Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday November 25, 2020
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THE EPOCH TIMES
NOVEMBER 25, 2020 READ IN BROWSER
Protect Your Retirement from COVID-19 with a Home Delivery Gold IRA. Delivered right to your doorstep. In these uncertain times, it is more important than ever to stay informed. We at The Epoch Times have made it our mission to report the news, unbiased and with journalistic integrity, so that you can form your own opinion. We believe it is essential for you to stay informed. Which is why we are offering a full access subscription to The Epoch Times for 4 months for just $1. NOTE: This is our lowest priced offer ever, and it is available for a very limited time: Offer Ends Soon Cancel anytime “Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all others.” CICERO “The CCP has launched a ‘war against everyone’ to loot advanced technology from the West, using patriotism, racial sentiments, money, and prestige to drive its unprecedented stealing spree.” You can rollover Your IRA/401K into Physical Gold and have it delivered to your doorstep. Find out how 1,000s of American retirees are protecting their future with a TAX FREE Home Delivery transfer… The only way to personally control your Gold IRA yourself. For a limited time only Red Rock Secured is offering up to $3,500 in free gold or silver on new qualifying accounts. Click here for your free guide and find out if you qualify. The Thieves Who Stole Our Election Got Sloppy Laziness leads to sloppiness, and sloppiness is how the most brazen heist in American history is being exposed…Read more The Smartmatic Story: From Venezuela With No Love Many have debated, and Rudy Giuliani only vaguely explained on Lou Dobbs’ show by saying they had “different theories” of the case…Read more As we are sure you are aware, there is so much misinformation in the world today. You can help correct that right now by sharing this infographic. ‘Jeopardy’, ‘Individual inscription made on a wall’, ‘Figured out’, ‘African antelope’, ‘In the Red?’, ‘Bar selections’, and ‘Presidents’ Day mo.’ are some of the clues in this crossword puzzle. Georgia has become a focal point of the 2020 election, with questions remaining about the ultimate outcome of the presidential election, and with the fate of the Senate to be decided by the upcoming runoff elections. 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 28th St, Fl.5
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AXIOS
Axios AM
🥧 Wishing you peace for Thanksgiving Eve! I’m thankful for our daily conversations.
- Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,180 words … 4½ minutes.
💡 Start a non-political debate at your Thanksgiving table. Axios newsletter writers will have ideas later today on @Axios Instagram/Twitter.
- When they bring up conspiracy theories, you pivot to whether college athletes should be able to profit off their name, image and likeness.
⚡ Situational awareness: Michael Flynn will be part of a series of pardons that President Trump issues between now and Jan. 20, Jonathan Swan scooped last night.
Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photo: Kirsty O’Connor/PA via Getty Images
President-elect Biden has said the fight against systemic racism will be one of the top goals of his presidency. But advocates are pushing so many ideas that he’ll have trouble satisfying everyone, Axios’ Russell Contreras and Stef Kight report.
- Wish lists include ending the detention of migrant children and expanding DACA, announcing a Justice Department investigation of rogue police departments, and returning some public lands to Indigenous tribes.
Advocates say that if Republicans keep control of the Senate, Biden could test executive powers by directing federal agencies to change policies on immigration, criminal justice and education:
- Some are pushing Biden to sign an order forgiving student debt, since many Black and Latino former students are burdened by college loans.
- Some are advocating for an order that all federal agencies reinstitute requirements for anti-racial bias training for their workers.
- And some want Biden to sign an order decriminalizing cannabis, since many Black and Latino residents face petty drug charges from marijuana possession when it’s legal in some states.
Fairfax County Public Schools food and nutrition workers outside Forest Edge Elementary School in Reston in April. Photo: Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post via Getty Images
An internal report from Fairfax County, Va. — one of the nation’s largest and best regarded school districts — “offers some of the first concrete evidence that online learning is” resulting in tanking grades, the WashPost reports.
- Similar surges in F’s have been reported in Houston and St. Paul.
- “[T]he most vulnerable students — children with disabilities and English-language learners — are suffering the most.”
By the numbers: Fairfax schools, “mostly online since March, published an internal analysis this week showing that, between the last academic year and this one, the percentage of middle school and high school students earning F’s in at least two classes jumped by 83 percent: from 6 percent to 11 percent,” per The Post.
- “By the end of the first quarter of 2020-2021, nearly 10,000 Fairfax students had scored F’s in two or more classes — an increase of more than 4,300 students as compared with” last year.
… please remember how hard these times are for our neighbors.
- President-elect Joe Biden, in his first post-election interview, told NBC’s Lester Holt this story in Wilmington yesterday:
I remember my dad being restless, and I remember one night … you could just hear the bed moving. So the next morning, I said: “Mom, what’s wrong with Dad?” She said: “Honey, he’s worried. We just lost our — .” He had moved jobs. “He lost his health insurance. He doesn’t know what to do.”
Think of all the people … who are laying … awake at night, staring at the ceiling thinking: “God forbid. What happens?”
Tesla’s market value blew past $500 billion for the first time yesterday, making the company more valuable than most of the world’s major automakers combined, Ben Geman reports in his daily Generate newsletter.
The vast majority of Americans hadn’t developed coronavirus antibodies as of September, Caitlin Owens writes from a study in JAMA Internal Medicine.
- The science: Emerging evidence suggests that antibodies wane over time. In New York, the percentage of people with antibodies decreased from 23.3% in the first collection period to 17% in the final one.
Harvard’s student body has elected a Black man as president for the first time in the school’s 384-year history, The Grio reports:
- “Noah Harris, a junior from Hattiesburg, Mississippi, ran a virtual campaign via social media and texting.”
- Deferring to the pandemic, “he limited contact with his fellow students, declining to pass out flyers or knock on doors.”
Women were first: In 1999, Fentrice Driskell, now a member of the Florida House of Representatives, was elected Harvard’s first Black student-body president.
Noah Harris self-published a children’s book, “Successville,” last year.
- In July, upon the death of the congressman and civil rights leader, Harris wrote a guest column for his local paper, the Hattiesburg American, “Thank you, John Lewis: We are the next generation of good troublemakers.”
On “The Late Show,” President Obama told Stephen Colbert that he’s “already waved the white flag” on catching sales of Michelle Obama’s memoir, “Becoming.”
- “It turns out that now that [the way] my book is selling, they all package it with her book. So she keeps on selling more,” Obama said in his first in-person late night TV interview since leaving the White House. “It’s hopeless.”
- See a clip.
📈 Obama’s “A Promised Land” sold more than 1.7 million copies in North America in Week 1 — roughly the combined first-week sales of memoirs by his two immediate predecessors, and among the highest ever for nonfiction. (AP)
RadioShack, a mall fixture for decades, is the most prized name in the basket of brands (including Pier 1, Dressbarn and Modell’s) that entrepreneur investors Alex Mehr and Tai Lopez have scooped up during the pandemic, AP reports.
- Mehr and Lopez hope to make RadioShack competitive again, this time online. But it’s Amazon’s world now.
🥊 Sobering quote: “It’s a very thin line between being iconic and being dead,” said Robert Passikoff, founder of Brand Keys Inc., a marketing consultancy.
Fifty-seven years ago today, John F. Kennedy Jr. seared himself into the national consciousness by saluting his slain father’s casket, Axios’ Glen Johnson writes from Boston.
- Adding to the tragedy of the moment, it was his third birthday.
Flash forward: Today would have been JFK Jr.’s 60th birthday. It’s a cultural and social milestone almost unfathomable to those who knew him as “John-John.” There’s still a whole generation who sees his age frozen at 38, when he died his untimely death.
- In delivering his nephew’s eulogy, Ted Kennedy quoted poet William Butler Yeats: “We dared to think … that this John Kennedy would live to comb gray hair. … But like his father, he had every gift but length of years.”
JFK Jr.’s magazine, George — unveiled in 1995 when Kennedy was 34, with Cindy Crawford on the cover — foresaw the merger of celebrity and politics.
Diane Kaji of Tallahassee decorated early to spread a little extra cheer for neighbors. Photo: Tori Lynn Schneider/Tallahassee Democrat
“Pandemic-weary homeowners have been stringing up lights and flocking to fake trees since Halloween,” The Wall Street Journal reports:
- “Fred Stewart was [so] disappointed that he couldn’t throw a holiday party as usual this year, he decided to decorate his front yard in Rogersville, Mo., for the first time. He bought four 6-foot snowmen and an 8-foot Santa, and is adding his own tropical theme, including 20 pink flamingos in Santa caps plus a 4-foot-tall hippo wearing a pink tutu.”
- “At Home Depot, sales of artificial trees are three weeks ahead of usual.”
📬 Thanks for starting your day with us. Please invite your friends to sign up for Axios AM/PM.
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THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Nov 25, 2020 View in Browser AP MORNING WIRE Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
There will be no Morning Wire on Thursday, for the Thanksgiving holiday in the U.S. We’ll return Nov. 27 with a Special Edition Black Friday takeover with AP’s Business News team.
TAMER FAKAHANY
The Rundown AP PHOTO/CAROLYN KASTER ‘America is back,’ Biden declares as he pushes past Trump era with nominees; Trump vents about election as agencies aid Biden transition
It was a declaration many in America, and across the globe, were waiting to hear for four years, but also one that would have caused consternation among others in the U.S. and beyond.
“America is back,” President-elect Joe Biden said as he formally introduced his national security team, his first substantive offering of how he’ll shift from Trump-era “America First” policies by relying on experts from the Democratic establishment to be some of his most important advisers, Alexandra Jaffe, Matthew Lee and Aamer Madhani report.
VIDEO: Biden says ‘America is back’ on world stage.
Biden’s Washington veterans all have ties to the Obama administration as the president-elect has sought to deliver a clear message about his desire to reestablish a more predictable engagement from Washington in the global arena.
Analysis: The first wave of Biden Cabinet picks and choices for White House staff has prized staying power over star power, with a premium placed on government experience and proficiency as he looks to rebuild a depleted and demoralized federal bureaucracy. With an eye in part toward making selections who may have to seek approval from a Republican-controlled Senate, Biden prioritized choosing qualified professionals while eschewing flashy names. Competence is making a comeback, Jonathan Lemire writes.
Senate Confirmations: While Biden started rolling out his administrative team, one voice has been notably silent: Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. Senate Republicans will hold great sway in confirming or denying Biden’s Cabinet nominees, regardless of which party controls the narrowly split Senate. But key Republican senators, including the GOP leader, are keeping quiet for now, Lisa Mascaro and Matthew Daly report.
Trump Transition: He says he’s not giving up his fight to overturn the election results, even as agencies across the federal government begin to support Biden’s incoming administration. Career federal officials are opening the doors of agencies to hundreds of transition aides ready to prepare for Biden’s Jan. 20 inauguration. Trump signed off on allowing Biden to receive the presidential daily brief, the highly classified briefing prepared by the nation’s intelligence community for the most senior leaders, Zeke Miller reports.
AP FACT CHECK: Trump still uses distortion in hopeless quest. Calvin Woodward and Scott Bauer lay out the false accusations.
Trump Social Media: Since he became president four years ago, Trump has enjoyed special status not given to regular users on Twitter and Facebook even as he used his perch atop the social media pyramid to peddle misinformation and hurl abuse at his critics. But could his loose leash on the platforms be yanked on Jan. 20 when his successor is inaugurated? Barbara Ortutay reports. AP PHOTO/MARK LENNIHAN Masks for foreseeable future: A vaccine won’t end the US crisis right away; Restaurant workers jobless again as virus surges anew
Throwing away the mask in America, and many other countries beside, isn’t a plausible consideration in the immediate future.
Despite the expected arrival of COVID-19 vaccines in just a few weeks, it could take several months — probably well into 2021 — before things get back to something close to normal in the U.S, Candice Choi reports.
Many challenges lie ahead — not just the logistical hurdles involved in the biggest vaccination campaign in U.S. history, but public fear and misinformation that could hinder the effort and kick the end of the pandemic further down the road.
The U.S. has seen more than 12.5 million confirmed infections, and more than 259,000 people have died.
Thanksgiving Travel: Later today, AP will be focusing on one of the busiest travel days of the year with the U.S. in the grips of a surging pandemic and health officials cautioning against large indoor family gatherings. You can follow that story here.
U.S. Surge: It’s battering the hospitality industry and its workers once more. Waiters and bartenders are losing their jobs – again – as governors and local officials shut down indoor dining and drinking establishments to combat a nationwide surge that is overwhelming hospitals and dashing hopes for a quick economic recovery.
The timing couldn’t be worse. One Los Angeles County restaurant owner says he’s dreading having to notify employees that they won’t have a job over the holidays. Many restaurants are offering curbside pickup but also trying to offer outdoor dining, even if it means setting up igloos and outdoor heaters. Some are challenging shutdown orders in court, with little success. Tammy Webber, Daniella Peters and Brian Melley report.
Rural Kansas: The cancellation of the beloved Christmas Drawing in Norcatur, Kansas, has shone a spotlight on a global pandemic that has reached deep into rural America. The notice blamed individuals who have the virus and refuse to quarantine for making it unsafe for the town to hold its Christmas celebration. It’s a decades-old tradition in which the whole town gets together for a potluck dinner, Roxana Hegeman reports. AP PHOTO/ALBERTO PEZZALI UK eases restrictions so families can gather at Christmas; Macron lays out France’s steps out of lockdown; Germany set to extend
It’s probably not what Charles Dickens envisaged as he created the concept of a British Christmas in his literary work, but the government is relaxing coronavirus restrictions so that friends and families can gather over the holidays.
Up to three households will be able to form a “Christmas bubble” for five days over the festive season, and members can move freely between them. People are currently barred from visiting members of other households in much of the U.K. and there are limits on travel to high-infection areas, Pan Pylas reports from London.
In another change, the 14-day quarantine requirement for travelers arriving in England from most places will be reduced to as little as five days if they test negative. The U.K. has recorded more than 55,000 deaths linked to the virus, the deadliest outbreak in Europe.
France: People in the country will be able to go back to their favorite shops and attend religious services again next week, after a month of a partial virus lockdown. But they’ll have to wait until next year to savor a meal in a restaurant or enjoy a gym workout. These are among announcements President Emmanuel Macron made when he laid out the next baby steps in France’s virus strategy. Infection and hospitalization rates are slowing, but the nation is still reporting hundreds of virus-related deaths per day.
EXPLAINER: China’s claims of coronavirus on frozen foods. Beijing says it has detected the virus on packages of imported frozen food, but how valid are its claims and how serious is the threat to public health? The country’s Customs Administration has suspended frozen shrimp imports from an Ecuadorian company for one week in a continuing series of such temporary bans. The virus can survive for a time on surfaces, but it remains unclear how serious a risk that poses. Ethiopia Conflict
More than 40,000 people have fled the Ethiopian government’s offensive in the defiant Tigray region.
They hurried into Sudan, often under gunfire, sometimes so quickly they had to leave family behind.
“We don’t know who is fighting us. We don’t know who is with us or who is not with us. We don’t know. When the war came, we just ran,” says one Tigrayan refugee.
There is not enough to feed them in this remote area, and very little shelter. Some drink from the river that separates the countries, and more cross it every day. Almost half the refugees are children under 18.
At least nine women have given birth in Sudan. One newborn had her first bath in a puddle. Now she cries all night in a country that is not her own. Fay Abuelgasim and Nariman El-Mofty report from Umm Rakouba in Sudan, across from the Ethiopian border.
VIDEO: Ethiopian refugees cross Tekeze River to Sudan.
In the meantime, alarm is spiraling over Ethiopia’s imminent tank attack on the capital of the Tigray region, with a rush of warnings about protecting civilians three weeks after the war began.
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s 72-hour ultimatum for the region’s leaders to surrender ends today. His military has warned civilians there will be “no mercy” if they don’t move away in time,
Abiy has rejected a growing international consensus for dialogue and a halt to deadly fighting in the country’s Tigray region as “interference,” saying his country will handle the conflict on its own as the surrender ultimatum runs out, Cara Anna reports
The United Nations Security Council met for the first time on the conflict Tuesday and backed a new diplomatic effort amid warnings that food in the Tigray region is running out. Other Top Stories Wall Street reached its latest milestone when the Dow Jones Industrial Average topped 30,000 for the first time. It’s an attention-grabbing psychological threshold, and it’s an encouraging signal that the market’s rally is broadening. Many investors say the Dow and stocks generally can keep climbing in 2021, mainly because of the prospects for a coming COVID-19 vaccine and the news that the transition of power to President-elect Biden is finally beginning. But big risks in the near term mean the Dow could cross back and forth over the 30,000 threshold a few more times. Flooded out Honduran and Guatemalan families stranded on rooftops in the most marginalized neighborhoods after the passage of hurricanes Eta and Iota this month have raised fears of a new wave of migration, observers across the region say. More than 4.3 million Central Americans, including 3 million Hondurans, were affected by Eta alone. Those numbers only rose after Iota, another Category 4 storm, hit the region last week. It’s still early. Homes are still flooded, tens of thousands remain in shelters, but those along the migration route have already started to see storm victims who lost everything begin to trickle north. Pakistan’s Christian transgender people, often mocked, abused and bullied, say they have found peace and a refuge in the country’s first church dedicated to them. The First Church for Eunuchs _ “eunuchs” is a term sometimes used for transgender women in South Asia _ provides a place for worship, Bible readings and community. Pakistan in recent years recognized transgender people as a third gender, but the community is still often shunned by the public at large in the mainly Muslim nation. The Duchess of Sussex has revealed that she had a miscarriage in July. Meghan described the experience in an opinion piece in the New York Times. She wrote: “I knew, as I clutched my firstborn child, that I was losing my second.” The former Meghan Markle and husband Prince Harry have a son, Archie, born in 2019. The duchess, who is 39, said she was sharing her story in hope of helping others. She wrote that “losing a child means carrying an almost unbearable grief, experienced by many but talked about by few,.” We’ll leave you with this…
Film: Kurt Russell and Goldie Hawn reunite for ”The Christmas Chronicles Part Two”
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CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Will Rahm be right for Biden’s cabinet?
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THE HILL
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ROLL CALL
POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Some good news ahead of Thanksgiving
Presented by Facebook
DRIVING THE DAY
LET’S KICK OFF THE THANKSGIVING BREAK with a bit of good news:
— JOE BIDEN — who will become president in 56 DAYS — is now able to get the Presidential Daily Briefing, an in-depth glimpse at the world, produced by America’s intelligence community. President DONALD TRUMP facilitated this. Whether you are for or against BIDEN, he’s the president-elect, and should be working with the full suite of information at hand. CNN scoop
— THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION is now allowing a transition of power, which, of course, is a standard but critical part of the American tradition.
— A BIPARTISAN SPENDING DEAL is coming together. Government funding runs out Dec. 11 — 16 DAYS from now — and the two sides have agreed on the top-line spending numbers, which allows them to fill in other details. Caitlin Emma with more
— THE STOCK MARKET hit new highs this week.
— THREE VACCINES have shown promise in ridding the globe of the Covid-19 pandemic.
THERE IS NO DOUBT THAT AMERICA is going through one of the most difficult stretches in contemporary history. But let’s be safe, and pause for one second to note the good.
SIREN … BIDEN sounds bearish to LESTER HOLT on appointing Sens. BERNIE SANDERS or ELIZABETH WARREN to the administration: “We already have significant representation among progressives in our administration. But there’s nothing really off the table. One thing is really critical: Taking someone out of the Senate, taking someone out of the House — particularly a person of consequence — is a really difficult decision that would have to be made. I have a very ambitious, very progressive agenda. And it’s gonna take really strong leaders in the House and Senate to get it done.” Holly Otterbein and Laura Barrón-López on how Biden has kept the peace with early Cabinet picks
— 100 DAY PRIORITIES … BIDEN said he will “send a immigration bill to the United States Senate with a pathway to citizenship for over 11 million undocumented people in America.”
TRANSITION DEETS … WAPO’S MATT VISER: “At the Environmental Protection Agency, acting deputy chief of staff Wes Carpenter met with the transition team’s point person, Patrice Simms. When it comes to the environment, the transition from Trump to Biden is likely to involve a dizzying effort to halt the deregulatory zeal of the past four years and to reestablish the United States as a global force for tackling climate change.
“At the Department of Justice — where some officials were privately frustrated at being unable to work with Biden’s team sooner — Lee Lofthus, the assistant attorney general for administration, was tapped to work with Biden’s agency team, led by Christopher H. Schroeder, a former Justice Department official now at Duke Law School, according to a Justice Department official.
“At the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the agency’s transition team was scheduled to hold an initial call with the Biden administration’s review committee Tuesday afternoon. NOAA leadership has prepared ‘extensive’ briefing materials on agency operations, a senior NOAA official said. Officials at the Department of Housing and Urban Development, who had previously ordered civil servants not to talk to Biden’s transition team, were scheduling meetings Tuesday and putting together a briefing book.”
L.A. TIMES HEADLINE: “Biden picks a Goldilocks Cabinet, neither too left or right,” by Evan Halper … L.A. TIMES’ STEVE LOPEZ urges Mayor ERIC GARCETTI to jump at any offer from the BIDEN administration.
Good Wednesday morning. The Audio Briefing and Playbook PM will be off Thursday and Friday. We’ll still be in your inboxes every morning.
THE PRESIDENT and VP MIKE PENCE have nothing on their public schedule, but CNN’s JEREMY DIAMOND reported that TRUMP may join RUDY GIULIANI for a GOP hearing on voter fraud in Pennsylvania. Meridith McGraw on Trump carrying on his fight everyone else is abandoning
BIDEN will give a Thanksgiving address in Wilmington, Del. VP-elect KAMALA HARRIS will meet with transition advisers.
JONATHAN SWAN SCOOP … AXIOS: “Scoop: Trump tells confidants he plans to pardon Michael Flynn”: “President Trump has told confidants he plans to pardon his former national security adviser Michael Flynn, who pleaded guilty in December 2017 to lying to the FBI about his Russian contacts, two sources with direct knowledge of the discussions tell Axios. Behind the scenes: Sources with direct knowledge of the discussions said Flynn will be part of a series of pardons that Trump issues between now and when he leaves office.”
AS YELLEN MOVES FROM CONSTITUTION AVE. TO HAMILTON PLACE … NYT, BIZDAY COVER: “Yellen Would Assume Vast Policy Portfolio as Treasury Secretary”: “While Ms. Yellen’s views on monetary policy are well known from her time leading the central bank, her perspective on a range of issues that are part of the Treasury Department’s portfolio is less known. … Here is what we know, so far, about Ms. Yellen’s views in several areas where she will have a role to play.
“A monetary ‘dove’ but a (somewhat) fiscal ‘hawk’ … A free trader at heart … Swinging the pendulum toward more, not less, financial regulation … Putting a price on carbon.”
— WSJ: “Politics Isn’t Janet Yellen’s Forte, but It’s What She’s In for Now,” by Jon Hilsenrath and Nick Timiraos
MORE CABINET PICKS — “Biden eyes New Mexico governor, Obama surgeon general for health secretary,” by Adam Cancryn and Alice Miranda Ollstein: “New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and former Surgeon General Vivek Murthy have emerged as top contenders to be President-elect Joe Biden’s health secretary, with Hispanic advocacy groups making a strong push for Lujan Grisham.
“The nomination of Lujan Grisham, 61, would continue a tradition of presidents tapping governors to lead the sprawling Department of Health and Human Services, and make her the first Latina ever nominated for the post. Murthy, a 43-year-old Yale-educated internist who’s grown close to Biden as a top adviser on the coronavirus pandemic, would be the first nominee of Indian descent for the department’s top job.
“Either would face potentially tough confirmation hearings as the Biden administration begins coordinating one of the largest immunization programs in history — and confronts the economic fallout of a pandemic that’s left tens of millions of people out of work and uninsured. The next secretary will play a key role in managing the Covid-19 response, and convincing a fatigued and distrustful public to buy into the tough public health measures needed to suppress the virus.”
— WAPO: “Biden searches for attorney general to restore Justice Dept.’s independence, refocus on civil rights,” by Devlin Barrett and Matt Zapotosky: “Most senior Democrats and former Justice Department officials agree a top contender for the position is Sally Q. Yates, the former deputy attorney general whose tenure stretched from 2015 to the early, tumultuous days of the Trump administration. Other names under consideration include Sen. Doug Jones (D-Ala.), former homeland security secretary Jeh Johnson, former Massachusetts governor Deval Patrick, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra and former White House adviser Lisa Monaco.”
BIG PICTURE … ALEX BURNS’ Political Memo on A1 of the NYT: “Trump Stress-Tested the Election System, and the Cracks Showed”: “In the end — and the postelection standoff instigated by Mr. Trump and his party is truly nearing its end — the president’s attack on the election wheezed to an anticlimax. It was marked not by dangerous new political convulsions but by a letter from an obscure Trump-appointed bureaucrat, Emily W. Murphy of the General Services Administration, authorizing the process of formally handing over the government to Mr. Biden.
“For now, the country appears to have avoided a ruinous breakdown of its electoral system. Next time, Americans might not be so lucky.
“While Mr. Trump’s mission to subvert the election has so far failed at every turn, it has nevertheless exposed deep cracks in the edifice of American democracy and opened the way for future disruption and perhaps disaster. With the most amateurish of efforts, Mr. Trump managed to freeze the passage of power for most of a month, commanding submissive indulgence from Republicans and stirring fear and frustration among Democrats as he explored a range of wild options for thwarting Mr. Biden.”
IN GEORGIA … “In Georgia Senate runoffs, the focus — and the fire — is on Raphael Warnock,” by WaPo’s Cleve Wootson Jr. in Marietta, Ga.: “Two weeks into the extraordinary runoff races that will decide which party controls the U.S. Senate, Warnock and Ossoff have combined their efforts to try to win Georgia’s pair of Senate seats. Their names are stacked together on yard signs; they’ve called each other ‘brother’ at joint campaign appearances. But it is Warnock who is animating the Democratic base — and the Republican opposition.
“That’s because both sides are treating Warnock, the fiery 51-year-old preacher who leads the legendary Atlanta church associated with [Martin Luther King Jr.], as the key factor in determining who wins the Jan. 5 races. Democrats hope his presence on the ballot can sustain the energy of Black voters who helped hand Georgia’s electoral votes to a Democratic presidential candidate for the first time since 1992. Republicans, likewise, see Warnock as a threat as well as a ripe target, unleashing a torrent of attacks designed to tarnish his appeal and mobilize GOP voters despite finger-pointing in the party over President Trump’s defeat in the state.” WaPo
PLAYBOOK READS
THE CORONAVIRUS CONTINUES TO RAGE … 12.5 MILLION Americans have tested positive for the coronavirus. … 259,962 Americans have died.
— ANOTHER CASE IN THE HOUSE … ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION: “Georgia U.S. Rep. Rick Allen tests positive for COVID-19”
— “First 6.4 million doses of Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine could go out in mid-December,” by WaPo’s Lena Sun: “The federal government plans to send 6.4 million doses of pharmaceutical giant Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine to communities across the United States within 24 hours of regulatory clearance, with the expectation that shots will be administered quickly to front-line health-care workers, the top priority group, officials said Tuesday.”
— “CDC Finalizing Recommendation to Shorten Covid-19 Quarantines,” by WSJ’s Betsy McKay: “The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention may soon shorten the length of time it recommends that a person self-quarantine after potential exposure to the coronavirus, hoping that such a step will encourage more people to comply, a top agency official said.
“CDC officials are finalizing recommendations for a new quarantine period that would likely be between seven and 10 days and include a test to ensure a person is negative for Covid-19, said Henry Walke, the agency’s incident manager for Covid-19 response. Agency officials are discussing the exact time period and what type of test a person would be given to exit quarantine, he said.”
— “How 9 governors are handling the next coronavirus wave,” by Rachel Roubein and Shia Kapos
TIM ALBERTA: “The Michigan GOP’s Fake Voter Fraud Scandal”
NYT’S ELIZABETH WILLIAMSON: “As Their D.C. Days Dwindle, Ivanka and Jared Look for a New Beginning”: “Town officials in Bedminster, N.J., have the plans for a possible Trump family future, or at least the blueprints: a major addition to Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner’s ‘cottage’ on the grounds of the Trump National Golf Club, four new pickleball courts, a relocated heliport, and a spa and yoga complex. …
“The couple had already expanded their ‘cottage’ in New Jersey by 2,500 square feet in 2016, adding a basement and a fireplace sitting room, all documented by Ms. Trump on Instagram. The new plans before Bedminster Township call for an expanded master bedroom, bath and dressing room, two new bedrooms, a study and a ground floor veranda, making it more comparable to the $5 million house they rent for $15,000 a month in the gilded Washington enclave of Kalorama.
“Plans also call for adding five more ‘cottages’ of 5,000 square feet each to the property, and a recreation complex with spa treatments and a ‘general store.’ A friend of the family said Tuesday that the renovations have been going on for a while, but Trump representatives are set to present the plans to the township on Dec. 3.”
MEDIAWATCH — Ravi Agrawal will be editor-in-chief of Foreign Policy. He is currently managing editor. Announcement
PLAYBOOKERS
Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.
IN MEMORIAM — STANFORD: “Trailblazing economist and presidential adviser Edward Lazear dies at 72”: “Described as ‘perhaps the foremost labor economist of his generation,’ economist, White House adviser and Stanford University professor Edward P. Lazear passed away from pancreatic cancer on Nov. 23. …
“Lazear served at the White House from 2006 to 2009, where he was chairman of President Bush’s Council of Economic Advisers. Lazear was a trusted confidant to President George W. Bush and played a key role in fashioning the response to the financial crisis in 2007 and 2008.”
TRANSITION — Casey Contres is now chief of staff for Rep.-elect Tony Gonzales (R-Texas). He most recently was campaign manager for Sen. Cory Gardner’s (R-Colo.) reelect.
ENGAGED — Jeffrey Cimmino, program assistant at the Atlantic Council’s Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security, and Anne Houtz, a fourth-year creative media student at the University of Alabama, got engaged Saturday near her family home in Texas. They met this spring and navigated a long-distance relationship amid the pandemic. Pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Abby Phillip, CNN political correspondent. A fun fact about her: “I’m a very domestic person! Very much a homebody. I love to cook, bake (sourdough season was great for me this summer). I love gardening and houseplants. I’ve been like this since I was a kid (ask my mom!). So when people ask me what I do with my free time, usually the answer is taking care of my plants. Very boring but it’s what keeps me sane.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Rep. Jimmy Gomez (D-Calif.) is 46 … Jenna Bush Hager and Barbara Pierce Bush are 39 … Mark Bloomfield, president and CEO of the American Council for Capital Formation, is 71 … Robert Steurer … Elan Carr, State Department special envoy to monitor and combat anti-Semitism, is 53 … Bill Dauster (h/t Jon Haber) … Lee Dunn, director of cloud policy for the Americas at Google Cloud … Jason Rae … Shilpa Phadke … Philippe Reines is 51 … Donna Zaccaro … Robin Brand … Eric Oginsky … Gillian Drummond (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … WaPo’s Brent Griffiths … David Almacy, founder of CapitalGig … Jason Huffman … American Cleaning Institute’s Doug Troutman (h/t Brian Sansoni) … Charly Norton … Melissa Weiss, managing editor at Jewish Insider (h/t Steve Miller) …
… Ben Stein is 76 … Kira Lerner, managing editor at Votebeat … Reuters’ Sarah Lynch … Keith Sonderling, vice chair and commissioner at the EEOC, is 38 … Josh Green … Loully Saney, policy and strategic comms adviser at Day One Project … former Maryland Gov. Bob Ehrlich is 63 … former New Hampshire Gov. John Lynch is 68 … Lyn Stout, owner of Bond Events … Rachel Holt, co-founder and general partner at Construct Capital … Colin Crowell … Lisa Borders … Stuart Yael Gordon … Christine Isett … Adam Zeplain … Kendrick Lau … Steph Dodge … Amanda (Gross) Kenzitt … Leah Regan … Emilie Jackson … Isaac Wright … Alexandra Givens … Mark Schleifstein … Sean Durns … Jenn Jacques … former Washington Football Team coach Joe Gibbs
Follow us on Twitter
AMERICAN MINUTE
Pilgrim Thanksgiving “God be praised we had a good increase … Our harvest being gotten in” – American Minute with Bill Federer
- when things were bad they would have days of prayer;
- when things were real bad they would have days of fasting; and
- when things turned around they would have days of thanksgiving.
the Council doth commend it to the respective ministers, elders and people of this jurisdiction; solemnly and seriously to keep the same beseeching that being persuaded by the mercies of God we may all, even this whole people offer up our bodies and souls as a living and acceptable Service unto God by Jesus Christ.”
“They shook off the yoke of anti-christian bondage, and as ye Lord’s free people, joined themselves (by a covenant of the Lord) into a church estate, in ye fellowship of ye Gospel, to walk in all his ways, made known or to be made known unto them, according to their best endeavors, whatsoever it should cost them, the Lord assisting them.”
“Being thus arrived in a good harbor, and brought safe to land, they fell upon their knees and blessed the God of Heaven who had brought them over the vast and furious ocean, and delivered them from all the perils and miseries thereof, again to set their feet on the firm and stable earth, their proper element.”
CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Idiot Democrats Think There’s Some Kumbaya on the Way
Democrats Want to Be Our Friends Now or Something
Happy Wednesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Beer is better than stuffing.
Every. Single. Time.
Far be it from me to ever try and figure out what’s going on in the mind of any American Democrat here in the 21st century. Sure, there was a simpler time when I understood a little about them. I worked with them all of the time, we hung out, we shared important moments in our lives.
It always seemed as if we were from the same planet back then.
Here in the Inglorious Year of the Chinese Bat Flu Mail-In Ballot Fraud Election, I’m not only unable to reach across the aisle, I’m not really sure where in the heck the freakin’ aisle is anymore.
They are making overtures over there on the Left. We are hearing a lot about healing and unity and coming together and all kinds of other stuff that we’re supposed to expect as we move into the Hallmark Christmas movies time of the year.
I have one burning question: have these morons met themselves?
The drooling sack of empty that they are calling President-Elect Biden has undergone an image makeover that’s most unbelievable. We’re now being told that he’s our kindly best pal and that he is going to put a big band-aid on all of the ORANGE MAN BAD hurt that our beloved country has suffered through.
No, seriously everyone, kindly Grandpa Gropes wants us all to be better now:
Somebody should tell the 25-year-old intern running Biden’s Twitter account to read up on the Obama era, and learn about the president and his vice-spaz who ran around for eight years projectile vomiting divisive rhetoric that sought to demonize every conservative in America.
Are you starting to get the feeling that I’m probably not interested this big Democrat group hug feint?
If I were a Democrat, however, maybe this oh-so-sincere gesture from A TELEVISION CELEBRITY would warm my heart:
Cue “Can You Feel the Love Tonight” from The Lion King.
For those of you who don’t frequent Twitter, Ms. Milano has spent the last four years redefining “unhinged” with her behavior towards President Trump and anyone who dared to support him. All because Trump legitimately won a presidential election that she — and the rest of insane liberal America — thought her lazy candidate was entitled to.
Now that she thinks she’s gotten her way we’re all supposed to be BFFs and head to the salon together for mani-pedis.
Some of this nonsense might be just a little bit believable if it weren’t being spearheaded by a lunatic with anger issues who’s been in the public eye for half a century and has been a spiteful tool towards his political opposites the entire time.
And if everyone of us on the Right had amnesia, of course.
You can keep your offers of Kumbaya, lefties. We will be over here remember what bottom-feeding scum you’ve been since late 2016.
We’ll also be tweaking that #resist thing you’ve been doing.
There will be a lot of that if people from the other side keep pretending to make nice with me.
Have a lovely day.
Dear Democrats: Here’s What You Can Do With Your Unity Candle
Ladies and Gentlemen, We Have a Winner
KICK IT!
PJM Linktank
Treacher: Computer Repairman Who Threatened Biden’s Electoral Prospects Goes Into Hiding
Crime pays, kids: California Inmates Defraud Taxpayers of $1 Billion in Unemployment Benefits
A California One-Year-Old Is Getting $167 Per Week in Unemployment Payments
Mattis Hopes Biden Won’t Put America First
New Congresswoman Creates a Furor by Asking About Her Second Amendment Rights
I admire her spunk. Trump Lawyer Jenna Ellis Compares Biden Picking Cabinet to ‘Fantasy Football’
Stunning Increase in LA Criminals Obeying Gov Newsom’s Mask Mandate, New Crime Stats Find
The COVID-19 News the Corporate Media Doesn’t Publish
PREACH. Georgia Is On My Mind and It Is Imperative We Get Our Priorities Straight Now
Election 2020 and the Stages of Grief
Buck Up, Conservatives: There Are Silver Linings to a Likely Trump Loss
Bureaucracy at work: From Here, We Can See the F-35 Wasting Money
VodkaPundit: Insanity Wrap #94: The CDC Doesn’t Want You Singing Any Thanksgiving Carols, Seriously
Because he didn’t. Over 53 Million Trump Voters Don’t Believe Biden Legitimately Won the Election
Big Tech Expert Says Google’s ‘Manipulations’ Shifted ‘at Least Six Million Votes’ to Joe Biden
Stacey Abrams: More Than 750K Georgians Requested Absentee Ballots for Senate Runoffs
The Mandalorian Takes on an Impossible Task — And Just Might Pull It Off
Child Abuse? HBO Max Documentary Celebrates 4-Year-Old Boy’s Transgender Identity
VIP
Me: Admitting That Dems Stole the Election Is the Opposite of Giving Up on Trump
VIP Gold
When Is A Record-Setting Report Of New Coronavirus Cases Not National News?
From the Mothership and Beyond
Remote work shakes up geopolitics
Report: President Trump Plans to Pardon Michael Flynn
Swing State Woes: Conservative Group Says They Discovered 150,000 Fraudulent Ballots
She’s the dumb blond of brunettes. AOC’s Attempt to Dunk on Ted Cruz Didn’t Go So Well
Is ABC News Serious with That Observation of Biden’s Foreign Policy Crew?
Yeah, Let’s Talk About That Machine Error in Arizona
Senator Loeffler Keeps Promise of Donating Senate Salary to Georgia Charities Every Quarter
This Governor Knows He Has No Power to Mandate Thanksgiving Behavior
New Data Shows Devastating Effects of Keeping Schools Closed
Federal court ruling allows TX, LA to deny Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood
Everyone should call the cops on her. From “Defund Police” To “Call The Cops On Thanksgiving Dinner”
DC Project Kicks Off #TealFor2A
Rachel Maddow’s Gun Range Date
Castle Doctrine, Stand Your Ground Not Just About Guns
Who Will Get the Vaccine First?
#PettyTyrant Update: New Mexico Governor Shuts Down Grocery Stores With New Public Health Order
“Persecuted”: Pope Francis Criticizes China Over Uighur Oppression
New York City To Reopen COVID Field Hospital That They Barely Used Last Time
George Clooney and the new woke imperialism
Who Paid for the (Alleged) $15,000 Wine Bill Gavin Newsom and Friends Racked up at French Laundry?
Here’s Why the Corporate Media Keeps Whining About Parler
The New York Times Makes a Rather Stunning Admission About Small Gatherings and the Spread of COVID
Biden Taps Architect Of ‘Children In Cages’ To Lead Homeland Security
PBS’ Yamiche Alcindor Shares a ‘Democrats Say’ Moment, and It’s Everything Wrong With D.C.
Tucker Carlson Has Epic Rant About the Real Theft of the Election
Sorry Media, Trump Is Still President And This Is Still His Stock Market
Paris Climate Treaty Puts America Last
Mayor Bill de Blasio threatens to shut down synagogue that hosted a huge wedding behind his back
Twitter will now warn you if you try to like a tweet flagged as ‘disputed’
Hmmm…There Are Way More Copies of Newton’s Masterwork Than Anyone Thought
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Just so no one can call me a tease…
Always disappointed that Forensic Files never did any holiday specials.
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Kruiser on Parler
Kruiser on MeWe
Kruiser on Twitter
Kruiser on Facebook
PJ Media Senior Columnist and Associate Editor Stephen Kruiser is the author of “Don’t Let the Hippies Shower” and “Straight Outta Feelings: Political Zen in the Age of Outrage,” both of which address serious subjects in a humorous way. Monday through Friday he edits PJ Media’s “Morning Briefing.” His columns appear twice a week.
WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: As Much Concession As We’re Likely to Get
Plus: A few days’ dalliance with OANN and Newsmax.
The Dispatch Staff | 2 hr ago | 4 |
Happy Wednesday! Quick programming note: Declan is spending all day today trying (and likely failing) to bake a pie. Andrew is celebrating his post-Georgia negative COVID test. Audrey is going to be brining her turkey, Charlotte will be battling the lines at the grocery store, and James can’t stop watching OAN (we never should have given him that assignment).
All that’s to say, this is the last TMD we’ll be publishing this week. We hope you all have a wonderful Thanksgiving, and look forward to catching you up on all the hijinks that will inevitably occur between now and Monday.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- In yet another blow to the Trump campaign’s efforts to overturn the results of the election, Pennsylvania, Nevada, and Minnesota certified Joe Biden’s victory in those states yesterday. North Carolina certified its results as well, handing Donald Trump its 15 electoral votes.
- The White House gave formal approval on Tuesday for President-elect Joe Biden to begin receiving the President’s Daily Brief, a collection of classified intelligence information on national security. The move came just one day after the General Services Administration signed off on the presidential transition process.
- The massive toll of school closures on students is becoming clearer. A report on grades in Virginia’s Fairfax County Public Schools—the largest system in the state—found the percentage of middle and high school students earning F’s in at least two classes has nearly doubled from last year to this year, which has been conducted primarily online. The drop in academic achievement following the switch to remote learning was found to be particularly dramatic among students with disabilities and students for whom English is a second language.
- OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma pled guilty to three criminal charges on Tuesday, formally acknowledging its role in the nationwide opioid epidemic.
- Axios reported last night that President Trump plans to pardon Michael Flynn, his former national security adviser, before the conclusion of Trump’s term in January. Flynn pled guilty in December 2017 to lying to the FBI about the contents of his communications with the Russian ambassador.
- In an event on Tuesday unveiling his first handful of Cabinet nominees, President-elect Joe Biden urged the Senate to consider his picks in good faith. “I hope these outstanding nominees received a prompt hearing, and that we can work across the aisle in good faith to move forward for the country,” Biden said.
- A federal prosecutor and four district attorneys announced Tuesday that 35,000 fraudulent unemployment claims were filed between March and August in the name of California jail and prison inmates, including 100 who were on death row. More than 20,000 of those pandemic unemployment insurance claims were paid out, costing California hundreds of millions of dollars and marking what one district attorney called “the biggest fraud of taxpayer dollars in California history.”
- The United States confirmed 174,929 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 9.8 percent of the 1,785,707 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 2,223 deaths were attributed to the virus on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 259,874. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 88,080 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19.
Raffensperger’s Georgia Postmortem
It’s Wednesday, November 25—two-and-a-half weeks after most network decision desks called the presidential race for Joe Biden—and we appear to have reached a workable election equilibrium. No, President Trump hasn’t conceded, and he says he “never will.” News broke late last night that he’s expected to join Rudy Giuliani in Pennsylvania later today in search of voter fraud in the Keystone State.
But as of today, Trump’s post-election antics are officially now just that: Antics. On Monday night, Emily Murphy, head of the Government Services Administration, officially authorized President-elect Biden and his team to begin the transition process, making available $6.3 million in funding and signaling to Trump administration officials they can start coordinating and cooperating with their soon-to-be successors. On Tuesday, the White House officially approved the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) giving Biden access to the Presidential Daily Brief.
Biden didn’t seem too perturbed by the delay in an interview with NBC News’ Lester Holt last night. “Immediately, we’ve gotten outreach from the national security shop to just across the board,” the president-elect said. “We’re already working out meeting with the COVID team in the White House, and how to not only distribute but get from a vaccine being distributed to a person able to get vaccinated. So I think we’re going to not be so far behind the curve as we thought we might be in the past.”
“And I must say, the outreach has been sincere,” he added. “It has not been begrudging so far, and I don’t expect it to be.”
So what are we to make of the last 18 days? Does it matter that Trump and his allies spent the past three weeks, to borrow a phrase from the president’s former adviser Steve Bannon, flooding the zone with s—? Does it matter that, with very few exceptions, Republican elected officials stood by and watched them do it? Were we actually on the precipice of a constitutional crisis, brought back from the brink by the integrity of a handful of heretofore anonymous state and local election officials? Or is the state of American democracy strong, with its guardrails bending, but not breaking under the recent strain?
Georgia’s Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger—one of those heretofore anonymous election officials—has had a rough few weeks, but maintains confidence in American democracy on the whole. “We just need to continue to remember that America is great because the people are good,” Raffensperger told us. “At the end of the day, what I’ve been focusing on is: What is the law, and then following the law, and then following the process that’s based on that law, and making sure that every legal vote is counted.”
Out With the Old, In With the Newsmax
The schism between President Trump and Fox News has been months, if not years, in the making. But the network’s early—and correct—call of Arizona this month pushed Trump and many of his supporters over the edge. Trump has repeatedly in recent weeks encouraged his followers to change the channel from Fox to One America News and Newsmax, two minor networks that still support the President’s claims of widespread election fraud. There are reports Trump is considering a post-presidency deal with one—or both—of them.
Given their recent surge in popularity, we thought it’d be a good idea to see what all the hubbub is about. So we assigned James—the intern, and therefore expendable—to watch as much of the networks as possible the past few days. He emerged alive—but changed—and wrote about his experience living in a right-wing bubble in a piece for the site. A few excerpts are below.
What are these networks claiming about the election?
On Newsmax, election conspiracy theorizing tends to come through guests, with occasional (very mild) pushback from anchors. Friday morning’s National Report featured frequent guest Robert Graham, a former Arizona GOP chairman, inveighing against Mitt Romney’s statement calling for President Trump to concede the election, saying Romney was “a milquetoast Republican … these people should literally be registered to the other party.” Graham then praised Rudy Giuliani’s increasingly hapless attempts at litigating vote counts as “Herculean.”
Shortly after that, host John Bachman interviewed Michelle Malkin (just one example of the early-aughts conservative flotsam that often washes up on Newsmax’s and OAN’s shores). She claimed that billionaires, “many of them, not just one” had colluded with “big business and hedge funds” to, somehow, interfere with election processes. “We don’t control our own elections,” she concluded.
Worth Your Time
- The Dow Jones Industrial Average surpassed the 30,000 mark for the first time on Tuesday, highlighting the stock market’s remarkable eight month rebound since its March low. The Wall Street Journal’s Gunjan Banerju, Akane Otani, and Michael Wursthorn explain the nuts and bolts of the stock market’s historic rally and consider whether the momentum will continue. “Some pessimists say today’s gains will inevitably lower returns tomorrow,” they write. “But low interest rates mean investors big and small can’t expect to make much money in less-risky investments like bonds. So they are betting that the market’s momentum will continue, whether passively through index funds or actively with a buy-on-dips mantra.”
- In The Atlantic this week, Gregg Nunziata—an attorney, self-described “lifelong Republican,” member of the Federalist Society, and Dispatch contributor—argues that GOP lawmakers who have failed to acknowledge President Trump’s electoral loss are failing to live up to their duty to uphold the Constitution. “Too many elected Republicans retreat to repeating truisms: The president has the right to challenge election results, he has no obligation to concede while he’s still pursuing these claims, and states have not yet certified their votes,” Nunziata writes. “These positions have the virtue of being accurate, but they ignore the president’s more outrageous claims and the real harm he is doing.”
- “Her days, and her nights, now revolve around him,” Christopher Solomon writes of his aging mother and his dying father in GQ. “She is a moon in furious orbit around a collapsing star.” In a heartrending read about the perils of love, Solomon beautifully captures his parents’ story—from a wartime romance to his father’s battle with Parkinson’s and dementia. “If you are lucky, you will have someone for whom you will want to do whatever it takes, and without question, until the very end.”
Presented Without Comment
John Paul Mac Isaac, the computer repairman who passed Giuliani a laptop he claimed belonged to Hunter Biden (which was never verified), has closed his shop and apparently skipped town.
Also Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- In his latest Capitolism newsletter (🔒), Scott Lincicome looks beyond the political ramifications of Trump’s “two-plus-week attack of the integrity of the U.S. election process.” Eroding trust in American institutions, Scott argues, seeps into other facets of American life—like personal income and even interpersonal relationships. “A wide body of academic literature shows that interpersonal trust levels are connected to trust in public institutions and a key determinant of various positive economic outcomes,” he writes. Bonus content: a Lincicome family stuffing recipe.
- Sarah sat down with Joe Biden’s Georgia press secretary, Jeremy Edwards, for a special Thanksgiving Week Mop-Up (🔒). “Our strategy was pretty simple,” Edwards said of the Biden team’s successful campaign in the state. “Make sure that every person in Georgia knows all the ways that they can vote in this election—whether by mail, early in person, or on the day of Election Day, as well as reminding those voters what was at stake this election.”
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), James P. Sutton (@jamespsuttonsf), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
Photo of Brad Raffensperger by Jessica McGowan/Getty Images.
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LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
THE BLAZE
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One last thing … Former Speaker of the House Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) called on President Donald Trump to concede the election and accused his lawyers of spreading “baseless conspiracy theories” without evidence to continue their challenges to the election results. Ryan made the comments Tuesday while speaking at the Bank of America’s virtual European Credit Conferen … Read more
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THE FEDERALIST
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The Federalist, 611 Pennsylvania Ave SE, #247, Washington, DC 20003, United State
NOQ REPORT
ARRA NEWS SERVICE
ARRA News Service (in this message: 16 new items) |
- Conservative Values Won Big Across America, Except in Contested Swing States
- The Rural Way
- The Legal Fight Continues, Getting Tough On Israel, Teen Indoctrination
- Biden Taps Globalist Blinken for Sec of State
- Cancel Fox News?
- Past Is Prologue: Obama-Biden Was Owned and Operated by Big Tech, So…
- Biden’s Allies Threaten Religious Liberty
- Paris Climate Treaty Puts America Last
- What Trump Will Leave in Biden’s Inbox
- The Other Red Wave
- Good Relations with Genocide?
- Democrat Governors Are Suicidal – Or They Don’t Believe In Their Own Lockdowns
- The War on Thanksgiving
- America Is Over. It’s Time To Opt Out
- Happy Thanksgiving Week
- Lt. Governor Griffin Calls For Complete Phase-Out of Arkansas’s Personal Income Tax
Conservative Values Won Big Across America, Except in Contested Swing States
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 10:09 PM PST by Connor Semelsberger: The 2020 election revealed many interesting trends. Most notably, it revealed a number of unexpected conservative victories in federal and state elections. From the suburbs of Miami, Los Angeles, and Cincinnati to key races in Iowa and Montana, Republicans held onto key seats or made substantial gains despite millions of dollars in spending by Democrats. Yet despite these positive results, with ample opportunity to win similar races in Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Nevada, Republicans came up short in these states. What explains this? One of the biggest headlines from the 2020 election was President Donald Trump’s increased number of votes in major urban areas across the country, including substantial gains among the Latino community, especially in Florida. President Trump improved his percentage of the vote from 2016 in Chicago, Cleveland, Buffalo, Toledo, and even Portland and Seattle. These gains propelled President Trump to capturing north of 73 million votes nationwide, even beating President Obama’s record-setting popular vote total in 2008. Republican candidates down ballot also had several major victories:
Republicans outperformed expectations in nearly every state, except the key battlegrounds that continue to have election integrity questions and will ultimately decide the final outcome of the electoral college. There were very similar opportunities for Republican success in down-ballot federal and state races; however, they all came up short in these states.
The geographic and demographic analysis of these key states reveals a lot. Urban and suburban districts in regions across the country turned favorably for Republicans, causing House districts to flip and President Trump to secure key swing states like Florida, Iowa, and Ohio. Having campaigned on law and order in response to the civil unrest throughout the summer, it makes sense why Republicans saw their prospects improve in these areas. However it is odd that these gains happened nearly everywhere in the country except for the key battlegrounds states, especially when President Trump campaigned almost exclusively in these states in the final days. National Review did address outliers for Joe Biden’s performance in several major cities, but no piece has fully captured how Trump performed compared to his 2016 totals and the impact on down ballot races in key urban and suburban centers. One answer may be that President Trump’s message just did not resonate with the swing voters in these key battlegrounds or that there was a much stronger anti-Trump sentiment that turned out for Biden. That may be true to some degree. Yet why did geographically and demographically-similar cities and regions swing even more favorably for President Trump? The rust belt cities of Buffalo, Cleveland, Toledo, Chicago, and Gary, Indiana saw President Trump improve his vote totals, and in some cases saw Biden lose support compared to past Democrat presidential candidates. Compare those cities to Pittsburgh and Milwaukee, where Joe Biden beat Barack Obama’s unprecedented totals from 2008 and Trump underperformed, even losing support in the blue collar pro-coal, pro-steel city of Pittsburgh. When we compare them, something is amiss. Another theory is that conservative values are gaining traction in unlikely areas, but voters just did not like Trump and his personality and so voted against him. However, if that were the case, then it would have been likely that at least one U.S. Senate or House seat would have gone in Republicans’ favor in either Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, or Pennsylvania. Instead, Democrats won nearly every close race. It is not clear what this contrast between the presidential results and the down ballot races in key swings states means, but it certainly exists. If voter fraud were occurring, that could help explain it. There continue to be allegations of targeted voter fraud in these key swing states; allegations are currently being resolved by courts and state legislatures. Whatever the ultimate explanation, these seemingly strange outcomes in down ballot races deserve to be analyzed and explained. |
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The Rural Way
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 09:28 PM PST City-dwellers and suburbanites get a hard lesson in human nature, common sense, and the value of self-reliance.
by Victor Davis Hanson: Almost every national Election Night reveals the same old red/blue map. The country geographically is a sea of red. The coasts and small areas along the southern border and around the Great Lakes remain blue atolls. Yet when the maps are recalibrated for population rather than area, the blue areas blow up, expanding to smother half the country — a graphical metaphor for the dominant cultural influence of city over country. Ideological differences are now being recalibrated as rural-urban on issues from guns and abortion to taxes and foreign policy. Red/conservative is often synonymous with small-town and rural. Gone are the old New Deal Democratic coalitions of New England and the South, or the 19th- and mid-20th-century Republican alliances between the farm belt and the mid-Atlantic states. Instead, globalization has become a worrisome force-multiplying effect of geography, culture, and ideology — not seen since the political differences of the pre-Civil War mapped out two potentially different Americas, north and south of the Mason-Dixon line. On Election Night, news analysts and talking heads matter-of-factly cite returns as if there is no need to explain that the red areas are more rural and conservative, while the blue cities and suburbs are more progressive. A few small adjustments are made for Republican-run cities in mostly red Florida, Oklahoma, and Texas, and some blue or purple rural states such as Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine that serve as rural retirements and refuges for the nearby blue states of Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York. The media figures who report on the election are urban denizens. Few have any idea of why half the country votes as it does. So they just assume that pollsters, like themselves, are better educated, smarter, and of greater value to society than those whom they often to fail to find in their surveys. The cities since antiquity have been considered cosmopolitan and progressive; the countryside, traditional and conservative. In the positive appraisal, Western literature always thematically emphasized the sophistication and energy of cities, balanced by the purity and autonomy of the country. More darkly, in the pejorative sense, the former of the cities were all too prone to Petronian decadence and excess; the latter outside the walls, to Aristophanic parochialism and rusticity. Aristotle adjudicated the divide in his Politics by arguing that the “best” type of democracy was in a sense the least — and thus the most rural (farmers by necessity would have less time to walk into town, loiter about, and as “agora-lounger” busybodies cram the assembly). Much of these eternal radical differences transcend time and space. Even in the age of a mobile and transient population — and our omnipresent Internet, social media, cellphones, and telecommuting — the material landscapes, population densities, and need for physical work still explain radical differences in outlook and mindset. That eternal divide guided our gentry Framers. In classical terms, they took for granted that their farms and urban lives balanced each other and remedied the limitations of each. That fact of the rural/urban dichotomy is underappreciated, but it remains at the heart of the Constitution — to the continuing chagrin of our globalist coastal elite who wish to wipe it out. The Electoral College and the quite antithetical makeup of the Senate and the House keep a Montana, Utah, or Wyoming from being politically neutered by California and New York. The idea, deemed outrageously “unfair” by academics and the media, is that a Wyoming rancher might have as much of a say in the direction of the country as thousands of more redundant city dwellers. Yet the classical idea of federal republicanism was to save democracy by not allowing 51 percent (of an increasingly urban population) to create laws on any given day at any given hour. So the originalist theories of the Founders — nursed on classical tropes found in bucolic, pastoral, and agrarian romance, and on the skepticism of human nature conveyed throughout classical political philosophy — was that in a republic, real diversity is needed to offset sheer numbers. That is, rural voices, always to be in a minority, provided checks on the exuberance and occasional danger of the volatile cities, prone to fads that could devolve into hysteria and worse. Few city dwellers realize that half the country probably always found the increasingly hyped burlesque halftime shows of the Super Bowl buffoonish, boring, and a time to wash dishes, make a beer run, or shut off the television. The old network anchors never grasped that plenty didn’t appreciate their snarky frowns and their eye-rolling. Articles written under the masthead of the New York Times mean no more to someone in North Dakota than posts from a blogger with a well-viewed website. Live in Portland, Seattle, Washington, D.C., or New York, or watch news generated from there, and an American might think that what BLM and Antifa wrought this summer was America’s collective future — until one paused and thought, “Why don’t they try all that across the small towns of Kansas or in the midsize cities of Utah or the suburbs of Oklahoma City?” And, “Why isn’t Antifa taking hold in Tulare County, Calif., or Arkansas?” The Western exegeses of these differences was often simplistic. Rural people, with or without proximity to the frontier, had to rely more on themselves for their own defense, for obtaining their water, for disposing their sewage, for feeding themselves. What they did not make or grow themselves, they saw produced by others living around them — minerals, metals, fuels, wood — to be sent into the city. Nature for them was not distant, not a romance, but a mercurial partner to be respected, feared, and occasionally with difficulty brought to heel and for a while harnessed. When you see, firsthand, wondrous life born around you, from the barn to the woods, and rural underpopulation not overpopulation is an ancient worry, abortion is not just a moral crime, but a tragic loss of a precious resource, a needed voice, another ally in an eternal struggle. From that autonomy or autarchy came a distrust of larger government redistribution and dependence on anonymous others. Self-sufficiency was an impossible luxury for dependent city-dwellers in a dense Athens, Constantinople, Rome, Paris, Venice, or London, whose sophistication, talents, and scientific knowledge came at the cost of being entirely reliant on the extramural activities of those with less impressive speech, appearance, and manners. For the ancients, living in the same place as one’s parents was not proof of parochial mediocrity (although Jefferson thought that a farm was a refuge from failure elsewhere), but an obligation to allow the next in line to have the same chance to live apart from the city. And indeed, even in our increasingly urbanized world, the lessons of vestigial agrarianism still can echo and permeate our society in the most unexpected ways. In our time, savior-designate candidate Michael Bloomberg blew $1 billion without winning one delegate. He poured $100 million into Florida and Ohio to see both states go for Trump far more easily this year than in 2016. Bloomberg could ridiculously lecture an audience of Oxford sophisticates that farming was just a simplistic matter of dropping a seed in the ground and watching it sprout automatically (“You dig a hole, you put a seed in, you put dirt on top, add water, up comes the corn”) — without being laughed out of the lecture hall as a dunce. Imagine if a farmer had said of stocks, “You just make a call, place your buy, and up comes the dividend.” In other words, Bloomberg was a man unaware of his own limitations. The ability to navigate Wall Street, or the financial markets of communist China, or A-list dinners, or the New York–Washington media, or to be courted by Aspen and Davos did not mean that he had any appreciation for the tenuousness of his own existence, that all his billions could not guarantee him water, food, or sewage removal during a COVID lockdown, or that in extremis he could secure his family without the NYPD. Had Bloomberg in 2010 just taken care of the snow first, and fatty foods and super-sized drinks second, he might have avoided the disastrous effects of the blizzard that paralyzed New York. We can see this incidental dichotomy between pragmatism and accepted authority almost everywhere today. In the Brett Kavanaugh Supreme Court confirmation hearings, crusty old farmer emeritus Chuck Grassley drew on common sense and a knowledge of human nature; urban sophisticate Dianne Feinstein, on ideology and current fad. Missouri’s Josh Hawley recently sliced and diced the masters of the Silicon Valley Universe, because he was able to reduce all their arguments from authority and esoterica about social media into the pragmatic: These billionaire modulators of influence had no defense of their own power to adjudicate the free expression of millions of Americans. Read dairy farmer Devin Nunes’s final memo concerning the Russian collusion hoax and compare it to that of his counterpart Adam Schiff. The former is blunt, truthful, and logical; the latter rhetoric is a dishonest mess masquerading as an exposé. In other words, there is still much value in vestigial Americans countering the increasing legions of apartment-living, densely packed, and mass-transit-community urban dwellers, as we saw during the COVID epidemic and subsequent quarantine. A Governor Noem of South Dakota, despite a media hit campaign, radiated steady and consistent confidence in her own people, Andrew Cuomo and Bill de Blasio were a maze of contradictions and policy incoherence, as their yesterday’s gospel became tomorrow’s heresy. A balance between real and urban, Homo rusticus and urbanus is, of course, needed. But in our currently globalized and bifurcated society, the influence and power of our coasts have vastly overshadowed those of the interior. We have measured worth by money, credentials, and titles and inordinately been awed by the veneer of cosmopolitanism that surrounds them. Losers never learned to code, winners thought mere coding was quaint. Welding and plumbing were drudgery; a barista with $100,000 in debt from her women’s-studies major was considered the next angry Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Few pondered whether a good welder might make a far better congressman than an indebted sociology graduate, angry that the world had not appreciated his singular college-branded degree. So much of the absurdity of the modern world relates to a culture entirely divorced from the commonsense audits of 2,500 years of rural pragmatism. Antifa is the ultimate expression of tens of thousands of urban youth, many deeply in college debt, many with degrees but little learning — and oblivious of how they are completely dependent on what they despise, from the police to those who truck in their food and take out their waste, to those who make and sell them their riot appurtenances and communications gadgetry. Listen to the automaton Mark Zuckerberg or Jack Dorsey masquerading as a bewildered Robinson Crusoe, and one shudders that elites like these massage what millions think and how we communicate. The current fear is not just that America is becoming an urbanized and suburbanized nation — in the manner that many of the Founders feared would make our nation a European replicant. Rather, what is strange is that so many who are not rural are becoming fearful of their cannibalistic own, and what they have in store for the suburbs and cities — and thus are becoming desperate either to graft the values of the countryside onto the urban sprawl or leave the latter altogether. Tags: Victor Davis Hanson, The Rural Way 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 Legal Fight Continues, Getting Tough On Israel, Teen Indoctrination
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 09:03 PM PST
by Gary Bauer: The Legal Fight Continues It was telling to see one of the reasons President Trump mentioned for allowing the transition to begin. The president tweeted: “I want to thank Emily Murphy at GSA for her steadfast dedication and loyalty to our Country. She has been harassed, threatened, and abused – and I do not want to see this happen to her, her family, or employees of GSA. Our case STRONGLY continues, we will keep up the good fight, and I believe we will prevail! “Nevertheless, in the best interest of our Country, I am recommending that Emily and her team do what needs to be done with regard to initial protocols, and have told my team to do the same.” Murphy was being subjected to what Christians, pro-life advocates and other conservatives are routinely subjected too. She was being threatened and doxed, and the president didn’t want her to face that any longer. This is now the established pattern. You could write a book about the people the left has attempted to ruin simply for being conservative. Sadly, it works, and as long as it works the left will continue to do it. This is a fundamental violation of the rules of a constitutional republic (not to mention basic decency), and we must come up with an answer. But, as the president reiterated, this development does not in any way impact the ongoing legal challenges in a number of states. Those challenges will continue. The legal stumbling block so far is completely unrelated to when Joe Biden and Kamala Harris receive their transition briefings. The main legal problem, as Rudy Giuliani has alleged, is that once invalid ballots were separated from their envelopes and put into the voter stream, judges who have heard these cases are confronted with a very extreme remedy – to throw out all the ballots that the tainted ballots were mixed in with. I suppose a new election could be ordered under close observation. But those are very difficult legal remedies for any judge to order. In the meantime, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals has agreed to expedite the Trump campaign’s lawsuit against the state of Pennsylvania, taking the case one step closer to the U.S. Supreme Court. Ready For Open Borders? Sources in the Border Patrol and ICE report that many people are gathering at the southern border. When the October fake news polls showed a Biden landslide coming, there was an immediate uptick in the number of people attempting to cross the border illegally. It’s easy to understand why. Biden has already said he will end deportations, scrap virtually all of Trump’s border control policies and provide healthcare to illegal immigrants. Border Patrol officials are warning of a coming crisis on the southern border. By the way, Biden has announced that Alejandro Mayorkas will lead the Department of Homeland Security. Well, Mayorkas was the creator of Obama’s DACA program, which instituted a quasi-amnesty by instructing immigration authorities to ignore existing law. And here is an issue that our lying media will not report: The growing number of people who attempted to illegally enter the country in October are putting Border Patrol agents and Americans in border communities at increased risk. Acting Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Mark Morgan said last week: “Against the backdrop of an unprecedented public health crisis, those attempting to illegally enter our country are actually increasing. The migrants themselves, what we’re encountering, they know or highly suspect that they have COVID, yet they still try to illegally enter.” No one is pointing out that the open borders left is promising free healthcare in the middle of a pandemic while shutting down our businesses and churches. The responsible thing to do would be to shut down illegal immigration rather than our economy. But once again the left is punishing hard-working Americans who know that businesses can’t survive without consumers and profits. Getting Tough On Israel The letter complained that U.S. policy was too pro-Israel. It condemned Israel’s “ongoing occupation” of Palestinian territory and “settlement expansion.” The letter also demanded “clear opposition to violence, terrorism and incitement from all sides.” First of all, there is no “moral equivalency” between the state of Israel and the terrorism and incitement from the Palestinian Authority. To suggest that “all sides” are guilty of “violence, terrorism and incitement” is beyond disgusting. Second, there are 600,000 Israelis living in these so-called “settlements.” What Haines is really objecting to is Jews living in Judea and Samaria. So, Joe Biden’s director of National Intelligence thinks Israel is guilty of “terrorism and incitement,” and that Jews have no right to live in Judea and Samaria. That tells you a lot about what the next four years could be like. Teen Indoctrination The outlet recently published a column that condemns America for being founded on genocide and slavery. The column denounces America as “an empire,” and declares, “At its core, America’s values are white supremacy and capitalism.” Even Joe Biden’s call for unity is rejected as “nationalist propaganda,” with the author asking, “Why should people who have been systematically oppressed . . . be asked to hold hands with their oppressors?” This is propaganda straight out of the Soviet Union or communist China! And it is being fed to children, indoctrinating them to hate our country. Renaming The Lincoln Project Their latest ads suggest that a president who follows legal remedies is guilty of being undemocratic and like dictators in Russia, China and North Korea. They are also condemning anyone who defends the president as dangerous to our democracy. How can these so-called “Republicans,” who are getting money from socialist Democrats to smear a conservative populist, sleep at night? They seem intent on destroying the party of Lincoln, turning it into another version of the Democrat Party. They’re already looking for “common ground” with AOC and her progressive squad. I suggest they change their name to the “John Wilkes Booth Project.” He was on the Democrats’ side too. Tags: Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, The Legal Fight Continues, Getting Tough On Israel, Teen IndoctrinationTo 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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Biden Taps Globalist Blinken for Sec of State
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 08:26 PM PST And picks John Kerry to serve as special climate envoy.
by Joseph Klein: Joe Biden has gone back to the well of the foreign policy establishment to select his Secretary of State-designate. Biden chose his longtime confidante Antony Blinken, who served as the former Deputy Secretary of State and Deputy National Security Advisor in the Obama administration and as then-Vice President Biden’s National Security Advisor. Blinken is a globalist who worries more about how other countries perceive America than how other countries, especially China, have manipulated multilateral institutions and agreements to the detriment of the American people. Indeed, Blinken wants to re-engage with the Chinese regime to deal with such global threats as climate change and pandemics. Blinken seems oblivious to the fact that China has made these problems worse in pursuit of its goal to overtake the United States as the world’s number one superpower. China has continued to increase its greenhouse gas emissions to support its economic growth while expecting the U.S to cut its emissions. And China hid the truth about the coronavirus outbreak, which originated in China, during the outbreak’s early days when the virus could have been prevented from spreading worldwide. Blinken has said that climate change will be “a number one priority” for a Biden administration. To drive this point home, Biden chose former Secretary of State John Kerry to serve as his special presidential envoy for climate. In that role Kerry will sit on the National Security Council, where he will have plenty of opportunity to spout off to a receptive audience that climate change is our preeminent national security threat. During the Obama-Biden administration, Kerry was a prime mover behind engaging with China to enter into the Paris Agreement on Climate Change. Kerry was swindled then. And now he is back. “America will soon have a government that treats the climate crisis as the urgent national security threat it is,” Kerry tweeted after Biden’s announcement. “I’m proud to partner with the President-elect, our allies, and the young leaders of the climate movement to take on this crisis as the President’s Climate Envoy.” Through the artifice of the Paris Agreement on Climate Change, China managed to maneuver the Obama-Biden administration into agreeing to severely handicap the U.S. economy. The Obama-Biden administration committed to make significant cuts in greenhouse gas emissions by 2025, through stifling, job-killing regulations. China meanwhile would be allowed to continue spewing more and more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere as it further accelerates its economic growth. President Trump wisely withdrew the U.S. from this con game. But Biden, with Blinken and Kerry by his side, intends to rejoin the Paris Agreement on Climate Change on day one of his administration and allow China to take us to the cleaners once again. During an interview with the Hudson Institute last July, Antony Blinken admitted that “the status quo was really not sustainable particularly when it comes to China’s commercial and economic practices,” including “the lack of reciprocity in the relationships.” But Blinken, who left out his boss Biden’s part in helping to create this non-sustainable status quo in the first place, is ready to repeat the same mistakes while hoping this time for a more constructive response from China. That fits the classic definition of insanity, attributed to Albert Einstein, which is “doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” Beginning in 2002, Blinken served for six years as Democratic Staff Director for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee when then-Senator Biden was committee chairman. Biden at the time was pushing for expanded trade with China within the framework of the rules-based World Trade Organization. Biden expected China to play by the rules and to reform its own government as it was integrated into the global economic system. That didn’t happen. Nothing changed while Blinken was working closely with then-Vice President Biden as his National Security Advisor. Biden said in May 2011 that “a rising China is a positive, positive development, not only for China but for America and the world writ large.” We know how that worked out. On Biden and Blinken’s watch at the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and then during the Obama administration, a “rising China” has turned into an extremely negative development for “America and the world writ large.” Yet we are now supposed to believe that this same dynamic duo, together with John Kerry, will fix the mess that they helped create by reversing President Trump’s successful efforts to confront the “rising China” head-on. That’s like calling the arsonist to put out the fire. During his Hudson Institute interview, Blinken said that “we are in a competition with China and there’s nothing wrong with competition if it’s fair.” Duh! The question is how to make it fair. Blinken offers more of the same conventional wisdom that he and the rest of the foreign policy establishment are so used to peddling. “We need, in the first instance, to invest in our own competitiveness,” Blinken said. Until the China Virus came to our shores, the Trump administration had already restored the competitiveness of the American economy to new heights, including in manufacturing. But fair competitiveness requires a level playing field. And with China that means removing from the playing field China’s unfair trade practices and massive thefts of intellectual property. Blinken said during his Hudson Institute interview that a Biden administration will be tougher with China than in years past. But there is nothing in Biden’s long record of failures or in what Blinken recommended in his interview with the Hudson Institute that gives us any reason to believe him. “We need to rally our allies and partners instead of alienating them to deal with some of the challenges that China poses,” Blinken suggested. Fine, but what happens if, out of fear, self-interest or both, they refuse to cooperate in taking on China’s increasingly aggressive behavior? Trump was willing to lead by example from the front with strong actions of his own. He had no use for collective cowardice with the U.S. leading from behind. Blinken said during his Hudson Institute interview that “we need to be standing up for our values and put them back at the center of our foreign policy, not walk away from them.” While Blinken no doubt intended this comment as a slap at the Trump administration’s focus on economic and national security issues with China, he is barking up the wrong tree. Trump did not walk away from our values. Far from it. Trump signed the Uyghur Human Rights Policy Act of 2020. And the Trump administration followed through by imposing sanctions on several senior officials of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). The list of sanctioned senior officials included a member of CCP’s most powerful political body, the 25-member Politburo. The difference between Trump and the Biden-Blinken-Kerry foreign policy establishment is that Trump does not stop with high sounding rhetoric or meaningless symbolic gestures. He takes effective action. Blinken makes the same mistake when it comes to defending the disastrous nuclear deal the Obama-Biden administration negotiated with Iran, with John Kerry leading the charge. Blinken sharply criticized the Trump administration’s decision to withdraw from the deal (known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action or JCPOA) and apply maximum economic pressure on the Iranian regime. “We’re heading right back to where we were before the agreement,” Blinken said, “which is a really terrible binary choice between either taking action to stop the program of all of the potential unintended consequences of doing that (sic) or doing nothing and allowing Iran to be in a breakout position where it can develop a nuclear weapon on very, very short order.” However, we would be facing precisely the same “binary choice” Blinken worries about just a few years from now if the U.S. had remained in the JCPOA as originally negotiated. Obama himself admitted back in 2015 that once the deal’s restrictions on Iran’s use of advanced centrifuges are lifted, Iran would be able to break out to produce enough fissile material for a nuclear bomb in “almost zero” time by 2028 or so. All that the JCPOA did was to kick the can down the road for a short time. By then, Iran will be more militarily prepared to defend its nuclear weapons production facilities than it is now. Dictatorships like the Chinese and Iranian regimes pay lip service to the rules of multilateral institutions such as the World Trade Organization and World Health Organization while regularly flouting them in practice. They enter into multilateral agreements such as the Paris Agreement on Climate Change and the JCPOA with every intention of manipulating them at the expense of their adversaries in a zero-sum game. With globalists like Antony Blinken and John Kerry around, Trump’s America First policies will be replaced by Biden’s sellout of America. Tags: Joe Biden, Anthony Blinken, Secretary of State 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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Cancel Fox News?
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 07:53 PM PST Conservative anger with the network has been growing lately. by Nate Jackson: It’s been brewing for some time, the tiff between President Donald Trump and Fox News. But when the network called Arizona for Joe Biden on Election Night, it was the final straw for some number of conservative viewers. If New York/Beltway churn was what people were after, fine — those outlets are a dime a dozen. But many conservatives who want conservative news were going to look elsewhere. We’ve certainly had our beefs with Fox over the years, primarily because of its ad-revenue-driven model for infotainment. Hyping the same non-stories 24/7 with obnoxious “ALERTS” every time a meaningless detail is released gets eyeballs, and eyeballs get advertisers to pay for time. By stark contrast, your humble team at The Patriot Post, which began our enterprise just before Fox did in 1996, opted not to bow to the wishes of advertisers by electing to be donor supported. That way we could focus on what matters, not on what sells. At Fox, however, the almighty advertising dollar speaks — sometimes loudly. When everything is an “ALERT,” nothing is. That was certainly the case with former Fox host Bill O’Reilly, who was dumped in 2017 after 21 years at the network. The advertisers spoke, and Bill had to go. But are conservative news consumers cutting off their nose to spite their face? Over at the Washington Examiner, Derek Hunter recounts some of Fox’s good work just this year: “interview[ing] Tony Bobulinski, Hunter Biden’s former business partner”; covering the “BLM-Antifa goons destroying cities and attacking people”; having actual diversity of opinion on its programs; and “the Fox prime-time lineup is unapologetically conservative.” Fox is the only major outlet to give airtime to the Biden Crime Family scandal. We’re always glad to see competition in the marketplace no matter the product. Competition makes things better. Along those same lines, we also believe that Cancel Culture is of the Left — not of the Right. Squelching speech, canceling those with whom you disagree, is anti-competitive and anti-Liberty. Those are not conservative values. Yet there is a growing movement on the Right that seeks to shun and silence anyone or any publication that gets so much as a toe over the line of whatever is perceived as acceptable opinion. Fox is only the biggest target. This, again, is leftist thinking, not the practice of Patriots who love free speech and Liberty itself. There is, of course, a limit to how much garbage anyone can put up with, and we understand why a lot of folks have concluded Fox has simply crossed that line too many times. There is little need to watch CNN, for example, to know what Democrats want you to think. We merely offer the idea that, sometimes, reading and listening to a variety of opinions, especially from those on our own side, makes us all better than if we hunker down in our echo chambers and only hear what we want to hear. Tags: Nate Jackson, Patriot Post, Cancel Fox News?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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Past Is Prologue: Obama-Biden Was Owned and Operated by Big Tech, So…
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 07:18 PM PST by Seton Motley, Contributing Author: “What is past is prologue” — William Shakespeare, The Tempest The Barack Obama-Joe Biden Administration was exceedingly awful in ways too exceeding to innumerate. Which is why successor President Donald Trump’s three year pre-China Virus Lockdown turnaround to perhaps the greatest economy in American history was so exceedingly impressive. One is left to wonder: What will a prospective Biden Administration do – should they be successful in finally, fully stealing the election? The Bard tells us: All the awfulness Biden foisted upon us as second banana – he will almost certainly foist again as the lead banana. In this now-Banana Republic. One area in which Trump Made America Great Again? Which was a fundamental component of his entire overall economic turnaround? Intellectual Property (IP) creation and its protection. Which was a good thing, Because Obama-Biden destroyed US: “When Obama entered the White House, the US was on the global innovation ranking list – consistently #1 or very close to it. “By the time we were rid of Obama?” Intellectual Property Crisis: U.S. Drops Out Of The Top Ten In Innovation Ranking How’d Trump – and his head of the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) Andrei Iancu – do in cleaning up this particular Obama-Biden mess?: “Iancu’s work to restore our patent system – has borne fruit….We’re now back up to #3. And rising with a bullet.” Except that bullet will now almost certainly be stopped…and reversed. By an incoming Biden – who ain’t no Superman. Facing the Consequences: Biden’s Transition Team Should Concern the IP Community: “(L)ooming for the patent and innovation community is a potential disaster.” I am exceedingly older and have seen much of humanity and its nature. This political thing – the desire to cut one’s own throat – still vexes me: “I know that many patent and innovation proponents did not vote for President Trump, (but) elections have consequences. “A byproduct of President Trump losing, is the loss of the pro-patent and unapologetically pro-patent system agenda ushered in by U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) Director Andrei Iancu. “It also means losing the pro-patent agenda – the New Madison Approach – brought to bear at the United States Department of Justice Antitrust Division by Assistant Attorney General Makan Delrahim…. “(T)here is growing concern that the groundwork laid by each man will be erased by a Biden Administration, which would be for the benefit of technology implementers – who are sometimes referred to as efficient infringers because of their cavalier attitude toward the patent rights of others.” “Efficient infringers” with a “cavalier attitude toward the patent rights of others” – is a delicate way of saying “frigging patent thieves.” We don’t yet know for sure how awful Biden will be – but we can guess. Past being prologue: “A review of the announced members of the Biden Transition Team only bolsters these concerns. “It appears as if the only person who will advise a President-Elect Biden regarding the Department of Commerce who has any knowledge of patents is Colleen Chien, who served in the Obama Administration in the Office of Science and Technology Policy during Obama’s second term. “Chien, who, according to her LinkedIn page, ‘helped formulate White House policy on innovation and intellectual property with a focus on patents,’ advised President Obama during a period that saw former Google Executive Michelle Lee chosen as Director of the USPTO.” Wait – Google? Google’s Business Model – Is Theft The Evidence Google’s Systematic Theft is Anti-Competitive I would argue that again putting the likes of that $1.2 trillion fox in charge of the hen house isn’t exactly sound IP policy for the US. But then, I’m not bought and paid for by the likes of that $1.2 trillion fox. The Obama-Biden Administration absolutely was. Currently In Power: The Google Administration: “‘Search giant averages a White House meeting a week during Obama administration.’” And it looks like we’re again on the way to anti-IP crony captivity in the Biden Administration: “Chien’s views on patents are academic, not grounded in the real world, and her default is to be in favor of Silicon Valley implementers who successfully convinced Congress and the Obama Administration to significantly tilt U.S. patent laws away from innovators and toward infringers.” “Infringers?” This guy Gene Quinn is way too exceedingly nice. They’re IP thieves. Google is the biggest IP thief this side of Communist China. In fact, they’re brothers in thieving arms. Google’s Thieving Collaboration with Communist China Doesn’t Speak Well for Google And Google and their thieving Big Tech cohorts – have already primed the IP heist pump with scads of Biden campaign assistance: “(T)he social media giants and Google did much to support the Democratic ticket during this most recent election, not just financially, but very publicly suppressing news stories (for whatever reason) and removing conservative media from search results….Biden owes quite a lot to the FAANGs of Silicon Valley. “Will this mean the next USPTO Director will again come from Google or Facebook or Amazon, as was the case during Obama’s second term? “Will the antitrust lawsuit just filed against Google continue, or will the Antitrust Division of the DOJ step in? Will the Antitrust Division of the DOJ withdraw from the 2019 joint policy statement entered into with the USPTO and NIST, which recognized that injunctions can be appropriate even when dealing with standard essential patents? “Given the support the Biden-Harris ticket received from Silicon Valley and the makeup of the Biden Transition Team, legitimate fears are percolating about whether a first Biden term might look an awful lot like a third Obama term insofar as patents and innovation policy is concerned – even among some Democrats who voted for Biden.” “Legitimate fears” indeed. Willie Shakespeare knew of what he wrote: What is past is prologue. Tags: Seton Motley, Less Government, Past Is Prologue, Obama-Biden, Was Owned and Operated, by Big Tech, So…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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Biden’s Allies Threaten Religious Liberty
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 06:42 PM PST
by Bill Donohue: Left-wing advocacy organizations are wasting no time pressing Joe Biden to do away with the religious liberty protections afforded by the Trump administration. As we have previously detailed, no president has done more to secure religious liberty than Donald Trump. The three most prominent organizations asking Biden to undo Trump’s progress are the American Civil Liberties Union, the Human Rights Campaign, and the Center for American Progress. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is obsessed with sex: it wants to make sure that homosexuals, the sexually confused (transgender people), and women seeking an abortion never have rights that are subordinate to religious rights. It does not matter to the civil libertarians that the former are nowhere mentioned in the Constitution and the latter are enshrined in the First Amendment. The ACLU is worried that “a new wave of bills seeking to create religious exemptions” will succeed, endangering the rights of “LGBTQ” people. No right is more important than conscience rights, a liberty which is ineluctably tied to religious rights. It is this premier right that the ACLU loathes. In a statement released after the election, it condemned “attempts by the Trump administration to invoke religious or personal beliefs.” It said that such exercises can be used to discriminate against LGBTQ people. It further stated that “invoking religious or moral objections” to the LGBTQ agenda cannot be tolerated. On November 11, the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) issued its “Blueprint for Positive Change 2020.” It is chock-a-block full of recommendations for Biden. One of its priorities is to upend the new direction taken by the Office of Civil Rights within the Department of Health and Human Services under President Trump. It specifically takes aim at the Office’s enforcement of “federal conscience and religious liberty laws.” Once again, the LGBTQ agenda is considered to be more important. Thus HRC joins the ACLU in the left-wing assault on conscience rights. HRC also wants to pare back the religious liberty protections afforded faith-based programs by the Trump administration. If its position were followed, it would essentially excise the faith element in faith-based initiatives. This, of course, is its goal. The most draconian recommendation promoted by HRC is its call for the Department of Education to reconsider its standards for accrediting religious institutions of higher education. In short, it wants to deny accreditation to religious colleges and universities that do not meet its secular vision of education. HRC is incensed over the current mandate that accreditation agencies “respect the stated mission” of these religious institutions. It takes particular umbrage at the religious liberty protections cited in the Higher Education Opportunity Act, a law passed by the Congress during the outgoing Bush administration in 2008. The Center for American Progress (CAP) encourages the Biden Administration to do everything the ACLU and HRC want, focusing on doing away with religious exemptions initiated by the Trump administration. However, it does have a few novel ideas of its own. CAP is big on “diversity outreach” efforts to minority religions. This multicultural game, of course, is less interested in recognizing minority religions than it is in whittling away at our Judeo-Christian heritage. It does not stop there. “Religious outreach efforts should also specifically include secular humanist or nonreligious groups, as well as faith-based or spirit-rooted communities who do not observe a specific religious tradition.” If the gurus who wrote this were honest, they would simply say that religious outreach efforts should embrace organizations founded to subvert religion. Inviting atheists to have a table at religious gatherings is like having racists participate in a forum on racism. Yes, there are non-bigoted atheists, but organized atheist entities invariably harbor an animus against religion. CAP urges the Biden administration to “safeguard the separation between religion and government.” Really? Then why does it say, “Together with Pope Francis, the Biden administration should organize a global gathering of religious leaders to discuss climate change and refugee issues”? Whatever happened to that proverbial “wall” separating church and state? No matter, if the pope is to have a voice on climate change (not exactly his specialty), why not invite the Holy Father to share his views on gender ideology—the fanciful notion that we can switch our sex? He properly calls it “demonic.” Constitutional law professor Patrick Garry notes that it was never the intent of the Founders to “place religion and nonreligion on the same level.” In fact, “Textually, the Constitution provides greater protection of religious practices than for any secular-belief-related activities.” This is what gnaws at the ACLU, HRC and CAP. Much is being made of Biden’s alleged “devout” Catholic status. Yet many of his polices on life, marriage, the family, and sexuality are at variance with the teachings of the Catholic Church. Now he is being besieged by organizations that are positively inimical to his professed religion. He cannot have it both ways any more. It is time for him to draw a line in the sand, before his allies eviscerate it altogether. Tags: Bill Donohue, Catholic League, Joe Biden’s Allies, Threaten Religious LibertyTo 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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Paris Climate Treaty Puts America Last
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 06:17 PM PST
by Stephen Moore: Here we are in the midst of the second wave of a once-in-a-half-century pandemic, with the economy flattened and millions of Americans unemployed and race riots in the streets of our major cities. And Joe Biden says that one of his highest priorities as president will be to … reenter the Paris Climate Accord. Trump kept his America First promise and pulled America out of this Obama-era treaty. Biden wants us back in — immediately. Why? Paris is an unmitigated failure. You don’t have to take my word for it. National Geographic, a supporter of climate change action, recently ran the numbers and admits in its recent headline: “Most Countries Aren’t Hitting 2030 Climate Goals.” That’s putting it mildly. Most haven’t even reached half their pledged target for emission reductions. Robert Watson, the former chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, laments: “Countries need to double and triple their 2030 reduction commitments to be aligned with the Paris target.” Gee, this sounds like a treaty we definitely should be part of and pay the bills for. The one country making substantial progress in reducing carbon emissions is the U.S. under President Donald Trump. Even though our gross domestic product is way up over the past four years, our carbon dioxide emissions are DOWN. Our air pollution levels and emissions of lead, carbon monoxide and other pollutants are at record-low levels. Meanwhile, Beijing is far and away the largest polluter. Year after year, it makes hollow promises to stop climate change while they build dozens of new coal plants. India and its 1 billion people are hooked on coal, too. Here is Paris in nutshell: We put our coal miners out of their jobs and cripple our $1 trillion oil and gas industry while China and India keep polluting and laugh at us behind our back. These nations have bigger and more immediate development priorities than worrying about climate change models and their guestimates of the global temperature in 50 years. China has much deeper and sinister ambitions. Those don’t involve cleaning up the planet. The communists in Beijing’s are obsessed with seizing world superpower status away from the U.S. The China 2025 plan for technology domination doesn’t involve switching to expensive and unreliable energy sources. Their plan is to goad the U.S. into doing that. The tragedy of all this is that we have a clean and efficient source of energy. Thanks to the shale oil and gas revolution, the cost of fossil fuels has fallen by 70% to 80% — and the costs will continue to fall, thanks to the superabundance of these energy sources. The U.S. has more fossil fuel energy than virtually any other nation. We are technologically ahead of the rest of the world in drilling productivity and have become a net exporter. Gas is the planet’s wonder-fuel. It should be the 21st-century power source. It makes no sense economically or ecologically to switch to windmills and solar panels, unless you are an investor in these expensive 19th-century energy sources. Across the globe, world leaders are overjoyed that under a Biden administration, the U.S. will reenter the Paris Accord. Why wouldn’t they be? We pay the bills. We hang our booming free market economy on a cross of climate change regulation. We pretend that the world is complying — when their actions speak much louder than their words. We trust, but we don’t verify. If Paris is one of Biden’s first official acts as president, he will be announcing to the world that putting America First has been replaced with putting America Last. Tags: Stephen Moore, Rasmussen Reports, Paris Climate Treaty, Puts America LastTo 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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What Trump Will Leave in Biden’s Inbox
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 06:13 PM PST by Patrick J. Buchanan: Then, there are the human rights backsliders that are U.S. partners and allies — Turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia. How does Biden deal with the party’s progressives who demand he sanction such partner-nations — without risking the loss of these countries’ cooperation on our policy agenda? Dismissing President Donald Trump’s claim that the 2020 election remains undecided, Joe Biden has begun to name his national security team. Right now, it looks Democratic establishment all the way. Antony Blinken, a longtime foreign policy aide, is Biden’s choice for secretary of state. Jake Sullivan, one of Hillary Clinton’s closest aides, is said to be his choice for national security adviser. Biden’s urgency in naming his foreign policy team is understandable. For if his election is confirmed by the Electoral College, then he will find himself on Jan. 20 with a lineup of foreign policy crises. First is Afghanistan. While a Beltway battle has erupted over the wisdom of Trump’s decision to cut in half, to 2,500, the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan by Jan. 15, no one denies the risk this entails for the besieged pro-American government in Kabul. Ex-Ambassador to Afghanistan and Pakistan Ryan Crocker summed it up Friday before the House Armed Services Committee: “The worst thing we can do is what we are doing. … Basically telling the Taliban, ‘You win. We lose. Let’s dress this up as best we can.’” America “is waving the white flag” of surrender, said Crocker. Saturday, a barrage of rockets slammed into the Green Zone of Kabul where many embassies are located, killing eight and wounding two dozen. The Islamic State claimed responsibility. As President Biden is not going to send fresh regiments of U.S. troops back to Afghanistan, he could, in his first year, face a collapse of the Kabul regime and a triumph of the Taliban, whom we expelled from power 19 years ago for hosting the al-Qaida terrorists who perpetrated 9/11. Biden could, in his first days in office, preside over the first U.S. defeat in a major war since Vietnam. A second situation confronting the new president is China. For the China of 2021 is not the China with which Barack Obama and Biden had to deal. The China of today revels in its Communist ideology. It openly crushes democratic dissent in Hong Kong and defends “reeducation camps” for Muslim Uighurs in Xinjiang, uses air and naval forces and missile threats to assert and to defend its claims to the Paracel and Spratly Islands in the South China Sea, to Taiwan, and to the Senkaku Islands that Japan controls and claims. U.S. planes and ships flying close to Chinese territorial claims are intercepted and treated as hostile. This is not a China that is going to back down before American power. If the U.S. imposes sanctions on Beijing, then Beijing will reciprocate with sanctions on the U.S. And if the U.S. decides to use force, the U.S. should not be surprised if China reciprocates in kind. President Biden, it is said, will find a way to rejoin the Iran nuclear deal from which Trump rudely exited. And how will this sit with Israel? Sunday, at a memorial service for Founding Father David Ben-Gurion, Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu sent a message, clearly for Biden: “We must stick to an uncompromising policy to ensure that Iran does not develop nuclear weapons. … There must be no return to the previous nuclear agreement.” How will Biden deal with the now-regular Israeli attacks on Iran and Iranian-backed militias in Syria, Iraq and Lebanon? What would Biden do if Iran responded with attacks on Israel? This is not an academic question. Sunday, the Israelis launched new attacks on Iranian-backed militia in Syria, and Trump has said that if an Iranian hand is found behind an attack that kills an American, then the U.S. will retaliate against Iran. While his foreign policy advisers argued successfully against a Trump proposal for a preemptive strike on Iran’s nuclear enrichment plant at Natanz, Israeli strikes on Iranian-backed militia in Syria could produce retaliation, and a sudden larger and wider war. Worst-case scenario: Iran responds to an Israeli attack; Americans are killed; Trump retaliates; and Biden inherits a war with Iran he must fight or seek to end. Then, there are the human rights backsliders that are U.S. partners and allies — Turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia. How does Biden deal with the party’s progressives who demand he sanction such partner-nations — without risking the loss of these countries’ cooperation on our policy agenda? And the question with regard to Afghanistan is also true of Syria and Iraq. How do we extract our military from these endless conflicts without losing any leverage we have, and with it losing our influence over the composition and character of the regime and its direction? “America First” has an answer to these questions: If there are no vital U.S. interests imperiled, keep U.S. troops out. And ashcan the utopian nonsense of trying to plant democracy in the sandy soil of a Middle East that has shown itself unreceptive to that particular crop. The interventionalists got us into the sandbox. Let’s see if they can get us out. Tags: Patrick Buchanan, conservative, commentary, What Trump Will Leave, in Biden’s Inbox 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 Other Red Wave
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 05:49 PM PST If Joe Biden takes over there will be a huge red wave of the communist kind coming.
Editorial Cartoon by AF “Tony” Branco Tags: AF Branco, editorial cartoon, Other Red Wave, Joe Biden, huge red wave, communist kindTo 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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Good Relations with Genocide?
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 05:35 PM PST by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: “Beijing is trying to convince the incoming Biden administration that the U.S.-China relationship can be smooth and positive,” writes Washington Post columnist Josh Rogin, “but only if Washington dumps the Trump administration’s policies, ignores China’s worst behaviors and pretends everything is fine.” It is more than a little scary because “pretending” is one of the political establishment’s greatest skill-sets. Plus, the columnist reminds that “calls for the Biden administration to reverse course are coming not only from China but also from . . . former secretary of state Henry Kissinger” and a “range of interest groups.” But “yielding to China’s demands,” Rogin warns President-Elect Biden, “would be going against a majority of Americans in both parties and breaking Biden’s campaign promises to stand up to [Chinese leader] Xi.” Consider “Beijing’s naked economic extortion of Australia,” argues Rogin. “If Biden intends to repair alliances, he should realize that allies like Australia want support for resistance to China’s bullying.” So, what does China want? “A Chinese official gave the Sydney Morning Herald a list of the conditions it expects in return for lifting harsh sanctions on Australia’s agricultural and mineral export industries,” Rogin explains. “. . . Australia must stop exposing Chinese Communist Party influence efforts on its soil; shut up about Taiwan, Hong Kong and the Uighurs; open its doors to Chinese tech companies; and quit calling for an independent investigation into the origins of the coronavirus pandemic.” Rogin notes “concern in Asia” about whether Mr. Biden will return to the Obama Administration’s weak stance on China, which “would allow serious problems to fester, raising the long-term risk of just the kind of serious conflict both countries would like to avoid.” How “good” should our relations be with nations engaged in genocide, such as China? This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. Tags: Paul Jacob, Common Sense, Good Relations with Genocide?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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Democrat Governors Are Suicidal – Or They Don’t Believe In Their Own Lockdowns
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 05:18 PM PST by Daniel Greenfield: week before issuing a statewide mask mandate and a few weeks after trying to ban Thanksgiving, Governor Newsom attended a dinner party, maskless, for a lobbyist. The size of the party, a dozen people, contravened, Newsom’s own Thanksgiving crackdown limiting gathering sizes and urging members of different households not to mingle. The photos also contravened Newsom’s 93 to wear a mask at dinner between bites. “COVID-19 has NOT gone away. Take the new case rates seriously. We cannot let our guard down,” Newsom had urged on Twitter. “Wear a mask, limit mixing with those you don’t live with, and physically distance.” Photos of the dinner party showed no social distancing, no mask wearing, and no precautions. Those attending the party included not only Newsom, but top California Medical Association officials. The CMA had lobbied to suspend “non-urgent” and “non-essential” procedures. It had also cheered Newsom’s mask mandate warning that “anti-science extremists” were “putting public health at risk” in an ad campaign released earlier this summer by the association. The anti-science extremists apparently include the CEO of the California Medical Association. Newsom’s dinner party comes after D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser violated her own quarantine, traveling to Delaware for Biden’s election party, one of the “high-risk” states, while partying with Democrat political operatives, before returning home and then refusing to quarantine. Bowser claimed that she didn’t have to follow her own rules because it was “official business”. The coronavirus is presumably obliging enough not to infect politicians who are traveling on official business to party with fellow Democrats, but knows to infect people at Trump rallies. In Chicago, Mayor Lightfoot told residents to “cancel traditional Thanksgiving plans”, after joining a massive crowd celebrating Biden’s claim to have won the 2020 presidentia election. “There are times when we actually do need to have relief and come together, and I felt like that was one of those times. That crowd was gathered whether I was there or not,” Lightfoot argued. Of course all of this isn’t really news. Governor Whitmer’s husband was already caught demanding his boat, Governor Pritzker’s family was caught traveling around the country, Governor Murphy was caught dining indoors, Governor Cuomo didn’t bother social distancing or wearing a mask at a Sharpton event, Mayor Lightfoot was caught getting a haircut, and Speaker Pelosi was caught at a hair salon. Senator Dianne Feinstein was caught repeatedly not using a mask, and Senator Kamala Harris had no problem piling into an elevator with her entire staff. All this is just business as usual. Even without listing the numerous Black Lives Matter marches and Biden victory parties, or the Women’s March in D.C., it’s all too obvious that Democrat leaders don’t follow the rules. And that leads to one of two inevitable conclusions. Either Democrat leaders are suicidal or the mask and lockdown regimen doesn’t work. But what absolutely cannot be true is the media narrative that Democrats are following science and should be trusted to lead us through the pandemic using a regime of lockdowns and masks. The same Democrat leadership lecturing us that masks save lives goes maskless whenever it can. And that might be forgivable if they weren’t constantly pretending that the only people not wearing masks are Republican scofflaws who are endangering all of us with their selfishness. The only thing more unforgivable than corruption is hypocrisy. But the fundamental question is why Governor Newsom, Governor Cuomo, Mayor Bowser, Mayor Lightfoot, and so many others are casually violating their own restrictions and guidelines. If Governor Newsom truly believed, as he tweeted, “Wear your mask. Physically distance. Do not let your guard down. Your actions could literally save lives”, would he have joined a crowded party at the French Laundry for a lobbyist and adviser, without doing any of these things? The only two rational conclusions are that Governor Newsom has no regard for his own life (we already know that he, like most Democrat governors on this list, has no regard for human life when he ordered skilled nursing facilities to accept coronavirus patients in a cruel act that one geriatric doctor compared to, “premeditated murder”) or he doesn’t believe his own guidance. Are Democrat leaders particularly suicidal? That seems unlikely. Newsom, Cuomo, Murphy, Whitmer, and Pritzker, not to mention Pelosi, Feinstein, Bowser, and Lightfoot, can be accused of many things, but a wilful disregard for their lives isn’t one of them. That leaves us with the cold hard reality that they don’t believe the things that they’re telling us. Some of the violations of guidance meant to stop the spread of the virus can be dismissed as selfishness that doesn’t directly put Whitmer or Pritzker at risk. But when Newsom and Cuomo, among others, casually hang out in close proximity without masks, there’s only one conclusion. They don’t practice this stuff because they don’t think it works. What do they know that we don’t? Mostly, that nothing they’re doing will really make a difference, but that they need to be seen to be doing something. This is a common problem in politics. President Trump suffered from poor ratings on the coronavirus because, while his administration did practical things behind the scenes, it didn’t impose abusive mandates. Like the kind that Biden ran on. People expect medicine that really works to taste bitter and any real approach to a crisis to cause pain. That’s why we have to take off our shoes and belts when we fly even though the TSA has not stopped a single terrorist attack after all these years of airport shoelessness. But the TSA was never meant to stop terrorism. It was there to show that the government was taking the problem seriously. And the more miserable flying became, the tighter the security. There’s a term for that sort of thing: security theater. And there’s a term for what we’re doing now: medical theater. All of these are subsidiaries of political theater in which governments and politicians pretend to be doing things even though they know none of it really matters. Congress spends a lot of its time holding entirely useless hearings that only exist so that its members can tweet about how seriously they’re taking the thing that the hearing is about. Governor Cuomo mismanaged the coronavirus in the worst way possible, lying to the public, sending thousands of infected patients into nursing homes, imposing lockdowns and bragging his way through innumerable press conferences, before illegally scapegoating Orthodox Jews for the virus ahead of the second wave, but never missed a press opportunity or book deal. That’s why his coronavirus leadership book hit the bestseller lists ahead of the morgues. Democrat politicians know exactly how to navigate the pandemic, not to save lives, but to maximize their approval ratings, book sales, and potential presidential runs down the road. It doesn’t matter how many people die. Arguably more people dying in your state is better. Just ask Cuomo who still holds down a nationwide championship in coronavirus corpses. What is really important in any crisis is to be seen taking it very seriously by holding constant press conferences and imposing pain, lockdowns, restrictions, mandates, on the public. The more people suffer, the more a politician must get credit for doing everything to fight the virus. The governors know that what they’re doing isn’t working and they don’t know what does. Their strategy isn’t to protect the people in their states, but to protect their political careers. To find out what people really believe, don’t listen to what they say, watch what they do. Governor Newsom knew, before imposing his statewide mask mandate, that masks don’t work. If he thought they did, he would have been wearing one while hanging out with his pals. But to a lot of people, masks provide a sense of control and so politicians happily mandate masks. Newsom, Cuomo, Whitmer, Murphy, and the rest of the gubernatorial gang don’t have a plan to deal with the virus. Their only plan is to wait it out and come out looking good. That’s why they wear masks in front of the camera and then take them off the first chance they get. They’re not leaders, they’re politicians, with no clue what to do in a real crisis. Except lie. As winter is upon us, there are only two possible explanations why so many governors repeatedly violate the rules that they tell us mean the difference between life and death. Either they’re suicidal or they’re lying to us. Since none of them have yet grasped a noose, put shotguns in their ears, or plunged needles filled with uncut heroin in their veins, they’re not suicidal. They are corrupt and incompetent. And while they destroy the lives and livelihoods of millions, they go on partying behind closed doors. Tags: Daniel Greenfield, Democrat Governors, Are Suicidal, Or They Don’t Believe, In Their Own LockdownsTo 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 War on Thanksgiving
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 03:47 PM PST by Jarrett Stepman: Will Americans still be celebrating Thanksgiving 100 years from now?
This year marks the 400th anniversary of the Pilgrims’ arrival in America. The moment, which deserved wider recognition, was celebrated in an excellent speech by Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark. “A great American anniversary is upon us,” Cotton said on Nov. 18. “Regrettably, we haven’t heard much about this anniversary of the Mayflower; I suppose the Pilgrims have fallen out of favor in fashionable circles these days. I’d therefore like to take a few minutes to reflect on the Pilgrim story and its living legacy for our nation.” Cotton delivered a fitting tribute to the Pilgrims and their story of faith and perseverance, which is so intertwined with the Thanksgiving holiday and the values we cherish most. Perhaps predictably, the speech was attacked by media outlets and Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., who hurled an ad hominem attack at Cotton on Twitter. Of course, it was The New York Times editorial board that was so “terrified” of Cotton’s opinions that it slapped an apology on an editorial he wrote for it about riots and fired the editor responsible for publishing it to appease woke staffers. Omar’s comment, as utterly unserious as it was, demonstrates the great crisis confronting modern Americans. She is not alone in dismissing the Pilgrim story or Thanksgiving as a whole. Many of our elite institutions—and now, elected officials—have a knee-jerk reaction to attack or dismiss much of our history. Clearly, a steady drumbeat of woke ideologues in the media and on Twitter have convinced enough people to view the Pilgrim story as another example of oppressor against oppressed, of racist versus antiracist. How did this happen? It’s unclear what “actual history” Omar was referring to, but perhaps something akin to it is Howard Zinn’s “A People’s History of the United States,” a work often celebrated by her left-wing allies. In this book, Zinn created a dishonest, distorted, and ultimately shallow picture of the Pilgrim arrival in America. As Mary Grabar, author of “Debunking Howard Zinn,” wrote for The Federalist in 2019, Zinn deconstructs the Pilgrims’ “first” Thanksgiving to advance his Marxist ideas of oppressors versus oppressed. In these simplistic narratives, the Pilgrims are portrayed as wicked oppressors and the native people as angelic, oppressed victims. This is the narrative now being peddled in elementary schools around the country. In her critique of Zinn-inspired literature used in Portland, Oregon, public schools, Grabar wrote: It makes a cartoonish presentation of myriad people groups from the Bahamas and South America to New Mexico and New England. They are falsely oversimplified as universally peace-loving, Mother Earth-respecting, generous, and welcoming. All Indian tribes are lumped together as a mass of childlike people oppressed by the greedy capitalist explorers and settlers. It’s no surprise that in 2020, Portland became an epicenter of Jacobin-like rioters, who targeted statues of George Washington and countless others while making absurd demands to abolish the police. Here we see the fruits of a generation raised on Zinn. While it is likely pointless to convince the vandals who attack statues and businesses that their views are misguided, we need to take the propaganda that has undermined our country and driven fellow citizens to lunacy and extremism seriously. Thanksgiving is in the beginning stages of receiving the Columbus Day treatment. We can’t underestimate the threat of a few militant voices amplified by America’s elite culture-shaping institutions. Columbus was once nearly universally admired in America, his holiday only questioned by an odd collection of left-wing radicals and, at an even early date, white nationalists who resented the celebration of a Catholic and Italian-born hero. Now, the holiday has nearly collapsed. Even his statues are going undefended by the descendants of Italian immigrants who helped construct them. Columbus may receive a revival someday, and I firmly believe the spirit of his holiday will. But for now, the radicals have mostly won. Thanksgiving is much harder to cancel at the moment, but it is clear that leftists want it on the chopping block. As I wrote in my book “The War on History: The Conspiracy to Rewrite America’s Past,” the real target here isn’t really the Pilgrims and Puritans, it’s the very heart of the Thanksgiving holiday, a holiday that—from its more modern origin in the 19th century—stands for faith, family, and patriotism. All of these virtues are anathema to woke social justice warriors, who want to purge religion from the public square, obliterate the “Western-prescribed” traditional nuclear family, and redefine love of country as a mask for hatred of others. This year’s Mayflower anniversary, as Cotton eloquently explained, is particularly noteworthy: [T]he Thanksgiving season is upon us and once again we have much to give thanks for. But this year we ought to be especially thankful for our ancestors, the Pilgrims, on their four hundredth anniversary. Their faith, their bravery, their wisdom places them in the American pantheon. Alongside the Patriots of 1776, the Pilgrims of 1620 deserve the honor of American founders. As Cotton noted in his speech, prominent Americans of ages past have made speeches marking the centuries since the landing at Plymouth. Perhaps the most famous is by New England statesman Daniel Webster, whose Plymouth Oration of 1820—delivered on “Forefathers Day”—was one of the most important steps in turning the New England story into a national story. Webster’s speech was both deeply conservative and “progressive” at the same time. He explained how the Pilgrim forefathers laid down the foundation, the building blocks of what would become a country attached to both self-government and religious liberty. The Pilgrim experience of fleeing religious repression and inaugurating their newly founded community in the New World with a simple, 200-word Mayflower Compact affirming the rule of law set in motion the inertia for a people rooted in but diverging from their European origins. However, Webster’s speech was not merely a celebration of the past. He called on his generation and the generations to come to perpetuate and extend what we had been given: the great gift of free government. The speech was mixed with a general, genuine, and unquestionable love of country, with a specific demand for what needed to be changed—the abominable institution of slavery in particular. It is perhaps a symbol of Webster’s triumph that it is a senator from Arkansas, a Southerner and not a New Englander, who delivered a great oration in celebration of the Pilgrims for the fourth-century mark in a republic where slavery has long been buried. In his own words, Cotton proudly declared: Some—too many—may have lost the civilizational self-confidence needed to celebrate the Pilgrims … But I for one still have the pride and confidence of our forebears, so here today, I speak in the spirit of that cabin and I reaffirm that old Compact. The future of our country, and the continuity of ideas and institutions that we should all be deeply grateful for, depend on Thanksgiving. If we fail to cherish the special achievements of 1620, Americans a century from now will look forward through the lens of grievance and back with a feeling of contempt. This war cannot be lost, or our country is lost.
Comment before being removed: Of course, it was The New York Times editorial board that was so “terrified” of Cotton’s opinions that it slapped an apology on an editorial he wrote for it about riots and fired the editor responsible for publishing it to appease woke staffers. Omar’s comment, as utterly unserious as it was, demonstrates the great crisis confronting modern Americans. She is not alone in dismissing the Pilgrim story or Thanksgiving as a whole. Many of our elite institutions—and now, elected officials—have a knee-jerk reaction to attack or dismiss much of our history. Clearly, a steady drumbeat of woke ideologues in the media and on Twitter have convinced enough people to view the Pilgrim story as another example of oppressor against oppressed, of racist versus antiracist. How did this happen? It’s unclear what “actual history” Omar was referring to, but perhaps something akin to it is Howard Zinn’s “A People’s History of the United States,” a work often celebrated by her left-wing allies. In this book, Zinn created a dishonest, distorted, and ultimately shallow picture of the Pilgrim arrival in America. As Mary Grabar, author of “Debunking Howard Zinn,” wrote for The Federalist in 2019, Zinn deconstructs the Pilgrims’ “first” Thanksgiving to advance his Marxist ideas of oppressors versus oppressed. In these simplistic narratives, the Pilgrims are portrayed as wicked oppressors and the native people as angelic, oppressed victims. This is the narrative now being peddled in elementary schools around the country. In her critique of Zinn-inspired literature used in Portland, Oregon, public schools, Grabar wrote: It makes a cartoonish presentation of myriad people groups from the Bahamas and South America to New Mexico and New England. They are falsely oversimplified as universally peace-loving, Mother Earth-respecting, generous, and welcoming. All Indian tribes are lumped together as a mass of childlike people oppressed by the greedy capitalist explorers and settlers. It’s no surprise that in 2020, Portland became an epicenter of Jacobin-like rioters, who targeted statues of George Washington and countless others while making absurd demands to abolish the police. Here we see the fruits of a generation raised on Zinn. While it is likely pointless to convince the vandals who attack statues and businesses that their views are misguided, we need to take the propaganda that has undermined our country and driven fellow citizens to lunacy and extremism seriously. Thanksgiving is in the beginning stages of receiving the Columbus Day treatment. We can’t underestimate the threat of a few militant voices amplified by America’s elite culture-shaping institutions. Columbus was once nearly universally admired in America, his holiday only questioned by an odd collection of left-wing radicals and, at an even early date, white nationalists who resented the celebration of a Catholic and Italian-born hero. Now, the holiday has nearly collapsed. Even his statues are going undefended by the descendants of Italian immigrants who helped construct them. Columbus may receive a revival someday, and I firmly believe the spirit of his holiday will. But for now, the radicals have mostly won. Thanksgiving is much harder to cancel at the moment, but it is clear that leftists want it on the chopping block. As I wrote in my book “The War on History: The Conspiracy to Rewrite America’s Past,” the real target here isn’t really the Pilgrims and Puritans, it’s the very heart of the Thanksgiving holiday, a holiday that—from its more modern origin in the 19th century—stands for faith, family, and patriotism. All of these virtues are anathema to woke social justice warriors, who want to purge religion from the public square, obliterate the “Western-prescribed” traditional nuclear family, and redefine love of country as a mask for hatred of others. This year’s Mayflower anniversary, as Cotton eloquently explained, is particularly noteworthy: [T]he Thanksgiving season is upon us and once again we have much to give thanks for. But this year we ought to be especially thankful for our ancestors, the Pilgrims, on their four hundredth anniversary. Their faith, their bravery, their wisdom places them in the American pantheon. Alongside the Patriots of 1776, the Pilgrims of 1620 deserve the honor of American founders. As Cotton noted in his speech, prominent Americans of ages past have made speeches marking the centuries since the landing at Plymouth. Perhaps the most famous is by New England statesman Daniel Webster, whose Plymouth Oration of 1820—delivered on “Forefathers Day”—was one of the most important steps in turning the New England story into a national story. Webster’s speech was both deeply conservative and “progressive” at the same time. He explained how the Pilgrim forefathers laid down the foundation, the building blocks of what would become a country attached to both self-government and religious liberty. The Pilgrim experience of fleeing religious repression and inaugurating their newly founded community in the New World with a simple, 200-word Mayflower Compact affirming the rule of law set in motion the inertia for a people rooted in but diverging from their European origins. However, Webster’s speech was not merely a celebration of the past. He called on his generation and the generations to come to perpetuate and extend what we had been given: the great gift of free government. The speech was mixed with a general, genuine, and unquestionable love of country, with a specific demand for what needed to be changed—the abominable institution of slavery in particular. It is perhaps a symbol of Webster’s triumph that it is a senator from Arkansas, a Southerner and not a New Englander, who delivered a great oration in celebration of the Pilgrims for the fourth-century mark in a republic where slavery has long been buried. In his own words, Cotton proudly declared: Some—too many—may have lost the civilizational self-confidence needed to celebrate the Pilgrims … But I for one still have the pride and confidence of our forebears, so here today, I speak in the spirit of that cabin and I reaffirm that old Compact. The future of our country, and the continuity of ideas and institutions that we should all be deeply grateful for, depend on Thanksgiving. If we fail to cherish the special achievements of 1620, Americans a century from now will look forward through the lens of grievance and back with a feeling of contempt. This war cannot be lost, or our country is lost. Tags: The War on Thanksgiving, Jarrett Stepman, The Daily Signal, Sen. Tom Cotton, Rep. Ilhan OmarTo 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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America Is Over. It’s Time To Opt Out
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 02:53 PM PST
by Bob Maistros: This correspondent doesn’t know exactly how the Democrats pulled off a heist of biblical proportions: Grand Theft Election. Maybe it was out-of-staters showing up with truckloads of pre-completed Biden ballots. Maybe “curing” votes with Republican observers held at a distance. Maybe, indeed, software flipping millions of tallies from Donald Trump to Joe Biden. Probably, an “all-of-the-above” strategy of, as described on these pages over the weekend, assorted “voter irregularities, improbable election processes, questionable official actions and statistical impossibilities” after Democrats openly war-gamed for months. We – basically every sentient adult American – just know that they did it. We knew it from the time votes were being held back in swing states on election night (a “water main break.” Yeah, right) in Democratic machine urban areas in four states where Trump was running up double-digit leads. To when, as days passed, the Biden vote count took the kind of sudden vertical leaps previously confined to Third World banana republics. To now, when Democrats, the media and Establishment Republicans rush to finalize America’s hostile takeover. Like Jimmy Hoffa’s murder 35 years ago, we’ll ultimately know the whos, whats, wheres, whens and hows of this dastardly deed (we already knew the whys). It just will never be provable in court. And certainly not in the short timeframe required to stave off a Biden inauguration. By the way: Don’t dream for a moment that swing-state state legislators, as also suggested in the above-referenced piece, will step in and blow the whistle. Not after they witnessed Wayne County, Michigan, Republican officials race for cover after being accused of attempting to “steal the election” (exactly what Democrats are doing) for initially refusing to bless results after oddities there. Nor that the same playbook won’t be executed to the same peachy perfection in the Peach State’s upcoming Senate runoffs. The certain fruits of Dems’ multi-state, multi-step larceny of the White House and Capitol Hill: the full “Californication” of America also cautioned about on this site last week. That article quoted Michael Anton from his brilliant opening chapter in “The Stakes” on how middle-class Californians are fleeing “high taxes, higher costs, cratering standards of living, declining services, deteriorating infrastructure (and) worsening quality of life.” But any equally important citation follows thereafter. Anton queries: “Americans don’t have the luxury of fleeing a Californicated America. Where are we supposed to go?” The simple answer: nowhere, physically. Legally and institutionally? That’s another matter. On those fronts, America’s wronged electoral majority needs to do exactly what Californians are doing. Leave. Opt out. As some would have it: secede. Though the favored word here is “partition.” Because the United States of America ceased to exist the moment the vote tally crossed the threshold allowing Team Biden to claim “victory” – as the Democrats nullified its existential principle: “consent of the governed.” Nor can any nation of states be “United” when nearly half of its citizenry has been so aggrieved. Especially when the object is even greater, Californicated aggrievement. As Ronald Reagan once said of the same Democratic Party, “I didn’t leave them. They left me.” Now that party has not just left tens of millions of voters. It’s actively exiling us politically and culturally. The notion of formalizing America’s long separation into two nations may seem to some not just unthinkable, but unspeakable. But speaking the unspeakable is how movements pass from impossibility to reality. The notion of same-sex “marriage” was so unthinkable in 1972 that a case was dismissed in a single sentence for lack of a “substantial federal question,” the judicial equivalent of “are you kidding me?” Yet the concept continued to be spoken. Then shouted – demanded – and commanded. With questioners now even persecuted, prosecuted, fined, censured and cancelled. And not just same-sex marriage. Transgenderism. Climate change. Cost-driving, blackout-inducing renewable mandates. Plus other once instantly discounted and even taboo notions. Today, partition must follow the same path from anathema to mandate and impossibility to imperative – and much faster to save Red America from Blue Dominion and destruction. How will it get done? The same way liberals have pulled off their capture of culture and ultimately, their coup: not just speaking the unspeakable until it becomes conventional – but dispensing with niceties such as settled law and procedure. No asking “Mother-may-I” to Congress. Deep red states should simply declare the Union dissolved by nefarious actions to disenfranchise Americans. And for the red counties and other jurisdictions that want to part from their urban blue captors, just do it: declare independence – it’s been suggested that California itself could break into as many as six units – or pursue annexation by adjacent departing states. Partition won’t be easy – breaking up is hard to do – in fact, sorting out who gets what jurisdictionally, financially and especially militarily will be downright ugly and messy. But the path to making it real begins here and now with open and forthright discussion of those practical whos, whats, whens, wheres, and hows of opting-out. Because once again, in Election 2020’s aftermath, we already know the whys. Tags: Bob Maistros, Issues and Insights, America Is Over, It’s Time To Opt OutTo 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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Happy Thanksgiving Week
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 02:29 PM PST
by Mike Huckabee: HAPPY THANKSGIVING WEEK With all the other things in the news, a very important anniversary is not getting the attention it deserves. This year marks the 400th anniversary of the arrival of the Pilgrims in the New World aboard the Mayflower in 1620. A lot of people are poisoning our children’s minds with lies about their nation’s history and trying to convince them that America was founded on nothing but racism, slavery and genocide. They are an even better argument for home-schooling than COVID-19. Arkansas Tom Cotton has a terrific article about the importance of this date and the Pilgrims, and the truly great and real American traditions that first appeared in that small colony of people seeking the freedom to express their religious beliefs without fear of government oppression. John Adams called the Pilgrims’ arrival and their organizing document, the Mayflower Compact, the “birth-day of your nation.” Sen. Cotton writes, “In this covenant, the ship’s passengers agreed to form a ‘civil body politic’ of ‘just and equal laws’ based on the consent of the governed and dedicated to the ‘Glory of God’ and the ‘general good of the colony.’ Immediately after signing the compact, the signatories conducted a democratic election to choose their first governor.” No wonder schools don’t want kids to be taught that anymore! Read the whole thing. It will remind you of a whole lot of things that all Americans have to be thankful for, and that a lot of people would like us to forget about. Speaking of 1620, National Review has a great article about an important new book, “1620: A Critical Response to the 1619 Project.” It’s a well-deserved deconstruction of the New York Times’ awful “1619 Project” that falsely recasts America’s founding as being about nothing but enforcing and preserving slavery and that some schools are now teaching as part of their curriculum (see my recommendation of home-schooling, above.) ELECTION UPDATES After Georgia certified its vote results, the Trump campaign announced Saturday that it wants a recount that includes signature matching, to insure that the ballots that were counted and recounted are legitimate. Since Biden’s current lead is only 12,670 votes out of more than 5 million cast, or less than 0.5%, Trump has a legal right to request a recount after certification. Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski has become one of the few prominent GOP political figures to call on President Trump to begin the transition to a Biden Administration. Fact To Bear In Mind: I’m starting to see op-eds pop up in liberal outlets, praising Al Gore for selflessly putting the good of America first by conceding to George W. Bush in 2000. What they’re not mentioning is that he only did that after exhausting all possible legal options, and the date that he conceded was December 13th. If Trump hasn’t either prevailed or conceded by December 13th (nearly three weeks from now), then you can compare him to Al Gore. COLOR ME SHOCKED RECOVERING FROM COVID, BEN CARSON THANKS PRESIDENT TRUMPFriday, HUD Secretary Dr. Ben Carson issued a statement thanking President Trump for saving his life. Carson contracted COVID-19 and was treated with Oleander 4X. At first, he improved, but he has several co-morbidities and soon worsened and became “desperately ill.” He said Trump was following his condition and cleared him to get the monoclonal antibody therapy he’d received, and it worked. I’m sure we’re all thankful that Dr. Carson is on the mend, but there’s another part of his statement that applies to us all and that deserves to quoted far and wide: “I am hopeful that we can stop playing politics with medicine and instead combine our efforts and goodwill for the good of all people. While I am blessed to have the best medical care in the world (and I am convinced it saved my life), we must prioritize getting comparable treatments and care to everyone as soon as possible. There are a number of promising treatments that need to be tested, approved, and distributed (sooner rather than later) so that the economy can be reopened and we can all return to a semblance of normalcy. Also, people should recognize that there are a number of defined steps that legally have to be taken before vaccines are released to the public and trying to cause alarm by saying dangerous shortcuts were taken only serves to stoke fear. Together we will be victorious. God is still in charge.” Those who keep pushing draconian measures that destroy the economy and people’s lives until a vaccine is developed while spreading politically-motivated suspicion of any vaccine developed under President Trump also keep telling us we must listen to the doctors. Ben Carson is one of the most preeminent doctors in the world. How about listening to him? CORONAVIRUS IS CHANGING OUR HABITS 57 YEARS That’s one of many reasons why some of us find it so shocking and appalling that loose talk of assassinating a President you don’t like has become commonplace. It’s just one of many examples of how woeful the younger generations’ history education has become. There have been many distorted conspiracy theories about JFK’s death that have supplanted the real history, and in recent years, they’ve taken a new twist as political partisans have tried to rewrite the truth about that dark day to throw shade on their contemporary political rivals. For instance, on the 50th anniversary, liberal media outlets like the Washington Post tried to link the Tea Party with the “right-wing extremism” of the ‘60s to imply they would have killed JFK if they’d been around back then. I wouldn’t be surprised to find similar attacks on Trump supporters, if I felt like digging through the muck to look for them. So let me just give you a quick history lesson: For years, Dallas was unfairly painted by the left as a “city of hate” because JFK was killed there. Yes, there were some nasty anti-JFK ads in the local media (imagine that during a campaign year!) But in fact, the streets of Dallas were jammed with hundreds of cheering well-wishers who turned out just to see the President drive past. That’s why the FBI had so many photos to analyze: because there were so many people who came out to get a picture. Lee Harvey Oswald was not a Dallasite, or even a Texan, and certainly not a right-winger. He was born in New Orleans and had only recently moved to Dallas. He was also a genuine, card-carrying communist who admired Castro and Cuba and had actually defected and lived in the Soviet Union for three years. He hated JFK for his anti-communist policies. He was also known to be a rude, arrogant, communist loser who couldn’t hold a job and was always arguing with people and getting into fights. I could make an argument that he sounds more like an Antifa member than a Tea Partier or Trump supporter. But I won’t. The anniversary of the JFK assassination should be a time for reflection on a tragic event that affected the world and all Americans. It should also be a time for reflection on what horrors can take place when people let their political passions overrun their sense of basic human decency. Tags: Mike Huckabee, Evening Edition, Happy Thanksgiving WeekTo 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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Lt. Governor Griffin Calls For Complete Phase-Out of Arkansas’s Personal Income Tax
Posted: 24 Nov 2020 01:41 PM PST ‘Eliminating the income tax will incentivize work and productivity, attract high-quality, good-paying jobs, and unleash Arkansas small businesses’
Lt. Gov. Tim Griffin: I have called for a complete and total phase-out of Arkansas’s personal income tax over a period of several years and provided the following statement: ——————— David Ray released this public notice by Lt. Gov. Tim Griffin. Tags: Arkansas, Lt. Gov, Tim Griffin, calls for, complete phase-out, Arkansas Personal Income Tax To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Wednesday, November 25, 2020
Good morning, NBC News readers.
On this Thanksgiving eve, we are looking at the dilemma facing doctors as new Covid-19 treatments become available, President-elect Joe Biden’s new team and a revelation from Meghan Markle.
Here is what’s happening this Wednesday morning.
Scarcity of new Covid drug poses dilemma for doctors over who to treat Two authorized Covid-19 antibody treatments that may help keep high-risk patients out of the hospital are in such short supply that doctors are facing a daunting question as cases surge in the United States: Which patients should be first in line?
The antibody treatments must be given shortly after a patient tests positive, before severe symptoms begin. The hourlong IV infusions are considered to be among the more promising treatments for the disease. But doses of the drugs, one made by Regeneron and the other by Eli Lilly, are extremely limited. Both companies received emergency use authorization from the Food and Drug Administration in recent weeks.
It’s just one of the many challenges the U.S. medical system is facing with the soaring number of coronavirus cases across the country.
Earlier in the pandemic, hospitals were competing for ventilators, Covid-19 tests and personal protective equipment; now they are competing for nurses.
In nursing homes, Covid-19 outbreaks are hitting a record high.
“It’s an out-of-control fire. You stamp it out in one place, then it pops up somewhere else,” said Bill Sweeney, senior vice president of government affairs at AARP, which has urged Congress to pass more funding for testing, personal protective equipment and staffing for the country’s 15,000 nursing homes.
And the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is finalizing plans to shorten the recommended length of quarantine for those exposed to Covid-19.
Follow our live blog for all the latest Covid-19 developments.
Biden says outreach from Trump admin has been ‘sincere’ as transition begins President-elect Joe Biden said Tuesday that the Trump administration has already begun to reach out to his transition team, and he described the effort as “sincere,” a day after a federal agency released a letter to formally begin the transition of power.
“Immediately, we’ve gotten outreach from the national security shop to just across the board,” Biden said in an exclusive interview with NBC News’ Lester Holt.
“And I must say the outreach has been sincere — it has not been begrudging so far, and I don’t expect it to be,” Biden added.
Biden’s first batch of administration picks, introduced at an event Tuesday in Wilmington, Delaware, gives competing wings of the Democratic Party something to celebrate, and sends a signal to the United States that he plans to govern as an institutionalist.
So far, he’s giving everybody from progressive activists to centrist Democrats something to be happy about and little to fight over, writes NBC News’ Sahil Kapur.
“The president-elect understands that he has to continue this balancing act in constituting his presidency,” said William Galston, a senior fellow in governance studies at the Brookings Institution. “Biden is a unifier, and he’s picked a team of fellow unifiers. These are not people who go out of their way to pick fights, especially with other Democrats.”
The Dow Jones Industrial Average seemed to agree with the news that the Trump administration had finally green-lighted the transition process for Biden. The Dow closed above 30,000 for the first time in history on Tuesday.
Wall Street is also optimistic about Biden picking former Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen to head the Treasury Department. If approved by the Senate, Yellen, 74, would be the first woman to hold the Cabinet-level position of secretary of the Treasury.
Meghan Markle reveals she suffered a miscarriage Meghan Markle said on Wednesday that she suffered a miscarriage, writing in an article about her “unbearable grief” and calling for individuals to show more empathy toward one another during this difficult year.
The Duchess of Sussex, and wife of Britain’s Prince Harry, revealed that her miscarriage occurred in July in a New York Times opinion piece.
The disclosure was part of a wider discussion the Duchess of Sussex was trying to spark this Thanksgiving on the importance of asking each other “Are you OK?” during these troubled times brought on by the coronavirus pandemic, political divisiveness and societal reckonings over race. “I knew, as I clutched my firstborn child, that I was losing my second,” Markle wrote in her New York Times opinion piece. (Photo: Ben Birchall / Getty Images file)
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Plus
THINK about it Americans worry about their grocery stores running out of toilet paper. Imagine how much more worried they’ll be if their hospitals run out of nurses, former ICU nurse Janet Campbell-Vincent writes in an opinion piece.
Live BETTER You still have one day left to prepare. Here are recipes, strategies and tips for a different, more low-key kind of Thanksgiving feast this year.
Shopping Many retailers, including Amazon and Bed Bath & Beyond have put out holiday hubs to simplify gift-giving this year.
Quote of the day “America is back, multilateralism is back, diplomacy is back.” — Linda Thomas-Greenfield, Biden’s U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations nominee, said during remarks Tuesday.
One fun thing Officials in Chickasha, Oklahoma, were looking for ideas to draw visitors to the city.
They decided a giant 40-foot inflatable lamp, like the one in the movie “A Christmas Story,” would be just the thing to give them a leg up over the competition to attract tourists.
Just for fun, check out the moment when Ralphie’s parents open up the “‘Fra-gil-e!’ It must be Italian” incredible new piece of home decor.
We know this holiday season is going to be different, but we still hope it’s full of joyful surprises.
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
We will be sending the newsletter tomorrow morning, but in case you are busy cooking away, wishing you a very Happy Thanksgiving. No matter how you choose to celebrate, have a happy and safe day.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com
Thanks, Petra Cahill
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CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
DECISION DESK HQ
You are receiving this free email because you signed up for it along — |
While President Donald Trump continues to pursue legal options to challenge the outcome of the election, Decision Desk HQ has projected a winner in each state. Georgia was the final state to be called as county officials certified their results as part of their initial hand recount of the November 3rd results. |
In the Senate, Republicans have 50 seats, while Democrats have 48, with two seats to be decided in Georgia on January 5th. |
In the House, Republicans have picked up eight seats and there are still six seats left to be called. The remaining seats to be decided are: |
CA-21: Repubican David Valadao leads freshman incumbent T.J. Cox in a rematch from 2018. CA-25: Republican Congressman Mike Garcia leads Democrat Christy Smith, in a rematch from their special election battle earlier this year. IA-2: Republican Mariannette Miller-Meeks leads Rita Hart in the battle to replace retiring Democratic Congressman Dave Loebsack by 47 votes heading into a recount. LA-5: With no candidate breaking the 50% threshold, two Republicans, Luke Letlow and Lance Harris, will face each other in a runoff on December 5th. NY-1: Republican Congressman Lee Zeldin leads Democratic challenger Nancy Goroft with Suffolk County still to report it’s absentee votes. NY-22: Former Republican Congresswoman Claudia Tenney leads Democratic incumbent Anthony Brindisi by 281 while counties in the district are finalizing their count and adjudicating provisional and challenged ballots. |
Full results from around the country can be found at our website. |
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The 2020 elections were a challenge for pollsters and election forecasters. We took a look at how our model did on its own terms and compared to other forecasters and the results were quite good. “One can’t evaluate a forecast in 2020 without talking about the polls and their relatively historic misses (especially in the upper Midwest). We share our initial thoughts on polling. In our preliminary analysis, we’re going to include all of the races we know about as of Nov 11th, 2020. This includes all of the Presidential races, all but the two Georgia Senate races (that have gone into runoff), and 430 out of the 435 House races. Once all the results are in, we’ll make an update and revise some of the numbers presented below. Our final Presidential prediction had Joe Biden with an 87.6% chance of winning the Presidency. The predicted mean electoral votes across our simulations was 318 with a 95% confidence interval spanning from 268 to 368. The Presidency was called for Joe Biden on Friday Nov 6th by DecisionDeskHQ, with most large news outlets calling it a day later on Saturday Nov 7th. Joe Biden won with small leads in MI, WI, PA, and GA, and will end up with 306 electoral votes. Our final Senate prediction gave Democrats an 82.9% chance of winning the Senate, with a 9.9% chance of a tie (50-50 chamber). The mean prediction was 52 Democratic seats to 48 GOP seats with a 90% confidence interval spanning between 45 and 50 GOP seats. Control of the Senate has yet to be called due to the two Georgia races that went into runoff and will be resolved on Jan 5th, but it will end with between 50 and 52 seats for the GOP. Our final House prediction gave Democrats a 98.3% chance of winning the House. The mean prediction was 237 Democratic seats to 198 GOP seats with a 90% confidence interval spanning between 187 GOP seats and 210 GOP seats. Although we don’t have a final split of House seats, it appears that Democrats will end with roughly 222-223 seats and the GOP will end with roughly 212-213 seats.” For a full rundown of our preliminary analysis of our forecasting model, see our complete post. |
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Every wonder what it’s like to be responsible for forecasting turnout levels for an entire national election or be the first person to project the winner of a presidential election? In this edition of Around The Desk, DDHQ’s podcast program, we take you behind the scenes of what it’s like leading up to and on election night at one of the nation’s major election reporting services. |
Click on the image above to listen to our post-election edition of Around the Desk. |
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Why Donald Trump Lost Minnesota By 7% By Aaron Booth |
Joe Biden rode to victory this month largely with strength among suburbanites. While he struggled in places like Southern Florida and the Rio Grande Valley, he found strength in places like the Twin Cities, Atlanta and Phoenix, Philadelphia and Detroit metro areas. The Twin Cities metro area has been growing at a fairly steady pace (outpacing the rest of the state) over the past couple decades. This population shift trend coupled with regional realignments in the state have kept its 10 electoral votes out of reach for the Minnesota GOP and President Trump. |
First off, you have the growing share of the electorate the metro contains. In 2000, 54.6% of the statewide vote for President came from the region. In 2016 that number grew to 55.9%. Now in 2020, that was 56.3%. While the larger overall statewide trends are positive for the DFL, the growth in the metro particularly complimented Biden’s coalition of suburbanites. |
The quick and simple definition I am using here for “suburb” is the 7-county metro minus Minneapolis and St. Paul. Using this definition, Biden made pretty solid gains in both the affluent and working class suburbs. Biden was able to expand Clinton’s 7.1-point margin in the Twin Cities suburbs to a 15.7-point margin. While Biden’s 7-point margin increase in Minneapolis 3.3-point increase in St Paul certainly helped, the growth across the metro is what padded his lead. No doubt Biden also benefited from growth in greater Minnesota in Rochester, Duluth, St Cloud, Bemidji and Moorhead, though we can save that analysis for another day. A quick look at the map makes it pretty evident what happened. Biden built upon recent trends towards the DFL among college educated affluent suburbs. He then won back some of the blue collar suburbs that flipped from Obama to Trump. Finally, he made some notable gains in some of the farther reaches in the metro including shifting Waconia from Trump +17.2 in 2016 to Trump +7 in 2020 and Lakeville from Trump +11.8 in 2016 to Trump +1.4 in 2020. |
Looking back to the year 2000, George W. Bush carried the Twin Cities suburbs as defined here. While Gore came similarly close in Anoka County, he lost Dakota and Washington Counties and ran behind what Biden got in Carver and Scott Counties two decades later. There have also been considerable shifts in the suburbs in Ramsey and Hennepin Counties. In 2020, Biden carried every Ramsey County precinct both within the city of St Paul as well as the suburbs to the north and east within the county. In Hennepin, the DFL has a solid footing in formerly red cities such as Maple Grove, Edina, Eden Prairie and Minnetonka. The DFL now only holds Congressional districts in the state that are anchored in the 7-county metro. (There is some extension with Angie Craig’s 2nd District into southern Minnesota) The DFL also has similar strength at the State Legislative level in the metro area, though they have some strength in various population centers in greater Minnesota. At the same time, the GOP has some strength in the metro as they flipped a State Senate seat in the metro and held a few other metro-area State Senate and House seats this cycle. Continued gains for the DFL and population shifts towards the metro will make this round of redistricting in Minnesota one to watch. With divided government again going into 2021, districts are likely to be drawn again by the courts as they were following the 2010 census. While this will avoid either side gerrymandering the state, the overall balance may still shift towards the DFL (particularly at the State Legislative level) considering population growth in the 7-county metro and outstate suburban cores and population decreases in more rural areas of which the GOP has recently dominated. |
Aaron Booth (@ActorAaronBooth) is a contributor to Decision Desk HQ. |
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