Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday October 16, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
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THE RESURGENT
THE EPOCH TIMES
OCTOBER 16, 2020 READ IN BROWSER
Red Rock Secured —COVID-19 continues to send shockwaves throughout the stock market, your retirement is more fragile than ever… Protect your money with the #1 Retirement Playbook During this special time, we would like to invite you to try 4 Months of Epoch Premium at our lowest possible rate here: Offer Ends Soon Cancel anytime “It’s not what happens to you but how you react to it that matters.” EPICTETUS Let’s face it: There’s a lot to worry about these days if you hope to protect your hard-earned savings and retire comfortably.The U.S. has entered a red zone of debt that threatens to worsen along with the pandemic and experts warn your retirement could be at SERIOUS risk.Goldman Sachs has identified one asset class that deems virus resistant: Gold. Gold dramatically outperforms other safe havens in 2020 and has officially become, “the currency of last resort.”Convert vulnerable assets into pandemic-proof gold & silver for a worry-free retirement. Free Copy: #1 Retirement Playbook Ideology in Science Is Destroying Trust PREMIUM Science should never be tainted by ideology. After all, science isn’t supposed to be about political beliefs but is a powerful method for learning about and understanding the physical universe. Read more Amazon Suppresses Terrific New Shelby Steele Documentary on Race PREMIUM Many of us, myself included, regard Shelby Steele—the Hoover Institute scholar and author of the seminal “White Guilt”—as the leading thinker on matters of race in our time. Read more Back to Square One: Why the Financial System Needs to Reset By (July 29, 2016) If you don’t know about finance and you want to learn, where do you start? Start with the money, says Paul Brodsky of Macro Allocation Inc. Paul … Three years ago, Daniel Allott left his job to travel around America talking to voters across the political spectrum, from farmers to students to refugees. Copyright © 2020 The Epoch Times, All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted in to receive newsletter communications from The Epoch Times. Our mailing address is: The Epoch Times 229 W. 28 St. Fl. 5 If you no longer wish to receive Morning Brief from us, please click here to unsubscribe. |
DAYBREAK
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THE SUNBURN
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MORNING BREW
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Francis Scialabba
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Sports Media Watch
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Francis Scialabba
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Written by Neal Freyman, Toby Howell, and Alex Hickey
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JUST THE NEWS
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AXIOS
Axios AM
Happy Friday! Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,199 words … 4½ minutes.
🗳️ I’ll host an Axios virtual event on our political road ahead with White House editor Margaret Talev at 3:30 p.m. ET, featuring Senate Judiciary Committee member Chris Coons (D-Del.) and Trump 2020 senior adviser Steve Cortes.
- Register here.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Fast action this week by Facebook and Twitter to limit the reach of a sketchy New York Post story about Hunter Biden showed what aggressive misinformation policing by social-media platforms looks like — and much of the world didn’t like what it saw, Axios managing editor Scott Rosenberg writes.
- On the right, pundits cried “censorship,” with lawmakers demanding in-person testimony from CEOs to defend their choices.
- On the left, observers worried about the “Streisand effect” — trying to suppress or remove online information only draws attention to it.
What happened: The two companies took different measures and relied on different rationales.
- Facebook decided to send the article to its third-party fact-checking partners for review. (The fact check is still in process.) While awaiting a report, the social network said it would limit the story’s reach to reduce the likelihood of spreading misinformation.
- Twitter declared some of the information in the story, including photos and personal information, to be “hacked materials” and blocked sharing of links to the article.
- Last night, Twitter announced it will change its “hacked materials” policy, and will no longer remove such content unless it is directly shared by hackers or those acting in concert with them.
Between the lines: The companies were reacting to criticism of their performance during the 2016 election — and responding to what looked to them like a “hack and leak” operation similar to the pilfering of DNC emails.
Our thought bubble: These companies didn’t set out to be gatekeepers of political news, but their success made them ubiquitous. Now, they can’t duck tough calls.
Photos: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images; Evan Vucci/AP
Both candidates promised further disclosures last night, during dueling town halls that replaced the second presidential debate, after President Trump refused to participate virtually:
- Trump, under persistent questioning by NBC’s Savannah Guthrie about whether he owes money to any foreign bank or entity, said in Miami: “I will let you know who — who I owe whatever small amount of money. … When you look at vast properties like I have — and they’re big and they’re beautiful and they’re well located — when you look at that the amount of money [that he owes], $400 million is a peanut. It’s extremely under-levered. And it’s levered with normal banks — not a big deal.”
- Joe Biden suggested he’d provide more clarity on his court-packing position before Election Day, depending on how the confirmation process for Judge Amy Coney Barrett is “handled”: “[F]or example, if there’s actually real live debate on the floor, if people are really going to be able to have a time to go through this … [Voters] do have a right to know where I stand. And they will have a right to know where I stand before they vote.”
Go deeper: Our “Axios AM Thought Bubble” on the town halls dropped into your inbox last night just before 11 p.m. ET.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Some colleges are creating a blueprint for how to safely remain open during the pandemic — relying heavily on regular testing, and doing what they can to curb parties and other large gatherings, Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes.
- “We weren’t able to do this as a country, but it’s totally doable in the university context,” Vanderbilt University Chancellor Daniel Diermeier said.
At Vanderbilt, the majority of classes are in-person, and spread of the virus has been minimal.
- The university had the benefit early on of in-house experts and good connections with Nashville’s public health system, Diermeier said. Undergraduate students have mandatory weekly testing.
- Early on, the school used positive messaging — rather than threats — to encourage students to behave responsibly, and it hasn’t had any problems so far with large gatherings.
The bottom line: Containing the virus hasn’t been cheap or easy for the colleges that have managed to do it. But the alternative — widespread deferrals or dropouts — is worse.
Illustration: Rebecca Zisser/Axios
The tantalizing prospect of 10G internet service — 10 times faster than today’s networks — is starting to take shape, writes Axios’ Jennifer Kingson.
- But today’s networks are still available to only 80% of Americans, though that’s a huge jump from 4% in 2016.
Why it matters: 10G internet is “really going to be needed to ensure that the U.S. is at the forefront of global economic growth and opportunity,” says Angie Kronenberg of INCOMPAS, the internet and competitive networks trade association.
“The rise since mid-September has been especially profound in the Midwest and Mountain West, where hospitals are filling up and rural areas are seeing staggering outbreaks,” the N.Y. Times reports.
- “We are starting from a much higher plateau than we were before the summer wave,” Caitlin Rivers, an epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins University, told the Times. “It concerns me that we might see even more cases during the next peak than we did during the summer.”
Just 3% of college students say they’d protest if Joe Biden is elected, while 39% would if President Trump wins, Stef Kight writes from a College Reaction survey for Axios.
- Six in 10 of those polled (875 college students; margin of error is +/- 3.3 points) said they’ll shame friends who can vote but don’t.
Why it matters: These measures of intensity bolster findings from several recent surveys that suggest the election may draw higher than normal turnout from young voters, boosting Biden’s prospects.
- Millennials and Gen Z voters make up more than one third of the U.S. electorate. They’re racially and ethnically diverse and overwhelmingly progressive.
- More than 1 million 18-to-29 year olds have already cast ballots this year, more than four times as many as at the same point in 2016, according to the Democratic data firm TargetSmart.
Illustration: The Economist
The Economist is challenging democracies to take action on China’s Uighur internment camps, which it calls “the most extensive violation in the world today of the principle that individuals have a right to liberty and dignity simply because they are people”:
They should offer asylum to Uyghurs and, like America, slap targeted sanctions on abusive officials and ban goods made with forced Uyghur labour. They should speak up, too. China’s regime is not impervious to shame. If it were proud of its harsh actions in Xinjiang, it would not try to hide them. …
Liberal democracies have an obligation to call a gulag a gulag. In an age of growing global competition, that is what makes them different. If they fail to stand up for liberal values they should not be surprised if others do not respect them, either.
Keep reading (subscription).
Rudy Giuliani (center) in the White House briefing room on Sept. 27. Photo: Ken Cedeno/Reuters
“U.S. intelligence agencies warned the White House last year that President Trump’s personal lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani was the target of an influence operation by Russian intelligence,” the WashPost reports.
- Why it matters: The New York Post said the former New York mayor was the source of the material it published this week about Hunter Biden. And Giuliani was in the White House 19 days ago to prep Trump for the first presidential debate.
“The warnings were based on multiple sources, including intercepted communications, that showed Giuliani was interacting with people tied to Russian intelligence during a December 2019 trip to Ukraine, where he was gathering information that he thought would expose corrupt acts by former vice president Joe Biden and his son Hunter,” according to The Post.
- “The intelligence raised concerns that Giuliani was being used to feed Russian misinformation to the president.”
Phoenix notched its 144th day of triple-digit heat this year on Wednesday, breaking a record set in 1989, per the Arizona Republic.
- It means “that exactly half of the days in 2020 so far have reached or exceeded 100 degrees.”
☀️ Today’s forecast? 100 degrees.
University of California Press
One of Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s former clerks, Amanda Tyler, worked with the late justice during her final months on a book that will provide some of Ginsburg’s final thoughts on her pioneering career, per AP.
- “Justice, Justice Thou Shalt Pursue: A Life’s Work Fighting for a More Perfect Union,” to be released in March, presents Ginsburg’s “perspective on her legacy as an advocate for justice as defined by her personal selection of favorite opinions written from the Supreme Court bench.”
📱 Thanks for starting your day with us. Invite your friends to sign up for Axios AM/PM.
THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
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THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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Copyright © 2020 MEDIADC, All rights reserved.
Washington Examiner | A MediaDC Publication |
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Oct 16, 2020 View in Browser AP MORNING WIRE Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
TAMER FAKAHANY
The Rundown AP PHOTO/CAROLYN KASTER Trump, Biden duel from afar in town halls in place of debate; Avalanche of early votes transforming 2020 election
It may not have not been the face-to-face debate as planned, but it was an evening nevertheless that underscored striking differences between the rivals for the White House.
The candidates were certainly firmly in character, in temperament, views on racial justice and approaches to a pandemic that has reshaped America.
Donald Trump in Miami and Joe Biden in Philadelphia squared off, in a way, with their second debate scuttled due to Trump’s virus diagnosis replaced by separate televised town halls, report Jonathan Lemire, Will Weissert and Darlene Superville.
Trump was defensive about his administration’s handling of the coronavirus, which has claimed more than 215,000 American lives, and evasive when pressed about whether he took a required COVID-19 test before his first debate with Biden. Angry and combative, he refused to denounce the QAnon conspiracy group, and only testily did so while pressed on white supremacists.
Biden, for his part, denounced the White House’s handling of the virus, declaring that it was at fault for closing a pandemic response office established by the Obama administration in which he served.
Though vague at times, he suggested he will offer clarity on his position on expanding the Supreme Court if Trump’s nominee to the bench is seated before Election Day.
AP FACT CHECK: Rhetoric from Trump, Biden in the non-debate.
Dueling Town Halls: Instead of the expected debate between President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden, television viewers were left Thursday with what ABC’s David Muir called “split-screen America,” AP Media Writer Dave Bauder reports.
Supreme Court Senate Hearings: Republicans have pushed high court nominee Amy Coney Barrett closer to confirmation, setting Oct. 22 for its vote to recommend her nomination to the full Senate. In the drive to seat Trump’s nominee before the election, the chamber is pausing work on other priorities during the virus crisis. Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar called it “a sham.” Republicans counter that Trump is well within bounds to fill the vacancy, and they have the votes to do it.
AP-NORC poll: Americans critical of Trump’s handling of virus.
VIDEO poll: Voters skeptical of Trump’s health.
Why tech giants limited the spread of NY Post story on Biden. AP PHOTO/FRANK AUGSTEIN Europe, US reel as virus infections surge at record pace; Iran sees worst wave of deaths months into the pandemic
Coronavirus cases all around the pandemic-hit globe have climbed to all-time highs of more than 330,000 per day as the scourge comes storming back across Europe and spreads with renewed speed in the U.S. and Iran.
Many countries and cities are being forced to reimpose tough restrictions they had eased just a few months ago, David Crary, Carla K. Johnson and Geir Moulson report.
Well after Europe seemed to have largely tamed the virus, newly confirmed infections are hitting record daily highs in Germany, the Czech Republic, Italy and Poland, and most of the rest of the continent is seeing similar danger signs.
In the United States, new cases per day are on the rise in 44 states, with the biggest surges in the Midwest and Great Plains. Deaths per day are climbing in 30 states.
Iran’s Deadly Spike: The Islamic Republic is confronting a new surge of infections that is grimly and relentlessly filling hospitals and cemeteries alike. Tehran has run out of intensive care beds, and the country’s single-day death toll hit a record high three times this week. Eight months after the pandemic first stormed Iran, authorities appear unable to prevent its spread.
In a country devastated by U.S. sanctions, the government considers an economic shutdown like the ones imposed in Europe and the U.S. impossible. On social media, chaotic scenes are described at overwhelmed hospitals. On state TV, gravediggers can be seen breaking new ground for virus victims. And contradictory messages and measures have plagued the government’s response, Nasser Karimi and Isabel Debre report.
Britain’s North South Divide: The English port city that gave the world The Beatles weathered decades of industrial decline and was battered under Thatcherism before becoming a celebrated symbol of urban renewal. Now, the virus is shaking the foundations of Liverpool’s hard-won revival, and raising tensions between the north of England and the wealthier south.
The city made itself vibrant again by promoting local culture, football and ties to the Fab Four. But past Conservative government neglect left Liverpool with a mistrust of London politicians, and the pandemic has brought it to the surface. The city again feels it’s being punished by policies made in the capital as the first area in England slapped with new restrictions that have closed pubs and imperiled jobs. But unlike in the 1980s, London too has suffered in equal measure, struck during the outbreak with a full lockdown and mass deaths. Jill Lawless reports from Liverpool.
More from the AP U.S. team:
Hawaii Travel Testing: About 8,000 people landed in Hawaii on the first day of a pre-travel testing program that allowed travelers to come to the islands without quarantining for two weeks if they could produce a negative coronavirus test, Caleb Jones reports.
Rethinking the U.S. Holidays: Many people are already looking for creative and safe ways to celebrate the holidays this year. Some plan to cook their traditional Thanksgiving feast — but with a twist forced by the pandemic. They’ll mail or deliver portions of the meal to family and friends who can’t travel to be together. Other folks are holding early Christmas celebrations so they can be with elderly parents outdoors while the weather still allows it, Melissa Rayworth reports. AP PHOTO/ANDREW HARNIK Exclusive: White House puts political operatives at CDC to keep an eye on agency director and control flow of pandemic info
The Trump White House has installed two political operatives at the nation’s top public health agency to try to control the information it releases about the coronavirus pandemic as the administration seeks to paint a positive outlook, sometimes at odds with the scientific evidence.
The two appointees assigned to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Atlanta headquarters in June have no public health background, report Jason Dearen, Mike Stobbe and Richard Lardner.
They have instead been tasked with keeping an eye on Dr. Robert Redfield, the agency director, as well as scientists, according to a half-dozen CDC and administration officials who spoke to the AP on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal government affairs.
VIDEO: White House puts ‘politicals’ at CDC to try to control info
When the two appointees showed up in Atlanta, their roles were a mystery to senior CDC staff. Eventually one, Nina Witkofsky, became acting chief of staff, an influential role as Redfield’s right hand. The other, her deputy Chester “Trey” Moeller, also began sitting in on scientific meetings, the sources said. Child Labor
A “global education emergency.” That’s what the Executive Director of UNICEF, the United Nations’ children’s agency, warned in August.
The pandemic is threatening the future of a generation of the world’s children, depriving them of schooling and sending them to work. Across the developing world, two decades of hard-fought gains against child labor are eroding.
With classrooms shuttered and parents losing their jobs, reading, writing and times tables are giving way to sweat, blisters and fading hopes for a better life.
VIDEO: Closed schools in Mexico amid virus lead to more child labor.
Instead of going to school, children in Kenya are grinding rocks in quarries. Tens of thousands of children in India have poured into farm fields and factories.
Across Latin America, kids are making bricks, building furniture and clearing brush, once after-school jobs that are now full-time work. Maria Verza, Carlos Valdez and William Costa have this special report. Other Top Stories As the fighting between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces rages on, some residents of the separatist territory of Nagorno-Karabakh are joining volunteer squads to defend their towns, should the need arise. Recruiting offices are handing out Kalashnikov rifles to those eligible to fight, and they are joining others to protect Martuni, a town close to the front line in the eastern part of the region. The recent fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh marks the biggest escalation of a decades-old conflict over the region that lies within Azerbaijan but has been under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia. Five of the men accused in a plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer return to federal court today as a hearing on whether there is enough evidence to charge them continues. A federal judge also plans to consider whether two of the men, including the Michigan man described by federal authorities as the group’s ringleader, should remain in jail before trial. A sixth man was separately ordered to be transferred to Michigan earlier this week. An AP investigation found the U.S Drug Enforcement Administration has received a string of recent discrimination complaints at its Quantico, Virginia, training academy, including allegations a white firearms instructor took to a loudspeaker to taunt Black trainees with “monkey noises.” Other trainees say they were held to a higher standard than whites. The complaints come as the DEA has struggled to bring diversity to its ranks: Of the agency’s more than 4,000 special agents, just 8% are black. Former Mexican defense secretary Gen. Salvador Cienfuegos has been arrested in Los Angeles. Two people with knowledge of the arrest say Cienfuegos was arrested on a DEA warrant. One of the sources says the warrant is for drug trafficking and money laundering charges. The general served from 2012 to 2018 as secretary of defense under former president Enrique Peña Nieto. Mexican officials said he was arrested at the L.A. international airport as he was arriving in the United States with his family, who were released. GET THE APP
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CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Taxpayers paid for 7 business trips taken by then-Supt. Johnson and cop suing him for sex assault
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PRO TRUMP NEWS
THE HILL
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ROLL CALL
POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: One year ago today …
Presented by Facebook
DRIVING THE DAY
TODAY IS THE ONE-YEAR ANNIVERSARY of the last time President DONALD TRUMP spoke with Speaker NANCY PELOSI. We’re living through the most difficult year in most of our lifetimes, and the president of the United States and the speaker of the House have not even had so much as a conversation in 2020.
STUCK IN 2017 … TRUMP THURSDAY NIGHT, to SAVANNAH GUTHRIE on the NBC town hall, live from Miami: GUTHRIE: “Senate Republicans with you, they’re going to go big?” TRUMP: “They’ll go. Yeah, they’ll go. They’ll go. They’re going to be very active.” GUTHRIE: “OK, because so far, they have not said they would.” TRUMP: “I know, because I haven’t asked them to because I can’t get through Nancy Pelosi. … If Nancy Pelosi and I, through my representatives or directly, I don’t care, if we agree to something, the Republicans will agree to it.”
— WASHINGTON’S MOST EAGER MAN UPDATE … Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN and PELOSI spoke for 80 minutes Thursday, and said they had made progress in their quest to get a Covid relief deal. They have not made any progress in dislodging Senate Republicans.
18 DAYS until Election Day.
RARE: Not a single story on the front page of THE NEW YORK TIMES mentions TRUMP before the jump. A1 NYT
DAVID SIDERS and ANITA KUMAR make a good point here about Thursday’s dueling town halls: “It came off less like a split screen than a breach in the political universe – ‘Die Hard’ versus ‘It’s a Wonderful Life.’ At the edge of his seat at his town hall in Miami, Donald Trump refused to disavow QAnon, the far-right conspiracy theory, and sidestepped questions about his coronavirus tests. On a more sober, distant stage in Philadelphia, Biden criticized Trump’s response to the pandemic and discussed the intricacies of racial injustice.”
FLICKING BACK AND FORTH between BIDEN and TRUMP was like going from Bob Ross to Wrestlemania. For all the flak NBC got before the event, GUTHRIE pressed TRUMP quite hard and elicited interesting and newsworthy responses. The pushback from the White House and TRUMP campaign was GUTHRIE was focused on issues that matter to the Beltway, not ordinary Americans.
— NYT: “NBC’s Savannah Guthrie Grills Trump Opposite ABC’s Sober Biden Talk,” by Michael Grynbaum and John Koblin: “George Stephanopoulos of ABC had it easy, steering an old-school Washington veteran through policy plans against a patriotic backdrop, while Savannah Guthrie of NBC had to navigate the stormy waters of QAnon, white supremacy and whether the virus-stricken president had pneumonia. (Despite repeated inquiries, he would not say.)”
THIS IS BONKERS: Maine GOP Sen. SUSAN COLLINS raised $8.3 million last quarter and has $6.6 million on hand after raising $25.2 million for the cycle. SARA GIDEON, her Democratic challenger, raised $39.4 million last quarter and has $22.7 million on hand after raising $63.6 million this cycle.
— THE DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR SENATE in Iowa, THERESA GREENFIELD, was asked in a debate what a bushel of corn cost. She knew. Sen. JONI ERNST (R-Iowa) was asked what the price of soybeans was, and she was off by a lot. The clip
WAPO: “White House was warned Giuliani was target of Russian intelligence operation to feed misinformation to Trump,” by Shane Harris, Ellen Nakashima, Greg Miller and Josh Dawsey: “U.S. intelligence agencies warned the White House last year that President Trump’s personal lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani was the target of an influence operation by Russian intelligence, according to four former officials familiar with the matter.
“The warnings were based on multiple sources, including intercepted communications, that showed Giuliani was interacting with people tied to Russian intelligence during a December 2019 trip to Ukraine, where he was gathering information that he thought would expose corrupt acts by former vice president Joe Biden and his son Hunter.
“The intelligence raised concerns that Giuliani was being used to feed Russian misinformation to the president, the former officials said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive information and conversations.”
THAT WAS FAST — “Twitter Changes Course After Republicans Claim ‘Election Interference,’” by NYT’s Mike Isaac and Kate Conger: “[L]ate Thursday, under pressure, Twitter said it was changing the policy that it had used to block the New York Post article and would now allow similar content to be shared, along with a label to provide context about the source of the information. Twitter said it was concerned that the earlier policy was leading to unintended consequences.”
BUT NOT FAST ENOUGH … “Senate Judiciary to vote on subpoena for Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey,” by Cristiano Lima
… AND THIS: WSJ EDITORIAL: “Twitter’s Partisan Censors”
Good Friday morning.
CORONAVIRUS RAGING … 7.9 MILLION Americans have tested positive for the coronavirus. … 217,700 Americans have died.
THE FALL SURGE — “Hospitals search for enough beds and nurses as virus rebounds,” by Dan Goldberg: “The coronavirus is engulfing big city hospitals in states including Utah, Wisconsin and Indiana that are running low on nurses and beds and are being forced to set up overflow facilities. With new daily U.S. cases surpassing 62,000 on Thursday, the prospect of swamped intensive care units is prompting some governors who previously resisted public health orders to weigh new restrictions to ease pressure on their health care systems.
“From the early days of the pandemic, the availability of ICU beds — and hospitals’ ability to treat people who need life-support equipment like ventilators to breathe — has been an important benchmark for whether local health systems can handle outbreaks. …
“The pandemic is spawning new infections at a rate not seen since the end of July. Hot spots began to cluster in parts of Utah, Indiana, Wisconsin, Oklahoma, Wyoming, Missouri, Mississippi and North Dakota as the nationwide average number of daily new cases surged over the past month.”
NYT’S MAGGIE HABERMAN: “Chris Christie says he should have worn a mask at White House events”: “Chris Christie, the former New Jersey governor who was recently battling a coronavirus infection, said on Thursday that he had been “wrong” not to wear a mask at an event honoring Judge Amy Coney Barrett or in his debate preparation sessions with President Trump, and that people should take the threat of the virus seriously.
“In an interview with The New York Times and in a written statement, Mr. Christie said that he had believed he was in a ‘safe zone’ at the White House while he was there. He urged people to follow best practices, like mask wearing and social distancing, but argued there was a middle ground between extensive, large-scale shutdowns and reopening cities and states without taking proper precautions.”
MEANWHILE … AP: “White House puts ‘politicals’ at CDC to try to control info,” by Jason Dearen and Mike Stobbe in New York and Richard Lardner in Washington: “The Trump White House has installed two political operatives at the nation’s top public health agency to try to control the information it releases about the coronavirus pandemic as the administration seeks to paint a positive outlook, sometimes at odds with the scientific evidence.
“The two appointees assigned to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Atlanta headquarters in June have no public health background. They have instead been tasked with keeping an eye on Dr. Robert Redfield, the agency director, as well as scientists, according to a half-dozen CDC and administration officials who spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal government affairs.
“The appointments were part of a push to get more ‘politicals’ into the CDC to help control messaging after a handful of leaks were ‘upsetting the apple cart,’ said an administration official.
“When the two appointees showed up in Atlanta, their roles were a mystery to senior CDC staff, the people said. They had not even been assigned offices. Eventually one, Nina Witkofsky, became acting chief of staff, an influential role as Redfield’s right hand. The other, her deputy Chester ‘Trey’ Moeller, also began sitting in on scientific meetings, the sources said.”
BIG PROPUBLICA READ: “Inside the fall of the CDC,” by James Bandler, Patricia Callahan, Sebastian Rotella and Kirsten Berg
MARKET WATCH … WSJ: “Stocks Edge Lower on Rising Covid-19, Economic Risks,” by Will Horner and Karen Langley: “U.S. stocks dropped Thursday as tightening coronavirus lockdowns in Europe and a weakening jobs picture in the U.S. cast a shadow on markets. Major indexes recorded a third consecutive day of declines as investors pulled back from the big technology stocks that have helped propel the market this year.”
L.A. TIMES: “Amid Biden speculation, Garcetti says it’s ‘more likely than not’ he’ll remain as L.A. mayor,” by Dakota Smith and Benjamin Oreskes: “Mayor Eric Garcetti floated himself as a possible presidential candidate for 18 months before telling Angelenos last year he wouldn’t run because he wanted to ‘finish the job’ of running L.A.
“Now, Garcetti could face another job prospect. The mayor did not provide a definitive answer Wednesday when asked by The Times whether he’d like to join a Joe Biden Cabinet should the Democratic candidate be elected president. Garcetti endorsed Biden earlier this year when the prospects for his nomination were uncertain, and serves as a co-chair of his campaign. Garcetti, whose term ends in 2022, said that ‘it’s more likely than not’ that he’ll be L.A.’s mayor in two years.”
FROM NWA TO MAGA — “The inside story of how Ice Cube joined forces with Donald Trump,” by Alex Isenstadt
CASH DASH — “Biden routs Trump in September fundraising, $383M to $248M,” by Zach Montellaro
TRUMP’S FRIDAY — The president will leave Doral, Fla., at 11:40 a.m. and travel to Fort Myers, Fla. He will give a speech about protecting seniors at the Caloosa Sound Convention Center and Amphitheater at 1:30 p.m. He will depart at 2:40 p.m. en route to Ocala, Fla., where he will speak at a campaign rally at 4:15 p.m. at the Ocala International Airport. Afterward, he will travel to Middle Georgia Regional Airport in Macon, Ga. He will attend another campaign rally at 7 p.m. Afterward, he will return to Washington. He will arrive at the White House at 10:30 p.m.
— VP MIKE PENCE will lead a coronavirus task force meeting at 10:30 a.m. in the situation room. He will leave at 12:25 p.m. and travel to Morrisville, N.C., where he will give a campaign speech. Afterward, Pence will travel back to Washington.
ON THE TRAIL … BIDEN will travel to Michigan. He will deliver remarks on health care in Southfield, Mich. He will also attend a virtual meeting with African American faith leaders. In the evening, Biden will attend an event in Detroit to support early voting.
SEN. KAMALA HARRIS (D-Calif.) will attend a virtual fundraiser.
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week” with Bob Costa: Chuck Todd, Jane Mayer and Ayesha Rascoe.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
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ABC
“This Week”: Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Panel: Chris Christie, Rahm Emanuel, Yvette Simpson and Sarah Isgur.
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Gray TV
“Full Court Press with Greta Van Susteren”: Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) … Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.).
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Sinclair
“America This Week with Eric Bolling”: Steve Bannon … Anthony Scaramucci … Alyssa Farah … Scott Atlas … Dinesh D’Souza … Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.).
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CBS
“Face the Nation”: DNC Chair Tom Perez … Mike Rogers … Raphael Bostic … Scott Gottlieb.
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FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Jason Miller. Panel: Karl Rove, Catherine Lucey and Bob Woodward. Power Player: Alan Alda.
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NBC
“Meet the Press”: Donna Edwards, Mark Leibovich, Pat McCrory and Ashley Parker.
PLAYBOOK READS
BREAKING OVERNIGHT … CNN: “Trump administration rejects California’s disaster assistance request for wildfires,” by Sarah Moon and Paul LeBlanc
BATTLE FOR FLORIDA — “Florida Republicans cut Democrats’ registration edge to historic low,” by Matt Dixon in Tallahassee: “Republicans in Florida, a must-win state for President Donald Trump, have narrowed the voter registration gap with Democrats to the lowest level in at least three decades, giving the GOP a shot of momentum as they continue to trail in early turnout.
“Republicans now lag Democrats by just 134,242 registered voters, down from 327,483 when Trump won Florida by fewer than 113,000 votes in 2016. The gain is a byproduct of the Trump campaign’s extensive face-to-face ground game and voter registration operation, which continued as Joe Biden and Florida Democrats pulled back from those traditional activities after the coronavirus pandemic erupted in March.
“The shift means the two parties, statistically speaking, are almost evenly matched when it comes to raw numbers, with Democrats holding a narrow 1 percent lead. Final voter registration data released Thursday by Florida election officials show 5.3 million Democrats, 5.1 million Republicans and 3.7 million people with no major party affiliation. Florida Democrats turned much of their focus to boosting vote-by-mail turnout, which has helped them bank 430,000 more votes than Republicans three weeks ahead of Election Day.” POLITICO
— “Florida acts to remove felons from voter rolls as election looms,” by Gary Fineout in Tallahassee: “Florida will seek to push former felons from voter rolls if they have outstanding court debts, a surprise, late-hour move that comes after more than 2 million people already have voted in the presidential battleground.
“The announcement, which was distributed to local election officials but not the wider public, drew immediate pushback from county election supervisors and suspicion from Democrats who say it could be used to challenge the eventual election results.”
— “Bloomberg teams up with top Latino group for Florida ad buy,” by Sabrina Rodríguez in Miami: “Latino Victory Fund and billionaire Mike Bloomberg are launching a $2.4 million digital ad campaign to get Florida Latinos out to the polls to defeat President Donald Trump in his must-win state.”
SASSY! — “GOP Sen. Sasse says Trump ‘kisses dictators’ butts’ and mocks evangelicals,” by the Washington Examiner’s David Drucker: “Republican Sen. Ben Sasse excoriated President Trump in a telephone conference call with constituents this week, saying he had mishandled the coronavirus response, ‘kisses dictators’ butts,’ ‘sells out our allies,’ spends ‘like a drunken sailor,’ mistreats women, and trash-talks evangelicals behind their backs.
“Trump has ‘flirted with white supremacists,’ according to Sasse, and his family ‘treated the presidency like a business opportunity.’ He said Trump could drive the Senate into the hand of the Democrats and cause permanent damage to the Republican Party.” The audio
HAPPENING THIS WEEKEND — “Women’s March will bring thousands of marchers to D.C. and cities nationwide this weekend,” by WaPo’s Samantha Schmidt: “In Washington, D.C., organizers expect between 6,000 and 10,000 people to gather on Freedom Plaza for a midday rally focused on voting rights and calling on Congress to suspend the Supreme Court confirmation process, according to a permit issued by the National Park Service on Wednesday. After the rally, participants will march to the U.S. Supreme Court and the U.S. Capitol.” WaPo
MEDIAWATCH — “Fox Business Network Brings Back ‘Kennedy’ After 7-Month Hiatus,” by TheWrap’s Lindsey Ellefson
PLAYBOOKERS
Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.
TRANSITIONS — Arlene Corbin Lewis will be chief comms and marketing officer at Code for America. She most recently has been comms director for Demos. … Robert Williams is now senior political director at Stateside Associates. He previously was a senior strategist in Orrick’s public policy practice, and is a DLCC alum.
WEDDING — Kelly Klass, principal at the Locust Street Group, and Tucker Bourne, project manager at L.F. Jennings, got married Sept. 26 in a small ceremony in her parents’ New Jersey backyard. They met playing on a congressional softball team on the Mall. Pic … Another pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Phil Bianchi, public policy specialist at Squire Patton Boggs. A trend he thinks doesn’t get enough attention: “Putting on my public policy hat for a minute: the building consequences of disruption and technological advances. We’re already seeing this in many places, but as automation and artificial intelligence continue to streamline a lot of lower-income jobs, there will be a greater surge in displaced workers. I’m not advocating maintaining the status quo, but, much like my quarantine diet, at some point, the status quo tends to push back. I’m hopeful people much smarter than I will have the right solutions when that time comes.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Rep. André Carson (D-Ind.) is 46 … Sarah Westwood, White House reporter for CNN (h/t Melissa Brown) … Michael Pratt, chief comms officer for Operation Warp Speed … Jim Courtovich … Beatrice Peterson … Tiph Turpin … Linda Miller (h/ts Jon Haber) … Ben Coffey Clark, partner at Bully Pulpit Interactive (h/t Tim Burger) … Rodell Mollineau, partner at Rokk Solutions (h/ts Mark Paustenbach) … Delacey Skinner (h/ts Ben Chang) … Jim Pribyl … Mark Bohannon … Jeff Link … Chris Walloch … Loranne Ausley (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Chamberlain Harris, receptionist of the United States, is 21 … Jenny Hopkinson … USA Today’s Alex Lemley … Dan Hirschhorn … WaPo’s Andrew Heining … Ryan Walters … Alex Macfarlane, comms director for Rep. Mike Thompson (D-Calif.) … USAID’s Daniel Henke … Matt Koch …
… Ivette Fernandez, VP of government relations at Endeavor … POLITICO’s Kelly Hooper … Frank Green … Hamilton Place Strategies’ Adeline Sandridge is 23 (h/t Anna Harter) … Steve Friess is 48 … former Rep. Tom MacArthur (R-N.J.) is 6-0 … former Rep. Dave Trott (R-Mich.) is 6-0 … John Goodwin … former SEC Chair Christopher Cox is 68 … Keely Weiss … Tyler Evans … former North Dakota Gov. Jack Dalrymple is 72 … Lindi Harvey … FT’s Brendan Greeley is 46 … Bradley Becnel … Dan Gross, senior adviser for citywide events for New York Mayor Bill de Blasio … Garrett Murch … Vanessa Dennis … Deloitte’s Kristen McGrath Dugan … Nate Morris … Avi Fink … Devora Kaye … Bruce Plaxen … Emily Karl … Alexandra Fetissoff, managing director at New Partners … Becca Milfeld … Ric Arenstein … Colin Cappadona
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AMERICAN MINUTE
The Supreme Court & Judicial Activism: Why Justices should NOT Usurp Power & Make Laws – American Minute with Bill Federer
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CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Savannah Guthrie Was a Good Pet for Her DNC Masters During Trump Town Hall
Savannah Guthrie Deserves a Treat From the Democrats
Happy Friday, my dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. The first round is on me. Round of what, I don’t know.
We got dueling town hall events last night to replace the debate that was canceled because President Trump wouldn’t agree to a virtual encounter. That was a wise move on his part, of course. Biden probably would have been awash in cue cards and cheat sheets during a virtual debate.
There was some controversy when NBC decided to schedule its event with President Trump opposite ABC’s Night of Love With George Stephanopoulos and Joe Biden. The network caught flack on social media from outraged Dems who didn’t want attention to be drawn away from ABC’s in-kind contribution to the Harris-Biden campaign.
In response to the criticism, NBC’s Savannah Guthrie decided that she would be a shrill attack dog while questioning President Trump. While Grandpa Gropes was being verbally caressed by Stephanopoulos on ABC, the president was subjected to a barrage of ridiculousness from a partisan, agenda-driven shrieking harridan in the form of Guthrie.
Using a rapid-fire, aggressive cadence that sounded more like a woman who was mad at her boyfriend for partying with his friends than a journalist, Guthrie behaved like one would expect someone from NBC News to behave toward a Republican.
Guthrie’s performance was the subject of an ongoing gush-fest from other journalists on Twitter, like this revealing tweet from the CBS News White House reporter:
Weird, I thought she was there to moderate the town hall, not combat the president.
The cheering section for Guthrie was the death rattle of American political journalism. It was difficult to figure out which was more embarrassing: Guthrie or her fan club.
Naturally, Trump handled himself well during Guthrie’s hackfest. Axios said he was “confident and combative.”
Over at Townhall, Reagan McCarthy details Trump’s winning counterpunches. Here is one of my favorites from her post:
Guthrie tries to steamroll him and he isn’t having any of it.
Meanwhile, over on ABC, Biden was tripping all over himself, which Tyler wrote about here.
Jeff wrote about Biden’s stamina, or lack thereof:
During the bizarre scene of the dueling town hall events between Joe Biden and Donald Trump on Thursday night, several PJ Media columnists took on the task of live blogging what unfolded. We all watched as a de facto debate unfolded in separate locations and with separate treatment for each candidate. Trump got a consistent stream of hostile questions, and Biden faced a softball environment. Even with about three times as many breaks, Biden showed significant signs of fatigue and a lack of focus toward the end, calling into question his capacity to handle the job of POTUS.
Let these idiot propagandists continue to embarrass themselves. The karmic payback for what they’ve been doing since 2016 is going to be unrelenting.
And fun to watch.
Have a great weekend.
I’ve Found Where I’m Moving to Get Away After the Election
America
PJM Linktank
Biden Updates His Position on Court-Packing, Slams Amy Coney Barrett
Bite me. Dr. Fauci Tells Americans to ‘Bite the Bullet and Sacrifice’ Thanksgiving
Indiana Child Services Ripped Children Away From Disabled Parents. A New Lawsuit Aims to Stop It.
Federal Court Rebukes D.C. Mayor’s Double Standard on Church Services and BLM Protests
Treacher: Twitter Is Silencing Anybody Who Wants to Talk About Hunter Biden
Axios Admits Joe Biden Gets No Scrutiny and Then Everything Goes Off the Rails
#LockHimUp. Orthodox Jewish Rabbis Sue Cuomo for ‘Blatantly Anti-Semitic’ COVID Order
The Fix Was Always In: C-SPAN Suspends Steve Scully, Moderator Scheduled for 2nd Debate
Melania Trump Pens Rare Essay Revealing That Barron Recovered From COVID-19
Facebook and Twitter Explain How Their Bias Works
Trump Says He’s ‘Ready to Sign’ Another Stim Bill; McConnell Skeptical
Biden Campaign Attacks the Messenger, Not the Message, on Hunter Email Story
Biden Campaign Manager: Race Is ‘Far Closer’ Than the Polls Suggest
Swing Voters Are Sticking With Trump, Expect Him to Be Reelected
SHOCKER: Twitter Locked Trump Campaign Account 19 Days Before the Election
BREAKING: Biden-Harris Campaign Staffers Test Positive for COVID-19
California GOP to Keep ‘Unofficial’ Ballot Dropboxes
VIP
Me: Will Enough Sanders Supporters Show Up for Biden to Make a Difference?
The Conventional Wisdom About 2016 Is Wrong, and It’s Likely Wrong About 2020 as Well
VIP Gold
Graham To Dems: Your Character Assassination Of Kavanaugh Changed The Rules For Me
From the Mothership and Beyond
Twitter experiences a widespread outage
Schlichter: Trump’s Momentum Is Back
Biden Has a Really Dumb Idea to Stop ‘Police Brutality’
Trump Slams Twitter and Facebook as an Extension of the DNC
Giuliani: You’ve Only Seen Five Percent of What’s on Hunter Biden’s Hard Drive
‘Winter Is Coming’: Tom Cotton Warns Big Tech Protections Could Be Going Away After NY Post Debacle
We’re doomed as a species. Netherlands to allow euthanasia of children under 12
Barrett Says She Can Judge 2A Fairly, Media Implodes
Myrtle Beach Residents Reject Gun Control Measure
The Motivations Behind The Great Gun Run Of 2020
Democrats Continue Their Absurd Attacks On Amy Coney Barrett’s 2A Record
Covid-19: Is Sweden getting it right?
More NYPost: Hunter E-Mails Show Big Paydays From China
Trafalgar Pollster: I Predict A Trump Win In The Mid-270s
The Bard Of Lake Wobegon Says Roe V. Wade Isn’t Worth Fighting For Anymore.
China always wins in the NBA. Daryl Morey Stepping Down As Rockets General Manager
Massachusetts Student Who Supported Trump Gets Apology From School
Nuns praised for anti-trafficking work during COVID-19
Education Just Got Woker: Duke University Announces Its New Study Program
Pennsylvania County Screwed up 30,000 Ballots; They Say They Will Review Them…. After the Election
Scaramucci Responds to Steve Scully’s C-SPAN Suspension, the Responses Are Brutal
Minnesota Democratic Candidate Exposes Vote Buying Scam… by Democrats
Go read about the dire working conditions for Ring’s call center employees in the Philippines
Security guard who shot and killed Trump supporter in Denver to be charged with second-degree murder
Richard Grenell reminds us why we’re not watching a presidential debate right now
I always do. Not a Fan of Hawaiian Pizza, Processed Cheese, and California Rolls? Blame Canada
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Thanks for hanging out and please take a turkey leg when you leave.
___
Kruiser Twitter
Kruiser Facebook
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.
WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Town Hall Split-Screen
Plus: Ballot box shenanigans in California and some more on Rudy Giuliani’s Hunter Biden story.
The Dispatch Staff | 3 hr | 41 | 183 |
Happy Friday! We hope you’re as excited for our post-election event as we are. In the meantime, on to the news!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The United States confirmed 65,600 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 6.5 percent of the 1,011,416 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,020 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 217,754.
- The number of Americans living in poverty has grown by 6 to 8 million since May, according to two new reports. The CARES Act—passed in March—temporarily lifted millions out of poverty, but most of its benefits expired months ago.
- The Trump administration rejected California’s request for a disaster declaration in response to six wildfires raging across the state. Gov. Gavin Newsom had requested financial assistance from the federal government in a letter on September 28.
- Just under 900,000 Americans filed initial unemployment claims last week, up from 845,000 the week prior. More than 25 million Americans were receiving some form of unemployment aid during the week ending September 26.
- Sen. Ben Sasse was highly critical of President Trump in a telephone town hall with Nebraska voters, saying Trump has “flirted with white supremacists,” “kisses dictators’ butts,” “sells out our allies,” “mocks evangelicals behind closed doors,” ignores the plight of the Uighurs in Xinjiang, and mistreats women. Sasse won his Republican primary in May soundly.
- In a crackdown targeted at the QAnon conspiracy theory, YouTube expanded its hate and harassment policies to “prohibit content that targets an individual or group with conspiracy theories that have been used to justify real-world violence.”
- Sen. Kamala Harris is pausing her in-person campaign schedule through Sunday after one of her staffers and a campaign flight crew member tested positive for COVID-19. Harris has tested negative twice since her last interaction with the positive cases.
- A day after the Biden campaign announced a $383 million September fundraising haul and $432 million cash on hand, the Trump campaign disclosed it raised $247.8 million last month and has $251.4 million in the bank.
- President Trump bragged about the extrajudicial killing by federal officers of a murder suspect with ties to antifa at a campaign rally Thursday. “We sent in the U.S. Marshals … They knew who he was,” Trump said. “They didn’t want to arrest him, and in 15 minutes that ended.”
Dueling Banjos—Er, Town Halls
The Commission on Presidential Debates made the unilateral decision last week to hold the second presidential debate virtually after President Trump’s COVID-19 diagnosis. But while the Biden campaign agreed to the new terms, Trump said he was “not going to waste my time on a virtual debate.” So the Biden campaign scheduled a town hall in Philadelphia with ABC News instead. A few days later, the Trump campaign scheduled one in Miami with NBC News. Both were at 8:00PM ET last night.
Fortunately, there’s enough Morning Dispatchers these days to divide and conquer. Here are some of the biggest takeaways from each.
Biden Town Hall with George Stephanopoulos
Biden’s conversation with ABC’s George Stephanopolous was generally friendly and policy-focused. With questions from the audience, they covered a wide range of subjects.
Coronavirus and Vaccines
When asked by a voter about Kamala Harris’ comment doubting the efficacy of a coronavirus vaccine approved by the Trump administration, Biden said that if scientists broadly agreed on a vaccine, he “absolutely” would urge Americans to take it. He also criticized what he saw as the White House’s lack of a plan to distribute not only a vaccine, but treatments like Regeneron’s monoclonal antibodies.
Would he make a COVID-19 vaccine mandatory?
“It depends on the state of the nature of the vaccine when it comes out and how it’s being distributed,” he said. “Depending on the continuation of the spread of the virus, we should be thinking about making it mandatory.”
Stephanopoulos pressed Biden on how he could enforce that. “Well, you couldn’t, that’s the problem,” the former vice president replied. “You can’t say, everyone has to do this … just like you can’t mandate a mask. But you can go to every governor and get them all in a room, all 50 of them, as president, and say, ‘ask people to wear the mask.’”
Would he lock down the country again? How would he balance public health concerns with economic ones? “I don’t think there’s a need to lock down,” Biden said. “You can open businesses and schools if in fact you provide them the guidance that they need as well as the money to be able to do it.”
Race and Policing
Cedric, a young black voter, said he was between voting for Biden and not voting at all. “Besides ‘you ain’t black,’” he asked, referring to Biden’s gaffe from earlier this year, “what do you have to say to young black voters who see voting for you as further participation in a system that continually fails to protect them?”
The former vice president outlined a number of government-backed plans for helping black Americans accumulate wealth, from guaranteed down payments for first time home buyers to greater federal subsidies for public schools in poor areas.
Biden also gave answers on policing that likely displeased many members of his party’s more progressive wing. “We shouldn’t be defunding cops,” Biden said. He stood by his previous statements that “more cops mean less crime,”—as long as “they’re involved in community policing, not jump squads.” Biden said it was a mistake to support the 1994 crime bill, because “of what the states did locally.”
Supreme Court
Addressing questions by one voter about proposals to reform the Supreme Court, Biden largely eschewed specifics. He unsurprisingly said he opposed confirming Amy Coney Barrett before the election, citing concerns for Obamacare and the LGBT community.
Pressed more directly by Stephanopolous on whether he favored court packing, he reiterated that he’s “not been a fan of court packing,” but left the door open. “It depends on how this turns out,” he said. “How it’s handled.”
“They will have a right to know where I stand before they vote,” Biden added, saying he will come out with a clear position before Election Day. “Depending on how they handle this.” (It’s worth noting that this position holds less water this year than most; nearly 20 million Americans have already voted, and that number grows every day.)
Trump Town Hall with Savannah Guthrie
President Trump’s town hall was a little more contentious, and got off to a rocky start when he failed to provide a clear answer about his COVID-19 testing timeline leading up to his Oct. 1 diagnosis.The president said he did not recall whether he received a test the day of the first presidential debate against Joe Biden in Cleveland, Ohio.
Trump appeared caught off guard by NBC anchor Savannah Guthrie’s rapid-fire questioning strategy throughout the evening. “Did you take a test, though, on the day of the debate?” she asked. When Trump didn’t give a direct answer, she kept peppering him with follow-ups. “Do you take a test every single day?” “You don’t know if you took a test the day of the debate?”
“Possibly I did, possibly I didn’t,” Trump eventually relented. “But I was in great shape for the debate. And sometime after the debate, I tested positive, then that’s when they decided to, let’s go.”
The president expressed skepticism about the effectiveness of mask-wearing in preventing the spread of the coronavirus. “I’m president,” Trump said. “I have to see people. I can’t be in a basement.” Guthrie asked the president why he can’t see people with a mask. “I can, but people with masks are catching it all the time.”
QAnon’s Dreams Come True
The president denounced white supremacy again when asked, but this time struggled to condemn QAnon, the pro-Trump conspiracy theory that claims there is a cabal of Satan worshipping Democratic elites who traffic and sexually abuse children. Trump conceded Sen. Ben Sasse “may be right” to say that QAnon is “nuts.” But the president proceeded to add that he “knows nothing about it,” before revealing he does know something about it. “What I do hear about it is that they are very strongly against pedophilia, and I agree with that.”
Guthrie also asked the president why he decided to retweet a video on Tuesday suggesting that Joe Biden had secretly planned to have members of the Navy SEAL Team 6 killed to cover up the allegedly fake death of Osama bin Laden. “Why would you send a lie like that to your followers?” Guthrie asked the president. “That was a retweet,” Trump responded. “I’ll put it out there.” “I don’t get that,” Guthrie replied. “You’re the president. You’re not like someone’s crazy uncle who can retweet whatever.” (See Tom Joscelyn’s Vital Interests newsletter from yesterday afternoon for an excellent analysis of why it matter when Trump amplifies these conspiracies.)
Trump’s Tax Returns Take the Spotlight
The president all but confirmed the New York Times’ bombshell story on his tax returns which alleges he is more than $421 million in debt. “What I’m saying is it’s a tiny percentage of my net worth,” the president said after Guthrie asked him to confirm whether he does, in fact, “owe some $400 million” to undisclosed individuals. “That sounds like yes,” Guthrie said.
“When you look at vast properties like I have, and they’re big and their beautiful and they’re well-located, when you look at that, the amount of money, $400 million, is a peanut, it’s extremely underleveraged,” Trump said. “And it’s leveraged with normal banks. Not a big deal.”
When asked whether any of that money is owed to foreign entities or banks, the president did not provide a clear answer: “Not that I know of, but, I will, probably.” He claimed that he is “treated very badly by the IRS” and that the $750 he allegedly paid in 2016 is simply a “filing number.” He cited “common sense and intelligence” as justification for not making his tax returns public.
All Things ACB
One town hall participant asked Trump about the GOP’s decision to fill the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s seat just weeks before an election, when the Republican Party refused to consider Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland, in 2016. “If you look at it, and you put the shoe on the other foot, if they had this, they would do it, 100 percent,” Trump said of senate Democrats. He then pivoted to the senate Democrats’ treatment of Justice Brett Kavanaugh in 2018 following sexual assault allegations from Dr. Christine Blasey Ford. “The whole ballgame changed when I saw the way they treated Justice Kavanaugh,” he said. “I have never seen a human being treated so badly with false accusations and everything else.”
Trump took pains to portray nominee Amy Coney Barrett as an independent, nonpartisan figure. “It would be totally up to her,” Trump said when Guthrie asked whether he thought Barrett would rule in his favor should a disputed presidential election reach the Supreme Court.
“I think she would be able to rule either for me or against me,” he added. “I don’t see any conflict whatsoever.” The president said he never discussed a potential election dispute with Judge Barrett prior to her Senate confirmation hearings.
With 30 seconds on the clock, Trump offered his final pitch to undecided voters: “We had the strongest economy in the world, we closed it up, we are coming around the corner.” The president also mentioned COVID-19 vaccine development, current construction on the southern border, and his success rebuilding the military as reasons to vote for him on November 3. “We’ve given you the greatest tax cut in the history of our country, greatest regulation cut—equally as important—and we created new levels of jobs that nobody thought was possible, and next year is going to be better than ever before.”
Ballot Box Shenanigans in California
Over the past several months, criticism of voting by mail has been dominated primarily by Republicans—particularly in California, where mail-in voting is widely practiced and “ballot harvesting,” the collection of ballots by a third party, is legal. On Monday, however, the California GOP found itself under legal threat for doing exactly that.
Last weekend, reports emerged of metal boxes—at least some of which were labeled as “official ballot drop boxes”—being placed in sites around Fresno, Los Angeles, and Orange counties. None were located in the official ballot drop-off sites listed by the state government. The boxes, it turned out, had been placed there by the state Republican party.
California Secretary of State Alex Padilla, a Democrat, sent cease-and-desist orders to the California’s state and county-level Republican parties Monday, demanding the boxes be taken down by October 15. Padilla argued that in addition to violating regulations concerning the security of ballot drop-off boxes, the boxes were not in compliance with a law requiring ballots collected by a third party to be signed by the voter and the person collecting it.
In a call with reporters Wednesday, California GOP general counsel Tom Hiltachk said “there is nothing illegal about the collection of ballots provided by voters, on a certainly volunteer basis, and entrusted to the persons who are operating that local election, or local party office, from transmitting those ballots.” He admitted that certain boxes being labeled as “official” were isolated mistakes made by an “overzealous” volunteer, but countered Padilla by arguing state law prevents a ballot from being disqualified because the person returning it fails to provide their name, signature, or relationship to the voter on the envelope.
California GOP spokesman Hector Barajas told The Orange County Register Wednesday that the distribution of ballot boxes was wider than originally thought. He said boxes were placed in “far more” counties than Fresno, Orange, and Los Angeles counties, as was originally reported. He also told San Diego’s KUSI News that Republicans were merely adapting to changes Democrats had initiated, saying “we looked at the chessboard that Democrats laid out, and now we’re playing with the pieces they provided for us.” Democrats’ 2018 victories in traditionally Republican areas of the state were boosted by organized ballot harvesting operations, which critics say create potential for fraud by having partisan groups collect and deliver large numbers of ballots.
Jessica Levinson—a Loyola Law School professor specializing in election law—says the legal case against the state GOP here is muddled. “In terms of putting out a dropbox and saying it’s official,” she said, the Republican Party clearly violated the law. She also noted that the law “doesn’t say we suggest, the law says that we require” voters sign their ballots and indicate their relationship with the person collecting them. But she concluded major penalties or prosecution would be unlikely, since it would be difficult to prove California Republicans willfully and knowingly violated the law.
The state GOP said Wednesday it has no plans to stop using the boxes for ballot collection, and that it is prepared to go to court over the issue. President Trump expressed his support as well: “You mean only Democrats are allowed to do this?” he tweeted. “But haven’t the Dems been doing this for years? See you in court. Fight hard Republicans!”
Rudy Steps in It
We wrote yesterday about the Hunter Biden/Burisma story that popped up in The New York Post, cautioning you to take it with a grain or two of salt given its bizarre sourcing and suspect timing. Well, 24 hours later, we’ve got a few more details to share. And they only strengthen our initial suspicions.
In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Rudy Giuliani—President Trump’s lawyer and the person who provided the information in question to the New York Post—got cagey when asked about how he obtained it. “Could it be hacked? I don’t know. I don’t think so,” he said. “If it was hacked, it’s for real. If it was hacked. I didn’t hack it. I have every right to use it.”
On the SiriusXM David Webb Show yesterday, Giuliani also appeared to change the story that was given to the New York Post. The Post originally reported on Wednesday that the partially-blind computer repairman was unable to “positively identify the customer [that dropped off the laptop] as Hunter Biden,” only putting the pieces together after seeing a “Beau Biden Foundation” sticker on the computer. Thursday, Giuliani said, “the process was that the laptop was left by Hunter Biden, in an inebriated … heavily inebriated state with the merchant.”
The Washington Post reported last night that “U.S. intelligence agencies warned the White House last year that President Trump’s personal lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani was the target of an influence operation by Russian intelligence.” National security adviser Robert O’Brien reportedly warned Trump that “any information Giuliani brought back from Ukraine should be considered contaminated by Russia.” As we wrote yesterday, the Treasury Department sanctioned Ukrainian lawmaker Andriy Derkach—whom Giuliani has worked with in the past—for his role meddling in U.S. elections, noting that Derkach has worked as an agent of the Russian government.
Oh, and the whole thing about Twitter blocking any posting or sharing of the Post link? The company reversed course yesterday, saying it will “no longer remove hacked content unless it is directly shared by hackers or those acting in concert with them,” opting to “label Tweets to provide context instead of blocking links from being shared on Twitter.”
Worth Your Time
- ProPublica took a deep dive into “perhaps the darkest chapter” of our nation’s public health institutions in its recent investigative piece: “Inside the Fall of the CDC.” The federal agency’s declining legitimacy, and wavering effectiveness, derives from a confluence of several factors at an inopportune moment. As internal disagreements regarding the coronavirus pandemic present mixed signals to the American people, the organization also faces external pressure to cater its messaging to the Trump administration. “As a historically lethal pandemic raged, the White House turned the CDC into a political bludgeon to advance Trump’s agenda, alternately blocking the agency’s leaders from using their quarantine powers or forcing them to assert those powers over the objections of CDC scientists,” the authors write.
- Bari Weiss made her return to the journalism world with a piece in Tablet Magazine warning that American liberalism is under siege. The new ideology rising to take its place sends a “clear signal about who belongs in the new progressive coalition and who does not.” Left out of what is interchangeably referred to as “postcolonialism, neo-Marxism, critical race theory, intersectionality and the therapeutic mentality” is an acceptance and embrace of Judaism. “It does not matter how progressive you are, how vegan or how gay, how much you want universal health care and pre-K and to end the drug war,” she writes. “To believe in the justness of the existence of the Jewish state—to believe in Jewish particularism at all—is to make yourself an enemy of this movement.”
Presented Without Comment
Democrats are furious at Dianne Feinstein for hugging Lindsey Graham and thanking him for a job well done after Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmation hearings
Toeing the Company Line
- Over at the site today, David has a fascinating interview with two fascinating people: J.D. Vance, the author of the blockbuster 2016 memoir Hillbilly Elegy, and Ron Howard, the director of its new film adaptation. You won’t want to miss it.
- As noted above, earlier this week, President Trump retweeted a conspiracy theory that claims President Obama staged the killing of Osama bin Laden for political purposes, and subsequently had members of Navy SEAL Team Six assassinated to cover up the plot. Anyways, in-house national security expert Thomas Joscelyn reminds us in his latest Vital Interests newsletter (🔒) that “this is, in a word, nonsense.”
- Sarah and David share their thoughts on marriage, the New York Post’s Hunter Biden story, and voter turnout in the latest installment of Advisory Opinions. “There’s two different schools of thought here,” Sarah says on the latter point. “One is that we’re on pace to have record turnout and one is that we’re simply banking Election Day votes early this time.”
Let Us Know
During last night’s town hall, ABC News returned from every commercial break with a graphic showing different sections of the Constitution (it was held at the Constitution Center in Philadelphia). Do you make time to reread our nation’s founding documents? If so, what are your favorite passages from them?
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), James P. Sutton (@jamespsuttonsf), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
Photograph by Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images.
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LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
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ARRA News Service (in this message: 14 new items) |
- Ballots 2020: Going Postal Has Its Downsides
- Debate Night, Biden’s Communist Connections, The Reaction
- A Lie Pitched From The Pits Of Hell
- Racial Deception
- Hunter Biden Emails Expose Joe Biden
- Destroying The Institutions We Inherited
- Deeper and Deeper
- Democrats Distort History On The 1864 Vacancy
- For WHO the Toll
- A Higher Loyalty
- Barrett’s Motherhood Under Attack
- Despicable Media Just Had Its Busiest Day of Carrying Water for Biden Yet
- Top WHO official to world leaders: ‘Stop using lockdowns’ to control COVID; ‘Terrible, ghastly, global catastrophe’
- Why Liberals Hate Amy Coney Barrett
Ballots 2020: Going Postal Has Its Downsides
Posted: 15 Oct 2020 10:33 PM PDT Tony Perkins: It was an unexpected headline, especially from the New York Times. Biden, it warned, “is not out of the woods.” Democrats may not be prematurely celebrating to the level of Hillary Clinton in 2016, but the stories about potential Cabinet picks and wildly lopsided poll numbers have eerie similarities to four years ago. The result, the Times warns, may also bear an uncanny resemblance. The bottom line? Don’t go measuring the White House’s drapes just yet. Like FRC Action’s Matt Carpenter, the Times is paying close attention to the voter registration numbers. The Cook Political Report’s David Wasserman, they point out, says that “Republicans have swamped Democrats in adding new voters to the rolls, a dramatic GOP improvement over 2016… Florida, since the state’s March primary, added 195,652 Republicans and 98,362 Democrats. Pennsylvania, since June, Republicans plus 135,619, Democrats up 57,985. North Carolina, since March, Republicans up 83,785 to Democrats 38,137. In Arizona, the exception, “Democrats out-registered Republicans 31,139 to 29,667” in recent months. Also worrisome for liberals, Thomas Edsall notes, is that Biden is getting weaker among Hispanic Catholics and African-American women. Combined with the strong support for Trump among evangelical Christians, and the election just got a lot more interesting than the major polling houses are telling us. Another thing to watch, political strategists are realizing, is this whole mail-in voting scheme. While states race to put out ballot fraud fires and other election errors, some Democrats are starting to worry that this push for voting remotely could backfire. While the headlines about general incompetence are troubling — 28,879 voters in Pennsylvania were sent the wrong ballots this week — that’s just a microcosm of the bigger problem. This heavy reliance on mail-in ballot also exposes another vulnerability for the Left, Newsweek’s Jonathan Tobin argues, and that’s the number of votes that will be incorrectly cast and automatically disqualified. “Democrats may believe that moving to mail-in ballots expands the electorate and increases their vote totals. Yet by making themselves so dependent on absentee rather than in-person voting, they have also made themselves vulnerable to having a significant proportion of their votes go uncounted.” It’s not just that ballots go missing (as more than 28 million have since 2012), it’s that the ones that do arrive are ruled ineligible. “A study published in USA Today showed that in 2016 as many as 315,651 ballots were rejected by authorities nationwide. Given the closeness of the race between Trump and Hillary Clinton, in which fewer than 80,000 votes in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin gave Trump his Electoral College victory, that’s a significant number. The authors point out that the number of rejected ballots in 2020 could be as high as 1,030,700, given the higher number of votes cast by mail. But they admit that the actual number could be higher still, since the vast majority of those availing themselves of the opportunity to vote by mail will be doing so for the first time.” That’s especially troubling for Democrats, who are twice as likely to vote by mail-in ballot than Republicans (40 percent to 20 percent). Adding to those woes, a number of researchers say that Democratic voters “seem to be more likely than Republicans to make the sorts of mistakes that could disqualify their ballots. “Any ballot sent in with the wrong address or name — rather than a corrected one that we’re told voters will eventually receive — won’t be counted. Ballots wrongly marked “military” will be counted, but many citizens won’t use them. This could result in widespread disenfranchisement.” Even states, Tobin writes, that have been doing all mail-in voting for years still reject about 1 in every 100 ballots. in an election that will almost certainly be decided by razor-thin margins, that’s a frightening thought for either side — but especially, more headlines are starting to suggest, the Left. Democrats wanted to exploit the pandemic and change the voting system for good. But increasingly, the message is this: Be careful what you wish for. |
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Debate Night, Biden’s Communist Connections, The Reaction
Posted: 15 Oct 2020 10:04 PM PDT by Gary Bauer: Debate Night
Well, not exactly. The second presidential debate was supposed to be held tonight. It was canceled by the Commission on Presidential Debates. Instead, we have dueling town hall events.On ABC former Vice President Joe Biden will appear with George Stehanopoulos at 8:00 PM ET. And on NBC President Trump will appear with Savannah Guthrie at 8:00 PM ET.Which one will you watch?Biden’s Communist Connections The New York Post today released additional details of what was discovered on the mysterious laptop that was abandoned at a Delaware computer repair shop. These latest revelations detail Hunter Biden’s attempts to negotiate a sweeter deal from a Chinese energy company connected to the communist Chinese military and intelligence agencies. The initial agreement would have paid Biden at least $30 million. But he was angling for “a much more lasting and lucrative arrangement.” Former Vice President Biden was given two foreign policy portfolios to manage during the Obama years – Ukraine and China. In both cases, his son, and by extension the entire Biden family, was getting wealthy by trading on the powerful position that Joe Biden held. Speaking in Iowa last night, President Trump said that Biden ran the vice presidency like it was a for-profit corporation. But here is the most significant point: The American heartland got poorer because their jobs were sent to communist China due to trade deals that Joe Biden and Barack Obama enthusiastically supported. Meanwhile, the Biden family got richer, as did a lot of the Washington establishment, by doing business with communist China. Donald Trump interrupted that gravy train. He put the heartland and its hard-working families first. And that is one of the main reasons that the Washington establishment hates him so much. If Biden/Harris win this election, the Washington swamp will revert to “business as usual,” cutting deals with Beijing’s communist bosses and Iran’s mullahs. People like Hunter Biden will happily get rich doing business with corrupt regimes while hard working families struggle to make ends meet. The Reaction The tech giants did their part too. As I noted yesterday, Facebook was deliberately attempting to quash the story. Twitter went even further. It shutdown the New York Post’s Twitter account, White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany’s account and the Trump campaign’s official account. The New York Post is a legitimate news outlet, but it could not get on Twitter yesterday to comment on any of its reporting. The president’s press secretary was also blocked all day, and was told that she could not have her account restored until she deleted the links to the Post’s Hunter Biden report. Facebook and Twitter censored the story for various reasons, including a refusal to publish hacked information. They also claimed that they could not determine the veracity of the story. Well, there’s a lot on social media every day that one should take with more than a grain of salt. But Twitter and most of the American media willingly circulated the Steele dossier long before its veracity could be proven, and, of course, it ended up being totally debunked. Every major network, as well as Twitter and Facebook, promoted the New York Times‘s reports about the president’s tax returns. The Times has never proven that those are actually the president’s tax returns. Trump says their reporting is false, and the Times refuses to identify its sources. Once again, it is clear that only conservative stories are subject to such stringent factchecking, which will undoubtedly take until mid-November to resolve. By the way, here’s the latest example of the left’s totalitarian impulse. Judge Amy Coney Barrett took some heat for referring to “sexual preference” during her confirmation hearings this week. Evidently, the term is offensive to some leftists, even though many liberals use it. But hours after Barrett’s hearing, Merriam-Webster had updated its definition to comply with the new progressive groupthink. This is what the old Soviet Union used to do! The left is increasingly dictating what we can see, what we can say and what we can think. We must defend our freedoms. We must prevail this November! COVID Update Britain, France, Germany and Spain are on the verge of new lockdowns. Why? Because Europe’s coronavirus cases are now exceeding ours. Meanwhile, the World Health Organization is warning that lockdowns are not necessarily the best approach. Dr. David Nabarro declared, “Lockdowns just have one consequence that you must never, ever belittle, and that is making poor people an awful lot poorer.” The American people get it. By a whopping 24-point margin, 57%-to-33%, voters reject locking down the country again. There is a clear difference between the recoveries in Republican states and the continued recessions in Democrat states. But more lockdowns are Joe Biden’s COVID strategy. That is the choice facing us in this election: A Trump recovery or a Biden recession. Encouraging News In addition, his campaign is attracting tremendous support from independent voters, first-time voters and even Democrats! The president held a big rally in Des Moines, Iowa, last night, and according to Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel, nearly half of those who attended (48.5%) were not Republicans. A quarter of the attendees did not vote in 2016, and 29% were registered Democrats. Tags: Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Debate Night, Biden’s Communist Connections, The ReactionTo 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 Lie Pitched From The Pits Of Hell
Posted: 15 Oct 2020 09:20 PM PDT by Dr. Chuck Baldwin: The World Health Organization (WHO) and Centers For Disease Control (CDC)—who together orchestrated the biggest global fraud in world history and who put the entire planet on military and police lockdown resulting in millions of lost jobs, millions of people thrust into poverty, millions of people becoming prisoners in nursing homes and even their own homes, untold broken families, ruined careers and suicides—recently published two reports that shatter the accepted corona narrative fostered by both organizations. Typically, almost no one in the mainstream media will cover these reports, so you probably have heard nothing about them. In fact, they didn’t seem to completely understand it themselves. At the session, Dr Michael Ryan, the WHO’s Head of Emergencies revealed that they believe roughly 10% of the world has been infected with Sars-Cov-2. This is their “best estimate”, and a huge increase over the number of officially recognised cases (around 35 million). Dr. Margaret Harris, a WHO spokeswoman, later confirmed the figure, stating it was based on the average results of all the broad seroprevalence studies done around the world. As much as the WHO were attempting to spin this as a bad thing – Dr Ryan even said it means “the vast majority of the world remains at risk” – it’s actually good news. And confirms, once more, that the virus is nothing like as deadly as everyone predicted. The global population is roughly 7.8 billion people, if 10% have been infected that is 780 million cases. The global death toll currently attributed to Sars-Cov-2 infections is 1,061,539. That’s an infection fatality rate of roughly 0.14%. Right in line with seasonal flu and the predictions of many experts from all around the world. 0.14% is over 24 times LOWER than the WHO’s “provisional figure” of 3.4% back in March. This figure was used in the models which were used to justify lockdowns and other draconian policies. In fact, given the over-reporting of alleged Covid deaths, the IFR is likely even lower than 0.14%, and could show Covid to be much less dangerous than flu.Think about it: The American people have allowed themselves to be put in a giant open air prison, prohibiting them from going to work, from going to church, from going anywhere without a stupid face diaper, from going to movies, from going to concerts, from going to sporting events, from going to bars or restaurants, from going to hair salons or barber shops, forcing them to close their businesses, forcing them to close their stores, forcing them to close their shops, forcing them to close their churches—basically, forcing them to abandon virtually all of their God-given, constitutionally protected liberties. FOR WHAT? For a virus that is less harmful than the seasonal flu. And WHO admits it. The key phrase there is: “Since no quantified virus isolates of the 2019-nCoV are currently available…” Every object that exists can be quantified, which is to say, measured. The use of the term “quantified” in that phrase means: the CDC has no measurable amount of the virus, because it is unavailable. THE CDC HAS NO VIRUS. A further tip-off is the use of the word “isolates.” This means NO ISOLATED VIRUS IS AVAILABLE. Another way to put it: NO ONE HAS AN ISOLATED SPECIMEN OF THE COVID-19 VIRUS. NO ONE HAS ISOLATED THE COVID-19 VIRUS. THEREFORE, NO ONE HAS PROVED THAT IT EXISTS. As if this were not enough of a revelation to shock the world, the CDC goes on to say they are presenting a diagnostic PCR test to detect the virus-that-hasn’t-been-isolated …and the test is looking for RNA which is PRESUMED to come from the virus that hasn’t been proved to exist.So, now the CDC is saying they cannot prove the coronavirus even exists. I say again, this entire coronavirus narrative is the biggest global fraud in world history. In fact, this fraud is so large it cannot be explained in natural terms. The sheer magnitude of such global devastation, disruption and decimation of Liberty and natural living can only be explained in terms of the supernatural. Yes, I’m saying it straight out: The corona fraud is a work of evil spirits. It is a lie pitched from the pits of Hell. This means that the medical professionals, local and county health boards, State governors, mayors, city councils, county commissions, school boards, government bureaucrats, media professionals, Big Tech executives and PASTORS who are blindly going along with the corona narrative are being manipulated by evil spirits. There can be no other explanation. And the real lesson of the corona fraud is the almost universal lack of spiritual discernment and courage within the Church. If I am right that the corona fraud is a creation of the dark regions of the netherworld, the ONLY answer to it is the heavenly light of spiritual truth. That means THE CHURCH must respond. Except it’s not! Pastors are silent. TV preachers are silent. Evangelists are silent. Christian educators are silent. Christian authors are silent. Christian radio broadcasters are silent. Christian doctors are silent. Christian attorneys are silent. Christian businessmen are silent. Christians in the pews are silent. Save for a precious few, the entire Church is utterly, shamefully SILENT. The only thing Christians can focus on is Donald Trump’s reelection. They are absolutely insensible to the fact that all of this happened ON TRUMP’S WATCH—and with his assistance. Donald Trump is as much a stooge of evil spirits as anyone else in Washington, D.C. In fact, I just discovered that here in Montana, the governor’s Emergency and Disaster orders expired months ago. The only Emergency Order (EO) that is in effect, the EO that maintains the phony corona narrative, the EO that keeps businesses closed, keeps churches closed, keeps theaters closed, keeps concert halls and sporting events closed and that forces people into agonizing isolation and forces them to wear those stupid face diapers is Donald Trump’s Emergency Order. Look hard at your State laws, folks, because I suspect that many states are likewise suffering primarily under Trump’s Emergency Order—the same Emergency Order that is funneling trillions of taxpayer dollars into the perpetuation of the phony corona narrative and the giant corporations that are profiting from it. If Donald Trump truly wanted to end the lockdowns, shutdowns, closures, etc., if he truly wanted Americans to go back to work, if he truly wanted the American people to have their lives and their liberties restored, he would rescind his Emergency Order NOW. So, why hasn’t he done it? Christians foolishly assume that this nightmare will go away after Trump is reelected. It won’t, because this is NOT a political or natural attack; this is a supernatural or spiritual attack that can only be defeated by a supernatural and spiritual counterattack—a counterattack that hasn’t come. After this much time with no meaningful response from America’s spiritual leaders, the powers of darkness know that the Church is ignorant, impotent and indolent. As a result, nothing stands in their way. The power elite have already started the next phase of our open air imprisonment. If you don’t believe that, read this: They are planning the creation of a real-life Minority Report society, except MUCH WORSE. Trump’s decision to use the U.S. military to deliver corona vaccines and/or other Big Pharma solutions to the faux corona pandemic is no small matter. It has nothing to do with speeding a wonder drug to America’s heartland for our medical healing. It has everything to do with merging America’s healthcare and pharmaceutical industries with the U.S. military for our near-future enslavement. Of course Joe Biden is no better. Again, this is not a political problem; it is a spiritual problem. And as long as Christians keep shirking their responsibility to apply spiritual solutions to spiritual problems and keep telling themselves that their national salvation depends on perfidious, unprincipled politicians, the more they aid and abet their own enslavement. As already stated, the phony corona narrative is a lie pitched from the pits of Hell. It’s past time for Christians to stand up and say so. Christ told us that the gates of Hell would not prevail against the Church. So, why is the Church not storming the gates? Scripture tells us that when we resist the evil one, he will flee from us. So, when will the Church start resisting? America’s future is not in the hands of the politicians; it is in the hands of the men in the pulpits. And so far, all most of them have done is wash their hands. Tags: Chuck Baldwin, A Lie, Pitched From, The Pits Of Hell, The World Health Organization, WHO, and Centers For Disease Control, CDC, together orchestrated, the biggest global fraud, in world historyTo 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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Racial Deception
Posted: 15 Oct 2020 08:22 PM PDT Reflections on the white women who claim they’re black.
by Dr. Walter E. Williams: During slavery, many black women, often in a forcible union with a white man, bore mixed-race children. Based on their percentage of white blood, they were deemed “mulattos,” “quadroons,” “octoroons” or even “hexadecaroons.”Depending on skin color, they could pass as white and avoid the gross racial discrimination suffered by their darker skinned brothers and sisters. This was portrayed in a 1949 motion picture titled “Pinky” that highlighted “passing” for white.Now the tables have been turned with some white women claiming they are black. For years, Rachel Dolezal claimed that she was black. As a result of her deception, she became president of the Spokane, Washington, office of the NAACP and an instructor of Africana studies at Eastern Washington University. Her two white parents outed her.Just recently, Jessica Krug, George Washington University professor of history, who for years claimed that she was black, confessed that she was white. Her faculty bio listed her as a scholar in African American history, imperialism and colonialism. Krug, in a fit of contrition, apologized for her “continued appropriation of a black Caribbean identity.” She confessed: “I am not a culture vulture. I am a culture leech.” After Krug’s confession, she resigned from the GWU faculty. An Indianapolis activist for Black Lives Matter, Satchuel Paigelyn Cole, born to two white parents, has admitted to pretending to be black for years. CV Vitolo-Haddad, a graduate student at UW’s School of Journalism and Mass Communications, after faking her race, has resigned from her teaching position and stepped down as co-president of the school’s chapter of the Teaching Assistants’ Association. One cannot be sure about race these days because of “blackfishing,” a trend in which people alter their appearance to present themselves as black. Dolezal, Krug, Cole and others are not the only white women who have benefited from racial fakery. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, sometimes called “Pocahontas,” claimed that she was of Cherokee Indian ancestry. That helped her land a job at diversity-hungry Harvard University as a professor of law and was paid $400,000 to teach two courses. She described herself as a minority in the Harvard Law School directory and claimed that her great-grandfather was Cherokee. Not only was her great-grandfather not a Cherokee as she claimed but he was a white man who boasted of shooting a Cherokee Indian. By the way, if as it has now become acceptable to call oneself a woman, when one has the anatomical equipment of a male, then why isn’t it okay to claim that one is black, Latino or Asian when one is really Caucasian? According to the U.S. Bureau of Census, people self-identify their race or ethnicity. Personally, I do not hold Dolezal, Krug, Cole, Warren or other undiscovered university professors at fault for racial fakery. I am guilty of the same during my troubled time in the Army. In 1960, landing in Incheon harbor in Korea, I tried to fake my race. Arriving soldiers were required to fill out a form containing information such as blood type, religion and next of kin. I checked off “Caucasian” where it asked for race. A chief warrant officer, in charge of inspecting the forms noticed the entry and told me I should have checked off Negro. I told him that if I put down “Negro,” I would get the worst job over there. The warrant officer probably changed the designation. Some years ago, I declared myself a springbok trapped in a human body. A springbok is a highly agile, cute, deer-like animal that resides in southern and southwestern African. Some people suggested that I suffered from a condition known as species dysphoria, in which one thinks he is a wild animal trapped in a human body. Species dysphoria is similar to gender dysphoria, a condition in which a person believes he is a woman trapped in a male body or a man trapped in a female body. Psychological counseling was recommended, which, in my opinion, is nothing less than animal phobia. One might ask, “Williams, why in the world would you want to call yourself a springbok?” The reason is quite simple. There is nothing in the Internal Revenue Code that says springboks have a federal tax obligation. If IRS officials were to demand that a springbok pay taxes, they could be referred to the U.S. Department of Justice for prosecution and reported to the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. Tags: Walter Williams, commentary, Racial DeceptionTo 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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Hunter Biden Emails Expose Joe Biden
Posted: 15 Oct 2020 07:57 PM PDT More evidence that Dems impeached Trump for what Biden actually did.
by Thomas Gallatin: What did Joe Biden know, and when did he know it?On Wednesday, smoke began to billow from the smoldering embers of the Biden-Burisma-Ukraine scandal, a scandal that much of the mainstream media has intentionally ignored and social media has taken steps to tamp down. The New York Post broke the story: “Smoking-gun email reveals how Hunter Biden introduced Ukrainian businessman to VP dad.”According to the report, back in April 2015, after having been on the board of Ukraine energy giant Burisma for just a year, Hunter Biden received an email from Vadym Pozharskyi, Burisma’s number-three executive, appearing to thank him for an invitation to meet his father, then-Vice President Joe Biden. “Dear Hunter, thank you for inviting me to DC and giving an opportunity to meet your father and spent [sic] some time together. It’s realty [sic] an honor and pleasure,” reads the email. Significantly, less than eight months later, Joe Biden would engage in his infamous qui pro quo demand, pressuring then-Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko to fire the country’s top prosecutor, Viktor Shokin, or risk losing out on a $1 billion U.S. loan guarantee.The Post notes, “Shokin has said that at the time of his firing, in March 2016, he’d made ‘specific plans’ to investigate Burisma that ‘included interrogations and other crime-investigation procedures into all members of the executive board, including Hunter Biden.’” At a bare minimum, the email’s revelation of at least the invitation for a previously unknown meeting between Joe Biden and a Burisma top exec catches Sleepy Joe in a lie. He has previously and repeatedly claimed that he’d “never spoken to my son about his overseas business dealings.” The story surrounding the Post’s acquisition of the information is equally intriguing, sounding like something out of a spy novel. A water-damaged laptop containing the email in question was dropped off at a repair shop in Delaware back in April 2019, whereupon the shop owner uncovered a trove of data including emails and a “12-minute video that appears to show Hunter, who’s admitted struggling with addiction problems, smoking crack while engaged in a sex act with an unidentified woman, as well as numerous other sexually explicit images.” After the mysterious client who dropped off the computer never paid for the repair or returned to retrieve it, the shop owner eventually contacted the FBI. Agents then seized the computer in December 2019, but not before the shop owner had created a copy of the hard drive. This copied hard drive was then later given to Rudy Giuliani’s former lawyer, Robert Costello. After learning of its existence from former Trump adviser Steve Bannon, the Post reached out to Giuliani and was given a copy this past Sunday. The Post also highlights another significant email correspondence contained on the hard drive dating from May 2014, shortly after Hunter joined Burisma’s board. Pozharski originated the email exchange with Hunter and his business partner Devon Archer under the subject line “urgent issue.” Pozharski wrote, “We urgently need your advice on how you could use your influence to convey a message / signal, etc. to stop what we consider to be politically motivated actions.” Hunter responded by asking, “Who is ultimately behind these attacks on the company? Who in the current interim government could put an end to such attacks?” The email exchange occurred the same day that Burisma officially announced it had added Hunter Biden to its board of directors and placed him in charge of its “legal unit [where he] will provide support for the Company among international organizations.” This information conflicts with Hunter’s lawyer’s claim last year that Hunter was “not a member of the management team,” and that “at no time was Hunter in charge of the company’s legal affairs.” Why does all this matter? For one thing, it reveals that President Donald Trump was completely justified in his request of Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky to have the Bidens’ shady Ukraine dealings investigated. It further shows that members of the deep state were so in the tank for Democrats that, rather than seek the truth, they aided House partisans in launching a ridiculous impeachment charade to spin the Ukraine scandal onto Trump. Democrats impeached Trump for what Joe Biden did — for even having the “gall” to ask what Biden did. Meanwhile, Biden, who has been protected every step of the way by the mainstream media, may now be unable to avoid answering a few questions. (Stay tuned for a planted question and dismissive response at tonight’s town hall.) The FBI did indeed seize the laptop and hard drive as demonstrated by the Post’s inclusion of a photo of the federal subpoena. That the FBI has had this hard drive for the last 10 months with no word of any investigation may indicate that it has been included in John Durham’s ongoing investigation. The Post reported that the FBI directed all questions regarding “its seizure of the laptop and hard drive to the Delaware US Attorney’s Office, where a spokesperson said, ‘My office can neither confirm nor deny the existence of an investigation.’” However, the emails are under investigation by the Senate Homeland Security Committee. The bottom line, as Gary Bauer notes: “Biden was given two foreign policy portfolios to manage during the Obama years – Ukraine and China. In both cases, his son, and by extension the entire Biden family, was getting wealthy by trading on the powerful position that Joe Biden held. The American heartland got poorer because their jobs were sent to communist China due to trade deals that Joe Biden and Barack Obama enthusiastically supported.” Tonight, there will be competing town hall events – since the Debate Commission cancelled the scheduled joint town hall event. Will ABC allow any questions on this topic in Biden’s moderated Q&A event? Stay tuned. Mark Alexander concludes: “Hunter Biden’s communications with Ukraine officials have ensnared Joe Biden in a web of BIG lies, and have exposed the Demos’ mainstream media enablers and social media censors for the leftist hacks they are. This confirms what I asserted last January — that Democrats impeached President Trump for high crimes Joe Biden actually committed.” Tags: Thomas Gallatin, The Patriot Post, Hunter Biden Emails, Expose, Joe BidenTo 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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Destroying The Institutions We Inherited
Posted: 15 Oct 2020 07:19 PM PDT
Anywhere ideology trumps science, public service, history, art and entertainment, ruin surely follows. by Dr. Victor Davis Hanson: In the 21st century, hallmark American and international institutions have lost much of their prestige and respect. The overseers entrusted with preserving these institutions all caved to short-term political pressures. As a result, they have mostly destroyed what they inherited. The World Health Organization’s director-general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, is the first person without a medical degree to hold that position. Why? No one really knows. In the critical first days of the rapidly spreading COVID-19 pandemic, almost every statement issued by Tedros and the WHO about the origins, transmission, prevention and treatment of the virus was inaccurate. Worse, the announcements predictably reflected the propaganda of the Chinese government. The bipartisan Commission on Presidential Debates was formed in 1987 for two purposes: to ensure that during every presidential campaign, candidates would agree to debate; and to ensure that the debates would be impartial and not favor either major party. Unfortunately, in 2020, the commission so far has a checkered record on both counts. Conservatives have argued that the moderators of the first presidential debate and the vice presidential debate — Chris Wallace of Fox News and Susan Page of USA Today — were systematically asymmetrical in their questioning. The moderators asked both President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence to explain prior controversial quotes and then to reply to critics’ accusations. The moderators did not pose the same sort of gotcha-type “When did you stop beating your wife?” questions to Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden or vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris. Although the vice presidential debate was conducted with proper social distancing, along with screens and testing to protect the candidates, the commission abruptly canceled the second live presidential debate for safety’s sake and insisted it be conducted remotely. Yet White House doctors have cleared Trump, who recently contracted COVID-19, as both medically able to debate and no longer infectious. The public perception was that a remote debate would favor the frequently teleprompted Biden, who has been largely ensconced in his home during the last six months, and would be less advantageous to Trump, who thrives on live, ad hoc television. Susan Page is currently writing a biography of Trump’s chief antagonist, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif). The designated moderator of the now-canceled second president debate, Steve Scully of C-SPAN, once interned for Vice President Joe Biden. The Nobel Peace Prize has been subject to criticism over the years for failing to adequately recognize either diplomatic or humanitarian achievement. Yasser Arafat of the Palestine Liberation Organization won the prize in 1994, despite conducting lethal terrorist operations. He allegedly gave the final order to execute U.S. Ambassador to Sudan Cleo Noel and two other diplomats in 1973. In 2009, the Nobel Peace Prize went to President Barack Obama, despite the fact that Obama had only been president for eight months when the prize was announced. Many felt the award was a political statement — aimed at empowering Obama and criticizing the policies of his then-unpopular predecessor, George W. Bush. Much later, Geir Lundestad, the longtime director of the Nobel Institute, confessed that the prize committee had indeed hoped the award would strengthen Obama’s future agendas and wasn’t really in recognition of anything he had actually done. Although the vice presidential debate was conducted with proper social distancing, along with screens and testing to protect the candidates, the commission abruptly canceled the second live presidential debate for safety’s sake and insisted it be conducted remotely. Yet White House doctors have cleared Trump, who recently contracted COVID-19, as both medically able to debate and no longer infectious. The public perception was that a remote debate would favor the frequently teleprompted Biden, who has been largely ensconced in his home during the last six months, and would be less advantageous to Trump, who thrives on live, ad hoc television. Susan Page is currently writing a biography of Trump’s chief antagonist, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif). The designated moderator of the now-canceled second president debate, Steve Scully of C-SPAN, once interned for Vice President Joe Biden. The Nobel Peace Prize has been subject to criticism over the years for failing to adequately recognize either diplomatic or humanitarian achievement. Yasser Arafat of the Palestine Liberation Organization won the prize in 1994, despite conducting lethal terrorist operations. He allegedly gave the final order to execute U.S. Ambassador to Sudan Cleo Noel and two other diplomats in 1973. In 2009, the Nobel Peace Prize went to President Barack Obama, despite the fact that Obama had only been president for eight months when the prize was announced. Many felt the award was a political statement — aimed at empowering Obama and criticizing the policies of his then-unpopular predecessor, George W. Bush. Much later, Geir Lundestad, the longtime director of the Nobel Institute, confessed that the prize committee had indeed hoped the award would strengthen Obama’s future agendas and wasn’t really in recognition of anything he had actually done. “Even many of Obama’s supporters believed that the prize was a mistake,” Lundestad lamented in his memoir. “In that sense the committee didn’t achieve what it had hoped for.” Earlier this year, New York Times reporter Nikole Hannah-Jones won the prestigious Pulitzer Prize for Commentary for her work on The 1619 Project. She has argued that 1619, the year African slaves first arrived on North American soil, and not 1776 marked the real founding of America. Almost immediately, distinguished American historians cited factual errors and general incoherence in The 1619 Project –especially Hannah-Jones’ claim that the United States was created to promote and protect slavery. Facing a storm of criticism, Hannah-Jones falsely countered that she had never advanced a revisionist date of American’s “real” founding. Yet even the New York Times — without explanation — erased from its own website Hannah-Jones’ earlier description of 1619 as “our true founding.” The annual Academy Awards were once among the most watched events in America. In 2020, however, Oscar viewership crashed to its lowest level in history, due in large part to backlash against the left-wing politicking, sermonizing and virtue-signaling of award winners. Recently, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which oversees the Oscars, announced that it will adopt racial, gender and sexual identity quotas for nominees — refuting the ancient idea of “art for art’s sake” Such ideology has also infected, and thus tarnished, the Grammy and Emmy awards, and left-wing virtue-signaling has also become part of the NFL and the NBA. The lesson in all these debacles is that anywhere ideology trumps science, public service, history, art and entertainment, ruin surely follows. Tags: Victor Davis Hanson, Destroying The Institutions, We InheritedTo 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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Deeper and Deeper
Posted: 15 Oct 2020 06:37 PM PDT
by Cal Thomas: “Debt is the worst poverty.” — Thomas Fuller, 17th-century English churchman and historian No reporter asks about it. The candidates don’t talk about it. Are voters even concerned about it? The unmentioned “it” is the national debt, which days ago reached $27 trillion and continues to grow like an untreated tumor on the economic body of the nation. At least one group is trying to get the public’s attention about how dangerous the national debt is to the future of the country. It is the newly formed Millennial Debt Commission (MDC), a civilian-led commission working toward a framework for long-term deficit reduction, made up of “20 millennial business leaders from across the country.” The MDC recently held a conference call with current and former Members of Congress (all Republicans, unfortunately, since the debt is equally the fault of both parties) and former government officials. One of those on the call was former Congressional Budget Office Director Doug Holtz-Eakin, who said the national debt is “quite literally mathematically unsustainable.” This is not new, as many have been saying much the same over many years, though they lack the will to do anything about reducing it. These include congresses with Democrat and Republican majorities and administrations. Holtz-Eakin added, “We are headed into a death spiral where we borrow to pay interest on previous borrowing, and it cannot be sustained.” It is, as Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) calls it, “intergenerational theft.” We’ve heard that one before, too, but it’s one thing to sound an alarm; it is quite another to stop the thieves. Said Johnson, “70 percent of our budget (is) now on complete automatic pilot…” While some alarmists are warning we could all die from climate change in the next however many years (their predictions differ and have been consistently wrong), the national debt is a clear and present threat to the stability, even existence, of the country. Great nations of the past have expired, or been greatly diminished, by refusing to control debt. Rep. William Timmons (R-SC) warned, “The global economy is not going to allow the United States government to borrow $70 trillion (his estimate at the current rate of borrowing and spending)…we will lose our pre-eminent position and the dollar will just be in the trash can.” Rep. Bryan Steil (R-WI) added, “…the projected Congressional Budget Office debt to GDP ratio at the end of the year is 101 percent. That’s really the tipping point when you talk to macroeconomists and where you get into a danger zone. … What we need to do is have an adult and thoughtful conversation about how we are going to turn the tide and get back to a sustainable path going forward.” Ah, but herein lies the problem. Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) told the conference call participants, “I was on the budget and appropriations process reform committee, the joint select committee that was established several years ago … we couldn’t come together on legislation. We could not do anything more than simple window dressing. … There are so many people stuck in the way that we’ve always done things … and we really do have to move beyond that.” The ongoing problem is how? As long as many Americans believe government owes them money extracted from other people, as long as politicians use spending to “buy” votes, refusing to say “no” to any request, the debt will grow. That guarantees the bill will come due sooner rather than later. Ralph Waldo Emerson is among legions of people who have warned of the dangers of debt: “A man in debt is so far a slave.” If that is true for individuals, how much more for nations? Tags: Cal Thomas, Deeper and DeeperTo 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 Distort History On The 1864 Vacancy
Posted: 15 Oct 2020 05:55 PM PDT
Democrats’ Recounting Of How Abraham Lincoln Handled Democrats Claim Abraham Lincoln Didn’t Fill A Supreme Court Vacancy Arising Before The 1864 Election Because It Wasn’t ‘The Right Thing To Do’ SEN. KAMALA HARRIS (D-CA): “In 1864, one of the, I think political heroes, certainly of the president, I assume of you also, Mr. Vice President, is Abraham Lincoln. Abraham Lincoln was up for re-election and it was 27 days before the election and a seat became open on the United States Supreme Court. Abraham Lincoln’s party was in charge not only of the White House, but the Senate. But Honest Abe said it’s not the right thing to do.” (Sen. Harris, Vice Presidential Debate, 10/07/2020) SEN. AMY KLOBUCHAR (D-MN): “And the best precedent that we really have is when Abraham Lincoln was president and it was the closest in time that we have had in history to this, when a justice died closest to the election, and he waited until after the election to make the selection.” (U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee Markup, 10/15/2020) Contrary To Sens. Harris and Klobuchar’s False Claims, Lincoln Waited Because He Wanted To Use The Vacancy As An Incentive To Strengthen His Political Support And Encourage Aspirants To Campaign On His Behalf “On October 12, 1864, Chief Justice Roger B. Taney died. Lincoln believed that in naming Taney’s successor he was making a choice that could have profound practical and political consequences for his second term. Lincoln also realized that the naming of the country’s fifth Chief Justice was a momentous historical event as the new Chief would continue the powerful role established by Marshall and Taney.” (Michael A. Kahn, “Abraham Lincoln’s Appointments to the Supreme Court: A Master Politician at His Craft,” Journal of Supreme Court History, 1997, Vol. II) “Taney’s death instantly energized campaigns for several aspirants for the job including William M. Evarts of New York, Justice Swayne of Ohio, Montgomery Blair of Maryland’ and, ex-Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase. … Once again, Lincoln was inundated with advice that he immediately appoint each one of these men and many others including Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton and Attorney General Edward Bates (who asked the President for the appointment “as the crowning retiring honor of my life” by letter of October 13, 1864). As ever, Lincoln was the shrewd politician and in October of 1864 he saw no profit in alienating any of the factions of his political support by making a selection before the election. There is no evidence that he seriously considered announcing his choice before he was re-elected.” (Michael A. Kahn, “Abraham Lincoln’s Appointments to the Supreme Court: A Master Politician at His Craft,” Journal of Supreme Court History, 1997, Vol. II) “Lincoln was not, however, above using the enticement of the office to encourage campaigning on his behalf. The highest prize in that regard was the active political support of Salmon P. Chase, the former Senator, governor, Secretary of the Treasury, and presidential candidate and a towering figure in the country. In the apt analysis of historian David Donald, after Taney’s death in October 1864 Chase took the ‘cue’ and stumped for Lincoln throughout the Midwest in marked contrast to his earlier maneuverings in 1864 to replace Lincoln as President (Of course, Chase’s unusual behavior did not go unnoticed and rumors of a bargain surfaced.)” (Michael A. Kahn, “Abraham Lincoln’s Appointments to the Supreme Court: A Master Politician at His Craft,” Journal of Supreme Court History, 1997, Vol. II) · “So Lincoln, from the time of his first election, adopted the strategy of attempting to harness and co-opt Chase’s political and personal power to use in his own causes. This strategy worked well enough until December 1864 as Lincoln manipulated Chase into serving his purposes in the Cabinet and in the re-election campaign.” (Michael A. Kahn, “Abraham Lincoln’s Appointments to the Supreme Court: A Master Politician at His Craft,” Journal of Supreme Court History, 1997, Vol. II) Further, When The Vacancy Opened In October 1864, The Senate Was Not In Session, So A New Justice Could Not Have Been Confirmed Until It Reconvened In December Chief Justice Roger Taney died on October 12, 1864. But the Senate had adjourned the 1st Session of the 38th Congress on July 4th of that year and did not reconvene until the 2nd Session began on December 5, 1864. President Lincoln nominated Salmon P. Chase to the vacancy the very next day. (“Justices 1789 to Present,” U.S. Supreme Court Website, Accessed 10/13/2020; “Dates of Sessions of the Congress,” U.S. Senate Website, Accessed 10/13/2020; “Supreme Court Nominations (1789-Present),” U.S. Senate Website, Accessed 10/13/2020) Lincoln’s Nomination Of Salmon Chase As Chief Justice Was Unanimously Confirmed On The Day It Was Received “Lincoln was re-elected on November 8, 1864. Congress and the Supreme Court were set to reconvene during the first week in December. … Then, with startling suddenness, Lincoln sent Chase’s name to the Senate on December 6, 1864. Lincoln did so with no advance notice. Even his closest advisors were uninformed before Lincoln put pen to paper and wrote, ‘I nominate Salmon P. Chase of Ohio to be chief justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, vice Roger B. Taney, deceased.’” (Michael A. Kahn, “Abraham Lincoln’s Appointments to the Supreme Court: A Master Politician at His Craft,” Journal of Supreme Court History, 1997, Vol. II) · “In December 1864 Lincoln looked beyond the war and saw a troubled time during which the radicals in the Senate would need to be pacified and the courts would need to cooperate in the healing efforts. The choice of Chase as Chief Justice was far and away the best way -in Lincoln’s mind—of mollifying and co-opting the radicals, of neutralizing (or at least silencing) Chase himself, a potentially dangerous and rancorous political enemy, and of providing leadership within the judiciary to promote administration efforts to preserve the Union in war and peace. The selection of Chase advanced every political and ideological goal that Lincoln was pursuing in December 1864. Therefore, Lincoln swallowed his personal qualms about Chase and allowed his arrogant and obstinate rival the glory that he craved.” (Michael A. Kahn, “Abraham Lincoln’s Appointments to the Supreme Court: A Master Politician at His Craft,” Journal of Supreme Court History, 1997, Vol. II)
“Once again, Lincoln was proven (at least during his lifetime) correct. Chase’s nomination was unanimously confirmed on the day it was received and lavishly praised in the press. On December 15, 1864, Chase was installed as Chief Justice.” (Michael A. Kahn, “Abraham Lincoln’s Appointments to the Supreme Court: A Master Politician at His Craft,” Journal of Supreme Court History, 1997, Vol. II) Tags: Democrats, Distort History, On The 1864 VacancyTo 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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For WHO the Toll
Posted: 15 Oct 2020 05:56 PM PDT by Paul Jacob: When the World Health Organization did an about-face, last week, advising against the lockdowns that have constituted the most-touted and most common extreme pandemic response around the world, many wondered: what could the WHO be up to? David Nabarro, the organization’s special envoy for Covid-19, explains that lockdowns are useful only to buy time “to reorganize, regroup, rebalance” health care resources, and that we are obviously not in such emergency conditions now. J.D. Tuccille, writing at Reason, provided us with the most astute news angle from the WHO’s apparent turnabout: “At long last, months into the pandemic, the debates over the proper response to COVID-19 have begun.” We can hope so, anyway. Enough with bullying by government edict or inane “follow the science” rhetoric! But what the WHO’s new clue should highlight is how we got here. The lockdowns were first offered as a way to do precisely what Mr. Nabarro said, buy time to reorganize medical resources so as not to induce chaos — you know, “flatten the curve.” It did not take long, however, before a very different rationale for harsh “mitigation efforts” became the rule: buy time for a vaccine. This plan was strenuously argued against by a trio of doctors in their eyebrow-raising “Great Barrington Declaration.” Continuing the lockdowns until a vaccine emerges “will cause irreparable damage, with the underprivileged disproportionately harmed.” The lockdown obsession may misdirect our attention from actual treatments for the disease — which President Trump has touted from the beginning. Indeed, Trump’s quick exit from his own bout with the malady may serve as an effective reminder that our options are not limited to (a) quivering in sequestration till vaccinations roll out or (b) mass death. There is hope. This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. Tags: Paul Jacob, For WHO the Toll, World Health OrganizationTo 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 Higher Loyalty
Posted: 15 Oct 2020 03:48 PM PDT . . . Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmation will help keep liberal activists on the court from destroying the Constitution.
Editorial Cartoon by AF “Tony” Branco Tags: AF Branco, editorial cartoon, A Higher Loyalty, Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmation, will help keep, liberal activists, on the court, from destroying, the ConstitutionTo 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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Barrett’s Motherhood Under Attack
Posted: 15 Oct 2020 03:37 PM PDT by Bill Donohue: Judge Amy Coney Barrett has angered the left: they’ve tried desperately to destroy her, but they never laid a glove on her. Pundits and activists reviewed her scholarship, which is impressive by any measure, and found nothing to use against her. Similarly, they scoured her legal opinions, but found nothing that would disqualify her. What’s left? Her personal life. They really wanted to find some dirt on Barrett, but they came up empty. Unlike some of the senators who grilled her, she’s clean. Sen. Mazie Hirono showed what she is made of when she asked her if she had ever been a sexual predator. It accomplished nothing, except to discredit Hirono. Coming off a tale of vicious lies told about Brett Kavanaugh, some on the left resorted to condemning Barrett for being a model mother. If this sounds crazy, read the screed by Lyz Lenz in Glamour. In the matter of a few pages, she refers to “mother” or “motherhood” 55 times, almost always in the kind of snide way we have come to expect from those who see mothers as “breeders” (often out of envy). This is especially true of white mothers who embody the best attributes of motherhood. Referring to Barrett’s status as a mother of seven children, Lenz contends that those who support her have “boiled her down to a single identity and everything she does or will do flows from that.” Wrong. Her supporters know she has multiple identities and multiple gifts. It is her foes, like Lenz, who treat her as a “bare foot in the kitchen” type of woman. Lenz is a single mother, an LGBTQ proponent and a former evangelical. That pretty much says it all. It surely explains why she sees in Barrett someone who “remind[s] the public that a woman’s worth is primarily a measure of her reproductive capabilities.” No one thinks that way except those who are livid over the sight of a pro-life mother, with impeccable scholarly and characterological credentials, poised to ascend to the U.S. Supreme Court. Like many young white women these days, Lenz is riddled with guilt. When they are not confessing their sin of whiteness in a racial sensitivity program, or engaging in street violence at a “peaceful” demonstration, they are lashing out at well-adjusted white women. For example, she takes a stab at Kellyanne Conway—out of the blue—simply because she is another pro-Trump, pro-life mother. Oh yes, she is also white. Strike three. Like other alienated women who despise Barrett, Lenz is furious that the Trump nominee is supposedly benefiting from the trail blazed by Ruth Bader Ginsburg. They need to get over it. Ginsburg was a distinguished jurist. So is Barrett. It is childlike to think that whoever succeeds Ginsburg should be her clone. Moreover, Barrett owes more to Antonin Scalia, whose jurisprudential philosophy she shares, than Ginsburg. What is really strange about this hit piece on Barrett is that it appears in Glamour. Not too long ago, this magazine entertained normal women waiting to get their hair done. Now it entertains women who hate white mothers. There is nothing normal about that. Tags: Bill Donohue, Catholic League, Amy Barrett, Motherhood under attack 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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Despicable Media Just Had Its Busiest Day of Carrying Water for Biden Yet
Posted: 15 Oct 2020 03:24 PM PDT by Stephen Kruiser: It’s Thursday in America, I think. The days are so blurry. I do hope you’re having a good one so far, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. It’s no wonder Joe Biden is able to go to bed right after breakfast every day — he knows that the media will campaign for him. The Enemy of the People had their hands full covering for Grandpa Gropes on Wednesday once the New York Post story about the Cocaine Kid broke. The speed with which they coordinated their efforts and messaging was proof positive that Journolist still exists, albeit in an altered form. By the time I got to the computer, my Tweetdeck media columns were flooded with various MSM accounts all tweeting very slight variations on a theme: don’t link or share the Post story because it is, or it may be, disinformation. I took a big swig of coffee, got up and walked around a bit, then returned to my computer to make sure I was reading everything correctly. Yep, I’d seen it right the first time. The media outlets that spent years breathlessly “reporting” on every bit of fabricated and uncorroborated garbage about President Trump colluding with Russia were now concerned with the veracity of a new detail in a story that’s always had more legs than the Russia nonsense. It was both disturbing and amusing to see them tune up their hive-mind chorus in defense of Biden’s reprehensible son and whatever his pops might know about the depths of his reprehensibility. Disturbing because it showed once again that they’re merely full-throated advocates for all things Democrat, now more so than ever. Amusing because every time one of them tweeted about not sharing the story, conservatives would flood their mentions with links to the story. Who says Twitter can’t be fun? While the mainstream media hacks were barking in unison like the trained seals that they are, the Social Media Supreme Soviet took matters into their own hands. Paula wrote about a Facebook exec freely admitting that they were “reducing” the distribution of the Post article on the platform. Twitter really went into Bizzaroland with its overreaction. When I went to click on the link to the article I was given a dire warning that the content had been flagged as “potentially spammy.” I don’t think “spammy” is a thing. Later in the day, Twitter CEO sort of backtracked, which Tyler wrote about: The coordinated efforts by the mainstream media and social media Biden water-carriers had a decidedly “Nothing to see here, move along…move along,” feel to it. That, of course, makes it feel as if there is definitely something to see there. Perhaps they were all merely exhausted from having to pretend that the Democrats on the Judiciary Committee weren’t consistently getting their you-know-whats handed to them by Amy Coney Barrett and wanted a change of pace. That’s understandable. They were all a little too shrill in their dismissal of the Post story though. They’ve all invested a lot of time and effort into ignoring the Hunter Biden/Burisma stuff thus far. The reaction yesterday seemed as if they had snapped from the pressure of that. The stink around this story never goes away despite the best efforts of the MSM to get rid of it. It may not have had October surprise or smoking gun status when the Post first released it, but the flop-sweat panic reaction of the media gave it both. Thanks, guys! Rest up, you have to get back to not asking Joe Biden about anything substantive. Tags: Stephen Kruiser, PJMedia, Despicable Media, Busiest Day, Carrying Water, for BidenTo 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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Top WHO official to world leaders: ‘Stop using lockdowns’ to control COVID; ‘Terrible, ghastly, global catastrophe’
Posted: 15 Oct 2020 02:46 PM PDT ‘…making poor people an awful lot poorer’
by Chris Enlow: A top official at the World Health Organization is urging world leaders to stop “using lockdowns as your primary control method” against the coronavirus. What’s the background?When COVID-19 struck the world, most countries responded by enacting strict nationwide lockdowns. The decision plunged the world economy into an immediate recession, the consequences of which are still being felt even months after most countries have lifted their strict lockdown measures. In fact, experts estimate the pandemic, and the ensuing lockdowns, plunged around 100 million additional people into “extreme poverty.” From the Wall Street Journal: Dr. David Nabarro, the WHO’s special envoy on COVID-19, told the Spectator last week that lockdowns are not the answer to COVID-19. “We in the World Health Organization do not advocate lockdowns as the primary means of control of this virus,” Nabarro said. “The only time we believe a lockdown is justified is to buy you time to reorganize, regroup, rebalance your resources, protect your health workers who are exhausted,” he added. “But by and large, we’d rather not do it.” Nabarro pointed to the devastating economic side-effects of the lockdown as evidence for why world leaders should not enact further lockdowns. “Just look at what’s happened to the tourism industry in the Caribbean, for example, or in the Pacific because people aren’t taking their holidays,” he explained. “Look what’s happened to smallholder farmers all over the world because their markets have got dented. Look what’s happening to poverty levels. It seems that we may well have a doubling of world poverty by next year. We may well have at least a doubling of child malnutrition.” “This is a terrible, ghastly, global catastrophe, actually,” Nabarro added. “And so we really do appeal to all world leaders: Stop using lockdown as your primary control method.” “Develop better systems for doing it,” he continued. “Remember, lockdowns have just one consequence that you must never ever belittle, and that is making poor people an awful lot poorer.”
————————– Tags: Chris Enlow, TheBlaze, Top WHO official, to world leaders, ‘Stop using lockdowns,’ to control COVIDTo 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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Why Liberals Hate Amy Coney Barrett
Posted: 15 Oct 2020 02:11 PM PDT by Ben Shapiro: This week, Democrats struggled to explain why Judge Amy Coney Barrett should not be confirmed to serve on the Supreme Court. They trotted out hackneyed arguments, suggesting that some political norm had been broken by a Republican president nominating a judge to be confirmed as a justice by a Republican Senate in an election year. There have been 19 times where a seat became vacant in an election year and both the presidency and Senate were controlled by the same party, resulting in 17 judicial confirmations. They suggested that Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s dying wish to leave her seat open until a Democrat takes power represented a sort of binding legal commitment. And they fumed. They fumed that Barrett refuses to pledge fealty to their political priorities. They fumed that Barrett has stated that the role of the judiciary is not to achieve moral ends but to enforce the law. They fumed that Barrett had the temerity to state that “courts are not designed to solve every problem or right every wrong in our public life,” that “the policy decisions and value judgments of government must be made by the political branches,” and that she has done her utmost to “reach the result required by the law,” whatever her preferences might be. That’s because, in the view of the political left, the court ought to be merely another weapon in its political arsenal. Conservatives see the judiciary as Alexander Hamilton characterized it in Federalist No. 78: as the “least dangerous” branch, capable of “neither force nor will, but merely judgment,” an institution whose legitimacy rests on its unwillingness to “exercise WILL instead of JUDGMENT.” Liberals see the court as a super-legislature, designed to act as moral arbiters on behalf of progressive values. That’s why former President Barack Obama stated that judges ought to be selected for the quality of “empathy, of understanding and identifying with people’s hopes and struggles, as an essential ingredient for arriving at just decisions and outcomes.” Critical legal theorists have suggested that conservatives are fibbing—that their view of the judiciary as relegated to judgment alone is merely cover for the reinforcement of their political priorities. But the data suggest otherwise. During the 2019 Supreme Court term, for example, out of some 67 decisions, the four justices appointed by Democrats voted together 51 times; Republican appointees only voted together 37 times. As Ilya Shapiro of the Cato Institute has pointed out, “It’s the [Ruth Bader] Ginsburg Four that represent a bloc geared toward progressive policy outcomes.” Republican appointees, in other words, are politically heterodox significantly more often than Democratic appointees. That’s because, on a fundamental level, they take their job—and the constitutional separation of powers—seriously. Democrats do not. That’s why they see as the glories of the Supreme Court those moments in which the Supreme Court seized power on behalf of progressive ideals. Roe v. Wade has become holy writ on the political left, specifically because it robbed the American people of their right to vote on the issue of abortion. Democrats see nothing but glory in Supreme Court justices seizing authority to protect abortion on behalf of defining “one’s own concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life” (Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 1992). They see nothing but wonder in Supreme Court justices declaring that the judiciary has been delegated enforcement of “a charter protecting the right of all persons to enjoy liberty as we learn its meaning” (Obergefell v. Hodges, 2015). They see nothing but cause for celebration in the Supreme Court cramming down on the American people their own sense of our “evolving standards of decency” (Trop v. Dulles, 1958) or the importance of never-before-defined “emanations” and “penumbras” (Griswold v. Connecticut, 1965). They want the court to act as an oligarchy. And they are angry that Barrett’s nomination has moved the court away from that progressive, oligarchic rule. That’s why they’re threatening to pack the court—because they wish to restore that oligarchy to power. And that’s just another reason why, for all the talk about President Donald Trump’s threats to core American institutions, he can’t hold a candle to even mainstream Democratic willingness to trash checks and balances on behalf of power. Tags: Ben Shapiro, Why Liberals, Hate Amy Coney BarrettTo 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
Friday, October 16, 2020
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Good morning, NBC News readers.
Dueling town halls, a new coronavirus-scarred advocate for face masks and a happy lemur.
Here’s what we’re watching this Friday morning.
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Trump and Biden clash on separate screens
The town hall meetings President Donald Trump and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden participated in Thursday night were markedly different in style and tone.
On NBC, Trump combatively sparred with the moderator, “TODAY” show anchor Savannah Guthrie, on everything from his own health and finances to Covid-19, conspiracy theories and retweets.
On ABC Biden engaged in a more sedate, policy-heavy discussion with anchor George Stephanopoulos on topics ranging from the Supreme Court and the 1994 crime bill to transgender rights.
Here are a few key takeaways:
- Trump couldn’t confirm whether he had tested negative for the coronavirus before the first presidential debate. “Possibly I did, possibly I didn’t,” he said, adding that he thought he was likely to have tested negative either that day or the day before.
- In a testy exchange with Guthrie, Trump denounced white supremacy, but refused to condemn the QAnon conspiracy movement. “I just don’t know about QAnon,” said Trump. Guthrie retorted, “You do know.” He went on to say, “What I do hear about it is they are very strongly against pedophilia. And I agree with that.”
- On ABC, Biden said parts of the 1994 crime bill that he helped write were “bad” and that it was a mistake to support the measure which has been linked to the rise of mass incarceration with a disproportionate impact on Black Americans.
- Biden remained non-committal on whether or not Democrats would move to add more seats to the Supreme Court if he wins the election. He said that he’s still “not a fan” of “court packing” because it could lead to a tit-for-tat escalation.
- NBC News fact-checked both Trump and Biden town hall events. Find out which claims were true and which were whoppers.
- Watch the full NBC News town hall.
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Feds examining whether alleged Hunter Biden emails are linked to a foreign intel operation
Federal investigators are examining whether the emails allegedly describing activities by Joe Biden and his son Hunter and found on a laptop at a Delaware repair shop are linked to a foreign intelligence operation, two people familiar with the matter told NBC News.
The New York Post, a conservative tabloid, has published a series of stories based on emails the newspaper said it obtained from President Donald Trump’s attorney, Rudy Giuliani.
The first story highlighted what it called a “smoking gun email” that suggested a meeting between Vice President Biden and a representative of a Ukrainian company that once paid Hunter Biden. The Biden campaign says there is no evidence the meeting happened, and the story was greeted with widespread skepticism.
“We have no idea where this came from, and certainly cannot credit anything that Rudy Giuliani provided to the New York Post,” George Mesires, attorney for Hunter Biden, said in a statement. (Photo: Nick Wass / AP file)
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Covid-19: A new rare complication and a new advocate for masks
A rare Covid-19 complication was reported in children this spring.
Kids were developing dangerous inflammation around the heart and other organs, often weeks after their initial infections with the virus that causes Covid-19.
Now, it’s showing up in adults.
“It may be rare, but we don’t know. It might be more common than we think,” said one expert.
Meantime, Trump has repeatedly questioned the efficacy of masks in protecting individuals against catching Covid-19 by incorrectly citing a recent report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (He did so again last night during the town hall).
The CDC has tried to set the record straight, tweeting on Wednesday that “the interpretation that more mask-wearers are getting infected compared to non-mask wearers is incorrect.”
Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Trump ally on Thursday urged Americans to wear masks to fight the coronavirus, which put him in intensive care for seven days.
“No one should be happy to get the virus and no one should be cavalier about being infected or infecting others,” Christie said in a statement. “It is something to take very seriously. The ramifications are wildly random and potentially deadly.”
He added that “as a former public official, I believe we have not treated Americans as adults, who understand truth, sacrifice and responsibility.”
Change of heart: After his stint in the ICU for coronavirus, Christie is urging people to “follow CDC guidelines in public no matter where you are and wear a mask to protect yourself and others.”
(Photo: Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images file)
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Plus
- C-SPAN suspended host Steve Scully after he admitted that he falsely claimed his Twitter account was hacked last week.
- Democrats hint at consequences as the GOP moves to vote to confirm Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court.
- Mexico’s former defense secretary was arrested in Los Angeles on a Drug Enforcement Administration warrant.
- A painting looted by Nazis in 1933 was returned to the Jewish family that owned it on Thursday after 87 years.
- Six Hall of Famers who died in 2020 weren’t just ballplayers. They were part of the “public imagination.”
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THINK about it
Ultra-Orthodox Jews are flouting Covid-19 rules. It’s not anti-Semitic to call them out, editor emeritus of the Jewish Daily Forward JJ Goldberg writes in an opinion piece.
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Live BETTER
Time to get that delicious smell of fall into your kitchen:
7 easy apple crisp recipes to make this fall and forever.
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Quote of the day
“I don’t get that. You’re the President. You’re not like someone’s crazy uncle who can just retweet whatever.”
— NBC News’ Savannah Guthrie reacting to President Trump’s defense of retweeting to his 87 million followers a conspiracy theory about Biden and former President Barack Obama related to the killing of Osama bin Laden.
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One fun thing
Phew, Maki, the 21-year-old ring-tailed lemur stolen from the San Francisco Zoo earlier this week, is safe and sound.
The animal was spotted by a woman in Daly City, south of San Francisco, in a church playground around 5 p.m. on Thursday. It was captured and returned to the zoo, San Francisco police said in a statement.
The lemur, one of the oldest at the zoo, was discovered missing Wednesday morning after a report of a burglary, police said.
No arrests have been made in the case, which is an “open and active” investigation, San Francisco police said.
“We are grateful Maki is home safely!” Daly City Police tweeted. (Photo: San Francisco Zoo)
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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: Here’s why Biden’s 2020 lead is different than Clinton’s in 2016
Joe Biden leads President Trump by 11 points in the latest national NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll.
So did Hillary Clinton at this exact same time four years ago (after “Access Hollywood” but before the Oct. 28 Comey letter).
Photo By Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call
But here’s what’s different from 2016:
Biden has a net-positive fav/unfav rating in our latest poll (43 percent/42 percent), while Clinton didn’t in the Oct. 2016 NBC News/WSJ poll (40 percent/50 percent).
Biden has been at 50 percent or higher on the ballot in five-straight NBC News/WSJ polls, while Clinton only got to 50 percent or higher twice in two-way matchups during the general election (and both times were right after “Access Hollywood”).
Biden’s lead since January has consistently been between 6 and 11 points (with the exception being his 14-point lead right after the first debate), while Clinton’s lead over Trump ranged between 3 and 11 points.
Biden has consistently led among seniors, while Clinton never did, as the Cook Political Report’s Dave Wasserman points out.
And while there was a sizable third-party vote in 2016 (Gary Johnson was at 7 percent in our Oct. 2016 NBC News/WSJ poll, Jill Stein was at 2 percent), our present poll isn’t even measuring the third-party vote in 2020 – because it’s guaranteed to be smaller in 2020.
Add them all up — Biden’s positive fav/unfav rating, his consistently larger and more durable lead, his advantage with seniors, and the lack of a real third-party vote — and you see that not all 11-point leads are created equally. (And this analysis doesn’t include all of the post-2016 changes we made to our poll.)
After what happened four years ago, it’s become easy for many to dismiss the polls (even though the final national polls were more right than wrong; Clinton won the popular vote, after all).
But our October 2020 poll is vastly different than the one from 2016, even if the ballot margin is the same.
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Two very different town halls
Speaking of differences, last night’s dueling Trump and Biden town halls couldn’t have provided a clearer contrast.
“On NBC, Trump was pushed to address questions he’s avoided, pressed about his health and finances, in sometimes testy fashion. On ABC, Biden delivered lengthy detailed responses in a policy-heavy discussion, continuing to dodge questions about ‘packing’ the Supreme Court and regretting his support of the 1994 crime bill,” per NBC News.
The New York Times adds: “President Trump spoke positively about an extremist conspiracy-theory group, expressed skepticism about mask-wearing, rebuked his own F.B.I. director and attacked the legitimacy of the 2020 election … as his Democratic opponent, Joseph R. Biden Jr., pushed a deliberate message anchored in concerns over public health and promises to restore political norms.”
And be sure to read the other town hall takeaways from NBC’s Sahil Kapur and Alex Seitz-Wald.
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What you see is what you get
At the end of last night’s NBC town hall, Savannah Guthrie asked Trump this question: How might you improve in a second term?
The president’s answer: “Because I’ve done a great job. We had the strongest economy in the world, we’d closed it up, we are coming around the corner, the vaccines are coming out soon, and our economy is strong… And next year is going to be better than ever before.”
Translation: He’s made no mistakes, committed no errors and has nothing on which to improve.
Modern American presidents have admitted mistakes and made course corrections – think Bill Clinton after 1994, Barack Obama after 2010.
But Trump never has.
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DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
8,029,163: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 71,269 more than yesterday morning.)
218,921: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 905 more than yesterday morning.)
119.38 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: The money chase
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2020 VISION: Q Anew
President Trump often makes news on what he will not do, and last night’s NBC town hall was no different. During the first presidential debate, President Trump would not clearly denounce white supremacy – a few days later he denounced the group that he had told to “stand back and stand by” during the debate.
Last night, Trump refused to disavow QAnon – a conspiracy group that some Republicans like Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse call nuts. Last night, the president said he doesn’t “know anything about it” but that “they are very much against pedophilia.” He said he didn’t know if one of their core beliefs, that there is a satanic group being run by Democrats is true.
Here’s what NBC’s Ben Collins, who reports on QAnon, tweeted about the president’s answer: “Outside of a straight up endorsement, this is about as about as close to a dream scenario for QAnon followers as is humanly possible.”
On the campaign trail today: President Trump holds rallies in Ocala, Fla., and Macon, Ga…. Joe Biden stumps in Michigan… And Mike Pence is in North Carolina.
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Ad Watch from Ben Kamisar
Today’s Ad Watch takes a look under the hood of Preserve America PAC, one of the largest outside spenders in the presidential race and a group that has had the luxury of keeping its donors quiet until Thursday.
It turns out the super PAC, which spent $76 million in September on independent expenditures attacking former Vice President Joe Biden, was funded primarily by GOP megadonors/billionaires/casino magnates Sheldon and Miriam Adelson. The couple donated $75 million to the PAC, new campaign finance reports show. A few other GOP megadonors cut big checks, too, although at a much smaller magnitude—Diane Hendricks donated $1 million, Bernie Marcus donated $5 million and Warren Stephens donated $2 million.
Since Preserve America PAC launched so late in the game, Thursday’s filing deadline gave us the first glimpse at the money behind the new group. The massive infusion of cash has allowed Preserve America to become one of the biggest outside spenders in the entire presidential race, despite being active for less than two months.
Check out Politico for more on Adelson’s recent spending this cycle.
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THE LID: Q and A
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at what polling says about QAnon’s believers.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Here are five top takeaways from last night’s town halls.
And here’s our team’s fact check of last night’s claims.
Biden now says his position on expanding the Supreme Court depends on how Republicans handle the current nomination — so he may take a position before the election.
Those Hunter Biden emails? Federal investigators are probing whether they may be part of a foreign intelligence operation.
And the White House has been warned by intelligence officials that Russians may be using Rudy Giuliani to feed misinformation to Trump.
Here’s what Ben Sasse had to say about Trump on a call with constituents.
The Trump administration is rejecting California’s request for wildfire aid.
Gretchen Whitmer isn’t letting up the heat on Trump for his “appalling” response to a kidnapping plot against her.
CBS
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IJR
MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
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LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Ice Cube has been going hard against Donald Trump for most of Trump’s time in office. Especially over the past few months. He’s sounded a lot more like the Ice Cube coming straight outta Compton than … MORE
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GATEWAY PUNDIT
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FRONTPAGE MAG
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HOOVER INSTITUTE
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Yes, it’s important to take that time to read the actual wording. When you see an argument for a contemporary policy (all of which should be rooted in our constitution’s bonds) and think “of course the constitution is on my side here,” go back and re-read the actual thing and make sure you’re not remembering only what you want.
Would like it if the editors could elaborate re the Hunter story on your thinking: we’re told to take the allegations re the Hunter story with a grain of salt due to the faulty sourcing. Which specific elements? The entire story? Are you explicitly alleging that the allegations are untrue? Are you suggesting that the intended effect of those who may’ve sourced it – or the ill intentions of adversaries of ours – negate the information therein and/or is there evidence it was wholly manufactured?
I am a subscriber because I wanted a news source that is primarily conservative, but not instinctively Trump favorable. In today’s TMD, I am disappointed that the editors seem to be bending over backwards to slant the news, even clearly biased and damaging news, toward Biden.
The contrast in the way the two candidates were treated last night was stark. This barely got a passing mention. And explaining away Twitter and Facebook and their clear bias against the Trump campaign by saying, “Twitter reversed course”, so there is nothing more to see here, without focusing on their changing stories and explanations, along with their clear hypocrisy in allowing all kinds of rumor to fester when it’s anti-Trump, is weird.
I get that there is not a lot of respect for Trump at the Dispatch, but I would appreciate some equally vigorous examination and skepticism of the other side.
I am still a proud subscriber, And I learn a lot every day from the Dispatch.