Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednessday February 17, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
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Millions to be Hit Hard by this U.S. Scheme to Confiscate Your Savings.Alan Greenspan, 20-year Chairman of the U.S. Fed, reveals Washington’s nasty trick to confiscate the savings of unsuspecting Americans.You won’t believe their sneaky tactic to take your wealth right out from under your nose.Here’s the one thing Greenspan recommends to avoid this nasty scheme.
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
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5.) MORNING BREW
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6.) THE FACTUAL
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7.) LIBERTY NATION
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8.) FOX NEWS
9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
10.) JUST THE NEWS
11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE
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12.) THE FLIP SIDE
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
✝️ Good morning. It’s Ash Wednesday — for Christians, the first day of Lent.
- Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 993 words … 4 minutes.
🌟 Join Axios Des Moines reporters Jason Clayworth and Linh Ta tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. ET / 12:30 p.m. CT for a Smart Take event on the impact of the new administration on Iowa politics, featuring Sen. Chuck Grassley (R) and state Rep. Ross Wilburn, chair of the Iowa Democratic Party. Register here.
As the pandemic pushes people from pricey superstar cities to mid-tier ones where life is cheaper and easier, traditional powerhouses are being upstaged by smaller insurgents, Axios Cities author Jennifer A. Kingson writes.
- San Francisco fell from No. 1 — supplanted by Provo, Utah! — in the Milken Institute’s annual ranking of big metros with the best regional economies.
What a difference a (pandemic) year makes: The 2021 Milken Institute Best-Performing Cities Index, out today, shows S.F., San Jose, Reno, Seattle and Dallas falling out of the top 10 places for job creation, wage growth and innovation.
- “Large cities in the Intermountain West and South are outperforming many areas on the coasts,” said the Milken Institute, a nonprofit think tank.
- “For instance, Salt Lake City moves up 21 spots to come in at No. 4, and Huntsville, Ala., has one of the largest jumps up in the rankings.”
“Housing affordability” and “broadband access” were added as new index criteria this year.
- The report calls Provo-Orem a “relatively new innovation center with significantly lower costs than Silicon Valley,” and says the area has attracted tech firms including Qualtrics, Vivint and SmartCitizen.
The big picture: This seismic shift of people and power can be a boon to the smaller cities that prosper — attracting companies, capital and citizens. But it can hurt qualities people cherish, like affordability and middle-class values.
Large metros with the biggest gains in the Milken rankings include Wichita, Kansas; Harrisburg-Carlisle, Pa.; Albuquerque, N.M.; Durham-Chapel Hill, N.C.; Madison, Wis., and Lincoln, Neb.
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
Nearly 4 million Americans have been unemployed for 27 weeks or longer — trapped in a vicious cycle that makes it harder to get back to work, Axios @Work author Erica Pandey writes.
- Long-term unemployment during a pandemic is a double whammy. Millions are experiencing food and housing insecurity and lack health care when they need it most.
Job-seeking is even more exhausting during a pandemic, says Tim Classen, an economist at the Quinlan School of Business at Loyola University Chicago.
- To start, there are fewer jobs out there than there are unemployed people.
- On top of that, people may be attempting to juggle job-hunting with parenting kids who are learning remotely.
- Not everyone is comfortable interviewing over video calls, and not everyone has the broadband access required.
Customers use cellphone light to shop for meat in a Dallas grocery store yesterday. With no power, the store was open for cash-only sales. Photo: LM Otero/AP
This week’s vast Texas power failures are connected to California’s worsening fire crises: America’s electrical grid is scarily outmoded for extreme weather, Ben Geman writes in Axios Generate.
- The N.Y. Times’ Brad Plumer writes (subscription): “While scientists are still analyzing what role human-caused climate change may have played in this week’s winter storms, … global warming poses a barrage of additional threats to power systems nationwide, including fiercer heat waves and water shortages.”
Go deeper … “A complete bungle”: Texas’ energy pride goes out with cold (AP)
Photo: Maxar Technologies via Reuters
Satellite close-up of a street mural in Mandalay, the last royal capital of Myanmar (then Burma), where residents are protesting a military coup.
Photo: Evan Vucci/AP
President Biden said at last night’s town hall in Milwaukee, when Anderson Cooper asked when America will “get back to normal”:
- “[A]s my mother would say with the grace of God and the goodwill of the neighbors, … by next Christmas, I think we’ll be in a very different circumstance, God willing, than we are today.”
- “I think a year from now, … there will be significantly fewer people having to be socially distanced, have to wear a mask.”
- “I don’t want to overpromise anything here,” Biden added. “It matters whether you continue to wear that mask.”
On schools, Biden said: “My guess is they’re going to probably be pushing to open all summer, to continue like it’s a different semester and try to catch up. … The goal will be five days a week.”
- Go deeper: Biden on schools … Biden: “tired of talking about Donald Trump.”
President Biden holds a mask at the town hall. Photo: Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images
Mike Donilon, senior adviser to President Biden, argues in a memo to White House senior staff that GOP opposition to the COVID rescue package would shrink the party’s already declining national support.
- “There seems to be a growing conventional wisdom that it is either politically smart — or, at worst, cost-free — for the GOP to adopt an obstructionist, partisan, base-politics posture,” Donilon writes in the two-page memo, obtained by Axios. “However, there is lots of evidence that the opposite is true: … this approach has been quite damaging to them.”
The memo cites a Morning Consult poll showing a Biden approval rating of 62% with registered voters. Just 23% of registered voters think the Republican Party is going in the right direction, while 63% say the party is on the wrong track.
- Polls put support for Biden’s American Rescue Plan at 68%+ (Quinnipiac).
- Donilon called opposition to the plan “politically isolating.”
A Manhattan-based hedge fund known for cutting journalists agreed to buy local newspaper giant Tribune, creating one of the largest local publishing operators in America, Axios Media Trends author Sara Fischer writes.
- Why it matters: The deal imperils the already decimated staffs of some of the country’s classic papers, from the Chicago Tribune to New York Daily News.
Alden Global Capital already owns hundreds of local papers through its majority ownership of MNG (MediaNews Group) Enterprises, which controls papers like the Denver Post and the Boston Herald.
- Alden agreed to sell the Baltimore Sun, The Capital Gazette in Annapolis, and a few other smaller papers, to a Maryland-based nonprofit.
🤯 Alden’s purchase valued Tribune Publishing at $630 million. Tribune rival McClatchy and its 30 titles sold last year for $312 million.
- By comparison, the buzzy new audio app Clubhouse, which launched in September, is valued at $1 billion.
Cover: Foreign Affairs
Jessica T. Matthews, former president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, writes in the March/April issue of Foreign Affairs that “a return to the pre-Trump status quo” isn’t possible:
Foreign governments understand that last year’s presidential election was not a repudiation of Trumpism. Even close allies have therefore been forced into a dangerous game of American roulette, dealing with a United States that can flip unpredictably from one foreign policy posture to its opposite.
Mardi Gras on Bourbon Street — yesterday, and last year.
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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
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16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
Feb 17, 2021 View in Browser AP MORNING WIRE Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
TAMER FAKAHANY
The Rundown AP PHOTO/LM OTERO Millions endure record, bitter cold without power, at least 20 dead; ‘A complete bungle’: Texas’ energy pride goes out with freezing temperatures
A bitter U.S. winter storm that has left millions without power in record-breaking cold has claimed more lives, including three people dead after a tornado hit a seaside town in North Carolina and four family members who perished in a Houston-area house fire while using a fireplace to stay warm.
At least 20 deaths across the country were reported.
The storm, which overwhelmed power grids and immobilized the Southern Plains, carried heavy snow and freezing rain into New England and the Deep South and left behind painfully low temperatures. Wind-chill warnings extended from Canada into Mexico. Bryan Anderson reports.
The worst U.S. power outages were in Texas, affecting more than 2 million homes and businesses. More than 250,000 people also lost power across Appalachia, and another 200,000 were without electricity following an ice storm in northwest Oregon.
Four million people lost power in Mexico.
The tornado that hit North Carolina’s Brunswick County had winds estimated at 160 mph, the weather service said. Three people died and 10 were injured when it tore through a golf course community and another rural area, destroying dozens of homes.
VIDEO: Aerial video shows tornado damage in North Carolina.
The paralyzing winter storm also wreaked havoc with COVID-19 vaccination efforts around the country, forcing the cancellation of appointments and delaying vaccine deliveries just as the federal government rolled out new mass vaccination sites to reach hard-hit communities, Eugene Garcia and Jocelyn Noveck report.
Power Failures: Anger over Texas’ power grid failing in the face of a record winter freeze mounted as millions there remained shivering with no assurances that their electricity and heat — out for 36 hours or longer in many homes — would return soon or stay on once it finally does. One Austin resident summed up the prevailing feeling: “We’re all angry because there is no reason to leave entire neighborhoods freezing to death. This is a complete bungle,” she said. Paul J. Weber reports from Austin.
VIDEO: Millions of Texans without power after storm.
Power Failure Misinformation: Conservative commentators shared a false narrative that wind turbines and solar energy were primarily to blame for power outages across Texas as the power grid buckled. A variety of misleading claims spread on social media, with the Green New Deal and wind turbines getting much of the attention. But the Texas state power agency said gas, coal and nuclear plants actually caused nearly twice as many outages as wind and solar power, Ali Swenson and Arijeta Lajka report.
EXPLAINER: Topsy-turvy weather comes from polar vortex. It seems like the world’s weather has turned upside-down. There have been record subzero temperatures in Texas and Oklahoma, and Greenland is warmer than normal. Snow fell in Greece and Turkey. Meteorologists blame the all-too-familiar polar vortex. The cold air that’s normally penned up in the high Arctic got slammed by an atmospheric wave in late December. It broke apart in early January and moved out of its normal area. The result has been crazy winter weather, Seth Borenstein reports. POOL PHOTO VIA AP/BEHROUZ MEHRI Japan belatedly begins COVID-19 vaccination drive amid Olympic worries; Volunteer paramedics patrol Venezuela’s Caracas amid virus
Months after other major world economies, Japan has belatedly begun giving its first coronavirus vaccines to front-line health workers today.
Many are wondering if the campaign will reach enough people in time to save a Summer Olympics already delayed a year by the worst pandemic in a century, Mari Yamaguchi reports from Tokyo.
Japan has largely dodged the kind of pandemic suffering that has battered other wealthy countries, but the fate of the Olympics, and the billions of dollars at stake, makes Japan’s vaccine campaign crucial.
The effort faces worries about shortages of the imported coronavirus vaccines and a reluctance among many Japanese to take them. Workers treating COVID-19 patients were the first to get jabs. Experts say Japan’s late rollout makes “herd immunity” impossible before the Olympics begins in July.
EXPLAINER: Japan begins vaccination drive, but why so late?
Venezuela Volunteer Paramedics: “We Venezuelans have to solve our own country’s problems. We have to use the skills we’re each good at.” That’s the coda expressed by a volunteer paramedic whose group has stepped into the void to offer lifesaving help on the tough streets of Caracas, from where Scott Smith reports. Venezuela has been wracked by a deepening economic crisis for years that has gutted emergency ambulance services.
Calling themselves Angels of the Road, the volunteers rely on donated medical supplies and funding from international organizations. Despite receiving no pay, roughly 40 paramedics are ready at a moment’s notice to jump onto motorcycles, fire up their single ambulance and race into the streets.
Each day brings three to four calls, and at least one is a request to take a patient with trouble breathing to a hospital, putting the volunteers themselves at risk.
More from Around the World:
AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI Biden declares reopening elementary schools a top goal; Latinos in US face daunting barriers to getting vaccine shot; Native Americans embrace vaccines, virus containment measures
President Joe Biden has promised that a majority of U.S. elementary schools will be open five days a week by the end of his first 100 days in office.
Biden was restating a pandemic goal after his administration came under fire when aides said schools would be considered open if they held in-person learning just one day a week, Aamer Madhani and Alexandra Jaffe report.
Biden spoke during a CNN town hall last night in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He has faced increasing questions about how he would reopen schools, with school districts operating under a patchwork of different virtual and in-person learning arrangements nationwide.
Biden’s trip comes as infection rates and deaths are falling after the nation endured the two deadliest months so far of the pandemic. The White House is also reporting an increase in the administration of vaccines throughout the country after a slow start.
But Biden has stressed that the U.S. still has a long road ahead as thousands of Americans die each day. The virus has killed more than 485,000, and newly emerging variants are complicating the response effort.
Latinos Vaccinations: Latinos face daunting barriers to getting vaccine shots in the U.S., creating a risk for public health as the coronavirus mutates and spreads. Many are struggling with a lack of knowledge about the shots, state vaccine websites that don’t have Spanish instructions and fears they could be targeted for immigration enforcement. Ranging from the elderly Cuban Americans in Florida to farmworkers in California, health problems like diabetes, obesity and hypertension are prevalent. That makes Latinos one of the groups at highest risk from COVID-19 in America. Gisela Salomon, Claudia Torrens and Anita Snow have that story.
VIDEO: Latinos in US struggle with access to vaccines.
Native Americans Vaccinations: Tribes across the U.S. are bucking a trend of minority populations who harbor doubts about the vaccines. Native Americans are embracing inoculations and are adopting virus containment measures. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says Native Americans and Alaskan Natives are four times more likely to be hospitalized from COVID-19. And community before self has long been a core principle in their culture. Tribal leaders and health care providers say it is about preserving a fragile heritage that has been under threat for centuries. Sarah Blake Morgan reports from Cherokee, North Carolina.
VIDEO: Native Americans embrace vaccine in North Carolina.
Tracking Mutations: Scientists would gain vastly expanded capabilities to identify potentially deadlier mutations under legislation advancing in Congress. The U.S. now maps only the genetic makeup of a minuscule fraction of positive virus samples, a situation some experts liken to flying blind. It means the true spread of problematic mutations first identified in the U.K. and South Africa remains a matter of guesswork. Such ignorance could prove costly in the race to vaccinate Americans before virus variants become dominant. The House COVID-19 relief bill would provide $1.75 billion for mapping virus genes, Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar reports. Israel: Coronavirus Election
Israel’s fourth bruising election campaign in two years, reflecting a bitterly divided society and political class, is on the final stretch.
The March 23 election is striking a notable resemblance to the toxic American presidential brawl in 2020, Laurie Kellman reports from Jerusalem.
Candidates are holding virtual events or limited in-person gatherings due to the pandemic. Some have signed up star U.S. advisers who faced off against each other during the contest between Donald Trump and Joe Biden.
And as in the United States, the Israeli race is a referendum on the divisive personality of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his stewardship of a nation brutalized by COVID-19. Many Americans saw the choice as Trump — or almost anyone else. In Israel, the field is divided between those who are for or against Netanyahu.
The question of moral authority, too, is a common theme. As president, Trump stood accused of a multitude of wrongdoing, including sexual misconduct against more than a dozen women (he denies all), questions about his taxes and serial problems telling the truth.
Netanyahu last week pleaded not guilty to charges of breach of trust, fraud and accepting bribes. Both men have cast themselves as victims of a ”witch hunt” and waged a war against the news media. Other Top Stories The end of Donald Trump’s impeachment trial is only the beginning of Congress’ reckoning with the riot of Jan. 6. Lawmakers will spend months working through the many unanswered questions about the attack. Democratic leaders say they will form an independent investigative commission modeled after the one that studied security failures before the 9/11 attacks. Two Senate committees have summoned top security officials to testify. And retired Army Lt. Gen. Russel Honoré is leading an ongoing review of the Capitol’s security, commissioned by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Demonstrators in Myanmar have gathered in their largest numbers so far to protest the military’s seizure of power. A U.N. human rights expert warned that troops being brought to Yangon and elsewhere could signal the prospect for major violence. Today’s turnout appears to be one of the biggest so far in Yangon. Protesters have adopted a tactic of blocking off streets from security forces by parking vehicles in groups with their hoods up and the excuse of having engine trouble. In the capital Naypyitaw, thousands including private bank employees and engineers marched down its wide boulevards, chanting for the release of ousted leader Aung San Suu Kyi and the country’s president who remain under house arrest. Libyans are marking the tenth anniversary of their 2011 uprising that led to the overthrow and killing of longtime ruler Moammar Gadhafi, with eyes on a recently appointed government that would lead the country through elections late this year. Libya has become one of the most intractable conflicts left over from the “Arab spring” a decade ago. The country has descended into devastating chaos and has become a haven for Islamic militants and armed groups that survive on looting and human trafficking. An interim government has been appointed in order to prepare the divided country for elections scheduled on December 24. China’s internet watchdog is cracking down further on online speech, issuing a requirement that bloggers and influencers have a government-approved credential before they can publish on certain topics. The rule from the Cyberspace Administration of China goes into effect next week, shrinking an already narrow space for discourse amid heavy censorship of sensitive topics and any perceived criticism of the ruling Communist Party. The revised regulation is just one of a series of actions the internet regulator has taken to tighten its grip. The agency head recently signaled the harder line, saying the agency must “let our supervision and management grow teeth.” GET THE APP
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19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Peoples Gas pipe replacement is costing Chicagoans more
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
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Morning Headlines
Gendered terms still run freely on Capitol Hill, a place full of traditions, titles and honorifics, plus even more excuses to use them. Is gender-neutral language truly catching on here? What are members calling themselves? Read more…
The Vote Above Replacement, or VAR, metric quantifies how valuable (or how much of a liability) a particular candidate was to his or her party. It also helps us dig deeper into the Senate races that decided the 2020 elections and look ahead to some of the key contests next year. Read more…
Small-business tax cuts eyed as sweetener for minimum wage boost
Democratic leaders are considering adding small-business tax breaks to their COVID-19 aid bill to make raising the federal minimum wage more palatable for wavering senators. The potential move is part of the overall strategizing underway to try to pass a relief plan through the reconciliation process, according to several sources. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
In our political rewards system, fundraising tops accountability. That has to change
OPINION — The political reward system has created a model that works for consultants, the media and super PACs that dominate the political environment, but it is failing candidates, the donors who fund campaigns and those who value civil political discourse and democracy. And it’s dividing the country in the process. Read more…
GOP campaign arm hits Democrats over what was kept out of the pandemic relief package
House Republicans are preparing to attack Democrats for a flurry of votes taken in a handful of committees over the past week as they rushed to send a $1.9 billion COVID package to President Joe Biden’s desk by mid-March. Read more…
House to vote on HR 1 government overhaul, policing bill first week of March
The first week of March will be a big one in the House as Democratic leaders bring two top party priorities to the floor: a government overhaul measure given the coveted bill number HR 1 and legislation to overhaul policing laws named after George Floyd. Read more…
Lawmakers, Capitol Police Board unmoved by union no confidence vote
Acting Capitol Police Chief Yogananda Pittman and six other top officials received votes of no confidence from the department union regarding their ability to lead the department after the Jan. 6 insurrection, but lawmakers and the Capitol Police Board have yet to signal what comes next. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: The best (and worst) of Biden’s town hall
Presented by Facebook
DRIVING THE DAY
There’s almost nothing President JOE BIDEN loves more than talking to voters. It’s where he’s at his most empathetic, if loquacious, best. Tuesday night’s CNN town hall in Milwaukee put Biden’s virtues and flaws on full display: There were genuine moments of reflection, a few policy reveals and meandering monologues without a clear point — leading to many apologies for talking too much (at least five according to our count).
Here are Playbook’s superlatives from the hour-plus event, Biden’s first with voters since he took office.
Quickest real-time backtrack: When Anderson Cooper asked when everyone who wants to be vaccinated would be, Biden answered: “By the end of July of this year.” That would be a fast timeline and a difficult promise to keep. Biden then clarified that the vaccines would be available to all by the end of July. Not the same thing.
Most tender moment: Biden loves kids — and it showed when a mom said her daughter (standing alongside her) was scared of dying from Covid-19. Consoling the girl, the president explained that children are less likely to get the disease. “I wouldn’t worry about it, baby,” he said. “I promise you.”
Harshest toss under the bus: There had been a bit of … confusion about whether the administration would consider a school that’s open just one day a week as an “open school.” Biden cut Cooper off, saying: “No, that’s not true. That’s what was reported. It was a mistake in the communication.” As in, the press secretary got it wrong.
Best moniker: In the first of several times that DONALD TRUMP came up Tuesday night, Biden referred to his predecessor as “the former guy.”
Biggest progressive slap-downs: So far, Biden and the progressive wing of his party have had a nice honeymoon. But two things some liberal activists really want got the “no-from-me-dawg” treatment: Biden reiterated he doesn’t want to defund the police, but instead thinks “we have to put more money in police work.” Later, a woman asked about the government canceling $50,000 in student loan debt per borrower. “What will you do to make that happen?” she asked Biden.
“I will not make that happen,” he answered.
Most relatable quote: Talking about his new life in the White House, Biden said: “I don’t know about you all, but I was raised in a way that you didn’t look for anybody to wait on you. And it’s — I find myself extremely self-conscious. [There are] wonderful people working at the White House.”
Best shade: Biden said he’s talked to his living predecessors since he took office. “All of them, with one exception, picked up the phone and called me,” he said with a smirk. We wonder who that might be?
Most surprising reveal: Biden said he’d never been in the White House residence before he moved in, despite his eight years as veep.
Most vulnerable moment: Biden can be an introspective guy. Reflecting on his first few weeks in the job, he said at the conclusion of the town hall: “I literally pray that I have the capacity to do for the country what you all deserve need be done.”
Headlines from the town hall:
— NYT: “Biden suggests vaccines will be available for every American ‘by the end of July’”
— POLITICO: “Biden focuses on K-8 in recasting benchmark on opening schools”
— WAPO: “Biden indicates he’s open to negotiation on $15 minimum wage”
THE GAUNTLET IS THROWN — “Trump attacks McConnell in fiery statement,” by Matthew Choi, Marianne LeVine, Meredith McGraw and Gabby Orr: “Former President Donald Trump issued a caustic and highly personal statement against Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on Tuesday, effectively declaring war on the Kentucky Republican for failing to back his attempts to undermine the 2020 election.
“‘Mitch is a dour, sullen, and unsmiling political hack, and if Republican Senators are going to stay with him, they will not win again,’ Trump said in the statement released by his PAC. … A person familiar with the crafting of the statement confirmed that it could have been far worse. An earlier draft mocked McConnell for having multiple chins.” The statement
A few points here:
— Trump has McConnell to thank for his biggest accomplishment as president — confirming three Supreme Court justices and a raft of lower court judges.
— McConnell won the Senate years ago without Trump, and arguably lost it in Georgia this year because of him. Trump also presided over the GOP’s loss of the House in 2018.
— Among actual Republican voters — i.e. the people who’ve dictated GOP politics the past five years — Trump is way more popular than McConnell. That was true before Jan. 6 and it’s true now. Our latest POLITICO/Morning Consult poll has McConnell at 34% favorable, 53% unfavorable among Republicans. Trump’s numbers: 81% favorable, 18% unfavorable.
The upshot: McConnell has the inside game wired. Trump has the hearts and minds of the GOP faithful. If we’re really looking at a showdown between the two men for control of the party, it’s advantage Trump at the outset.
Sen. LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-S.C.) gave McConnell some unsolicited advice on Hannity on Tuesday night: “What I would say to Sen. McConnell, I know Trump can be a handful, but he is the most dominant figure in the Republican Party. We don’t have a snowball’s chance in hell of taking back the majority without Donald Trump. If you don’t get that, you’re just not looking.”
SURVEY SAYS — Voters want parents and local administrators to decide whether to reopen schools, according to our latest POLITICO/Morning Consult poll. Two-thirds of respondents said they trust parents to make the right decision, 59% trust local school administrators, 54% trust local boards of education, and 54% trust local teachers unions.
More than half of respondents, 55%, said teachers should be vaccinated before schools reopen, but the question divides voters along partisan lines. The topline results and crosstabs
BIDEN’S WEDNESDAY — The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 11:30 a.m. and have lunch together at 12:30 p.m. They’ll meet with labor leaders to talk Covid relief and infrastructure at 3:30 p.m. in the Oval Office.
— The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 11 a.m.
— Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m. along with ANNE NEUBERGER, deputy national security adviser for cyber and emerging technology.
PLAYBOOK READS
SPEAKING OF THE STORMS — “‘We’re in it alone’: Power outages leave millions of Texans desperate for heat and safety,” Texas Tribune: “A grandmother slept in her car. Parents who ran out of firewood burned belongings to keep their children warm. A Richardson resident watched the battery level of her partner’s oxygen machine drain away and desperately sought help to have it recharged.
“As Texas utility operators and politicians squabbled over responsibility for ‘load shedding’ and ‘rolling blackouts’ Tuesday, many residents scrambled simply to stay warm and alive.”
THE WHITE HOUSE
TODAY’S MEETING — “Biden to Meet With Unions Pushing for Infrastructure Spending,” WSJ: “President Biden is scheduled to meet in the White House Wednesday with senior labor union leaders, who are hoping to win commitments for a massive federal investment in infrastructure as well as efforts to create jobs in clean-tech and alternative energy, according to people familiar with the matter.
“Sean McGarvey, president of North America’s Building Trades Unions, will be meeting with the president and Vice President Kamala Harris in the Oval Office, and may be joined by AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka and other labor leaders, according to some of the people.”
IMMIGRATION FILES — “Democrats and Biden prepare to unveil bill that would provide a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants,” CNN: “Biden’s bill will also likely join a series of other immigration measures that are narrowly focused on undocumented immigrants who were brought to the US as children, are in the US under a form of humanitarian relief, and are working in agriculture — setting up a dizzying number of attempts to provide legalization to the undocumented population. …
“Biden’s bill, titled U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021, addresses the millions of undocumented immigrants living in the US, boosts border technology, and targets the root causes of migration, according to a White House fact sheet.”
PANDEMIC
TRACKER: The U.S. reported 1,353 Covid-19 deaths and 56,000 new coronavirus cases Tuesday.
DEEP DIVE — “Who has died from Covid-19 in the U.S,?” Vox: “To get a clearer sense of the shifting burden of Covid-19 deaths over time, Vox analyzed coronavirus mortality by age, region, and race from the past year, based on data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Johns Hopkins University.
“We found that while Covid-19 spared no group, it impacted certain populations more than others. Throughout the pandemic, people of color have consistently been disproportionately sickened and killed by the virus. They also died young: Of Covid-19 deaths in people under the age of 45, more than 40 percent were Hispanic and about a quarter were Black.”
JUST WHAT WE NEEDED — “Crippling storm hampers vaccinations as FEMA opens new sites,” AP: “A paralyzing winter storm wrought havoc with COVID-19 vaccination efforts around the country on Tuesday, forcing the cancellation of appointments and delaying vaccine deliveries just as the federal government rolled out new mass vaccination sites aimed at reaching hard-hit communities.”
JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH
KNOWING THE INSURRECTIONISTS — “Brent Bozell IV, Son Of Prominent Conservative Activist, Charged In Capitol Riot,” HuffPost
IMPEACHMENT FALLOUT — “Stumbles, Clashes and Egos: Behind the Scenes With Trump’s Legal Team,” NYT: “The lawyers assembled by the former president to represent him in his Senate impeachment trial hardly knew one another. They prevailed in the end, but it wasn’t pretty.”
FOR NOW … “Giuliani not currently representing Trump ‘in any legal matters,’ adviser says,” CNN
(MY)PILLOW TALK — “Dominion says it will sue MyPillow CEO Mike Liddell for spreading election fraud conspiracy,” by The Daily Beast’s Asawin Suebsaeng, Lachlan Cartwright and Adam Rawnsley
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
THE FOREVER WARS — “Stay or Go? Biden, Long a Critic of Afghan Deployments, Faces a Deadline,” NYT: “The previous two presidents of the United States declared they wanted to pull all American troops out of Afghanistan, and they both decided in the end that they could not do it. … Now President Biden is facing the same issue, with a deadline less than three months away.
“The Pentagon, uncertain what the new commander in chief will do, is preparing variations on a plan to stay, a plan to leave and a plan to withdraw very, very slowly — a reflection of the debate now swirling in the White House. The current deadline is May 1, in keeping with a much-violated peace agreement that calls for the complete withdrawal of the remaining 2,500 American forces.”
THE MBS QUESTION — “To speak or not to speak: Saudi Arabia poses a princely dilemma for Biden,” by Nahal Toosi: “Whether and how to engage that powerful figure, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, is among the thorniest diplomatic dilemmas facing Biden and his aides, one that exemplifies how hard it will be to keep their promises to promote both human rights and America’s national interest on the world stage. …
“Some former U.S. officials as well as Saudi and American analysts say the Biden team has no choice but to directly engage the young royal, who is often referred to as ‘MBS,’ if it wants to accomplish goals such as ending the war in Yemen and constraining Iran’s nuclear program. … Others stress that, barring the sudden death of the monarch, there’s no rush, and that any U.S. engagement with the crown prince should be zero to minimal or indirect.”
MISCELLANY
WELCOME HOME — “Marine gone! Demolition crews rip out Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago helipad after exception to Palm Beach’s helicopter-free zone is revoked now he has left office,” Daily Mail: “Construction workers were seen at the former president’s sprawling estate Tuesday with a red digger and concrete cutting equipment, demolishing the concrete helicopter landing pad set among the towering palm trees. … The town of Palm Beach issued a permit for the helipad’s demolition on February 2.”
LINCOLN PROJECT LATEST — “Senior Partners at Firm Hired to ‘Review’ Lincoln Project Scandal Have Donated Thousands to Group,” Washington Free Beacon: “Paul Hastings, the law firm hired to conduct a ‘comprehensive review’ of the Lincoln Project’s ‘operations and culture,’ could be hard-pressed to deliver a credible result given several of its senior partners have donated to the scandal-plagued super PAC.
“Greg Nitzkowski, the firm’s managing partner of more than two decades, donated $3,000 to the Lincoln Project in 2020, according to federal election records. Elena Baca, who chairs the firm’s employment law department, has donated almost $2,000 to the Lincoln Project.”
— “George Conway, a Lincoln Project founder, backs shuttering the group amid a harassment crisis,” by NYT
ZOINKS — “Hacker Claims to Have Stolen Files Belonging to Prominent Law Firm Jones Day,” WSJ: “A hacker claims to have stolen files belonging to the global law firm Jones Day and posted many of them on the dark web. Jones Day has many prominent clients, including former President Donald Trump and major corporations. Jones Day, in a statement, disputed that its network has been breached. …
“The posting by a person who self-identified as the hacker, which goes by the name Clop, includes a few individual documents that are easily reviewed by the public, including by The Wall Street Journal. One memo is to a judge and is marked ‘confidential mediation brief,’ another is a cover letter for enclosed ‘confidential documents.’ The Journal couldn’t immediately confirm their authenticity.”
PLAYBOOKERS
MEDIAWATCH
PALACE INTRIGUE — “Zucker lieutenant is a top candidate to replace him at CNN’s helm,” NBC: “Allison Gollust, a CNN executive and top lieutenant to Jeff Zucker, has emerged as the leading internal candidate to take over the network if Zucker steps down as president … Zucker and Gollust’s business relationship dates back to their days at NBCUniversal … Gollust did a brief stint as communications director for New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo before rejoining Zucker at CNN shortly after he became president in 2013.”
— CNN’s Brooke Baldwin announced she will be leaving the network in April. More from Variety … Twitter thread from Baldwin
THE LOCAL NEWS CRISIS — “Alden Global Capital Agrees to Buy Rest of Tribune Publishing,” WSJ: “A New York hedge fund that is the largest shareholder in Tribune Publishing Co. has reached a deal to acquire the rest of the newspaper company which owns some of the biggest papers in the country, including the Chicago Tribune and New York Daily News.”
THE NYT SAGA — “NY Times Star Donald McNeil Privately Dismisses Accusations Against Him as ‘Recovered Memories,’” The Daily Beast: “‘I’m amazed at what’s happening. I feel like I’m facing students “recovered memories” from two years ago,’ Donald McNeil Jr. wrote in the email sent this week to close friends. ‘And other papers are eating it up. I said “racism is over?” Huh?’
“He continued: ‘I said “ghetto”? I don’t think I’ve said “ghetto” except 1. about Warsaw or 2. ironically, with air quotes, since Elvis released that ridiculous song in 1969. A teenager “corrected” me and was upset that I failed to apologize to her/him? I don’t even know how to respond to that. Somehow I think I’d remember it if it had happened.’ … [H]e told friends he has been ‘writing out long answers to everything’ which he promised to have finished by March 1—the same day he is due to leave the Times.”
— The Columbia Journalism School and NBCU News Group are launching a $1 million multi-year scholarship fund to support students from underrepresented populations who seek careers in journalism. The announcement
— John Simons is joining Time as executive editor. He previously was deputy health and science editor and bureau chief for health business at the WSJ.
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TRANSITIONS — Michael Atkinson is joining Crowell & Moring as a partner. He previously was inspector general of the U.S. Intelligence Community, a position from which Trump fired him after he investigated a whistleblower complaint in the events leading up to Trump’s first impeachment. … Ali Pardo is now PAC and political comms director for Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.). She previously was deputy comms director for the Trump campaign. … Doug Dziak is now senior counsel for the United States Consumer Product Safety Commission. He most recently was general counsel and staff director for the Senate Budget Committee. …
… Eric Heighberger is now minority policy director for the House Homeland Security Committee and minority staff director for the Oversight, Management and Accountability Subcommittee. He most recently was COS at FEMA. … Pia Carusone has joined SKDK as a managing director and co-head of SKDKPolitical. She is owner of Republic Restoratives Distillery, most recently was a partner at Left Hook and is a State Department and Gabby Giffords alum. … Ryan Rodgers is moving up to be president of the Strategy Group Company. He previously was chief marketing officer.
WEEKEND WEDDING — Taylor Weeks, former NASA adviser, and Clay Armentrout, legislative director for Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), got married Saturday in her hometown of Houston. They met in 2018 through mutual friends. Pic … Another pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: DHS’ Sam Vinograd … Reps. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), Suzan DelBene (D-Wash.) and Jake LaTurner (R-Ohio) … Brian Jack … Axios’ Lachlan Markay and Lindsey Sullivan … Cliff Sims … Betsy Fischer Martin … McClatchy’s Kristin Roberts … CNN’s Dianna Heitz … Keegan Goudiss … Ashley Berrang … Sean Cartwright … Surya Gunasekara … Boeing’s Fred Schwien … Cara Camacho … AARP’s Barbara Shipley … POLITICO’s Kelsey Tamborrino … Mark Shriver of Save the Children … Catherine De Bolle … Curtis Tate … Google’s Will Hayworth … Edith Honan … Danielle Most … Annamarie Rienzi … Kelsey Rohwer … Frederick Hill of FTI Consulting … former Rep. Randy Forbes (R-Va.) … Howard Megdal … Maddie Carlos, comms director for Rep. Deborah Ross (D-N.C.) … Baillee Brown, legislative director for Rep. Scott Peters (D-Calif.) … Katherine Culligan … Cara Camacho of the Bank Policy Institute … Taylor Hawkins
Got a document to share? A birthday coming up? A copy of Biden’s immigration bill? Drop us a line at playbook@politico.com or individually: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: DeSantis ’24 Just To Break the COVID Panic Porn Tyrants
DeSantis, for the Agitation
Happy Wednesday, my dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Celery sticks have their place, but it’s not here.
Lent is here and none too soon. This year I’m giving up regret and despair. That stuff it too easy to get addicted to these days. Let’s hope and pray that the secular heathens don’t try to cancel Easter in the name of public safety now.
It’s another one of those days here at the Briefing where I want to avoid thinking about the present by having some made up happy thoughts about the future.
It’s no secret that I’m a fan of Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida. I’ve been singing his praises since last spring, when he was doing all of the right things in response to the Wuhan Chinese Bat Flu and idiot boy Andrew Cuomo killing as many elderly New Yorkers as he could. The press was excoriating DeSantis and praising Cuomo, and a conservative star was born.
DeSantis’s handling of the bottom feeders in the mainstream media has been so masterful that I recently wrote that it would be nice if he could teach some tricks to other Republicans. The kinds of Republicans who are going to try and screw up the party now that Trump is no longer in D.C.
DeSantis continues to make all of the right people angry, which as you know is a favorite criterion of mine for judging our elected officials. DeSantis has been flying in the face of the liberal hypocrisy orthodoxy regarding whether schools should be open or not. Lib politicians are, of course, utterly beholden to the demands of teachers’ unions, who have been lobbying hard to get paid, get vaccinated, and not return to work.
COVID-19 Has Exposed Teachers’ Unions as the Shakedown Artists They Really Are
The good governor of Florida didn’t play that game and is rightfully proud of how it worked out:
As the GOP looks to 2024, it should look outside of the Beltway for its nominee. This is, of course, setting aside the idea of Trump making a comeback, which I would still support. Who knows where we will all be by the time the 2024 presidential campaign kicks off on New Year’s Day 2023? If we had to set the wheels in motion for a candidate now, however, DeSantis would be one of the most obvious choices.
He’s becoming a favorite all over, which Stacey wrote about yesterday:
Politico spoke to Republican veterans across the country who give DeSantis a lot of runway going into 2024. Many say they hear his name in unexpected places, like Texas, where he seems to be gaining popularity. The author notes that he is probably popular with Republicans because he defies experts and spars with the media. A shallow assessment, to be sure.
DeSantis is gaining in popularity for several reasons. He has an authenticity about him that is not boorish. He can handle himself with the media, knowing when to crack a joke and when to get serious. DeSantis holds people accountable, like firing Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel after his failures during the Parkland shooting. He also defends Floridians by committing to taking on Big Tech to protect free speech and showing a willingness to take on the new administration when it threatened Florida with travel restrictions.
That’s not a “shallow assessment,” by the way. That’s something important to conservatives like me out here in the hinterlands who feel betrayed by D.C. Republicans who seem to be more interested in being liked by their Democratic colleagues than by their constituents.
As the governor of a large state, DeSantis has a name recognition advantage that most governors don’t enjoy. Additionally, all of the undeserved negative press he’s gotten in the last year has backfired and made him better known than the Democrats probably wanted him to be. If he remains popular and is a serious contender in ’24 it will make all of his haters’ heads explode. He might get my support just for that.
The Republican cupboard isn’t bare as we head into the next couple of election cycles.
We have to take our comfort where we can get it.
Yup
Everything Isn’t Awful
LOL “YardiGras”
PJM Linktank
Trump Sparks a GOP Civil War With SCATHING McConnell Rebuke
Two Lincoln Project Founders Call on Group to Disband
VodkaPundit: Insanity Wrap #147: Here Come the Lunatic Gun-Grabbers
Trans Predator Jessica Yaniv Accused of ‘Lewd Conduct’ With 911 Responders
Excellent. Ron DeSantis Gets 2024 ‘Tier One’ Designation From Party Insiders
Kamala Harris: Biden Admin ‘Started From Scratch’ on Vaccine Distribution. Fauci Begs to Differ
Second Thoughts: Minneapolis City Council Votes to Increase Police Budget
Memo to California COVID Cops: When Crushing the Dreams of a Brewery Owner, Don’t Do a ‘Happy Dance’
The Great Texas Valentine’s Day Freeze and the Statewide Blackouts: What Happened? [UPDATED]
Democrat Claims Trump Violated Anti-KKK Law by ‘Inciting’ Capitol Riot
House Republican Calls for Boycott of 2022 Winter Olympics Unless Moved From China
Joe Biden Played ‘Mario Kart,’ and the Media Thinks You Care Because ‘Journalism’
Pelosi Pushes Ahead With ‘9/11-Type Commission’ to Fight Domestic ‘War on Terror’
Portland’s So ‘Woke’ That Even the Snow Plows Bow to ‘Equity’
Journalism Alert: Biden’s Bedtime and Adorable PDA’s Give the Corporate Media All the Feels
No. Super Emissions Emitter Bill Gates Wants to Force You to Eat Fake Meat
The Backlash to Biden’s Transgender Agenda Is Already Brewing
The REAL Reason Conspiracy Theories Are So Common These Days
VIP
7 Things You Can’t Say on Facebook Anymore
Gaslit by the Institutions: How I Became an Unlikely Populist Conservative
Does the Biden Administration Want Unity or Compliance?
VIP Gold
Schlichter: Hacks Panic as Trump Vanishes
From the Mothership and Beyond
Fauci: Timeline for widespread COVID-19 vaccine availability slightly delayed
#SenilityAlert. Biden Talked About the COVID Vaccine. There’s Just One Problem.
‘A Deep Green Freeze’: WSJ Editorial Board Torches Texas’ Clean Energy Push
New Democratic Aide Called Capitol Police White Supremacists
Rep. Waltz Blasts Biden on China, ‘Social Justice Doesn’t Just Apply to You’
How the Mars Perseverance rover will navigate the ‘7 minutes of terror’ landing
Chuck Todd Does a Very Chuck Toddian Thing During Report on Texas Weather Conditions
No Common Ground With Abortion
Biden Faces Uphill Battle On Gun Plan
“Not In My Name” – Parkland Dad Blasts Biden Gun Ban
Trudeau Still Silent On Key Details Of Gun Grab
Media Applauds Biden’s Grotesque Exploitation Of Parkland
Why China is terrified of Christianity
Too Bad To Check: High School Sends ‘8 White Identities’ Outline To Parents
“The Evidence Is Clear”: Open Schools Now, Says … Vox?
NBC: U.S. Officials Standing By Possibility Coronavirus Was Result Of A Lab Leak
North Korea accused of hacking Pfizer for Covid-19 vaccine data
PolitiFact debunks the story that President Biden planned the winter storm as ‘an attack on Texas’
The narrative that rioters brought flex cuffs to the Capitol has been debunked but lives on
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Call me when there’s a potato vodka flavored Girl Scout Cookie.
___
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PJ Media Senior Columnist and Associate Editor Stephen Kruiser is the author of “Don’t Let the Hippies Shower” and “Straight Outta Feelings: Political Zen in the Age of Outrage,” both of which address serious subjects in a humorous way. Monday through Friday he edits PJ Media’s “Morning Briefing.” His columns appear twice a week.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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Editor
White House Dossier
http://www.whitehousedossier.com
P.O. Box 27211,
Washington, DC 20038
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Knives Out Against Newsom
Plus: A deep freeze in Texas and the past and future of the GOP.
The Dispatch Staff | 5 min ago |
Happy Wednesday! A quick announcement: Dispatch Live is back tonight!
Join Sarah, David, Steve, and Jonah—plus special guest and new contributing editor Chris Stirewalt—for an hour of lively discussion. The gang will be taking your questions and providing the context and insights you’ve come to expect from The Dispatch.
DATE: Wednesday, February 17
TIME: 7:45 pm EST / 4:45 pm PST
This Dispatch Live is for members and their families. These live-streamed gatherings are scheduled semi-regularly throughout the year as a way for Dispatch members and staff to interact and discuss the topics of the day. We aim for Dispatch Live to be informative but also a lively, casual affair. We encourage you to bring your questions, a beverage of your choice, and engage with fellow members as much or as little as you like.
Become a Dispatch member today and join us tonight! Details for this Dispatch Live can be found here.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- A Monday rocket attack on a U.S. airbase in the Kurdish region of Iraq killed one non-American civilian contractor and injured eight others, including a U.S. service member. Secretary of State Antony Blinken expressed outrage over the attack, and White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said the administration “reserves the right to respond in the time and manner of our choosing,” though they are still determining the source of the attack.
- The White House on Tuesday announced the extension of the current foreclosure moratorium and mortgage payment forbearance enrollment window through June 30, citing the pandemic-induced “housing affordability crisis.”
- Health officials in the West African nation of Guinea confirmed three people have died of Ebola in recent days, declaring it an epidemic as the country experiences the first cases of the deadly disease since 2016.
- Former President Donald Trump issued an angry statement yesterday trashing Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. Trump branded McConnell an “unsmiling political hack,” and threatened to back primary challengers who “espouse Making America Great Again and our policy of America First.”
- The United States confirmed 60,725 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 5.8 percent of the 1,048,068 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,611 deaths were attributed to the virus on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 487,927. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 64,533 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. The Centers for Disease Control did not update its vaccine data yesterday. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 2,336,008 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered the past two days, bringing the nationwide total to 55,220,364.
Effort to Recall California Gov. Gavin Newsom Gains Steam
California Republicans reached a crucial breakthrough in their ongoing effort to remove Gov. Gavin Newsom from office, saying that they’ve secured the 1.5 million signatures necessary to trigger a recall election later this year. Despite the state’s largely Democratic voter base, Newsom’s stringent coronavirus restrictions—and failure to adhere to them in his personal life—have garnered bipartisan support for the petition to recall.
Gubernatorial recall attempts are nothing new to Californians. Opposition groups have led 55 recall campaigns since 1913, but have only succeeded once: When Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) ousted Gray Davis (D) in 2003. Initiating a recall election requires 12 percent of the total voter turnout from the last election to sign a petition within 160 days, a timeline that was extended in light of the pandemic.
For California, that percentage amounts to just under 1.5 million voters. To account for any potentially invalid signatures, those leading the recall effort are pushing ahead, looking to create a buffer of 300,000 to 500,000 signatures before the March 17 deadline. If the count is confirmed statewide, a special election will be scheduled—likely in the late summer or early fall—and California voters will face two choices on the same ballot: Whether to recall Newsom, and who will replace him if the recall passes.
Republicans have tried—and failed—to recall Newsom before, and for a while, Democrats shrugged off this most recent effort as equally far-fetched. But now, California’s Democratic lawmakers are scrambling to dissuade the state’s progressive and liberal voters from lending their signatures, painting the recall push as purely a partisan ploy from Republicans.
“This recall is a vanity project initiated by Trump Republicans, and if it is to qualify, would be a colossal waste of taxpayer dollars,” Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez said this week. “In the middle of this pandemic, our collective efforts should be used to ensure we keep people safe, get them vaccinated and back to normal as soon as possible.”
Power Outages in Texas
At least 23 people have died and 3.3 million are without power in Texas this week, following record snowfall and frigid temperatures caused by a historic cold snap that has blanketed much of the central United States. Several of the deaths have been attributed to carbon monoxide poisoning after Texans seeking respite from the cold brought their grills, barbecue pits, and generators indoors.
Most of the time, weather-related power issues result from damage to the infrastructure of power delivery, usually in the form of downed electrical poles and lines. But the issues currently plaguing Texas are more fundamental: It’s simply so cold that the infrastructure of power generation can’t work as it should. This fact, coupled with surging power demand also brought about by low temperatures, has sent energy prices in the state skyrocketing in recent days and caused the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) to implement rolling blackouts across the state to alleviate stress on the grid.
Why have storms so damaged Texas’s ability to get electricity to its citizens? After all, places with far more frigid climates still generally manage to keep the lights on. Republican leaders in the state hastened to point the finger at frozen wind turbines, but natural gas and coal plants were struggling in the cold as well. The biggest reason seems to be that energy plants in the ordinarily balmy state simply hadn’t ponied up to “weatherize” their facilities with measures like heating elements near pipes that are standard in chillier parts of the country. This helped keep Texas’ energy costs among the lowest in the nation—but has come back to bite them during a historically cold storm.
Is It Time for the Republican Party to Split Apart?
Earlier this week, Gallup released a survey showing that Americans’ desire for a viable third political party reached a two-decade peak in January. The surge was driven almost entirely by GOP voters, but for disparate reasons: 41 percent of Republicans surveyed favored separating to create an even Trumpier third party, while 28 percent backed the idea of a new party less beholden to the former president.
The poll raises an obvious question: Will GOP leaders in the post-Trump era be able to keep the party from breaking up?
Such a dissolution has happened before. The Whig Party of the mid-19th century proved unable to bridge the various divisions within its ranks—chiefly over the expansion of slavery—and ultimately disbanded, giving way to the Know Nothings and, more permanently, the GOP.
Declan asked several Republican officials looking to chart a different path for the party—including Sen. Ben Sasse, Gov. Larry Hogan, and Sen. Pat Toomey—if they ever think about leaving the GOP behind, and talked to dozens of former Republican voters who have done just that.
Check out the full piece here, and an excerpt below.
Longtime observers of Sen. Mitch McConnell know the high regard in which he holds Henry Clay, the 19th-century statesman who represented Kentucky in both the House of Representatives and the Senate. A younger McConnell wrote his college thesis on Clay at the University of Louisville, and a portrait of the “Great Compromiser” still hangs in his Senate office today. “The way Clay operated—a marvelous combination of compromise and principle—is a lesson for the ages if you’re a public official,” McConnell once said.
Clay, a founding member of the Whig Party, was instrumental in brokering a series of grand bargains over the expansion of slavery. The Missouri Compromise of 1820—passed while Clay was speaker of the House—admitted the Show-Me State to the Union as a slave state, while banning the practice above the 36°30’ parallel everywhere else. But the slavery issue became thornier over time, requiring Congress to revisit it three decades later. Clay and Democratic Sen. Stephen Douglas negotiated the aforementioned Compromise of 1850, which was signed into law by President Fillmore.
The latter compromise had its detractors, but Clay brushed them aside. “It is the duty of all who assail this compromise,” he said in a May 1850 Senate speech, “to give us their own and a better project; to tell us how they would reconcile the interests of this country and harmonize its distracted parts.”
Clay went to his death bed two years later believing that his work had warded off a splintering of not only the country, but his own party. But the splintering came nonetheless: The Whigs in 1854 and 1855, the country five years after that. On an issue as consequential as chattel slavery, there ultimately could be no compromise.
McConnell voted on Saturday to acquit President Trump on charges he incited the mob that stormed the Capitol back in January, deferring to a disputed constitutional argument that former officeholders cannot be impeached or convicted. Immediately after the vote concluded, however, McConnell returned to the floor of the Senate to reiterate his belief that Trump was determined to “either overturn the voters’ decision or else torch our institutions on the way out” of office.
Trump did not appreciate the half measure. “Mitch is a dour, sullen, and unsmiling political hack,” the former president said in a statement Tuesday. “If Republican Senators are going to stay with him, they will not win again.”
The two-step is indicative of the approach McConnell appears to be taking in charting a course for the post-Trump GOP: Keep the new voters that Trump brought into the tent, without bleeding the ones he drove away. “My goal is, in every way possible, to have nominees representing the Republican Party who can win in November,” McConnell told Politico over the weekend. “Some of them may be people the former president likes. Some of them may not be. The only thing I care about is electability.”
But like his Kentucky idol, the Senate minority leader may be trying to bridge an unbridgeable divide. Voters in a big tent conservative party can disagree—vigorously—on marginal tax rates, the size of the next COVID-19 relief package, how and where to deploy the United States’ military might. Can they disagree on adherence to the democratic process? Loyalty to the truth? Reality itself?
Worth Your Time
- Stories of vaccine waste and poor distribution logistics have made it all too easy to deride the U.S. government’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout as a failure. But in doing so, we often lose sight of how far we’ve come since the onset of the pandemic. Per Bloomberg columnist (and fellow Substack writer) Noah Smith: “The U.S. vaccine rollout, for all its faults, is ahead of almost every other country in the entire world.” Smith points out that the U.S. is outpacing everyone besides Israel, Seychelles, UAE, and the UK when it comes to the percentage of doses administered. That’s a big deal. Check out Smith’s article for his take on why other countries have fallen behind, why our technology is the best, and who deserves credit for what he calls the “U.S.’ world-beating” vaccine rollout.
- By now, we’ve endured countless retrospectives on the Trump era and endless lamentations about the grim year that was 2020. This one is different. In the Winter issue of National Affairs, Richard Reinecke looks back and sees strength in a system that survived “mounting crises” that “brought out the worst in our elected officials.” And, looking forward, he wonders whether that same system might constrain the leftist impulses of those newly empowered. “Progressives want to construct a social-justice empire ruled by those the old America victimized while ignoring the giant constitutional and policy steps that have brought much of that victimization to an end. But can they achieve the breakthroughs their ambitions demand and their ideology grandiloquently justifies? Or are the highest ambitions of the left, and therefore the worst fears of the right, bound to be rendered moot by our governing institutions? Did 2020, that annus horribilis, somehow manage to end with a real cause for hope in our constitutional order?”
Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- In recent years, the New York Times and Fox News have grown so institutionally powerful that they now dwarf the readership and viewership of their respective competitors on the left and right. “Their dominant market positions grant Fox and the Times disproportionate influence over public opinion and a disproportionate influence over the rest of the industry,” David writes in his Tuesday French Press (🔒). “Thus it’s vitally important for the body politic that these institutions are healthy. Sadly, they are not.” Read David’s piece to learn more about the blinding partisanship and institutional toxicity that have worked in concert to destroy both media outlets from within.
- If you’re looking for a slightly more optimistic take on the GOP’s future after reading Declan’s piece, check out Sarah’s latest Sweep newsletter. “Headline after headline suggests that the GOP is in serious trouble post-Trump,” she writes. “And maybe it is. The party’s current coalition isn’t a winning one at the presidential level because it’s bleeding independents. But if the party alienates pro-Trump Republicans to win back independents, it will certainly lose more voters in the short term.” Plus: Chris Stirewalt adds his two cents: “Elected officials are lagging indicators of popular sentiment, not thought leaders.”
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Haley Byrd Wilt (@byrdinator), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
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34.) DESERET NEWS
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— In the second impeachment trial of his presidency, former President Donald Trump was acquitted by the Senate. Seven Republicans joined 50 Democrats in voting to convict Trump. — The sole Republican running for reelection in 2022 who voted to convict Trump was Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) — she has a reputation as a political maverick. — Democrats will be targeting a few open-seat contests next year in the Senate, specifically North Carolina and Pennsylvania, where retiring Republicans have been censured by their local parties. — For now, Senate Democrats probably won’t see much electoral backlash from their votes, though Democrats representing Trump states may feel heat in 2024. Trump acquitted, but conviction vote is bipartisanOver the weekend, former President Trump was acquitted by the Senate. Days before his term as president expired last month, the House, in a bipartisan vote, impeached Trump for inciting an insurrection at the Capitol. After a shorter-than-expected trial in the Senate — one which featured no witnesses — 57 senators, out of 100, voted to convict the former president. As this was short of the constitutionally required two-thirds of the chamber, Trump was acquitted. Though Democrats control both houses of Congress, achieving a two-thirds majority in the Senate to secure a conviction was always going to be a tall order. It seems hard enough to get more than 60 votes in the Senate for any major policy these days — let alone for something as politically, and emotionally, charged as impeachment. Map 1 shows the breakdown of the Senate vote by state delegation. Republicans Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), Bill Cassidy (R-LA), Susan Collins (R-ME), Ben Sasse (R-NE), Richard Burr (R-NC), Pat Toomey (R-PA), and Mitt Romney (R-UT) joined a unanimous Democratic caucus in supporting conviction. Map 1: 2021 Senate vote on Trump convictionGiven his standing within the caucus, McConnell could have likely whipped the necessary votes if he felt that barring the former president from running for office again, a potential consequence of conviction, was worth it. Instead, the minority leader made it known that, while he considers Trump responsible for January’s insurrection at the Capitol, he viewed the trial as out of the Senate’s purview: citing Article II, Section 4 of the Constitution, he argued that as a former president, Trump shouldn’t be eligible for conviction. Much of the GOP conference agreed. Republicans up in 2022 mostly supported TrumpTo a large extent, Republican hands were tied, as Trump is still a popular figure in the party. When he was on the ballot himself, Trump generated turnout that boosted Republicans down the ballot. In 2016, he arguably kept the Senate in GOP hands and in 2020, Republicans beat expectations in the chamber, only narrowly losing control. While Trump didn’t carry the states he needed for reelection, the rural turnout he inspired helped vulnerable Republicans in states like North Carolina and Iowa, while other red state Senate contests that seemed competitive — such as South Carolina and Montana — ended up as solid Republican wins. The Republican senators up for election next year would very much like to have Trump’s base on their side. To GOP members, this would be helpful both in their primaries as well as in the general election, where turning out Trump’s voters, without the former president on the ballot, will be a priority. Perhaps not surprisingly, every Republican senator facing voters in 2022 was against conviction, with the exception of Sen. Lisa Murkowski. Murkowski, in some ways, can be viewed as an independent who caucuses with Republicans. A moderate, she’s faced primary challenges since her earliest years as an incumbent legislator; she famously lost her 2010 senatorial primary, but mounted a successful write-in campaign to keep her seat that year. Murkowski seemed free to vote her conscience, as she won’t realistically be a favorite of the Trump crowd anytime soon — the former president has vowed to campaign against her. But the Alaska senator has put together diverse electoral coalitions in the past and, as the Crystal Ball outlined recently, the state’s new ranked-choice electoral system may insulate her from more ideological challengers. Two of the top three Democratic Senate targets that the Crystal Ball identified in our initial 2022 ratings — Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and Wisconsin — are open seats. Both retiring Sens. Richard Burr and Pat Toomey voted for conviction but were promptly censured by partisans in their states. It’s a good sign of where the party is that Republican candidates running to replace them struck a much more pro-Trump tone. Former Rep. Mark Walker (R, NC-6), who’s framing himself as something of a consensus candidate for North Carolina Republicans, charged that Burr cast a “wrong vote.” In the third state, Wisconsin, there was no question that Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) would support acquittal. Though he’s still deciding whether to run again, Johnson is popular with conservatives in his bright purple state. Last weekend’s vote may lead to some new maneuvering from Republicans who aren’t in especially tough races, too. One of the most surprising votes for conviction was Sen. Bill Cassidy — since his election in 2014, he’s generally supported GOP leadership. When asked for his reasoning, he simply summed up that Trump “is guilty.” While Cassidy isn’t up in 2022 himself, his colleague, Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA) is. Kennedy got to the Senate by beating out several other Republicans in a 2016 jungle primary, in part because he was able to own the conservative mantle. It’s easy to see Kennedy criticizing Cassidy’s stance on the campaign trail, as he tries to preserve that image. After the vote, the Louisiana Republican Party immediately censured Cassidy but praised Kennedy. As an aside, this type of contrast between Louisiana senators of the same party isn’t new. For the first eight years of her three-term tenure, former Sen. Mary Landrieu’s (D-LA) critics would often compare her to the state’s other member at the time, Sen. John Breaux (D-LA). Republicans would bash Landrieu as a New Orleans liberal, while Breaux was held up as a “conservative” Cajun Democrat. Aside from Kennedy, the only other Republican up in 2022 who had a home-state colleague of the same party vote for conviction is Utah’s Mike Lee. Though he serves with Sen. Mitt Romney, a frequent Trump critic, Lee has a libertarian streak, and few question his credibility with conservatives. Conviction votes may hurt red state Democrats in 2024 — if the electorate remembers itIf Republicans are concerned about their near-term electoral prospects with Trump off the ballot, the consequences of last weekend’s vote may hurt Democrats most in the next presidential year. In a straight-party vote, the entire Democratic caucus voted for Trump’s conviction. Public opinion does seem to be on their side: according to an Ipsos/ABC News poll that was out Monday, about 60% of respondents agreed that the former president’s actions merited conviction. So with the 2022 midterms on the horizon, impeachment probably won’t be a liability for many Democratic senators, as none of them will be up in states that Trump carried. But 2024 promises to be a much tougher cycle for Democrats. That year, they’ll be defending roughly two-thirds of the states with elections — and Trump himself could feasibly be leading the GOP ticket again. For Republicans, the most obvious 2024 targets will be three Democrats who represent states that Trump won in both times he was on the ballot. Specifically, these are Sens. Jon Tester (D-MT), Sherrod Brown (D-OH), and Joe Manchin (D-WV). All three have been reelected because they’ve been able to cast themselves as different types of Democrats. Though the impeachment vote may well be a distant memory by 2024, Republicans will almost certainly point out that these members voted with their party when it mattered most. Any competent Republican presidential nominee should carry those three states in 2024, so the electoral threat that those Democratic senators would face is clear. This vote could potentially complicate their efforts to attain the crossover support they’ll almost assuredly need in order to win. Over the last two presidential election cycles, just one senator (Susan Collins in Maine) won while the other party’s presidential candidate was carrying their state. Even going beyond federal offices, aside from these senators, there are no Democrats left in partisan, statewide positions in Montana, Ohio, or West Virginia. This isn’t to say that those seats will be sure-fire Republican flips. Though Manchin has, at times, indicated he may retire in 2024, the others won’t be pushovers, should they run again. Brown and Tester were reelected in 2018 after voting against both of the Supreme Court nominees that Trump put forward during the first part of his presidency. For now, the Senate will return to its more routine business of considering President Biden’s nominees and negotiating another COVID-19 relief bill. But, looking to future campaigns, last weekend’s vote will likely figure into partisan messaging from both sides. Read the fine printLearn more about the Crystal Ball and find out how to contact us here. Sign up to receive Crystal Ball e-mails like this one delivered straight to your inbox. Use caution with Sabato’s Crystal Ball, and remember: “He who lives by the Crystal Ball ends up eating ground glass!” |
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38.) THE BLAZE
Listen live to Blaze Radio Tune in to the next generation of talk radio, featuring original content from hosts like Glenn Beck, Pat Gray, Stu Burguiere, Steve Deace and more!
One last thing … Popular podcaster Joe Rogan and other cultural commentators blasted New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio over a video touting the arts and culture — featuring mask-wearing dancers doing interpretive jumps on a street, no less — while the city continues to collapse under the weight of several factors, most notably the coronavirus.What are the details? … Read more
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39.) THE FEDERALIST
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The Federalist, 611 Pennsylvania Ave SE, #247, Washington, DC 20003, United States
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
NOQ Report Daily |
- Can bullion and Bitcoin save us from Biden?
- ‘Unsmiling political hack’: Trump goes nuclear on Mitch McConnell
- Biden, The Pale Horse
- Dr Cordie Williams: Conservatives, now is the time to start a movement
- Venezuela turns to privatization after being bankrupted by socialism
- Downplaying great presidents like Washington and Lincoln is now the left destroys our history
- Biden reignites White House religious outreach program to advance Cultural Marxism
- The politics of HollyWeird: #MeToo movement strikes again
- John Zmirak: The slur of ‘Christian Nationalism’
- Steve Mosher: China’s ‘gain of function research’ bioweapons program created the Wuhan Flu
Can bullion and Bitcoin save us from Biden?
Posted: 17 Feb 2021 03:04 AM PST One of the biggest economic shifts from one United States president to another happened in 1981. The incredibly horrible economic policies of Jimmy Carter were rapidly reversed by Ronald Reagan. What followed was the most prosperous individual decade in history as our fortunes reversed, seemingly overnight. Today, we’re facing the opposite shift as we’re going from the man who delivered the strongest economy in the history of the world to a man who is determined to wreck it in a matter of weeks. You’re probably already seeing the changes in prices at grocery stores, gas stations, and common services. Even before the monstrous $1.9 trillion “relief” bill is official, the economic turmoil that was finally starting to subside in the final months under President Trump are ramping back up again. What’s worse is that anything bad that happens in the economy will be blamed on President Trump and Covid-19 while anything positive will be positioned by the press as 100% due to President Biden. Unfortunately, we shouldn’t expect a whole lot of positives to debate about. The stock market continues to perform well, but everyone in the know on Wall Street is on edge with the understanding that this is the biggest investment bubble since 2008, perhaps bigger. The bottom could fall out at any time. To be clear, I’m not one of those financial fearmongers who sees economic collapse around every corner. Even as stocks plummeted at the height of the lockdowns, I was confident they would bounce back and they did. This is difference. I’m legitimately concerned about 401Ks, inflation, and the collapse of the U.S. Dollar. This is why I’m looking very seriously at two arenas: Precious metals and cryptocurrencies. As an obligatory disclaimer, I am NOT a financial advisor, economist, accountant, hedge fund manager, or prophet. The best part about ordering from Doordash is that it calculates the tip for me so I don’t have to embarrass myself at the restaurant. But I read. I read a whole lot. And I have a penchant for reading tea leaves regardless of whether they’re economic, political, or cultural. Right now, it doesn’t take a fiscal guru to realize that the economy is on shaky ground. Precious metals and cryptocurrencies are very interesting for different reasons. Gold and silver in particular have always been used as a hedge against inflation. When the Dollar goes down, gold and silver tend to go up. When stocks go down, many investors lean on the security of precious metals to stabilize their portfolios. These things aren’t new. What’s new is the uncertainty in a market that seems to be morphing from bear to bull and back again in a matter of days. Cryptocurrencies offer a different type of “security.” I had to use scare-quotes around “security” because there’s really nothing secure about the most volatile market out there. Huge gains and massive losses are the norm in cryptocurrencies which is one of the reasons they aren’t being adopted more. Yet. There’s also a technological barrier that doesn’t exist in most other markets, but that’s quickly fading as well. What makes cryptocurrencies so interesting is that they also bet against the Dollar. It’s not as direct of a correlation as there is with precious metals, but the connection is there nonetheless. Fortunes are made and lost in minutes. Cryptocurrencies are not for the feeble. And while there is a push to pretend like they’re not similar to betting at a casino, they really are. Where precious metals have stability, cryptocurrencies have none. Nevertheless, the uncertainty surrounding the Biden economy makes it a smart move to dabble in cryptos. I would never recommend investing anything you aren’t willing to lose in a second. When I go to Las Vegas, I only go with money that I can live without. Any other strategy is foolhardy. In the latest episode of NOQ Report, I explored these concepts more thoroughly. I also had an excellent conversation with Jack Hanney, someone who knows a thing or two about precious metals and investments. Hanney has been in the financial markets for 20+ years and is widely considered as an expert in his field. He studied under William O’Neill, one of the most successful investors in history. He is now a senior partner at Patriot Gold Group. I’m not a financial advisor. Not even close. But it seems clear that as Joe Biden and Democrats set forth to wreck the economy through Modern Monetary Theory, precious metals and cryptocurrencies seem to be smart plays right now.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Can bullion and Bitcoin save us from Biden? appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
‘Unsmiling political hack’: Trump goes nuclear on Mitch McConnell
Posted: 17 Feb 2021 02:48 AM PST After being repeatedly condemned by Sen. Mitch McConnell, former President Trump has turned on his former ally, the ranking Republican in the U.S. Senate, calling him names he had previously reserved for Democrats.Characterizing McConnell as a “dour, sullen and unsmiling political hack,” Trump said the GOP would “never again be respected or strong” with McConnell at its helm. Via WND. McConnell has claimed Trump bears responsibility for the Jan. 6 Capitol riot and suggested that he voted not to convict Trump on an impeachment count of inciting the riot only because Trump is no longer president. Saying that Democrats, including Sen. Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., play “McConnell like a fiddle,” Trump blamed the former Senate majority leader for the GOP’s Senate losses in Georgia, contending McConnell was badly outmaneuvered with regard to COVID stimulus checks. “In ‘Mitch’s Senate,’ over the last two election cycles, I single-handedly saved at least 12 Senate seats, more than eight in the 2020 cycle alone – and then came the Georgia disaster, where we should have won both U.S. Senate seats, but McConnell matched the Democrat offer of $2,000 stimulus checks with $600.” More important, Trump insisted that Republicans lost in Georgia because they hadn’t maintained election integrity. “Many Republicans in Georgia voted Democrat, or just didn’t vote, because of their anguish at their inept Governor, Brian Kemp, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, and the Republican Party, for not doing its job on Election Integrity during the 2020 Presidential race.” The former president also accused McConnell of being soft on China due to his business ties in the country through his Taiwanese wife, Elaine Chao, Trump’s former Transportation Secretary. “McConnell has no credibility on China because of his family’s substantial Chinese business holdings. He does nothing on this tremendous economic and military threat.” Trump and McConnell found themselves at odds in the aftermath of the 2020 election, when McConnell urged his colleagues to vote to certify the election for President Biden as Trump continued to assert that the election had been stolen from him. Trump promised to back primary rivals against McConnell “where necessary and appropriate.” The statement by Trump came following one by McConnell, who eviscerated the former president on the Senate floor Saturday, after voting to acquit him in the impeachment trial. He argued the Senate didn’t have the constitutional authority to convict a private citizen, but left the door open for a criminal trial. He followed that with another attack Monday in an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal. “There is no question former President Trump bears moral responsibility. His supporters stormed the Capitol because of the unhinged falsehoods he shouted into the world’s largest megaphone,” said McConnell. “His behavior during and after the chaos was also unconscionable, from attacking Vice President Mike Pence during the riot to praising the criminals after it ended.” Trump’s full statement is below: “The Republican Party can never again be respected or strong with political ‘leaders’ like Sen. Mitch McConnell at its helm. McConnell’s dedication to business as usual, status quo policies, together with his lack of political insight, wisdom, skill, and personality, has rapidly driven him from Majority Leader to Minority Leader, and it will only get worse. The Democrats and Chuck Schumer play McConnell like a fiddle – they’ve never had it so good – and they want to keep it that way! We know our America First agenda is a winner, not McConnell’s Beltway First agenda or Biden’s America Last. “In 2020, I received the most votes of any sitting President in history, almost 75,000,000. Every incumbent House Republican won for the first time in decades, and we flipped 15 seats, almost costing Nancy Pelosi her job. Republicans won majorities in at least 59 of the 98 partisan legislative chambers, and the Democrats failed to flip a single legislative chamber from red to blue. And in ‘Mitch’s Senate,’ over the last two election cycles, I single-handedly saved at least 12 Senate seats, more than eight in the 2020 cycle alone – and then came the Georgia disaster, where we should have won both U.S. Senate seats, but McConnell matched the Democrat offer of $2,000 stimulus checks with $600. How does that work? It became the Democrats’ principal advertisement, and a big winner for them it was. McConnell then put himself, one of the most unpopular politicians in the United States, into the advertisements. Many Republicans in Georgia voted Democrat, or just didn’t vote, because of their anguish at their inept Governor, Brian Kemp, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, and the Republican Party, for not doing its job on Election Integrity during the 2020 Presidential race. “It was a complete election disaster in Georgia, and certain other swing states. McConnell did nothing, and will never do what needs to be done in order to secure a fair and just electoral system into the future. He doesn’t have what it takes, never did, and never will. “My only regret is that McConnell ‘begged’ for my strong support and endorsement before the great people of Kentucky in the 2020 election, and I gave it to him. He went from one point down to 20 points up, and won. How quickly he forgets. Without my endorsement, McConnell would have lost, and lost badly. Now, his numbers are lower than ever before, he is destroying the Republican side of the Senate, and in so doing, seriously hurting our Country. “Likewise, McConnell has no credibility on China because of his family’s substantial Chinese business holdings. He does nothing on this tremendous economic and military threat. “Mitch is a dour, sullen, and unsmiling political hack, and if Republican Senators are going to stay with him, they will not win again. He will never do what needs to be done, or what is right for our Country. Where necessary and appropriate, I will back primary rivals who espouse Making America Great Again and our policy of America First. We want brilliant, strong, thoughtful, and compassionate leadership. “Prior to the pandemic, we produced the greatest economy and jobs numbers in the history of our Country, and likewise, our economic recovery after Covid was the best in the world. We cut taxes and regulations, rebuilt our military, took care of our Vets, became energy independent, built the wall and stopped the massive inflow of illegals into our Country, and so much more. And now, illegals are pouring in, pipelines are being stopped, taxes will be going up, and we will no longer be energy independent. “This is a big moment for our country, and we cannot let it pass by using third rate ‘leaders’ to dictate our future!” COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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.
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post ‘Unsmiling political hack’: Trump goes nuclear on Mitch McConnell appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Biden, The Pale Horse
Posted: 17 Feb 2021 02:41 AM PST
Perhaps you may have heard America is turning blue. Were you to tune in to most any mainstream source of information during our recent presidential election, you would have invariably encountered this ill-connoted phrase being uttered with a zeal that one might easily mistake for piety. It is in light of this that I hope readers may overlook the overtly religious theme of the article to follow, and instead judge it on its literary merits, for I propose that one need not be Bible-believing to find it’s reading profitable, and in fact, it is for such audiences that I found it worthwhile to write. Though it may exist for no other purpose than to seduce and disarm a reader and render him more willing to take productive action – like the infectious melody of an avian mating call, or the hypnotic beauty of flower in bloom – a poetic turn of phrase may serve us in the same manner. And though there are many who would argue the divine origins of The Holy Bible, there are rare few who contest the sublimity of its contents. I myself do not intend to declare it a biblical fact that Joe Biden is literally the fourth horseman of the apocalypse, but rather by its contemplation, dissolve the inhibitions of those who might otherwise reject such a notion as matter of reflex and thus avoid edification.
Be you devout Christian or apostate, it is difficult to deny Joe Biden is an apocalyptic allegory. His body with it’s tentative, faltering gate intimates a pale, dying animal overburdened by a spirit of death that rests upon it. It is this spirit of death that we most concern ourselves with. It is a spirit that has been, since the inception of the current Chinese plague, wholly preoccupied with the number of lives the pestilence has claimed. As he famously retorted, “We are learning to die with it.” As President, Biden’s policies reflect the same ghastly spirit, not least of which is his shameless affinity for abortion. His inclination is against any vibrant or vivacious policy and toward stagnation, be it through the embrace of stifling lock downs, the suffocation of free speech, or job killing economic policies. He is defined by his rejection of growth in any form and a marked preference for atrophy. These illustrations may be dismissed as hyperbole, but certainly not more readily than any argument to the contrary. But let us consider the matter of Biden’s Presidential campaign slogan: “The battle for the Soul of the Nation”. It is no exaggeration to suggest such a motto is decidedly ominous in it’s meaning, literal or otherwise. And it is just as reasonable as it is terrifying to conclude that as many would have unquestioningly joined the campaign dirge had his slogan instead been: “I’m coming, and Kamala is coming with me.”
You may dismiss as coincidence the fact that the Biden-Harris administration is presently in authority over roughly 25% of the world’s gross domestic production, but it is a fourth part nonetheless. Likewise, it is a simple fact that they exercise unfettered military jurisdiction over the Northwest quarter of the globe. And you may initially reject the possibility that the present regime would be capable of engaging in a slaughter of such biblical proportions, but one need look no further than the present garrison that encompasses the American seat of government, armed to the hilt, their weapons trained outward, to envision a scenario in which the Commander In Chief would unleash the sword of the US military upon it’s citizenry. Meanwhile, Biden wields the COVID body count, death itself, as a weapon to destroy our productivity and our livelihoods. And who would make a more suitable harbinger of hell on earth than Kamala Devi Harris, who immediately upon the usurpation of our government, was so crass as to place an unsightly monument to vanity and self-exaltation therein? Who else but a vocal and enthusiastic enabler of the numerous pandemonia that have gripped our US cities? Who but the foulest creature could look upon a burning metropolis, overrun with lawlessness and debauchery, and hail it as beautiful and glorious, and as a noble trend to be propagated throughout the land? And is it not an entity of such extreme aberrance that is perfectly suited to preside over the debased den of corruption that is our present US Senate? What description would be more precise than “spirit of anti-Christ” in referring to one who so relishes the forced masking of our population, the domestic imprisonment of our children, the perversion of our sexual identities, and laws that persecute Christians for congregating in their churches to give praise to God? To the objective mind there can be no doubt that Christians are quite reasonable in the belief that today, perhaps more than ever, we are struggling against spiritual wickedness in high places. But for those unbelievers, an equally compelling case can also be made. An attitude of anti-Christ need not be shrouded in religious mystery. It is plain enough even to the secularist that good is preferable to evil, that man is not woman, and our innate ability to know such fundamental truths is superior to a willing ignorance of it. Likewise, the rulers of the darkness of this world need not be constrained within a religious context in order to be perceived. By any standard, Joe Biden’s personification of death is as evident as is Harris’ devilishness. Only those that refuse to expose themselves to such a point of view and continue to imbibe the intoxicating elixir of mainstream media unquestioningly, will fail to recognize that there is an undeniable malevolence that guides the actions of our present political leaders, and in so doing, make themselves willing slaves to a religion of death, ushers to help conduct humanity into a hell on earth. COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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.
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Biden, The Pale Horse appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Dr Cordie Williams: Conservatives, now is the time to start a movement
Posted: 17 Feb 2021 02:02 AM PST Dr Cordie Williams, also known as the Megaphone Marine, shares his view on the future of the Conservative Movement during this episode of Freedom One-On-One. One of the most important things that we need to focus on is organizing, which has been an historically glaring weakness of the Right. The Left is great at organization, which has allowed them to mobilize around their pet projects. Conservatives, because we are more individualistic, have a more difficult time creating a long-term movement. However, if there was ever a time for this, 2021 is it! For many, including Cordie, there are a lot of parallels between what our Founding Fathers fought against leading up the Revolutionary War and what we are facing in America today. Taxation without representation, no personal property rights and a devaluing of life. Very similar to what we are experiencing now, with our Constitutional Rights being undone before our eyes.
Our Founding Fathers intended for our nation to be one of self-government, giving the most power to the individual and the most restrictions on the Federal Government. Unfortunately, we are living in an inverted America, especially now that Joe Biden is president and systematically stripping away our Constitutional Rights. If we are going to save our nation, we are going to have to organize and create a movement that cannot be stopped. If we do not accomplish this mission, America is facing the point of no return.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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.
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Dr Cordie Williams: Conservatives, now is the time to start a movement appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Venezuela turns to privatization after being bankrupted by socialism
Posted: 17 Feb 2021 01:57 AM PST Early in 2007, after winning a second six-year term as president, Hugo Chávez announced his plan to nationalize Venezuela’s largest telecommunications company, CANTV, hinting at wider nationalization plans to come. Article by Jon Miltimore via FEE. “All that was privatized, let it be nationalized,” announced Chávez, who had run under the banner of democratic socialism. Nearly a decade and a half later, on the brink of mass famine and a growing energy crisis, Venezuela is now moving in the opposite direction. According to Bloomberg News, Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro has quietly begun transferring state assets back into the hands of private owners in an effort to reverse the country’s economic collapse. “Saddled with hundreds of failed state companies in an economy barreling over a cliff, the Venezuelan government is abandoning socialist doctrine by offloading key enterprises to private investors, offering profit in exchange for a share of revenue or products,” write Caracas-based journalists Fabiola Zerpa and Nicolle Yapur. The transfer, which was not announced publicly but was confirmed by “nine people with knowledge of the matter,” reportedly includes dozens of coffee processors, grain silos, and hotels that were confiscated as part of Venezuela’s widespread nationalization that began under Chavez. Venezuela’s CollapseIn some ways, Venezuela’s plight is the most unlikely of stories. In 1950, Venezuela was one of the most prosperous nations in the world. It ranked among the top 10 in GDP per capita and had a labor force with higher productivity than the United States. Venezuela’s economic growth began to stall in the mid 1970s, however, after it nationalized the petroleum sector, which resulted in a surge of government revenue and public spending. It’s estimated that Venezuela brought in $7.6 billion in 1975 alone from nationalization ($37 billion in 2021 dollars). This led to an unprecedented surge of public spending. John Polga-Hecimovich, a professor of political science at the US Naval Academy, said the Venezuelan government spent more from 1974 to 1979 than in its entire previous history. Despite the growth in government spending, the political situation remained relatively steady. In the late 70s, University of Michigan political science professor Daniel H. Levine asserted that “Venezuelans have achieved one of the few stable competitive political orders in Latin America.” However, Venezuela’s flirtation with socialism would eventually turn into a love affair. In 1998, Venezuelans voted in Chavez, a populist and self-described Marxist. He was re-elected in 2000 (59.8% of the vote) and in 2006 (62.8%), at which point he began to nationalize various sectors of the economy—including agriculture, the steel industry, transportation, and mining—and confiscating more than a thousand companies, farms, and properties. At the time of Chavez’s death, his socialist policies were heralded by Salon as an “economic miracle”—but in reality the Venezuelan economy was already in a free fall.
By 2014, with the price of oil collapsing, Maduro’s government admitted it was in severe recession and Venezuela was suffering from the highest inflation in the Americas. By January 2016, the country was on the verge of “complete economic collapse.” Not long after, the Venezuelan government abandoned any pretense of being a “democratic” regime. A 2019 United Nations report concluded that there were “reasonable grounds to believe that” Maduro’s government had used special forces to kill thousands of political opponents in “extrajudicial executions.” To date, it is believed that more than 5 million Venezuelans have fled the country to escape economic ruin and political oppression. Privatization to the Rescue?The collapse of Venezuela, once the most prosperous country in Latin America, is hardly a secret. But Maduro’s pivot toward private enterprise in an attempt to stabilize the collapsing country is a new revelation. It’s not unprecedented, however. “This process is similar to the privatization process in Russia in that assets are transferred to private local companies and to investors from countries allied to the government,” Asdrubal Oliveros, head of economic consultancy Ecoanalitica, told Bloomberg. Rodrigo Agudo, head of the Venezuela Food Network, told the news agency that the regime instituted “a wild capitalism” by ceasing the collection of taxes on certain companies, liberalizing licensing on imports, and convincing military and other connected officials to invest in certain businesses. Ramon Lobo, a lawmaker with the ruling socialist party and a former finance minister, said the arrangements tend to have time limits (usually less than 10 years) and work much like a concession. Companies are allowed to invest and manage the asset, with the government then taking a percentage. “We believe this is positive because it is the synchronization of the public sector with the private sector,” said Lobo. “The state acts as a supervisor and receives compensation.” Economic Fascism Is Not CapitalismIn one sense, the revelation of Venezuela’s privatization push is a clear positive development. Maduro’s effort to quietly form private-public partnerships, a strategy that began in 2017, reveals the total failure of Venezuela’s command economy. Bloomberg points out, for example, that once-successful food processing plants have been “mostly idle” since being seized by the government, plants that could have been feeding a starving population. This revelation is both tragic and infuriating, but it’s not surprising. By their very nature, command economies are doomed to fail because they lack the basic incentive and price structures that are present in a market economy. “It is more than a metaphor to describe the price system as a kind of machinery for registering change, or a system of telecommunications which enables individual producers to watch merely the movements of a few pointers, as an engineer might watch the hands of a few dials, in order to adjust their activities to changes of which they may never know more than is reflected in the price movement,” the Nobel Laureate economist F.A. Hayek wrote. Many might be tempted to think that Maduro was just a bad or stupid person. But Ludwig von Mises reminds us that the quest to find the right person to run a command economy is a futile one for this very reason. “It has not been realized that even exceptionally gifted men of high character cannot solve the problems created by socialist control of industry,” Mises observed. It seems that after much pain and suffering, even socialist leaders in Venezuela have conceded that they cannot run an economy with enough efficiency to avoid economic ruin. But while returning enterprises to private owners is a step in the right direction, it’s hardly accurate to call Maduro’s strategy “capitalism.” The Maduro government is still using everything from price controls on food to minimum wage hikes to currency manipulation to manage its economy, not to mention selecting which businesses get to participate in its privatization efforts (and who gets to invest). In terms of overall economic freedom, Venezuela ranked 179 out of 180 countries in 2020—one place ahead of North Korea and one behind Cuba. At best, Venezuela’s current economic system is a form of fascism, which Sheldon Richman once described as “socialism with a capitalist veneer.” So while applauding Venezuela’s small but important step, we should not lose sight of an observation from Nobel Laureate economist Vernon Smith, who in 2018 noted that prosperity would return almost at once to Venezuela if politicians repealed their harmful policies and unleashed the power of markets. COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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.
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Venezuela turns to privatization after being bankrupted by socialism appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Downplaying great presidents like Washington and Lincoln is now the left destroys our history
Posted: 17 Feb 2021 01:51 AM PST Today, The Two Mikes hosted each other and discussed Mr. Trump’s acquittal, the deep and everlasting cruelty of the Democratic Party, and that tool for destroying American history—Presidents’ Day. The acquittal was, of course, expected, and it also exposed those seven senators who have no part in the patriot’s movement. In addition, McConnell’s post-vote words suggest that he will side with his wife, Biden, and China from here on. We again remarked on the deliberate cruelty of the Democrats toward everyday Americans, especially that being practiced by Biden—or his double—in killing jobs, increasing taxes, and witch-hunting of American patriots. When the worm turns the Democrats will pay dearly. Finally, we questioned whether President’s Day was the first congressional step toward eradicating U.S. history. Honestly, the United States has had very few presidents who are worth remembering, let alone honoring. Days set aside to honoring the greatest American, George Washington, and the enormously important Mr. Lincoln, were cancelled in favor of giving every president a trophy, as if they were eight-year old soccer players. Mr. Lincoln’s birthday silently passed on February 12th. And Google’s honoree was some two-bit singer no one heard from. I imagine General Washington’s birthday on February 22nd will pass in the same intentional science. If you want to support us, please help by signing up for Locals and following us to help us get over the 1000 member threshold. It’s free. You’ll find excellent creators there on top of us, so I encourage you to become members of anyone else you like as well. It’s not a competition. We just want to be able to put our content on the site and start promoting it heavily. Until we have full access, there’s simply no reason for us to promote it like we do with other channels. The Locals platform is excellent. We are eagerly pressing to get to the 1000-member threshold so we can put all of our content there. Dave Rubin’s team has built something special. COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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.
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Downplaying great presidents like Washington and Lincoln is now the left destroys our history appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Biden reignites White House religious outreach program to advance Cultural Marxism
Posted: 17 Feb 2021 01:44 AM PST Among the executive orders of the Biden Regency was the reestablishment of a religious outreach office created first by Bush II. The organization is a bit of a political football. The Trump Administration largely mothballed the organization until Trump tapped renown heretic, Paula White, to lead it in 2019. A recent Biden executive order reclaimed both the name and the direction of this office.
Melissa Rogers has been rehired to helm this operation. She ran the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships from 2013 to 2017 under President Obama. Melissa Roger’s leadership will mark a departure from the predecessor’s focus on evangelicals and towards a focus on woke causes. According to Religious News Service, Rogers had this to say about her mission:
Rogers makes it abundantly clear that Social Justice will be a primary focus of this organization. The second in command of this operation has a focus on coronavirus. Josh Dickson, who was formerly in charge of religious outreach for the Biden campaign, says this:
Perhaps this is an initiative to further pacify the church against government overreach. But it looks like they want to use religion to sell the vaccine. The article continues:
It’s worth noting that “pluralism” which can be summarized as the sentiment that all paths lead to Heaven is a heretical doctrine. Biden’s White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships is reportedly intent on strengthening false gospels. There is a distinction between principles and doctrine. The government can legislate Christian principles like marriage, definition of life, etc. But legislating doctrine is where the First Amendment is breached, in that Congress would be respecting the establishment of a religion. Powers denied to Congress (that are not reserved for other branches) are also denied to the Executive Branch. This religious outreach office was constitutionally flawed from its conception, and now it is going to be weaponized to advance the Social Justice Gospel. But at least Big Eva can rest easy at night now that there are no more mean tweets. For more coverage on the Social Justice Gospel, subscribe to Evangelical Dark Web COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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.
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Biden reignites White House religious outreach program to advance Cultural Marxism appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
The politics of HollyWeird: #MeToo movement strikes again
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 09:27 PM PST Editor’s Note: Whether on screen or off, Hollywood can always be counted on to keep us entertained. This is especially true when it comes to politics. Join us each week as we shine the spotlight on Tinseltown’s A-listers and their wacky and sometimes inspiring takes on today’s current events. Article by Kelli Ballard via Liberty Nation. Manson And Whedon Accused Of Sexual Misconduct – And WorseMarilyn MansonMarilyn Manson, the musician-slash-artist-slash-actor, has had his share of controversial media coverage, but now, after nine women have come forward to accuse him of bizarre and even frightening sexual misconduct, the star is experiencing the #MeToo movement at its finest. Once again, without proof – guilty until proven innocent – the star has been dropped by his talent agency CAA, fired from the record label Loma Vista, and let go from TV shows American Gods on Starz and Shudder’s Creepshow. To be fair, the accusations are disturbing, to say the least. Westworld actress Evan Rachel Wood, 33, opened the floodgates after accusing Manson. Soon after, eight more women came forward to claim abuse and sexual harassment. Wood met Manson when she was a teenager and said he had “groomed” her so that she was “brainwashed and manipulated into submission.” Some of the other accusations were more detailed. Model Sarah McNeilly said Manson threw her against a wall and threatened to smash her face with a baseball bat, according to the Daily Mail. Another model, Ashley Lindsay Morgan, a Jewish woman, claims he asked her to buy him Nazi memorabilia while she was in Asia and to bring it to the United States for him. Photographer Ashley Walters did not have a romantic relationship with Manson, but as his assistant, she alleges that the singer “frequently” became violent and even “offered” her up for “sexual relationships with collaborators.” Game of Thrones actress Esme Bianco has scars on her back, allegedly whip marks from one of Manson’s beatings. She said in an interview with ABC News that she has gone to authorities, including the FBI, with evidence that she was also human-trafficked by the rocker. Other allegations accuse Manson of forcing the women to make blood pacts, abusing them physically, and biting that left them black and blue. Former porn star Jenna Jameson said he fantasized about burning her alive. Manson denies all charges, of course, saying everything was consensual. Ex-wife and burlesque star Dita Von Teese said that she’d never experienced physical abuse at his hands and that their 12-month marriage ended because of his drug abuse and infidelity. She did, however, offer support for the women who have come forward against her ex-husband. Joss WhedonJoss Whedon is best known for the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The Avengers movie, and his newest project The Nevers. Ray Fisher, the actor who portrayed the Cyborg in Warner Bros.’ 2017 film Justice League, accused Whedon of “gross, abusive, unprofessional, and completely unacceptable” behavior. Since Fisher’s accusation, some former stars of Buffy spoke out to give support and share their stories. Charisma Carpenter, who played Cordelia Chase on both Buffy and the offshoot Angel, said he made rude remarks about her pregnancy, even asking if she was “going to keep it.” Then, he put the pregnant actress on a daily 1 a.m. reporting schedule. Sarah Michelle Gellar (Buffy) tweeted, “I don’t want to be forever associated with Joss Whedon.” Michelle Trachtenberg (Dawn Summers) said she wasn’t allowed to be in a room alone with him. On Angel, James Marsters (Spike) said Whedon once backed him against a wall and said, “I don’t care how popular you are, kid, you’re dead.” Whedon’s ex-wife, Kai Cole, had a different take on his behavior, claiming he promoted the feminist movement while he “deceived” her for 15 years of their marriage. Whedon stepped down from The Nevers after the accusations went public but has yet to respond to them. Cheers And JeersSometimes, HollyWeird players make headlines for silly or bizarre happenings, so here is a collection of newsworthy doings — honorable and dishonorable — by the tenants of Tinseltown. From Fighting to Protect Baby Yoda to Fighting for Free SpeechGina Carano, the actress on Disney’s The Mandalorian, was recently let go from Lucasfilm for what its officials considered inappropriate tweets. Apparently, the former MMA fighter made fun of mask-wearing protocols, stated claims of election fraud, and posted an Instagram that compared today to Holocaust times. The good news is she hasn’t been silenced. Carano has just signed a filmmaking deal with Ben Shapiro and The Daily Wire. Timberlake Apologizes to Women in His LifeAfter a recent documentary on Britney Spears and her battle with her father over taking conservatorship was aired, former boyfriend Justin Timberlake took to social media to make amends for the mistakes he’d made in regards to women. Timberlake apologized to Spears for his insensitivity as a male in Hollywood, which gives him privilege. In the 2002 music video for Cry Me a River, he used a Spears look-alike, giving the impression that Britney had cheated on him and reportedly damaged her reputation while his soared. Timberlake also apologized to Janet Jackson for the “wardrobe malfunction” during the 2004 Super Bowl. Jackson’s career suffered from the “mistake” while Timberlake’s boomed, so that he was even invited to perform at another Super Bowl. Hart’s Personal Shopper Commits Identity TheftActor and comedian Kevin Hart had a rude awakening after discovering that his personal shopper had used his accounts to allegedly steal more than $1 million. Dylan Jason Syer, 29, the shopper, was charged with grand larceny, criminal possession of stolen property, and identity theft. According to reports, he used the star’s credit cards to make expensive purchases such as jewelry, paintings, and other collectible items. Tune in next week to see what else Tinseltown has planned. ~ Read more from Kelli Ballard. COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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.
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post The politics of HollyWeird: #MeToo movement strikes again appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
John Zmirak: The slur of ‘Christian Nationalism’
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 09:17 PM PST John Zmirak returns for another episode of The Big Brown Gadfly with Bobby Lopez to discuss the fact that Conservatives being accused of being Christian Nationalists and whether it’s even a bad thing to be one. Clearly, the Left uses the term Christian Nationalism as a slur, attempting to tie it to White Nationalism. However, what does it actually mean to be a Christian Nationalist? This is a part of a strategic agenda to discredit Conservative Christians who love God and love this Country. Instead of being intellectually honest and acknowledging that just because you vote for Trump or have an America First philosophy of government, doesn’t mean that you’ve elevated Trump to worship status, nor does it mean that we are a racist group of people. America First simply refers to the role of the American government… specifically that America needs to take care of herself first, and then once our nation is protected and secure, then we can outreach. The problem is that most of our foreign policy implemented by the establishment is an America Last philosophy, which means that we are hurting our nation for the benefit of others.
It’s not wrong to want to do what’s best for your nation. Each nation should be putting its own interests first, followed by what is best for their allies. This is logical. John Zmirak and Bobby Lopez break down and expose not only the sinister tactics being used with this term Christian Nationalism, but also why we should all be Christian Nationalists!
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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.
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post John Zmirak: The slur of ‘Christian Nationalism’ appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Steve Mosher: China’s ‘gain of function research’ bioweapons program created the Wuhan Flu
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 08:18 AM PST Following reports by the World Health Organization that failed to lay blame for the coronavirus pandemic on China or the Chinese Communist Party, Americans on both sides of the political aisle have been crying foul. One of the most vocal opponents of the coverup by WHO on behalf of China is Steve Mosher, a social scientist and expert on China. Does he think based on the information we have available that the Wuhan Flu’s creation and spread should be blamed on China? “There’s no question China is to blame for this first, last, and always,” he said. “They’re to blame because they’ve had a bioweapons program in place for a couple of decades now. They’re to blame because they were doing at the Wuhan Institute of Virology very dangerous research. It’s called ‘gain of function’ research.” Mosher is an international authority on China and is President of the Population Research Institute. He is the author of the bestselling book Bully of Asia: Why China’s Dream is the New Threat to World Order. In 1979, he was the first American social scientist to visit mainland China where he had access to government documents and actually witnessed women being forced to have abortions under the “one-child policy.” He was a pro-choice atheist at the time, but witnessing these traumatic abortions led him to reconsider his convictions and to eventually become a practicing, pro-life Roman Catholic. He has appeared numerous times before Congress as an expert on world population, China, and human rights abuses. He has also made TV appearances on Good Morning America, 60 Minutes and now he’s on NOQ Report. “Gain of what function research, you ask?” he continued. “Gain of the function to make a virus more deadly and more infectious.” Between the World Health Organization, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and politicians across the globe who seem to be compromised by the Chinese Communist Party, the narrative that has persisted throughout the worldwide crisis has been that China is not to blame. This is false prima facie and only becomes more demonstrably ludicrous the deeper we dig into the origins and spread of the coronavirus. But Chinese Communist Party influence has become so ubiquitous, it has become very difficult to get to the truth and then to get the truth out to the people. Experts like Mosher who have been pointing their fingers at the CCP have been called “conspiracy theorists” for thinking the virology lab in Wuhan is the original of the disease. The CCP shills making such accusations against Mosher and others still hold to the notion that it was a random mutation from someone eating bat soup in a market that is conspicuously down the block from the lab. If it was created there, was it then released accidentally or intentionally? “This is one of those superbugs that was being created in the laboratory and got out of the laboratory,” Mosher said. “I’m not completely rejecting the idea that it was deliberately released in China and then released on the world.” One of the side-effects of having the Chinese Communist Party controlling so much of our media, Big Tech, and politicians is that even mentioning the CCP can get a website or interview flagged. We’ve had several brave guests on, especially though our Two Mikes podcast, who reveal the truth about Covid-19. Mosher’s expertise on China makes his interview important and he used his time on the show to call for China’s reckoning. “There ought to be trillions of dollars in reparations paid for the economic damage, not to mention the millions of people who lost their lives or lost their jobs or lost their business because of the China Virus,” he said. “The butcher’s bill in this case is huge. It ought to be paid in full by the Chinese Communist Party.” This fascinating conversation continued beyond talking about the China Virus. Is Joe Biden compromised by the CCP? What is China’s “Social Credit System” and is it working its way into America now? What can stop the Chinese Communist Party from advancing further towards world domination? Will there be armed conflict between the United States and China, perhaps over Taiwan? Mosher answered these and other questions during the interview. With the WHO covering for the Chinese Communist Party, it takes truthful and patriotic experts like Steve Mosher to reveal the truth about the China Virus. It’s not just about laying blame. It’s about preventing future attacks like this from happening again.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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.
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Steve Mosher: China’s ‘gain of function research’ bioweapons program created the Wuhan Flu appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
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42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
ARRA News Service (in this message: 15 new items) |
- Green Energy Leaves America Out in the Cold in More Ways Than One
- Texas Tragedy, Trump Acquitted Again, About Those Republicans
- Why Aren’t School Districts Giving Taxpayers Their Money Back?
- Will the Radical Left Reunite the GOP?
- H.R. 127 – A Bill Designed to Express Hostility Toward Law-Abiding Gun Owners
- Report: Bank of America Turned “Weapons-Related” Purchase Data Over to the Feds
- Biden’s Secular Vision Of Faith-Based Programs
- Say it Ain’t So, Joe
- Biden’s DHS Is Abolishing ICE Without Abolishing ICE
- Should Oppressors Host the Olympics?
- Get Ready for COVID-19 Variants Panic-Porn Perma-Mandates
- Capitol Hill Police Officer Brian Sicknick Not Killed By Fire Extinguisher – New York Times Withdraws Report
- Unintended Consequence of $15 Minimum Wage: Higher Child Care Costs
- Greene for Guns
- The Supreme Court, Smart Phones, and a Question of Privacy Rights in the Digital Age
Green Energy Leaves America Out in the Cold in More Ways Than One
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 10:10 PM PST by Tony Perkins: February gave Texas the cold shoulder this weekend as an extreme winter storm pounded the entire state. As of this morning, power had not been restored to more than 4 million Texans. Hundreds of thousands have also lost water after the water treatment plants in Fort Worth, Abilene, and elsewhere suffered power outages. A handful of deaths from the cold have already been reported, although we may not know the true toll until the state digs itself out. Prolonged power outages are always life-threatening for the sick and elderly, but are made worse by freezing temperatures. In subtropical Houston, temperatures dipped into the teens, while temperatures around Dallas plunged toward zero this morning. Residents have reported temperatures inside their homes are in the 30s and 40s, and they still have no power. Economically speaking, the catastrophe was caused because power demand peaked as power production plummeted. But what role did lack of preparation and an over-reliance on so-called green energy play? The state had planned to implement 45-minute, rolling blackouts — because those always work so well for California — but was forced instead to cut power to entire regions for extended periods. The Electric Reliability Council of Texas, responsible for running the state’s power grid, reported 30,000 megawatts of power generation went offline. For context, they also reported that nearly 70,000 megawatts of power was demanded, a new winter record. If you believe NPR, most of the outages are at “facilities run by gas, coal or nuclear energy,” a narrative they’ve repeated over and over. Those reports are “false,” according to the Texas Public Policy Foundation. They pointed out gas, coal, or nuclear power plants work just fine in parts of the world much colder than Texas. The real problem, they said, is the state’s reliance on nearly 20,000 megawatts of wind and solar power. Wind power generation bottomed out at 2 percent, creating a system failure that knocked other plants offline, too. It turns out green energy performs poorly in white-out conditions. This should come as no surprise. National Review’s John Fund pointed out that winter storms freeze wind turbines, and snow blankets disable solar panels. The Center for the American Experiment calculated that, during freezing conditions, wind turbines are a net loss of power because even when they are unable to produce power, they have to consume it to run electric heaters to keep the oil in their housing from freezing. The lesson here is that green energy production is least available when it is needed most. Even if, by some miracle, America achieves 100 percent renewable energy production, we will need gas, coal, and nuclear-generated power as a backup for when wind and solar generation inevitably goes offline. Advocates believe that renewable energy can be stored in batteries to be used when needed, but the Texas Public Policy Foundation said batteries are an “impractical and expensive” solution. In Texas alone, they estimate the state would need more than 1,000 times its current battery capacity. While Americans slowly freeze in their homes, President Biden in his first month in office has already aggressively restricted the fossil fuels that could keep them warm. He has revoked the Keystone Pipeline permit, restricted drilling offshore and in Alaska, and closed public lands to fracking. All this is done with an eye towards expanding green energy production. In fact, White House climate czar John Kerry inanely suggested pipeline workers who lost their jobs could make solar panels. But when energy matters most, renewables just can’t cut it. Americans will be forced to rely on foreign dictators to export the oil that will heat their homes. This is simply unacceptable. There is little chance that Americans will warm up to President Biden’s environmental policies. Tags: Tony Perkins, Family Research Council, To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Texas Tragedy, Trump Acquitted Again, About Those Republicans
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 09:36 PM PST
by Gary Bauer: Texas Tragedy Democrats say never let a crisis go to waste, which is very cynical. I say we should learn from this crisis and there are lessons to be learned. For example, the state most known for energy is suffering through rolling blackouts right now. More than 4 million people are without power and heat as temperatures in the Lone Star State have plummeted to below zero. While Texas is known for its oil and natural gas, it has also embraced so-called “sustainable energy sources” like wind power. But the giant wind turbines froze in the Texas plains, and that’s one major reason why the state’s energy grid is on tilt. Wind and solar can be part of our energy future. But this fiction that we can end the use of carbon-based fuel in 10, 20 or 30 years will end up killing people and our economy. By the way, there are other alternatives, but the left opposes those too. The left has scared people away from nuclear power. We have abundant natural gas, but President Biden has effectively declared war on that. Consider what he has done in his first days in office: He canceled the Keystone pipeline. Left-wing activists are demanding that more pipelines be shut down. Biden suspended drilling on federal lands. And he rejoined the Paris Climate Accord, which will destroy the American energy industry if it is ever fully implemented. The environmental extremists and politicians like Joe Biden and Kamala Harris have already cost America tens of thousands of jobs. Now environmental extremism is costing lives in places like Texas. We should learn from these mistakes, rather than repeating them all over the country. Many people seem to think that younger generations are smarter than we are, but they are like fish in water. They think the things we have always had will always be here. But they have no idea what had to be done to develop the abundant energy that fuels America’s great economy. We must explain to them all the progress that was made possible by carbon-based fuels before they wake up one day and wonder where all the heat and food went. Trump Acquitted Again Unfortunately, the homes of Trump’s attorneys were vandalized. Their law firms and their families were threatened. And the left fought just as dirty on the Senate floor too. Speaker Pelosi’s impeachment team altered tweets and censored video of the president’s January 6th speech. I think Democrats thought they had a chance to prevail. They have a good sense of the weakness in the GOP. But then they unexpectedly decided to call witnesses and won the vote to begin taking depositions. Senator Lindsey Graham called their bluff and demanded to depose Speaker Nancy Pelosi. One of Trump’s lawyers said they would depose 100 witnesses. Others wanted to hear from the Capitol Hill Police to learn why requests for additional reinforcements were denied before January 6th. Suddenly, the Democrats backed off and dropped their demand for witnesses. The Senate then voted to acquit the president, with seven Republicans voting with all Democrats to convict. About Those Republicans. . . That seven Republicans broke ranks and voted with Democrats to convict President Trump was disgusting. Most Republicans (45) were already on the record supporting a resolution by Senator Rand Paul declaring the impeachment of a former president, now a private citizen, unconstitutional. But two senators, Louisiana’s Bill Cassidy and North Carolina’s Richard Burr, changed their positions over the course of the trial. Louisiana is one of the most pro-Trump states. Trump won it by 19 points over Joe Biden. But for whatever reason, Sen. Cassidy joined the left to destroy a president who has done more for Louisiana’s energy industry than any president in history. And Louisiana Republicans wasted no time in expressing their outrage with Cassidy’s vote. Many of us were frustrated that the Senate Intelligence Committee led by Senator Richard Burr never seemingly got to the bottom of the Russia collusion hoax and what happened with the FBI’s 2016 investigation of the Trump campaign. Burr seemed more interested in bipartisanship and following the lead of committee Democrats than he was in rooting out corruption at the FBI. His public defenses of Trump were always weak. But he announced his retirement months ago, so now we get to see the real Richard Burr. There are no words to describe the perpetual frustration that is Mitt Romney. When it comes to fighting the left, Romney seems most committed to losing gracefully. Not surprisingly, his actions have spurred talk of a serious primary challenge by conservatives who want a fighter to represent them. That’s what Romney and so many of these renegade Republicans find so disturbing about Donald Trump. He’s not in politics to get rich. In fact, he lost much of his wealth over the past four years. He doesn’t buy into the left’s false narratives about America, and he fights back. I don’t recall Burr, Cassidy or Romney rushing to defend America from the radical left. Worst of all is Mitch McConnell. While he voted the right way, he has spent more time lately attacking Trump than Joe Biden. Insiders say McConnell believes it is imperative for the GOP to move away from Trump. If that’s true, then he must believe it is imperative for the party to commit suicide, as many polls show Trump with high ratings among Republicans. I think McConnell is showing by his actions that this is his last term in the Senate. About That Science. . . In fact, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky acknowledged that the new school reopening guidelines were developed after receiving “an understanding of the lived experiences . . . of teachers and school staff, parents, and students.” Notice who comes last in that framework – parents and students. In other words, the teacher unions, not science, are calling the shots. Who knows when our schools will ever reopen. Parler’s Back Parler’s interim CEO, Mark Meckler, said, “We’re thrilled to welcome everyone back. Parler is being run by an experienced team and is here to stay. We will thrive as the premier social media platform dedicated to free speech, privacy and civil dialogue.” You can follow me on Parler. Tags: Gary Bauer, Texas Tragedy, Trump Acquitted Again, About Those RepublicansTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Why Aren’t School Districts Giving Taxpayers Their Money Back?
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 09:05 PM PST The people who deserve a break are the tens of millions of taxpayers who paid for public educational services not rendered. by Stephen Moore: In Naperville, Illinois, the school board announced it would distribute $10 million back to taxpayers this year. Yes, a tax refund. In a news release, Superintendent Dan Bridges told residents that he “understands the great burden many of our families have faced during the COVID-19 pandemic and hopes that this reimbursement lessens that burden.” The typical family will receive a refund of $200 to $500. Good for Naperville. The 10-month pandemic shutdown generated a savings of roughly $20 million, or about 6.5% out of a $300 million school budget. The Naperville Sun reported that the district’s expenses for everything from transportation, utilities, staffing needs and so on have been much lower while the doors have been shut. Naperville school board member Paul Leong, a local businessman, told me: “It’s amazing that we are the only school district in the area or in the state that has given taxpayers some of their money back.” Or in the whole country, for that matter. Why aren’t more school boards in areas where school buildings were shut down providing families and businesses with property tax rebate checks? Heritage Foundation education analyst Lindsey Burke, who first suggested the tax rebate idea many months ago, said that if schools aren’t open, the taxpayers who fund the schools deserve a break. But the National Taxpayers Union said it hasn’t found any other school districts that have done so. Why not? Lost revenues squeeze some low-income school budgets due to the economic effects of the pandemic. But in suburbs where property taxes primarily fund schools, the savings should be similar to what Naperville saw. The near-record 12% nationwide increase in home values over the past year means more, not fewer, revenues for schools. Perhaps it is time for flash-fire local tax revolts led by homeowners demanding some of their money back. If school authorities claim no budget savings, school boards and mayors have a fiduciary obligation to require full audits to determine where all the money went. For example, we know that many school districts scandalously continued to waste millions of dollars of tax money running school buses for months. The Naperville story is also instructive because it points to the fiscal lunacy of President Joe Biden’s “stimulus” proposal for the federal government to give $170 billion to the nation’s public schools. Hundreds of private and Catholic schools in some of the most impoverished areas have kept their doors open without extra financial help. Why do schools that have closed their doors for nearly a year need MORE money? The people who deserve a break are the tens of millions of taxpayers who paid for public educational services not rendered. Tags: Stephen Moore, why aren’t, school districts, giving taxpayers, money back To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Will the Radical Left Reunite the GOP?
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 08:51 PM PST by Patrick J. Buchanan: The succession struggle in the GOP is now underway. But as for now, Donald Trump is The Man, and he is not going anywhere… Still, even if Trump cannot unite the Republican Party, he brings, far and away, the largest pile of chips to the table. “Our historic, patriotic and beautiful movement to Make America Great Again has only just begun.” So said Citizen Trump Saturday on his acquittal by the Senate of the impeachment article of “incitement of insurrection” in the Jan 6 invasion of the Capitol. “I look forward to continuing our incredible journey together to achieve American greatness for all our people,” said Trump. “We have so much work ahead of us, and soon we will emerge with a vision for a bright, radiant and limitless American future.” Translation: Donald Trump is not going anywhere soon. The new Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell, has another view. While he had voted to acquit Trump because he saw the Senate as acting outside the Constitution in prosecuting a former president, now a private citizen, he was unequivocal about the validity of the charge. Trump is guilty, said McConnell: “There’s no question, none, that President Trump is practically and morally responsible for provoking the events of (Jan. 6).” “The people who stormed this building believed they were acting on the wishes and instructions of their president. And having that belief was a foreseeable consequence of the growing crescendo of false statements, conspiracy theories and reckless hyperbole which the defeated president kept shouting into the largest megaphone on planet Earth.” Nor had then-President Trump done his duty to stop the rioting by his followers: “He did not do his job. He did not take steps so federal law could be faithfully executed and order restored.” McConnell was saying that Trump not only was guilty of the charge of incitement but also has disqualified himself as leader of the Republican Party, and the party should wash its hands of the former president. If it’s Trump’s Party now, McConnell was saying, he is seceding. Nikki Haley, whom Trump honored by naming her U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, in an interview published Friday, told Politico that Trump, “let us down. … We shouldn’t have followed him, and we shouldn’t have listened to him. And we can’t let that ever happen again.” Haley, too, has belatedly washed her hands of her benefactor. But Sen. Lindsey Graham called McConnell’s remark a burden for the party to bear in 2022 and Trump the still-indispensable leader: “We need to unite the party. Trump-plus is the way back in 2022. … We can’t do that without Donald Trump.” Who is the future party leader? Who comes after Trump? The succession struggle in the GOP is now underway. But as for now, Donald Trump is The Man, and he is not going anywhere. As former president and most recent nominee, he is the party’s titular leader. He won the largest total of popular votes in party history, 74 million. He intends to raise millions and campaign in 2022 in states where he is wanted — and in states where he may not be wanted. And he will likely set the issues agenda, as a media obsessed with Trump will elevate everything he says, if only to denounce it. Yet, Trump’s immediate future is likely to see a blizzard of subpoenas from litigants and prosecutors that will take a toll of his time and resources. Still, even if Trump cannot unite the Republican Party, he brings, far and away, the largest pile of chips to the table. That House Republicans voted 19-1 against impeachment and Senate Republicans voted 6-1 against conviction testifies to the breadth and depth of his support. As for the Never-Trumpers, John Weaver seems to have done for the Lincoln Project what John Wilkes Booth did for Ford’s Theater. What can reunite a party as divided as it hasn’t been since the Barry Goldwater-Nelson Rockefeller battle of 1964? The Democrats can; the left can; the establishment can; the media can; the cancel-cultural elite can — all of whom are disliked or detested by Republicans. Its enemies can reunite the Republican Party. The Biden crowd has already killed the Keystone XL pipeline and put federal lands off-limits to future drilling, imperiling the energy independence the GOP had achieved under Trump. The open-borders crowd, which seeks to swamp Middle America with millions of new migrants, is seeking to emasculate U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, end deportations and tear down the Trump wall. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom of California is in danger of being recalled and fired, and Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York may be charged with misleading federal authorities about how many New Yorkers died in nursing homes because he assigned COVID-19 positive patients into rooms alongside them. While the invasion of the Capitol was the most publicized act of mob violence in decades, it was not the most violent, nor is it the norm. When antifa, Black Lives Matter and leftist allies smashed statues, looted and torched inner cities and attacked cops in 2020, that was the norm. And the street criminals who compiled those new records of shootings and killings last year in almost all of our cities, they were not Oath Keepers or Proud Boys. Tags: Patrick Buchanan, conservative, commentary, Will the Radical Left, Reunite the GOPTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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H.R. 127 – A Bill Designed to Express Hostility Toward Law-Abiding Gun Owners
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 08:38 PM PST by NRA-ILA: All gun control bills share the same basic goal: a world in which fewer people own firearms. Some bills simply ban certain types of firearms or ammunition outright. Others place obstacles in the path of owning firearms or ammunition to make them more difficult and expensive to obtain, thereby shrinking the market for them. The fundamental flaw of these approaches is that they treat all law-abiding firearm owners as would-be criminals, when the reality is that most firearm-related assaults and homicides are committed by people who completely disregard the law, including laws against taking human life. H.R. 127 combines both failed approaches. It bans common types of ammunition and original equipment magazines for most self-defense firearms. And, it makes all firearms more difficult to obtain and possess through a punitive licensing and registration scheme. In its details, however, H.R. 127 is so outrageous, persecutory, and unworkable that its main function is simply to display the hostility of its author and supporters toward firearms, those who own them, and those who want to own them. o H.R. 127 would ban common types of ammunition, including every shotgun shell larger than .410. o The bill states: “It shall be unlawful for any person to possess ammunition that is 0.50 caliber or greater.” o Violations of this ban would result in the imposition of a fine of at least $50,000 and imprisonment of at least 10 years, mandatory penalties not seen in many violent or infamous federal crimes, including torturing someone to death outside the U.S. or committing treason during wartime. o Hunting whitetail deer would be legally impossible in at least 10 U.S. states if these restrictions went into effect. o The bill would also make it impossible for Americans to follow President Biden’s advice to keep a double-barreled, 12 gauge shotgun for self-defense, rather than an AR-15. o Innumerable numbers of shotgun shells currently possessed by law-abiding people for lawful purposes would suddenly become contraband. H.R. 127 would force Americans to relinquish hundreds of millions firearm magazines with no compensation. o The bill states: “It shall be unlawful for any person to possess a large capacity ammunition feeding device”, and defines such devices to include those “that can be readily restored or converted to accept, more than 10 rounds of ammunition,” excluding certain integral .22 rimfire magazines. o Industry production figures show that there are hundreds of millions of 11+ round magazines. o As with its ban on shotgun shells, H.R.127’s magazine ban would apply retroactively, affecting items already owned by millions of Americans for lawful purposes, with no compensation for owners forced to relinquish property that was lawful when obtained. H.R. 127 would require the federal government to register some 400 million guns in the span of only 3 months. o The bill states that registration information would have to be provided to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosive, “in the case of a firearm acquired before the effective date of this section, within 3 months after the effective date of this section.” o But BATFE would also have to create the registration system during those 3 months. o Because the U.S. (intentionally) does not already have a national firearms registry, it would be impossible for the government to fairly and effectively enforce this system with respect to existing gun owners. The firearm registry database would have to be made available to “all members of the public,” as well as “all branches of the United States Armed Forces,” among others. o This would facilitate private discrimination against gun owners, including in such things as employment and access to essential services such as banking, insurance, or housing. o It also seems to presuppose that the military, which is prohibited by law from engaging in domestic law enforcement, has some role in policing civilian firearm ownership. Ironically, criminals who possess firearms illegally would self-exempt themselves from the registration requirement, and under U.S. Supreme Court case law, could not be required to disclose their illegal firearm possession through registration. H.R. 127 would retroactively criminalize firearm ownership by young adults. o Currently, there is no federal prohibition on adults aged 18 or older possessing otherwise lawful firearms. o The bill, however, would require a license to possess any firearm, and licenses would only be available to those aged 21 or older. o Millions of young adults, including those in the military, would become ineligible to possess firearms for their own lawful purposes under this legislation, including any firearms they already owned. H.R. 127 would discourage voluntary mental health treatment, including for combat veterans or victims of violent trauma, by permanently prohibiting the issuance of a license to anyone who “has been hospitalized … with a mental illness, disturbance, or diagnosis (including … addiction to a controlled substance … or alcohol) … .” o Anyone who had been hospitalized with a “brain disease” would also be ineligible for a license, including those suffering from brain cancer, epilepsy, and Parkinson’s disease. H.R. 127 would effectively price lawful firearm ownership out of reach for many of the poorest and most vulnerable Americans. o It would require the holder of a firearm license to pay a tax (masquerading as government-issued “insurance”) of $800 per year. o License applicants (and even other members of their household, as directed) would also have to undergo a psychological evaluation at their own expense. H.R. 127 has a long way to go before becoming law. o The bill has not yet been scheduled for a committee hearing, and it currently has zero cosponsors. o While it is not presently moving, it does show how far gun control advocates would like to go in attacking the right to keep and bear arms. Tags: NRA, ILA, H.R. 127, Bill Designed, to Express, Hostility Toward Law-Abiding, Gun Owners, registration, licensingTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Report: Bank of America Turned “Weapons-Related” Purchase Data Over to the Feds
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 07:58 PM PST by NRA-ILA: According to a recent Fox News report, Bank of America secretly turned over hundreds of its customers’ personal data to the federal government following the unrest at the Capitol on January 6. The targeted customers included those who made purchases at “weapons-related merchants” in early January. The report suggested that the nation’s second largest bank turned the private information over voluntarily rather than in response to a subpoena. Bank of America’s willing collaboration with federal law enforcement at the expense of its customers highlights the broad threat posed by those that would commandeer ostensibly private banks and payment processors to undermine Second Amendment rights. According to Fox, at the behest of federal investigators, Bank of America swept its transaction records for individuals who met the following criteria: 1. Customers confirmed as transacting, either through bank account debit card or credit card purchases in Washington, D.C. between 1/5 and 1/6. 2. Purchases made for Hotel/Airbnb RSVPs in DC, VA, and MD after 1/6. 3. Any purchase of weapons or at a weapons-related merchant between 1/7 and their upcoming suspected stay in D.C. area around Inauguration Day. 4. Airline related purchases since 1/6. This resulted in the identification of 211 Bank of America customers, whose data was then turned over to the federal government without their knowledge. Fox News noted that at least one of the identified individuals was subsequently interviewed by federal authorities and cleared of any wrongdoing. This gross abuse of trust reveals how financial service companies collaborating with federal law enforcement can erode gun owners’ rights and statutory protections preventing the federal government’s retention of gun owner data. Federal law explicitly prohibits the federal government from compiling certain data on gun owners. The Firearms Owners’ Protection Act of 1986 amended the Gun Control Act to protect gun owners from the threat of registration. The legislation added language stating, The Brady Act of 1993, which provided for the establishment of the National Instant Criminal Background Check System, made clear the NICS cannot be used to create a firearms registry. The language states that the NICS must “destroy all records of the system with respect to the call (other than the identifying number and the date the number was assigned) and all records of the system relating to the person or the transfer.” Further, the Brady Act prohibited any “department, agency, officer, or employee of the United States” from requiring any record generated by the NICS to be retained or to use the system to establish a firearms registry. The federal government deputizing willing banks to compile and hand over information on law-abiding gun owners that is comparable to data they would be prohibited from compiling themselves is a direct attack on the privacy that these statutory protections were intended to preserve. This isn’t the first time the federal government has used the acquiescent banking sector to push outcomes gun control advocates could not achieve through legitimate means. In 2013 the Justice Department and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation initiated Operation Choke Point, which sought to deter banks from conducting business with companies that engaged in commerce that the Obama administration viewed as undesirable. To do this, the Obama administration categorized certain types of businesses as being “associated with high-risk activity” in a banking guidance document used by the FDIC. Some of the types of businesses targeted by the operation were engaged in illegal or fraudulent activity, like “On-line Gambling” or “Ponzi Schemes.” However, the operation also targeted legal businesses that engaged in lawful commerce such as “Tobacco Sales,” “Coin Dealers,” “Ammunition Sales,” and “Firearms Sales.” The Trump administration put an end to the federal government’s organized financial harassment campaign in 2017. However, some lawmakers, including U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.), have continued to bully banks in an attempt to force them to cut ties with the firearms industry. This continued assault prompted NRA to support a Trump era rule from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) aimed at ending politically-motivated discrimination in the provision of financial services. Exposing their zeal for political discrimination in banking, on January 28 the Biden administration put a hold on this vital measure. Moreover, gun control advocates have tried to directly commandeer banks and payment processors in an attempt to attack gun owners. On December 24, 2019 the gun confiscation supporters at the New York Times ran a thinly-veiled advocacy piece by Andrew Ross Sorkin in the news section, titled, “Devastating Arsenals, Bought With Plastic and Nary a Red Flag.” According to Sorkin, banks and other financial services companies are “uniquely positioned” to monitor gun owner purchasing habits. Under Sorkin’s preferred scenario, credit card companies would require retailers to tag firearms-related purchases with additional data that could be used by the credit card companies to compile information on gun owners. The surveillance data could then be used to flag suspicious purchases for law enforcement. On April 30, 2018, the Wall Street Journal reported that “[b]anks and credit-card companies are discussing ways to identify purchases of guns in their payment systems.” Elaborating, the paper explained, The financial companies have explored creating a new credit-card code for firearms dealers, similar to how they code restaurants or department stores, according to people familiar with the matter. Another idea would require merchants to share information about specific firearm products consumers are buying, some of the people said. Such data could allow banks to restrict purchases at certain businesses or monitor them. More recently, Moms Demand Action Founder Shannon Watts encouraged the payment processing industry to restrict what gun owners can buy. According to Watts, credit card companies should refuse to process payments for certain firearms parts – preventing law-abiding gun owners from purchasing lawful products. Given Bank of America and federal law enforcement’s recent conduct, it would be reasonable for gun owners to assume that the federal government would have unfettered access to any data collected under gun controllers’ proposed banking and payment processing schemes. NRA-ILA has been at the forefront of confronting governmental and private efforts to attack gun owners and the gun industry through banking and payment processing. NRA-ILA will continue to work with our friends in congress, including members of the Senate Banking Committee, to ensure that gun owners and the gun industry have access to financial services free from privacy abuses and political retribution. Tags: NRA-ILA Report, Bank of America, Turned, “Weapons-Related” Purchase Data, Over to the FedsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Biden’s Secular Vision Of Faith-Based Programs
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 07:26 PM PST
by Bill Donohue: Comments on President Biden’s faith-based programs: President Trump and President Biden could not be more different when it comes to religion. Trump never gave the impression that he was a deeply religious man; Biden has. But Trump delivered on religious liberty, passing many key policies and appointing religion-friendly judges. Biden, on the other hand, is content to check his religion at the church door. Biden’s decision to appoint Melissa Rogers to head the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships is telling. She will also serve as senior director for faith and public policy in the White House Domestic Policy Council. He could not have chosen a more seasoned secularist to steer these faith-based entities. Rogers may be a Baptist, but it is her secular vision of faith-based programs that will direct her decision-making. This not a matter of speculation. This is her second appointment as director of faith-based programs: Obama chose her to head this initiative in his second term. So we know what we are getting. When Rogers worked in the Obama White House, her idea of reaching out to faith communities was to invite the Secular Coalition of America to the White House. She welcomed the professional atheists in the name of religious pluralism. As I previously said, this was “akin to welcoming racists in the name of racial harmony.” The clash between religious liberty and the LGBT agenda is well known. It is fair to say that we would not expect an LGBT activist to champion the cause of religious liberty. Nor would we expect a religious leader to champion the LGBT cause. That’s what makes Rogers special. She sides with the homosexual agenda against people of faith. Does this mean that Rogers would ban Orthodox Jews from exclusively hiring their own to run their day-care centers? Yes it does. Does this mean that she opposes Catholic foster-care programs from following Catholic teachings when deciding whom to place children with in adoptive settings? Yes it does. Rogers doesn’t miss any salient issue. For example, she wants to ban “government-sponsored religious displays.” Not sure whether she would approve of the Catholic League’s display of a life-size nativity scene in Central Park. After all, it is on public property. Biden obviously shares Rogers’ secular vision, which is why he went back to the well and brought her on board again. In doing so, he is right in step with his previous boss, President Obama. Three months into his first term, the Obama advance team told Georgetown University that the president would not speak there unless they put a drape over religious symbols. Then there was the serious debate over whether to display a manger scene at Christmastime in 2009. These anecdotes are revealing, but it was secularization of faith-based programs that angered religious leaders. Matters got so bad that on January 15, 2010, I released a statement, “Time to Close Faith-Based Programs.” On June 24, 2011, after another round of dumbing-down the religious element of these programs, I issued another news release calling to “Shut Down Faith-Based Programs.” President Biden has a right to appoint whomever he wants to command his faith-based programs. But in choosing Rogers the “devout Catholic” has sent an unmistakable message to people of faith: You lose. Tags: Bill Donohue, Catholic League, Biden’s secular vision, faith based programs. Melissa Rogers To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Say it Ain’t So, Joe
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 07:05 PM PST . . . Pelosi has struck out twice trying to Impeach Trump on frivolous charges.
Tags: ediorial Cartoon, AF Branco, Say It Ain’t So, JoeTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Biden’s DHS Is Abolishing ICE Without Abolishing ICE
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 06:55 PM PST Officers ‘now being told to enforce nothing’
by Andrew R. Arthur: The Washington Post ran an article this week captioned “New Biden rules for ICE point to fewer arrests and deportations, and a more restrained agency“. That is one way of putting it. I prefer the following quote in the article, from one unnamed “distraught official”: “They’ve abolished ICE without abolishing ICE.”I have already reported on the DHS memorandum of January 20 limiting ICE arrests to three specified “priorities”: spies and terrorists; aliens who entered illegally on or after November 1; and aliens released from incarceration on or after the date of that memorandum who have been convicted of “aggravated felonies”, as defined in section 101(a)(43) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA).As a fig leaf, that memorandum notes that “nothing in this memorandum prohibits the apprehension or detention of individuals unlawfully in the United States who are not identified as priorities herein.” Note, however, aliens lawfully admitted who are removable, for say, sexual abuse of a minor (an aggravated felony) are not “unlawfully in the United States” until they have been ordered removed.So, if said child molester was released from federal, state, or local custody prior to Inauguration Day, 2020, he or she is not to be arrested by ICE under the limitations in that memorandum. This is not a matter of semantics or legalese: Agents and officers know the law as well as I do, and will certainly interpret this sentence in the memorandum as I have. (See my colleague Jessica Vaughan’s analysis applying the new priorities to 2018 interior removal statistics; she found that 96.5 percent of those removed would have been allowed to stay.)The memorandum continues: “In order to ensure appropriate allocation of resources and exercise of prosecutorial discretion, the Acting Director of ICE shall issue operational guidance on the implementation of these priorities.” Which brings me to the Post story. It reports that ICE is preparing such guidelines “as the Biden administration attempts to assert more control over an agency afforded wide latitude under President Donald Trump.” That is in the first line of the article, but bears more analysis. It is not as if ICE officials had untrammeled authority to grab whomever they wanted off of the street under Trump. They could only arrest aliens whom they had concluded were removable under the INA — the law that Congress enacted and the president signed. Put another way, ICE could only arrest, detain, and remove aliens your elected representatives said that they could arrest, detain, and remove. That is actually an overstatement, as Trump issued an executive order with his own ICE enforcement priorities, but if officers happened upon other removable aliens, they could be arrested, as well. And, as I explained in a January 26 statistics-filled post captioned “The Canard of ‘Hyper’ ICE Enforcement Under Trump”, ICE actually was more restrained under the 45th president than they were for the majority of President Obama’s time in office. Here are two key takeaways:
Those are actual statistics, not feelings, thoughts, or impressions. With due respect to DC’s paper of record, if ICE had “wide latitude” under Trump, it is only when compared to the last years of the Obama administration, and they used it judiciously. The Post reports that according to “interim instructions sent to senior officials”, ICE “will no longer seek to deport immigrants for crimes such as driving under the influence and assault”. In an October 2019 post, I asked the question “Are Immigration Advocates Pro-Drunk Driver?”, and it appears to be an evergreen one. Of course, as I reported last March, then-candidate Biden threatened to fire ICE officials who arrested and removed any alien who had not been convicted of a felony (more on that below), and that he did not consider “drunk driving as a felony”. That was a campaign promise. The new guidelines are where the metaphorical rubber — and the literal drunk driver—meet the road. Aliens convicted of or facing charges for DUI have been the leading category of foreign nationals who have been arrested by ICE over the last four years: ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) arrested 35,716 aliens with DUI convictions and 20,091 aliens facing charges for that offense in FY 2020; 49,106 aliens with convictions and 25,417 facing charges in FY 2019; 54,630 aliens with convictions, 26,100 with charges in FY 2018; and 59,985 aliens with convictions and 20,562 charged in FY 2017. Why focus on them? Because they are dangers to others and themselves, and are likely to do it again. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports that “[e]very day, almost 30 people in the United States die in drunk-driving crashes — that’s one person every 50 minutes” — a total of 10,511 needless deaths in 2018. Mothers Against Drunk Drivers (MADD) reports that the average drunk driver has driven drunk 80 times before their first arrest, and that one-third of all of those arrested for drunk driving are repeat offenders. “Follow the science.” Under the new Biden priorities, ICE agents and officers will have to get HQ clearance before arresting any criminal alien after they have been released from custody. Note that many sanctuary jurisdictions will not give ICE the heads-up that an alien will be released, and may not allow agents and officers into their facilities. How will officers in those jurisdictions arrest even the remaining criminal aliens? Needless to say, getting approval from Washington will be a time-consuming and often frustrating process, and it will be the rare case as a practical matter in which an alien makes the cut. Further, as former ICE Director Ron Vitiello explained: “Clearing enforcement actions in Washington, D.C., sets a tone that Agents do not have the trust and confidence of their leadership at ICE HQ or DHS and possibly higher in the chain of command.” With due respect to Chief Vitiello, it is not a tone — it is a symphony. That said, and as the foregoing demonstrates, not even every criminal alien will be treated equally. The new policy memorandum is apparently focused on alien criminals who are “public safety threats”, but its definition of that term and yours might be very different. According to the Post, ICE will not be looking for many aliens convicted of simple assault (as noted above), “money laundering, property crimes, fraud, tax crimes, [or] solicitation”, nor will it go after aliens who have been charged but not convicted as a general rule, either. Simple assault may or may not be a ground of removal and an aggravated felony (depending on how it is defined under the applicable statute and the sentence), but offenders pose a danger to the community, and there is no reason to suffer the continued presence of an otherwise removable alien who has been convicted of the crime. In 2015, the rate of simple assault in the United States was 11.8 per thousand, meaning that the odds are good that you or someone you know have been or will be a victim. Money laundering is an aggravated felony if the funds exceeded $10,000. More importantly, however, it is a “secondary offense”, as it, in the words of the Congressional Research Service (CRS), “is commonly understood as the process of cleansing the taint from the proceeds of crime.” Simply put, you don’t “launder” money unless it was dirty when you got it. “Property crimes” may be aggravated felonies, as well. Here is what the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) at DOJ has to say about such offenses: “In a property crime, a victim’s property is stolen or destroyed, without the use or threat of force against the victim. Property crimes include burglary and theft as well as vandalism and arson.” If you steal my stuff, or burglarize my home, you’re a threat. NIJ explains it “supports projects that strive to understand and reduce the occurrence and impact of property crimes.” One sure way to reduce the impact of property crimes is to remove aliens who have committed them from the United States, because that dissuades potential offenders and takes future recidivists from the community. There’s no indication that it was consulted by DHS leadership, however. Fraud? Again, an aggravated felony if the loss is $10,000 or more (and a removable crime involving moral turpitude). AARP (whose constituency is uniquely susceptible to scams) explains that: “Overall fraud losses were more than $1.9 billion last year, up from more than $1.48 billion in 2018, for a 28 percent jump.” Why would the Biden administration de-emphasize the removal of aliens for a crime that is getting worse, and costing Americans more? Tax crimes need no explanation. Tax evasion, again, is an aggravated felony where the revenue lost to the government is $10,000. I pay my taxes, and so should you. Justice Holmes explained that “[t]axes are what we pay for civilized society.” He was echoing James Madison, who stated: “The power of taxing people and their property is essential to the very existence of government.” Pro-amnesty group America’s Voice asserts: “Immigrants, including those without documentation, pay billions of dollars in taxes to federal, state and local governments every year.” If so, what is the problem with removing the few bad apples who don’t? And then there is solicitation. Justia explains: “Solicitation is an inchoate crime that involves seeking out another person to engage in a criminal act.” That means, you are looking for someone to commit a crime with you. Why would we want people who are looking for others to help them commit a crime to remain in the community? Even for the few remaining criminal aliens left after these exceptions, ICE had better act quickly. As per the Post: “In instances where the aggravated felony is more than 10 years old and not the reason for a recent arrest, that individual would not be considered a public safety threat” who would be amenable to ICE apprehension under the Biden rules. Consider that for a moment. An alien convicted of murder (an aggravated felony), who came to ICE’s attention 10 years and one day after that conviction as a result of an arrest for, say, DUI, would not be subject to arrest and removal, despite the fact that section 237(a)(1) of the INA states: “Any alien (including an alien crewman) in and admitted to the United States shall, upon the order of the Attorney General, be removed if the alien” has been convicted of an aggravated felony. (Emphasis added.) It was a similar “shall” that prompted Judge Drew B. Tipton of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas to issue a temporary restraining order blocking implementation of a 100-day “pause” on most removals in the referenced January 20 DHS memorandum (as I explained on January 27). Congress did not intend to give ICE latitude in deciding whether or not to remove criminal aliens, and this policy will likely give Texas (the plaintiff in that case) plenty of opportunities for legal challenges. Even gang affiliates will be cut a break under the policy, according to the Post. Only aliens with “well-documented gang affiliations” will be considered public safety threats, not those who only have: “gang tattoos or records showing ‘loose affiliation with gang activity'” (whatever the latter means). Two points: First, does anybody believe that ICE was deporting too many gang members? Second, I am fairly familiar with how gangs operate. MS-13 does not issue membership cards, and transnational criminal organizations are dependent upon confederates and affiliates to help them carry out their criminal activities. Case in point: In the May 29 killing of 16-year-old Gabriela Alejandra Gonzalez Ardon in a rural area in northern Baltimore County, Md. (a case about which I have written extensively), the county police have charged five individuals who it believes to be “affiliated with the MS-13 gang”. Would those five have otherwise made the Biden-DHS cutoff if ICE had arrested them before that murder? I don’t know, but probably not. The aforementioned “distraught official” was quoted by the Post as stating: “It literally feels like we’ve gone from the ability to fully enforce our immigration laws to now being told to enforce nothing.” That’s my take, too. Tags: Joe Biden, DHS, abolishing ICE, without abolishing ICE To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Should Oppressors Host the Olympics?
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 06:07 PM PST by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: China is scheduled to host the Winter Olympics in 2022. Should it be allowed to? If allowed, should anybody go? Cato scholar Ilya Somin argues, at Reason, for at least boycotting the event. Why? To respond to the Chinese government’s “many egregious atrocities, including its detention of hundreds of thousands of Uighurs in concentration camps, brutal repression in Hong Kong, and much else.” China is one of the worst violators of human rights in the world. So why let the Olympics serve as a “propaganda showcase” for the regime? The ideal of an Olympic Games unencumbered by politics is untenable. You can’t keep the games free of politics when tyrant-hosts routinely exploit the event for political purposes while appeasers turn a blind eye. A globally publicized boycott would make the work of the appeasers much harder. Somin goes further, however. He argues that the International Olympic Committee should permanently prohibit oppressive governments from hosting the Olympics. If this policy were enacted, there would be heated debates about whether Country Y or Country Z belong to the same ban-worthy category as China, Russia, Iran, Cuba, North Korea, and Zimbabwe. Maybe we could use Cato’s Human Freedom Index as a guide to oppression. How brutal is too brutal? Let’s talk, because without open argument, any decision or policy will be arbitrary and useless. And I welcome those debates about borderline cases, just as long as the most blatantly brutal regimes can never again host the Olympics and exploit them to advance their vicious agendas. Until then: Boycott the 2022 games in China. This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. Tags: Paul Jacob, Common Sense, Should Oppressors, Host, Olympics To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Get Ready for COVID-19 Variants Panic-Porn Perma-Mandates
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 05:53 PM PST by Stephen Kruiser: Happy Tuesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Never trust anyone who wants to split a dessert. It was a busy Monday, what with all the hours spent trying to log on to the newly relaunched Parler. Finally got back on late last night and it felt good to know that there was one more social media outlet available for all of us to complain about Facebook and Twitter when we’re not on Facebook or Twitter. These are truly magical times. We are a little less than a month away from when the Wuhan Chinese Bat Flu began wreaking havoc with, well, everything. Last February, we weren’t worried about “protocols,” the government wasn’t telling anyone to stay at home, and a curfew was something you imposed upon your teenage kids. What was odd back then is, sadly, commonplace now. There have been a great many of us — myself included — who have questioned a lot of what has been done in the name of public safety. Given what we’ve been learning about Andrew Cuomo lately, it’s obvious that it would have been helpful if more people had been skeptical. Some curious journalists would have helped too. A year later, the conversations among sane people aren’t about how well it all worked but rather how long it’s all going to go on. We’re all painfully familiar with the script to this bad B-movie we’ve been living in since last March. First, it was fifteen days to flatten the curve. Then it was a weeks-long lockdown that was supposed to do something, but that something was never really clear. Lockdown 1 became Lockdown 2 and, in many places, Lockdown 3. Some of us were getting the feeling that the lockdowns weren’t really working all that well. A lot of us were insisting that all of the panic about COVID would magically disappear once Biden got into office. He only needed the crisis to get elected, after all. I was saying that for months. What many of us were forgetting is that Democrats like to play the long game on these crises that they salivate over as opportunities. Sometime last December I realized they were going to look for ways to keep terrorizing the public in the name of public safety. It behooves the Democrats to keep producing COVID panic-porn for the inevitable day when Ol’ Gropes starts tripling up on his public senior moments and is babbling a lot about trouser ferrets and the leprechaun who brings the weed to his treehouse. They’re going to need an excuse for keeping the most powerful and visible man in the world out of the public eye. Thank you, bat flu! The vaccine was supposed to hasten a return to normalcy, yet that’s not playing out so well, especially given the fact that vaccines are always in limited supply and our idiot elected leaders have been playing politics with the distribution. The hope of returning to whatever the “new normal” is supposed to be by the end of this year isn’t strong. Whenever I’m asked for an estimate I say it won’t be until at least late in 2022. The problem, as we have also discussed before, is that the petty tyrants who’ve been capriciously enforcing protocols aren’t going to relinquish power easily. Dr. Anthony Fauci is a prime example of how this can go on in perpetuity. A physician/bureaucrat who specializes in the moving of goalposts, he delights in just making things up to mess with us. One of my best friends has been saying since the first of the year that people who think things will be less restrictive are delusional because the petty tyrant class will merely use the new variants of the virus as an excuse to keep the panic ratcheted up. He isn’t wrong:
Welcome to the real New Normal. They’ll keep this up because so many blindly follow them. The COVID panic-porn purveyors have now been weaponized by the election of Joe Biden, so they have no incentive to factor the rights or livelihoods of the hoi polloi into their decision-making. Have a wonderful day. I’m off to do my part to #resist Big Mask. Tags: Stephen Kruiser, PJMedia, Get Ready for COVID-19 Variants, Panic-Porn, Perma-MandatesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Capitol Hill Police Officer Brian Sicknick Not Killed By Fire Extinguisher – New York Times Withdraws Report
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 05:22 PM PST by Rick Manning: A Capitol Hill police officer was not killed on Jan. 6 at the US Capitol by someone using a fire extinguisher as a blunt instrument. It was a lie, reported by the New York Times using two anonymous “law enforcement” sources and now the “Grey Lady” has retracted the guts of the inflammatory story, now stating, “New information has emerged regarding the death of the Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick that questions the initial cause of his death provided by officials close to the Capitol Police.” The tragic death of Brian Sicknick was one of the primary drivers in the Democrats’ impeachment proceedings against President Trump and is being used as the rationale for a crackdown on groups that the left has targeted by the suddenly engaged Department of Homeland Security. And the only three parts of the story which seems to be true are that Brian Sicknick was a Capitol police officer, he was at or around the Capitol on Jan. 6 and tragically he died from causes unknown on Jan. 8, 2021. What has become clear is that he did not have trauma to his head, and he reportedly texted with his brother that he was okay after the Capitol was brought under control. It is known that sympathetic stories about the shooting inside the Capitol Building of Ashli Babbitt were circulating on Jan. 7, and media’s overall narrative was being dispelled at the time when the big lie reported by the New York Times changed everything. This is not to excuse any of the actions of those who invaded the Capitol Building, but it is important to recognize that one of the agreed upon facts of the events of the day, including a funeral in the Capitol honoring the fallen officer was not only not true, but was clearly concocted to drive a messaging narrative that has underwritten the national perception of the events of that day. Doctors, medical examiners and other emergency personnel had to know that Officer Sicknick did not die in the manner that was reported, yet they all remained silent for over a month, allowing the dangerous lie to imbed itself into the American consciousness. A FoxNews report on Feb. 6, quoted the Metropolitan DC Police Chief Robert Contee on the autopsy process, “… speaking vaguely, (Contee) also suggested Sicknick’s injuries may not have been immediately visible. “That determination is made by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, so MPD’s role in that is to make sure that the medical examiner has all of the evidence they need to make that determination.” It doesn’t require fictional NCIS crime coroner genius Donald ‘Ducky’ Mallard to determine if the Officer got hit in the head or not. Yet the DC Medical Examiner has chosen to allow the false fire extinguisher story to remain unchallenged and used for political purposes. Faced with an impeachment of the President and subsequent trial, it wasn’t until Friday, February 12, when the President’s defense team was making their case that the New York Times finally began to back away from their story. It is being said on Capitol Hill that one of the reasons House managers ended their demand for witnesses was that the real facts would be brought out surrounding the Officer’s death, destroying one of the key prosecution narratives. None of the above should in any way disparage the memory of Officer Brian Sicknick, but it does accentuate the simple point that it is almost impossible to believe anything the multi-national media feeds you. After two impeachments based upon fake anonymous sources, manipulated evidence and a breathtaking dishonesty by law enforcement, prosecutors, the media and the elected establishment from both political parties, truth has become more elusive than ever. While the big lie(s) that have been told over the past five years about Trump supporters are being used as justification for federal round ups of those who dare oppose the regime that has gained power in D.C., it becomes more important than ever that truth be told and heard. The good news is that about six weeks after the Big Tech takedown of free speech site Parler.com, that platform which allows points of view without ideological bias is back up and running. Now it is up to those of us who have the truth to tell it without fear. Tags: >Rick Manning, Americans for Limited Government, Capitol Hill Police Officer, Brian Sicknick, Not Killed By Fire Extinguisher,New York Times, Withdraws ReportTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Unintended Consequence of $15 Minimum Wage: Higher Child Care Costs
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 03:31 PM PST
by Rachel Greszler: Many families struggle to find child care, especially at a cost they can afford. A $15 federal minimum wage could make child care unattainable for millions more families. Higher wages are a great thing, especially for child care workers who serve such an important role in the lives of children and families. But the reality is that higher wages that come from government mandates result in unintended consequences. This is because child care wages can be lower than the proposed $15 per hour minimum—the median wage was $11.65 per hour in 2019—and child care providers’ hands are tied through regulations that prevent them from responding to minimum wage hikes in the ways that many other businesses do. Whereas many businesses would respond to being forced by the government to raise wages by laying off workers, reducing employees’ hours, cutting back on other forms of compensation, or automating jobs, child care providers do not have these options. Child care regulations strictly specify teacher-to-child ratios, square-footage requirements, and virtually every aspect of a child care environment. While fast-food restaurants can replace cashiers with kiosks and Amazon can replace warehouse workers with machines, it’s unlikely that robots will ever be able to watch children (nor would parents want that). Consequently, almost the entirety of wage increases for child care workers would be passed onto families. But cost increases would not be equal across the U.S. Families in lower-cost areas—especially those in the South and Midwest—would experience the largest increases. Child care prices would rise by more than 30%, on average, in 10 states, including a whopping 43% increase in Mississippi. While the average increase in costs for a family with two children would be $3,728, costs would rise by more than $6,000 per year in Iowa ($6,304) and Indiana ($6,028), and by more than $5,000 per year in Kansas ($5,636), Louisiana ($5,487), Oklahoma ($5,602), Wisconsin ($5,227), Georgia ($5,222), and Nevada ($5,019). Considering that child care for two children could cost upward of 40% of the median household income in many states, a $15 minimum wage could make child care unattainable for millions of families. This could reduce employment and income among families with children. In two-parent homes, it may no longer make financial sense for both parents to work, even if the family is struggling to make ends meet. Since women are more likely to stay home than men, this could widen gender-based differences in the labor market. Others—especially single-parent families—could have to resort to non-licensed or illegal child care, or depend on unpaid child care of friends and family. The point is that all families have different needs and should be free to make decisions based on what’s best for them. Some families have one parent at home. Others have both parents working. And most single parents have no choice but to work. Bad policy like the $15 federal minimum wage would hurt low-income and working families the most by making the child care they need completely unaffordable. Unaffordable child care costs is just one of the many ways a $15 federal minimum wage would lead to a cascade of unintended consequences. As the Congressional Budget Office estimated, there would also be upward of 1.4 million job losses, fewer work opportunities, reduced productivity, lower family incomes, a smaller economy, higher prices, and even increased federal deficits and inflation. There are better ways to help workers achieve lasting income gains, and better ways to make child care more accessible and affordable. Expanding apprenticeships and other alternative forms of education; opening doors to entrepreneurial opportunities for lower-income workers through occupational licensing reform and improved freedom to contract; and reducing unnecessary regulations so that businesses can invest more in workers are just a few ways to boost incomes without hurting others. And by easing unnecessary regulations on child care providers, giving parents choices on where to use existing public child care dollars, and making it easier for parents to save for child care, policymakers could help more families find the care they need, in an environment they want, and at a cost they can afford. Tags: Unintended Consequence, $15 Minimum Wage, Higher Child Care CostsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Greene for Guns
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 02:58 PM PST
by Charlie Kirk: These are a couple of items I put together for those who are concerned about the upcoming efforts of the lefty-libs to emasculate the 2nd Amendment. Boom! Marjorie Taylor Greene isn’t good friends with the Swamp Monsters in Washington, D.C. but she is a good friend to America’s gun owners — as she has proved yet again with some groundbreaking legislation she is filing today. News broke this morning that the freshman Congresswoman has filed legislation that would effectively nullify federal gun control by outlawing the use of ANY federal money to enforce gun control. Without money to put boots on the ground, federal gun control would be dead in the water! This bill is essentially a federal version of the Second Amendment Preservation Act or ‘SAPA legislation’ that is being filed in states all across the country. For an explanation of SAPA legislation, see below. When reached for comment, Greene replied: I ran for Congress with a pledge to be the most pro-gun Member of Congress. In my first week, I co-sponsored National Reciprocity and the Hearing Protection Acts. This SAPA bill is the first of many I plan on filing in the coming weeks and months. Americans need allies in Congress who won’t give an inch of our Second Amendment rights away to the gun-grabbers. There’s no better ally than me. Stay tuned. There’s more to come.” This bill isn’t just a publicity stunt that doesn’t have the legs to move. In fact, it’s already gathering cosponsors, including Paul Gosar (AZ), Randy Weber (TX), Scott Perry (PA), Madison Cawthorn (NC), Thomas Massie (KY), and Chip Roy (TX). A long time champion of the Second Amendment, Greene’s campaign made national headlines and drew Big Tech censorship for her viral ad featuring an AR-15. Since President Trump left office, Greene has been outspoken in her efforts to hold back the tide of gun control that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris have promised to pass for their far-left supporters. This bill would do just that, cutting off the left’s ability to enforce any new gun control they might pass! A Rising Star And A Powerful Alliance Greene has been a longtime supporter and advocate for the American Firearms Association — a national organization dedicated to defending Second Amendment with a ‘no compromise’ approach and cutting-edge tactics. We expect to see great things from Marjorie Greene and the American Firearms Association in the future and this is just the beginning! The American Firearms Association and sister organizations that are active in almost a dozen states are leading the fight to pass this SAPA legislation across the country — and it’s taking off like wildfire! The Second Amendment Preservation Act We commented at that time that the state of Missouri seems to have hit upon the best defense against federal gun control. It’s called ‘SAPA’ or the Second Amendment Preservation Act. What Is SAPA And How Does It Work? Here’s how it works. That means that if Joe Biden and his radical Democrat legislature pass a federal law requiring the confiscation of the AR-15 and all magazines that hold over ten rounds of ammunition, that state’s city, state, and county authorities would be required to ignore it. If it sounds too good to be true, it’s not. Missouri has already filed SAPA legislation for this session! They are leading the way in this fight — and we think dozens of red states are going to follow suit! Historical Standing The Supreme Court has upheld this idea in the past, and not just in regards to some dusty old law. The most recent examples include: More, the Court also prohibited federal retribution through the withholding of federal funding for state programs! So if a state doesn’t want to play ball with Biden and crew in regards to gun control, they wouldn’t be allowed to withhold federal money to force their hands! New Jersey: As recently as two years ago, in its 2018 Murphy v NCAA decision, the Supreme Court reaffirmed the fact that the state legislature in New Jersey had the right to place restrictions on sports gambling, even though the new state law contradicted federal law. Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel Alito made it clear that federal law may not simply trample over states’ rights when he said, “A more direct affront to state sovereignty is not easy to imagine.” An Old Idea — Improved But SAPA solves one of the biggest problems with the Firearms Freedom Act: who stops the feds?! You see, the FFA required that the state’s attorney general to come to the defense of the gun owner whose rights were being trampled. Needless to say, that was a pipe dream in many states, even historically pro-gun states! But Missouri’s SAPA legislation is much different. Their bill would allow individual gun owners to bring government officials who violate their rights to civil court on their own initiative! That’s right: gun owners can SUE any state law enforcement official, judge or mayor who tries to enforce federal gun control! Sure, it doesn’t stop the Feds from coming into the state, but many in law enforcement will tell you that that the federal government relies on state and local authorities to enforce the vast majority of federal law — they don’t have the manpower! SAPA Is The Future Of The Fight Against Gun Control But this time, instead of relying on weak Attorney Generals to enforce it or a county level resistance, gun owners would have a much better defense against Biden and the radical left’s gun control. Tags: Greene for Guns, Charlie Kirk, Turning Point USA To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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The Supreme Court, Smart Phones, and a Question of Privacy Rights in the Digital Age
Posted: 16 Feb 2021 01:42 PM PST by Eric Bolinder: Half a decades’ worth of family pictures, my banking app, and a recent, highly charged text stream debating holding calls at the Super Bowl. That’s a starting list of everything on my phone without even getting to the second screen of apps. Hundreds of millions of other Americans store personal information on their phone too. What if the information in your phone might help the government prosecute you? Should you have to say the password, and thus testify against yourself? That’s a question the U.S. Supreme Court may consider in the next few months in Andrews v. New Jersey. Applying the Fifth Amendment in the digital age Unfortunately, courts have struggled to apply this to the digital age, particularly when it comes to entering passwords into a phone. Your password, after all, is stored in your head. If your phone contains potentially incriminating information, and you’re asked to produce the password, aren’t you being asked to testify against yourself? Courts have failed to come to a universal conclusion on this. It’s time for the Supreme Court to step in and enforce the proper, originalist meaning of the Fifth Amendment. A brief authored by the Cordell Institute at Washington University in St. Louis, and joined by the Rutherford Institute and Americans for Prosperity Foundation (AFP’s sister organization), argues for just that outcome. The lower court reasoned that this act isn’t protected by the Fifth Amendment, applying an outdated and narrow exception called the “foregone conclusion doctrine.” That means if it’s a “foregone conclusion” that the information in the device exists, is in the defendant’s possession, and is authentic, then he can be compelled to testify against himself by producing the password. This turns the Fifth Amendment and its history on its head. Forcing people into the “cruel trilemma” the Fifth Amendment was meant to protect against As the brief argues, this “cruel trilemma” and other concerns about self-accusation undergirded our founders’ thinking when they wrote the expansive and well-understood Fifth Amendment. But courts now threaten this protection by forcing individuals, like the defendant here, straight into the cruel trilemma. Either refuse to produce the phone password from his brain—a testimony—and be held in contempt, give it up and hand over possibly incriminating evidence to the police, or lie about the password and face perjury charges. One of the first times any court approached this issue of compelled decryption was in the case of United States v. Burr, where Aaron Burr’s (yes—THAT Aaron Burr) secretary was asked by the government to describe the contents of an encrypted letter. He refused, and the court agreed, holding that this would “obviously” infringe on the right against self-incrimination. One might argue that the password itself isn’t incriminating—after all, it’s just a series of numbers. But courts have consistently held that any “link in the chain of evidence” that could lead to incriminating evidence is covered by the Fifth Amendment. As the brief painstakingly develops, this is wholly supported by the history and text of the Constitution. And it should apply to phone passwords too. In our developing digital world, this protection is paramount. As the Supreme Court itself has recognized, a search of your phone can often be even more invasive than a search of your house. No American should be forced into the Star Chamber’s cruel trilemma when it comes to the contents of his phone. Unfortunately, lower courts have struggled to come to any cohesive standard to apply to production of phone passwords, causing a splinter that the Supreme Court must resolve. This is the case to do so, and we hope the Court grants certiorari. Tags: Eric Bolinder, Americans for Prosperity, The Supreme Court, Smart Phones, Question of Privacy Rights, Digital AgeTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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AOC Demonstrates a Callous Misunderstanding of Her Green New Deal in Tweets About Texas
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Wednesday, February 17, 2021
Good morning, NBC News readers.
Today we continue to monitor the impact of severe winter weather sweeping across large parts of Central and Southern America. Plus, President Biden’s push to vaccinate the country faces new hurdles.
Here is what we’re following this Wednesday morning.
Texas and other Southern states brace for another round of winter weather Millions in Texas were left without power for a second night in a row, as severe winter weather brought bitter cold and the looming threat of more ice for a swath of the state and parts of the South.
Unable to turn on heaters in freezing temperatures, Texas residents were forced to resort to other means such as huddling beneath heavy blankets.
The storm has led to at least 28 deaths and put Texas — a state whose energy infrastructure was not built for this sort of weather — in a state of emergency.
The crisis has made Texas’ energy grid the focus of fresh scrutiny, primarily due to the state’s shirking of federal regulations that require cold-weather capabilities, critics say.
The electricity crisis offers warning signs for the U.S. as the Biden administration seeks to prepare for a future in which extreme weather is a greater risk and America is almost entirely powered by renewable energy.
Some state lawmakers want to block vaccination mandates As the U.S. continues its vaccine rollout, the storms are just one potential new stumbling block.
The pandemic has also sparked a newfound interest in vaccination legislation among some legislators, with lawmakers and public health experts across the country looking at whether new legislation can or should mandate vaccinations. But while some want stronger vaccination enforcement, others want to block such requirements — many of whom also pushed back against mask mandates and other prevention measures.
Meanwhile in Latino-heavy Miami, elected officials are calling for more vaccines for its senior citizens. Despite having the largest number of deaths in Florida, the county is lagging in the number of over 65-year-olds that are being vaccinated.
A number of Biden allies have begun publicly raising concerns about aspects of the administration’s pandemic response.
A bipartisan group of governors sent a letter this week saying better coordination is needed between the federal government and states in distributing vaccines.
And a group of public health experts, including several who advised Biden on Covid-19 during the presidential transition, is urging the administration to enact stronger mask requirements to protect workers.
Want to receive the Morning Rundown in your inbox? Sign up here.
Plus
THINK about it India’s farmers have been protesting en masse for months. Supreet Kaur, assistant professor of economics at UC Berkeley, explains why in an opinion piece.
Live BETTER Have you lost power because of the winter storm? Here’s what to toss — and what to keep — in your fridge when the powers out.
Shopping The first ever set of facemask standards has finally arrived, allowing for approved brands to add the certification to their product.
Quote of the day “It was not easy going, it was challenging,” — 90-year-old Seattle woman Fran Goldman said after she trekked through six miles of snow to get a Covid-19 vaccination.
One fun thing With a rare winter storm hitting millions in Texas and throughout the South, one college student took advantage of the snow and cold. Towed by his friends in a pickup truck, Corbin Antu snowboarded through streets of Lubbock, Texas and compared the conditions to the slopes in Colorado.
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
I’m filling in for Petra Cahill while she takes a week off. If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: yasmine.salam@nbcuni.com If you’re a fan, please forward it to your family and friends. They can sign-up here.
Thanks, Yasmine Salam
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49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: California appears headed for another recall. Here’s what’s changed since the last one.
We are now exactly one month away from the deadline for supporters to submit the nearly 1.5 million valid signatures to begin the process of recalling California Gov. Gavin Newsom – and holding a referendum on the state’s progressive governance.
(Supporters say they already have that number, but the signatures still have to be verified first.)
AFP PHOTO/RICH SCHMITT
But there is one significant difference between this likely recall and the one that took down Democratic Gov. Gray Davis (and installed Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger) in 2003:
California is so much more blue – and non-white – than it was two decades ago.
Just look at these numbers:
In the 2000 presidential election, Al Gore defeated George W. Bush in California by less than a point, 48.4 percent to 47.9 percent. (Raise your hand if thought the Golden State was THAT close 20 years ago.)
In 2020? Joe Biden beat Donald Trump in California by almost 30 points (!!!), 63 percent to 34 percent.
In his gubernatorial victory in 2002, Gray Davis won by just 5 points, 47 percent to 42 percent.
But Gavin Newsom’s win in 2018? He defeated his GOP opponent by 24 points, 62 percent to 38 percent.
Ultimately, Gray Davis got recalled in 2003 by a 55 percent-to-45 percent margin – with that 55 percent not too far off from the 53 percent of California voters who did NOT vote for him the year before.
But if Newsom is going to recalled, it’s going to take a lot more than the 38 percent of California voters who didn’t vote for him in 2018 – recall supporters will need to overperform that by at least 12 points to get a majority in recalling the governor.
It’s one thing for recall supporters to get 1.5 million signatures in a state of nearly 40 million residents.
It’s another for Democrats to lose a state that the party has been winning by 20 to 30 points.
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Democratic governance is on the line, too
But the recall effort is about more than changing electoral margins and demographics.
It’s about the future of Democratic and progressive governance.
The state of Jerry Brown and Gavin Newsom, of course, is also the state of Nancy Pelosi and Kamala Harris.
And while recall supporters say their biggest beef with Newsom is his handling of the pandemic, so much more – taxes, housing, transportation, even how San Francisco is naming its schools – appears to be on the line.
So there’s maybe a bigger story going on California than whether or not Gavin Newsom can survive a recall election.
It’s whether Democrats can govern in a state where they have most (if not all) of the political power.
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Highlights of VP Harris’ “Today” interview
Speaking of Kamala Harris, here were some of the highlights of her interview on “Today” this morning:
On vaccines: “We have a vaccine now, and that is great. But we need to get it in the arms of all Americans. And as the president said last night, we expect that that will be done in terms of having the available supply by the end of July.”
On reopening schools: “So our goal is that, as many K-8 schools as possible will reopen within the first 100 days. Our goal is that it will be five days a week. And so we have to work to achieve that goal.”
On the Covid relief legislation: “A big problem requires a big solution.”
On whether Trump should be criminally charged: “I haven’t reviewed the case through the lens of being a prosecutor. I’m reviewing the case of COVID in America through the lens of being the vice president of America.”
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TWEET OF THE DAY: Gassed in Texas
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
At least 20: The number of deaths reported nationwide linked to the recent winter storm and brutal cold.
Nearly 3 million: The number of people without power in Texas, as of publication time.
3,000: The estimated number of sticks of dynamite expected to be used for the demolition of the former Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City this morning.
19.6 percentage points: Mitch McConnell’s margin of victory over Democrat Amy McGrath in 2020. (Trump said in a statement yesterday that McConnell “would have lost badly” without his support.)
27,880,005: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 72,596 more than yesterday morning.)
490,176: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,812 more than yesterday morning.)
64,533: The number of people currently hospitalized with coronavirus in the United States.
337.3 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
55,220,364: Number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
15,015,434: People fully vaccinated in the U.S.
71: The number of days left for Biden to reach his 100-day vaccination goal.
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Promises made, promises kept?
In his first town hall as president, Joe Biden laid out promises, plus the dates that those promises will be fulfilled.
Vaccines available for all Americans (600 million doses) — End of July
K-8 schools open for in-person learning five days a week — Majority within his first 100 days (End of April)
A Biden-backed immigration plan — Rollout by the end of this week
And one *big* promise from another Democratic candidate that Biden will not keep? Cancelling $50,000 of student debt.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., made cancelling student debt central to her 2020 campaign and has kept pushing for it since Biden won the election.
When asked what Biden would do to cancel $50,000 in student debt last night, the president bluntly said, “I will not make that happen.”
Biden has expressed support for cancelling $10,000 in federal student debt instead.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The recent storm and Texas power crisis is highlighting the challenges of a clean energy future.
A Texas mayor has resigned after telling residents in his town to fend for themselves.
A Democratic congressman and the NAACP have filed a lawsuit against Trump and former lawyer Rudy Giuliani over the Capitol riot.
The New York Times reports on what was going on behind the scenes with Trump’s impeachment legal team.
Sens. Tom Cottom and Mitt Romney are working on a proposal that would link a minimum wage hike to immigration enforcement.
Biden is extending the foreclosure moratorium and mortgage forbearance through June.
What was up with Kamala Harris’s claim that the Biden administration was “starting from scratch” on vaccine administration? The Washington Post gives her two Pinocchios.
Now George Conway says he’s in favor of shutting down the Lincoln Project.
Milwaukee Bucks exec Alex Lasry is in for Wisconsin Senate.
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53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
There are two groups of people during our time of the corona: people who want to be left alone to live their best lives while taking proper precautions, and people so high on panic porn (allegedly) … MORE
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Wednesday, Feb. 17, and winter storms continue to leave much of the United States in a deep freeze. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWWinter Storm Wreaks Havoc At least 20 people are dead and millions without power as a massive winter storm continued to cause chaos across the US yesterday. The system brought rare subfreezing temperatures to the southern Great Plain states and the Deep South, while spawning a deadly tornado in North Carolina. The expansive weather pattern managed to drop multiple inches of snow in Texas (see photos) while dumping an estimated 18 inches in Chicago. Nearly 75% of the contiguous US is currently covered in snow. The low temperatures crippled the Texas power system—a reported 60% of Texas homes use electric heat—with 3 million people without power as of this morning. Early reports attributed the failure to frozen wind turbines, though officials later said the situation was more complex, with renewable energy sources accounting for one-third of the 46 gigawatts of lost capacity, with the rest largely coming from natural gas power plants. Separately, about 250,000 people also lost power in Appalachia. Residents in the south will have to wait until Thursday for a reprieve—a second storm is already making its way through the region today. In the Pacific Northwest, Oregon is recovering from an ice storm that knocked out power to more than 330,000 people, the worst blackout in state history. New Charges for Suu KyiOfficials in Myanmar (Burma) filed a new charge against Aung San Suu Kyi yesterday, accusing the deposed leader of violating COVID-19 restrictions. While Suu Kyi was originally accused of importing illegal walkie-talkies into the country, her supporters say the new charge is intended to allow the military to detain her indefinitely without a court trial. The 75-year-old Nobel laureate was ousted from office, along with nearly the entire civilian government, during a Feb. 1 military coup (see background). Suu Kyi has been held incommunicado since—her lawyer has reportedly not met with her, and only became aware of the new charges when initial trial proceedings were broadcast from a secret location. Hundreds of thousands of protestors have marched against the takeover, with security forces increasingly using force to break up crowds. Here’s why the US government still refers to the country as Burma. India’s Mysterious FallThe rate of new COVID-19 cases reported in India has fallen by 90% since mid-September, with the number of new cases reported across the country averaging just over 11,000. With more than 1.3 billion people and inconsistent healthcare access for rural citizens, India was on pace to surpass the US as the world’s epicenter heading into the winter. Instead, hospital critical care capacity has dropped from 90% to 16% over the same time frame. Experts speculate a mix of herd immunity in urban centers, under-reporting, and possibly some type of preexisting resistance to SARS-CoV-2 may be among the factors. Demographics may also play a role—65% of India’s population is under age 35, and less susceptible to severe COVID-19 cases. In the US, the number of vaccines shipped to states this week will be increased to 13.6 million in total, up from 11 million last week, while almost 40 million people have received at least one vaccine dose. The US has reported 488,801 total COVID-19 deaths, with 1,756 deaths reported yesterday (see data). GIFT SIMPLY, SHOP SAFELYPrivacy enables you to create virtual debit cards with just the click of a button. And the applications are endless. Giving your employees company cards, and want to easily manage and monitor spending? Choose Privacy. Not sure about a seller’s reputation and afraid to share your banking information? Or trying to ensure you aren’t billed twice for a subscription? Choose Privacy. Sending an online cash birthday gift but trying to avoid Visa gift card fees? Or looking for an easy way to manage your children’s allowances? Well, you get the idea. We can’t stress enough how many ways Privacy can be useful to your life. It’s never been so quick and convenient for us to create new cards to share them with our employees and loved ones. Check Privacy out today and receive a $5 credit toward your first purchase, no strings attached. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & Culture> “Judas and the Black Messiah” and “The Trial of the Chicago 7” among top films nominated for 2021 Writers Guild of America Awards (March 21) (More) > Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms tells fans not to travel to Atlanta for the 2021 NBA All-Star Game (March 7); encourages local businesses not to host events around the game (More) > CNN daytime news anchor Brooke Baldwin to depart the cable news network in April after 13 years (More) Science & Technology> Blue-green algae successfully grown in conditions mimicking Mars; the cyanobacteria have been proposed as a key step toward terraforming the red planet (More) | NASA’s Perseverance rover set to land on Mars tomorrow (More) > Research finds rapidly cooling temperatures in North America, not overhunting, was the main driver of the extinction of the region’s largest mammals roughly 13,000 years ago (More) > New study casts doubt on the existence of Planet Nine, a yet-to-observed planet lurking far from the sun; the planet was proposed to explain a clustering of celestial objects located beyond Neptune (More) Business & MarketsBrought to you by Masterworks From our partners: Many investors are flocking out of the market and into physical assets to hedge against inflation. With the Fed printing trillions of new dollars, institutions and hedge funds are piling into fine art. Masterworks makes it possible for everyday investors to invest in artists like Basquiat and Banksy at a fraction of the cost. Skip the 17,500 waitlist to get access today.* *See important information Politics & World Affairs> South Korean intelligence officials accuse North Korea of attempting to hack Pfizer for COVID-19 vaccine data; unclear what, if any, intellectual property was stolen (More) > NAACP files suit against former President Trump, Rudy Giuliani, and others over Jan. 6 storming of the US Capitol building; suit brought on behalf of Rep. Bennie Thompson (D, MS-2) (More) | Trump criticizes Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), says he will back candidates in 2022 (More) > Libyans mark 10-year anniversary from the fall of former dictator Moammar Gadhafi; the North African country continues to be split between a UN-backed government and opposition forces (More) PRIVACY IS SECURITYIn partnership with Privacy When it comes to shopping online, it’s becoming increasingly difficult to know who we can trust giving our bank or credit card information to. And that’s why Privacy allows us to create virtual card numbers with preset limits, so no one can take advantage of our finances. Even better, Privacy lets us generate these virtual cards to manage and monitor employee spending, or to give allowances and gifts without buying pesky gift cards. So check out Privacy today for a $5 credit toward your first purchase. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAThe true history behind HBO Max’s “Judas and the Black Messiah.” Citibank makes a $500M mistake. Need to relax? Try 11 hours of high-definition underwater footage. From our partners: Take your company’s video communication to the next level. You can promote, host, and analyze your events in one place with this browser-based video communication platform. Get started for free. #Ad Mapping the world’s youngest (and oldest) populations. Adam Sandler breaks out a real-life “Happy Gilmore” golf swing. … and Shooter McGavin responds. Boston men use TikTok to record Fenway Park break-in. When the wheels on your ride are circular saws. Clickbait: Scientists think they’ve found a portal to a fifth dimension. Historybook: Football legend and actor Jim Brown born (1936); Vanguard 2 launched as first weather satellite (1959); HBD Michael Jordan (1963); Volkswagen Beetle passes Ford Model T to become world’s bestselling car (1972); RIP golf great Mickey Wright (2020). “I can accept failure. 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74.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
BlackListed News Updates |
- TIME Magazine Exposé Admits “Conspiracy” to Steal Election, Activists Told to “Stand Down”
- China Threatens To Hobble US Defense Industry By Limiting Export Of Rare-Earth Metals
- Tyranny By Propaganda Is Tyranny By Force
- U.S. Focus On Narratives Will Let It Collide With Reality
- Lincoln Project Funneled $45 Million To76.) THE DAILY DOT Companies Owned By Its Founders
- Brave Judge Rules Cops Must Return Cash Seized Under Civil Asset Forfeiture—Or Go to Jail
- DARPA’s New Space Program Stirs Worldwide Concern
- Pelosi Unveils 9/11 Style Commission to Investigate Jan. 6
TIME Magazine Exposé Admits “Conspiracy” to Steal Election, Activists Told to “Stand Down”
Posted: 15 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST In a recent exposé, TIME Magazine admitted that the 2020 election was rigged to favor Joe Biden, while attempting to justify it. “They were not rigging the election; they were fortifying it,” says reporter Molly Ball. “It’s massively important for the country to understand that it didn’t happen accidentally.” |
China Threatens To Hobble US Defense Industry By Limiting Export Of Rare-Earth Metals
Posted: 15 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST China has been quietly exploring the economic damage it could inflict to US and European companies – including defense contractors – if they were to impose export ‘restrictions’ on 17 rare-earth materials, according to a report in the Financial Times. |
Tyranny By Propaganda Is Tyranny By Force
Posted: 15 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST While it is now taboo to openly butcher members of your citizenry who oppose you, it is considered perfectly acceptable to send troops across the sea to destroy foreign nations which disobey your dictates. |
U.S. Focus On Narratives Will Let It Collide With Reality
Posted: 15 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST The impeachment narrative circus is leaving the town and the real world work can now begin |
Lincoln Project Funneled $45 Million To Companies Owned By Its Founders
Posted: 15 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST The Lincoln Project co-founder John Weaver has been outed as a potential pedophile, sexually approaching and in some cases harassing young boys as young as 14 years of age. New information exposes the fact that Lincoln Project board members were aware of a litany of complaints against Weaver dating back to June of 2020 but refrained from addressing the issue both publicly and privately. |
Brave Judge Rules Cops Must Return Cash Seized Under Civil Asset Forfeiture—Or Go to Jail
Posted: 15 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST In one of the most inspiring moves we’ve seen in a long time, a judge has ordered the Town of Mooresville and its police department to give back money they seized under civil asset forfeiture. But that is not all. Iredell District Court Judge Christine Underwood has issued an ultimatum to the would-be thieves — give back the cash or go to jail. |
DARPA’s New Space Program Stirs Worldwide Concern
Posted: 15 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST A new space technology exploration program announced by the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency is riling up international opposition as the race to mine space heats up |
Pelosi Unveils 9/11 Style Commission to Investigate Jan. 6
Posted: 15 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST After failing to disclose any information regarding the unrest at the Capitol on January 6 thus far, Nancy Pelosi revealed Monday that the House will establish an independent commission to investigate what really happened. |
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76.) THE DAILY DOT
Hello! Every Wednesday, our internet culture staff discusses the world of streaming entertainment. In today’s Internet Insider:
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The Muppet Show is making its streaming debut on Disney+
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Netflix’s Space Sweepers is the first good blockbuster of 2021
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Judas and the Black Messiah is a gripping and tragic thriller
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BREAK THE INTERNET
Disney+ is about to raise the curtains on ‘The Muppet Show’
I’ve been a fan of the Muppets for as long as I can remember. I watched my family’s VHS copies of The Muppet Movie and The Great Muppet Caper so often that the paper sleeves those cassette tapes came in started to break. The Muppet Christmas Carol was a holiday staple. I remember watching Muppet Babies reruns on Nick Jr. in the ’90s. I managed to make it over to the Museum of the Moving Image to see the Jim Henson Exhibition and watch The Muppet Movie in a theater in 2019 for the film’s 40th anniversary. (It was just as great as I’d hoped.)
But, apart from a few sporadic clips here and there, I’ve never been able to watch The Muppet Show, the variety and sketch series that turned Kermit, Miss Piggy, Fozzie, Gonzo, and the gang into international stars, properly. And while there have been home releases of the first three seasons, you couldn’t stream the series until now: First announced last month, Disney+ is bringing all five seasons of The Muppet Show to its streaming service on Friday.
How does it hold up?
I can’t answer that right now. What I do know is that every Muppet project, for better and for worse, has been held to the near-impossible standards of The Muppet Show—all the way up to the recent Disney+ series Muppets Now—and that a lot of people became walking, flailing Kermit GIFs when they woke up to the news. And that upon remembering that The Muppet Show’s streaming debut was only days away, I got excited all over again. I don’t know about you, but my weekend is now booked solid.
Entertainment Writer
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BLOCKBUSTERS
‘Space Sweepers’ is the first good blockbuster of 2021
Following in the mold of Cowboy Bebop and Guardians of the Galaxy, the heroes of Space Sweepers start out as a team of squabbling assholes.
At first, they’re only brought together by the prospect of a big payday: ransom money for a missing android girl named Dorothy (Park Ye-rin). After picking her up on a routine junk haul, they realize she’s incredibly valuable: An explosive killing machine who just looks like a 7-year-old kid. Naturally, they start planning an incompetent hostage exchange, but one by one, they begin to bond with her like an actual child. Dorothy, aka Kot-nim, is a charming foil to the greedy and disaster-prone crew.
It’s hardly groundbreaking stuff: An adventure movie about a squad of misfits whose hearts are melted by an adorable kid, teaming up to defeat a dastardly supervillain. But it’s fun to watch, and from a Western perspective, it’s interesting to see these familiar ideas play out from a different angle.
Space Sweepers feels far more international than most Hollywood blockbusters, featuring a diverse supporting cast of characters speaking a variety of languages. Also, the heroes are working-class. Modern American action/adventure movies prefer to focus on rich people, superhumans, and the U.S. military, and when we do see some working-class characters, they’re often rooted in nostalgic Americana.
Meanwhile, the main characters of Space Sweepers are relatably overworked, annoyed, and struggling with debt—and very aware of their place in a toxic capitalist hierarchy. Like Pacific Rim, this film’s politics don’t need to be subtle to be effective.
Space Sweepers is now streaming on Netflix.
Staff Writer
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OSCAR BUZZ
‘Judas and the Black Messiah’ is a gripping and tragic thriller
Judas and the Black Messiah is not your average biopic.
Though primarily focused on depicting the fall of Fred Hampton (Daniel Kaluuya), the chairman of the Black Panther Party’s Illinois chapter, it’s a film that’s just as much concerned with showing us the many conflicts that William “Bill” O’Neal (LaKeith Stanfield), the FBI informant who would eventually betray him, as it is the complexities of Fred Hampton.
Thanks to two powerhouse performances, we see all of those complexities come to life in a film that highlights just how much the system wants to put them down.
It would be easy to paint Bill O’Neal as the outright villain or take Fred Hampton, whose story is largely ignored, and reduce him to either a larger-than-life figure or have a two-dimensional view of him (as Aaron Sorkin’s recent film The Trial of the Chicago 7 did).
It’s certainly what J. Edgar Hoover (Martin Sheen in heavy prosthetics) does as he calls the Black Panther Party and its policies “the single greatest threat to national security” above the Chinese and the Russians, the kind of justification that would eventually lead to the police raid (a collaboration between the Chicago Police and federal officials) that killed Hampton; as Sam Pollard’s recent documentary MLK/FBI reminds us, Hampton isn’t the only person the FBI abused power to target.
Judas and the Black Messiah is streaming on HBO Max until March 14.
Entertainment Writer
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BTW
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Nomadland, Chloe Zhao’s masterful character study of a woman who lives in her van and travels around America, is finally debuting on Hulu this Friday.
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A look at the complicated history of Marvel’s whitewashing of Scarlet Witch in the wake of WandaVision’s latest episode.
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After being released from prison early, Anna Delvey returned to social media.
- Yes, Rian Johnson’s Star Wars trilogy is still happening.
- Disney is canceling Gina Carano’s Mandalorian action figures, too.
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77.) DECISION DESK HQ
Why The GOP Was Able To Maintain Their Advantage In Texas- Part 2 No images? Click here You are receiving this newsletter because you signed up for it along with free access to our election night results. DDHQ Election News And Notes
What Happened in Texas? An Analysis of the 2020 Presidential and Congressional Vote Part 2: Suburban TexasBy Benjiman Lefkowitz Texas Republicans electoral position held firm in the 2020 elections. The overall results failed to match Democratic expectations from before the election even though there were a few key local and state legislative party flips. The previous article in this series examined the South and Southwest of Texas, where voter movement among Hispanics led to former President Trump flipping several rural counties that had not voted Republican since Nixon’s landslide in 1972 or earlier. Now it is time to examine the other side of Texas, the plurality-White ‘Anglo’ (rather than Latino) Texas home to most of the state’s population. President Biden surged in this side of the state, finding new Democratic voters in the suburbs and cities. Biden added 1,322,715 votes to Hillary Clinton’s 2016 total in the analyzed counties, compared to Trump’s 1,027,222 new voters. While the percentage swings appear less momentous than those along the Rio Grande, the number of people living in Texas’s metro areas means Biden netted more voters from this side of Texas than former President Trump did among in the South and Southwest. However, these gains failed to flow down the ballot to almost all other Democratic candidates. Congressional Democrats hoped they could break apart the Republican Gerrymander, but instead every Republican in a competitive Congressional race outran the Presidential topline. In the seats Democrats flipped in 2018 – Texas’s 7th and Texas’s 32nd – Congressional Republicans needed to outrun the Presidential results to have any chance of flipping the seats. Voters in these seats however split their tickets less than voters in similar seats with incumbent or retiring Republican incumbents. In the GOP seats, the rates of ticket splitting were among the highest in the nation’s competitive districts. This is especially the case when one accounts for the seats with candidates affected by scandal or possessing abnormal amounts of personal charisma, such as New York’s 22nd. This article explains why President Biden was able to match and, in a few cases outperform, Robert “Beto” O’Rourke’s margins with voters in Texas’s sprawling and diversifying suburbs, and why these individuals opted for the Republican party down ballot. Swing In Texas counties between 2016 and 2020, and 2018 and 2020. Do note that I use the Simple United Kingdom Political Swing formula, which is different than certain other ways of calculating swing. Presidential ResultsEase of travel between states means that those with skills, worldviews, and expectations unsatisfied by their present lot seek out areas where these views are satisfied. This act of relocation changes the character, identity, and eventually the political calculations of the contesting parties in both the origin and the destination. For millions both nationally and globally, Texas’s multiple metropolises were the destination of their migration. President Carter was the last Democrat to win Texas at the presidential level, and he did it without winning Dallas or Harris (Houston) Counties. Texas today has more than double the population as it did in 1976 because of the construction and population of new suburban communities. Tarrant County (Fort Worth & near suburbs) has almost tripled in size to 2,102,515 residents, Montgomery County (North of Houston) has six times as many people than in 1976, Denton, Collin (North DFW metroplex), Williamson (North of Austin), and Fort Bend (Southwest Houston Suburbs) Counties are almost ten times the size they were in 1976 – and that is just the immediate suburban counties. Originally it was well-off suburban Whites settling in these suburbs, and they built the state into a Republican bulwark, but recent developments reflect the increasing diversity of America’s financially stable. For example, Denton and Collin Counites are 57.6% and 55.1% White respectively, and Fort Bend is the third most diverse county in the US. These are globalized metropolises, and they are increasingly at home in the cosmopolitan Democratic Party. The groundwork for urban improvement had been laid by decades of individuals actions, yet previous Democratic party activity insufficiently capitalized on it. The large Biden lead in national polls suggested that Texas might be close, and Robert “Beto” O’Rourke had shown that there was enough energy in the suburbs to challenge Republican strength. The result was 5,315,914 votes for former President Trump and 4,657,196 votes for President Biden within the analyzed area. On one hand, the GOP won Texas, disappointing Democrats and reliving Republicans. On the other hand, 2020’s 52.5% to 46% margin in the analyzed area is not that different from the 51.9% to 47.3% margin enjoyed by Republican Senator Ted Cruz in the 2018 Senate race over O’Rourke. If Biden had matched or slightly underperformed O’Rourke’s margins in Harris County and the Rio Grande, rather than underperforming previous Democrats, Including Hillary Clinton’s results in 2016, among urban and rural Hispanics, then Trump would have won Texas by around a 4% margin. Had this outcome occurred, the narrative would have focused on voter movement in counties like Collin, and how Biden’s Democratic ticket flipped Hays, Tarrant, and Williamson Counties. This is despite the fact that nothing would be different about those counties results, only their surroundings would change. Biden’s Democratic ticket surged past Clinton’s 2016 results in outlying suburbs, but voter behavior in the Rio Grande got all the attention. Congressional ResultsPresident Biden’s 2020 Democratic ticket on average matched O’Rourke’s 2018 margins in Texas’s suburbs, despite the surge in voter turnout. For those Democratic candidates in competitive races, replication wasn’t good enough. Polarization has led to a rise in parliamentary voting patterns – voting for the legislative candidates sharing the Party label with one’s preferred Presidential nominee, or straight-ticket voting without the official checkbox – and a decrease in split-ticket voting. Additionally, this year it was the Republicans who outperformed their President’s baseline in opposition party target seats. Biden would have needed to win the districts to give Democratic candidates an opportunity, and that didn’t happen. Even though Texas’s overall congressional map is now worse for Republicans than it was in 2018, the median seat is 2% more Democratic than the increasingly competitive state, the individual district results prevented any Democratic challenger from getting through. Former President Trump won Texas’s 10th District, which O’Rourke won by a slim 0.1% margin, as well as the previously analyzed TX-23. Even though more seats had tighter margins than in the 2018 Senate race, the inability of Biden to flip these marginals into the Democratic column meant that Congressional Democrats had no foundation to build upon. Even if President Biden was able to win some, or even all, of the eight Republican-held competitive suburban seats across the Texas Triangle, it might not have mattered. Congressional Republicans benefited from split-ticket voting across the Texas suburbs – even if the seat wasn’t competitive. Republicans ran ahead of former President Trump in Democratic target seats across the nation, but Texas has some of the highest rates of split-ticket voting in the country, not including seats like New York’s 22nd which are only competitive because of the immense gap in candidate quality (scandals, unique candidate appeal). Ironically, the districts where the GOP was hoping for split ticket voting, TX-07 and TX-32, had lower rates of split ticket voting than their demographically similar neighbors. Split-ticket voting did occur in these seats, particularly the Whiter precincts, but the incumbent Democrats maintained Biden’s results in the more diverse parts of their districts. Texas’s 24th district is the only one of the three Republican-held Congressional districts O’Rourke won in 2018 that President Biden also won in 2020, and it is a perfect example Texas’s Congressional voter behavior peculiarities. TX-24’s 2020 electorate was 1% more Democratic than the 2018 Senate electorate. It is one of only six districts in the state to swing towards Biden’s Democratic ticket when matched against the better Democratic and worse Republican results in 2018. Biden improved O’Rourke’s 51.3% to 51.9% and Trump’s 46.5% is 1.3% worse than Cruz’s 47.8%. However, the Democratic topline didn’t stick. Biden received 180,609 votes compared to Trump’s 161671, of 347,789 cast votes. The Democratic Senate nominee MJ Hegar, one line down the ticket, received 165,218 votes or 47.8%, to Incumbent GOP Senator Cornyn’s 171,828 or 49.7%, of 345,795 cast. Democratic nominee Candace Valenzuela received only 162,846 votes or 47.5% in the Congressional race, compared to Republican nominee Beth Van Duyne’s 167,489 or 48.8%, of 342,874 total votes. To put this in perspective, 0.4% and 1.4% of Presidential voters didn’t vote for the Senate and Congressional races respectively – not enough to account for the overall Democratic decrease even if every one of these voters choose Joe Biden. It is normal for a percentage of voters to drop off each race down the ballot. All three races had third parties and independents competing, so some votes in each race were siphoned away from the main party’s candidates. It is uncertain how many voters for each candidate dropped off the ballot, but it is likely that at least 4% of Van Duyne voters cast a vote for Joe Biden, a notable result given the rise in polarization. Split-ticket voting allowed Beth Van Duyne to become one of only nine Congressional Republicans nationwide to hold districts won by Biden’s presidential ticket. So, Why?Most cases of split-ticket voting are covered by one of four explanations that are normal in politics: advantages of incumbency, the desire to prevent one-party rule, situations where the traditionally advantaged party has a personally (un)popular candidate, and inevitability. Even with deepening polarization, and the ease of political information offered via the internet, there is still a limited amount of split-ticket voting. Voters, not just in America, prefer familiarity or have a hard time justifying a change in representation, so a small amount will split their tickets in favor of the incumbent. If the topline race appears to be heading for a landslide, a percentage of voters will split their ticket to ‘check’ potential one-party rule. If a candidate suffers from a prominent scandal, or for a variety of reasons is immensely more ‘(un)likable’ than their opposition, the race will experience split-ticket voting even though the only explanation is candidate quality. Finally, sometimes in seats safe for one party the opposition is worse than an empty suit. This could result in votes congregating around the expected victor, or lead to a portion of the safe party’s voters opting for the opposition in order to voice their displeasure that the party nominated a peculiar candidate. All four types of traditional split-ticket voting occurred in Texas – even though the desire to check one-party rule is hard to assess. For example, Republican incumbents in similar seats did marginally better, and therefore received marginally more split -ticket voters, than their colleagues running in open seats. TX-24 and Texas’s 3rd district are both competitive Dallas-Fort Worth suburban seats, but TX-24 was an open seat. President Biden overperformed TX-03’s Democratic Congressional candidate, Lulu Seikaly, by 5.8%, compared to the 4.4% overperformance over Valenzuela in TX-24. Personal appeal and recognition helped Democrat Henry Cuellar and Republican Dan Crenshaw, both incumbents, significantly outperform the presidential topline compared to neighboring congressional races. Cuellar in TX-28 outran Biden by 6.8%, and Crenshaw in TX-02 outperformed former President Trump by 5.7%. Safe seats like Texas’s 33rd and Texas’s 29th both witnessed the effects of inevitability. TX-33’s African American incumbent Marc Veasey underperformed Biden by 6.2%, mainly in the heavily Hispanic parts of his safe multiracial district. Sylvia Garcia on the other hand outperformed Biden by 5.1% in her safe Democratic and overwhelmingly Hispanic Houston district. However, these three usual split-ticket voting explanations fail to fully explain why President Biden surged in the Texas suburbs and matched the best Democratic result in the modern era, O’Rourke’s 2018 Senate campaign, but did not benefit Congressional Democrats. While Republican seats with incumbents had better GOP results than seats without incumbents, the results only differ at the margins. The 1% drop-off in split-ticket voting between seats with incumbents and without incumbents is significant, but accounting for it still leaves Texas’s competitive Congressional overperformance larger than in similar seats nationwide. Biden’s Democratic ticket did 0.5% worse than the Congressional Democrat in Arizona’s 6th, 0.3% worse in Arkansas 2nd, 1% better than the Congressional Democrat in Georgia’s 7th, 1.9% better in Indiana’s 5th, 1.5% better in Illinois’s 13th, 0.4% better in Michigan’s 3rd, 3.1% better in Missouri’s 2nd, 1.6% better in New Jersey’s 2nd, 1.1% worse in North Carolina’s 8th, 3% better in Ohio’s 1st, 1.1% better in Pennsylvania’s 10th, and 2.4% worse in Virginia’s 5th – to list a few similar Democratic target seats those in Texas. The gap between the topline and the Congressional ballot in Texas was consistently wider than in other parts of the country, and Biden consistently received the better result. The isolated candidate-specific and safe-seat reliant overperformances are just that; isolated or limited to safe seats. The overall Texas picture is unaffected and unresolved. Another explanation is needed. Then there is the previously unresolved desire to check one-party rule in Washington. It is ironic that parliamentary voting has only increased with time, despite political information and polling data being more accessible and more omnipresent than before. Regardless of these trends, voters can still recognize that the Presidential contest is uncompetitive and then vote for the opposing party for Congress in order to check the Presidency, albeit at a marginal rate. There is nothing that suggests Texas has more voters that behave in this manner than similar districts across the country, and the previous data shows that something different happened in the Lone Star State. One also must ask how many of these ‘check one-party rule’ voters there actually were nationally, and if they could have meaningfully adjusted the overall result. Voters may have changed their minds at the last moment, but a consistent feature of Presidential polls were the discrepancies between Biden voters and those who believed Joe Biden would win the Presidency. Even though Biden often enjoyed leads of more than 7% in national polls, he was at best tied with former President Trump when voters were asked who they believed would win. A significant chunk of Democratic voters did not believe the polling data. They feared history repeating itself and Trump overperforming the polling averages similar to 2016. These, and many other voters on all sides, didn’t trust the polls for a variety of reasons, leading to voters disregarding that information. They appear to have remained true to their partisan, parliamentary, votes on both the Presidential and Congressional ballot. In the end, those Democrats worried about a Trump overperformance were vindicated. The polls appear to have overstated Joe Biden’s lead by 3 to 4%. Although the polling industry failed to get a representative sample of certain sub-populations, the polling data isn’t useless. The Congressional and Presidential ballot went nearly hand in hand as polls predicted, with Congressional Democrats winning nationally by 3.1% (the national congressional total is an imperfect number because some races only have a candidate from one party), compared to Biden’s 4.5% margin. Parliamentary voting and polarization did deepen. Trump voters overwhelmingly believed that former President Trump would win the Presidency, so polls being off by 3 to 4% likely shifts the gap in expected electoral outcomes 3 to 4% in Trump’s favor. This does not resolve the issue of the ‘gap’ in expected outcomes, it simply shifts the gap towards the former President. Nor does it change the fact that voters inferred what they wanted from the polls, and cast ballots in line with the world as it was perceived, not the world suggested by the polling data. The Theory With the traditional reasons accounted for, a different explanation is needed to understand the behavior of Texas’s electorate. The electorate’s behavior does display similarities to previous elections, but an analysis requires delving slightly into voter theory. The idea is that swing voters are groupable into two broad categories: semi-permanent ones that identify as swing voters, and temporary ones with more partisan loyalties, best referred to as ‘voters in transition.’ A individual internally has their own voter identity, which starts at a baseline subconsciously and unintentionally determined prior to deciding which party receives their first ever cast vote. This value can be calculated in countless different ways, depending on how much weight one assigns to the multitude of variables (family unit, social groups, religion, ethnicity, education, age cohort, time of first vote, income, life experiences, etc.). From that point onwards the voter cannot change the fact that they voted for that party, their baseline is locked in, and a habit is established. Subsequent actions, experiences, votes, and a multitude of other factors may shift that baseline towards one that is inflexibly loyal to their party, one that swings at times between parties, or one that is moving away from their initial party. The ‘voter in transition’ emerges when an individual possessing eroding party loyalties happens to find themselves on the threshold of changing from their old party to the new one, and for this brief moment can go either way. After a period of time, if this voter continues on their path, then they will no longer be ‘in transition,’ they will be committed to their new party. This theory importantly has little to do with voter ideology or values, because those rarely change once ingrained upon one’s identity. It has everything to do with how a voter perceives themselves, how a voter views society, and how they perceive the parties. The theory though allows one to account for several peculiarities of electoral politics. Why a voter may be ideologically distant from the countries supposed ideological center yet still swing between the parties. Why the majority of Americans lack extreme ideological positions yet are polarized to their chosen party. Why the number of self-described and semi-permanent swing voters is tiny compared to the larger population of undecided or loosely attached voters. Most importantly for Texas, it accounts for why some voters split their tickets to resolve the internal struggle between current and previous partisan identities. This is not new behavior nor does it favor one party. For example, there are numerous districts that Clinton won in 2016 that reelected their GOP incumbent, threw that incumbent out in 2018, and then reaffirmed their loyalty in 2020. There are two in Texas, TX-07 and TX-32. The key voters in these areas were once ‘in transition,’ but now they are Democrats. In 2020 these districts remained Blue: some voters newly added to the Democratic column by Biden and O’Rourke split their ticket, but the deciding voters had moved beyond their point of ‘transition’ and could no longer be considered swing voters. The question of the swing voter makes more sense after examining the seats Democrats targeted across the county in 2020. Democrats focused on seats that Trump won by about 10 points in 2016, but had shown promising signs for statewide Democrats during the 2018 midterms. However, a vote for a statewide candidate, even a Senatorial one, is not the same as a vote for the nationally elected President with the stronger perception of a national party. These voters were asked to cast votes divergent from their previous Republican affiliations, and many could only rationalize or legitimize this choice by splitting their ticket. It wouldn’t be unusual that Texas may have more voters ‘transitioning’ to the Democratic party, for a variety of reasons specific to the state. Texas’s size and Republican lean historically discouraged national Democrats from investing in the state, which in turn left few incentives for voters to show up to the polls. If a voter hasn’t seen the value in participating in politics for years, their perception of the political situation is held in stasis until they reenter the voting booth. Texas’s emergence as a political battleground incentivized voter participation, and forced decisions on voters with dormant political perceptions. Texas’s booming growth could have attracted the types of individuals more demographically predisposed to be Republicans moving towards the Democrats, despite the fact that these individuals migrated to the state from no single point of origin. The end result is the same: Texas had an unusual number of voters in her suburbs that were formerly Republicans and, in the future will be Democrats, but in 2020 were stuck in the middle. OverallThe suburbs in Texas revolted against former President Trump, with President Biden getting numbers never before seen by modern Democrats in places like Collin and Williamson Counties. However, no down-ticket Texas Democrat held onto the entirety of the Democratic Presidential vote. Traditional explanations for split-ticket voting can not explain the scale and specificity of the drop-off from Presidential to Congressional vote, leading one into the realm of voter behavior and identity. The key voter in these Texas suburbs matches with the picture of a voter on the threshold of diverging with their previous partisan identity, but who can justify that next step through a gradual process. It will be as short or as long as the individual needs it to be, but if individual voters continue their trajectory they will find themselves at home in a new party. For Texas Republicans, this is a precarious time. These voters will not just ‘snap back’ to their old GOP identity. Acting or assuming suburban voters will loyally return is a recipe for further erosion. Voter movement can be reversed by changing the voter’s perceptions of the parties and their candidates. This would require the party bureaucracy to fight inertia, adjust course, change the message, and project a different brand – all of which would go against the wishes of the party activists who feed that inertia. Change is only possible if lead from the top, but historically the top only realizes danger when it is already too late. Ben Lefkowitz (@OryxMaps) is a Contributor to Decision Desk HQ. |