Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday October 23, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
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THE RESURGENT
THE EPOCH TIMES
OCTOBER 23, 2020 READ IN BROWSER
Red Rock Secured—Help Election—Proof Your Retirement with a Home Delivery Gold IRA. Delivered right to your doorstep. You don’t have to worry anymore. Best newspaper I’ve ever subscribed to. Real journalism, honest people, authentic stories of health and well being. Tremendous folks run this operation, with eyes wide open about China’s desire to rule the world with it’s biometric totalitarian communist methods in bed with Google, Facebook, the Democrats, just look at Joe and Hunter’s deeds, tip of the iceberg. This is a newspaper like those that were the standard of journalism back in the day when people wanted truth. I applaud even their customer service. These truth loving individuals are committed. Subscriber of The Epoch Times Offer Ends Soon Cancel anytime “Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man’s character, give him power.” ABRAHAM LINCOLN The devil chose Marx as its envoy among men. His Communist Manifesto of 1848 advocated the violent destruction of private enterprise, social classes, nations, religions, and the family. Uncertainty is leading at the polls as our political discourse has become a partisan charade that threatens to send economic growth into a historic tailspin…In 2020, the question is – what will the IRA’s, 401(k)’s, savings, pensions, and retirement plans look when the dust settles? Retirement accounts, savings accounts, and financial portfolios are at the mercy of ever-growing global turmoil and dramatic political change. The good news: Gold dramatically outperforms other safe havens in 2020 and has officially become, “the currency of last resort.” Help Election-Proof Your Retirement with a Home Delivery Gold IRA. Worldwide, Attitudes Toward China Harden If China were a stock, the people of the world are not buying it. A recent survey of fourteen developed countries by the Pew Research Center shows unfavorable views of China …Read more Busting Trusts or Trusting Busts? In the news this week, the Department of Justice filed an antitrust lawsuit against Google. This action is good news to many conservatives, though …Read more Is China’s Corporate Debt Bubble Finally Popping? By (August 8, 2016) One year after the mini-devaluation of the Chinese currency, China is getting desperate about its corporate debt situation and has given directions to make loans evergreen. According … In this ATL Extra episode, we sit down with Robert Henneke, General Counsel at the Texas Public Policy Foundation and a lead attorney representing parties challenging the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare. 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. |
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AXIOS
Axios AM
☕ Happy Friday! Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,181 words … 4½ minutes.
- 💻 Today at 3:30 p.m. ET, join Margaret Talev, Stef Kight and me for an Axios virtual event with Gen. H.R. McMaster, Voto Latino CEO and president María Teresa Kumar and Rep. Karen Bass (D-Calif.). Register here.
Joe Biden twice referred to President Trump as “this guy,” and Trump called the former vice president’s family “like a vacuum cleaner” for foreign money.
- “Oh, God,” Biden said during an exchange on race.
- Why it matters: The personal venom — during the final presidential debate, in Nashville last night — was a reminder that even during a more normal debate, nothing this year is normal.
Foreshadowing the crises he’d face if elected, Biden said America is “about to go into a dark winter” because of the coronavirus:
- “220,000 Americans dead. If you hear nothing else I say tonight, hear this: … Anyone who’s responsible for that many deaths should not remain as president of the United States of America.”
- Trump responded that he expects a vaccine “within a matter of weeks”: “I don’t think we’re going to have a dark winter, at all. … We have to open our country.”
An exchange that captures the two in a nutshell:
- Biden: “It’s not about his family and my family. It’s about your family. And your family’s hurting badly. … [Middle-class families are] sitting at the kitchen table this morning deciding: ‘Well, we can’t get new tires — they’re bald — because we have to wait another month or so.'”
- Trump: “That’s a typical political statement. Let’s get off this China thing, and then he looks [in mocking tone]: ‘The family around the table,’ everything. Just a typical politician when I see that. I’m not a typical politician. That’s why I got elected.”
Go deeper: Our “Axios AM Thought Bubble” on the debate hit your inbox just after 11 p.m. ET.
- Videos on COVID, foreign cash, socialism and immigration.
- Read a transcript.
🎧 Hear our debate postgame on the “Axios Today” podcast with host Niala Boodhoo.
Photo: Jim Bourg via AP
The most notable part of last night’s debate on climate change was the fact it was included as a topic and assumed as a fact, Axios’ Amy Harder writes.
- Why it matters: This is the first time in U.S. history that climate change was a featured issue at a presidential debate. It signals how the problem has become part of the fabric of our society. More extreme weather, like the wildfires ravaging Colorado, is pushing the topic to the front-burner.
Moderator Kristen Welker of NBC News asked how the candidates would create jobs while also tackling climate change and how to combat environmental justice.
- That’s the concept that communities of color often live closest to polluting facilities — a dilemma receiving renewed attention as the nation focuses more on systemic racism.
What we’re watching … Expect this exchange to come back again during the campaign’s final 11 days:
- Trump: “Would you close down the oil industry?”
- Biden: “By the way, I would transition from the oil industry, yes.”
- Trump: “Ohhhhh, that’s a big statement.”
- Biden: “I will transition. It is a big statement. … Because the oil industry pollutes, significantly. … [I]t has to be replaced by renewable energy over time.”
- Trump: “Will you remember that, Texas? Will you remember that, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Ohio?”
- Biden: “He takes everything out of context.”
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Georgia hasn’t backed a Democrat for president since 1992. But the state’s changing demographics may prove pivotal this year — not only to Trump vs. Biden, but also to whether Democrats take control of the Senate, Axios’ Margaret Talev and Alexi McCammond report.
- Why it matters: If the fate of the Senate does hinge on Georgia, it might be January before we know the outcome.
Here’s why it could come down to Georgia:
- Not just one, but both of Georgia’s Senate seats are on the ballot this year because of the special election to fill Johnny Isakson’s seat.
- Polling shows they’re crowded or close races with no clear winner.
- Georgia law sends general-election races to a Jan. 5 runoff if no one hits 50%+ — and, right now, no candidate is reaching 50% in the polling. So if control of the Senate isn’t clear by then, we’ll have to wait for the Georgia runoffs.
A new AI model is able to predict future onset of Alzheimer’s disease around seven years in advance of diagnosis using short speech tests, Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes from a new study in The Lancet’s EClinicalMedicine.
- Why it matters: There’s still no treatment for Alzheimer’s. So there could be limited real-world demand by patients for such a tool today. But it could also be valuable for recruiting patients for clinical trials for potential treatments.
The model, developed by IBM Research and Pfizer, analyzed speech samples provided by the Framingham Heart Study, a long-term study that has been tracking thousands of people since 1948.
A running week-to-week tally of office space occupancy rates has found that New York City’s rate keeps edging up, although the top rates are in Houston, Austin, Dallas, L.A. and Philly, Jennifer A. Kingson writes in Axios Cities.
Kastle Systems, which runs electronic card-swipe entry systems for about 3,600 buildings and 41,000 businesses (and has more than 1.3 million cardholders), has run the “Kastle Return-to-Work Barometer” since the virus started hitting hard, tracking office occupancy rates in 10 big cities every week.
- Cities range from a low of 14% in San Francisco to a high of more than 40% in Dallas, Mark Ein, chairman of Kastle Systems, told Axios.
- The 10-city average continues to rise, and is now at 27%.
Sign up for the weekly Axios Cities.
The New York Times Magazine’s Michael Steinberger talks with Alex Karp, CEO of Palantir, the tech giant that helps government and law enforcement decipher vast amounts of data, with customers paying $10 million to $100 million annually:
Palantir merged around two billion data elements related to the COVID-19 outbreak in less than three weeks. Once the data has been integrated, it can be presented in the form of tables, graphs, timelines, heat maps, artificial-intelligence models, histograms, spider diagrams and geospatial analysis.
It is a digital panopticon, and having sat through several Palantir demos, I can report that the interface is impressive — the search results are strikingly elegant and easy to understand.
Keep reading (subscription).
- 🎬 See my “Axios on HBO” interview with Karp.
Investors around the world prefer Joe Biden, according to a UBS survey of nearly 3,000 investment professionals in 14 global markets, Dion Rabouin writes in Axios Markets.
- 72% of investors said they plan to adjust their portfolios ahead of the election.
Macy’s said Santa Claus won’t be greeting kids at its flagship New York store this year due to the coronavirus, interrupting a holiday tradition started nearly 160 years ago, AP reports.
- Before taking a picture with the jolly old man, crowds walk in tight quarters through a maze-like Santaland that’s filled with Christmas trees, running toy trains and elves in green costumes.
- Santa also won’t be showing up at its Chicago and San Francisco stores, which have similar Santalands.
The Macy’s decision differs from big mall owners, which will still go ahead with in-person Santa visits by banning kids from sitting on his lap and making sure they stay six feet away from him.
📱 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 TIMES
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THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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Copyright © 2020 MEDIADC, All rights reserved.Washington Examiner | A MediaDC Publication 1152 15th Street NW Suite 200 | Washington, DC 20005 |
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Oct 23, 2020 View in Browser AP MORNING WIRE Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
TAMER FAKAHANY
The Rundown AP PHOTO/JEFF CHIU Trump, Biden battle over virus, climate and race in less chaotic debate; Analysis: Debate is brief interlude of normalcy in 2020 race
A bonafide U.S. presidential debate broke out in Nashville last night as President Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden battled over how to tame the raging coronavirus in the 2020 election’s final face-off.
Trump declared that the virus, which killed more than 1,000 Americans on Thursday alone, and more than 223,000 so far, will “go away.”
Biden countered that the nation was heading toward “a dark winter.” “Anyone who is responsible for that many deaths should not remain as president of the United States of America,” Biden said.
They largely shelved the rancor that overshadowed their previous debate in favor of a more substantive exchange that highlighted their vastly different approaches to solving the major domestic and foreign policy challenges engulfing the nation, report Jonathan Lemire, Michelle L. Price, Darlene Superville and Will Weissert.
With less than two weeks until the election, Trump sought to portray himself as the same outsider he first pitched to voters four years ago, arguing anew that he wasn’t a politician.
Biden, meanwhile, argued that Trump was an incompetent leader of a country facing multiple crises, including the pandemic, widespread job losses and racial injustice, and tried to connect what he saw as the president’s failures to the everyday lives of Americans.
Key Takeaways: Round 2 highlights policy over petulance.
VIDEO: Trump, Biden spar over virus, race in last debate.
Analysis: It was a brief interlude of normalcy in an otherwise highly abnormal year, and a reprieve for voters turned off by their noxious first faceoff, AP Washington Bureau Chief, Julie Pace writes. The candidates spent 90 minutes tussling over their approach to the pandemic, the future of the nation’s health insurance system and who is best positioned to de-escalate nuclear tensions with North Korea. There were heated clashes, but far fewer interruptions and crosstalk than in the opening debate. The debate commission mandated a mute button for the candidates’ opening answers to each topic, helping the moderator enforce some decorum.
Scene: Final debate marked by clashes but less chaos.
NBC’s Kristen Welker sharp in first turn as debate moderator.
China’s Hopes: Beijing hopes Washington will tone down conflicts over trade, technology and security if Biden wins the election. But any shift is likely to be limited as frustration with Beijing grows across the American political spectrum. Trump’s Republicans and Biden’s Democrats agree on criticism of China’s trade record and stance toward Hong Kong, Taiwan and religious and ethnic minorities in Tibet and Xinjiang, where the ruling Communist Party has detained Muslims in political re-education camps. Joe McDonald reports from Beijing.
In the meantime, Chinese leader Xi Jinping has condemned what he called unilateralism, protectionism and extreme egoism in a jab at the U.S. made during a rally to mark the 70th anniversary of China’s entry into the 1950-53 Korean War.
U.S. relations with North Korea featured briefly in the presidential debate, with Trump claiming the Obama administration left him a “mess” to deal with in terms of tempering relations with Pyongyang and that he had warded off a war. Biden said Trump had “legitimized” a “thug” by meeting and forging a relationship with Kim Jong Un. North Korea didn’t immediately react to the presidential debate.
Election Security: Russian hackers have targeted the networks of dozens of state and local governments in the U.S. in recent days, and have stolen data from at least two servers. The alert describes an onslaught of recent activity from Russian state-sponsored hacking groups against state and local networks, some of which were successfully compromised. The advisory from the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security’s cybersecurity agency functions as a reminder of Russia’s potent capabilities even as U.S. officials warn about Iranian interference. Eric Tucker reports. AP PHOTO/MORRY GASH AP FACT CHECK: Falsehoods and fumbles in final presidential debate
The facts took a pummeling from the outset last night.
With the last presidential debate between Trump and Biden now history, what to make of their statements?
An AP Fact Check looked at the night’s rhetoric. Calvin Woodward, Hope Yen and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar pored over various claims from the debate forensically.
They found that Trump misrepresented the reality of the pandemic in myriad and familiar ways. He insisted against obvious reality that the pandemic is drawing to a close. And he claimed falsely that public health authorities expected over 2 million people to die from the virus in the U.S.
Biden was selective at times in his account of the pandemic and more. He asserted that no one with private health insurance lost their coverage under Obamacare. Actually, several million people did. AP PHOTO/MARTIN MEISSNER Europe faces more curfews, lockdowns as virus cases swell; US regulators approve first COVID-19 drug: antiviral remdesivir
Curfews have been vastly expanded in France, which has added 41,600 new coronavirus infections in one day, and similar nighttime crackdowns loom in Italy, including for Rome, Naples and Milan. In Greece, Athens was adopting a similar restriction as Europe struggles with exponentially rising caseloads.
Italy was Europe’s first country to impose national lockdown in March. So far Italy’s government, wary of crippling the country’s long-lame economy, hasn’t done so again — even as new confirmed infections hit a record of more than 16,000. Francis D’Emilio reports from Rome.
The Czech Republic’s government re-imposed the same heavy restrictions it slapped on citizens in the spring.
The U.K. Treasury has announced increased help for bars, pubs and restaurants that have seen business collapse because of virus controls, saying that even businesses that remain open face profound economic uncertainty, Danica Kirka reports from London.
Drug Approval: U.S. regulators have approved the first drug to treat COVID-19. Remdesivir is an antiviral medicine given through an IV. Its maker, Gilead Sciences Inc., said that the drug is approved for people at least 12 years old who need hospitalization for their coronavirus infection. The company is calling it Veklury. A large U.S. study found it cut the time to recovery by five days — from 15 days to 10 on average, Marilynn Marchione reports.
POPE FALLOUT
A Mexican TV broadcaster has confirmed that Pope Francis’ bombshell comments endorsing same-sex civil unions were first made during a May 2019 interview that was never broadcast in its entirety.
Televisa said the emphasis of its interview was on clergy sexual abuse. In a statement to the AP, it suggested it didn’t consider the comments on civil unions as newsworthy because Francis had previously indicated support for them, report Nicole Winfield and Maria Verza.
But a source in Mexico familiar with the interview says the Vatican footage provided to Televisa from the session did not include the quote on civil unions in question. The Vatican did not respond to requests for comment. The Vatican allowed the comments to be aired now in the documentary “Francesco,” which premiered Wednesday.
In the movie, Francis said gay people have the right to be in a family since they are “children of God.” Those comments have caused a global firestorm.
World Reaction: Across the globe, the pontiff’s comments were received by some as encouragement for an advancing struggle and condemned by others as an earth-shaking departure from church doctrine. In the Philippines, officials see the potential for political change. In Zimbabwe, activists applaud the move, but doubt it will quickly bring change in the country, where discrimination against the LGBT community is widespread.
Nowhere was reaction more divided than in Latin America, where the Roman Catholic Church remains influential — and where some countries have legalized same-sex marriage in recent years over objections of the church, report Maria Verza and Christopher Sherman from Mexico City. Other Top Stories A Minnesota judge has dismissed a third-degree murder charge against the former Minneapolis police officer who knelt on George Floyd’s neck, but a second-degree murder charge against Derek Chauvin remains. Chauvin now faces two counts going forward: second-degree murder and manslaughter. The judge denied defense requests to dismiss the aiding and abetting counts against three other former officers, Thomas Lane, J. Kueng and Tou Thao. Floyd, a Black man who was in handcuffs, died May 25 after Chauvin pressed his knee on Floyd’s neck as Floyd said he couldn’t breathe, sparking global protests. Heavy fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh is continuing, with Armenia and Azerbaijan trading blame for new attacks. The nearly four weeks of hostilities have raised the threat of Turkey and Russia being drawn into the conflict. Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry accused Armenia of firing several ballistic missiles from its territory at the Azerbaijani cities of Gabala, Siyazan and Kurdamir which are located far from the area of fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh. It said there were no casualties. The Armenian military rejected the claim as a “cynical lie.” Iraq’s government is struggling to pay the salaries of its public sector employees, its coffers drained because of this year’s plunge in oil prices. Delays in pay have thrown the lives of hundreds of thousands of civil servants into turmoil, and the crisis is raising fears of instability ahead of mass demonstrations later this week. The government has ambitions of cutting back the massive public payroll, which soaks up nearly three-quarters of all state expenditures. But it needs the backing of political factions who depend on patronage to entrench their power. Four centuries after white Europeans stepped off the Mayflower and onto America’s shores, some descendants of the colonists are wrestling with the complicated legacy of their ancestors amid a global racial reckoning. There is pride among those who can trace their families back to those who boarded the ship in Plymouth, England, in 1620 to flee religious persecution. Yet for some, the devastating impact that the Pilgrims’ landing in New England had on Native Americans weighs heavily. Indigenous people endured racism, oppression and new diseases brought by the European settlers. GET THE APP
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CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Lynn Sweet: Biden makes no mistakes while dueling with subdued Trump
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PRO TRUMP NEWS
THE HILL
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ROLL CALL
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Morning Headlines
Warnings from the director of national intelligence that Iran and Russia were spreading disinformation intended to harm President Donald Trump immediately drew skeptical reactions from Democratic lawmakers, some of whom had been briefed in private about the interference. Read More…
House Democrats looking to defend and grow their majority are launching new efforts to engage Asian American and Pacific Islander voters, believing they could make the difference in a number of hotly contested House districts in California, Texas and Georgia. Read More…
Senate Judiciary authorizes subpoenas for Facebook, Twitter chiefs
Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee continued Thursday to push for a hearing with the chief executives of Facebook and Twitter before the Nov. 3 presidential election, authorizing subpoenas to both companies for testimony related to their handling of the New York Post’s Hunter Biden story. Read More…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Timeline for coronavirus relief package vote slips despite progress in talks
Speaker Nancy Pelosi raised doubts Thursday about getting a coronavirus aid bill passed before the Nov. 3 elections, even if a bipartisan deal is reached in the coming days, saying it would take time to get a comprehensive bill written and reviewed before a floor vote could be scheduled. Read More…
Listen: Brent Roske, ‘Iowa’s political bartender,’ talks Hawkeye State races
With several competitive races in the Iowa this year, Brent Roske of “Roske on Politics” is doing what he does best: getting politicians to open up in the public sphere. He talks to CQ Roll Call deputy editor Jason Dick on this week’s episode of Political Theater. Listen here…
Photo of the day: Smile, you’re on Cornyn camera
Texas Sen. John Cornyn takes a cell phone video Thursday of the Democratic senators’ empty seats on the Judiciary Committee. Democrats boycotted the panel’s vote on the Supreme Court nomination of Amy Coney Barrett. Read More…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2020 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
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POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Lowering the bar
DRIVING THE DAY
OK, THAT WAS NORMAL. Right? That made sense. That felt somewhat right. We learned things. There was not much shouting. We didn’t go to bed gnashing our teeth, or smashing our fists into walls.
THE FINAL TILT between JOE BIDEN and President DONALD TRUMP was refreshingly standard — and that was good. The two men were forced to talk in turn, and the moderator, KRISTEN WELKER, did a bang-up job on the largest stage of any political journalist’s career. And, for that, she got well-deserved plaudits.
OF COURSE, the bar for BIDEN and TRUMP was low. It might have been skimming the floor.
FOR TRUMP, that meant not acting completely and embarrassingly out of control, interrupting at every turn and disrespecting the debate rules. He reminded us that he was not a typical politician — but at times, he almost looked like one, which was OK for the moment, because we know he isn’t and don’t need to be reminded with a bullhorn every three seconds, as we have been for five years. Sometimes people want to hear information, not static. For Phish fans, sometimes “Fast Enough for You” is good, and for Dead Heads, when “Space” turns into “Stella Blue,” it’s occasionally centering.
NYT’S MATT FLEGENHEIMER and MAGGIE HABERMAN put it this way: “Before the president’s last, best chance to change the trajectory of his re-election bid, his mandate on Thursday evening was at once clear and complicated: Be less like Donald J. Trump. It can be said that he tried, by his standard.”
FOR BIDEN, that meant delivering cogent arguments, tripping up only once (saying he wants to get rid of the oil industry, rather than just cutting subsidies) and not getting sucked into TRUMP’S vortex.
THEY ABLY CONTRASTED their general governing and substantive theories. This is what we wanted here. Right?
MORE THAN 45 MILLION AMERICANS have already voted — so, for them, watching the Giants-Eagles game may have been a better use of time.
THE BIG QUESTION … DAVID SIDERS: “Trump comes out strong. But is it too late?”
HOW IT PLAYED … NATIONAL FRONTS … NYT, two columns, with photos by the great ERIN SCHAFF: “TRUMP AND BIDEN DIVERGE SHARPLY IN VISIONS FOR U.S.” … WAPO: “Contentious and broad final faceoff” … WSJ: “Debate Intensifies Race to Finish as Trump, Biden Clash”
JOHN HARRIS column: “This Was a Pretty Good Debate. Who Cares?”: “There was a rough consensus in the political class before Thursday night’s presidential debate about what both candidates and the moderator needed to do to avoid a disaster. Defying precedent, both candidates and the moderator did those things.
“The result: No disaster. No national embarrassment with a debate that hurtled off the rails. And likely no big alterations in a race that has stayed basically stable even through 2020’s twin traumas of pandemic and racial unrest and will finally end just eleven days from now.
“Instead, the final presidential debate seemed to carry a vague whiff of normal. Was that for real? Or have expectations corroded so comprehensively that anything that doesn’t reek as acridly abnormal now seems inoffensive, or even the slightest bit pleasant?”
RYAN LIZZA’S TAKE: “Hunter Biden wins the debate”
CONTOURS OF THE RACE REMAIN THE SAME … WAPO’S DAN BALZ: “Trump did what he came to do in Nashville, but Biden was ready for what came at him”: “With time running out and trailing in the polls, President Trump needed the strongest possible showing in his final debate against Joe Biden. But in the face of a series of attacks, the former vice president parried the president with a strong performance that is likely to leave the presidential campaign little changed from where it was at the start.” WaPo
WSJ EDITORIAL BOARD: “Mr. Trump was both better prepared and more disciplined than in the first debate, and if he loses on Nov. 3 he will wish he had done that the first time. He offered the best defense we’ve heard him make of his coronavirus effort, focusing on the vaccines in development, his mobilization of resources in the spring, and the need to balance protection of the vulnerable with reopening the country.”
DAY 95: Speaker NANCY PELOSI told her leadership team on a private conference call Thursday afternoon that Democratic lawmakers have been telling her they don’t want to vote on a Covid relief bill before the election unless Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL was going to put it on the floor of the Senate before Nov. 3. This is a new insight into what’s driving PELOSI in these final days.
— WAPO’S ERICA WERNER and JEFF STEIN catalogue angst about Washington’s Most Eager Man, Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN.
11 DAYS until ELECTION DAY.
Good Friday morning. ICYMI: The first edition of Transition Playbook is here.
WSJ VS. WSJ … WAPO’S @mattviser: “Hard to imagine as stark of a difference between the news side and opinion side of the Wall Street Journal than the two pieces that will run tomorrow on Hunter Biden’s venture in China. Read them in this order:”
— NEWS: “Hunter Biden’s Ex-Business Partner Alleges Father Knew About Venture,” by Andrew Duehren and James Areddy: “The venture—set up in 2017 after Mr. Biden left the vice presidency and before his presidential campaign—never received proposed funds from the Chinese company or completed any deals, according to people familiar with the matter. Corporate records reviewed by The Wall Street Journal show no role for Joe Biden.”
— OPINION: “The Biden ‘Family Legacy,’” by Kimberley Strassel: “[A] former business partner of Hunter Biden’s has come forward to provide the ugly details of the ‘family brand.’ Tony Bobulinski, a Navy veteran and institutional investor, has provided the Journal emails and text messages associated with his time as CEO of Sinohawk Holdings, a venture between the Bidens and CEFC China Energy, a Shanghai-based conglomerate. That correspondence corroborates and expands on emails recently published by the New York Post, which says they come from a Hunter laptop.”
IN MARK MEADOWS’ OLD CONGRESSIONAL SEAT … THE BULWARK: “Madison Cawthorn’s Racist Website: GOP wunderkind attacks opponent’s attempt to ‘ruin white males,’” by Tim Miller: “A new attack website put up by the Madison Cawthorn campaign includes an explicitly racist broadside against his opponent, Moe Davis (D-N.C.), for associating himself with people who want to ‘ruin white males.’
“For real. The website, MoeTaxes.com, takes aim at Davis over his purported association with a local journalist, Tom Fiedler. It says that Fiedler ‘quit his academia job in Boston to work for non-white males, like Cory Booker who aims to ruin white males.’”
— CAWTHORN previously took smiling selfies at Hitler’s bunker.
ON THE GROUND — “Trump Campaign Draws Rebuke for Surveilling Philadelphia Voters,” by NYT’s Danny Hakim and Nick Corasaniti in Philadelphia: “The Trump campaign has been videotaping Philadelphia voters while they deposit their ballots in drop boxes, leading Pennsylvania’s attorney general to warn this week that the campaign’s actions fall outside of permitted poll watching practices and could amount to illegal voter intimidation.
“The campaign made a formal complaint to city officials on Oct. 16, saying a campaign representative had surveilled voters depositing two or three ballots at drop boxes, instead of only their own. The campaign called the conduct ‘blatant violations of the Pennsylvania election code,’ according to a letter from a lawyer representing the Trump campaign that was reviewed by The New York Times. The campaign included photos of three voters who it claimed were dropping off multiple ballots.” NYT
— “‘Warning flare’: New swing-state data shows massive Democratic early-vote lead,” by Marc Caputo and Zach Montellaro: “Democrats have opened up a yawning gap in early voting over Republicans in six of the most crucial battleground states — but that only begins to tell the story of their advantage heading into Election Day.
“In a more worrisome sign for Republicans, Democrats are also turning out more low-frequency and newly registered voters than the GOP, according to internal data shared with POLITICO by Hawkfish, a new Democratic research firm, which was reviewed by Republicans and independent experts.
“The turnout data does not mean Donald Trump will lose to Joe Biden. Both sides are bracing for a close race and a giant wave of Republicans to vote in person on Nov. 3. Yet the turnout disparity with new and less-reliable voters has forced Republican political operatives to take notice. ‘It’s a warning flare,’ said veteran Republican strategist Scott Reed.” POLITICO
YOWZA … TRUMP’S LEAD in KANSAS in the new NYT/Siena poll is 7 points. He won Kansas by 20 in 2016. Democratic Senate candidate BARBARA BOLLIER is losing to Kansas GOP Rep. ROGER MARSHALL 46-42. The poll
GREEN WAVE — “Biden carries big cash advantage into final weeks of election,” by Zach Montellaro: “Former Vice President Joe Biden is carrying a cash advantage of more than $100 million over President Donald Trump into the final weeks of the election, according to newly filed campaign finance reports.
“Reports filed with the Federal Election Commission on Thursday revealed that Biden, the Democratic National Committee and two affiliated committees had $331.2 million in the bank as of Oct. 14, while Trump, the Republican National Committee and two of their fundraising affiliates had $223.6 million in reserve.”
TRUMP’S FRIDAY — The president will leave the White House at 1:30 p.m. en route to Ocala, Fla. He will travel to The Villages, Fla., and speak at a campaign rally at 4:30 p.m. Trump will leave at 6:10 p.m. and travel to Pensacola, Fla. He will arrive at Pensacola International Airport at 6:50 p.m. CDT and speak at a campaign rally. Afterward, he will travel to West Palm Beach. He will arrive at Mar-a-Lago at 11:30 p.m.
ON THE TRAIL … BIDEN will deliver remarks on Covid-19 and the economy in Wilmington, Del.
SEN. KAMALA HARRIS (D-Calif.) will travel to Atlanta. She will participate in virtual fundraisers in the afternoon. She will also participate in an early vote mobilization launch in the evening.
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week” with Bob Costa: Asma Khalid, Susan Page and Toluse Olorunnipa.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
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FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel. Panel: Jonathan Swan, Kimberley Strassel and Mo Elleithee. Power Player: Ice Cube.
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Gray TV
“Full Court Press with Greta Van Susteren”: Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.) … Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-La.).
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CBS
“Face the Nation”: Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine … Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms … Scott Gottlieb … new polling with Anthony Salvanto.
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ABC
“This Week” (Martha Raddatz co-anchoring from Philadelphia): Chris Christie and Rahm Emanuel … Jen Ashton and Tom Bossert. Panel: Rick Klein, Matt Dowd and Tamala Edwards.
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NBC
“Meet the Press”: Panel: Yamiche Alcindor, Mark Murray, Anna Palmer and Amy Walter.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION — “Trump issues sweeping order for tens of thousands of career federal employees to lose civil service protections,” by WaPo’s Lisa Rein and Eric Yoder: “President Trump this week fired his biggest broadside yet against the federal bureaucracy by issuing an executive order that would remove job security from an estimated tens of thousands of civil servants and dramatically remake the government.
“The directive, issued late Wednesday, strips long-held civil service protections from employees whose work involves policymaking, allowing them to be dismissed with little cause or recourse, much like the political appointees who come and go with each administration.
“Federal scientists, attorneys, regulators, public health experts and many others in senior roles would lose rights to due process and in some cases, union representation, at agencies across the government. The White House declined to say how many jobs would be swept into a class of employees with fewer civil service rights, but civil service experts and union leaders estimated anywhere from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands in a workforce of 2.1 million.” WaPo
DEEP DIVE — “Inside the campaign to ‘pizzagate’ Hunter Biden,” by NBC’s Ben Collins and Brandy Zadrozny
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RUSSIA WATCH — “Russia Poses Greater Election Threat Than Iran, Many U.S. Officials Say,” by NYT’s Julian Barnes, Nicole Perlroth and David Sanger: “While senior Trump administration officials said this week that Iran has been actively interfering in the presidential election, many intelligence officials said they remained far more concerned about Russia, which in recent days has hacked into state and local computer networks in breaches that could allow Moscow broader access to American voting infrastructure.
“The discovery of the hacks came as American intelligence agencies, infiltrating Russian networks themselves, have pieced together details of what they believe are Russia’s plans to interfere in the presidential race in its final days or immediately after the election on Nov. 3. Officials did not make clear what Russia planned to do, but they said its operations would be intended to help President Trump, potentially by exacerbating disputes around the results, especially if the race is too close to call.
“F.B.I. and Homeland Security officials also announced on Thursday that Russia’s state hackers had targeted dozens of state and local governments and aviation networks starting in September. They stole data from the computer servers of at least two unidentified targets and continued to crawl through some of the affected networks, the agencies said. Other officials said that the targets included some voting-related systems, and that they may have been collateral damage in the attacks.” NYT
PLAYBOOKERS
Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.
SPOTTED at a virtual cocktail reception hosted by the Meridian International Center on Thursday night to kick off the Meridian Summit on the Rise of Global Health Diplomacy, featuring violinist Joshua Bell and the American Pops Orchestra: Reps. Neal Dunn (R-Fla.) and Don Beyer (D-Va.) and Megan Beyer, Richard Jonas and Katherine Vernot-Jonas, John and Mary Walsh, Carlos Diaz-Rosillo, Patrick Steel and Lee Satterfield, Stuart and Gwen Holliday, Ann Stock, Robert and Marsha Jones, Randi Levine, Brad Knox, Michael Allen and Ken Staley.
WHITE HOUSE DEPARTURE LOUNGE — Pranay Udutha is leaving the White House, where he’s been Kellyanne Conway’s senior advisor since 2018. He will be joining ARPA-E at the Energy Department, focusing on venture capital partnerships and engagement. He’s also a Senate Finance and Bill Cassidy alum.
BIRTHWEEK (was Thursday): Sister Simone Campbell turned 75 (h/t Jeff Solnet)
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Caroline Kitchens, director of government affairs at the R Street Institute. A trend she thinks doesn’t get enough attention: “One positive thing to come out of the pandemic is that we’ve seen many U.S. states easing or temporarily suspending occupational licensing laws. This is a great way to remove barriers to employment and give people more opportunity, both in normal times and pandemic times. A lot of people don’t realize that medical professionals can’t work across state lines or that some states even require licenses for people that arrange flowers!” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Rep. Fred Keller (R-Pa.) is 55 … Martin Luther King III is 63 … former Sen. Mel Martinez (R-Fla.) is 74 … Joanna Miller of the White House is 24 … POLITICO’s Lauren Morello and Jackie Heinz … Brian Ross … The Hill’s Ellen Mitchell … Rick Robinson … Rachel Shabad of the Biden campaign … Ani Chkhikvadze … USAID’s Sally Rey Parkinson … Corey Wilson, VP and head of comms at Condé Nast … Anne Filipic, chief program officer at the Obama Foundation … Karen Hobert Flynn, president of Common Cause (h/t Stephen Spaulding) … Nicole Streeter, general counsel for the D.C. Council (h/ts Jon Haber) … Jason Neal … Hayden Haynes, COS for Rep. Mike Johnson (R-La.) … Malia Rulon Herman … Sandy Maisel, political scientist at Colby College, is 75 (h/t Robert Hoopes) … Simon Rosenberg, founder of New Democrat Network, is 57 … Carmela Isabella (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Vikrum Aiyer, VP of global public policy at Postmates (h/ts Tim Burger and Gary Stier) …
… Leif Noren, chair of CRC Public Relations … Benjamin Haddad … Allison Preiss, VP of comms at the Center for American Progress … Sarah Smith … Arielle Tait … Vanity Fair’s Caleb Ecarma … Emma Racila … NYT’s John Koblin … Herbert Simon is 86 … Thumbtack’s Kellyn Blossom … Jennifer Paolino Romano … Peter Benton-Sullivan, director of government relations at the Glover Park Group … Gerald Sorin is 8-0 … Sheena Tahilramani, principal at SVN PR … Carole Brand … Amazon’s Linda Thomas … James Kotecki … Kinsey Casey … Meghan Mitchum of Proxy … Rwandan President Paul Kagame is 63 … Matthew Barzun is 5-0 … Ken Feinberg is 75 … Conrad Lucas … Pat Cleary … The National Law Journal’s Ryan Barber … Darcy Spencer … Ken Kurson … Jacob Alperin-Sheriff … Jessica Hoy … Moe Vela … POLITICO Europe’s Saim Saeed … Jesus Martinez … Halli Casser-Jayne … Annika Lichtenbaum … UNHCR’s Matthew Reynolds … Bobby Burchfield
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AMERICAN MINUTE
CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Trump Overcomes Horrid, Biased Moderator to KO Biden in 2nd Debate
Trump Levels Grandpa Gropes
Happy Friday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. May the #TGIF be upon you.
Here we are kids, the final debate is behind us and it’s all up to Democrat voter fraud now.
Before we get to my ramblings about the debate you should give Tyler’s recap a read and check out VodkaPundit’s Drunkblog reactions as they happened in real time.
Let me be clear about something up front here: last night’s debate wasn’t even close. President Trump won this thing in a rout, even though you won’t be finding that out from any mainstream media outlets.
I would once again remind you all that I am the resident pessimist and curmudgeon here at PJ Media when it comes to this election and the president’s chances, so it’s not as if I am simply offering some MAGA fan boy stuff here. I thought Trump was awful in the first debate.
I also thought Biden was awful in the first debate too, just to clarify.
Trump had to overcome the same obstacle every Republican faces in these contests: a thoroughly biased moderator. Kristen Welker of NBC News is being lauded on social media and by her colleagues in the MSM for her performance. The nicest thing I can honestly say about her is that she was less awful than Chris Wallace.
Welker was continually interrupting the president. As the evening wore on, she became more shrill. Her voice took on that angry girlfriend tone that Savannah Guthrie used during the town hall event with President Trump last week.
When Biden spoke, however, Welker didn’t say a word.
Once again, the questions seemed as if they’d been faxed to Welker from the Democratic National Committee. Far too much time was spent on the coronavirus conversation. That, of course, is the Harris-Biden campaign’s only real play here, so of course someone from NBC News would make sure it got the most air time. Then she transitioned to kids at the border. Climate change. Blah, blah, Democrat, blah.
Precious little time was spent on Biden’s plans to gouge American taxpayers, his sleazebag son, or anything else that might really matter to any Americans who are still undecided. I was surprised Welker didn’t ask President Trump to apologize for Watergate.
Biden rattled off one unsubstantiated claim after another, including more Russia nonsense, never once being challenged by Welker, who was obviously there to babysit him. Here was one of my favorite descriptions of her performance:
It was plain to see that Biden had attempted to memorize a script. Just as in the first debate, he never directly answered a question. He’d launch into a talking point, then say, “This guy,” and begin a personal attack on the president that wasn’t germane to the question. By the end of the debate he was glitching a lot and having difficulty remembering the script. He also had difficulty articulating any of his own policies. He just kept telling people to look at his website to know what he thought.
Despite having to deal with Welker’s maddening bias all night, the president kept remarkably calm, employing a sotto voce approach and saving his crescendos for maximum effect.
Trump also went back to playing the Washington outsider, a tactic that helped him win in 2016. Even though he’s been there for four years now, it pales in comparison to Biden’s almost half century in D.C. Trump repeatedly pointed out that Biden never got anything done when he was there and that it’s kind of ridiculous to think anything is going to be different if he’s president.
President Trump made his case for re-election very well, while Biden slurred and said “This guy…” a lot. It would have been an even clearer victory for the president if every topic and question hadn’t been framed by Democrat friendlies.
The MSM is naturally carrying water for Biden. An NBC News panel of “experts” all graded the debate as close but gave the edge to Crazy Joe the Wonder Veep.
That’s laughable. It wasn’t close.
Don’t let the Enemy of the People discourage you.
I WANT MY HOVERCAR
PJM Linktank
Twitter Doesn’t Want People to Know The Detroit News Endorsed Republican John James for Senate
Epstein Madam Ghislaine Maxwell’s Deposition Revealed
Black Chicago-Area Teen Shot When the Driver of Car He Was Riding in Tried to Kill a Police Officer
Treacher: NPR: We’re Not Reporting on Hunter Biden ‘Cause We Don’t Wanna, So There
Let the packing begin. Biden Says He’ll Form a Commission to Study SCOTUS ‘Reform’
Not Even Barack Obama Can Draw a Crowd Like Donald Trump
Courts Give GOP Two Important Ballot Integrity Wins
Anti-Trump Lincoln Project Caught Spreading Iran Disinformation
Trump Ambassador Grenell Tried to Secretly Negotiate Venezuela Dictator Maduro’s Exit
VodkaPundit: The Unspeakable Corruption of Joe Biden
Key Source Will Turn Over Hunter Biden Docs to the FBI
Buy ammo. The Left: Biden Had Better Win or the Country Gets It! Weeks of Riots Threatened
Now We Know Why Trump Decided to Air the Leslie Stahl Interview Before ’60 Minutes’
VIP
The Kruiser Kabana Episode 75: Trump Jokes and the Death of Late-Night Comedy
What to Tell Your Fence-Sitting Friends About Trump’s Foreign Policy Successes
I Went To a Trump Rally in Pennsylvania and Here’s What I Saw
Flashback: Joe Biden Poisoned Our Judicial Nominations and Divided America for Decades
VIP Gold
Could The GOP Pick Up A Senate Seat In MN?
From the Mothership and Beyond
Macy’s: There Is No Santa Claus (At Company Stores) This Year
Voters Worry a Biden Administration Would Displace 59 Million Freelancers
‘Here are the Facts’: Bobulinski Brings Trove of Receipts on Biden Family Foreign Deals
CBS News Is Not Happy President Trump Pre-empted Their Hack Job by Releasing Interview Early
Twitter Suspends Trump Campaign Press Secretary Just Hours Before Presidential Debate
Watch: Rep. Elise Stefanik Schools Opponent on Court Packing
Nancy Pelosi Loses It When Asked About the Joe and Hunter Biden Scandal
Schumer Trashes ‘Awful Hearing’ with Feinstein At His Side…She Called the Process ‘One of the Best.’
A Vaccine From China? No Thanks
California BLM Leader: We Need To Be Armed
The Double Standard About Gun Ownership
Florida Man Allegedly Had Guns, Demons, And A Lot Of Crazy
Cannabis Dispensary Owner Opens Virtual Range In Denver
The Constitution Doesn’t Mean Whatever You Want It To
Federal judge: Colorado’s anti-coronavirus rules can’t single out churches
Chris Wallace Chimes in on Hunter Biden Scandal, And It’s as Silly as You’d Expect
‘Cause It’s California: Middle Schooler Threatened With Arrest Because He Missed Virtual Class
FINGERS CROSSED…Rasmussen Says Trump Just Hit the ‘Holy Grail’ of Reelection Numbers
God’s work…Meet the 24-year-old who’s tracking every broken McDonald’s ice-cream machine in the US
Murkowski: I Haven’t Changed My Mind On A Confirmation Before The Election
#EnemyOfThePeople update: Nicholas Kristof’s Rehash Of US Coronavirus Mistakes Is Pretty Misleading
Twitter Status Report: NY Post Still Locked Out. China’s Blue-Checked Propagandist Still Tweeting.
Is The “Revolution” In Thailand Over Already?
Fined restaurant owner who told PA Gov. Tom Wolf, “We ain’t paying crap” wins court showdown
Dem Rep from Georgia questions Trump claim about border ‘coyotes’ (and people have thoughts)
10 Places That Will Take You to Potato Paradise
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Is everyone else working on their post-election riots menus too?
___
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PJ Media Senior Columnist and Associate Editor Stephen Kruiser is the author of “Don’t Let the Hippies Shower” and “Straight Outta Feelings: Political Zen in the Age of Outrage,” both of which address serious subjects in a humorous way. Monday through Friday he edits PJ Media’s “Morning Briefing.” His columns appear twice a week.
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Goodness Gracious, a Useful Debate!
Plus: Will the Trumps bail out the Trump campaign’s financial woes?
The Dispatch Staff | 1 hr | 2 |
Happy Friday! We will miss you, presidential debate season. Only 31 months (give or take) until the first ones of the 2024 cycle!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The United States confirmed 74,040 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 6.5 percent of the 1,139,419 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,010 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 223,000. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 41,010 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19.
- All 12 Republican members of the Senate Judiciary Committee voted on Thursday to advance Judge Amy Coney Barrett’s nomination to the Supreme Court; all 10 Democrats on the committee boycotted the vote in protest. The 12-0 vote sets the stage for a full Senate confirmation next week.
- Initial unemployment claims fell by 55,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 787,000, the Labor Department reported Thursday. Slightly more than 23 million people claimed some form of unemployment benefits during the week ending October 3.
- According to Amnesty International, at least 56 people have died in Nigeria over the past two weeks amid protests related to police brutality.
- In a “60 Minutes” interview set to air Sunday, Joe Biden said he plans to create a “bipartisan commission of scholars” to provide him “recommendations as to how to reform the court system because it’s getting out of whack.” Demand Justice, a liberal group looking to make the judiciary more progressive, called Biden’s proposal a “punt” and said it “runs the risk of stalling momentum for serious reform.”
- Following up on the New York Post’s story about Hunter Biden’s ex-business partner Tony Bobulinski and a 2017 planned Chinese energy venture, the Wall Street Journal reports that Joe Biden himself had no role in the endeavor. “The venture—set up in 2017 after Mr. Biden left the vice presidency and before his presidential campaign—never received proposed funds from the Chinese company or completed any deals, according to people familiar with the matter. Corporate records reviewed by The Wall Street Journal show no role for Joe Biden.”
- The antiviral drug remdesivir became the first therapeutic to receive full FDA approval for treating COVID-19 on Thursday. The antiviral had been authorized for use on an emergency basis since the spring.
- Walmart preemptively sued the federal government on Thursday, in expectation of a legal challenge from the Justice Department alleging that the retail giant’s pharmacists have a track record for filling suspicious opioid prescriptions.
An Actual Debate!
Several weeks ago, only the fiercest of Trump loyalists were able to walk away from the first general election debate and say with a straight face that the president came out on top. That was not the case last night.
It wasn’t a blowout by any means, and reasonable people can—and will—disagree about who “won,” but the president turned in a much stronger performance the second time around. Still, Joe Biden is nursing a 10-point lead in national polls with just 11 days of voting left. His campaign will treat anything even remotely resembling a draw as a job well done. Let’s break down a few of the developments that might actually matter.
- Hunter’s emails fell flat in primetime.
In the week since the New York Post published its first story about Hunter Biden’s purported hard drive, the Trump campaign had been building suspense over how the president would deploy his newfound information in the debate. Advisers signaled to media outlets all week that the president would bring up Hunter, and Team Trump even trotted out Anthony Bobulinski—ex-Hunter Biden business associate and “guy-nobody-had-ever-heard-of-26 hours-ago”—in Nashville as their guest of honor.
But when it came time to make the case—in front of tens of millions of people—Trump whiffed.
“All of the emails, the emails, the horrible emails of the kind of money that you were raking in, you and your family. And Joe, you were vice-president when some of this was happening, and it should have never happened. And I think you owe an explanation to the American people. Why is it—somebody just had a news conference a little while ago who was essentially supposed to work with you and your family, but what he said was damning.”
Debate moderator Kristen Welker asked Joe Biden to respond, and the former vice president denied the charges, pivoting to Trump’s tax returns. “I have not taken a penny from any foreign source ever in my life,” Biden said. “I have released all of my tax returns, 22 years, go look at them. You have not released a single solitary year of your tax return. … Release your tax return or stop talking about corruption.”
- Biden didn’t escape the night gaffe-free.
Joe Biden was known for his gaffes even before he reached his late 70s, and he made a few of them last night, most notably in the climate change section of the debate. Pressed by Trump for his current stance on fracking—a crucial industry in Pennsylvania, the election’s potential tipping-point state—Biden asserted that “I never said I oppose fracking,” and challenged Trump to “show the tape” of him doing so. The Trump campaign was happy to oblige:
As per your request, Joe… https://t.co/78mzcfLEsF
Joe Biden @JoeBiden
Folks, the final debate is here. Tune in at 9 PM ET as I go head-to-head with Donald Trump for the last time before Election Day.
A few minutes later, Trump asked Biden if he would close down the oil industry, to which Biden responded he would “transition from the oil industry, yes.” He added that “it has to be replaced by renewable energy over time,” and that he’d “stop giving [the oil industry] federal subsidies.”
Immediately after the debate, a handful of congressional Democrats representing oil-producing areas distanced themselves from the former vice president’s comments. Biden himself tried to clean up the remark speaking with reporters at the airport after the debate. “We’re not getting rid of fossil fuels for a long time,” he said, according to pool reports. “It will not be gone for (inaudible) probably 2050.”
Trump’s Campaign Finance Woes
In last night’s debate, President Trump made a bold claim about the state of his campaign. “We don’t need money. We have plenty of money,” he said. “In fact, we beat Hillary Clinton with a tiny fraction of the money.” While it is true that Clinton’s 2016 campaign ended up costing about twice what Trump’s did, you wouldn’t get the sense Trump “doesn’t need money” if you were subscribed to his campaign’s email list.
“You’ve always been one of his strongest defenders, which is why we were surprised to see you didn’t step up to help us reach our End-of-Quarter Goal,” reads one email. “It’s going to take EVERY Patriot stepping up if we want to CRUSH Sleepy Joe and Phony Kamala’s dreams of turning America into a BIG GOVERNMENT SOCIALIST Nation. The stakes are too high to sit on the sidelines right now.”
“With the Election only 25 days away, the LIES from the Democrats and their Fake News friends are at a level we’ve never seen before,” another says, switching between all-caps, bold, underlined, and italic fonts. “They’re NEVER going to stop, which is why my father is counting on YOUR support.” The email promises a “LIMITED-TIME … 800%-MATCH.” But it’s only for “a few TOP supporters, like YOU, Friend. Do not share this.”
Worth Your Time
- Marine Gen. Frank McKenzie told the House Armed Services Committee in March that the United States military was providing “limited support” to the Taliban, although the extent of that support remained unknown to the public. “In reality, even as its warplanes have struck the Taliban in other parts of Afghanistan,” writes Wesley Morgan in the Washington Post, “the U.S. military has been quietly helping the Taliban to weaken the Islamic State in its Konar stronghold and keep more of the country from falling into the hands of the group, which—unlike the Taliban—the United States views as an international terrorist organization with aspirations to strike America and Europe.” Read Morgan’s piece for more about the Joint Special Operations Command counterterrorism task force and its active efforts to help one US enemy in its battle against another.
- Jane Coaston—friend of the pod—has new piece at Vox assessing the state of the race: “Trump’s presidential campaign is Too Online.” She starts by referencing President Trump waxing poetic before an Iowa crowd last week about former Associate Deputy Attorney General Bruce Ohr, and how he finally resigned from the Department of Justice. But “Iowans are likely more concerned about rising numbers of coronavirus-related hospitalizations and a potential surge in unemployment,” Coaston writes. “After five years of claiming that Democrats took their cues from Twitter and were untethered from the realities of American life, the Trump campaign has spent significant time focusing on issues that are most of interest to conservatives who spend hours of each day on Twitter, and thus believe that the issues discussed on that platform (or even the machinations of the platform itself) are of critical importance to every American.”
Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- Thanks to the nearly 4,000 of you who tuned in to our post-debate Dispatch Live last night! If you missed it—or want to relive it—you can watch a replay here. And stay tuned for details on our plans for election night.
- What’s it like running for office? Check out Sarah’s Midweek Mop-Up (🔒) with Nevada’s 33rd Lt. Governor Brian Krolicki—a former investment banker turned public servant—for his insights on the best campaign tactics, the importance of endorsements, and the ideal relationship between a candidate and his general consultant or campaign manager. And if you think a candidate’s life is glamorous in the closing days of a campaign, the details of the grind here will disabuse you of that impression.
- “The Trump administration attempted to convince Kim Jong-un, a murderous tyrant, to give up his nuclear aspirations,” writes Tom Joscelyn in Thursday’s Vital Interests (🔒). Why has this effort failed? “The simplest answer may be that there is nothing the U.S. or its allies can do to dissuade Kim.” Read Joscelyn’s newsletter for a playback of the Trump administration’s yearslong fight to curtail North Korea’s nuclear aspirations.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), James P. Sutton (@jamespsuttonsf), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
Photo by Jim Bourg/Pool/AFP via Getty Images.
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LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
THE BLAZE
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One last thing … Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill on Thursday dismissed the lesser charge of third-degree murder against former Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin.Chauvin and three other officers were arrested in connection with the May 25 death of George Floyd. Chauvin was caught on video with his knee on Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes.Floyd’s death … Read more
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ARRA News Service (in this message: 13 new items) |
- A Win for Churches in Colorado (Update)
- McConnell Mocks Media for Reporting on Barrett’s Faith as If They ‘Discovered Some Secret Scandal’
- “The Big Guy,” Election Interference, Barrett Advances
- The Biden Crime Family Comes Undone – Say it ain’t so, Joe
- For a New Normalcy
- It Took the Obama-Biden Economy More than Three Years to Create a Single New Net Job
- Let Them Eat COVID
- President Trump Praises NRA Members in Exclusive Interview – A Critical Vote for Freedom
- Social Media’s Preemptive Spiking of New York Post Story Shows Bias Against Conservatives Continues
- Unmarried Birth Rates and Fatherless Households: A National Crisis
- The October Laptop Surprise
- The City is Killing America
- DOJ Slaps Google With Antitrust Lawsuit
A Win for Churches in Colorado (Update)
Posted: 22 Oct 2020 10:52 PM PDT by David Closson: When the pandemic first swept across the nation this spring, state and local authorities took quick action, enacting a series of restrictions and mandates designed to protect public health and safety. With the goal of “flattening the curve,” officials asked Americans to temporarily set aside some of their liberties to ensure hospitals did not exceed capacity. This included asking churches and religious organizations to suspend in-person worship services and meetings. The vast majority complied. However, as the pandemic wore on and communities began phased re-openings, it soon became clear that some local authorities were not treating churches and religious organizations fairly. As a result, some pastors began to defy what they believed were unconstitutional and overreaching mandates. As this double standard against churches has become more apparent, many churches are now winning in court. U.S. District Court Judge Daniel Domenico has agreed with two Colorado churches, Denver Bible Church and Community Baptist Church, that the state’s coronavirus restrictions limiting the churches’ capacity for religious gatherings were unconstitutional. Colorado’s restrictions on worship services were more restrictive than those for businesses deemed essential by the state. Judge Domenico agreed with the two churches that they should be exempt from mask-wearing requirements if they interfere with religious exercise and from any limits on indoor gatherings that do not apply to secular groups. “The Constitution does not allow the State to tell a congregation how large it can be when comparable secular gatherings are not so limited, or to tell a congregation that its reason for wishing to remove facial coverings is less important than a restaurant’s or spa’s,” Judge Domenico explained. According to the decision, churches must still follow social distancing protocols and other sanitation requirements. But public health orders must be applied equally to secular and religious institutions. According to Judge Domenico, who was appointed by President Trump in 2019, the First Amendment does not allow government officials to treat religious worship as less essential than other actions, nor does it allow the government to decide what aspects of a church’s faith and practice are essential. The religious freedom win in Colorado is just the latest in victories for churches and people of faith over coronavirus restrictions and mandates that unfairly target religious practice. Earlier this week, the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) announced an agreement with two hospitals that had violated the rights of religious patients. In one instance, the hospital denied a patient recovering from surgery access to a priest and the sacraments. In another, a mother was told a priest could not baptize her newborn baby. As a result of the OCR’s intervention, both hospitals modified their pandemic visitation policies to allow members of the clergy to minister in compassionate care situations. While the decision by the OCR and the recent ruling in Colorado are victories for religious freedom, it is concerning that the federal government needed to intervene in the first place. The U.S. Constitution protects the right to free exercise of religion. It should shock every American that state and local authorities are applying a different standard to churches and religious organizations than the one applied to their secular counterparts. But as the percentage of Americans with a biblical worldview continues to decline and fewer people understand the central role of faith in believers’ lives, we can expect more situations where religious practice will be treated unfairly. And when that happens, Americans should remind our leaders that our first freedom — the freedom to practice our faith — is protected by our nation’s laws and is an indispensable part of who we are as a people. Tags: David Closson, Family Research Center, A Win for Churches in ColoradoTo 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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McConnell Mocks Media for Reporting on Barrett’s Faith as If They ‘Discovered Some Secret Scandal’
Posted: 22 Oct 2020 10:30 PM PDT
by Mary Margaret Olohan: Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell condemned continuing attacks on Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett Wednesday, warning that “anti-religious bigotry needs to stop.” “It is so revealing to watch elite society keep stumbling upon mainstream religious beliefs and practices that are shared by huge numbers of Christian Americans and thinking they’ve discovered some secret scandal,” McConnell said in a Wednesday statement.
The Senate majority leader referenced a Wednesday report from The Associated Press highlighting that Barrett served as a trustee for her children’s Christian school. McConnell notes that Barrett had already disclosed that she served as a trustee at this school. “The slanted story then attacks the school for holding traditional views about sex and marriage, and baselessly asserts that Judge Barrett’s personal views on these matters would be ‘particularly crucial’ to her jurisprudence,” McConnell said. “In reality, Judge Barrett has taken the same oath of impartiality as every other federal judge, and has affirmed over and over that her legal judgment is independent from her private opinions.” McConnell reminded Americans that the Constitution prohibits religious tests for office. “The anti-religious bigotry needs to stop,” he added. “It is an embarrassment to those who propagate it. Fortunately, it will not stop the Senate from voting to confirm this outstanding nominee in just a few days.” The Kentucky senator said that since Barrett’s credentials are “unassailable,” Democrats and “their press allies continue to fumble for other lines of attack, including her religious faith.” McConnell referenced Democratic suggestions in 2017 that Barrett’s Catholic faith made her unfit to be a federal judge, calling these attacks “open and unveiled.” “This time, euphemisms and insinuations have carried the day,” McConnell said. “One Judiciary Committee Democrat attacked the nominee’s ‘closely held views.’ Another Senator wrote a letter arguing that Judge Barrett’s normal and widely-held Catholic views on when life begins should disqualify her from judicial service. The press has worked overtime to paint Judge Barrett’s private faith practices as exotic, ominous, and fair game for public critique.” Tags: Mary Margaret Olohan. The Daily Signal, McConnell Mocks Media, for Reporting, on Barrett’s Fait, as If They, ‘Discovered Some Secret Scandal’To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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“The Big Guy,” Election Interference, Barrett Advances
Posted: 22 Oct 2020 09:45 PM PDT
by Gary Bauer: “The Big Guy” Bobulinksi is listed as the recipient of several messages related to the Bidens’ China dealings. He has confirmed that the messages are genuine, not part of a Russian disinformation scheme, and that “the Big Guy” referenced in one message is in fact Joe Biden. He also rejects Joe Biden’s claim that he never discussed his son’s business dealings with him. Here’s what he told Fox News: “I’ve seen firsthand that that’s not true, because it wasn’t just Hunter’s business, they said they were putting the Biden family name and its legacy on the line. The Biden family aggressively leveraged the Biden family name to make millions of dollars from foreign entities even though some were from communist controlled China.” That the Bidens have “aggressively leveraged” the family name is not new news. Last year, the left-leaning Politico wrote a lengthy article exposing “Biden Inc,” and how James Biden, the former vice president’s brother, once bragged, “We’ve got people all around the world who want to invest in Joe Biden.” We’re also learning that the FBI seized Hunter’s laptop last year as part of a money laundering investigation. As we have previously reported, one of his former business associates is already in jail and a second is awaiting sentencing. Now, here’s the latest revelation from Molly Hemingway, one of the most trusted conservative reporters in Washington. The Federalist does not publish what it cannot prove. Hemingway reports that The Federalist has obtained text messages in which Bobulinski was warned not to mention Joe Biden’s involvement, and that Hunter’s foreign dealings were a major risk factor for his father’s presidential ambitions. My friends, here’s what you must understand: This scandal isn’t about Hunter Biden. It is all about Joe Biden exploiting his public service to enrich himself and his family. And while he was doing it, he devoted his career to promoting globalism and trade deals that sent our manufacturing jobs to China. Joe Biden is a corrupt creature of the Washington Swamp! Election Interference Some Democrat voters received threatening emails that appeared to come from the Proud Boys. The messages read, “Vote for Donald Trump or else!” Other messages included the recipients home address and stated, “You will vote for Trump on Election Day or we will come after you.” These messages did not come from the Proud Boys. They came from the Islamic Republic of Iran. Some pundits insanely suggested that this was evidence that Iran was helping Trump. If there’s one regime in the world that most wants to see Trump defeated, it’s the mullahs of Iran. There is no logical explanation for why Iran would want to help Donald Trump. He has crushed their economy with biting sanctions. He took out their terrorist mastermind, Qassem Soleimani. He has strengthened our alliance with Israel, and has broken the decades-old stalemate of Arab hostility toward the Jewish state. But the ayatollah has every reason to want Joe Biden back in power. The Obama/Biden Administration gave Iran billions of dollars, and Joe Biden wants to cut another deal with Iran. The Democrat Party is increasingly hostile toward Israel, and largely condemned Trump for taking out Soleimani. Like so many progressives, Iran was committing fake hate crimes with these fake emails in order to smear Donald Trump and his supporters. They knew the offensive emails would get leaked to the press. Sure enough, the Lincoln Project, a group of NeverTrumpers, cited the fake Proud Boys emails as evidence of the hate among Trump supporters. I wonder if the Lincoln Project coordinated its efforts with Iran. But just to clear up any confusion about the issue, Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe said yesterday, “We have already seen Iran sending spoofed emails designed to intimidate voters, incite social unrest and damage President Trump.” In other words, Iran is helping Joe Biden! Debate Night Don’t expect too much from Welker. As the New York Post notes, she has “deep Democrat ties.” Her selection, as well as Steve Scully’s, shows just how biased the Commission on Presidential Debates is. The final presidential debate historically focuses on foreign policy. Instead, Welker is choosing to rehash the same issues from the first debate. But why aren’t we discussing foreign policy in this campaign? The left insisted that Trump would get us into war. He hasn’t. In fact, he has worked hard to get us out of wars, and he has achieved historic peace deals. Donald Trump crushed the ISIS caliphate. He confronted communist China. He got our NATO allies to boost their defense spending. And while he was unable to make a deal with Kim Jong Un, when was the last time you heard North Korea’s dictator threaten our country? Barrett Advances I’m sure it may surprise some people to read that not one Judiciary Committee Democrat opposed Judge Barrett’s nomination. Well, that’s because not one Democrat bothered to show up for the vote. As they have done for decades now, the left has ratcheted up the rhetoric and the theatrics against conservative judicial nominees. Today, Democrats took the unprecedented step of boycotting the committee vote, hoping to prevent the vote entirely. But Senate Republicans weren’t having it. Chairman Lindsey Graham ordered a roll call vote and it was 12-to-0, with 10 no votes. The full Senate will take up Judge Barrett’s nomination on Monday. Call your senators now at 202-224-3121. Urge them to support Judge Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmation to the Supreme Court. Biden Will Pack The Court Many conservatives voted for Donald Trump because they believed the left-wing courts were out of whack, and they wanted to see balance restored to our courts. Biden thinks the courts are too conservative, and he’s looking for ways to undo everything we have accomplished in the last four years. Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi will pack the Supreme Court! Good News It’s a clear sign that the economy is on the road to recovery. That said, President Trump and congressional Republicans are trying to pass additional stimulus measures. Unfortunately, Senate Democrats once again blocked a stimulus bill that would have provided additional unemployment funds and support to struggling small businesses. Tags: Gary Bauer, The Big Guy, Election Interference, Barrett Advances To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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The Biden Crime Family Comes Undone – Say it ain’t so, Joe
Posted: 22 Oct 2020 08:46 PM PDT by Daniel Greenfield: The Biden family is notorious for being the crookedest clan not only in Delaware, but in D.C. Delaware is a pretty small place, but D.C. is even smaller, yet the scope for corruption, unethical behavior, conflicts of interest, and even brazen thievery are far greater in Washington D.C. And yet the Biden family stood out even there. To be born a Biden in the era after Joe switched his party affiliation, plagiarized his speeches, and inappropriately touched every woman or girl he could get his hands on in the state and the nation, was to be bred into dirty money. Joe Biden was now asked in Wisconsin if Hunter had “profited off the Biden name”. “None whatsoever,” the godfather of Delaware retorted. And the entire state laughed. Say it ain’t so, Joe. It doesn’t matter if you’re a Democrat or a Republican, in Delaware, everyone knows that the Biden name means money in the bank. Literally. Just ask MBNA, Hunter’s former employer, whose executives poured $200,000 into Joe’s coffers, and one of whom bought his house. “Don’t worry about investors,” James Biden, Joe’s brother, famous for scoring a billion dollar contract to build houses in Iraq, told executives at Paradigm Global Advisors. “We’ve got people all around the world who want to invest in Joe Biden.” James had bought Paradigm together with Hunter Biden. Biden can try to deny the obvious, but he isn’t even trying to deny that the emails and photos are real, or that it was his son’s laptop. Instead, he spouted a word salad of gibberish, stating, “the vast of the intelligence people have come out and said there’s no basis at all.” Why does Biden need to call on “the vast of the intelligence people” who carefully avoided making a firm statement, to deny something he is better able to deny on his own? Because it’s really an admission. The latest emails make it all too clear that Joe Biden got Viktor Shokin, the Ukranian prosecutor, fired because Burisma wanted him gone and that Hunter Biden’s purpose in making deals with a powerful Chinese energy company linked to the Communist regime was to produce income for “me and my family”. It’s no wonder that the latest reports link the FBI’s subpoena of the laptop, not to the media’s false claims of a Russian op, but to a money laundering investigation. Investing in Joe Biden or, as one message allegedly has it, “the big guy”, meant depositing the money with James or Hunter. And then Hunter deposited a laptop with a small computer repair shop in Delaware five miles from his father’s home, and never picked it up. The rest is history. And the history is happening now. The Hunter Biden laptop unrolls two ragged threads. One is the descent of Joe Biden’s son into new depths of depravity and the other are the foreign investors who bought into Joe Biden Inc. The alleged photos of Hunter Biden’s drug use and underage girls might be dismissed as a spoiled rich kid’s demons. But, looking at public photos and videos of Joe Biden touching, caressing, and sniffing women and young girls, it’s hard not to see the influence. What did a teenage Hunter grow up seeing his father do? How did that shape him into the man he is? And why was Hunter able to get away with it for so long? In alleged text messages exchanged between Joe and Hunter Biden, father and son discuss “sexually inappropriate” behavior with a 14-year-old girl. “She told my therapist that I was sexually inappropriate with [name of 14-year-old girl redacted] when she says that I facetime naked with her and the reason I can’t have her out to see me is because I’ll walk around naked smoking crack talking [redacted] girls on face time,” Hunter appeared to message his father. What was done about this? The odds are good that the answer is nothing. The Hunter Biden laptop was turned over to the FBI in December of 2019. And the FBI appears to have done little with it. Giuliani submitted material allegedly showing criminal sexual behavior to the Delaware police who passed it off to the Delaware Department of Justice. A spokesman for Delaware Attorney General Kathy Jennings said it was sent to the FBI. Jennings is not only a Democrat, but a friend of the Biden family who had worked under Beau Biden and has been vigorously campaigning for Joe Biden. “I’ve known Joe, Jill, and the Biden family for most of my life. Joe is one of the kindest and most genuine people I’ve ever known,” Jennings had posted on her Facebook page. The Biden family may have been able to get away with a lot for the same reason as the Kennedy clan. They were big fish in a small pond being protected by the Democrat club. Like some Kennedy sons, Hunter may have spun out of control because he could get away with it. That’s why Hunter Biden’s story is just an echo of Joe. Father and son appear to share a boundless greed for unearned wealth and women, and a complete lack of self-control with both. And both men have spent their lives being protected from the consequences of their actions. Laptop computers, like notebooks, are the mirrors of their owners. We use them and fill them with the things that matter to us. Going through a lost laptop or phone tells us a lot about the man or woman who spent years with it. Hunter Biden’s laptop is a mirror of the man. And the mirror shows a broken and corrupt human being filling its gigabytes with his demons. What were Hunter Biden’s demons? The same as the ones that bedeviled Joe. Women and money. And as dirty and wrong as possible. That’s why Hunter allegedly didn’t just seek out money, he went after business opportunities in the most corrupt places in the world, like Kazakhstan and the People’s Republic of China, and he didn’t just chase women. Instead, Rudy Giuliani has said that the laptop contained photos of underage girls. But the bigger story isn’t Hunter’s depravity, it’s the business opportunities, the lobbying gigs and board seats offered to him by foreign companies looking to invest in Joe Biden. In less than two weeks, Joe Biden’s stock will either boom or bust. And voters are entitled to know who, beyond the battalions of domestic special interests from Wall Street to Hollywood, from the gun control lobby to green businesses, pouring hundreds of millions into his campaign, is getting ready to collect interest on the foreign money that financed Hunter’s lifestyle. Hunter Biden’s emails offer a window into a global operation, in the Ukraine, in Kazakhstan, and the People’s Republic of China, of investing in Joe Biden courtesy of his wastrel son. Joe Biden has claimed that he has nothing to do with his son’s business affairs, but that’s a transparent lie that had been shot down even long before the laptop by media reporting. The media is frantically trying to bury information that backs up their own reporting from the primaries when the same media now trying to save Joe Biden originally wanted to bury him. Why did so many Democrat officials, beginning with Barack Obama, try to keep Joe Biden from running in 2016 and then 2020? Joe Biden is a mediocre hack, but he’s a better candidate than Hillary Clinton, not to mention lefty luminaries like Al Gore or John Kerry. The problem was that the small state that spawned the Biden crime family was littered with their dirty laundry. And now, in the final stretch before Election Day, the messy stained laundry is spilling out. Like Humpty Dumpty, all the Democrat horses and men are trying to keep the mess contained. Twitter and Facebook are blatantly suppressing the story. The media has refused to cover the biggest scandal of the election while falsely claiming that Hunter Biden’s laptop is Russian disinformation despite clear denials by the intelligence community and the FBI. Hunter Biden’s laptop isn’t just evidence of a degenerate past, but of the coming attractions. The Biden crime family has built a global network of contacts. And when their father was a mere veep, they could only wet their beaks a little. If he wins, they’ll be able to drown in money. Joe could throw around his weight in a backwater like Ukraine, but if he wins, Burisma will just be a tiny taste of what is to come. And the corruption in D.C. will make Delaware blush again. Corruption is nothing new in D.C., but what the laptop reveals about Hunter Biden and his father is that, like the Clintons, they have no self-control. And the only thing more dangerous than cunning crooks at the head of a nation are inept kleptocrats who would leave evidence of their financial and sexual corruption on a laptop abandoned in a Delaware repair shop. As new details trickle out, two things are obvious about the Biden crime family: they’re not only as crooked as a bent tree in a thunderstorm, they’re also hopelessly stupid at covering it up. Even as the media denies everything for the Bidens, they have yet to deny the core facts. Rep. Schiff may claim that Hunter Biden’s laptop is a Russian conspiracy, but neither Joe nor Hunter will say it. And what Schiff and the Democrats and their media can only say behind their backs is that they can’t believe how corrupt and incompetent the horse they bet on really is. They haven’t seen anything yet. Tags: Daniel Greenfield, Biden Crime Family, come undone, say it ain’t so To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. 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For a New Normalcy
Posted: 22 Oct 2020 08:19 PM PDT by Paul Jacob: Science writer Ronald Bailey argues that the best path to “a New Normal” can be found by rolling out home COVID-19 tests. But notes they are illegal. Bailey’s November piece in Reason magazine informs us that “biotech startup E25Bio, diagnostics maker OraSure, and the 3M Co., are working on and could quickly deploy rapid at-home COVID-19 diagnostic tests.” These tests work, he says, “by detecting, within minutes, the presence of coronavirus proteins using specific antibodies embedded on a paper test strip coated with nasal swab samples or saliva. Somewhat like at-home pregnancy tests, the antigen tests change color or reveal lines if COVID-19 proteins are recognized.” So why not go ahead with these antigen tests? Well, the Food and Drug Administration doesn’t allow it. Bailey quotes a Harvard epidemiologist: “Until the regulatory landscape changes, those companies have no reason to bring a product to market.” Regulatory blocking and kludge are just one reason this is not possible. But if you — or for that matter, Mr. Bailey — think that this problem can just be solved with a Trumpian executive order or a quick legislative fix, there are reasons for doubt. Our whole system is government-rigged. And, as Ludwig von Mises made clear in Bureaucracy, clunky slowness is not just a bug of such systems. It’s the feature. And it’s a bad feature. It’s why many of us oppose regulation by bureaucracy and prefer a rule of law and competition within markets to supply the regulation that businesses need. Which suggests to me that the best way back to normalcy is not through a quick government fix but by nixing government fixes more broadly. This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. Tags: New Normalcy, Covid-19 tests, Paul Jacob, Comme Sense To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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It Took the Obama-Biden Economy More than Three Years to Create a Single New Net Job
Posted: 22 Oct 2020 07:45 PM PDT by Robert Romano: Former Vice President Joe Biden inherited a recession in 2009 when he and former President Barack Obama were elected in 2008, and if he wins this year, it will happen again. Although 14 million jobs have already been recovered from the state-led Covid pandemic economic lockdowns in the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ household survey — up to 25 million were lost when labor markets bottomed in April — there is still a long way to go to get back the other 11 million jobs. Here’s the problem. The last time Biden as in the White House with Obama, it would not be until May 2012 when the U.S. economy would begin creating jobs on a net basis — almost three-and-a-half years after they took office. To be fair, the economy was still hemorrhaging jobs from the financial crisis at the end of 2008, a trend that began in Nov. 2007, and would not reach a bottom until Dec. 2009, 11 months after assuming office. Overall, it was not until Sept. 2014 when the more than 8 million jobs lost throughout the entire recession would be regained. Could Obama and Biden have acted quicker? Was the $787 billion stimulus — which easily passed as Democrats nearly had a filibuster-proof majority in the U.S. Senate — enough to provide the American people with immediate relief? In contrast, President Donald Trump worked with Congress on preempting the Covid recession this spring with the $2.2 trillion CARES Act that included $525 billion of relief for small businesses, supporting 5.2 million small businesses and saving as many as 50 million jobs. While the 2008 Congress engineered a Wall Street bailout, and the 2009 Congress was focused on wealth transfers to state governments — the 2020 Congress with President Trump worked on a Main Street recovery package. And so far, it’s been largely successful, with 14 million jobs recovered. The labor market hit its bottom rapidly in this recession in just two months, compared to more than two years in the last recession. But the headwinds are strong. In September, the limits of the recovery were tested and job creation in the household survey appeared to slow down a bit. 879,000 Americans left the labor force altogether as their unemployment benefits ran out. The economy, therefore still has a long way to go, and it will take leadership to get the economy safely reopened. Biden does not appear dedicated to this task, saying he would “shut it down” again if advised by medical professionals even though the scientists are saying you don’t need a lockdown again. A lot of families are still struggling through the lockdowns. We mustn’t forget them. We need to get America back, no matter who wins the election. This cannot go on forever. The key to that will be safely reopening schools again so that working families can get back to work, which Biden complained in the first debate would be very expensive to do. But all the same it is absolutely necessary. In the meantime, Biden has done almost nothing to encourage House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) to work with the Republican Senate and President Trump on completing the next round of stimulus in phase four legislation. Perhaps Biden, Pelosi and Schumer are sitting around waiting for a better deal after the election — assuming they are going to win. The risk is that by failing this critical leadership test, the American people might not give them a second chance to disappoint them. Tags: Robert Romano, It Took the Obama-Biden Economy, More than Three Years, to Create a Single, New Net JobTo 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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Let Them Eat COVID
Posted: 22 Oct 2020 07:48 PM PDT . . . Pelosi is holding back COVID relief in fear if it pasted it might give Trump a win before the election
Editorial Cartoon by AF “Tony” Branco Tags: Editorial Cartoon, AF Branco, Let Them Eat 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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President Trump Praises NRA Members in Exclusive Interview – A Critical Vote for Freedom
Posted: 22 Oct 2020 06:55 PM PDT by Frank Miniter: “President Trump is straightforward and candid in his support for our Second Amendment freedom. This interview is a great testimony to his unyielding belief in every law abiding American’s right to defend themselves and their families. He has earned the vote of every gun owner, and indeed anyone who values the Bill of Rights, to lead our country for four more years. Please vote Donald J. Trump for President.”
– Wayne LaPierre, Executive Vice President, NRA“An Oval Office interview is exceedingly rare. We enjoyed the opportunity to sit down with President Trump because he is a fellow NRA member who recognizes that our Second Amendment hangs in the balance this election. I thank President Trump for giving us this exclusive interview, and encourage everyone to read it and vote on Nov. 3 like their freedom depends upon it, because it does.”– Jason Ouimet, Executive Director, NRA-ILAA white door opened across the Oval Office and President Donald J. Trump stopped in the doorway, backlit by windows on a bright summer day. Energetically, he tapped his fists on his thighs as he surveyed the people waiting for him in the white room with the golden drapes and the pantheon of paintings of American history’s iconic leaders like Abraham Lincoln and Benjamin Franklin.The leader of the free world walked confidently into the Oval Office, settled in behind his desk, and waved off the various photographers who had come to document yet another moment in the history of this historical president.As the room grew quiet, President Trump planted his elbows firmly on a desk blotter depicting the Declaration of Independence, leaned forward, and focused his attention on me—intently and expertly shifting gears for his latest in a long line of scheduled appointments.
Seated to my left was White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany, who just before the president entered the Oval Office, explained that he agreed to this interview because he wanted to speak directly to NRA members in a year where the pandemic canceled the NRA Annual Meetings and Exhibits, and with it, his speech to the members of the NRA. “He likes to speak directly to audiences. He does all he can to get his message out without the spin,” she said. The president then broke the momentary silence in the room, and stated firmly: “I will never waver. I will never disappoint. I have and I will continue to protect the Second Amendment.” I was struck by the powerful conviction with which he delivered the statement—strong, clear and concise straight-talk from a man who unabashedly and confidently means what he says and says what he means. Promises made—promises kept. “Thank you, Mr. President,” I said with my eyes still locked with his. He then nodded, leaned back into his chair, smiled warmly and complimented the White House press secretary for arranging an interview with the National Rifle Association. In this polite moment, a Secret Service agent stopped in a doorway, and with a series of gestures, asked the president if he wanted him to stay or go. President Trump smiled and said, “You can go relax. It’s okay. If he does anything, I can handle him.” As the Secret Service agent grinned and closed the door, I said, “Mr. President, I think you could take me.” President Trump nodded and with a brief smile said, “Let’s get started.” I began by asking, “Mr. President, this, as you have noted so well, is a time when we need a law-and-order president. You are getting endorsements from police organizations for this and many other reasons. How will you continue to foster American freedom and safety in this trying time?” President Trump nodded and said, “The Democrats don’t respect our law enforcement, but I do.” He then talked about Chicago and Portland—cities whose mere names have become loaded with images of chaos, anarchy and murder—and said, “We need law and order to keep our businesses safe; we need law and order to save lives; we need law and order so that freedom can prosper in this great nation. We can’t let the anarchists win. The American way of life, the freedoms we enjoy, are what my administration is fighting for. The other side is for the mob. They are investigating the police in Portland for protecting a court house, not the anarchists who tried to burn it down. Is that what the American people want? I don’t think so.” When asked about the many judges his administration has nominated to the federal bench, and that, thanks to the steady guidance of U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, have been confirmed, President Trump said, “We could have over 300 judges appointed to the federal bench by the end of my first term—this includes two Supreme Court justices. I was given a large batch to fill—as many as a hundred openings—by President Obama because he wasn’t focused on nominating judges. A lot of people think this has been one of our greatest accomplishments. The Democrats want to put activists on the bench. We just want judges who will rule according to the law—the Constitution.” President Trump put up his hands as he said this. He clearly found it exasperating that nominating judges who will simply uphold what a law actually says, not what some might like it to say, is treated as controversial by the mainstream media and by many Democrats in Congress. “And we have a lot more to do,” said the president. This is clearly true, as the U.S. Supreme Court recently rejected many Second Amendment cases in which plaintiffs challenged laws that clearly infringe upon this constitutional right. Also, many lower courts, though bolstered by President Trump’s nominees, are still overrun with activist judges who continue to rule against our constitutionally protected freedom. I then said, “Joe Biden’s campaign website includes 11 pages of bullet-pointed bans and restrictions on our Second Amendment rights. How will you show people the stark contrast between your agenda for protecting freedom and Biden’s goals for destroying it?” President Trump sat back as he considered this before saying, “I am talking about this a lot. I respect American freedom. Biden wants to take it away. We won’t have a Second Amendment if he is elected.” The president then continued, “I could have made many deals that would have been bad for the Second Amendment and for freedom and safety, but I’ve given zero ground, as you probably know. They would terminate your Second Amendment. They would take your guns away. I’ve held firm. I’ve given zero ground. I am going to protect your Second Amendment and Biden would decimate it.” The conversation then turned to Chicago and Baltimore and the fact that the elected officials who run these cities are blaming our Second Amendment rights, as well as our brave men and women in blue, for the problems their policies created. I asked, “What can you do to bring the light of freedom, and all the peace and prosperity it brings with it, to these communities?” “These Democrats are investigating law enforcement rather than the people who throw Molotov cocktails,” said the president. “It’s just lucky that we are here right now or this would be happening in every city. These are the same people who want your guns. So now these places are seeing a tremendous surge in gun sales as good people try to protect themselves from the bad people the Democrats are protecting.” This basic truth is so plainly obvious, yet so unreported in the mainstream media, that President Trump shook his head in bewilderment. As he did, I thought of the media members who were just a few doors away in the Press Room and the narratives they spin about this issue in particular. Is it any wonder this president uses Twitter and rallies at every opportunity to sidestep the dishonest press, and communicate these basic truths to the American people? I experienced this firsthand when I met various journalists in the Press Room that day, and they’d invariably ask me: “Who are you with?” After I answered, they’d say something like, “Oh, you’re with the NRA,” and make an expression as if they’d just swallowed a mouthful of bad milk. We then switched to a topic that, for purely partisan political reasons, the mainstream media continues to try and paint as “controversial.” “Mr. President, each state’s driver’s license is honored across this great nation, yet a permit to carry a concealed gun—which, in contrast, is a right specifically protected in the U.S. Bill of Rights—is often not respected by other states. Will you support a national reciprocity act so that law-abiding gun owners can more easily travel with their freedom?” “You are talking about concealed-carry, right?” asked President Trump. “About people who cross state lines?” he asked. “Yes, Mr. President,” I replied. “Right now, simply taking a wrong turn from Pennsylvania into New Jersey can result in years in prison for an otherwise law-abiding American citizen.” President Trump nodded and said, “I will support such legislation. If it comes across my desk I will sign it.” The president, of course, had a concealed-carry permit while he lived in New York City. He has said many times that he found it necessary to be ready to protect himself. He has also said many times that he believes all lawful citizens are guaranteed this same, basic human right. Our discussion of people traveling with their freedom then led us to the topic of the millions of new gun owners in America, many of whom are women. “If the Democrats get in, they are going to take your guns away,” said the president. “If you’re a woman or you’re anybody, and a criminal breaks into your home, they will still have a gun—an illegal gun—but you won’t and they’ll know it.” As our time began to wind down, this strong defender of the Second Amendment and proud father stated, “I have shot guns many times, but my boys are great shots. World-class shots.” He said this as he picked up a copy of the August issue of America’s 1st Freedom, which features his son Eric on the cover. He said, “Only in America could I have kids like this.” Filled with pride and conviction, he said, “We need the Second Amendment. This important American freedom won’t end on my watch.” He then stood up and delivered one final message: “I have great respect for Wayne. Say hello to him for me. And you tell all the members of your great organization I am totally for the Second Amendment. We’re with the Second Amendment all the way.” Tags: President Trump, Interview, Second Amendment, A Critical Vote For Freedom, November 3rd Election, NRA, America’s 1st Freedom, Frank Miniter 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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Social Media’s Preemptive Spiking of New York Post Story Shows Bias Against Conservatives Continues
Posted: 22 Oct 2020 05:53 PM PDT by Kay C. James: Twitter and Facebook are quickly backpedaling after suppressing a New York Post story damaging to former Vice President Joe Biden, but that doesn’t erase the fact that just weeks before an election, the social media platforms continue to enforce their rules differently for those with whom they disagree politically. When the Post published a story last week that Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, allegedly made money from providing access to his father when he was vice president, it seemed like Twitter and Facebook all of a sudden “got religion,” as we say in the South. The platforms said they spiked the story because it contained links to documents—allegedly from Hunter Biden’s personal computer—that they claimed might have been hacked or illegally obtained or that the story might be outright disinformation. Boy, that’s a great standard to have, but it’s funny how they didn’t seem to have that same standard when it came to left-wing news outlets reporting on near-daily anonymous leaks from within the federal government and other stories that would seemingly fall under the same rules. In particular, Twitter’s excuses for taking down the Post link and blocking anyone who shared it just didn’t hold water. The problem with the excuse that the article may have violated policies against sharing hacked material is that, so far, there’s no evidence the emails were hacked or otherwise illegally obtained. In fact, neither Joe Biden nor Hunter Biden claimed Hunter Biden was hacked, nor did they dispute the facts of the reporting. The Post reported that the computer was turned over to a computer shop for repairs and never claimed, which meant it became the property of the shop owner. The other problem with that excuse is that Twitter allows hacked information from WikiLeaks and other sources all the time. Even if down the road it turns out the Post was fed disinformation or the information was hacked, Twitter and Facebook preemptively took down the story before anyone could offer proof it wasn’t true. Have Twitter and Facebook preemptively taken down stories from The New York Times, The Washington Post, BuzzFeed, or others? Twitter also claimed that its concerns about the article were due to the “lack of authoritative reporting” from the New York Post. Although it has a conservative bent, the Post is one of the largest mainstream newspapers in the country. Again, has Twitter expressed concern about the lack of authoritative reporting from The New York Times, The Washington Post, BuzzFeed, or others? Clearly, there is bias here. The Heritage Foundation has seen firsthand how Big Tech companies block or otherwise limit the reach of our own content—even medical information provided by licensed doctors—because that information doesn’t agree with certain platforms’ social or political agendas. They do it through politicized fact checks, contrived labels, removing posts, or even blocking users. We’ve also seen how just last week, Amazon Prime’s streaming service announced that it won’t carry conservative Shelby Steele’s new documentary “What Killed Michael Brown?” The film examines the left’s use of a false racial narrative after Michael Brown’s 2014 death to divide a nation, setting off riots in Ferguson, Missouri, and around the country. While the film is timely and informative, the narrative it debunks is the very narrative that Amazon and many in Big Tech have been promoting. One can certainly understand that Twitter and Facebook and other platforms have rules to protect users, to prevent the spread of false information and foreign propaganda, and to otherwise provide a safe user experience. But they have politicized these rules, and the evidence continues to mount that their application of these rules is dependent on whether they agree with the user’s political viewpoint. The result is a collapse in public trust and a significant impact on the American electoral process. According to recent polling by Pew, an astounding 72% of Americans think it’s likely that “social media platforms actively censor political views that those companies find objectionable.” While 85% of those on the political right believe this bias is real, 62% of those on the left also share this concern. Regardless of one’s political views, the suppression of a major news story from a reputable news outlet is very troubling. While Twitter said that it’s changing its policies to prevent similar incidents from happening again, Americans are no longer interested in repeated apologies or promises that these platforms will do better. They demand action. Social media platforms need to leave their biases out of their business models and apply their rules and standards fairly and impartially, or they risk being overtaken by a tidal wave of government action, public criticism, and competing alternatives the free market is already creating to take their place. Tags: Kay C. James, Heritage Foundation, Social Media, Preemptive Spiking, New York Post Story, Shows Bias, Against Conservatives ContinuesTo 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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Unmarried Birth Rates and Fatherless Households: A National Crisis
Posted: 22 Oct 2020 05:23 PM PDT by Larry Elder: In a recent television appearance, I discussed my appointment to a presidential commission called “The Social Status of Black Men and Black Boys.” I called fatherless households America’s top domestic problem, a particularly severe phenomenon in the black community where nearly 70% of kids begin their lives in households with unmarried mothers. I then received the following letter: In the summer of 1969, I was a first-year obstetrics and gynecology resident at a hospital in New Orleans. I do not know if you are familiar with Charity Hospital. Unfortunately, it was closed by Hurricane Katrina. Up until then, it was nicknamed ‘Big Mother’ because most black people in New Orleans were born there. As a first-year obstetrical resident, I delivered 150 babies in three months. Only one of the mothers was married. Most of these girls were 11 years old. (Most people do not believe me when I tell them that and—unfortunately—I do not have written statistics to prove it.) Obviously, there was no way 11-year-olds could serve as parents to these babies. Grandparents tried to do the best they could, but they were often too busy working to provide for the extended family. These little girls quickly learned (and/or taught each other) that having babies brought checks from the Aid to Dependent Children Program in the state of Louisiana. They learned that if they needed more money, they simply had to bear another child. The problem with the [Aid to Dependent Children] Program was that these young mothers were denied the check if the father of the child lived with them. This never made any sense to me. Still, that was the rule. A public health physician at Tulane Medical School, Dr. Joseph Beasely, recognized the problem and tried to do something about it. He worked out an arrangement with the heads of OB-GYN Departments at Tulane and [Louisiana State University] Medical Schools to set up a free clinic. We residents manned the clinic. We did free examinations, free sexual counseling (many of these mothers did not know where these babies came from), prescribed birth control pills, inserted IUD’s, etc. The program proved to be a huge success. Unfortunately, a group of black ministers shut us down after six weeks claiming we were committing ‘genocide.’ I do not know if you find this information useful, but I thought it addressed an aspect of what you were talking about. If you would like to discuss these matters in greater detail, please feel free to contact me.”This problem is not confined to the black community. In 2006, the Manhattan Institute published a piece in its quarterly magazine, City Journal, by Heather Mac Donald called “Hispanic Family Values? Runaway Illegitimacy is Creating a New U.S. Underclass.” She wrote: If protesters are truly concerned about the condition of black and Hispanic urban Americans in particular, why the pathetic silence over the fatherless households, the principal reason for the very conditions they complain about? Tags: Larry Elder, The Daily Signal, Unmarried Birth Rates, Fatherless Households, A National CrisisTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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The October Laptop Surprise
Posted: 22 Oct 2020 03:47 PM PDT by Fredy Lowe: Please promise not to even whisper amongst yourselves what you are about to read here. Do not share it, or even comment below about Hunter Biden’s laptop, because social media tells us that you are not qualified to know or discuss this information at the risk of having your account banned, where you will possibly be electronically scorned for life. And, as if the threat of being banned by FB or Twitter were not bad enough, the ultimate warning was laid down by James Clapper, “Fight if you want, but there’s nothing you can do. ‘The emails are Russian’ is going to be the official dominant narrative in the mainstream political discourse, and there’s nothing you can do to stop it! Resistance is Futile.” Who amongst us will volunteer to tell former DNI James Clapper that he is—so yesterday—and would he please mind sitting down. And, furthermore, that it has been confirmed by the current DNI John Ratcliffe that, “Hunter Biden’s laptop is not part of some Russian disinformation campaign.” And, so we begin: The truncated version of our ‘unspoken tale’ began after corresponding with Larry Johnson, a veteran CIA agent and working in the State Department’s Office of Counter Terrorism. Joe Biden’s son. Hunter, who resides in California, came to Wilmington, Delaware, on or about April 12, 2019, where his father Joe, aka Big Guy (Democrat candidate for POTUS) lives. As a former investigator myself, we often relied upon, and thanked God for, the basic stupidity of criminals who would give us some of our most informative and creditable leads. And so, having said that, there was more-than-likely a discussion over the three (3) laptops and what to do with them. If Big Guy was a ‘clear-thinking-criminal’ he would have called Hillary for advice, but no, they decided on their own, (now this part is just investigatory speculation) to submerge the laptops in the bath tub. But, now fast-thinking-Hunter needed to confirm that the laptops were water-damaged beyond repair and took them to a local computer repair shop in Wilmington on the aforementioned April 12th date. Our hero JP, looked them over, saying one was destroyed by ‘some kind of liquid’ (luckily Hunter removed the rubber ducky from the bag…), but one was fine and he could retrieve the data from the hard drive of the third. Hunter, who could have been in a drug induced haze when he signed a service agreement left the shop, thinking they were now gone forever, with no plans to ever return to the shop. After safely removing all the data from the damaged laptop, our hero John Paul tried multiple times to contact Hunter to pick them up, but to no avail. Months went by (May, June, July and August) and, according to Delaware law, when a product is left for service and not retrieved by the original owner within ninety (90) days, the legal ownership is transferred to the repair shop, which was specified in the agreement that Hunter signed. Then on September 25, 2019, the White House released a printed version of President Donald Trump’s phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. John Paul was shocked to hear this and realized that he was in possession of potentially ‘radioactive’ material from the laptop’s hard drive, which he still had in his possession. He recalled that the data contained hundreds, if not thousands, of confidential emails to and from unknown people in the Ukraine, China and Russia. JP thinking this enormous amount of vital information may be relevant to a federal investigation, which now might involve the President of the United States, contacted his father Mac, who lived in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Mac was a well-respected man, known as being a decorated Vietnam Veteran, who flew gunships in Vietnam, and then continued his military service with an impeccable record until he retired as a Colonel in the US Air Force. He agreed with John Paul and offered to make initial contact by taking the data files to the FBI office in Albuquerque. But, after discussing the potential importance of the information, he was blown off by an arrogant agent, who was uninterested, and basically told Mac to leave the office. Sometime in mid-November 2019, as JP began thinking that the government was uninterested in the data, was surprised by two FBI agents (Joshua Williams and Mike Dzielak) from the local Wilmington office who simply walked into his shop. JP immediately offered to give them the data files from Hunter Biden’s laptop, but after a brief discussion, they again refused and left John Paul’s shop. About two weeks later (in late November/early December 2019), the FBI finally returned to JP’s shop and took the data from Hunter Biden’s laptop computer. It is worth noting here that our hero John Paul Mac Issac, after realizing that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) had no initial interest in the data files, never considered taking it to the media or possibly a tabloid which would undoubtedly have paid big bucks for this potentially salacious information, where the source would never have to be revealed. But, John Paul Mac Issac was his father’s son, an honorable man of character and integrity who never even consider the huge payday he might otherwise be ‘entitled to’. Never shared the incriminating data from the laptop with President Trump’s defense teamAnd, then on December 18, 2019, President Donald Trump was formally impeached. And, on that day, JP knew for certain that the FBI (Christopher Wray), and by extension, the Department of Justice (William Barr) never shared the incriminating data from the laptop with President Trump’s defense team. And, in the normal course of his business, JP had made a forensic copy, an exact clone of the data from the laptop, contacted President Trump’s personal attorney, Rudi Giuliani, and arranged to give him a copy of the massive amount of data from Hunter Biden’s laptop. And, as you now know, after spending a considerable time of due diligence as an investigative prosecutor, Rudi Giuliani gave the initial story of the contents on Hunter Biden’s laptop to the New York Post. But, know now that there is much more to come—much more. Thank God that the all-powerful social media giants wanting to crush this amazing story by sending out fools like James Clapper to make ultimatums saying that THE EMAILS ARE RUSSIAN! can no longer un-ring this bell! Every possible version of this blockbuster story is now being told by every alternate media source available, and of course that FoxNews TV host Tucker Carlson, is one of the only trusted sources who has the integrity to report the truth. Realizing my lead off was tongue-in-cheek, it is now more important than ever to find ways to break away from the mainstream and social media and share this vitally important information with each other, to electronically share and to make sure it cannot be corrupted by powerful interests, such as the ones James Clapper referred to. Please consider this as your civic duty to share this as we know the legacy media will continually attempt to influence the outcome of our upcoming presidential election by withholding and/or corrupting these truths. There are so many moving parts to this salacious story, but one of the most important for us to analyze is the silence of the FBI Director Christopher Wray and his boss, Attorney General William Barr. In their secretive minds, the data from the Hunter Biden laptop never existed. Thinking they were in possession of the only copy Wray and Barr made a conscious decision to hold back the files for safe-keeping, while seemingly hoping and praying that it would all go away when Joe Biden was elected president. Thankfully, John Paul was no fool and made additional copies of the data files. President Trump should immediately call Wray and Barr into the Oval Office for a serious discussion of their plans, going forward. Then the question arises of what Nancy Pelosi knew, and when did she know it? Or what and when did Adam Schiff or Chuck Schumer know about the incriminating data found on Hunter Biden’s laptop? We need to stop and think for a quiet moment and consider how different our world would have been had the FBI in the Albuquerque office, or for that matter possibly the agents in the Wilmington office, had been honest investigators, and as well as them having honest bosses. Firstly, President Donald J. Trump would not have been impeached, and secondly of equal importance, Bernie Sanders would have been the Democratic candidate for President of the United States, certainly not Joe Biden. Joe Biden has been compromised by the Chinese CCP government. He is a known national security threat. LOCK HIM UP! Tags: Fredy Lowe, The October Laptop SurpriseTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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The City is Killing America
Posted: 22 Oct 2020 02:27 PM PDT . . . America’s real problem are urban problems.
Daniel Greenfield: The coronavirus, like so many other social ills, real and metaphorical, incubated in major cities.New York City, with the highest population density in the country, also accounted for the highest death toll. San Francisco, the second highest among large cities, was a major incubator.Pandemic maps of the death toll show the deaths concentrating around major cities before making the slow trek from urban into suburban and eventually rural areas. The urban lockdowns didn’t stop the spread of the virus. What they really did was trap poor and middle class residents in urban areas, while the wealthy fled, and the virus spread to urbanites with the least mobility.The people with the worst immune systems, in the densest living conditions, and the least ability to get up and leave, suffered the most, from nursing home patients to minorities with large families. The general pattern was historically familiar from the Middle Ages, and the only thing that our public health experts proved is that they weren’t any smarter than medieval peasants.But the coronavirus is an urban problem and all the official solutions to it are urban solutions. And the urban problems and their solutions are killing us and taking down the whole country.The Black Lives Matter race riots that followed on the heels of the lockdowns were yet another example of an urban problem exploding out of failed cities to become a national crisis. But the vast majority of our problems, social, economic, racial, and political, are the problem of the city. Cities concentrate civilizational achievements and challenges, but it’s been a long time since cities were generating American achievements. America’s cities were once built to house industries and businesses. Their only real business anymore is the business of government. That’s why the Democrat plan to stack the Senate depends on making D.C. into a state. American cities aren’t hyperdense blocs because of industrial density. Even as the city went into a decline as an industrial center, municipal governments began building huge stacks of public housing meant to cram as many people as cheaply as possible into a single block. Why did so many people need to be housed in such a small space? It wasn’t because they had jobs, but because they didn’t. And yet cities needed to keep growing, not because they had too many jobs to fill, but because their political influence depended on human capital. The more people a city had, the more votes it commanded, and the more money it got. And the fewer jobs a city had, the more people it needed to boost its political capital and its cash flow. Even fifty years ago, cities had stopped making jobs and focused on making people. The cities are running out of money, but population growth made them political powerhouses. Even if that power is based on trapping the descendants of black factory workers in urban wastelands, attracting immigrants they can’t employ, and using raw numbers to seize power. That’s what the battle over the census is about. The South had triggered a civil war by trying to use human capital for political power, but its Northern urban counterparts used human capital to dominate regions, states, and then the country. Cities took over the country’s power politics even as they grew more broken and less useful. No one asked what cities were for anymore. The answer seemed self-evident. Huge cities growing out of control while figuring out new ways to house new immigrants and the grandchildren of dispossessed sharecroppers was one of those things a great nation needed. What it needed them for, beyond exotic restaurants and a few industries requiring dense office spaces that suburban employees would spend two hours a day commuting to, no one knew. And pandemics and race riots are just part of the price we pay for having big cities. Housing thousands of people in an area that would normally be home to one family comes with high crime, mental breakdowns, and vulnerability to disease. Stacking a vast number of poor minority groups together requires high welfare spending, heavy police investment, and tolerance for the inevitable outbreaks of violence by people living dead end lives in miserable conditions. But cities need that human capital. And that means importing immigrants from Muslim majority countries who react to religious or political dissent with violence. It means that regular air travel and border traffic keeps bringing new exciting diseases into cities where they spread like wildfire. It means the implosion of families and the communal and social structures of civilization which unleash gang violence, feral youth, suicide, drug use, and constant political outrage. These aren’t really new developments. Prohibition was one of the first massive responses to urban misery. But back then cities created more than they destroyed. Now all they do is destroy. America was a rare example of a new land. The land attracted settlers, the settlers built villages, towns, cities, industries, and their own unique society and government. Millions of immigrants flocked to the frontiers to run their own farms and to the cities to build their own businesses. By the turn of the last century, the country was a booming proposition and running out of frontier. But what it lacked in territorial frontiers, it made up for in industrialization. Immigrants came for factory jobs and large numbers of black people also moved out of the South for them. And then the industrialization declined, but the people still kept coming. A million immigrants poured into the country every year. But America wasn’t making a million more jobs. Certainly not a million jobs that would transform the new arrivals into productive and independent citizens. The American city has failed. The coronavirus lockdowns and the Black Lives Matter race riots haven’t revealed a new reality, but the old truths under the glossy branding and hipster cafes. The underlying failure of the city isn’t social, it’s economic. Urban areas parted ways from the basis for their existence generations ago. Cities don’t exist because we need them, or because they’re more efficient ways of bringing workers and businesses together. They’re relics of economic empires that have collapsed leaving behind beautiful architecture and urban decay. Major cities only productively employ a fraction of their residents, and most of their better jobs in both the private and public sectors are filled by workers who don’t live there. But the limited culture, medical, financial and tech industries that do thrive there produce a lot of money and even more influence. The difference between the perception of a failed city and a successful one is bringing in a few companies with a national brand and a global footprint. A city with a few major publishing firms, financial companies, or dot coms is seen as a success even if these narrow sectors have little to do with the majority of the millions of people who actually live there. Urbanization has become a pyramid scheme taking over entire states, while hollowing out the more conservative rural areas, turning red states blue, and leaving everyone except those at the top of the pyramid scheme poorer with each generation. America is no longer divided between the old geographies of North and South, but the new geographies of density, between cities and their suburbs, and rural areas and small towns. The latter represent the old American communities, while the former showcase the new feudal order in which great suburban wealth and urban poverty combine into radical political alignment. That’s the so-called “resistance”, not by the disempowered, but by the politically privileged. The growth of urban areas benefited Democrat political machines. These machines however fell out of the hands of the old machine politicians and into the hands of a class of academic leftists who were detached from everyday life and incapable of understanding basic economic realities. They accumulated populations without having the faintest idea of how to provide for them even while imposing policies that crushed industries and shattered the economies of entire regions. And this class insisted that it knew what it was doing because it was listening to the experts. The bigger the urban political class grew, the more it was able to destroy industries, replacing actual productive labor with government makework in its own economic echo chambers. The deficits were plugged with unsustainable borrowing sprees against the brand of the city. Cities grew, debt rose, jobs declined, welfare increased, and the clock ticked ever closer to midnight. The scarcity of jobs sharpened racial conflicts, between black and white workers, between citizens and new arrivals, fighting over the rotting slices of a shrinking pie. And the only solution of the political class was to promise that everyone should be able to go to college for free, as if the problem was the lack of credits in social anthropology, instead of the lack of industries. The dot com boom made the promise of new industries seem real, but it was another facade. The biggest tech companies, Amazon, Facebook, and Google are little more than pipelines connecting Chinese businesses with American consumers. When Chinese dot coms succeed in replicating Amazon’s fulfillment model, and the freebies-for-data advertising models of Google and Facebook, then the big behemoths will fall or just be taken over by our new overlords. Meanwhile all they’re really doing is creating new industries and manufacturing jobs in China. Our political and social crises are rooted in the economic boom of our origins. America only ‘worked’ as a growing and expanding nation. The boom of land, liberty and production made us a superpower. But, like the European continent that birthed America, we’re running out of all three. All we have anymore is population growth and so does the entire Third World. Cities have become cancers on the country, expanding unsustainably, sucking up resources, and eliminating productive employment. The urban model is a welfare state subsidized by a handful of wealthy industries. Those cities that can keep a Silicon Valley, a Wall Street or a Hollywood can go on faking it, while those that lose core industries become black holes, sucking up endless amounts of money, while spewing blight, crime, and violence in all directions. Urban political models insist that we can spend our way out of these crises by putting even more money into schools, social services, public housing, and the rest of the welfare state. That hasn’t worked in four generations. It’s not about to start working now. Welfare states don’t create jobs. They’re what happens when there are too many people and no jobs. We might be able to build our way out of this dead end, but we have to begin by questioning the urban model which is at the root of all of our national problems. America doesn’t need an expanding population. Urban political machines do. Nor do we need massive urban density that no longer occurs because of the density of opportunities, but just the opposite, the density of failure and the real estate bubbles that are fueled by urban crises. There is no shortage of cheap labor in America. We don’t need more of it. Every major city is already choking on the unemployed cheap labor forces they have. And unless we have a massive manufacturing boom, the only employment opportunities for them are in the gig economy where they can deliver pad thai and give rides to environmental consultants. The urban model hasn’t worked for America in sixty years. The pandemic has put it on the verge of collapse as the wealthy industries that made cities their base flee into virtual workspaces. It’s time to rethink and defund cities as the hubs of our economy and our nation. The Trump administration began the move by trying to relocate federal agencies from Washington D.C. to other parts of the country. But the government has a great deal more power to defund the urban sprawl that’s choking the country’s institutions. Government funding created centralized institutions and massive urban housing complexes. It has the power to defund them. Envisioning a less dense and more open country will heal many of our social and economic ills. Urban areas have concentrated political radicalism and blight. Universities have become their own radical cities. Municipalities have built networks of crony companies around themselves. Density has destroyed communities and families while depriving people of a meaningful life. America was built around communities, not cities. It can be rebuilt around communities again. Reducing immigration can slow down population growth to sustainably match our economy and replacing cities with communities can allow our society to heal from its urban wounds. The city is too big to fail and that means that the country is dying of its failures. We can either keep the city alive at the cost of the country, or let the city fail so that the country can live. Tags: Daniel Greenfield, The City, Killing America To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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DOJ Slaps Google With Antitrust Lawsuit
Posted: 22 Oct 2020 02:00 PM PDT Rare bipartisan support arises among Congress to go after Big Tech. by Thomas Gallatin: The Department of Justice leveled an anti-trust lawsuit against tech giant Google on Tuesday, alleging that it has engaged in monopolistic behavior with its Internet search and advertising business. “Google has frozen out competitors through contracts between the tech giant and browsers, carriers, and mobile phone manufactures that give Google such prime standing as the default search engine across a variety of platforms as to bar any competitors from beginning to compete with the tech giant,” reports The Daily Wire. “Google search queries make up roughly 80% of all those in the U.S.” After more than a year of investigating, DOJ officials have determined there was enough evidence to go after the tech behemoth over antitrust violations. However, despite Google’s near-complete dominance of the industry, it won’t be an easy case for the DOJ to make. The main problem arises from the fact that Google does not prevent or even make it difficult for users to chose other companies’ platforms. As The Wall Street Journal editorial board notes, “Consumers can easily download other browsers and search engines if they don’t like Google’s, unlike in the 1990s when they had to buy special software or jump through hoops to use an alternative to Microsoft’s. Now most general search engines and web browsers are free. Microsoft’s Bing even pays consumers rewards for using it. Where is the consumer harm?” Indeed, Google SVP of Global Affairs Kent Walker responded to the DOJ lawsuit by arguing, “This isn’t the dial-up 1990s when you needed to purchase a CD-ROM from a store to access alternative services or wait forever for a 28.8 bps modem. Today, you can easily choose your own search engine or download an app in a matter of seconds. The DOJ is wrongly claiming Americans aren’t sophisticated enough to do this.” Furthermore, the antitrust lawsuit doesn’t actually get at the heart of what bothers most Americans and especially conservatives about Google. It’s Google’s increasing and blatantly political censorship practices that has conservatives up in arms, as they condemn the tech giant for violating Americans’ free speech and privacy rights. That is clearly what concerns Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO), who backs the DOJ’s action. “Google and its fellow Big Tech monopolists exercise unprecedented power over the lives of ordinary Americans, controlling everything from the news we read to the security of our most personal information,” Hawley said. “And Google in particular has gathered and maintained that power through illegal means. That is why I launched a sweeping antitrust investigation of Google when I was Missouri Attorney General, and that’s why I stand behind the Department of Justice’s actions today.” However, Hawley was quick to add, “But to be clear — this is just a first step, and I will continue to fight for the legislative solutions needed to end the tyranny of Big Tech.” Interestingly, it’s not just Republicans celebrating the DOJ’s actions. None other than House Judiciary Committee Chairman (and one of President Donald Trump’s biggest opponents) Jerry Nadler (D-NY) praised the announcement. “There is bipartisan agreement in Congress and among federal and state antitrust enforcers that protecting competition and innovation online is essential to our economy,” stated Nadler. “Today’s antitrust lawsuit against Google is an important step for ensuring a competitive online space.” Well, as C&C Music Factory sang, “Things that make you go hmmmm…” Why would Democrats like Nadler, who have benefited immensely from Big Tech’s suppression of conservative views, jump on board an antitrust lawsuit? The answer likely lies in the opportunity to assert greater government control via regulations on the industry. Picture Big Business working with Big Government to craft just the right regulations. Finally, Mark Alexander contends that the actual solution isn’t via the antitrust lawsuit route. Instead, he says, “If Congress is serious about curbing the unmitigated power of social and search media platforms to influence elections, it must start with their unmitigated violation of user privacy. Congress has the authority to protect consumer privacy through legislation, and in the case of Facebook, Google and other aggregators of private data (which should be classified as private property), that legislation should include explicit conditions regarding the collection and dissemination of such data. Congress should enact legislation requiring that social media and other aggregators of individual data be required to obtain specific and explicit user permissions for each and every collection and transfer of such data, prior to such collection or transfer. Violations of those conditions warrant enormously expensive fines.” Tags: Patriot Post, DOJ, Slaps Google, With Antitrust LawsuitTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. 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NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Friday, October 23, 2020
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Good morning, NBC News readers.
President Donald Trump and Joe Biden had their last face-off ahead of Election Day. We breakdown how they fared in the more subdued forum and double-check their claims.
Here’s what we’re watching this Friday morning.
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Biden and Trump clash on hot topics during cooler debate
The final debate between President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden was a departure from their rancorous first clash in Cleveland. Instead, the two candidates sparred over federal Covid-19 policy, health care, energy, immigration policy and race.
With polls showing Biden holding a sizable national lead and Election Day just 12 days away — over 42 million ballots have already been cast — Trump delivered no obvious knockout blows, and Biden appeared to clear his final hurdle without a major stumble.
Moderator Kristen Welker — aided by a new rule that muted candidates’ microphones while their opponent delivered their initial responses to questions — managed to keep order, which allowed for a more substantive conversation than the name-calling shouting match we all witnessed last time.
- Trump looked backwards, Biden looked forward. Trump spent much of his time defending his actions over the last four years, but didn’t take the opportunity to lay out his plans going forward for the coronavirus pandemic, health care or the economy. Biden came armed with talking points about his plans, from tackling Covid-19 to providing more subsidies for alternative energy sources and less for oil and gas. Check four key takeaways on the debate from NBC News’ White House reporter Shannon Pettypiece.
- Did Biden sell Ukraine “pillows and sheets”? Despite the generally calmer vibe, a lot of mud was still slung during the 90-minute event. Check out which claims were true and which were false in our fact check.
- Who won the debate?: Experts grade the debate that cleared the “lowest bar of civility.”
- With just less than two weeks to go before Election Day, keep up on all the latest developments with our live blog.
- And listen to our Into America podcast. In the latest episode, host Trymaine Lee digs into how both campaigns are targeting a crucial demographic: Black men.
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Inside the campaign to ‘pizzagate’ Hunter Biden
Some of the same people who pushed the false “pizzagate” conspiracy theory about Hillary Clinton that first emerged in 2016 are now targeting Hunter Biden, Joe Biden’s son, with similar falsehoods.
Back in 2016, the pizzagate-style rumors in were largely confined to far-right message boards like 4chan and parts of Reddit.
But not this year. These fringe claims are now reaching the mainstream with help from a website boosted by Trump and his surrogates, NBC News’ Ben Collins and Brandy Zadrozny report.
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Hailed at first, Germany is now grappling with a Covid-19 spike
A few months can make a world of difference during a pandemic.
After being lauded for its response to Covid-19 after Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government flattened the curve this spring, Germany is now grappling with more than 10,000 daily coronavirus infections, the most it has seen since the outbreak started, and admissions to hospital intensive care units have doubled in the last two weeks.
While infection rates have spiked, Germany is still faring better than the rest of Europe, having reported less than 10,000 total deaths and under 400,000 infections, according to John Hopkins University data.
But the worsening situation is raising eyebrows in Germany, especially as people worry about “crisis fatigue.”
Meantime, in the U.S., the Food and Drug Administration has approved the first drug for Covid-19 treatment: Remdesivir.
“We need to do everything now so that the virus will not spread uncontrollably. Every day counts now,” Merkel, a physicist by training, said in a recent video. (Photo: Stefanie Loos / AFP – Getty Images file)
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Plus
- Amy Coney Barrett’s Supreme Court nomination moved to the full Senate after Democrats on the judiciary committee boycotted the vote.
- The Trump administration has known for weeks that Iran and Russia had hacked local governments and obtained voter registration info, officials say.
- A man with a van full of guns had a checklist to “execute” Biden, authorities say.
- The pope’s civil union remarks have raised both hopes and doubts for gay Catholics.
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THINK about it
The Iran “Proud Boys” email and alleged voter intimidation scam aren’t about Trump or Biden, Geoff LaMear, Marcellus Policy Fellow at the John Quincy Adams Society, writes in an opinion piece.
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Live BETTER
Who is out there feeding all those hungry voters stuck waiting in long lines at voting sites? “Chefs for the Polls,” an initiative launched by Chef Jose Andres’ not-for-profit organization World Central Kitchen.
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Shopping
Looking for a new mask? These are best sellers that meet CDC guidelines.
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One fun thing
NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft touched down briefly on an asteroid Tuesday, gathering samples of the space rock that will be delivered to Earth in 2023. The intricate maneuver, conducted more than 200 million miles from Earth, was the first time NASA has collected pieces of an asteroid in space.
On Wednesday, the agency released new video of the spacecraft’s cosmic encounter with the asteroid, named Bennu. The contact was more of a punch than a high-five, but it’s pretty cool to watch. Check it out below.
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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: Final Trump-Biden debate finally provides clarity on the issues
Fewer insults. Fewer interruptions. And a lot less name-calling.
Unlike the first presidential debate, last night’s second – and final — showdown perfectly distilled the presidential candidates’ positions on the most important issues, giving voters some important clarity.
Jim Bourg/Pool via AP
President Trump on the coronavirus: “There was a very big spike in Texas, it’s now gone. There was a very big spike in Arizona, it’s now gone. And there are some spikes and surges in other places. They will soon be gone. We have a vaccine that’s coming, it’s ready, it’s going to be announced within weeks and it’s going to be delivered.”
Joe Biden on the coronavirus: “The expectation is we’ll have another 200,000 Americans dead between now and the end of the year. If we just wore these masks, the president’s own advisers have told him, we could save 100,000 lives. And we’re in a circumstance where the president thus far and still has no plan. No comprehensive plan. What I would do is make sure we have everyone encouraged to wear a mask all the time.”
Trump on health care: “What we’d like to do [on Obamacare] is terminate it. We have the individual mandate, done. I don’t know that it’s going to work. If we don’t win, we will have to run it and we’ll have Obamacare but it’ll be better run. But it no longer is Obamacare, because without the individual mandate it’s much different. Pre-existing conditions will always stay. What I would like to do is a much better healthcare – much better.”
Biden on health care: “What I’m going to do is pass Obamacare with a public option, become Bidencare… Secondly, we’re going to make sure we reduce the premiums and reduce drug prices by making sure that there’s competition that doesn’t exist now by allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices with the insurance companies.”
Trump on immigration: “Catch-and-release is a disaster. A murderer would come in; a rapist would come in; a very bad person would come in. We would take their name. We have to release them into our country. And then you say they come back. Less than 1 percent of the people come back.”
Biden on immigration: “I’ve made it very clear within 100 days I’m going to send to the United States Congress a pathway to citizenship for over 11 million undocumented people, and all of those so-called Dreamers, those DACA kids, they’re going to be immediately certified again to be able to stay in this country and put on a path to citizenship.”
Trump on personal foreign entanglements: “But you were getting a lot of money from Russia, they were paying you a lot of money, and they probably still are. But now, with what came out today, it’s even worse. All of the e-mails, the e-mails, the horrible emails of the kind of money that you were raking in, you and your family.”
Biden on personal foreign entanglements: “I have not taken a penny from any foreign source ever in my life. We learned that this president paid 50 times the tax in China, has a secret bank account with China, does business in China, and in fact is talking about me taking money? I have not taken a single penny from any country whatsoever.”
Trump on race: “Nobody has done more for the black community than Donald Trump, and if you look with the exception of Abraham Lincoln – possible exception, but the exception of Abraham Lincoln, nobody has done what I’ve done. Criminal justice reform, Obama and Joe didn’t do it.”
Biden on race: “The fact of the matter is, there is institutional racism in America. And we have always said — we’ve never lived up to it — that ‘We hold these truths to be self-evident, all men and women are created equal.’ But guess what? We have never, ever lived up to it. But we’ve constantly been moving the needle further and further to inclusion, not exclusion. This is the first president to come along and says, ‘That’s the end of that. We’re not going to do that anymore.’”
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Other post-debate thoughts
If you’re a Republican, last night’s more normal debate probably stopped the bleeding from the first one, which is good news for GOP Senate candidates like Dan Sullivan (in Alaska), Roger Marshall (in Kansas) and John Cornyn (in Texas).
If you’re a Democrat, you’re pleased that Biden came out ahead in the credible insta-polls…
Biden’s oil comment gave some ammunition to the GOP.
And we are now 11 days out – or one Scaramucci away – from Election Day.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: Last night’s real winner
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DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
8,456,088: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 77,322 more than yesterday morning.)
224,280: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 920 more than yesterday morning.)
128.96 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
42,250,954: The number of Americans who have voted early, either by mail or in person, according to NBC and TargetSmart
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2020 VISION: A reminder that a lot can happen in 11 days
We are 11 days out until Election Day — which just happens to be the four-year anniversary of the Comey letter, which upended the 2016 race.
It’s a reminder that news bombshells CAN influence a race, and that the unexpected can happen in politics.
Still, what’s been remarkable about 2020 is that despite all of the big news and events (a pandemic, racial protests, an ugly debate and the president getting COVID), this race has remained remarkably stable.
At least for now.
On the campaign trail today: The day after the debate, Trump stumps in Florida, holding rallies in The Villages and Pensacola… Biden delivers remarks on fighting COVID-19 from Delaware… Mike Pence hits Ohio and Pennsylvania… And Kamala Harris campaigns in Georgia.
On the campaign trail Saturday: Trump travels to Ohio and Wisconsin… Joe and Jill Biden hit Bucks and Luzerne counties in Pennsylvania… Kamala Harris is in Cleveland… And Barack Obama campaigns for Biden in Miami.
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Closing arguments
Trump and Biden delivered their closing messages in last night’s debate – in the form of what they’d say in their inaugural address.
When asked by NBC’s Kristen Welker what they’d say to Americans on Jan. 20 who DIDN’T vote for them, the two candidates offered vastly different messages.
Here was Trump: “We have to make our country totally successful as it was prior to the plague coming in from China. Now we’re rebuilding it and we’re doing record numbers.”
He added, “Success is going to bring us together.”
And here was Biden: “I will say, I’m an American president, I represent all of you, whether you voted for me or against me. And I’m going to make sure that you’re represented.”
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Ad Watch from Ben Kamisar
Biden and Trump also released two new ads during last night’s debate that typify key parts of their strategies down the stretch.
The new Trump spot never mentions the president outside of the mandated “stand by your ad” and “paid for by” tags. Instead, the ad spends its entire 30 seconds attacking Biden on his controversial comment that “you ain’t black” if they support Trump, as well as the 90s crime bill and his rhetoric around it.
And the Biden campaign launched an ad featuring a bartender talking about the struggles of workers during the pandemic, arguing his policies have not gotten the virus under the control enough to stimulate the economy.
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THE LID: Early and often
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when NBC’s Alex Seitz-Wald looked at the wild early-vote numbers and what it means for the 2020 race.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Here are Shannon Pettypiece’s four takeaways from the debate.
Here’s what was true and what wasn’t from last night’s debate.
Dan Balz says that Trump brought a changed game to Nashville, but it’s unlikely to change the race.
Top intelligence officials say Russia is a bigger foreign threat to the election than Iran.
Here’s the latest in the fight over when to count ballots in North Carolina.
Here’s how online posters are trying to “Pizzagate” Hunter Biden.
Some Senate Republicans aren’t happy with Steve Mnuchin.
More than 300 military families have signed a letter in support of Biden.
Trump says he will vote in person on Saturday in Florida.
The New York Times checks in on the Maine Senate race.
CBS
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LOUDER WITH CROWDER
AOC is super mad that Donald Trump called her AOC and didn’t refer to her by her official title, Congresswoman AOC. Rep. AOC works too. She’s a super serious person who demands to be taken super se … MORE
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