coronavirus pandemic. Because the power to set the elections is explicitly given to Congress alone by the Constitution and has been set on the same date since 1845, this frivolous thought was quickly rejected by both parties and their congressional leaders. But Trump’s tweet was more than idle musing. He tied it to a larger objective — opposition to voting by mail, rapidly spreading as an alternative to in-person voting, the traditional practice. COVID-19 has made voters and election workers fearful of contagion by the killer of more than 175,000 Americans. Trump claimed (as did Barr), contrary to empirical evidence, that voting by mail would lead to massive election fraud and, probably worse in his eyes, to an extensive mobilization of Democratic votes. The Post Office itself has become a political flashpoint. The president has probably lost the political argument. Already, over three-fourths of the voting public has relatively good access to alternative means of casting their ballots, including mail, absentee, and early voting. More restrictive laws exist largely in noncompetitive states, particularly in the South, where Trump will likely win whatever the formal arrangements. Moreover, there is some preliminary but ironic evidence that his criticism is hurting his own cause, lowering Republicans’ use of mail ballots more than Democrats’. But the president’s objectives do serve a larger purpose, to frame these methods as illegitimate props to a “rigged election.” Whatever the outcome, he will be able to avoid the damage to his self-image of a “loser” and to maintain his caustic critique of American institutions. Trump is right, moreover, that mail balloting will complicate and lengthen the voting process. In-person voting is normally simple. An individual voter is known to the poll workers, verification requires a quick signature, casting a vote requires only pushing a few buttons, and the tally is automatically recorded and counted. Voting by mail involves many impersonal exchanges, each subject to innocent human and mechanical errors: in most states, each ballot must be requested, sent, received, completed, returned to the election officials, received, counted, and finally included in the overall tally. As an electorate, we will also now experience a quite different way of knowing the results. Television coverage, computerized data analysis, polls, and instant electronic communication have led us to expect the basic facts the very night of the balloting. By the time we go to bed (unless the year is 2000), the networks and the pundits have confidently identified the next president; when awakened we are prepared to cheer or at least acknowledge our designated leader. That very well may not be the case this year. In all likelihood, half or perhaps even more than half of all votes will be cast either early or by mail, according to the Brookings Institution’s Elaine Kamarck. A considerable number of these votes will not be counted on Election Night. For the November election, 20 states allow mail ballots to be received after Election Day (if postmarked by that day). Obviously they could not be counted until after the polls have closed, probably resulting in delayed calls of the winners. Tens of millions of mailed ballots will take days to count, even weeks in California. To reach an Electoral College majority, the roll of the states will not take minutes of broadcasters’ verdicts, but potentially weeks of accountants’ ledger readings. We are less likely to repeat Jimmy Carter’s concession of his national loss at 7 p.m. Pacific time in 1980, and more likely to endure the plodding recount of chads and ballots through December of 2000. The count of the ballots in the critical larger states can easily extend for a month. The process will be still more excruciating if those state elections are close. Then the ballots need not only to be counted, but often recounted. We already have seen the difficulties of reaching a final count in this year’s primaries in such states as New York. The problems, where they exist, will likely worsen when a larger presidential vote is involved, and a single statewide decision of critical electoral votes is at stake. It is also true that some of this year’s elections were handled well, such as Kentucky’s Democratic nomination, and that many states, both Republican and Democratic, are making efforts to improve their procedures. Whatever the locale, we can be sure that there will be challenges by the apparent losers, and that the count will change during the court cases that will follow. The partisan impact will be different because of countervailing problems in the confused administration of elections in the COVID-19 era. On the one hand, Democratic turnout in in-person voting will be lowered because fewer polling stations will be open, particularly affecting big cities with larger minority populations. On the other hand, Democrats seem more likely to use mail ballots (precisely Trump’s fear and effect). It is quite possible that a Republican lead on election night after in-person voting will be reversed after mail ballots are tabulated in a “blue shift” — as happened, for example, in the Arizona Senate election in 2018, when a small GOP lead on Election Night evaporated as the vote was finalized in the days after the election. To add to the possible confusion, these counts and recounts will be determined by state laws, not a national standard, so there will be inconsistent procedures. The application of those laws will be subject to interventions by governors and state legislatures, often in opposed partisan control, as in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, the decisive states in Trump’s 2016 victory. Federal courts will also be invoked, now bulwarked by Trump’s selection of 200 conservatives. Appeals to the U.S. Supreme Court will surely follow, but that is no guarantee of a definitive ruling. When the court did end the close election in 2000, its ruling in Bush v. Gore was not only poorly reasoned but was also specifically declared to be no precedent for the future. Since then, the court’s position has generally been to refuse to rule on state election procedures, leaving the nation without guidance and its judgment, even if made, is uncertain, given the close division between ideological blocs, the fragile health of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and the clever but vacillating stance of Chief Justice John Roberts. But the calendar will keep turning, as Constitutional deadlines — specified in the 12th and 20th amendments — and procedures established in 1877 in the Electoral Count Act come into effect. The critical date is Dec. 14, when the chosen electors in each state will gather in their separate state capitals to cast their votes. But which electors — those nominated by the Republicans to endorse Trump, or those selected by the Democrats to name Biden? That’s precisely the issue to be resolved in the contested states. It’s possible that the legislature, if controlled by the opposite party, will try to change the rules (as Florida Republicans did try in 2000). The decision will usually be made by the state governors, whose reports are already designated by statute as determining. Significantly, Democrats now head many of the key swing states, specifically Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and North Carolina. All of them voted for Trump in 2016, all are likely to be certified by their governors as voting for Biden if the tallies are murky. Their combined 61 electoral votes, added to those of the states that chose Hilary Clinton in 2016, would give Biden a total of 293, a national electoral majority. Countervailing efforts by Republican governors in other battleground states — Texas, Florida, Arizona, Ohio, Georgia — would do no more than hold these states in a shrunken, losing Trump coalition. Once the electors decide, they send the results by registered mail to the president of the U.S. Senate, who will still be Vice President Mike Pence. Then, the two houses of Congress meet on Jan. 6, precisely at 1 p.m. Pence would then open the mailed state results in alphabetical order (beginning, the statute insists, with “A”), read the results, which would then be recorded by senators and representatives designated as tellers. If there are conflicting reports, he would rule on which to include. Where there are conflicting state reports, the procedures set in 1877 declare that the report of the state governor is determining. And the roll of the states would proceed, the total results would be announced, and the new president would be chosen by a majority of all electoral votes. That’s the way it’s supposed to happen. But, remember, this will be 2021. The Congress that will witness the count of the vote will be the new Congress, elected in November. It will surely have a Democratic majority in the House, and odds right now are that Democrats will also net at least three new seats in the Senate. Another opposition seat (Georgia) may also be vacant, at least for a time, awaiting the official results of an all-but-certain Georgia special election runoff on Jan. 5, 2021 (and potentially a runoff in the state’s other, regular Senate election as well). In these circumstances, at least at first, the Democrats could have a minimum voting edge of 50 to 49. With control of both houses, Democrats would decide how to count the state electoral votes, which competing results to accept, or even to disregard a state’s vote altogether, and whether to overrule any unfavorable rulings of presiding Vice President Pence (who will not have any vote, even in a tie). They will also be free of worry about the Supreme Court, which has generally refused to intervene in cases of congressional decisions on elections. With their likely majorities in both House and Senate, Democrats would confirm Biden’s election as president, and Kamala Harris as vice president. But that’s not the only possibility. Let’s say that Trump wins, but under controversial and close circumstances, perhaps related to actions he took as president to try to help his own election odds. In this scenario, Republicans might hold the Senate, while Democrats would retain the House. The last scenario is the most unsettling but perhaps most intriguing. Assuming party loyalties hold, Congress could not reach a decision amicably, with the Senate voting for Trump electors, the House for Biden electors. Republicans might have one controversial way to get their way — if one or more “faithless electors” had the foresight or unbounded egotism to vote for a third candidate. These electors have pledged that they would vote for their party’s choice, Trump or Biden, but they might decide — or heed instructions — to choose someone else, as did seven electors in 2016 whose picks ranged from Colin Powell to Faith Spotted Eagle, a native American. The Supreme Court has since ruled that states may punish or replace such “faithless electors,” but disloyalty is still possible in a third of the states. As the Supreme Court explained in the case of Chiafalo v. Washington (2020), 32 states do require electors to formally pledge support of their party’s candidates, but only 15 provide enforcement measures, such as fines, replacement or criminal punishment for any who violate their oaths. Electors may still act faithlessly, it would seem, if they are willing to accept some loss of reputation or a small fine or a brief jail term. With the right numerical split, neither Trump nor Biden would have a majority of the Electoral College, and the decision would pass to the House alone, with each state having a single vote, determined by its full delegation. A bare majority of state delegations (26 of 50), aided by Republican gerrymandering by state legislatures, now have a Republican majority, including five states with only a single representative. To counter this force in the presidential count held in the new House, Democrats would need to win or neutralize at least three states. There are reasonable targets — such as Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Florida. Assuming no other changes, the overall balance would become 25 delegations for each party — with neither having the majority of states needed to choose the president. Failing in this maneuver, the Senate would select the new vice president from the top two contestants, who would then take office as acting president. So, if 51 senators agreed, Mike Pence would be president until the House could make a decision — perhaps immediately in a notorious political deal, perhaps after midterm elections in 2022, perhaps never in four years or never in a peaceable country. Or perhaps no decision at all could be made in Congress before the precisely fixed time for the new presidential term — Jan. 20, at noon. In that case, the office would be vacant for only a second, and the new president would be the person designated in accord with the 20th Amendment — the Speaker of the House. Nancy Pelosi would become the acting president. Trump’s manipulations would bring his most hated foe to the office he had fought to retain for his personal glory amid what Lawrence Douglas, Professor of Law at Amherst, properly warns, “a complete electoral meltdown and the unrest and violence it could unleash.” The ironies looming in a bitter contested 2020 election would be exceeded only by our sadness for the loss of the greatest American contribution to democratic practice, the peaceful transfer of power. Will we ever again believe in Jefferson’s invocation of a free and temperate politics? “We are all Republicans, we are all Federalists. If there be any among us who would wish to dissolve this Union or to change its republican form, let them stand undisturbed as monuments of the safety with which error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is left free to combat it.”
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- The Liberty Daily for August 27, 2020
- CNN’s ‘mostly peaceful protesters’ narrative requires their audience to be stupid
- John Miano highlights more ills of the immigration system
- NBA strike is not to change minds but to mobilize communist insurgents
- Dr Bobby Lopez on the epic takeover of Liberty University
- Road-blocking Seattle protesters butcher the Constitution in unhinged debate with police
- 1st degree murder charges against Kyle Rittenhouse are ludicrous prima facie
- Democrats keep on exploiting crisis while the CDC admitted stunning news about face masks
- Fentanyl in George Floyd’s system made his lungs weigh 2x-3x more than normal
- After third night of domestic terrorism, Tony Evers accepts President Trump’s assistance
The Liberty Daily for August 27, 2020
Posted: 27 Aug 2020 05:45 AM PDT
Paralyzed Madison Cawthorn stands as he urges Americans to ‘be a radical for liberty’ – Story by WNDGOP congressional candidate Madison Cawthorn urged his fellow Americans to “be a radical for liberty” as he rose to his feet at the Republican National Convention. The 25-year-old North Carolina candidate was left paralyzed from the waist down after a car accident when he was 18 and campaigns on the idea that overcoming his own personal tragedy makes him better fit to represent his fellow Americans. “I know something about adversity,” he said Wednesday night at the RNC, describing the accident that left him paralyzed from the waist down and his fight to “make a difference.” “I choose to fight for the future, to seize the high ground and retake the Shining City on a Hill,” he said. “While the radical left wants to dismantle, defund, and destroy, Republicans, under President Trump’s leadership, want to rebuild, restore and renew.” Minneapolis descends into chaos, looting again after false police shooting story circulates – Story by RedStateIf you thought things were settling down in Minneapolis, think again. Looting and rioting have broken out again tonight after a homicide suspect took his own life. Rumors spread on social media that the police had shot him, a trend of misinformation we’ve seen play out in Chicago as well. Videos of the chaos are starting to emerge. Target should probably think about just closing all stores in the area at this point, but I digress. What we are seeing here is yet more lawlessness by people looking for any reason to act out. This is not righteous anger, nor do I even buy that most of them believe whatever lie they read on social media. They just want to cause destruction and steal things. There is no deeper meaning or justification here. Apparently, this all started after a man killed someone on a parking ramp. Police were pursing him when he shot himself. That led social media instigators to spread a lie that police had shot the man. In organized fashion, people began to gather in downtown to take part in a new round of destruction. It’s anarchy and it’s a direct result of failed leadership at the local and state levels. GoFundMe nukes Kyle Rittenhouse fundraiser, allows BLM rioters to receive over $1.3M in bail donations – Story by National FileA GoFundMe page raising legal defense funds for 17-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse, who video suggests shot two men in self defense Tuesday during the Kenosha riots but has been charged with first-degree murder, has been removed from the site within minutes of going live. Users who wanted to donate to the page were greeted by a message that read “We’re sorry, but that campaign cannot be found.” In contrast, the GoFundMe page for Black Lives Matter rioters arrested by police in Portland has been allowed to accumulate over $1.3 million in donations. Other pages asking for bail money for jailed rioters across the country have accumulated hundreds of thousands of dollars. Laura Loomer uses establishment smears as proof of authenticity in new campaign ad – Story by Big League PoliticsFlorida Congressional contender Laura Loomer can no longer be ignored now that she defeated her primary challengers to be the Republican nominee for U.S. Rep in Florida’s 21st District, so the political establishment is intent upon attacking her and destroying her momentum. Loomer, who is the most banished woman in the history due to her work as a journalist, is using the smears in a new campaign ad titled: “Why They Attack.” The ad features commentary from a bipartisan group of establishment hacks. Disingenuous smears are compiled from the National Review, CNN, Washington Post, Daily Beast, Vox, Business Insider, Vanity Fair, the New Yorker and other sources to build the case that Loomer is the outsider who will go to Washington D.C. to fight entrenched corruption. “Congressional candidate Laura Loomer is headed to Congress,” the ad states. “This terrifies the establishment politicians in Washington, and now, they’re working hand-in-hand with the media to slander her with lies.” CNN panned for on-air graphic reading ‘fiery but mostly peaceful protest’ in front of Kenosha fire – Story by Fox NewsCNN was widely mocked late Wednesday after an on-air graphic that was broadcasted a day earlier went viral. CNN national correspondent Omar Jimenez was reporting live in the early hours on Tuesday morning on the unrest that had taken place in Kenosha, Wis., following the police-involved shooting of Jacob Blake. Jimenez was standing in front of a raging fire and the chyron at the bottom of the screen read, “FIERY BUT MOSTLY PEACEFUL PROTESTS AFTER POLICE SHOOTING.” The image, which didn’t surface until Wednesday night, sparked jokes across social media. “Clowns. Irresponsible clowns. It’s not even funny. Months of enabling violence and destruction by ignoring and downplaying it, thereby eliminating any pressure on politicians to take action,” conservative writer A.G. Hamilton reacted. “The Most 2020 headline you’ll ever read…” comedians the Hodge Twins quipped. “‘Fiery but mostly peaceful protest’ is so absurd that if it were satire you’d think it was lazy and unimaginative,” National Republican Senatorial Committee senior adviser Matt Whitlock wrote. “The phrase ‘beyond parody’ doesn’t begin to describe this,” conservative commentator Matt Walsh said.
Coronavirus lockdowns put the future of independent news at riskReports indicate rising traffic but drastically lower revenues for mid-sized independent news outlets.The economic downturn from COVID-19 lockdowns has hit many industries in the gut. One industry that doesn’t get nearly enough attention is journalism. The corporate conglomerates controlling mainstream media outlets are able to weather the storm, but independent news outlets have seen revenues plummet to the point that many are considering shutting down. We know. We’ve had to consider the possibility ourselves. We’ve always run a very tight ship, keeping expenses to a minimum by limiting travel and technology expenditures. This has proven to be beneficial during the economic crisis, but we would not have made it this far if not for our generous donors. I cannot appropriately express my appreciation to those who have helped us raise nearly $4,000 since we started asking for assistance. It has been a true blessing and has inspired us to work harder to bring the truth to light that mainstream media tries to hide. As I note below, traffic is through the roof. The appetite for honest news reporting, conservative opinion writing, and right-leaning podcasts is high. Every day we pick up new readers and subscribers; it’s another blessing we do not take for granted. But despite the increases in traffic and viewership, revenues have continued to plummet. We have maxed out on the number of ads we run, and that’s definitely not by choice. Ideally, we would run minimal ads or no ads at all, but this isn’t a hobby. This is a business, the only one that supports my family, so I’ve chosen to do what I hate doing by having plenty of ads on the site. Even with more ads, revenues are not what they were before the coronavirus lockdowns. This is why we’re still desperately asking for help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. Our initial estimate of $11,500 to stay afloat through the end of the year was understated. Just as revenues have gone down, so too have expenses risen. We need to pick up quite a bit more than expected; I won’t even venture a guess anymore. At this point, literally everything we receive helps us keep the dream of being a truth-centered news outlet alive. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready to talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. In these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going. 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 The Liberty Daily for August 27, 2020 appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
CNN’s ‘mostly peaceful protesters’ narrative requires their audience to be stupid
Posted: 27 Aug 2020 03:21 AM PDT CNN’s credibility has been completely abolished in recent years. The once-proud news channel has devolved into a propaganda arm for the Democratic Party. Part of their responsibility is to run cover for Black Lives Matter, the Neo-Marxist domestic terrorist organization currently burning down multiple cities across the nation. Their latest attempt to downplay the violence of BLM’s acts of terrorism would be comical if it weren’t so sad.
According to The Blaze: In the video, CNN national correspondent Omar Jimenez noted that earlier in the day that the protests were “largely peaceful” but that they “became a little more contentious” after night fell. Jimenez then recounted the measures police took to disperse the protesters, implying that police aggression was the cause for the rioting. “And then what you are seeing, the common theme that ties all of this together,” Jimenez continued, “is an expression of anger and frustration over what people feel like has become an all-too familiar story playing out in places all across the country, not just here, in Kenosha, Wisconsin.” CNN is a lost cause. Even their loyal viewers are scratching their head about the gaslighting and cognitive dissonance. They’re a walking contradiction and their reporting has become a total farce in recent years. Coronavirus lockdowns put the future of independent news at riskReports indicate rising traffic but drastically lower revenues for mid-sized independent news outlets.The economic downturn from COVID-19 lockdowns has hit many industries in the gut. One industry that doesn’t get nearly enough attention is journalism. The corporate conglomerates controlling mainstream media outlets are able to weather the storm, but independent news outlets have seen revenues plummet to the point that many are considering shutting down. We know. We’ve had to consider the possibility ourselves. We’ve always run a very tight ship, keeping expenses to a minimum by limiting travel and technology expenditures. This has proven to be beneficial during the economic crisis, but we would not have made it this far if not for our generous donors. I cannot appropriately express my appreciation to those who have helped us raise nearly $4,000 since we started asking for assistance. It has been a true blessing and has inspired us to work harder to bring the truth to light that mainstream media tries to hide. As I note below, traffic is through the roof. The appetite for honest news reporting, conservative opinion writing, and right-leaning podcasts is high. Every day we pick up new readers and subscribers; it’s another blessing we do not take for granted. But despite the increases in traffic and viewership, revenues have continued to plummet. We have maxed out on the number of ads we run, and that’s definitely not by choice. Ideally, we would run minimal ads or no ads at all, but this isn’t a hobby. This is a business, the only one that supports my family, so I’ve chosen to do what I hate doing by having plenty of ads on the site. Even with more ads, revenues are not what they were before the coronavirus lockdowns. This is why we’re still desperately asking for help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. Our initial estimate of $11,500 to stay afloat through the end of the year was understated. Just as revenues have gone down, so too have expenses risen. We need to pick up quite a bit more than expected; I won’t even venture a guess anymore. At this point, literally everything we receive helps us keep the dream of being a truth-centered news outlet alive. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready to talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. In these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going. 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 CNN’s ‘mostly peaceful protesters’ narrative requires their audience to be stupid appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
John Miano highlights more ills of the immigration system
Posted: 27 Aug 2020 02:51 AM PDT The United States clearly has challenges with illegal immigration. Those problems would be easier to solve if we could get a handle on our legal immigration system, but even those have barely been helped during the Trump era. It’s not for lack of trying, but between a feckless GOP in Congress and the Deep State within his administration, there have been major roadblocks. In the latest episode of Two Mikes, Col. Mike runs solo in his follow-up interview with John Miano. From the DNC to legal immigration challenges, the two discuss solutions to the country’s many ills.
Coronavirus lockdowns put the future of independent news at riskReports indicate rising traffic but drastically lower revenues for mid-sized independent news outlets.The economic downturn from COVID-19 lockdowns has hit many industries in the gut. One industry that doesn’t get nearly enough attention is journalism. The corporate conglomerates controlling mainstream media outlets are able to weather the storm, but independent news outlets have seen revenues plummet to the point that many are considering shutting down. We know. We’ve had to consider the possibility ourselves. We’ve always run a very tight ship, keeping expenses to a minimum by limiting travel and technology expenditures. This has proven to be beneficial during the economic crisis, but we would not have made it this far if not for our generous donors. I cannot appropriately express my appreciation to those who have helped us raise nearly $4,000 since we started asking for assistance. It has been a true blessing and has inspired us to work harder to bring the truth to light that mainstream media tries to hide. As I note below, traffic is through the roof. The appetite for honest news reporting, conservative opinion writing, and right-leaning podcasts is high. Every day we pick up new readers and subscribers; it’s another blessing we do not take for granted. But despite the increases in traffic and viewership, revenues have continued to plummet. We have maxed out on the number of ads we run, and that’s definitely not by choice. Ideally, we would run minimal ads or no ads at all, but this isn’t a hobby. This is a business, the only one that supports my family, so I’ve chosen to do what I hate doing by having plenty of ads on the site. Even with more ads, revenues are not what they were before the coronavirus lockdowns. This is why we’re still desperately asking for help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. Our initial estimate of $11,500 to stay afloat through the end of the year was understated. Just as revenues have gone down, so too have expenses risen. We need to pick up quite a bit more than expected; I won’t even venture a guess anymore. At this point, literally everything we receive helps us keep the dream of being a truth-centered news outlet alive. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready to talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. In these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going. 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 John Miano highlights more ills of the immigration system appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
NBA strike is not to change minds but to mobilize communist insurgents
Posted: 27 Aug 2020 02:32 AM PDT Let’s get some facts cleared up. The Black Lives Matter movement is fundamentally Marxist embracing both classical Marxism, the economic theory, and Cultural Marxism, the broadening of the proletariat. The NBA has been least shy about endorsing the communist movement in our culture. In response, many are not watching the once proud American sport. The NBA ratings drop is considerably worse than other sports as noted by the Washington Times. So when the Milwaukee Bucks decided to ‘boycott’ a playoff game, there are very few people left to boycott the NBA who have not done so already, for one cannot boycott what they never consume.
The NBA seems to want the police officers involved with incapacitating alleged sex offender Jacob Blake arrested. Because the Orlando Magic have agreed not to accept a forfeit for Game 5 of their series, the next game played will inevitably be Game 5 whether it is played tomorrow or the next day. So its dubious how meaningful the gesture actually is. And with the further decline in the NBA’s relevancy as indicated by their TV ratings, especially among key demographics, it’s quite unclear, if not outright doubtful this player strike for social justice will impact the situation surrounding Jacob Blake. And I believe the NBA is willing to accept this fact that their strike will likely amount to nothing. But what they are trying to do is mobilize radical communist forces. Society has moved like dominoes in 2020. Large corporations have moved in lockstep whether it be pushing coronavirus propaganda or the Marxist Black Lives. The NBA could very well be trying to launch other strikes in order to coerce the legal system to action. This would be a dangerous application of cancel culture that is foreseeable right now. The other likelihood is that the NBA is emboldening the communist radicals practicing lawlessness in our cities through celebrity endorsement, particularly after a night where the communist insurgents suffered casualties. It’s not about justice and it never has been. We need to understand that what is going on in this country are not protests, nor are they necessarily riots. They are acts of terrorism committed by Marxists. And the NBA is trying to feed it. Coronavirus lockdowns put the future of independent news at riskReports indicate rising traffic but drastically lower revenues for mid-sized independent news outlets.The economic downturn from COVID-19 lockdowns has hit many industries in the gut. One industry that doesn’t get nearly enough attention is journalism. The corporate conglomerates controlling mainstream media outlets are able to weather the storm, but independent news outlets have seen revenues plummet to the point that many are considering shutting down. We know. We’ve had to consider the possibility ourselves. We’ve always run a very tight ship, keeping expenses to a minimum by limiting travel and technology expenditures. This has proven to be beneficial during the economic crisis, but we would not have made it this far if not for our generous donors. I cannot appropriately express my appreciation to those who have helped us raise nearly $4,000 since we started asking for assistance. It has been a true blessing and has inspired us to work harder to bring the truth to light that mainstream media tries to hide. As I note below, traffic is through the roof. The appetite for honest news reporting, conservative opinion writing, and right-leaning podcasts is high. Every day we pick up new readers and subscribers; it’s another blessing we do not take for granted. But despite the increases in traffic and viewership, revenues have continued to plummet. We have maxed out on the number of ads we run, and that’s definitely not by choice. Ideally, we would run minimal ads or no ads at all, but this isn’t a hobby. This is a business, the only one that supports my family, so I’ve chosen to do what I hate doing by having plenty of ads on the site. Even with more ads, revenues are not what they were before the coronavirus lockdowns. This is why we’re still desperately asking for help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. Our initial estimate of $11,500 to stay afloat through the end of the year was understated. Just as revenues have gone down, so too have expenses risen. We need to pick up quite a bit more than expected; I won’t even venture a guess anymore. At this point, literally everything we receive helps us keep the dream of being a truth-centered news outlet alive. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready to talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. In these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going. 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 NBA strike is not to change minds but to mobilize communist insurgents appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Dr Bobby Lopez on the epic takeover of Liberty University
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 11:05 PM PDT The latest hot-button issue that is causing an uproar both within the political world and within Christianity is the ousting of Jerry Falwell Jr as the president of Liberty University. As most of you know, Falwell is a staunch supporter of President Donald Trump, which makes him a huge target of the Left. However, he’s also the leader of probably the most influential Conservative Christian University in the country. Dr Bobby Lopez, host of the podcast The Big Brown Gadfly on The GK Podcast Network, joined this episode of Conversations with Jeff to break down what he believes is really happening surrounding the takedown of Falwell as president of Liberty University. Bobby is concerned that the Woke crowd is blowing Falwell’s flaws out of proportion in order to get him out of the way so that they might turn Liberty U into Woke U. Bobby has experienced this kind of takeover personally. He was a professor at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and witnessed the takedown of Paige Patterson, who was at the helm of SWBTS. They used old statements that he had made many years ago, took them out of context, spliced them together to make it seem as if he was unfit to lead the seminary. Following his ousting, they ushered in a new president and began firing many of the conservative professors, including Dr Bobby Lopez. He was a threat to their narrative because of his true conservatism, as well as his testimony of God saving him out of the homosexual lifestyle, which they attempted to stop him from sharing. Many of the same players are involved in taking out Paige Patterson are also involved in pushing Jerry Falwell Jr out of Liberty University, including Karen Swallow Prior. We are witnessing an attempt to hijack the university and takeover yet another conservative institution. This is a systematic takeover of the major institutions promoting biblical Christianity and true conservatism. We have to fight back and not allow the Woke Progressives to gain any more ground. We must not allow them to use Cancel Culture to manipulate us into devouring our own. Remember, this is a battle for the soul of America and the Church.
The post Dr Bobby Lopez on the epic takeover of Liberty University appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Road-blocking Seattle protesters butcher the Constitution in unhinged debate with police
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 10:41 PM PDT Protests are vital components of American government for the people, by the people. But our right to protest is not universal. It’s not without limits. We cannot put others or even ourselves at risk for the sake of exercising our First Amendment rights. Seattle law enforcement tried to calmly explain this, but the Black Lives Matter protesters they engaged with last night were unable to grasp the concept. A large group of protesters used their vehicles to block oncoming traffic on a major street in Seattle. SPD SWAT officer Jeff Geoghagan tried to calmly explain to them that they cannot put people in danger with their protests. Their vehicles and the protesters themselves were blocking a portion of road that included a highway off-ramp, from which vehicles coming off the highway at high speeds would be forced to stop suddenly. The protesters’ solution: Close the ramp.
The ability for Americans to travel in their vehicles is important. Emergency vehicles, for example, should not have to spend more time on the road simply because Black Lives Matter protesters want them forced to take a slower route. It’s an idiotic argument, one that does nothing to endear them to the people. But this has never been about endearing them. It’s about bullying. It’s about making people submit to their demands and exerting control over situations so their worldview is forced upon others.They want people to comply or get out of their way. As law and order spirals into oblivion in cities like Seattle, Chicago, Portland, and Kenosha, police have a hard enough time keeping the peace. Having to deal with people who distort the Constitution is just another impediment. Coronavirus lockdowns put the future of independent news at riskReports indicate rising traffic but drastically lower revenues for mid-sized independent news outlets.The economic downturn from COVID-19 lockdowns has hit many industries in the gut. One industry that doesn’t get nearly enough attention is journalism. The corporate conglomerates controlling mainstream media outlets are able to weather the storm, but independent news outlets have seen revenues plummet to the point that many are considering shutting down. We know. We’ve had to consider the possibility ourselves. We’ve always run a very tight ship, keeping expenses to a minimum by limiting travel and technology expenditures. This has proven to be beneficial during the economic crisis, but we would not have made it this far if not for our generous donors. I cannot appropriately express my appreciation to those who have helped us raise nearly $4,000 since we started asking for assistance. It has been a true blessing and has inspired us to work harder to bring the truth to light that mainstream media tries to hide. As I note below, traffic is through the roof. The appetite for honest news reporting, conservative opinion writing, and right-leaning podcasts is high. Every day we pick up new readers and subscribers; it’s another blessing we do not take for granted. But despite the increases in traffic and viewership, revenues have continued to plummet. We have maxed out on the number of ads we run, and that’s definitely not by choice. Ideally, we would run minimal ads or no ads at all, but this isn’t a hobby. This is a business, the only one that supports my family, so I’ve chosen to do what I hate doing by having plenty of ads on the site. Even with more ads, revenues are not what they were before the coronavirus lockdowns. This is why we’re still desperately asking for help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. Our initial estimate of $11,500 to stay afloat through the end of the year was understated. Just as revenues have gone down, so too have expenses risen. We need to pick up quite a bit more than expected; I won’t even venture a guess anymore. At this point, literally everything we receive helps us keep the dream of being a truth-centered news outlet alive. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready to talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. In these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going. 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 Road-blocking Seattle protesters butcher the Constitution in unhinged debate with police appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
1st degree murder charges against Kyle Rittenhouse are ludicrous prima facie
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 01:40 PM PDT This isn’t about a crime. It’s about politics. It’s about optics. It’s about appeasing the mob. The killing of two men in Kenosha, Wisconsin, has the nation taking sides. Black Lives Matter supporters are generally calling it murder. Opposition to Black Lives Matter are calling it self-defense. All that matters is how the law views the series of events leading up to the three shootings and two deaths.
17-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse has been arrested for charges that include 1st degree murder. He evaded capture by crossing state lines, returning to his home state of Illinois. Reports indicate he was not lawfully in possession of the AR-15 he used in the shootings. There may be charges that can stick, but 1st degree murder almost certainly cannot. Unless there is further evidence that we have not seen, our EIC lays out in simple terms why they can’t make murder-one charges stick.
Premeditation is the key here. He was clearly being chased and attacked by the first man he shot, leading to calls that it was self-defense. As for the second and third shooting, he was even more clearly being chased and attacked. Once again, this appears to be self-defense. He may have to answer for other crimes, but murder-one is not one of them. At least it shouldn’t be. So why are they trying to throw the book at him? Surely they know any decent defense attorney will eat them alive in court. Could it be that they’re simply trying to pander to Black Lives Matter, perhaps in an effort to deescalate the situation with hopes of lowering the charges at a point when things have calmed down? That’s possible. Then again, they may be doing it with the intention of pursuing it and losing, thereby taking the blame away from them. Hey, they tried, but a jury didn’t see it their way? Or, perhaps they truly believe they can convince a jury that premeditation was inherent with his presence from out of state. In that scenario, they would try to paint him as a young man living out a fantasy of some sort, doing what he could to provoke an altercation through which he could claim self-defense. They’d need evidence that we haven’t seen at this time or a very vindictive jury. Or both. If that’s the case and they achieve their goal of convicting him on 1st degree murder charges, the nation will be rocked. It will suddenly become much more challenging to defend our property, to defend our very lives. The nation needs to take a step back and truly examine what is happening to us. If defending oneself from bodily harm is somehow construed by the law as premeditated murder, then we’re in worse trouble than we know. Coronavirus lockdowns put the future of independent news at riskReports indicate rising traffic but drastically lower revenues for mid-sized independent news outlets.The economic downturn from COVID-19 lockdowns has hit many industries in the gut. One industry that doesn’t get nearly enough attention is journalism. The corporate conglomerates controlling mainstream media outlets are able to weather the storm, but independent news outlets have seen revenues plummet to the point that many are considering shutting down. We know. We’ve had to consider the possibility ourselves. We’ve always run a very tight ship, keeping expenses to a minimum by limiting travel and technology expenditures. This has proven to be beneficial during the economic crisis, but we would not have made it this far if not for our generous donors. I cannot appropriately express my appreciation to those who have helped us raise nearly $4,000 since we started asking for assistance. It has been a true blessing and has inspired us to work harder to bring the truth to light that mainstream media tries to hide. As I note below, traffic is through the roof. The appetite for honest news reporting, conservative opinion writing, and right-leaning podcasts is high. Every day we pick up new readers and subscribers; it’s another blessing we do not take for granted. But despite the increases in traffic and viewership, revenues have continued to plummet. We have maxed out on the number of ads we run, and that’s definitely not by choice. Ideally, we would run minimal ads or no ads at all, but this isn’t a hobby. This is a business, the only one that supports my family, so I’ve chosen to do what I hate doing by having plenty of ads on the site. Even with more ads, revenues are not what they were before the coronavirus lockdowns. This is why we’re still desperately asking for help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. Our initial estimate of $11,500 to stay afloat through the end of the year was understated. Just as revenues have gone down, so too have expenses risen. We need to pick up quite a bit more than expected; I won’t even venture a guess anymore. At this point, literally everything we receive helps us keep the dream of being a truth-centered news outlet alive. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready to talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. In these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going. 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 1st degree murder charges against Kyle Rittenhouse are ludicrous prima facie appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Democrats keep on exploiting crisis while the CDC admitted stunning news about face masks
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 01:24 PM PDT It’s becoming increasingly evident that the nation’s socialist left never wants to return to normalcy. Crisis exploitation has become their go-to method of achieving ‘progress’. Whether it’s COVID-19, global cooling, the destruction of our basic human rights, or whatever, power is their only priority. The video is of Tucker Carlson asking the question of when do we get America back? When do we get back to normal? We never will if the left has anything to say about it. Now that they’ve dragged out ’15 days to flatten the curve’ to over 165 they are now starting to explore how else they can exploit this crisis for some of their other pet projects. So now Now that they’ve rhetorically beaten us down with unending rules for staying at home, social distancing, hand washing and of course forcing us to wear face placebos. They now think that they can make us bargain for our freedom to get out of this mess. Leftists are crediting face placebos for the downward trends – guess what comes nextWe’ve predicted all along that the left would want to hold onto the control they’ve taken with the COVID crisis. That this wasn’t going to end anytime soon. It should be noted that they’ve already credited face placebos for the downward trends in the states. Never mind that ‘mask mandates’ haven’t been universally imposed or that these have seen an increase in cases in some states. So it’s only a matter of time before we will be ordered to keep them on, lest the coronavirus comes backNot to mention that we’ve got a new word in the mix: “twindemic”. Seems like the ‘COVID-19 lockdowns blocked flu in some places but fall looms’ [That’s the headline of the moment, the Associated press changes them whenever they feel like it] CDC: Contact should be made irrespective of whether the person with COVID-19 or the contact was wearing a maskWe credit Fox News and Tucker Carlson for finding this little nugget of information. But even the CDC has taken note that mask usage should be ignored in the process of contact tracing. In other words, the lack of training and types of masks make this nothing more than a placebo measure. In their Public Health Guidance for Community-Related Exposure publication updated Updated July 31, 2020, they note that with regard contact tracing in exposure to COVID-19: This is irrespective of whether the person with COVID-19 or the contact was wearing a mask or whether the contact was wearing respiratory personal protective equipment (PPE) A footnote later on in the document states the following:
[Emphasis added] In other words, they are going to ignore whether or not someone was wearing a mask for various reasons. So in essence, the CDC is tacitly admitting that face masks are nothing but a placebo measure. The Bottom Line: We seem to be approaching herd immunity, why are we still doing all of this?The data and trends indicate that for at least many of the states, the trends in new cases are down. This is in light of varied approaches to the pandemic. We also note that Sweden has recently announced they have attained herd immunity. This should mean that the lock-down measures are no longer necessary. That we need to dispense with the draconian face placebo mandates. The CDC confirmed that these are a pointless gesture at best. We assert they are a dangerous precedent that will be exploited in the future. Those of us in the rational 90% have had enough of all the pandemic folderol. We’ve had enough of the useless and inherently dangerous lock-downs. We’ve had enough of ‘social distancing’ nonsense and we’ve certainly had enough of the face placebo pandemic security theatre now that the CDC has confirmed it is useless. The “peaceful” protests have shown that aside from wearing useless masks, they are doing nothing to slow the spread unless committing arson has some unknown disease mitigation properties. The double standard shows the left doesn’t take the pandemic seriously, so why should we? Coronavirus lockdowns put the future of independent news at riskReports indicate rising traffic but drastically lower revenues for mid-sized independent news outlets.The economic downturn from COVID-19 lockdowns has hit many industries in the gut. One industry that doesn’t get nearly enough attention is journalism. The corporate conglomerates controlling mainstream media outlets are able to weather the storm, but independent news outlets have seen revenues plummet to the point that many are considering shutting down. We know. We’ve had to consider the possibility ourselves. We’ve always run a very tight ship, keeping expenses to a minimum by limiting travel and technology expenditures. This has proven to be beneficial during the economic crisis, but we would not have made it this far if not for our generous donors. I cannot appropriately express my appreciation to those who have helped us raise nearly $4,000 since we started asking for assistance. It has been a true blessing and has inspired us to work harder to bring the truth to light that mainstream media tries to hide. As I note below, traffic is through the roof. The appetite for honest news reporting, conservative opinion writing, and right-leaning podcasts is high. Every day we pick up new readers and subscribers; it’s another blessing we do not take for granted. But despite the increases in traffic and viewership, revenues have continued to plummet. We have maxed out on the number of ads we run, and that’s definitely not by choice. Ideally, we would run minimal ads or no ads at all, but this isn’t a hobby. This is a business, the only one that supports my family, so I’ve chosen to do what I hate doing by having plenty of ads on the site. Even with more ads, revenues are not what they were before the coronavirus lockdowns. This is why we’re still desperately asking for help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. Our initial estimate of $11,500 to stay afloat through the end of the year was understated. Just as revenues have gone down, so too have expenses risen. We need to pick up quite a bit more than expected; I won’t even venture a guess anymore. At this point, literally everything we receive helps us keep the dream of being a truth-centered news outlet alive. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready to talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. In these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going. 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 Democrats keep on exploiting crisis while the CDC admitted stunning news about face masks appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Fentanyl in George Floyd’s system made his lungs weigh 2x-3x more than normal
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 11:17 AM PDT George Floyd’s death has been solely attributed by the press as well as prosecutors to former police officer Derek Chauvin’s knee being on Floyd’s neck for over eight minutes. Newly released information from medical examiners indicate there was much more to the story than we’ve been told. According to court filings yesterday, Floyd had so much Fentanyl in his system, his lungs weighed 2x-3x more than a normal lung. While it’s still presumed that Chauvin’s sustained hold on Floyd contributed to his death, this new report indicates Floyd may have been near death with or without the knee in his neck. According to FOX9: New exhibits filed in the case against the four former Minneapolis Police Officers accused of murdering George Floyd suggest the Hennepin County Medical Examiner thought George Floyd’s fentanyl levels were at a potentially “fatal level”, but his and other medical examiner’s findings showed he died of a combination of factors. Six pieces of evidence were filed in the case Tuesday one day after former officer Tou Thao’s attorneys requested the release of the full autopsy reports from the Hennepin County Medical Examiner, the Armed Forces Medical Examiner and the private medical examiners hired by George Floyd’s family.
This would likely spark a new round of contention between Black Lives Matter and law-abiding citizens in Minneapolis if it were being reported, but as of the writing of this article, only local media and a handful of conservative news outlets have even mentioned it. According to The Gateway Pundit, this evidence reaffirms what was already widely suspected: We reported on August 4th in a post by Larry Johnson that we had a video and a transcript of the the altercation with police surrounding George Floyd’s death. Both pieces of evidence show that Floyd was as high as a kite when he was arrested on the day of his death. Johnson said: “…the Minnesota Attorney General tried to keep the public from seeing the video…”
The more we learn about George Floyd’s death, the less likely it becomes that the former police officers charged in his killing will be convicted. Everything about this ordeal has been built on lies. Coronavirus lockdowns put the future of independent news at riskReports indicate rising traffic but drastically lower revenues for mid-sized independent news outlets.The economic downturn from COVID-19 lockdowns has hit many industries in the gut. One industry that doesn’t get nearly enough attention is journalism. The corporate conglomerates controlling mainstream media outlets are able to weather the storm, but independent news outlets have seen revenues plummet to the point that many are considering shutting down. We know. We’ve had to consider the possibility ourselves. We’ve always run a very tight ship, keeping expenses to a minimum by limiting travel and technology expenditures. This has proven to be beneficial during the economic crisis, but we would not have made it this far if not for our generous donors. I cannot appropriately express my appreciation to those who have helped us raise nearly $4,000 since we started asking for assistance. It has been a true blessing and has inspired us to work harder to bring the truth to light that mainstream media tries to hide. As I note below, traffic is through the roof. The appetite for honest news reporting, conservative opinion writing, and right-leaning podcasts is high. Every day we pick up new readers and subscribers; it’s another blessing we do not take for granted. But despite the increases in traffic and viewership, revenues have continued to plummet. We have maxed out on the number of ads we run, and that’s definitely not by choice. Ideally, we would run minimal ads or no ads at all, but this isn’t a hobby. This is a business, the only one that supports my family, so I’ve chosen to do what I hate doing by having plenty of ads on the site. Even with more ads, revenues are not what they were before the coronavirus lockdowns. This is why we’re still desperately asking for help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. Our initial estimate of $11,500 to stay afloat through the end of the year was understated. Just as revenues have gone down, so too have expenses risen. We need to pick up quite a bit more than expected; I won’t even venture a guess anymore. At this point, literally everything we receive helps us keep the dream of being a truth-centered news outlet alive. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready to talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. In these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going. 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 Fentanyl in George Floyd’s system made his lungs weigh 2x-3x more than normal appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
After third night of domestic terrorism, Tony Evers accepts President Trump’s assistance
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 10:43 AM PDT Following the death of two Black Lives Matter “peaceful protesters” last night, Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers has accepted assistance from the White House to put an end to the rioting in Kenosha. This follows the Governor declining the same offer from the President and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows yesterday. On this morning’s episode of the NOQ Report, I noted that Evers had blood on his hands for not taking these domestic terrorists seriously enough to accept help. I also noted that I did not believe his pride would allow him to overcome his “Trump Derangement Syndrome” and accept help no matter how bad things got. Praise God that I was wrong.
Local, county, and state law enforcement had been bolstered by 250 members of the National Guard, but in a city of over 100,000 people covering a land area of nearly 30 square miles, it was simply not enough to restore peace. Buildings burned. Shots were fired. Two men died. It hasn’t been often that I’ve given kudos to Democratic lawmakers lately, but Tony Evers made the right decision to accept federal help to solve this highly volatile problem. Law and order must be restored across America, especially Kenosha. Coronavirus lockdowns put the future of independent news at riskReports indicate rising traffic but drastically lower revenues for mid-sized independent news outlets.The economic downturn from COVID-19 lockdowns has hit many industries in the gut. One industry that doesn’t get nearly enough attention is journalism. The corporate conglomerates controlling mainstream media outlets are able to weather the storm, but independent news outlets have seen revenues plummet to the point that many are considering shutting down. We know. We’ve had to consider the possibility ourselves. We’ve always run a very tight ship, keeping expenses to a minimum by limiting travel and technology expenditures. This has proven to be beneficial during the economic crisis, but we would not have made it this far if not for our generous donors. I cannot appropriately express my appreciation to those who have helped us raise nearly $4,000 since we started asking for assistance. It has been a true blessing and has inspired us to work harder to bring the truth to light that mainstream media tries to hide. As I note below, traffic is through the roof. The appetite for honest news reporting, conservative opinion writing, and right-leaning podcasts is high. Every day we pick up new readers and subscribers; it’s another blessing we do not take for granted. But despite the increases in traffic and viewership, revenues have continued to plummet. We have maxed out on the number of ads we run, and that’s definitely not by choice. Ideally, we would run minimal ads or no ads at all, but this isn’t a hobby. This is a business, the only one that supports my family, so I’ve chosen to do what I hate doing by having plenty of ads on the site. Even with more ads, revenues are not what they were before the coronavirus lockdowns. This is why we’re still desperately asking for help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. Our initial estimate of $11,500 to stay afloat through the end of the year was understated. Just as revenues have gone down, so too have expenses risen. We need to pick up quite a bit more than expected; I won’t even venture a guess anymore. At this point, literally everything we receive helps us keep the dream of being a truth-centered news outlet alive. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready to talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. In these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going. 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 After third night of domestic terrorism, Tony Evers accepts President Trump’s assistance appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
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ARRA NEWS SERVICE
ARRA News Service (in this message: 17 new items) |
- No Canceling Strong Voices at the RNC
- Perhaps Elon Musk Shouldn’t Have Borrowed $1.6 Billion from Communist China….
- Abby Educates America, Sandmann Still Standing, Biden vs. Sarsour
- President Trump’s Contract with America
- BLM’s Perpetual Fake Outrage Cycle
- Big Spending Trump
- Democrats Falsely Claim ‘Epidemic of Gun Violence’
- Margaret Sanger’s Racism Still Defended
- Bearing False Witness
- It’s Never Too Late to Prep?
- COVID Risk
- I Was Wrong About Trump. He Didn’t Destroy the GOP, He Saved It
- A Tale Of Two Conventions
- California Apocalypto
- Lawmakers Demand Answers From Jeff Bezos on Exclusion of Conservatives From Charitable Program
- Bloomberg Wants to Buy Your Right to Bear Arms
- The Choice Is Clear: President Trump’s Second Amendment Record Has Earned Him the Gun Vote in 2020
No Canceling Strong Voices at the RNC
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 07:55 PM PDT by Tony Perkins: On night two of the Republican National Convention, it wasn’t just the contrast in two parties that was on display — but the contrast of two medias. Networks like CNN, probably furious to see the RNC blow away the DNC’s ratings, dripped with animosity for speakers like teenager Nick Sandmann, calling him a “snot-nosed, entitled kid from Kentucky.” But that was almost kind compared to the “token minority” label the Daily Beast slapped on rising star Daniel Cameron. Then came the bogus fact checks, which the press bypassed for most of the DNC event because, as Chris Cuomo put it, Democrats “don’t lie like Trump.” But for every bitter roundtable, every biting comment, all the over-the-top spin, conservatives proved they could dish it right back. Nick, who’s had “the full war machine of the mainstream media” pointed directly at him, knows the real problem in the press is that the truth isn’t important. “Advancing their anti-Christian, anti-Conservative, anti-Donald Trump narrative was all that mattered.” “Canceled,” he warned, “is what’s happening to people around this country who refuse to be silenced by the far Left,” the 18-year-old said. “But I wouldn’t be canceled.” Others, like Cissie Graham Lynch, dared to challenge the Democrats’ godless agenda. “During the Obama-Biden administration, [our] freedoms were under attack,” she warned. “Democrats tried to make faith organizations pay for abortion-inducing drugs. Democrats tried to force adoption agencies to violate their deeply held beliefs. Democrats pressured schools to allow boys to compete in girls’ sports and use girls’ locker rooms.” The Biden-Harris vision, she insisted, will be worse. It “leaves no room for people of faith, whether you are a baker, or a florist or a football coach. They will force the choice between being obedient to God or to Caesar,” she added. “Because the radical Left’s God is government power.” Almost immediately, the media and far-Left allies let loose. Headlines like NBC’s declared that “Cissie Graham Lynch Attacks Transgender Rights” — a far cry from what reporters at the Washington Times heard: “Billy Graham’s Granddaughter Lauds Trump on Religious Freedom.” The Human Rights Campaign accused her of being “dehumanizing” and “demeaning” for referring to them as boys using the restroom and not “transgender girls.” “There were no efforts to ‘pressure schools'” into changing their bathroom policies, NBC lied — conveniently ignoring the 2016 mandate that cut federal funds for non-compliers. It’s no wonder the media was racing to discredit everything Cissie said. It was a powerful speech that pulled back the curtain on the Left’s best kept secret: how they plan to destroy America once they control it. Even Politico has been stunned at just how intentional this strategy has been. “The Democratic Convention,” their headline read, “was a massive evasion… masking the most Left-wing strategy in years.” The only way Joe Biden succeeds, many acknowledge, is by concealing his extremist plan from voters — which, as we know from his White House years, includes taking a blowtorch to religious freedom. “Our Founders did not envision a quiet, hidden faith,” Cissie insisted. “They fought to ensure that voices of faith were always welcomed… Not bullied.” That’s been a shared goal of this administration, she pointed out, which has shown an unparalleled commitment to persecuted people everywhere. “On the world stage, President Trump became the first president to talk about the importance of religious liberty at the United Nations, giving hope to people of faith around the world,” Cissie said. Minutes later, everyone from NBC News to the AP rushed to declare, “This is false,” as they played a non-stop loop of Barack Obama in 2012, delivering a throwaway line about the freedom he spent eight years dismantling. If the Left wants to quibble over words, fine. But the point is, this administration’s leaders didn’t just talk about religious freedom. They acted on it. Of course, President Obama acted too — punishing faith, marginalizing believers, and leaving tens of millions of brothers and sisters suffering silently around the world. The fact that President Trump has freed Christian hostages, appointed an Ambassador-at-Large for Religious Liberty, used its economic leverage to stop persecution and religious genocide, hosted two international Ministerial to Advance Religious Freedom, condemned blasphemy and apostasy laws, denounced China, Iran, Nigeria, and others for their human rights atrocities, launched an International Religious Freedom Alliance, and so much more — speaks volumes to how much his team cares. The media needs to stop with its “fact checks” and try a reality check instead. There’s no glossing over the truth about these two parties or their agendas. The reason networks can’t stand speeches like Cissie’s or Nick’s or Abby Johnson’s is because they show viewers the one thing Democrats don’t want voters to see — a preview of exactly where they’ll take America if they have the chance. |
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Perhaps Elon Musk Shouldn’t Have Borrowed $1.6 Billion from Communist China….
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 07:37 PM PDT
by Seton Motley: Our anti-fan-hood of Elon Musk goes back more than a little bit. Elon Musk: The $5-Billion-Government-Money-Recipient ‘Genius’ Because he’s hailed as this avant garde entrepreneurial genius. When what he actually is – is the largest welfare king of all time. Our fan-hood of Intellectual Property (IP) goes back…to the very beginnings of human existence. Only Savages Don’t Value Creation (And Thieves Are Savages) And our loathing of Communist China – including its massive IP theft – should be inherently obvious. Communist China: We Must Stop Feeding IP to the Hand That Bites Us China is inordinately hyperactive in its IP theft. 1 in 5 Corporations Say China Has Stolen Their IP Within the Last Year So when we saw this – it was a philosophical harmonic convergence: “NASA Authorization Hangup: “One of the last hurdles before the Senate passes a NASA authorization bill is a disagreement over a pair of amendments that would enact thorough restrictions on keeping China out of NASA programs, a Senate staffer tells us…. “The two amendments from Sen. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.)…are intended to make sure China cannot steal intellectual property from the U.S. space program. Both were approved by the Senate Commerce Committee by voice vote. “SpaceX has been lobbying against similar legislative provisions being considered in the House, a House staffer tells us. SpaceX is owned by Elon Musk, who also owns Tesla, a luxury car company that operates a factory in China. “Lobbyists for the company argued that SpaceX could be hurt by the bill, which would require NASA to look at whether companies had any ‘affiliation’ with a company that has ties to China, the staffer said. SpaceX did not respond to a request for comment.” Wait – Why would Musk’s SpaceX oppose amendments aimed at excluding IP-thieving China from our space program? Especially when China is looking to take out SpaceX. China’s Pouring Serious Money into Potential Rivals of SpaceX and Blue Origin Especially when China has previously stolen IP from Musk. Musk also owns government-money-vacuum Tesla Motors…. Tesla Says Chinese Startup Xpeng Stole Autopilot Source Code Through Former Employee: “Tesla claims that one of its former Autopilot employees, Guangzhi Cao, stole the source code for Xpeng….(T)he company claims that he stole it when he left to join Xpeng in January.” Well, Musk’s SpaceX gets a LOT of coin from our government. (Shocker, I know.) SpaceX Wins Large NASA Contract for Starship Moon Missions SpaceX to Launch ‘Secret Military Satellite’ into Orbit in Victory for Elon Musk Given Musk’s SpaceX is getting government contracts for some seriously secret stuff – you would think Musk would understand the attempt to ban China from the process. Rather than, you know, lobby against it. Except as it turns out – Musk has a bit of a China problem. Tesla Wins Tencent Backing as China Tech Giant Buys 5% Stake: “Chinese Internet giant Tencent Holdings Ltd. bought a 5% stake in Tesla Inc., a vote of confidence in Elon Musk….” Ummm…Communist China owning a 5% stake in Tesla makes me even less confident in Tesla – and Musk. As does this….
How Elon Musk Built a Tesla Factory in China in Less Than a Year: “The Chinese plant…was completed in record time as it sped through approvals and construction…. “Various government officials including Mayor Ying Yong and Zhu Zhisong, deputy secretary-general of the Shanghai municipal government, were among the dignitaries attending Tuesday’s (grand opening) event.” Why was the Chinese government so invested in Musk’s factory? Because the Chinese government is so invested in Musk’s factory. According to a 2019 Securities and Exchange filing, the Chinese government helped Musk secure $1.6 BILLION in loans for the joint. Elon Musk has a HUGE Communist China problem. For Musk, huge government money is a way of life. Even if it’s Communist China huge government money. And what’s even worse? Tesla’s peanut butter is all over SpaceX’s jelly. And vice versa. It’s all one giant Musk mess. Here’s How Tesla and SpaceX Worked with and Paid Each Other in the Past Year: “(T)ransactions between the two firms aren’t new….” Tesla Cybertruck and SpaceX Starship to Use a New Alloy, Musk Reveals: “In 2016, Musk had hired former Apple alloy expert Charles Kuehmann to head research into materials engineering at the two companies.” Well isn’t all of that cozy and helpful. For Communist China. China is hardwired into Musk’s Tesla. Musk’s Tesla owes a billion-plus dollars to the ChiComms. Musk’s Tesla is bleeding personnel and IP to the ChiComms. And given the ChiComms ownership stake, huge mortgage and home country advantage – does anyone doubt this will continue? Meanwhile, Musk’s SpaceX and Musk’s Tesla – are constantly cross-pollinating. Which means the ChiComms access to Tesla – means the ChiComms have access to SpaceX. Think it doesn’t? Imagine you owe someone $1.6 billion – and they come asking you for favors. Saying “No” – really isn’t an option. So: Now we know why Musk’s SpaceX is lobbying against our government’s attempt to keep China’s peanut butter out of our jelly. Tags: Seton Motley, Less Government, Perhaps Elon Musk, Shouldn’t Have, Borrowed $1.6 Billion, from Communist China 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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Abby Educates America, Sandmann Still Standing, Biden vs. Sarsour
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 06:36 PM PDT
by Gary Bauer: Abby Educates America Johnson described something that I bet millions of people tuning in last night did not know: That an unborn baby in utero will fight to escape an abortionist’s implements, just like any living thing will fight to save its life. If you raise a hand to a dog, it will cower and try to escape the blow. If you are seen raising a hand to your dog, you’re likely going to be in legal trouble. But if you put a scalpel in a mother’s womb or inject a saline solution into the womb, there is no legal jeopardy as the baby struggles to avoid having her life snuffed out. Johnson also described the “Products of Conception room . . . where infant corpses are pieced back together to ensure nothing remains in the mother’s womb.” She added that she knows what abortion “smells like.” I hadn’t really thought about that. But as we know, death has an odor and abortion takes an innocent life. Sandmann Still Standing He didn’t have a radio or TV show. He wasn’t a social media influencer. He didn’t have a successful business. There was nothing to “cancel.” Nick Sandmann was a powerless teenage Christian, who was simply trying to exercise his First Amendment rights. He and his classmates were mercilessly harassed by a radical black group, and then a professional protestor walked up to him banging a drum in his face. When Nick did not move, they didn’t try to “cancel” him. They tried to destroy him. It is not an exaggeration to say that many leftists hoped he would die. They used a level of bullying on a national scale that in our schools all too often results in suicide. One well-known liberal commentator tweeted, “Have you ever seen a more punchable face than this kid’s?” And they’re still smearing him, even after video evidence proved he did nothing wrong. Radical leftists told him he would never go to college or get a job because they would follow him the rest of his life, telling everyone what an evil person he was. His school had to close because of threats. His family received death threats. They wanted him to put a gun to his head. God bless Nick Sandman. God bless his courage that day for not yielding to the mob. Thankfully, he is getting some satisfaction in the courts. But Nick’s fight is not over. Our fight is not over. The left’s assault on free speech and our cherished values is far from over. We must steel ourselves for the days and weeks ahead. We must keep fighting. And we will need all the courage we can muster. Day Two Jon Ponder spoke about his time in prison for bank robbery, how he committed his life to Jesus and how the FBI agent who arrested him (Richard Beasley) became one of his best friends. After leaving prison, Ponder started a non-profit group to help former prisoners succeed in life. Ponder asked President Trump to speak to his group. This February the president of the United States addressed the Hope For Prisoners graduating class and spoke about the importance of second chances. Yesterday, President Trump finished the job by granting Ponder a full pardon, wiping his record clean. Rising GOP star Daniel Cameron, Kentucky’s attorney general, brilliantly exposed the left and ripped into Joe Biden for his claim that conservative blacks “ain’t black.” First Lady Melania Trump ended the evening with an eloquent and uplifting address urging Americans to “come together in a civil manner” in order to “live up to our shared American ideals.” She also called for an end to the “violence and looting being done in the name of justice.” The more America sees what the Republican Party is about the more they also see what the left is about. (See below.) In response to this call for unity, Bette Midler attacked the first lady as an “illegal alien” who “still can’t speak English.” For the record, the first lady became a citizen in 2006 and speaks five languages, while Midler sounds like an idiot. Her tweet is exactly the kind of bigotry the left constantly accuses conservative of expressing. Biden vs. Sarsour Joe Biden didn’t have the courage to denounce her and stop her from speaking. When the backlash hit, Biden’s campaign tried to disavow her. But then they apologized. Sarsour was arrested yesterday in Louisville, Kentucky, with 70 other radicals staging a major demonstration. The group she was with is so radical that area Catholic schools, Humana and other businesses closed due to concerns about violence. That’s who Linda Sarsour is. And Joe Biden’s campaign apologized to her. Biden couldn’t stop Sarsour from speaking at his convention. Biden couldn’t stand up to her when he was criticized by radical leftists. If Joe Biden can’t stand up to Linda Sarsour, why should we expect him to stand up to our enemies overseas or to the radicals in the streets of our major cities? More Riots In Wisconsin It must be noted that Wisconsin’s Democrat governor has been hesitant to deploy sufficient National Guard troops and he rejected an offer of federal assistance from the White House. Business owners and city residents have been left to fend for themselves. Some of the demonstrators yesterday were chanting “Death to America!” and “Kill the police!” Clearly, these people are not marching for social justice or even law enforcement reform. In a country as big as ours, there will never be a year when there is never one questionable interaction between law enforcement and criminal suspects. But these radicals intend to exploit every example to bring down the United States. Why would we not believe them when they are shouting their goals? Meanwhile, Julia Jackson, Jacob Blake’s mother, was interviewed on CNN last night. Jackson called for calm, saying: “My family and I are very hurt and quite frankly disgusted [by the violence] . . . Please don’t burn up property and cause havoc and tear your own homes down in my son’s name. . . It’s not helping Jacob or any of the other men or women who have suffered in these areas.” Host Don Lemon asked her, “Do you have anything to say, Ms. Jackson, to the politicians . . . to the president or the candidates, Trump or Biden, or anything like that?” I don’t think Lemon got the response he was expecting. Jackson replied: “For our President Trump, first I want to say a family member, and I don’t know if it was heard or not, said something that was not kind. She is hurting and I do apologize for that. . . And also for President Trump, I’m sorry I missed your call. . . I’m not mad at you at all. I have the utmost respect for you as the leader of our country.” Tags: Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Abby Educates America, Sandmann Still Standing, Biden vs. Sarsour 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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President Trump’s Contract with America
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 06:07 PM PDT by Newt Gingrich: For weeks people have asked me what President Donald Trump’s agenda for a second term would be. I know the White House team led by Brooke Rollins had been developing such an agenda for months. Finally, this last weekend the Trump campaign released a comprehensive agenda covering 50 major commitments toward a better future. In 2015, Callista and I had been part of a meeting in which then-candidate Trump committed to releasing a list of potential US Supreme Court Justices (something he is challenging Joe Biden to do this year). With help from Leonard Leo at the Federalist Society, he developed what was – from a conservative perspective – a superb list of jurists. He kept his word and his first two Supreme Court appointments came from that list.Candidate Trump campaigned on tax cuts and deregulation leading to economic growth and jobs, and President Trump delivered on both. Candidate Trump campaigned on energy independence, and President Trump delivered. Candidate Trump campaigned on reducing American losses in the Middle East, and despite the opposition of many so-called experts in foreign policy and national security, President Trump delivered. Candidate Trump promised to move the American Embassy to Jerusalem, and President Trump delivered – a promise dozens of past presidents could not keep. The point is that the historic record of the first term indicates that the president will treat this list of 50 major goals as a contract. And, he will build his second term around fulfilling his obligations to it – and the American people. For that reason, President Trump should consider this Contract with America. For years, people have praised the original 1994 Contract with America which led to the Republicans winning control of the House for the first time in 40 years. I always explain that it took a unique time and event to create a contract that was real. We had President Ronald Reagan’s ideas and 40 years in the minority to enable us to come together in 1994. Now, we have a president who is bold and keeps his word. He has prepared a powerful agenda for the future which virtually every Republican candidate and activist can use and support. It is, in effect, the Trump Contract with America. The initial outline is extensive – although there will presently be a version which expands it further: TRUMP CAMPAIGN ANNOUNCES PRESIDENT TRUMP’S 2ND TERM AGENDA: FIGHTING President Trump will further illuminate these plans during his acceptance speech Thursday at the Republican National Convention. Over the coming weeks, the President will be sharing additional details about his plans through policy-focused speeches on the campaign trail. JOBS
ERADICATE COVID-19
END OUR RELIANCE ON CHINA
HEALTHCARE
EDUCATION
DRAIN THE SWAMP
DEFEND OUR POLICE
END ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION AND PROTECT AMERICAN WORKERS
INNOVATE FOR THE FUTURE
AMERICA FIRST FOREIGN POLICY
Some of President Trump’s pledges are continuations of patterns and strategies which he has already begun. However, there are new promises which have come from President Trump listening and learning from the American people during his first term. Regardless of how some people view President Trump and his tough tactics, I think most Americans support most of the promises in Trump’s Contract with America. One thing all Americans can be sure of is that President Trump will keep his word. Tags: Newt Gingrich, President Trump, Contract with America 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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BLM’s Perpetual Fake Outrage Cycle
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 05:35 PM PDT
by Michelle Malkin: Here we go again: Manufacture. Rinse. Repeat. Everyone knows the cycle. Everyone knows it ends with false and incomplete narratives eventually being debunked by actual facts. Everyone knows that the racial mythmakers and political opportunists end up with fame, wealth and glory — but never any criminal punishments or moral accountability. Everyone knows, yet on and on and on it goes. Step 1: Spread out-of-context video clip of Black man subdued or shot by white cops across national media airwaves and social media platforms. Step 2: Riot. Step 3: Accuse law enforcement and America of “systemic racism,” decry police brutality and demand “justice” for fill-in-the-blank “victim.” Step 4: Riot. Step 5. Enter Al Sharpton, Benjamin Crump, Black Lives Matter chief propagandist Shaun King, and the rest of the racial hoax crime brigade. Step 6: Persecute and prosecute involved police officers. Step 7: Burn, loot and maraud nationwide. Step 8: Demand more funding for “restorative justice,” “alternative” policing, sensitivity training and “anti-racism” programs. Step 9: Bury all evidence of justified police action while screaming, “Racism!” ever louder. Step 10: Lie in wait for the next opportunity to return to Step 1. I’ve been covering this self-destructive ritual in American life since the very beginning of my journalism career in 1992, when the Rodney King beating video led to the acquittal of four Los Angeles police department officers, which led to the L.A. riots (60 killed, 2,000 injured, $1 billion in damages, $700 million in federal aid), which led to a federal civil rights settlement for King worth $4 million and prison sentences for two of the cops despite their previous acquittals. On Sunday night, Jacob Blake became the latest overnight cause celebre of the Black Lives Matter brigade. He’s black. The cops, captured on video shooting him in the back seven times after arriving at the scene of a domestic incident, were white. Like the cops in the Rodney King case, Kenosha, Wisconsin, officers were dealing with a career criminal who was young, strong and troubled. Blake’s name, age and neighborhood match court records of a Jacob Blake who had an outstanding warrant for misdemeanor criminal trespass, felony third-degree sexual assault and misdemeanor disorderly assault associated with domestic abuse charges. Like the cops in the Rodney King case, Kenosha cops were confronted with a suspect who brazenly resisted arrest. At least four officers can be seen trying to subdue him. Blake continues to evade arrest and climb into his vehicle, where his children were. At least seven shots rang out. The rest is a re-re-re-re-re-repeat of social justice history. “Hands up, don’t shoot” was the foundational lie of the Michael Brown fatal cop encounter, as even the Obama Justice Department was forced to acknowledge. The primary perpetrator of that deception? Benjamin Crump. The Trayvon Martin hoax, as exposed by investigative documentarian Joel Gilbert, was built on an astonishing key prosecution witness switch-a-roo involving Martin’s real girlfriend, Brittany Diamond Eugene (who was on the phone with Martin before he assaulted George Zimmerman) and a ridiculous impostor, Rachael Jeantel, who was barely literate and apparently manipulated into coached testimony by none other than Benjamin Crump. Three months after the death of George Floyd in Minnesota, we now know this career criminal — who robbed and beat a pregnant woman in a brutal home invasion — refused to comply with police officers from initial contact. He acted erratically, invoked common “please don’t shoot me” and “I can’t breathe” excuses before was put on the ground, lied about being claustrophobic and was told by one of his own passengers to stop resisting. We now also know that officers believed Floyd was on drugs and swallowed a fatal overdose of fentanyl, compounding his preexisting heart conditions and positive COVID results. Benjamin Crump, who filed multimillion-dollar lawsuits against the city of Minneapolis on behalf of the Floyd family last month, is now also the lawyer for Jacob Blake. BLM leaders say what’s left of Kenosha after the weekend’s riots will burn to the ground unless cops are fired and arrested. Al Sharpton, Shaun King, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Bernie Sanders, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Nancy Pelosi, Hillary Clinton, LeBron James, NASCAR race agitator Bubba (Fake Noose) Wallace, Cardi B and Demi Lovato all immediately piled on as well, demanding “justice” and condemning police instead of the perps. I’m reminded of what a black activist in Phoenix confessed to a local news station in 2015 upon seeing what it’s like to be an officer’s shoes. Jarrett Maupin ended up being shot point-blank by one suspect and shooting another in the chest when both ignored his orders in life-or-death use-of-force scenarios. Maupin’s takeaway? “I didn’t understand how important compliance was, but after going through this, yeah, my attitude has changed. This is all unfolding in ten to fifteen seconds. People need to comply with the orders of law enforcement officers for their own safety.” That is the plain, simple truth. All else is racial extortion and deceit. How to save America and end this vicious cycle of smoke, mirrors and ashes? Stop the lies. Tags: Michelle Malkin, Rasmussen Reports, BLM’s, Perpetual Fake Outrage Cycle 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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Big Spending Trump
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 05:25 PM PDT
by John Stossel: Last week, I tallied Joe Biden’s spending plans. This week, President Trump’s. Which presidential candidate will bankrupt America first? When Donald Trump ran for president, he promised “big league” spending cuts. Once in office, he again said he’d cut the budget, adding, “There’s a lot of fat in there.” There sure is. Since I was born, spending has grown faster than inflation most every year. Then, President Obama, as Trump liked to out, “put more debt on than all other presidents of the United States combined!” It’s true. But then Trump increased the debt just as much. Now even more, with the COVID-19 spending. One of his first biggest increases was the $738 billion defense spending bill. Trump bragged that it was “an all-time record!” He said Democrats had “depleted” our fighting ability, so he “had” to “fix our military.” “The ‘fix’ looks a whole lot like bloated defense spending,” says Pete Sepp of the National Taxpayers Union. “It’s more than our rivals around the world could even hope to spend.” epp’s organization has fought government spending for decades. Sadly, they’ve had little success. Now federal spending will grow even faster because: 1) The COVID-19 “stimulus” will grow. 2) Both political parties love spending your money. 3) Old people like me keep living longer. Sorry about that last one. But I, rudely, decline to die. Soon, my generation’s Medicare and Social Security checks will crowd out everything else in the budget. (No, fellow geezers, we don’t just “get back what we put in.” We’ll get, on average, almost triple our FICA deductions.) Sadly, no presidential candidate expresses much interest in addressing that: Trump promises to “protect” Social Security. Biden says he’ll increase it! Trump was also eager to spend on special interests. He gave $16 billion to farmers and ranchers, $1.6 billion more to NASA and, despite government’s horrible track record at “picking winners,” he tried loaning $765 million to Kodak Pharmaceuticals. After the pandemic hit, Trump joined Democrats in authorizing $6.2 trillion in new spending. Signing that, Trump joked: “I’ve never signed anything with a “T” on it. I don’t know if I can handle this one!” The politicians standing behind him laughed. But it’s not funny. Now Democrats want to add even more spending. Trump at least made some cuts, prepandemic. Sepp acknowledges that he made “important progress in reducing overhead (and) personnel costs.” He also cut the budget of his own office, plus the Departments of Labor, Education and State. Good! The State Department is bloated with 60 subdepartments, and its spending had increased at triple the rate inflation. Still, media pundits whined about every cut. On CNN, one “expert” called the cuts to the State Department “insanity.” When Trump proposed other cuts, or just slowing the growth of government, Congress wouldn’t let him. Trump’s 2021 budget would still have increased spending by $39 billion. Rep. Chuck Schumer rejected that, calling it “a blueprint for destroying America!” To sum up: What’s Trump’s total budget impact been? Spending is up by more than $1 trillion a year. The national debt is over $26 trillion. “Deficits and debt destroy economic growth,” says Sepp. “Nobody’s talking about this stuff. You must be frustrated,” I say. “Very,” he responds. “After 51 years as an organization, to see this kind of attitude and carelessness…” When it comes to increasing spending, who is worse, Trump or Biden? “Biden,” replies Sepp, because he promises $1.2 trillion a year in new spending. “We’re already trillions in the hole. He’s spending money out of an empty pocket!” And Biden is favored to win. Of course, some argue that when it comes to Republicats and Democans spending your and your grandkids’ money, it doesn’t matter who wins. “Washington just seems to grow at the expense of everyone else, no matter who is in power,” concludes Sepp. So, next week, I’ll report on an alternative to Biden and Trump. Tags: John Stossel, Big Spending Trump 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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Democrats Falsely Claim ‘Epidemic of Gun Violence’
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 05:14 PM PDT . . . The lies are all in service to the Left’s anti-Constitution agenda of gun control. by Louis DeBroux: During last week’s Democratic National Convention, party leaders decried the “epidemic of gun violence” to justify their calls for ever more draconian gun control. While this surely makes a compelling sound bite, the facts expose it as nothing more than Democrat fear mongering. Homicides with guns in the U.S. hit a historic high of 17,075 in 1993 before falling to 7,803 in 2014, a drop of 54%. They rose again from 2015 to 2017, and fell in 2018, at that point still 40% below 1993 totals. The gun homicide rate (deaths per 100,000) fell even more precipitously, to 3.1 — half the 1993 rate. An astute historian might note that these homicide rates peaked the year before the Democrats’ 1994 “assault weapons” ban and argue the rate fell as a result of the ban. But there is a flaw in that logic; namely, the data doesn’t support it. The so-called “assault weapons” ban ended in 2004, and despite rising levels of gun ownership following its expiration, the number of homicides committed with guns continued to plummet for another decade, including a more than 30% decline between 2005 and 2011 alone. It’s also worth noting that more people are murdered by hands and feet each year than by rifles of any type. With the expiration of the “assault weapons” ban in 2004, and the Supreme Court’s decisions in Heller (2008) and McDonald (2010), which established the Second Amendment’s true meaning, the accessibility of firearms for private citizens increased. If the Democrats’ claims were correct, we should have seen an explosion in deaths by firearm. Instead, gun homicide totals have stayed relatively constant (between 8,000 and 11,000 per year) as gun sales have drastically increased over the last decade and a half. Nearly 27 million firearms have been sold in the last 18 months alone, placing the total number of privately held firearms in the U.S. at well over 400 million. So why, with gun sales skyrocketing but gun deaths constant, would Democrats falsely claim there is an epidemic of “gun violence”? Because it sells. Because Democrats despise the idea of private citizens being able to protect themselves from criminals and tyrants. And because they know many people will believe their lies. Last year, a Marist poll found that 59% of Americans believed “the per capita gun murder rate in the U.S.” was higher than it was 25 years earlier, while only 12% correctly knew the rate had fallen significantly. This outcome is similar to a recent poll that found that, on average, Americans believe 20% of the U.S. population has contracted COVID-19 and 9% (equal to three million people) had died from it. In reality, just 1% have been infected, and just 0.04% have died from/with it. Barack Obama’s chief of staff and former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emmanuel famously told Democrats they should never let a crisis go to waste, and in their efforts to expand the size, scope, and power of government, and to restrict individual liberty, facts are a nuisance to leftist Democrats. So instead, Democrats and the media (but we repeat ourselves) sensationalize every mass shooting and every shooting of a black man by a white cop. Never mind that mass shootings account for less than 1% of all gun homicides, or that the number of “unarmed” black men killed by police in America in a year is less than the number of black men killed by other black men in Chicago on your average weekend. No, if Democrats wanted to have an honest conversation about “gun violence,” they would ask themselves why every major U.S. city plagued by violence (places like St. Louis, Detroit, DC, Memphis, Baltimore, and New Orleans) have been run by Democrats for decades and have some of the most draconian gun-control laws in the nation. They might also look at the rioting, looting, murder, and mayhem that has plagued their cities this year, with local officials doing little to stop it (and often praising the rioters), and draw a correlation between the unchecked violence and anarchy and a jump in gun sales by law-abiding citizens, even in liberal strongholds like California, where gun shops are seeing more than a 100% increase in sales over last year. It’s unlikely that gun sales will drop so long as the Democrat Party and its leaders refuse to even acknowledge the murder and anarchy that has engulfed their cities, much less take steps to stop it. In Chicago, murders are up 50%, and in New York, they’re up 30%. There has been rioting in Portland for nearly 90 straight days. In a way, freedom-loving Americans owe the Democrats a debt of gratitude. When things are relatively peaceful, the siren song of security may entice people to give up individual liberties in the name of security and social cohesion. But when violent leftists are invading neighborhoods and threatening to kill residents and burn their homes down, when dozens of 9-1-1 calls go unanswered by local police during a riot, and when a state’s attorney general tells citizens that police should no longer respond to rape calls, even the most gun-averse American starts to think twice about leaving their family’s safety and security to politicians and bureaucrats who practice protection for me but not for thee. If we want to restore peace, safety, and security in America, getting rid of guns is not the answer. We need to get rid of Democrats. Tags: Louis DeBroux, The Patriot Post, Democrats, Falsely Claim, ‘Epidemic of Gun Violence’ 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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Margaret Sanger’s Racism Still Defended
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 04:50 PM PDT by Bill Donohue: Aside from pro-abortion activists, everyone who has taken a serious look at the writings and speeches of Margaret Sanger admits that she was a racist. Indeed, she was as big a racist as any Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan ever was. The evidence is overwhelming. Yet there are those who are still trying to rescue her legacy. Worse, some are in total denial about her racism. On July 21, Planned Parenthood of Greater New York announced it would remove Sanger’s name from its Manhattan clinic. It cited her “harmful connections to the eugenics movement,” as if that were breaking news; it has been known for a century. But it stopped short of calling her out for her racist agenda. It is impossible to separate eugenics from racism: it was built on it. Angela Franks, who authored Margaret Sanger’s Eugenics Legacy, said “she believed that if you eliminated the poor, then there would be no more poverty. Instead of eliminating the problem, she would eliminate the people who had the problem.” That was the purpose of her birth control crusade. The organization she launched continues to serve her goal of eliminating the poor, albeit with greater certainty: it facilitates killing them in utero. This means, of course, that a disproportionate number of black babies are killed every year. Even today, almost 8 in 10 Planned Parenthood abortion clinics are in minority neighborhoods. Sanger opened her first birth control clinic in Brooklyn in 1916. After officials at the abortion giant recently admitted that her record was tainted, they adjusted the section on their website titled, “100 Years Strong.” In their concluding statement on “Margaret Sanger—Our Founder,” they said, “Like all leaders—Sanger had many flaws.” In other words, Sanger’s targeting of African Americans for extinction was merely a “flaw.” This is the best Planned Parenthood can admit to today. If a white supremacist had her legacy, he would be condemned. Sanger’s friends in Marxist circles continue to defend her. “People’s World,” which is the successor of the Communist Party USA organ, the “Daily Worker,” published a piece on August 6 saying, “While Sanger did have ideas we find intolerable today, bigotry and contempt for workers were not among them (my italic).” Lying about Sanger’s racist past is commonplace. Ellen Chesler wrote the most celebrated volume on Sanger, Women of Valor. After carefully documenting all of Sanger’s work that served racist causes, she concludes that while her subject was “rabidly anti-Catholic,” she was not a racist. This is what happens when feminist ideology discolors the mind. It poisons the ability to reason. Edwin Black wrote an influential book about Sanger’s contribution to the eugenics movement, War Against the Weak. He admitted that “Sanger surrounded herself with some of the eugenics movement’s most outspoken racists and white supremacists.” He also wrote that “she openly welcomed” racists and anti-Semites into “the birth control movement.” Yet, like Chesler, he still concludes that she “was not a racist.” The most recent defender of Sanger’s racist history is Katha Pollitt, a pro-abortion extremist who writes for the Nation, a publication that defended Joseph Stalin. “For the record,” she says, “Margaret Sanger was not a racist.” Why not? Because prominent blacks supported her. The “exoneration by association” gambit fails: They may have supported her birth control policies, but they certainly did not support abortion. As late as 1963, Planned Parenthood admitted that “An abortion kills the life of the baby after it has begun.” It does not help Pollitt’s case to cite H.G. Wells’ support for Sanger (Planned Parenthood also notes that he was her ally). He made clear his goal. “We want fewer and better children…and we cannot make the social life and the world-peace we are determined to make, with the ill-bred, ill-trained swarms of inferior citizens that you inflict upon us.” In case Pollitt doubts who Wells was referring to, consider what Sanger said in her book, Women, Morality, and Birth Control. “We don’t want the word to get out that we want to exterminate the Negro population.” Moreover, Sanger constantly called those in the lower class “weeds” and “human waste” that must be “exterminated.” While Sanger did not campaign to make abortion legal, it is intellectually dishonest to say she was viscerally opposed to abortion. Indeed, she supported infanticide. “The most merciful thing that the large family does to one of its infant members is to kill it.” Her honesty was commendable, even if her goal was evil. Racism is what animated Planned Parenthood from its inception, and it is what motivates it today. Tags: Bill Donohue, Margaret Sanger, Racism Still Defended 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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Bearing False Witness
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 04:31 PM PDT . . . The Democrat convention very rare occurrences of any truth, but plenty of hate and lies to go around.
Editorial Cartoon by AF “Tony” Branco Tags: Editorial Cartoon, AF Branco, Bearing False Witness 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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It’s Never Too Late to Prep?
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 03:36 PM PDT by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: That’s the theme of a discussion at reddit.com. “Someone told me it was too late last fall,” the original poster recalls. “I went on to build a moderate canned prep. . . . Someone told me it was too late to prep for the pandemic in February. I went on to gather [personal protective equipment] before the stores emptied.” Most Redditors nodded. But one suggested that if things go kablooey and some products become scarce on shelves, “buying up those supplies is not being a prepper but being a hoarder.” “Hoarding” is a word used to disparage somebody else’s foresight and concern for survival. If something you need is in short supply, it is reasonable to stock up, if you can. (Even if it’s toilet paper and comedians chortle.) If the market is allowed to function — so that sellers of highly demanded goods can charge what the market will bear — everyone who can scrape together the necessary extra dollars will be able to obtain those goods. If a person buys up a supply only to resell it, not to restock his larder, he does us all a favor if the item is about to become desperately needed. He makes no money unless people can pay his price. But if we can afford the price, it is pointless to sputter about the extra expense — an expense we could have avoided had we prepared better for the future earlier on, saving more of the thing ourselves. The cost of not being prepared can be quite high. Same with the value, hence purchase price, of necessities bought after disaster. This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. Tags: Paul Jacob, Common Sense. It’s Never Too Late to Prep? 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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COVID Risk
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 03:25 PM PDT by Kerby Anderson: Six months into this pandemic, Americans still misperceive their risk of death from COVID-19. That is one of the conclusions from an extensive survey done by Franklin Templeton in conjunction with Gallup. They also found that the misperception is greater for people who identify as Democrats and also for people who rely more on social media for their information. Americans generally underestimate the likelihood of a person aged 55 or older dying from the coronavirus. They assume about half (57.5%) have died of COVID-19, when the actual percentage is more than nine in ten (92%). For the other age cohorts, they tend to overestimate the likelihood of a person dying. They assume that people aged 44 and younger account for about 30 percent of the total deaths, while the actual figure is 2.7 percent. And they estimate the risk of death from COVID-19 for people aged 24 and younger to be about 8 percent, when the actual figure is 0.2 percent. The report also explains that this “misperception translates into a degree of fear for one’s health that for most people vastly exceeds the actual risk.” For example, more than a majority (59.1%) of young people (18-24) worry about the serious health effects from the coronavirus, yet their percentage of total deaths is only 0.1 percent. Partisanship and social media also have an influence. “Those who identify as Democrats tend to mistakenly overstate the risk of death from COVID-19 for younger people much more than Republicans.” Also, the survey found that people “who get their information predominately from social media have the most erroneous and distorted perception of risk.” This survey not only illustrates the mistaken ideas many Americans have about the coronavirus, but also highlights how the media and politicized statements by candidates skew our view of the pandemic. Tags: Kerby Anderson, Viewpoints, Point of View, COVID Risk 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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I Was Wrong About Trump. He Didn’t Destroy the GOP, He Saved It
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 02:47 PM PDT At the RNC four years ago, I thought Trump couldn’t win the White House and that his nomination would destroy the Republican Party. I was wrong. by John Daniel Davidson: When the Republican Party formally nominated Donald Trump four years ago at the national convention in Cleveland, I thought the GOP was making huge mistake. It seemed Trump would certainly lose in November, and that every Republican officeholder who climbed aboard the Trump train that summer would be purged from whatever came after his inevitable defeat. It would be the end of the GOP as we knew it. I was wrong about all of that—and in hindsight, I’m glad I was wrong. But it turned out Trump was the best candidate to beat Clinton because Clinton embodied nearly everything voters had come to hate about America’s political class: the falsity, the naked hypocrisy, the barely disguised disdain for ordinary people. For all his obvious faults, Trump wasn’t a professional politician, had no record to defend, and was unconstrained by the conventions of ordinary political rhetoric. He was uniquely positioned to call out and exploit Clinton’s faults and shortcomings, and expose the contradictions at the heart of the Democratic Party. For Republican voters, Trump offered the promise of something different from the seemingly endless pattern of politicians who promised one thing and did another, especially on immigration and free trade. For decades, incessant Republican boasting about “securing the border” never actually secured the border as mass illegal immigration continued apace. Expressions of sympathy for the American working class never produced policies that might actually help the working class. Trump zeroed in on these things, and his message resonated because it was true (and still is). On foreign policy, Trump was nearly alone in his unequivocal condemnation of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. The other GOP candidates, especially Jeb Bush, were loath to litigate those wars or criticize Bush-era foreign policy, but Trump jumped right in, saying over and over what most Americans really thought: the wars were a mistake, the U.S. military was overstretched, Americans were getting a raw deal. There was a purge in the GOP, but the ones who were purged were pols like former Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona and former Ohio Gov. John Kasich, the kind of Republican leaders who spent their entire careers politely touting plans for entitlement reform and balanced budgets while ignoring the things voters actually cared about. There’s a reason the newly announced list of two dozen “Republicans for Biden” is comprised of former GOP congressmen, and that Flake, who made a name for himself by criticizing Trump and backing the Democrats’ impeachment fiasco, tops the list. There’s a reason Kasich was one of just three Republicans to speak at the Democratic National Convention last week. Trump didn’t destroy the GOP, he saved it from people like Flake and Kasich. Voters Face A Stark Choice This Year, Just As In 2016 Four years later, that’s still the basic choice facing Americans as the Republican National Convention gets underway this week. In Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, the Democrats have a ticket that represents nearly everything the Clinton candidacy represented, only this time their line is that Biden will be a “return to normalcy”—as if Americans didn’t reject the normalcy of the political establishment four years ago. The intervening years since Trump won the White House have done nothing to inspire a renewed confidence in our political and expert class. The coronavirus no doubt represents challenges for Trump’s reelection, as it would for any incumbent. But Democrats in Congress and in governor’s mansions across the country have not exactly covered themselves in glory during the pandemic. Nor have they inspired confidence by their inaction in the face of widespread rioting and urban unrest in recent months. Amid the chaos, they appear weak and confused, afraid of the mob and the virus alike, oftentimes unable to articulate a vision even for re-opening schools. Biden inspires no confidence. He now leads a party riven by internal tensions and contradictions, a coalition that will not likely hold together in defeat, and will certainly crumble in victory. His presidency would be dominated by Harris and bullied by the ascendant left wing of the Democratic Party. His pitch to America, such that it is, seems to be more of a plea that at least he isn’t Trump, he’s just a kindly old man who will be decent and do whatever his advisors tell him to do. None of this is to say that Trump is a shoe-in come November. But win or lose, he has done something for the GOP that Biden cannot do for Democratic Party: he has helped clarify what the Republican Party is about and whose interests it serves, and by taking on the GOP establishment, he has done much to save the party from itself. Tags: John Daniel Davidson, The Federalist, I Was Wrong About Trump, He Didn’t Destroy the GOP, He Saved It 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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A Tale Of Two Conventions
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 02:18 PM PDT by Mario Murillo Ministries: It was the best of conventions and the worst of conventions. One was a funeral for America. The other, a new birth of freedom. One, a convention of life, the other a convention of death. One pointed to faith in the future. The other made a grave, by digging up the past. One was a beacon of light. The other was the keeper of the flames for rioters. One was a spring of hope, the other a nuclear winter of despair. Fear and hate ruled in one venue. Courage and love in the other. Democrats carted out the waxworks. The usual suspects. Political-lifers, hacks, and traitors. Men and women festering in old bitterness, demonizing everything American. Bashing patriotism. Removing God. Even the American flag was banned. And when they finally went after the youth-vote, it was a singer who loves the number 666. Obama ranted and railed against Trump. He painted a dark picture of what America would be like if Trump won. Forgetting that what he was really describing is the current conditions in cities under Democrat control. The Democrat convention was a black hole, sucking vision, hope, unity, inspiration, decency, and faith out of anyone who would listen. Trump’s best campaign commercials would be simply to play sound bites from this raging dysfunctional family. Meanwhile, in complete contrast, at the Republican Convention, true diversity—true unity—true love for America was raised like a banner over a weary army. The will to be great coursed in the veins of those who listened as speaker after speaker brought encouragement and the will to win. Thus far in the convention, there have been many speakers who were amazing, but Melania, our wonderful First Lady, soared above the rest. She brought something long missing in all the rhetoric: consolation and comfort. Her speech will be most remembered for her words to the victims of the coronavirus and their families, that evoked a sense of empathy for loss in the pandemic. “My deepest sympathy goes out to all of you who have lost a loved one and my prayers are with those who are ill or suffering,” the First Lady said. “I know many people are anxious and some feel helpless. I want you to know you are not alone.” One of the most beautiful things she said drives home the difference between her spirit and that of the former regime. The Obamas constantly projected ingratitude for being American. They never concealed it—it oozed out of them. They mentored Ilhan Omar well in this ingratitude. She came from a war-torn nation, was rescued and brought to America, only to vilify us as evil people. Melania also came from a war-torn nation, but listen to the difference in her gracious words: “The past three-and-a-half years have been unforgettable. There are no words to describe how honored, humbled, and fortunate I am to serve our nation as your First Lady. After many of the experiences I have had, I don’t know if I can fully explain how many people I take home with me in my heart each day, from brave soldiers who give up so much so we can be free, to children of all circumstances who we have met around the world.” These two totally disparate conventions leave you with no doubt as to your choice. Biden is saying, ‘Vote for me and—when I don’t have a mental lapse—I will show how bad and how hard it is in this country. I will help you understand anger, your evil history, disrespect for others and self-pity. I will raise your taxes and lower your expectations. I will foist upon you and especially your children, the old abnormal, but I will call it the new normal. When we are done with this nation, you will no longer recognize it. Join the Marxist revolution.’ The other is calling out, ‘We have defeated evil before and we can do it again. We have been knocked down, but I know how to get us back up. You should be proud of America. You should be proud of the abundant instances of American greatness over the past two and a half centuries of history. Let’s not slow down the train to throw rocks at the barking dogs. Come with me, because the best is yet to come!” Solomon described those who want to overthrow the government, “Do not be envious of evil men, nor desire to be with them; for their heart devises violence, and their lips talk of troublemaking…but the lamp of the wicked will be put out. My son, fear the Lord and the king; and do not associate with those given to revolution; for their calamity will rise suddenly, and who knows the destruction that will come to them? (Proverbs 24:1-3; 21-22). Any questions? Tags: Mario Murillo Ministries, A Tale, Of Two Conventions 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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California Apocalypto
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 01:58 PM PDT Power outages, fires, water shortages, rising taxes, crumbling and congested highways, dismal schools, lawlessness …
by Dr. Victor Davis Hanson: It is now August in California. Green Napalm When the inept state can’t extinguish them as it has in the past, it suggests that it’s more “natural” to let them burn. Jerry Brown’s team told us that the drought’s toll — millions of dead trees and tens of millions of acres of parched grass and calcified shrubs on hillsides — provided a natural source of food and shelter for bugs and birds and thus need not be grazed or thinned or harvested. And so the wages of drought could be in a sense good for an “ecosystem” that otherwise proved to be green napalm for the people of foothill communities. We can expect power outages, because we don’t believe in releasing clean heat to make energy. Note that we do not mind people heating up in their 108-degree apartments without power. The planet is always more important than the non-privileged people who inhabit it. Note the synergism of the California postmodern apocalypse: The hotter it gets, the more fires burn on ecological fuel and hillside natural “compost,” the smokier the air becomes, the less efficiently California’s solar pathway to the future generates, the more power outages ensue, the more real people are put in danger from either being incinerated by fire or suffocated by smoke or boiled inside without air conditioning. Last week, I asked an elderly patient at the allergy clinic whether, in the 108-degree heat, he preferred to stay outside to breathe smoke and haze, or stay inside his uncooled apartment. He gave a novel answer: He didn’t care about the power outages since he couldn’t pay the exorbitant electricity charges anyway to turn on his air conditioner. And he added that, in California these days, you can’t tell whether mask wearers are fighting the virus, the smoke, or the police. We can expect shortages of water, because the state blocks new reservoirs and aqueducts, and drains those we do have to send millions of acre-feet to the sea. State officials now suddenly stop bashing “last generation” hydroelectric power as not really “green” (after all, dams are not quite “natural”) and instead try to use every last drop of stored water to generate hydroelectricity amid brownouts, scorching temperatures, and fires. We can expect lots of crime, because in fear of COVID-19 and in line with no-to-little bail policies, lots of criminals roam our streets. The state was once far safer after the adoption of the three-strikes law, but as crime radically declined, the imprisoned criminal, not his prey, was recalibrated as a victim. Gun sales are soaring, in the bluest of states, as if carjackers and home invaders just might not extend exemption to the woke. California, as some of the Democratic primary candidates bragged last year, is the progressive model of the future: a once-innovative rich state that is now a civilization in near ruins. The nation should watch us this election year and learn of its possible future. After one of the primary debates in late 2019, I drove to San Francisco. On checking into the hotel, I was reminded (off the record) by the officious hotel doorman of the city’s Third World protocols: 1) Do not park your car on the street, because it most surely will have its windows smashed and its contents stolen, and the police will either not respond if called or the city would not prosecute the criminal if arrested. 2) Check the soles of your shoes before entering the hotel lobby to ensure that human feces or needle remnants are not stuck to the bottoms. 3) Do not offer food/money/“help” if walking along nearby homeless corridors, given the uncertain and possibly violent reaction that such outreach might incur. As he warned me, I kept thinking of scenes in the Hitchcock films of a 1950s San Francisco with streets that were clean and safe, with people polite and mannered. No doubt that world is written off now as racist and exploitive by the morally superior San Francisco of the woke, who 60 years later have created their own wasteland and called it civilization. Once-successful civilizations implode not only from moral laxity, debt, inflation, and luxury, but also from a sort of psychological stasis by which the bureaucracy would rather die in place as it is than change and survive. How to Destroy a Once-Successful State Our beleaguered governor Newsom is no longer just leveraging the lockdown and boasting of the virus as “an opportunity for reimagining a more progressive era.” Instead, he is now worried about our the Frankensteinian Green New Deal state that he, in his earlier political incarnations, helped create: “We cannot sacrifice reliability as we move on.” That means something like, “We built so many subsidized solar and wind farms, and retired or canceled so many clean-burning natural-gas power plants, that we don’t have enough electricity for 40 million sweltering residents when the annual green napalm hits.” Who would have figured? So Newsom has announced that his state’s shutting off the power without much warning is “unacceptable.” He fears there will be lots of blackouts if the heat wave and fires continue. Apparently, Newsom now has some doubt that we have really “move[ed] on” to a green utopia. Could someone hooked up on electrically dependent dialysis actually be more important than taking a ranting call from billionaire Tom Steyer? I would add lots to the governor’s list of California lapses: It might have been a mistake to cancel water projects, like the raising of dams on large existing reservoirs central to the California Water Project and Central Valley project, or the construction of the planned Sites Reservoir, or the Los Banos Grandes or Temperance Flat proposed reservoirs. The Left is instead talking about destroying dams in the far north of the state that store water, generate clean electricity, and stop flooding. We haven’t seen such year-zero nihilism since Mao unleashed the Red Guard. Some 30 million of 40 million Californians live crowded along a desert-like coastal strip from La Jolla to Berkeley, with a water storage system designed for 20 million state residents that is now woefully inadequate. Yet most in the Bay Area seem to oppose more water-transfer investments. Their ideology dictates that “dams are bad because they are unnatural and won’t allow rivers to run to the sea as we read about in the mid 19th century.” Their new reality answers, “How else can we supply water in a state where two-thirds of the precipitation falls where one-third of the population lives, and two-thirds live where one-third falls?” Is not the most green of all methods of power generation, the cheapest way to store water, the best method to stop flooding, and the most scenic of opportunities for recreation a mountain reservoir that allows gravity-driven water to create electricity, ensures water will flow to the cities without much pumping, stops flooding that destroys civilization, provides water for irrigated food, and endows the middle classes with clean, natural outdoor relaxation? Was it not a mistake, Governor Newsom, for premodern California to attempt postmodern high-speed rail? The skeleton of a now mostly canceled high-speed-rail project looms like Stonehenge about 15 miles from where I live. The frozen overpasses remain half-built and are now stained with graffiti. They are religious totems to a now discredited post-viral, post-quarantine, post-rioting/defund-the-police urban model of cramming citizens into trains to send them into crammed stations and on into crammed elevators up to crammed offices and apartments — whose thin margin of safety and efficacy hinges on mayors such as Bill De Blasio, Ted Wheeler, and Lori Lightfoot. On one side of the high-speed proposed corridor, Amtrak trains sit still on their side turnouts while trains on the opposite side roar by. Would it have been wiser to first create two parallel Amtrak tracks to facilitate nonstop train travel than spend ten times more on a pipe dream now wafting away? Again, when California cannot solve the premodern problem, it hides its impotence by futilely pursuing the postmodern fantasy. On the other eastern parallel side, Freeway 99 is often backed up with traffic because of constant ad hoc reconstruction. The old 1960s goal of having six lanes in the state’s major central longitudinal freeway was never realized — given the Jerry Brown theory that the worse California roads became, the slower traffic would move, and thus the more that exasperated commuters would cry uncle to mass or high-speed transit. Might it also have been smarter not to raise income taxes on top tiers to over 13 percent? After 2017, when high earners could no longer write off their property taxes and state income taxes, the real state-income-tax bite doubled. So still more of the most productive residents left the state. Yet if the state gets its way, raising rates to over 16 percent and inaugurating a wealth tax, there will be a stampede. It is not just that the upper middle class can no longer afford coastal living at $1,000 a square foot and $15,000–$20,000 a year in “low” property taxes. The rub is more about what they get in return: terrible roads, crumbling bridges, human-enhanced droughts, power blackouts, dismal schools that rank near the nation’s bottom, half the nation’s homeless, a third of its welfare recipients, one-fifth of the residents living below the poverty level — and more lectures from the likes of privileged Gavin Newsom on the progressive possibilities of manipulating the chaos. California enshrined the idea that the higher taxes become, the worse state services will be. Or is the state’s suicide one Orwellian nightmarish plan? The worse California becomes, the less attractive it will be for illegal immigrants? The more who flee, the more affordable will be their abandoned homes? The fewer Californians, the less need for water and power? The more congested the ossified highways, the fewer will try to drive? The more the middle class shrinks, the more powerful the wealthy and the more dependent the poor? The New Dark Ages It might have been wiser for Newsom and his predecessors to have ensured a secure border and legal, diverse, meritocratic, and measured immigration. Some 27 percent of the state was not born in the U.S. They arrived at a time when California was championing sanctuary cities and a “diversity” K–12 curriculum, and the state was treating with contempt the ancient idea of the melting pot. The state’s implicit message to new arrivals was that the now long dead who built California — which everyone wished to come to — were racists deserving of contempt and Trotskyization, despite immigrants’ dependence on their strange 1950s and 1960 freeways, UC/CSU/JC master education plan, once-modern airports, and ingenious water projects. The result of lots of fresh newcomers, a politicized education system, and an inert infrastructure is now that Californians live in something akin to the Greek Dark Ages. They wander about looking at the ruins of prior civilizations and seem dumbstruck at the nature and purpose of decaying monuments in their midst. The problem is not just that the state does not wish to build a new dam, but it is questionable whether it can anymore, even if it wished. Millions drive along the California aqueduct and have no idea who built it or why, only perhaps that it gives them life. Californians love their Sierra reservoirs but haven’t a clue how hard it once was to build them or why they were ever created in the first place, much less who planned and constructed them — and who is draining them. When so many poor came to California from abroad, many without English, a high-school diploma, or legality, the state was faced with two choices. One was a radical plan of assimilation and integration — to ensure that their new home would be what they expected, something far superior to what they had left — and an educational curriculum that apprised newcomers of why and how California’s infrastructure, universities, and industries had led to such wealth. Unfortunately, the state preferred the easier alternative strategy of reassuring poor and future voters that upon arrival they were victims of native-born citizens, who had rigged the system to benefit their own race and class. The latter message of victimization and exemption only fueled immigrant poverty. In response to the new pyramidal society, the exasperated state decided that it could hardly apply California Bay Area utopian standards of regulation and nanny-state control to the poor and the foreign-born. So they created two sets of laws: one for those who would follow them, and another consisting of exemptions for those who couldn’t or wouldn’t follow the laws. Translated, that means millions of Californians from Sacramento to Bakersfield, from the foothills to the Sierra, live in shacks and trailers. They eat at roadside canteens without running water or bathrooms. They buy gas at rural stations that have no facilities. In other words, they are poor and do not care to follow the hyper-rules made by the rich. In the most highly taxed state in America’s history, there is a huge black market of cash exchanges, much of it run by the poor and the recent immigrants, that the state doesn’t dare stop. When I leave my driveway, I see four “restaurants” on the side of the road, without running water or flush toilets — mobile canteens that almost always remain immobile. On the next two intersections, I can buy flowers, homemade soft drinks, even clothes or tools — for cash only. The local “swap” meet on Sundays near my house is a huge mostly tax-free sort of outdoor ad hoc Costco. Darkness at the End of the Tunnel? Not until Nancy Pelosi’s Napa Valley estate is without power and her boutique ice cream collections all melt. Not until the Silicon Valley private academies are forced to diversify, as inclusion trainers recruit the very poor and undocumented from Mexico and Central America into their student bodies. Not until the Google and Facebook employees leave their beds in parked cars and buses and break into their employers’ lobbies to sleep better at night. Not until the Malibu “help” strike, demand unionization, and are paid for nannying, housecleaning, yardwork, and cooking at the going SEIU rates. Not until Antifa and BLM begin prying up 2,000–2,500 terrazzo stars of all the Hollywood Walk of Fame living and dead who did not meet their 2020 woke requirements. Not until a retired Jerry Brown is forced to commute daily to a new consulting job on the 99. Not until the showers in the Zuckerberg estates blast out sand rather than water. And not until Gavin Newsom finally is forced to pay own his delinquent property-tax bill and comply with tax laws governing the huge gifts bequeathed to him. Not until they put homeless tents and shelters on the curb outside Diane Feinstein’s mansion. Not until the homeless and paroled are put up at the Fairmont and the Mark Hopkins. Not until Barbra Streisand gets a recording when she calls 911 after her seaside estate is besieged. Not until Hetch Hetchy and its artificially constructed aqueducts dry up and the Bay Area has no water delivered from afar, as it resorts to its preferable natural arid state. When all that happens, California will begin to change. In other words — never. Tags: Victor Davis Hanson, National Review 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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Lawmakers Demand Answers From Jeff Bezos on Exclusion of Conservatives From Charitable Program
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 01:24 PM PDT
by Rachel del Guidice: Conservative members of the House are asking Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos to answer questions as to why some conservatives appear to have been banned from using Amazon Smile, an Amazon charity program. “The exclusion of these conservative groups from Amazon’s heavily-trafficked digital platform leads to less exposure for these groups and fewer opportunities for donations,” the letter reads, which was obtained by Fox Business and signed by Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee. The Amazon charity program, Amazon Smile, according to its website, donates 0.5% of eligible purchases to the designated charitable organization with no added costs or fees but some conservative organizations are not allowed to use the program, which raised $100 million in 2018 for charities that took part, Fox News reported. Amazon Smile follows the recommendations of the left-wing Southern Poverty Law Center on charitable organizations, and the Southern Poverty Law Center designates organizations like the Family Research Council and Alliance Defending Freedom as hate groups. “Amazon’s reliance on the SPLC as a barometer to determine the eligibility of charitable organizations on AmazonSmile serves to discriminate against conservative views,” the letter reads, which was also signed by Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., who sits on the House Judiciary Committee, and 13 other House Republicans. The letter adds: “While Amazon is within its rights as a private company to conduct its business the way it wants, consumers also have a right to complain to Amazon and to ultimately decide not to do business with the retailer if their complaints aren’t taken seriously.” Tags: Rachel del Guidice, Lawmakers Demand Answers, Jeff Bezos, Exclusion of Conservatives, From Charitable Program 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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Bloomberg Wants to Buy Your Right to Bear Arms
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 12:58 PM PDT by Susanne Edward : Michael Bloomberg failed to win much Democratic support in his expensive quest (spending an estimated $1 billion of his personal fortune) to secure the 2020 nomination for president, but the former New York City mayor is continuing to push his unrelenting gun-control agenda with lots of money. He has plenty of it, and has no problem using it in an attempt to buy peoples’ freedom. On Monday, Bloomberg confirmed that he is going to spend $60 million of his own money—a drop in the pan for a man worth in surplus of $50 billion by some estimates, but unfathomable funds to us commoners—to aid Democrat candidates for the U.S. House of Representatives across the country who would vote to restrict our right to keep and bear arms. The $60 million is being poured into digital and television ads. It will also include a dump of funds to the House Majority PAC, connected to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who has already gushed that the Bloomberg injection “was pivotal to our success two years ago.” The multi-faceted, multi-million dollar expenditure also includes a revival of Independence USA, a 2012 PAC Bloomberg brought to life to help candidates running in local state and federal races nationwide. But for recipients and potential recipients, it’s more than just a fat check; it is about establishing a relationship with a man who can ultimately make or break their future in public service. Whether or not they agree with gun control, those seeking a slice of the Bloomberg pie will have little choice but to promise to vote for more gun control. A New York Times investigation published earlier this year—when he was still a big-spending presidential contender—said that the “philanthropic and political spending in the years leading up to his presidential bid illustrates how he developed a national infrastructure of influence, image-making, and unspoken suasion.” Even his charitable giving over the past year—some $3.3 billion to Johns Hopkins University, his alma mater—is enmeshed in his gun-control philosophy. The year after leaving office in New York City, Bloomberg is said to have dished out more than $500,000 into electing an anti-gun governor in Maryland, where the university is located. Let’s go back further. In the years after securing the mayor title in 2002, Bloomberg emphasized his quest to “rid our streets of guns, and punish all those who possess and traffic in these instruments of death.” But he wasn’t content targeting the streets of the Big Apple. In April 2006, he brought 15 mayors across the U.S. to his well-guarded Gracie Mansion to drum up support as he created Mayors Against Illegal Guns. And while still in power, Bloomberg continued his tirade into Virginia. Then, after departing office in December 2013, Bloomberg brought to life Everytown for Gun Safety with a swift $50 million, which has muscled gun-control upon us via his massive fortune. This year, in keeping with the prominent businessman’s pledge to spread millions to hopefuls across the country, Everytown also gets $60 million to put toward its goals of “electing candidates who will govern gun safety in mind,” “beat the NRA,” and “change how America thinks about gun violence.” The ad bombardment is expected to take aim at eight key states: Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Minnesota, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Texas. So, if you’re there, get ready up for a gun-demonizing onslaught designed to “change your mind.” And know where it comes from: a man with a lot of money who couldn’t buy popularity to get the Democratic Party’s nomination for president, but is, nevertheless, intent on pulling strings. Tags: Susanne Edward, NRA-ILA, Michael Bloomberg, Elections, Everytown, For Gun Safety, Virginia, Second Amendment, Gun Rights, Gun Control 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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The Choice Is Clear: President Trump’s Second Amendment Record Has Earned Him the Gun Vote in 2020
Posted: 26 Aug 2020 12:37 PM PDT by Jason Ouimet: We are living in extraordinary times, and it will take an extraordinary effort by freedom-loving Americans during this year’s presidential election to emerge with our liberties intact. The candidates could not be further apart in how they view your fundamental right to protect yourself and your loved ones. Regardless of party affiliation, if you value the right to keep and bear arms and wish to preserve it for this and future generations, you must vote to re-elect President Donald J. Trump in November. I explained last month why the election of Joe Biden would be a disaster for gun owners and would cripple the Second Amendment as we know it. That alone makes the choice easy. But for his part, President Trump has earned the gun vote by keeping his promises to America’s firearm owners and by proving time after time that he is a stalwart and trusted ally to Second Amendment supporters. Gun owners will remember that 2016’s presidential election was largely a referendum on who would choose the successor to U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, author of the landmark 2008 opinion in District of Columbia v. Heller. Scalia used text, history and tradition to establish as a matter of law what was already common knowledge to most Americans: the Second Amendment protects an individual right to keep and bear arms, independent of service in an organized militia. Justice Scalia’s decision led to the end of handgun bans in the District of Columbia and Chicago. It also signaled that the Second Amendment must be afforded the same respect as other individual liberties protected by the Bill of Rights. Gun prohibitionists reacted with fury and have been trying to undermine and reverse Heller’s individual-rights holding ever since. They may well have succeeded, had the Senate confirmed Barack Obama’s choice to fill Scalia’s vacant seat on the court. That nominee, Judge Merrick Garland of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, had voted to rehear the lower court decision that would eventually become the Heller case before the Supreme Court. Garland manifestly believed the full D.C. Circuit needed another crack at interpreting the Second Amendment, after a three-judge panel issued an opinion holding that D.C.’s handgun ban violated the Second Amendment’s individual right to keep and bear arms. Donald Trump made appointing a worthier successor to Scalia’s legacy a keystone of his presidential platform. He even published a list of potential Supreme Court nominees during his campaign, so voters could see for themselves what sorts of judges Trump would appoint to the nation’s highest court. The common denominator among these judges (besides impeccable professional credentials) was a demonstrated respect for America’s constitutional order, legal traditions and Second Amendment. Most had also adopted Scalia’s signature “originalist” style of constitutional interpretation, which limits judicial policy-making by deferring to the meaning of constitutional language as it was understood at the time of its adoption. This ensures permanence and stability for the nation’s founding principles, unlike the contrary practice of simply declaring constitutional precepts out of thin air to suit the judge’s preferred politics and to keep up with the elite trends of the day, whatever they happen to be. Gun owners understood the stakes in 2016 and voted for Donald Trump in droves. After his election, President Trump kept his most important promise by nominating Judge Neil M. Gorsuch, then of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, to ascend to Scalia’s vacant seat on the U.S. Supreme Court. Gorsuch, in contrast to Garland, had demonstrated his respect for the Second Amendment, writing in one case that the “Second Amendment protects an individual’s right to own firearms and may not be infringed lightly.” Like Scalia, Gorsuch also emphasized textualism and originalism in his approach to constitutional interpretation. President Trump had another opportunity to appoint a Supreme Court justice with the retirement of Justice Anthony Kennedy in 2018. Kennedy was widely recognized as the critical swing vote in Heller and the follow-up case of McDonald v. City of Chicago. Yet he was also typically characterized as a centrist, and it wasn’t clear how far his support for the Second Amendment extended. Many believe the reason the Supreme Court remained silent on the Second Amendment in the years after Heller and McDonald was that neither the evenly divided pro- and anti-gun wings of the court had confidence that Kennedy would vote their way. Trump’s choice to succeed Kennedy was Brett M. Kavanaugh, then of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. Kavanaugh had one of the strongest records on the Second Amendment of any potential nominee, having penned a lengthy and well-reasoned dissent from a case that upheld various aspects of D.C.’s onerous post-Heller gun control regime. It was clear he would take the Second Amendment seriously if elevated to the high court. Since their appointments to the Supreme Court, both Gorsuch and Kavanaugh have been even clearer about their concern over the lower courts’ dismissive treatment of the Second Amendment and their desire for the court to rectify that situation. Both have joined or written opinions expressing this sentiment in cases in which the court ultimately declined to revisit the right to keep and bear arms. No one knows when the Supreme Court will take up another Second Amendment case, but when they do, few doubt that Gorsuch and Kavanaugh will be among the strongest defenders of that essential liberty. Speaking of the lower courts, President Trump has been busy there as well, in June reaching the milestone of 200 judicial appointments. Only a tiny fraction of cases ever reach the U.S. Supreme Court. The decisions that affect Americans’ lives and liberties—including the right to keep and bear arms—will mostly be rendered by judges at the district and circuit court levels. President Trump recognizes this and has made an investment in the judiciary that will pay dividends for gun owners for decades to come. Even Trump’s detractors recognize that his reshaping of the federal judiciary will be his most important and lasting legacy. Yet President Trump’s support for the Second Amendment goes well beyond his judicial appointments. Shortly after taking office, he wasted no time repealing an Obama-era scheme that forced Social Security recipients to choose between their benefits and their Second Amendment right to possess a firearm. President Trump made sure that Americans’ rights should never be the subject of such a false choice. During his 2016 campaign, Trump promised to abolish so-called “gun-free zones” that empower criminals and disarm the law-abiding. He did exactly that in April, initiating a rulemaking to end a ban on the possession of firearms in water resource development projects administered by the Army Corps of Engineers (ACE). These areas comprise one of the largest networks of outdoor recreation sites in America, encompassing more than 400 lake and river projects in 43 states. Visitors use these sites for hiking, boating, fishing, camping, hunting and geo-caching. Yet carrying firearms for self-defense in these areas is prohibited. The proposed rule would abolish an existing “gun-free zone” on 12 million acres of public lands and waters nationwide, including 55,390 miles of shoreline, 7,856 miles of trails, 92,588 campsites and 3,754 boat ramps. It is set to be one of the single largest expansions of the right to carry in the nation’s history. The Trump administration also reformed America’s antiquated system for regulating exports of firearms and ammunition in a way that benefited both individual gun owners and the lawful industries that support them. Among other things, this move reversed Obama-era polices that wreaked havoc with gunsmiths and gunsmithing schools, as well as with hunters traveling abroad with personally owned firearms and ammunition. During the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, when many state governments were poised to use the novel virus as a means to restrict Second Amendment rights, President Trump’s administration identified the firearms industry as “critical infrastructure,” forcing all but a few states to keep gun stores and other firearm businesses open. In doing so, President Trump made clear that the self-defense rights of law-abiding Americans are and forever will be “essential.” And, who could forget the historic moment when President Trump “unsigned” the Arms Trade Treaty on stage at our 2018 Annual Meeting. His leadership freed the U.S. from a terrible treaty that could have imposed restrictive international gun control on American gun owners. The president additionally used his authority to increase access to public lands for the use of hunters and sport shooters, both through executive orders and by signing federal legislation to that helps states provide more shooting ranges on public lands. More so than any of his predecessors, President Trump has unapologetically supported the Second Amendment, even when “elite” opinion has railed against it. President Trump understands that despite what these so-called “elites” claim, nothing is more important than the fundamental freedoms we enjoy as Americans. That’s why I’ve whole-heartedly endorsed him in my role as Chairman of NRA-PVF, and why I look forward to casting my ballot to help re-elect him on November 3. I invite you to join me by doing the same. Tags: Jason Ouimet, Executive Director, NRA-ILA, President Trump, Second Amendment record, gun vote, 2020, Supreme Court, 2nd Amendment 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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NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Thursday, August 27, 2020
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Good morning, NBC News readers.
Hurricane Laura has hit the Gulf Coast, professional sports refused to play last night to protest the latest police shooting and the GOP stuck with its “law and order” message on the third night of the Republican National Convention.
Here’s what we’re watching this Wednesday morning.
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Hurricane Laura slams into Gulf Coast
Packing wind speeds of 150 mph and threatening a catastrophic storm surge, Laura on Thursday became one of the strongest hurricanes to make landfall in U.S. history as it struck Louisiana near the Texas border.
The “extremely dangerous” storm brought incredibly high winds and flash flooding when it made landfall near Cameron in southwestern Louisiana at about 1 a.m. local time (2 a.m. ET), the National Hurricane Center said.
The storm’s maximum sustained winds have since fallen to 110 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center.
- Live blog: Get the latest updates on Hurricane Laura.
- Storm surge tracker: The National Weather Service warned that Laura’s “unsurvivable storm surge” could cause “catastrophic damage” to the shores of Louisiana and Texas. See a map live-tracking the storm surge.
- Map: Follow Laura’s path as it continues inland.
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Teen arrested in Kenosha shooting promoted ‘Blue Lives Matter,’ guns and Trump online
On Wednesday 17-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse was arrested and charged with first-degree homicide in connection with the deaths of two people during protests in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Tuesday night over the police shooting of Jacob Blake.
NBCNews’ investigative reporters Brandy Zadrozny and Jason Abbruzzese found that Rittenhouse’s online footprint revealed strong support for law enforcement, including the “Blue Lives Matter” movement, guns and President Donald Trump.
Numerous videos, recorded Tuesday night by journalists and people on the streets of Kenosha, appeared to show Rittenhouse before the shootings he was arrested in connection with. Other videos appeared to have captured at least some of the violence he is accused of.
The identities of the two people who were killed on Tuesday have not been released yet.
Meantime, Wisconsin’s attorney general says Blake — the Black man who was shot seven times in the back by a police officer in Kenosha on Sunday — was near a knife when the shooting took place. But he would not say whether Blake was carrying the knife when he was shot.
The wider reckoning over the police shooting continued Wednesday with the NBA and other professional sports teams delaying play in protest of Blake’s shooting.
The Milwaukee Bucks kicked off the pro-sports protest by refusing to take the floor for its scheduled playoff game against the Orlando Magic.
“Despite the overwhelming plea for change, there has been no action, so our focus today cannot be on basketball,” the players who represent Milwaukee and Wisconsin said.
The team owners supported the move and the NBA followed up by postponing other playoff games.
The Los Angeles Clippers head coach Doc Rivers presaged the ban with raw, emotional comments about the state of race relations in the U.S. late Tuesday that quickly went viral.
“All you hear is Donald Trump and all of them talking about fear,” Rivers said of the Republican National Convention. “We’re the ones getting killed. We’re the ones getting shot. We’re the ones that we’re denied to live in certain communities. We’ve been hung. We’ve been shot. And all you do is keep hearing about fear.
“It’s amazing why we keep loving this country, and this country does not love us back,” Rivers said.
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Pence drives home ‘law and order’ message on third night of RNC
Vice President Mike Pence praised law enforcement and drove home President Donald Trump’s “law and order” message on the third night of the Republican National Convention as the country is roiled again over the police shooting of a Black man.
“Let me be clear: the violence must stop – whether in Minneapolis, Portland, or Kenosha,” said Pence, referring to protests in the wake of police shootings. “The hard truth is, you won’t be safe in Joe Biden’s America.”
Pence honored a police officer killed during recent protests, but did not mention by name any of the Black Americans killed by law enforcement whose deaths have sparked the recent Black Lives Matter protests.
“Law and order are on the ballot,” the vice president said. “The choice in this election is whether America remains America.”
He concluded by saying, with Trump back in office, “We will Make America Great Again — again.”
- “The most pro-life president”: Abortion was another major theme on Wednesday night. Here are 5 key takeaways from Night 3.
- Fact check: Has ISIS really been defeated? Not according to the U.S. military. See our fact-check on some of the RNC speakers’ claims from Wednesday night.
- Catch up: Read analysis of the night’s big moments.
- Night 4: Trump will officially accept his party’s nomination for president with the White House as a backdrop this evening. Tune into NBC News, MSNBC and NBCNews.com for special coverage of the final day of the convention.
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Plus
- Dr. Anthony Fauci “has some concerns” about changes to the official guidance for COVID-19 testing.
- “Your actions were inhuman”: The New Zealand mosque shooter has been sentenced to life without parole.
- Alexander Vindman’s twin brother has filed a complaint with the Pentagon’s Inspector General alleging the White House has retaliated against him.
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THINK about it
The Republican Party has no platform because it has no principles, former secretary of the Navy and NASA administrator Sean O’Keefe writes in an opinion piece.
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Live BETTER
Meet the 107-year-old who had Spanish flu as a child and recovered from COVID-19.
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One fun thing
As the world waits for a vaccine to help bring about the end of the coronavirus pandemic, scientists in Northern California have been at work on a different approach — one that takes cues from llamas and their unique antibodies.
Scientists say they hope to harness the power of llama antibodies to stop the coronavirus from infecting humans.
“It binds to the virus’ spike protein with an unmatched affinity — we’ve never seen anything like this in my lab before,” said Peter Walter, a molecular biologist and biochemist who is part of a team working to develop a potential coronavirus treatment using the llama-inspired compound. “It was absolutely beautiful to see.”
Could llamas save us all? (Photo: Martin Mejia / AP)
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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: Chaos, events undercut Trump’s convention
For most of this year, the events of 2020 have overshadowed the actual presidential campaign.
And it’s happening again – as the Republican convention concludes and with 68 days to until Election Day.
Photo by Eric Thayer/Getty Images
A powerful hurricane has slammed into the Louisiana-Texas Gulf Coast.
The shooting of Jacob Blake by police in Kenosha, Wis., has resulted in unrest, further violence and the arrest of a 17-year-old charged with murder during the protests.
Also because of the Blake shooting, professional athletes – from the NBA and WNBA, to Major League Baseball, Major League Soccer and tennis star Naomi Osaka – walked off their respective courts and playing fields.
And on top of it all, the U.S. death toll from the coronavirus has now surpassed 180,000 – all in six months.
Two things can be true at the same time.
One, this presidential election is so consequential, as Democrats and Republicans continue to remind us.
And two, the actual campaigns – whether it’s the conventions or the limited campaign activity – seem so small compared with everything else.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: So much has changed
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The reality: This is Trump’s America, not Biden’s
Law and order was a central message of Vice President Mike Pence’s convention speech last night.
“The violence must stop, whether in Minneapolis, Portland, or Kenosha, too many heroes have died defending our freedom to see American strike each other down. We will have law and order on the streets of this country for every American of every race and creed and color,” Pence said, with no mention of George Floyd’s or Jacob Blake’s names.
Pence continued, “Joe Biden would double down on the very policies that are leading to violence in America’s cities, the hard truth is, you won’t be safe in Joe Biden’s America. Under President Trump, we will always stand with those who stand on the thin blue line, and we’re not going to defund the police not now, not ever.”
But the reality is that this kind of violence – police shooting Black men, white 17 year-olds taking up arms – is happening in Donald Trump’s America right now.
So is the fact that about 1,000 Americans a day are dying from the coronavirus, as NBC’s Alex Seitz-Wald notes.
Given all of these events, Trump and Pence are trying to run as challengers, not as incumbents. (“We will make American great again – again,” Pence said last night.)
But they’re the incumbents.
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DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
5,842,528: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 44,561 more than yesterday morning.)
180,684: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 1,219 more than yesterday morning.)
74.05 million: The number of coronavirus TESTS administered in the U.S., according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
150 mph: The peak winds of Hurricane Laura when it made landfall at about 1am ET last night near Cameron, Louisiana.
164: The number of years since a hurricane this strong hit Louisiana.
Three: The number of NBA playoff games postponed yesterday as teams, led by the Milwaukee Bucks, refused to play in protest of the police shooting of Jacob Blake. Athletes from the WNBA, Major League Baseball and Major League Soccer followed suit.
17: The age of a man who has been charged with first-degree homicide in connection with the deaths of two people protesting in Kenosha, Wisconsin on Tuesday night.
Nearly two dozen: The number of freshman House Democrats that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is poised to endorse for reelection, a major break for the typically GOP-focused organization.
More than 100: The number of former staffers for John McCain who announced today that they’re backing Joe Biden over Trump.
More than 30: The number of staffers from Mitt Romney’s 2012 presidential campaign who also say they’re endorsing Biden.
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2020 VISION: The final night of the RNC
The major speakers on the last day of the Republican convention include:
- President Donald Trump
- Ivanka Trump
- Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark.
- Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell
- House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif.
- HUD Secretary Ben Carson
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AD WATCH from Ben Kamisar
Today’s Ad Watch heads to Texas’s 7th District, where Republican Wesley Hunt is trying to win back the Houston-area seat Democrats flipped in 2018.
Republican Army veteran Wesley Hunt is the Republicans’ candidate there, and he’s been running a series of interesting bio spots that bluntly confront his family’s path to America.
“When my great, great grandfather came to America, he worked the land 16 hours a day. Not by choice, he was bound by chains,” Hunt says, holding a set of chains.
“But through the decades, my family found opportunity, success and security, and we achieved the American dream. From slavery to West Point in just five generations, that’s our story.”
Hunt’s opponent, incumbent Democratic Rep. Lizzie Fletcher, has largely focused her ad messaging in recent months on the coronavirus, highlighting things like her push in Congress to help businesses during the pandemic.
So far, Fletcher has significantly outspent Hunt on the airwaves as the freshman Democrat looks to hold the line. But these are the places that Republicans are looking to win back to make a dent in House Democrats’ majority.
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Skinny relief
NBC’s Capitol Hill team reports that a group of Senate Republicans are working on a skinny coronavirus relief proposal – around $500 billion – which could be released to members sometime this week.
But it’s highly unlikely that this legislation is going anywhere, and it’s unlikely that proposing a new bill will do anything to appease Democrats or restart negotiations. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has said she will not re-engage with Republicans and the administration until they raise their budget for relief to at least $2 trillion (up from the $1 trillion their last bill budgeted for).
This new round of legislation won’t include a second round of stimulus checks, which is something the president has said he’d want to sign before the November election, but it’s the third Republican-led attempt at legislation in the past month.
On July 27, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell released a $1 trillion bill which half of his caucus disapproved of. And on Aug. 18, McConnell’s team floated a less than $1 trillion bill – that bill was never introduced.
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THE LID: Not just about the base
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at the RNC’s push for Black voters, particularly men.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Here’s NBC’s fact-check of Night Three of the RNC.
A woman who became a citizen during Tuesday night’s naturalization ceremony did not know she was going to be part of the GOP convention.
Federal officials say they’ve seen no evidence of foreign governments trying to tamper with mail-in ballots.
Disinformation accounts are targeting Black voters.
The change in CDC guidelines for coronavirus testing happened while Dr. Anthony Fauci was in surgery, he says. He has some concerns.
Top Dems want a probe into potential Hatch Act violations this week by the White House.
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