Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday March 11, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
March 11 2021
Good morning from Washington, where, in a major flip-flop, President Biden now thinks it’s fine to make taxpayers finance abortion as part of COVID-19 “relief.” The White House just won’t tell us so, Terence Jeffrey writes. On the podcast, a leading House conservative isn’t buying reasons to keep schools closed. Plus: making a lot fewer babies; acting to fix Medicare; hurting women and calling it progressive; and pointing guns to save lives. A year ago today, President Donald Trump uses a prime-time Oval Office address to announce a 30-day ban on travel to the U.S. from most European countries as coronavirus cases surge and the World Health Organization declares a pandemic.
“This online learning, this basic lockdown for these kids is producing greater suicide rates, higher depression rates,” says the chairman of the House Freedom Caucus.
Two masked intruders forced their way into a home, demanded money, and shot a 73-year-old woman. Her 12-year-old grandson retrieved a firearm and shot at both intruders, who ran.
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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From David Harsanyi: …presidents dream “of getting numbers like this for a major piece of legislation — especially if no one from the opposition party votes for it.” Indeed, they do. But the dream can be made reality only if the media abdicate their responsibility of critically reporting and properly highlighting the partisan boondoggles in trillion-dollar legislation. How popular would the “American Rescue Plan” be if pollsters asked voters grown-up questions rather than push-polling for Democrats?
This one claims she was touched inappropriately at the governor’s mansion (Daily Wire). Video of Cuomo mocking the legal standard for being too easy on sexual harassers (Twitter).
4.
Fauci Struggles to Explain Why CDC Won’t Say Vaccinated Are Safe to Fly
Telling the reporter “When you don’t have the data, and you don’t have the actual evidence, then you’ve got to make a judgment call” (Washington Examiner). Meanwhile, the data shows the rate of hospitalization for those over 50 has plunged (CDC). The New York Times now admits “New York City’s public schools have seen remarkably low virus transmission compared with the citywide rate of positive test results in the months since the nation’s largest school system reopened for thousands of students” (NY Times).
5.
California Public Schools Could Soon See Hyper-Woke, Anti-Christian View of History
As a new, insane curriculum will be voted on next week (American Conservative). Bari Weiss tells the story of a high-end race-obsessed private school in California teaching that capitalism is evil (City Journal).
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6.
Nation’s Top-Ranked Public High School Discriminates Against Asian Americans
From the Pacific Legal Foundation: Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, or TJ, is the nation’s top-ranked public high school. Fairfax County Public Schools’ (FCPS) recent changes to TJ’s admissions process specifically aim to reduce the number of Asian-American children—and only Asian-American children—who can attend TJ. The school district’s race-based admissions scheme garnered nationwide interest and strong opposition from the Coalition for TJ, a group of over 5,000 parents, students, alumni, staff, and community members who advocate for school diversity and excellence through race-blind, merit-based admissions. Represented by PLF in federal court, the Coalition is challenging FCPS’ race-based admissions scheme as a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
New York City School Tells Kids to Stop Using Words “Mom” and “Dad”
From the story: The detailed guide recommends using the terms “grown-ups,” “folks,” “family,” or “guardians” as alternatives to “mom” “dad” and “parents.” It also suggests using “caregiver” instead of “nanny/babysitter.” “Families are formed and structured in many ways. At Grace Church School, we use inclusive language that reflects this diversity. It’s important to refrain from making assumptions about who kids live with, who cares for them, whether they sleep in the same place every night, whether they see their parents, etc.,” the guide reads.
Both New York and California Require ID to Get Vaccine
Several people have discussed the ID requirements in New York (Twitter). The ID requirement is noted in this story on Hollywood workers who shut down a vaccine clinic by demanding they go ahead of those who need it more (NY Post).
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9.
Anti-Vax Parents Tell Surrogates to Avoid COVID Vaccine
Many parents are seeking surrogates who are willing to refrain from the vaccine.
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Cracking down on protesters. Sidestepping voter-approved minimum wage increases. Making it harder to propose constitutional amendments. Guns in churches. You don’t have to look far this Legislative Session to find controversy.
Who cares?
The Legislative Session is also about the tangential and the trivial, but it’s the tangential and trivial which drives the state capital.
That’s why Florida Politics is excited to announce the return of TallyMadness — an online voting competition to determine who is the “best” lobbyist in Florida.
Just like college basketball fans who fill out their brackets as part of “March Madness,” political aficionados in the capital and beyond can vote on a series of bracketed matchups pitting Florida’s top lobbyists against each other.
Bracket time: Get your pencils out — it’s Tally Madness 2021!
But just like last year, we’re mixing things up. This year we want to crown the top in-house lobbyist in #FlaPol.
In-house lobbyists are those individuals who lobby on behalf of his or her own employer. Think John Holley of FP&L, Mark Kaplan at the University of Florida, or Stephanie Smith of Anthem. Contract lobbyists, such as Nick Iarossi, will be taking the year off.
Right now, we are still accepting nominations for who should make the big dance. From there, a select committee will then seed the lobbyists. Voters will select each matchup winner, with first-round voting beginning this weekend and lasting through the final days of Session.
If you would like to nominate an in-house lobbyist or would like to serve on the selection committee, please email me at Peter@FloridaPolitics.com.
Let the TallyMadness begin.
Here are a few other items of note:
🦠 — The day everything changed: March 11, 2020, will live in infamy. Maybe not ‘where were you when Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated’ infamy, but close. It’s the day the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic. Various health officials, executives, and just random Americans weigh in on what might have been their last “normal” day for a very long time in a Wired roundup. So, where were you when the pandemic was declared?
— If you could hop into the wayback machine, what would you tell yourself one-year ago?: That’s the question Slate asked of its staff, all of whom left the office a year ago and still haven’t gone back. Some of the advice to the past versions of themselves is practical — just go ahead and buy a desk now, and those overpriced comfy sweatpants — and others are motivational — visit friends outdoors, don’t worry, Donald Trump loses (hey, that’s their point, not ours) and yes, masks actually do work. Take a look at what the Slate staff ponders and maybe ponder your own ‘what if.’
🩸 — Step-by-step through the night Kyle Rittenhouse became a murder suspect: It’s been months since the then 17-year old activist (and aspiring police officer) took the law into his own hands to defend against crowds of protesters in Kenosha calling for an end to police brutality. After combing through interviews, photo and video, and first-person accounts of the evening, the picture is becoming clear as Rittenhouse faces charges for killing two and maiming a third. Despite numerous cellphone videos showing the shootings, the nation was torn, often along partisan lines, over what really transpired. GQ takes an in-depth look at the details to get to the bottom of it.
— Must read on Stacey Abrams’ rise to political prominence: When Democrats flipped both U.S. Senate seats in Georgia blue earlier this year, the most commonly attributed hero in the fight was Abrams. She turned a near-miss election and turned it into a grassroots powerhouse political operation that delivered the Senate seats and a win for now-President JoeBiden in the Peach State. So how did she do it? Abrams sat down with Marie Claire to talk about her work in 2020, her refusal to accept claims that Georgia couldn’t go blue, and her future in politics. It’s a must-read on one of the nation’s rising stars in politics … and a potential lesson for those moving up the ranks.
Stacey Adams and her political rise are the subjects of a must-read profile.
— What Democrats are reading: With Democrats on a seemingly never-ending losing streak in Florida, TLE Analytics’ SeanPhillippi suggests the party scrap the playbook and start anew. That involves reevaluating data quality, the types of data leveraged, polling and how data is used in campaigns. “The fact that Republicans have better data is a huge competitive advantage for them as it doesn’t matter if the Democratic message is superior when the Republican message is getting delivered as intended, and the Democratic message isn’t being delivered because of incorrect information,” he wrote in an op-ed for Florida Politics. Phillippi suggests utilizing descriptive-analytical data and predictive analytics as a jumping-off point. Read more about it here.
— With Peter Schorsch and Jack Latvala, it is absolutely a political party: Want to catch up on the latest in Pinellas County politics? Former Tampa Bay Times political editor Adam Smith has you covered with his latest edition of Political Party, with guests Schorsch, Latvala and Florida Politics’ Associate Senior Editor and reporter Janelle Irwin Taylor. Is Charlie Crist Democrats’ best chance at taking back the Governor’s mansion? And is he really going to get drawn out of his Congressional district? How about that St. Pete mayoral race … is a Republican yet to come? Here our speculation and a whole lot more here.
Situational awareness
—@MollyJongFast: Every vaccinated person gets us closer to the end of the pandemic and the return of normal life
—@is_that_a_read: The DC political media is so fucking bored with this administration that they’re literally treating a “dog bites man” story as if it’s earth-shattering news.
—@TomasKenn: No Republicans voted for COVID relief. All Republicans wanted to deny you and your family survival checks. Shame on them.
—@AriBerman: 2 cases of voter fraud in 2020: let’s pass 253 voter suppression bills in 43 states 525,000 dead Americans: who needs COVID relief?
—@MarcoRubio: Soon, we will have to comply with the senseless twice-a-year “time change.” We need to pass my bill to make daylight savings permanent. More daylight in the evenings results in fewer car accidents & robberies. And it allows kids to play outside longer. #LockTheClock
—@Fineout: Well, off and running — another day in the Fla. Legislature where the bill sponsor can’t really explain what his bill does or why — and the questions from senators show that they are unaware of history/context
—@Photoriphy: The only Black man on the committee, @RamonAlexander, speaking for the first time on HB 1, gets choked up when discussing the bill, bringing up protests in the civil rights era. “If it wasn’t for civil disobedience … I wouldn’t be drinking from the same water fountain as you.”
—@AFPFlorida: Thank you, Rep. Randy Fine, for carrying #HB35 on Legal Notices through the Judiciary Committee this afternoon. The bill brings Florida into the 21st century by allowing legal notices to be published online and not just in newspapers.
—@RWitbracht: Springtime in Tallahassee is a gift straight from God himself
—@RAlexAndrade: Real question: when the death count gets adjusted by over 50%, does @BNBuzz have to move @andrewcuomo ‘s book from the nonfiction to the fiction section?
Days until
2021 Grammys — 3; Zack Snyder’s ‘Justice League’ premieres on HBO Max — 7; ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ premieres — 15; 2021 Florida Virtual Hemp Conference — 15; 2021 Florida Derby — 16; Disneyland, other California theme parks begin to reopen — 21; MLB Opening Day — 21; RNC spring donor summit — 29; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 57; Florida Chamber Safety Council’s inaugural Southeastern Leadership Conference on Safety, Health and Sustainability — 60; ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 78; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 113; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 122; MLB All-Star Game in Atlanta — 124; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 134; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 142; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 166; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 197; ‘Dune’ premieres — 204; MLB regular season ends — 206; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 212; World Series Game 1 — 229; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 236; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 239; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 274; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 281; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 379; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 421; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 575.
Dateline Tallahassee
“Ron DeSantis, lawmakers to wield power over federal COVID-19 relief” via Alex Daugherty and Kirby Wilson of the Tampa Bay Times — The $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill will send billions of dollars to Florida and its residents, but the state’s Republican Governor and Legislature will ultimately have a lot of power over funds that were passed into law by Democrats. The bill, so big its price tag amounts to about 10% of the entire U.S. economy, includes a lot of significant policies that will affect millions of Floridians, including an additional $300 per week in unemployment benefits through Sept. 6 and a tax break of up to $10,000 for unemployment benefits.
Ron DeSantis will wield enormous power over Florida’s share of the COVID-19 relief fund. Image via Colin Hackley.
First on #FlaPol — “Wilton Simpson, Chris Sprowls plan to rebuild unemployment trust with online sale tax” via Jacob Ogles Florida Politics — Senate President Simpson and House Speaker Sprowls released a plan to collect sales tax for online purchases by out-of-state retailers. The money generated would be used to avoid an increase business taxes this year. Revenue estimators predict collecting sales tax at the point of purchase for internet commerce should generate nearly $1 billion in revenue next year alone. A plan endorsed by Simpson and Sprowls would direct all dollars raised this way into Florida’s Unemployment Compensation Trust Fund, at least until that account reaches pre-pandemic levels. Simpson noted consumers by law already owe online sales tax for purchases made online, but most don’t pay it because that requires sending money independently to the Department of Revenue.
Tweet, tweet:
“Florida GOP leaders seek to ban election drop boxes in latest voter restriction plan” via Gray Rohrer and Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — Republicans on a state Senate panel voted Wednesday to forbid the use of drop boxes to gather mail-in ballots, the latest proposed restriction on voting, and a move condemned by county elections officials of both parties. “The bill is a “travesty,” said Republican Lake County elections chief Alan Hays, adding that it would play “havoc with the lives of 1.5 million Floridians.” The boxes helped election officials retrieve and count the record 4.86 million mail ballots in Florida in 2020 as many voters of both parties opted to avoid in-person voting because of the COVID-19 pandemic. But in 2020, mail-in ballots were demonized by Trump and his false claims of fraud.
“Bill to crack down on violent protests marches forward in Florida House” via James Call of the Tallahassee Democrat — Florida Republican leaders’ efforts to crack down on violent protests is ready for a House floor debate after it cleared its final committee stop Wednesday evening on a party-line vote. State Rep. Juan Alfonso Fernandez-Barquin guided the “Combating Public Disorder Act,” also known as HB 1, through criticism by Democrats, free-speech advocates, college students, and political activists. The League of Women Voters of Florida, Florida Faith and Advocacy Office, Leon County Democratic Party, and the Party for Socialism and Liberation of Tampa Bay, among others, spoke against the increased criminal penalties, additional costs, and what they called an infringement of free speech that the bill creates.
“COVID-19 liability protections for health care providers clears committee” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The House Judiciary Committee advanced a bill on Monday that would create COVID-19 liability protections for health care providers. The committee OK’d the measure (HB 7005) with a 15-5 vote. Rep. Colleen Burton is the bill sponsor. Burton’s proposal would create legal shields for health care providers who make a “good faith effort” to follow government health guidelines. By design, it would also raise the bar for plaintiffs who file COVID-19 related lawsuits against health care providers. The bill further ups the evidentiary standards to a “greater weight of evidence” and requires a plaintiff to prove that a provider acted with gross negligence.
“Legislature proposes restricting local emergency orders during public health crisis” via Jim Turner of The News Service of Florida — In a 12-6 vote along party lines Tuesday, the House Pandemics & Public Emergencies Committee approved a bill (HB 945), sponsored by Naples Republican Rep. Bob Rommel that would limit the duration of emergency orders issued by local governments. While Republican committee members expressed a need to safeguard against restraints on civil liberties, Rommel maintained the bill is “not about masks” but the “overreach of local government, picking winners and losers, deciding that your civil liberties, your God-given rights don’t matter.” Currently, local states of emergency can be ordered for seven days and extended indefinitely in seven-day increments as needed. Rommel’s proposal would allow a maximum of 42 days, approved in seven-day extensions.
Bob Rommel wants Tallahassee to preempt local emergency orders. Image via Colin Hackley.
“House subcommittee advances proposal to repeal Florida no-fault law” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The House Civil Justice & Property Rights Subcommittee voted Wednesday unanimously to advance a proposal that would fundamentally alter Florida’s auto insurance system. Sponsored by Republican Rep. Erin Grall of Vero Beach, the proposal (HB 719) would eliminate Florida’s personal injury protection (PIP) requirement and no-fault insurance system in favor of bodily injury liability coverage. The current system, established 50 years ago, requires motorists to carry $10,000 in personal injury protection, or PIP, to pay for medical coverage after an accident. The coverage pays out regardless of which party is responsible for an accident. Under Grall’s proposal, the mandatory bodily injury coverage would be set at $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident.
“Senate panel OKs removing VISIT FLORIDA’s sunset clause” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Members of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Tourism, and Economic Development showed little concern for philosophical arguments against government funding business and gave strong support Wednesday to a bill that frees up VISIT FLORIDA. The panel approved a measure (SB 778), which would eliminate a sunset provision that has required the tourism marketing agency to justify its existence continually. The bill also would allow the agency to carry forward unspent money from one year to the next. The bill and the enthusiastic endorsements that subcommittee members provided suggest lawmakers’ confidence that the agency has emerged from the time, at its worst three or four years ago.
“House bill allowing guns at churches with schools heads to final committee” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — A bill that would allow Floridians with concealed carry licenses to carry a gun to religious institutions, even if there is a school on the property, passed its second committee Wednesday. The legislation (HB 259), filed by Rep. Jayer Williamson, was approved 16-5, with Democratic Reps. James Bush and Daisy Morales dissenting from their party in favor of the bill. Although Florida law does not prevent a person from carrying a gun into a religious institution, the current statute does prohibit individuals from bringing firearms into houses of worship located on the same property as a school.
Tally 2
“Republicans look to curb prescription middlemen’s fees and practices” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — A band of Republican lawmakers hopes to reel in pharmacy benefit managers and save Florida’s Medicaid program millions of dollars. They say their legislation (SB1306/HB1043) would level the playing field to contest unfair practices by pharmacy benefit managers, known as PBMs. In doing so, one sponsor, Doral Sen. Ana Maria Rodriguez, said the state could save at least $143 million in the bill’s first year. “Our pharmacies are being gouged for providing services to communities that would otherwise be left no choice, and they’d suffer dire health consequences from lack of access to care,” said Rep. Jackie Toledo, a Tampa Representative who has routinely tackled issues tied to PBMs.
Ana Maria Rodriguez and Jackie Toledo are tackling the thorny issue of PBMs.
“Legislation to patch gaps in behavioral health care moves forward” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — The Senate has joined the House to consider a bill that aims to address repeated complaints about mental health care access in Florida. Legislation filed by Sen. Jason Brodeur and Rep. Cyndi Stevenson (SB 1024/HB 701) would aggregate complaints in one report that lawmakers plan to use to find the gaps in insurance people find in behavioral health coverage. Through federal and state requirements, consumers should often have access to health care under their coverage. Stevenson’s version began moving last week, and the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee voted Wednesday unanimously to advance Brodeur’s version out of its first committee.
“Senate panel offers lukewarm support to optometrist scope-of-practice expansion” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — The Senate Health Policy committee advanced a bill that would give optometrists prescribing authority and allow them to perform certain surgical procedures despite most Senators expressing concern the bill oversteps. SB 876, sponsored by Sen. Manny Diaz, revives the long-running “Eyeball Wars.” Similar legislation has been introduced in past Legislative Sessions, with optometrists largely in support and ophthalmologists staunchly opposed. The division stems from the pathways to similar-sounding, but not identical, careers. Optometrists are primary eye care providers. They are licensed to prescribe corrective lenses and have limited prescription powers, mostly for topical medications such as eye drops.
“Bill for broadband internet grants uploaded to final committee, but M-CORES proposal carries implications” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Lawmakers hope to leverage the Department of Economic Opportunity’s new Office of Broadband to expand high-speed internet access in the state. Rep. Chuck Clemons and a bipartisan group of lawmakers are backing legislation in the House (HB 753) to create the Florida Broadband Opportunity Program within the new office to provide grants to extend broadband access to areas without it. For-profit and nonprofit businesses and local governments could file for grants to install and deploy broadband infrastructure under the proposal.
“Data privacy bill gets unanimous approval in first hearing” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Over opposition from business and legal groups, a House panel gave its unanimous approval to a bill to protect internet users’ data privacy. That measure (HB 969), filed by Sarasota Republican Rep. Fiona McFarland, would give consumers the right to control how their personal data is shared and sold. That data helps businesses know more about individual consumers and help make things like targeted ads possible. The proposal is a priority of DeSantis and House Speaker Sprowls, announced as part of their plans this Session to combat Big Tech, both in social media and on consumer privacy. The social media half of that package has drawn opposition, mainly from Democrats.
“Spencer Roach’s bill to require ideological survey of professors clears final committee” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Legislation calling for a survey on the ideological beliefs of Florida’s college professors is now headed to the House floor. The House Education and Employment Committee approved the legislation (HB 233) in a 14-6 vote with a partisan split, except for Democratic Rep. James Bush dissenting from his party in favor of the bill. The proposal, filed by Republican Rep. Spencer Roach, would require the State Board of Education to conduct an annual assessment on the viewpoint of college professors in order “to assess the status of intellectual freedom and viewpoint diversity.”
“With eye on Key West, Florida Senate narrows local ports plan” via Jim Turner of The News Service of Florida — Florida lawmakers continued Wednesday to narrow an effort to overturn a decision by Key West voters last year that placed restrictions on cruise ships docking at the city’s port. The Senate Transportation Committee backed a revised bill (SB 426) that initially sought to block local governments from enacting rules on port operations statewide. The revised bill approved Thursday in a 6-2 vote would limit a state “preemption” of local regulations to cruise ship operations in municipal-run ports in Pensacola, Panama City, Key West and St. Petersburg. Currently, only Key West has cruise ship operations. The bill, opposed by Sens. Rodriguez and Lori Berman, also would nullify past referendums.
“Jeff Brandes’ electric and autonomous vehicle bills zoom forward” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — The Senate Transportation Committee passed a series of forward-looking bills on electric and autonomous vehicles. Sen. Brandes said the legislation will keep Florida leading the pack on the path to the future. “Florida really is a leader in this conversation,” he said. “This keeps Florida in the driver’s seat.” But some Senators worry preparing for the future may put up disincentives to those who may invest in cleaner transportation options now. The most controversial legislation Brandes dealt with registration fees for electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles. The bill in question (SB 140) sets a much higher fee for such vehicles because, unlike cars with internal combustible engines, drivers for these pay little or no gas tax.
Jeff Brandes’ electric vehicle expansion bill is speeding along nicely.
“Seatless bike legislation speeds through latest committee” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — A Senate bill to remove a seemingly obscure biking regulation disallowing seatless bikes earned unanimous support in the Senate Community Affairs Committee. The legislation would make way for elliptical bicycles, one of the many ways cycling is experiencing a boom in popularity since the pandemic. Pedaling the bill (SB 738) is sponsor Sen. Dennis Baxley. Baxley said people in The Villages and other parts of Florida ride the standing bicycles. In a House Tourism, Infrastructure & Energy Subcommittee meeting, sponsor of House companion legislation (HB 353), Rep. Brett Hage, said The Villages’ residents had received tickets for riding the seatless bikes.
“PACE septic-to-sewer expansion clears first Senate panel” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — A bill that would expand the list of home improvement projects eligible for PACE financing earned unanimous support in the Senate Community Affairs Committee. SB 1208, sponsored by Doral Republican Sen. Rodriguez, would add several improvement projects to the PACE list, including battery installations, asbestos mitigation and the replacement of lead pipes. The headliners, however, are septic-to-sewer conversions and flood mitigation projects. SB 1208 now heads to Senate Finance and Tax Committee. The House companion, HB 387 by Brevard County Republican Rep. Fine, will go before the House Tourism, Infrastructure & Energy Subcommittee on Thursday.
Senate panel advances student retention bill — The Appropriations Subcommittee on Education unanimously approved a bill that would make it easier for Florida parents to hold their children back in school due to the pandemic. As reported by Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida, SB 200’s advance came after some rewrites that would put school principals in charge of the retention requests. Principals would discuss potential holdbacks with both teachers and parents before a determination is made. The bill also was amended to allow legal guardians to request grade retention.
Senate FDOT package starts rolling — The Senate started working on this years’ transportation package, which will be housed in SB 1126 and SB 1500. As reported by Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida, the massive bills are packed with changes to state transportation laws, including provisions to raise the bonding cap for right of way acquisition and provide the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles subpoena powers in odometer fraud, title fraud or driver’s license fraud investigations.
Capitol Reax:
FRF praises plan to replenish unemployment fund — The Florida Retail Federation praised a plan unveiled by Simpson and Sprowls that would use approximately $1 billion in new sales tax collections from online retailers to refill the state’s unemployment trust fund. Florida Retail Federation president and CEO Scott Shalley lauded the plan. This plan is a creative approach to tackle multiple challenges our state faces. It will bolster Florida’s retail businesses, both big and small, while bringing much-needed revenue from out-of-state to provide support to the workers who have suffered job loss during the pandemic.”
Florida Ports Council encourages lawmakers to fine-tune ports bill — Florida Ports Council President and CEO Doug Wheeler thanks the Senate Transportation Committee for amending SB 426, which would preempt local government ordinances that interfere with seaport commerce, but said the bill still houses some provisions that could bring unintended consequences. He said the council “remains concerned the bill negatively impacts four municipal ports, restricting their ability to recruit new cruise ship port activity that would generate additional economic opportunities. As this bill and its companion HB 267 continues to move through the legislative process, we look forward to working with lawmakers to help ensure that ownership and control of Florida’s 14 deep water seaports remain with their respective local governments.”
APCIA opposes no-fault repeal sans bad faith reform — The American Property Casualty Insurance Association said it couldn’t get behind the latest effort to repeal the state’s no-fault system unless it was coupled with significant reform to “bad faith” laws. “House Bill 719 repeals Florida’s no-fault auto insurance system without addressing much needed bad faith reforms, which could lead to higher costs for consumers and increased litigation,” APCIA VP Logan McFaddin said. “Florida already has some of the highest auto insurance costs in the country and our state’s court system is experiencing a significant backlog of cases due to the pandemic.” … “Any attempt to repeal the existing no-fault auto insurance system should contain bad faith reforms that will combat rampant litigation abuse, ensure policyholders’ rights are protected, and help lower auto insurance costs for Floridians.”
Even more Tally
“Lawmakers debate political bias on college campuses” via Anila Yoganathan of The Associated Press — Young conservatives fear being ostracized on college campuses, where school officials may be imposing an environment that promotes liberal views while stifling conservative thought, according to Florida Republicans who are spearheading a legislative effort that they argue would protect free speech at the state’s public universities. Florida lawmakers are hardly the first in taking up the fight, which critics say could lead to the amplification of dangerous hate speech. Over the past three years, seven states have enacted measures over free speech on college campuses.
Young Republicans feel they are outnumbered on campus. Image via AP.
“‘Countless people were affected by this system’s failure,’ inspector general says of flawed jobless website” via Caroline Glenn of the Orlando Sentinel — An investigation into Florida’s unemployment website uncovered what frustrated laid-off workers already knew: “Countless people were affected by this system’s failure.” The state’s chief inspector general, Melinda Miguel, said that during a House committee meeting Wednesday, the first opportunity she’s had to discuss the findings of her agency’s investigation into the site. At one point in April, the DEO had managed to only process 4% of the 850,000 applications for unemployment benefits it received. A year out from the onset of the pandemic, some people say they’re still waiting on benefits. Miguel’s office released a preliminary report last week that largely blamed Deloitte Consulting for selling Florida a system that hadn’t been properly designed or tested.
“‘Tears a couple corners off the Constitution’: Andrew Warren slams anti-riot legislation” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Warren, the Hillsborough County State Attorney, is asking Florida legislators to reject a contentious anti-rioting bill supported by DeSantis, calling it an attack on First Amendment Rights. “This bill doesn’t give police or prosecutors any important new tools to handle unrest. It tears a couple [of] corners off the Constitution,” Warren said in a news release. The legislation would increase penalties for crimes committed during a riot. Its supporters say this will protect law enforcement and prevent public disorder seen at the US Capitol and amid unrest last summer following George Floyd‘s death. The House Judiciary Committee is expected to debate the bill at 3:15 p.m. Wednesday. If it passes, it will be sent to the House floor.
“Parents of trans athletes lobby against legislation targeting youth sports” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A mother discussed her transgender daughter being forced to compete on a boys soccer team despite intense bullying. Another recalled her trans son coming out at 11 years old and her personal commitment to make a safe world for her child. Coaches neared tears as they discussed the importance of sports in child development and the threats they face. Equality Florida focused a Pride Day news conference on the rights of transgender children, particularly access to athletics. All of it happened as legislation surfaces in states across America, including in Florida, that would primarily restrict school athletics based on gender assigned at birth.
With a tip of the hat for LobbyTools, here are the latest movements — both on and off — the legislative merry-go-round.
On and off: Margaret Adiar is replacing Daniel Martinez as a legislative assistant to Hialeah Gardens Republican Sen. Manny Diaz.
On: Marlon Diaz is the new legislative assistant to Miami Republican Sen. Ileana Garcia.
Off: Jessica Garafola stepped down as legislative assistant to Miami Gardens Democratic Sen. Shev Jones.
On and off: Sarah Massey is replacing Kaitlyn Currey as a legislative assistant to Melbourne Republican Sen. Debbie Mayfield.
On: Janeen Lofton is the new legislative assistant to Miami Democratic Sen. Annette Taddeo.
On: Nazbi Chowdhury is the new legislative assistant to Fort Lauderdale Democratic Rep. Bobby DuBose.
Off: Zac Stone stepped down as legislative assistant to St. Cloud Republican Rep. Fred Hawkins.
Off: Melissa Burnos stepped down as district secretary to Dania Beach Democratic Rep. Evan Jenne.
On: Amelia Keaton is the new legislative assistant to Shalimar Republican Rep. Patt Maney.
On: Gina Rotunno is the new district secretary to Miami Gardens Democratic Rep. Felicia Robinson.
On and off: Ashlee Evers is replacing Gary Pheabus as a legislative assistant to Escambia County Republican Rep. Michelle Salzman.
On: Nahja Dieudonne is the new district secretary to Hollywood Democratic Rep. Marie Paule Woodson.
For your radar
EMPOWER Patients latest comic: ‘Papa PBM’ wants you to do business with his pharmacy — The fourth comic strip in the Papa PBM series highlights patient steering and how prescription drug middlemen are “getting paid twice.” A recent AHCA report revealed major anti-competitive inconsistencies. One PBM controls 41.1% of the Florida Medicaid market. This same PBM fills 48% of all prescription drug claims for Florida Medicaid recipients. EMPOWER Patients believes that competition is what has driven pharmacists throughout history. Competition keeps industries in check and results in better services for Florida families. They are calling for an end to the “anti-competitive system” that limits access.
EMPOWER Patients calls AHCA PBM presentation ‘disturbing’ — Florida Pharmacy Association CEO and EMPOWER Patients member Michael Jackson said a Wednesday presentation from the Agency for Health Care Administration on the effects pharmacy benefit managers have on the Medicaid system was “disturbing” and called on the Governor to dig deeper into “AHCA’s clearly cozy relationship with PBM players.” He added, “We categorically reject the premise that a multibillion-dollar state program has no problems with how the program is administered. It’s clear that prescription drug middlemen have entrenched support within AHCA and state bureaucrats clearly have clouded judgment. It is inconceivable that while 23 other states have addressed PBM reform within their own Medicaid systems, Florida’s system is without problems.”
Lobby regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Miguel Abad, New Century Partnership: Cemex Construction Materials Florida, H.O.P.E. Mission
Sandy Ahn: Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America
Amy Bisceglia, AB Governmental Affairs: Mental Health Association in Indian River County
Rachael Bonlarron: Palm Beach State College
Angela Bonds, French Brown, Marc Dunbar, PeterDunbar, Martha Edenfield, Christopher Moya, Jim Naff, Teye Reeves, Jennifer Ungru, Dean Mead: 2201 N. Miami Avenue Owner LLC
Julie Brown: Department of Business & Professional Regulation
Matt Bryan, Thomas Griffin, Jeff Hartley, Lisa Hurley, Smith Bryan & Myers: Match Group Holdings
Dean Cannon, Carlecia Collins, David Daniel, Joseph Salzverg, GrayRobinson: City of New Smyrna Beach Utilities Commission
Joanne Chan: Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America
Stephanie Clary: SKD Consulting Group
Michael Fischer, The Legis Group: Asphalt Roofing Manufacturers Association, International Door Association
Amanda Fraser, Colodny Fass: American Property Casualty Insurance Association, G4S Secure Solutions, Walt Disney Parks and Resorts
Nicole Kelly, Erin Rock, The Southern Group: Aon Benfield, Florida Court Clerks and Comptrollers
Fielding Greaves: AdvaMed
Tyler Jefferson: Department of Management Services
Natalie Kato: National Redistricting Action Fund
Crystal Stickle, Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney: Florida Governmental Utility Authority, Government Services Group
Jared Willis, Strategos Public Affairs: MGT Consulting Group
Leg. sked
The Senate will hold a floor Session, 2:30 p.m., Senate Chamber.
Other legislative meetings:
The Senate Rules Committee, 8:15 a.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The House Appropriations Committee, 9 a.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
The House Ways and Means Committee, 9 a.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building.
The Senate Finance and Tax Committee, 9 a.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The House Rules Committee, 11:30 a.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
The Senate Appropriations Committee, 11:30 a.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The House Children, Families and Seniors Subcommittee, 12:45 p.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
The House Environment, Agriculture and Flooding Subcommittee, 12:45 p.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building.
The House Higher Education Appropriations Subcommittee, 12:45 p.m., Reed Hall, House Office Building.
The House Justice Appropriations Subcommittee, 12:45 p.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
The House Agriculture and Natural Resources Appropriations Subcommittee, 2:30 p.m., Reed Hall, House Office Building.
The House Early Learning and Elementary Education Subcommittee, 2:30 p.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building.
The House Local Administration and Veterans Affairs Subcommittee, 2:30 p.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
The House Professions and Public Health Subcommittee, 2:30 p.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
The House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Subcommittee, 4:15 p.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building.
The House Post-Secondary Education and Lifelong Learning Subcommittee, 4:15 p.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
The House State Administration and Technology Appropriations Subcommittee, 4:15 p.m., Reed Hall, House Office Building.
The House Tourism, Infrastructure and Energy Subcommittee, 4:15 p.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
Statewide
“Rick Scott implores states to ‘reject and return’ stimulus money. DeSantis wants more.” via Wendy Rhodes of The Palm Beach Post — In an open letter to Governors and Mayors, sent moments after the U.S. House on Wednesday approved the $1.9 trillion bill, U.S. Sen. Scott called it “massive, wasteful and non-targeted,” urging states to follow his lead and send a message to Congress to “quit recklessly spending other people’s money” by returning any unneeded funding. His letter comes as polls show the legislation is extremely popular. A Morning Consult/Politico poll found 69% of U.S. voters said the “package is the right amount” or “doesn’t go far enough,” including 54% of Republicans. Apparently, the latter includes Scott’s successor, Gov. DeSantis, who complained Florida should be getting a bigger piece of the pie.
Rick Scott says ‘reject the money.’ Ron DeSantis says ‘not so fast.’ Image via AP.
“DeSantis again denies pardon to ex-felon voting advocate Desmond Meade” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — On a day when advocates for ex-felons could celebrate another big win, Meade was again denied a pardon by DeSantis. DeSantis also would not expedite Meade’s clemency, saying he should go through the proper channels. Meade, of Orlando, spearheaded the push for Amendment 4 in 2018, which restored the right to vote for former felons in Florida. But at a clemency board hearing in Tallahassee on Wednesday, DeSantis said that while “I’m not saying that he hasn’t done good things,” he would not grant a pardon because of Meade’s dishonorable discharge from the Army. Meade was a former addict convicted on drug and firearm charges in 2001 before turning his life around and earned a law degree.
“Dane Eagle says CONNECT system will be ‘new shiny car’” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Florida’s overhaul of its overwhelmed and underwhelming CONNECT unemployment benefits online system will turn it into a “new shiny car” when it’s all done, Eagle promised a Senate committee Wednesday. Eagle responded to Democratic Sen. Janet Cruz‘s lament that the disastrous $77 million system, which failed last year when Florida’s unemployment rate skyrocketed and millions tried in vain to access it, and which has essentially been abandoned now by the original prime contractor Deloitte Consulting, might need complete replacement. “It seems like we keep fixing this old, beat-up car that doesn’t even run, right? And at some point, you gotta say we need a new car,” urged Cruz, of Tampa.
“DeSantis tries again to strip the Florida Cabinet of its powers” via Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — For the second year in a row, DeSantis is pushing for a bill to eliminate Cabinet oversight over a slew of agency and state personnel rules and transfer many of those powers to himself or agencies he controls, arguing that America’s Founding Fathers envisioned a “unitary executive.” DeSantis spokesman Cody McCloud said the bill, HB 1537, would “create a more efficient and effective government, which has always been central to the Governor’s mission.” It would remove Cabinet oversight of many issues connected to Fried, a Democrat, such as its ability to review water management district rules and consumptive use permits issued by DEP. The state’s hemp plan from Fried’s office would also require DeSantis’ approval instead of the Cabinet’s.
Assignment editors — DeSantis will hold a news conference, 9:30 a.m., Southside Sports Complex, 1963 SW Bascom Norris Drive, Lake City. RSVP at Christina.Schmitt@eog.myflorida.com.
“DeSantis ally Shane Strum reels in sweet deal to run Broward Health with contract finessed by his lawyers” via Dan Christensen of the Florida Bulldog — Strum, the Governor’s chief of staff, will become CEO of Broward Health later this month with a handcrafted three-year contract worth $1.3 million annually, despite having no hands-on experience running a hospital. Broward Health’s seven-member board, hobbled by three long-unfilled seats, unanimously voted 4-0 to approve the Fort Lauderdale resident’s contract on Feb. 24 in what looked to be something of a rush toward the end of its regular meeting. Each of those commissioners was appointed by former Republican Governor-now-U.S. Sen. Scott. The deal’s political overtones are obvious, raising questions about whether the taxpayer-assisted North Broward Hospital District, as it is legally known, is backsliding toward the muck of political influence.
“More than 40% of Florida kindergartners are not ready for kindergarten; ‘That’s a failure on us’” via Danielle J. Brown of the Florida Phoenix — For many Florida families with young children, a child’s education starts much sooner than kindergarten. A new class of kindergartners is expected to start school with some sense of the fundamentals, such as language, literacy and math. But for the 2020-21 school year, at least 43% of kindergartners in classes now are not actually ready for kindergarten, according to state data. That’s 57,534 Florida students who went to kindergarten in the 2020-21 academic year and took what’s known as the Florida Kindergarten Readiness Screener about a month into the school year. The kids were deemed “not ready” for the grade they were in — kindergarten.
“Florida spent $3.6 million for a company to drop its SunPass bid. Is this normal?” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — A Tampa Bay state Senator wants answers about a deal where the Florida Department of Transportation paid a company $3.6 million in 2015 to drop its protest over a lucrative contract to overhaul the SunPass system. State Sen. Tom Lee asks the new transportation secretary why the deal was made, which ensured that Conduent State & Local Solutions would win the estimated $600 million contract despite concerns over the New Jersey company’s troubled history. Those concerns were realized last year, when Conduent started processing state tolls and botched the job, leading to overbilling and a backlog of millions of unpaid tolls.
“Wall Street A-listers fled to Florida. Many now eye a return” via Katherine Burton, Annie Massa, Amanda L. Gordon and Jonathan Levin of Bloomberg — For months now, A-listers and lesser-lights from the world of high finance have been traveling to the Sunshine State while riding out COVID-19. Hopeful locals see evidence that the area’s long-elusive dream of luring Big Finance for good might be coming true at last. Along Worth Avenue in Palm Beach, real estate agents count commissions from a pandemic-induced real estate boom. Private schools fantasize about attracting the Spence set. The reality is more nuanced — much more. Only a small percentage of Manhattanites moved permanently to Florida last year. And as vaccinations stir fresh hope that the pandemic’s end is near, ebullient talk of South Florida drawing Wall Streeters en masse is already beginning to fizzle.
“Walking is hazardous to your health in Florida, the deadliest state for pedestrians” via Linda Robertson of the Miami Herald — The Sunshine State retained its notorious No. 1 ranking as the place where a pedestrian is most likely to be struck and killed by a driver in the United States, according to the 2021 “Dangerous By Design” report from Smart Growth America and the National Complete Streets Coalition. Nine of the 15 most hazardous U.S. cities for pedestrians are in Florida, with Orlando ranked as least safe and the Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach metropolis ranked No. 13 in the biennial study. Drivers hit and killed 53,435 pedestrians, about 17 per day, throughout the country between 2010 and 2019. The report emphasized that fatality rates are disproportionately high for the elderly, Blacks, American Indians, Alaska Natives, and walkers in low-income communities.
Being a pedestrian in Florida is not good for your health.
“‘Carbon farming’ could soon be new cash crop for Florida growers” via WJCT — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has estimated that the agriculture sector accounts for 10% of greenhouse gas emissions across the country. Biden wants to reward farmers for using climate-friendly practices on their lands. Big agriculture companies are already paying growers in the Midwest to plant crops that remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and use techniques to keep that carbon in the soil. Those developments and others have spurred hope that the business of carbon may soon come to Florida. Greenhouse gasses can be emitted when farmers till the land. When preparing for new crops, the traditional practice of overturning soil releases carbon from the soil back into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide. It also destroys the natural ground structure.
2022
“Lauren Book brings in $250K in February as she weighs CFO run” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Sen. Book added nearly $251,000 in February alone, according to the latest fundraising reports filed with the Division of Elections. The haul comes as Book considers whether to seek another Senate term or run for the Chief Financial Officer position. She now has a massive war chest containing more than $2.18 million as of Feb. 28. Outside of Nikki Fried’s 2018 win in the Agriculture Commissioner contest, Florida Democrats have struggled in statewide races in recent years. But Book’s sizable fundraising numbers could help her right the ship for Democrats after a strong 2020 cycle for Republicans. Book first joined the Senate after winning a 2016 contest in Senate District 32, following redistricting.
Lauren Book builds her war chest as she decides the next move. Image via Colin Hackley.
Grady Judd backs Jennifer Canady for HD 40 — Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd endorsed Republican Canady in the race to succeed term-limited Rep. Colleen Burton. “Jennifer is an unapologetic supporter of our law enforcement community, an ardent defender of the Second Amendment, and a fiscal conservative who will balance Florida’s budget and keep taxes low. I know we can count on Jennifer to stand up for our conservative values and our founding principles in Tallahassee,” Judd said in a news release. Canady is one of three candidates seeking the GOP nomination in the Polk County-based seat. She faces Nicholas Poucher and Lakeland City Commissioner Phillip Walker.
“Architect Orlando Lamas launches bid to replace Bryan Avila in HD 111” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Orlando Lamas, an architect based in Hialeah, says he’ll be a candidate for the Republican nomination in House District 111 next cycle. Incumbent Republican Rep. Avila is term-limited heading into the 2022 cycle. That gives room for Republican candidates to line up for a shot to represent the right-leaning district. I’m excited and encouraged by the people of the district to pursue this seat,” Lamas said in a news release announcing his run. Lamas is a University of Florida grad. He doubled up at UF with a master’s degree in architecture. Since 2000, Lamas has headed a construction firm, Three County Construction. In 2003 he launched his own architecture firm as well.
Corona Florida
“Florida reports 59 COVID-19 deaths, the lowest number in more than three months” via David Fleshler of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Florida reported the lowest COVID-19 death count since late November, in another sign the disease may be on the retreat in the state. Florida reported 4,853 new coronavirus cases on Wednesday and another 59 new resident deaths linked to COVID-19. The state has now reported 1,957,586 cases since the pandemic began. The number of deaths reported for each day is a cumulative total that reflects deaths that took place over days and weeks, so it can be difficult to tell how much weight to give a single day’s report. But the seven-day average of daily death counts has been declining since late January, providing some optimism that the worst may be over.
“Vaccination politics in Florida: VIP lists? Donor favors?Time to investigate.” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — When Democrats first started accusing DeSantis of playing politics with vaccinations, I didn’t pay it much mind. After all, Democrats always criticize Republicans. And vice versa. And these particular accusations — that DeSantis was steering vaccines to campaign donors and places that might help him politically while families with Down syndrome and other medically vulnerable groups were struggling for access — were so ugly and outlandish, they were hard to believe. Except now, we’re starting to see the secret text messages and hear from the health officials involved in setting up some of these vaccination efforts. And it’s looking like an actual fire might be generating all this smoke.
With Ron DeSantis’ handling of vaccinations, there are simply too many issues to ignore.
“Florida close to opening vaccinations to all, DeSantis says” via Megan Reeves of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida will open coronavirus vaccinations to people as young as 55 “relatively soon,” then make shots available to everyone, DeSantis said Wednesday during an appearance in Sumter County. The state’s age-based eligibility for vaccination is 65 and up, and it will move to 60 and up starting Monday, DeSantis said. “We’ll lower the age to 55 in due time,” he added. “It’s all dependent on how we’re doing with getting the 60 to 64. But that will happen relatively soon.” After that, the state “probably could just open it up to the general public at that point,” DeSantis said, pointing out that Florida’s supply of doses from the federal government is growing, as is the Federal Pharmacy Program.
“Florida vaccine supply to rise again with Moderna, Pfizer while next shipment of J&J uncertain” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel — Continued increase in the Pfizer vaccine means Florida will once again see a jump in supply next week. The data released by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services on Tuesday nearly 20,000 more doses of Pfizer over this week’s allotment. An equal number of second doses for each of the two vaccines has also been allotted, with the first doses usually arriving from Monday-Wednesday each week. Moderna’s supply remains the same, so between the two, Florida will receive 489,970 initial doses, up from 470,080 arriving this week. In the past week, the state also received its initial supply of the one-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine, a total of 175,100.
“About 1.8 million Florida seniors are still not vaccinated” via Bailey LeFever of the Tampa Bay Times— Three months after DeSantis announced that seniors were his top priority in the coronavirus vaccine rollout, about 1.8 million of the state’s residents 65 and older still hadn’t been vaccinated as of Monday. DeSantis is expanding vaccination eligibility next week to anyone 60 or older, adding another 1.4 million people to those vying with seniors for the often hard-to-get vaccine appointments. Health care workers, people of any age with existing health conditions, and firefighters, teachers, and law enforcement officers 50 and older also are eligible.
“As COVID-19 spreads fast in Florida prisons, no vaccines have been given to its inmates” via Ana Ceballos of the Miami Herald — Three months into Florida’s vaccination efforts, DeSantis has yet to make vaccines available to state prisons, even as corrections officials have requested doses and identified thousands of elderly inmates who meet the state’s eligibility requirements. “The department is ready and willing to administer, but they have not received any supply,” Senate Criminal Justice Chairman Jason Pizzo said. Inmates who meet the state’s age group criteria could be waiting for the foreseeable future. The governor’s office won’t say when supplies will be made available to the state Department of Corrections, only saying DeSantis has “made it clear” he will not prioritize inmates ahead of the other vulnerable populations and front-line workers.
“DeSantis order cancels COVID-19 fines after ‘unprecedented local government restrictions’” via WFLA — DeSantis has filed an executive order that cancels all fines related to local government COVID-19 restrictions on people and business. The order states any fines imposed between March 1, 2020, and March 10, 2021, fines imposed by any political subdivision of Florida related to local government COVID-19 restrictions are canceled. The order goes on to say it can serve as a defense to the collection of those fines. The order only applies to local government and not any enforcement or COVID-19 related orders taken by the state. It also does not cancel fines imposed on assisted living facilities, hospitals or health care providers.
Tweet, tweet:
Corona local
“Each major South Florida county has now administered at least 500K COVID-19 vaccine doses” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — All three major South Florida counties have each delivered at least 500,000 COVID-19 vaccine shots as the fight to inoculate the region continues. Broward and Palm Beach counties sit just above that threshold. Broward has administered more than 509,000, while Palm Beach has placed nearly 508,000 shots in arms. Miami-Dade County, Florida’s most populous county, has administered close to 667,000 shots. In total, vaccinators have doled out more than 1.68 million shots. Close to 600,000 people are fully vaccinated across the three counties.
“Ineligible COVID-19 vaccine seekers crowd site at Miami-Dade College” via Glenna Milberg and Andrea Torres of Local10.com — Informal lapses on state eligibility requirements at the temporary COVID-19 vaccination site in Miami-Dade College North Campus, motivated some to show up on Wednesday with unrealistic expectations. Many said they drove to Westview from Broward County. Mike Jachles, the chair of the Florida Association of Public Information Officers, described a chaotic scene. “What we are discouraging strongly is people driving from other areas, other counties,” Jachles said. ”They are parking cars, blocking businesses, blocking private homes … trying to jump the line.”
“Blacks on coast to get 1st permanent vaccine site” via Jane Musgrave of The Palm Beach Post — A permanent coronavirus vaccination site could be opened in Riviera Beach as early as next week, closing a key gap that left predominantly Black neighborhoods without access to the lifesaving shots, a county commissioner said Wednesday. A day after Palm Beach County officials said they needed Riviera officials’ cooperation to establish a site at Wells Recreation Center, city officials said they were more than willing to help. But, they said, no one had asked. “We always stand ready, willing and able to assist,” said Riviera Beach Fire Chief John Curd. “I haven’t heard anything from the state or the county about making the site permanent.”
A vaccine site in Rivera Beach will be the first permanent pod to serve a Black community.
“Pop-up vaccine sites in Sweetwater and Florida City are on the move to new locations” via Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald — Federal pop-up vaccination sites in Sweetwater and Florida City are moving and will reopen Thursday at two new locations in Miami-Dade County. On Thursday, the sites will open at Allen Park Community Center at 1770 NE 162nd St. in North Miami Beach and at the Miami Springs Community Center at 1401 Westward Dr. The sites will remain at the new locations through March 17. The sites will return to Ronselli Park Youth Center, 250 SW 114th Ave. in Sweetwater, and the Florida City Youth Activity Center, 650 NW Fifth Ave., when it’s time for people who got the first dose of the Pfizer vaccine to receive their second injection, according to the Florida Division of Emergency Management.
“Bay County is best in Panhandle at mass COVID-19 vaccination turnout, officials say” via Jacqueline Bostick of the Panama City News-Herald — After waiting for more than a month, Patrise Chambless finally had her turn at getting the COVID-19 vaccination on Sunday. “It was very smooth. We had our paperwork already completed online, so we basically walked in,” she said. “I feel fine. I feel anybody should get it as a preventive medicine versus not getting it prevented.” The 67-year-old Panama City Beach resident was one of more than 600 people who registered for the vaccination event held at the Lynn Haven Senior Center, 904 Pennsylvania Ave. In a news release Friday, DeSantis’ office made the announcement of the weekend events, which added to the targeted 70 events held since January that seeks to vaccinate underserved communities.
“2 new FEMA COVID-19 vaccine sites open Thursday in Tampa Bay” via WFLA — Two new FEMA-supported satellite COVID-19 vaccine locations open Thursday in the Tampa Bay area. The new site in Ruskin will be at Hillsborough Community College’s SouthShore campus, at 551 24th St. NE. The site will be available March 11-14 and then will be moved again, to Plant City Stadium, 1810 S Park Road in Plant City, where it will stay through March 17. The second mobile site will relocate to Walker Road Park in Lakeland on Thursday and will stay there through March 17. The new Ruskin and Lakeland locations are relocating from Hillsborough Community College’s Brandon campus and from Lake Maude Park in Winter Haven.
“Pinellas County health agencies making vaccine accessible through different clinics” via Megan Gannon of WFLA — Clearwater residents are feeling grateful for a vaccine clinic at a local rec center, telling 8 On Your Side it offered easy accessibility to the vaccine. The North Greenwood Rec Center was the site of a vaccine clinic on Wednesday. The Division Chief of Emergency Management for the City of Clearwater said the site was allotted 500 doses of the vaccine. For Charlie Campbell, this is what he has been waiting for, as he has experienced issues, like many, trying to register for an appointment.
“Flagler Health+ recognizes anniversary of the first patient diagnosed with COVID-19 in northeast Florida” via Gina Mangus of Flagler Health — One year ago today, Flagler Health+ made history as the first health care system in Northeast Florida to treat a patient diagnosed with COVID-19. And over the course of the year that would follow, nearly 600 patients were treated for COVID-19 at Flagler Hospital, thousands of people were tested, and now, thousands were vaccinated by Flagler Health+. Each staff member was vital to ensuring that patients received the best possible care. And now, Flagler Health+ will recognize each team member as a “COVID-19 Hero” with a commemorative pin. Close to 2,000 pins will be distributed to recognize the resiliency, sacrifice, and unwavering commitment to the patients served throughout a very difficult year.
Flagler Health+ recognizes its ‘COVID-19 Heroes.’
“DOH Leon cancels March 13 COVID-19 vaccine clinic due to appointment slowdown” via WCTV — The Florida Department of Health in Leon County has canceled its upcoming COVID-19 vaccine clinic due to a slowdown in scheduled COVID-19 appointments from the state’s vaccine preregistration system. Those with confirmed appointments for Saturday’s clinic are currently being contacted to reschedule their appointments. Anyone with an appointment for the March 13 vaccine clinic will now be scheduled for DOH, Leon’s March 16 clinic, which will be operating from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the DOH Leon Administration Building located at 2965 Municipal Way.
Corona nation
“Joe Biden got the vaccine rollout humming, with Donald Trump’s help” via Sharon LaFraniere of The New York Times — When Biden pledged last week to amass enough vaccine by late May to inoculate every adult in the United States, the pronouncement was greeted as a triumphant acceleration of a vaccination campaign that seemed to be faltering only weeks earlier. And production of two of the three federally-authorized vaccines has indeed sped up in part because of the demands and directives of the new president’s coronavirus team. But the announcement was also a triumph of another kind: public relations. Because Biden had tamped down expectations early, the quicker timetable for vaccine production conjured an image of a White House running on all cylinders and leaving its predecessor’s effort in the dust.
Joe Biden’s vaccine ramp-up was a PR triumph as well.
“Biden announces his intention to secure another 100 million doses of Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine.” via Sheryl Gay Stolberg of The New York Times — Biden said on Wednesday that he was directing the federal government to secure an additional 100 million doses of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 single-shot vaccine, a move the White House said could help the country vaccinate children and, if necessary, administer booster doses or reformulate the vaccine to combat emerging variants of the virus. Biden made the announcement during an afternoon event at the White House with executives from Johnson & Johnson and the pharmaceutical giant Merck, where he praised them for partnering to ramp up production of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, a deal brokered by the White House.
“Virus drove record U.S. death rate in 2020, CDC finds” via Erin Banco of POLITICO — The U.S. death rate increased by 15% last year as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, making it the deadliest year in recorded U.S. history, the CDC will announce, according to two senior administration officials with direct knowledge of the matter. The agency will summarize its findings in an upcoming issue of Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. Its analysis will detail the rates at which U.S. residents of various races and ethnicities died as a result of the virus as well as the total number of deaths in each demographic group, those sources said. COVID-19 was the third leading cause of death behind heart disease and cancer, the report found. “Unintentional injuries” is normally the third-leading cause of death, officials said.
“‘Hoping for a flood’: How states are preparing for a surge in vaccine supply” via Isaac Stanley-Becker of The Washington Post — State and local health officials who have spent months rationing shots are now racing to be ready for a surge in supply, enough for every adult by the end of May, as Biden promised last week. They’ve been advised to plan for between 22 and 24 million doses a week by early April, an increase of as much as 50% from current allocations, according to two people familiar with the estimates who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss them.
“Black and Hispanic communities are confronted with vaccine misinformation.” via Sheera Frenkel of The New York Times — Black and Hispanic communities are confronting vaccine conspiracy theories, rumors and misleading news reports on social media. The misinformation includes false claims that vaccines can alter DNA or don’t work, and efforts by states to reach out to Black and Hispanic residents have become the basis for new false narratives. “What might look like, on the surface, as doctors prioritizing communities of color is being read by some people online as ‘Oh, those doctors want us to go first, to be the guinea pigs,’” said Kolina Koltai, a researcher at the University of Washington who studies online conspiracy theories.
“Federal officials relax guidance on nursing home visits, citing vaccines and slowing infections” via Amy Goldstein of The Washington Post — Federal health officials on Wednesday substantially relaxed the government’s guidelines for family and friends to see nursing home residents in person, saying that vaccinations and a slowing of coronavirus infections in the facilities warrant restoring indoor visits in most situations. The nursing home guidance, the first federal advice on the subject since September, says “outdoor visitation is preferred,” even when a nursing home resident and family or friends are fully vaccinated against COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus.
Corona economics
“Restaurants are big beneficiaries of COVID-19 relief bill” via Joyce M. Rosenberg of The Associated Press — Restaurants devastated by the coronavirus outbreak are getting a lifeline from the pandemic relief package that’s awaiting Biden’s signature. The bill that gained final congressional approval Wednesday adds money to the PPP and provides indirect help to small businesses in general through stimulus payments and unemployment benefits. But restaurants got the biggest share of direct help: $28.6 billion in grants for restaurants whose revenue fell in 2020 due to the pandemic. The bill calls for grants equal to the amount of restaurants’ revenue losses, up to a maximum of $10 million per company and $5 million per location.
Restaurants are some of the biggest winners in the COVID-19 relief bill. Image via AP.
“13,000 American Airlines workers told to ‘tear up’ layoff notices after COVID-19 bill passes” via Travis Pittman of WTSP — American Airlines on Wednesday told 13,000 workers who were given layoff warning notices in February to “tear them up” after Congress passed the $1.9 trillion COVID relief bill. The American Rescue Plan includes funding to support payrolls. American Airlines CEO Doug Parker and President Robert Isom sent a letter to thousands of workers telling them that jobs in jeopardy are now safe. “For our 13,000 colleagues who received Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) notices last month, those are happily canceled; you can tear them up!” they wrote in an email to workers. The executives also sounded an optimistic tone about the future as COVID-19 vaccinations increase across the country.
“Volunteers are key at vaccine sites. It pays off with a shot” via Terry Tang and Manuel Valdes of The Associated Press — When Seattle’s largest health care system got a mandate from Washington state to create a mass COVID-19 vaccination site, organizers knew that gathering enough volunteers would be almost as crucial as the vaccine itself. “We could not do this without volunteers,” said Renee Rassilyer-Bomers, the chief quality officer for Swedish Health Services and head of its vaccination site at Seattle University. As states ramp up vaccination distribution in the fight against the coronavirus, volunteers must do everything from direct traffic to check people in so vaccination sites run smoothly. In return for their work, they’re often given a shot.
The perk of being a vaccine volunteer — a vaccine. Image via AP.
“Late-stage pandemic is messing with your brain” via Ellen Cushing of The Atlantic — I first became aware that I was losing my mind in late December. It was a Friday night, the start of my 40-somethingth pandemic weekend: Hours and hours with no work to distract me and outside temperatures prohibitive of anything other than staying in. I couldn’t for the life of me figure out how to fill the time. “What did I used to … do on weekends?” I asked my boyfriend, like a soap-opera amnesiac. He couldn’t really remember either. Everywhere I turn, the fog of forgetting has crept in.
“This week marks one year since COVID-19 upended our lives. It’s OK to let ourselves feel whatever emotions that brings up” via Julie Gallagher of CNN — This month marks one year since COVID-19 upended American life. This week in March 2020, most Americans left their offices and schools to quarantine for what was only supposed to be a few weeks. It was supposed to flatten the curve so that hospitals didn’t become overwhelmed. We thought staying 6 feet apart from each other would be just a temporary inconvenience for the greater good. We thought we could prevent the death toll from reaching 1,000 people. We assumed normalcy would come by summer.
“Anthony Fauci marks COVID anniversary with hope and a warning: Don’t ‘underestimate’ virus” via Michael Wilner of the Miami Herald — Fauci is hopeful that a nation devastated by the coronavirus pandemic might soon be within the grasp of some normalcy. But reflecting on the anniversary of the pandemic, Fauci also expressed caution, sharing the most important lesson he has learned in the past year: “Don’t ever underestimate this virus.” The leading U.S. infectious disease expert told McClatchy in an interview Wednesday that, with over 2 million Americans getting vaccinated every day, the country could reach a level of protection within months that would begin lowering the risk of individuals contracting the virus in social settings. At that point, he said: “We should see a considerable degree of flexibility in what we can do — much more than what we can do right now.”
Anthony Fauci warns us that the virus still poses risk. Image via AP.
“COVID-19 is also raising the death toll from opioids” via Bloomberg Opinion — More than 535,000 lives have been lost to opioid overdoses. If that grim number seems familiar, it’s just a bit higher than COVID-19’s toll of 527,000 deaths so far. COVID-19 and the opioid crisis are linked in other ways, too. The pandemic has driven an alarming increase in overdose fatalities over the past year, as people struggling to recover from opioid dependence have been undone by isolation, job loss, and the added difficulty of getting support and treatment with social-distancing rules in effect. All this at a time when lethal illicit fentanyl is increasingly turning up in street narcotics, including counterfeit hydrocodone and oxycodone pills.
Presidential
“Biden wants to sell the stimulus. The White House is still figuring out how.” via Annie Linskey, Tyler Pager and Jeff Stein of The Washington Post — The Biden administration weighed putting the president’s name on stimulus checks to make sure he got credit for helping the millions of Americans who will receive aid, but rejected the idea in recent days. The White House is planning for Biden to hit the road to promote the $1.9 trillion plan, but officials have not settled on where he should go. And there is currently no major advertising campaign focused on the proposal. As Democrats prepare to celebrate what they see as one of the most significant domestic policy achievements in modern history, the White House has yet to fully develop a strategy for the next crucial step: selling it to the American public.
“Biden’s name will not appear on $1,400 stimulus payments” via Jeff Stein of The Washington Post — The White House said Tuesday that Biden’s name would not appear on the $1,400 stimulus payments set to be sent out to millions of American families as part of the administration’s relief package, a reversal from the precedent set under Trump. White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters on Tuesday that the payments approved under Biden would instead be signed by a career official at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, an office within the Department of Treasury. The House is expected to vote on the $1.9 trillion stimulus plan as soon as Wednesday, putting it on course to be signed into law by Biden next week.
One thing missing on the latest round of stimulus checks — Joe Biden’s signature.
“Biden yet to act on overturning some Trump immigration policies” via Anita Kumar of POLITICO — Since he took office, Biden has sworn to overhaul draconian Trump-era policies, crafting a kinder, gentler immigration system where everyone — from refugees to asylees to students to billionaire CEOs — is welcome. There’s just one problem: Despite the massive immigration package he introduced on Day One and the flurry of executive orders that soon followed, Biden’s policies have yet to catch up with his rhetoric. To be sure, Biden inherited a complicated puzzle — a convoluted system designed to do the exact opposite of what he wants it to do. He’s only been in office for six weeks. And much of his energy has been focused on battling the pandemic.
“Cuba policy shift ‘not a top priority’ for Biden, White House says” via Nora Gámez Torres of the Miami Herald — The Biden administration is not in a rush to change Cuba policy, which is currently under review, the White House said Tuesday. “A Cuba policy shift is not currently among President Biden’s top priorities,” spokeswoman Psaki said at a press briefing. She added the administration was committed “to making human rights a core pillar of our U.S. policy” and “to carefully reviewing policy decisions made in the prior administration, including the decision to designate Cuba as a state sponsor of terrorism.” Biden promised during his campaign to lift current restrictions on remittances and travel to the island, but it is unclear if he will pursue a new thaw in relations with Havana.
“Merrick Garland wins Senate approval, opening Biden era at DOJ” via Chris Strohm of Bloomberg — The Senate confirmed Garland as U.S. Attorney General, filling a major position in Biden’s Cabinet and ushering in a new era at the Justice Department. The 70-30 vote Wednesday in the evenly divided Senate reflected substantial Republican support for Garland, who pledged to make decisions and pursue investigations independently from Biden and the White House. His predecessors Jeff Sessions and William Barr came under withering criticism for bending to political pressure from Trump and his allies.
“Marcia Fudge has ambitious plans for HUD — even though she didn’t want the job.” via Katy O’Donnell and Maya King of POLITICO — The Senate confirmed Fudge as the next Housing Secretary in a 66-34 vote Wednesday, clearing the way for her to take on a cascade of crises: millions of people facing eviction amid a pandemic, a rise in homelessness, soaring housing prices worsening a yearslong affordable housing crunch. And when Fudge reports for work at the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Brutalist headquarters in Southwest D.C., she’ll also be taking over an agency that is itself in crisis. This wasn’t the job that Fudge initially wanted. But last month, at her Senate confirmation hearing, the Congress member made an impassioned pitch to overhaul housing policy.
“Senate confirms Michael Regan to lead EPA” via Brady Dennis and Dino Grandoni of The Washington Post — The Senate confirmed Regan on Wednesday as the next Environmental Protection Agency administrator, a role that lies at the heart of Biden’s promises to cut the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions and help poor and minority communities that have long borne the brunt of pollution. He will be the first Black man to lead the EPA in its half-century of existence. “He is immensely qualified for this position, not only in qualifications but in his demeanor,” U.S. Sen. Richard Burr, a North Carolina Republican, said on the Senate floor before voting for Regan. “Too often, we overlook whether a nominee has the right character to lead an organization. In this case, there’s no question that Michael Regan has that character.”
Michael Regan will be the first Black man to lead the EPA in its half-century of existence. Image via The Washington Post.
“Elizabeth Warren builds clout with Biden through pipeline of staff picks” via Nancy Cook of Bloomberg — Biden has shown little appetite for Warren’s trademark campaign proposal, a wealth tax, but she’s won something else from the president, as nearly a dozen of her allies and former aides have joined his administration. The Massachusetts Senator’s associates hold top posts at the White House and federal agencies handling issues ranging from financial regulation to national security and climate change. The hires have helped assuage progressives concerned Biden isn’t sympathetic to their views but have set off alarms in the banking and financial sector. The influx of her staffers and allies into Biden’s orbit has been part of Warren’s conscious, multi-year plan and progressives to zero in on personnel picks when a Democrat next took the White House.
Epilogue: Trump
“Recording of Trump phone call to Georgia lead investigator reveals new details” via Cameron McWhirter of The Wall Street Journal — Then-President Trump urged the chief investigator of the Georgia Secretary of State’s office to look for fraud during an audit of mail-in ballots in a suburban Atlanta county, on a phone call he made to her in late December. During the six-minute call, which The Wall Street Journal reviewed, Trump repeatedly said that he won Georgia. “Something bad happened,” he said. She responded: “I can assure you that our team and the [Georgia Bureau of Investigation], that we are only interested in the truth and finding the information that is based on the facts.” The Washington Post reported on the call in January, but this is the first time the recording has been released.
Of course, there’s another phone call.
“Manhattan prosecutors advance probe into Trump’s Seven Springs estate” via Corinne Ramey of The Wall Street Journal — Manhattan prosecutors are intensifying their investigation into Trump’s businesses, aiming at a Westchester County, New York, estate that the former President unsuccessfully tried to develop, according to people familiar with the matter. In recent weeks, according to the people, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office has issued new subpoenas and requested recordings of local government meetings related to the Trump Organization’s failed attempt to create a luxury subdivision at Seven Springs, a 213-acre property that the former President bought for $7.5 million in 1995. Trump has valued the property at up to $291 million in financial statements that the New York Attorney General’s office, which is also investigating Seven Springs, said were given to financial institutions.
“Parler blocked on Apple’s app store after Capitol riot review” via William Turton and Mark Gurman of Yahoo News — Parler, the controversial conservative social media app, was denied reentry to Apple Inc.’s App Store recently after it was kicked off the platform in the wake of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. On Wednesday, Parler LLC cut its three remaining iOS developers, according to a person familiar with the matter. The company eliminated seven workers in total, most of whom were contractors. The other staff worked on Parler TV and quality assurance, said the person, who asked not to be identified discussing private matters. When it initially removed Parler from the App Store in January, Apple asked the social network to change its moderation practices.
This is a BFD — “Beth Moore, a prominent evangelical, splits with southern baptists” via Ruth Graham and Elizabeth Dias of The New York Times — From the outside, the marriage of convenience between White conservative Christians and Trump looked like a devoted one: White evangelicals voted for Trump overwhelmingly in 2016 and stuck with him in 2020, brushing aside perpetual lies and sexual impropriety to support a man they saw as their protector. However, not everyone was content. Now, one of the most prominent White evangelical women in the United States is breaking with her longtime denomination, the Southern Baptist Convention, citing the “staggering” disorientation of seeing its leaders support Trump, and the cultural and spiritual fallout from that support.
D.C. matters
“Justice Amy Coney Barrett riles conservatives with moderate rulings” via Alex Swoyer of The Washington Times — Barrett, who was billed as a jurist in the mold of the late conservative icon Justice Antonin Scalia, is raising eyebrows with early rulings in which she sides with the high court’s moderates. Justice Barrett appeared to break with her mentor Scalia, for whom she clerked, when she joined the moderates and liberals on the bench in rejecting a pro-Trump challenge to Pennsylvania’s election laws and leaving in place some COVID-19 restrictions on houses of worship. She was Trump’s third high court appointee and has been on the bench for only about four months, not leaving much time for her to craft her own opinions.
“Mitch McConnell, amid Trump’s threats, tells GOP Senators their political operation has outraised the former President’s.” via Maggie Haberman and Nicholas Fandos of The New York Times — Sen. McConnell, the minority leader, boasted privately to fellow Republicans on Wednesday that their fundraising efforts had outperformed Trump’s after the former President took aim at the Party’s committees in a bid to control its financial future. McConnell’s comments at a weekly party lunch, which were described on condition of anonymity by three people briefed on the meeting, represented a response of sorts to Trump trying to throw down the gauntlet on fundraising. The former President recently suggested that he would be a better steward of the Republican Party’s money and use the resources to target incumbent Republicans he finds insufficiently loyal.
Mitch McConnell boasts that Republican fundraising outpaced Donald Trump’s Image via AP.
“Scott’s bet: COVID-19 relief bill will be a political loser for Democrats” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Sen. Scott on Wednesday told a national radio audience that Republican Senate candidates are going to have a “great 2022,” thanks in part to the COVID-19 relief bill slated to pass the House this morning. Scott, who heads the National Republican Senatorial Committee, told listeners to the Hugh Hewitt program that success will be in part due to the landmark American Rescue Act relief legislation. “The COVID bill they passed, it’s not going to be popular in a few months. When people figure out what’s in this thing, they’ll be furious,” Scott predicted. Scott expects this to lead to “great candidates” and a “great win.”
“How does the $1.9 trillion stimulus package impact food and farming?” via H. Claire Brown of The Counter — In less than one week, expanded unemployment benefits are set to expire for millions of Americans, but help is likely on the way. After the Senate passed its $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package over the weekend, the House, in a floor vote scheduled for Wednesday, is expected to pass the final bill along party lines. The legislation, known as The American Rescue Plan, would then head to Biden’s desk, where he is expected to sign it before the benefits lapse. In addition to sending $1,400 checks to most Americans, the legislation would extend $300 weekly expanded unemployment benefits through September 6 and increase the child tax credit.
“Why a Florida Republican Congressman has Britney Spears on his mind” via Chris Perkins of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz waded into the #FreeBritney movement when he invoked the name of multiplatinum pop singer Spears in a letter to the chairman of the U.S. House Judiciary Committee. Gaetz mentioned the pop star’s name Monday when he joined fellow Republican Rep. Jim Jordan in requesting a congressional hearing regarding the practice of court-ordered conservatorships. Spears, 39, has been under one since 2008. It seems the congressmen consider the practice potentially, ahem, “toxic.” The Gaetz-Jordan letter also mentioned “questionable motives and legal tactics” used by Spears’ father, Jamie.
Matt Gaetz jumped on the #FreeBritney bandwagon. Image via AP.
Happening today — GrayRobinson will host a virtual event titled “Restoring Bilateral Trade Between Canada and Florida” to discuss trade between Canada and Florida. Hosted by firm President and former House Speaker Dean Cannon, speakers include Consulate General of Canada in Miami Susan Harper and Enterprise Florida SVP Manny Mencia. The event is from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. Register here to attend.
Local notes
“Despite pandemic, 300,000 expected at Daytona motorcycle rally” via Johnny Diaz of The New York Times — About 300,000 people are expected to descend on Daytona Beach this week for a large annual motorcycle rally called Bike Week that is taking place during a pandemic in a state with few restrictions to slow its spread. Excitement about the event has been tempered by pushback from some motorcycle enthusiasts in a Facebook group dedicated to the rally who feared it could turn into a coronavirus superspreader event. Last August, the Sturgis motorcycle rally in South Dakota drew more than 450,000 bikers, most of whom did not wear masks or appear to follow social-distancing guidelines. The Sturgis rally was later blamed for outbreaks in other states.
Daytona Bike Week 2021 expects to draw more than 300,000.
“One of Jacksonville Mayor’s final acts might turn out to be his best” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — Mayor Lenny Curry will propose legislation in the coming months increasing Jacksonville’s gas tax by 6 cents to jump-start a nearly $1 billion campaign to complete backlogged road projects — many of which will include adding bike lanes and sidewalks to busy thoroughfares and will including drainage improvements — as well as financing a Jacksonville Transportation Authority effort to modernize the Skyway and upgrade bus stops and other transit infrastructure throughout the city. It would be the largest targeted public works campaign since the $2.2 billion Better Jacksonville Plan. This infrastructure plan isn’t quite Curry’s swan song, but it’s one of his final acts. It could be his best.
“Top law official describes ‘extremely lax’ security at hacked water plant” via Stephanie Matat of Fresh Take Florida — A top Florida law enforcement official told DeSantis and other state leaders that “extremely lax” security at a municipal water plant northwest of Tampa allowed hackers to break into its computers to try to poison residents earlier this year. The head of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Rick Swearingen, provided the unexpected update on the mysterious sabotage effort during a Cabinet meeting in Tallahassee. The criminal investigation continues in the case. No one was hurt.
“Miami School Board members speak out on Instagram account targeting Superintendent Alberto Carvalho” via Colleen Wright of the Miami Herald — Four Miami-Dade County School Board members on Wednesday spoke publicly about a now-deleted Instagram account targeting Carvalho. The account, named “I have a lover” with the handle @superintendentofmiami, made rounds among Tallahassee political circles and Miami-Dade teachers and administrators. It featured several intimate selfies of Carvalho, both shirtless and clothed, and accused him of cheating on his wife. The account had 14 posts and was following 55 other accounts before it was locked down Tuesday. On Wednesday, the account was deleted around noon.
“In the Keys, all students can return to classrooms full time on March 29” via Gwen Filosa of the Miami Herald — The Monroe County School District on Tuesday said it will offer full-time, in-person instruction for all students starting March 29 in response to a state order. But Superintendent Theresa Axford said the schools might have trouble maintaining social distancing in classes. “While we will do our best to make this a safe transition, please be aware we may have difficulty ensuring students maintain a safe distance from one another while they are attending classes in-person,” Axford said in a statement. “Students, staff and visitors will still be required to wear masks, and we will continue to emphasize the importance of hand-washing and sanitizing at all times.”
“Coral Gables Commission OK’s compromise Miracle Mile rezone. Candidates dislike it.” via Andres Viglucci and Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — Coral Gables commissioners on Tuesday easily approved a controversial zoning measure that could spur small- and midscale redevelopment on struggling Miracle Mile by lifting parking requirements for new buildings while enacting a strict 4-story cap on height. By a decisive 4-1 vote and with virtually no debate, the Commission officially embraced a compromise hammered out in a public workshop on March 1 following several virtual community meetings on the issue. Vice Mayor Vince Lago, who is vying with Commissioner Patricia Keon for the Mayor’s seat in elections on April 13, voted no.
“Bay County Commissioner Tommy Hamm sues Netflix over docuseries ‘ Immigration Nation’” via Tony Mixon of the Panama City News Herald — Hamm filed a lawsuit March 4 against Netflix and those involved with a documentary series on immigration that accuses him and his company, Winterfell Construction, of wage theft. The 101-page lawsuit lists numerous items, including emotional distress and defamation. Hamm said back in August, when the public caught wind of the series, that he would take legal action against Netflix and those involved with the documentary. The group Resilience Force, which accused Hamm of wage theft, was listed in the lawsuit along with Netflix.
Tommy Hamm sues Netflix over a documentary that accuses him of wage theft.
“Sarasota’s coastal residents are urging city leaders to take action on proliferating hotel houses” via Allyson Henning of WFLA — Residents on St. Armands and Lido Key have posted signs around their neighborhood that read ‘stop the hotel houses’. Locals say the issue first started on the island back in 2019 when developers first started purchasing old homes, demolishing them, and rebuilding mini-hotels in residential neighborhoods. “They are coming in and building businesses. This is not a house. This is a little hotel. It has seven or eight bedrooms and bathrooms. It is not even configured for a family, it is configured like a hotel and the amenities that go along with a hotel,” St. Armands resident Mike Adkinson said. Adkinson has lived on the key for about seven years. He still remembers the turning point on his street.
“Voracious super termites are carving out a new existence in South Florida, leaving decades-old trees gutted and vulnerable” via Chris Perkins of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Normally, termites make their homes in dead or harvested wood, such as timber used in houses. But the more voracious species, often called super termites, are finding new sources of food in some of South Florida’s largest and oldest living trees from Palm Beach County to the Keys. Experts say they are seeing signs that normally wind-resistant trees such as oaks are being compromised. “That’s one of the big things I’m concerned about, especially in South Florida, and especially here in Broward, where we have a big population of Asian subterranean termites that within 20 years have spread extensively from the old part of the city … areas with beautiful old canopies,” said Tom Chouvenc, an urban entomology professor at UF/IFAS.
Top opinion
“John Morgan: Stop the reefer madness, oppose THC caps” via Florida Politics — Almost every big change in Florida has come from citizen-initiated constitutional amendments. In every case, Tallahassee does its best to overturn the will of The People. Now they are at it again. They hope to reduce the amount of THC in medical marijuana so much as to be worthless. Go to any MMTC in Florida; you will see mostly older people in line for marijuana. Because it works. And THC is a key ingredient. It is almost impossible to even grow it with less than 10% — the exact cap being proposed in Tallahassee. Their reasoning? Because lots of use by children can result in psychosis, they say. They say they have “studies” and “science.” It. Doesn’t. Exist. Such utter bullshit.
Opinions
“DeSantis’ change to civil rights for felons necessary and long overdue” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — With little fanfare, the state of Florida took a major step forward Wednesday, and DeSantis deserves credit for it. DeSantis and the three elected Cabinet members wiped out Florida’s repressive requirement that former felons wait five years before applying for the restoration of their civil rights, something needed to serve on a jury or obtain a license for certain jobs. This change is good news, but it took much too long. The passage of Amendment 4 should have made the automatic restoration of civil rights a no-brainer more than two years ago. Still, this is a good start, and DeSantis and Cabinet members did the right thing.
“A civics lesson: Florida’s sordid voting rights past, and its grim future” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — A rite of passage for each Florida legislative session is proposing a new law telling schoolteachers what to teach. This year’s proposal builds on previous, successful efforts to mandate civics instruction. The bill requires a “discussion of political ideologies, such as communism and totalitarianism, that conflict with the principles of freedom and democracy essential to the founding principles of the United States.” We agree. If the Legislature mandates an examination of ideologies that conflict with democracy, teachers should start with the anti-democratic ideals that have tainted our republic from its beginning and continue to flourish today, centuries later, in the halls of Florida’s Capitol.
“Don’t let Legislature tip voting scales for DeSantis” via Howard L. Simon for the Orlando Sentinel — There’s no nice way to put this: The Legislature and the Governor are trying to manipulate the rules governing elections in order to favor DeSantis’ reelection next year. Democrats came out of the 2020 presidential election with a significant advantage in applications for mail ballots. But now come Sen. Baxley and DeSantis claiming that in order to bolster citizen confidence in the integrity of the election system, voters should be required to request absentee ballots for each election rather than, as at present, have their application to vote by mail approved for two general election cycles. The result, if the measure is approved — millions of Florida voters will have their vote-by-mail applications erased, forcing them to reapply.
“It’s time: Collecting online-sales taxes is only fair” via Bill Cotterell of the Tallahassee Democrat — The first and most important thing to remember about pending internet sales tax legislation is that it’s not a tax increase. If it clears the Legislature and gets signed by DeSantis, maybe you’ll wind up paying a bit more when you buy stuff online. And state and local governments would reap hundreds of millions of dollars they’re currently missing out on. But it’s not a tax increase because we’re all supposed to be paying the sales tax now. We just don’t, usually, and the state has no reasonable way of making us pay up.
On today’s Sunrise
Republican leaders in the Senate unveil a new plan to mess with the vote-by-mail process, and voting rights groups are calling them out.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Republicans insist they are not trying to suppress the vote; it’s all about preventing fraud in the future.
— The Governor and Cabinet adopt new rules to try to streamline the clemency process. Attorney Richard Greenberg says it’s about time.
— The clemency board also voted to rescind any fines imposed by local governments for violating mask mandates or other COVID-19 rules.
— Gov. DeSantis opens a new pod where seniors in Sumter County can get the one-dose COVID-19 vaccination from Johnson & Johnson.
— The Florida Department of Health reports 62 more fatalities from COVID-19. Did you ever imagine a time when 62 deaths in one day is considered an improvement?
— And finally, a Florida Woman is jailed in New Orleans, accused of firing several shots into a crowd and wounding two teenagers on Bourbon Street. And a Florida Man is busted after bouncing on his neighbor’s trampoline in the nude.
“After cancellation last year, 2020 FSU grads get their chance to walk in May graduation ceremony” via Byron Dobson of the Tallahassee Democrat — Florida State University President John Thrasher, who recently announced in-person commencement services for the Class of 2021, says the Class of 2020 is getting the same treatment. The COVID-19 pandemic caused the university to cancel traditional ceremonies last year and make the pomp and circumstance virtual. But those graduates now have their chance to walk and flip the tassel. Ceremonies for Class of 2020 graduates will be held at the Tucker Center on Saturday, May 22, and Sunday, May 23. Social distancing requires graduates will be seated on the Tucker Center floor, and allowed four guests each in the audience.
In-person graduation will return to FSU for the class of 2020. Image via Facebook.
“Attention, Spring Break tourists: Age matters at this Fort Lauderdale hotspot” via Madeleine Marr of the Miami Herald — This may come as a buzzkill to spring breakers, but a popular bar recently added age restrictions for out-of-towners. Meaning that if even if you’re of legal age, 21, you won’t be able to get into The Wharf Fort Lauderdale, at least for now. On Instagram, the popular outdoor venue posted a notice saying that if you carry an out-of-state ID, you must be 23 and up, through March 31. For those who fit the criteria: “General admission & walk-ups are welcome,” says the post. “However, we will be operating at reduced capacity. Masks must be worn at all times while walking through common areas and when not eating or drinking.”
What Kevin Sweeny is reading — “St. Johns County Buc-ee’s hosts grand opening” via Sheldon Gardner of the St. Augustine Record — The Buc-ee’s grand opening in St. Johns County began around 6 a.m. Monday with a line of people waiting for the doors to open, managers said. By a little after 10 a.m., people were still buzzing around the convenience store and gas station near the World Golf Village in St. Johns County, the first location in Florida. The day included a visit by Buc-ee’s co-founder Arch “Beaver” Aplin III, known as Beaver since his mother gave him the nickname.
— THE PLAYERS —
“Fans eager to renew Players Championship tradition after pandemic year” via Jennifer Ready of News4Jax — Some fans at The Players Championship said they’re enjoying their first major sporting event in the last year because of the pandemic, and they’re eager to get outside and enjoy the event safely. For many people in Northeast Florida, The Players Championship is a tradition. Andrew Kennon and his family look forward to the tournament every year. “Just came out to walk with my daughter and get her outside,” Kennon said. “I volunteered a couple [of] years before, and we usually come every year. This is her first time.” Kennon is one of many fans planning to check out the action this week and feel a sense of normalcy.
For The Players 2021, excitement abounds, but fans are sparse. Image via the Jacksonville Business Journal.
“The Players Championship fan experience, 2021 version: Contactless, hopefully seamless” via Garry Smits of the Florida Times-Union — The only thing normal about going to The Players Championship this week will be the drive to the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass. The Tour’s prevailing feeling is that it’s too early to relax COVID-19 health and safety protocols. The 2021 Players won’t be spring break. “It will look different,” said executive director Jared Rice. “It will feel different. What we’re asking is that fans comply with the protocols and do it for the greater good. This will be an amazing opportunity to show the world, through our [TV] telecast, that this community came out and supported the event in a safe manner.”
“Anniversary marks progress of pandemic, not the end” via Doug Ferguson for The Associated Press — The backdrop was a navy blue board filled with 33 logos of The Players Championship. Sitting next to PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan was the gold trophy as he spoke about scrapping the tour’s premier event last year and how golf made it through the COVID-19 pandemic. At least there wasn’t a “Mission Accomplished” banner. It’s tempting to think that way. Monahan mentioned the phrase “light at the end of the tunnel” on three occasions during his news conference Tuesday, which typically is more of a “State of the Tour.” This was a state of the pandemic.
“Justin Thomas surprises cancer patient at The Players Championship” via Mia O’Brien of First Coast News — March 11, 2020, is largely regarded as the day “the world shut down” due to the coronavirus pandemic. But for Jacksonville native T. Bender Middlekauff, his world changed on March 8, 2020. Middlekauff suffered a seizure at a friend’s house and was rushed to Baptist Medical Center Beaches. It was soon discovered that the seizure was provoked by a type of tumor known as a glioma that occurs in the brain and spinal cord and is most common in men ages 30-60. Bender’s treatment plan moving forward will include seven weeks of radiation treatment followed by six weeks of chemotherapy at Baptist MD Anderson. Two months after surgery, he carded his second career hole-in-one at Timuquana Country Club.
“Field of green: Players Stadium Course weathers cold winter, in pristine condition” via Garry Smits of the Florida Times-Union — It’s been more than a decade since the First Coast has had a colder winter. TPC Sawgrass director of agronomy Jeff Plotts said he and his team were still able to get the Players Stadium Course “worthy of the best players in the world” for this week’s Players Championship. Indeed, Plotts said there is a benefit to some cold weather for a March Players, as long as it doesn’t get too extreme. And the 18 nights of frost that he counted on the property during the winter — more than in the previous five years combined since he became the superintendent — helped keep the Bermuda grass from growing and battling the winter rye for supremacy on the fairways and greens.
“PGA Tour institutes ‘Bryson Rule’ with internal OB left of the lake on No. 18 at TPC Sawgrass” via Adam Shupak of Golf Week — Just days after Bryson DeChambeau said he would consider aiming left of the water at the dogleg-left par-4, 462-yard 18th hole at the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass, the Players Championship Rules Committee has installed an internal out of bounds left of the lake for play of Hole 18. Rules officials heard about DeChambeau’s latest gambit and nipped any thoughts of taking a unique route at 18 in the bud. Any shot coming to rest left of the white stakes on 18 will be determined to be out of bounds.
Happy birthday
Celebrating today are Emily Jeanne Barber, Floridian Partners’ Nichole Geary, and Janet Scherberger.
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Good morning. The first round of the Greatest Product of All Time tournament is here, which means we’ll begin narrowing down the field of 64 contenders to crown the one and only GPOAT.
It’s sure to be a wild day of upsets, buzzer-beaters, and a few tears. Here are some key matchups to watch.
Legends region: #8 New York Yankees hat vs. #9 Bud Light, #2 Lego vs. #15 Denny’s Grand Slam breakfast
Unsung Heroes region: #3 Duct tape vs. #14 Kleenex, #6 Intel chip vs. #11 Velcro
How to play along: First-round voting will take place exclusively on our Twitter account beginning at 9am ET. So read your Brew, sip your brew, then go vote!
365 days ago, Americans were confronted with a series of headlines that seemed to be lifted from a sci-fi novel: the NBA was suspended, Tom Hanks announced he had Covid-19 (we were still adding the -19 back then), and the WHO declared the novel coronavirus a global pandemic.
It’s been a long year. Here are some of the most important numbers across business, the economy, and public health to put things in perspective.
Health: Nearly 118 million people globally fell ill with the coronavirus, and 2.6 million people have died. In the US, almost 528,000 people have died due to Covid; a year ago today, the US death toll was 38.
Vaccines: More than 321 million vaccine doses have been administered in 118 countries. 1 in 4 adults in the US have now received their first vaccine dose, per the White House.
Stimulus: Including the latest stimulus bill,DC will have spent more than $5 trillion on emergency aid for Americans over the past year. For reference, Obama’s stimulus package following the Great Recession was $840 billion.
Jobs: Despite adding 379,000 jobs last month, the US economy is down 9.5 million jobs from pre-pandemic levels in February 2020. Some companies hired like crazy, though—Amazon was bringing on an average of 1,400 new workers a day last year.
Stocks: The S&P 500 has climbed more than 50% in a year, and the Nasdaq, which is focused on tech companies, has jumped more than 75%. Stocks that were primed for at-home life soared (Etsy +368%), while those that weren’t…still soared (Norwegian Cruise Line +206%).
Businesses: Loads of new businesses emerged from the pandemic wreckage—487,577 to be exact, says Yelp. That number is only down 14% year-over-year.
Looking ahead…tonight, Biden will deliver his first prime-time address to the country to mark the occasion.
Roblox, an online multiplayer video game platform, popped 7.75% in its public debut yesterday to close with a market cap of $38 billion.
The backstory: Roblox is a free platform that allows players to create their own mini games. For example, one user might construct an obstacle course that another can attempt to complete, or a performer could host a concert like Lil Nas X did last November.
Kids love it
With an estimated 199 million monthly active users as of January, more than half of which are under the age of 13, the game is more popular with the youths than saying “yeet” for no reason.
It’s also been minting money. Robloxgenerated $923.9 million in revenue last year, primarily through the sale of virtual in-game currency called “Robux.” And although it has yet to turn a profit, the company expects to rake in between $1.44 billion and $1.52 billion in 2021 revenue.
Bottom line: Roblox went public via direct listing, a stiff-arm to the traditional IPO process and its hefty investment banking fees. This method ensures that company shareholders themselves, not investment banks, capture more of the stock’s gains.
Yesterday, the House followed the Senate’s lead and passed President Biden’s enormous $1.9 trillion Covid relief package. He’s expected to sign it into law tomorrow.
As we wrote earlier this week, this bill is more focused on giving money to governments and individuals rather than businesses. But it does provide billions in relief to some struggling sectors, including…
Restaurants: The bill contains a $28.6 billion “revitalization fund” that will dole out grants to cover pandemic-related revenue shortfalls. Lobbyists for the sector say it’s lost $255 billion during the social distancing era.
Event venues: They received $1.25 billion in grant money, on top of the $15 billion the live entertainment industry secured in the stimulus package approved in December. The “Save Our Stages” campaign rallied support from lawmakers and high-profile artists, pointing out that you can’t sell a takeout concert.
Airlines: American Airlines told 13,000 employees who had received furlough notices to “tear them up” following the passage of the bill, which provides more funding for the Payroll Support Program.
Zoom out: Other businesses like gym operators were miffed they were left out of this round of support, arguing they were subject to the same restrictions as restaurants and entertainment venues.
Or at least make sure you’re sitting down, because do we have a financial doosie to drop on you: Depending on your age, every year you wait to buy life insurance, you add between 4.5% and 9.2% to your premium every year.
Stat: Searches for “fully vaccinated travel” jumped 750% and “CDC guidelines for travel” spiked 650% on Tuesday, per Google Trends. You can see where everyone’s going on the map above.
Quote: “It is never a good idea to invest in a SPAC just because someone famous sponsors or invests in it or says it is a good investment.”
The SEC warned investors about celebrity-backed SPACs, saying that just because a famous person endorses it, it’s not necessarily good for you. Wish we woulda known that before ordering that oil diffuser made of Swarovski crystals…
Read: Open up a time capsule by reading our newsletter from March 12, 2020, which recapped all the craziness of the previous day. (Morning Brew)
Covid isn’t the only anniversary we’re remembering today. 10 years ago, the largest earthquake in Japan’s recorded history (9.0 magnitude) unleashed a massive tsunami. That tsunami flooded a generator that powered a cooling system at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, causing three reactors to melt down.
What happened next: the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986. More than 22,000 people died or went missing, and about 150,000 had to be evacuated.
What it means now: Japan, which is the world’s third-largest economy and is committed to significant emissions reductions, is highly uneasy about nuclear energy.
The government recently offered incentives to any towns that were willing to study hosting nuclear waste. Only two (out of about 1,700) took them up on it, and the home of the mayor of one of those towns was targeted by a Molotov cocktail.
Zoom out: Some of that uneasiness around nuclear energy has spread to other countries since the disaster, including Germany. But other countries, including the US, France, and the UK, are more willing to consider it as a zero-emissions energy source.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
GE’s big makeover continues. It’s merging its aircraft leasing business with Ireland’s AerCap in a deal worth over $30 billion.
Goldman Sachs pledged $10 billion over 10 years to support Black women.
McKinsey has selected Bob Sternfels as its new global managing partner. Sternfels will be tasked with restoring the consulting firm’s health following multiple PR bruisings.
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Invest in the next-gen way to spend.VITAL is the mobile-first, community-based credit card designed for digital connection and responsible spending—a combo ready to disrupt an entire industry for younger generations. VITAL’s campaign closes April 2—become an investor today.*
Demystifying algorithms: Emerging Tech Brew is running a fantastic series that goes behind-the-scenes on mysterious algorithms. Check out the latest installment about credit card fraud models.
Morning Brew mini: That’s exactly what you think it is—we’re trying out Morning Brew mini crosswords. Try the first one here.
The next Bill Nye: If you a) feel like giggling and/or b) don’t understand how the mRNA vaccines for Covid-19 work, watch this TikTok.
Every other Thursday, Brew’s Bookshelf brings you a few of our favorite, business-related reads. In honor of Women’s History Month, we’re sharing some stories about women who rose to the top of the corporate world.
In Own It, Ellevest CEO Sallie Krawcheck reflects on a career with plenty of ups and downs to share her advice for succeeding in business and building financial security.
Melinda Gates’s The Moment of Lift recounts her experiences at Microsoft and in the public health sector to show why lifting up women benefits everyone.
What I Told My Daughter by Nina Tassler is a collection of advice from prominent women in government, entertainment, business, and culture.
Like a teenager trying to dupe their parents, our headline quiz effortlessly combines facts with fibs. Three of these headlines are real, but one is made up. Can you spot the fake?
“Trader buys $36 million of copper and gets painted rocks instead”
“Lost volleyball officially becomes the fastest uncrewed vessel to cross Pacific Ocean”
“Covid-19 inspires 1,200 new German words, like ‘Gesichtskondom,’ or ‘Face Condom'”
“A Brazilian entrepreneur is crafting bikinis out of tape to give customers perfect tan lines”
ANSWER
We made up the volleyball one.
✢ A Note From Policygenius
4.5%-9.2% increase each year: Policygenius calculated the average annual increase in cost for non-smoking men and women in their 30s (4.5% increase), 40s (7.8% increase), and 50s (9.2% increase) with Preferred health ratings for a $1M, 20-year term life insurance policy in all states with each of the 11 carriers that offer policies through the Policygenius marketplace. Calculation is based on a composite of policies from AIG, Banner, Brighthouse, Lincoln, Mutual of Omaha, Pacific Life, Principal, Protective, Prudential, SBLI, and Transamerica and may vary by carrier, term, coverage amount, health class, and state. Not all policies are available in all states. Rate illustration valid as of 9/22/2020.
Des Moines Register reporter Andrea Sahouri was arrested and pepper-sprayed while covering a racial justice protest that descended into chaos on May 31. Des Moines police also arrested Sahouri’s boyfriend at the time, Spenser Robnett, who said he had accompanied her to help keep her safe. The pair faced fines and up to 30 days in jail for two charges: failure to disperse and interference with official acts.
…
At least 126 U.S. journalists were arrested or detained on the job in 2020, many of them while covering protests sparked by the killing of George Floyd, but most of those journalists had their charges dropped, if they were charged at all. Of the dozen or so still facing charges, Sahouri is so far the only one to stand trial, according to the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker, which monitors such cases.
…
Although the First Amendment doesn’t grant journalists privileges to go places the public can’t, prosecutors have traditionally declined to pursue charges against reporters covering protests. In court, prosecutors had argued that Sahouri’s status as a journalist was irrelevant to the charges and that she and Robnett had ignored an order to disperse and then interfered with an arrest, and therefore committed crimes.
All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLShould Big Tech be broken up?
Yes
68%
No
13%
Unsure
19%
317 votes, 141 comments
BEST COMMENTS“Yes – Apple not allowing other app stores on their devices is anti-competitive and not good for consumers. Amazon has puts 10’s of thousands (likely hundreds of thousands) of local businesses out of business. Technically it’s costing us less money to buy our products but it’s eliminated millions of good jobs and replaced them with less jobs and less good jobs which is incredibly detrimental to the overall economy. In addition they have the dangerous ability to control the flow of information for most Americans opening the door of censorship.”
“No – Honestly, I think that we benefit more when big tech stays big. They have a better chance to have a positive impact in our liv…”
“Unsure – If big tech companies are indeed in violation of anti-trust laws as currently wri…”
President Biden’s sweeping relief package has been voted through the House in a distinctly partisan vote. Only Maine Rep. Jared Golden broke ranks with his Democrat colleagues to vote against the bill, along with all Republicans. Biden is expected to sign the bill into law either late Friday or early Saturday. Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) said, “Let’s be clear: This isn’t a rescue bill. It isn’t a relief bill. It’s a laundry list of left-wing priorities that predate the pandemic and do not meet the needs of the American families.”
Is $1.9 Trillion Package Just Ideology Wrapped in Dollar Bills?
Media outlets are heralding the House vote for the $1.9 trillion spending package as the first step in a shift away from pandemic rescue to poverty relief. Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) said the bill was ″an ideological revolution on behalf of justice.” This attitude may surprise many Americans who follow the legacy media, which for the last month has been hailing this as something to do with COVID.
George Floyd Trial – Third-Degree Murder Back on the Table
My Pillow founder and CEO Mike Lindell has announced that he will be forming a social media company, saying that people won’t need to use outlets like YouTube or Twitter anymore. He predicts the launch will take place in three to five weeks.
The Senate has voted 70-30 to confirm Merrick Garland as the Attorney General. During his confirmation hearing, Garland swore to “fend off any effort by anyone to make prosecutions or investigations partisan or political in any way.”
A local reporter is suing Michigan’s health department for denying repeated requests for nursing home data. The situation is being compared to the New York alleged cover-up under Governor Andrew Cuomo.
Iran-Backed Houthi Terrorists Didn’t Get Biden’s Friendship Memo
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
For a primer on jury selection – useful for those watching the Derek Chauvin murder trial – the book The Juror, by John Grisham, may be a good starting point. It details how the jurors are chosen not based entirely on their select answers but on numerous factors that the prosecution and defense might utilize to either sway or hang the jury. What we are seeing is a brutal battle between lawyers determined to give their case the best possible advantage.
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
Cuomo faces new accuser as aide alleges groping incident at governor’s mansion: report A female aide alleges New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo aggressively groped her in a sexual manner after she was summoned to the governor’s mansion last year, a person familiar with the woman’s claims reportedly said.
The staff member had been called to the mansion to help Cuomo with phone troubles. They were alone in his private residence, and he shut the door, reached under her blouse and groped her, according to the source.
The woman is much younger than the governor, according to the source, who is not authorized to comment publicly. The aide told Cuomo to stop when he reached under her blouse. The woman reportedly said the governor frequently flirted with her and it wasn’t the only time he touched her.
Details of the woman’s accusation were reported by the Albany Times-Union. The paper wrote an initial report with fewer details Tuesday. Her identity has not been released.
In response to the Times-Union report, Cuomo said in a statement: “As I said yesterday, I have never done anything like this. The details of this report are gut-wrenching. I am not going to speak to the specifics of this or any other allegation given the ongoing review, but I am confident in the result of the attorney general’s report.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Andrew Cuomo: 85 New York lawmakers call for governor to either resign or be impeached
– New York lawmakers circulate letter to demand Cuomo’s resignation, assemblyman says
– Kamala Harris ignores question on Cuomo sexual harassment scandal
– Cuomo’s office flooded with protesters demanding Democratic governor’s resignation
– CNN, MSNBC both go full 24 hours without on-air mention of Andrew Cuomo’s sixth accuser
– New York lawmaker alleges Cuomo ‘personally profited’ off book deal at height of COVID pandemic
Queen ‘privately devastated’ by Meghan Markle, Prince Harry’s Oprah interview, royal insider says
Queen Elizabeth II is allegedly heartbroken after Meghan Markle and Prince Harry’s bombshell interview with Oprah Winfrey aired Sunday night.
“The queen, who has never given a formal media interview, is said to be privately devastated by the shocking revelations and the potential damage to the reputation of the Royal Family,” royal author Katie Nicholl wrote for Vanity Fair.
“She is also deeply concerned for Prince Philip, who remains in the hospital recovering from a heart procedure,” Nicholl added.
While it’s not known if the reigning monarch watched the interview privately, the 94-year-old was reportedly briefed by palace aides at breakfast earlier this week. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Piers Morgan polarizes Twitter as he doubles down on criticism of Meghan Markle’s ‘diatribe of bilge’
– Sharon Osbourne addresses Piers Morgan support: ‘It’s not my opinion’
– What members of the royal family do not get pricey protection?
– Meghan Markle’s friend Janina Gavankar says ’emails and texts’ support Oprah Winfrey interview claims
Utah mother dies four days after taking second COVID vaccine dose
A 39-year-old Utah mom died just four days after receiving her second dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine, according to a report.
Kassidi Kurill, who lived in Ogden, took the second dose on Feb. 1. By Friday evening that week, she was dead, according to KUTV-TV of Salt Lake City, which was the first to report on Kurill’s case.
“She was seemingly healthy as a horse,” Kurill’s father, Alfred Hawley, told Fox News. “She had no known underlying conditions.”
On Tuesday, Kurill’s condition worsened. Her father said she complained that she was drinking fluids by not urinating and had a headache and nausea. By Wednesday, she felt a little better. But on Thursday, her heart began racing and Hawley took her to a hospital.
“They were trying to get her to a point where she was stable enough for a liver transplant. And they just could not get her stable,” Hawley said. “She got worse and worse throughout the day. And at nine o’clock, she passed.”
In other developments:
– Trump takes credit for ‘China virus’ vaccine: ‘I hope everyone remembers!’
– Family of Phoenix 911 operator who died files $35M lawsuit: ‘They overworked her’
– House passes landmark $1.9T COVID bill, delivers Biden first legislative win
– Fauci draws backlash for admitting CDC must make ‘judgment call’ on whether vaccinated people can travel
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Pelosi-Milley phone call about ‘unhinged’ Trump is target of Judicial Watch lawsuit
– Biden’s COVID bill could be defining political issue in midterm elections
– CNN report suggests GOP senators oppose two Biden DOJ nominees because they’re ‘women of color’
– US losing military edge in Asia as China looks like it is planning for war: US Indo-Pacific Command chief
– Idaho killer Joseph Duncan has terminal brain cancer
– China’s parliament approves plan to reform Hong Kong’s electoral system
– Susan Sarandon says she’s open to dating ‘someone who’s been vaccinated’ for coronavirus THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Warren Buffett’s fortune tops $100B as his stock soars
– NHL, ESPN announce 7-year agreement beginning next season
– Unilever to remove the word ‘normal’ from beauty products and ads as a way to be inclusive
– Boeing close to major order for dozens of 737 MAX jets: sources
– Amtrak restoring service on long-distance routes
– 30-year mortgage rates hit highest since July, refis cool
#The Flashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Tucker Carlson took a closer look Wednesday at former Minneapolis police Officer Derek Chauvin’s murder trial in the George Floyd case.
“On one level, this trial is a local crime story, one of many unfolding right now. But, of course, it’s also incalculably more than that,” Carlson said on “Tucker Carlson Tonight.”“The death of George Floyd changed the United States profoundly and forever.
“George Floyd wasn’t simply an individual, he was every African-American in the country. Derek Chauvin wasn’t just a cop, he was a physical embodiment of America’s institutions. When Chauvin murdered George Floyd, he was doing to one man what our country has done to all African-Americans. George Floyd was murdered because he was Black – that’s what they told us. They demanded that we believe that.”
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If recent government spending leads to a sustained surge in inflation, the Federal Reserve could be forced to raise interest rates and potentially deny low-wage workers the benefits of a sustained economic expansion.
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, no other country in the world is pumping money into its economy quite like the United States is. So America is about to run a pretty wild experiment, risking soaring inflation and a short-circuited recovery.
Vincent H. Smith and Eric J. Belasco | MarketWatch
Thanks to Congress and the average less-affluent American taxpayer, farmers and other agricultural landowners get a steady and substantial return on their investments through subsidies that consistently guarantee and increase those revenues.
“The number of migrant children and families seeking to cross the U.S. southwest border has surged to levels not seen since before the pandemic… Statistics released Wednesday by U.S. Customs and Border Protection showed the number of children and families increased by more than 100% between January and February. Kids crossing by themselves rose 60% to more than 9,400.” AP News
In a press conference on Wednesday, Amb. Roberta Jacobson, the White House coordinator for the Southern Border, “stressed that people should not try and migrate to the United States across the border, for now. ‘La frontera no esta abierta,’ she said, repeating multiple times in Spanish that ‘the border is not open.’” NPR
In late February, it was announced that “President Joe Biden’s administration has reopened a tent facility to house up to 700 immigrant teenagers after they cross the U.S.-Mexico border unaccompanied by a parent… the first teens arrived at Carrizo Springs, Texas, which was converted two years ago into a holding facility under former President Donald Trump. The facility has been closed since July 2019.” AP News
From the Right
The right criticizes Biden’s reversal of Trump’s border policies, and argues that his rhetoric has caused an influx of migrants at the border.
“Trump overemphasized the importance of the border wall, and had a number of false starts at the border, most notoriously the ‘zero tolerance’ policy that led to family separations. By the end, though, he had created an entirely reasonable system based on his lawful authorities to impose order at the border, while still allowing asylum seekers to apply for asylum in the U.S…
“Under Trump, the Migration Protection Protocols, also known as Remain in Mexico, ended the practice of letting Central American migrants into the U.S. while their asylum claims were adjudicated. This was crucial because under the old arrangement, asylum seekers were allowed into the U.S. while their claims were considered. Even if the claims were ultimately rejected, as the vast majority of them were, the migrants overwhelmingly ended up staying anyway (we lacked the will and resources to track down and deport them)…
“The premise of the overall Trump approach was that people who feared for their lives in their home country because of persecution don’t necessarily need to come to the United States to escape. It should be enough for them to go to another country in the region, or if they are indeed applying for asylum in the U.S., to stay in Mexico while doing so. Allowing them into the U.S., with no reliable internal enforcement mechanism to remove them if their claims are rejected, constitutes an end run around our immigration system.” Rich Lowry, Politico
“This is the second time in the last two weeks that a top U.S. immigration official has resorted to begging people not to come… The obvious solution is for Biden to reinstate Trump’s rule authorizing the Border Patrol to use pandemic regulations to turn kids away, but progressives won’t tolerate that. So we’re stuck with [border czar Roberta] Jacobson’s lame pleas, plus the news that the White House is restarting the ‘Central American Minors Program’ in hopes of convincing families to keep their kids home and apply for admission from afar instead of sending them north…
“There’s evidence that this issue is beginning to bite him politically, which is good news inasmuch as it’ll give him a reason to take enforcement more seriously. Today’s new CNN poll shows his approval very solid on handling the pandemic (60/34) and moderately healthy on subjects like helping the middle class (50/43) and the economy (49/44), where he’ll probably improve as COVID recedes and the new stimulus bill begins to do its thing. On only one subject was he more than two points underwater, though. Yep, immigration — where he stands at 43/49.” Allahpundit, Hot Air
“Locals aren’t happy with the inrush of illegal immigrants [either]. The heavily Hispanic Rio Grande Valley produced one of the biggest increases in Trump’s percentages last fall. Laredo’s Democratic congressman, Henry Cuellar, lamented recently that ‘migrants are illegally crossing, potentially exposing border communities to the coronavirus and putting us at risk.’ Biden may have called Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s end to mandatory masking ‘Neanderthal’-esque, but the Biden administration seems happy to send infectious illegal immigrants all around the country.” Michael Barone, Washington Examiner
“Biden has capitulated to the far-left members of his party who think we should let in everyone from Central America, no matter the legitimacy of their asylum claims… As Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, a proud man of the left, has put it: ‘They see him as the migrant president, and so many feel they’re going to reach the United States.’ Reuters reports that those on the top levels of Mexico’s government are tearing their hair out over how this boosts the crime cartels, which cash in on ‘helping’ the migrants. That nation’s internal documents bewail Team Biden measures that ‘incentivize migration.’” Editorial Board, New York Post
From the Left
The left argues that Biden’s policies are not comparable to Trump’s family separation program, and urges him to pursue long-term solutions such as reducing instability in Central America.
“It’s important to note that the Texas facility is run not by Border Patrol, but by the Office of Refugee Resettlement [ORR]… In this case, the overflow at ORR is being caused in part by the rise in migrant children arriving at the border alone, not after being separated from parents…
“We need to scrutinize whether the administration makes good on its promise to make the conditions under which ORR holds children, including at such warehouse facilities, genuinely more humane. Also crucial is whether the administration undertakes reforms to speed up the process of moving kids from ORR to guardians… [But] Comparing all this to ‘kids in cages’ confuses the debate in a way that obscures what the Biden administration is genuinely trying to accomplish — and thus makes it harder to actually hold the administration accountable on it.” Greg Sargent, Washington Post
“Of course, it’s never OK to cage children, force them to sleep on floors covered with aluminum-foil blankets and deny them basic sanitation as Trump did. It’s never OK to rip babies from their mothers, deport the parent and lose contact with them. Biden isn’t doing any of that…
“The agency responsible for the temporary care of the unaccompanied children describes the facility as a self-sufficient site equipped with medical and fire services, a dining tent, a soccer field, a basketball court and all sorts of staff, including translators that are available 24/7… Where Biden erred was to open a facility that symbolizes Trump’s camps.” Elvia Díaz, Arizona Republic
“We welcome Biden’s more humane approach, but wonder whether it will succeed in the face of the rising tide of juveniles arriving without parents or guardians. Once again the nation is watching its government strain to meet obligations Congress imposed to treat unaccompanied minors with the delicacy they deserve. Once again we see a growing crisis spotlight the broad inadequacies of the government’s immigration enforcement system to deal compassionately with human migration…
“The solutions require broad vision and actions, including efforts to reduce the instability in Central American countries that send so many people fleeing in the first place. Such efforts, of course, run into a headwind of deep-rooted corruption in some of those countries. But the longer the government leaves those broad solutions unfulfilled, the more it will be forced to deal with waves of migration, one crisis following another. We need a better way of doing this.” Editorial Board, Los Angeles Times
“The White House was never likely to convince many Republicans, still in thrall to Mr. Trump, of the merits of a more humane asylum policy, let alone broader goals of legalizing 11 million long-term unauthorized immigrants, or even ‘dreamers’ brought to the country as children. But a chaotic flood of migrants crossing the border, and the resulting GOP demagoguery about ‘catch-and-release,’ increases the risk that moderates and independents could recoil from Mr. Biden’s push for immigration reform…
“The only real solution is a long-term one. It involves sending aid to Central America that improves conditions in the region; beefing up immigration courts with a major infusion of new judges to expand their capacity so that asylum claims are processed quickly and the years-long case backlog is shrunk; and, perhaps, screening and processing asylum applicants in Central America, perhaps Guatemala — a prospect that seems far off at best. For the time being, Mr. Biden must manage a balancing act, reestablishing the United States’ traditional role as a beacon for beleaguered immigrants while also avoiding a massive new wave of illegal immigration that many Americans would object to.” Editorial Board, Washington Post
☕ Good Thursday morning. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,176 words … 4½ minutes.
💻 Join Axios health care editor Sam Baker tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET for a virtual event on the future of health care, with Sen. Bill Cassidy (who’s also Dr. Cassidy) and former U.S. deputy CTO Ryan Panchadsaram.Sign up here.
1 big thing: America’s nightmarish year is finally ending
Today, one year after the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic, the end of that pandemic is within reach.
The death and suffering caused by the coronavirus have been much worse than many people expected a year ago — but the vaccines have been much better, Axios health care editor Sam Baker writes.
A year ago today, the U.S. had confirmed 1,000 coronavirus infections. Now, we’re approaching 30 million.
In those early days, Americans were terrified by White House projections — informed by well-respected modeling — that 100,000 to 240,000 Americans could die from the virus. That actual number now sits at just under 530,000.
Many models thought the virus would peak last May — nowhere close. The deadliest month of the pandemic was January.
But last March, even the sunniest optimists didn’t expect the U.S. to have a vaccine by now.
They certainly didn’t anticipate that 300 million shots would already be in arms worldwide. And they didn’t think the eventual vaccines would be anywhere near as effective as these turned out to be.
Where it stands: President Biden has said every American adult who wants a vaccine will be able to get one by the end of May — and the country is on track to meet that target.
The U.S. is administering an average of 2 million shots per day. Roughly 25% of the adult population has gotten at least one shot.
The federal government has purchased more doses than this country can use: 300 million from Pfizer, 300 million from Moderna and 200 million from Johnson & Johnson.
The Pfizer and Moderna orders alone would be more than enough to fully vaccinate every American adult (the vaccines aren’t yet authorized for use in children).
But millions of Americans are still awaiting their first shot — and navigating signup websites is frustrating and awful.
The big picture: Cases, hospitalizations and deaths are all falling sharply at the same time vaccinations are ramping up.
USA Todaydeclared: “Hospitals report third wave is over.”
The bottom line: Measured in death, loss, isolation and financial ruin, this year felt like an eternity. Measured from the declaration of a pandemic to 60 million Americans vaccinated, the year was an instant.
🎧 On today’s episode of “The Week America Changed,” NewYork-Presbyterian CEO Steven Corwin tells Dan Primack how the hospital managed the “tsunami” of COVID cases last spring. Sign up.
2. Native American tribes lead way on vaccinations
In Shiprock, N.M., Northern Navajo Medical Center staff were among the first in the Navajo Nation to receive Pfizer-BioNTech vaccinations. Photo: Micah Garen/Getty Images
Despite severe technological barriers, some Native American tribes are vaccinating their members for COVID so efficiently that they’ve been able to branch out and offer vaccines to people outside of their tribes, Axios’ Shawna Chen and Russell Contreras write.
Why it matters: Native Americans are one of the most at-risk groups for contracting and dying from COVID-19. But tribal nations have rallied to get members vaccinated and helped nearby communities while major cities have struggled with rollouts.
Three Indigenous principles have helped provide the impetus to get vaccinated, according to activist Allie Young, a citizen of the Navajo Nation:
Recognize how Native Americans’ actions will impact the next seven generations.
Act in honor of ancestors who fought to ensure their survival and elders who carry on their traditions and cultures.
Hold on to ancestral knowledge in the ongoing fight to protect Mother Earth.
In President Biden’s first primetime speech (8 p.m. tonight), he’ll “launch the next phase of the COVID response, and explain what we will do as a government and what we will ask of the American people.
In a sneak peek, Biden said the speech — expected to run under 20 minutes — will “talk about what we went through as a nation this past year. But more importantly, I’m going to talk about what comes next.”
A White House preview says Biden will speak about how this has been the greatest operational challenge the country has faced.
🗞️ How it’s playing …
Go deeper: What’s inside the bill, which Biden is expected to sign tomorrow.
4. Pictures of America
Sgt. Hannah Boulder of the Michigan National Guard sings while playing guitar in the Capitol Rotunda yesterday.
In Chicago, a drone’s-eye view of white tents — in a parking lot at the United Center, home to the Chicago Bulls and Blackhawks — that opened yesterday as a mass vaccination site (6,000 residents per day).
5. First look: New report urges reopening of schools
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
There’s a dire need to reopen schools as quickly as possible — and it can be done without endangering teachers, families or the community, Axios’ Jennifer A. Kingson writes from a report to be presented to Congress.
The report— commissioned by the Walton Family Foundation, AEI and five other nonprofits — analyzed the conclusions of 130+ studies:
Any benefits to closing schools are far outweighed by the grave risks to children from remote-only schooling, the report says.
The harms include academic loss — so severe children could be set back for life — and mental health issues from loneliness and isolation.
There are also severe hardships on parents — mothers in particular, about 2 million of whom have left the workforce to care for their kids as part of remote learning.
Keep reading, for Jennifer’s conversation with the report’s author.
6. Dow sets record in “catch-up rally”
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
The Dow set its 11th record of 2021, closing above 32,000 for the first time in what Axios Markets editor Dion Rabouin calls a catch-up rally for stocks that were unloved during the pandemic:
In 2021, the Dow’s mix of financial, health care and retail companies has outperformed the tech-heavy Nasdaq.
Investors are betting big on oil, banks and airlines.
7. Rising global food prices could foreshadow social unrest
Global food prices rose for the ninth straight month in February, bringing the Food and Agriculture Organization’s Food Price Index to its highest level since July 2014, Axios Future author Bryan Walsh writes.
Why it matters: Past spikes in the price of food staples put pressure on the world’s poorest and have been connected to periods of social unrest, including the Arab Spring.
An unnamed aide to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo told the Albany Times Union that he groped her in the governor’s mansion — the most serious allegation yet by a half-dozen women.
The paper reported that the staffer “had been called to the mansion under the apparent pretext of having her assist the governor with a minor technical issue involving his mobile phone. They were alone in Cuomo’s private residence on the second floor when he closed the door and allegedly reached under her blouse and began to fondle her.”
Cuomo said in a statement: “I have never done anything like this. The details of this report are gut-wrenching.”
9. A stark story
Graphic: MSNBC
10. Students plot rogue graduation
Illustration: Rebecca Zisser/Axios
University of Tampa students and parents — upset with the private school’s decision to hold a virtual commencement — plan to throw a graduation of their own, Selene San Felice writes in Axios Tampa Bay.
Why it matters: As more people get vaccinated — and cities like Tampa prove big events (Super Bowl and victory boat parade) can happen relatively safely — schools face new pressure for real-life tassels.
A group of students started a petition to pressure the school into having an in-person commencement. There’s a GoFundMe to help pay for the venue and live-streaming costs.
Take the local: Sign up here for Axios Charlotte, Denver, Des Moines, Tampa Bay or Twin Cities — or to be notified about future cities.
Democrats’ comments on the legislation — and GOP complaints that the sprawling bill does more to address long-held liberal priorities than attack the twin economic and health-care crises brought on by the coronavirus pandemic — gave Republicans political cover to oppose the package in unison.
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s nursing home deathtraps have silent partners — a network of some 7,000 group homes where thousands of disabled COVID-19-positive residents languished with little foresight or intervention by the state, a whistleblower has told the Washington Examiner.
President Biden entered office promising rapid action to bring the coronavirus pandemic under control and deliver an aid package for millions of people struggling in the economic downturn.
Republican legislation meant to stop censorship on social media platforms could backfire and result in less conservative speech and a number of onerous lawsuits that will hamstring their goals, conservative lawyers say.
A decade after Congress eliminated earmarks after years of bipartisan opposition to the practice and outrage over the excess and influence they fostered, House Democrats are bringing a version of the provisions back.
President Biden moves more slowly than when he was vice president under former President Barack Obama. He squints slightly when looking at the teleprompter and sometimes misspeaks anyway.
President Biden likely would be greeted by the sounds of boos if he issues calls for bipartisanship and unity during his first address to a joint session of Congress, according to some Republicans.
Former President Donald Trump on Wednesday night sent out the latest in his series of tweemails, emails that have increasingly looked like his tweets of yore.
The White House acknowledges an ongoing genocide against the Uyghur Muslims by the Chinese Communist Party, ending days of stubborn resistance by the State Department to say such an atrocity is happening in the present tense.
The Senate confirmed Michael Regan to lead the Environmental Protection Agency in a bipartisan 66-34 vote despite concerns from some GOP lawmakers that he will help President Biden’s team issue strict emissions mandates.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
March 11, 2021
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AP Morning Wire
Good morning from The Hague. It’s been a year since the World Health Organization declared the coronavirus pandemic. We report from Geneva on how the U.N. agency is still struggling with its response to the global crisis, while in Washington, U.S. Congress has approved President Joe Biden’s sweeping $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill.
Also this morning:
Japan marks the 10th anniversary of its earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster.
Brazil’s hospitals buckle under the strain of the coronavirus.
And looking ahead to the Grammys, we talk to bluesman Jimmy “Duck” Holmes at his Mississippi juke joint.
GENEVA (AP) — When the World Health Organization declared the coronavirus a pandemic one year ago Thursday, it did so only after weeks of resisting the term and maintaining that the highly……Read More
One year into the COVID-19 pandemic, the world has seen death, economic hardship and anxiety on an unprecedented scale. But it has also witnessed self-sacrifice, courage and perseverance. In….Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — A Congress riven along party lines has approved the landmark $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill, as President Joe Biden and Democrats claimed a major triumph on legislation….Read More
TOKYO (AP) — Japan is marking the 10th anniversary Thursday of the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster that hit the northeastern region, where many survivors’ lives are still on hold…….Read More
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Brazil’s hospitals are faltering as a highly contagious coronavirus variant tears through the country, the president insists on unproven treatments and the only attempt …Read More
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Potential jurors in Derek Chauvin’s murder trial return Thursday to continue a selection process moving more quickly than expected. Meanwhile, the former…Read More
The images ricochet across the planet, as so many do in this dizzying era of film it, upload it, tell it to the world: scenes from a protest-turned-government crackdown, ca…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — Marking a year of loss and disruption, President Joe Biden will use his first prime-time address since taking office to steer the nation toward a hungered…Read More
BENTONIA, Miss. (AP) — With calloused hands, Jimmy “Duck” Holmes plucks an old acoustic guitar at the juke joint his parents started more than 70 years ago. He checks the c…Read More
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Angelika Geerlof said the bodies of her daughter and daughter’s boyfriend were in his pickup on the Sanibel Causeway, apparently unchecked, for four days.
Good morning, Chicago. A year ago today, COVID-19 was declared a pandemic, changing the world as we knew it. Now, many public health experts believe the light at the end of the tunnel is real, if we remain vigilant about taking precautions, tracking cases and getting vaccines into arms.
Over the next few days, the Tribune will be sharing stories about those we’ve lost, hope we’ve found and how industries and institutions are building themselves back up.
Since the beginning of the pandemic, Illinois has recorded 1,202,709 confirmed cases of COVID-19, 20,810 fatalities and 3,567,927 vaccine doses administered. On Wednesday, officials reported 1,682 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 and 30 additional fatalities, as well as 104,777 coronavirus vaccinations administered Tuesday.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
First came a tough spring surge. Then, an even more brutal fall and winter. Through it all, Illinois managed to avoid the overwhelmed hospitals seen in other states. But a new Tribune analysis shows that the two waves took an extraordinarily high toll on the state’s population.
Looking at federal estimates of excess deaths, Illinois ranked among the 10 worst states from March through December 2020. Nearly 111,000 people died in Illinois over the 10-month period. That’s 27% higher than the average for 2015 through 2019.
People getting vaccinated at the United Center Tuesday and Wednesday did not get their second dose appointments confirmed on-site, officials said despite earlier promises to the contrary.
For those first two days that Chicago’s latest large vaccination center opened, the second dose appointments for the Pfizer vaccine were instead “automatically scheduled” with details to arrive later via text and email, according to a Wednesday statement from the Chicago Department of Public Health.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot opened the door Wednesday to a more traditional summer in Chicago, saying the city is doing well in its fight against the coronavirus while highlighting the relative safety of outdoor activities.
“I believe that the summer of 2021 is going to look more like 2019 and less like 2020, but we’ve got to be driven by and led by what the science and the public health guidance tells us,” Lightfoot said at an unrelated news conference.
The long-standing 6-feet social distancing rule for Illinois schools has been halved to 3 feet, part of loosened guidelines unveiled by state education and health departments that say the new rules are needed for a rapid return to the classroom.
Six feet of social distancing must still be strictly maintained in situations where face masks are removed, such as during lunch, which is considered one of the higher-risk activities in school. Otherwise, except for those who have medical exemptions, face masks are required at all times, and the guidance calls for masks of at least two layers without any vents.
Some changes will be out of view, such as the new ice machine or sales processing system. Others will be apparent to the eagle-eyed — new menu items and new dining room windows installed this week to improve ventilation for the next stage of pandemic living.
On March 16, 2020, Patricia Frieson became the first person in Illinois to die of the coronavirus. It claimed her sister, Wanda Bailey, just nine days later.
Their brother, Anthony Frieson, talked to the Sun-Times about how their family became “essentially the first” in the state to understand the full cruelty of COVID-19. Maudlyne Iherijika has the story…
The Chicago Police Department on Wednesday unveiled a carjacking-specific website as law enforcement continues to combat the troubling increase in carjackings plaguing the city and its surrounding areas.
Chicago will be allotted 60% of the vaccines administered at the United Center for its residents, while Cook County and the state determine rules for other residents.
Hotel revenues that support the events are down, but a mayoral aide hopes the city’s $1.8 billion in new federal relief-funds can help pay for large summer events, including Taste of Chicago and the Air and Water Show.
CPS leaders acknowledged families are frustrated not to have more information by now and admitted the district is still “in the early stages” of planning.
The reforms include helping contractors obtain affordable financing, as well as making sure minority-and women-owned firms are paid on time for goods and services they provide to the city.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Today is Thursday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 525,035; Tuesday, 525,816; Wednesday, 527,699; Thursday, 529,203.
The House handed President Biden a major legislative victory on Wednesday when it passed the $1.9 trillion relief package as the U.S. solemnly commemorates one year since coronavirus lockdowns took hold across the country.
Lawmakers passed the massive stimulus bill, 220-211, largely along partisan lines. Rep. Jared Golden (D-Maine) was the lone Democrat to oppose the measure, while no Republican supported the bill, which includes another round of $1,400 checks, aid for state and local governments, and more help for small businesses and schools.
Biden, who made the bill and his response to COVID-19 the centerpiece of his first two months in office, is set to sign the measure into law on Friday, according to the White House.
The Hill: Biden under pressure to get $1,400 payments out quickly.
The Wall Street Journal: Latest stimulus package could jolt U.S. growth, revive inflation in 2021.
Dallas Business Journal: American Airlines says no furloughs this spring after latest stimulus package passes.
The Hill: Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) voted against the $1.9 trillion relief bill. When it passed the House on Wednesday, however, he praised $28.6 billion in grant funding included for the restaurant and bar industry, which he backed in an amendment.
The bill’s signing will take place a day after Biden addresses the nation tonight to mark a full year of the pandemic’s effect on everyday life as much of the nation has dealt with lockdowns and restrictions. On March 11 last year, former President Trump restricted travel into the U.S., the NBA postponed its season and Tom Hanks announced he had contracted the virus.
As The Hill’s Nathaniel Weixel and Brett Samuels write, Biden’s first prime-time speech will give him a chance to lean into his role as empathizer in chief, with more than 529,000 U.S. deaths since the start of the pandemic. However, the president will be able to offer up an optimistic message as the nation races to get vaccinated. Biden has pledged that every American will be able to receive a vaccine by the end of May.
“I’m going to … talk about what we’ve been through as a nation this past year, but more importantly I’m going to talk about what comes next,” Biden said at an event with executives from Johnson & Johnson and Merck.
The New York Times: A mammoth bill becomes a law this week, and Biden plans a messaging blitz to sell its economic provisions to the American people.
The Washington Post: Biden to offer hopes for a return to normalcy in first prime-time speech.
Niall Stanage: The Memo: How the COVID year upended politics.
To remember the past year that was, The Hill’s Reid Wilson looks back and examines how the world ended up where it is today. According to interviews over the last year with scientists, health experts, political leaders, and frontline health care and social workers across five continents, the story of the pandemic that emerges is one of action, or the lack thereof, with the nations that took the most proactive steps having suffered the least. Nations whose leaders pretended the virus did not pose a substantial threat, such as the U.S., or that the economy mattered more than the lives that would be lost, such as Brazil and Sweden, suffered the most.
“We refused to launch a federal response,” said Peter Hotez, who heads the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College. “We came up small every time.”
The Hill: Experts say the country needs to address loneliness, a massive public health concern, particularly as widespread vaccination is still months away.
MSNBC: Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) lost her oldest brother, Donald Herring of Oklahoma, to COVID-19 almost a year ago. She spoke Tuesday with anchor Nicolle Wallace about his death at 86: “We got what we could through the nurses, and God bless them. But they were stretched to the edges. And so we would just get like these — it was like a telegram that would just come in. And they would say, `he’s better.’ And then they would say, `he’s worse. He’s not going to make it through the night.’ Then they would say, `he’s better.’ And then he took a turn for the worse. And they called us and told us he was gone. And nobody was with him, not — not any of us. And I don’t know how he died. I don’t know — I don’t know if he was cold, or if he was thirsty. All I know is, I couldn’t be there to tell him how much I loved him, and neither could the rest of our family. And that’s hard.”
The Hill: How the pandemic turbocharged inequality.
The Associated Press: After the pandemic year, a weary world looks back — and forward.
At the one-year mark, many are looking at the light at the end of the tunnel as vaccines become more available and plentiful. According to Bloomberg News’s tracker, the U.S. is averaging 2.2 million new vaccinations per day, with nearly 19 percent of the population having received at least one dose of vaccine.
CORONAVIRUS: Amid giddy national exuberance about shedding restrictions tied to COVID-19, thanks to inoculations, face coverings and measuring tapes, Biden (pictured below at the White House) announced on Wednesday that Johnson & Johnson, maker of an effective one-dose vaccine, will deliver another 100 million doses later this year, thanks to a manufacturing partnership with Merck & Co.
That additional supply will backstop the administration’s push to offer all American adults a vaccine by the end of May, the president said. Nearly 32 million people in the United States have been fully vaccinated, close to 10 percent of the population. The nation is administering an average of 2.1 million doses per day, up from about 1.5 million a month ago (The Washington Post).
The Associated Press: European Union regulator meets today to evaluate Johnson & Johnson’s one-dose COVID-19 shot for potential authorization in Europe.
For those wondering how many lawmakers have been fully vaccinated as of this week, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) said Wednesday the answer is about three-quarters of the House. Vaccine doses have been available since December in the Capitol for representatives and senators (Roll Call).
States’ phased-in vaccination priorities for at-risk populations by age, health history and public-facing jobs are beginning to change as infection rates drop and vaccination rates improve. Texas on Wednesday said those in the state who are 50 and older will be eligible starting on March 15 to get vaccinated (The Texas Tribune).
The Lone Star State may have struggled last month to deliver electricity in cold weather, but powerful decision makers believe they have a prescription to warm up the population this spring: baseball! The Texas Rangers may allow 100 percent fan capacity for their home opener April 5 against the Toronto Blue Jays. Translation: 40,518 seats, although fans will be required to wear masks at all times (ESPN).
The New York Times: Indoor dining in New York City and New Jersey can go to 50 percent on March 19, the governors say.
> Visits with parents, grandparents: Federal officials relaxed guidance about in-person visits to nursing homes after nearly a year of lockdowns and debilitating isolation for seniors. The recommendations encourage nursing homes to permit indoor visits “at all times and for all residents,” even if outdoor visits are preferable (seen below in Washington state), regardless of whether people have been vaccinated, with some exceptions that may require some up-to-date research and data monitoring (The Washington Post).
> In the realm of COVID-19 treatments for high-risk patients soon after they contract the virus, drug maker Eli Lilly reports positive trial results with an antibody cocktail that it says reduces death and hospitalizations by 87 percent (Reuters).
The Atlantic: Unlocking the mysteries of “long COVID.”
> Surprise hospital bills: John Druschitz spent five days in a Texas hospital last April with fever and shortness of breath. Tests were inconclusive for COVID-19, and he was sent home on oxygen, later surprised to receive a bill for $22,368 that the hospital threatened to send to collections. Druschitz ultimately fell slightly short of qualifying for multiple federal health programs that would have paid for his care if the details had been slightly different. Health policy experts see his experience as a case study in how easily patients can fall through the cracks of America’s fragmented health insurance system (The New York Times).
> Death toll:West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice (R) on Wednesday apologized after he said officials discovered that the state’s COVID-19 death toll was incorrect because an estimated 168 fatalities were not reported in a timely manner to the state’s health department by 70 facilities, mostly hospitals and nursing homes. The state relied on incorrect data while deciding to lift some of its COVID-19 restrictions (PBS).
*****
POLITICS: California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) in a speech this week acknowledged the anger and anxiety that has welled up across his state ahead of a recall election.
Newsom sought in his Tuesday state of the state address to sway voters who will likely determine his future later this year, saying that California is set for a dramatic rebound after a brutal year of suffering through the pandemic, noting that he has made mistakes over the past year.
“We won’t change course just because of a few nay-sayers and dooms-dayers,” he said. “So to the California critics, who are promoting partisan power grabs and outdated prejudices and rejecting everything that makes California truly great, we say this: We will not be distracted from getting shots in arms and our economy booming again. This is a fight for California’s future.”
“I know our progress hasn’t always felt fast enough. And look, we’ve made mistakes. I’ve made mistakes. But we own them, we learn from them, and we never stop trying,” Newsom continued. “The state of our state remains determined. I remain determined” (The Hill).
> Campaigns, etc.: The National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) announced on Wednesday that it raised $6.4 million in February, with more than half of that total ($3.8 million) coming in online donations.
As The Hill’s Max Greenwood notes, the NRSC said that it ended the month with more than $15 million in the bank, having paid off $3.6 million worth of the $9 million debt it carried over from the 2020 cycle.
The New York Times: Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), amid Trump’s threats, tells GOP senators their political operation has out-raised the former president’s.
Politico: Rift between Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) shocks Senate.
The Hill: Missouri Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft (R) declines run to replace Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.).
The Hill: Audio obtained by The Wall Street Journal indicates Trump, while serving as president last year, pressured a lead investigator to find ballot fraud as part of Georgia’s mail-in ballot audit. Trump repeatedly and incorrectly asserted during a six-minute phone call with chief investigator Frances Watson that he won Georgia. “When the right answer comes out, you’ll be praised,” Trump told Watson.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
ADMINISTRATION: Biden says he is cheered to be on the verge of enacting a mammoth coronavirus relief measure, but what lies ahead for immigration policy is, if anything, an equally emotional and high-stakes challenge. The Hill’s Jonathan Easley and Rebecca Beitsch report the administration is racing to contain the situation at the U.S. southern border as a surge of migrant children threatens to become a new humanitarian crisis.
White House chief of staff Ron Klain dodged details on Tuesday when asked by Punchbowl News how long the administration will need to deal with the asylum-seeking children at the border. After repeating that the administration wants to work with Congress to pass immigration reform legislation, Klain denied the administration is separating children from relatives.
“It’s a hard problem. I’m not going to deny that this is one of the most vexing problems we face,” he said, adding that the White House is open to “suggestions.”
“We inherited a real mess. We inherited the facilities we have,” Klain continued. “I hope people will look at what we’re trying to do and judge us based on our actions.”
Reuters analysis: Facing critics, Biden has no good choices to manage an influx of migrant children.
NPR: U.S. Customs and Border Protection released new data on Wednesday that agents encountered nearly 3,500 migrants a day during February, a 28 percent jump from January. The number of children and families seeking to enter the United States more than doubled in the span of that month. And, the number of unaccompanied minors from Central America also rose 60 percent to more than 9,400 in February compared with January.
On Wednesday, Roberta Jacobson, Biden’s coordinator for the southern border, acknowledged that the administration struggles to communicate a welcoming message to migrants while also urging them to wait and not travel to the U.S. border until the immigration system can handle the load.
Biden’s struggles with border challenges have sparked criticism from Republicans, including Trump, as well as from some Democrats (Politico). More than 3,200 migrant children seeking protection are in U.S. detention and shelter facilities, a statistic that agitates immigrant advocacy groups and progressive lawmakers who want to see Trump-era policies and techniques banished for good (The New York Times).
> State Department: Secretary of State Antony Blinken told Congress on Wednesday that the United States will take action against those responsible for violations of human rights in Hong Kong. “We need to continue to follow through on sanctions, for example, against those responsible for committing repressive acts in Hong Kong,” he testified at a House hearing (The Hill and Reuters). … Blinken and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin announced they will travel to meet their counterparts in Tokyo on March 16-17 and Seoul on March 17-18. Blinken and national security adviser Jake Sullivan will meet with Chinese officials in Alaska on March 18, the State Department announced.
> HUD: Former Rep. Marcia Fudge (D-Ohio), 68, was sworn in as secretary of Housing and Urban Development on Wednesday after garnering bipartisan Senate support in a 66-34 vote. She is the first Black woman to lead the department in more than 40 years and has said she will work to end discriminatory housing practices and support Black homeownership, a critical component in narrowing the racial wealth gap (The Washington Post).
> Justice Department: After weeks of procedural delays sought by some Senate conservatives, Merrick Garland, 68, on Wednesday was confirmed as attorney general by a bipartisan vote of 70-30 (The Hill). McConnell and Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), who opposed Garland in 1997 before he became an appeals court judge and then blocked his 2016 nomination to the Supreme Court, voted to confirm him as the nation’s top law enforcer.
> Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): The Senate on Wednesday voted 66-34 to confirm Michael Regan, 44, to be EPA administrator. He is the first Black man to lead the regulatory agency since its creation in 1970 (The Hill).
> Budget: On Wednesday, two Senate panels approved the nomination of Shalanda Young to be deputy director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The OMB is without a director as it prepares an already overdue fiscal 2022 budget to be sent to Congress this spring (The Hill).
> Securities and Exchange Commission: Gary Gensler, Biden’s nominee to lead the SEC as a tough financial regulator, cleared the Senate Banking Committee on Wednesday by a vote of 14-10. Republican Sens. Mike Rounds of South Dakota and Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming joined all 12 Democrats in supporting the nomination (The Wall Street Journal).
Biden has a mandate to compete with China, by Ilan Berman of the American Foreign Policy Council, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2N4NLVp
The unrest in the Derek Chauvin trial, by Jonathan Turley, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3rAjDAs
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 9 a.m. Pelosi will hold her weekly press conference at 10:45 a.m.
TheSenate convenes at 10:30 a.m. and resumes consideration of the nomination of Xavier Becerra to be Health and Human Services secretary.
The president and Vice President Harris will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 11:30 a.m. They will get a weekly briefing about the economy from Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen at 3:15 p.m. Biden will address the nation from the East Room at 8:02 p.m. about strides made while combating the coronavirus during the last year. Biden plans to highlight “the role that Americans will play” in getting the country “back to normal,” his spokeswoman says.
Harris will participate in a virtual meeting at 1:45 p.m. with Americans she met during the first 50 days in office. She will swear in Garland as attorney general in a ceremony at 5:15 p.m.
The White House press briefing takes place at 12:30 p.m.
Economic indicator: The Labor Department at 8:30 a.m. reports on filings for unemployment benefits in the week ending March 6. Analysts anticipate that applications for benefits continued to fall but are holding at a level that underscores significant labor market dislocation.
➔ TECH:Facebook on Wednesday asked a federal court to dismiss antitrust lawsuits brought by federal and state regulators, saying the suits failed to prove the company was a monopoly and harmed competition. In a filing with the U.S. District Court of the District of Columbia, Facebook argued that it faced ample competition and that the Federal Trade Commission and 48 attorneys general from states and territories could not prove their case (The New York Times).
➔ INTERNATIONAL: The United States on Wednesday imposed sanctions on two children of Min Aung Hlaing, Myanmar’s military leader and six companies they control, increasing pressure on the military as it continues its crackdown against protesters following the army’s Feb. 1 coup (Reuters). … Also on Wednesday, the United Nations Security Council agreed to condemn violence against Myanmar protesters and call on the army to show restraint, but China and Russia helped block language denouncing the military takeover as a coup and threatening further action (Reuters). … A watching world sees smartphone images of violence and death in Myanmar flood small screens (The Associated Press).
➔ 🌛UPWARD BOUND: China and Russia say they will build a lunar research station — a “comprehensive scientific experiment base with the capability of long-term autonomous operation” — possibly on the moon’s surface, marking the start of a new era in space cooperation between the two countries. The International Lunar Research Station would also be open to use by other countries, according to a statement posted on the website of the China National Space Administration on Wednesday. No timeline for construction was mentioned (The Associated Press).
THE CLOSER
And finally … It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for this week’s Morning Report Quiz! Inspired by a newsy week for news reporters and the media, we’re eager for some smart guesses about TV personalities and networks.
Email your responses to asimendinger@thehill.com and/or aweaver@thehill.com, and please add “Quiz” to subject lines. Winners who submit correct answers will take a bow with some newsletter heraldry on Friday.
Piers Morgan resigned as host of “Good Morning Britain,” a program seen on which TV network, following comments he made about Meghan Markle, the Duchess of Sussex?
BBC
ITV
Sky News
None of the above
Roger Mudd, a longtime CBS anchor and reporter who died at age 93 on Wednesday, conducted an interview with ____ that effectively ended a bid for the presidency.
Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.)
Bob Dole (R-Kan.)
Vice President Walter Mondale
Howard Baker (R-Tenn.)
Which former TV host/personality announced on Wednesday that he is exploring a bid in Ohio for the Senate seat being vacated by Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio)?
Jerry Springer
Geraldo Rivera
Steve Wilkos
None of the above
ESPN announced on Wednesday that it has reached a seven-year deal to broadcast what sports league?
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On March 11, 2020, the COVID-19 lockdown began and the world as we knew it changed.
What happened on March 11 last year: Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious diseases expert, testified before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee and warned of the coronavirus.
And within hours: “The NBA suspended its season after a player who had mocked the virus tested positive. The NCAA said its annual basketball tournament would take place without fans. The Dow Jones Industrial Average entered bear territory for the first time in more than a decade.” https://bit.ly/3lepGs4
This is a good point: The Hill’s Reid Wilson pointed out, “If, in the decades ahead, society decides to set aside a day to remember the year that followed, March 11 will be as appropriate a date as any. It will be a day of mourning for the 2.6 million who have already died around the globe, a fifth of whom died in the United States.”
Read Wilson’s full bird’s eye view of the past year — it’s worth your time: https://bit.ly/3lepGs4
It’s weird talking about the start of the pandemic in the past because it all feels SO recent. Does anyone else feel that way?
My takeaway here: stay in bed in mid-March and hide under the covers:
HAPPENING AT 8 P.M. EST — HEARING FROM THE HEAD HONCHO:
President Biden is giving his first primetime address of his presidency, marking the anniversary of the coronavirus lockdowns. What to expect: https://bit.ly/30MfNIN
It’s Thursday. I’m Cate Martel with a quick recap of the morning and what’s coming up. Send comments, story ideas and events for our radar to cmartel@thehill.com — and follow along on Twitter @CateMartel and Facebook.
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Former Presidents Carter, Clinton, George W. Bush and Obama are appearing in ads encouraging Americans to receive their COVID-19 vaccine. https://bit.ly/3laTDsP
You guessed it: Former President Trump and former first lady Melania Trump did not appear in the ad.
Watch the first, 61-second ad — also featuringformer first ladies Rosalynn Carter, Hillary Clinton, Laura Bush and Michelle Obama: https://bit.ly/3laTDsP
Via The Hill’s Marty Johnson, “A third-degree murder charge has been reinstated in the trial of Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer who is charged with killing George Floyd last May.” https://bit.ly/3ckRrLj
What other charges is Chauvin facing: Charges of second-degree murder and manslaughter
Earlier this week: “The question of whether the charge should be reinstated initially delayed the start of jury selection in the high-profile case from Monday to Tuesday.”
Via The Hill’s Juliegrace Brufke, “The House on Thursday approved legislation aimed at strengthening background checks on firearm sales and transfers, a leading priority for Democratic lawmakers.” https://bit.ly/3bzYAsa
The vote: “The bill passed by a 237-203 vote with eight Republicans backing the measure and one Democrat voting against.”
The chances of becoming law: “Both bills are backed by the Biden administration, but the legislation faces an uphill battle in the upper chamber, where it’s unlikely to garner enough GOP support to meet the 60-vote threshold for it to be signed into law.”
MEANWHILE IN THE SENATE:
Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) cements himself as the key vote in the 50-50 Senate. The full story: https://bit.ly/3l7Ge51
Via Axios’s Sam Baker, “One year after the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic, the end of that pandemic is within reach.” https://bit.ly/3tavjdv
Putting the projections into context: “Last March, even the sunniest optimists didn’t expect the U.S. to have a vaccine by now … They certainly didn’t anticipate that over 300 million shots would already be in arms worldwide, and they didn’t think the eventual vaccines, whenever they arrived, would be anywhere near as effective as these shots turned out to be.”
Axios’s conclusion: “The virus hasn’t been defeated, and may never fully go away. Getting back to ‘normal’ will be a moving target. Nothing’s over yet. But the end of the worst of it — the long, brutal nightmare of death and suffering — is getting close.”
Via The Hill’s Niv Elis, “The income gap is widening at a frantic pace one year into the pandemic, raising tough questions for policymakers as the recovery starts to take hold.” https://bit.ly/3qzR0BX
For comparison: In 2019: “The bottom 50 percent of U.S. households in 2019 accounted for just 1 percent of the country’s total wealth, while the top 10 percent owned 76 percent of assets.” In the past year: “The country’s 664 billionaires saw their wealth increase 44 percent, or $1.3 trillion, according to an analysis by Americans for Tax Fairness, a left-leaning advocacy group.”
Meanwhile with the jobless rate: “Weekly jobless claims have exceeded their pre-pandemic record every single week since last spring. More than 18 million Americans are claiming unemployment benefits of some kind or another.”
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The House and Senate are in. President Biden and Vice President Harris are in Washington, D.C.
9:15 a.m. – 12:15 p.m. EST: First and last votes in the House. The House’s full agenda today: https://bit.ly/30A2uuM
11:30 a.m. EST: President Biden and Vice President Harris received the President’s Daily Brief.
Noon: A roll call vote in the Senate.
1:30 p.m. EST: Another roll call vote in the Senate. The Senate’s full agenda today: https://bit.ly/38uoT0V
3:15 p.m. EST: President Biden and Vice President Harris receive a weekly economic briefing.
5:15 p.m. EST: Vice President Harris ceremonially swears in Merrick Garland as attorney general.
WHAT TO WATCH:
This morning: Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) held a press briefing. Livestream: https://bit.ly/30wgtln
12:30 p.m. EST: White House press secretary Jen Psaki holds a press briefing. Livestream:https://bit.ly/3qCdvGC
1:45 p.m. EST: Vice President Harris participates in a virtual meeting with Americans she met with during her first 50 days in office to discuss the COVID-19 relief package. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3licuCB
8:02 p.m. EST: President Biden addresses the nation on the anniversary of the COVID-19 shutdown. Livestream: https://bit.ly/2Ne64ru
NOW FOR THE FUN STUFF…:
Today is National Oatmeal Nut Waffles Day. That’s oddly specific …
“The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” edited Oprah Winfrey’s interview with Prince Harry and Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, to a sit-down with President Biden’s dogs, Major and Champ. It’s pretty funny — watch: https://on.today.com/38vaQIr
And because you read this far, here’s a cat figuring out what a candle is: https://bit.ly/2NetRaM
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The COVID-19 pandemic forced Congress to adapt and, in some cases, accelerated shifts in operations that had long been goals of staff and lawmakers but were stuck in the inertia of the institution’s arcane and analog systems. But just because a change is popular and nudges Congress to modernity doesn’t mean it is here to stay. Read more…
As the pace of vaccination across the country picks up and a return to pre-pandemic normal appears increasingly possible, lawmakers and advocates are debating whether Congress should keep using new teleconferencing tools even after the pandemic ends. Read more…
OPINION — Where do Black women fit in this time of celebrating the social, economic, cultural and political achievements of women? At turns ignored and praised, vilified and valorized — and, sometimes, called on to save the world — we still have to stand up to declare our own truth, and our fullness as human beings. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
The House cleared a $1.86 trillion COVID-19 relief package Wednesday that would provide an expanded safety net to millions of Americans enduring medical and financial fallout from the pandemic. The 220-211 vote sends the massive bill to President Joe Biden’s desk before enhanced unemployment benefits lapse Sunday. Read more…
Thanks to strenuous efforts to mitigate the impact of the coronavirus on ships and submarines, largely put into place after a shipboard outbreak sidelined an aircraft carrier, the Navy has maintained an ambitious tempo of operations and kept its assets deployed as it saw fit. But the measures that were put in place do come at a cost. Read more…
Thursday marks the first anniversary of the World Health Organization declaring the coronavirus outbreak a pandemic. CQ Roll Call photojournalists picked five images from the archives that tell the story of the past 12 months on Capitol Hill. Read more…
Group lunches, happy hours and post-work cocktails used to be the lifeblood of political Washington and may be again. But these days, bland food from a vending machine feels like a better symbol of where things stand on Capitol Hill. Read more…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2021 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Is Biden’s next bid for bipartisanship dead already?
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
It didn’t happen with Covid relief. But President JOE BIDEN says he really, really wants to go bipartisan on infrastructure.
At this early stage, however, there’s every indication that GOP cooperation is less likelyon a massive public works bill than it was on the pandemic legislation.
Here’s why:
1) Cost: Biden campaigned on a $2 trillion infrastructure-climate plan, but already there’s talk among Democrats about going as high as $4 trillion. The bigger the number, the harder it will be to garner GOP support — especially because Congress just spent $1.9 trillion.
Also: Only three House Republicans supported Democrats’ $1.5 trillion version of a similar proposal pairing transportation and climate last year, a bill then-Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL called a “multithousand-page cousin of the Green New Deal masquerading as a highway bill.”
We’re told from a good House source that the same plan will probably be the “starting point” for the House’s infrastructure package this year — and then go higher from there.
2) Scope: With the Senate filibuster clogging up the rest of Democrats’ agenda, progressives see this as possibly their last chance to get something major through Congress. They’re talking about lowering the Medicare eligibility age or tucking in a health care public option (both are long shots). Other Democrats want to make the newly expanded child tax credit permanent (more likely), which Bloomberg reports would cost $1 trillion on its own.
That’s to say nothing about expanding broadband, combating climate change and addressing racial inequities — all top priorities for Biden in his “Build Back Better” plan. Republicans want few if any of these add-ons: Keep it to bridges, roads and the like, they say.
3) Tone: Our colleague Sam Mintz, who covers transportation, points out that Transportation Secretary PETE BUTTIGIEG seems to have adopted the White House’s new definition of “bipartisanship” — i.e. support from some GOP voters, not necessarily from Republicans on the Hill. Not a good sign for getting GOP votes.
4) Pay-fors: During the campaign, Biden proposed taxing corporations and the wealthy to pay for his plan. But Republicans aren’t going to vote for tax hikes, especially when it would mean giving Biden a win heading into the midterms, when they have a solid shot at flipping both chambers.
Buttigieg has been suggesting maybe they don’t need to pay for the plan at all, pointing out low interest rates for borrowing. But going that route to pay for the package would also repel the GOP, not to mention further balloon the deficit.
BOTTOM LINE: Sam, who will be our guest on POLITICO’s “Nerdcast” this Friday (everybody listen!), gives Democrats about a 7 out of 10 chance of getting something big passed on infrastructure. But if they do, he says it’s not likely going to be bipartisan. “I don’t think the question in the Senate is going to be, ‘Can you get 10 Republicans to vote for this bill?’ … Given what they’ve talked about wanting to do with the bill, how big they want it to be, I think the question is going to be, ‘Can you get Joe Manchin to vote for it?’”
THE LEFT COMES FOR RICCHETTI — As we’ve reported, progressives have been thrilled so far with Biden’s early picks when it comes to regulation of Big Tech. There has been an antitrust renaissance on the left since Democrats last held the White House, and Biden has embraced this movement by picking two of its intellectual leaders: TIM WU, now a White House economic adviser, and LINA KHAN, whom Biden plans to nominate to the FTC.
But the advocates cheered by these moves are a suspicious lot, always prepared to be sold out with a new round of appointments that appease industry. So while they adore Wu and Khan, they have repeatedly told us that they are reserving judgment until they know who will fill the two most important administration positions when it comes to regulation: chair of the FTC and assistant A.G. for antitrust.
This week, to keep the pressure on, the Revolving Door Project, which keeps an eye on corporate influence, sent a letter, obtained exclusively by Playbook, to chief of staff RON KLAIN warning about the influence of Amazon on the AAG spot.
Why Amazon?
“Such a powerful corporation will no doubt expend enormous political and economic capital to limit the power of anti-monopoly forces and their ability to curb its power,” JEFF HAUSER, the group’s executive director, wrote. “Of particular note is Amazon’s direct route into influencing Oval Office strategy and policy conversation, by way of White House Counselor STEVE RICCHETTI.”
The letter continues: “Amazon hired Ricchetti’s brother Jeff as a lobbyist in December 2020, as part of Jeff’s most lucrative quarter in a decade as a lobbyist. The reason why is self-evident: Jeff’s brother has the ear of the most powerful man on earth, and the Ricchetti brothers are close — they opened their eponymous lobbying firm together. Then-fellow Democratic lobbyist TONY PODESTA once compared himself and the Ricchettis to the Medicis of Renaissance Florence.”
The letter also singles outLISA MONACO, Biden’s nominee for deputy A.G., because she has done legal work for Apple and was a founder of WestExec Advisors, which has advised Google.
We admit that these kinds of letters are often little more than press releases, but the issue that the group is trying to spotlight is legitimate: How will the Biden administration enforce potential conflicts of interest when it comes to personnel decisions?
In this case Hauser asks Klain to set a high standard: “To close discrete avenues for undue corporate influence over personnel decisions, the administration must demand that those who are entangled with Big Tech — through past employment or present family ties — recuse themselves from deliberations over antitrust policy and personnel.”
BIDEN’S THURSDAY — Biden will deliver his first primetime speech to the nation on the anniversary of the pandemic shutdown from the Oval Office at 8:02 p.m. It’s expected to last under 20 minutes. He’ll talk about the lives lost to and changed by Covid-19, the vaccination effort thus far, and what’s coming next to tackle the pandemic.
The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will also receive the President’s Daily Brief at 11:30 a.m. and a weekly economic briefing at 3:15 p.m.
— Harris will meet virtually with Americans she’s met over the first 50 days in office to talk Covid relief at 1:45 p.m. She’ll swear in MERRICK GARLAND as A.G. at 5:15 p.m.
— Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m.
THE HOUSE will meet at 9 a.m. to vote on universal background checks bills. Speaker NANCY PELOSI will hold her weekly press conference at 10:45 a.m. Postmaster General LOUIS DEJOY will testify before an Appropriations subcommittee at 2 p.m.
THE SENATE: Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN will brief the Foreign Relations Committee behind closed doors at 10 a.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
CONGRESS
BAD BLOOD — Burgess Everett has a classic POLITICO pieceon the long-running acrimony between Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER and Sen. SUSAN COLLINS (R-Maine) — and the implications for any faint hope of bipartisanship in the Biden era:“More than four months after Collins handily dispatched Schumer’s efforts to deny her a fifth term, the moderate Maine Republican and the Senate majority leader have no relationship to speak of. And that awkward dynamic could make problems for Schumer in the coming months if his narrow Democratic majority needs Collins’s vote.”
Best Schumer zinger: “[O]n Tuesday night Schumer fired back to blame Collins’ fiscal conservatism for exacerbating the last financial crisis. The New York Democrat said in a nationally televised interview that his party’s courtship of three GOP votes for its Obama-era stimulus bill shrunk the legislation too much: ‘We made a big mistake in 2009 and ’10. Susan Collins was part of that mistake.’”
Best Collins zinger: “‘Why Chuck seems to be going out of his way to alienate the most bipartisan member of the Senate is a mystery to me,’ Collins said. ‘And it must just reflect his extraordinary frustration at having wasted $100 million in the state of Maine in an attempt to defeat me. And for me to win by a strong margin.’” Read the full story here
MEANWHILE, IN THE GOP CIVIL WAR … “McConnell, amid Trump’s threats, tells GOP senators their political operation has out-raised the former president’s,”NYT: “Mr. McConnell said several times that the Senate Leadership Fund, the super PAC that backs the Republicans’ Senate efforts, had out-raised Mr. Trump’s super PAC in 2020 … To underscore his point, the usually taciturn minority leader shared data he had prepared on small cards — headlined ‘Super PAC money raised’ — that he distributed to Republican senators.
“It showed the totals raised by the Senate Republican super PAC and for the two Georgia Senate races that cost the party its majority. ‘Total: $612+ million.’ ‘In 3 cycles: nearly $1 billion,’ the card said. Below that were the former president’s statistics: ‘Trump: $148+ million,’ referring to America First, the outside group that was formed to support Mr. Trump in 2020.”
SIREN — “Trump Call to Georgia Lead Investigator Reveals New Details,”WSJ: “Then-President Donald Trump urged the chief investigator of the Georgia Secretary of State’s office to look for fraud during an audit of mail-in ballots in a suburban Atlanta county, on a phone call he made to her in late December. During the six-minute call, which was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, Mr. Trump repeatedly said that he won Georgia. ‘Something bad happened,’ he said.
“‘When the right answer comes out, you’ll be praised,’ Mr. Trump told the chief investigator, Frances Watson. … The Washington Post reported on the call in January, but this is the first time the recording has been released.” With audio
JOHN HARRIS column: “Why So Many Politicians Are Such A–holes”: “Why are so many people in the business of being likable actually so unlikable? Not unlikable merely in the awkward, eye-rolling, prefer-not-to-spend-much-time-with-that-clod sense. Unlikable in the toxic, misanthropic, something-must-be-wrong-with-him sense. In other words: in the Andrew Cuomo sense. Or at least, it is now clear, the way many subordinates and fellow politicians experienced Cuomo on many occasions. …
“One element is probably ageless. Professions that demand public performance attract ambitious, creative, and often needy people who feel under intense psychic pressure and often take it out on people when the spotlight is not on (or they wrongly assume it is not on.) There are even examples, or so I’ve heard, of this phenomenon afflicting people in the news media. But an important factor is distinctly a product of this age: The cult of bad-ass, trash-talking that has come to politics, including or especially to political-media relations.”
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — House Majority Forward, the outside progressive group, is launching a $1.4 million ad blitz this week to bolster nine vulnerable House Democrats who backed the Covid relief package. Democrats say they’re not going to repeat the mistake they made in 2009, when the party failed to defend their stimulus bill — then paid a political price. The group is one of the first to go on offense for these front-line Democrats, all top GOP targets in 2022, for passing assistance.
The ads will run in districts for the following House Dems: CINDY AXNE (Iowa), LAUREN UNDERWOOD (Ill.), ANDY KIM (N.J.), ANTONIO DELGADO (N.Y.), MATT CARTWRIGHT (Pa.), LIZZIE FLETCHER (Texas), VICENTE GONZALEZ (Texas), ELAINE LURIA (Va.) and RON KIND (Wis.). The ad for Kind
MCCAMMOND FALLOUT — “Beauty Brand Ulta Pulls Teen Vogue Ads Over New Editor-in-Chief’s Old Racist Tweets,”The Daily Beast: “Popular cosmetics and skincare retailer Ulta Beauty said in a statement to The Daily Beast on Wednesday that it is halting its current advertising campaign with the Condé Nast-owned publication. According to people familiar with the situation, the deal was worth seven figures.”
McCammond apologized for her decade-old tweets in a statement Wednesday, noting that she will “be putting together and sharing a more comprehensive plan about Teen Vogue’s editorial commitment to uplifting and reflecting the true complexities and beauties of the [Asian American and Pacific Islander] community.”
TUCKER’S LATEST TARGET — “New York Times Defends Reporter Taylor Lorenz From Tucker Carlson’s ‘Cruel’ Attack,”Variety: “Carlson said Lorenz, a tech and internet culture reporter, was ‘at the top of journalism’s repulsive little food chain’ and that she is ‘far younger’ and ‘much less talented’ than other prominent New York Times reporters in a segment discussing ‘powerful people claiming to be powerless.’
“‘You’d think Taylor Lorenz would be grateful for the remarkable good luck that she’s had. But no, she’s not,’ Carlson said. He then read a tweet from Lorenz, posted on International Women’s Day, saying how online harassment and smear campaigns have destroyed her life.”
SPOTTED: Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg filming a video with husband Chasten and dogs at the corner of H and 2nd streets SE. Pic
SPOTTED at Palm Beach’s Cucina restaurant Tuesday night: Hogan Gidley, Holly Peterson, Nick Mele, Ned Grace, Bettina Anderson, Ryan Williams and Michelle Rosin. They were there for a fundraiser hosted by Stacey Leuliette to benefit the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. The event was outside at the restaurant’s parking lot turned “beach.”
SPOTTED at a private virtual reception Wednesday ahead of the Bipartisan Policy Center’s Legislative Action Awards honoring Sens. Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.) and Todd Young (R-Ind.) and Reps. Don Bacon (R-Neb.), Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-Del.), Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) and Dean Phillips (D-Minn.): John Delaney, Jason Grumet, Bill Hoagland, Katherine Lugar, Olympia Snowe, Michael Steele, Candi Wolff and Neal Simon.
SPOTTED at a virtual launch for Julia Sweig’s new book, “Lady Bird Johnson: Hiding in Plain Sight,” ($32) hosted by Mike Abramowitz with an interview by Lynn Novick: Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) and Sarah Bloom Raskin, Mark Salter, Juliet Eilperin, Diana Negroponte, Dan Balz, Peter Baker, Elizabeth Becker, Sara Bloomfield, David Cole and Nina Pillard, David Tatel, Marcus Brauchli, Tamera Luzzatto, Fred Hiatt, James Jones, Katrina Vanden Heuval, Bernard Aronson and Donna Edwards.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Daniela Fernández will be mid-Atlantic finance director at the DSCC. She most recently has been national finance director at the Latino Victory Fund.
— Maura Keefe and Dana Singiser recently launched a new consulting firm, Keefe Singiser Partners. Keefe previously was chief of staff to Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), and Singiser is a Planned Parenthood and Obama White House alum. They’re focusing on health care and key progressive issues.
TRANSITIONS — An America United, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan’s nonprofit, has moved up David Weinman to be executive director and added Jordan Riggs as digital director. Riggs most recently managed Republican Lance Harris’ Louisiana congressional campaign. … Madi Shupe is joining Deloitte to work in human capital consulting. She previously was comms director for Rep. Chris Stewart (R-Utah). …
… California consulting firmSCRB Strategies is rebranding as Bearstar Strategies and bringing on two new partners, DCCC alum Erica Kwiatkowski-Nielsen and creative director George Ross. They’ll join current Bearstar partners Ace Smith, Sean Clegg and Juan Rodriguez. The firm guided campaigns for VP Kamala Harris and Sen. Alex Padilla and is taking a lead role in fighting the possible recall of Gov. Gavin Newsom. … Adriana McLamb is now a digital marketing manager for the Independent Women’s Forum. She previously was a digital strategist for Stand Together.
— “Congressional Hispanic Caucus’s political arm taps new executive director,”The Hill: “In her new role at BOLD PAC, the CHC’s political action committee, [Victoria] McGroary will be charged with recruiting and electing Latino candidates and mobilizing voters at a time … McGroary previously served as the deputy political director for the New Democrat Coalition Action Fund.”
ENGAGED — Zack Colman, a climate reporter at POLITICO, and Kim Hassell, a senior health communication manager at CommunicateHealth, got engaged Friday along the river outside the AirBnB they were staying at in Middleburg, Va. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY:Rupert Murdoch (9-0) … Michael Holley … Curt Cashour … Perri Peltz … MC Gonzalez Noguera, SVP of global public affairs at Estée Lauder … Sam Donaldson (87) … Adam Piper … Matt Sobocinski … Ben Becker of Precision Strategies … Claire Burghoff of Cornerstone Government Affairs … NBC News’ Miguel Almaguer … former Interior Secretary Gale Norton (67) … CNN’s Emily Riley … former Wyoming Gov. Matt Mead (59) … Christina Arvanites, producer at MSNBC’s “The Last Word” with Lawrence O’Donnell … Micaela Rodríguez … Alice Stewart, CNN political commentator and NPR political contributor … Joe Quinn, VP of external affairs and industry relations at the Aluminum Association … DOD’s Jeff Hayes … NEA’s Carrie Pugh … Tim Mack, comms director for Rep. Madeleine Dean (D-Pa.) … Amy Weiss, CEO of Weiss Public Affairs … Christian Healy, director at the Herald Group … Michal Grayevsky … Alexandria, Va., Mayor Justin Wilson … Jon Cohen, chief research officer at SurveyMonkey … Jen Mullin … Nick Shapiro … Charles McElwee … Virginia state Del. Will Wampler … Sam Donaldson
Industrial Revolution, Steam Engine, Steamboat, & the Battle of Ironclads: CSS Virginia (Merrimack) & USS Monitor – “Naval Warfare had been Revolutionized” – American Minute with Bill Federer
In 1712, Thomas Newcomen designed a device to pump water out of mines by using a cylinder raised by hot steam, then lowered by cool mist, on a repeating cycle, but it was inefficient.
In 1769, James Watt, the son of Scottish Presbyterian Covenanters, significantly improved the design by having a separate cylinder for the cool air and shut off valves.
The story is that Watt became fascinated with steam power after having observed a kettle on the stove as steam forced the lid to rise.
Watt patented his double action steam engine with a rocking beam connected to a flywheel, which rotated in a circular arc.
Speed was controlled by an ingenious invention called a centrifugal governor.
To measure the power of a steam engine, Watt introduced the measurement of “horsepower.”
One unit of horsepower is equal to a horse lifting 75 kilograms one meter in one second.
Watt’s inventions, along with those of others, were adapted for use in:
paper mills,
cotton textile manufacturing,
locomotives, and
steamboats.
This was called the Industrial Revolution.
In honor of James Watt, German-British engineer C. William Siemens proposed in 1882 naming a unit of power a “watt.”
Another invention during the Industrial Revolution was the hot air engine, patented by Scottish Presbyterian minister, Rev. Robert Sterling in 1816.
Though not as practical as the steam engine, the Sterling Engine inspired further inventions and had applications from heat pumps to refrigeration and submarines.
The steam engine was adapted in 1787 by American John Fitch to power a boat — a steamboat.
Fitch’s model was too expensive for practical use.
In 1806, Robert Fulton invented the first successful steamboat, with a circular wooden paddle wheel.
In 1836, John Ericsson invented and patented a screw propeller, which significantly improved steamship propulsion and was less vulnerable in battle as compared to paddle wheels.
In 1839, the U.S. Navy Captain Robert Stockton invited Ericsson to come to America to design the sloop USS Princeton, with new steam driven twin screw propellers and smokestacks.
Launched in 1843, the USS Princeton won speed trials over steam paddle boats, making it the fastest steamer afloat.
Unfortunately, during a demonstration in 1844, a faulty cannon exploded, killing the Secretary of the Navy and the Secretary of State. Fortunately for him, President John Tyler was safe below deck.
In 1845, nine years after the Battle of the Alamo, Stockton sailed the USS Princeton to Galveston with President James Polk’s offer to annex Texas.
Fort Stockton, Texas, is named for him.
Stockton is most remembered for sailing a fleet in 1846 to California, on by his flagship USS Congress.
He captured the state and sent word by land back to Washington, D.C., carried by Kit Carson.
Stockton, California, is also named after him.
John Ericsson continued making naval innovations:
a boilerless hot air caloric engine, modified from Rev. Robert Sterling’s Engine;
the first submarine boat;
the first self-propelled torpedo; and
the first torpedo boat.
He presented a design for an iron-clad armored battleship to France’s Napoleon III in 1854, but he did not pursue it.
Using a steam-powered screw propeller, the frigate USS Merrimack was launched in 1855 in Boston Navy Yard.
It also had masts and sails to conserve on coal which was needed to burn and make steam.
It named after the Merrimack River that flows through New Hampshire and Massachusetts.
The USS Merrimack sailed to:
Southampton, England;
Brest, northwestern France;
Lisbon, Portugal; and
Toulon, and southern France.
In 1857, it sailed around Cape Horn, South America, and cruised the Pacific coast of South and Central America.
In 1860, USS Merrimack was decommissioned for repairs in Norfolk, Virginia.
When the Civil War started, a Union naval office tried to get the USS Merrimack out of the Norfolk harbor, but sunken ships blocked the way.
To prevent capture, it was partially burned and sunk.
The Confederate Navy, desperate for ships, salvaged the USS Merrimack from the water and repaired it, transforming it into an “ironclad,” with its hull and deck covered with iron plates, and 14 gun ports with iron shutters.
The Confederate navy renamed it the CSS Virginia, though many still referred to it as Merrimack.
The Union Navy was blockading the James River as it entered Chesapeake Bay, thus cutting off Virginia’s largest cities, Richmond and Norfolk, from international trade.
On the morning of March 8, 1862, the Battle of Hampton Roads began.
The Confederate iron-plated CSS Virginia (Merrimack) attacked, destroying numerous vessels, including two Union boats, USS Congress and USS Cumberland, and running a third aground in shallow water, the USS Minnesota.
The next day, the CSS Virginia (Merrimack) sailed out to continue its attacks but during the night, the Union the ironclad, USS Monitor, had sailed into the waters of Hampton Roads.
The USS Monitor was designed by John Ericsson, who had presented plans for it to the U.S. Navy in 1861 based on the dimensions of a Swedish lumber raft.
It had a revolving gun turret designed by American inventor Theodore Timby.
Dedicating a memorial to John Ericsson, President Calvin Coolidge stated, May 29, 1926:
“The Confederate ironclad … Merrimack began a work of destruction among 16 Federal vessels, carrying 298 guns ….
… When the ironclad Merrimack went out on the morning of March 9 to complete its work of destruction it was at once surprised and challenged by this new and extraordinary naval innovation …
After a battle lasting four hours in which the Monitor suffered no material damage … the Merrimack … badly crippled, withdrew, never to venture out again …
The London Times stated that the day before this battle England had 149 first-class warships.
The day after she had but two, and they were iron-plated only amidships.
Naval warfare had been revolutionized.”
Coolidge continued his dedication speech to the 5,000 people assembled at the John Ericsson Memorial, one block south of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC, May 29, 1926:
“We assemble here today to do reverence to the memory of a great son of Sweden … John Ericsson …
We honor him most of all because we can truly say he was a great American.”
With Sweden’s Crown Prince Gustav Adolf in attendance at the dedication of the Memorial, President Coolidge described Ericsson’s home country:
“Sweden is a country where existence has not been easy. Lying up under the Arctic Circle …
… At an early period they were converted to the Christian faith and their natural independence made them early responsive to the Protestant Reformation, in which their most famous king, Gustavus Adolphus, ‘The Lion of the North,’ was one of the most militant figures in the movement for a greater religious freedom …
… It was under this great leader that plans were first matured to establish a colony in this country for purpose of trade and in order that the native, as was set out in the charter, might be
‘made more civilized and taught morality and the Christian religion … besides the further propagation of the Holy Gospel’ …
… While it was under a new charter that a Swedish colony finally reached the Delaware in 1638, they never lost sight of their original purpose, but among other requests kept calling on the mother country for ministers, Bibles, and Psalm books …”
Coolidge described the Swedes further:
“Forty-one clergymen came to America prior to 1779.
One of the historians of this early settlement asserts that these colonists laid the basis for a religious structure, built the first flour mills, the first ships, the first brickyards, and made the first roads, while they introduced horticulture and scientific forestry into this Delaware region …
The building of nearly 2,000 churches and nearly as many schools stands to their credit …
Always as soon as they have provided shelter for themselves they have turned to build places of religious worship and founded institutions of higher learning with the original purpose of training clergymen and teachers …
Reverence for religion which is the foundation of moral power.”
Calvin Coolidge spoke further on the subject of Swedes:
“Though few in number during the period of our Revolutionary War, they supported the Colonial cause and it has been said that King Gustavus III, writing to a friend, declared
‘If I were not King I would proceed to America and offer my sword of behalf of the brave Colonies’ …
Such is the background and greatness of the Swedish people in the country of their origin and in America that gave to the world John Ericsson.”
When offered payment for designing the Monitor, John Ericsson, who “had a particular horror of slavery,” replied to a U.S. Senator in 1882:
“Nothing could induce me to accept any remuneration from the United States for the Monitor … It was my contribution to the glorious Union cause … which freed 4,000,000 bondsmen.”
In Battery Park, New York City, a bronze portrait of John Ericsson was dedicated in 1893, and a statue in 1903, with the plaque:
“The City of New York erects this statue to the memory of a citizen whose genius has contributed to the greatness of the Republic and the progress of the world … JOHN ERICSSON was born in Langsbanshyttan, Sweden, July 31, 1803, died in New York, March 8, 1889.”
Considered one of the greatest mechanical engineers in history, a monument was dedicated to him in Nybroviken, Stockholm.
The United States issued a postage stamp honoring John Ericsson in 1926.
A memorial erected to John Ericsson and the Monitor in McGolrick Park, Brooklyn, NY, in 1939:
“Erected by the people of the State of New York to commemorate the Battle of the Monitor and Merrimack, March 9, 1862, and in memory of the men of the Monitor and its designer John Ericsson.”
President Coolidge concluded his tribute to John Ericsson:
“This great mechanical genius wrote to President Lincoln offering to ‘construct a vessel for the destruction of the hostile fleet in Norfolk and for scouring southern rivers and inlets of all craft protected by southern batteries.'”
John Ericsson explained to President Lincoln, who was dedicated to ending slavery:
“Attachment to the Union alone impels me to offer my services at this frightful crisis -my life if need be – in the great cause which Providence has caused you to defend.”
Ericsson stated:
“I love this country. I love its people and its laws, and I would give my life for it.”
By Shane Vander Hart on Mar 10, 2021 02:00 pm
Shane Vander Hart: Every Christian standing up to the sexual revolution will have to choose will they stand on their biblical convictions or will they acquiesce? Read in browser »
Launched in 2006, Caffeinated Thoughts reports news and shares commentary about culture, current events, faith and state and national politics from a Christian and conservative point of view.
Adam Levy, Knowable Magazine PODCAST, EPISODE 4: Just in the past half-century, our understanding of how exactly our brains remember has taken huge leaps. Amazingly, this is just the beginning. Knowable Magazine · Memory, the mystery Memory, the mystery: Just in the past half-century, our understanding of how exactly our brains remember has taken huge …
Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing Thursday morning then he will receive an economic briefing in the afternoon. In the evening, the president will deliver an address to the nation. President Biden’s Itinerary for 3/11/21: All Times EST 11:30 AM Receive daily briefing – Oval Office3:15 PM Receive economic briefing – Oval …
When the downfall of the United States is written, and as of today’s actions on the part of Democrats, it appears that day is at hand, it will identify the year 2021 as the year the nation put a mentally failing man in the Oval Office, as being the nation’s final chapter. The year 2021 …
Illegal immigrants have torn down fences, left “bricks of marijuana” and even stolen vehicles from a ranch near Carrizo Springs, Texas, and it’s happening more frequently since the election of President Joe Biden, a rancher told the Daily Caller News Foundation Wednesday. The changes in visible foot traffic around the ranch increased in the months …
Esther Landhuis, Knowable Magazine Increasing evidence suggests that chronic inflammation takes a toll on the brain over the course of a lifetime For nearly 30 years, the hunt for a cure for Alzheimer’s disease has focused on a protein called beta-amyloid. Amyloid, the hypothesis goes, builds up inside the brain to bring about this memory-robbing …
President Joe Biden said Wednesday that extra COVID-19 vaccines will go to foreign countries during an event with executives from Johnson & Johnson and Merck. “If we have a surplus, we’re gonna share it with the rest of the world,” Biden said. “We’ve already decided we’re going to work with the outfit COVAX. We’ve committed …
Republican Ohio Sen. Rob Portman said Wednesday that he believes the GOP will win back the Senate majority in 2022. “Typically, in that midterm, after a presidential election the party and power in the White House loses a bunch of seats in the Senate,” Portman said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box”. “I suspect given the makeup …
An affluent New York prep school reportedly told students to call Newton’s Laws of Motion the “three fundamental laws of physics” in attempts to “decenter whiteness.” “We don’t call them Newton’s laws anymore,” a student told writer Bari Weiss. “We call them the three fundamental laws of physics. They say we need to ‘decenter whiteness,’ …
The top Senate Republican called the increased security of the Capitol building unnecessary during a press conference Wednesday. Republican Kentucky Sen. Mitch McConnell said he is “extremely uncomfortable” with the heightened security, according to Reuters. McConnell added that Congress doesn’t face any ongoing serious threats. “With all this razor wire around the complex, it reminds …
Republican leaders and pro-life activists condemned the massive COVID-19 relief package that cleared Congress Wednesday, telling the Daily Caller News Foundation that the bill will funnel massive amounts of funding to abortion providers. “Because this bill funnels money into subsidizing private insurance that includes abortion coverage, it’s going to be difficult to even ballpark the …
On Tuesday, Speaker Nancy Pelosi held a press conference to discuss the upcoming vote on the COVID “relief” bill that the Democrats are pushing through Congress. They pushed the bill through the Senate using reconciliation – the nuclear option – without any support from Republicans. They are celebrating the “accomplishment” and doing their typical pressers …
LAREDO, Texas – U.S. Border Patrol agents assigned to the Laredo North Station apprehended 111 individuals during three separate human smuggling attempts involving commercial trailers north of Laredo, Texas. The first incident occurred during the late evening of March 8, when a tractor-trailer approached the checkpoint on Interstate Highway 35 (I-35). A Service canine alerted to …
Border agents encountered over 9,000 unaccompanied minors in February, a Biden administration official announced Wednesday. More than 100,000 illegal immigrants including over 19,000 people who were traveling as family units were encountered by Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in February, according to Troy Miller, the acting commissioner of the agency. “Let’s be clear, the border …
The U.S. could avoid a COVID-19 winter surge “if we can get to 80% population immunity by the end of the summer,” a top doctor said Wednesday on CNN. “I mean, if you look at what happened last summer when 100% of the population was susceptible and we didn’t have a vaccine, still those numbers …
The Wuhan Institute of Virology removed public databases in September 2019 that contained information on at least 16,000 virus samples it had studied prior to the pandemic. The World Health Organization did not even ask to review the deleted databases during its investigation into the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic in China in early 2021. …
Russian authorities are slowing media uploads to Twitter after the platform failed to remove illegal content, a state communications watchdog said Wednesday. Twitter failed to remove over 3,000 posts containing illegal content including narcotics, suicide among minors and child pornography, Russian state-affiliated communications watchdog Roskomnadzor said, the Associated Press reported. Twitter will likely be banned …
The Huffington Post, a mainstay in the liberal rag media-sphere, was recently bought by an equally exhausting rag, BuzzFeed. This has led to a restructuring that saw approximately 47 ‘journalists’ who never did a day of quality ‘journalisming’ in their lives were fired yesterday. Naturally, the weeping and gnashing of teeth has begun and it’s …
A top U.S. military commander warned lawmakers on Tuesday that China has adopted an “increasingly assertive military posture” as it seeks to supplant the United States as the world’s dominant military force. “Its rapidly advancing capabilities and increasingly competitive posture underscore its drive to become a regionally dominant, globally influential power,” Adm. Philip Davidson, commander …
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki and Coordinator for the Southern Border Ambassador Roberta Jacobson hold a briefing Wednesday. The briefing is scheduled to begin at 12:30 p.m. EST. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for …
Happy Thursday, dear fellow travelers along the Kruiser Morning Briefing path. The dress code is whiskey.
On a personal note: I really wish that I didn’t find Forensic Files so comforting.
It was less than a week ago that I was writing about what a mess things are in California. We were focusing on the governor then, but we all know that the hot mess list over in the Golden State is rather lengthy. Looking at the state from the outside, no sane person would say, “Hey, let’s have more of that. In fact, let’s see if we can make the whole country run like California.”
Well kids, that’s exactly what the Democrats want.
My laundry list of reasons that I didn’t want the Democrats to be successful last November ran about War and Peace length, and one of the things on it that I mentioned frequently in interviews was that the looming national version of California’s disastrous AB 5 law. Dems were salivating at the prospect of having a hammerlock on Congress so they could push through the PRO Act, which is AB 5 on federal steroids. It’s got the components of AB 5 and it resurrects the card check insanity that the Democrats tried and failed to pass in the early days of The Lightbringer era.
The House of Representatives has passed the PRO Act, short for “Protecting the Right to Organize.” This bill goes far beyond the promise the Obama administration made to give card-check neutrality to private-sector unions. Then it was called the Employee Free Choice Act. The legislation would have allowed union certification via the card-check process traditionally used to force a union election. If 50% +1 voted to have a union election, both the employer and the union conducted campaigns before the election. Under card-check neutrality, if a majority signed cards, the union would be automatically certified. It did not pass when Democrats held Congress and the White House in 2009.
The PRO Act brings card-check neutrality in the backdoor. The legislation gives the National Labor Relations Board the power to overrule a union election loss if a majority of employees sign a card and the union alleges the employer interfered in the election. A majority of employees had to sign a card to trigger the election in the first place. The burden of proof would be on the employer to prove they did not interfere. There are already significant restrictions on what an employer can do during a union election campaign. This provision would upend the understanding of due process that generally applies to administrative law.
It also outlaws Right-to-Work laws in the 27 states that have them. If you look at a map, you can see what many of them have in common.
Put mildly, this thing is a nightmare.
The PRO Act also adopts the assault on the gig economy in AB 5, forcing companies who usually use independent contractors to hire them as employees. Once all of those new bodies are on the payroll, the rest of the PRO Act is there to force them into the dues paying fold.
Convenient, no?
AB 5 is so awful that even the ultra-liberal electorate in California passed a ballot measure to counter it last November.
As Stacey notes in her post, this bill is designed beef up union membership. Private sector union membership has been cratering for a very long time. Public sector unions (which should be illegal) are doing all right, especially in states with no right-to-work laws. Union membership only thrives with coercion. This bill is one big strong arm play.
This is also a big part of the Democrats’ long term, one-party fever dream for the United States:
Democrats’ incentive for doing this is obvious. The vast majority of union donations go to Democrat candidates and causes. Having higher union density made up of members forced to pay dues benefits them directly. The PRO Act is an insane level of graft in the legislative process.
This is no small thing. Getting back to the California example: the most powerful political lobby in the most populous state in the union is the California Teachers Association. More union members being forced to fork over dues means more money flowing to Democratic causes. The California assemblywoman who sponsored AB 5 is a former AFL-CIO executive, by the way.
Now we have to hope that this monstrosity dies a hideous death in the Senate.
Who knew jumping rope could look this epic??? Lauren Flymen starting jumping rope in lockdown as a distraction after being furloughed from her job and having to postpone her wedding. Now, her rad skills are inspiring others to try it as well. https://t.co/XYVfb0zvqipic.twitter.com/wRXV95D91b
Day 49: Half the nation worried Biden not ‘physically and mentally up to the job’ . . . It doesn’t take much for the nation’s voters to become concerned that President Biden, the oldest new chief executive at 78 years old, might not be up for the job.
The latest proof: His resistance to holding a full-blown press conference now 49 days into his presidency has half the country worried. In the latest Rasmussen Reports survey of likely voters, 50% said they are not confident that “Joe Biden is physically and mentally up to the job of being president of the United States.” Another 48% have confidence in Biden, though only 34% were “very confident” that he was up to the job. Driving that was Biden’s refusal to meet with reporters. He has had some interactions with the small pool of reporters, but his sometimes awkward speaking style has led to criticism. And the White House has recently cut short his appearances. Washington Examiner
Jen Psaki gets snippy when asked if Biden will give regular press conferences . . . White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki was asked, admittedly inartfully, a simple question about whether President Biden would do regular press conferences. The answer was sarcastic and condescending, referring instead to what she claims are “40 Q&As” that President Biden has done. White House Dossier
Coronavirus
In US, 1 in 4 adults have gotten their first vax dose . . . One in four adults in the US have now received their first shot of the coronavirus vaccine, Andy Slavitt, the senior adviser to President Biden’s coronavirus response team, announced on Wednesday. More than 95.7 million COVID-19 doses have been administered in the country since inoculation efforts began in mid-December. Over 62.4 million people or 18.8 percent of the population have gotten at least one vaccine shot, while 32.9 million people or 9.9 percent of the population have been fully vaccinated, according to the CDC data. New York Post
Lockdowns ‘single worst public health mistake’ in last 100 years: Doctor . . . A professor of medicine at Stanford University declared Monday that the COVID-19 lockdowns will be remembered as the country’s “single worst public health mistake” in the last 100 years. Dr. Jay Bhattacharya told Newsweek that the physical and psychological damage the ongoing lockdowns are causing to kids and adults is “catastrophic.” “I stand behind my comment that the lockdowns are the single worst public health mistake in the last 100 years,” he said. “We will be counting the catastrophic health and psychological harms, imposed on nearly every poor person on the face of the earth, for a generation. Washington Times
Feds lift COVID restrictions on nursing homes . . . The Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services lifted most restrictions on visits to nursing homes Wednesday. “Facilities should allow responsible indoor visitation at all times and for all residents, regardless of vaccination status of the resident, or visitor, unless certain scenarios arise that would limit visitation,” CMS said in its announcement. Visitation would be limited for unvaccinated residents of a facility if fewer than 70% of residents at that facility have been vaccinated and the COVID-19 positivity rate in the county is 10% or higher. Residents with confirmed COVID-19 infection or who are in quarantine would also be restricted from seeing visitors. Nursing homes and other long-term care facilities have been hit hard by the pandemic. Washington Examiner
Politics
Biden White House admits its policies drive illegal immigration surge . . . Southern Border Coordinator Roberta Jacobson said Wednesday that it was not a “coincidence” border crossing attempts spiked after President Biden took office. Asked if surges at the border could be linked to Biden’s undoing of Trump-era border policies, Jacobson said: “We’ve seen surges before. Surges tend to respond to hope, and there was significant hope for a more humane policy after four years of pent-up demand. “There was a hope for a more humane policy after four years of pent-up demand, so I don’t know if I would call that a coincidence,” said Jacobson, who spoke during the daily White House briefing. White House Dossier
Peter Doocy Presses Psaki For Laughing At Question On Border Crisis . . . Fox News White House correspondent Peter Doocy pushed back on White House press secretary Jen Psaki when she laughed at one of his questions. Doocy asked about the CDC recommendations regarding reopening schools and managing migrant detention facilities during Wednesday’s briefing, noting that while the detention facilities were being opened to full capacity, many schools still were not. Psaki immediately pushed back on Doocy’s point, asking whether he had a specific school to hold up as an example, noting that to reopen, the CDC had said there were a series of mitigation efforts that needed to be implemented before schools could safely open. “The CDC is saying, ‘Schools, you can be at — every school can be at full capacity,’ as you know —” Doocy protested. Daily Caller
House Passes Biden’s $1.9 Trillion COVID-19 Relief Package . . . The House of Representatives on Wednesday passed the updated version of President Biden’s $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package. The vote was 220-211, with all Democrats voting for the bill except for Rep. Jared Golden (D-Maine) and all Republicans voting against it. The House passed a version of the bill late last month, followed by the Senate on March 4. The upper chamber removed the $15 federal minimum wage hike and changed other provisions, such as decreasing weekly supplemental unemployment aid by $100 to $300 a week. No Republicans supported the package in either vote. Epoch Times
Biden’s COVID-19 Plan: Force Taxpayers to Pay for Abortions . . . Back in 1994, a worried Delaware taxpayer sent a message to his senator. “Please don’t force me to pay for abortions against my conscience,” he said. Joe Biden sent an unambiguous response. “I will continue to abide by the same principle that has guided me throughout my 21 years in the Senate: those of us who are opposed to abortion should not be compelled to pay for them,” he wrote. “[T]he government,” Biden said, “should not tell those with strong convictions against abortion, such as you and I, that we must pay for them.” Today, President Biden is demanding that Americans “with strong convictions against abortion” must pay for them with their tax dollars. Daily Signal
Senate votes to confirm Garland as attorney general . . . The Senate on Wednesday confirmed Merrick Garland to be President Biden’s attorney general, a U-turn from a 2016 stalemate that kept him stuck in Senate limbo. Senators voted 70-30 on Garland’s nomination to lead the Justice Department, easily topping the 50 votes needed. The vote comes just days before the five-year anniversary of when then-President Obama nominated Garland to fill the Supreme Court seat left vacant by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia. Republicans, who then controlled the Senate, refused to give Garland a hearing or a vote. The Hill
Dem Senator crusading against dark money, takes dark money, invites witnesses to Congress with ties to dark money . . . All three witnesses invited by Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D., R.I.) to testify at a hearing on the destructive impact dark money has had on the Supreme Court have significant ties to liberal dark money groups. Whitehouse is scheduled to preside over a Judiciary Committee hearing Wednesday afternoon on “What’s Wrong with the Supreme Court: The Big Money Assault on Our Judiciary.” The hearing is Whitehouse’s latest attempt to push dark money groups to disclose their donors. Although he frequently attacks the role of dark money in politics, Whitehouse himself has relied on groups that conceal their donors throughout his tenure in the Senate. Washington Free Beacon
National Security
US plans to deploy missiles in Asia to deter ‘our greatest strategic threat’ . . . The US military plans to deploy long-range missiles in Asia capable of threatening China as part of efforts to deter a conflict with Beijing, the commander of American military forces in the Pacific said Tuesday. Adm. Philip S. Davidson, the four-star commander of the Indo-Pacific Command, told a congressional hearing his most pressing defense need is a ground-based missile defense system on the US island of Guam to provide 360-degree defense from a potential Chinese attack. With the Biden administration still formulating its diplomatic and security strategy for East Asia, Adm. Davidson told the Senate Armed Services Committee that “the greatest long-term strategic threat to security in the 21st century [is] China.” Washington Times
US Airforce ‘Got Its Ass Handed To It’ In War Game Against Simulated Chinese Attack . . . A highly classified war game the United States Air Force conducted in Fall 2020 ended with Chinese missiles pounding American bases while China invaded Taiwan. The war simulation started with China mounting a biological attack against U.S. bases and warships in the Indo-Pacific region China then used a military exercise as cover to invade Taiwan and launch missiles against U.S. bases and naval forces.This simulation is one in a series of war games where the U.S. loses, according to Air Force Lt. Gen. S. Clinton Hinote. “More than a decade ago, our war games indicated that the Chinese were doing a good job of investing in military capabilities that would make our preferred model of expeditionary warfare . . . increasingly difficult.” “The trend in our war games was not just that we were losing, but we were losing faster,” Hinote said. Daily Caller
With regard to US-Russia war-games, my own experience, as senior intel officer for Russian Doctrine & Strategy at the DIA, was similar. Red consistently beat Blue, but not because Red had superior weaponry (often the opposite) but because Blue had no viable response to Red’s strategy that aimed to turn Blue’s reliance on technology for war fighting into strategic vulnerability.
Lawmakers Say Overhaul Needed to Protect Fed Agencies from Foreign Hacks . . . Lawmakers on Capitol Hill are demanding the federal government beef up cybersecurity, pointing to a series of attacks from hostile nations and the Department of Homeland Security’s current inability to detect and deter complex cyberattacks. The calls for a renewed focus on cybersecurity come as the federal government reels from the “SolarWinds” hack, in which foreign intruders gained access to vast swathes of federal agency communications and records over the course of 2020. US intelligence community believes Russian intelligence likely accessed emails from the Treasury Department, the State Department, the National Nuclear Security Administration, and even DHS itself. Researchers and lawmakers worry that foreign adversaries have the upper hand on the federal government, and that programsare unfit for modern cyberwarfare. Washington Free Beacon
International
Russia’s websites go dark after US vowed retaliation for SolarWinds hack . . . The outages knocked out websites for the Kremlin and other major agencies. Two days after the White House telegraphed a retaliatory stealth attack on Russian cyber systems, Russian government websites for the Kremlin and other agencies were knocked offline. In addition to the Kremlin site, the disabled web pages included those for the State Duma, the Security Council, the Russian Investigative Committee, the Ministry of the Interior, and other agencies. The outages followed a Monday warning from the White House that the U.S. would launch a counterstrike to retaliate for the SolarWinds computer data breach. Just the News
China’s parliament approves plan to reform Hong Kong’s electoral system . . . China’s parliament on Thursday voted overwhelmingly in favor of a controversial draft plan that will increase Beijing’s grip on Hong Kong’s electoral system, which has drawn criticism from the U.S. The “patriots governing Hong Kong” is a resolution that will allow a pro-Beijing panel to approve some candidates that it deems sufficiently “patriotic,” according to the BBC. The vote was 2,895-0, with one abstention, the report said. The next step is a formal bill, which could be implemented in the city within a few months. Fox News
Millions of websites offline after fire at French cloud services firm . . . A fire at a French cloud services firm has disrupted millions of websites, knocking out government agencies’ portals, banks, shops, news websites and taking out a chunk of the .FR web space, according to internet monitors. The fire, which broke out on Wednesday shortly after midnight at OVHcloud, destroyed one of four data centres in Strasbourg, in eastern France, and damaged another, the company said. There was no immediate explanation provided for the blaze. Reuters
Money
A $60 billion surprise in the Covid relief bill: Tax hikes . . . Democrats tucked in a trio of little-noticed tax hikes on the wealthy and big corporations. It’s surprising because Democrats were widely expected to put off their tax-increase plans until later. Many lawmakers are wary of hiking them now, when the economy is still struggling with the coronavirus pandemic. If anything, when it came to their stimulus plan, Democrats were focused on cutting taxes, not increasing them. But they ran into problems complying with the stringent budget rules surrounding so-called reconciliation measures like the coronavirus legislation — especially after some wanted to add provisions like one waiving taxes on unemployment benefits. Politico
You should also know
Wall Street Journal Fact-Checks Facebook Fact-Checkers . . . Recently, the WSJ editorial board responded to yet another instance of Big Tech censorship by Facebook’s “fact-checkers.” A scholarly article written by John Hopkins surgeon Marty Makary about COVID herd immunity, published by the WSJ and run on its Facebook page, was labeled as “missing context” thus “misleading” by “independent fact-checkers.” The reason for the article, titled “We’ll Have Herd Immunity by April,” being “fact-checked” appears clear — it challenged the Left’s political narrative on the pandemic. FB “fact checkers” disagree with the evidence Dr. Makary cites as well as how he interprets it. But scientists disagree all the time. Frustrated by the dubious “fact-check” of an opinion piece by a clearly well-educated and knowledgeable individual, the WSJ decided to fact-check the “fact-checkers.” The Journal concluded that Facebook’s third-party “independent” fact-checkers were in fact opinion-checkers. The legal privileges enabled by Section 230 protections, that shield internet platforms from liability, have given cover to The Big Tech for this censorship abuse. Patriot Post
NYC school encourages kids to stop using words like ‘mom,’ ‘dad’ in ‘inclusive language’ guide . . . A Manhattan private school aiming to use more “inclusive language” is encouraging its students to stop using the terms “mom,” “dad” and “parents” because the words make “assumptions” about kids’ home lives. The Grace Church School in NoHo — which offers academic courses for junior kindergarten through 12th grade — issued a 12-page guide to students and staff explaining the school’s mission of inclusivity. The detailed guide recommends using the terms “grown-ups,” “folks,” “family,” or “guardians” as alternatives to “mom” “dad” and “parents.” It also suggests using “caregiver” instead of “nanny/ babysitter.” New York Post
Unilever to remove the word ‘normal’ from beauty products and ads to be inclusive . . . Unilever is doing away with the word “normal” on the packaging of its beauty products and respective advertisements. The language change is one way the multinational consumer goods company is being “equitable and inclusive,” according to a press release issued on Tuesday. Brands such as Dove, Vaseline, Axe, Sunsilk and Love Beauty and Planet are included in Unilever’s progressive commitment among other beauty and personal care lines the company owns. Unilever’s decision to strike the word “normal” from its products comes as a response to the 10,000-person study it commissioned that found the term makes 70% of consumers (from across nine countries) feel excluded. Fox Business
To fully comprehend the potentially catastrophic consequences of the progressive movement’s relentless pursuit to re-order the American society and alter reality, every American must read “We,” a seminal piece of literature by the Russian author Yevgeniy Zamyatin. Banned by the Soviets for “subversive” content, Zamyatin’s “We,” by some accounts, inspired George Orwell’s “1984.” For over 70 years, the Russian people endured the alternate reality forced upon them by the totalitarian Soviet government, until the entire house of cards collapsed in 1991.
MyPillow CEO to launch social media site described as cross between YouTube and Twitter . . . MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell said in an interview that he plans to launch a social media site called Vocl that he described as a cross between YouTube and Twitter. Lindell said that Vocl would be meant “for print, radio and TV” and differ from conservative platforms Gab and Parler. “It’s all about being able to be vocal again and not to be walking on eggshells,” he said. The MyPillow CEO, who was barred from Twitter this year after posting repeated claims about widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election, said he’s worked on Vocl for four years and plans to be the CEO. He predicted it would launch at the latest in three weeks. The Hill
It would be liberating for conservatives not to have to walk on eggshells any longer when expressing our views.
Guilty Pleasures
Bear chases ski instructor at Romanian resort . . . A ski instructor at a Romanian resort captured video of a bear chasing him down a slope for several minutes before the animal fled into the woods. The bear eventually turned and ran back into the forest. Officials said the person who filmed it was a ski instructor who was trying to draw the bear away from other skiers and back toward the woods. The incident took place just weeks after riders on the chairlifts at the same resort captured video of a bear chasing a skier. UPI
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Happy Thursday! One year ago today, the WHO declared COVID-19 a pandemic, President Trump announced a 30-day European travel ban, the NBA suspended its season, and Tom Hanks tested positive for the virus. Or was it one month ago? All feels like a blur.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The House voted 220-211 on Wednesday to pass the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, which will expand child tax credits, extend federal unemployment benefits, and send direct checks to millions of Americans, among other provisions. President Biden is expected to sign the bill into law on Friday.
The Senate voted on Wednesday to confirm Merrick Garland as Attorney General, Marcia Fudge as Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, and Michael Regan as administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency. All three were confirmed on a bipartisan basis.
President Biden directed the Department of Health and Human Services to purchase another 100 million doses of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine, to be delivered later this year. Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine rollout has been slow out of the gate, with the White House telling governors Tuesday to expect less than 400,000 doses of the one-dose vaccine next week.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and Centers for Disease Control issued updated guidance for nursing homes on Wednesday, recommending long-term care facilities—with a few exceptions—allow “responsible indoor visitation at all times and for all residents, regardless of vaccination status of the resident, or visitor.”
The Consumer Price Index rose 0.4 percent in February, and has risen 1.7 percent over the past year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Both figures were about what economists expected.
The United States confirmed 56,121 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 2.6 percent of the 2,166,487 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,459 deaths were attributed to the virus on Wednesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 529,102. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 36,647 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. 2,028,692 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, bringing the nationwide total to 95,721,290.
Reading the Biden Tea Leaves on Big Tech
As we’ve writtenin recent months, Big Tech—the term of art for describing platforms such as Google, Facebook, Apple, Amazon, and Twitter—is increasingly under fire from both the right and the left, albeit for entirely different reasons. To simplify, Republican critiques of the platforms tend to focus on their content moderation efforts, while Democrats are more concerned about the sheer size and economic power the companies hold.
This was not always the case. Barack Obama’s Democratic Party was incredibly cozy with the tech industry: Pundits and reporters have long credited social media with playing a pivotal role in the success of his 2008 presidential campaign, and the White House provided members of the Obama administration a launching pad for future careers in Silicon Valley. Former press secretary Jay Carney now serves as a senior vice president at Amazon, onetime deputy chief of staff Kristie Canegallo is a vice president at Google, and erstwhile assistant attorney general Tony West is currently Uber’s chief legal officer. Heck, Obama himself has deals with Netflix and Spotify.
After spending four years as Donald Trump’s rhetorical punching bag, most in Silicon Valley welcomed the return of Obama’s vice president to the White House: 98 percent of campaign donations from tech company employees went to Democrats in 2020, according to an analysis by the Center for Responsive Politics.
But the Democratic Party has changed, and Joe Biden has changed with it. He never matched Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s level of hostility to the tech sector, but in a New York Times interview during the heat of the primary last year, Biden said he thinks Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is “a real problem,” adding that “some of the things that are going on [in Silicon Valley] are simply wrong and require government regulation.” His campaign said that, as president, Biden would aggressively use “all the tools available—including utilizing antitrust measures” to ensure corporations act responsibly. Was this simply campaign rhetoric, or a legitimate promise?
Fifty days into his presidency, Biden has kept relatively mum about tech, instead focusing most of his time and energy on responding to the coronavirus. But a pair of recent personnel moves may indicate how his administration plans to approach the issue.
On Tuesday morning, Politico reported that Biden intends to nominate Lina Khan to the Federal Trade Commission, news that the New York Times confirmed yesterday. Khan rose to prominence in policy circles in 2017, when she published a lengthy piece in the Yale Law Journal arguing that existing antitrust law is “unequipped to capture the architecture of market power in the modern economy,” particularly tech companies. She claimed companies like Amazon can “escape antitrust scrutiny” by engaging in “predatory pricing” to pursue growth over profits. The paper became something of a holy text for the “hipster antitrust” movement that is attempting to shift antitrust law away from the consumer welfare standard.
Khan has since worked in the office of FTC Commissioner Rohit Chopra, served as counsel on the House Judiciary Antitrust Subcommittee’s lengthy investigation into leading tech companies, and is now an associate professor at Columbia Law School. At just 32 years old, she would be the youngest FTC commissioner in history if confirmed by the Senate.
The Khan news made the biggest waves, but it came just days after fellow Columbia Law School professor Tim Wu announced he was joining Biden’s National Economic Council to work on technology and competition policy. The title of his most recent book—The Curse of Bigness: Antitrust in the New Gilded Age—may provide some insight into how he’ll be approaching these issues.
GOP Sen. Mike Lee, ranking member of the Senate Antitrust Subcommittee, expressed concern on Tuesday over Khan’s lack of experience and her approach to competition policy. “Ms. Khan no doubt has a promising career ahead of her, but being less than four years out of law school, she lacks the experience necessary for such an important role as FTC Commissioner,” he said. “Her views on antitrust enforcement are also wildly out of step with a prudent approach to the law.”
But tech is an issue that splits Republicans between their free market instincts and populist rhetoric. A spokesperson for Sen. Ted Cruz—one of Big Tech’s harshest critics—told The Dispatch the senator “looks forward to meeting with Ms. Kahn and will assess her nomination on the merits.”
Progressives, meanwhile, are ecstatic with Biden’s actions. “We applaud President Biden for recognizing that Lina Khan is a once-in-a-generation legal mind,” said Sarah Miller of the anti-monopoly American Economic Liberties Project. Rep. David Cicilline—chair of the House Antitrust Subcommittee—praised Khan for doing an “incredible job” while working for him, claiming her nomination to the FTC would be a “major victory for locally-owned businesses, workers, and everyone who has been negatively affected by the dominance of Big Tech.”
The appointments certainly represent a major shift for Democrats’ relationship with Silicon Valley, but on their own, they likely won’t change much in terms of actual enforcement action. “I think by elevating these two figures, the Biden administration is trying to appease the Left in a way, and show they’re taking antitrust seriously,” said Alec Stapp, director of technology policy at the Progressive Policy Institute. The most important positions for competition policy—assistant attorney general for antitrust and FTC chair—have yet to be filled.
The FTC—responsible for enforcing antitrust laws—is led by five commissioners, no more than three of whom are allowed to hail from the same political party. It’s currently knotted up at two apiece, but one Democrat—Rohit Chopra—is leaving to head up the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Who Biden nominates as the third Democrat—and who he elevates to chair—will say a lot about where his priorities lie.
“It’s not like [Khan] is going to be unilaterally making any kind of enforcement decisions,” said Geoffrey Manne, president and founder of the International Center for Law and Economics, in an interview with The Dispatch. “Anyone who was appointed into that position was going to vote the same way at the end of the day.”
He echoed Stapp’s theory that Biden may have chosen Khan and Wu for more political reasons. Their selection could “imply that the administration is serious about antitrust enforcement, serious about being aggressive against big tech companies,” he said. “But it could also just mean that the administration recognizes that there are a diversity of viewpoints in the party, and it’s important to keep everyone kind of happy, and you put people like Lina and Tim in positions that maybe aren’t decisive [to] make your constituency happy. And maybe you end up with a pretty moderate overall position.”
Regardless of which position the Biden administration takes, the FTC is already building an antitrust case against Facebook, and the Department of Justice is doing the same with Google. Antitrust cases are “almost always multi-year” endeavors, Stapp said. “This will be a very long process, and we’re in the early innings.” Back in December, a judge overseeing the Google case set the trial’s tentative start date as September 12—of 2023.
In the meantime, Stapp thinks Biden and Senate Democrats will likely come together through budget reconciliation to increase funding for the FTC to hire more staffers. “Big antitrust cases like the case the FTC is bringing against Facebook are very resource intensive. And I think no reasonable person would want the FTC or the DOJ to decline to bring a case that they thought they could win with the proper resources, but they only declined to bring it because they’re underfunded,” he said. “If we were to adequately fund our enforcement agencies, they would likely be able to bring more cases, maybe win more cases. And then people would be a little more satisfied and maybe not necessarily want to make as radical of changes to the antitrust laws.”
Worth Your Time
In his new self-published book, The Secret Apartment: Vet Stadium, a surreal memoir, Vietnam veteran Tom Garvey (no relation) chronicles his experience living in a concessions stand inside Philadelphia’s Veterans Stadium from 1979 to 1981. In a piece for the Philadelphia Inquirer, reporter Stephanie Farr chronicled Garvey’s bizarre story. “He arranged the space so that if someone opened the door, all they would see was a wall of cardboard boxes,” she writes, “but hidden at one end of the boxes was a corridor which opened up into the secret apartment.”
COVID-19 has, in more ways than one, robbed us of our sense of familiarity with the outside world. In a piece for The Atlantic, Emma Cushing talks to neuroscientists about how the pandemic has messed with our brain chemistry to the point where we’re beginning to forget how to be normal. “I feel like I have spent the past year being pushed through a pasta extruder,” she writes. “I wake up groggy and spend every day moving from the couch to the dining-room table to the bed and back. At some point night falls, and at some point after that I close work-related browser windows and open leisure-related ones.”
If you’re a history buff and/or enjoyed Declan’s piece about the Whig Party last month, check out history professor Jelani Cobb’s latest piece in The New Yorker on a similar theme. “America’s political parties and the party system are, in fact, accidents of history,” he writes. “The Founders were suspicious of ‘factions,’ as parties were then called, fearing that powerful blocs would put their own regional or commercial interests above the common good, and endanger the fragile union of the new nation. But, as Richard Hofstadter wrote, in his 1969 book, ‘The Idea of a Party System,’ the Founders’ ‘primary paradox’ was that they ‘did not believe in parties as such, scorned those that they were conscious of as historical models, had a keen terror of party spirit and its evil consequences, and yet, almost as soon as their national government was in operation, found it necessary to establish parties.’”
Presented Without Comment: You’ve Got About Two Weeks Edition
National Guard Will Stay In D.C. For 10 More Weeks https://t.co/UMEHBKPom8 https://t.co/XdqEXI9KfA
Toeing the Company Line
On the site today, Rachael looks at several school districts that have opened up during the pandemic and how they have navigated mitigation measures. Beyond implementing masking, some have changed their class schedules to reduce classroom sizes and others have moved lunch to a larger location like the school’s gymnasium. “The truth is, while the school year has not gone perfectly for anyone, the districts that are open have been showing how it can be done,” she writes.
In his Wednesday G-File (🔒), Jonah breaks down the inevitability of elites as a sociological and historical phenomenon to help us better understand Meghan Markle and Prince Harry’s controversial interview with Oprah Winfrey this week. For Jonah, the couple and the royal family are classic representations of warring elitist factions: “The old aristocracy of inherited titles and noble bloodlines versus the new aristocracy of celebrity.”
In his latest French Press (🔒), David focuses on Biden’s decision to undo “one of the Trump administration’s best policies” by issuing an executive order “directing the secretary of education to ‘consider suspending, revising, or rescinding’ Trump administration regulations that guaranteed basic due process protections for accused students in campus sexual misconduct adjudications.” Read the whole thing to learn more about how this Obama-era guidance “created a due process nightmare on American campuses.”
Congressional Democrats’ omnibus voting rights, campaign finance, and ethics bill, H.R. 1—also known as the “For the People Act”—passed in the House last week, and the gang broke it all down on this week’s Dispatch Podcast. They also discussed GOP retirements in the Senate, whether arguments about cancel culture are trumping more substantive public policy debates, and a surprise tabloid-y topic you won’t want to miss!
“An increasingly common tactic on the populist right is to label skeptics of new government programs (protectionism, subsidies, etc.) ‘free market fundamentalists’ who dogmatically oppose any and all government regulation and believe in the perfection of free markets,” Scott Lincicome writes in his Capitolism newsletter (🔒) this week. “The same folks brushing aside us ‘market fundamentalists’ are quick to add that they, of course, still support free markets generally but are compelled to make an exception in the case of whatever policy they may be advocating at the moment.”
Let Us Know
Thinking back to this time last year, what memories stand out to you as pandemic life began in earnest? What was your last “normal” activity? When did you realize this was serious?
William Jacobson: “WE LANDED, SORTA — The launch of the new website went mostly well, but there are some glitches, and we even ran into a problem with the site going down last night because a plug-in meant to make the site more efficient didn’t work properly. Overall, I’m satisfied, but it may take another day to iron out problems.”
Mary Chastain: “I blogged about Biden’s brain freeze on Tuesday. Maybe that’s why his aides keep him on a short leash and won’t let him address the White House corps.”
Leslie Eastman: “Twelves states are suing over Biden’s climate-related executive orders. The complaint asks the court to issue an order that prohibits federal agencies from using ‘social cost’ estimates and declare they are ‘arbitrary, capricious, unreasonable, and contrary to law.'”
Stacey Matthews: “So Snopes actually “fact-checked” the true statement that Joe Biden forgot the name of his defense secretary a few days ago. Unreal.”
David Gerstman: “Last week the White House cut off President Joe Biden after he offered to take questions. This week, Mary Chastain blogged, the president’s handlers whisked him away before he could take questions at a public appearance. Don’t worry, the Babylon Bee is on the case.”
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Congress Passes a Historically Bad Bill
The House voted 220-211 yesterday to approve the Senate’s revised version of the $1.9 trillion coronavirus “relief” package, sending the bill to President Biden’s desk to be signed. The bill provides $1,400 stimulus payments for individuals making up to $75,000 and couples making $150,000, extends weekly $300 unemployment insurance bonuses through Sept. 6, and gives K-12 public schools $128.6 billion in additional funding.
The minority staff of the House Budget Committee and Rep. Jason Smith provided The Examiner with a breakdown of what was spent in this year of the $1.9 trillion. The answer? Not much. But still, they need more.
Five percent ($6 billion) of the $130 billion set aside for K-12 schools.
Five percent ($250 million) of the $5 billion for Emergency Housing Vouchers.
Seventeen percent ($7 billion) of the $39 billion for child care.
Twenty-three percent ($11 billion) of the $50 billion for the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
None of the $5 billion for homeless assistance.
As House Minority Leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy pointed out, the new bill “showers money on special interests but spends less than 9% on actually defeating the virus. But it gives San Francisco $600 million, essentially wiping out 92% of their budget deficit.”
In essence, the “American Rescue Plan” rewards teachers’ unions for keeping schools closed, rewards blue cities for running their budget deficits into the drain, and rewards workers for quitting their jobs and staying home. Liberal math—it works, man.
More Vaccines Coming Our Way
In a piece of good news, President Biden announced the U.S. will purchase an additional 100 million doses of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine, on top of the 100 million already purchased. Part of the goal in purchasing these vaccines is to ensure the U.S. has enough doses supply to vaccinate children (which it’s not yet approved for) and — if necessary — administer booster shots to increase protection against new variants of the virus.
Biden is standing firm in his promise that the U.S. will have enough vaccines available for 300 million adults by the end of May.
Thus far, more than 18% of Americans have received their first dose on top of the estimated 55% of Americans who now have natural immunity. In light of the backlash Texas and Mississippi faced for removing government-manded masks, here’s the reasonable case against reopening the country too slowly.
Royal Drama Continues
After daring to question and criticize the allegations Prince Harry and Meghan Markle laid out in their dramatic interview with Oprah, British broadcast journalist Piers Morgan is not giving into the woke, liberal mobs.
“On Monday, I said I didn’t believe Meghan Markle in her Oprah interview,” he wrote on Twitter. “I’ve had time to reflect on this opinion, and I still don’t. If you did, OK. Freedom of speech is a hill I’m happy to die on. Thanks for all the love, and hate. I’m off to spend more time with my opinions.”
Morgan paired his proclamation with a Winston Churchill quote graphic which states, “Some people’s idea of free speech is that they are free to say what they like, but if anyone says anything back, that is an outrage.”
If only Churchill could witness what’s happening now. Read more at The Federalist.
The End of Daylight Savings Time?
From Kylee Zempel at The Federalist:
“[A] glorious piece of legislation popping up in the Senate is a bright spot this week — not only because it’s bipartisan, but also because it would literally grant daylight to weary Americans. The Sunshine Protection Act would make Daylight Savings Time permanent across the country, putting to bed the absurd practice we continue year after year of switching our clocks around — or not, and accidentally sleeping through church.”
“Save for a few lucky states that have put the kibosh on the practice through their own legislation, Daylight Savings Time lasts eight months out of the year. In March, we “spring forward” to optimize our hours of daylight, and in November, we “fall back” — usually into despair, as the four coldest, gloomiest months come with an added level of actual and metaphorical darkness.”
Amen to adding an extra hour of sunshine for the full 365 days a year! Let’s hope Congress gets this one right.
Kelsey Bolar is a senior policy analyst at Independent Women’s Forum and a contributor to The Federalist. She is also the Thursday editor of BRIGHT, and the 2017 Tony Blankley Chair at The Steamboat Institute. She lives in Washington, DC, with her husband, daughter, and Australian Shepherd, Utah.
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Mar 11, 2021 01:00 am
Behind the scenes, she exercises all the powers of the presidency without having to publicly carry any responsibility for the results. Read More…
Mar 11, 2021 01:00 am
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A mind so blurred or dulled by pro-choice rhetoric as to bypass the instinct to protect human life has entered a twilight zone where sanity is absent. Read More…
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The NBA has turned “woke” and a China apologist. It is no longer entertainment but “wokism” at its worst. Read more…
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American Thinker is a daily internet publication devoted to the thoughtful exploration of issues of importance to Americans.
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AmericanThinker · 3060 El Cerrito Plaza, #306 · El Cerrito, CA 94530 · USA
By J. Miles Coleman
Associate Editor, Sabato’s Crystal Ball
KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE
— 38 states will see gubernatorial races over the next two years; Democrats currently hold 18 of the seats that will be contested while the GOP holds 20.
— Maryland, where popular Gov. Larry Hogan (R-MD) is term-limited, will be hard for Republicans to hold. With a Leans Democratic rating, the Crystal Ball expects a Democrat to flip the seat.
— We’re starting the cycle off with five Toss-ups: Arizona, Georgia, Kansas, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. Not coincidentally, four of those gave President Biden very narrow margins last year.
— Democrats are clear favorites to retain governorships in three of the nation’s most populous states — California, Illinois, and New York — but they could be better-positioned in each.
— In the Senate, Sen. Roy Blunt’s (R-MO) retirement nudges that contest from Safe Republican to Likely Republican.
Sizing up 2022’s gubernatorial landscape
Midterm election cycles feature the lion’s share of the nation’s gubernatorial races, and there will be 38 gubernatorial elections over the next two years — New Jersey and Virginia in November, and the rest next year. We took a look at the 2021 races last week, and now we’ll dive into the 2022 races.
Just as in congressional elections, the president’s party often struggles in gubernatorial races. The president’s party has lost governorships in 16 of the 19 midterms since the end of World War II, and two of the three exceptions (1962 and 1998) were years where there was no net change. Only in 1986, Ronald Reagan’s second midterm, did the president’s party enjoy a gubernatorial net gain (eight seats) in the postwar era.
Overall, Republicans control 27 governorships and Democrats control 23. Of the 38 up this cycle, Republicans hold 20 and Democrats hold 18. The current party control of those governorships is shown in Map 1.
Map 1: Current party control of governorships being contested in 2021-2022
Our initial ratings for these races are shown in Map 2.
Map 2: Crystal Ball gubernatorial ratings
Compared to 2018, 2022 could be a cycle defined by greater stability in gubernatorial politics. Four years ago, only 20 races featured incumbents running for reelection. This time, only seven governors who were up in 2018 are term-limited, though others who are eligible to run again may decide not to. Still, this isn’t to say that there’s no potential for partisan turnover.
Maryland: A tough hold for the GOP without Hogan
We’ll start our initial sweep through the map with Maryland, which is the only state we see changing hands right off the bat. Now-outgoing Gov. Larry Hogan (R-MD) was one of 2014’s upset winners. That year, Hogan made fiscal restraint a centerpiece of his campaign and had the good fortune of running against then-Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown (D-MD) — Brown was widely criticized for his handling of the state’s Obamacare exchange. In 2018, against an underfunded Democratic challenger, Hogan rode out a national Democratic tide to become Maryland’s first Republican governor since 1954 to secure reelection.
Though Hogan, who has emerged as one of the most prominent voices in the anti-Trump faction of the GOP, was able to find success, he’ll likely have a tougher time trying to dictate his successor. Lt. Gov. Boyd Rutherford (R-MD) may be an attractive candidate, but his office might as well have an “abandon all hope ye who enter here” sign above it — Maryland voters have never elevated an incumbent lieutenant governor to the state’s top job. With Democrats in charge of the state’s redistricting process, the lone Republican in Maryland’s congressional delegation, Rep. Andy Harris (R, MD-1), may very well get a blue district. This may push Harris to consider running statewide, though he’s much more conservative than Hogan.
Of the few announced Democratic candidates, state Comptroller Peter Franchot leads the field. First elected to public office in 1986, Franchot has carved out a niche as something of a moderate Democrat who will take on his own party. From an electoral perspective, this approach seems a hit with voters: in 2018, he was reelected 72%-28%, the best showing for a statewide Democrat since 1990. Aside from Franchot, there are no shortage of Democrats who could run in this blue state, and we think any competent Democrat would be favored over a generic Republican. Hence, our Leans Democratic rating.
The Toss-ups
Perhaps not surprisingly, four of the closest states in the 2020 presidential election feature Toss-up gubernatorial races in our initial 2022 ratings. Arizona, Georgia, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin were all states that Donald Trump carried in 2016, but each gave President Joe Biden pluralities last year. Digging further into that quartet, there’s a nice symmetry: two will see open seat contests this cycle while two feature incumbents who can run again.
In Arizona, Gov. Doug Ducey (R-AZ) is term-limited. While some governors have seen their approval ratings soar as the COVID-19 pandemic has lingered on, this has not been the case for Ducey — as Arizona has been hit particularly hard, his image has suffered. So in Arizona, the GOP could benefit from running a fresh face. Aside from Ducey, who led the state Republican ticket in 2018, first-term state Treasurer Kimberly Yee was the best-performing Republican that year. But in a primary, Yee may have competition from state Attorney General Mark Brnovich, who is term-limited in his current job. Unlike the past few midterms, Democrats are entering the cycle with a statewide bench in Arizona — specifically, Secretary of State Katie Hobbs has been mentioned as a candidate, though other Democrats may run.
After two impressive performances in the Keystone State, Gov. Tom Wolf (D-PA) can’t run for a third term. In 2014, Wolf, who had no prior experience in elected office, parlayed his background as a business executive into a winning campaign against then-Gov. Tom Corbett (R-PA). If Wolf’s image as a political outsider was part of his appeal, many state Democrats seem intent on replacing him with a more experienced politician. In Pennsylvania politics, it’s been a poorly kept secret that state Attorney General Josh Shapiro, who was just reelected last year, has his eye on the governorship.
While Pennsylvania elects its governor in midterm years, it elects a slate of three row offices — auditor, attorney general, and treasurer — in presidential years. Even as Trump carried the state in 2016, Democrats swept the three row offices. But, almost paradoxically, as Biden flipped Pennsylvania, the GOP picked up the auditor and treasurer posts. So aside from Wolf, Shapiro is now the only non-federal statewide Pennsylvania Democrat who’s been elected in their own right (Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, also a Democrat, was part of Wolf’s ticket in 2018 and is running for U.S. Senate). The Republican side is more open. Pennsylvania is unique this year in that it has open contests for both Senate and governor, so candidates may take some time to settle on which campaign seems more promising. Until Wolf’s 2014 victory, one rhythm was constant in state politics: beginning in 1954, Pennsylvania voters would put one party in control of the statehouse for two terms, then choose the other party for two terms. Could 2022 mark a return to form?
Wisconsin shouldn’t see an open seat contest in 2022, but, as usual, we expect the state to host a competitive race. In 2018, in their fourth attempt, Badger State Democrats finally defeated now-former Gov. Scott Walker (R-WI). But after taking office, Gov. Tony Evers (D-WI), a generally inoffensive Democrat who is expected to run again, has constantly battled with a hostile legislature. Though they’ve fought over several items, the COVID-19 pandemic has accentuated the fault lines between Evers and state Republicans. In the earlier months of the pandemic, legislative Republicans challenged a stay-at-home order that Evers issued — on a partisan vote, the GOP-friendly state Supreme Court sided against the governor. More recently, last month, Republicans, with their large majorities in the state legislature, repealed a mask mandate that Evers put into place.
Former Rep. Sean Duffy (R, WI-7), who held down a rural district in the northern part of the state for much of the last decade, is sometimes mentioned as a gubernatorial candidate. Last week, Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI), who’s been noncommittal on his 2022 plans, suggested that he’s leaning towards retirement. The Senate race, without Johnson, would likely attract some ambitious Republicans, but in this sharply divided state, we have to imagine Republicans will find a quality recruit. In 2020, Biden carried the state by outperforming Evers in the suburban counties around Milwaukee — known to political junkies as the “WOW” counties (Map 3). If Evers can’t match Biden in those suburbs, he will need to retain as much of his rural appeal as he can.
Map 3: Wisconsin, 2018 vs. 2020
Moving back to the Sun Belt, we don’t consider Gov. Brian Kemp (R-GA) to be an especially strong incumbent. In fact, for Kemp, what Trump giveth, Trump may also taketh away. During the 2018 primary, Kemp, then the Georgia secretary of state, was locked in a competitive race with then-Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle (R-GA). Though it wasn’t the only decisive factor, Kemp’s endorsement from Trump was certainly helpful. After finishing 13 percentage points behind Cagle in the May primary, Kemp won the runoff by a smashing 39% margin. In a contentious general election campaign against former state House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams, a Black woman who got national attention for her historic run, Kemp ran to the right. On Election Day, Kemp won with 50.2%, and avoided a runoff — under Georgia law, if no candidate receives a majority in the general election, a runoff is required.
Once in office, and despite governing as a conservative, Kemp made several moves that drew Trump’s ire. After a Senate vacancy arose in late 2019, Kemp appointed businesswoman Kelly Loeffler, snubbing Trump’s choice, then-Rep. Doug Collins (R, GA-9). After the presidential election, Kemp signed off on Georgia’s official vote count, which showed that Biden carried the state by 11,779 votes. To Trump, who insisted, without any proof, that the election was rife with voter fraud, this amounted to a betrayal — the former president promised to campaign against Kemp. As of last month, Collins was considering challenging Kemp, though other pro-Trump candidates may emerge. On the Democratic side, it’s easy to see Abrams clearing the primary field — since her loss, she’s stayed active in Democratic politics. As the two senatorial runoffs from earlier this year show, Democrats can win Georgia in non-presidential scenarios.
As an aside, one of the key differences between our current map and our initial map for the 2018 cycle was the positioning of Georgia and Florida. Four years ago, we started Florida, the more traditional battleground state, off as a Toss-up, while Georgia was in the Likely Republican category — this year, those are switched. In a state where Democrats have struggled to get their act together for much of the last decade, Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) has posted positive approval ratings and seems to be well-positioned.
The final race that the Crystal Ball sees as a Toss-up isn’t a swing state at the presidential level, but like Wisconsin, it features a Democrat who could be in for a tough race. In 2018, now-Gov. Laura Kelly (D-KS) had the benefit of running against a polarizing Republican, former Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach. While Kobach, who was known for his hardline stances on immigration, was outright toxic in the suburban pockets of the state — after Clinton narrowly carried the Kansas City-area KS-3, Kelly did so by almost 20% — Kelly was also able to keep the GOP margins down in the rural parts of the state: In KS-1, a sprawling, rural district that often gives Republicans over 70% of the vote, Kobach took just 51%.
Two big-name Republicans have gotten into the race already: former Gov. Jeff Colyer and state Attorney General Derek Schmidt. A Colyer nomination may give Democrats reason to bring up his old boss, former Gov. Sam Brownback (R-KS), who left office a deeply unpopular figure. Colyer, formerly the state’s lieutenant governor, took over the top job after Brownback left office for a diplomatic post in 2018 but then narrowly lost to Kobach in the gubernatorial primary. Had Colyer won the primary, he might have beaten Kelly in 2018. As Kelly won in 2018, Schmidt was elected to a third term as Attorney General 59%-41%, suggesting he may lack the baggage of some other Republicans.
Gov. John Bel Edwards’ (D-LA) reelection may offer somewhat of a template for Kelly. Edwards was first elected in 2015 — in a red state, he was running against a well-known but flawed Republican to replace another Republican who had low approvals. Edwards was reelected in 2019 over a less problematic opponent, but it was an all-hands-on-deck effort by state Democrats.
New England: Still defying political gravity?
On the gubernatorial map, no single region defies its presidential partisanship more than New England. Though Biden carried all six states in the region fairly comfortably, we don’t put any New England states in the Safe Democratic category.
In terms of personality and style, Maine may feature one of the biggest contrasts of any race. In 2018, then-state Attorney General Janet Mills won the open gubernatorial race to replace Republican Paul LePage. As governor, Mills has kept a low-key profile while LePage was known for his bombastic attitude. Since leaving office, LePage has worked as a bartender and even spent some time living in Florida. But back in Maine now, LePage seems intent on challenging Mills. We’d start LePage off as an underdog — if he follows through with his plans — but he did beat expectations last time he was on the ballot, in 2014. In fact, his strength in northern Maine’s 2nd District presaged Trump’s showing in the area two years later.
Moving one state west, we’re starting New Hampshire off as Leans Republican; until Gov. Chris Sununu’s (R-NH) plans are more solid, this will be something of a hedge rating. Sununu, who is broadly popular in the state, is under pressure from national Republicans to run for Senate against Sen. Maggie Hassan (D-NH) — Hassan also preceded him as governor. While Sununu isn’t term-limited, Granite State governors must face voters every two years. If he takes the plunge against Hassan, an open gubernatorial contest may look more like Toss-up. If Sununu runs for a fourth term as governor, we’d probably upgrade the GOP’s chances here.
In next-door Vermont, the only other state that requires its governors to run biennially, Gov. Phil Scott (R-VT) hasn’t announced his 2022 plans, but he is immensely popular. As one of the most moderate Republican officials in the country, he was reelected last year with nearly 70%, as Biden took about the same share up the ballot. Recently, Scott was tested in hypothetical polling against veteran Sen. Pat Leahy (D-VT) and was actually slightly ahead. Serving as governor and handling the day-to-day affairs of a state is one thing but going off to the Senate to vote with the national party is something else entirely. So we’re skeptical that, when push comes to shove, Scott, or any Republican, could win a federal race in Vermont. But for now, while Vermonters give national Democrats landslide margins, they seem content with electing moderate Republicans to state office. We’ll start this race off as Likely Republican, though an open seat situation would make for an attractive Democratic target.
Massachusetts, though its governors enjoy the luxury of four-year terms, is in much the same situation as Vermont. Gov. Charlie Baker (R-MA) was first elected in 2014 has and routinely ranked among the country’s most popular state executives. Last month, polling from MassINC showed him with a 74% approval rating; often, his numbers are higher with Democrats than Republicans. A frequent critic of Trump, Baker seems to also benefit from the electorate’s appetite for split government — as a Republican who emphasizes bipartisanship, he’s in a position to work with, and serve as a check on, the Democratic supermajorities in the legislature. With his fundraising picking up, it seems like he’ll run for a third term (there are no term limits in the Bay State). We’ll default to Likely Republican for now, but if he runs, Baker is a very strong bet for reelection.
Rhode Island has the nation’s newest governor, though it may also see competitive primaries. As then-Gov. Gina Raimondo (D-RI) was sworn in to lead the Department of Commerce earlier this month, her lieutenant governor, Dan McKee, replaced her in the Ocean State’s top office. McKee was first elected as lieutenant governor in 2014 and he survived a close primary from a more liberal challenger in 2018. As McKee looks to winning the governorship in his own right, another potential primary looms large. Both Secretary of State Nellie Gorbea and state Treasurer Seth Magaziner are term-limited in their positions, and either would be formidable opponents in a Democratic primary. Rhode Island is also expected to lose one of its two congressional districts, as a result of the 2020 census — rather than running against each other for the state’s sole seat, one of Reps. David Cicilline (D, RI-1) or Jim Langevin (D, RI-2) may run for governor.
Like other New England states, Rhode Island tends to be more receptive to local Republicans, and it has seen competitive state-level races over the last few decades. In fact, when Raimondo received 53% in 2014, it was the first time since 1992 that a Democrat claimed a majority of the vote in a gubernatorial race there (until 1994, it elected governors biennially). Still, given the strong Democratic bench, if McKee loses a primary, we think most of his potential foes would perform at least as well as he could in a general election. We’re starting Rhode Island off as Likely Democratic.
Rounding out New England, Connecticut may be in for a different type of gubernatorial election. After losing the keys to the governor’s mansion in 1990, Democrats were locked out until 2010. They’ve since strung together three victories, but the margins have been close. Despite the red environment of 2010, then-former Stamford Mayor Dan Malloy won an open seat race by six-tenths of a percentage point — on Election Night 2010, some networks called the race for him while he was still behind his GOP opponent. Even with subpar approval ratings throughout his first term, Malloy was reelected by about 3% in 2014, and now-Gov. Ned Lamont (D-CT) won by about that same amount in 2018.
With the pandemic, Lamont’s approvals numbers went up, and they haven’t come back down — last week, some polling found his approval rating at 71%. During Malloy’s time leading the state, his party’s standing in the legislature eroded: after 2016, for the final stretch of his tenure, the state Senate was tied and Democrats had only a slim majority in the state House. By contrast, in 2020, voters strengthened Lamont’s hand by giving him a supermajority in the state Senate while expanding the Democratic edge in the state House. Though he’s taking his time setting up his campaign, Lamont seems to be in a surprisingly strong position for reelection, so we see the race as Likely Democratic.
Democrats’ big three: Likely but not Safe
One of the things that most stands out about the Crystal Ball’s initial map is the lack of states that we consider to be Safe Democratic. Aside from Hawaii, which is actually open — though in gubernatorial races there recently, Democrats have generally won by wider-than expected margins — there aren’t any states that we’d place in that most secure category.
On one level, this reflects the nature of gubernatorial races — as mentioned earlier, in state-level contests, voters tend to be less partisan than in federal contests. Also, with the election roughly a year and a half away, a lot can change. But in three of the most populous states that they control, Democrats aren’t as well-off as they could optimally be.
After his initial landslide election in 2010, over a controversial Republican nominee, Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D-NY) fell into something of a holding pattern for 2014 and 2018. A moderate Democrat, he was never beloved by liberals. For his two reelection campaigns, he easily beat back underfunded challengers from the left in primaries, but would go on to win by double-digits in the general elections, as many of his Democratic critics held their noses for him. In the early months of the pandemic, Cuomo became a national figure — with many press outlets based in New York City, his daily briefings buoyed his profile and his approval ratings were stratospheric for much of the year. But more recently, Cuomo’s image has taken a massive hit. Criticism is mounting over his handling of the state’s nursing homes during the pandemic. Meanwhile, at least six women have come forward accusing the governor of sexual harassment. Last week, polling from Quinnipiac University found that, while New Yorkers don’t think the governor should resign, they would rather not see him stand for a fourth term (the state has no term limits).
Cuomo has not ruled out running again. On a historical, and lighter, note, his father, the late Mario Cuomo, was defeated in his bid for a fourth term in 1994 but immediately afterwards, landed a high-profile gig advertising Doritos chips. New York is a Democratic state, but to some degree, we’re waiting to see what Cuomo does. Despite facing calls to resign in early 2019, Gov. Ralph Northam (D-VA) rode out a scandal stemming from a mid-1980s photograph allegedly of Northam in blackface alongside someone dressed in KKK garb, plus another blackface incident from the same era where Northam was posing as Michael Jackson. Two years later, the Virginia governor has largely resuscitated his image, so perhaps Cuomo may be trying to follow a similar path. But in Virginia, which limits its governors to a single consecutive term, reelection is not an option for Northam anyway, and if a damaged Cuomo runs again, Republicans may be more competitive than usual.
In the heart of the Midwest, Illinois is a blue state, but it’s also one that doesn’t fall in love with its governors: it’s ousted two over the last two midterms. In 2009, as his legal troubles were compounding, an actor impersonating then-Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D-IL) on Saturday Night Live joked that in Illinois, having a governor end up in jail is “like flipping a coin and landing on tails.” While we consider Gov. J. B. Pritzker (D-IL) to be better off for reelection than some of his predecessors, there are a few uncertainties for Illinois Democrats on the horizon. In a referendum in 2020, voters defeated a tax proposal that Pritzker supported. Perhaps with that in mind going into an election year, the governor’s most recent budget excluded an income tax hike. Pritzker probably will be fine but we’re not going to start the race as Safe Democratic.
Finally, in California, Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA) made a strong debut in 2018 — aside from Hawaii’s term-limited David Ige (D-HI), he was the only Democratic candidate for governor to win with more than 60% of the vote that year. Ordinarily, Newsom would be a solid choice for reelection, but he faces the prospect of a recall election later this year, which injects some uncertainty into the picture.
In California, recalls are essentially a two-part proposition. On the ballot, voters are first asked whether the current governor should remain in office. A second ballot question lists a slate of replacement candidates — the incumbent governor is not eligible to be a choice. On the first question, if a majority of voters agree to replace the current governor, the candidate who gets the most votes on the second question becomes the new governor. In 2003, the last (and only) time such an effort has been successful in California, voters chose to recall Gov. Gray Davis (D-CA) by a 55%-45% margin, while Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger — with high name recognition from his acting career — got the most votes as the replacement candidate.
As of last month, Newsom’s approval rating was above 50%, but organizers of the recall claim that they’ll gather enough signatures to initiate the process. Republicans have also recruited one of their strongest candidates, former San Diego mayor Kevin Faulconer, and their 2018 nominee, businessman John Cox, is also running. Against either, Newsom likely would have little to worry about, but under recall rules, and out of an abundance of caution, we’re rating California as Likely Democratic.
Streaks to watch out for and some other notes
Though we don’t expect them to be among the most closely-contested races, two states we’ll be watching are Oregon and Arkansas — both carry some historical significance. Aside from its neighbor, Washington state, Oregon has the longest continuous streak of electing Democratic governors, as no Republican has won there since 1982. Oregon Republicans can sometimes come close — the last time the state saw an open seat contest, in 2010, Democrats held the governor’s mansion by just 1.5% — but putting together the final pieces of a winning coalition has proved challenging for them. Republicans had a credible candidate in 2018, former state Rep. Knute Buehler. But in what could be an ominous sign for the GOP, Buehler has since left the party. As Gov. Kate Brown (D-OR) cannot run for another term, we’ll start the race as Leans Democratic, though if Republicans have trouble finding a quality recruit, we may shift the race more in the incumbent party’s direction.
The Crystal Ball sees Arkansas as a safely Republican state, but some history could be made there next year. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who served as former President Trump’s press secretary and is the daughter of former Gov. Mike Huckabee (R-AR), is running with Trump’s endorsement. Sanders will have a primary with state Attorney General Leslie Rutledge. In a general election, either would be heavily favored to replace outgoing Gov. Asa Hutchinson (R-AR) — in a sign of the times, this would mark the first time since Reconstruction that a Republican has handed off the Arkansas governorship to another Republican.
Looking to some more competitive states, aside from Evers and Kelly, we’re starting off all of the Democratic governors who were first elected in 2018 as favorites. In the west, it remains to be seen if Govs. Jared Polis (D-CO) or Michelle Lujan Grisham (D-NM) will draw credible opposition — both won open seats by solid margins in 2018 and are now in Likely Democratic races. Gov. Tim Walz (D-MN) was another solid performer that year, winning an open seat by a 54%-42% vote. This week, former Republican state Sen. Scott Jensen announced plans to run. Jensen represented Carver County, west of the Twin Cities, in the legislature, though another prominent local figure may make the race: Trump has reportedly encouraged MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell to run for governor. Given his outlandish statements after (and before) the election, Lindell would likely be a weaker nominee. In any event, we put Walz in the Likely Democratic category, as well.
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D-MI) saw her national stock rise with the COVID-19 pandemic last year. While Whitmer’s approval numbers are usually healthy, Republicans may be competitive, depending on their recruit. Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak (D-NV) also starts off a slight favorite, though some recent upheaval within the state Democratic Party may add a layer of uncertainty here. Biden carried Michigan and Nevada by about 2.5% apiece, so starting each off as Leans Democratic seems reasonable.
Two of Biden’s disappointments last year were Iowa and Ohio, on either side of the Midwest. Though polling showed him competitive in both, he lost them each by about 8%. In 2018, despite serious efforts, the story was similar for state Democrats. Govs. Kim Reynolds (R-IA) and Mike DeWine (R-OH) each won by about 3%. DeWine, who has upset some local Republicans with his COVID-19 restrictions, could potentially have more to worry about in a primary than a general election. No major Democrat has entered the race against Reynolds, though state Auditor Rob Sand hasn’t ruled out seeking a promotion. Both are Likely Republican for now.
Conclusion
Even though 2018 was, broadly, considered a “blue wave” year for Democrats, Republicans still won several of the most competitive gubernatorial races. So with local issues figuring more prominently into campaigns, statewide races are often more candidate-driven than federal elections, which are increasingly breaking along presidential fault lines. Going into the 2014 cycle, Republicans, who had a great year in 2010, were thought to be overexposed. But by running candidates who fit their states, like Hogan in Maryland and Baker in Massachusetts, the GOP ended the cycle with a net gain of statehouses.
Hopefully by 2022, the COVID-19 pandemic will have subsided. While many governors are still riding high from their handling of the pandemic, more “conventional” issues may be dominating gubernatorial campaigns by then — perhaps this will lead to more competitive races.
P.S. Missouri Senate to Likely Republican
Table 1: Crystal Ball Senate rating change
Senator
Old Rating
New Rating
Roy Blunt (R-MO)
Safe Republican
Likely Republican
On Monday, Sen. Roy Blunt (R-MO) became the fifth Republican senator of the 2022 cycle to announce his retirement. Blunt’s departure may open the door to a competitive GOP primary in the Show Me State. Democrats may look harder at the contest as a long shot opportunity, especially if former Gov. Eric Greitens (R-MO), who left office in disgrace in 2018 but is reportedly eyeing a comeback, is nominated.
To be clear, we recognize that Missouri, which gave Trump 57% of the vote last year, is not the bellwether that it once was. If he were around today, Harry Truman, the state’s favorite son, might not even be able to win there as a Democrat. But for now, we’re keeping the race at the right edge of the playing field.
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A Tampa police officer is dead after he intentionally veered into the path of what appeared to be an out-of-control driver, according to reports. Witnesses say that th … Read more
It’s a story of hard streets, difficult decisions, heightened tempers, and hard drugs. It’s a story about human beings, our duties, our failings, and our weaknesses.
The losing side needed to know that a fair shake was given, and that justice prevailed, even if it wasn’t the outcome they wanted. That did not happen after Nov. 3.
‘Nomadland’ is not an exceptional case study. It’s proof that erecting artistic barriers against cross-cultural exploration will cost us beautiful work.
Cuomo is far from the only U.S. governor who implemented a deadly nursing home policy forcing coronavirus-infected patients into close contact with the population’s most vulnerable.
The only people who really like Meghan are her left-wing pals in Hollywood and the corporate media. Diana was a populist princess, beloved by the people and the press.
Federalist Co-Founder Sean Davis called New York Times TikTok reporter Taylor Lorenz the ‘journalism equivalent of the creeper cruising by the schoolyard.’
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
“You must read The Transom. With brilliant political analysis and insight into the news that matters most, it is essential to understanding this incredible moment in history. I read it every day!” – Newt Gingrich
As President Joe Biden prepares to mark the one-year anniversary of the U.S. coronavirus lockdown, we look at how Americans are seeking compensation for failed COVID-19 treatments from a decade-old government fund.
The House of Representatives gave final approval to one of the largest economic stimulus measures in American history, a sweeping $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill that gives Biden his first major victory in office.
Mindful of hard lessons learned by the previous Democratic administration, Biden and top aides are planning a nationwide tour to sell Americans on the benefits of the pandemic relief bill.
The bill was crafted without Republican input and passed Congress without a single Republican vote. Nevertheless, Republican-leaning states are due to get a disproportionate share of many of its benefits.
↑ House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer display the ‘American Rescue Plan’ on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., March 10, 2021
WORLD
↑ Participants pray and observe a moment of silence towards the sea at 2:46 p.m., the time when the 9.0-magnitude earthquake struck off Japan’s coast in 2011, at Arahama district in Sendai, northeastern Japan, March 11, 2021
With a moment of silence, prayers and anti-nuclear protests, Japan mourned about 20,000 victims of the massive earthquake and tsunami that struck Japan 10 years ago, destroying towns and triggering nuclear meltdowns in Fukushima.
Myanmar’s military government accused deposed leader Aung San Suu Kyi of accepting illegal payments as eight people were killed when security forces opened fire on protests against the coup.
China’s parliament approved a draft decision to change Hong Kong’s electoral system, further reducing democratic representation in the city’s institutions and introducing a mechanism to vet politicians’ loyalty to Beijing.
Tens of thousands of Hindu devotees plunged into India’s Ganges river as the country kicked off one of the world’s largest religious festivals, even as officials reported the biggest spike in coronavirus cases for three months.
BUSINESS
The worst of the COVID-19 crisis is over for Rolls-Royce, its CEO predicts, after the engine maker plunged to a record 4 billion pound ($5.6 billion) underlying loss for 2020 as its airline customers stopped flying.
Electric van and bus maker Arrival is wrestling with the global pandemic like other UK firms, but not because of a lack of business. We look at how the picture is brightening for commercial EVs on rising demand from delivery customers
A fire at a French cloud services firm has disrupted millions of websites, knocking out government agencies’ portals, banks, shops, news websites and taking out a chunk of the .FR web space.
Joe Youngblood, who works in digital marketing in Dallas, bought his first share of GameStop at $98 in early February and found his investment cut in half in a matter of days. After a wild ride, he is now up more than 200%.
Joshua Arnold: On Tuesday, Arkansas S.B. 6, the “Arkansas Unborn Child Protection Act,” was signed into law by Governor Asa Hutchinson (R). The act, which criminalizes abortion at all stages of pregnancy except when the life of the mother is at risk, paints a big, red target on Roe v. Wade.
The bill passed the state senate (27-7) with three-to-one support and the state house (76-19) with four-to-one support. State Senator Jason Rapert and State Representative Mary Bentley worked tirelessly alongside the Arkansas Family Council to ensure the bill’s passage.
Instead of tiptoeing around the abortion industry’s sacred cow, S.B. 6 opened a direct frontal assault on the Supreme Court’s 1973 abortion decision. The bill compared Roe v. Wade (and Doe and Casey), which denies the personhood of the unborn, with the Dred Scott decision (and Plessy v. Ferguson), which denied the personhood of African Americans. This is important because abortion advocates’ best argument to defend Roe is that it should be upheld simply because it is precedent and for no other reason. Just as the Supreme Court overturned its unjust decisions in Dred Scott and Plessy v. Ferguson, so it should overturn its unjust decisions in Roe, Doe, and Casey, argues the Arkansas bill.
The Arkansas Unborn Child Protection Act faithfully reflects a pro-life philosophy. It legally recognizes the government’s responsibility to honor and protect all human life, even in the womb. That is, the intentional taking of any life, even an unborn life, is morally and legally wrong. Consistent with this truth, the bill omits the common exceptions for rape and incest, which absurdly permit unborn babies to be killed because of who their parents are.
Arkansas Representative Julie Mayberry told her own story while discussing the bill on the state house floor. At 19 weeks gestation, her unborn daughter was diagnosed with spina bifidia. Many children with spina bifidia, Down syndrome, and other disabilities are aborted based on the contorted reasoning that a life with a severe condition is worse than no life at all. Not only is that not true (as anyone who has cared for a disabled child will tell you), but in Mayberry’s case the diagnosis was incorrect, and her daughter was born without any disability. Had she thought, as she once did, that abortion was okay, she might have had her healthy unborn daughter killed because of a misdiagnosis.
Christians have always held that no law is valid which flies in the face of God’s law found in Scripture. And so the bill’s sponsors deserve credit, not only for crafting a bill that consistently values and protects human life, but also for explicitly condemning one of the bloodiest stains on America’s national record, Roe v. Wade.
Arkansas isn’t alone in passing such a broad ban on abortion. Alabama passed a similar bill in 2019, and other states have considered them too. This demonstrates the increasing momentum of the pro-life movement, energized by popular opinion (millennials dislike abortion more than previous generations) and what may be the most favorable Supreme Court environment in the 48 years since the Roe decision was first handed down. Increasing numbers of Americans are being persuaded of The Legal, Historical, and Cultural Reasons to Overturn Roe v. Wade. It’s time for Roe‘s legacy of death to end.
—————————- Joshua Arnold shared article at Family Research Center.
Tags:New Arkansas Law, Sets up, Direct Challenge to, Roe v. WadeTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Gary Bauer: Trump Responds
The crisis at the southern border is increasingly out of control. While Biden Administration officials refuse to utter the word “crisis,” Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas conceded this week that Border Patrol agents are being “overwhelmed” by the migrant surge.
Here’s what everyone must understand: The Democrats own this crisis.
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris campaigned on amnesty. They promised free healthcare for illegal immigrants. And they have gutted the border security policies that President Donald Trump put into place.
The results were predictable. With deportations down 60% since Biden took office, migrants throughout Mexico and Central America know that our border is now wide open.
“When I was President, our Southern border was in great shape – stronger, safer, and more secure than ever before. We ended Catch-and-Release, shut down asylum fraud, and crippled the vicious smugglers, drug dealers, and human traffickers. . . Our country is being destroyed at the Southern border, a terrible thing to see!”
I’m glad Trump is speaking up. Every Republican should be.
And the state of Texas is stepping up as well. Governor Greg Abbott has ordered the Texas National Guard to the border. That’s a much better use of the National Guard than the ongoing “occupation” of Washington, D.C.
Confronting Communist China
Just a few hours ago, as a Trump appointee on the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, I participated in a hearing on human rights abuses in communist China. More specifically, the hearing focused on what American businesses are doing in communist China.
China’s communist regime has declared war on all faiths. Beijing’s tyrants want the Chinese Communist Party to be the people’s religion. And they want President Xi to be their god.
They have persecuted all faiths, including Buddhists and Christians. But the worst abuses right now are being committed against ethnic Muslims known as Uighurs.
Several million Uighurs have been put into concentration camps. There have been numerous indications and warnings that Beijing is engaged in genocide against the Uighurs. Tens of thousands have been relocated all over China and forced into slave labor. It’s a nightmare. But it gets worse.
There is evidence that major American and European corporations are making their products in China with Uighur slave labor. This is a national scandal that must be exposed. But I went further in today’s hearing.
Even if the slave labor scandal is resolved, my question for American corporations is why are they building factories in communist China at all?
Communist China is our greatest adversary. Like the old Soviet Union, Beijing has made no secret about its intentions to replace the United States as the world’s sole superpower. (See next item.) But when American corporations build factories in China, they are only strengthening our enemy.
I have a message for these American companies: Bring your factories home!
There are 17 million unemployed Americans. Yes, profits are important. But not more important than the country that gave birth to you and allowed you to prosper.
We were told over and over again for the past 25 years that trade with communist China would change China. It hasn’t. But as I warned, it changed us.
Major American companies that have bought into the left’s woke nonsense and insist on dictating radical values to us, are silent when it comes to communist China’s political oppression, religious persecution, ethnic genocide and rank racism. Instead, they have lobbied for even more trade with China.
There is something terribly wrong when American capitalists become apologists for brutal communists.
U.S. Admiral Sounds The Alarm
Make no mistake about it, my friends: Communist China intends to dominate the world. They see the West, and the United States in particular, as nations in decline, and they are eager to fill the void.
Yesterday, Adm. Philip Davidson, commander of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee. He warned senators that communist China represents “the greatest long-term strategic threat to security in the 21st century,” adding that Beijing’s communist bosses are “accelerating their ambitions to supplant the United States.”
Davidson said that communist China’s rapid military buildup, combined with its overall bad behavior, is leading to “a posture that would indicate they are interested in aggression.” He warned that Taiwan “is clearly one of their ambitions,” and may be attacked “during the next six years.”
Many experts believe that the only reason communist China hasn’t already invaded Taiwan is that they just aren’t sure how the United States would respond. Any sign of weakness on our part could lead to a tragic miscalculation by communist China.
In addition, Admiral Davidson said that the communist Chinese have “a vast disinformation machine” that utilizes nearly one million people on social media to spread communist propaganda.
The admiral’s warnings shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone. Military leaders and intelligence leaders have been telling us this for years now. And, as I noted above, the communist Chinese have been too.
Is Joe Up To The Job?
In yesterday’s report, I noted some of the many struggles that have plagued President Joe Biden lately, including his trouble remembering the name of his secretary of defense (Lloyd Austin) and the building where he works (the Pentagon).
While senility is not a precise medical term, Brit Hume has not been shy about suggesting that Biden is going senile. And it seems that a growing number of Americans are increasingly concerned that Biden may not be up to the job.
A new Rasmussen poll finds that 50% of Americans have little to no confidence that Biden is either physically or mentally fit for the rigors of being president of the United States.
“The Age Of Rush”
Fox Nation is honoring the great Rush Limbaugh with a new four-part series about his life and legacy. It explores how he dropped out of college to get into the radio business, how instrumental he was in the 1994 “Republican Revolution,” his leadership as the voice of the conservative resistance during the Obama era and the final days of his “blessed life.”
The series is narrated by former Vice President Mike Pence, a former talk radio host himself, who credits Rush Limbaugh for his election to Congress.
Click here to learn more and to watch the series, entitled “The Age Of Rush.”
Biden’s Super Spreader Policy
The Biden Administration, liberal Democrat governors and the left-wing media have taken virtually every aspect of American life that people yearn for and labeled those activities as “super spreader events.”
For example, they have kept the schools closed because they said they would be super spreader places. That was completely contrary to the science, yet in many big cities they still won’t open our schools.
They have almost completely destroyed American sports. When the Super Bowl took place, we were told that many experts were having sleepless nights, worried that it would cause a spike in virus infections. It didn’t happen.
I went to an outdoor event at the White House to celebrate the confirmation of Justice Amy Coney Barrett. Several people who worked at the White House were later diagnosed with COVID.
USA Today not only called it a “White House super spreader event,” it published a photo of all of us outside in the Rose Garden. They identified most of us by name, and asked for help identifying the others at this “White House super spreader event.” They stopped just short of issuing “Most Wanted” posters for us!
Now the same people who haven’t wanted American citizens to enjoy one ounce of normalcy over the past year are proud of the fact that they have created a crisis at the southern border. Thousands of illegal immigrants are flowing into our country, many of whom are infected with the coronavirus.
What is happening on the southern border right now is, without any fear of contradiction, a Biden super spreader policy that should be condemned by everyone.
Not Helpful
While we’re all happy about the progress being made on the coronavirus vaccinations, the CDC continues to mystify everybody with its guidelines.
Yesterday, the CDC made a big announcement. If you have gotten the vaccination and are visiting with other people who have been vaccinated, the CDC now says you have permission to take your mask off indoors. Wow!
But the CDC also said that even if you have your vaccination, non-essential travel is discouraged.
Excuse me? Why is our government telling people who have been vaccinated that they still can’t travel?
What’s Wrong With Joe?
The evidence of President Biden’s cognitive decline is growing. I don’t say that with any glee. Sadly, I feel he is being exploited by those around him who don’t have his best interests, or the country’s, in mind.
I believe it is one of the reasons his staff hid him in the basement during last year’s campaign, and why they had so many “lids” or down times on his schedule.
Sometimes I see him deliver a speech and think maybe I am wrong. But then I realize that Biden was just reading from a teleprompter. Of course, even that hasn’t always gone well, and there were times when he read out instructions that he wasn’t supposed to.
But when Biden attempts to speak off-the-cuff, he increasingly seems to have difficulty finding his words. In Texas recently, Biden struggled to remember the names of prominent Democrats.
During an online event, the White House staff cut off the live feed rather than let him take questions. Biden tried to take a victory lap this weekend after the Senate passed his $1.9 trillion bailout bill, but he had difficulty conveying essential points.
At a White House event yesterday recognizing the appointment of two female generals, Biden seemingly forgot the name of his secretary of defense and the building where he works, eventually referring to him as “the guy who runs that outfit over there.” (It’s the Pentagon, Joe!)
Biden is obsessed with masks. He wears them outside, and he ordered all of us to do so, which is completely unnecessary. He regularly lectures us about masks.
Here’s another odd thing. There are multiple reports that Vice President Kamala Harris is “playing an unusually large role” in foreign policy, including making calls to foreign leaders.
Why is that? Is Harris taking on more work because there are “lids” on the commander-in-chief’s days in the White House too?
Not surprisingly, a majority of voters are growing increasingly concerned that Biden still hasn’t held a formal press conference yet.
You Read It Here First
Two weeks ago, I told you that China’s Communist Party was increasingly parroting the rhetoric of the radical left to attack America and our allies. Or is the left parroting the communist Chinese to attack America? Either way, it’s difficult to tell the difference between Chinese communist rhetoric and American progressive rhetoric.
I’m pleased to see that Wall Street Journal picked up on this. The Journal published an editorial Sunday entitled, “The Woke Chinese Communist Party.”
Last week, I told you that Biden’s Blue State bailout bill included reparations for black farmers. I am pleased to see that Senators Lindsey Graham and Sen. Pat Toomey (R-PA) are speaking out against it.
On Fox News yesterday, Toomey blasted the bill, saying:
“There’s reparations for minority farmers [who] don’t have to demonstrate any financial stress or any adverse effect from COVID, but they’ll get 120% of whatever indebtedness they have just paid for by the taxpayer. But not if you’re a white farmer. It’s outrageous and, I think, unconstitutional.”
On CNBC, Toomey said the bill was “an embarrassment” and “a disaster,” and he again called out the plan’s reparations for minority farmers.
Frankly, every Republican member of Congress should be exposing the radical left as pawns of communist China, and they should be exposing the obscene and indefensible spending in this Democrat bailout bill.
I am glad that our keen insights in these daily reports are on the cutting edge, keeping you up-to-date and informed. It’s your support that makes it happen, and we can’t do it without you!
Good News
There was an important victory for free speech and religious liberty at the Supreme Court yesterday. The justices ruled 8-to-1 that speech codes at Georgia Gwinnett College unconstitutionally prevented a student from sharing his Christian faith on campus.
Friday, federal Judge Rudolph Contreras rejected a Democrat lawsuit attempting to force the ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment. The lawsuit was brought by the attorneys general of Illinois, Nevada and Virginia after their states recently ratified the ERA, even though the deadline for ratification passed decades ago.
Thankfully, Judge Contreras (an Obama appointee!) wasn’t having any of it. In his opinion, he stated that the ratification deadline was “just as effective as . . . the text of a proposed amendment.”
In other news, election reform measures are continuing to advance at the state level. The Georgia Senate passed legislation yesterday limiting “no-excuse absentee voting” and tightening voter ID requirements for absentee ballots.
And Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds signed legislation into law that enacts numerous commonsense election reforms, including efforts to return her state to the concept of an Election Day rather than an Election Month.
—————————- Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
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by Investing.com: While it’s common knowledge that many of our favorite American products are actually made in China, many don’t know that several popular American companies are actually owned by Chinese investors. It’s not always obvious until you see it for yourself – even some sports clubs have interesting foreign stakeholders.
America is home to many companies that have truly become trailblazers in their respective industries. From General Electric appliances to General Mortors cars, all of these thriving businesses help buoy the US economy – but even these giants need to get their money from somewhere.
Investments come from across the globe, but the burgeoning economy in China means that American companies are vulnerable to foreign takeovers, or open to foreign investments, depending on your perspective. If that means saving a floundering brand, then it may be for the best. Read on to find out which of Uncle Sam’s most influential companies are backed by Chinese businesses – some names might surprise you.
Sea World Headquarters: Orlando, FA Bought By: Zhonghong Zhuoye Headquarters: China
The SeaWorld theme park chain has been going for 56 years, for better or for worse. The parks were owned by Busch Entertainment Group, but this all changed in 2009 when they were sold to Blackstone Group.
Blackstone held onto the venture until 2017 when they sold the majority of their stake in a public offering. SeaWorld was hurting ever since the release of the 2013 film Blackfish by CNN Films, so this buyout was advantageous to both sides.
One of the buyers was Zhonghong Zhuoye. Two of the executives, Yoshikazu Maruyama and Yongli Wang, became board members once the deal was completed. Plans were soon unveiled in a bid to generate $14 million in profit for the theme parks over the following three years.
General Electric – Appliances Division Headquarters: Boston, Mass. Bought By: Haier Headquarters: Qingdao, China
General Electric may have started out as a relatively small brand when it was founded in 1892, but the company has grown exponentially since then. Now, GE has its fingers in a lot of pies, from aviation and healthcare to power and venture capital. It’s a titan.
Many Americans find the brand appealing because it has a “Made in America” stamp on its products, however, the appliances wing of the company has been owned by Chinese company Haier since 2016. Haier bought GE appliances for $5.4 billion, a recording breaking sum at that time. The products are still made in the USA, but the decisions are made in China.
It might come as a surprise to many considering just how long the company has been around. However, it just goes to show that when it comes to making money, it really doesn’t matter where the money comes from – as long as it’s coming.
AMC Headquarters: Leawood, Kansas Bought By: Dalian Wanda Group Headquarters: Beijing, China
AMC cinemas have been around for 100 years, providing movie lovers with a wonderful, relaxing experience watching the latest blockbuster hits. AMC is prolific for many reasons, not least because it’s the largest movie theatre chain in the world.
AMC might be short for American Multi-Cinema, but in reality, Chinese company Dalian Wanda Group was the majority stakeholder from 2012-2018. This did change slightly when Silver Lake Partners made a $600 million investment back in 2018, but Wanda Group still calls the shots when it comes to making decisions at the executive level.
Next time you’re tucking into your popcorn and getting ready to watch a movie at one of their locations, it might be worth sparing a moment to think about how China helped keep AMC going. It shouldn’t be a surprise, given how much money Chinese investors pour into the movie industry each year.
Cleveland Cavaliers Headquarters: Cleveland, Ohio Bought By: Investor Group led by, Jianhua Huang Headquarters: Beijing, China
Basketball team the Cleveland Cavaliers burst onto the scene in 1970 with thanks from their sponsors. The team continued to grow in the game over the decades, with backing from Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company. However, in 2019, they got some overseas investors, too.
The Cavaliers signed a deal with Jianhua Huang, a Chinese businessman that previously made deals with the New York Yankees and other teams throughout America. Huang reportedly bought a 15% stake in the Cavaliers. It’s not unusual for sports clubs to have outside investors from overseas.
LeBron James is popular in China, however, he left by the time the deal was finalized. Something tells us that LeBron didn’t mind too much, considering how much money he’s making with the Lakers. Whether the Cavaliers miss him or not is a different story!
General Motors Headquarters: Detroit, Michigan Bought By: Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp (Joint Venture) Headquarters: Shanghai, China
General Motors holds the distinction of being America’s largest automobile manufacturer. As such, it’s also one of the biggest companies of its kind in the entire world, which certainly makes it profitable and appealing.
While General Motors isn’t owned by a Chinese company, it does rely on its partnership with Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp to keep the money rolling in. Both of the companies formed a joint venture in 1998. SAIC sells companies under the General Motors name, even if customers don’t realize it. SAIC has its headquarters in Shanghai, while GM has theirs in Detroit.
At its core, General Motors still remains a very American brand with American values, but every company needs a helping hand sometimes. In this case, it’s a beneficial partnership that allows the brand to experience the best of both worlds.
Spotify Headquarters: Luxembourg, Stockholm, and NYC Bought By: Tencent Holdings Ltd Headquarters: Shenzhen, China
Spotify is such a part of everyday life now that it’s difficult to remember a time when we couldn’t listen to the songs we want at the drop of a hat. The company was first founded in 2006, providing listeners with a way to stream their favorite music. Although it came from Sweden, Spotify has traveled a lot since then.
Back in 2017, Tencent Holdings and Spotify bought a stake in each other of roughly 10%. This joint venture helped Spotify crack into the Chinese market, while Tencent expanded its already large portfolio. It was a partnership of convenience for Spotify, who wasn’t strong enough at that point to dive into the Chinese market alone.
By partnering up with Tencent, aka one of the largest companies in the world, Spotify put itself at a distinct advantage. Tencent executives also have the uncanny ability to spot a successful venture from a mile off, so to them, it was just another day at the office.
Tesla Headquarters: Palo Alto, California Bought By: Tencent Holdings Ltd (5% Stake) Headquarters: Shenzhen, China
Elon Musk might be the brains behind Tesla and the majority shareholder with 21.7%, but he isn’t the only one pumping money into the automotive company. There are plenty of shareholders, including Chinese company Tencent Holdings Ltd. Tencent isn’t just into music, but a variety of industries.
Tencent is the world’s largest video game company and one of the largest social media companies, making it a force to be reckoned with. In 2019, it had a net income of $95.8 billion, so whatever they’re doing, they’re doing it right. At the moment, the company is still on the up and up.
As for Tesla, the brand is more than just a luxury car manufacturer. The success of the company arguably gave Musk the capital he needed to launch his other projects, including SpaceX. When it comes to technology, we have a lot to thank Tesla for.
21st Century Fox Headquarters: New York City Bought By: Bona Film Headquarters: Beijing
The glittering lights of Hollywood and the looming presence of 21st Century Fox has been part of the American dream since the days of Marilyn Monroe, but the company itself is no longer 100% American.
In 2014 Beijing’s Bona Film bought 19% of Fox for $70 million. While it’s still majority-owned by Americans, the 19% stake is nothing to scoff at. Rather, it means that Chinese investors will have a substantial say in the future productions of 20th Century Fox.
The following year, Bona poured in $235 million into a slew of upcoming movies that the movie studio was producing. Through the financing body TSG, Bona was able to help several blockbusters get off the ground. TSG had done it in the past with movies like The Martian and X-Men Days of Future Past.
Smithfield Foods Headquarters: Smithfield, Virginia Bought By: WH Group Headquarters: Hong Kong
When it comes to producing pork-based products, Smithfield Foods reigns supreme. The company has been going since 1936 when it was created by Joseph W. Luter and his son. The business grew steadily over the years to become one of the largest in the industry, with over 500 farms in America alone.
Back in 2013, WH Group bought Smithfield foods for the astronomical sum of $4.72 billion. At that time, it was the most expensive acquisition made by a Chinese company in America. So, while Smithfield’s HQ might be in Smithfield, Virginia, the company is actually run from Luohe in Henan province.
Smithfield Foods can be found all over the country in stores like Walmart, so WH Group knew they were making a wise investment. After all, clothes and other wares might go out of fashion, but Americans will always need to be fed.
Hilton Hotels Headquarters: McLean, Virginia Bought By: HNA Group Co Ltd Headquarters: Haikou, China
Hilton Hotels & Resorts has been operating since 1919 thanks to founder Conrad “Nicky” Hilton. From a handful of simple locations, Hilton became a worldwide name with 586 hotels in 85 countries by 2018. Today, Hilton hotels are all over the world.
In 2016, China’s aviation and shipping titan HNA Group paid $6.5 billion for a 25% stake in the hospitality chain, becoming the biggest shareholder. This was the second purchase that year for HNA who also bought Carlson Hotels Inc. in a bid to spread its wings into the hotel industry. At the time of the purchase, Hilton Hilton was worth around $26 billion.
While 25% isn’t 100%, it certainly makes a difference. Hilton will always remain a distinctly American brand thanks to pop culture history, but does it make a difference to guests to know the business isn’t rooted in Uncle Sam anymore? The jury’s out on that one.
Brookstone Inc Headquarters: Peterborough, New Hampshire Bought By: Sanpower Group Corp; General Electric Capital Corp; Sailing Capital Management Co Ltd Headquarters: Nanjing, China; Connecticut, United States; Shanghai, China
Brookstone Inc. started out as a mail-order business selling special tools that were hard to find in the mid-60s. From there it started selling items like remote control toys, alarm clocks, and much more. As of 2018, there were 34 locations in America.
The company fell on hard times in 2014 when it was forced to file for bankruptcy under Chapter 11, but Chinese companies Sailing Capital and Sanpower came forward and bought it for $173 million. Thankfully, this purchase and a large injection of cash saved the company from going under completely. Brookstone came out of bankruptcy in July 2014.
However, not everything was sunshine and rainbows from thereon in. Four years after the purchase Brookstone filed for bankruptcy again, closing all of its US locations. Now, only airport stores and its website remain. It just goes to show that it takes more than cash to make the dream work.
WeWork Headquarters: New York City Bought By: Legend Holdings Corp Headquarters: Beijing, China
In recent years, shared workspaces have become more chic and on-trend than ever, especially for freelancers or companies just starting out. WeWork capitalized on this trend when it was conceived 10 years ago. Now, it manages over 4 million square meters of co-working space.
However, it hasn’t always been smooth sailing for the business, who desperately needed some capital in 2016. As a result, Beijing-based company Legend Holdings Corp poured over $430 million into WeWork as a “new partner.” CEO of Legend’s Hony Capital John Zhao said, “Our investment in WeWork is both strategic and obvious.”
The partnership seemed to work, keeping WeWork on the path to success when it looked like it was doomed to fade into obscurity. Cash injections make all the difference, especially when it comes to businesses that are still relatively young.
Sotheby’s Headquarters: New York City Bought By: Taikang Life Insurance Co Ltd Headquarters: Beijing, China
What does a luxury broker of fine and decorative art and a life insurance company have in common? The answer is more complex than you might think. Sotheby’s was founded in London in 1744 before setting up shop in New York City and opening locations around the world.
In 2016, Chinese life insurance company Taikang Life was announced as Sotheby’s newest majority shareholder. Taikang held that position until 2019 when the company was bought by French-Israeli titan Patrick Drahi. It’s unclear what happened to Taikang’s 13.5% stake or if they’re still in partnership with Drahi.
The initial deal was a shock to most people given the quintessentially trans-Atlantic reputation of the business. Sotheby’s has been portrayed in numerous movies and TV shows as a place for the aristocracy and blue blooded gentry to sell their wares. This idea didn’t quite seem to fit its new identity as a Beijing-owned company.
Snapchat Headquarters: Venice, Los Angeles Bought By: Tencent Holdings Ltd Headquarters: Shenzhen, China
Taking a picture with a silly filter has never been so popular thanks to Snapchat. The company was founded by Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy in 2011, but neither one would have realized how popular it would become. At the moment, Snapchat is valued at over $20 billion.
Back in 2017, Tencent extended its reach to Snapchat, too. The tech giant poured in over $2 billion for a 10% stake in the company, hoping to see a tidy return from its investment. On the flip side, Tencent used its tech expertise to develop the augmented reality Snapchat uses even further.
With the rise in other apps like TikTok, Snapchat isn’t quite as popular as it once was. That doesn’t mean that it isn’t still a jewel in Tencent’s crown though, given how many people have the app on their phones.
Starplex Cinemas Headquarters: Dallas, Texas Bought By: Dalian Wanda Group Corp Ltd Headquarters: Beijing, China
Starplex never had the same power in the industry as AMC did, with only 34 locations across America. As a result, many Americans never set foot in a Starplex theater because there just weren’t any around. The chain was bought by AMC in 2015 for $175 million, with many locations turned into AMC Classics.
As we discussed earlier, AMC Theaters is largely controlled by the Dalian Wanda Group Corp Ltd. As Starplex faded into obscurity when the last of the theaters were changed over to AMC in 2017, the company was swallowed by AMC and Dalian to become another cog in the machine.
Any remaining Starplex theaters turned into AMC Classic locations, erasing Starplex off the map forever. It was a blow to many fans of the nostalgic chain considering the name had been around since 1995. Movie lovers saw some huge blockbusters at a Starplex over the years.
Lionsgate Headquarters: Santa Monica, CA Bought By: Hunan TV Headquarters: Changsha
Lionsgate has been making movies since 1997, producing hits like The Hunger Games, What to Expect When You’re Expecting, American Psycho, and more. In 2015, Lionsgate and Hunan brokered a $375 million deal that saw the Chinese company taking 25% of Lionsgate’s projects for the following three years.
This enormous quarter stake in the company will no doubt have ramifications for years down the line. Movies that benefited from the arrangement included Now You See Me 2, Age of Adeline, Gods of Egypt, and many other titles.
Lionsgate commented, “This agreement reflects our strategy of teaming with entrepreneurial partners to expand our global operations in key markets while underscoring our commitment to a business model that mitigates risk.”
During its time at Ford, Volvos were marketed as higher-end, luxury vehicles along the lines of the more affordable Mercedes and BMW models. Alas, after the financial crisis of 2008, the market simply wasn’t there, and Ford was looking for a way out.
Geely bought Volvo for $1.68 billion. The company has remained owned by them ever since. The union proved fruitful. Within 5 years, Volvo was back on top, selling 5 million cars for the first time in its operating history. Together, Geely and Volvo have continued to make strides and grow the brand.
Didi put in $100 million in a bid to help both companies become stronger in the battle against Uber. While Uber has come under fire for several issues since its inception, including a toxic company culture, it’s Chinese-owned competitor is often lauded for treating its drivers better, in the US and abroad.
Interestingly, Didi is backed by Tencent and Alibaba, making it a force to be reckoned with in China already. At the time, Didi had triple the presence in China as Uber did, making it a super strong contender.
Back in 2017, the company secured a $100 million investment from China Investment Corp. The idea was beyond unusual, expecting people to rent out strangers apartments or homes instead of staying in hotels, but it went over like gangbusters practically overnight.
The 10% stake would help Airbnb expand in other territories while also helping to support locations it already served. At the time, Airbnb was worth $31 billion. The investment didn’t stop the company from taking a hit during the 2020 pandemic though when it was forced to lay off 25% of its staff.
Reddit Headquarters: San Francisco, California Bought By: Tencent Headquarters: Nanshan District, Shenzhen
Reddit first popped up online 15 years ago, growing to become a place where users can find information on niche subjects, or simply find a sense of community. Billed as a social media news site, the platform was created by Steve Huffman, Aaron Swartz, and Alexis Ohanian.
Ohanian, is the most public-facing co-founder of the online platform, also notable for his marriage to world champion tennis player Serena Williams. While he is no longer on the board at Reddit, it is only because he chose to step down from his role to be replaced by a black board member in a move that serves to model how big companies can participate in social justice.
At the start of 2019, Tencent invested $150 million into the site, but the details of the deal remain undisclosed. We don’t know exactly what percent the company got for their large cash injection, but the partnership helped Reddit’s value jump to $3 billion from a previous valuation of $1.8 billion.
Ninebot was able to push the technology to try and make Segway a bigger presence in the robotics and technology industry. In 2018, plans to move production out of New Hampshire to China were announced, but it was later said that the majority of production would stay in Bedford.
While moving the production out of New Hampshire would’ve been a sorry state of affairs for the local economy, it’s also an almost inevitable move. Production costs in China and overseas are much lower than they are in America, but let’s hope Segway stays true to its roots.
American company Access Industries holds the majority stake in the company with 86.3%, but Tencent holdings owns 1.6%. On paper, 1.6% sounds like a minute figure, but in reality, it’s still a sizable amount. The company bought its $200 million stake in the New York-based business in mid-2020.
Interestingly, Tencent also has stakes in Universal. While having small stakes in many companies may seem like a less influential path than owning large stakes in fewer companies, Tencent has managed to assert dominance by dipping its toes in several industries, from entertainment to technology.
That extravagant price made it the most expensive hotel ever sold. Anbang made some big changes to the Astoria, including making some of the rooms into condos. This Chinese company has also looked at buying several other American-owned businesses over the years, including Starwood Resorts.
While The Waldorf might be owned by China, it’s good to know that Hilton has a hand in the day-to-day operations. Hilton itself is a well-established, iconic American brand that the public knows, loves, and trusts – that goes a long way in this day and age. But, Hilton isn’t exactly 1005 American-owned, either.
Back in 2005, announced that its Personal Computer Division had been acquired by Lenovo, who paid $1.25 billion for the pleasure. The Chinese business poured a lot of money besides that into IBM too. According to the statement, “Additionally, Lenovo will assume approximately $500 million of net balance sheet liabilities for IBM.”
That kind of money is almost impossible for any business to refuse, even one as famous as IBM. Japan and China are known as technology meccas, so perhaps it makes sense that Lenovo would want to expand its reach even further. ———————— Chinese Investorsbought these iconicAmerican Companies
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by AFP: This week, the U.S. House of Representatives is set to vote on the “Protecting the Right to Organize” (PRO) Act.
It isn’t the first time. Each year since 2018, some member of Congress has introduced the PRO Act, and the House passed it along partisan lines in 2019.
Americans for Prosperity full supports the ability of workers to choose with whom they associate and who speaks on their behalf.
But the PRO Act, referred to as one of the worst bills in Congress earlier this year, would upend more than 70 years of established labor law and do irreparable harm at a time when the American economy can least afford it.
The PRO Act would undermine the rights and interests of workers, employers, and the public by:
Invalidating right-to-work laws enacted in 27 states
Restricting the ability of millions of people to work as independent contractors
Infringing on the privacy of workers
Repealing the ban on secondary boycotts
Eliminating franchising and contractor-subcontractor relationships as we know them
Slanting organizing efforts heavily in favor of unions
Forcing labor negotiations to be settled through binding arbitrations
Eliminating client-attorney privilege
Details about how the PRO Act would harm American workers can be found in the following resource from Americans for Prosperity:
Download a copy of this document and visit votenopro.com to urge your lawmaker to oppose the PRO Act.
————————- Americans For Prosperity supporting American Workers.
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by Frank Miniter: As President Joe Biden (D) has never seen a gun-control bill he doesn’t like, the mainstream media has been salivating over the prospects; though, to name one outlet, Politico’s recent reporting on the topic makes them sound so very disappointed that the filibuster rule in the U.S. Senate will make passing gun-control bills difficult, as they would need to achieve a 60-vote majority to end a filibuster.
Still, the pressure is growing. So much so that when Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), who has said he is not for ending the filibuster rule, was asked again whether he could alter his position, he said, “NEVER!… . What don’t you understand about NEVER?!”
Here are four reason that make it clear gun-control attempts are coming soon.
Here’s part of the White House statement on the meeting: “Today, Domestic Policy Advisor Susan Rice and White House Public Engagement Director and Senior Advisor Cedric Richmond hosted a virtual discussion with leaders of gun violence prevention advocacy groups – Everytown for Gun Safety, Moms Demand Action, Giffords, and Brady. They discussed the ongoing public health crisis of gun violence in America, the historic increase in homicides across American cities last year, and commonsense steps that can be taken to make our communities safer such as closing background check loopholes, stopping the proliferation of unregulated and untraceable ‘ghost’ guns, and expanding community-based violence intervention programs.”
2. The White House Press Secretary Says It’s Coming
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said gun control is “a priority” to President Biden. She said for Biden this is “on a personal level.” She said Biden would “love to see action” and “is happy and eager” to “take on the NRA.” Psaki even says Biden “hasn’t ruled out” acting without Congress.
3. Biden Said He Would Do It
President Biden’s campaign website spelled out his many desires for gun bans, confiscations, onerous regulations, and more. Biden plainly told us he will, if he can: ban and confiscate the most-commonly owned rifle in the United States; ban the magazines that come as standard in almost every newly purchased semi-automatic firearm; destroy gun manufacturers and dealers by repealing the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA); arbitrarily limit the number of guns an American citizen can buy per month; ban the online sale of ammunition and firearm parts and accessories and so much more.
4. Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) is Scheduling Votes
The word is that next week, the U.S. House of Representatives could vote on several gun-control bills, including a so-called “universal” background law (how can it be universal if criminals won’t abide by it.
“According to reports from Capitol Hill, the Democrat-controlled U.S. House of Representatives plans to vote on two gun control bills as early as next week,” reported NRA-ILA. “The first bill, so-called ‘universal’ background check legislation, would criminalize the private transfer of firearms. The second bill, sometimes inaccurately described as legislation to close the ‘Charleston loophole,’ would undermine the Second Amendment right by permitting the federal government to delay a firearm transfer indefinitely without proof that the transferee is prohibited from possessing firearms.”
We’ll keep you informed on this bill and whatever else the Biden administration attempts to do to your right to keep and bear arms.
———————— Frank Miniter is Editor in Chief NRA America’s1st Freedom.
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by Seton Motley: For a society to function and continue to exist – the same words have to mean the same things to everyone. You can’t say “X” – and have a portion of a population take it to mean “Not X.”
The Left – and the DC Deep State Swamp – have a very warped and perverted dictionary. Where all sorts of words and phrases mean the exact opposite of what they actually mean.
To wit: Here is Britannica’s definition of “free trade”:
“A policy by which a government does not discriminate against imports or interfere with exports by applying tariffs (to imports) or subsidies (to exports). A free-trade policy does not necessarily imply, however, that a country abandons all control and taxation of imports and exports.”All of which is the exact opposite of DC’s definition of “free trade.”
DC and their Big Business cronies want to keep their First World executive compensation packages and stock market returns – while Third World-outsourcing their manufacturing and production.
Which means closing millions of American businesses – and opening them elsewhere. To be able to fire tens of millions of Americans – to instead hire cheaper Third World labor.
For decades, the world’s nations have made this screwing of the US ever more lucrative for Big Business. By subsidizing the products Big Business relocates to make there and sell here. And by limiting and tariffing what remaining US businesses make here and seek to export there.
This has been the international status quo – for decades. This is the exact opposite of “free trade.” But it is precisely what the DC Deep State Swamp has been calling “free trade” – for decades.
Donald Trump long saw this lie for what it was. And addressed the heck out of it during his presidential term – by adhering nearly perfectly to the dictionary definition of “free trade.”
Trump highlighted the very many limits and tariffs emplaced upon our stuff – and the very many subsidies pumped into their stuff.
And emplaced strategic – and very tiny – tariffs to force these anti-free trade nations to behave better. And it worked like a charm.
Tags:Seton Motley, The Swamp’s, Warped DictionaryTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Tony Perkins: Cartoonists ought to be mocking the cancel culture — not becoming victims of it! Apparently, not only is the mob overbearing and hypocritical, but humorless too. They’ve turned their corporate guns on everything from the gender-insensitive Mr. Potato Head to Pepe Le Pew, a Looney Tunes skunk the New York Times accuses of “normalizing rape culture.” (What’s next? A #MeToon hashtag?) Now, 27 years into a comic strip about a fictional duck, the banning of Mallard Fillmore in newspapers across the country is showing everyone where the liberal quack down might lead.
“I’ve thought a million times, ‘This is it,’ cartoonist Bruce Tinsley said. But of all the comic strips he thought he’d be blacklisted for, this wasn’t the one. “You know,” he explained on “Washington Watch,” “I don’t understand. It was just over two cartoons.” One was about the Equality Act and another about girls’ sports. Neither of them “attack[ed] transgender people in any way,” he assured listeners, “but it did support a woman’s right to compete only with other biological women in sports. And to me, it’s just a matter of fairness.”
But “fairness” wasn’t on the minds of executives at Gannett. “The president of my syndicate, King Features, and my editor both said they’d never seen it before — because what happened was that I was canceled at the corporate level. They went over the heads of all the local newspaper editors all over the country from Florida to California to everything in between and didn’t even give their editors or publishers a say. They said, ‘We’re canceling Mallard Fillmore immediately.'” Honestly, Bruce said, no one knows what’s going on — only that “the current cancel culture climate is really scary.” And 64 percent of his country agrees.
Look, he said, “I’ve worked in newsrooms all my life. And there was a time — and I’m sure you probably remember it — when [liberals] really encouraged debate, even if they were against your position. Debate and discussion were [even] encouraged in colleges and in the media. And it seems like all of that is suddenly changing in a really frightening way.” Right before Bruce came on Monday’s show, he got a call from another editorial cartoonist for Creators Syndicate. “Guess what?” the voice at the other end of the line said. “I’m in the same boat. I just got canceled in 13 newspapers.” “It’s frightening,” Bruce said, shaking his head, “for the future of our country and [free speech].”
And just when people think the world might be coming to its senses, something else happens. This week, it was Pepe Le Pew and Speedy Gonzales. Last week, it was Dr. Seuss. The week before that, Hasbro tried to say that a male and female potatoes were “too limiting.” (Then, after the uproar, thought better of it.) “No one asked Hasbro to weigh in on the issues of gender identity, just as no one really wants Jimmy Dean sausage to tell us where they stand on Peruvian labor conditions,” James Lileks argued on NRO. But look at where those corporate politics have gotten us. Americans are logging on to their Twitter feeds to see Oreos and Nilla Wafers fighting over who loves transgenderism more. These are cookies, for crying out loud! Big Business can’t even advertise snacks in this country without bowing to the cultural extremists.
It’s no wonder, Bruce said, that his email and social media are full of “a whole lot of people who are really fed up with it.” The problem is, he explains, “They’re just average readers and college students — just regular old people like my audience has always been. And all the power seems to be concentrated within these big corporations.” Like him, they don’t think there’s much hope for dialogue in this country if we can’t even laugh at ourselves. Dropping Mallard Fillmore wasn’t about being inclusive or sensitive or striking a more unified tone. This was about silencing a conservative perspective and any criticism — however legitimate — of this president.
And readers like Indiana’s Anita Sewall aren’t happy about it. “Every day,” she wrote in a letter to her editor, “I think that this newspaper [the Indianapolis Star] was not published for someone like me. Every day, I think, ‘Is it worth the money?’ … With the cancellation of the ‘Mallard Fillmore’ comic strip, you have completely stilled any conservative voice in your publication — and in the process you have answered my question: No, it isn’t worth the money.”
Others, like Florida’s Jerry Saylor, told his Sarasota paper, “Since Gannett acquired the Herald-Tribune, the Leftward drift of the newspaper has continued unabated. The announcement Feb. 24 that the ‘Mallard Fillmore’ comic strip will be discontinued, while ‘Doonesbury’ remains, confirms the trend. Why you wish to alienate your readership only you understand.”
It will take more vocal people like that, Bruce agrees, to put an end to this insanity. Americans have to stand up and be counted. “I appreciate readers writing their papers who take [Mallard Fillmore] out and [supporting] the strip and other conservative materials in papers that still carry it.” If these companies won’t listen to conservative voices, they’ll listen to conservative dollars. And the more Americans move their subscriptions to outlets who believe in free speech, the sooner the mob will get the message.
————————– Tony Perkins writes for FRC.com.
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Seven other justices join Justice Clarence Thomas in his opinion
Constitution’s “redressability element” for standing before the court
when a plaintiff’s claim is based on a violation of a legal right.
by Sarah Parshall Perry: A near-unanimous Supreme Court decided Monday that two Christian students have the right to sue the Georgia college that violated their free speech rights in the past.
The impact of the ruling is far greater than what at first sounds like a run-of-the-mill decision on a procedural issue that might prompt non-lawyers to take a nap.
The case is a significant win for the First Amendment and protection of religious speech on the campus of a public college. It portends more thoughtful administration of speech policies on campuses.
And the near unanimity of opinion by nine Supreme Court justices with vastly different ideological bents also may bode well for the high court’s future interpretations of the importance of constitutional rights.
The case, Uzuegbunam v. Preczewski, involvestwo former students of Georgia Gwinnett College who, while enrolled there, sought to exercise their religious liberty and publicly share their faith with other students by handing out religious literature on campus.
However, college officials decided to enforce a policy that barred students from speaking to fellow students about their Christian religious beliefs in a public square. Later, officials barred the students’ speech in a campus “free speech zone” even after the students had applied for and received the appropriate permit as requested by the school.
An analysis of the case reveals how hostile Georgia Gwinnett College was to religious speech.
After other students complained about Chike Uzuegbunam’s sharing of his faith in the school’s “free speech zone,” campus police told Uzuegbunam that his speech violated campus policy because it “disturb(ed) the peace and/or comfort” of others.
Uzuegbunam and the other student filed lawsuits seeking injunctive relief and nominal damages. After the college eventually abandoned its speech policy, the school moved to dismiss the suits as moot.
But the students pressed forward, arguing that their claims were not moot because they sought to remedy a violation of their First Amendment rights through a request for nominal damages.
In a short opinion written by Justice Clarence Thomas and joined by seven other justices, the Supreme Court ruled that a request for nominal damages satisfies Article 3’s “redressability element” necessary for standing before the court when a plaintiff’s claim is based on a past violation of a legal right.
The court specified that even a claim for small or largely symbolic damages—here, for the violation of a constitutional right—is enough for a plaintiff to sue, assuming all other elements of standing are met.
In agreeing with the former students, the court looked to forms of relief generally awarded in common law to determine whether nominal damages can redress a past injury.
Significantly, the court acknowledged that the rule allowing nominal damages for a violation of a legal right is “decisively settled” and was established specifically to prevent favoring “economic rights over important, but not easily quantifiable, nonpecuniary rights.”
During oral arguments in January, Justice Amy Coney Barrett asked the attorney for the Justice Department whether the case would have much broader implications than protecting free speech.
Specifically, Barrett asked whether the outcome of a dispute over New York City gun laws, a case that the court dismissed as moot after the city had changed its policy, would have been different if the challengers had added a claim for nominal damages for the violation of their constitutional rights.
The Justice Department attorney answered that the outcome indeed would have been different.
Chief Justice John Roberts was the lone dissenting vote, writing that the majority risked a “radical extension of judicial power.”
Roberts’ decision was unusual, not only because it was his first solo dissent since joining the court in 2005, but because of his strong language in rebuking the majority.
Roberts stressed that because the disputed speech restrictions no longer exist at Georgia Gwinnett College, and because the students had not asked for “actual damages” (monetary relief), the case no longer was a live controversy and therefore moot.
The chief justice suggested that the majority’s ruling risked forcing federal courts to “give advisory opinions whenever a plaintiff tacks on a request for a dollar.”
But Thomas countered that if the high court would recognize a dollar in economic injury for wasted bus fare in traveling to the free speech zone, it must certainly recognize a dollar for a completed violation of a constitutional right.
Holding that every violation of a right imports damage, Thomas wrote that nominal damages are sufficient to redress an injury even if that injury—like the violation of First Amendment rights—cannot be reduced to or quantified in simple economic terms.
The Supreme Court’s decision in this case is a reminder that censorship has consequences and that redressing the harm from violating constitutional rights, though sometimes hard to quantify, is just as important as redressing the harm from violations of economic rights.
A college’s preemptive silencing of a student’s speech—even if it later changes that policy to pump the brakes on litigation—may not be enough to keep the matter out of court.
School administrators hopefully will think twice before promulgating and implementing campus speech codes and other policies that can adversely affect their students’ constitutional rights.
———————— Sarah Parshall Perry (@SarahPPerry) is a legal fellow in the Edwin Meese III Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The Heritage Foundation.
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by Stephen Moore: Congressional Democrats are a runaway train with a drunk-on-power conductor in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. No matter how much evidence pours in that the economy doesn’t need $1.9 trillion more in debt spending, the Pelosi locomotive keeps crashing down the track toward the financial cliff. Generations will have to pay for the joyride.
One of the worst features of the bill is the “blue-state bailout.” Twenty-one Republican governors and one Democrat are protesting the “biased” formula for allocating some $400 billion to the states. South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster complained that the bill “punishes” states that did the right thing by keeping their economies and businesses open during the pandemic.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said the bill “loots” the red states to pay for Democratic governors who have locked down their economies.
DeSantis has good reason to complain. Florida has a slightly higher population than New York, but New York gets $2,799 per person, or twice as much money as the $1,355 per person that Florida receives. In other words: Floridians are paying for New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s incompetence. That is precisely what is happening because the main factor in determining how much money each state gets is not its population but how high its unemployment rate has risen.
The three states that get the most significant share of the money are New York, California and New Jersey. These are three of the most liberal states with Democratic governors. That’s not a coincidence.
Blue Pennsylvania gets more per person than red Ohio. Blue Massachusetts and red Tennessee are about the same size, but somehow, Massachusetts receives $1.5 billion more in handouts. Connecticut gets twice as much bailout money as Utah, despite the fact that they are about the same size in population.
The governors’ joint statement declares: “A state’s ability to keep businesses open and people employed should not be a penalizing factor when distributing funds. If Congress is going to provide aid to states, it should be on an equitable population basis.”
But it isn’t. The way Congress passes out money is akin to assigning the highest performing students an F and the lowest performers an A. Maybe this is what the left means by “equity.” The last shall be first.
Most red states have already balanced their budgets. So how will Republican governors use their free money?
Here’s a better idea: Rather than squander the money with more bureaucratic spending and the risk of inflating a financial bubble in their state budgets in the years ahead, devote every penny of these funds to finance tax reform and relief. Eight states have no state income tax. Those states are Alaska, Nevada, South Dakota, Washington, Florida, Wyoming, Tennessee and Texas.
It would be rough justice for the blue-state bailout. If Democrats take the red states’ money, Republican governors should make their states income-tax-free havens and steal the blue states’ families and businesses. The states without income taxes create twice as many jobs as the high-tax blue states.
If you think California, Illinois, New Jersey and New York are melting down now, wait until they have to compete against regions of the country in the South and the mountain states with no income taxes.
Will the last person in New York please turn out the lights?
———————— Stephen Moore is a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation and an economic consultant with FreedomWorks. He is the co-author of “Trumponomics: Inside the America First Plan to Revive the American Economy.” H/T Rasmussen Reports.
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by Patrick Buchanan: Among the recent border-crossers, who are transported by bus to detention centers, where they remain for 72 hours and then are released to travel where they wish, many are carrying the coronavirus. Thus, what’s shaping up on the border is not only a national security crisis but a national survival crisis.
During a Democratic debate in 2020, the candidates were asked if their health care plans would cover “undocumented immigrants.”
Each raised his or her hand, including front-runner Joe Biden.
From that stage, the message went forth: If the Democrats win this election, then it is amnesty for all and open borders in America.
The message was reinforced by repeated Democratic praise for sanctuary cities, by calls to “abolish ICE” and end deportations, by pledges to stop work on Donald Trump’s wall, if not to tear it down.
Message sent to Mexico, Central America and the Third World:
If the Democrats win and you make it across the border into the United States, under President Joe Biden, you will not be sent back. After only a brief hassle, the economic opportunities and social welfare benefits of the richest country on earth will be open to you and yours.
Hence, when Biden won, a new and potentially historic surge to the Southern border began, and the number of illegal arrivals and crossings are in the growing thousands every day.
According to a White House domestic policy council document, the number of children who, without a parent or guardian, will arrive at the border in 2021 will be about 117,000 — 50% higher than the record number of children who arrived in the 2019 humanitarian crisis.
In February, some 100,000 immigrants were apprehended by the Border Patrol for illegal border crossing. “I actually think that’s an undercount,” says Victor Manjarrez Jr., ex-Border Patrol agent who teaches at Texas University.
The pre-Trump policy of “catch-and-release” has been reinstated.
Children and families who cross illegally from Mexico cannot now be held for more than 72 hours. They are being released into the U.S. to await a court date — potentially years off — to hear their claim to a right to be here. Most never show up.
“We are weeks, maybe even days, away from a crisis on the southern border,” says Rep. Henry Cuellar, a Democrat whose Texas district abuts Mexico. “Our country is currently unprepared to handle a surge in migrants in the middle of the pandemic.”
Congressional Democrats, following Biden’s lead, have proposed a new citizenship act. “Dreamers,” brought here by their parents as children, would be put on a three-year fast-track to U.S. citizenship.
The 11 million to 22 million illegal migrants already in the country — the exact number is unknown — would be put on an eight-year track to citizenship.
The Democratic Party is signing on to the largest mass amnesty for illegal immigrants in history — which would produce millions of new voters for the party.
Among the recent border-crossers, who are transported by bus to detention centers, where they remain for 72 hours and then are released to travel where they wish, many are carrying the coronavirus.
Thus, what’s shaping up on the border is not only a national security crisis but a national survival crisis. For it is impossible to see, given the Biden administration policies adopted, how the invasion of America can be halted. And if 2 million or 3 million migrants reach the U.S. border and cross over each year, and we do not send them back, what stops the invasion and remaking America?
What would blanket amnesty and a renewed invasion portend?
In a decade, Texas, the Southwest and much of the South would take on the political aspect of California where the GOP has become a permanent minority party.
As many illegal migrants do not read, write or speak English, and do not bring a unique set of skills, their immense and growing presence can only deepen our national disunity.
Almost all of these folks are poor or working-class people who would have to rely on government subsidies for their health care, food support, housing and the schooling of their children.
With the unemployment rate rising again in the Black community, which has sustained the heaviest collective hit from the pandemic and economic collapse, the migrants would be competing with them for jobs.
And as the illegal migrants are disproportionately young and male, they would add to the surging crime rates in America’s major cities.
America is headed, seemingly inexorably, to a future where a majority in this country traces its ancestry to Asia, Africa and Latin America, a future where this already fractionated nation is even more multiracial, multiethnic, multilingual and multicultural than today.
With racial conflict as sharp as it has been in decades, with our political parties at swords point, with the culture war raging unabated, as mobs tears down statues and monuments to America’s founders, exactly what national problem will be solved by an unstopping and unrelenting wave of migrants illegally crossing the border into our country year after year?
One wonders: Is this how the Republic ends?
——————– Patrick Buchanan (@PatrickBuchanan) is currently a blogger, conservative columnist, political analyst, chairman of The American Cause foundation and an editor of The American Conservative. He has been a senior adviser to three Presidents, a two-time candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, and was the presidential nominee of the Reform Party in 2000.
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by Thomas Catenacci: The Supreme Court ruled in an 8-1 decision Monday that a Georgia college’s speech code policy violated the First Amendment and that a student who was harmed by the policy can seek damages.
Justice Clarence Thomas issued the opinion of the high court, siding with Chike Uzuegbunam, a former student at Georgia Gwinnett College, and affirming his right to share his Christian faith on campus.
The opinion reversed an 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision, which said Uzuegbunam didn’t have standing to sue the college over a policy that severely restricted his speech.
“The Supreme Court has rightly affirmed that government officials should be held accountable for the injuries they cause,” Kristen Waggoner, general counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom, said in a statement Monday. “When public officials violate constitutional rights, it causes serious harm to the victims.”
In 2016, Uzuegbunam was told that he needed to use one of two “speech zones,” which made up less than 1% of the entire campus, if he wanted to continue sharing his Christian faith on campus, according to Alliance Defending Freedom. Uzuegbunam complied, but minutes after speaking in a reserved zone, campus police threatened him with discipline if he continued.
“School officials violated [Uzuegbunam’s] constitutional rights when they stopped him twice from speaking in an open area of campus,” Tyson Langhofer, the director of Alliance Defending Freedom’s Center for Academic Freedom, toldThe Daily Caller News Foundation in January. “The only permit students need to speak on campus is the First Amendment.”
School officials ultimately accused Uzuegbunam of violating a campus speech code, which prohibited offensive speech, Langhofer said. Georgia Gwinnett College initially defended its speech code in court after Alliance Defending Freedom sued on behalf of Uzuegbunam in 2016, but then reversed its speech policy and argued the case was moot as a result.
Thomas was joined in his opinion by seven justices from across the ideological spectrum. The justices agreed that because Uzuegbunam’s rights were violated, he can sue the school and receive nominal damages.
“It is undisputed that Uzuegbunam experienced a completed violation of his constitutional rights when respondents enforced their speech policies against him,” Thomas wrote.
Chief Justice John Roberts issued the lone dissent. Roberts agreed with the appeals court, which argued that because Georgia Gwinnett College changed its policy after Uzuegbunam sued, the case was moot.
“Today’s decision risks a major expansion of the judicial role,” Roberts wrote. “Until now, we have said that federal courts can review the legality of policies and actions only as a necessary incident to resolving real disputes.”
The American Civil Liberties Union, the American Humanist Association, the Frederick Douglass Foundation, and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops all filed friend-of-the-court briefs in support of Uzuegbunam.
————————- Thomas Catenacci writes for The Daily Signal.
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We have become an absurd society obsessed with race but without any mechanism to develop a logical category of victimization and reparation.
Victor Davis Hanson
by Victor Davis Hanson: Two recent polls suggest wokism is beginning to recede on a variety of fronts, from less trust in Black Lives Matter and more confidence in the police to suspicion that the Capitol “insurrection” account is being used to unfairly suppress political expression while Antifa, increasingly, is seen as a terrorist organization whose violence has been ignored improperly by authorities.
There are tens of millions of Americans who either have been stung or turned off, by McCarthyite wokeness (and thus have anti-wokeness antibodies). More have been vaccinated from its latest virulent strains by their own values of judging people as individuals, not as racial or gender collectives. So lots of Americans have developed peremptory defenses against it. The result is that daily there are ever-fewer who are susceptible to the woke pandemic. And it will thus begin to fade out—even as the virus desperately seeks to mutate and go after more institutions.
Peak wokeness is nearing also because if it continued in its present incarnation, then the United States as we know would cease to exist—in the sense that 1692-93 Salem or 1793-94 Paris could not have continued apace without destroying society. Woke leftism exists to destroy and tear down, not to unite and build. It is not designed to play down and heal racial differences, but to accentuate and capitalize on them.
Scattershot Immunity
The methodology of cancel culture is utterly incoherent and unsustainable. The shark was jumped by the case of the Dr. Seuss books—banned by some local school districts, even as Dr. Seuss Enterprises, in terror, pulled some of the late Theodor Seuss Geisel’s publications of its own accord. If the author of The Cat in the Hat is now an enemy of the people, then anyone and all can be so designated.
That is, after 70 years and millions of books in the houses of millions of Americans, our generation’s new Soviet censors have now decided that Seuss’s books of the late 1940s and 1950s do not conform to our 2021 sensibilities and thus should be banned. The same kind of canceling of Disney films and cartoons, and of particular novelists and social critics is now a matter of record.
But what are to be the new standards of Trotskyization as we go forth? Can the Governor of New York be excused for months of policies that led to nearly 15,000 unnecessary deaths, but not for inappropriate kisses and touching of women? Or will he, as an Emmy-winning woke official, be exempt from punishment for both types of transgressions?
There are no logical standards that dictate who is and who is not canceled. For now, all we know about the rules of wokeness is that living leftists are mostly not canceled by the woke mob for the thought crimes that ruin both the non-Left or the generic dead.
The operating assumption is that the uncovered sins of the progressive are aberrations and not windows into their dark souls. Or perhaps woke leftism works on the same principle as carbon credits: the more you act progressively, the more pluses you have when minuses are summed up.
Most who have claims of being non-white are likely to find partial vaccination from the woke mob. Those who are independently wealthy or successfully self-employed likewise have some immunity. Then there are the defiant, the proverbial “Don’t Tread on Me” folks, who will fight, and thus encourage the zombie walkers to detour around them.
The only consistent pattern of woke punishment is the shared logic of the lions and cape buffalos at the ford — devour the sacrificial, single, and vulnerable while avoiding the robust herd with retaliatory horns.
The Woke Tax
Wokeness eventually would put an unsustainable economic strain on the system. Wokeness is siphoning off billions of dollars from a productive economy through a sort of value-subtracted tax. We are spending a great deal of labor and capital for merit to be replaced in college admissions, in hiring, in grants, in publication, in the selections of awards, and in movies and videos, in everything — as racial, ethnic, and sexual identity considerations replace meritocratic, literary, artistic, and technological criteria, rather than just augment, them.
Americans also are investing lots of capital in preempting wokeness—writing/saying/acting in ways that are not productive, but simply defensive. Diversity oaths and diversity applications, pledges, and statements take some time to read and digest. It will not be long before insurers will sell “woke insurance,” the premiums adjusted upward for those more conservative and of the wrong genealogy. It won’t be long before we all carry cards certifying that “At no time, did I say, hear, or think anything . . . .”
At a time of $1.7 trillion in student aggregate debt, and existential financial crises in universities during the zoom virtual campus, is higher education really so rich that it can add layers and layers of six-figure-salary diversity and equity coordinators?
Most will not invent, create, teach, or produce. Instead, they are not merely monitoring but hindering those who do—either out of a need to justify their apparat or from self-importance. To believe otherwise is to suggest that on, say, May 1, 2020, the United States was an utterly racist society, without civil rights protections or any reparatory programs for those deemed unfairly victimized in the past.
The result is that billions of Americans’ hours are invested in woke reeducation and diversity training, in workshops and group confessionals, and in adjudicating and punishing those who do not comply. Ad hoc and personal cancel culture result in thousands of days of unproductive labor as functionaries scour the internet on the scent of a past misspoken word, or an ancient but now incorrect gesture that can return to ruin a rival or an enemy.
Our economy will soon mimic the totalitarian ones of old. Our commissars are like those of the old Red Army—ordering Soviet commanders’ counter-offensives during the Great Patriotic War to ensure that tank battalions were advancing ideologically correctly rather than just tactically or strategically soundly.
Melodramatic? Perhaps. But 280 former generals, admirals, and national security officials signed a letter warning that if Trump were to bring in any federal troops to keep the peace after the capital violence of late May and early June, riots that saw systematic attacks on police, vandalism, arson, injuries, and looting, and neared the White House grounds, he should be considered a dictatorial threat. “There is no role for the U.S. military in dealing with American citizens exercising their constitutional right to free speech, however uncomfortable that speech may be for some,” they insisted.
The same group remained mute when nearly 30,000 troops flooded the streets of the capital in the aftermath of the January 6 riot inside the Capitol building. They maintain their silence as barbed wire and fencing now cordon off the city, and thousands of troops remain without a terrorist or insurrectionist enemy in sight—a militarization of the capital not seen since the Civil War. Tolerable and intolerable violence is predicated on ideology, not its nature or magnitude.
Warring on the Past
No society can long exist if it believes that its own founding principles, its customs, and traditions, its very origins are evil and must be erased. Tearing down statues of Abraham Lincoln, and redefining 1776 and 1787 as 1619, are many things, but one thing they are not is coherent. Trump was considered nutty when he warned that the statue topplers would go from Confederate monuments to Washington and Jefferson—and then when they did just that he was further ridiculed for being prescient.Who were the long-dead men who devised a system whose natural and eventual fruition is what attracts indigenous people from Oaxaca, the destitute from Somalia, or the politically oppressed from Vietnam? If evil white people founded an evil system solely for their own evil purposes, why would anyone nonwhite dare risk his life to eat from the alluring fruit of the inherently long-ago poisoned tree?If Americans are to accept that their Declaration of Independence and Constitution were frauds, abject falsifications of the real unspoken founding of 1619, then again what is to replace them? Whose statues are to rise, which books are we to be authorized to read, whose science are we to turn to?Everyone has feet of some clay. For every cancellation, then must there be commensurate bowdlerizing? Is there no adultery, or unkind treatment of women or plagiarism in the past of Martin Luther King, Jr? No violence or criminality in the life of Malcolm X? Did Cesar Chavez never send his goons to the border to beat back illegal aliens? Was Margaret Sanger only a sometimes advocate of eugenic abortion? Are the written biographies of Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson to be freed of anti-Semitism and petty corruption? Is Louis Farrakhan an ecumenical leader in the way FDR was not? Was JFK really our first feminist?Are we to look to those who erased our supposedly awful past for guidance?
Is it to be the architect of the 1619 Project? Long ago the ecumenical Nikole Hannah-Jones wrote that “the white race is the biggest murderer, rapist, pillager, and thief of the modern world . . . The descendants of these savage people pump drugs and guns into the Black community, pack Black people into the squalor of segregated urban ghettos and continue to be bloodsuckers in our community.”
Is going back into one’s student days to find such an embarrassing rant, in the fashion of the accusers’ of Brett Kavanaugh’s desperate but false allegations, unfair? If so, this past summer Hannah-Jones bragged that, yes, it would be “an honor” if the summer rioting—700 police officers injured, 40 deaths, and billions in property damages and hundreds—be called henceforth “the 1619 riots.”
At the height of tensions, she advised, “Destroying property, which can be replaced, is not violence.” And she added, “Any reasonable person would say we shouldn’t be destroying other people’s property, but these are not reasonable times.” Did the Times consider its essayist inflammatory?
Tribes
In our self-celebrated liberal society are we all to be reduced to identifying by race? But first, do we even have the ability to ascertain who is and is not white or black or brown?Most illiberal societies in the past that tried such stigmatization of race, ethnicity, or religion did not end so well—from the Ottomans and the Third Reich to the former Yugoslavians, Rwandans, and Iraqis. One eighth, one fourth, or one half makes one a person of color—or not color? Shall we seek knowledge of one-drop of tell-tale bloodlines from the archived jurisprudence of the antebellum South?
If Peruvian George Zimmerman had only used his matronymic, and Latinized his first name, then would a Jorge Mesa have become a sympathetic character who lost a fair fight with Trayvon Martin rather than reduced by the New York Times to a strange category of “white Hispanic” hoodlum, with the additional odor of a Germanized patronymic.
Why does class bow to race, since the former seems to trump the latter. If we forget percentages for a moment, and also forget that we are individuals, not anonymous cogs of vast racial wheels, in absolute numbers, there are roughly (in some studies) more poor white people—both those earning incomes below the poverty level and those with no income at all—than all other commensurate poor minorities combined. Were these supposed to be the targets of Barack Obama’s “clingers” remarks, or Hillary Clinton’s “deplorables,” John McCain’s “crazies,” or Joe Biden’s “dregs,” “chumps,” and “Neanderthals”?
Apparently, the supposedly all-powerful, all-determining Oz-like role of racial supremacy and the unearned privilege that accompanies it, have aided those 26 million white impoverished very little. Or perhaps they did not get the message that they were recipients of unearned, all-determinative white privilege.
Or perhaps they were just people, like the poor of all other races, who suffer from lack of or access to education or vocational training, the stagnation of entry-level incomes, divorce, family dissolution, bad luck, poor health, substance abuse, economic ill-winds, cultural disadvantages, self-inflicted pathologies, or all the other criteria that can make every one of us of every race susceptible to ravages of poverty.
Given that, in absolute numbers alone, there are more minorities that are not poor than the number of white people who are, how is it that class considerations are forgotten? Or for that matter, does any child’s destiny rest on just race—or a two-parent household living in Menlo Park rather than Parlier, or growing up with college-educated parents or high-school dropouts? And does race really determine all the other criteria that foster wealth or poverty?
Note the artifact that those who are now classified as nonwhite are wisely not often seeking to rebrand themselves as “white” to share in intractable “white privilege” — in the fashion of the past when white majority racism was undeniable. Why are Asian-Americans, on average, enjoying over $20,000 more in average household income than so-called whites?
Why more commonly would so-called white people create an entire industry of constructing pseudo-minority identities—from Elizabeth Warren to Rachel Dolezal to Ward Churchill to Alec Baldwin’s wife, Hilaria—if not for careerist or social advantage or wishing to be cool by claiming not to be “white”? Why has the new racist “passing for non-white” replaced the old racist “passing for white”?
These are admittedly absurd questions. But they are quite apt for an absurd society obsessed with race but without any mechanism to develop a logical category of victimization and reparation.
Predicating wokism on race is a tricky business, even if one could define and identify race, quantify its role in determining class status, and convince millions that it is moral to judge people by how they look.
Like the Salem witch trials and the McCarthyite hysteria, when wokism fades, we are likely to see its real catalysts revealed. And they will not be found to be misplaced idealism, nor heartfelt desire for a more ecumenical society, but mostly the age-old, narcissistic destructive road to career enhancement, fueled by customary ancient fears, envies, and hatreds.
————————– Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution where many of his articles are found; his focus is classics and military history. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush. H/T American Greatness.
Tags:Victor Davis Hanson, American Greatness, Hitting Woke Herd Immunity?To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Judd Garrett: Back in the 1970’s, Coca-Cola ran a commercial with a group of people of all races standing on a hilltop singing in unison, “I’d like to teach the world to sing in perfect harmony”. In 2021, Coca-Cola is training their white employees to be “less white”; white people must apologize for the color of their skin. Coca-Cola is no longer teaching the world about racial harmony; they have chosen to teach their employees racial division.
In the phrase, “be less white”, if one were to replace the word “white” with any other group identity, how would that go over? Is it okay to tell a black person “be less black”? Or a Hispanic person “be less Hispanic”? Or a gay person “be less gay”? Or a woman “be less female”? Those statements would be racist, homophobic and misogynist. They would be categorically rejected. No questions asked. Rightfully so. Yet, it is okay to tell white people to “be less white”?
This program was being taught during Black History Month, a time when we, as a country, were celebrating the history of black people, and encouraging black people to embrace their race, their culture, their heritage, their blackness. Yet, all the while, white people are told to denounce their race, their culture, their heritage, their whiteness.
Coca-Cola is not alone. New York Education Department implemented a program to “purge whiteness” from the city schools. New York City Schools Chancellor, Richard Carranza threatened employees who balked at his program, “if you draw a paycheck from DOE, get on board with [my] equity platform or leave.” Basically, he told his white employees, reject your race or you’re fired.
If white people must reject their own race and culture, and be “less white” what are they supposed to be? More black? More Hispanic? More Asian? More Native American? But if white people embrace other cultures to fill the cultural void, wouldn’t they be committing “cultural appropriation” which is also deemed racist? So, if white people cannot embrace other races and cultures, and must reject their own, they will become a group of people with no heritage, no culture, no race because you can’t be white, but you also can’t not be white.
This is a figurative ethnic cleansing of white people. Literal ethnic cleansings always start figuratively, before they manifest into actual ethnic cleansings. In order for “good” human beings to kill other human beings, they must de-humanize them. They must take their humanity, make them lesser, make them the other.
This is what they are doing when they force white people to reject their whiteness. It is a proclamation that all that is white is bad; white culture, white history, white people. It’s all bad. It’s all evil. If they deny that is what they are doing, then why must white people reject their whiteness by being “less white”? Why can’t white people celebrate their whiteness the way other cultures in our society do every February, May, September and October?
Many of these “anti-racist” programs are teaching racism. They teach that white people cannot not be racist, while claiming black people can’t be racist. Which are both blatantly racist statements. This is evil stuff, and it’s seeping into our mainstream thinking, into our academia. Evil thinking produces evil acts.
But it’s only present-day white people who are held accountable for the past atrocities committed by those of their race, not Black people, not Asians, not Hispanics, even though some of those atrocities are still occurring today, and very few people are saying anything about them. And if people of other races were held accountable for the past sins of their race, it would rightfully elicit the charge of racism. It’s only white people who must denounce their race because of the sins of others of their race.
Every race of people has in its history a laundry list of evil. So, the practice of holding present-day people accountable for crimes of past members of their race, indicts us all, each and every one of us, regardless of skin color, ethnicity, religion. But every race also has a history of good, benevolence, generosity, innovation, creation, contribution, as well.
Which means we are not defined by our skin color. Never allow anyone to tell you what you are, who you are, or diminish your humanity in any way. Every human being is born with a divine spark, regardless of race or gender. Do not allow anyone take your divine spark away from you for any reason, much less because of arbitrary boxes they want to wedge you into.
You define yourself, solely by your thoughts, your words and your actions. Your skin color or your physical attributes do not define you. We used to know this. Your insides are much more valuable to the person you are than your outsides. It’s not even close. Those who want to diminish you, control you, dictate to you, want to focus on your exterior, and ignore your interior. They want to reduce you to lazy stereotypes and the sins of others who look like you because they do not want to see and understand the full breadth and depth of who you are. You are infinitely more than their narrow vision of you. Their denial of your humanity exposes the limits their humanity not yours.
The only way we can live in true harmony is when we are able to look beyond each other’s race, ethnicity, gender, and see the humanity inside that is common to all of us; the humanity that makes each of us unique individuals, but also connects us all. And it is only when we get to that place when we will live in “perfect harmony”.
—————————- Judd Garrett writes for Objectivity is the Objective. His most recent non-writing job was as Director of Advanced Scouting with the Dallas Cowboys. He is a frequent contributor on the topics of sports and politics.
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The Biden administration is getting it wrong on immigration and COVID. by Arnold Ahlert: It’s no secret that the Democrat Party has only one “principle,” namely the acquisition and maintenance of power by any means necessary. And if that means taking a position today that is the polar opposite of a position taken yesterday, so be it. That such intellectual dishonesty and ideological bankruptcy requires large dollops of hypocrisy to sustain it is also no secret. Yet sometimes that hypocrisy is so blatant, and what it produces is so disconnected from rational thinking, it deserves highlighting. This is one of those moments.On March 2, Texas and Mississippi decided that the time to end draconian lockdown measures was at hand, and both states eliminated mask mandates and other coronavirus-related restrictions on businesses. Texas Governor Greg Abbott, who stated that Texas is 100% open for business, expects Texans to behave like adults, making the restrictions unnecessary. “Make no mistake, COVID has not suddenly disappeared,” he stated. “COVID still exists in Texas, in the United States and across the globe. But it is clear from the recoveries, the vaccinations, the reduced hospitalizations and the safe practices that Texans are using, that state mandates are no longer needed.”Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves, who lifted all mask mandates in the state except for K-12 schools and indoor arenas, echoed that sentiment. “We are lifting all of our county mask mandates and businesses will be able to operate at full capacity without any state-imposed rules. Our hospitalizations and case numbers have plummeted, and the vaccine is being rapidly distributed. It is time!” the governor tweeted.Naturally, those who wish to retain as much control over Americans’ lives as possible were apoplectic. America’s unelected national scold, better known as Dr. Anthony Fauci, led the charge. “It just is inexplicable why you would want to pull back now,” he huffed.The CDC also warned against rolling back safeguards. CDC Director Rochelle Walensky insisted, “[Virus variants] are a very real threat to our people and our progress. Now is not the time to relax the critical safeguards that we know can stop the spread of COVID-19 in our communities, not when we are so close.”
President Joe Biden was equally chagrined. “We are on the cusp of being able to fundamentally change the nature of this disease because of the way in which we’re able to get vaccines in people’s arms,” he said. “The last thing we need is Neanderthal thinking that in the meantime, everything’s fine, take off your mask, forget it. It still matters.”
Whether it matters or not remains to be seen. Moreover, whether or not this nation will ever be apprised of the full scope of the societal damage precipitated by extended lockdowns also remains to be seen. For almost a year, the idea that life is a series of tradeoffs was completely ignored. The only deaths that really mattered were COVID-related, even as extended lockdowns also precipitated suicides, drug overdoses, murders, and the deaths of people who needed treatment but were terrified to visit doctors’ offices or hospitals.
That uncomfortable reality was buried under a blizzard of nonnegotiable mandates issued by those with both a lust for power and wholesale contempt for individual choice. Slogans like “14 days to flatten the curve” and “30 days to stop the spread” were used to rationalize mandates that were often unconstitutional and unscientific.
Yet amidst the blowback from the likes of Fauci, Walensky, Biden, and countless others, the aforementioned unprecedented level of hypocrisy unfolds. In one of the largest contradictions ever foisted on the American public — one that would even make a Neanderthal blush with embarrassment — the Biden administration has reinstituted a program that completely undermines every assertion it has made about containing the coronavirus:
Catch and Release.
How contradictory is Catch and Release? While millions of Americans remain locked down and several states still maintain travel restrictions, the administration is not only releasing COVID-positive illegals but dispersing them throughout the nation.
“Felipe Romero, a spokesperson for Brownsville [Texas], said Wednesday that the 108 positives represent 6.3% of the number of total migrants who have been rapid-tested at the city’s main bus station, where they are being released by the Border Patrol,” Fox Newreports. “Rapid testing of the individuals began there on Jan. 25. He added that Brownsville does not have the authority to prevent those who test positive from traveling elsewhere in the U.S. — and are advising them to quarantine, follow the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines and socially distance.”
Does anyone seriously believe that “advising” quarantines for those who have already ignored laws and entered the nation illegally will suffice?
Miriam Izaguirre, an illegal from Honduras, was released by Border Patrol within hours of crossing the Rio Grande with her son. “Right now we were tested for COVID and they separated us … because we were positive,” Izaguirre stated. “We are waiting right now.”
Nonetheless, they were expected to board a bus to Houston, even as a bus company that operates out of the Brownsville station where they are located told the Noticias Telemundo Investiga news organization it cannot ask passengers for proof of coronavirus test results before boarding. Other COVID-positive illegals stated they were waiting to travel to Maryland, New Jersey, and North Carolina.
Remarkably, as of this writing, not a single member of the media has asked Fauci or Biden or any other member of this administration how they reconcile the irreconcilable. No one has asked the same CDC that advises against travel by Americans for spring break where it stands on wholly unrestricted travel by illegal aliens.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas insists what is occurring at the border is not a crisis, despite the reality that the number of unaccompanied illegal alien children entering America is on pace to exceed the all-time record by 45%. The Department of Homeland Security is projecting a yearly total of 117,000 unaccompanied minors crossing the border, including 6,000 migrants aged 16 and 17 caught just this month alone. Moreover, the Department of Health and Human Services is expected to reach its shelter capacity this month, meaning even more illegals will be released. And because Biden rolled back Donald Trump’s border-protection protocols and asked the Supreme Court to dismiss Trump administration challenges to withhold funds from sanctuary jurisdictions, thousands of additional migrants will be further incentivized by an administration that has quickly made a complete mockery of legal immigration and secure borders.
In short, the same collection of hacks more than willing to take American governors to task are precipitating what amounts to a fully coordinated super-spreader agenda of their own making.
Toward what end? A cynic — or is that Neanderthal? — might suspect that it’s a purposeful effort by our Ruling Class to make sure virus-related restrictions become permanent.
In the meantime, the CDC is hiring Coronavirus Quarantine Officers to help prevent the importation of communicable diseases from abroad, and their spread domestically. Its ad states, “The incumbents will be required to wear a uniform.”
Brownshirts would be very apropos.
———————- Arnold Ahlert writes for The Patriot Post.
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47.) ABC
March 11, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
House Democrats pass $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill: House Democrats on Wednesday passed a massive $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill just days before key federal unemployment benefits start to expire. The vote was 220-211, with one Democrat — Rep. Jared Golden — joining every Republican in voting against the bill. “This is a momentous day in the history of our country because we have passed historic, consequential and transformative legislation,” said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. The relief bill — which will provide $1,400 stimulus checks to many Americans, and provide funding for contact tracing, vaccine distribution and schools — is expected to be sent to President Joe Biden’s desk by the end of the week. Meanwhile, to help bolster vaccination efforts, Biden on Wednesday pushed to acquire 100 million additional doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine to be delivered sometime in the latter half of 2021. The additional doses are intended to act as an insurance policy against unknowns, such as booster shots or for research on emerging variants. Tune into ABC News at 8 p.m. ET tonight for full coverage of Biden’s address.
Senate confirms Merrick Garland as attorney general, Rep. Marcia Fudge as HUD secretary:Merrick Garland, President Joe Biden’s nominee for attorney general, was confirmed Wednesday by the U.S. Senate. His confirmation comes nearly five years to the day since he was nominated by President Barack Obama to replace the late Justice Antonin Scalia on the U.S. Supreme Court. He was never given a confirmation hearing by Senate Republicans who said Scalia’s successor should be picked by the winner of the 2016 presidential election. Garland said he hoped his tenure will “turn down the volume” at the Justice Department, removing it from the day-to-day political disputes that run through Washington. He also said he wants to return to the days when the department does its law enforcement and criminal justice policy — and that this is viewed in a bipartisan way. In addition, the Senate also confirmed Rep. Marcia Fudge, D-Ohio, as secretary of Housing and Urban Development. Fudge has been a House member since 2008 and is a former chair of the Congressional Black Caucus. During her confirmation hearings, she said that if confirmed, her first priority would be alleviating the housing crisis.
Unilever to stop using ‘normal’ on all hair and skin products: Unilever has announced that it will stop using the word “normal” on all of its beauty and personal care products and brands, as well as ceasing the practice of digitally editing a model’s shape, size or skin color. In a statement, Unilever — which owns brands Dove, Vaseline and Axe — said that the company intends to “champion a new era of beauty which is equitable and inclusive, as well as sustainable for the planet.” “We are committed to tackling harmful norms and stereotypes and shaping a broader, far more inclusive definition of beauty,” said Sunny Jain, Unilever’s president of beauty and personal care. “We know that removing ‘normal’ from our products and packaging will not fix the problem alone, but it is an important step forward.” In addition, Unilever said it will no longer “digitally alter a person’s body shape, size, proportion or skin color in its brand advertising.”
Grandmother reunites with grandson after 15 months apart due to COVID-19: One grandmother who recently received her second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine was finally allowed to reunite with her grandson. According to ABC affiliate WTAE in Pittsburgh, 71-year-old Jean Chvala of Ford City, Pennsylvania, was able to give her 3-year-old grandson, Trax, a hug after more than a year. The heartwarming moment, captured on video by Jean’s daughter-in-law Kelsey, shows Trax running into Jean’s arms and the two locking in a long embrace. “The reaction was absolutely priceless and filled our hearts with so much love,” Kelsey told WTAE. According to WTAE, the last time Jean saw her grandson was Christmas 2019. “It was hard,” Jean said. “But I FaceTimed him and then I got to talk to him, you know through video chat. But it was hard not being with him.” The video was shared by Kelsey on WTAE’s Facebook group page, where it resonated with many locals. “It’s just such a precious moment that we haven’t had,” said Kelsey.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Kelly Rowland tells us about her new EP, “K,” and performs her new song, “Black Magic.” And “Queen Sugar” star Kofi Siriboe chats with us about the fifth season of the show. Plus, Tory Johnson joins us live with great deals for your home and kitchen. All this and more only on “GMA.”
The passage of the $1.9 trillion Covid-19 relief package offers President Joe Biden a key victory as he looks to lead the U.S. out of the depths of the coronavirus pandemic. But we start today looking back at the day one year ago when the country was first forced to reckon with its new reality.
In the days and weeks leading up to March 11, 2020, Americans could be excused for underestimating the coronavirus.
The U.S. had faced a variety of infectious diseases in recent decades — from SARS to Ebola — and it was unclear how this new coronavirus would be notably different.
But any doubt that the Covid-19 pandemic was about to shatter daily life ended on March 11. What had been a steadily building crisis exploded in a handful of hours.
The World Health Organization declared the coronavirus outbreak a pandemic; Tom Hanks and his wife announced they test positive for the virus; an NBA game minutes from tipoff would be canceled and the season suspended; and former President Donald Trump announced a ban on foreign travelers from Europe.
NBC News spoke with a diverse group of leaders about their recollections of the day the pandemic put the U.S. and the world on an entirely new track.
From that day forward, the pandemic surged across the country in waves — hitting regions at different seasons and creating scenes of lockdowns in one state while beaches remained open in another.
Take a look at maps showing how the Covid surges played out across the country over the last year.
One big result: “We’ve gone through a collective trauma,” said Arthur C. Evans, head of the American Psychological Association.
A new report by the APA found that all the added stress in 2020 is showing up in drastic weight changes and increased alcohol use.
By Shannon Pettypiece and Kristen Welker | Read more
The President is planning to head out of D.C. on a nationwide victory lap after he signs the massive Covid-19 relief package into law to sell his first legislative achievement to the American public. Meantime, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is calling the aid bill a “turning point” that will restore the country’s faith in government.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton threatened Wednesday to sue the city of Austin and surrounding Travis County for defying the governor after he did away with a mask mandate.
In our most recent “Into America” podcast episode, host Trymaine Lee looks at whether racial bias in the jury selection process could impact Derek Chauvin’s trial.
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The right set of bed sheets can have a big impact on your sleep. Here’s how to choose the right sheets for you.
One bittersweet thing
Sports games in packed arenas. Weekend getaways and world travels. Birthday parties with family and friends.
Conspicuously absent: Masks, social distancing, bottles of hand sanitizer.
NBC News asked readers to share the final picture they took before the World Health Organization declared the coronavirus a pandemic. The images, from just one year ago, now feel a lifetime away.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Lawmakers say they want big legislation to be bipartisan. It doesn’t happen often.
Not a single Republican in the House or Senate voted for President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion Covid relief legislation, which the Dem-controlled House passed on Wednesday and which now heads to Biden’s desk for his signature.
And it follows a familiar pattern we’ve seen over the last 30 years in Washington: Bipartisan votes on major pieces of legislation have been the exception rather than the norm.
Especially during Democratic presidencies.
REUTERS/Jason Reed
In 1993, no Republican in the House or the Senate voted or Bill Clinton’s budget deal, although Clinton did get bipartisan votes for NAFTA and welfare reform.
In 2009, just three GOP senators and no House Republicans voted for Barack Obama’s stimulus, and not a single Republican voted for Obamacare a year later, even though it was modeled after what a Republican governor (and later presidential nominee) had signed into law.
And in 2017, no Democrats voted for Donald Trump’s tax cuts, but every Dem senator backed the major Covid relief measures that Trump signed into law in March and December of last year.
The other pattern here: A president is much more likely to get bipartisan support for legislation the OTHER side wants – see NAFTA and welfare reform under Clinton, education and Medicare Part D under Bush, and Covid relief under Trump.
And so when we’re gaming out what Republican votes (if any) Biden could get on future legislation, maybe it’s on China, as the Washington Post reported yesterday.
Biden in primetime
At 8:02 pm ET from the White House, Joe Biden delivers his first primetime address as president – to mark the anniversary of the Covid-19 shutdown.
NBC’s White House team reports that Biden will discuss the sacrifices made by the American people, the more than 500,000 lives lost, and the current vaccination effort.
And although Biden WILL mention the Covid relief measure that Congress passed, it won’t take up a significant portion of his speech.
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
15 percent: The spike in the U.S. death rate in 2020 due to Covid, according to new data from the CDC.
29,342,26: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 57,915 more than yesterday morning.)
531,865: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,621 more than yesterday morning.)
95,721,290: Number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
9.8 percent: The share of Americans who are fully vaccinated
49: The number of days left for Biden to reach his 100-day vaccination goal.
100,441: The number of encounters between Customs and Border Protection and immigrants crossing the border illegally over the month of February, a 28 percent rise from January.
More than 40 years: How long since a Black woman had led HUD until yesterday’s confirmation of Marcia Fudge.
20: The number of GOP senators who voted for Merrick Garland’s confirmation to be Attorney General
After 50 days in office, President Biden’s Cabinet is close to fully taking shape. On Wednesday, the Senate confirmed three of Biden’s Cabinet members: Merrick Garland (Attorney General), Marcia Fudge (HUD secretary) and Michael Regan (EPA administrator).
That takes Biden’s Cabinet to 16 confirmed nominees. And Garland’s confirmation sticks out for its bipartisanship.
NBC’s Pete Williams reports that Garland’s confirmation vote (70 to 30) is one of the largest margins for an attorney general in recent administrations. According to Williams, most attorney generals have been confirmed with votes in the 50s and 60s for the last few decades with three exceptions: Garland, the first African American attorney general, Eric Holder (confirmed with 75 votes) and the first woman to serve as attorney general, Janet Reno (confirmed with 98 votes).
Here’s how Garland’s vote stacks up to some of his other predecessors:
Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions (Trump): 52-47 vote.
William Barr (Trump): 54-45 vote
Loretta Lynch (Obama): 56-43
John Ashcroft (Bush): 58-42
Alberto Gonzales (Bush): 60-36
Michael Mukasey (Bush): 53-40
BIDEN CABINET WATCH
State: Tony Blinken (confirmed)
Treasury: Janet Yellen (confirmed)
Defense: Ret. Gen. Lloyd Austin (confirmed)
Attorney General: Merrick Garland (confirmed)
Homeland Security: Alejandro Mayorkas (confirmed)
HHS: Xavier Becerra
Agriculture: Tom Vilsack (confirmed)
Transportation: Pete Buttigieg (confirmed)
Energy: Jennifer Granholm (confirmed)
Interior: Deb Haaland
Education: Miguel Cardona (confirmed)
Commerce: Gina Raimondo (confirmed)
Labor: Marty Walsh
HUD: Marcia Fudge (confirmed)
Veterans Affairs: Denis McDonough (confirmed)
UN Ambassador: Linda Thomas-Greenfield (confirmed)
Director of National Intelligence: Avril Haines (confirmed)
EPA: Michael Regan (confirmed)
SBA: Isabel Guzman
OMB Director: Neera Tanden (withdrawn)
US Trade Representative: Katherine Tai
Chair of Council of Economic Advisers: Cecilia Rouse (confirmed)
TWEET OF THE DAY: Look who’s missing
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Here’s the latest allegation against Andrew Cuomo, from an aide who says he groped her at the governor’s mansion.
Plus: Mexico moves closer to legalizing marijuana, Facebook fights monopoly allegations, and more…
Court protects property rights. A nationwide eviction moratorium mandated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is outside the scope of the agency’s authority, a federal court ruled yesterday. The case (Skyworks Ltd. v. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) upends the CDC’s September 4, 2020, ban on eviction actions against tenants who don’t pay rent.
The CDC order—which is different from the eviction moratorium issued by Congress that expired last July—was first imposed through December 31, 2020, and later extended through March 31, 2021. It declared that “a landlord, owner of a residential property, or other person with a legal right to pursue eviction or possessory action shall not evict any covered person.” It did not extend to people being evicted for property damage or reasons other than not paying rent.
The order was challenged by the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and a group of Ohio landlords and property managers in a lawsuit filed last October in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio.
“One may view the CDC’s eviction moratorium as good and essential public policy or the opposite. But those considerations are not for the Court,” wrote Calabrese in his opinion. “Nor may the Court decide this case based on its own personal or policy preferences or its views of the competing public interests involved. Instead, this dispute presents a narrower question. This case turns on whether Congress has authorized the CDC to adopt a nationwide eviction moratorium.”
On this question, Calabrese found that Congress had not.
The CDC’s orders “exceed the agency’s statutory authority…and are, therefore, invalid,” he wrote.
“This decision makes clear that federal agencies can’t exercise power Congress has not given them,” said the Pacific Legal Foundation’s (PLF) Steve Simpson, who represented the landlords, in a statement. “Now our clients no longer have to provide housing for free.”
PLF is also representing plaintiffs in another challenge to the order (Chambless Enterprises, LLC v. CDC); that case is on appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit.
FREE MARKETS
Mexico moves forward with legalizing marijuana. On Wednesday, Mexican lawmakers in the country’s Chamber of Deputies voted 316-129 to legalize marijuana for recreational, not just medical, purposes. “The measure is widely expected to sail through the Senate before being sent to President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who has signaled support for legalization,” notesThe New York Times. “The measure, as of Wednesday night, would allow adults to smoke marijuana and, with a permit, grow a small number of cannabis plants at home. It would also grant licenses for producers — from small farmers to commercial growers — to cultivate and sell the crop.”
FREE MINDS
Prostitution decriminalization push comes to Louisiana. State Rep. Mandie Landry (D–New Orleans) is promoting a path to decriminalize paid sex between consenting adults in the state. She plans to introduce a bill to this effect when the legislature is back in session in April. “The younger generation, people my age and younger, don’t understand at all how the government could ever enter your bedroom and tell you what to do,” she said. “If two people engage in a relationship in their own home, whether they exchange money or not, it’s between them.”
QUICK HITS
• Almost five years after being blocked from becoming a Supreme Court justice, Merrick Garland has been confirmed as the next attorney general of the United States.
• Facebook asks courts to dismiss the antitrust lawsuits against the company. “You only have to look at your phone to know that the government’s assertion that Facebook monopolizes ‘personal social networking services’ doesn’t make sense,” Facebook spokesperson Christopher Sgro said in a statement. “The government ignores these realities and attempts to rewrite history with its unprecedented lawsuit.
• Nonprofit donor disclosure requirements are a violation of the First Amendment, explainsReason‘s Jacob Sullum.
• The great food appropriation debate continues (and is as dumb as ever):
What’s a “South Asian curry dish?” These authors (who are not from any part of South Asia) ironically do not seem to understand the food culture they are implicitly criticizing Roman for not acknowledging. https://t.co/bSu30Et4xr
• Against Biden’s proposed rollback of due process in campus disciplinary proceedings:
Obama’s Title IX guidance was terrible, fixing it was something Trump got right, and it’s maddening that Biden is set to destroy due process on campus. @DavidAFrench@thedispatchhttps://t.co/LrStYmAmSt
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.
Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Playboy, Fox News, Politico, The Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.
Reason is the magazine of “free minds and free markets,” offering a refreshing alternative to the left-wing and right-wing echo chambers for independent-minded readers who love liberty.
We are now on day fifty-one of Joe Biden avoiding the press. Or at least avoiding holding an actual press conference where reporters can ask him questions professionally. According to White House pres … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
03/11/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Biden’s Prime Time; Danger Ahead; What She Said
By Carl M. Cannon on Mar 11, 2021 08:45 am
Good morning, it’s Thursday, March 11, 2021. One year ago today, as part of a Women’s History Month series curated by Dana Rubin, RCP readers were treated to the wisdom of journalist and author Lillie Devereux Blake. Titled “A Woman Spoke Today,” the series featured a cross section of addresses made by women at pivotal historical points.
Ms. Blake’s came in the spring of 1883 in response to lectures by Morgan Dix, rector of Trinity Church in Manhattan and a trustee of Columbia University. Dix’s weekly homilies imparted his vision of “Christian womanhood.” Finding this view of women’s roles far too constricting, Blake rented her own meeting hall and on four consecutive Sunday evenings she gave a rebuttal to “the haughty rector of Trinity.”
In the March 11, speech, Blake took aim at the injustice of divorce laws then on the books as well as the Bible-based notion of “headship” — that a wife belonged to her husband. “These dueling themes present two poles of the ongoing debate about women in society,” Dana Rubin noted in her introduction. “Dix believed maternity was woman’s highest role and opposed letting women enroll at Columbia. Blake was one of the most vocal and determined advocates for women’s admittance to the university.”
Her vision was the more persuasive. Or, as we would say today, she had history on her side: Six years after her speeches, Barnard College opened its doors as a women’s liberal arts college. The prestigious school it was affiliated with? Columbia University.
With that, I’d direct you to our front page, which aggregates, as it does each day, an array of columns and stories spanning the political spectrum. Today’s include Doreen St. Felix writing about Oprah Winfrey’s recent interview with two ex-royals I need not name (The New Yorker); Josh Rogin on early warnings of problems in an infamous Wuhan research lab (Politico); and Justin Sink and Jenny Leonard writing about President Biden’s planned victory lap over Democrats $1.9 trillion stimulus package (Bloomberg News). We also offer a complement of original material from RCP’s reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
For Biden, a Prime-Time Address (But No Press Conferences). Phil Wegmann previews the president’s speech tonight, and explores his reluctance to meet the press.
Predictable Train Wrecks on Crime and Immigration. Charles Lipson outlines the problems arising as “social justice Democrats” turn a blind to mounting crises.
AARP’s Entangling Alliances. At RealClearMarkets, Jonathan Decker asserts that the organization acts as a marketing and advocacy arm of the UnitedHealth Group.
Don’t Make the Postal Service an Energy Policy Guinea Pig. In RealClearEnergy, Paul Steidler opposes congressional efforts to micro-manage USPS’s vehicle fleet when more holistic reforms are needed.
Future Is Bright for Indo-Pacific Alliance. At RealClearWorld, Jeff M. Smith hails the so-called Quad of Australia, Japan, India, and the United States, formed in response to China’s aggressive foreign policy.
U.S. Territories: The Front Lines in Countering China. At RealClearDefense, Alexander B. Gray and Douglas W. Domenech warn that policymakers have barely recognized the threat to vital interests on our own territory or in adjacent waters.
Break the Link Between Housing and Education. At RealClearEducation, Anna Tyger assails the cause of persistent school segregation.
You’re Related to Egypt’s Queen Nefertiti. And so is everyone else, reports RealClearScience editor Ross Pomeroy.
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61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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Good morning. It’s Thursday, March 11, and we’re launching a great giveaway contest today—check out the details below. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
Today marks one year since the World Health Organization formally declared the global COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic, an official designation acknowledging the coronavirus had achieved worldwide spread. While a number of countries had grappled with the virus for months by that point, the milestone is recognized by many as the start of the COVID era.
At the time, the US had reported 647 cases (127,000 globally) and 33 known deaths (4,600 globally). Since then, the global death toll has grown to more than 2.6 million out of more than 117 million known cases, with 20% of those deaths—529,203 as of this morning—coming from the US. See data for all countries here.
One year later, 12 vaccines are in full or limited use (see tracker), with three authorized for use in the US—including two ground-breaking drugs based on mRNA technology (how it works). While decades of research underpin the science, mRNA vaccines had never been authorized for any disease until the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna shots.
About 320 million vaccination doses have been administered globally. Israel leads in percentage of population vaccinated, at more than 50%. And despite struggling to contain the virus, the US leads the world in terms of absolute doses administered at almost 94 million, or about 30% of the global total. Roughly 33 million people in the US are fully vaccinated, while US COVID-19 hospitalizations are down almost 70% from a January peak.
The Biden administration said yesterday it would purchase an additional 100 million single-shot vaccine doses from Johnson & Johnson. The move gives the US enough vaccines to inoculate 500 million people.
Earlier this week, Alaska became the first state to open vaccine eligibility to all residents over 16 years of age, while Texas fully reopened yesterday, dropping all COVID-19 restrictions.
The House gave final approval to a $1.9T economic aid package yesterday, passing the sweeping bill by a near party-line 220-211 vote. It marks the second-largest stimulus in US history behind last March’s $2.2T CARES Act, and brings the total aid passed to counter the pandemic above $5T.
The proposal includes $1,400 direct payments to individuals making up to $75K, a sum dropping to zero at $80K ($150K to $160K for those filing jointly). The threshold for single parents is raised to $112.5K and drops to zero at $120K. Eligible households will also receive $1,400 per dependent. The cost of direct payments is near $400B.
The bill also significantly expands the child tax credit, provides $86B in pension support, $30B to support cash-strapped public transportation systems, and $28B in funding for the restaurant industry. A provision for $350B in state and local aid, criticized by Republicans, is included. Roughly $123B, or 7% of the bill, is marked for direct COVID-19 response, including testing and vaccine distribution. See a more detailed breakdown of the package here ($$, WashPo).
President Joe Biden is expected to sign the bill into law Friday.
A Tragic Anniversary
Ten years ago today, a 9.0 magnitude earthquake struck off the northeastern coast of Japan, triggering a series of tsunamis that killed nearly 20,000 people and destroyed hundreds of thousands of homes. The initial quake was the most powerful ever recorded in Japan, while more than 340,000 people were displaced from the resulting tsunami.
The wall of water also caused catastrophic damage to the Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima, triggering explosions that sprinkled radioactive dust across the region and led to the release of radioactive water into the Eastern Pacific Ocean. The worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl, more than 150,000 people were forced into long-term evacuation.
While tsunami damage has largely been repaired (see photos), officials say it may take up to 40 years to reclaim the exclusion zone around the nuclear plant (more photos).
See footage of the tsunami here (warning: sensitive content).
What do Netflix and an internet company 1/50th the size of Google have in common? Well, for starters, they’re both smaller than Google (ha!). But they also both have a special connection with our pals, Tom and David Gardner.
The Gardner brothers founded The Motley Fool back in 1993, and every month since then, Tom and David have searched far and wide with their independent teams to release their most promising stock picks. Because these teams work independently of each other, their picks are—more often than not—very different. But every once in a while, they’ll arrive at the same recommendation. Which brings us back to Netflix. Back in 2007, both Tom and David recommended the little-known DVD-subscription site, and returns have been a whopping 18,393%. In fact, their teams have only arrived at the same pick 27 times in the entire history of The Motley Fool, with average returns of 1,698%.
>Los Angeles County movie theaters could reopen as early as Saturday at 25% capacity (More) | AMC Theatres reports full-year loss of $4.58B amid global pandemic (More)
>Lou Ottens, inventor of the audio cassette tape, dies at 94(More) | Joe Tait, NBA and MLB broadcaster whose career spanned more than four decades, dies at 83(More)
>Only five healthy players needed for teams to compete in NCAA tournament games, officials say (More) | ESPN and NHL sign seven-year broadcasting deal beginning next season; first time NHL will air on ESPN since 2004 (More)
Science & Technology
>First high-resolution study of the genetic architecture of the human placenta shows the organ is a dumping ground for genetic defects, resembling a cancer tumor; organ helps the fetus avoid the mutations (More)
>Scientists measure the gravitational pull between objects weighing near one one-thousandth of an ounce; measurement is the most sensitive of its kind and makes a step toward measuring gravitational fields at the quantum level (More)
>Russia and China partner on planned lunar orbiting station, will rival NASA’s planned Gateway station (More)
Business & Markets
>US stock markets mixed (S&P 500 +0.6%, Dow +1.5%, Nasdaq -0.04%); Dow crosses 32,000 for first time, as House passes $1.9T stimulus package (More) | Online gaming giant Roblox surges 54% in trading debut to $45B valuation (More)
>General Electric shares slide 5% as company plans to exit its jet leasing business to rival AerCap in deal valued at $30B (More)
>Business Roundtable’s CEO confidence index surges to one of the highest levels on record, signaling CEO optimism for economic growth (More)
>Merrick Garland confirmed as attorney general in 70-30 Senate vote (More) | Rep. Marcia Fudge (D, OH-11) confirmed as housing chief, Michael Regan confirmed to lead Environmental Protection Agency; see cabinet tracker here (More)
>Mexico moves closer torecreational marijuana, as lower house of Congress approves legalization; pending passage by the country’s Senate, the move would create the world’s largest cannabis market (More)
>Des Moines Register reporter Andrea Sahouri found not guilty on all charges related to an arrest while reporting on Black Lives Matter protests last summer; case was closely watched as a referendum on press rights (More)
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IN-DEPTH
The Business Empire of the Tatmadaw
BBC | Joshua Cheetham. The Myanmar military, also known as the Tatmadaw, is funded by a large chunk of the national budget—much of which may dry up as the effects of a Feb. 1 coup paralyze the economy. But they also draw a significant shadow income from a vast and secretive military-run corporate empire, cultivated over the past six decades. (Read)
Editor’s note: We also recommend this piece on the recent brutal history ($$, NYT) of the country’s military.
‘We Sucked—But it Was Fun’
MLB.com | Anthony Castrovince. The Yonkers Hoot Owls only existed for a single season, but their 1995 campaign made them the stuff of legends—in the worst way possible. (Read)
Historybook: Civil rights leader Ralph Abernathy born (1926); RIP Sir Alexander Fleming, scientist who discovered penicillin (1955); Janet Reno confirmed as first female attorney general in the US (1993); Coordinated bombings kill 191 people aboard trains in Madrid (2004).
“The unprepared mind cannot see the outstretched hand of opportunity.”
– Sir Alexander Fleming
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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March 11, 2021
Politicized Name Calling and the Dehumanization of…
By Robert E. Wright | “The election of 2020 caused a big ruckus for nothing. We went into the election with a mean, old elephantine POTUS and came out of it with a mean, old asinine one. Both espouse policies that are, frankly, rather…
By Jeffrey A. Tucker | “I might be wrong that The Lego Movie portends a future of one generation of planners replacing another. Maybe it is just a fun cartoon after all. Still, the idea of master builders battling each other over what to make…
By Vincent Geloso | “It is easy to remember Simon as a cheerful optimist whose view can be summarized as ‘more people, more innovations, more value created, more abilities to deal with environmental problems.’ But, in reality, Simon was a much…
AIER Leading Indicators Index Moves Higher in February
By Robert Hughes | AIER’s Leading Indicators Index posted a gain in February, hitting the highest level since October 2018. The Leading Indicators index came in at 83 following four consecutive months at 75. The February result marks the sixth…
A Case for ‘Operation Warp Speed’ As An Odious Form of…
By John Tamny | “These are questions worth asking amid all the back slapping taking place over the creation of corona-vaccines. Conservatives in particular normally think of tradeoffs, of the unseen, and of the dangers presented by partnerships…
Energy Price Jump Leads Broad-based Increase in Everyday …
By Robert Hughes | For a second consecutive month, everyday prices moved sharply higher with gains led by energy goods and services, especially motor fuels. The AIER Everyday Price Index increased by 0.8 percent for the second month in a row,…
By James Bovard | “The Biden administration is reviving America’s proselytizing for democracy around the globe. But Covid-19 crackdowns are a warning for people to be wary of oppressive governments regardless of their purported mandate. The world…
Masking Children: Tragic, Unscientific, and Damaging
By Paul E. Alexander | “Masking children is as absurd, illogical, nonsensical, and potentially dangerous as trying to stop ‘every case of Covid’ or ‘stopping Covid at all costs.’ Masks are not needed for children based on near zero risk in children.
Edward C. Harwood fought for sound money when few Americans seemed to care. He was the original gold standard man before that became cool. Now he is honored in this beautiful sewn silk tie in the richest possible color and greatest detail.
The red is not just red; it is darker and deeper, more distinctive and suggestive of seriousness of purpose.
The Harwood coin is carefully sewn. Sporting this, others might miss that you are secretly supporting the revolution for freedom and sound money, but you will know, and that is what matters.
The lockdowns in response to the Covid-19 pandemic have taught many lessons. One is that politicians either don’t understand, or care, about maintaining the integrity of the wellspring of prosperity: private commerce, rooted in individual liberty and private property rights. A second is that an enshrined, protected and inviolable right—a human right—to private commercial dealing, on whatever scale or basis it may take, can no longer be overlooked.
One year ago, everything changed. I hope that in the past year, this newsletter, my reporting, and my colleagues’ work have been useful, edifying, and illuminating, helping you get through a time when the whole world seemed to have turned upside down in the worst way. The reader response over the past year demonstrates that what I’ve written about the pandemic reached a … READ MORE
Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL) “has a message for states and cities poised to receive a collective $360 billion from the American Rescue Act stimulus package: Send it back,” the Palm Beach Post reports.
“Scott’s call to reject money that polls show is popular nationally, even among Republicans, has flared tension between Scott and another Florida GOP leader, Gov. Ron DeSantis.”
Dylan Matthews: “Fifty-seven years ago, a Democratic president who had a reputation as a moderate — and who had been a senator and vice president before reaching the highest office in the land — announced his administration would be waging ‘unconditional war on poverty in America.’”
“With Congress’s passage of the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, another Democratic president with a reputation as a moderate (and who came through the Senate and the vice presidency) is putting his stamp on American policy. The Covid-19 relief bill, which passed the US House on Wednesday afternoon and is set to be signed into law by President Joe Biden on Friday, is the most far-reaching anti-poverty legislation in more than 50 years.”
Larry Sabato’s Crystal Ball: “Just as in congressional elections, the president’s party often struggles in gubernatorial races. The president’s party has lost governorships in 16 of the 19 midterms since the end of World War II, and two of the three exceptions (1962 and 1998) were years where there was no net change. Only in 1986, Ronald Reagan’s second midterm, did the president’s party enjoy a gubernatorial net gain (eight seats) in the postwar era.”
A new CBS News/YouGov poll finds 75% of Americans approve of Congress passing President Biden’s pandemic relief plan, including large majorities of Democrats and independents, along with nearly half of Republicans.
Biden’s approval rate on handling the pandemic is 67% to 33%.
Dr. Anthony Fauci told the Today Show that he would have been “shocked” to hear a year ago that the U.S. coronavirus death toll would surpass 500,000.
Said Fauci: “It would have shocked me completely. I mean, I knew we were in for trouble… In fact that day, at a congressional hearing I made the statement, ‘Things are going to get much worse before they get better.’ But I did not in my mind think that ‘much worse’ was going to be 525,000 deaths.”
“The number of Americans seeking unemployment benefits fell last week to 712,000, the lowest total since early November, evidence that fewer employers are cutting jobs amid a decline in confirmed coronavirus cases and signs of an improving economy,” the AP reports.
Washington Post: “The GOP’s national push to enact hundreds of new election restrictions could strain every available method of voting for tens of millions of Americans, potentially amounting to the most sweeping contraction of ballot access in the United States since the end of Reconstruction, when Southern states curtailed the voting rights of formerly enslaved Black men.”
“In 43 states across the country, Republican lawmakers have proposed at least 250 laws that would limit mail, early in-person and Election Day voting with such constraints as stricter ID requirements, limited hours or narrower eligibility to vote absentee, according to data compiled as of Feb. 19 by the nonpartisan Brennan Center for Justice. Even more proposals have been introduced since then.”
Reuters: “Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said on Wednesday that he is ‘extremely uncomfortable’ with the continued high level of security at the U.S. Capitol, saying there are currently no serious threats against Congress.”
Said McConnell: “With all this razor wire around the complex, it reminds me of my last visit to Kabul.”
A new Gallup poll finds 79% of parents of K-12 students in the U.S. favor in-person learning in their communities right now.
“Many frustrated parents have been vocally pushing for a return to the classroom, citing concerns about the damage to their children’s academic progress, psychological health and social development.”
“The Biden administration has pledged a laser-like focus on the judiciary in the coming months, vowing to not only prioritize nominations but also cast a wide net in its search for potential appointees,” CNN reports.
“As things stand, there are currently 69 eligible vacancies in various levels of the federal court system and 27 that will occur down the road as judges have announced their intent to retire. And the White House is almost assuredly keeping an eye on the seat of Justice Stephen Breyer, should he decide to step down this term and give the President his first chance to fill a Supreme Court seat.”
“Marking a year of loss and disruption, President Joe Biden will use his first prime-time address since taking office to steer the nation toward a hungered-for sentiment — hope — in the ‘next phase’ of the fight against the pandemic that has killed more than 529,000 Americans,” the AP reports.
Previewing his remarks, Biden said he would “talk about what we’ve been through as a nation this past year, but more importantly, I’m going to talk about what comes next.”
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell voted to confirm Merrick Garland as President Joe Biden’s attorney general, five years after he blocked the longtime judge’s nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court, the Louisville Courier Journal reports.
Said McConnell: “I’m voting to confirm Judge Garland because of his long reputation as a straight-shooter and legal expert. His left-of-center perspective has been within the legal mainstream.”
Axios: “The death and suffering caused by the coronavirus have been much worse than many people expected a year ago — but the vaccines have been much better.”
All of the living former presidents have joined in a new ad campaign urging Americans to get the coronavirus vaccine—all of them, that is, except one.
Donald Trump didn’t take part in the campaign and instead issued a statement saying “I hope everyone remembers” the vaccine wouldn’t exist without him.
John Harris: “Why are so many people in the business of being likable actually so unlikable? Not unlikable merely in the awkward, eye-rolling, prefer-not-to-spend-much-time-with-that-clod sense. Unlikable in the toxic, misanthropic, something-must-be-wrong-with-him sense. In other words: in the Andrew Cuomo sense. Or at least, it is now clear, the way many subordinates and fellow politicians experienced Cuomo on many occasions.”
“One element is probably ageless. Professions that demand public performance attract ambitious, creative, and often needy people who feel under intense psychic pressure and often take it out on people when the spotlight is not on (or they wrongly assume it is not on.) There are even examples, or so I’ve heard, of this phenomenon afflicting people in the news media. But an important factor is distinctly a product of this age: The cult of bad-ass, trash-talking that has come to politics, including or especially to political-media relations.”
Politics seems to affect nearly everything now, including attitudes toward the COVID-19 pandemic. Americans are becoming more optimistic that the country is nearing the end of mask mandates and lockdowns, but their opinions vary along party lines.
Update (0954ET): Iceland has become the latest European nation to suspend the AstraZeneca jab. ICELAND HAS ALSO SUSPENDED USE OF THE OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA COVID VACCINE The tiny island nation has confirmed roughly 6K COVID cases since the…
Just hours after the House passed the Democrats’ $1.9 trillion stimulus package (which will unleash another wave of “stimmies” that will inevitably find their way into millions of Robinhood and other discount brokerage accounts), President…
A famous LA mansion called “The One” that originally had a planned list price of approximately $500 million in 2017 now faces the threat of default, according to LA Times . Movie producer turned real estate developer (of course) Nile…
Did the FBI make off with ‘seven to nine tons’ of Civil War-era gold in a Pennsylvania forest after a treasure hunting duo led them to its long-hidden location? A father-son team wants to know, and has successfully sued for access to…
Authored by Steve Watson via Summit News, A livid President Trump issued a statement Tuesday lamenting that the country is “being destroyed” by the Biden administration’s actions at the border, as the crisis further spirals out of control.
Authored by Steve Watson via Summit News, As half the country expressed concerns over the mental fitness of Joe Biden, it has emerged that Vice President Kamala Harris has yet again taken on duties that the President should be fulfilling…
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Alan Greenspan, 20-yr head of the US Fed, reveals Washington’s nasty trick to confiscate the savings of unsuspecting Americans. Here’s How to Prepare Read more…
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On March 12, U.S. President Joe Biden will lead the first Quadrilateral Security Dialogue talks with the leaders of Australia, India, and Japan. Making the Quad work could be Biden’s most important task in Asia but doing so requires a specific agenda that builds on shared goals. And it’s not just about China—it’s about getting Asia right.
In this wide-ranging discussion with Peter Robinson, Bjorn Lomborg analyzes the Biden administration’s plan to address climate change, lauds a slew of new clean energy technologies that are coming in the next decade, and discusses the upsides—and the downsides—of migrating the world from a carbon-based economy to one based on electricity generated by clean energy sources.
Strategika Issue 71 is now available online. Strategika is an online journal that analyzes ongoing issues of national security in light of conflicts of the past—the efforts of the Military History Working Group of historians, analysts, and military personnel focusing on military history and contemporary conflict.
It is a grave mistake to frame the Ethiopian conflict narrowly as a humanitarian and human rights problem. It is a regional crisis that threatens U.S. security interests. The United States must work, foremost with African countries, to stop the fighting before it is too late.
In this interview, Research Fellow Anatol Shmelev, curator of the Hoover Library & Archives’ Russia and Eurasia collection, discusses his new book, published by Hoover Institution Press, In the Wake of Empire: Anti-Bolshevik Russia in International Affairs, 1917–1920.
International Women’s Day is a globally significant day in which we honor women’s social, economic, social, cultural, and political contributions. To celebrate International Women’s Day, we’re highlighting four of our female Hoover Institution fellows who are leading and transforming their respective fields.
Call it coincidence, but a week ago and in this same space I asked if California’s five major-league baseball franchises would be allowed to play their games in front of live audiences this season—a potential headache for California governor Gavin Newsom as he tours the Golden State with the message that better times lie ahead.
Because the West is a self-critical, affluent, tolerant, and leisurely place, the number of the victimized has grown to far outnumber the vanishing pool of victimizers.
Essay on monetary policy in National Review Online. Short version: The Fed’s monetary policy has returned to the intellectual framework of the late 1960s. At best “expectations” now float around as an independent force, manipulable by speeches, but not tied to patterns of action by the Fed as analysis since the 1980s would require.
In the weeks after the Fukushima disaster, the then-CEO of the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations (and one of the authors) made a passionate call for the creation of “a robust, highly capable response team with pre-staged equipment interoperable both domestically and internationally.” In the decade since, the nuclear industry and those who regulate it have come a long way in many countries but, arguably, still haven’t made sufficient progress in cultivating and codifying effective, trusting, and transparent international relationships.
Last week I explored how we might truly personalize instruction and blow up the whole notion of grade levels so that elementary students could learn at their own pace and get what they need as they recover from the pandemic. I argued that it’s harder than it looks, especially at the elementary level, for several reasons. First, much of what the youngest learners are supposed to master in school is how to behave and get along with other kids and adults.
The gap between aspiration and achievement in human rights promotion is a long-standing feature of U.S. foreign policy. We Foreign Service Officers learn early that, however genuine our intentions, there are natural limits to what is achievable.
In April 2020, the US Department of State decided to support the opening of a dialogue between the Kurdish National Council (KNC), an umbrella organization of Syrian-Kurdish political parties close to the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) of Massoud Barzani, and the Democratic Unity Party (PYD), the Syrian branch of the PKK (Kurdistan Worker’s Party).
Over the past several weeks, I’ve been exploring various options that elementary schools might embrace next fall when (let’s hope!) almost all kids are back in school full time and the focus shifts to academic recovery.
Hoover Institution fellow John Cochrane applies the habit of mind to a number of puzzles, including why real interest rates don’t equalize across countries. Cochrane also talks about what explains why high trading volumes and active management persist in finance, how the pandemic has affected his opinion of habit formation theories, and more.
Hoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson considers the Republican Party’s future as it deals with the long shadow cast by the presidency of Donald Trump. Should the GOP embrace a Trump comeback? Or should it attempt to find a new standard-bearer who can blend the Trump agenda with a different sensibility? And what’s the one issue to which VDH thinks the GOP hasn’t paid nearly enough attention? Tune in to find out.
Hoover Institution fellow Lanhee Chen discusses the latest on Congress clearing the $1.9T aid bill and how little of the relief bill goes to addressing COVID-19 related issues. Chen notes the aid could have been more targeted which might have encouraged bipartisan support.
interview with Joshua Eisenman via Conversations on China’s Global Sharp Power
Joshua Eisenman, associate professor at the University of Notre Dame’s Keough School of Global Affairs, and senior fellow for China studies at the American Foreign Policy Council, discusses Africa’s deepening engagements with China.
Women from the Hoover fellowship representing national security fields participated in a forum commemorating International Women’s Day, recalling their own challenges in a profession historically dominated by men and assessing the status of women around the world, especially those deeply impacted by social, political, and economic crises.
Although many lament the dark times for conservative ideas and the death of free speech, they should see this as an opportunity to break free of corrupted institutions.
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
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71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief:
Good morning, it’s March 11, 2021. On this day in history, the largest earthquake ever recorded in Japan caused massive devastation and a tsunami that decimated a region of northeastern Honshu. It also led to the second-worst nuclear disaster in history at the Fukushima plant (2011).
TOP STORIES:
COVID-19 Relief Bill Passes in the House
On Wednesday, March 11, 2021, the U.S. House of Representatives approved the American Rescue Plan, a 1.9 trillion-dollar COVID-19 relief bill. All Republicans in the House voted against the bill, and all Democrats except Rep. Jared Golden of Maine voted for the legislation.
The American Rescue Plan is the third stimulus bill to pass in Congress since the COVID-19 pandemic began in mid-March 2020. The vote for the bill was 220-211.
President Biden called the bill a “historic victory for the American people.”
In contrast, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) tweeted, “President Biden’s spending bill is a classic example of big Democratic overreach in the name of COVID relief. It manages to spend only ~1 percent on vaccinations and less than 9 percent on the entire health fight. This is by far one of the worst pieces of legislation I’ve seen in the Senate.”
Disney+ Bars Access for 7-Year-Olds to Peter Pan and Dumbo
Disney+ changed the settings on Peter Pan and Dumbo this week. As of March 9, 2021, only children 7 years old and up can access both movies. Disney justified its decision by saying that both films included racist stereotypes.
The disclaimer on both films now reads, “This program includes negative depictions and/or mistreatment of people or cultures. These stereotypes were wrong then and are wrong now. Rather than remove this content, we want to acknowledge its harmful impact, learn from it and spark conversation to create a more inclusive future together.”
Biden Administration Will Meet with Chinese Officials in Alaska Next Week
Secretary of State Antony Blinken and National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan will meet with Chinese officials in Alaska next week. The officials Blinken and Sullivan will meet with are Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Yang Jiechi, a high-ranking Politburo member. Blinken says that the parties will discuss a range of issues, including those in which both parties have “deep disagreements.”
DAILY RUMOR:
Are Kentucky Lawmakers Considering a Bill That Would Make Insulting Police a Crime?
TRUE or FALSE: TRUE
Kentucky legislators are considering a bill that would make a crime to insult a police officer.
The Courier Journal reports, “A Senate committee advanced a bill Thursday enhancing punishments for crimes related to rioting, including a provision making it a crime to insult or taunt a police officer to the point it could provoke a violent response.”
“Sen. Danny Carroll, R-Benton, a retired police officer and lead sponsor of Senate Bill 211, told the committee his legislation was a response to “riots” seen in many cities throughout the country last summer, including Louisville.”
DAILY PERSPECTIVE ON COVID-19
Since the Outbreak Started
As of Wednesday, March 10, 2021, 20,638,496 people in the U.S. have recovered from coronavirus. Also, the U.S. reports 29,858,838 COVID-19 cases, with 542,024 deaths.
Daily Numbers
For Wednesday, March 10, 2021, the U.S. reports 57,024 cases, with 1,443 deaths.
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR US AS AMERICANS
President Joe Biden is expected to sign the American Rescue Plan on Friday, March 12, 2021. With the new COVID-19 relief bill, single Americans who make under $80,000 will receive a $1,400 check. Families that make under $160,000 will receive $1,400 checks as well. In addition, families will receive $1,400 for each child dependent in the household. The American Rescue Plan also adds more funds to the Paycheck Protection Program, which can assist business owners who have struggled during the pandemic.
The news from Disney+ shows how major entertainment companies are censoring older animated content. Previously, DIB analysts reported how Disney+ added a disclaimer to The Muppet Show because of a Confederate flag scene. Also, earlier this week, the DIB reported how Space Jam 2 removed Pepe Le Pew from the movie. Americans should expect further cancellation of older animated characters that do not meet the woke movement standards, which continually looks for targets to cancel that they deem racist, sexist or offensive.
The meeting between the U.S. and China in Alaska marks the first talks between the Biden Administration and CCP officials. In previous DIBs, analysts have reported how Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi made extremely negative comments about the U.S. and the former Trump Administration’s policies. President Biden has said he wants to take a different approach to China than his predecessor. Whether that approach makes the U.S. more vulnerable to the CCP remains to be seen.
The Daily Intelligence Brief, The DIB as we call it, is curated by a hard working team with a diverse background of experience including government intelligence, investigative journalism, high-risk missionary work and marketing.
This team has more than 68 years of combined experience in the intelligence community, 35 years of combined experience in combat and high-risk areas, and have visited more than 65 countries. We have more than 22 years of investigative reporting and marketing experience. Daily, we scour and verify more than 600 social media sites using more than 200 analytic tools in the process. Leveraging the tools and methods available to us, we uncover facts and provide analysis that would take an average person years of networking and research to uncover. We are doing it for you every 24 hours.
From All Things Possible, the Victor Marx Group and Echo Analytics Group, we aim to provide you with a daily intelligence brief collected from trusted sources and analysts.
Sources for the DIB include local and national media outlets, state and government websites, proprietary sources, in addition to social media networks. State reporting of COVID-19 deaths includes probable cases and probable deaths from COVID-19, in accordance with each state’s guidelines.
Thank you for joining us today. Be safe, be healthy and
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Prominent Democrats Call on NY Gov Cuomo to Resign
We’ve previously covered New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s COVID-19 coverup scandal. To recap, the governor ordered nursing homes to accept COVID-19-positive patients, which endangered thousands of elderly New Yorkers. Then, Cuomo tried to cover up the data showing the damage his policy had wrought—all while accepting an Emmy and writing a book about how amazing his leadership was.
Now, Cuomo faces a #MeToo scandal, with multiple women accusing him of inappropriate behavior or sexual harassment. It looks like this will finally be it for Cuomo, as even members of his own party are calling on him to resign.
“[The allegations are] disgusting to me,” NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio, a Democrat, said. “He can no longer serve as governor.” And in a joint letter, 59 Democratic state legislators called on Cuomo to resign and wrote that he “has lost the confidence of the public and the state legislature, rendering him ineffective in this time of most urgent need.”
Cuomo’s downfall appears imminent. The saga will likely go down as yet another warning showing how hubris and concentrated power inevitably result in disgrace and disaster.
More Tax Hikes Snuck Into Biden ‘Stimulus’ Bill
Hiking taxes isn’t exactly the best way to stimulate an economy. But that’s what several provisions slipped into Biden’s $1.9 trillion “stimulus” bill would reportedly do.
“Democrats snuck a handful of surprise tax hikes on corporations in President Biden’s sweeping coronavirus relief package that combined are worth more than $60 billion,” Fox Business reports.
“One provision in the $1.9 trillion stimulus bill limits deductions for publicly traded companies that pay their top employees more than $1 million for tax years beginning after 2026,” reporter Megan Henney continues. “Another extends a cap on how much certain unincorporated business owners can deduct against their non-business income to reduce their tax liability, and the third clamps down on how multinational corporations do their taxes.”
It’s complicated and wonky stuff. But, in a more general takeaway, advocates have pointed out that these hikes could hit middle-class Americans, not just the rich. This would violate President Biden’s campaign promise to not raise taxes on anyone earning less than $400,000.
I guess that promise was just “malarkey” after all.
Data of the Day: Lego sales surged 21% last year as kids stayed home during school closures and lockdowns. The context may be dark, but the nostalgia for Lego is real.
P.S. Some podcast news: I’ll soon be interviewing Manhattan Institute economist Brian Riedl on the pending debt crisis Americans face and U.S. Senator Mike Braun on how a $15 minimum wage would hurt Main Street. Subscribe now on Apple, Spotify, or YouTube if you’re interested and want to join our conversations.
You don’t always have time to read a full in-depth article. Thankfully, FEE Fellow Patrick Carroll is here to give you the key takeaways from one highlighted article each day.
Getting teens to enjoy academics can sometimes feel like pulling teeth, and this seems to be especially true for economics. For some reason, this “dismal science” is regarded as the boring class that you have to take at the end of high school even though nobody likes it.
But not all students feel this way. In fact, some students fall in love with economics, and they become so enthralled with it that they want to share their passion with others. Such is the case for three high schoolers from Silicon Valley who recently launched the Youth Economics Initiative.
As Kerry McDonald explains in her latest article on FEE.org, the goal of this organization is to promote economics education by fostering connections between clubs, sponsoring talks and hosting competitions. Of course, the COVID-19 pandemic has forced them to make some changes, but they have persevered through these hard times, and they now have over 2000 teens and 40 clubs in their network.
One of the founders, Darion Phan, was introduced to economics at a FEE seminar. “The FEE program was a great experience because it applied economics to the real world,” he recounts. As a result of this program, Darion is likewise eager to make economics relevant and interesting to his peers.
So how do we make economics relevant? A lot of it comes down to focusing on the individual, which is a characteristic feature of the Austrian school of economics, which FEE promotes. As Kerry writes, “understanding the economy must begin with—and never lose sight of—the individual: individual preferences, choices, and actions.”
For many teens, economics has the reputation of being the boring class you take at the end of high school because the state forces it into the curriculum. But a new group of high schoolers is determined to dismantle this perception.
The Foundation for Economic Education is excited to partner with the New Jersey Council for Economic Education in bringing a 3-part webinar series on the importance of economic freedom to a wide audience of educators, professionals, and anybody interested in continuing economic education.
Be sure to register below if any session catches your interest.
1. How Economic Freedom Makes the World a Better Place
Professor Antony Davies will discuss how lower violence rates, poverty, and the overall rise in how Americans live today are the result of freer markets and greater respect for human rights.
K. W. Davis Visiting Lecturer Signè Thomas will delve into what makes for sound economic institutions and how they impact the well-being of people around the globe.
3. Economic Freedom and How It Impacts Women’s Lives
Signé Thomas will examine the true causes of gender inequality, how economic freedom affects equality, and analyze policies that attempt to provide solutions.
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IBM is partnering with Covid-19 mRNA vaccine maker Moderna to track vaccine administration in real time through its various blockchain, Artificial Intelligence, and hybrid cloud services. According to a company press release, the collaboration will “focus on exploring the utility of IBM capabilities in the U.S.,” such as a recently unveiled pilot program for a Covid-19 Digital Health Pass in the State of New York, which effectively deputizes private businesses to enforce government-imposed Covid-19 regulations.
A 91-year-old man in Ohio, Victor Smith, who had already had one Covid shot weeks earlier, accidentally received his second shot twice in one day, four hours apart. He then went into shock.
President Biden’s health honcho, Rochelle Walensky, announced Monday that vaccinated Americans can visit with others who are vaccinated in small groups at home. But when Walensky was asked about visiting grandchildren, she said no, unless the kids are local. Even vaccinated people must avoid traveling, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention insisted: “Every time there’s a surge in travel, we have a surge in cases in this country.”
The founder of the ‘super straight’ movement, which asserts the right to not be attracted to transgenders without being labeled “transphobic,” received a wave of harassment and death threats after the media ran hit pieces against him.
A terrifying ruling has been made in a child custody case which used the father’s beliefs over the COVID-19 pandemic to remove his children from his custody.
Last April, the Washington Post’s Josh Rogin revealed that in January 2018, the US Embassy in Beijing “took the unusual step of repeatedly sending US science diplomats to the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV),” and subsequently sent two official warnings back to Washington about “inadequate safety at the lab.”
The Great Reset is a phrase first used by Klaus Schwab and the WEF to describe a new kind of capitalism. In their book, COVID-19: The Great Reset, WEF founder and executive chairman Klaus Schwab and Thierry Malleret write that the COVID-19 crisis should be regarded as an “opportunity [that can be] seized to make the kind of institutional changes and policy choices that will put economies on the path toward a fairer, greener future.
A new outbreak of COVID-19 has been declared at the Cottonwoods Care Centre in B.C.’s Interior Health region where staff and residents had already received vaccines, the provincial health officer announced Monday
China and Russia have announced plans to work together to construct a lunar research station, an ambitious first-ever such space project between the two countries.
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Welcome to the Thursday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect identities online and off. Today:
Transphobic trolls try to pass off ‘super straight’ as a new sexual identity
Do women have worse side effects after they get the COVID vaccine?
Self-care: Cleaning out my closet
BREAK THE INTERNET
Transphobic trolls try to pass off ‘super straight’ as a new sexual identity
Trolls, bigots, and trans-exclusionary radical feminists are reframing their harassment of transgender people as the supposed new sexual identity “super straight.”
Like many wretched things on the internet, image forum 4chan is largely responsible. But TikToker Kyle Royce first coined the term in a now-deleted video. In the clip, he complains about being called transphobic for only wanting to date “real women,” a transphobic way of excluding transgender women, and says his solution is to create a new orientation.
He facetiously says being “super straight” means that he only dates “women that are born women.” “You can’t say I’m transphobic now because that’s just my sexuality,” he says.
As Royce’s TikTok video spread, 4Chan users and other trolls used the term “super straight” to weaponize the language and symbols used for the LGBTQ community, like “pride” and the rainbow flag.
On 4chan, users seemed excited to “red pill,” or indoctrinate, Gen Z users and sow division.
But even 4chan bigots didn’t completely agree. Some transphobic users insisted that using a new term was all a plot—either by Jewish people trying to normalize transgender people or even by the LGBTQ community itself. One user wrote of a conspiracy “to make you slowly accept degeneracy … step by step.”
The fact that “super straight” can be shortened to SS, the acronym for the Nazi military branch Schutzstaffel, was especially enticing for some 4chan dwellers. It also caused infighting between those who ran with it and those who said the coincidence made their plan too obvious to the target audience.
On Monday, the hashtag #superstraight went viral on Twitter, and plenty of garden variety bigots leaped on board. In some cases, it was hard to tell who was trolling and who believed it was a real identity. “I’m #superlesbian and we’ve been getting harassed for years because of our orientation,” one user wrote. “I stand with #superstraight.”
COVID-19 variant B.1.1.7, which was first discovered in the U.K., is rapidly spreading across the U.S. This highly contagious strain could easily lead to another dangerous surge if people are not careful about following the current safety guidelines. Of course, this also comes at a time when vaccines are also rolling out, and we’re all desperate to get back to a semblance of our old lives. But being patient for a few more months could mean savings hundreds of thousands of Americans from an untimely death.
The MaskUP Project is a non-profit initiative that believes that message has never been more important. That’s why we’re taking action to get it out there to those who need to hear it most. In addition to raising our voices, we’re also raising funds to donate masks to the people who need them most: Medical workers. If you’re ready to make a change, visit MaskUp.org to learn more.
Do women have worse side effects after they get the COVID vaccine?
Women are reporting more severe side effects from the COVID-19 vaccines than their male counterparts, according to a study published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Since vaccines began distribution at the end of 2020, the side effects of receiving one have been well documented. People have reported a range of side effects after receiving their vaccination, including pain, redness, and swelling at the injection site. Side effects also include muscle pain, headache, nausea, fatigue, chills, and fever. Reports show that these symptoms are more commonly experienced by women than men and that symptoms experienced by women are often more severe. But why?
We were beginning coronavirus lockdowns when chatter of the “quarantine 15” wormed its way into Zoom calls and Twitter discourse. A year later, the term still sucks.
There’s plenty of reporting on what to do with extra lockdown pounds: be worried, don’t be worried. I probably fall somewhere in the middle. But radical self-acceptance and body stigmas aside, I was tired of looking at my overfull closet. This weekend, I decided to make peace with the clothes that I may or may not ever fit in again. I made neat piles for donation, sold a few loved outfits on Instagram, and made mental notes of the basic items I’ll want to eventually replace.
Clothes are inextricable from bodies, of course, but it’s also becoming clear that I might emerge from the COVID era with a new sense of style, new hobbies (like cooking), and new ideas about what’s needed in the world and for myself. So y’all, I’m cleaning out my closet.
Donald Trump is clearly the most polarizing President we’ve ever seen. Whether you love him or hate him, he gathers massive amounts of media attention.
Though does he still deserve to be President?
American Polling is conducting an urgent national poll to examine whether or not Trump is fit for office.
The results of this poll will be shared with many of the major media outlets, including CNN, FOX, MSNBC, and ABC News. So they can show ACTUAL results on the opinions of the voting public.
Please take just 20 seconds of your time today to let your voice be heard.
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82.) SEAN HANNITY
March 11, 2021
Latest News
NEW YORK UNRAVELS: Cuomo Says Tax Hikes ‘On the Table’ Despite Massive Federal Bailout
Embattled New York Governor threatened to raise the taxes of countless residents […]
It is now clear that government lockdowns have proven disastrous for people and our economy. They have also been ineffective. According to the most recent summary of social-distancing measures published by Nature, “Stay-at-home orders did little to mitigate the pandemic spread.” The authors say there is “no evidence that the number of deaths/million is reduced by staying at home.”
In discussions this week with physicians who are career disease specialists, I noted these interesting data points. This information is receiving no mention by the Biden administration or its Leftmedia propagandists in order not to disrupt their perpetual “fear and angst” agenda — ensuring their constituents believe BIG Gov is their savior.
First, according to the CDC, in the U.S. there have been 29 million individuals who have tested positive for the ChiCom Virus and recovered.
Second, early in the pandemic it was estimated that the number of Americans who have had the virus but were either asymptomatic or recovered from mild flu-like symptoms was 10 times the number of diagnosed cases. That number is now more conservatively estimated to be about three times the diagnosed number. So at present there are about 87 million undiagnosed recoveries.
Third, thanks to the stunning success of the Trump administration’s Operation Warp Speed vaccine-development program, 60 million people have already had one or both vaccine doses, and by the end of March the number of those fully vaccinated will be almost 100 million.
Thus, by the beginning of April, more than 200 million Americans will have COVID immunities.
According to Mayo Clinic experts, 70% of the population must have immunities intact in order to reach COVID “herd immunity” — that’s 220 million people. In other words, we are weeks away from reaching herd immunity, as predicted by Johns Hopkins School of Medicine professor Dr. Martin Makary, despite the variants.
Of course, Makary was “fact-checked” for daring to suggest we would reach herd immunity prior to when the Swamp Doctor, Anthony Fauci, says we will. But the fact-checkers got fact-checked and Makary is correct.
Indeed, this week Fauci himself declared, “We anticipate … that the herd immunity level will be about 70-85%. That’s the time that we believe, if you look at the planned rollout of the vaccines, that we would hopefully get to that point somewhere by the end of the summer and the early fall.”
Well, no.
If 70%, we will reach that target by mid-April. If 85%, we should reach that target in May.
Last week, Joe Biden read these words from his prepared script: “We’re now on track to have enough vaccine supply for every adult in America by the end of May.” That is “every adult” including those who have already recovered but may choose to take the vaccine anyway.
What’s next from Fauci, “herd immunity when we reach 150%”? Is anyone paying attention to the basic math?
Question: Should anyone be listening to anything Fauci says?
Behind Biden, the second most powerful and equally senile wax figure in DC is Fauci. He wields an enormous amount of power for an 80-year-old lifelong DC bureaucrat, having been in the bowels of various federal agencies since 1968.
Recall that once caught in that lie, demonstrating his signature unmitigated arrogance, Fauci insisted, “With all due modesty, I think I’m pretty effective.”
Fauci’s “modesty” and “effectiveness” notwithstanding, herd immunity is on its way! While those with significant comorbidity factors should take appropriate precautions, it is past time to reopen our country. Unlike Fauci, Makary is sticking with the science. As Dr. Makary advised in an additional Wall Street Journal analysis today, get the vaccine and go.
Finally, never again should we quarantine the most healthy among us and shutter businesses across the nation.
A record-breaking 9,500 unaccompanied juveniles illegally crossed the U.S. border in February. These children, most of them teens, are often exploited by coyotes — the seedy men who traffic people and drugs across the border. And these kids were just a sliver of last month’s 100,000 encounters with illegals reported by U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Clearly, we have a crisis on our hands, and it’s a moral one at that.
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki also thinks there’s a moral problem, but that it was former President Donald Trump’s. “In the last administration, we had a morality problem,” Psaki lectured Wednesday. “Children were being pulled from the arms of their parents, and kids were being sent back on a treacherous journey. That’s not the approach of this administration.”
No, the approach of this administration is to fling the doors open wide for unaccompanied minors to be trafficked into this country without limits. Psaki even admitted as much: “We understand that means there will be more kids who are crossing the border. We made a policy decision that was the right, humane step to take.”
Likewise, Southern Border Coordinator Roberta Jacobson practically claimed the surge is the policy of the Biden administration. “There was a hope for a more humane policy after four years of pent-up demand,” she said Wednesday, “so I don’t know if I would call that a coincidence.” In fact, while speaking in Spanish, Jacobson also said, “The border is not closed.” Only several minutes later did she say in English, “The border is closed.”
She’s almost literally speaking out of both sides of her mouth.
Families often send a teen to the U.S. ahead of them, knowing that our policies favoring chain migration will eventually help them all get here. They’re willing to risk their own children for a better life in America. That doesn’t make the Trump administration “immoral” for closing the border to such shenanigans, and it most certainly doesn’t make the Biden administration moral for incentivizing gang activity and human smuggling.
“The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.” —Amendment 10, U.S. Constitution
It appears Republican Texas Governor Greg Abbott and the state legislature are about to explore where federal immigration law ends and Texas’s ability to preserve the Rule of Law in general begins. Due to the utter fecklessness of the Biden administration’s immigration policies — which set a new record for illegal minors crossing the border — Abbott has launched “Operation Lone Star” in an effort to combat drug smuggling and human trafficking in his state. In conjunction with that effort, Texas state Representative Bryan Slaton (R-Canton) has introduced a bill proposing that Texas itself should complete border wall construction initiated by the Trump administration.
How chaotic has the Biden administration’s response to the border crisis been? On March 1, a clueless DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas tore into the previous administration’s immigration policies, while insisting there was no border crisis. Eight days later, Mayorkas was asking for DHS volunteers to deal with the “overwhelming numbers of migrants seeking access to this country along the Southwest Border.” He added, “President Biden and I are committed to ensuring our Nation has a safe, orderly, and humane immigration system while continuing to balance all of the other critical DHS missions.”
That is, quite simply, a lie. As this writer documented in his last column, the Biden administration is not only releasing COVID-positive illegals from detention centers but allowing them to disperse themselves throughout the nation.
And this particular manifestation of gross irresponsibility isn’t about to stop anytime soon: In the last two weeks, the number of children detained in Border Patrol facilities has tripled, and more than 100,000 migrants have stormed the border over the past four weeks ending March 3, marking a five-year high.
Texas is fighting back. Operation Lone Star will integrate the Texas Department of Public Safety with the Texas National Guard. Air, ground, marine, and tactical border-security units will be deployed to high-threat areas in an effort to prevent Mexican cartels and other smugglers from moving drugs and people into the state.
“The crisis at our southern border continues to escalate because of Biden Administration policies that refuse to secure the border and invite illegal immigration,” Abbott said in a statement last Saturday. “Texas supports legal immigration but will not be an accomplice to the open border policies that cause, rather than prevent, a humanitarian crisis in our state and endanger the lives of Texans. We will surge the resources and law enforcement personnel needed to confront this crisis.”
And if Slaton gets his way, a completed wall will also be part of the equation. “It is time for Texas to stand up and finish the work that President Trump started,” Slaton said in a press statement. “Let’s finish building the border wall now.”
Texas contractors will be given preference, and those who wish to participate will be required to participate in the E-Verify program that ensures workers are authorized to work in America. The bill also calls for a “border security enhancement fund” that instructs the governor to ask the federal government to reimburse the state for the costs associated with finishing the border wall.
Slaton wants it to be called the Trump Border Wall.
The same day Slaton unveiled his proposal, Abbott released a statement condemning the Biden administration’s “unconscionable act” of releasing COVID-positive illegals into his state. “Border security is strictly a federal responsibility,” it said. “The federal government alone has the responsibility to test, screen and quarantine illegal immigrants crossing our border who may have COVID. Instead of doing their job, the Biden Administration suggested it did not have the sufficient resources and, remarkably, asked Texas to assist them in aiding their illegal immigration program. Texas refused. We will not aid a program that makes our country a magnet for illegal immigration.”
Texas is not alone. Arizona and Montana have also filed a lawsuit against the Biden administration aimed at blocking regulations that limit ICE’s ability to arrest illegal aliens unless they are a national security threat, crossed the border after November 1, or committed aggravated felonies. “If asked about the poorest policy choice I’ve ever seen in government, this would be a strong contender,” Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich said in a statement. “Blindly releasing thousands of people, including convicted criminals and those who may be spreading COVID-19 into our state, is both unconscionable and a violation of federal law. This must be stopped now to avoid a dangerous humanitarian crisis for the immigrants and the people of Arizona.”
Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen agreed. “Meth trafficked into Montana by Mexican drug cartels has wracked our state. The problem will only be made worse if the Biden administration continues to allow criminals to stay in the country,” he added. “Enforcing our immigration laws and helping to keep Americans safe is one of the federal government’s most important functions. The Biden administration is failing its basic responsibility to Americans.”
Can these states succeed? In 2012, the U.S. Supreme court ruled against key parts of an Arizona law that sought to deter illegal immigration. “The National Government has significant power to regulate immigration,” Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in the majority opinion at the time. “Arizona may have understandable frustrations with the problems caused by illegal immigration while that process continues, but the State may not pursue policies that undermine federal law.”
None of these states are undermining federal law. Rather, it is the Biden administration itself that is conspicuously refusing to regulate federal immigration law to abet its contemptible open-border/amnesty agenda. That agenda also includes requesting and receiving the dismissal of three requests to hear cases with regard to the Trump administration’s desire to withhold federal funds from sanctuary jurisdictions.
That sanctuary jurisdictions epitomize the defiance of federal immigration laws? Again, Democrats and Biden have long made it clear that “selective” law enforcement, a.k.a. the refusal to regulate, will remain the order of the day.
Thus, Texas, Arizona, and Montana will likely inform the nation about whether the Biden administration’s imposition of de facto anarchy via policies specifically designed to nullify federal enforcement of immigration laws is legally tenable, or whether the Rule of Law, border integrity, and the safety of the American public can be maintained on a state-by-state basis.
More than two months have passed since the Capitol building was overrun by an angry mob seeking to disrupt the certification of the Electoral College, yet Capitol Hill remains a fortress, surrounded by 5,000 National Guard troops standing behind razor wire and barricades. Washington, DC, more closely resembles the capital of a third-world regime than the home of the United States government.
The Democrats seem to like it this way, and for the foreseeable future, that’s how it’s going to stay.
This week, the Department of Defense, at the behest of the U.S. Capitol Police, extended the National Guard deployment in Washington to May 23. The force will be reduced to 2,300, cutting the Guard presence in half, but checkpoints will remain in place, and plans are being drawn up to deploy mobile fencing and create a “quick reaction force” to be at the ready 24 hours a day.
The mob that rushed the Capitol on January 6 has been continuously leveraged by Democrats to push for a veritable police state in Washington and beyond. First, they used it as an excuse to impeach Donald Trump a second time. After that shamelessly unconstitutional sideshow, they then argued for a massive military presence for Joe Biden’s inauguration, with the 26,000 National Guard personnel at the Capitol vastly outnumbering the event attendees. Then, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer called upon the Guard to remain until March 12, surrounding the Capitol and giving off the appearance that a military junta had just taken place. Maybe it had.
As the end of the Guard deployment approached, scuttlebutt arose of a QAnon-led mob planning to descend on the Capitol on March 4, under the supposed belief that Trump would be inaugurated president on what was the original Inauguration Day. Congressional Democrats talked up the threat incessantly, and Pelosi ginned up the drama by giving the House the day off “for their own safety” — time they used to share their faux fear and rage on social media over a mob that never materialized.
Regardless of the validity of the claim, the Democrats played it to the full. The direct result was the request to extend the Guard presence, much to the surprise of many troops currently deployed in Washington.
The Capitol Police were woefully (if understandably) unprepared for the mob that swarmed the building on January 6, and an investigation into their response to the incident was warranted. We should expect that the capital is protected from attack, no matter who the perpetrators are. Hiring additional police and deploying mobile barriers are within the realm of guaranteeing the safety of the capital and those who work there.
However, the Democrats are using the January 6 event as an opportunity to close off the nation’s capital from ordinary citizens, or at the very least make it difficult for people to approach the Capitol building. Like doomsday cultists, Democrats and their media lackeys keep predicting violence, then when it never materializes, they simply push their predictions further out on the calendar. They have not taken even a moment to revisit their very public prognostications of angry mobs, nor have they given any indication as to when this ginned up state of emergency will end. And that is what is most troubling.
Power once claimed is rarely relinquished voluntarily. The erosion of our constitutional liberties and the growth of the federal government are proof. The Democrats are following the playbook followed by tyrannical despots throughout history — use an emergency as a gateway to seizing greater power in the name of safety, then extend the emergency and label those who question their methods as being part of the opposition.
The U.S. Capitol belongs to the American people, and it needs to stay that way.
It’s a sickening sight, watching journalist Andy Ngo get pummeled by a pack of antifa animals in Portland. Not quite as sickening, though, as listening to yet another public figure beg for forgiveness after being called out by the cancel crowd.
The latest to so supplicate himself is Winston Marshall, 33, who plays banjo and lead guitar for Mumford & Sons, a British folk-rock band perhaps most famous for “I Will Wait,” which was nominated for a Grammy in 2013.
Marshall’s transgression? He had the nerve to express support for a newly released book by the aforementioned Andy Ngo titled Unmasked: Inside Antifa’s Radical Plan to Destroy Democracy. In a since-deleted tweet addressed to Ngo, Marshall said, simply, “Finally had the time to read your important book. You’re a brave man.” That was the extent of his transgression.
And then, as Matt Walsh writes, “Fans, the media, and fellow musicians came out swinging, labeling Marshall a racist, calling for him to be fired, and so on and so forth. They made it clear that there is essentially no difference between reading and enjoying a book critical of Antifa and pledging allegiance to Hitler after reading Mein Kampf.”
By Tuesday, Marshall’s publicists had determined just what his apology should sound like.
“Over the past few days,” he groveled, “I have come to better understand the pain caused by the book I endorsed. I have offended not only a lot of people I don’t know, but also those closest to me, including my bandmates and for that I am truly sorry. As a result of my actions I am taking time away from the band to examine my blindspots. For now, please know that I realize how my endorsements have the potential to be viewed as approvals of hateful, divisive behavior. I apologize, as this was not at all my intention.”
Got that? Andy Ngo, the gay guy who got set upon and given a brain hemorrhage by antifa, the guy whose Vietnamese parents were boat people fleeing the communist nation in the late ‘70s, is the “hateful” and “divisive” one. He’s got TWO “intersectionality” points, and he’s still persona non grata.
As Walsh continued, “To hint at even the mildest disagreement with the most radical fringes of the far Left is to profess far Right views, which is to be a bigot, which is to reveal yourself unworthy of inclusion in civilized society. This is the formula, clear and simple and totally insane.”
Far less insane, and far more hopeful as a way out of this Kafkaesque cancel culture, was the lifeline thrown to NBAer Meyers Leonard, who dropped an anti-Semitic slur amid a stream of obscenities while he was playing the “Call of Duty” video game on a public platform called Twitch.
Leonard, who will remain away from his Miami Heat teammates indefinitely, apologized in an Instagram post: “I am deeply sorry,” he said, “for using an anti-Semitic slur during a livestream yesterday. While I didn’t know what the word meant at the time, my ignorance about its history and how offensive it is to the Jewish community is absolutely not an excuse and I was just wrong.”
But whereas even some of Leonard’s teammates were quick to throw him under the bus, one man, New England Patriots receiver and one-time Super Bowl MVP Julian Edelman, took a different approach, tweeting out an open letter that began, “So we’ve never met, I hope we can one day soon.” It went on, “I get the sense that you didn’t use that word out of hate, more out of ignorance.” It ends with, “I’m down in Miami fairly often. Let’s do a Shabbat dinner with some friends. I’ll show you a fun time.”
Julian Edelman. What a mensch. Grace and forgiveness. What an idea.
On Wednesday, Facebook pushed back against antitrust lawsuits filed last December by the Federal Trade Commission and 46 state attorneys general. In seeking to have the lawsuits dismissed prior to trial, Facebook argued that the cases “do not credibly claim that our conduct harmed” either users or competing companies. Rather, Facebook asserted, the real motive for the lawsuits is an attempt by the FTC to have a “do-over” of its past decisions okaying Facebook’s purchase of competitors WhatsApp and Instagram.
The social media giant further contended that it has not harmed users because its “products are offered for free and in unlimited quantities.” Regarding the allegation that Facebook has essentially engaged in monopolistic and anticompetitive actions by cutting off access to its platform for third-party developers, Facebook claimed Supreme Court rulings have set a clearly established precedent that it was under no obligation to provide competitors access to its platform.
However, success for Facebook is not a given. As The Wall Street Journal reports, “Facebook will have to meet a high legal standard to convince a federal judge to throw out the cases before trial. In order to prevail on a motion to dismiss, the company must show that the plaintiffs’ factual allegations about the nature of the marketplace, even if accepted as true, don’t establish a valid legal claim.”
Facebook argues that it’s not a near-monopoly and therefore is not guilty of anticompetitive practices. Yet the very model of its platform is designed to monopolize — the monopoly is the point. The more users the platform has, the greater the ability for Facebook to generate ad revenue. Therefore, allege the FTC and the state AGs, to mitigate the threat of users abandoning Facebook for a competitor, the social media giant simply bought the competition.
It’s Facebook’s abuse via dubious and blatantly politically motivated censorship practices that has raised the greatest ire with users. Facebook tacitly admits as much by suggesting that the antitrust lawsuits were raised “for matters entirely unrelated to antitrust concerns.” It is most certainly not “entirely unrelated” — the monopoly makes the censorship all that much more consequential.
If there’s one thing the mainstream media would have us all know, it’s that Derek Chauvin killed George Floyd. After all, that’s what it told us every time it played that endless loop of video with Floyd handcuffed and lying prostrate on the ground crying “I can’t breathe” while Officer Chauvin kneeled on his neck for nine interminable minutes, well past the point of Floyd losing consciousness.
So a second-degree murder conviction in the trial whose jury selection began Monday should be a slam-dunk, right?
And plenty of evidence, too. It’s just that we haven’t seen it. As Tucker Carlson said last night, “The effort to hide that evidence began immediately after George Floyd died. Everyone saw the footage of Derek Chauvin with his knee on George Floyd’s neck. It was horrible. It is also confusing. When you watch it, you ask yourself ‘Why would a police officer act like that? Of course, it must be illegal.’ No one in the media thought to tell us that, in fact, using a knee to restrain an uncooperative suspect is the official policy of the Minneapolis Police Department. In fact, it’s taught at their academy.”
Think about it: If Chauvin were doing something he knew to be illegal or even merely at odds with official policy, would he have done it in broad daylight in front of numerous witnesses? And would he have looked up so calmly at those who were capturing the whole thing with their smartphones?
It’s tough to see Floyd complain about not being able to breathe and to see Chauvin simply ignore those complaints. Why didn’t he listen, and why didn’t he take his knee off Floyd’s neck?
Because, as Roger Kimball notes in The Spectator, “A look at the police bodycam footage shows that Floyd was complaining that he couldn’t breathe before he was restrained by the police. Why? Because, as the FBI’s interview with the local medical examiner on July 8, 2020, revealed, Floyd was suffering from pulmonary edema, i.e., his lungs were full of fluid. And why was that? Partly because of an underlying heart condition, partly because Floyd was full to the gills with fentanyl, a drug known to affect respiration and cause pulmonary edema.”
Fentanyl. The same drug that killed Prince, Tom Petty, and tens of thousands of other Americans in recent years. Floyd had 11 nanograms of fentanyl per milligram of blood in his body. As the autopsy report states, “Signs associated with fentanyl toxicity include severe respiratory depression, seizures, hypotension, coma and death. In fatalities from fentanyl, blood concentrations are variable and have been reported as low as 3 nanograms of fentanyl per milliliter of blood.”
Whatever considerable distress Chauvin caused Floyd by putting his knee on his neck, it paled in comparison to the distress Floyd caused himself with that massive overdose of fentanyl.
But still, that knee to the neck must’ve kept him from breathing, right? Wrong. As Andrew Baker, the chief Hennepin County medical examiner, also made clear, “The autopsy revealed no physical evidence suggesting that Mr. Floyd died of asphyxiation.”
Suddenly, then, that slam-dunk case for second-degree murder isn’t quite so convincing. Because if Floyd didn’t die from asphyxiation, then he didn’t die from Chauvin’s knee. Maybe that’s why prosecutors put in a last-minute request — that the judge granted just this morning — to add a third-degree murder charge. Maybe that will stick, they’re saying.
If only Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison had played it straight and shared that bodycam footage immediately. Had he done so, he might’ve saved South Minneapolis and countless other communities across the country from the mob.
Instead, as our Thomas Gallatin wrote last week, “Ellison has overcharged Chauvin, making the prospect of conviction far from a given. Then, should the state fail to convict, Ellison and the ‘social justice’ Left will spin the narrative as yet more ‘evidence’ of their false ‘systemic racism’ claims, and the BLM mob will be ready.”
And so, downtown Minneapolis braces for a trial. And if, as it seems, a racially motivated conviction is the only thing that can keep us from another wave of arson, looting, and rioting, we’re in a terrible place as a nation.
Marching from February’s Black History Month, Michael Brown Sr. is requesting “reparations” for his son’s death. But you won’t believe who he’s demanding $20 million from — Black Lives Matter.
Yes, the infamous organization that took to the streets of Ferguson, Missouri, in August 2014 after Mike Brown Jr. was shot and killed by police. Black Lives Matter is being confronted by the black family whose son’s death it used to raise money. How dare these people seek restitution, right? Wrong. If reparations are to be paid, they should be given while the getting is good.
The call for $20 million comes after the organization revealed it raised $90 million in 2020. Did you read those numbers correctly? During an election year and through a pandemic, an organization based on race, transgenderism, lesbianism, defunding the police, white guilt, and the destruction of the nuclear family raised $90 million.
BLM released its 2020 impact report, which showed that the organization granted $21.7 million to multiple black local organizations and BLM chapters. But activists are calling for more assistance and accountability.
“We’re asking that Black Lives Matter leadership funds $20 million to Ferguson organizers, organizations, and community foundations to do the work,” International Black Freedom Alliance cofounder Tory Russell said in a video with Michael Brown Sr. “We’re not begging for a handout; we’re coming for what we deserve.”
In a video, Russell said they wanted “to hold Black Lives Matter accountable” and called on the organization for assistance for those on the frontlines in Ferguson.
“What kind of movement are we building where we’re saying ‘Black Lives Matter’ but the freedom fighters and the families are being left behind?” Russell asked. “Where’s our restitution? Where’s our organizing? Where’s our building of a movement?”
Michael Brown Jr. was killed by a cop, Darren Wilson, on August 9, 2014. Wilson was not charged for Brown’s fatal shooting, and Barack Obama’s Justice Department found it was a justified shooting. Yet Brown’s death sparked a wave of protests and uprisings in Ferguson and elsewhere, helping BLM gain more prominence as an organization.
Unfortunately, the only thing that makes Mike Brown Jr.‘s life memorable is his death at the hands of a white cop. If he were shot by a local black cop, there would have been no media frenzy or R.I.P. black death T-shirts being made. He would have died like he lived, and nobody would have cared to make a martyr or even paint a mural of him. Seven years afterwards, Black Death Matters even for reparations, but only when it conveniently fits the “white cop shoots unarmed black male” narrative.
What city will host the next “narrative” in 2021? It’s coming.
House passes $1.9 trillion pork-stuffed COVID bill (Fox News)
“The vote was 220 to 211 in the House. No Republicans voted ‘yes’ on the legislation. … Republicans said the legislation was unnecessary, too big and filled with unrelated liberal priorities, such as $350 billion for state and local governments. … Biden is expected to sign the bill into law at the White House on Friday.”
New commonsense report urges reopening of schools (Axios)
“The report — commissioned by the Walton Family Foundation, the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), and five other nonprofits — analyzed the conclusions of more than 130 studies of whether schools can be reopened safely. … Any benefits to closing schools are far outweighed by the grave risks to children from remote-only schooling — risks that intensify the longer it continues, the report says. The harms include academic loss — so severe that it could set children back for life — and mental health problems related to loneliness and isolation.”
Big Tech Oligarchs
Free speech-suppressing Apple denies Parler’s request to be reinstated in App Store (Post Millennial)
“The company severed relationships with seven workers, mostly contractors, and developed a new terms of service in order to appease the big tech giants. The changes were apparently not enough to warrant re-entry onto the App Store, however.”
Health
U.S. orders 100 million more doses of Johnson & Johnson COVID vaccine (CBS News)
“Last month, HHS announced it purchased 200 million more doses of COVID-19 vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna, which each require a two-shot regimen. The administration’s order brought the total doses bought by the federal government from the two companies to 600 million, enough to fully vaccinate 300 million people, most of the U.S. population.”
Pandemic pushed rural hospital closures to a record of 20 in 2020 (Examiner)
“As the pandemic worsened in March, most states ordered hospitals to discontinue elective procedures. For rural hospitals, that meant canceling a great many outpatient procedures. The Chartis Center has found that outpatient procedures account for an average of 76% of rural hospital revenue.”
National Security
Mexican officials worried about Biden’s immigration policy is incentivizing human smuggling and gang activity (Examiner)
“The internal assessments further revealed that policies from within Mexico are encouraging migration to the U.S. due to COVID-19 vaccinations and protections for children. Those looking to cross the border have been implored to bring children with them, following a new law in the country that bars families with children who are seven and older from being returned to Mexico if border enforcement is unable to house them.”
Biden administration to resume undeserved taxpayer aid to Palestinians (Disrn)
“The Palestinian government continues to spend international aid dollars on the ‘pay-to-slay’ program, where large portions of the money are given to imprisoned terrorists and their families.”
Annals of the “Social Justice” Caliphate
Disney yanks several movies from Disney+ kid profiles (Disrn)
“The movie Dumbo is cited for having crows paying ‘homage to racist minstrel shows.’ Peter Pan is criticized for portraying ‘Native people in a stereotypical manner.’ The Aristocats movie uses a Siamese cat in a way that plays into a ‘racist caricature of East Asian peoples.’”
A food chain in Washington, DC, wants you to know which products come from oppressed identity groups (Not the Bee)
“[Giant Food] will feature labels on more than 3,000 products, indicating if they’re women, black, Asian-Indian, Hispanic, LGBT, Asian-Pacific, or veteran owned.”
Fewer than 1 in 5 support “defund the police” movement (USA Today)
“Only 18% of respondents supported the movement known as ‘defund the police,’ and 58% said they opposed it. Though white Americans (67%) and Republicans (84%) were much more likely to oppose the movement, only 28% of Black Americans and 34% of Democrats were in favor of it [emphases added].”
Other Notables
FBI releases new video of suspect planting pipe bombs at DNC and RNC headquarters (UPI)
If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again: Eight senators propose extending Daylight Saving Time to year-round (Daily Signal)
Closing Arguments
Policy: Washington must face the coming Medicare crisis (Daily Signal)
Policy: Managing the economy: More than the Fed can do (National Review)
Humor: American patriots dump Harry and Meghan into Boston Harbor (Babylon Bee)
For more of today’s editors’ choice headlines, visit Headline Report.
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The Border Crisis Is Real and Joe Biden Is to Blame — There is an all-time record number of children in “cages” (now known as “containers”) due to the Biden administration’s policy on illegal immigration.
Satire: Why You Should Stay Off Parler — After being kicked off the Internet by Big Tech, Parler is back! Learn why you should stay off the free speech platform.
Insight: “To make your children capable of honesty is the beginning of education.” —John Ruskin (1819-1900)
Upright: “Having children is about life, and life is about caring for more than just yourself. Calling abortion women’s health care and thinking that your job is three times more important than bringing new life into the world is not a sign of a healthy culture with a healthy soul. If we want insight into our baby bust, this is what we should be thinking about.” —Star Parker
Observations: “Legal torts require damages; societal torts merely require a claim of damages, without evidence. No one can explain just how a drawing in ‘If I Ran the Zoo’ has contributed to actual racism; there are no recorded incidents of a single white supremacist citing ‘And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street’ as a formative source in his racist worldview. But any academic with a computer and a degree in postmodern nonsense can take those books off the shelves simply by claiming that offense is possible.” —Ben Shapiro
Nailed it: “Woke supremacy is as bad as white supremacy.” —Senator Tim Scott
For the record: “When Brownsville officials tested migrants last month, over 6% tested positive. Some were willing to quarantine at local hotels paid for by charities, but many boarded busses for other parts of the country. Six percent sounds small, but 6% of 1 million migrants adds up to 60,000 — a steady stream of spreaders being knowingly dispersed throughout the nation. … Travelers flying into the U.S. must have a negative COVID-19 test before boarding, and another negative test is recommended after landing. But illegal immigrants get a free pass to bring the coronavirus to a bus terminal near you.” —Betsy McCaughey
The BIG Lie: “As our state legislators seek to turn back the clock through legislation that will restrict access to voting for many Georgians, I am disheartened, saddened, and angry. … The proposed changes appear to be rooted in partisan interests, not in the interests of all Georgia voters.” —Jimmy Carter
Non sequitur: “We are not trying to close our borders. We are trying to … create an effective, moral, humane system.” —White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki (“There’s nothing ‘effective, moral, or humane’ about empowering human, sex, and drug traffickers to increase their activity across our southern border and in American communities.” —Rep. Andy Biggs)
And last… “What is Jesus’s most cancelable statement? In Matthew 19, he says God made people ‘male and female’ and points to Adam and Eve as the model of marriage. That would get a lot of other people canceled these days.” —Frank J. Fleming
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