Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday January 11, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
January 11 2021
Good morning from Washington, where conservatives face the unfolding squelching of free speech from the president on down. Jarrett Stepman isn’t curbing his opinion. Law enforcement needs to regroup from mistakes that led to a mob’s breach of the Capitol, Lora Ries and Steve Bucci write. On the podcast, we seek a physician’s advice on worrisome new strains of the coronavirus. Plus: a poll finds that a majority wants Trump out now, and a constitutional amendment that some advocate using to do that. On this date in 1989, President Ronald Reagan gives his farewell address to Americans as his second term draws to a close.
While health scares for Eisenhower led to some informal agreements about transmitting the duties of the president in a time of crisis, nothing was enacted until the Kennedy assassination.
Democrats are calling for the removal of President Trump before his term expires Jan. 20, either through a second impeachment or by invoking the 25th Amendment.
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
JANUARY 11, 2021 READ IN BROWSER
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
She claims “As the days go by, the horror of the ongoing assault on our democracy perpetrated by this President is intensified and so is the immediate need for action.” The story also explains “The House will first try to force Vice President Mike Pence and the Cabinet to remove Trump by invoking the 25th Amendment” (NY Post). From New York Democrat Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez: “But in addition to removal, we’re also talking about complete barring of the president or, rather, of Donald Trump from running for office ever again” (Washington Times). From Hugh Hewitt: What ought to drive discussions at this moment is what’s best for the country now and hereafter. Precedents about impeachment are significant disturbances in the constitutional order. There isn’t time to even consider them seriously. Passions are running high — which is why this is exactly the moment to allow them to cool. Allow the 12 days to pass in somber silence and reflection. Why burden the new president with a country even more deeply divided than it is now? (Washington Post). Andrew McCarthy argues Trump has committed an impeachable offense (Fox News).
2.
At Least 25 Rioters Investigated for Terrorism
As a result of the assault on the capital (NY Post). From Bill Weir: Horrific new video obtained by CNN shows a MAGA rioter (in white hat and backpack) grab a DC Metro officer and pull him down Capitol steps where he is stomped and beaten with an American flag pole. At one point they sing the Star Spangled Banner (Twitter). From Amy Swearer on a photo of one of the rioters: Time out. Did this guy breach the United States Capitol during a riot with a freaking handgun plainly visible on his hip? Open carry is *extremely illegal* in D.C. and he just walked around like this all day without MPD or anyone elset noticing? Am I missing something? (Twitter). There have now been more than a dozen resignations since the attack on the capital (NY Post). The cause of death of the capital policeman remains a mystery (Red State). Lots of jobs lost by Capital police (Washington Times). A look at 28 times media and Democrats excused violence by left wing activists (The Federalist).
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3.
Wall Street Journal: Tech Giants Seek to Destroy Conservative Speech
Regarding Parler, the story notes “Conservatives of all stripes watched as Twitter and Facebook took extraordinary measures to black out legitimate reporting on Hunter Biden in the run-up to the election. Now an informal confederation of web gatekeepers is methodically destroying a competitor that was created to accommodate their views” (WSJ). Trump had to resort to the old fashioned press release to respond to Twitter (NY Post). From Kelley Paul, wife of Senator Rand Paul: Hey @jack , remember how for the last three years you have allowed thousands of hateful tweets celebrating my husband’s assault and encouraging more violence against him? I do (Twitter).
4.
Manchin Suddenly Open to Statehood for DC and Puerto Rico
Citibank Says It Won’t Support Candidates Who Objected
Just the GOP candidates, far as I can tell (Twitter). Not the Democrats who objected in the recent past (NY Times). Marriott joined them (Red State). From Jeff Blehar: The weaponization of the left of capital (even as their more extreme elements claim to be socialist/Bernie/Stalin-did-nothing-wrong etc.) is a real issue that we’re going to be wrestling over in the near future. Hand-wave all you want, juddlegum! It’s going be a massive fight (Twitter). From another story: Critics of Missouri Republican Sen. Josh Hawley are contacting the all-boys Jesuit high school from which he graduated more than twenty years ago to express their displeasure with the role they claim he played in Wednesday’s riot at the U.S. Capitol (Daily Wire).
7.
Story Looks at Complicated Process for Senior Citizens to Get Vaccine in New York
Including “a 51 step online questionnaire that includes uploading multiple attachments” (Twitter). Meanwhile, one story claims single seniors want the vaccine so they can date again (NY Post).
8.
“The Bible in a Year” Sits Atop Apples Podcast List
Hosted by a Catholic priest. In the story, Alexandra DeSanctis calls it “a blazing sign of hope.”
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It’s too long to include in its entirety at the top of Sunburn, so please click here to read my analysis of Gov. Ron DeSantis‘ political fortunes.
Some other notes this morning:
— Absolute must read: As chaos erupted into insurrection Wednesday at the U.S. Capitol, the scene was shocking, but the extent to which lives were in peril didn’t become clear until the days following as more and more firsthand accounts came into view. The Washington Post highlights just how terrified lawmakers and their staff were on that fateful day with a shocking play by play.
Lawmakers and staff seek cover as rioters swarm The Capitol. Image via AP.
— Not the first time: Civil rights activists took notice Wednesday the notable difference between a mob of mostly White insurrectionists storming the U.S. Capitol and the Black Lives Matter protests this summer: the police response was notable less with the White crowd even though that group presented a greater threat than protests against police brutality. Experts who track these sort of things pointed out something troubling: that fits a pattern. As FiveThirtyEight points out, “between May 1 and November 28, 2020, authorities were more than twice as likely to attempt to break up and disperse a left-wing protest than a right-wing one.” Worse, an analysis shows that when law enforcement uses force, they do so 51% of the time at left-leaning demonstrations while only 34% at conservative protests.
❌ — This is what Rick Scott is reading: The hotel chain Marriott International is suspending donations to Republicans who voted against certifying Joe Biden‘s election victory Monday. That would include Florida’s junior Senator, who voted against certifying results in Pennsylvania. According to Bloomberg, the hotel giant is one of the first corporate donors to take such action after Wednesday’s insurrection on Capitol Hill by Donald Trump supporters.
— Sunburn readers already know this, but …: It turns out waking up early is actually pretty good. As part of The Cut’s “Turns out it’s pretty good” series, author Sarah Hagi describes her life long commitment to waking up whenever she felt like it, how it made her secretly feel less put together than Type A folks who had their lives perfectly in order and how a friend showed her the value in waking up early. As she puts it, “The first few times, I couldn’t believe how great it was. There was so much day ahead of me! So many hours to be alive. I’d leave her place at noon, and it felt like I had already lived an entire day only to have another one sprawling before me.”
Situational awareness
—@Pontifex: I am praying for the United States of America, shaken by the recent attack on Congress. I pray for those who lost their life. Violence is always self-destructive. I urge everyone to promote a culture of encounter and of care to construct the common good.
—@HolmesJosh: The more time, images, and stories removed from Wednesday, the worse it gets. If you’re not in a white-hot rage over what happened by now, you’re not paying attention.
—@MaggieNYT: The videos that have come out from the riot on Wednesday have been horrible, one worse than the last. There’s still so much we don’t know about how it unfolded and how it came to be.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@KatyTurNBC: This was not two days in the making. Not two weeks. Not two months. The violence we saw — urged by Donald Trump — has been 5 years coming. Since he announced his candidacy. No one woke up this morning and suddenly realized he was a dangerous leader. They knew.
—@atrupar: That Trump won’t lower flags at the White House to honor the cop who was killed by the mob he encouraged really says it all.
Tweet, tweet:
—@RepBarbaraLee: We can’t have unity without accountability for the White supremacy coming out of the White House.
—@Dgleick: As a Capitol Hill staffer, it feels insane that we’ll be going back to work with the same people who incited and, in some cases, may have helped organize a deadly fascist attack on us. Like, I walk by these people in the hallway. What am I supposed to do with that?
—@StuartPStevens: At @ProjectLincolnwe are constructing a database of Trump officials & staff that will detail their roles in the Trump administration & track where they are now. No personal info, only professional. But they will be held accountable & not allowed to pretend they were not involved
—@Angry_saint: Breaking: PGA will be canceling all tournaments and instituting a lifetime ban of ever holding events at Trump Courses, including stripping Trump of hosting the 2022 PGA Championship, insider says. A sport governing body doing more than Congress.
Tweet, tweet:
Days until
NHL season begins — 2; WandaVision premieres on Disney+ — 4; the 2021 Inauguration — 9; Florida Chamber Economic Outlook and Job Solution Summit begins — 17; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 27; Daytona 500 — 34; “Nomadland” with Frances McDormand — 40; 2021 Legislative Session begins — 50; “Coming 2 America” premieres on Amazon Prime — 54; “The Many Saints of Newark” premieres — 60; “No Time to Die” premieres (rescheduled) — 81; Children’s Gasparilla — 89; Seminole Hard Rock Gasparilla Pirate Fest — 96; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 101; “Black Widow” rescheduled premiere — 116; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 172; Disney’s “Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings” premieres — 180; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 193; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 200; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 225; “Dune” premieres — 263; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 295; Disney’s “Eternals” premieres — 298; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 340; Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” premieres — 333; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 438; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 480; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 634.
Impeachment
“Donald Trump’s closest political allies plot against him during his final 10 days in office amid fears the U.S. President is going ‘rogue’” via Caroline Graham of The Daily Mail — Trump’s closest political allies have closed ranks to ‘shut down’ the U.S. President during his final 10 days in office, it has emerged, amid fears he is going ‘rogue.’ Vice President Mike Pence has assumed control of Trump’s Cabinet and is ‘acting as if he is no longer President,’ one former aide said. The source added: ‘Allies and foes alike have united to ensure the President doesn’t go completely rogue during his final days in office. He has effectively been shut down. The Cabinet are going about their duties to ensure the safety of the country and a smooth transition of power to Joe Biden.’
Those closest to Donald Trump are closing ranks to ‘shut him down’ during the last few days of his presidency. Image via AP.
“Dems grapple with impeachment realities in race to punish Trump” via Heather Caygle, Sarah Ferris, and Kyle Cheney of POLITICO — Speaker Nancy Pelosi and senior Democrats are still weighing whether to impeach Trump next week, concerned that the resulting Senate trial would hamstring the first critical weeks of Biden’s presidency. Pelosi and her leadership team discussed several options for holding Trump accountable for inciting a deadly riot at the Capitol during a two-hour call Saturday night. Several top Democrats, including House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, raised concerns that any effort to quickly confirm Biden’s Cabinet nominees or pass a major coronavirus relief package would be delayed for weeks by a Senate impeachment trial.
“Trump still poses a danger, House Democratic caucus chair says” via Kelsey Tamborrino of POLITICO — House Democratic Caucus Chair Hakeem Jeffries warned Sunday that Trump “may be in the Twitter penalty box” but still has access to the nuclear codes, following the deadly siege by pro-Trump supporters on the U.S. Capitol last week. The House is barreling toward Trump’s impeachment for his role in fomenting the violent riots at the U.S. Capitol. “All of our efforts at the present moment are focused on his immediate removal,” Jeffries said Sunday. “That’s the right thing to do.”
“Democrats split on how hard to push impeachment” via Felicia Sonmez, Mike DeBonis and Juliet Eilperin of The Washington Post — Tensions are breaking out among Democrats over how aggressively to push for the impeachment of Trump, as House members insist he face consequences for inciting last week’s deadly assault on the U.S. Capitol while Biden signals he does not want the effort to interfere with his agenda. Both sides are treading carefully, aware that many voters hope Congress will prevent Trump from provoking further violence, but also want Biden to be free to take immediate action on the coronavirus pandemic and a faltering economy. Some Democrats said privately that they are wary of impeachment but unsure how to slow its momentum given the intensifying passions against Trump.
“Mitch McConnell memo outlines how Senate would conduct second trial for Trump if House impeaches” via Seung Min Kim of The Washington Post — On the cusp of the second impeachment battle in just over a year, McConnell is circulating a memo to Republican Senators that outlines how a potential Senate trial would work for Trump, proceedings that would all but certainly occur after he leaves the White House. In the memo, McConnell’s office notes that the Senate will not reconvene for substantive business until Jan. 19, the day before Biden is inaugurated. Although the Senate will hold two pro forma sessions next week, on Jan. 12 and Jan. 15, it is barred from conducting any kind of business during those days without agreement from all 100 Senators.
“Justin Amash’s successor Peter Meijer: Trump’s deceptions are ‘rankly unfit’” via Matt Welch of Reason.com — Rep. Meijer, the Republican successor to the retiring Amash, has had quite the week. On Sunday, the 32-year-old Iraq/Afghanistan veteran and supermarket heir was sworn into office. On Tuesday, he joined a dozen GOP lawmakers, including such Amash pals as Reps. Thomas Massie and Chip Roy, in objecting to Republican attempts to delay or oppose Biden’s certification as President-elect. The Congressman has withering words for elected Republicans who have spent the past nine weeks filling protesters’ ears with false conspiracy theories and unfulfillable hopes. “They were being lied to. They were being misled,” he said of the demonstrators.
Peter Meijer is tired of the deception and lies told to protesters. Image via YouTube.
“Yes, Congress should impeach Trump before he leaves office” via Laurence H. Tribe and Joshua Matz of The Washington Post — The Constitution entrusts the House with “the sole Power of Impeachment,” and the Senate with “the sole Power to try all Impeachments.” For good reason, the House and Senate have traditionally exercised those powers with considerable due diligence, deliberation and process. But the Constitution does not require slow motion at times of crisis, especially when the nation witnessed an impeachable offense in real-time. Here, holding protracted hearings would be a foolish undertaking, akin to playing a sonata on the decks of the Titanic. The House can and should act with dispatch. Moreover, there is now widespread, bipartisan recognition that Trump will remain a danger to our national security through his final days in office.
It was worse than we thought
“FBI, NYPD told Capitol Police about possibility of violence before riot, senior officials say” via Ken Dilanian, Tom Winter, Jonathan Dienst and Andrew Blankstein of NBC News — The FBI and the New York City Police Department passed information to U.S. Capitol Police about the possibility of violence during the protests Wednesday against the counting of the Electoral College vote, and the FBI even visited more than a dozen extremists already under investigation to urge them not to travel to Washington, senior law enforcement officials said. The previously unreported details undercut the assertion by a top FBI official that officials had no indication that violence was a possibility, and they add to questions about what intelligence authorities had reviewed before the Capitol riot, which led to the death of an officer and four other people, including a rioter who was shot and killed by police.
The FBI and the New York City Police Department passed information to U.S. Capitol Police about the possibility of violence during the protests. Image via Reuters.
“‘Inside job’: House Dems ask if Capitol rioters had hidden help” via Kyle Cheney, Sarah Ferris, and Laura Barrón-López of POLITICO — A growing number of House Democrats say they’re concerned that tactical decisions by some Capitol Police officers worsened Wednesday’s riots and have raised the possibility that the pro-Trump mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol might have had outside help. Lawmakers have uniformly praised most Capitol Police officers for their heroic response to the riots. Many officers suffered injuries defending members, aides and journalists from the onslaught and one, Brian Sicknick, died. But videos have also surfaced showing a small number of officers pulling down barricades for the rioters and, in another instance, stopping for a photo with one of them.
“The inaction of Capitol Police was by design” via Kellie Carter Jackson of The Atlantic — What Americans witnessed on their TV screens on Wednesday was not just an insurrection against American democracy, it was also an expression of White supremacy. As mobs of White Trump supporters stormed the Capitol building to ransack offices, terrorize lawmakers, and interrupt the certification of the presidential election, they were met with a notably weak show of force by the Capitol Police, who were responsible for quelling the insurrection. More than 50 officers were injured, and footage of police being physically assaulted by rioters proliferated online. To many of these acts of violence, officers responded with immense restraint or full capitulation.
“These Black Capitol Police officers describe fighting off ‘racist ass terrorists’” via Emmanuel Felton of BuzzFeed News — The first glimpse of the deadly tragedy that was about to unfold came at 9 a.m. on the morning of the insurrection for one Black veteran of the U.S. Capitol Police. But it didn’t come from his superiors, instead the officer had to rely on a screenshot from Instagram sent to him by a friend. “I found out what they were planning when a friend of mine screenshot me an Instagram story from the Proud Boys saying, ‘We’re breaching the Capitol today, guys. I hope y’all ready.’” The officer said that it was just a sign of the chaos that was to come, which saw officers regularly finding themselves unprepared and then outmanned and overpowered by the mob. Management’s inaction left Black police officers especially vulnerable to a mob that had been whipped up by Trump.
“Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund has stepped down, leaving earlier than expected” via Allison Klein and Rebecca Tan of The Washington Post — U.S. Capitol Police Chief Sund stepped down from his post on Friday, days earlier than he said he would following a deadly breach of the Capitol complex by a mob supporting Trump. Sund had said Thursday that his resignation would be effective Jan. 16, hours after Pelosi publicly called on him to step down. But Assistant Chief Yogananda D. Pittman took control of the agency on Friday. A Capitol Police officer since 2001, she was one of the first Black female supervisors to become a captain. The Capitol Police did not request significant help from other law enforcement agencies in advance of the siege. Sund said he sought such help but was rebuffed by his bosses in Congress.
“An Air Force combat veteran breached the Senate” via Ronan Farrow of The New Yorker — As insurrectionists stormed the U.S. Capitol this week, a few figures stood out. One man, clad in a combat helmet, body armor, and other tactical gear, was among the group that made it to the building’s inner reaches. A day after the riots, a senior researcher at Citizen Lab notified the FBI that he suspected the man was retired Lieutenant Colonel Larry Rendall Brock, Jr., a Texas-based Air Force Academy graduate and combat veteran. Brock’s family members said that he called himself a patriot, and that his expressions of that identity had become increasingly strident. In an interview, Brock confirmed that he was the man in the photos and videos.
Retired Air Force Lt. Col. Larry Rendall Brock Jr. was photographed on the Senate floor clad in tactical gear and holding flex cuffs. Image via Win McNamee/Getty Images.
“One Trump fan’s descent into the U.S. Capitol mob” via Michael M. Phillips and Jennifer Levitz of The Wall Street Journal — On Doug Sweet’s first trip to the U.S. Capitol, as a 13-year-old in 1975, he tilted his head back, gazed up at the glistening white dome and thought it was the most awesome thing he had ever seen. On his second trip to the Capitol, he joined a mob of Trump supporters who smashed their way into the seat of the U.S. Congress and finished his visit handcuffed facedown on the floor. The 45-year journey between those two visits was marked by bright idealism and belief in dark conspiracies, by a solitary existence and a newfound fraternity with those convinced there is no way Biden beat Trump in the 2020 presidential election.
“Records show fervent Trump fans fueled U.S. Capitol takeover” via Michael Biesecker, Michael Kunzelman, Gillian Flaccus and Jim Mustian of The Associated Press — The Associated Press reviewed social media posts, voter registrations, court files and other public records for more than 120 people either facing criminal charges related to the Jan. 6 unrest or who, going maskless amid the pandemic, were later identified through photographs and videos taken during the melee. That evidence shows the mob was overwhelmingly made up of longtime Trump supporters, including Republican Party officials, GOP political donors, far-right militants, White supremacists and adherents of the QAnon myth that a cabal of Satan-worshiping pedophile cannibals secretly controls the government. Records show the rowdy crowd also included convicted criminals, including a Florida man recently released from prison for attempted murder.
“Capitol siege was planned online. Trump supporters now planning the next one” via Craig Timberg, Drew Harwell and Marissa J. Lang of The Seattle Times — The planning for Wednesday’s assault on the U.S. Capitol happened largely in plain view, with chatters in far-right forums explicitly discussing how to storm the building, handcuff lawmakers with zip ties and disrupt the certification of Biden’s election in what they portrayed as responding to orders from Trump. This went far beyond the widely reported, angry talk about thronging Washington that day. Trump supporters exchanged detailed tactical advice about what to bring and what to do once they assembled at the Capitol to conduct “citizens arrests” of members of Congress.
Judgement
“Trump plans defiant final week as many Democrats urge his ouster” via Jennifer Jacobs, Mario Parker, and Josh Wingrove of Bloomberg — Banned from social media and abandoned by some staff after inciting a riot at the U.S. Capitol, Trump and a dwindling circle of advisers plan a defiant final week in office, according to people familiar with the matter. Trump is confident Pence and his Cabinet members won’t attempt to remove him under the 25th Amendment, the people said. Pence is dismissive of the idea of trying to use that authority to drive Trump from office, one person said. The President and some allies also believe Democrats are overreaching by trying to once again impeach him over Wednesday’s mob at the Capitol and think Senate conviction would be unlikely in any event.
“Hurt and anger cloud Trump-Pence relationship after clash” via The Associated Press — They were never a natural fit, the straight-laced evangelical and the brash reality TV star. But for more than four years, Trump and Pence made their marriage of political convenience work. Now, in the last days of their administration, each is feeling betrayed by the other. It’s part of the fallout from an extraordinary 24-hour stretch in which Pence openly defied Trump, Trump unleashed his fury on the Vice President, and a mob of violent supporters incensed by Trump’s rhetoric stormed the Capitol building and tried to halt the peaceful transfer of power. Pence’s decision to publicly defy Trump was a first for the notoriously deferential vice president, who has been unflinchingly loyal since joining the GOP ticket in 2016.
The relationship between Mike Pence and Donald Trump has soured. Image via AP.
“Trump legacy on race shadowed by divisive rhetoric, actions” via Aamer Madhani of The Associated Press — Trump repeatedly claimed in the final months of his presidency to have done more for Black Americans than anyone with the “possible exception” of Abraham Lincoln. He boasted that the African American unemployment rate dropped to record lows under his watch before the coronavirus pandemic ravaged the economy. But in the end, historians say Trump’s legacy will be largely shaped by rhetoric aimed at stirring significant swaths of his white base that tugged at the long-frayed strands of race relations in America. His strategy of divisiveness was on display this past week as he urged supporters, mostly white men, to descend on the U.S. Capitol in the name of his baseless claims of election fraud.
“Trump’s legacy: Voters who reject democracy and any politics but their own” via Trip Gabriel of The New York Times — The sight of a violent mob inspired by Trump smashing its way into the Capitol was more than just a shocking spectacle. It also highlighted the disbelief in democracy that has metastasized among many of his supporters. While the turmoil has divided Republican officials, with some resigning or calling for Trump to leave office and others rallying behind him, there are few signs of division among these voters who fervently back Trump. The adherence of Trump’s base to his groundless claims of a “sacred landslide” victory and their rejection of a routine Constitutional process suggests that a core part of the Republican Party is dead-set on rejecting the legitimacy of any politics or party but their own.
“How Republican Senators are explaining their years of previous fealty to Trump” via Amber Phillips of The Washington Post — Many Republican Senators are distancing themselves from the President after he urged his supporters to “fight like hell” just before they mobbed the halls of Congress on Wednesday. But in four years of Trump’s controversy-filled presidency, we have rarely, if ever, heard sharp criticism from GOP Senators about him like they’re offering now. And there’s evidence that some regret that. “We should have done more to push back, both against his rhetoric and some of the things he did legislatively,” one Republican Senator told the Hill on the condition of anonymity.
“Trump slipped into madness and should quit, GOP Senator says” via Ros Krasny of Bloomberg — A former Republican ally of Trump said the President “spiraled down into a kind of madness” after losing the election, and that the best option for the U.S. is for him “to resign and go away as soon as possible.” “It does not look as though there is the will or the consensus to exercise the 25th Amendment option. And I don’t think there’s time to do an impeachment,” Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “The best thing would be a resignation.” Toomey said Trump, through his “outrageous behavior in the postelection period,” culminating in his role in Wednesday’s violent assault on the U.S. Capitol, isn’t a viable candidate for office “ever again.”
“An early Republican Trump critic feels vindicated” via Burgess Everett of POLITICO — Forgive Bob Corker if he sounds like he’s going to say, “I told you so.” The former Senator was lonely as a Republican critic of Trump, beginning in 2017. While most GOP lawmakers kept quiet about their concerns, Corker warned the White House had become an “adult day care” and that Trump’s Cabinet members “help separate our country from chaos.” He even held a hearing to scrutinize the president’s power to use nuclear weapons. Corker retired rather than run for a third term in 2018 amid a feud with Trump and potentially tough primary. But after a flood of GOP condemnation of Trump for inciting a deadly riot at the Capitol, the Tennessee Republican says he’s been vindicated.
Bob Corker has every reason to say ‘I told you so.’ Image via AP.
“Whose party is it?” via Amy Walter of Cook Political Report — For years, the GOP coalition was described as a three-legged stool consisting of religious conservatives, small government types and military hawks. The battle for the GOP presidential nomination would often come down to a battle between the leader of each one of these legs. The Barack Obama-era ushered in the fourth wing, a populist, nationalist Tea Party that has morphed into the Trump wing. But, the Trump coalition isn’t equal in size to the other three; it has overshadowed them. Since January of 2019, a poll has asked GOP voters if they identify more as a supporter of Trump or as a supporter of the Republican Party. In almost every poll, more Republicans identified as supporters of Trump than of the Republican Party.
“A farewell to @realDonaldTrump, gone after 57,000 tweets” via Aamer Madhani and Jill Colvin of The Associated Press — @realDonaldTrump, the Twitter feed that grew from the random musings of a reality TV star into the cudgel of an American president, has died. It was not quite 12 years old. The provocative handle was given birth by a New York real estate tycoon who used it to help him become the 45th U.S. president. It began with a May 4, 2009, tweet promoting Trump’s upcoming appearance on David Letterman’s show. It died more than 57,000 tweets later, with Trump using some of his final postings on the powerful platform to commiserate with a pro-Trump mob that besieged the halls of Congress in a deadly assault as lawmakers were set to certify his defeat.
“Trump’s existential threat: How to keep GOP in line without Twitter” via Alex Isenstadt of POLITICO — Trump was meeting then-campaign manager Brad Parscale and other political aides in the White House Cabinet Room early last year when the President made a demand: Find me a social media platform to use other than Twitter. Someone in the meeting had piped up with a concern that Twitter might eventually ban him over controversial posts. After the meeting, the Trump team mobilized with Parscale starting discussions about whether to have the President take up a major presence on the Trump-friendly platform Parler, posting messages there first to drive more users to the platform.
“Trump went ‘ballistic’ after being tossed off Twitter” via Gabby Orr, Daniel Lippman, Tina Nguyen and Sam Stein of POLITICO — The President is “ballistic,” a senior administration official said after Twitter permanently took down his account, citing the possibility that it would be used in the final 12 days of Trump’s presidency to incite violence. The official said Trump was “scrambling to figure out what his options are.” Through it all, he’s been uncharacteristically quiet, banished temporarily at first from the main social media platforms but also unwilling to go out and speak before the press. The only times the public saw him were through awkwardly-edited White House produced videos.
“Trump allies reelected to lead RNC as party faces reckoning” via Alex Isenstadt of POLITICO — Trump will have two staunch allies atop the RNC as he enters his post-presidency, an illustration of the hold he retains over the party even as some GOP leaders desert him in the wake of Wednesday’s riot at the Capitol. RNC chairwoman Ronna McDaniel and co-chairman Tommy Hicks easily won reelection on Friday at the party’s annual winter meeting on Florida’s Amelia Island. With Trump eager to retain influence over the GOP and quash dissent as he leaves office, their victories ensure that two party officials who’ve been close with the President will oversee the Republican Party infrastructure for the next two years.
Ronna McDaniel wins reelection, ensuring Donald Trump’s hold on the GOP.
“Joe Biden, who ran on unity, now leads a party furious at GOP” via Annie Linskey of The Washington Post — Biden, who campaigned on a promise to reach out to Republicans and unite the country, found himself Friday leading a party angrily bent on impeaching Trump, forcing the resignation of GOP Senators and making Republicans pay for their baseless challenge to the election results. Biden, speaking to reporters in Wilmington, Del., essentially offered a divided response, calling some Republicans “shameful” and praising others for their “enormous integrity.” He said his goal of bipartisanship is, if anything, more achievable after Wednesday’s assault on the Capitol, citing Republicans like Sen. Mitt Romney, who he said has talked to him in disgust about the rioters.
“FAA chief vows tough line after some Trump supporters disrupt flights” via David Shepardson of Reuters — The head of the FAA vowed to take “strong enforcement action” against unruly passengers following reports of supporters of Trump disrupting flights returning from Washington. The FAA said it shared the concerns raised by airlines and the Association of Flight Attendants. “I expect all passengers to follow crew member instructions, which are in place for their safety and the safety of flight,” FAA Administrator Steve Dickson said in a statement. Earlier this week, the flight attendants union said Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol should not be allowed to depart Washington on commercial flights after exhibiting “mob mentality behavior” on flights into the region.
Florida reacts
Lil’ Marco — “Marco Rubio compares U.S. Capitol storming with Black Lives Matter protests” via Steven Lemongello of The Orlando Sentinel — U.S. Sen. Rubio released a video Friday comparing the attack on the Capitol by a pro-Trump mob with Black Lives Matter protests, saying the unprecedented assault was similar to what the left had been “justifying” this past summer in cities across America. “The events that we saw this week should sicken every single one of us … Riots should be rejected by everyone, every single time,” Rubio said. “Now, are the left hypocrites? Absolutely. I remember what they now are calling ‘insurrection,’ they were justifying just this summer.”
“Rubio waited until after Capitol attack to say politicians lied to Trump rioters” via Alex Daugherty of The Miami Herald — Florida Sen. Rubio said Friday in a video that the people who stormed the U.S. Capitol were “lied to by politicians who were telling them that the Vice President had the power to change the election results.” But in the days before the attack that appalled the world and resulted in five deaths, Rubio made no public effort to counter what he now calls a lie pushed by politicians he didn’t name. Nor would he talk when asked this week about his fellow Senate Republicans’ last-ditch attempt to overturn the election by blocking Biden’s formal certification, though he later voted against it.
“To the bitter end, Scott chooses Trump over truth” via Steve Bousquet of the Sun-Sentinel — If a politician’s true character can be revealed by one vote, there’s no better example than Sen. Scott. The Florida Republican is one of seven Senators who voted to turn a Trump defeat into victory by tossing out the election results in Pennsylvania and disenfranchising 3.5 million people who voted for Biden for President. Scott joined Josh Hawley of Missouri, Ted Cruz of Texas and four accomplices in one last desperate act of blind devotion to Trump that failed, 92 to 7. This was a disgrace to Floridians. Scott should be ashamed of himself.
“Gary Farmer wants state investigation into whether Trump incited ‘insurrection’” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Farmer wants state officials to investigate whether Trump is guilty of “inciting insurrection” after Wednesday’s Capitol riot. Farmer argues that because Trump is now a Florida resident, his decision to urge protesters to gather in Washington could open him to violations of Florida law. “Through his organization of and participation in this week’s insurrection, Donald Trump advocated for the sabotaging and hindering of Pence and Congress’ ability to carry out the laws of our nation as set forth by the U.S. Constitution and federal statutes,” Farmer wrote in a letter to Ashley Moody.
“Feds arrest Florida man caught on camera carrying Nancy Pelosi’s lectern during Capitol riot” via Jessica de Leon of The Miami Herald — Florida resident Adam Christian Johnson, the man captured in viral photo carrying Speaker Pelosi’s lectern from House chambers during the riot at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, has been arrested. Johnson was arrested by Federal Marshals and booked into the Pinellas County jail shortly after 9 p.m. Friday. He has been charged with one count of knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; one count of theft of government property; and one count of violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds, according to a federal complaint. A warrant was issued on Friday and Johnson was charged in federal court in D.C. on Saturday.
The infamous House lectern thief has been arrested in Pinellas County. Image via Getty.
“Some in Miami Spanish-language media falsely blame Black Lives Matter, antifa in riot” via Lautaro Grinspan and David Smiley of The Miami Herald — The 100,000 people who tuned into Alexander Otaola’s YouTube program to hear his thoughts immediately after Wednesday’s deadly insurrection in the nation’s capital heard the Spanish-language, social media influencer downplay the violence and cast blame on the left. But his defensive depiction of an unprecedented riot and his inaccurate claim that no police were hurt show the extent to which some figures in Miami’s Spanish-language media continue to promote Trump’s divisive and often deceptive rhetoric to their audiences.
Corona Florida
“Florida adds more than 12,000 coronavirus cases, 111 deaths on Sunday” via Anastasia Dawson and Romy Ellenbogen of The Tampa Bay Times — Florida added 12,313 coronavirus cases Sunday, part of a surge of virus infection statewide. Since March, 1,477,010 cases of coronavirus have been identified statewide. As of Sunday, nearly 16,000 cases were being announced per day, based on the weekly average. On Sunday, the Florida Department of Health also announced 111 deaths, making it a total of 23,261 people in the state who have died from the virus. The weekly death average increased slightly to about 136 deaths announced per day.
“Ron DeSantis says vaccine favoritism ‘not what we are looking for’” via Ana Ceballos of the Miami Herald — DeSantis on Sunday was hesitant to call for penalties for instances where favoritism is played in vaccine distribution but said the state could potentially start sending fewer doses to offending facilities. At a news conference in the Panhandle city of Lynn Haven, DeSantis said instances where people jump in line, at odds with his administration’s vaccine distribution guidelines, is “not what we are looking for.” State guidelines say the first doses of the coronavirus vaccine should go to residents 65 and older, front-line health care workers, staff and residents at long-term care facilities, and those who hospitals deem to be “extremely” vulnerable to the virus. But donors and well-connected people have been offered vaccine doses ahead of the general public.
Ron DeSantis is frowning on allegations of vaccine favoritism. Image via AP.
“‘Like the Hunger Games’ out there: How Florida’s COVID-19 vaccine distribution went haywire” via Jeffrey Schweers of The Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Florida had a phased, orderly, step-by-step plan in place for distributing the COVID-19 vaccine to the public, starting with the most vulnerable months before a vaccine was even approved for emergency use. Following guidance laid out by the CDC, the state would focus on long-term care residents, hospital workers at the front lines of the coronavirus battle, workers essential to the running of society, and people with medical conditions that put them at higher risk of getting the disease. The plan outlined procedures for distribution, inventory management, storage and handling, second-dose reminders, provider recruitment and enrolling, and communication with the public.
“‘It became sort of lawless’: Florida vaccine rollout turns into a free-for-all” via Patricia Mazzei, Eric Adelson and Kate Kelly of The New York Times — Florida is in an alarming new upward spiral, with nearly 20,000 cases of the virus reported on Friday and more than 15,000 on Saturday. But the state’s well-intended effort to throw open the doors of the vaccine program to everyone 65 and older has led to long lines, confusion and disappointment. Florida, which has already prioritized a large swath of its population to receive the vaccine, illustrates the challenges of expanding a vaccination program being developed at record speed and with limited federal assistance.
“Scott grills Florida’s Surgeon General on vaccine distribution failings” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Florida’s former Republican Governor has no clue what the current Governor is doing to distribute coronavirus vaccines. To that end, he pressed the state’s current Surgeon General for answers Friday. Scott wrote Surgeon General Scott Rivkees pressing for operational details in the state’s vaccine distribution plan. Florida’s idiosyncratic approach to distributing the vaccine, one that deviates from CDC guidelines, has not been without incident, leading Scott to call for accountability as the state wrestles with distribution challenges. The Senator identifies popular frustration with an administration distribution plan that has had a rocky beginning, with supply shortfalls and logistical failures abounding throughout the state.
“Scott demands federal probe of Florida’s vaccine distribution” via Gary Fineout and Arek Sarkissian of POLITICO — Sen. Scott on Thursday called for a congressional investigation into what he called “vaccine distribution mismanagement,” following multiple reports that a West Palm Beach nursing home and assisted-living facility steered highly sought after vaccine shots to its board members and major donors. DeSantis already has been under fire for the bumpy rollout of vaccinations in Florida due to the Republican Governor’s insistence that those 65 or older be among the first to get inoculated with one of the COVID-19 vaccines. The state has roughly 4.4 million older residents.
“Support builds for Florida teachers to get vaccinated sooner” via Jeffrey S. Solochek of the Tampa Bay Times — Since the summer, DeSantis has hammered home his view that schools must remain open if the state’s economy has any chance of reviving and thriving. When pressed to prioritize the people who keep those schools running for coronavirus vaccinations, DeSantis has insisted that Floridians at greater risk should come first. More than 1,100 Pinellas County teachers have signed a petition urging the Governor to get vaccinations into educators’ arms quickly. Their union is collecting more signatures before sending the document to Tallahassee. “We should be classified as essential workers and put to the top, if they want schools open,” said Joanne McCall, the union’s executive director.
Teachers are calling for vaccines sooner. Image via Hillsborough Schools/Twitter.
“The truth is, nobody told us what to be ready for” via Eli Saslow for The Washington Post — I’ll be the first to admit that I didn’t expect for us to be managing this rollout at the county level. For whatever reason, I made the assumption back in the fall that when vaccines became available, it would be handled by some combination of federal and state government. There had been rumors for weeks about vials of vaccine starting to show up in Florida, but we didn’t know where, or which one, or if it would be one dose or two, or who would be eligible to get it. We’ve been given a lot of responsibility when it comes to giving out this vaccine, but not much control. It was basically: “You know as much as we do. Go get shots in arms.”
“Vaccine tourism? Florida could be the hotspot” via Jane Musgrave and John Pacenti of The Palm Beach Post — While thousands of seniors in Florida are bleary-eyed and angry after spending weeks trying unsuccessfully to get an appointment for a coronavirus vaccine, the former chairman and CEO of Time Warner told a national television audience on Friday that it was a breeze. Richard Parsons, a former chairman of Citigroup, said he left his home in New York to travel to Florida because the Sunshine State made it so easy. While there is no evidence that Parsons pulled any strings, seniors who have experienced just how difficult it is to get an appointment said they worry that the business giant’s words will encourage others.
Assignment editors — U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor joins local health care leaders and community representatives on a virtual meeting to outline coronavirus vaccine options currently or soon available to seniors, 10 a.m., RSVP to Rikki.Miller@mail.house.gov for Zoom information.
Corona local
“500 get COVID-19 vaccine at Tampa church as part of state pilot program” via Niko Clemmons of WFLA — Approximately 500 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine were administered at a church in Tampa Sunday. As coronavirus cases continue to rise across the state and in the Tampa Bay area, the number of vaccines is getting fewer. Now the question is, when will more doses arrive? The Florida Department of Health in Hillsborough County gave out up to 500 vaccinations at St. John Progressive Missionary Baptist Church Sunday. It’s part of DeSantis’ directive to identify places of worship in underserved communities where the vaccine can be administered.
“COVID-19 vaccination site opens at Broward church as legislators petition for better leadership” via C. Isaiah Smalls II of The Miami Herald — Several Broward mayors and lawmakers joined Florida Sen. Shevrin Jones Sunday morning as he opened a coronavirus vaccination site at a local church. More than 500 senior citizens received the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine at Koinonia Worship Center in Pembroke Park. Organized by Jones, the event emphasized unity as the only way to confront the virus that has already killed more than 23,000 people in Florida alone. “COVID doesn’t have a political party,” Jones said to reporters. Cars filled with excited seniors snaked around the Pembroke Park church and extended into the street.
Shevrin Jones is working with community churches to get more vaccines in arms. Image via Twitter.
“Escambia County authorities speculate COVID-19 factored into lower 2020 crime rates” via Colin Warren-Hicks of The Pensacola News-Journal — Crimes rates in Escambia and Santa Rosa counties were lower in the first six months of 2020 compared to the first half of 2019, which some law enforcement officials believe may be due to the COVID-19 pandemic. “I cannot say that our calls for service went down,” new Escambia County Sheriff Chip Simmons said. “But I cannot tell you it’s not out of the realm of possibilities that crime numbers are down in part due to the COVID epidemic.” In analyzing Escambia County’s dip in overall reported crimes during the first six months of 2020, the News-Journal used newly released data from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.
Corona nation
“Pressure grows for states to open vaccines to more groups of people” via Abby Goodnough of The New York Times — Just weeks into the country’s coronavirus vaccination effort, states have begun broadening access to the shots faster than planned, amid tremendous public demand and intense criticism about the pace of the rollout. Some public health officials worry that doing so could bring even more chaos to the complex operation and increase the likelihood that some of the highest-risk Americans will be skipped over. But the debate over how soon to expand eligibility is intensifying as deaths from the virus continue to surge, hospitals are overwhelmed with critically ill patients and millions of vaccine doses delivered last month remain in freezers.
States are under the gun to increase vaccinations, while health officials are afraid of increasing chaos. Image via AP.
“White House warned Governors about ‘USA variant’ of COVID-19, but no such discovery has been made” via Betsy Klein and Jim Acosta of CNN — The U.S. CDC shot down reports from the White House coronavirus task force that warned states of a more transmissible, homegrown “US variant” of coronavirus, a misperception that began on a call with Governors, an administration official told CNN. Officials on the Governors’ call discussed whether the steep slope in coronavirus cases might be due to a potential U.S. variant similar to a variant first identified by genetics experts in the UK. But the official made it very clear U.S. health officials have not determined that a U.S. variant of the virus exists.
Corona economics
“‘We need the relief.’ Orlando businesses anxiously await 2nd round of PPP loans” via Caroline Glenn and Austin Fuller of The Orlando Sentinel — Following a dismal December during which America shed 140,000 jobs, the Small Business Administration is set to begin rolling out the second round of Paycheck Protection Program loans, offering salvation for some Orlando employers struggling to stay afloat as the COVID-19 pandemic worsens. Businesses are expected to be able to apply for the potentially forgivable loans starting as soon as Monday after Congress greenlighted relaunching the program as part of the $900 billion relief package it passed in December. Within that bill, lawmakers earmarked $285 billion for businesses shut out of the program last time and especially hard hit employers to get a second loan.
“When will that $25 billion get to renters and landlords?” via Ron Hurtibise of The South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Sorry, it’s going to take several more weeks for that rental assistance approved by Congress and the President to start trickling down to help cover tenants’ past-due rents. Surprised? You shouldn’t be, considering how long it has taken the federal government to get stimulus checks into people’s bank accounts or how screwed up the state’s unemployment system remains nearly a year after the pandemic began. Renters and landlords counting on accessing the $25 billion in rental assistance money can do little at the moment but wait for the gears of bureaucracy to slowly grind along.
Landlords are asked to wait a little longer for COVID-19 rent relief. Image via AP.
“As spending climbs and revenue falls, the coronavirus forces a global reckoning” via By Alexander Villegas, Anthony Faiola and Lesley Wroughton of The Washington Post — Costa Rica built Latin America’s model society, enacting universal health care and spending its way to one of the Western Hemisphere’s highest literacy rates. Now, it’s reeling from the financially crushing side effects of the coronavirus, as cratering revenue and crisis spending force a reckoning over a massive pile of government debt. The pandemic is hurtling heavily leveraged nations into an economic danger zone, threatening to bankrupt the worst-affected. Costa Rica, a country known for zip-lining tourists and American retirees, is scrambling to stave off a full-blown debt crisis. To keep the lights on, a progressive, eco-friendly nation weighs desperate solutions — including open-pit gold mining, even oceanic fracking.
More corona
“COVID-19 patients’ symptoms persist six months in foreboding study” via Tim Loh of Bloomberg — More than three-quarters of COVID-19 patients hospitalized in Wuhan between January and May had at least one persistent symptom six months later, according to a report that forebodes the enduring pain of the pandemic. Almost two-thirds of those followed still experienced fatigue or muscle weakness half a year after their acute illness, while 26% had sleep difficulties, and 23% had anxiety or depression. The research from China underscores the long-term effects of COVID-19 for individuals and societies as infections surge across the world despite budding vaccination campaigns. It also highlights the growing need for sustained care for large swaths of populations and research into the new disease’s lingering effects.
COVID-19 symptoms can last months, researchers say. Image via AP.
“Hospitals say syringes supplied by feds waste vaccine doses” via Susannah Luthi and Rachel Roubein of POLITICO — Hospitals are throwing out doses of Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine because the federal government is giving some of the facilities syringes that can only extract five doses from vials that often contain more. Pharmacists discovered early in the U.S. vaccination push that the standard five-dose vials of the vaccine from Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech often contained enough material for six or even seven shots. Regulators in the U.S. and Europe agreed to allow use of those “overfill” doses to maximize the reach of coronavirus vaccines amid the raging pandemic.
Presidential
“White House forced Georgia U.S. attorney to resign” via Aruna Viswanatha, Sadie Gurman and Cameron McWhirter of The Wall Street Journal — White House officials pushed Atlanta’s top federal prosecutor to resign before Georgia’s U.S. Senate runoffs because Trump was upset he wasn’t doing enough to investigate the president’s unproven claims of election fraud. At the behest of the White House, a senior Justice Department official called the Trump-appointed U.S. Attorney Byung J. Pak late on the night of Jan. 3. In that call, the official said Trump was furious there was no investigation related to election fraud and that the President wanted to fire Pak, the people said. Pak resigned abruptly on Monday, the day before the runoffs, saying in an early morning email to colleagues that his departure was due to “unforeseen circumstances.”
The White House pushed out Byung J. “BJay” Pak. Image via AP.
Transition
“Trump’s pledge of an orderly transition is as worthless as he is” via Colbert I. King of The Washington Post — Even before the postelection period when Trump’s malevolence went into overdrive, he had spent more than three years thumbing his nose at the laws and touchstones of civility. His administration treated congressional subpoenas as nuisance letters. He played cat-and-mouse with the investigation led by special counsel Robert Mueller. He fired inspectors general who got too close to bad government behavior. He pressured foreign officials to hand over dirt that would harm a domestic political rival. Undoubtedly, there will be postmortems after Jan. 20 on democracy’s near-death experience at the hands of Trump. For America’s sake, let Trump’s term of service end now.
“A Trump self-pardon could make criminal charges more likely” via David Yaffe-Bellany of Bloomberg — Any move by Trump to pardon himself in his final days in office could backfire, legal experts say, inviting the incoming administration to challenge the unprecedented action by filing criminal charges against him. Trump has raised the possibility of a self-pardon in recent days as calls grow for him to face prosecution for inciting the U.S. Capitol siege that resulted in five deaths and sent members of Congress scrambling for safety. But though the President has vast authority to grant clemency to others, a self-pardon would be a novel assertion of executive power that both Democrats and Republicans might want the Supreme Court to strike down.
“Biden still planning to be sworn in on the steps of U.S. Capitol two weeks after mob attack” via Emily Davies and Matt Viser of The Washington Post — Biden still plans to be sworn in on the steps of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 20, exactly two weeks after a pro-Trump mob with rioters wielding Confederate flags stormed the building to attack the very nation Biden was elected to lead. That moment shrouded in symbolism will launch a 59th presidential inauguration set to take place under extraordinary circumstances. The event was already scaled-down and subdued by the coronavirus pandemic. And now, the Biden administration has the added weight of showing strength and stability to the rest of the world, which watched in horror as American democracy wavered from the exact place where he is to take the oath of office.
Despite the U.S. Capitol riots, Joe Biden’s inauguration will go as planned. Image via AP.
“D.C. Mayor pushes for enhanced security surrounding Inauguration Day” via Allie Bice of POLITICO — Mayor Muriel Bowser of Washington, D.C., is urging the Department of Homeland Security to bolster its efforts in securing the area for Biden’s inauguration, following deadly riots at the Capitol last week. In a letter to DHS acting Secretary Chad Wolf dated Saturday, Bowser asked that the National Special Security Event period be extended, changing it from Jan. 19-21 to Jan. 11-24. Expanding the period for the inauguration ceremony and in the days that follow would allow for continued federal security in the area. In her letter, Bowser asked that the acting attorney general direct the FBI to “provide an intelligence and threat briefing on a daily basis” during the extended event period.
“Trump won’t attend Biden’s inauguration: Will he move to Mar-a-Lago soon?” via Christine Stapleton of The Palm Beach Post — Trump’s tweet Friday morning that he will not attend the inauguration of Biden means he likely will be in Florida before Jan. 20, the day Biden is scheduled to be sworn in. Trump and First Lady Melania Trump changed their primary residence from New York to Mar-a-Lago in September 2019, and renovations have reportedly been underway to update the family’s private quarters at the president’s private club. The First Lady also recently visited a private school in Boca Raton for their teenage son Barron Trump to attend.
“Democratic wins could strengthen Biden’s legislative push” via Will Weissert of The Associated Press — Biden’s victory in November was tempered by concerns that he would face Republican opposition in the Senate that could stymie him at every turn. Those worries eased this past week when Democrats swept two Senate special elections in Georgia, giving the party control of Congress and the White House for the first time since 2011. And the bipartisan outrage over the violent insurrection at the Capitol by pro-Trump supporters could, at least for a moment, ease the partisan tensions that have paralyzed the legislative process for years.
“What Biden’s Cabinet picks say about how he plans to govern” via Alexandra Jaffe of The Associated Press — Biden promised that his presidency would mean a return to normalcy. The President-elect announced his final nominees this past week, completing a diverse team of two dozen people. He noted that this will be the “first Cabinet ever” to reach gender parity and include a majority of people of color, notable given earlier concerns that he was leaning largely on White men. Some nominees have decades of experience in their respective agencies. Many held prominent roles in the Barack Obama administration. Biden’s aides say one of the goals he set in filling out his Cabinet: to signal that his presidency means a return to competent, stable leadership government.
Joe Biden is keeping his promise that the Cabinet will look much like America. Image via AP.
“Biden tapping those with Tallahassee ties for his incoming administration” via James Call of The Tallahassee Democrat — Elections have consequences, and with Washington moving from a Republican to a Democratic administration, opportunities are opening for some familiar Tallahassee faces. On Friday, Florida A&M University grad Vincent Evans was announced as Deputy Director of Public Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs for Biden. Evans had been political director for Vice President-elect Kamala Harris. The 2011 graduate was mentored by Congressman Al Lawson and Tallahassee City Commissioner Curtis Richardson. He joined Lawson’s 2016 campaign after serving as a Richardson aide 2014-17. Evans also is a veteran of the 2018 Democratic gubernatorial race. He worked as Andrew Gillum’s North Florida political director.
“Kamala Harris gains prominent new role thanks to Democrats’ Senate majority” via Christopher Cadelago of POLITICO — Harris’s vice-presidential portfolio was nebulous before last week. But thanks to Democrats’ upset victories in two Georgia Senate runoffs, Harris has unexpectedly earned a new title: Senate tiebreaker. Once Jon Ossoff and the Rev. Raphael Warnock are sworn in next week, the Senate will be split 50-50 between Democrats and Republicans. That puts Harris, who as Vice President will formally be the President of the Senate, in a position to tip the balance of power on everything from key legislative items to confirming Cabinet nominees and judges.
D.C. matters
“Possible virus exposure for lawmakers sheltering during Capitol riot” via The Associated Press — House lawmakers may have been exposed to someone testing positive for COVID-19 while they sheltered at an undisclosed location during the Capitol siege by a violent mob loyal to Trump. The Capitol’s attending physician notified all lawmakers Sunday of the virus exposure and urged them to be tested. The infected individual was not named. Dr. Brian Moynihan wrote that “many members of the House community were in protective isolation in the large room — some for several hours” on Wednesday. He said: “Individuals may have been exposed to another occupant with coronavirus infection.”
The U.S. Capitol riot could be a superspreader event. Image via AP.
“Ted Deutch to return as chair of House Ethics Committee” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Deutch of Florida’s 22nd Congressional District has earned another term chairing the powerful House Ethics Committee. Pelosi announced the decision to reappoint Deutch as chairman. He took over that role following Democrats’ success in the 2018 election, which allowed his party to regain control of the House. Following the 2020 election, the chair positions were once again up for grabs, but Deutch held on to his role leading the committee. “Returning to the helm of this vital Committee, Chairman Deutch will build upon his outstanding work in the last Congress to restore transparency, accountability and integrity to Washington,” Pelosi said in a statement announcing the move.
“Carlos Giménez has medical emergency, cancels TV interview to discuss electoral votes” via Alex Daugherty of The Miami Herald — Giménez canceled a scheduled interview on WPLG’s This Week in South Florida to discuss his vote to overturn electoral college results in Arizona and Pennsylvania, with TV co-host Glenna Milberg saying the congressman was dealing with a medical emergency. Gimenez’s office did not immediately explain the emergency or details on his condition. He was invited to the show to answer questions about his votes on Wednesday night and Thursday morning, which were held in the wake of the riot and attack on the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters, an hourslong assault that left five dead. According to a tweet by co-host Milberg, the television news program invited all the South Florida GOP House members according to a tweet. He was the only one who accepted.
“In unusual move, top Trump official rescinds cheery exit letter and resubmits a protest resignation” via John Hudson of The Washington Post — As Washington grapples with the historic assault on the Capitol this week, the calculus for how senior government officials want to memorialize the end of their tenure in the Trump administration is also changing, in some cases, rapidly. Trump’s top arms control official, Chris Ford, announced his resignation to staff titled “A fond impending farewell” that did not mention the seizure of the Capitol building by a pro-Trump mob the day before. Instead, the memo mentioned how working as the undersecretary of state for arms control and international security was the “highlight of my professional career” and an “extraordinary honor and privilege.” He told colleagues his last day on the job would be “a week from tomorrow.”
“Hope Hicks is resigning, but not because of Capitol riots” via Fox 13 News — Trump’s longtime press aide and senior adviser, Hicks, will depart the White House next week, becoming the latest in a string of loyalists to exit after Trump supporters stormed the Capitol. Hicks told colleagues that she already planned to resign next week and that her decision isn’t linked to the riot that claimed five lives. The rampage prompted a bipartisan backlash from Capitol Hill, with many Democrats and some Republicans blaming Trump for inciting it.
Dateline Tallahassee
“Florida lawmakers, staff face new COVID-19 measures in return to Capitol” via Gray Rohrer of The South Florida Sun-Sentinel — When the Florida House and Senate begin interim committee meetings Monday in the run-up to the March 9 start of the legislative session, there will be some new protocols and safety measures in place to prevent the spread of COVID-19. The Capitol is usually humming with activity when lawmakers are in town, but the new guidelines will likely produce a more barren, sterile building while legislators prepare bills for the session. For example, the general public won’t be allowed into Senate committees but will be able to watch from a room in the Leon County Civic Center a few blocks away and provide testimony remotely.
“Danny Burgess to introduce anti-censorship legislation” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Sen. Burgess is filing legislation that would require social media sites to provide notice to users who have been punished by the platform. The new proposal was prompted by Facebook and Twitter’s decision to permanently ban Trump for inciting violence, specifically for the events at the Capitol on Wednesday. Burgess also cites Apple threatening to remove the unrestricted conservative-leaning social app Parler. Burgess believes this legislation will protect Floridians from “a dangerous precedent.” The bill would require social media platforms to provide electronic notice to a user who has been disabled or suspended within 30 days and explain why the user was punished.
Danny Burgess plans to push legislation that prevents censorship of conservative voices.
“Sen. Kathleen Passidomo tests positive for COVID-19, has ‘mild, cold-like symptoms’” via Thaddeus Mast of The Naples Daily News — Sen. Passidomo has tested positive for COVID-19 and will stay at home during the first week of committee meetings in Tallahassee. The Naples Senator stated she has “mild, cold-like symptoms” in a tweet on Sunday. “I do not anticipate my illness to stand in the way of the important work planned for this week,” Passidomo stated. She will call into her various briefings and hearings, she stated. Passidomo took a COVID-19 test on Thursday in anticipation of a week of meetings in Tallahassee. She will stay home “in accordance with Florida Senate protocols.”
Assignment editors — Senate Democratic Leader Gary Farmer, Florida Legislative Black Caucus Chair Sen. Bobby Powell, Sen. Perry Thurston, House Democratic Co-Leaders Bobby DuBose and Evan Jenne, and Reps. Fentrice Driskell and Geraldine Thompson will host a virtual news conference to discuss Republican legislative efforts to curtail the exercise of free speech and dissent in Florida, 10 a.m. Members of the press can take part in the event by clicking here.
Happening today — Florida TaxWatch will host a virtual news conference to announce new reports on COVID-19 liability protections and the state’s economic recovery. Joining TaxWatch will be Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis and former U.S. Sen. George LeMieux, who chairs TaxWatch, 11 a.m. To receive the Zoom link, contact christina@on3pr.com or 850-339-5773.
Happening today — The Senate will hold a briefing for committee chairs and vice-chairs; procedural briefing begins at 1 p.m., with a closed-door security briefing at 1:45 p.m., Room 412 of the Knott Building.
Happening today — The Senate Environment and Natural Resources Committee meets to consider the future of the state Office of Resilience and Coastal Protection and the chief resiliency officer position, 2:30 p.m., Room 37 of the Senate Office Building.
Statewide
“Florida gave thousands of tarnished officers a second chance. Hundreds blew it again.” via Devan Patel of The Naples Daily News — Thousands of tarnished officers around the state have been forced out from another Florida agency for misconduct in the last 30 years. At least 505 of those law enforcement and corrections officers who were given a second chance later committed an offense that led to decertification. The vast majority of those officers committed some form of crime, leaving a trail of victims and at least two dozen lawsuits. These officers were able to find work because the main burden for weeding out bad hires in Florida is put on local agencies. The minimum requirements for officers, established by a state law that some criminal justice experts criticize as weak, did not explicitly disqualify them from employment.
2022
“Florida Democrats tap former Miami Mayor to resurrect shellshocked party” via Gary Fineout of POLITICO Florida — Florida Democrats pinned their hopes to Manny Diaz on Saturday, entrusting the former Miami Mayor to revive the party’s fortunes after a disastrous election cycle where Trump won the state and Democrats lost congressional and legislative seats. Diaz defeated two other candidates for chairmanship during the Florida Democratic Party’s annual meeting, which was held virtually due to the coronavirus pandemic. Diaz has since been endorsed by dozens of Democratic politicians in the state, including Nikki Fried, the party’s only statewide officeholder.
“Nick DiCeglie, Rick Baker among potential candidates for Pinellas state Senate seat” via William March of The Tampa Bay Times — Pinellas Republicans could be looking at a competitive primary for a juicy political prize in 2022, as both state Rep. DiCeglie and former St. Petersburg Mayor Baker are considering running for what will be an open state Senate seat. According to GOP insiders, both have had conversations with Senate leadership about the seat now held by Sen. Jeff Brandes, who’s term-limited in 2022. DiCeglie, of Indian Rocks Beach, confirmed via text message he’s considering running, while Baker didn’t respond to messages for comment.
Local notes
“The promises and pitfalls of equal justice for all in Broward” via The South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — Broward marked a milestone this week, but it was in the middle of the night, and most people slept through it. Shortly after midnight Tuesday, Harold Pryor took the oath of office as the county’s top prosecutor, elected to replace retiring State Attorney Mike Satz, who honorably served our community for 44 years. The one-minute ceremony at Pryor’s home in Margate, with his wife and sleepy young son watching, allowed Pryor to quickly swear in his own staffers later in the day. As the sun rose, a hopeful new era in criminal justice also dawned. Pryor joins newly elected Public Defender Gordon Weekes and Sheriff Gregory Tony, who easily won election after two years as an appointee of DeSantis.
“Confederate flag issue returning to Walton County Commission” via Jim Thompson of NWF Daily News — A Walton County business owner is asking the County Commission to remove the Confederate monument and a Confederate flag from the grounds of the county courthouse. The flag flying at the monument honoring the county’s Civil War dead is not the Confederate battle flag, whose red field and diagonal blue lines emblazoned with stars has been appropriated by White supremacist groups in the decades since the Civil War. The flag at the courthouse features three alternating red and white stripes and a blue field decorated with a circle of seven stars representing the original Confederate states.
Top opinion
“The American abyss” via Timothy Snyder of The New York Times Magazine — When Trump stood before his followers on Jan. 6 and urged them to march on the United States Capitol, he was doing what he had always done. He never took electoral democracy seriously nor accepted the legitimacy of its American version. The responsibility for Trump’s push to overturn an election must be shared by a very large number of Republican members of Congress. Yet other Republicans saw the situation differently: They might actually break the system and have power without democracy. Yet for Congress to traduce its basic functions had a price. An elected institution that opposes elections is inviting its own overthrow. Post-truth is pre-fascism, and Trump has been our post-truth president.
Opinions
“The myth of American innocence” via Brent Staples of The New York Times — The history of the United States is rife with episodes of political violence far bloodier and more destructive than the one Trump incited at the Capitol on Wednesday. Talking heads queued up to tell the country again and again that the carnage was an aberration and “not who we are” as a people. This willful act of forgetting, compounded by the myth of American innocence, has shown itself to be dangerous on a variety of counts. The circumstances that led up to the sacking of the Capitol are reminiscent of the 19th century when Southerners rolled back the period of Black self-determination known as Reconstruction, unleashing a reign of racial tyranny.
“There’s no time to impeach Donald Trump. Censure him instead.” via David E. Kendall of The Washington Post — Given the shortness of time before Trump is out of office, congressional censure is the best way to stigmatize the soon-to-be-former President for his despicable actions in fomenting a mob attack on Congress at the very moment legislators were carrying out their constitutional duties to certify the will of American voters. Censure, a formal congressional condemnation, has been successfully invoked against sitting presidents. While admittedly symbolic, it is what is needed at this moment: an immediate bipartisan judgment that is strong, unequivocal, indelible and undeniable, a clear judgment that Trump’s conduct was a profound betrayal of both his duty and the basic legal rules of our democratic republic.
“Exodus and American nationhood” via Leon Kass of The Wall Street Journal — Many great thinkers, religious and not, have studied Exodus for its political wisdom. This biblical book not only recounts the political founding of one of the world’s oldest and most consequential peoples. It also invites us to think about the moral meaning of communal life, the requirements of political self-rule and the standards for judging a social order better or worse. In the 17th century, political thinkers found guidance for reform in the ancient “Hebrew Republic,” while jurists saw in the Hebrew Bible the foundation for universal principles of justice. The idea that the best body politic rests on the biblical notion of covenant entered the American colonies with the Mayflower Compact.
“Pre-Nazi Germany tells us the fight to save American democracy is just beginning” via Michael Brenner of The Stamford Advocate — Germany’s democracy was young, but the majority of the population stood behind it in the early 1920s. Yet, humiliated by defeat in World War I and plagued by an unprecedented economic crisis, a growing minority resorted to lies and conspiracy theories, such as the stab-in-the-back myth, which blamed scapegoats like Jews and socialists rather than the military for losing the war. What at first blush looked like a failed coup proved successful in the long run because of a justice system that was blind in its right eye and conservative political leaders who fueled the myths that Hitler had tapped into, planted the seeds of political polarization, and discredited the legitimacy of elected officials.
“Our new reality: Three Americas” via Jim VandeHei of Axios — The United States, torn apart by insurrection and mass misinformation, is witnessing a political and social realignment unfold in real-time: We’re splitting into three Americas. America, in its modern foundational components, is breaking into blue America, red America, and Trump America, all with distinct politics, social networks and media channels. The existential question for Republicans, and perhaps for America, is whether Trump America eclipses traditional Red America in power in the coming years. Parts of Trump America, canceled by Twitter and so many others, are severing their ties to the realities of the other Americas and basically going underground. There will be less awareness and perhaps scrutiny of what’s being said and done.
“For some Republicans, it’s time to head for the exits” via Jennifer Rubin of The Washington Post — Readers know that for a couple of years, I have argued that the Republican Party failed the test of character and decency when it embraced Trump and, therefore, should be leveled. The insurrection this past week highlights how essential it is to leave a party that is now thoroughly infested with neo-Nazi, racist, anti-Semitic and lawless elements. It is no surprise that several Republican state elected officials have been identified as having participated in Wednesday’s riot. The involvement of so many elected Republicans not simply in perpetuating the lie of a stolen election but in participating in a deadly event in which anti-Semitic, pro-Confederate thugs roamed the halls of Congress is horrifying, but predictable.
“Capitol Hill — the 9/11 moment of social media” via Thierry Breton of POLITICO Europe — We are all still shocked by the images of protesters storming the U.S. Congress to halt the certification of the next U.S. president. The attack on the U.S. Capitol, a symbol of democracy, feels like a direct assault on all of us. Just as 9/11 marked a paradigm shift for global security, 20 years later, we are witnessing a before-and-after in the role of digital platforms in our democracy. Social media companies have blocked Trump’s accounts on the grounds that his messages threatened democracy and incited hatred and violence. In doing so, they have recognized their responsibility, duty, and means to prevent the spread of illegal viral content. They can no longer hide their responsibility toward society by arguing that they merely provide hosting services.
“DeSantis denies essential employees the COVID-19 vaccine while his policies force them to work” via The Miami Herald editorial board — Florida’s health care workers who are on the front lines in the fight against COVID-19 have been among the first Floridians to get the vaccine. Senior citizens are especially vulnerable to this deadly virus, and they, too, are at the head of the line to get the shot. DeSantis was right to make each group a priority. He was smart, too, to make hospitals the main channel of distribution. They have the personnel to deliver the vaccine and access to the targeted populations. And he has made clear that he wants to give more vaccines to those facilities that can scale up efficiently and effectively.
On today’s Sunrise
Florida lawmakers are returning to The Capitol for more than two dozen committee hearings this week. COVID-19 and a multibillion-dollar hole in the budget are big concerns.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Gov. DeSantis travels to Bay County to check out a faith-based vaccination center that reaches out to seniors by going through their pastors and ministers.
— DeSantis is also counting on Publix to fight the virus. After a vaccination pilot program at grocery stores in three central Florida counties, the Governor is ready to expand to other parts of the state.
— Seniors now have the first shot at the vaccine in Florida, but DeSantis still won’t say who’s next in line, and teachers are getting antsy.
— As the Governor tries to speed up the vaccination process, the winter surge of COVID-19 continues with more than 12,000 new cases and 111 new fatalities reported in the past 24 hours.
— Florida Democrats pick former Miami Mayor Diaz to take over as party chair … replacing Terri Rizzo after the GOP cleaned their clock in 2020.
— And finally, two Florida Men: One tried to hide with the trash; the other faces federal charges after Wednesday’s riot at the U.S. Capitol.
“Mitt Romney, Joe Manchin to headline inaugural event of FSU Institute of Politics” via Byron Dobson of the Tallahassee Democrat — To many, this week’s takeover of the U.S. Capitol is an extreme example of the inability of opposing political sides to find common ground. Coincidentally, the recent chaos comes just before the inaugural kickoff of the new Institute of Politics at Florida State University (IOP@FSU). The Jan. 12 event will feature two of the biggest names in American politics, Utah Republican Sen. Romney and West Virginia Democratic Sen. Manchin, who will appear together in a free virtual forum. Both are considered moderates who work with members of the opposing party. The mission of the institute, launched in October, is to engage FSU students, Floridians, and all citizens in the political process by promoting civil debate, civic engagement, and research.
Mitt Romney will be one of the big names to launch the Institute of Politics at Florida State University. Image via AP.
“Jupiter, Saturn and Mercury conjunction — how to watch tonight” via Charlotte Edwards of The U.S. Sun — NASA said: “From Friday evening to Monday evening, the planet Mercury will appear to pass first by Saturn and then by Jupiter as it shifts away from the horizon, visible each evening low in the west-southwest and setting before evening twilight ends.” You should look toward the Capricorn constellation to try and spot the planets at twilight over the next few days. Night sky scanning apps can be useful to download if you need to be pointed in the right direction of a constellation. Some of the apps can even point out planets to you.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to Rusty Branch. Belated happy birthday wishes to Rep. James Buchanan, Albert Balido of Anfield Consulting, and a true defender of the Pinellas Peninsula, Ricky Butler.
Good morning. The originators of National Clean Your Desk Day could not have anticipated that at one point it would include washing your sheets. But hey, thanks for the reminder.
MARKETS YTD PERFORMANCE
NASDAQ
13,201.98
+ 2.43%
S&P
3,824.68
+ 1.83%
DOW
31,097.97
+ 1.61%
GOLD
1,849.70
– 2.73%
10-YR
1.120%
+ 20.10 bps
OIL
52.73
+ 8.90%
*As of market close
Government: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi does not want President Trump to complete his last full week in office. On Monday, she’ll urge Vice President Mike Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment to remove Trump from the White House; if that doesn’t work, she’s prepared to bring articles of impeachment.
Markets: Stocks have posted a solid start to 2021 as investors bet on rapid economic growth after the vaccine rollout hits high gear.
When one door closes, another one doesn’t always open. Last week, after social platforms disabled President Trump’s accounts to varying degrees, right-leaning social app Parler was looking like his best option for internet communication, until…
…this weekend, when Parler was cut off from Amazon’s web hosting service and removed from Apple’s and Google’s app stores for failing to address content calling for more violence. The app is now effectively cut off from new users and may shut down for a week while it finds a new host.
Parler’s CEO criticized the actions as a “coordinated attack by the tech giants to kill competition in the marketplace.”
Social media companies aren’t the only ones doing some reflecting
Political donation committees for Blue Cross Blue Shield, Marriott, and Commerce Bancshares will pull support from Republican lawmakers who voted against the certification of Biden’s electoral college victory, Popular Information reports.
Boston Scientific, Citigroup, and JPMorgan are suspending all PAC activity, and CVS, ExxonMobil, FedEx, Target, and Bank of America are reviewing their programs.
In golf, the PGA terminated its agreement to play the 2022 PGA Championship at Trump Bedminster.
Zoom out: Corporate America’s relationship with the Trump administration has been complicated. Former Goldman Sachs CEO and Trump critic Lloyd Blankfein told DealBook, “For Wall Street, it was lower taxes, less regulation. He was delivering what ‘we’ wanted. We put a clothespin on our nose. We weren’t ignorant of the kind of risks we were taking. We repressed them.”
The riot also rippled to Main Street
Bosses across the country weren’t pleased to turn on the news last week and see their employees making the wrong kind of history. Internet sleuths have been busy rooting out rioters’ identities, and some, including the CEO of a Chicago-area marketing tech company, got fired.
Can employers do that? If a worker engages in criminal activity, it’s generally a fireable offense. Employees’ First Amendment protections are more applicable to public sector work, so private employers have considerable discretion to fire workers for off-duty activities.
The Paycheck Protection Program, the US government’s big push to help small businesses hurting from the pandemic, is kicking off its latest round of loans today.
The backstory: When PPP was first rolled out last April, it led to a frantic dash for cash. While many companies were able to access emergency funding, PPP was criticized for its vulnerability to fraud and for neglecting businesses in underserved communities.
The nowstory: With $284 billion in fresh funding, the Small Business Administration is hoping to make a sequel on par with The Dark Knight.
During the first two days of the program, only community financial institutions that focus on underserved clientele will be allowed to accept applications from first-time PPP seekers. This is intended to prioritize minority- and women-owned businesses.
Plus, there’s a bit more upfront paperwork, which will hopefully filter out the fraudsters and ineligible companies.
Zoom out: In December, the job market recovery reversed and the US economy lost jobs for the first time since April. Women accounted for all of the job losses.
What’s the virtual equivalent of waking up with a searing hangover knowing you’ll have to spend the next 12 hours networking? That’s what CES organizers will try to recreate today when the world’s biggest tech show kicks off, fully digital for the first time in its 54-year history.
In a typical year, more than 100,000 attendees arrive in Las Vegas to explore the latest trends in consumer tech. But the pandemic forced CES 2021 to move online, dropping the exhibitor count from 4,500 last year to about 2,000 this year.
Covid tech: From smart air purifiers to PCs with better webcams for remote work, prepare for an onslaught of products to help you navigate These Challenging Times.
5G: Companies like Verizon will tout their rollout of the next-gen wireless technology and explain how it will influence sectors from auto to farming.
Samsung: The South Korean tech conglomerate will hold a separate event on the last day of CES to reveal the latest version of its flagship smartphone, the Galaxy S21.
Zoom out: Even before the pandemic hit, CES was evolving. Big Tech companies have largely backed out of the festivities, which has allowed startups to get more visibility.
Last week we spilled the beans on how this top-rated credit card can help you start off the year with less debt and 0% interest for 18 months on new purchases and balance transfers.
But that’s just one nugget in the credit card gold mine. Because CompareCredit™ has an entire list of credit cards to help you start the new year off right.
If your partner missed the mark by gifting you a colander for Christmas again, there’s a decent chance your local big box store doesn’t want it back, either. Amazon, Walmart, Target, and other retailers are refunding some purchases but letting customers keep the product because processing returns is too expensive, according to the WSJ.
Online returns can cost retailers $10–$20 per item, Locus Robotics CEO Rick Faulk told the Journal.
Return rates normally hover between 25–30%, Retail Brew reports, but more online shopping and bracketing (buying multiple sizes of the same item) during the pandemic have pushed that higher. In 2020, returns rose 70% year-over-year, per Narvar.
An estimated $70.5 billion in returns is expected from the holiday season.
Last week alone, 1.8 million returns were initiated daily with UPS.
Zoom out: Returns come with environmental baggage, too, in the form of boxes, plastic bags, bubble wrap, and other packaging. “E-commerce returns created 5 billion tons of landfill waste and produced as much carbon dioxide as 3 million cars do in a year,” B-Stock COO Marcus Shen told Retail Dive.
Earnings: We’re back. Earnings season for Q4 2020 will unofficially kick off on Friday, when banks JPMorgan, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo share their financial results. Delta and BlackRock are hosting the pregame on Thursday.
IPO: After a quick breather during the holidays, the public markets are ready for new victims. Petco, Affirm, and Poshmark are a few of the names expected to IPO this week.
Economic data: Look out for CPI inflation numbers on Wednesday and retail sales for the crucial December holiday shopping period on Friday.
Sports: The NCAA football national championship game is tonight between Alabama and Ohio State. And the NHL regular season begins Wednesday.
TV: Oh, Marvel, how we missed ye. The first Marvel TV series for Disney+, WandaVision, premieres on Friday. It’s a “superhero soap opera” set in the suburbs.Check out the trailer.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
A Boeing 737-500 operated by Indonesia’s Sriwijaya Air crashed into the sea shortly after takeoff from Jakarta on Saturday. It was carrying 62 people.
The US will ease restrictions on interactions between American and Taiwanese officials in a move meant to rile up China—which it did.
Apple and Hyundai are nearing a deal to produce autonomous electric cars around 2024, Reuters reports. And Nio unveiled its first electric sedan to compete with Tesla.
About 6.7 million people have been vaccinated against Covid-19 in the US, including 4+ million in long-term care facilities. Over 22 million doses have been distributed to states.
The NFL made its debut on Nickelodeon last night, which made a mostly unwatchable Bears-Saints game pretty watchable.
BREW’S BETS
Stock up on alternatives. Yieldstreet makes it easy to generate passive income with alternative investments. Their platform hooks you up with investments traditionally reserved for institutions and the ultra-wealthy: real estate, art, etc. Diversify your portfolio with Yieldstreet here.*
Sleep sheep aren’t happy about this new sleep tech. Bose Sleepbuds™ II are tiny, wireless earbuds that fit snugly in your ear, and deliver soothing, curated sounds to help you sleep all night long. No more counting sheep—just count on Bose Sleepbuds™ II for great sleep.*
Well this is helpful: A powerful search engine with 2 million recipes (thanks Recomendo for the tip).
Let’s kick off the week with a quiz on old-timey job titles; you know, words like haberdasher and arkwright and tanner. We’ll give you the name of the occupation, and you have to determine what items they make or sell.
Milliner
Cooper
Fletcher
Luthier
Wainwright
Costermonger
ANSWER
1. Milliner – women’s hats
2. Cooper – barrels, casks, and tubs
3. Fletcher – arrows
4. Luthier – string instruments, like violins or guitars
5. Wainwright – wagons and carts
6. Costermonger – fruits and vegetables
Spurred on by the Jan. 6 riots in which five people lost their lives, corporations including Marriott International and the Blue Cross Blue Shield insurance group have said they would stop giving money to Republican lawmakers who backed efforts to disrupt the certification of President-elect Joe Biden’s victory.
…
But banks, rather than targeting and potentially alienating members of the Republican party, have instead moved to halt donations to all lawmakers, for now at least. JPMorgan, the biggest U.S. bank by assets, is pausing contributions for both Republicans and Democrats for “at least” the next six months, according to spokesman Steve O’Halloran. The New York-based bank will use that time to consider potential changes to its political-donation strategies.
…
Citigroup is also pausing PAC donations to all lawmakers during the first quarter, the bank told employees Friday in an internal communication. Bank of America spokesman Bill Halldin said that the “appalling violent assault on the U.S. Capitol” will factor into donation decisions for the 2022 midterm elections.
Tom Fitton of Judicial Watch says that his Twitter account has been suspended over posting “#Hydroxychloroquine is a safe drug.” He says that “this is not about HCQ, it is about finding a pretext to silence another leading conservative voice.” Leading conservative voices have either been suspended or removed entirely from the platform amid calls from left-leaning politicians.
Joe Biden has renewed calls for an increase in the COVID stimulus payments from $600 to $2,000. Now that Democrats have won the two Georgia Senate seats, there is a good chance that it will pass without major opposition.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) says Democrats will move to impeach President Trump over the unrest at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 if Vice President Mike Pence does not invoke the 25th amendment and remove him from office. “In protecting our Constitution and our Democracy, we will act with urgency, because this President represents an imminent threat to both,” Pelosi wrote in a letter to party colleagues.
With not a hint of self-awareness in sight, media outlets are reporting that the international community is aghast at the events of January 6 and that it diminishes the United States as a nation. Is persecuting elected lawmakers for asking questions on the floor of Congress also not diminishing? What about efforts to label all Trump supporters as domestic terrorists? What about gleefully calling for the censorship of 70 million-plus American’s right to speak on a public platform?
Tech Tyranny: Purging Pro-Trump Social Media – Part 1
Contrasting voices are muddying the waters of the latest impeachment effort. While Nancy Pelosi insists that impeachment must happen immediately, Rep. Clyburn is saying that they should hold on sending to the Senate until after Joe Biden’s first 100 days. Perhaps not as urgent a situation as Pelosi suggests.
Former Secretary of State Colin Powell said: “I can no longer call myself a Republican” after the Capitol Hill protest by supporters of President Trump. His remark surely took many American conservatives by surprise since few of them knew he was ever a Republican.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, eager to portray herself as a victim/survivor of insurrectionists, gave 60 Minutes a tour of her office, which had been vandalized. The speaker’s laptop was not a part of the tour.
Parler, the social media platform, is down. CEO John Matze said that due to Amazon, Apple, and Google’s actions, the company will be offline for about a week. He noted that the firm’s attorneys have also cut ties.
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
What is driving the Democrat push for impeachment? Does Nancy Pelosi really believe that a president who has gotten the US involved in precisely zero major conflicts intends to launch nukes during his last week in office? The reaction of House and Senate Dems seems to be more inspired by fear of what President Trump might achieve in the coming years rather than what he will do in the next seven days. There is already talk of defining MAGA rallies as terrorist events, and with a full impeachment, Trump could be barred from running for office again. The stink of fear is almost palpable.
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8.) FOX NEWS
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Monday, January 11, 2021
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
Pelosi: Trump ‘imminent threat’ to ‘our Democracy,’ lawmakers moving forward with impeachment
The House will be moving forward with a resolution to impeach President Trump, said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, referring to the president in a letter to colleagues as an “imminent threat” to both the U.S. Constitution and democracy.
In the letter Sunday, Pelosi said the House will act with “great solemnity” with less than two weeks remaining before Trump is set to leave office.
“In protecting our Constitution and our Democracy, we will act with urgency, because this President represents an imminent threat to both,” she said.
Pelosi said the House will try to force Vice President Mike Pence and the Cabinet to oust Trump by invoking the 25th Amendment.
On Monday, House leaders will work to swiftly pass legislation to do that. If it is blocked by Republicans, which is almost certain, the House will convene for a full House vote on Tuesday.
Pelosi explained that the resolution calls on Pence “to convene and mobilize the Cabinet to activate the 25th Amendment to declare the President incapable of executing the duties of his office.” Under the procedure, the vice president “would immediately exercise powers as acting President,” she wrote. CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Chad Pergram: Right back to where we were last year: Dems seek Trump impeachment
– Kirk: Despite what the media claims, Trump supporters are ‘repulsed’ by Capitol riots
– Dershowitz calls Trump impeachment a ‘loaded weapon’ that would be ‘so dangerous to the Constitution’
– Clyburn says Trump impeachment vote ‘will happen this week’ as 195 lawmakers cosponsor articles
– Andrew McCarthy: Trump has committed an impeachable offense
– Trump speech before Capitol riot not enough for impeachment charges: Turley
Pelosi gets ‘sharp’ when asked about AOC during ’60 Minutes’ interview
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi gave an extensive interview to “60 Minutes” that aired Sunday night, and one of the highlights was when correspondent Lesley Stahl asked her about the party’s future leadership.
Stahl pointed out that Pelosi is 80 years old and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer is 81, and she asked why there are no clear heirs in the party. Especially since “The Squad,” the group of young progressives, command such a large following on social media.
Pelosi told Stahl the question was essentially based on a false premise. She responded that party leaders have groomed future leadership, and perhaps she was unaware.
“Why does AOC [Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y.] complain that you have not been grooming younger people for leadership?” Stahl asked.
Pelosi responded, “I don’t know. You’ll have to ask her—because we are.”
Stahl seemed to be taken aback for a moment and said, “That was kind of sharp, kind of dismissing her.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– AOC says Pelosi, Schumer need to go, but warns of Democratic power vacuum
– Pelosi announces new ‘Squad’ assignments to House committees
– Hemingway: AOC opposing Pelosi, Schumer exposes ‘complete disarray’ in Democratic Party
– Pelosi refuses to take blame for Dem election losses: ‘I accept credit for winning the majority’
Rep. Gaetz: Trump has no intention of resigning after Capitol riot, will ‘not leave the public stage at all’
President Trump has no intention of resigning or “leaving the public stage at all” following Trump supporters’ breach of the Capitol on Jan. 6, Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., said.
Gaetz told ‘Fox Report Weekend’ host Jon Scott on Sunday that Trump remains the leader of people who believe America’s best days are still ahead, who support law enforcement and who “need to stand together and fight against a radical left-wing agenda that it appears that Joe Biden intends to usher in with unified control over the government, with the House and the Senate.”
Gaetz’s comments come as the House is preparing to be move forward with a resolution to impeach President Trump, according to a letter from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. She refers to the president as an “imminent threat” to both the U.S. Constitution and democracy.
On Monday, House leaders will work to pass legislation that would force Vice President Mike Pence and the rest of the president’s Cabinet to oust Trump by invoking the 25th Amendment. If it is blocked by Republicans, which is almost certain, the House will convene for a full House vote on Tuesday. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– ‘Congress is obligated‘ to impeach Trump after Capitol riot: Rep. Cicilline
– GOP Sen. Ben Sasse says there is ‘brokenness’ in Trump’s soul, refuses to rule out impeachment
– Rep. Van Drew calls on Biden to oppose Trump impeachment: ‘Let’s try to come together’
– Capitol riot, votes against Electoral College certification prompt businesses to pause political donations
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Secret Service investigating death threats against Pence
– Woman leaps to her death from NYC building with child in her arms
– Chicago gunman who allegedly killed 3, wounded 4, posted bizarre videos before rampage: reports
– FBI visited extremists ahead of Capitol riots, urged them not to travel to DC: source
– Iran to execute 2nd wrestler, sparking outrage from US State Department
– NFL Super Wildcards: Ravens, Saints and Browns win, move on to Divisional playoff round
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Gab gaining 10,000 users per hour, CEO claims, after Trump’s permanent Twitter suspension
– First cryptocurrency-only restaurant sale in US launched
– Amazon, Walmart using AI to decide on economic sense to process a return: WSJ
– Victoria’s Secret on the rebound with new look, less product on shelves after pandemic
– Parler to be down ‘for a while’ without AWS, executives say: ‘We are clearly being singled out’
– Fannie, Freddie tighten rules for condos in vacation locales
#The Flashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Mark Levin blamed the media for what’s happening in the country on “Life, Liberty & Levin” Sunday night.
“Here’s my point…We should oppose all violence – all violence – whether it’s Capitol Hill – which is an outrage, whether it’s the White House – it’s an outrage, whether it’s a federal courthouse in Portland – it’s an outrage, whether it’s people leaving the last night of the Republican convention – which is an outrage – all forms of violence should be condemned,” Levin said. “But,” he continued, “not everyone has. We have media organizations that haven’t, who talk about mostly peaceful protests while buildings burn behind them.”
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Wednesday was an awful day for our country, but in many ways it was a proud day for Congress. Legislators kept their nerve and did their job, which ought to be celebrated.
Sens. Robert Casey (D-PA) and Joni Ernst (R-IA) recently introduced the Clean Slate Act in the United States Senate to follow up on the First Step Act of 2018. This legislation is both overdue and a step in the right direction.
“Apple Inc and Amazon.com Inc have suspended Parler from their respective App Store and web hosting service, saying the social networking service popular with many right-leaning social media users has not taken adequate measures to prevent the spread of posts inciting violence.” Reuters
The right is critical of Twitter’s ban of Trump and Parler’s suspension, arguing that they violate free speech principles.
“As private companies, Facebook and Twitter have the right to restrict President Trump from their platforms. Still, from the perspective of national interests, it is a mistake for them to do so…
“U.S. legal tradition [protects] speech that is hateful, hurtful, and designed to be so. Born of the Constitution and subsequent case law, this tradition rests on the understanding of a murky borderline between offensive speech and contemplative thought. That, where lawmakers attempt to draw the border against offensive speech, they risk undermining democratic participation and creative thinking…
“As Chief Justice John Roberts explained in his 2010 Snyder v. Phelps opinion, ‘Speech is powerful. It can stir people to action, move them to tears of both joy and sorrow, and — as it did here — inflict great pain. On the facts before us, we cannot react to that pain by punishing the speaker. As a nation we have chosen a different course — to protect even hurtful speech on public issues to ensure that we do not stifle public debate.’” Tom Rogan, Washington Examiner
“Sociologists have documented how America’s political tribes increasingly shop at different stores, live in different places and have different tastes. That cultural gap contributed to Donald Trump’s rise, and political segregation of the internet will widen it…
“Dissenting opinion won’t vanish because tech CEOs ban it. The views will go underground, perhaps become radicalized in frustration, and eventually burst into the open in the streets. Perceived political abuses by tech firms are becoming a major engine of populism in the 21st century, and the companies’ moves on Parler will supply an infusion of fuel…
“Joe Biden said Friday that America needs a ‘principled and strong’ opposition party. Whatever the GOP’s future, and despite widespread revulsion at the President’s actions last week, tens of millions of his supporters will be the basis for that opposition party. New and aggressive uses of corporate, politically endorsed power to silence larger swathes of the right will be destructive in a way that all Americans may live to regret.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
Twitter “[cites] one tweet saying he won’t attend Biden’s inauguration as ‘being received by a number of his supporters’ as a rejection of the election results or a signal that it would be ‘safe’ to attack the inauguration because he won’t be there to potentially be taken out as collateral damage. They then go on to claim that referring to his supporters as ‘American Patriots’ somehow signals approval of or incitement to violence. Am I the only one rolling my eyes to the point of needing new glasses right now?…
“Find the people who have been openly encouraging violence and destruction or bragging about doing it online and kick them off of social media. Actually, go find them and arrest them to boot. But by twisting the words of the President (or anyone else) in this fashion to justify the decision to kick him off the platform, we’re not seeing the exercise of power. This is an abuse of power.” Jazz Shaw, Hot Air
“Following the death of George Floyd, Colin Kaepernick told his legion of followers that ‘revolting is the only option’ and that they ‘have the right to fight back.’ Then-congressional candidate Cori Bush asked activists to show up to protests to ‘disrupt peace’ because if they’re ‘peaceful… it’s NOT a protest.’ We know what happened next. Those tweets remain online, by the way, along with those from dictators, terrorists, anti-Semites and Antifa members organizing online. Somehow they don’t violate Twitter’s terms of service. Team Trump’s? Or the legions of conservative accounts using Parler to connect with their community? Purged and taken down…
“In the short term, Big Tech fed into the worst instincts of the activist base… It won’t take long before the base turns on its own party. Democrats will never be left-wing enough to satisfy activists because they set both their enemies and allies up to fail. Progressives say not only are mere words violence, but silence is violence, too. Even Democrats are destined to fail in the progressive reality unless you kowtow to their worldview by saying the words they want you to say, when they want you to say it…
“When Democrats face the political consequences of this unwise decision, they may very well find themselves on the receiving end of the very same mistreatment.” Jason Rantz, Fox News
“Parler has policed at least some posts calling for violence, as Mediaite reports the company removed posts by extremist ‘election fraud’ lawyer Lin Wood that called for the execution of Vice President Mike Pence for his refusal to reject Electoral College votes for Joe Biden. As we’ve noted before, endless bile roams free on Twitter — hate speech and worse that the company polices in no consistent way. Yet now other tech companies are punishing Parler for failing in the same way. They’re not applying a neutral rule, they’re catering to the biases of their angry left-leaning employees…
“When people complain about the overwhelming share of their markets controlled by Facebook, Apple, Amazon and Google, the companies’ defenders insist that they compete in important ways, checking each other’s power. This is looking more like a cabal supporting each other — at the least, uniting to enforce a common political orthodoxy. A similar argument goes: If you don’t like how Facebook or Twitter enforces its rules, go build your own alternative. Yet Parler did just that, with growing success — and boom, the tech world moves to kill it.” Editorial Board, New York Post
From the Left
The left supports Twitter’s ban of Trump and urges tech companies to ensure their rules for acceptable speech are clear and transparent.
“Some critics, especially those on the right, object to the giant social networks enforcing their terms of service simply because they are giant. Their scale, these observers argue, has transformed them into the 21st century equivalent of the public commons. Maybe so! But that doesn’t change the fact that they are not government actors, so they’re not bound by the 1st Amendment. And even promoting a free speech culture does not mean amplifying all speech…
“Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has said he doesn’t feel comfortable playing the role of speech police. But he’s created one of the world’s most powerful amplifiers, and he’s rightly set standards — low standards, sadly — for what people can do with it. World leaders should be held to the same rules as everyone else…
“Twitter similarly has said there’s a public interest in seeing what’s on the minds of important figures. But those figures have their own platforms and their own microphones. No private company is obligated to hand over its platform to a president in the supposed interest of newsworthiness and history. That just feels like a pretext for maintaining the huge audiences that controversial figures such as Trump bring.” Jon Healey, Los Angeles Times
“Trump’s accounts have survived posting that ‘when the looting starts, the shooting starts’ during the summer’s Black Lives Matter protests. He has repeatedly amplified accounts supporting QAnon, a conspiracy theory that the FBI has labeled a domestic-terror threat. He’s compared the size of his nuclear button with that of North Korea’s, and still @realDonaldTrump [had] continued to grace our screens…
“The attempts [of tech companies] to dress up [last week’s] actions as part of a coherent and deliberate decision-making structure were trying to mask an uncomfortable truth about our most important speech forums: Platforms can and will do what they like… A tiny group of people in Silicon Valley are defining modern discourse, ostensibly establishing a Twilight Zone where the rules are something between democratic governance and journalism, but they’re doing it on the fly in ways that suit them…
“This will not be the last time a leader uses these platforms to incite violence; our tech overlords should prove, then, that it wasn’t just political expediency and tech-bro one-upmanship that made them act [last] week. In doing so, they can develop the coherent and consistent decision-making structure that they insist already exists and tie themselves to more principled masts.” Evelyn Douek, The Atlantic
“The Election Integrity Partnership found that about half of all retweets related to dozens of widely spread false claims of election interference could be traced back to just 35 Twitter accounts, including those of Mr. Trump, the conservative activist Charlie Kirk and the actor James Woods…
“YouTube has a ‘three strikes’ policy that aims to punish people who repeatedly break its rules. The policy is riddled with inconsistencies, but it might be worth copying. I can imagine something like it for all the social media sites, with teams laser focused on accounts with large followings — say, more than a million followers, or maybe just for accounts found to be habitual spreaders of misinformation or division…
“Some might call this internet censorship. It is. But the internet companies already have extensive guidelines prohibiting bullying, financial scams and deliberately misleading information about important issues like elections. To do this, the internet companies will have to be willing to make powerful people angry. The recalibration of how internet sites handle influential people would put a lot of pressure on users with large followings to be more careful about what they say and share. That’s not such a bad idea, is it?” Shira Ovide, New York Times
“[But] in fact, once the social media companies have to assume legal liability — not just for libel, but for inciting violence and so on — they will quickly change their algorithms to block anything remotely problematic. People would still be able to discuss politics, but they wouldn’t be able to hurl anti-Semitic slurs. Presidents and other officials could announce policies, but they wouldn’t be able to spin wild conspiracies…
“Would this harm Facebook and Twitter’s business models? Sure it would. But so what? They have done the country a lot of harm, and it is clear they have no idea how to get their houses in order — and no real desire to, either. If they make less money but cause less damage to the country, it will be well worth it.” Joe Nocera, Bloomberg
Regarding Parler, “Not only was violence planned and incited on the site before extremists stormed the Capitol Wednesday and killed a Capitol Police officer, but further planning was ongoing ahead of President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration on January 20…
“‘Many of Us will return on January 19, 2021, carrying Our weapons, in support of Our nation’s resolve, towhich [sic] the world will never forget!!!’ one user wrote on Parler this week following the Wednesday attack… ‘We will come in numbers that no standing army or police agency can match.’ Another user, before the attack, used Parler to solicit feedback on who the insurgents should kill first.” Cameron Peters, Vox
🏈 President Trump on Thursday will present the Presidential Medal of Freedom to the New England Patriots’ Bill Belichick, the only coach to win six Super Bowls. — AP
1 big thing … Growing GOP problem: Powerlessness
Republicans are losing power where power matters most at the national level: in politics, media, technology and the workplace.
Why it matters: Republicans often felt mistreated when they had real power in the form of the presidency and Senate. Watch Fox News or listen to Ben Shapiro, and you will see and hear how this new isolation will feed Republican worries and grievances in the months ahead.
Tucker Carlsonwarned on Fox: “Tens of millions of Americans have no chance — they’re about to be crushed by the ascendant left.”
Democrats will soon control the White House, Senate and House. They already dominate most mainstream newsrooms, own Big Tech companies, and often band together inside corporations to force politically motivated decisions.
Republicans will be left with Mitch McConnell as party leader of a 50-50 Senate, prime time on Fox News and The Wall Street Journal editorial page.
Most importantly, the right has the Supreme Court, which might prove to be the one reliable counterbalance, and the majority of power at the state level.
Conservatives long ago lost so many key institutions that define the national conversation, including culture, media and higher education.
But since 1980, the party had political power and policy-making capability.
Now, President Trump has cost Republicans those tools, and the party will have to rebuild around new people and ideas.
Government has done next to nothing to regulate misinformation on large tech platforms. Now, while belatedly and begrudgingly, large tech companies are creating de facto regulation policy in real time:
On many platforms, hate speech was always punishable.
Twitter and others, in banning President Trump, are suggesting that patterns of misinformation — even by the most powerful man in America — are grounds for disqualification and silencing.
Apple and Amazon Web Services are suggesting a minimum level of human moderation for using their services.
Between the lines, from Axios managing editor Scott Rosenberg: For years, tech companies improvised their own “regulations” via community standards and terms of service.
🥊Stripe cut off payment-processing for the Trump campaign’s website, for violating policies against encouraging violence, The Wall Street Journal scoops.
3. America’s population growth slows
Even in an unlikely “high growth rate” scenario, America’s population will grow at the slowest rate since at least the 1930s, Axios’ Stef Kight writes from Census Bureau projections.
Why it matters: America is aging. A growing number of people are out of the workforce, and a relatively smaller number of people are trying to support them. That could cripple programs like Social Security and slow economic growth.
What’s happening: Americans aren’t having as many babies as they used to, mirroring a trend in many developed countries.
In the lowest growth rate scenario, the U.S. could see the slowest 10-year increase in its population since at least the 1790s, according to a Brookings analysis.
Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, N.J. Photo: Seth Wenig/AP
The PGA of America voted to move the 2022 PGA Championship from Trump National Golf Club in New Jersey, Axios Sports author Kendall Baker reports.
Why it matters: The PGA is the first sports organization to abandon Trump after the Capitol siege.
Between the lines: The Trump Organization owns or operates 17 golf courses around the world, and they generate about a third of the family’s revenue, the N.Y. Times reports (subscription).
5. Mayor warns of inauguration danger
New fence around Supreme Court yesterday. Photo: Al Drago/Getty Images
D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser said in a letter to the Department of Homeland Security that she is “extremely concerned” about next week’s inauguration, citing “new threats from insurgent acts of domestic terrorists.”
A New York Times investigation (subscription)into the security failure (“FLOOD OF FAILURES LET MOB RAMPAGE THROUGH CAPITOL”) found:
“[G]overnment agencies have no coordinated plan to defend against an attack on the Capitol.”
“Poor planning and communication among a constellation of federal, state and local law enforcement agencies hamstrung the response.”
“The country got lucky. Hundreds of rioters carrying weapons breached the seat of American power — some with the clear intent of injuring, holding hostage or even killing federal officials to stop them from certifying the vote.”
Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund, who resigned Friday, told The Washington Post in his first post-riot interview: “My concern is if they don’t get their act together with physical security, it’s going to happen again.”
6. Stunning “60 Minutes” image
In her first interview since the riot, Speaker Pelosi showed Lesley Stahl of “60 Minutes” the damage in her office:
“You see what they did to the mirror there? The glass was all over the place. … And then the desk that they actually were at was right there — that they defamed in that way, feet on the desk and all that.”
⚡ What’s next: Pelosi said in a letter to members that the House will begin steps toward impeachment today, with a resolution calling on Vice President Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment within 24 hours.
“Next, we will proceed with bringing impeachment legislation to the Floor. “
7. 💰 Business rethinks donations after Capitol siege
In a shock to Washington Inc., several corporations are restricting or suspending political contributions after the Capitol siege:
JPMorgan Chase is pausing all giving to both parties for six months. “The country is facing unprecedented health, economic and political crises,” said Peter Scher, chair of the Mid-Atlantic Region and head of corporate responsibility. “There will be plenty of time for campaigning later.”
Citi’s head of global government affairs, Candi Wolff, said in a letter to colleagues that the bank will pause all contributions in Q1, and that after that, “[W]e will not support candidates who do not respect the rule of law.”
Marriott International said the hotel giant will pause donations “to those who voted against certification of the election.”
Blue Cross Blue Shield Associationsaid it will suspend contributions to “lawmakers who voted to undermine our democracy” by challenging Electoral College results.
Boston Scientific, the medical device maker, is pausing all federal gifts.
8. Data drives clean-fuel competition
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
One of the most important trends in climate change isn’t anything you heard on the campaign trail, but instead something as basic as data — and the technological exploitation of it, Amy Harder writes in her “Harder Line” column:
Companies have been disclosing more data on greenhouse gas emissions since the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement, and a new trend cropping up uses that to foster competition for greener energy.
Expect far moreof this under President-elect Biden.
Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Austrian-born “Terminator” actor and former California governor, released a 7½-minute video comparing the Capitol riot to a rampage that was a prelude to atrocity:
“Wednesday was the Night of Broken Glass right here in the United States.”
In 1938, Nazis in Germany and Austria vandalized Jewish homes, schools and businesses during an attack that became known as Kristallnacht.
Schwarzenegger likened American democracy to his sword “Conan the Barbarian,” which grew stronger when it was tempered. (AP)
Amazon, Walmart and other retailers are using AI to decide whether a return makes economic sense:
“For inexpensive items or large ones that would incur hefty shipping fees, it is often cheaper to refund the purchase price and let customers keep the products,” The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
Even as rioters violently overran his forces, outgoing Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund said in an exclusive interview, the sergeants at arms for the House and Senate took more than an hour to approve his request.
EXCLUSIVE ● By Carol D. Leonnig, Aaron C. Davis, Peter Hermann and Karoun Demirjian ● Read more »
As President Trump’s term comes to a screeching halt, he leaves behind a party split between MAGA loyalists and Republicans who are ready to turn the page on his presidency.
Vice President Mike Pence’s political future looks murky after he decisively broke with President Trump to preside over the certification of President-elect Joe Biden’s victory.
President Trump will award the Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, to famed football coach Bill Belichick on Thursday, the White House said Sunday night.
New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer, a leading contender in the city’s 2021 mayoral contest, has released an ambitious climate change agenda that would codify several aspects of the Green New Deal in the largest city in the United States.
A man arrested in connection with Wednesday’s attack on Capitol Hill sent text messages in which he considered shooting House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in the head.
Pope Francis prayed for the victims of the Capitol Hill siege and urged the public to remain calm in the wake of an attack on the nation’s capital that left five dead.
ATLANTA — Rev. Raphael Warnock, Georgia’s first black senator-elect and pastor of the famed Ebenezer Baptist Church, said on Sunday that his victory over Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler was part of “God’s vision.”
In the wake of the violent attack on Capitol Hill last week, at least three corporations have announced that they would suspend contributions to the campaigns of lawmakers who objected to the certification of Electoral College votes.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
AP Morning Wire – Jan 11, 2021
View in Browser
AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
US House to proceed with legislation to impeach Trump a second time.
The sinister unfolding of ‘home-grown fascism’ in Capitol assault.
UK again faces virus onslaught; US vaccine rollout slower than expected.
Trump legacy on race shadowed by divisive rhetoric, actions.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/JACQUELYN MARTIN
Pelosi says House will impeach Trump, pushes Pence to oust him; Trump remains defiant amid calls to resign; Biden faces challenge in guiding US past turmoil
The stunning end to Donald Trump’s final turbulent and traumatic days in office is hurtling
ahead as U.S. lawmakers warn of the damage the president could still do before Joe Biden is inaugurated Jan. 20.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says the House will proceed with legislation to impeach Trump an unprecedented second time as she pushes the vice president to invoke constitutional authority to force him out.
“We will act with urgency, because this President represents an imminent threat,” Pelosi said in a letter to colleagues.
Pelosi’s leadership team will also seek a vote on a resolution calling on Vice President Mike Pence and Cabinet officials to invoke the 25th Amendment, with a full House vote expected on Tuesday.
The president is holed up at the White House, increasingly isolated after a mob rioted in the Capitol in support of his false claims of election fraud. Two Republican senators have so far called for Trump to resign.
In the meantime, as Trump enters the last days of his presidency facing a second impeachment and growing calls for his resignation, he will attempt to go on the offensive, with no plans of resigning. Instead, Trump is planning to lash out against the companies that have now denied him his Twitter and Facebook megaphones.
Aides hope he will spend his last days trying to trumpet his policy accomplishments, beginning with a trip Tuesday, to Alamo, Texas, to highlight his administration’s contentious efforts to curb illegal immigration and border wall construction, Jill Colvin reports.
After the Turmoil: President-elect Biden has already been preparing for months to take on a confluence of historic crises — a pandemic that’s killed more than 374,000 Americans and a sluggish economy that’s left millions jobless. He has talked about the need for bipartisan action and unity among Americans to address these challenges. But guiding the the country past the turmoil of the Trump era may be his biggest task. The armed insurrection sparked by Trump’s false allegations of voter fraud and attempts at delegitimizing Biden’s win raised questions about how exactly Biden will achieve unity in a nation so deeply divided. His best bet to achieve that unity — or move in that direction — may be to get real results with the virus and economy, Alexandra Jaffe reports.
Republicans Analysis: At the heart of the violent insurrection was a lie, one that was allowed to fester and flourish by many of the same Republicans now condemning Trump for whipping his supporters into a frenzy with his false attacks on the integrity of the election. The response from some of those officials now? They didn’t think it would come to this. Republicans coming to grips with the intense fallout now face the prospect of a second impeachment proceeding as the president prepares to leave office, Washington Bureau Chief Julie Pace writes.
Fomenting Violence: Trump left plenty of clues he’d try to burn the place down on his way out the door. The clues spread over a lifetime of refusing to acknowledge defeat. They spanned a presidency marked by raw, angry rhetoric, puffed-up conspiracy theories and a fellowship with “patriots” drawn from the seething ranks of right-wing extremists. The clues piled on at light speed when Trump lost the election and wouldn’t admit it. For four years Trump has indulged and sometimes encouraged fringe groups, advancing their conspiracy theories. They stepped forward as his foot soldiers when he exhorted them to go to the Capitol and fight, Calvin Woodward and Deb Riechmann report.
Capitol Virus Spread: House lawmakers may have been exposed to someone testing positive for COVID-19 while they sheltered at an undisclosed location during the siege.
Lawmakers were taken to that location as a violent mob loyal to Trump ransacked the Capitol. The Capitol’s attending physician notified all lawmakers of the potential virus exposure and urged them to be tested. The infected individual wasn’t named. Some lawmakers and staff were furious after video surfaced of Republican lawmakers not wearing their masks in the room during lockdown.
The Backlash: Republicans in Congress who voted against certifying Biden’s presidential victory, even after the mob siege, have been denounced by critics in their home districts. Protesters, newspaper editorial boards and local-level Democrats are demanding that they resign or be ousted by their congressional colleagues, Jeffrey Collins reports.
Making Sense of it All: Americans watched as the hallowed chambers of the Capitol were overrun and defiled by a mob of their own fellow citizens. And then they tried to make sense of it. In letters to the editor and posts on social media. In Iowa, a lifelong Republican mourned the shredding of the country’s political norms. In Tennessee, a pastor and activist wondered if the rioters’ behavior might bring change. In Mississippi, a young teacher worried what her students will make of the violence. Days later, their anger, fear and uncertainties still linger. Adam Geller, Adrian Sainz and Tamara Lush report.
Social Media Bans:Though stripped of his Twitter bullhorn, Trump does have alternative options of much smaller reach led by the far right-friendly Parler. But Parler has already had its wings clipped, with Google and Apple removing it from their online stores, and Amazon booted it off its web-hosting service. Free speech experts anticipate growing pressure on all social media platforms to curb incendiary speech as Americans reel and learn from the violent siege, Frank Bajak reports.
Schwarzenegger Video: Former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger compared the mob that stormed the Capitol to the Nazis and called Trump a failed leader who “will go down in history as the worst president ever.” The Republican said in a video that “Wednesday was the Night of Broken Glass right here in the United States.” In 1938, Nazis in Germany and Austria vandalized Jewish homes, schools and businesses during an attack that became known as Kristallnacht or “the Night of Broken Glass.”
PGA Championship-Trump: The PGA of America has voted to leave Trump National Golf Club for its PGA Championship event next year following the insurrection at the nation’s Capitol. The PGA had agreed in 2014 to take the ’22 PGA to Trump’s course in New Jersey, Doug Ferguson reports.
The unfolding of ‘home-grown fascism’ in Capitol assault, extent of violence revealed; Records show fervent Trump fans fueled Capitol takeover
The deeply sinister nature and shocking scope of the violent assault on the U.S. Capitol by pro-Trump insurrectionists has come into sharp focus.
Under battle flags bearing Donald Trump’s name, the Capitol’s attackers pinned a bloodied police officer in a doorway, his twisted face and screams captured on video. They mortally wounded another officer with a blunt weapon and body-slammed a third over a railing into the crowd. Jay Reeves, Lisa Mascaro and Calvin Woodward have this story.
Democratic Rep. Jim McGovern told the AP, “I saw this crowd of people banging on that glass screaming, Looking at their faces, it occurred to me, these aren’t protesters. These are people who want to do harm. What I saw in front of me,” he added, “was basically home-grown fascism, out of control.”
Law enforcement: Despite ample warnings about pro-Trump demonstrations, U.S. Capitol Police did not bolster staffing and made no preparations for the possibility that the planned protests could escalate into massive violent riots, according to several people briefed on law enforcement’s response. The revelations shed new light on why Capitol police were so quickly overrun by rioters. The department had the same number of officers in place as on a routine day. While some of those officers were outfitted with equipment for a protest, they were no by no means staffed or equipped for a riot, Colleen Long, Michael Balsamo and Lisa Mascaro report.
Who Was There? The violent mob that stormed the Capitol was overwhelmingly made up of longtime Trump supporters. The AP reviewed social media posts, voter registrations, court files and other public records for more than 120 people connected to the rioting. They include Republican Party officials, political donors, far-right militants, white supremacists and adherents of the QAnon conspiracy theory. The evidence gives the lie to claims that the violence was perpetrated by left-wing antifa thugs rather than supporters of the president. An FBI official says investigators have seen “no indication” that antifa activists were disguised as Trump supporters during the Capitol riot. Michael Biesecker, Michael Kunzelman, Gillian Flaccus and Jim Mustian report.
AP PHOTO/PETER MORRISON
PM Johnson under fire as UK battered again by fierce COVID-19 onslaught; Vaccine rollout in US confirms public health officials’ warnings
The crisis facing Britain this winter is depressingly and oppressively familiar: stay-at-home orders and empty streets in a national lockdown; hospitals overflowing; and a daily toll of many hundreds of coronavirus deaths.
In the past 10 months, almost 3 million people in the U.K. have tested positive for coronavirus and 81,000 have died. Johnson has defended his record, but critics say his government’s slow response as the virus emerged from China was the first in a string of lethal mistakes.
US Vaccine Rollout: Public health officials complained for months about not having enough support or money to get vaccines quickly into arms. Now the slower-than-expected start to the largest vaccination effort in U.S. history is proving them right. State and local public health departments across the U.S. cite a variety of obstacles, most notably a lack of leadership from the federal government. Many officials worry that they are losing precious time at the height of the pandemic, and the delays could cost lives, Michelle R. Smith and Candice Choi report.
Ukraine Village Doctor: Riding a horse-drawn cart, one doctor trots along country roads to attend to her patients in several villages nestled in the Carpathian Mountains in western Ukraine. She now fears that the long holidays, during which Ukrainians frequented restaurants and other entertainment venues, attended festive parties and crowded church services, will trigger a surge in new infections. The country of 42 million has recorded more than 1.1 million confirmed cases and nearly 20,000 deaths. Starting Friday, it imposed a broad lockdown aimed at containing a surge in infections, but many medical workers say that the move came too late, Mstyslav Chernov and Yuras Karmanau report.
Donald Trump repeatedly claimed in the final months of his presidency — and without a trace of irony — to have done more for Black Americans than anyone with the “possible exception” of Abraham Lincoln.
His strategy of divisiveness was on display this past week as he urged supporters, mostly white men, to descend on the U.S. Capitol in the name of his baseless claims of election fraud.
Trump was frequently explicit in using race as a cudgel.
He claimed without evidence that Barack Obama, the nation’s first Black president, wasn’t born in the United States, has said Mexican immigrants were “bringing crime” and were “rapists” and argued there were “very fine people on both sides” after violence at a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, left one counterprotester dead.
He privately questioned why the United States would accept more immigrants from Haiti and “shithole countries” in Africa rather than from places such as Norway.
Trump even wrote in a tweet that appeared to be intended for a group of then-first-term lawmakers — progressive Democrats and women of color — to “go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came.”
The crash of a Sriwijaya Air jet carrying 62 people has once again put the safety of Indonesia’s aviation industry under a microscope. The country’s aviation record is one of the worst in Asia, though experts say many improvements have been made in recent years. The U.S. and European Union have both in recent years lifted bans on Indonesian carriers operating in their skies. Saturday’s crash occurred during heavy rain but it’s not known if the weather was a factor. The investigation will look into the plane’s condition, the actions of the crew and other possibilities. The search for the black boxes has intensified.
A leading aid organization has warned that U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s move to designate Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels as a “foreign terrorist organization” would deal another “devastating blow” to the impoverished and war-torn nation. The Norwegian Refugee Council, one of the main humanitarian agencies active in Yemen, said the designation and Pompeo’s planned sanctions on the Houthis “will hamstring the ability of aid agencies to respond” to the humanitarian needs of millions of Yemenis. Relief organizations have long warned that sanctions could prove catastrophic for efforts to help starving Yemeni civilians caught in the conflict between the Houthis and the Saudi-backed Yemeni government.
Gideon Saar has for years been one of Prime Minister’s Benjamin Netanyahu’s most loyal and vocal supporters, serving as Cabinet secretary and government minister. Now, armed with extraordinary political savvy and a searing grudge against his former boss, he could prove to be Netanyahu’s greatest challenge. After breaking away from the Likud Party to form his own faction, Saar is running against Netanyahu in March elections and has emerged as his top rival. The challenge caps the stunning decline of their relationship, pitting a cunning political mind against his former mentor in a deeply personal battle of past grievances.
Authorities say a man posted disturbing social media videos before he killed three people and wounded four others in a series of shootings that started on Chicago’s South Side and ended with his death in a suburban police shootout. Police said that investigators are trying to determine a motive for the attacks. They began Saturday afternoon with the killing of a 30-year-old University of Chicago student from China in a parking garage. 32-year-old Jason Nightengale went on to shoot people in an apartment complex, a store, a car and a restaurant before police killed him.
Meanwhile, in the days since the siege at the Capitol, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the House will proceed with legislation to impeach President Donald Trump and Twitter banned Trump from its platform. Here’s the latest.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
The first in-person classes since CPS schools shut last March are due to happen on Monday for preschool and some special education students. But with the pandemic still surging — and many teachers refusing to report because of COVID-19 fears — parents remain divided about sending their children back for some masked, socially distanced classes.
Vaughn High was the first Chicago school to close due to COVID-19. Monday, it’s among CPS buildings that will reopen to students for the first time since March.
Three people were killed and four injured in a shooting spree that police tied to a single gunman — a man who apparently had made threats in rambling videos posted to social media before the shootings and before he was fatally shot by Evanston police.
The 19 House Democrats who have pledged to vote against Michael Madigan’s bid for another term as speaker hardened their opposition Sunday and pledged to stay united. The legislators who have broken with Madigan have not coalesced around an alternative candidate. Sunday evening, one of the three announced challengers for the speaker’s post, Rep. Kathleen Willis of Addison, took herself out of the running, sources said.
As Bears chairman George McCaskey surveys the entirety of the 8-8 season and determines what direction he wants to head, he should not have any questions about how the Bears stack up against their rival and the No. 1 seed in the NFC, the Green Bay Packers, writes Brag Biggs.
It was bound to happen. After several fast food chains revamped their fried chicken sandwiches over the past year in the hopes of standing out in the ongoing fried chicken sandwich wars, KFC is finally getting into the game. And the Tribune’s humble fried chicken sandwich correspondent, Nick Kindelsperger, who once ranked 26 of the fast food options, obviously had to investigate. Here’s what he thought.
With business gatherings and conventions at a standstill since the start of the pandemic, 2020 was a lost year for Chicago hotels. But this year may be worse for many owners.
With little cash coming in, many hotel owners are in default to creditors, and experts in the industry say bankers and other lenders are getting impatient as the pandemic stretches on. Beyond that, owners are faced with the prospect that meetings and conventions scheduled months from now will be canceled. David Roeder has the story…
Rep. Mike Quigley D-Ill., describes what happened on a Chicago-bound flight Thursday when United Airlines was forced to throw five Trump supporters off the plane.
A 25-year-old, one-page section of an Illinois law governing educational labor that limits the Chicago Teachers Union’s bargaining rights could be repealed as soon as this weekend in Springfield.
Community groups are urging Illinois Senate President Don Harmon to allow that chamber to vote during this week’s lame-duck session on a bill to do away with an appointed school board.
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Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 374,329.
House Democrats plan to impeach President Trump for a second time, determined to indict him days before the end of his tenure as punishment for his encouragement to supporters last week to lay siege to the Capitol in a violent few hours that left five people dead and placed Vice President Pence and lawmakers in physical jeopardy.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said Sunday night in a message to House members that leaders will ask today for unanimous consent to impeach Trump, setting the stage for his second such repudiation as president, which would make history if approved by a narrow Democratic majority in a floor vote anticipated this week. That vote could attract Republican backing from colleagues who say they are deeply shaken by Trump’s actions, The Hill’s Scott Wong and Mike Lillis report.
Pelosi said she would prefer that Pence, working with a majority of Trump’s Cabinet, take the initiative to strip Trump of his presidential authority using the 25th Amendment. The House today will introduce a resolution that calls on Pence to take action.
The New York Times: House moves to force Trump out, vowing impeachment if Pence won’t act.
Reuters: Trump again may turn to Rudy Giuliani to defend him against impeachment.
The vice president, who was upbraided by Trump last week for not heeding his direction to violate the Constitution and overturn states’ electoral tallies to thwart President-elect Joe Biden, has no plans to declare the president unfit to fulfill his oath of office, according to news reports. Pence will attend Biden’s inauguration on Jan. 20, while Trump has announced he will not.
A few Senate Republicans openly condemned Trump and urged him to resign immediately, despite their expectations that he will refuse to step down. Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.), who is retiring from Congress in 2022, said on Sunday that the president “spiraled down into a kind of madness” after his Nov. 3 defeat (NBC News and The Hill).
Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), during an interview in her home state, excoriated Trump. “I want him out. He has caused enough damage,” she said (The Hill). Murkowski, who voted to acquit the president a year ago when he was impeached by the House, suggested she might leave the Republican Party if it continues to support Trump.
Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.) told CBS on Friday that he would “definitely consider whatever articles they might move.”
But Senate conviction, either before Trump leaves office or after, would require support from every Senate Democrat and at least 17 Republicans — a tall order ahead of the 2022 elections, when 20 Republican seats are in play.
The impeachment strategy that some House Democrats have talked about could put any indictment of Trump adopted this week into a kind of cryogenic sleep while Biden races to get his Cabinet nominees confirmed and parts of his 100-day legislative agenda through narrow Democratic majorities in both chambers. Months from now, the House could send the Trump article of impeachment to the Senate for a trial. If the upper chamber convicts Trump by a two-thirds majority — bolstered by results from multiple investigations into the Capitol riots — that action plus a separate Senate vote by a simple majority could bar Trump from holding a federal elective office in the future. He is considering another presidential bid in 2024.
NBC News: “The Senate will decide later what to do with that impeachment,” House Majority Whip James Clyburn (D-S.C.) said on Sunday. The House, he said, could vote on impeachment as early as Wednesday. Clyburn’s private office in the Capitol was vandalized by last week’s rioters, and his iPad was stolen.
However, as time passes under a new administration and as the 2022 elections draw closer, senators’ fear and revulsion could shift as Trump begins to operate as an ex-president without the trappings and clout of his office, even if he nurtures his sway among his loyal supporters.
The Hill: Democrats, GOP face defining moments after Capitol riot.
The New York Times: For Trump and the nation, a final test of accountability.
Reps. David Cicilline (D-R.I.); Ted Lieu (D-Calif.) and Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) plan to introduce a Trump impeachment article today. Cicilline tweeted they have more than 200 House cosponsors.
The New York Times: Congress’s impeachment debate will turn on Trump’s remarks to followers gathered in Washington on the afternoon of Jan. 6. He told his supporters, “We’re going to walk down, and I’ll be there with you. … We are going to the Capitol, and we are going to try and give — the Democrats are hopeless, they are never voting for anything, not even one vote, but we are going to try — give our Republicans, the weak ones, because the strong ones don’t need any of our help, we’re try — going to try and give them the kind of pride and boldness that they need to take back our country.”
The Hill: After the Capitol violence, a majority in a new poll say Trump should be removed from office before his term ends.
Other calls from allies of the president for his removal from office continued to pile up. Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R), who describes Trump as a friend for two decades, joined the chorus on Sunday (The Hill).
“We had people killed, and to me there’s not a whole lot of question here,” said Christie. “I think if inciting to insurrection isn’t [an impeachable offense], I don’t really know what it is.”
Mick Mulvaney, Trump’s former White House chief of staff, predicted that conservative voters will move on from their support of the president in the coming years. He argued that “the ideas are bigger than the people” (The Hill).
The Hill: Sunday shows — Capitol riots, Trump future dominate.
Dan Balz, The Washington Post: For Trump, the end is coming swiftly and with stinging rebukes.
For now, the president has a more immediate concern: whether Republicans will stick by him for nine more days before he leaves Washington. As The Hill’s Alexander Bolton notes, the number of GOP congressional lawmakers who publicly want Trump to leave office can be counted on two hands, and it remains an open question whether support in that area grows in the coming days.
National security concerns are behind some calls to remove Trump from office. As commander in chief, he has power to call up the armed forces to quell civil unrest, as well as nearly unfettered authority to launch a nuclear weapon. Some experts say tensions with global hotspots such as Iran could still flare up before Trump leaves office (The Hill).
Niall Stanage: The Memo: GOP and the nation grapple with what comes next.
Politico: Trump allies warn him not to run in 2024.
Meanwhile, the president is set to travel on Tuesday to Alamo, Texas, to visit the Rio Grande Valley where he will mark the completion of 400 miles of border wall and the Trump administration’s work on immigration. And first lady Melania Trump this morning issued a statement five days after the events at the Capitol calling for civil national healing.
MORE FALLOUT: The last five days have brought heavy scrutiny for Sens. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Ted Cruz (R-Texas) from top donors and lobbyists after leading the objection charge to the electoral count on Wednesday.
The two lawmakers, used to criticism from across the aisle, have been subjects of Democratic resignation calls. However, it’s now raining down from those in their own ranks, with the two potential 2024 candidates facing criticism from key givers and supporters.
Hawley, who also lost a book deal from Simon & Schuster late last week, saw two of his top donors vow never to support him again. Cruz has also eroded support, including from Chad Sweet, his 2016 campaign chairman.
“Donald Trump and those who aided and abetted him in his relentless assault on our Democracy – including Senators Josh Hawley and Ted Cruz – must be denounced,” Sweet wrote. “In particular, I made it clear to Senator Cruz, whom I have known for years, before the Joint Session of Congress, that if he proceeded to object to the Electoral count of the legitimate slates of delegates certified by the States, I could no longer support him.”
The financial issues are expected to affect not just the two 2024 potentials. A steady stream of companies and organizations, including JPMorgan, Marriott, Citibank and Blue Cross, have said in recent days that they will not donate to lawmakers who objected on Wednesday (The Hill).
It remains to be seen whether those donations extend to committees, including the National Republican Congressional Committee and the National Republican Senatorial Committee, which is helmed by Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), who objected to the results in Arizona and is a potential 2024 candidate himself, during the 2022 cycle. However, GOP operatives are skeptical the announcements from those companies will have a ton of impact moving forward.
“The fuel of modern campaigns is grassroots online fundraising and super PACs funded by mega donors. That will likely continue to grow regardless of corporate giving,” said Alex Conant, a top aide to Sen. Marco Rubio’s (R-Fla.) 2016 presidential campaign.
The Wall Street Journal: Financial tech company Stripe stops processing payments for Trump campaign website.
NBC News: Hawley becomes a pariah on Capitol Hill.
John F. Harris, Politico: Trump’s effort to overturn the election should be investigated like 9/11.
Security has also grown as a paramount issue in the aftermath of Wednesday’s riot. Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) said in a statement on Sunday that he spoke with FBI Director Christopher Wray on Saturday about the potential issues surrounding security during next week’s inauguration as threats continue to crop up.
“The threat of violent extremist groups remains high and the next few weeks are critical in our democratic process,” Schumer said of the inauguration. “Given that the same incendiary, dangerous rhetoric online that occurred before January 6 … has only escalated since, I impressed upon Director Wray the vitalness of the FBI to work with other federal and state agencies to remain highly proactive and extremely vigilant to defend our democracy.”
The Washington Post reported on Sunday that two individuals who appeared at the Capitol on Wednesday with zip ties and handcuffs are under investigation by the FBI as questions rise over whether they were on scene to potentially kill or capture lawmakers or others.
Axios: House increases security for lawmaker travel.
Politico: “Inside job”: House Dems ask if Capitol rioters had hidden help.
The New York Times: How a string of failures led to a dark day at the Capitol.
Three days after Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick died, the White House finally lowered the flags across government to half-staff. The flags were lowered shortly before 2 p.m., well after the flags were lowered at the United States Capitol (NBC News).
Fox 5: Capitol police officer Howard Liebengood, 51, dead by suicide after responding to Capitol riot.
The Washington Post: Lawmakers may have been exposed to the coronavirus in Capitol lockdown, attending physician says.
Amazon, Apple and Google on Saturday cut off Parler, an app used by Trump supporters (The New York Times). … The president’s backers who stormed the Capitol openly relied on mainstream social media platforms to publicly plan the attack. As those platforms suspend communications by the president and his campaign arm, as well as other users because of rules against fomenting violence and peddling misinformation, Trump’s base of fans is shifting communications to alternative conservative-leaning sites and apps to try to mobilize future protests in Washington and elsewhere (The Hill). … Rioters are vowing to assault the Capitol building as well as government locations in states on Jan. 17 and return to Washington to stir up trouble on Inauguration Day (NBC News and The New York Times).
NBC News analysis: The internet as most people know it has decided that Trump is no longer welcome. It’s a turning point for digital speech that was years in the making, but it took just a few hours to happen.
> D.C. statehood: Mayor Muriel Bowser and others again call for Washington, D.C., autonomy following last week’s Capitol violence and the emergency call for help from the U.S. Capitol Police to the city and the National Guard (The Washington Post).
> Sports: The PGA announced Sunday night that in the wake of Wednesday’s mob attack, the 2022 PGA Championship will no longer take place at Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, N.J., which was set to become the first major to take place at a Trump property.
“It’s become clear that conducting the PGA Championship at Trump Bedminster would be detrimental to the PGA of America brand and would put at risk the PGA’s ability to deliver our many programs and sustain the longevity of our mission,” said Jim Richerson, president of the PGA Tour of America, said after the PGA terminated its agreement. “Our board has thus made the decision to exercise our right to terminate the contract to hold the 2022 PGA Championship at Trump Bedminster” (ESPN).
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
NEW ADMINISTRATION: Biden says he’s proud to have completed his Cabinet announcements just as the new Congress gets to work, but it appears unlikely that any Cabinet nominee will clear Senate confirmation by the afternoon of Jan. 20, as has been the case with past presidents.
Retired four-star Army Gen. Lloyd Austin, Biden’s choice to lead the Pentagon, requires a congressional waiver to serve, which has slowed the confirmation process. Both the House and Senate must agree to waive a requirement that Austin wait seven years after leaving active duty before he can become Defense secretary. He retired in 2016 (The New York Times). Former Trump Defense Secretary James Mattis secured such a waiver in 2017 (Politico).
> Biden announced Ambassador William Burns as his nominee to serve as CIA director this morning, calling him an “exemplary diplomat with decades of experience on the world stage keeping our people and our country safe and secure (The Hill).
Burns previously served as deputy secretary of State and ambassador to Russia. Unlike the Trump administration, the CIA post will not be a Cabinet-level position (CBS News).
>Nominations: Biden says he will unveil details on Thursday of his pitch to Congress to enact “trillions” of dollars in additional investments in pandemic relief and economic support for Americans. If enacted, it would follow the recent enactment of $900 billion in coronavirus relief, which Biden has called a “down payment.” On Friday, the president-elect said passage of Democrats’ relief bill will be the incoming administration’s immediate priority after he’s sworn in. He spoke with House and Senate Democratic leaders on Friday afternoon. “The price tag will be high,” he said (CNET).
CNBC: Biden will ask Congress to immediately cancel $10,000 in student debt per borrower in response to the COVID-19 crisis, and extend a federally ordered pause in borrower repayments, which is set to expire.
> Cyber czar: The annual National Defense Authorization Act, which recently became law over Trump’s veto, established a White House cyber czar position that could help the incoming Biden administration respond to the SolarWinds cyber attack on government departments orchestrated by the Russians (The Hill).
> Regulatory issues: The Trump White House weakened guidance drafted by the Environmental Protection Agency to ban imports of products that contain a cancer-linked compound, according to documents reviewed by The Hill. The agency wants to limit potential exposure to chemicals used as a nonstick coating on products ranging from raincoats to carpets to cookware. It’s a regulatory debate the Biden administration will inherit (The Hill). … The financial services industry expects stricter regulation and oversight under the Biden administration (The Hill).
>International relations: The Trump administration has maintained a hard-line approach to the Cuban government — a posture supported by primarily older Cuban American voters located in South Florida. The current policy may complicate efforts by the Biden administration to return to Obama-era relations with the people of Cuba (The Hill).
OPINION
America will achieve herd immunity to Trumpism. I hope, by Niall Ferguson, columnist, Bloomberg Opinion. https://bloom.bg/2LjuAX7
Releasing more vaccines for first doses could create more problems than it solves, by Leana S. Wen, contributing columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3q8D41U
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 11 a.m. Democrats are expected to introduce a resolution calling on Pence and a majority of the Cabinet to invoke the 25th Amendment to remove Trump’s authority as president. A Tuesday vote on the resolution is expected. They will also introduce an article of impeachment.
The Senate convenes Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. for a pro forma session. Senators are not currently scheduled to return to Washington until the inauguration.
The president has no events on his public schedule.
Pence will lead a 2 p.m. meeting of the White House coronavirus task force.
Biden and Vice President-electKamala Harris will receive the President’s Daily Brief and meet with transition and economic advisers. The president-elect will also receive his second dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.
➔ CORONAVIRUS: Global COVID-19 infections over the weekend surpassed 90 million confirmed cases, as more countries brace for spread of virulent strains of a disease that has now killed nearly 2 million people worldwide. The number of infections around the globe doubled in just 10 weeks, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University on Sunday. The United States leads the world in the total number of infections (The Associated Press).
> Restrictions: In Kentucky, Republican lawmakers who oppose restrictions to try to contain rising COVID-19 infections and deaths voted on Saturday to limit the authority of Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear to close Kentucky commerce, sending six bills to his desk (WKYT). The state, with 4.5 million people, has repeatedly surpassed its own coronavirus records. Kentucky now has 300,000 confirmed cases of infection since early last year and more than 2,800 fatalities (The Associated Press).
> Vaccines and treatments: Former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb called on officials to “hit the reset” button on the U.S.’s vaccine rollout, which has been underwhelming over its first month in the United States. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 22.1 million doses of the vaccines have been distributed, but just 6.7 million people to date have received the first of two doses recommended by drug makers Pfizer and Moderna (CBS News). … A new research study shows that convalescent plasma drawn from patients who contracted COVID-19 is effective as a treatment for the coronavirus if administered early in the course of illness (The New York Times).
> Great Britain & COVID-19: Prime Minister Boris Johnson and the British government are under fire because of the rampant spread of COVID-19. More than 3 million people in the United Kingdom have tested positive for the coronavirus and 81,000 have died — 30,000 in just the last 30 days. The economy has contracted by 8 percent, more than 800,000 jobs have been lost and hundreds of thousands more furloughed workers are in limbo (The Associated Press). … Meanwhile, Johnson and his team want to ramp up the country’s vaccine rollout, aiming by the fall to inoculate every adult in the United Kingdom who wants the shot (The Associated Press). … Queen Elizabeth II, 94, and Prince Philip, 99, each received the COVID-19 vaccine on Saturday, Buckingham Palace announced (BBC).
➔ INTERNATIONAL: In Indonesia, authorities on Sunday said they determined the location of a crash site and black boxes of a Boeing 737-500, one day after the aircraft crashed into the Java Sea with 62 people on board after taking off from Jakarta headed for the capital of West Kalimantan province on Indonesia’s Borneo island, about a 90-minute flight. There was no sign of survivors and the cause of the crash has not been determined. Fishermen in the area reported hearing an explosion on Saturday afternoon in bad weather (The Associated Press).
➔ FINANCIAL MARKETS: The COVID-19 pandemic has worsened globally and in the United States. A mob attacked the Capitol, and five Americans lost their lives. The nation is navigating a fragile high wire between an outgoing and incoming government. Lawmakers want to impeach the president for the second time, unheard of in U.S. history. And another 140,000 Americans lost their jobs in December. Sounds horrific, right? And yet investors are showing signs of escalating exuberance. The Wall Street Journal and CNBC report why markets may be expecting a full-fledged economic recovery.
THE CLOSER
And finally … In a nail-biting environment in which Americans are keenly aware that the rich are getting richer and everyone else could tumble down the ladder tomorrow, there’s plenty of interest in Tuesday’s Mega Millions drawing, worth $600 million for the fourth time in history, and the Powerball jackpot, worth $550 million during a drawing scheduled on Wednesday (6ABC).
Mega Millions tickets are sold in 44 states plus Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Powerball is played in 45 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
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American businesses and government agencies could be spending upward of $100 billion over many months to contain and fix the damage from the Russian hack against the SolarWinds software used by so many Fortune 500 companies and U.S. government departments. Read More…
Police officers saluted their fallen brother, Officer Brian D. Sicknick, as the procession of his hearse passed by the U.S. Capitol on Sunday. Sicknick died Thursday from injuries suffered while defending the Capitol from a violent pro-Trump mob on Wednesday. Read More…
CQ Roll Call’s Chris Cioffi, Katherine Tully-McManus and Tom Williams were inside the House and Senate chambers when the mob descended on the Capitol. From witnessing lawmakers take care of each other to being shuffled to shelter, here are their stories from the tragic, historic day. Read More…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
In the wake of the Capitol attacks, Democrats have focused their punitive efforts on President Donald Trump. But as calls mount to find and prosecute the rioters and remove the president, Democrats are split on what consequences Trump’s enablers in Congress should face, if any. Read More…
Federal criminal charges from the mob attack on Congress highlight how much more dangerous the situation could have been, including what federal prosecutors said was a truck on the Capitol grounds with 11 Molotov cocktails made with a material to make them more like homemade napalm. Read More…
ANALYSIS — Republicans would likely benefit from a midterm cycle focused on Democratic control of Washington, but President Donald Trump’s shadow looms over the races. His dedication to punishing GOP senators who didn’t sufficiently support him could result in some costly primaries. Read More…
As House Democrats on Friday discussed whether to impeach President Trump for a second time, President-elect Joe Biden said “the quickest way” to remove Trump from office is through the Jan. 20 inauguration at which Biden will be sworn in. Read More…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Breaking down Trump’s final full week in office
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
Today is the first day of President Donald Trump’s last full week in office.
President-elect Joe Biden will be sworn in as the 46th president of the United States in nine days. Since the assault on the U.S. Capitol, everyone is trying to figure out the answer to a question we have all explored before:
Will Trump complete his full term? In short, yes. Well … probably. Here’s the state of play this morning on the three ways that Trump could leave the White House early, in order of likelihood:
1) IMPEACHMENT — Timing is everything, especially when you’re running out of time.
Democrats are barreling forward with plans to impeach Trump for the second time. Last night, Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced to members that the House will try to pass a resolution by unanimous consent calling on VP Mike Pence and cabinet members to invoke the 25th Amendment to remove the president from office. If that fails, the resolution will be brought to the floor Tuesday.
House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) said articles of impeachment could be drafted by today but might not reach the House floor until Tuesday or Wednesday.
But Clyburn also suggested onCNN’s “State of the Union” that the House might hit pause before sending them to the Senate, since Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has indicated the earliest an impeachment trial could begin is Jan. 19, and even that’s unlikely.
A few other factors guiding Democrats’ thinking: Impeaching Trump the day before Biden takes office might set a less-than-ideal tone to kick off his term. Senators have a lot on their plates, like confirming his Cabinet nominees.
“Let’s give President-elect Biden the 100 days he needs to get his agenda off and running,” Clyburn, a close ally of Biden, said. “And maybe we will send the articles some time after that.” If Trump were to be impeached and convicted, he could lose the ability to run for president again in 2024.
2) THE 25TH AMENDMENT — Cabinet members have not formally presented invoking the 25th Amendment to Pence, who would have to be on board. Two of them — Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao and Education Secretary Betsy Devos — bashed the president for his inflammatory rhetoric, but they resigned before having to publicly vote on the move.
White House sources have told me that releasing the idea of exercising the 25th Amendment into the ether was meant to serve as a warning shot to Trump to rein in the chaos.
Pence, for his part, hasn’t commented on the possibility publicly. But CNN reported over the weekend that the VP “wants to preserve the option in case President Donald Trump becomes more unstable.”
The “more unstable” bit suggests that the vice president has already identified some instability regarding Trump’s fitness to serve.
3) RESIGNATION — Democrats and even some Republicans (including GOP Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania on Sunday) are urging him to step down. Senior advisers have said he will not.
It took Trump 65 days to acknowledge his defeat. In a statement Thursday, he still peddled the lie that the election was rigged and that the facts show he won. Trump would only abandon the presidency if he felt he had no other choice, most likely because staying put would thrust him into legal trouble. Or, if he had something to gain that he couldn’t turn down, such as a pardon by the vice president.
Neither is the case.
Besides, there is nothing Trump dislikes more than a loser. A resignation would amount to quitting, and he views quitters as losers.
I know this because I have covered Trump since the 2016 presidential campaign. This feels like a good place for a brief introduction.
My name is Weijia Jiang. I’m a CBS News White House correspondent.
For over five years, I have thought about Donald J. Trump every single day. Sometimes for hours a day. The relationship between a reporter and her subject is, like all relationships, complicated. I have spent a lot of time reflecting about the assignment, especially during the past few exceptionally draining days. I keep coming back to a question that I wrote in my notepad in early December, when I thought the president might take questions from reporters. (He didn’t. In fact, he has only done that twice since Election Day.)
As a public servant, you are supposed to put the country first. How is refusing to concede putting America before your own ego?
I realized that over the course of the past four years, there were many things I could have swapped out for “refusing to concede.” Most recently, “calling on your supporters to act” and then “refusing to condemn the violence.” It is notable that Trump has not acknowledged his part in the protests. I thought about this again yesterday, when I was at the White House the moment the flags were finally lowered to honor the lives of Capitol Police Officers Howard Liebengood, who took his own life over the weekend, and Brian Sicknick, who died five days ago.
Why did it take so long?
I should probably revise my original question to ask:
What do you put before your own ego?
I believe the bottom line of his likely answer led to his own undoing, which we have witnessed in real time.
As a result, Trump will spend this week attempting to salvage what’s left of the credibility of his presidency.
My CBS News colleague Arden Farhi reports that the president is expected to make remarks today to highlight legacy items and attack Big Tech after losing his social media megaphones. He will likely bring up the Capitol riots, but they are not expected to be the centerpiece of his speech.
On Tuesday, Trump plans to visit the U.S.-Mexico border to tout the 400-mile wall that his administration built, or rebuilt, since much of it was to reinforce what was already there. The White House is calling it a “promise kept.” But the president promised a wall along the entire border, which is nearly 2,000 miles long.
Then there’s that immigration reform plan that never was.
We are also watching the spiraling relationship with Pence.
Sometimes, a lack of action tells us plenty.
If one of my closest colleagues and I had a blowup fight, and he also happened to have the power to destroy me, I would probably butter him up with his favorite wine or a nice orchid. At the least, I would try my best to hash it out. But the two men have not spoken since Wednesday morning before the violence unfolded. That means the president didn’t check in on his VP, whose safety was in jeopardy, during or after the attacks.
Trump is still angry that Pence didn’t use an authority that he does not possess to interfere in Congress’ Electoral College vote count. Anddespite Trump’s acknowledgement of defeat, he does not really believe he lost the election.
Yet, the main question overshadowing his final stretch in office is whether he belongs there at all.
WEIJIA’S PLAYBOOK READS
— The U.S. vaccination effort is not inspiring much confidence so far. Former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottleib said on CBS’ “Face the Nation” that the country’s vaccine distribution needs a reset. In the WSJ, he wrote about how the administration should deal with treating new variants. Important note: A senior official on the White House Coronavirus Task Force tells me there’s no evidence of a “new” U.S. strain — yet.
— It seemed as though nothing could have shaken Trump’s allies from his pole of power, especially for those who aspire to have power themselves. But apparently, there was a bottom for many of his fiercest supporters. Now, his staff is barely holding on. Reuters’ Jeff Mason and Steve Holland report that the “White House is in ‘meltdown’ as it lurches through his final days.” One source told me the riots have left him feeling “physically ill” for days.
— The images from the Capitol riots were unbelievable. I am in awe of the journalists who put their lives at risk so we could see and hear them. But pictures and video have limits, and they are subject to interpretation. This reporter captured raw fear without either, relying instead on her memory.
NBC’s Haley Talbot writes, “I started to think about what I would use to defend our group if the mob were to smash through the third-floor glass and enter the gallery. The congresswoman next to me had a cane. That’s what I’d use. I thought about how I’d position myself to block as many people as possible.”
— Did you miss the Twitter notifications this weekend? THE ALL CAPS THREADS THAT SUDDENLY FLASHED ON YOUR PHONE SCREEN AT ALL HOURS OF THE DAY AND NIGHT?
I wouldn’t use the word “miss,” considering the tweets contributed to five people losing their lives. But I and other reporters who cover him certainly felt their absence. The tweets not only gave the world an unfiltered look at the way in which Trump views it, they were also direct quotes from the president himself. People get paid good money to control our access to both, but he fired off tweets without permission.
New York magazine’s Olivia Nuzzi writes that Trump’s tweets “were the Presidency. Stupid, grammatically incoherent, racist, false, mean, petty, hilarious. His online persona was the same as his private self.”
— If you’re too embarrassed to say out loud, “Wait, what is Parler?”, this NYT piece is a good primer.
— Early on in my career, I used to transcribe Steve Hartman’s stories so I could study his writing. I still do, even though we are now colleagues at CBS News. I’ve heard many pundits talking about why we will prevail after the Capitol attacks, but Steve explains it effortlessly with this line:
“Because the soul of America can’t be ransacked and the solution to what ails us sure as heck isn’t under a dome.”
THE BIDEN COVID RESPONSE — “Tensions grow on Biden’s team over odds of making vaccination goal,” by Adam Cancryn and Tyler Pager: “President-elect Joe Biden has grown frustrated with the team in charge of plotting his coronavirus response, amid rising concerns that his administration will fall short of its promise of 100 million vaccinations in the first 100 days, according to people familiar with the conversations.
“Biden has expressed criticism on multiple occasions to groups of transition officials — including one confrontation where Biden conveyed to Covid coordinator Jeff Zients and his deputy, Natalie Quillian, that their team was underperforming. … In interviews, multiple senior transition officials defended Zients and stressed the enormity of the challenge, noting that the Trump administration has refused to share key information for weeks.”
CORONAVIRUS RAGING … 1,999 American deaths and 223,000 newly diagnosed cases were reported Sunday.
IMPEACHMENT LATEST — “Pelosi to move forward with impeachment if Pence doesn’t act to remove Trump,” by Sarah Ferris, Heather Caygle and Kyle Cheney: “On Monday, multiple House Democrats plan to introduce impeachment resolutions that would become the basis of any impeachment article considered by the House later this week. … Currently, 211 voting members (plus three nonvoting members) support [the] legislation, and they are hoping to reach 217 voting members by Monday morning, enough for the House to impeach Trump, one Democratic source familiar with the matter told POLITICO.”
MODERATE DEMS: IMPEACHMENT WILL BACKFIRE ON BIDEN — A bipartisan group of House members and senators huddled virtually over the weekend in a bid to halt the impeachment train. Members of the House Problem Solvers Caucus along with a swath of senators worry that the eleventh-hour impeachment effort will only incite more violence and turn Trump into a martyr.
Their preference: censure Trump instead of impeaching him. But Democratic leaders broadly agree censure isn’t enough.
Rep. Tom Reed (R-N.Y.) has been seeking signatures on a letter to Biden imploring him to call for unity and prevent what he’s calling “snap-judgment impeachment.” Reed’s also been trying to get in touch with Biden personally. The president-electso far has steered clear of endorsing or opposing impeachment, saying it’s up to Congress.
Some MAGA-aligned House Republicans are already whispering about exacting revenge on Democrats — by potentially using House procedures to instigate an impeachment of Biden. “Republicans will figure this out. … It will be their favorite new tool. We’re such imbeciles,” said another Democrat opposed to impeachment. “We never think about the consequences. It’s going to be like: Game on. Let’s impeach [Biden] 12 times in a week.” (h/t Rachael Bade)
— PELOSI on “60 Minutes”: “This president is guilty of inciting insurrection. He has to pay a price for that.”
“To be on the safe side, Sund asked House and Senate security officials for permission to request that the D.C. National Guard be placed on standby in case he needed quick backup. But, Sund said Sunday, they turned him down. In his first interview since pro-Trump rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol last week, Sund, who has since resigned his post, said his supervisors were reluctant to take formal steps to put the Guard on call even as police intelligence suggested that the crowd President Trump had invited to Washington to protest his defeat probably would be much larger than earlier demonstrations.”
— Jacob Angeli Chansley “said he’s not worried about being arrested for his actions in the Capitol on Wednesday. ‘No, no, I’ve already spoken with the FBI. When I heard they were looking for me, I called them,’ he said. ‘That’s the kind of guy I am.’” National Review
— “Jacob Anthony Chansley, a.k.a. Jake Angeli, of Arizona, was charged with knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority, and with violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds. Chansley was taken into custody today.” DOJ press release
REACTION FROM CORPORATE AMERICA — “Stripe Stops Processing Payments for Trump Campaign Website,”WSJ: “The financial-technology company handles card payments for millions of online businesses and e-commerce platforms, including Mr. Trump’s campaign website and online fundraising apparatus. Stripe is cutting off the president’s campaign account for violating its policies against encouraging violence, the people said.”
— FIRST IN PLAYBOOK … END CITIZENS UNITED is calling on corporations to demand their campaign contributions be returned from any members of Congress who voted to overturn the results of the presidential election last week. ECU also called on companies to demand their contributions back from the Republican Attorneys General Association, which it said “helped recruit for and incite the riot through its dark money organization.” Twenty top corporations — including Amazon, Google and Walmart — gave about $16 million in total to these lawmakers.
— CHAD SWEET, LONGTIME CRUZ ADVISER, CONDEMNS THE TEXAS SENATOR: “Donald Trump and those who aided and abetted him in his relentless assault on our Democracy – including Senators Josh Hawley and Ted Cruz – must be denounced.” Read more
PITCH PERFECT PARODY FROM ALEXANDRA PETRI: “I see no choice but to resign from this Death Star as it begins to explode” WaPo
JOHN HARRIS COLUMN: “Trump’s Effort To Overturn The Election Should Be Investigated Like 9/11”: “No previous transition has raised similar doubts about whether the executive branch, including the military, is being run with a clear and lawful chain of command, with a psychologically competent individual at the top. It is imperative that a multitude of urgent questions be answered in a comprehensive way, by an independent body with subpoena power to review documentary evidence and compel testimony under oath.”
GOP CONGRESSMAN SAYS MEMBERS VOTED OUT OF FEAR OF VIOLENCE: Rep. Peter Meijer (R-Mich.): “[O]ne of the saddest things is I had colleagues who, when it came time to recognize reality and vote to certify Arizona and Pennsylvania in the Electoral College, they knew in their heart of hearts that they should’ve voted to certify, but some had legitimate concerns about the safety of their families. They felt that that vote would put their families in danger.” Reason
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: The Campaign for Accountability is filing a complaint this morning against Rep. Mo Brooks (R-Ala.) with the House Office of Congressional Ethics over whether he “violated federal law by inciting a riot as part of a seditious conspiracy to use force to prevent Congress from carrying out its constitutional and statutory duties to count the votes of the Electoral College.” The left-leaning group cites this passage from Brooks’ Wednesday speech before the crowd at the Save America March: “Today is the day American patriots start taking down names and kicking ass! Now our ancestors sacrificed their blood, their sweat, their tears, their fortunes and sometimes their lives … Are you willing to do the same? My answer is yes! Louder!” Full complaint
TRUMP’S MONDAY — The president has nothing on his public schedule. Pence will lead a coronavirus task force meeting in the Situation Room at 2 p.m.
— Biden and Harris will receive the President’s Daily Brief and meet with transition and economic advisers. Biden will also get the second dose of the coronavirus vaccine.
Programming note:You’ll notice some guest writers as we prepare to officially relaunch Playbook on Jan. 19. In the meantime, we also want to hear from you: What do you love most about Playbook? How could we be more valuable to you?Let us know — we’ll read every submission.
MEDIAWATCH — The Appeal is announcing a major expansion of its newsroom and product offerings this year, including six new editors and a daily news show produced with NowThis. Chris Geidner will be director of editorial strategy and senior legal analyst. He previously was senior adviser for law and policy at The Justice Collaborative, and is a BuzzFeed alum.
TRANSITIONS — Jesse Hunt will oversee comms for the Republican Governors Association during the 2022 election cycle. He previously was comms director for the NRSC. (h/t Alex Isenstadt) … The Hudson Institute is adding Julia Sibley as comms director and Sarah Russell as manager of public programming. Sibley previously was deputy director of comms at the International Republican Institute. Russell most recently worked in the White House’s Office of the Senior Counselor and Office of Presidential Advance. …
… Lockwood Strategy,a Democratic digital firm that was mainly in-house for Acronym in 2020, is moving to become a full-service agency and taking on new clients. Shannon Kowalczyk will be CEO, and Clay Schroers and Victor Nguyen-Long will be principals.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Courtney Kube, NBC News Pentagon correspondent, and Eric Dent welcomed Andrew Joseph “AJ” Dent on Saturday afternoon. He came in at 8 lbs, 2 oz. Pic… Another pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Joe Lai, VP of government affairs at BGR Group. A fun fact about him: “My parents — who are immigrants from Hong Kong — own a small business that sells fruits and vegetables. I’m a good cook.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Rashida Jones,incoming MSNBC president … Alex Stone, deputy director of White House management and administration, is 31 … Steven Law … C.R. Wooters, partner at FIO360 … John Emerson (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Ashley Czin, deputy VP of policy and research at PhRMA … Jonathan Kott … John Milne … Ben Barrettof the Aspen Institute … Emma Ernst, special assistant for strategy and comms at the CEA (h/t Rachael Slobodien) … Richard Posner is 82 … Gerald Rafshoon… Daria Grastara of Realtime Media … Jennifer Higgins … Mary Jacoby (h/t Tim Burger) …
… Rep. Mike Turner (R-Ohio) is 61 … Jessica Brouckaert, associate at Dickinson Wright (h/t fiance Brian Bartlett) … Chris Jusuf … Kevin Mooney … ABC News’ Caragh Fisher O’Connor … Blair Brandt is 33 … Chris Beauregard is 31 … Alex Sarp … Brooke Anderson … Anne Cronin … Lynn Blitzer … Ron Phillips … Catherine Andrews … Ben Finkenbinder, senior director of executive comms at Salesforce, is 36 (h/t Ben Chang) … Travis Shank … Colton Henson … Randy Borntrager … Jim Hightower … Frederic Mishkin … John Sonsalla … Helen Gym … Alex White … A.J. Rice
26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
Voltaire’s anti-Christian agenda undermined France, disclosed by Yale’s 8th President, Timothy Dwight – American Minute with Bill Federer
Yale College was founded in the Colony of Connecticut on October 9, 1701 by ten Congregational Christian ministers as the Collegiate School at Killingworth, Milford and Saybrook.
In 1716, it was moved to New Haven, Connecticut.
Jeremiah Drummer, noted for defending colonial charters, solicited donations for the college from Irish playwright Sir Richard Steele, scientist Sir Isaac Newton, and merchant Elihu Yale.
Drummer stated: “that the business of good men is to spread religion and learning among mankind.”
Elihu Yale (1649-1721) was an American-born English merchant who amassed a considerable fortune working for the British East India Company as governor of Fort St. George in Madras, India.
He donated books and goods to the college from his estate in the amount of $2,800, for which a building was named.
In 1718, Puritan clergyman Cotton Mather suggested the college be renamed Yale College.
The purpose of Yale College, as recorded by the proceedings of the trustees, November 11, 1701, was:
“To plant, and under ye Divine blessing to propagate in this Wilderness, the blessed Reformed, Protestant Religion, in ye purity of its Order, and Worship.”
The act authorizing the college passed by the Connecticut General Court declared:
“Youth may be instructed in the arts and sciences who through the blessing of Almighty God may be fitted for public employment both in Church and Civil State.”
In 1745, it was recorded that Yale College:
“… has received the favorable benefactions of many liberal and piously disposed persons, and under the blessing of Almighty God has trained up many worthy persons for the service of God in the State as well as in the Church.”
The rules of Yale College set by the founders, stated:
“Whereunto the Liberal, and Religious Education of Suitable youth is under ye blessing of God, a chief, & most probable expedient … we agree to … these Rules:
1. The said rector shall take especial care as of the moral behaviour of the students at all times so with industry to instruct and ground them well in Theoretical divinity … and (not to) allow them to be instructed and grounded in any other Systems or Synopses …
To recite the Assemblies Catechism in Latin … (and) such explanations as may be (through the Blessing of God) most conducive to their establishment in the Principles of the Christian Protestant Religion.
2. That the said Rector shall cause the Scriptures daily … morning and evening to be read by the Students at the times of prayer in the School …
Expound practical Theology … Repeat Sermons … studiously Indeavor(ing) in the education of said students to promote the power and the Purity of Religion and best edification and peace of these New England Churches.”
The founders of Yale College stated:
“Every student shall consider the main end of his study to wit to know God in Jesus Christ and answerably to lead a Godly, sober life.”
In 1755, Yale students were instructed:
“Above all have an eye to the great end of all your studies, which is to obtain the clearest conceptions of Divine things and to lead you to a saving knowledge of God in his Son Jesus Christ.”
This continued Yale’s 1720 instruction to students:
“Seeing God is the giver of all wisdom, every scholar, besides private or secret prayer, where all we are bound to ask wisdom, shall be present morning and evening at public prayer in the hall at the accustomed hour.”
In 1787, the requirements of Yale College stated:
“All scholars are required to live a religious and blameless life according to the rules of God’s Word, diligently reading the Holy Scriptures, that fountain of truth, and constantly attending all the duties of religion, both in public and secret …
All the scholars are obliged to attend Divine worship in the College Chapel on the Lord’s Day and on Days of Fasting and Thanksgiving appointed by public Authority.”
Every president of Yale was an ordained Congregational Christian minister till 1899.
When Yale 7th president, Rev. Ezra Stiles, died in 1795, Rev. Timothy Dwight IV was elected to take his place, serving as Yale’s 8th President, 1795 to 1817.
Timothy Dwight was a grandson of the Great Awakening preacher and Princeton president Jonathan Edwards.
As a child, Dwight learned the alphabet and was reading the Bible at age 4.
He entered Yale at 13 and graduated at age 17 in 1769.
Dwight was a tutor at Yale from 1771 to 1777.
His first public address of note was “Valedictory Address” of 1776, stating that Americans were:
“… people, who have the same religion, the same manners, the same interests, the same language, and the same essential forms and principles of civic government.”
Dwight was licensed as a Congregational Christian preacher in 1777, and was appointed a chaplain in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War, serving in the brigade of General Samuel Holden Parsons.
When his father died, he returned to the family farm and worked to pay off their debts, as he was the eldest of 13 children.
He served in the very first sessions of the Massachusetts Legislature, called General Court.
From 1783 to 1795, he was the pastor of the Congregational Church at Greenfield Hill in Fairfield, Connecticut.
In 1793, Dwight delivered an influential sermon to the General Association of Connecticut, titled “Discourse on the Genuineness and Authenticity of the New Testament.”
During Timothy Dwight’s 22 years at Yale, the college grew from 110 to 313 students.
He created the Departments of:
Chemistry,
Geology,
Law, and
Medicine.
Dwight also founded Andover Theological Seminary and laid the groundwork for the Yale Divinity School.
He pioneered women’s education, advocated for the use of moral persuasion instead of corporal punishment, was critical of slavery, and opposed encroachment on Indian lands.
While at Yale, Dwight was also a founder of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.
He met and gave Christian instruction to Henry Opukahaia, the first Hawaiian convert to Christianity, whose testimony inspired missionaries to sail to the Hawaiian “Sandwich” Islands.
One of Dwight’s students was Samuel Morse, inventor of the telegraph.
Another of his students was Lyman Beecher, the father of Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, and Henry Ward Beecher, the famous New England preacher.
When Dwight first became president of Yale, students were becoming enamored with “French infidelity,” secularism, and France’s deistic “cult of reason.”
He met with students on campus, allowed them to state all their arguments criticizing Biblical faith, then he proceeded to answer them one by one.
By the time of Dwight’s death, JANUARY 11, 1817, over a third of the graduates had not only become professing Christians, but 30 entered the full-time ministry.
Yale Scientist Benjamin Silliman, the first to distill petroleum in America, observed the campus during Dwight’s tenure:
“It would delight your heart to see how the trophies of the cross are multiplied in this institution. Yale College is a little temple: prayer and praise seem to be the delight of the greater part of the students.”
At the time of the French Revolution, Yale President Timothy Dwight gave an address in New Haven titled “The Duty of Americans at the Present Crisis,” July 4, 1798.
In this address, he explained how Voltaire’s atheism inspired the French Revolution and led the Reign of Terror, 1793-1794, where 40,000 people were beheaded and 300,000 were butchered in the Vendée.
Dwight wrote:
“About the year 1728, Voltaire, so celebrated for his wit and brilliancy and not less distinguished for his hatred of Christianity and his abandonment of principle, formed a systematical design to destroy Christianity and to introduce in its stead a general diffusion of irreligion and atheism.
For this purpose he associated with himself Frederick the II-King of Prussia, and Mess. D’Alembert and Diderot, the principal compilers of the Encyclopedie, all men of talents, atheists and in the like manner abandoned.
… The principle parts of this system were:
1. The compilation of the Encyclopedie: in which with great art and insidiousness the doctrines of … Christian theology were rendered absurd and ridiculous; and the mind of the reader was insensibly steeled against conviction and duty.
2. The overthrow of the religious orders in Catholic countries, a step essentially necessary to the destruction of the religion professed in those countries.
3. The establishment of a sect of philosophists to serve, it is presumed as a conclave, a rallying point, for all their followers.”
Timothy Dwight continued describing Voltaire’s plan of national secular transformation:
“4. The appropriation to themselves, and their disciples, of the places and honors of members of the French Academy, the most respectable literary society in France, and always considered as containing none but men of prime learning and talents.
In this way they designed to hold out themselves and their friends as the only persons of great literary and intellectual distinction in that country, and to dictate all literary opinions to the nation.”
Voltaire sought to transition French society away from biblical absolutes of right and wrong and devolve it back to a primitive honor-shame culture.
Controlling people through publicly honoring or shaming them is a tactic prevalent in Eastern and Middle Eastern cultures, as well as studied by political philosophers from Sun Tzu to Plato to Montesquieu.
This is similar to biased news reporting, late-night comedies, and modern televised award ceremonies which deride some and confer prestigious recognition on others.
Those demonstrating behavior they deem acceptable are honored in media, entertainment, and academia, while those demonstrating behavior they deem unacceptable are publicly embarrassed in condescending acceptance speeches.
This effectively sets the national trend as to what is “in.”
It acts upon the psyche of impressionable people as an adult version of peer pressure, manipulating the deep-seated human craving for acceptance, and threatening with the fear of being shunned or rejected. The goad is to get people to make decisions on the emotion of fear rather than logic.
Community organizer Saul Alinsky wrote of fear of rejection:
“Ridicule is man’s most potent weapon …
Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it.”
Dwight explained how disinformation, the equivalent of “fake news,” was part of Voltaire’s plan:
“5. The fabrication of books of all kinds against Christianity, especially such as excite doubt and generate contempt and derision.
Of these they issued by themselves and their friends who early became numerous, an immense number; so printed as to be purchased for little or nothing, and so written as to catch the feelings, and steal upon the approbation, of every class of men …
6. The formation of a secret Academy, of which Voltaire was the standing president, and in which books were formed, altered, forged, imputed as posthumous to deceased writers of reputation, and sent abroad with the weight of their names.
These were printed and circulated at the lowest price through all classes of men in an uninterrupted succession, and through every part of the kingdom.”
This is similar to revisionist television docudramas which alter past history to promote a future political agenda,
George Orwell wrote in 1984:
“Those who control the past control the future, and those who control the present control the past.”
Joseph Goebbels, the National Socialist Workers Party’s Minister of Propaganda & National Enlightenment, skillfully engineered mob emotions to accept the killing of the Jews in Germany.
Goebbels pioneered “fake news,” stating:
“The most brilliant propagandist technique will yield no success unless one fundamental principle is borne in mind constantly — it must confine itself to a few points and repeat them over and over …
… If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it.
The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie.
… It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.”
Greek philosopher Plato described how the deep state controls people through “noble lies”:
“We want one single, grand lie which will be believed by everybody …
Our rulers will probably have to make considerable use of lies and deceit for the good of their subjects … We said that all such things are useful as a kind of drug.”
British Statesman Lord Acton wrote:
“Official truth is not actual truth.”
Machiavelli’s concept that the ends justify the means, allowed those who did not believe in God’s definition of good and bad to replace it with their political agenda being good and those opposing them as bad.
Dwight explained Voltaire’s tactics:
“In societies of Illuminati … the being of God was denied and ridiculed …
The possession of property was pronounced robbery.
Chastity and natural affection were declared to be nothing more than groundless prejudices.
Adultery, assassination, poisoning, and other crimes of the like infernal nature, were taught as lawful … provided the end was good …
The good ends proposed by the Illuminati … are the overthrow of religion, government, and human society, civil and domestic.
… These they pronounce to be so good that murder, butchery, and war, however extended and dreadful, are declared by them to be completely justifiable …
The means … were … the education of youth … every unprincipled civil officer … every abandoned clergyman … books replete with infidelity, irreligion, immorality, and obscenity …”
Dwight added:
“Where religion prevails, Illumination cannot make disciples, a French directory cannot govern, a nation cannot be made slaves, nor villains, nor atheists, nor beasts.
To destroy us therefore, in this dreadful sense, our enemies must first destroy our Sabbath and seduce us from the house of God …”
Timothy Dwight concluded:
“Religion and liberty are the meat and the drink of the body politic. Withdraw one of them and it languishes, consumes, and dies.
If indifference … becomes the prevailing character of a people … their motives to vigorous defense is lost, and the hopes of their enemies are proportionally increased …
Without religion we may possibly retain the freedom of savages, bears, and wolves, but not the freedom of New England.
If our religion were gone, our state of society would perish with it and nothing would be left which would be worth defending.”
In 1801, Yale President Timothy Dwight compiled a songbook, The Psalms of David, which included hymns written by Isaac Watts and some authored by himself, such as one based on Psalm 137, titled “I Love Thy Kingdom”:
President Donald Trump has no public events on his schedule for Monday. Keep up with the president on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 1/11/21 – note: this page will be updated during the day if events warrant All Times EST No public events White House Briefing Schedule None Content created by Conservative Daily …
Joe Biden has hired at least 14 current or former executives from five major tech firms to serve in his administration or advise his transition team. The firms — Apple, Google, Amazon, Twitter and Facebook — have all clamped down this week on President Trump and Parler, a social media site popular with conservatives. Conservatives …
The largest technology companies in the United States don’t like you very much. So, what should you do? I’ve heard from a ton of people that believe their fate is sealed. Conservatives will have their voices silenced just like the dissenters in Taiwan. Strategy to Survive “The Purge” Social Media Start by recognizing that you …
Washington, DC — Wednesday’s crowd in Washington, DC was estimated to have exceeded 100,000 Americans to peacefully assemble and listen to a speech from the President of the United States of America. All but a handful of the attendees dispersed peacefully. However, nothing done by the people who carried the demonstration into the US Capitol …
Joe Biden has officially been president-elect for just a few days and the enemies of freedom, both at home and abroad, are already taking advantage of his perceived weakness. Foreign Threats Regard Biden as Weak Iran Iran announced last week that they are ramping up uranium production to 20% purity – a level they hesitated …
We are brazenly told that we must accept whatever they tell us. Anyone who dares to question them will be ostracized, censored, and destroyed along with all the others who have been used as public examples. These powerful intimidation tactics are what Fascism really looks like. They work best on weak-minded individuals. It should surprise …
Google has removed Parler from its Play Store, but that doesn’t have to stop you from installing the #1 most downloaded app prior to the tech giant’s biased action. The Parler app can still be installed on Android devices. It’s a quick and easy process. #parler #Android #parlerapp #app #mobile — Parler parler Sunday, January …
New York, NY — On Saturday, Fox News host and conservative commentator Laura Ingraham made multiple statements on Twitter saying that Republicans should confront Big Tech. Ingraham has been outspoken on the recent actions taken by Apple, Google, Twitter and Facebook in removing Parler from app stores and restricting specific accounts of Republicans and, more …
Charlotte, NC — On Saturday, a group known as Really American released an attack ad against conservatives that went viral on Twitter. The video reached over 2 million views by late in the evening and was trending as one of the top tweets. The video depicts images of President Donald Trump, Tucker Carlson, Republican Sen.’s …
When the Soviet Union fell many decades ago I said watch it fall there and rise here and that’s just what is happening now. Big Tech censoring anything that opposes conservatives and Democrats who are now socialists controlling the Presidency House and Senate. They want to take control of your life and tell you what …
Charlotte, NC — Following a threat from Apple on Friday, the company followed through by removing the social media application Parler from its app store. The news came after Parler had submitted measures that it was taking to Apple, but the company determined it was not enough. Now, Parler has been suspended from both Apple …
Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I have never owned a candelabra.
Anybody else up for pretending last week didn’t happen and just calling this the beginning of the year? It’s probably time that we start trying new ways to shake things up. A little collective denial might be just the thing.
We’re a little off the rails here in the United States of America these days. In fact, we may need to work on re-branding because “United” doesn’t seem to apply anymore. I know that President-elect Gropes has promised that we will get there but my crystal ball is seeing none of that.
Like most people over here I the Right side of the political aisle, I thought that the Democrats and their various media minions wouldn’t begin their gulag antics until after Inauguration Day.
The aforementioned crystal ball was completely out of whack on that one, and it’s past it’s warranty time.
Big Tech has been itching for the freedom to crackdown on all conservatives for quite some time now. The Democrats’ wins in Georgia on Tuesday night gave them the green light. Not that the Republicans were really keeping them in check. I’ve lamented more than once here that the Republicans weren’t doing much to rein them in other then making Dorsey, Zuck, and the gang show up to virtual hearings for the occasional upbraiding. Today’s “Bee Me” nails it.
The Democrat takeover of the Senate means they know they won’t even have to put up with that now and gave them the go-ahead to let their totalitarian freak flags fly.
It all began with Twitter banning President Trump’s personal account forever. Dorsey’s Thought Gestapo gave some “Blah, blah, blah…” reasoning, pretending that the ban had something to do with specific tweets, but we all know that they’ve just been waiting to do that and didn’t need an excuse. Both the ban and Twitter lying about it were expected.
Facebook soon followed, and there were no doubt many bottles of celebratory kombucha popped throughout Silicon Valley.
Getting rid of Trump didn’t satisfy the many-headed Tech monster though. They soon began going after other accounts that committed the sin of not being leftist, like Brandon Straka’s “Walk Away” Facebook page.
Then it got really ugly.
Conservatives have been setting up accounts on Parler for a couple of months now and the flood of new users there greatly increased once Trump got the boot. Parler’s newfound popularity made it the next target. Victoria summed it up well:
This is tyranny. This is groupthink.
To sum up:
Big Tech censored you and the president on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Twitter
You left to go to other social media sites such as Parler, MeWe, Minds
Big Tech didn’t want you to leave for more freedom
Big Tech refused to let another social media platform, Parler, use their app stores
Big Tech then booted the social media site Parler from their servers
Double standards abound. No one on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram was tossed off those platforms for protesting, rioting, looting, and vandalizing on behalf of Black Lives Matter and antifa. Lobbing Molotov cocktails wouldn’t get a group booted off a platform.
As I write this, Parler is offline. The site has promised to get back online with new servers but there is no guarantee of that. Gab.com is getting an influx of new users as well They’ve got their own servers but things are a little slow with all of the new business.
This has nothing to do with public safety and everything to do with an all-out assault on conservative speech. What’s been most disturbing is seeing half the country cheer this on. The Left is rejoicing over the idea of a one-party information flow. Don’t doubt for a moment that all of the elected Democrats in Washington aren’t gleeful about this as well. They’ve finally found some billionaires they won’t complain about. Marginalizing conservative voices has been a core component of their fever dream since Rush Limbaugh first began making talk radio popular and if their rich buddies can make it happen they’ll be on board with some wealth disparity.
Welcome to the New World Order. Let’s figure out a way to make it not last very long.
Dems kick off efforts to remove POTUS from office . . . “We will act with urgency, because this president represents an imminent threat,” Mrs. Pelosi said. Mr. Pence isn’t expected to move forward with a 25th Amendment process. One article of impeachment that accuses Mr. Trump of inciting an insurrection was close to having enough support to pass the House. Meanwhile, more GOP lawmakers said Sunday Mr. Trump should resign. Should Democrats succeed, Mr. Trump would be the first president in U.S. history to be impeached twice. Conviction in the Senate faces higher hurdles, however, including a two-thirds majority vote requiring significant Republican support. Wall Street Journal
Pelosi and her ilk are the ones who pose a grave threat to the republic. With Harris-Biden Admin in charge and dems having taken full control of the government, the country is firmly on a path to a totalitarian socialist regime.
Eliminating Trump from being elected again one motivator in impeachment push . . . House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a “60 Minutes” interview that aired Sunday night that one of the motivating factors for some in the new effort to impeach President Trump and remove him from office is to eliminate any chance he has of being elected again. Fox News
Dershowitz: Trump impeachment will not make it to trial . . . Attorney and legal scholar Alan Dershowitz said Sunday that any second Impeachment attempt against President Donald Trump “will not go to trial” because Trump will no longer be president by the time the process reaches the Senate. “It will not go to trial. All the Democrats can do is impeach the president in the House of Representatives — for that all you need is a majority vote . . . You don’t have to take evidence and there are no lawyers involved.,” he said. “But the case cannot come to trial in the Senate because the Senate has rules and the rules would not allow the case to come to trial, according to the majority leader [Sen. Mitch McConnell], until 1 p.m. on Jan. 20th, an hour after President Trump leaves office,” Dershowitz continued. Daily Caller
Coronavirus
COVID vaccine rollout will not achieve world herd immunity this year . . . The roll-out of coronavirus vaccines in many countries will not provide herd immunity from the global pandemic this year, several health experts said on Monday, citing limited access for poor countries, community trust problems and potential virus mutations. Chairman of the World Health Organization’s Outbreak Alert and Response Network told Reuters that the best case scenario is that there might be some countries that might achieve it but even then that will not create ‘normal’ especially in terms of border controls, based on current knowledge of the vaccines being rolled out. Herd immunity refers to a situation where enough people in a population have immunity to an infection to be able to effectively stop that disease from spreading. Reuters
Devin Nunes seeks intel on COVID origins . . . The top Republican on the House Intelligence Committee called on the Trump administration’s spy chief to provide classified details about the origins of the coronavirus in China, including intelligence community information related to whether COVID-19 may have escaped from a lab in Wuhan. Rep. Devin Nunes, the ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee, sent a two-page letter to Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe on Friday, saying the Republicans on his panel “have conducted a long-standing investigation into the rise of China as our foremost national security threat,” and “as part of that probe, we are investigating the outbreak of the coronavirus.” Washington Examiner
At least someone in Congress works hard to get to the bottom of the China plague.
Politics
Republicans wrestle over removing Trump . . . GOP lawmakers are wrestling with whether to stick with President Trump between now and Jan. 20 as members of his Cabinet consider resigning or invoking the 25th Amendment to remove him from office. Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska became the first Republican senator to call on Trump to resign, declaring on Friday afternoon that “he has caused enough damage.” “I want him to resign. I want him out,” she told the Anchorage Daily News. A day later, Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.), who is retiring at the end of 2022, said Trump’s actions rise to the level of impeachment. “I do think the president committed impeachable offenses,” Toomey said Murkowski and Toomey’s comments put pressure on Republican centrists, such as Sens. Mitt Romney (Utah) and Susan Collins (Maine), who as of Saturday night had not addressed whether Trump should step down or be removed from office. The Hill
Pompeo stands by Trump Admin achievements . . . Secretary of State Mike Pompeo signaled he is standing by President Trump after critics have called for his impeachment following the storming of the Capitol on Wednesday. “I am proud of what we’ve accomplished — not just in the national security, foreign policy space, which I’ve worked with, but the things that we’ve done with families, the pro-life work that we have done. These are things that will truly be historic. I think history will remember us very well for these things when the books are written,” Pompeo said in remarks to Republican lawmakers and staffers. Washington Examiner
Trump may turn to Giuliani and Dershowitz to defend him in impeachment trial . . . President Trump is considering appointing his personal attorney Rudy Giuliani and the high-profile lawyer Alan Dershowitz to his defense team in case he faces another impeachment trial this week. Giuliani, who called for “trial by combat” as he spoke to Trump supporters hours before the deadly siege, is expected to represent the president. Dershowitz already said he would be willing to take on the job. “He [Trump] has not committed a constitutionally impeachable offense and I would be honored to once again defend the Constitution against partisan efforts to weaponize it for political purposes,” Dershowitz told The Hill on Saturday. Business Insider
Trump orders flags to half-staff in honor of Capitol Police officers . . . POTUS ordered American flags to be lowered to half-staff on Sunday in honor of the U.S. Capitol Police officer slain in Wednesday’s riot and another who reportedly died in the days after.
The move comes after several days of criticism for not doing so earlier. The president called for flags at the White House, public buildings, military posts, naval stations, naval vessels and facilities abroad to fly at half-staff to pay respect to Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick, who died due to injuries he suffered when a pro-Trump mob breached the Capitol. Trump announced the flags would remain at half-staff until sunset Wednesday “as a sign of respect for the service and sacrifice” of Sicknick, Liebengood and “all Capitol Police Officers, and law enforcement across this great Nation.” The Hill
Parler will be offline for a while given Amazon decision to cut web services . . . Parler will likely go offline for “a while” Sunday evening given Amazon Web Services’ decision to suspend the upstart social media platform after Wednesday’s U.S. Capitol riot, executives said Sunday. “We are clearly being singled out,” Chief Policy Officer Amy Peikoff told “Fox & Friends Weekend” one day after Apple suspended Parler from its App Store even as it surged to the No. 1 spot in the free apps section earlier in the day. Google suspended Parler from its app store Friday. Fox Business
The Big Brother deploys the “kill switch” to silence 75 million of Americans who voted for Trump. George Orwell is turning in his grave.
Republicans blast Big Tech’s bid to “erase” Trump and his supporters . . . Big Tech’s battle with President Trump has become an all-out war on conservatives’ free speech, Republican critics said Sunday after social media banished the president and his supporters from the Internet platforms. Amazon, Apple, Google and Twitter silenced Mr. Trump and scores of his supporters online in the name of preventing an Inauguration Day repeat of the Capitol Hill riot last week. Sen. Marco Rubio, Florida Republican, said liberals were using the attack on the U.S. Capitol to “not just erase the president [but] erase everybody” who supported him. Washington Times
PGA to end contract, move 2022 championship from Trump property . . . The Professional Golfers’ Association of America announced on Sunday its plans to move the 2022 championship away from property owned by President Trump. The PGA of America Board of Directors voted to end its contract to hold the 2022 PGA Championship at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster in New Jersey, PGA of America President Jim Richerson said in a statement. The announcement comes in the days after the president’s supporters raided the Capitol. The Hill
Teeing up the latest cancel culture insult.
Secret Service investigating death threats agains Pence . . . The U.S. Secret Service is investigating death threats against VP Mike Pence made by pro-Trump lawyer Lin Wood. Wood, who was banned from Twitter last week, is suspected of writing a now-deleted post on Parler: “Get the firing squads ready. Pence goes FIRST.” Fox News
Biden picks William Burns for CIA . . . President-elect Joe Biden early Monday announced former Deputy Secretary of State William Burns as his nominee for director of the CIA. Biden’s transition team noted that Burns, a career diplomat who retired in 2014 after serving in the U.S. Foreign Service for 33 years, has served in a number of national security positions across five Democratic and Republican administrations. Burns was U.S. ambassador to Russia between 2005 and 2008 and was U.S. ambassador to Jordan from 1998 to 2001. The Hill
National Security
SolarWinds hackers linked to known Russian spying tools . . . The group behind a global cyber-espionage campaign discovered last month deployed malicious computer code with links to spying tools previously used by suspected Russian hackers, researchers said on Monday. Investigators at Moscow-based cybersecurity firm Kaspersky said the “backdoor” used to compromise up to 18,000 customers of U.S. software maker SolarWinds closely resembled malware tied to a hacking group known as “Turla,” which Estonian authorities have said operates on behalf of Russia’s FSB security service. The findings are the first publicly-available evidence to support assertions by the United States that Russia orchestrated the hack, which compromised a raft of sensitive federal agencies and is among the most ambitious cyber operations ever disclosed. Reuters
Kaspersky Lab is run by a “former” KGB operative who had managed to convince US government “experts” to run his company’s “anti-virus” software on the feds’ computers. It took President Trump, “Putin’s secret agent,” to kick out the Russians by signing a law that banned Kaspersky software from USG systems.
International
China hits out at US move to elevate relations with Taiwan . . . China condemned the US decision to ease restrictions on diplomatic relations with Taiwan in the waning days of the Trump administration, saying the island was “the most important” part of its relations with Washington. “Any move that harms China’s core interests will be met with China’s resolute counter-strike,” said Zhao Lijian, foreign ministry spokesperson, on Monday, although he did not specify any concrete measures.
Mike Pompeo, US secretary of state, said on Saturday that the Trump administration would lift “self-imposed restrictions” that have governed relations between Washington and Taipei. Financial Times
Iran to execute second wrestler, sparking outrage from State Department . . . A top U.S. State Department official came out swinging Sunday against the Islamic Republic of Iran’s plan to execute another wrestler, after Tehran’s rulers publicly hanged the champion wrestler Navid Afkari in September on widely criticized, trumped-up charges. “The Iranian regime must be held to account for their vile human rights abuses and their attempt to cling to power through execution,” Ellie Cohanim, the State Department’s deputy special envoy to monitor and combat anti-Semitism, told Fox News. The execution of the decorated wrestler Mehdi Ali Hosseini is imminent. Fox News
Barbarians. Watch Biden’s “experts” negotiate another Obama-style deal with the Ayatollahs.
Money
Big banks and companies pause political funding after Capitol riot . . . Two of the biggest U.S. banks and other corporations said they are pausing or reviewing their political action committee donations in the wake of last week’s riot at the Capitol. JPMorgan, Chase, and Citigroup said they are pausing all PAC donations to Republicans and Democrats in the coming months. Other companies, including the Blue Cross Blue Shield insurance group and Marriott International said they would pause donations to Republican lawmakers who objected to President-elect Joe Biden’s Electoral College win after supporters of President Trump stormed the Capitol on Wednesday. Wall Street Journal
Biden has ties to 5 major tech companies . . . At least 14 people who Biden has picked to serve either in his administration or to advise his transition have worked for the Big Tech firms that cracked down earlier this week on President Donald Trump and a social media site popular with conservatives. Apple’s top lobbyist was a chief adviser to the Biden transition team. A former Facebook executive will serve as staff director in the Biden White House, and a former Twitter executive will serve as chief spokesperson for the National Security Council under Biden. Current and former executives at those firms and two others, Google and Amazon, fill out other positions in the incoming Biden administration, or his transition team. The five tech giants all took action this week against Trump and Parler, the social media site, in response to riots at the U.S. Capitol. Daily Caller
Business as usual.
You should also know
Trump-supporting Christian leaders and their Sunday messages . . . Support for President Donald Trump has been consistently strong among evangelicals, with some professing that he has been the best friend Christians have had in the White House. In wake of the Capitol riot the messages from the pulpits of Christian leaders who’ve backed Trump were as disparate as the opinions of the nation’s citizenry. They ranged from recitations of conspiracy theories of who was responsible, to calls for healing and following Jesus Christ rather than any individual person, to sermons that made no mention of Wednesday’s chaos and what it means for the future. Associated Press
Dems have limited options on abortion despite Senate wins in Georgia . . . Despite unified control of both chambers of Congress and the presidency, congressional Democrats’ narrow majorities will make lasting legislative victories on abortion difficult to attain, likely leaving President-elect Joe Biden to resort to executive actions. Victories in both of the runoff elections in Georgia have given Senate Democrats a 50-50 split in the Senate with VP-elect Harris (D.) in a position to cast a tie-breaking vote. The party’s 2020 platform vowed to restore federal funding for Planned Parenthood; repeal the Hyde Amendment, which prohibits taxpayer funding of abortion; and overturn federal and state laws restricting access to abortion or other “reproductive health and rights.” But West Virginia senator Joe Manchin (D.), a life0long catholic, pledged to thwart any legislative attempts to institute taxpayer funding of abortion. Washington Free Beacon
Pope allows more women in Church . . . Pope Francis, in another step towards greater equality for women in the Roman Catholic Church, on Monday changed its law to allow them to serve as readers at liturgies, altar servers and distributors of communion. In a decree, the pope formalized what already has been happening in many countries for years. But with the change in the Code of Canon Law, conservative bishops will not be able to block women in their diocese from those roles. But the Vatican stressed that the roles were “essentially distinct from the ordained ministry”, and were not an automatic precursor to women one day being allowed to be ordained priests. Reuters
Kamala Harris is Vogue’s cover star . . . VP-elect Kamala Harris is splashed on the February cover of Vogue, but many social media users are less than thrilled with the magazine’s photo choice. Two covers are posted with the interview, both shot by Tyler Mitchell, the Black photographer who was hired to shoot Beyoncé for the magazine in 2018. One depicts Harris, 56, in a powder-blue Michael Kors power suit, her arms crossed, with a flag pin on her lapel. The second, more controversial image shows Harris in a more casual black Donald Deal jacket, wearing matching Converse Chuck Taylors, pearls around her neck, and standing against a pink and green backdrop. Fans slammed the latter image on Twitter, calling it disrespectful and speculating that the image was deliberately washed out to lighten her skin. USA Today
Didn’t take long. Only the “correct” First Ladies get on the cover of glamour magazines.
Guilty Pleasures
Cat reunited with owner after 11 days in airport ceiling . . . A cat that escaped from her owner at a security checkpoint in New York’s LaGuardia Airport was returned to the distraught traveler after spending 11 days hiding in the hub’s ceiling. Taylor Le said she was in the process of moving from New York to Orange County, Calif., when she booked a Christmas Eve flight for herself and her 6-year-old cat, Muji. Le said TSA agents had her remove Muji from her carrier at the security checkpoint, despite her protestations that the feline was likely to flee. Muji panicked and led her owner and airport staff on a chase that ended when the cat climbed a series of platforms to a ceiling enclosure and disappeared inside. 11 days after the cat had fled from security, Le received word that the cat had emerged and been safely caught in a trap. UPI
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Happy Monday! With everything going on in the world, it seems kind of small to care about something as trivial as the NFL playoffs. Which teams even played yesterday? We didn’t have time to watch. (Editor: Sorry about the Bears, Declan.)
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
House Democrats will very likely move to impeach President Trump this week. According to a timeline laid out by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the House is likely to pass a resolution early this week calling on Vice President Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment and wrest power from President Trump. Once Pence does not, the House will bring impeachment legislation to the floor.
The U.S. economy lost 140,000 jobs in December as coronavirus cases and hospitalizations surged nationwide, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The unemployment rate currently stands at 6.7 percent, down from a staggering 14.8 percent in April but still nearly double its pre-pandemic levels.
Twitter announced Friday it had permanently suspended President Trump’s Twitter account “due to the risk of further incitement of violence.” As part of a QAnon conspiracy theory purge, the platform suspended Michael Flynn and Sidney Powell’s accounts for good as well.
Amazon, Apple, and Google have moved against social media platform Parler in the wake of last Wednesday’s siege of the Capitol, removing the less restrictive social network popular on the right from their respective app stores and—in Amazon’s case—kicking it off its web-hosting services. The companies said Parler has repeatedly violated their respective rules about policing posts advocating for and organizing violence and/or crime.
Breaking with Operation Warp Speed’s decision to withhold vaccine distribution to ensure the availability of second doses, the Biden administration reportedly plans to release nearly all available COVID-19 vaccine doses upon taking office on January 20 in an effort to get the first shot to more people as fast as possible.
President-elect Joe Biden announced that he will appoint William J. Burns, a career diplomat who was Barack Obama’s deputy secretary of state from 2011-2014 to lead the CIA. Burns was ambassador to Russia from 2005-2008 and ambassador to Jordan from 1998-2001.
An Indonesian passenger jet with 62 people aboard crashed into the ocean on Saturday, just minutes after taking off from Jakarta. Officials said on Sunday that rescuers located the plane’s black box flight recorder and the remains of some of the passengers.
Ronna McDaniel and Tommy Hicks were reelected chair and co-chair of the Republican National Committee, respectively. The pair—who are both close allies of President Trump—will serve through the 2022 midterm elections.
U.S. Capitol Police Officer Howard Liebengood died by suicide on Saturday, the Washington Post reports. Liebengood, who was at the Capitol during the insurrection on Wednesday, is the second Capitol Police officer to die this week.
The man carrying House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s lectern and the man who broke into Pelosi’s office during Wednesday’s storming of the Capitol were both arrested and have been charged in federal court, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia announced Saturday. West Virginia House of Delegates member Derrick Evans resigned Saturday after being taken into custody Friday for violent entry, disorderly conduct, and unlawful entry of a restricted building. Approximately 40 people have been charged in D.C. Superior Court and 16 people have been charged in D.C. federal court for charges related to curfew violations, unregistered firearm possession, and violent or unlawful entry of the Capitol, among other offenses.
The United States confirmed 274,350 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 14.4 percent of the 1,903,393 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,894 deaths were attributed to the virus on Sunday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 374,322. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 129,229 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 22,137,350 COVID-19 vaccine doses have been distributed nationwide, and 6,688,231 have been administered.
The More We Learn, the Worse It Gets
In the immediate aftermath of last Wednesday’s D.C. riot, it was all many Americans could do to process the brute fact of what had happened: A pro-Trump mob storming the U.S. Capitol in a furious effort to prevent Congress from certifying Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidential election. But in the days since—as we’ve studied the video, reviewed social media postings, and analyzed the background of the assault’s leaders—a clearer picture has started to emerge of an attack that was not just deliberate, but even planned in advance.
Let’s start by (again) dispensing with one viral lie: that the people who stormed the Capitol were Antifa interlopers there to make Trump supporters look bad. Over the weekend, the Associated Press examined the histories of more than 120 people who have been publicly identified as having participated in the attack:
Many of the rioters had taken to social media after the November election to retweet and parrot false claims by Trump that the vote had been stolen in a vast international conspiracy. Several had openly threatened violence against Democrats and Republicans they considered insufficiently loyal to the president. During the riot, some livestreamed and posted photos of themselves at the Capitol. Afterwards, many bragged about what they had done.
As more video footage of the attack itself emerged, it became increasingly plain that many in the crowd had come to the event already prepared for violence. Video of men kitted out in tactical gear moving in tandem up through the crowd on the Capitol steps and into the building itself went viral on social media, as did horrific photos of a man leaping through the Senate chamber with flex cuffs in hand.
Unearthed pre-riot posts from pro-Trump forums like social network Parler and Reddit spinoff TheDonald.win show show similar evidence of hardline Trump supporters trading tips and plans for how to smuggle firearms into D.C., which has very restrictive gun laws. “Those coming armed should meet outside the city and then move en masse,” said one commenter on the latter site in a post documented by investigative journalism site Bellingcat. “Too easy to get picked off moving onesies and twosies.” Another replied: “There is not enough cops in DC to stop what is coming.”
Not all such planning was done in such visible public forums, of course. A number of right-wing paramilitary groups participated in the attack, including at least one chapter of the Proud Boys, whose chairman Enrique Tarrio was arrested as he arrived in D.C. several days before the rally.
This isn’t to say that the riot wasn’t in some respects a spontaneous event. Many of those who traveled to D.C. to gather on the Mall and hear Trump speak—even many of those who stormed past police barriers to climb the Capitol steps—had no intention when they showed up that morning of participating in an attempted armed insurrection against the U.S. government. But the most bloodthirsty elements of the crowd took charge once they arrived at the Capitol, and the mob was happy to follow along.
Another thing that became clear over the weekend was how close things came to being much worse. There was a shockingly short span of time between the locking down of the Senate chamber and the arrival of the rioters in the building. The quick thinking of one officer who lured protesters away from the chamber door may have been all that prevented actual shooting on the floor of the Senate.
As reporters spent the days following the brawl poring over the photos and footage, law enforcement was doing the same. Dozens of arrests have been made, including some of the people who achieved the most notoriety on social media: Jake Angeli, who breached the Capitol shirtless in red, white, and blue facepaint and a fur-and-horns headdress; Richard Barnett, who was photographed with his feet on Nancy Pelosi’s desk and stole mail from her office; and Eric Muncel and Larry Brock, the men photographed with flex cuffs in the Senate chamber.
Federal investigators are looking carefully at the planning of the January 6 march, with a particular focus on who planned the storming of the Capitol. Alt-right activist Ali Alexander claimed in a video posted before the protest that he was working with three House Republicans—Reps. Paul Gosar, Andy Biggs and Mo Brooks—to organize the event. Alexander said he consulted the lawmakers as he “schemed up putting maximum pressure on Congress while they were voting…” Alex Jones, the InfoWars conspiracy theorist who claimed the Sandy Hook shootings were faked and has been publicly praised by President Trump, claimed in a video that the White House asked him three days before the event to lead the march to the Capitol. And sources familiar with the investigation tell The Dispatch that there are indications some of the militia groups involved had plans that included harming lawmakers and harming or capturing Vice President Mike Pence.
The House could vote early this week on articles of impeachment for President Trump’s role in provoking riots on Capitol Hill last Wednesday that left at least five people—including a Capitol police officer—dead. If a simple majority of the lower chamber votes to advance the article(s) of impeachment, Trump will become the first U.S. president to be impeached twice.
But given that just 10 days remain in Trump’s term—and the Senate is not set to reconvene until January 19 (except for two pro forma sessions)—the president is all but ensured to remain in office until Joe Biden is sworn in, barring an unexpected resignation or his Cabinet’s invocation of the 25th Amendment.
In a letter to her Democratic colleagues last night, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called on Vice President Mike Pence and the Cabinet to undertake the latter and declare the president “incapable of executing his duties of office.” Majority Leader Steny Hoyer is expected to request unanimous consent to bring up a resolution requesting Pence do exactly that, giving the vice president 24 hours to respond before impeachment proceedings are initiated.
Democratic Reps. Ted Lieu and David Cicilline began drafting the articles of impeachment on January 6 as they sheltered in place at the Capitol building. As of last night, Cicilline said the article had 210 cosponsors—pulling in nearly all of the chamber’s 222 Democrats.
“It was a coup to try to keep President Trump in power. We can’t just simply say let’s just wait 12 days and he’ll be gone. We have a responsibility to hold him accountable,” Cicilline—a Rhode Island Democrat who sits on the Judiciary Committee—told CNN’s Jake Tapper on Friday. “We took an oath and our framers gave us one mechanism to impose a punishment on a president who engages in this behavior, and that’s impeachment.”
When articles of impeachment are sent to the Senate, the chamber is compelled to begin a trial immediately. If you recall from last year, however, the House doesn’t need to send the articles over to the Senate immediately. If and when President Trump is impeached, Pelosi may choose to delay the process yet again—this time to free up the (soon-to-be) Democratic-controlled Senate to confirm President-elect Biden’s Cabinet and move on his legislative agenda in the early days of his presidency.
“Let’s give President-elect Biden the 100 days he needs to get his agenda off and running,” Rep. James E. Clyburn, the House’s Democratic whip, said on Fox News yesterday. “And maybe we will send the articles sometime after that.”
“We call ourselves the people’s house,” Clyburn continued. “If we are the people’s house, let’s do the people’s work and let’s vote to impeach this president and then we’ll decide later—or the Senate will decide later—what to do with that, an impeachment.”
Tensions between Trump and congressional Republicans have been running incredibly high since Wednesday, but even so, only a handful of GOP senators have called for Trump’s removal from office.
Sen. Ben Sasse said in an interview withCBS on Friday he would “definitely consider” any articles of impeachment against Trump. “I believe the president has disregarded his oath of office,” Sasse said. “He swore an oath to the American people to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution. He acted against that. What he did was wicked.”
“That said,” Sasse continued, “the question of what the House does now and how the Senate responds to it over the next 12 days is a critically important question, but the most important question is the prudential one of how we bring the country back together five and 10 and 15 years in the future.”
Sen. Pat Toomey said over the weekend he believes Trump committed impeachable offenses, but is instead advocating for the president to “resign and go away as soon as possible,” because any impeachment would not be completed prior to Trump leaving office. “I acknowledge that may not be likely, but I think that would be best.”
Sen. Lisa Murkowski is calling for the same. “I want him to resign. I want him out,” she told reporters Friday. “He hasn’t been focused on what is going on with COVID. He’s either been golfing or he’s been inside the Oval Office fuming and throwing every single person who has been loyal and faithful to him under the bus, starting with the vice president. He doesn’t want to stay there. He only wants to stay there for the title. He only wants to stay there for his ego. He needs to get out. He needs to do the good thing, but I don’t think he’s capable of doing a good thing.”
In the House, many of the dozens of Republicans who have amplified Trump’s false claims that the election was stolen have indicated they oppose any efforts to impeach him. In a letter organized by Colorado Rep. Ken Buck, a group of seven House Republicans who voted to accept Biden’s electoral college victory—including Reps. Chip Roy, Thomas Massie and Mike Gallagher—urged Nancy Pelosi not to move to impeach Trump. But there are House Republicans who would likely support impeachment if Democrats don’t play games with the process or drag it.
Asked for his thoughts on impeachment proceedings, Biden sidestepped the question. “That’s a decision for the Congress to make. I’m focused on my job,” the president-elect said Friday. “I’ll be speaking with Nancy and the Democratic leadership this afternoon, as a matter of fact, about my agenda, as well as whatever they want to talk to me about.”
While some fear that moving forward with the impeachment process may stoke unnecessary division with Trump already on his way out, others worry that a failure to pursue punitive measures following what happened Wednesday would only stand to further embolden Trump and his most ardent supporters.*
Who should be held accountable for Wednesday’s siege on the Capitol? According to conservative columnist George Will, President Trump, Sen. Josh Hawley, and Sen. Ted Cruz. “The three repulsive architects of Wednesday’s heartbreaking spectacle—mobs desecrating the Republic’s noblest building and preventing the completion of a constitutional process—must be named and forevermore shunned,” he writes in his latest column. Even though Trump “lit the fuse for the riot in the weeks before the election,” the president’s conspiratorial antics were enabled by Hawley and Cruz and their refusal to certify the Electoral College vote on Wednesday, Will writes. While Trump is gone in just over a week, it will take longer to “scrub” Hawley and Cruz from public life. “Until that hygienic outcome is accomplished, from this day forward, everything they say or do or advocate should be disregarded as patent attempts to distract attention from the lurid fact of what they have become. Each will wear a scarlet ‘S’ as a seditionist.”
Part of the reason it’s so important to apportion blame for last Wednesday’s atrocity is to avoid maligning political actors who had nothing to do with it. In a piece for National Review, Jack Butler argues against letting the siege of the Capitol become yet another partisan squabble. “Wednesday revealed serious problems with a far too high number of Republican Party elected leaders and supporters,” he writes. “But to paint with so broad a brush as to condemn all of conservatism as irredeemable is merely to reinforce the damage done to our political system.”
Making sense of Wednesday’s events in his Sunday French Press, David argues that we must be clear about what transpired: “A violent Christian insurrection invaded and occupied the Capitol.” David walks us through his reasoning, and explains why many Christians “are constantly in the business of taking exceptional behavior from our political opponents and trying to argue that the exceptional is emblematic.” How can the evangelical movement push back against this trend? “Rebutting enabling lies does not mean whitewashing the opposition. It does not mean surrendering your values or failing to resist destructive ideas. It does mean discerning the difference between a problem and a crisis, between an aberration and an example. And it means possessing the humility to admit when you’re wrong. It means understanding that no emergency is ever too great to stop loving your enemies and blessing those who persecute you.”
In Friday’s G-File on the horrors of last week, Jonah argues that it’s not just the political left with a snowflake problem. “Conservatives mock ‘safe spaces,’ ‘trigger warnings,’ and ‘snowflakes’ who can’t handle hard truths,” he writes. “Well, who’s the party of snowflakes now? Stripped of all their lawyerly evasions, Josh Hawley and Ted Cruz endorsed the idea the election was stolen not because they actually believe it, but because the voters they crave want to hear that it was. They all prattle about the ‘voices of the unheard’ and whine about the mean things people say about them or Trump. How much mileage have they gotten out of Hillary Clinton’s ‘deplorables’ thing?”
As the House considers articles of impeachment, Sarah offers a way that Joe Biden could work with the GOP Senate to help ensure a conviction. “If Biden promises to pardon Trump for all crimes committed before January 20, 2021, at least a few Republican senators would be able to explain that they voted to convict—not to punish Trump—but to help him. And to allow the country to move on.”
Wednesday’s storming of the Capitol should not have come as a surprise to anyone who has paid attention to Donald Trump—and much of the Republican Party’s—election-related conspiracy-mongering in the weeks since November 3. Politico’s chief political correspondent Tim Alberta had been talking to Trump supporters across the country in the months and years leading up to the election, and joined Friday’s episode of the Dispatch Podcast to explain why Wednesday’s Capitol siege was almost inevitable.
Let Us Know
Which of the below categories best describes your position? Why?
President Trump should be impeached and removed as soon as possible.
President Trump should be impeached and removed, but the timing isn’t urgent.
President Trump committed impeachable offenses, but it’s not worth pursuing them this close to the end of his term.
President Trump committed impeachable offenses, but it’s not worth pursuing them because it would further divide the country.
President Trump has not done anything impeachable.
*Correction, January 11: The item about impeachment initially included a sentence saying that if Trump were convicted, he’d be barred from holding office. Disqualification would require a separate vote.
I’m in number 2 camp. Impeach but no hurry. Is it even possible for Congress to do anything in a hurry? I don’t ever want him running for federal office again. Also I’d like to make a correction…Parler is not a pro Trump forum. It’s a social media app where people like America’s Frontline Doctors aren’t censored. Twitter can remove Trump..I don’t care…but silencing Parler?
Kemberlee Kaye:“These are uncertain times. Unprecedented times. Amazing times. But we were put exactly here for exactly this time for a very particular purpose. Do not give up. Do not lose hope. Take heart. Our God is here. His love and heart for us is so big, so grand, so vast. “Do not be afraid. Stand firm, and see the salvation from the Lord, which he will perform for you today.” Exodus 14:13″
Mary Chastain: “I wonder what will happen this week. At least the NHL begins on Wednesday!”
Leslie Eastman: “The coordinated attack on Parler by Apple and Amazon is truly chilling, and shows that the elites in politics, Big Tech, and media are fearful that their antics are not going to be tolerated by Americans. “When you tear out a man’s tongue, you are not proving him a liar, you’re only telling the world that you fear what he might say.””
David Gerstman: “Please read Kemberlee’s twitter thread.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “Germany has offered Joe Biden a “Marshall Plan for democracy” in the wake of the U.S. Capitol riot. German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas on Friday called on the incoming Democratic administration to join the European Union in backing a “wide-reaching pro-democracy initiative” to counter the “enemies of liberal democracy.” The “enemies of liberal democracy” is an apparent references to the supporters of President Donald Trump in the U.S. and to the surging populist anti-establishment movements in Europe.“
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Time to Investigate Big Tech?
Over the weekend it was a ban Trump free-for-all led by social media and tech companies. It also coincided with a purge of supposed bots/inactive accounts on Twitter and Apple removing the Parler app, one of Twitter’s biggest competitors. Parler CEO John Matze discussed it on Fox News. From The Post Millennial:
“‘It’s devastating is what it is. It’s an assault on everybody,’ Matze said. ‘They all worked together to make sure at the same time we would lose access to not only our apps, but they are actually shutting all our servers off.’Parler, which champions itself as a pro-free speech social media platform, saw itself booted from the Apple app store and Google Play store in the aftermath of the storming of Capitol Hill by pro-Trump rioters. Shortly after, the website in its entirety had its servers shut down by Amazon, which hosted the website on its web servers, forcing the company to scramble to find new web hosts.”
Yesterday, Congressman Devin Nunes said that it’s time to start investigating tech companies for racketeering. More from The Post Millennial:
“‘This is clearly a violation of antitrust, civil rights, the RICO statute. There should be a racketeering investigation on all the people that coordinated this attack on not only a company but on all of those like us, like me, like you, Maria,’ said Nunes in an interview with Fox’s Maria Bartiromo.
Nunes continued, ‘The effect of this is that there is no longer a free and open social media company or site for any American to get on any longer. It’s preposterous. So I don’t know where the hell the Department of Justice is at right now, or the FBI.'”
Tristan Justice at The Federalist points out that singling out Parler doesn’t bode well for the other social media companies:
“The line between platforms and publishers — the former serving as an objective online public square fostering the free exchange of ideas and the latter responsible for subjective content moderation — has eroded as accurate descriptions of Facebook and Twitter, which selectively ban content that opposes the companies’ political interests. Their roles as publishers came to full fruition when they weaponized their monopoly over internet discourse to suppress stories implicating then-Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden in his son’s corrupt business ventures.
By holding Parler responsible for content its users post, Apple, Google, and Amazon are effectively waiving their legal protections under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which bars platforms from third-party liability. In other words, Apple, Google, and Amazon are erasing Parler’s protections through corporate collusion that they benefit from themselves.”
Oh, and did I mention Google, Microsoft, and Verizon are on the Biden Inauguration Committee donor list? Money’s great, but you just can’t put a price on silencing your opponent and his supporters.
More Impeachment Talk
Democrats have cemented their total inability to read the room. As businesses closes, teachers unions demand they not have to go back to teaching, the media beclowns itself while covering last week’s events on Capitol Hill, and politicians make rules that don’t apply to them, they announce that they will pursue impeachment — again — of a president who will be leaving office in just over a week. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a statement, “It is the hope of members that the president will immediately resign. But if he does not, I have instructed the Rules Committee to be prepared.”
MORE STORYTELLING LIKE THIS AND LESS DOCUMENTARIES, PLEASE! Exclusive: Why The Daily Wire’s ‘Run Hide Fight’ Is A Cultural Game-Changer (The Federalist)
Rush Limbaugh: Swamp, Pelosi Scared to Death of Trump’s Final Days (Newsmax)
The Time Is Now: America Needs To End The Poisonous Personalization Of Politics (The Political Insider)
What I’m Reading This Week
If 2020 lockdowns weren’t enough, this past week makes last week’s read about a “multi-hyphen life” with multiple revenue streams more important than ever. This week, it’s a fun read — The Midnight Library by Matt Haig. From the description:
“Somewhere out beyond the edge of the universe there is a library that contains an infinite number of books, each one the story of another reality. One tells the story of your life as it is, along with another book for the other life you could have lived if you had made a different choice at any point in your life. While we all wonder how our lives might have been, what if you had the chance to go to the library and see for yourself? Would any of these other lives truly be better?
In The Midnight Library, Matt Haig’s enchanting new novel, Nora Seed finds herself faced with this decision. Faced with the possibility of changing her life for a new one, following a different career, undoing old breakups, realizing her dreams of becoming a glaciologist; she must search within herself as she travels through the Midnight Library to decide what is truly fulfilling in life, and what makes it worth living in the first place.”
A Case of the Mondays
Abandoned newborn baby saved by hero dog who barked until a passing motorist stopped and followed it into bushes (The Sun)
Nominations for Hero Dog Awards 2021 now open! (Hero Dog Awards)
This morning, the First Lady’s office posted a letter that’s worth reading in full. An excerpt:
“I am disappointed and disheartened with what happened last week. I find it shameful that surrounding these tragic events there has been salacious gossip, unwarranted personal attacks, and false misleading accusations on me – from people who are looking to be relevant and have an agenda. This time is solely about healing our country and its citizens. It should not be used for personal gain.Our Nation must heal in a civil manner. Make no mistake about it, I absolutely condemn the violence that has occurred on our Nation’s Capitol. Violence is never acceptable.
As an American, I am proud of our freedom to express our viewpoints without persecution. It is one of the paramount ideals which America is fundamentally built on. Many have made the ultimate sacrifice to protect that right. With that in mind, I would like to call on the citizens of this country to take a moment, pause, and look at things from all perspectives.
I implore people to stop the violence, never make assumptions based on the color of a person’s skin or use differing political ideologies as a basis for aggression and viciousness. We must listen to one another, focus on what unites us, and rise above what divides us.”
Unfortunately, Mondays with Melania will be ending next week. While I am planning something special for the last edition, I also wanted to tell you about the first.
The first Mondays with Melania was conceived and written by Bre Payton and included in BRIGHT on December 10, 2018. I thought it would be fitting to repost this week:
Do the Trump’s exchange Christmas gifts with one another? Probably not. According to Hollywood Life, Melania reportedly finds her husband, Donald Trump, “next to impossible to buy for,” and that the two often don’t exchange presents on Christmas. I relate to this so hard. I cannot for the life of me pick out a present for my (very easygoing) boyfriend. So I can’t imagine having to find a gift for someone like Donald Trump.
Flashback: Back in April, the President gave an interview to Fox & Friends to wish Melania a happy birthday. When asked, he admitted he failed to get his wife a gift, saying that he got her a card and some flowers, but that he’s “very busy to be running out looking for presents.”
If my man didn’t get me a birthday gift and told the whole country he was too busy to do so, I wouldn’t get him anything for Christmas either.
Here’s a recap of Melania’s looks throughout the week — what she wore to George H.W. Bush’s funeral, as well as her favorite gloves and boots.
The sleek, black, off-the-shoulder dress Melania wore to the White House Hanukkah party last week has reportedly sold out.
Mondays with Melania is a weekly feature that highlights what the First Lady is doing and wearing.
Note: By using some of the links above, Bright may be compensated through the Amazon Affiliate program and Magic Links. However, none of this content is sponsored and all opinions are our own.
Jan 11, 2021 01:00 am
My house has a ghost — the afterimage of someone who moved out, not the specter of a deceased person. In election jargon, a stale voter. Read More…
Questions for Democrats
Jan 11, 2021 01:00 am
When it comes to how we Americans get to act over the next four years, are the Biden rules going to be the same as the Trump rules? Read more…
There has been a lot of talk about big tech censorship following the permanent Twitter ban of President Donald Trump and the loss of thousands of conservative voices during the subsequent ” … Read more
It appears that global oligarchs have decided to not only collude with China’s totalitarian control over its society, but to export it to formerly free nations such as the United States.
President Trump told the assembly: ‘I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the Capitol building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard.’
The reality of our shifting sexual guardrails is worrisome not just because of what we’ll normalize in a decade, but due to the harm done in the process.
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
“You must read The Transom. With brilliant political analysis and insight into the news that matters most, it is essential to understanding this incredible moment in history. I read it every day!” – Newt Gingrich
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UK steps up vaccinations as COVID surges Britain is facing the worst weeks of the pandemic, its chief medical officer said on Monday, with the health service facing a “dangerous time” as deaths and cases hit record highs before the rollout of a mass vaccination program. Deaths from the virus have now exceeded 81,000 in the United Kingdom – the world’s fifth-highest toll – with more than 3 million people testing positive. A new, more transmissible variant of the disease is surging through the population, with one in 20 people in parts of London now infected.China reports biggest daily case jump in over 5 months Mainland China saw its biggest daily increase in COVID-19 cases in over five months, the country’s health authority said, as new infections in Hebei province surrounding Beijing continued to rise. A county in northeastern Heilongjiang province on Monday moved into lockdown after reporting new infections, state television also reported.Indonesia approves Sinovac vaccine Indonesia gave Sinovac Biotech’s vaccine its first emergency use approval outside China as the world’s fourth most populous country launches nationwide inoculations. A lack of data and varying efficacy rates reported for the vaccine from different countries could undermine public trust in the rollout, according to public health experts.Japan preparing to expand emergency Japan is preparing to expand a state of emergency to the western prefectures of Osaka, Kyoto and Hyogo by the end of the week, Jiji news agency reported. The three prefectures on Saturday asked the government to impose a state of emergency, which is already in place in around Tokyo.
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Trump may turn to Rudy Giuliani to defend him against possible impeachment over his role in last week’s violent siege of the U.S. Capitol, according to two people familiar with the matter.
Tesla Inc is searching for a design director in China, part of efforts to open a “full-function” studio in Shanghai or Beijing and design electric cars tailored to Chinese consumer tastes, according to three people with knowledge of the matter.
Hyundai Motor and Apple plan to sign a partnership deal on autonomous electric cars by March and start production around 2024 in the United States, local newspaper Korea IT News reported. Reuters reported last month that Apple was moving forward with autonomous car technology and aimed to produce a passenger vehicle that could include its own breakthrough battery technology as early as 2024.
The fact that many of the biggest companies in the world absolutely despise conservatives did not first manifest this week. It didn’t start with this election. It didn’t even start with President Trump. Companies like Twitter, Shopify, Marriott, and others who recently cancelled binders full of conservatives have hated us for years. Industries like professional sports, Hollywood, and Big Academia have hated us for longer. They’ve just tolerated us because we help drive their businesses.
Most conservatives haven’t been blind to this détente, either. We just assumed they might hate us but they need us. The lesson we’ve been learning slowly in recent years and quite suddenly in recent days is that they don’t need us. At least they think they don’t. Or, to be more accurate, they think we won’t leave, that we’ll take the abuse and move on like good little sheep once President Trump is finally out of office.
Will we oblige? I, for one, will not. In recent talks with a couple of fellow conservatives, we came to a conclusion that many of you have probably already considered. Some of you may have even acted on it. Our idea isn’t novel in any way, but as far as we know there isn’t a successful iteration of it. The idea is this: Conservatives need an ecosystem that embraces freedom.
For every Twitter there’s a Gab and Parler (well, there WAS a Parler until this morning; hopefully they’ll get their mess figured out). For every Google there’s a DuckDuckGo. For every… and this is the point in the article in which I can’t come up with another good example. We need a repository, a catalog, a directory, a… something. I’m not looking for a list of companies whose CEOs donate to conservative causes, though that would be nice as well. What we need is a place where people can go and find alternatives to the radical-left-supporting companies out there, which seems to be most of them lately.
They don’t have to be MyPillow or In-N-Out Burgers. I just want to know who runs their businesses in ways that are pro-America, who will not cancel us because of our ideology, and who are not big supporters of progressive causes like Planned Parenthood or Black Lives Matter. I want to know I can do business with a company and have a reasonable expectation that my dollars aren’t being used against me down the line. And I want to know that if they don’t like the fact that I’m not “woke,” they’re not going to cancel my account or spit in my burrito.
So here’s what I need. First, are there already services out there that list these types of things? Maybe I’m just bad at searching but the best I could find were short lists of a handful of conservative companies. Second, what companies should be listed? I’d love to hear from you guys as we contemplate how to make this happen. At this early stage, we’re just coming up with ideas. But we want to move quickly. If we wait too long we may not even be able to spread the word once we get it built.
I don’t want to get into many more details, not because I’m paranoid that someone will steal the idea (if you have the resources already, PLEASE steal the idea and run with it!) but because this is all just baking in the brain right now. I’m at the “spitballing” phase of development, but the pressure is already on to make something happen quickly.
As I posted to social media earlier, we thought the game was rigged when it was actually all a trap the whole time. Now we’re scrambling to figure out how to move forward. We cannot let this happen again.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Stripe and Shopify have joined the group of companies that have taken action against President Donald Trump, his campaign, and his business. Stripe, a payment processing company, told news outlets that it won’t process payments for Trump’s campaign because of the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol breach.
According to Stripe’s website, it doesn’t allow certain groups of businesses to use its services. That includes any business that “engages in, encourages, promotes, or celebrates unlawful violence or physical harm to persons or property.”
Shopify, meanwhile, took down online stores for both the Trump Organization and Trump’s campaign.
“Shopify does not tolerate actions that incite violence,” a Shopify spokesperson said in a statement to outlets. “Based on recent events, we have determined that the actions by President Donald J. Trump violate our Acceptable Use Policy, which prohibits promotion or support of organizations, platforms, or people that threaten or condone violence to further a cause. As a result, we have terminated stores affiliated with President Trump.”
The Trump campaign has not responded to requests for comment.
Jason Miller, a Trump campaign adviser, said in a tweet on Sunday: “75 million Americans voted for President Trump. Aside from their votes, their pocketbooks are their most powerful means of communication. We don’t have to spend our money with any companies participating in cancel culture. Corporate America is about to learn this the hard way.”
In all, 12 companies or services have taken action against Trump and his supporters following the Capitol breach.
Twitter permanently banned Trump and axed one of his campaign’s accounts, while Facebook banned the president until at least Jan. 20. Snapchat and Twitch disabled the president’s accounts. Instagram banned Trump. YouTube is taking heightened action against Trump. Pinterest and TikTok are limiting hashtags related to Trump. Discord and Reddit banned Trump supporters.
Additionally, Apple, Google, and Amazon removed the social media platform Parler from online stores and servers. Conservatives had flocked to Parler after a wave of bans on Twitter and other websites.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Anybody who hasn’t been sleepwalking through the last year will concur that 2020 convinced us that nobody in authority can be trusted. In the United States, both our legislative and judicial branches totally failed us. Most of our executive branch is now bailing out and abandoning our duly re-elected president. The last I heard he was at Camp David in the Maryland mountains. More about that later. Now as we are down to just nine days until January 20th, it’s impossible to really rely upon information coming from any so-called official source.
Conservatives here in Hawaii have long realized we cannot trust the Democrat authorities in our island state. I also empathize with many of my Native American friends who rightly distrust the Republican authorities back in Oklahoma who disrespect our sovereignty even after the Supreme Court decision in McGirt v Oklahoma.
Now in 2021, we have been taken off the offensive and the Stop the Steal initiative and put on the defense by a setup and accusations emanating from a false flag riot and invasion of the U.S. Capitol during the joint session of Congress on January 6th. Instead of going after the traitors who were about to give away our country to an interloper, they are now making a full-fledged effort to come after all Patriots, beginning with President Trump himself and extending to each and every honest patriotic American. Worthless and vengeful Senators like Mazie Hirono are calling for Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley to resign, when she should look in the mirror and realize she is the culprit who hates this country.
Most of your RINOs in Washington DC are on the wrong side of history. Most of them in your state capitals and city halls are also. So if you cannot trust your government, whom can you turn to?
ANTI-SOCIAL MEDIA
We’ve all been called things in Twitter that would probably make a sailor blush and told to do some things that even a contortionist could never accomplish. It is a place of hatred and animosity and very little civil discourse. Nobody ever convinced anybody of anything in Twitter. It has always been the home of disinformation and hostility. Therefore, we do not truly mourn its demise as they expel all of us Patriots from POTUS all the way down to us in the trenches.
But, if we want to communicate, where do we go from here? Everybody said, well let’s just use Parler. Then both Apple and Google conspired to delete the app which can no longer be installed on your phones. Play Store no longer makes it available for Android. Okay, then we’ll just access it using DuckDuckGo on the internet. Then co-conspirator Amazon is shutting down their servers probably before I finish this article tonight. Parler may be back but may or may not have all the previous accounts and posts available.
If nothing else, doesn’t this show you the extent of the conspiracy? Democrats and Republicans in our government have conspired against We the People. Now every Tech Giant is also lined up to censor us. Twitter, Facebook, Google, Apple, Amazon and the list goes on.
There are some other apps still available at this moment which I have downloaded before they are also taken away, including Gab, CloudHub and Telegram. Chances are, first of all, they will be overloaded by people trying to access them. Then the same conspiracy will do everything to eliminate them as well. Are you beginning to see how serious this effort is to keep us from expressing any views that are in opposition to the tyranny that now controls our country? Well, folks, if you think this oppression now is bad, you ain’t seen nothing yet until the Harris-Biden Administration takes over [and I said that exactly the way I intended to say it].
FAKE NEWS
I’ve been around since the time of President Harry Truman and I have never experienced a bigger feces-load of disinformation than what we are being bombarded with at this very moment. Be very careful and discerning whom you rely upon for information.
You’ve probably heard reports that either the Pope or the President of Italy or both have been arrested and that Mike Pompeo was involved in this effort. You’ve probably also been warned that Chinese troops are lined up on our borders with both Mexico and Canada to invade at any moment. What else have you heard? How did you get that info? There are a lot of Chicken Little “The sky is falling!” videos from serious-sounding people we’ve never heard of. It’s usually fairly easy for me to tell which ones are not credible, but my first question is whether these people really believe what they say or whether they are intentionally misleading us.
WHAT IS REALLY HAPPENING?
The sad and tragic reality is that all of these matters combined have intentionally put us in the dark so that it’s difficult to determine what is really going on. As I said earlier, it has been reported that President Trump went to the presidential retreat at Camp David this weekend. That would seem a very prudent action. It would be better for him to stay secluded and out of the public milieu but there were reports today that he might actually try to visit the Mexican border wall. Right now I hope he is singularly focused upon saving the United States of America from the Gathering Darkness.
John Chapter 3
19 This is the verdict: Light has come into the world, but people loved darkness instead of light because their deeds were evil. 20 Everyone who does evil hates the light, and will not come into the light for fear that their deeds will be exposed. 21 But whoever lives by the truth comes into the light, so that it may be seen plainly that what they have done has been done in the sight of God.
There are also reports that there were U.S. Special Forces members who infiltrated the group that penetrated the Capitol on January 6th and that they secured Nancy Pelosi’s laptop. At this point, I really cannot assess whether that is credible or not. If so, that would be a treasure trove of treason which would implicate Americans in high places here and abroad as well as foreign foes. It would also explain why the Speaker of the House panicked and called for both impeachment and the 25th Amendment. If reports are accurate that Nancy Pelosi asked the Chairman of The Joint Chiefs of Staff to take the military launch codes [the “football”] away from President Trump, our constitutional Commander in Chief, that is nothing short of an attempted coup d’état.
THE PRESIDENT’S CONSTITUTIONAL OPTIONS
I am not an attorney but I did enforce the law for many decades as a federal officer with U.S. Customs [USCS/CBP]. I am most concerned right now that there is a conspiracy of both members of our own government and high-tech companies to isolate the President of the United States from the American people. We the People must not let this happen.
As of now it appears that allegations that Apple and Google would shut down the presidential emergency alert system may not have occurred. My Android phone still shows that it is turned on and cannot be turned off. But after Play Store took away Parler and censored our communications, I simply don’t trust them for anything.
I even called my cell phone service provider and phone manufacturer and asked them to make Parler available for download. They basically just deferred and said Google will do what Google will do. They said I should call Google. That is the most ludicrous suggestion I have ever heard that Google would reconsider and allow me to install the Parler app just because I politely requested them to do so. That kind of ego, I do not have! When Big Tech censors the President of the United States and Commander-in-Chief, they sure as heck don’t care what you or I think.
But President Trump has a responsibility not only to maintain control of that nuclear football in case of an actual kinetic attack against our country [we have already had a cyber-attack Act of War], he also must be able to communicate with We the People. Therefore, he must do whatever is necessary. Submitted for your consideration is the following federal statute with pertinent excerpts:
The President is authorized, whenever in his judgment the public interest requires, to employ the armed forces of the United States to prevent any such obstruction or retardation of communication….
Upon proclamation by the President that there exists war or a threat of war, or a state of public peril or disaster or other national emergency, or in order to preserve the neutrality of the United States, the President, if he deems it necessary in the interest of national security or defense, may suspend or amend, for such time as he may see fit, the rules and regulations applicable to any or all stations or devices capable of emitting electromagnetic radiations within the jurisdiction of the United States….
☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
This is all still very much consistent with the Stop the Steal effort. Yes, they have successfully diverted attention away from the crux of the issue. Now we are defending President Trump against accusations that he incited a riot at the Capitol. That, of course, is hogwash. But we still have the real issue of intervention by foreign enemies with collusion by American traitors to steal this election. Let us never forget that!
THE GATHERING DARKNESS
We need to put this into historical perspective. If you or I had lived at the time of the American Revolution, information would have traveled only at the speed of the fastest horse available. During the old Pony Express and covered wagon days, a letter or what we now call snail mail could take weeks or months to get to its destination, if ever. Now I suppose we’re somewhat better though from Hawaii mail is notoriously slow. If it goes by boat, it takes a couple of weeks to get to the mainland. But I just had a personal instance where even first class mail couldn’t get a package from Hawaii to Oklahoma within a week. But I think those of us old enough do remember when exchanging letters meant waiting at least days for a turnaround and response even if the other party responded immediately.
I’m not the most tech-savvy person in the world and when I first heard about the internet about 30 years ago, I read a book called The Cuckoo’s Egg. A good one for some of you old-timers perhaps. Then when public access to the internet became available in the mid-1990s, it was kind of an exciting experience though we were treading in unknown territory. We had a form of MS-DOS-based email in the government since about 1987. Even as far back as when I started in 1979, we had computer-to-computer access, but not between individual users. So, having the ability to use email from a home computer was a new experience.
Then since we all got so-called smartphones, though sometimes I think they’re pretty dumb, we’ve gotten spoiled at being able to use email and social media on our phones in a mobile environment wherever we are. It became as close to real-time as possible. The problem was we didn’t really stop to think about who was providing these services and how they could unilaterally withhold them for political purposes from those who would not go along with their warped ideologies. We never really developed any recourse and right now our U.S. Congress is unwilling to hold these Big Tech companies accountable for their transgressions. But Congress is so corrupt that they have too much to lose by challenging their co-conspirators in industry just to benefit their innocent constituents.
I guess it’s good sometimes to have gallows humor, but I saw today that they would not allow conservatives to have pigeons because it might allow us to communicate with one another. My response was, don’t tell that to the Democrats because they wouldn’t understand that was just a joke. AOC would probably introduce the bill tomorrow.
SO WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO NOW?
I used to facetiously say with a football metaphor that if you don’t know whether to go for a touchdown or kick a field goal, drop back to the 40 and punt. But this is a real-life threat and not a game so therefore we must go for the win. If they turn the stadium lights off, we will be on the field with our flashlights on our helmets even if we have to charge them with a personal generator. We are already into overtime. The buzzer sounded on November 3rd but the final score has not been tabulated. Don’t trust the scoreboard, which will remain on even when the stadium lights are extinguished. It is owned by Dominion and uses Smartmatic software. It always shows the other team as being ahead.
So what we do is use every means available to remain in contact and stay in touch with one another. Google controls the voice recognition on my phone which I use to compose these articles and it has never been as slow and tedious as it is at this very moment. But, they can oppress us and they can harass us, but they will never, never defeat us.
ALL IS NOT LOST
To sum it up, even though they are shutting off the lights and closing down the communications channels, America survived in an age of pre-technology. They only had radio in World War II and only black and white television when I was a child. So, America has survived before without the internet and without social media and without smartphones.
At this time, we need to trust that President Donald Trump is doing his utmost to do what he must. Even though we may not have access to information the way we have recently, this is the time to pray and believe that God is still firmly in control. Nine days can feel like an eternity when events are fast-developing.
America’s best days are yet ahead! I’m not expecting any epiphany or any lightning bolts from Heaven, but the Lord Himself will ensure that His will be done! Neither a Harris nor a Biden nor a McConnell nor a Xi nor Big Tech can stand against the inevitable! God doesn’t take sides. It is We the People who choose whether to be on His side or on the side of the enemy.
They can never shut off our communication channel with Almighty God through prayer. That was available even in the day of candles and kerosene lamps. It served the Founders of our Nation very well and it will do just fine for you and me.
MODERN-DAY AMERICAN PATRIOTS
It’s time to recall the words of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, written in 1860 just prior to the first U.S. Civil War.
☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Listen, my children, and you shall hear of the midnight ride of Paul Revere….
*****
So through the night rode Paul Revere; and so through the night went his cry of alarm….
*****
Through all our history, to the last, in the hour of darkness and peril and need, the people will waken and listen to hear the hurrying hoof-beats of that steed, and the midnight message of Paul Revere.
☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
That happened in 1775, recalled in 1860, and now it’s once again midnight in 2021 as the war clouds once again gather, time for another midnight ride by today’s Paul Reveres. Saddle up, my fellow Patriots!
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Sometime back in the early sixties—climaxed in 1964 with Barry Goldwater’s efforts—the South with its conservative measure, almost En Masse wanted (and needed) a place to go other than the old Democrat bastion of “Solid South.”
The SS political vector had been in unofficial direction and vogue since the dastardly and corrupt destruction and “reconstruction” of the South; post-War-Between-the-States (the uncivil war). It was a result of the phony Republican party which had never had anything in mind in its creation but a national government to replace the (how ironic) republican one. And most of all, high tariffs were paid by the South for internal improvements in the North.
After beginning a war and ravaging the South for its comparable 1776 secession movements, the Republican party, and its political narcissists, bankers and railroad tycoon-thieves kept its boot on the neck of the South. (Yes, the Yankees started the war as they attempted to occupy a Southern fort—Sumpter. It was South Carolina’s fort, not the Union’s.)
In its formation in 1854 the Republican party had aligned itself to a certain extent with the abolitionists who were as radical then as the BLM and Antifa movements are today. But the newly formed Republicans had no interest in blacks other than keeping them out of the new territories. The Free-Soil movement was just that: no slaves allowed. Or put another way, no negroes allowed. And they had no interest in freeing them except to repatriate them to Africa. Lincoln himself was a proud member of the American Colonization Society.
Jefferson’s concept for ending slavery was the measure of spreading it out, therefore working to its ultimate dissolution. His famous “fire bell in the night” was a reaction to the Missouri compromise which had all the earmarks of a fear of slave state against non-slave state, and an economic war which usually results in a shooting war. And it did—The War for Southern Independence.
The myth of Republicans being the party attempting to end slavery in opposition to Democrats (especially Southern ones) opposing it is now coupled with the War between North and South as a “civil” war. These lies have come to us in the present and it is this exact kind of truth deficiency that has certain Southerners apologizing for what were Northern deficiencies.
The contemporary rot about “Honest” Abe joining a new party to free the slaves was just that: “rot.” The Republican party was the same then as it is now– money men for money men.
“The Northern onslaught upon slavery (ostensibly led by A. Lincoln and the Republicans) was no more than a piece of specious humbug designed to conceal its desire for economic control of the Southern states.”
Charles Dickens, 1862. One would have to search hard to find a more liberal mind in the 19th century than Charles Dickens.
The point to be made contemporarily is that the modern Republican party is as corrupt and state-owned as the Democrats and their government worshipping godless lackeys. Neither of this couplet of chicanery (Demos/Republicans) is worth the backside of a skunk’s firepower. Both are in the pocket of lobbyists and can be, and often are, bought.
The mass abandonment by the Republican Senators and Congressmen on and since January 10th of Donald Trump is demonstrable proof. This is the cloak of the political party system. They both often make a great show of their difference of opinion, though they pretend friendships in the honorable ways of, “…I’ll defend to the death your right to say it.” However, they are a political unit of the one-party of Washington’s BUREAU OF LIFE. They are not a dichotomy of political ideals. And these rubes in either party would not defend their own wife or children if a political contribution were in danger. Money first, family second.
“Defend to the death…”? Horse dung.
But now:
Flash forward from 1854 into the 20th century. With the Democrats building off the progressive Woodrow Wilson and the FDR socialist mindset (national governance of the people and their wealth). This mindset was initiated at the beginning of the century by Theodore Roosevelt’s Republican nationalism.
Before you could say “boo,” pushed by Roosevelt Republicans and Wilson Democrats this national government promoted and got an Income Tax Amendment (16th), a national bank (with no assets) –the Federal Reserve– and the virtual elimination of states electing Senators (17th). With the 17th Amendment Now, senators are no more than glorified congressional representatives. Considering the recent Georgia election runoff among the four clowns running, what difference does it make?
In 1964, Barry Goldwater who had as many enemies within his own party as Donald Trump has, captured the more realistic conservative vote of Republicans, which was really only a small part of the old Taft conservatism. But it also brought along the truest of genuine conservatives, the American South. Not unlike today’s people, though more with a populist scene, the South has rallied to Donald Trump via, unfortunately, the Republican party.
What many true conservatives have failed to understand is the bandit nature of both Democrats and Republicans. The difference being apropos to the difference in Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid. The Demos are Sundance, the fast-drawing killer, and the Repubs being the smooth-talking con artists—never heard a lie they couldn’t repeat.
One of the rich ironies is that George Romney was an enemy of Goldwater to at least the extent that Mitt Romney is of Trump. Like father like son, both Romneys have never been either conservative or had much loyalty or backbone. In fact, if they had been women they could have passed for Lisa Murkowski and Susan Collins.
The conservatives in the South today perhaps have finally come to understand that the Republican party is the kissing kin of the Democratic party. Both Democrats and Republicans are from the seed-borne child of the Washington momma-teat. Momma has produced two bastard children and they both live to soak, not the rich, but everyone else.
The father of political discourse once was the Constitution and its federal composition. But daddy was gunned down a long time ago by two train-robbing thugs.
I don’t know about other true conservatives, but the South needs another home. Trump is welcome, but not Sundance.
Down South, we have an old saying: “You lie down with dogs, you get up with fleas.”
After rigging the elections and staging the January 6th false flag “riot” at the capitol building in D.C., Democrats have some horrifying plans to roll out in their quest to achieve a full-blown Orwellian nightmare future for America… or at least what’s left of it.
With the rule of law now utterly rejected by every layer of the judicial system in the nation — including SCOTUS — there is no longer any controlling legal authority which will halt the rapid advance of the Left’s most ambitious agendas. And with Democrats now proving they can steal elections right in front of us, even with overwhelming evidence literally recorded on video cameras as the ballot counting crimes took place, they know nothing can stop them from fulfilling their most crazed visions of a Marxist society rooted in authoritarianism, censorship and lies.
Big Media, Big Tech and Big Government have now merged into one gargantuan monstrosity which allows no dissent and no challenges to its power. Obey or be crushed. Parler is being steamrolled by Apple as a demonstration of what happens if you dare suffer under the illusion that such a thing as the First Amendment even exists in this country anymore.
But that’s only the beginning. What comes next — if Trump and the Pentagon don’t stop Biden first — will rupture this nation to its core.
Here’s a list of 25 things that Democrats will likely try to implement in America, especially given that the GOP has proven itself to be completely useless at stopping the lawlessness of the Left. There was once a time when the GOP promised that if we voted for them, they would protect us from the most insane policy nightmares of the radical Left. But as of January 6th, the GOP has joined the radical Left in betraying America, and there is no longer any point in voting for any GOP candidate ever again.
25 things the Democrats will likely push if Biden is installed as president
Enforce nationwide mandatory masks and mandatory vaccines, all under fear of arrest.
Declare the Insurrection Act under Biden and weaponize the US military against patriots and Trump supporters by labeling them all “terrorists.”
Run a new slew of false flag operations to further paint Trump supporters as violent insurrectionists. The very same crisis actors used in the Jan. 6th riots are available for more acting gigs, and they already own all the MAGA gear to wear as costumes for CNN’s cameras.
Use forced “covid” lockdowns to further crush the US economy and drive the population onto government subsidies and food stamps, placing most Americans under the control of the regime.
Raise the minimum wage to $23 per hour, across the nation, causing a total collapse of the small business sector and driving tens of millions to unemployment and homelessness.
Tear down the border wall and encourage millions of illegals to swarm into America where they receive voting cards and instructions to vote for Democrats.
Outlaw all AR-15s and semiautomatic rifles, destroy the Second Amendment and confiscate all guns held by private citizens. (That’s about 500 million guns, by the way.)
Ban arm braces, 80% lowers, standard capacity magazines and most ammunition in order to disarm the public and make it easier for the Biden administration to achieve its goal of genocidal extermination of Christians, Whites and Trump supporters.
Crank up the money printing machines and create trillions in new debt to bail out Democrat-run cities and states. This will further destroy the dollar and lead to a financial collapse during which people who still hold dollars as currency will lose everything. (Anyone stupid enough to put their savings into dollars is about to learn a very expensive lesson about fiat currency collapse that has been repeated throughout world history.)
Protect Big Tech and its censorship regime in order to achieve total information dominance over America, snuffing out all independent or dissenting voices by any means necessary, including de-platforming, lawfare, economic warfare or threats of arrest.
Enact new carbon taxes to loot the people for driving cars, buying food or using electricity. Control human behavior through carbon allotments, and punish those who speak out against the new “green tyranny.”
Rejoin the Paris Climate Accord and other anti-America trade agreements that Trump rejected, once again placing America at a punishing disadvantage in trade actions with other nations, accelerating the global looting of America.
Remove all restrictions on China and invite the CCP to continue influencing America’s media, tech giants, stock market and elections, where they already have a strong foothold.
Critical Race Theory will be pushed into all public schools as part of the mass indoctrination of the youth with “official” hatred towards Whites, Christians and conservatives. All White people will be marginalized based solely on the whiteness of their skin, all while Leftists claim to be “tolerant” and “inclusive” as long as you’re a transgender, a Trump hater or a Person Of Color.
Enact government reparations to force White taxpayers to fund new handouts to People Of Color (POC) under the false justification that POC are “victims” and Whites are “oppressors.” (In reality, it’s White, conservative Christians who are now the marginalized victims in America.)
Eliminate $1 trillion in student debt, forcing taxpayers to pay off loans for left-wing university indoctrination training.
The NIH will be funded with tens of billions of dollars to create more biological weapons such as covid-21, covid-22, covid-23, all of which will be released to oppress the people through the same series of scamdemic hoaxes we all endured in 2020.
Launch nationwide arrests of pro-Trump conservatives to be placed into FEMA camps or executed as “traitors” after being labeled insurrectionists. The very same “resistance” that the Left celebrated for four years under Trump will be criminalized and prosecuted under Biden.
Pursue economy-crushing “Green New Deal” policies that will crush America’s economy and lead to mass famine due to the collapse of farming. Starvation is a desired policy of the Left because they want the masses to be completely dependent on government handouts for food, housing and health care.
Install more compromised voting machines across America so that Democrats never lose another election again. The ideal scenario for Democrats is to achieve a state where the votes of real voters no longer matter at all. That was already achieved on November 3rd, 2020.
Use widespread eminent domain laws to seize rural land and drive people into the Agenda 21 cities where they are easier to control and monitor. Use 5G Internet-Of-Things surveillance to track the movements and speech archives of all individuals. Roll out a Total Information Awareness techno-fascist police state under the banner of “security.”
All private health insurance will be outlawed, and healthcare rationing will be put in place, including death panels to decide who lives and who dies. Have no illusions: White people will be deemed to have no value in society whatsoever, so Whites will be killed first.
Purge the entire history of Trump from the internet and the White House archives, seeking to erase and rewrite history in classic Orwellian fashion. Purge all evidence of the election rigging crimes of the Democrats and erase all evidence of vaccine harm or the laboratory origins of the coronavirus.
“Anti-terrorism” laws will be invoked to cut off banking and all financial services to those who express dissent toward the authoritarian Biden regime. Any person flagged by the new social credit scoring system will be denied access to air travel, grocery stores or voting locations, much like is currently done in communist China.
The First Amendment will be nullified by new “hate speech” laws which will be upheld by the traitorous US Supreme Court as “justified” due to “right-wing violence.”
So unless Trump takes decisive action in the next nine days to expose the criminal corruption of the Democrats and reverse the stolen election, America will face the most deliberately destructive administration in its history… and the republic will not survive.
With Biden and Harris at the helm, I predict the United States of America as we know it will no longer be recognizable by 2023. It will be a failed state by 2025, and the fiat dollar will collapse, leading to widespread poverty, social chaos, disease and mass death.
Which is exactly what the CCP wants. And Joe Biden is their man to get it done. For the second time in history, we will have a president whose primary mission is the complete destruction of the nation he claims to be leading. (Obama was the first time.)
Prepare accordingly.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
When the SARS-CoV-2 virus first inflicted itself on planet Earth a year ago, causing worldwide COVID-19 cases to skyrocket, international leaders scrambled to respond. The elite coronavirus pandemic planners of the Bill Gates-hosted Event 201 that convened in New York City back in October 2019 already had a playbook. All they needed was Neal Ferguson’s inaccurate Imperial College model that predicted 2.3 million U.S. deaths to scare presidents, prime ministers, and premieres everywhere into taking extreme measures. Unprecedented quarantines of the healthy internationally ensued, and the citizens of Earth complied. We all wanted to do our part to eradicate this scourge.
That massively successful exercise in global compliance was intoxicating to those in power.
From a two-week lockdown that became a four-week lockdown that was intended to “flatten the curve” (remember that false flag?) so as to “not overwhelm the hospitals,” the Lucy Van Pelts of our international leadership kept yanking the football out of the way of the Charlie Brown citizenry. Although flattening the curve had worked, it was just a pretext to move the goalposts. Like throwing good money after bad in Las Vegas, the cognoscenti insisted that if we only kept doubling down on the bet, we’d finally hit the jackpot and eradicate the COVID-19 black plague proper. We would all unite to face down what we were told was a near-extinction level threat.
But because lockdowns were so demonstrably failing to impede COVID-19 – and with growing evidence, they were far more damaging than a virus with a 99.74% recovery rate – our leaders all changed their minds about a second, “crucial” factor in razing the earth-paralyzing threat: masks. The World Health Organization, (WHO) the CDC, Surgeon General Jerome Adams, and then-White House coronavirus adviser Anthony Fauci all reversed their positions of just a few months previous on masks. Without any science whatsoever to prove their efficacy against the spread of COVID-19, they insisted in concert that we must all wear masks whenever we ventured outside the home.
The mainstream media midwifed the messaging – and like sheep herded by dogs, we all dutifully lined up for our face covers. Economy-exploding lockdowns that have caused 100 million people to be thrust into extreme poverty worldwide, according to the world bank, would now team with dehumanizing masks to isolate us from each other even further. But it would all be worth it, we were told, when we could stand at the top of COVID-19 mountain together, like soldiers at Iwo Jima, and plant the flag of victory.
And yet, even though 83% to 95% of Americans have been wearing masks faithfully in public for over five months, new cases spiked throughout the fall, and now Los Angeles is the U.S. epicenter. This is implicit proof that masks have done nothing whatsoever to stop the spread of the highly contagious virus. And yet we are a few short weeks away from Joe Biden taking office – and his promised 100-day national mask mandate.
Welcome to dystopia.
The robust Danish Mask Study – which couldn’t find a publisher for months based on its inconvenient, off-message conclusion – is the only “gold standard” large-scale randomized-controlled study of the efficacy of masks to prevent COVID-19. When it was finally published in November 2020, it was ignored by the media as an affront to the false narrative being promulgated across America.
The 6,000-subject Danish Mask Study found no evidence wearing a mask significantly minimizes the risk of contracting COVID-19. This proved face coverings an abject failure at mitigation of the virus and useful only as a symbol of conformity – something that would prove a phenomenally successful dress rehearsal for mass-compliance of the miraculous “warp speed” COVID-19 vaccine. With every measure – scientific, anecdotal, observational, or otherwise – demonstrating how largely useless masks have been in the battle against COVID – why are we still mask-shamed into wearing them?
It is self-evident the elites who have commanded us to wear them and browbeat those who question their efficacy don’t believe they work. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), Gov. Gavin Newsom, (D-CA) Gov. Andrew Cuomo, (D-NY) Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA), Dr. Anthony Fauci, Joe Biden, Sen. Diane Feinstein, (D-CA) Chris Cuomo, Gov. Ralph Northam (D-VA) and Sen. Chris Murphy (D-NJ) are just a handful of the imperious ruling class who subscribe to the rank hypocrisy of rules for thee but not for me. They have all been photographed maskless. If they really believed they were in danger of dying without masks, is there any doubt they’d wear them without fail?
So are we being gaslit? Is this the most successful campaign to fool the masses in American history?
Denis Rancourt’s review of over a decades worth of studies of the efficacy of masks against viruses such as seasonal influenza entitled “Masks Don’t Work” unequivocally demonstrates that face coverings provide no significant protection against infection outside of a clinical setting such as a hospital.
But no one knows of these studies.
The CDC’s website states that “in the 14 days before illness onset, 71% of case-patients and 74% of control participants reported always using cloth face coverings or other mask types when in public.”
But no one knows this either.
The best the CDC can offer as a counter to the robust Danish Mask Study and a decades-worth of mask studies that all conclude masks show little efficacy outside a clinical setting are as follows: an observational study of 15 hairstylists that showed masks appeared to help, a lab study of masks that shows masks are effective in a clinical setting – which we already knew – a retrospective study from Thailand with unverifiable data, and another observational travel study with data demonstrating that one single passenger with COVID who wore a mask did not spread it to 25 close contacts in the weeks after.
This is from CDC’s website:
“Data regarding the ‘real-world’ effectiveness of community masking are limited to observational and epidemiological studies.”
Note the word “limited.” Epidemiology has great value, but it is not considered “hard science,” employing the rigors of the scientific method. The Danish Mask Study is a randomized-controlled study, which is “hard” science – and that trumps epidemiological and observational studies every time.
And so the burning question is this: With unlimited financial resources available to it, why hasn’t the CDC undertaken a “gold standard,” large-scale, randomized controlled study to prove masks work in order to shut down any dissenting views with science?
The answer is two-fold.
One, the CDC doesn’t have to. As many as 95% of Americans have been wearing masks compliantly for over five months without any science to prove their efficacy. And two, the CDC is afraid of what it might find if its robust study reaches the same conclusion as the Danish Mask Study – that masks are by and large useless against the march of this virus.
So what is the over-arching theme here?
Compliance – possibly as a dress rehearsal for universal COVID vaccine compliance.
Is it possible that such compliance was the plan all along?
Go back and watch the Gates-hosted Event 201 video from 2019 that gamed out the international response to a future coronavirus outbreak. The boots-on-the-ground discussions about supply chains and mitigation efforts and scientific interventions are limited.
The exercise is primarily centered around how to censor “misinformation” that might arise concerning the pandemic and how to ensure one thing above all else when mitigation measures are dictated to us by world leaders.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Things seem to be working backwards at The Commons on St. Anthony nursing home in Auburn, New York. Vaccinating people is supposed to reduce or end coronavirus deaths. Right? But, at The Commons, such deaths are reported to have occurred only after residents began receiving coronavirus vaccinations.
James T. Mulder wrote Saturday at syracuse.com that until December 29 there had been no coronavirus deaths at The Commons. December 29, when deaths of residents with coronavirus began occurring at The Commons, is also, Mulder’s article discloses, seven days days after the nursing home began giving coronavirus vaccinations to residents, with 80 percent of residents so far having been vaccinated.
Over a period of less than two weeks since December 29, Mulder relates that 24 coronavirus-infected residents at the 300-bed nursing home have died.
This is the penultimate paragraph of Mulder’s article, where vaccinations at The Commons is mentioned:
The nursing home began vaccinating residents Dec. 22. So far 193 residents, or 80%, and 113 employees, or less than half the staff, have been vaccinated. The nursing home plans to do more vaccinations Jan. 12.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
File this away in the “CCP Lies” folder. Today, the Chinese Communist Party scrubbed the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) database of hundreds of studies pertaining to infectious diseases. As part of the Wuhan Virology Lab, these have been referenced regularly by researches as the most complete studies on animal-to-human transfer of coronaviruses, including COVID-19. According to The National Pulse:
Details of over 300 studies, many of which focus on investigating diseases that transfer from animals to humans, are missing from the state-run National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC).
The NSFC also deleted all references to studies carried out by Shi Zhengli, the Wuhan-based virologist dubbed “Batwoman” in light of her trips to collect samples in bat caves. The purge follows the Wuhan lab altering its database of viral pathogens in December 2019 as COVID-19 began to spread.
This tells us two things. First, the CCP is continuing its year-long effort to rewrite the history of COVID-19 in real-time. They do not want anyone to blame them for what they’ve done in causing the spread of the pandemic. More importantly, this tells us that there are things in the studies that could be used to either implicate them for carelessness or more egregious wrongdoing.
The Chinese Communist Party’s information-control playbook dictates that they flood the world with false data while covering up anything that can tie them to mistakes or evil actions. Why would they delete 300 studies? Because somewhere in the mess is likely a single piece of data that can implicate them. If they only delete a single study, copies of that study that are already in the wild will be scrutinized. By deleting the one important study in a batch of 300, it makes it challenging, perhaps impossible, to isolate the data that points the finger at them.
If there’s one thing we’ve learned in the past year, it’s that the Chinese Communist Party will do anything to save face, even if that means the deaths of a massive number of people. It’s a lesson we should have learned long ago.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the resurgence of lockdowns that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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47.) ABC
January 11, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Democrats will try to vote on 25th Amendment bill, suggesting impeachment will follow: Days after pro-Trump rioters breached the Capitol, the push to impeach President Donald Trump has intensified, with the majority of Americans saying he should be removed from office, according to a new ABC News/Ipsos poll. Today, Congress will call for Vice President Mike Pence to use his powers under the 25th Amendment to “declare the President incapable of executing the duties of his office” within 24 hours, according to a letter released Sunday by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. If Republicans block this move, Democrats will vote on the bill Tuesday and impeachment proceedings could take place later this week. “In protecting our constitution and Democracy, we will act with urgency, because this President represents an imminent threat to both,” Pelosi added. More than 200 cosponsors have backed an article of impeachment for Trump, which holds him accountable for “incitement of insurrection.” In addition, several GOP leaders including Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, also have said Trump should be removed from office. For an expanded look into what happened at the Capitol riots, watch the ABC News special, “24 Hours: Assault on the Capitol,” exclusively on Hulu beginning tonight.
US sees increasing COVID-19 cases post-holidays: The post-holidays coronavirus surge that health officials warned of may have finally arrived. A new report from the COVID Tracking Project revealed new numbers reflecting the dire situation the country is facing right now, especially in the West. According to the report, which was released Saturday, the seven-day average of cases is up in 38 states, including California, where the number of deaths was just shy of 700 on Saturday alone and hospitalizations in Los Angeles County reached nearly 8,000. Montana and Washington also join the Golden State as having the second- and third-highest increases, respectively. Nationally, there was a record seven-day average for total hospitalizations (130,350) and daily deaths (3,091). At least 90 million people worldwide have been diagnosed with the virus, according to data from John Hopkins University’s Coronavirus Resource Center. The U.S. has 22,409,129 cases, and at least 374,329 deaths, Johns Hopkins reported Sunday.
Titans honor 6 heroic officers from Nashville Christmas Day explosion: During Sunday’s NFL playoff game between the Baltimore Ravens and the Tennessee Titans, the six first responders responsible for safely evacuating residents in downtown Nashville prior to the Christmas Day bombing were recognized for their heroic act. Officers Brenna Hosey, Tyler Luellen, Michael Sipos, Amanda Topping, James Wells and Sergeant Timothy Miller were invited to the game and recognized as honorary Titans, according to the team. “While we can never thank these officers enough for their heroic acts, it is an absolute privilege to have the opportunity to honor them,” Titans President and CEO Burke Nihill said Sunday. “We are grateful for their service to our community and appreciate that we’ll have them on site to support the team.” On Christmas morning, the officers were called to downtown Nashville, where they discovered a recreational vehicle playing a recording saying a potential bomb would detonate within 15 minutes. They worked quickly to evacuate the area, and at 6:30 a.m., a bomb exploded. Eight people were injured in the blast and the owner of the RV was killed.
4-year-old’s balloon containing 5 wishes is found by stranger 650 miles away: A Louisiana man is making sure two girls’ dreams come true after finding their Christmas wishlists in a balloon. On Dec. 1, Leticia Gonzalez, a mom of 4-year-old twin daughters, Luna and Gianella Gonzalez, both released balloons containing five holiday wishes. “It was something different for the girls — a memory they could keep after a rough 2020,” Leticia told “GMA.” She said that it was cold and windy that day and didn’t expect the balloons to go that far, but they did. Weeks later and 650 miles away from the Gonzalez home, Alvin Bamburg of Shreveport, Louisiana, found the balloon, which asked Santa for candy, a Spider-Man ball, a “Frozen” doll, a puppy and a My Little Pony. He shared it on Facebook, and asked his followers to help honor the girls’ wishes. “I believe that we don’t meet people by accident,” said Leticia. “I feel like we’ve made new friends for a lifetime.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Grammy Award-winning singer and songwriter Finneas joins us live to chat and perform his song, “What They’ll Say About Us.” Plus, Elizabeth Olsen joins us live to talk about the new Disney+ series “WandaVision,” in which she reprises her role of Wanda Maximoff from the Marvel Cinematic Universe. And Cheryl James and Sandra Denton, better known as female hip-hop duo Salt-N-Pepa, will join us to talk about their new biopic on Lifetime. All this and more only on “GMA.”
President Donald Trump could become the first president to get impeached twice as he faces more backlash for inciting the deadly attack on the U.S. Capitol last week.
Here’s what we’re watching this Monday morning.
Pelosi to Pence: Invoke 25th Amendment or we’ll impeach
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Sunday that lawmakers will move forward with impeaching President Donald Trump if other efforts to remove him from office fail.
Pelosi said Sunday that the House will formally call on Vice President Mike Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment and declare that Trump is incapable of executing the duties of his office. If the vice president refuses, Pelosi said the House will impeach the president.
House Majority Whip Rep. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., suggested that the House could take up the articles of impeachment against Trump early this week, but may wait to send them to the Senate until after President-elect Joe Biden’s first 100 days in office.
The moves come as the president faces more blowback from within his own party for the violent mob attack on the U.S. Capitol he helped incite.
Sen. Pat Toomey was thelatest Republican to call for Trump to immediately resign Sunday for “recruiting thousands of Americans” and “inciting them to attack the Capitol building” last week.
Two men holding zip-tie handcuffs among rioters arrested over weekend
Over the weekend, more disturbing images and video emerged from the mayhem and violence at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday as FBI officials across the country scrambled to make arrests.
Two men who were pictured carrying zip-tie style handcuffs and wearing tactical gear were charged Sunday in federal court with violently entering the Capitol and disorderly conduct, authorities said.
Counterterrorism experts expressed concern that many in the mob demonstrated police or military expertise and have led law enforcement from New York to California to investigate whether members of their own forces had participated.
The rush to identify and arrest those involved in the violent attack on the Capitol comes as more questions are raised about the failure to contain the rioters.
The previously unreported details undercut the assertion by a top FBI official that officials had no indication that violence was a possibility.
Sadly, another Capitol Police officer who responded to the pro-Trump riots has died.
Officer Howard Liebengood, a 15-year veteran of the U.S Capitol Police, died off-duty on Saturday. The Capitol Police confirmed his death, but did not disclose the cause.
Here is some more on the fallout from the riot:
Parler, “Twitter for conservatives,” went offline Monday after Amazon Web Services suspended it from its server for violent content.
The PGA pulled a major 2022 tournament from Trump’s Bedminster golf club saying it would be “detrimental” to their brand.
Stripe, the online payment processor for Trump’s campaign, also cut ties with him over the weekend.
We’re all spending more time outdoors this winter because of Covid-19. So finally an answer to the eternal question: Can you catch a cold from being in the cold?
One photo that went viral last week was different from many of the others.
It showed Rep. Andy Kim, D-N.J., cleaning up the floor of the Capitol rotunda long after the rioters had left.
“I was just overwhelmed with emotion,”Kim, 38, told NBC Asian America. “It’s a room that I love so much — it’s the heart of the Capitol, literally the heart of this country. It pained me so much to see it in this kind of condition.”
Rep. Andy Kim, D-N.J., cleans up debris and personal belongings strewn across the floor of the Rotunda in the early morning hours on Thursday after a mob stormed the Capitol. (Photo: Andrew Harnik / AP)
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Trump may finally face real consequences for his actions. But it’s up to the GOP.
Congressional Republicans now have a decision to make: What consequence should there be for President Trump’s actions and words that led to a violent insurrection at the Capitol last week?
REUTERS/Cheriss May
As House Democrats move forward first with a resolution calling for Vice President Mike Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment and then with impeachment if that’s not successful, the GOP is divided into three camps.
A handful of congressional Republicans – like Sens. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, and Pat Toomey, R-Pa. – want Trump out of office. ASAP.
“I think the best way for our country … is for the president to resign and go away as soon as possible,” Toomey said on “Meet the Press” yesterday, though he argued that there isn’t enough time to pursue impeachment and a Senate conviction.
A larger group of Republicans – like Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo. – believe Trump’s actions were “reckless,” but that his presidency is coming to an end and the country should focus on the incoming Biden administration.
“Now, my personal view is that the president touched the hot stove on Wednesday and is unlikely to touch it again,” Blunt told CBS. “And if that’s the case, I think we get — every day — we get closer to the last day of his presidency.”
And then there are the Republicans – like Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio – who are opposed to impeachment because they say it would divide the country, even though these same members voted to object to the 2020 presidential results.
“I do not see how that unifies the country,” Jordan said of the Democratic impeachment effort.
Someone like Rep. Liz Cheney, the No. 3 Republican in House leadership, would be key to any effort to remove Trump – either by impeachment or a resignation forced by the threat of impeachment.
It needs to be a bipartisan effort, which the previous impeachment (over Ukraine) wasn’t.
History is watching.
TWEET OF THE DAY: What happened inside the Capitol
Do Dems go full speed ahead? Or wait?
While Democrats are united that Trump should be held accountable, they’re also divided — on the timing.
Do they go full speed ahead? Or do they delay sending the Senate the articles of impeachment until after Biden’s first 100 days in office, as House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn has suggested?
For his part, Biden said his focus is on governing.
“I’m focused on the virus, the vaccine, and economic growth. What the Congress decides to do is for them to decide,” he said on Friday. “But I’m going to have to, and they’re to have to be ready to hit the ground running because when Kamala and I are sworn in we’re going to be introducing, immediately, significant pieces of legislation.”
Biden added, “If we were six months out, we should be moving everything to get him out of office, impeaching him again, invoke – trying to invoke the 25th amendment, whatever it took to get him out of office. But I am focused now on us taking control as president and vice president on the 20th, and to get our agenda moving as quickly as we can.”
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
More than 88 million: The number of Trump’s Twitter followers before the social media service shut down his account late last week.
22,495,929: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 768,418 more than Friday morning.)
374,996: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 8,952 more than Friday morning.)
129,229: The number of people currently hospitalized with coronavirus
268.12 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
9: The number of days until Inauguration Day.
Biden picks Burns to head to the CIA
This morning, President-elect Joe Biden announced selecting former Obama Deputy Secretary of State and former Ambassador William Burns to head the CIA.
The Washington Post’s David Ignatius has more on the Burns pick: “Burns is an inside player — brainy, reserved, collegial — and loyal to his superiors, sometimes to a fault, as he conceded in his 2019 memoir.”
“The choice of Burns will disappoint those who wanted a career intelligence officer to succeed Gina Haspel, the current director… Biden opted for an outsider who could bring independent judgment to running the agency.”
BIDEN TRANSITION WATCH
Filled Cabinet positions
State: Tony Blinken
Treasury: Janet Yellen
Defense: Ret. Gen. Lloyd Austin
Attorney General: Merrick Garland
Homeland Security: Alejandro Mayorkas
HHS: Xavier Becerra
Agriculture: Tom Vilsack
Transportation: Pete Buttigieg
Energy: Jennifer Granholm
Interior: Deb Haaland
Education: Miguel Cardona
Commerce: Gina Raimondo
Labor: Marty Walsh
HUD: Marcia Fudge
Veterans Affairs: Denis McDonough
UN Ambassador: Linda Thomas-Greenfield
Director of National Intelligence: Avril Haines
EPA: Michael Regan
SBA: Isabel Guzman
OMB Director: Neera Tanden
US Trade Representative: Katherine Tai
CIA: William Burns
Other top Biden staffers
Chief of Staff: Ron Klain
National Security Adviser: Jake Sullivan
Climate Envoy: John Kerry
Domestic Policy Council Director: Susan Rice
National Economic Council Director: Brian Deese
Surgeon General: Dr. Vivek Murthy
Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: Dr. Rochelle Walensky
Covid-19 Czar: Jeff Zients
White House Communications Director: Kate Bedingfield
White House Press Secretary: Jen Psaki
VP Communications Director: Ashley Etienne
VP Chief Spokesperson: Symone Sanders
THE LID: Kitchen Cabinet
Don’t miss the pod from Friday, when we took a look at Biden’s latest Cabinet picks.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The FBI and NYPD warned Capitol Police about the chance of violence before last week’s rally and subsequent violence.
The outgoing chief of the Capitol Police says that House and Senate security officials were reluctant to put the National Guard on call in advance of Wednesday’s violence.
Marriott, Blue Cross Blue Shield and other companies says that they will cut off donations from members of Congress who voted to question states’ electoral certifications.
The PGA will strip a major tournament from Trump’s New Jersey golf course next year.
The Capitol Physician is warning that Wednesday may have exposed additional members of Congress to Covid-19.
Plus: Pelosi will start impeachment proceedings if Pence doesn’t invoke 25th Amendment, asylum restrictions have been blocked, and more…
Amazon pulls plug on Parler. The relatively new social media platform Parler has—for now, at least—vanished, after Amazon canceled its web hosting contract with the company effective Sunday night. Google also banned Parler, on Friday, with Apple following suit on Saturday. The companies cite posts making threats against Mike Pence, organizing last week’s events in Washington, D.C., and making plans for further action to challenge the 2020 election results.
Parler may “be unavailable on the internet for up to a week as we rebuild from scratch,” wrote CEO John Matze in a statement. “We will try our best to move to a new provider right now as we have many competing for our business.”
Matze called it a coordinated attack by Apple, Amazon, and Google “to kill competition in the market place.” He added that “you can expect the war on competition and free speech to continue, but don’t count us out.”
Parler isn’t really a competitor for Apple, Amazon, or Google, and Parler’s head displays a fuzzy conception of free markets if he thinks it means big tech companies must contract with apps and businesses they don’t wish to, for whatever reason.
But Matze isn’t wrong that something here stinks.
Plenty of digital platforms—including those much bigger and more mainstream than Parler—provide a place for conspiracy theorists, MAGA riot organizers, and threats of violence, as well as the politicians who back and encourage these forces. To take action against Parler and no other social media sites or web forums—and to do it so swiftly, without providing them with a little buffer to find new options—feels like the Amazon/Apple/Google version of Twitter and Facebook suddenly banning Trump’s accounts and deleting his post history. It’s a big, high-profile move in the midst of inflamed passions and threats of legal action that feels more designed to stave off becoming a target themselves.
It’s not a First Amendment issue, of course, and it’s perfectly within Apple’s, Google’s, and Amazon’s rights as private companies to make these choices. But it also looks a lot like they’re making Parler a sacrificial lamb to political pressure to do something about people talking too uncontrollably online.
Actionable threats and harassment needn’t be ignored, but we should focus on the folks behind those threats, not aim to take down whole ancillary reams of speech and content to punish a minority of lawbreakers.
Incidentally, this provides the anti-Section 230 crowd with a better glimpse of what a world without Section 230 would look like all the time, not just in the wake of incidents that rattle us. Nobody would want to even tangentially do business with apps and other web forums that don’t aggressively police and limit user speech, for fear that liability would work its way up the food chain to them.
(One of the first civil lawsuits under the 2018 law FOSTA, which took aim at Section 230 and online ads for sex work, was against Mailchimp for letting an adult ad website sign up for an account and send emails.)
Parler was painted as a broadly conservative answer to Twitter, a place where free speech reigned. In reality, it attracted a certain strain of conservatism—that which worshiped President Donald Trump and often trafficked in wild conspiracy theories—and quickly started running into issues between its original “anything goes” ethos and the demands of moderating a major platform. But for all its flaws, it doesn’t deserve its current fate as a tech scapegoat for last week’s attack on the U.S. Capitol.
IMPEACHMENT IMMINENT?
If the vice president doesn’t invoke the 25th Amendment to get Trump out of the White House now, Nancy Pelosi will start impeachment proceedings. The House speaker plans to begin taking those steps today, attempting “to pass a resolution by unanimous consent Monday morning calling for Pence and Trump’s Cabinet to invoke the 25th Amendment and remove Trump from office,” reports CNN.
If the resolution doesn’t pass by unanimous consent — and it most assuredly won’t given likely Republican resistance — then the measure will be brought to the floor for a full vote on Tuesday.
The resolution will call on Pence to respond within 24 hours and, if not, the House would move to impeach the President.
“Next,” Pelosi said in a letter to Democratic colleagues, “we will proceed with bringing impeachment legislation to the Floor.”
[…] Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell previously made clear in a memo that even if the House moved in the coming days to impeach Trump, the Senate would not return to session before January 19. That would place the start of the trial on January 20 — the date of Biden’s inauguration.
• “More than 5,000 law school alumni and students have signed a petition calling for the disbarment of Sens. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) over what it says were their ‘efforts to undermine the peaceful transition of power after a free and fair election,'” notesThe Washington Post. You can read the full petition here.”
• Asylum restrictions set to take place today have been blocked, after another federal judge ruled Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf’s appointment to be illegitimate. “In a scathing 14-page decision, Judge James Donato of the U.S. District Court in San Francisco agreed with other federal judges who have concluded that DHS failed to follow proper legal procedures when installing Wolf as the department’s acting secretary,” reports CBS News. “He said Trump administration lawyers ‘recycled’ arguments to defend the legality of Wolf’s appointment, ‘as if they had not been soundly rejected in well-reasoned opinions by several courts.'”
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.
Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Playboy, Fox News, Politico, The Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.
Reason is the magazine of “free minds and free markets,” offering a refreshing alternative to the left-wing and right-wing echo chambers for independent-minded readers who love liberty.
On Wednesday, apparent Trump-supporters broke the flimsy barriers erected to protect the nation’s capitol and stormed inside. Already every head that can talk, has. Poignant points have already bee … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
01/11/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Impeachment; Social Media; Shining City
By Carl M. Cannon on Jan 11, 2021 08:34 am
Good morning, it’s Monday Jan. 11, 2021. The sun is up in the nation’s capital as I write these words, but the dark fallout continues from the mob violence wreaked by President Trump’s supporters in the hallowed halls of Congress last week. Another member of the U.S. Capitol Police has died, for one thing. Meanwhile, official Washington is wrestling with how to get through the next nine days.
This is not what presidential transitions are supposed to look like. All of Donald Trump’s predecessors — from George Washington through Barack Obama — realized it had to be done peacefully. Not this guy.
To be sure, others have behaved badly. President Benjamin Harrison sabotaged the economy after losing his rematch with Grover Cleveland. President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt also put partisanship ahead of the people by rebuffing Herbert Hoover’s overtures in the winter of 1932-1933, as the Great Depression worsened. Until now, James Buchanan was universally considered in a class by himself for feckless behavior by an outgoing president. As he dithered, the Confederacy took shape, the result being that the 1860-1861 transition is universally ranked as the worst.
In inciting a mob to march on the Capitol, however, Trump may have earned the dubious distinction of eclipsing Buchanan: After all, the 15th U.S. president didn’t personally call for Fort Sumter to be shelled.
In a moment, courtesy of Ronald Reagan, I’ll offer an example of the soaring rhetoric that the occasion demands. I’d first direct you to our front page, which aggregates, as it does each day, an array of columns and stories spanning the political spectrum. This morning’s lineup includes Tae Kim (Bloomberg News), John Cassidy (The New Yorker), John Harris (Politico), and Liz Peek (Fox). We also offer a complement of original material from RCP’s reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Nationalize Facebook, Twitter to Preserve Free Speech. Frank Miele explains why this provocative idea could end impediments to the free flow of information.
RCP Takeaway Podcast. In the latest episode, A.B. Stoddard joins Tom Bevan and me in discussing last week’s events in Washington.
Excerpt From “Center Stage,” a Political Thriller. Sample the first chapter of Wayne Avrashow’s new work, from the RealClear Publishing imprint.
The Political Struggle for Control of Bank Loans. Progressives increasingly impose their will on big business through banks controlling their loan lifelines, John Hirschauer reports for RealClearInvestigations.
Trump’s Last Chance to Release “Russian Collusion” Documents. Also at RCI, Aaron Mate lays out critical issues that could be cleared up before the president leaves office next week.
Democratic Trifecta Promises Tax Increases. At RealClearMarkets, Andrew Wilford expects changes in capital gains, income and corporate tax rates now that control of the Senate has shifted.
We Need a Humane New Deal for Animals. At RealClearPolicy, Robin Ganzert argues that conditions endemic to wet markets around the world were proven in 2020 to be inseparably linked to human lives, which ought to prompt action.
* * *
On this date in 1989, Ronald Wilson Reagan addressed the American people for the last time as president. In contrast to Donald Trump, Reagan was leaving in triumph. In 1984, he’d won a second term in an actual — not a fictional — landslide, and in 1988 had seen his loyal vice president succeed him: a third term for “the Gipper,” crowed some Reaganites. In his farewell address, Reagan didn’t boast about any of this. He did extol what he viewed as the policy successes of his administration, while deflecting credit to the countrymen themselves.
“And in all of that time I won a nickname, ‘The Great Communicator,'” he noted. “But I never thought it was my style or the words I used that made a difference: It was the content. I wasn’t a great communicator, but I communicated great things, and they didn’t spring full bloom from my brow, they came from the heart of a great nation — from our experience, our wisdom, and our belief in the principles that have guided us for two centuries.”
As he ended his speech, Reagan left us with his vision of America — one nearly diametrically opposed to what we’ve heard in the past five years.
“I’ve spoken of ‘the shining city’ all my political life, but I don’t know if I ever quite communicated what I saw when I said it. But in my mind, it was a tall, proud city built on rocks stronger than oceans, windswept, God-blessed, and teeming with people of all kinds living in harmony and peace; a city with free ports that hummed with commerce and creativity. And if there had to be city walls, the walls had doors and the doors were open to anyone with the will and the heart to get here. That’s how I saw it, and see it still.”
Former Vice President Joe Biden is assembling a national security team that’s more extreme than the one Barack Obama picked in 2009. American sovereignty is out and globalism is back in, with disturbing tilts toward Iran, Communist China, and even Russia. The Center for Security Policy’s John Rossomando and J. Michael Waller will take a look at how the Biden-Harris diplomatic, defense, and national security team is coming together, the various worldviews they bring to positions of power, and what it means for the United States and the American people.
German poet Martin Niemöller famously described how the Nazis achieved absolute power, warning: “First, they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out because I was not a Jew.” He remained silent when they came for other groups of which he was also not a part. When they came for him, there was no one left to help.
Partisans whose totalitarian tendencies are becoming ever more apparent are now coming for Donald Trump and his supporters. They seek the President’s immediate removal from office and, in the meantime, are eliminating his and his allies’ access to communications platforms. They are ramping up economic warfare against like-minded businesses and are threatening any that might serve or hire Trump-tied individuals.
You may not be affected so far. But make no mistake: Unless this stops, they will, in due course, come for you.
Kyle Shideler: The events that transpired on Capitol Hill on Jan 6, 2021, were possibly pre-planned
Orchestrated situations on Capitol Hill, bomb threats called in for the Cannon House Office Building and the James Madison Library of Congress Facility, and two pipe bombs found at both the Republican National Committee and Democratic National Committee
Months of rioting by notable left-wing actors vs. violence on Capitol Hill on Jan. 6th: What is the media portrayal like?
Shideler compares and contrasts the threats posed by white supremacists and the muslim brotherhood
RICK GREEN, Constitution Coach, Patriot Academy, former Texas State Representative, President, Authentic American History Productions, LLC, Twitter: @RickGreenTX
Rick Green: Jan 6th will go down as a victory for the cultural marxists as evil and foolish attackers descended on our nation’s capitol
Congresspeople changed their votes based not on the evidence but instead from the violence they witnessed
When you ignore or encourage a problem, chances are it will come back
ROBERT CHARLES, Former Assistant Secretary, State at the State Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs in the Bush Administration, Author, “Eagles and Evergreens,” Twitter: @RCharles4USA
Robert Charles: There is a picture being drawn of America during a great point of weakness
Comparison to the post-9/11 international space when our adversaries used our division to advance their interests
President-Elect Joe Biden needs to double-down on President Trump’s deterrence policies
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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Good morning. It’s Monday, Jan. 11, and we’re covering another Boeing crash, more fallout from the US Capitol building siege, and the NFL playoffs. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
A Sriwijaya Air flight crashed into the Java Sea shortly after takeoff from the Indonesian capital of Jakarta Saturday, likely killing all 62 people aboard. The flight disappeared from air traffic control radar screens four minutes after takeoff amid a heavy monsoon rain. Authorities have located and are attempting to recover the plane’s black boxes.
The plane was a 26-year-old Boeing 737-500, an older model than the MAX aircraft involved in two recent fatal crashes which killed a combined 346. The previous crashes were attributed to advanced but faulty stall prevention software—the cause of Saturday’s crash is still unknown, though the aircraft reportedly had a solid safety record. Despite being unrelated to the problems of the MAX model, the crash comes at a critical time for Boeing, with the MAX models being approved to return to the skies just last week.
Fallout from last week’s storming of the US Capitol building continued over the weekend, with social media giant Twitter permanently banning President Trump’s personal account. The company cited two tweets it alleged risked inciting further violence; see the company’s explanation here.
Having amassed 88 million followers since 2009, Trump leveraged the platform to facilitate a connection with the general public unprecedented in the history of the Oval Office. Often using the channel to announce major policy changes or administrative moves, the president was tweeting an average of 33 times per day by the end of his term. Search through the entire Trump Twitter archive here.
In related news, Google and Apple suspended social media platform Parler from their app stores, alleging further violence was being coordinated on the site. Amazon followed suit, booting the website from its web hosting services (what is Parler?). A number of conservatives—who have long accused tech companies of bias—criticized the decision as censoring free speech.
Federal officials continue to search for those involved with the Capitol siege. More than 80 people have been arrested as of this morning, including an Arkansas man who lounged in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (D, CA-12) office and an Arizona man seen in widely shared photos wearing a fur robe and horned helmet.
The FBI said it is yet to uncover evidence that disguised counterprotesters led the assault on the US Capitol building. Claims that members of the leftist movement known as antifa perpetrated the violence went viral almost immediately. See a separate fact check here.
House Democrats appear set to bring articles of impeachment against the president. Procedurally, any such effort would not begin in the Senate until after the Jan. 20 inauguration. At least two GOP senators have called on Trump to resign.
Finally, two law enforcement officers said Brian Sicknick, a Capitol Police officer who was killed in the melee, died from injuries after being struck in the head by a fire extinguisher while struggling with protesters. A second officer died by suicide over the weekend, though it is unclear whether the death was connected to the riot.
NFL Playoff Picture
The path to Super Bowl LV solidified over the weekend, with six wild-card games being played under the league’s new 14-team playoff format. The Cleveland Browns scored the upset of the weekend, jumping out to a 28-0 first quarter lead over the Pittsburgh Steelers before hanging on to win 48-37. It’s the franchise’s first playoff win since 1994. The Browns will visit the defending champion Kansas City Chiefs in the divisional round.
The outcomes set up a number of marquee matchups this coming weekend: Two superstar quarterbacks meet in New Orleans as Tom Brady’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers face Drew Brees’ Saints; Green Bay Packers QB Aaron Rodgers will host the Los Angeles Rams and QB Jared Goff; and reigning NFL MVP QB Lamar Jackson will take his Baltimore Ravens north to face the Buffalo Bills.
The favorites to win the Super Bowl include three stalwart franchises in the Chiefs, Packers, and Saints, with one interloper—the Bills.
In the college ranks, No. 1 Alabama faces No. 3 Ohio State in the national championship game tonight as 8.5-point favorites (8pm ET, ESPN).
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We’re going to let you in on a little secret: Your favorite soda probably isn’t very healthy.
But that can always change. OLIPOP is the delicious, refreshing soda you love, with the digestive health benefits you need. Their sodas have the same great taste as classics like orange soda, root beer, and (our personal favorite) Vintage Cola, but with 90% less sugar than the stuff you grew up with. Combine that with a mix of prebiotics, plant fiber, and botanicals to support your microbiome and benefit digestive health.
>“Sex and the City” revival greenlit for HBO Max; all main cast members except Kim Cattrall have signed on to the 10-episode limited series (More)
>The 2022 PGA Championship to be moved from Trump National Golf Club in New Jersey (More) | New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick to be awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom (More)
>Tommy Lasorda, Hall of Fame Los Angeles Dodgers manager, dies at 93(More) | Film director and former president of Directors Guild of America Michael Apted dies at 79(More)
Science & Technology
>Pfizer says its COVID-19 vaccine works against newly observed mutations of the coronavirus (More) | US passes 283,000 new cases reported in a single day, with 374,329 total deaths as of this morning (see dashboard)
>Bacteria can tell time, new study shows; nonphotosynthetic bacteria have internal processes that align with the 24-hour period of the day (More)
>Identical twins begin accumulating genetic differences in the pre-embryonic stage, new study reveals (More)
>The US sees decline of 140,000 jobs in December, the first monthly drop since April and beneath economist predictions of a 50,000 monthly gain; unemployment rate holds steady at 6.7% (More)
>US stock markets up Friday (S&P 500 +0.6%, Dow +0.2%, Nasdaq +1.0%) as all three indices reach fresh all-time highs (More)
>New Zealand’s central bank breached by hacker Sunday; breach contained and bank remains operational (More)
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Politics & World Affairs
>At least three people were killed and four injured in Chicago after a shooter goes on a four-hour rampage; police say victims appear to have been targeted at random (More)
>US likely to designate Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebel group as a terrorist organization as soon as today; group is the primary actor of one side of the country’s devastating six-year civil war (More)
>Spanish snowstorm leaves at least four dead, blankets Madrid with up to 20 inches of snow; marks the worst snowstorm since 1971 (More) | Power outage plunges the entire country of Pakistan into a blackout (More)
It used to be a highlight of our days to get home from school, grab a can or bottle of soda, and sip on it while kicking back. That is, until the sugar crashes started hitting. It wasn’t long before we realized that the ingredients in regular soda simply don’t cut it with our bodies. But thankfully, we recently discovered OLIPOP.
Historybook: Alexander Hamilton born (1755 or 1757); Grand Canyon becomes a national monument (1908); First use of insulin to treat diabetes in humans (1922); HBD Mary J. Blige (1971); RIP Edmund Hillary, one of first two people to reach summit of Mount Everest (2008).
“You don’t have to be a fantastic hero to do certain things—to compete. You can be just an ordinary chap, sufficiently motivated to reach challenging goals.”
– Edmund Hillary
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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January 11, 2021
Many Pathways to Policy Failure
By Jeffrey A. Tucker | Something has gone seriously wrong in the 21st century to the point that it seems like whole societies have forgotten everything we’ve learned about economics in the 20th century. It’s remarkable: we became wealthier than…
Cooperation, Not Retaliation, Can Restore Social Order
By Robert E. Wright | We have agency and reason and can see that the current cascade of retaliation and retribution is “unsustainable.” A great statesman focusing on first principles could, perhaps, cut the chain of retaliation and restore…
By Stacey Rudin | At some point, it’s not unreasonable to observe that this is no longer about public health. It’s about a new political vision, one hatched by a private few in order to rule over the many. It is unlikely to be shared by most…
By Joakim Book | Jones’ discussions are interesting and many of his proposals should definitely be introduced, but they don’t go far enough. Instead, we could do with much less democracy and much more individual liberty.
“The Market” Can Deliver Pho and Spring Rolls. It Can…
By Art Carden | Nobody ever saw one animal by its gestures and natural cries signify to another, this is mine, that yours; I am willing to give this for that. When an animal wants to obtain something either of a man or of another animal…
By Robert E. Wright | To reduce the probability of such a horror, America needs real statesmen (leaders of any gender who seek to implement rational policies instead of engaging in constant partisan pandering) to emerge from this mess.
Edward C. Harwood fought for sound money when few Americans seemed to care. He was the original gold standard man before that became cool. Now he is honored in this beautiful sewn silk bow tie in the richest possible color and greatest detail. The tie is adjustable to all sizes. Sporting this, others might miss that you are secretly supporting the revolution for freedom and sound money, but you will know, and that is what matters.
The lockdowns in response to the Covid-19 pandemic have taught many lessons. One is that politicians either don’t understand, or care, about maintaining the integrity of the wellspring of prosperity: private commerce, rooted in individual liberty and private property rights. A second is that an enshrined, protected and inviolable right—a human right—to private commercial dealing, on whatever scale or basis it may take, can no longer be overlooked.
On the menu today: Examining cause and effect in the sequence of Wednesday’s chaos at the U.S. Capitol; Twitter bans President Trump permanently; Amazon Web Services pulls the plug on Parler; and House majority whip Jim Clyburn says, “Let’s give President-elect Biden the 100 days he needs to get his agenda off and running, and maybe we’ll send the articles sometime after that.” Oh, and Alex Jones found a conspiracy theory that’s too farfetched, even for him.
Who Could Have Prevented Wednesday’s Violence?
Six events, in sequence:
One: At 8:17 a.m. Wednesday morning, Donald Trump tweeted, “All Mike Pence has to do is send them back to the States, AND WE WIN. Do it Mike, this is a time for extreme courage!”
“House Republicans on Monday blocked a measure calling on Vice President Pence and Trump’s Cabinet to remove him under the 25th Amendment,” the Washington Post reports.
“The procedural move by the GOP to block consideration of the measure under unanimous consent will force the full House to vote Tuesday on the resolution. The resolution pressures Pence to initiate proceedings to remove Trump in the wake of the attack on the Capitol by a pro-Trump mob and as calls from Trump’s impeachment grow.”
BuzzFeed News: Republicans are still trying to keep Trump in power even after he incited a deadly insurrection.
House Democrats on Monday formally introduced an article of impeachment against President Trump, charging him with “incitement of insurrection” for his role in the takeover of the Capitol last week by a violent pro-Trump mob, the Washington Post reports.
Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser requests Interior secretary “cancel any and all public gathering permits in the District of Columbia, and deny any applications for a public gathering during the period January 11 – January 24,” ABC News reports.
“As expected, the Supreme Court refused Monday to fast-track a batch of challenges to the presidential election filed by President Trump and his allies,” the Washington Post reports.
“The rejections came without comment or noted dissent, and were formal notifications of what already had become clear. Some of the petitions asking for the court to move quickly were filed in early December, and the court had not even called for responses from officials in the states where the results were challenged.”
Daily Beast: “It was one of the most shocking images of the Trumpist storming of the U.S. Capitol last week—a bearded man, making no attempt to disguise his identity, brazenly strolling around the building while brandishing a Confederate flag. But, despite the fact that his face was splashed across the front pages of newspapers around the world last week, the FBI hasn’t yet been able to identify the man, and it’s now appealing to the public for their help.”
Politico: “Democrats are weighing how to fast-track their plans to impeach President Donald Trump this week as new details, images and video further fuel the rage over the deadly domestic terrorist attack on the Capitol and those who enabled it.”
“Don’t underestimate just how shaken members of Congress have been by last week’s attack. Lawmakers had to flee the House and Senate chambers just minutes before the mob broke in, and now they’re learning more about just how close we came to a much greater tragedy. They’re furious, and they want answers and accountability. And it’s not just Democrats who feel this way.”
Daily Beast: “In a deeply weird and jarring farewell statement posted by the White House early Monday morning, Melania first paid tribute to those who lost their lives in last week’s violence carried out in support of her husband, before going on to settle some scores against unspecified people who she claims have ‘attacked’ her over the past few days since the riots.”
“It’s not exactly clear what she’s referring to—it’s hard to believe that Melania has really been at the forefront of anyone’s mind since last week’s unprecedented assault on American democracy.”
“Fox News Channel is removing one of its only nighttime hours of news coverage and replacing it with a right-wing opinion show, signifying a further shift toward the incendiary programming that Fox viewers overwhelmingly prefer,” CNN reports.
“After months of stoking anger about alleged election fraud, one of America’s largest talk-radio companies has decided on an abrupt change of direction,” the Washington Post reports.
“Cumulus Media, which employs some of the most popular right-leaning talk-radio hosts in the United States, has told its on-air personalities to stop suggesting that the election was stolen from President Trump — or else face termination.”
“Republican members of Congress who voted against certifying Joe Biden’s presidential victory, even after a mob broke into the Capitol, are being denounced by critics in their home districts who demand that they resign or be ousted,” the AP reports.
“Protesters, newspaper editorial boards and local-level Democrats have urged the lawmakers to step down or for their colleagues to kick them out. The House and Senate can remove members with a two-thirds vote or censure or reprimand with a majority.”
“President Trump has lost the support of many former loyalists in his administration after a riot at the U.S. Capitol that he helped provoke, and his White House is in ‘meltdown’ as it lurches through his final days,” Reuters reports.
“While Democrats plan to introduce an article of impeachment against Trump on Monday, many White House staff members are upset and embarrassed by the turn of events, and are eager to move on. They said they have faced criticism from peers and are worried about damage to their reputations and job prospects.”
“President-elect Joe Biden plans to nominate William J. Burns, a former career diplomat who has served both parties and won respect at home and abroad, to run a CIA that has been badly battered by the Trump administration,” the Washington Post reports.
“The choice of Burns is the incoming administration’s last major personnel decision, and it highlights the qualities that characterize Biden’s foreign policy team. Burns is an inside player — brainy, reserved, collegial — and loyal to his superiors, sometimes to a fault, as he conceded in his 2019 memoir.”
Politico: “President-elect Joe Biden has grown frustrated with the team in charge of plotting his coronavirus response, amid rising concerns that his administration will fall short of its promise of 100 million vaccinations in the first 100 days.”
“Biden has expressed criticism on multiple occasions to groups of transition officials — including one confrontation where Biden conveyed to Covid coordinator Jeff Zients and his deputy, Natalie Quillian, that their team was underperforming. … In interviews, multiple senior transition officials defended Zients and stressed the enormity of the challenge, noting that the Trump administration has refused to share key information for weeks.”
A majority of voters are against proposals to have reparation payments for slavery funded by U.S. taxpayers, but think such payments are likely to be enacted now that Joe Biden has been elected President and Democrats control Congress.
Twenty-three percent (23%) of Likely U.S. Voters think the country is heading in the right direction, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey for the week ending January 7, 2021.
Antifa domestic terrorists marched through the streets of New York City on Sunday claiming to own the public space, chanting, “Our motherf*ckin streets!” “F*ck the… Read more…
US lifts all self-imposed restrictions on Taiwan yesterday. A week ago we reported that China’s President Xi announced that his army should be prepared for… Read more…
Steve Malzberg discussed the proposed legislation in New York where the state will mandate COVID carriers be moved to detention centers and the cancel culture… Read more…
Earlier this week CNN interviewed John Sullivan from Utah after the shooting death of Ashli Babbit by Capitol Hill police. John Sullivan, a noted leftist… Read more…
Parler CEO John Matze responded to Amazon kicking the platform off their hosting services, calling it a “coordinated attack.” On Saturday, Amazon kicked Parler off… Read more…
Red Pope Francis Spoke Out Against the Protests in Washington DC in his Sunday homily today. AP News reports that the Pope spoke out against… Read more…
Whites need not apply. Democrat and RINO Governors destroyed small businesses with authoritarian Covid lockdown orders as Pelosi and McConnell held up stimulus money for… Read more…
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It remains a possibility that President Trump will pardon himself before leaving office. So perhaps it is useful to reflect on the legal advice that the president might, or might not, seek or receive on this question, and the potential consequences of the choices open to him.
Cdr. Jeffrey Vanak, representing the US Navy, is a National Security Affairs Fellow (NSAF) for the academic year 2020–21 at the Hoover Institution. In this interview, Vanak discusses his career as an intelligence officer, his work developing concepts in “human machine teaming” for the navy, and America’s interests in the Indo-Pacific Region.
Last month, the head of the world’s largest independent Muslim organization sent Secretary of State Mike Pompeo a gracious letter thanking him for his recent visit to Indonesia — home to the world’s largest Muslim population — to discuss the report of the Commission on Unalienable Rights.
President-elect Joe Biden and members of his foreign policy team have signaled their own European aspirations, with greater attention likely to be devoted to western European allies, France and Germany, as well as the EU itself.
Last week at the American Economic Association meetings, held online, many papers focused on Covid-19. A good example was the session organized by Dominick Salvatore which included Jan Eberly, Raghu Rajan, Carmen Reinhart, Joe Stiglitz, Larry Summers, and me. Most papers focused on the economic policy impact of the Coronavirus. I focused the “supply side” policies rather than on the “demand side” policies.
From Alex Tabarrok at Marginal Revolution, quoting Marty Makary, M.D., a professor of surgery and health policy at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine: …the FDA needs to stop playing games and authorize the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine. It’s safe, cheap ($2-$3 a dose), and is the easiest vaccine to distribute. It does not require freezing and is already approved and being administered in the United Kingdom.
More than four years after the Brexit referendum, the United Kingdom has finally left the European Union, and the timing could not be better. With Britain gone, Europe has nothing preventing it from adopting a new economic-policy model that is better equipped for contemporary conditions, not least a strengthening euro.
Economist and author Don Boudreaux of George Mason University discusses the life and work of the economist James Buchanan with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Buchanan received the Nobel Prize in 1986 for his work creating and developing public choice–the field which applies the tools of economics to politicians and political behavior. After discussing the importance of public choice, Boudreaux and Roberts focus on two contrarian articles of Buchanan’s where he argues for the importance of markets and life as processes rather than problems to be solved analytically.
The director of National Litigation & General counsel for the Goldwater Institute, Jon Riches, joins Paul E. Peterson to discuss a case before the New Jersey Supreme Court, which will decide whether taxpayers will be required to pay for teachers’ release time, where teachers work for their unions rather than the school district.
I’ve written before about how “The Box,” that is, containerization, slashed the cost of international trade, thus leading to more of it. My guess is that that reduction in cost was the equivalent of dropping tariffs by at least 5 percentage points.
This is another in my continuing series of excerpts from Joseph E. Stiglitz’s excellent 1988 textbook, Economics of the Public Sector. I’ve previously posted about this textbook here and here.
The year 2020 gave us a huge amount of evidence about the relative merits of government intervention and free markets. The bottom line is that government failed massively and free markets triumphed spectacularly (with one major exception) within the constraints that government placed on them. The one apparent exception to government failure is Operation Warp Speed but, as we shall see, that apparent exception may not be an exception at all.
Hoover Institution fellow Lee Ohanian discusses whether Phillips Curves are useful for forecasting inflation as well as New Deal policies and the persistence of the Great Depression, and much more.
Hoover Institution fellow Lanhee Chen discusses the future of Trumpism after a mob stormed the US Capitol while Congress was certifying the Electoral College vote. Chen also discusses the divide between Trump allies like Sens. Tom Cotton and Josh Hawley, Facebook and Twitter locking Trump out of their platforms, and Democratic control of the Senate.
featuring H. R. McMaster via The Association Of The United States Army
Former U.S. national security advisor and retired Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster delivers a candid assessment of American national security policy over the past two decades in Battlegrounds: The Fight to Defend the Free World.
“This is the beginning of the divorce,” former GOP Rep. Carlos Curbelo told The Hill on Friday as aftershocks from insurrectionary violence two days before reverberated across the nation. Curbelo, who represented Florida’s 26th District from 2015 to 2019, was predicting a final and permanent split between President Trump and the Republican Party.
As millions of students return to virtual classrooms after the holidays, new research reveals how the coronavirus pandemic has disrupted learning and skills retention nationwide that experts say could take years to overcome.
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
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71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief. Big Tech, Parler and Facebook
Good morning. It’s Monday, Jan. 11, and we’re covering Big Tech, Parler and Facebook. Want to stay connected with Victor? You can text him now (yes, text him) at 719-824-2386. Say “hello” today.
TOP STORIES:
Apple and Google Remove Parler From Their App Stores
Over the weekend, both Apple and Google pulled Parler from their app stores. The decision from both big tech companies comes following protests/riots at the U.S. Capitol last week, resulting in the death of five people. Apple and Google say that Parler users used the platform to incite violence and claim Parler does not moderate its content.
A representative for Apple said, “Parler has not taken adequate measures to address the proliferation of these threats to people’s safety. We have suspended Parler from the App Store until they resolve these issues.”
A representative for Google said, “Parler has not taken adequate measures to address the proliferation of these threats to people’s safety. We have suspended Parler from the App Store until they resolve these issues.”
In response to the comments, Parler investor and conservative political commentator Dan Bongino said that they are not a surveillance platform, but they do have terms of service for users to agree to when joining Parler.
Parler CEO Jon Matze called the move an attack on Parler, saying that, “We won’t cave to politically motivated companies and those authoritarians who hate free speech!”
Amazon Web Services Cuts Ties with Parler
On Saturday, January 9, 2021, Amazon announced it was cutting ties with Parler. Effective on Monday, January 11, 2021, Amazon kicked Parler from its web servers. As a result, Parler is down for a short period, according to its CEO Jon Matze.
Matze said, “We will try our best to move to a new provider right now as we have many competing for our business, however Amazon, Google and Apple purposefully did this in a coordinated effort knowing our options would be limited and knowing this would inflict the most damage right as President Trump was banned from the tech companies.”
Matze also said that they are going to building from scratch. “There is the possibility Parler will be unavailable on the internet for up to a week as we rebuild from scratch,” Matze said.
Facebook Removes Group Composed of 500,000 Former Democrats
On Friday, January 8, 2021, conservative activist and former Democrat Brandon Straka said that Facebook removed his group Walk Away on the platform. Walk Away consisted of former Democrats turned conservatives.
According to EIN News, “Brandon Straka revealed Friday that he was banned by Facebook, which removed hundreds of thousands of videos from former Democrats who have abandoned their former party. At the same time Facebook also deplatformed a dozen Walk Away Foundation staff members and dozens of volunteers, ostensibly for violating its terms of service.”
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR US AS AMERICANS
Google, Apple, and Amazon’s targeting of Parler for not moderating its content is a double standard. It wasn’t until April of 2018 that Facebook had an effective strategy in place to remove pro-Al Qaeda content on its platform. Additionally, as recent as 2015, Twitter had actual ISIS supporters and ISIS terrorists on its platform, spreading propaganda and inciting violence. Neither Twitter nor Facebook faced repercussions from Amazon, Google, or Apple for taking years to have a content moderation strategy in place.
If companies continue to blacklist Parler, the millions of Americans on the platform can expect it will not be as user friendly and smooth as previously, and possibly permanently shut down. Additionally, the blacklisting of Parler will lead to new social media and tech companies getting created to compete with entities like Google, Apple, and Amazon.
Facebook’s targeting of Brandon Straka’s group consisting of half of a million former Democrats shows it is going after conservatives on the platform. Straka has now moved his group to CloutHub. Americans are likely to see a mass exodus of conservatives leaving platforms like Twitter and Facebook for other social media sites that promote free speech, not censorship.
The Daily Intelligence Brief, The DIB as we call it, is curated by a hard working team with a diverse background of experience including government intelligence, investigative journalism, high-risk missionary work and marketing.
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See Nikki Haley’s pirouette. “you would expect to see this in China”. Trumper in training pants.
I’m in number 2 camp. Impeach but no hurry. Is it even possible for Congress to do anything in a hurry? I don’t ever want him running for federal office again. Also I’d like to make a correction…Parler is not a pro Trump forum. It’s a social media app where people like America’s Frontline Doctors aren’t censored. Twitter can remove Trump..I don’t care…but silencing Parler?