Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday April 12, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
April 12 2021
Good morning from Washington, where a new Supreme Court commission has been assembled. Is this a threat to the independence of the Supreme Court? Tom Jipping provides analysis. Who are President Biden’s new “environmental justice” appointees? Fred Lucas does a deep dive. Plus: Sen. Roger Wicker on leftist corporations; Matthew Dickerson on President Biden’s concerning budget proposal; and Nile Gardiner on the legacy of Prince Philip. One hundred and sixty years ago today, the Civil War begins, as Confederate troops launch an attack on Fort Sumter.
President Biden has appointed Beverly Wright, who links the legacy of slavery and the Jim Crow era with energy development, to his White House Environmental Justice Advisory Council.
President Biden’s announced Supreme Court commission raises serious questions about its real purpose and concerns about its impact on the independence of the judiciary.
The idea that Georgia’s voting changes are somehow akin to the oppression of Jim Crow is a complete falsehood designed to inflame divisions in this country.
The Internal Revenue Service, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Department of Labor would all see substantial increases in spending authority.
“Conservative ideals are the best way to solve environmental issues,” says Benji Backer, founder of the right-leaning environmental advocacy group American Conservation Coalition.
Prince Philip was a war hero who dedicated his life to protecting and serving the British people. A man of unfailing courage and duty, he embodied the ideal of public service.
Jason Small had an on-the-job injury that forced him to take on a new role with a different schedule that sometimes conflicted with his religious obligations, such as Sunday worship services.
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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Top CEOs Meet to Discuss Additional Action on Voter Laws
CBS: More than 100 of the nation’s top corporate leaders met virtually on Saturday to discuss ways for companies to continue responding to the passage of more restrictive voting laws across the country, a signal that the nation’s premier businesses are preparing a far more robust, organized response to the ongoing debate (CBS). Senator Tom Cotton (R-AR): Has a single one of these CEOs even read Georgia’s election law? (Twitter). These are some the same companies that lobbied against a forced labor bill regarding production with forced labor in China’s Xinjiang province just a few months ago (NRO).
2.
President Biden Announces Taxpayer-Funded Commission on Supreme Court Reform
It was a promise the President made on the campaign trail—and it’s been widely panned since the executive order was released. The Wall Street Journal noted that it sounds like the “executive branch telling the judicial branch how to do its job” (WSJ). Sen. Ben Sasse (R-NE) said it was dead on arrival: This progressive court packing commission is going nowhere fast. President Biden knows that he doesn’t even have the votes in his own party to pack the court; he knows that court packing is a non-starter with the American people; and he knows that the commission’s report is just going to be a taxpayer-funded door stopper (Townhall). The executive order: (WhiteHouse). The commission is 75 to 80 percent on the left, including Harvard’s Laurence Tribe (RedState). Some voices on the left are skeptical, including Mark Joseph Stern in Slate: … the commission is conspicuously missing the leading advocates of court expansion on the left. Where are academics like Yale Law School Professor Samuel Moyn, who recently co-authored a memo for Take Back the Court asserting that Congress can add seats to the lower courts through reconciliation? (Slate).
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3.
Pete Buttigieg Grilled by Chris Wallace Over Inflated Job Creation Numbers
The Secretary of Transportation had claimed Biden’s proposed legislation would create 19 million jobs. He was forced to admit that the study he was citing actually made a claim of 2.7 million jobs. When pressed, he admitted he “should have been more precise.” Perhaps it was a rounding error. Fox News: Wallace said there was a huge difference between 2 million jobs created and 19 million jobs, prompting Buttigieg to say it’s “very important” for Americans to know 2.7 million jobs will be created. He then asked Buttigieg whether he agrees that he and other Biden administration officials exaggerated the “jobs impact.” (Fox News). Secretary Buttigieg explains who the bill claims to help the most (Twitter).
4.
Israel’s Mossad Likely Behind Crippling Cyberattack on Iranian Nuclear Facility
Iran initially claimed it was an accident. Jerusalem Post: The incident at Natanz was not an “accident,” and the damage was worse than what Iran had initially presented to the public, a source confirmed to The Jerusalem Post. Western sources said the facility was hit by a cyberattack (JPost). Ryan Saavedra: One local media station said the attack caused “severe damage at the heart of Iran’s enrichment program” (DailyWire). Israel’s move ought to be understood in light of the efforts of the U.S. to bring Iran back to the bargaining table: The escalation, which isn’t so gradual anymore, is taking place against the backdrop of renewed nuclear talks between Iran and world powers (Haaretz). The attack: … dealt a severe blow to Iran’s ability to enrich uranium and that it could take at least nine months to restore Natanz’s production (NYTimes).
5.
The Supreme Court Rules Again in Favor of Religious Liberty
Washington Post: The Supreme Court on Friday blocked another California coronavirus restriction on religious gatherings, saying the state’s limits on home-based Bible study and prayer sessions violated constitutional rights (Washington Post). Wall Street Journal: The decision is the fifth time the Court has overruled the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals on pandemic orders against worship. The willfulness of the lower courts in defying the High Court underscores how much religious liberty needs protecting against the militant secular values (WSJ).
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6.
At GOP Fundraising Event, Trump Rips Sen. Minority Leader McConnell and Vice President Pence
With some choice words for the Senate Minority Leader (Politico). CBS: During his closing speech to top GOP donors, former President Donald Trump went after Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and his former VP, Mike Pence, shattering what was supposed to be unifying weekend for a Republican Party (CBS). It wasn’t clear how the messaging helps the GOP as the party looks to the midterms. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich attended the event: “We are much better off if we keep focusing on the Democrats. Period,” Gingrich said (CBS).
7.
As China Sees Weakened U.S. Resolve, Secretary of State Antony Blinken Delivers Warning on Taiwan
Politico reports: Blinken said of Chinese belligerence toward Taiwan, “We have a commitment to Taiwan under the Taiwan Relations Act, a bipartisan commitment that’s existed for many, many years, to make sure that Taiwan has the ability to defend itself, and to make sure that we’re sustaining peace and security in the Western Pacific. We stand behind those commitments… And all I can tell you is it would be a serious mistake for anyone to try to change the existing status quo by force” (Politico). The New York Times points out how China sees Washington as, “weakened and distracted” with some expressing need for a bolder stance (NYTimes).
8.
House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn Calls Georgia Law “New Jim Crow”
“It’s just that simple,” the South Carolina Democrat told CNN’s Jake Tapper (Politico). Since Georgia passed voter reform laws, the state has been met with numerous boycotts from companies and organizations claiming the laws go against their values. The truth about the issue is their ire toward the state is rooted in a lie. The Daily Signal: The law expands the window for early voting, allows no-excuse mail-in voting to continue, adds 100 new ballot drop boxes, and allows voters to get a government-issued ID at no charge. It also makes elections more transparent by prohibiting ballot counters from stopping the count in the middle of the night. The idea that these changes are somehow akin to the oppression of Jim Crow is a complete falsehood designed to inflame divisions in this country. (DailySignal). From Real Clear Politics, on the MLB All-Star Game: “I mean, a lot of these are minority-owned businesses that were really looking forward and desperately needed this kind of revenue instream,” Alfredo Ortiz stated. “All because there was a misinterpretation or misunderstanding or, quite frankly, just an outright lie of the law that was passed here in Georgia on voting rights” (Real Clear Politics).
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9.
Co-Founder of Black Lives Matter Goes on “Real Estate Buying Binge”
Patrisse Khan-Cullors has purchased four high-end homes in the U.S.—and is looking for properties in the Caribbean. Emily Zanotti: News of Khan-Cullors’ real estate empire, though, is not sitting well with other racial justice activists who, on Sunday, blasted the Black Lives Matter co-founder for profiting off black Americans’ plight and of being a “fraud” (DailyWire).
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Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 4.12.21
Here’s your AM rundown of people, politics and policy in the Sunshine State.
Good Monday morning.
I wrote a little something about the race to be Speaker of the Florida House in 2026. I believe it’s worthy of your time. Click here to read.
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A top-of-Sunburn birthday shoutout to one of our besties, Stephanie Cardozo, external affairs director to Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried.
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Spotted: Brian Crowley, former member of the Florida Capitol Press Corps and publisher of The Crowley Report, at the Vinoy Renaissance in St. Petersburg.
Brian Crowley was seen hanging out in The Burg.
Spotted: Brady Benford and Monica Rodriguez of Ballard Partners, separately, at the new JW Marriott Bonnet Creek in Orlando.
—@TimFullerton: Starting to look like it’ll be about 230,000,000 shots administered during President [Joe] Biden’s first 100 days in office. That would have been unthinkable back in January.
—@JimSciutto: “The former President is using the same language that he knows provoked Jan 6 … if you attack the rule of law, you’re not defending the constitution,” @RepLizCheney on CBS just now on [Donald] Trump’s comments to GOP Saturday.
—@Donie: Attendees at an event here in Trump National Doral this weekend are attempting to rewrite the history of January 6th. One asks, “what is so terrible about conspiracy theories anyway?”
—@JeremyNewberger: Marjorie Taylor Greene raised $3.2M on reports of her callousness, ignorance, and deceptiveness. Good job America. Why not invest your money in head lice too while you are at it.
—@RandyRRQuaid: What was @mattgaetztrying to expose just before he was assaulted by fake news? THINK ABOUT IT!
—@NikkiFried: There are no second chances when it comes to our environment. We can never let what’s happening at Piney Point happen again. We must hold bad actors accountable. Together, we can save Florida’s sacred environment.
—@AllisonTantFL: Been meaning to share that Thursday night, Bill Sadowzki’s widow called to ask what was going on w Affordable Housing. She was aghast. And confessed to being very emotional bc this past Friday was the 19th anniversary of the plane crash that killed him.
—@BruceRitchie: @FarmerForFLSenreferring to insurance commercials “The Gekko, the Lemur, Flo” and the guy who sounds like the voice of God. Lemur? You mean emu?
—@SenPizzo: Just a reminder, it’s P I Z Z O. Not Pizza. Not Pirozzolo.
Tweet, tweet:
Days until
Disneyland to open — 18; Orthodox Easter 2021 — 20; Mother’s Day — 27; Florida Chamber Safety Council’s inaugural Southeastern Leadership Conference on Safety, Health and Sustainability — 28; ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 46; Memorial Day — 49; ‘Loki’ premieres on Disney+ — 60; Father’s Day — 69; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 81; 4th of July — 83; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 87; MLB All-Star Game — 92; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 102; The NBA Draft — 108; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 110; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 116; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 134; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 144; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 165; ‘Dune’ premieres — 172; MLB regular season ends — 174; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 180; World Series Game 1 — 197; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 204; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 207; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 228; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 239; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 246; Super Bowl LVI — 307; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 347; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 389; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 452; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 543; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 578.
Gaetzgate
“House opens ethics investigation into Matt Gaetz” via Lori Rozsa, Michael Scherer and Matt Zapotosky of The Washington Post — The House Ethics Committee announced it would investigate claims against Rep. Gaetz, opening a new front in the growing scandal enveloping the Florida Republican. The news of the investigation came a day after Gaetz’s friend, Joel Greenberg, who has been charged with sex trafficking of a minor among other offenses, signaled to a federal judge through his lawyer that he was negotiating a plea deal with prosecutors that could help them in an ongoing probe into whether Gaetz paid for sex or trafficked a woman across state lines for sex.
The House Ethics Committee has opened an investigation of a defiant Matt Gaetz, as he lawyers up. Image via AP.
“Gaetz tells Donald Trump supporters he’s a champion of women, scoffs at ‘smears’” via Bianca Padró Ocasio of the Miami Herald — Gaetz’s speech at the “Save America Summit,” part of a four-day conference with a slate of right-wing speakers discussing topics like “election integrity,” was one of his first public appearances since The New York Times reported a week ago that the FBI was investigating Gaetz. “The smears against me range from distortions of my personal life, to wild — and I mean, wild — conspiracy theories,” said Gaetz. “I won’t be intimidated by a lying media, and I won’t be extorted by a former DOJ [Department of Justice] official and the crooks he is working with. The truth will prevail.” The event was organized by Women for America First, the same group that held the now-infamous “Save America Rally” in Washington on Jan. 6.
“Gaetz also says he is a victim of ‘the leaks and the lies’ of critics” via Maggie Haberman and Michael Majchrowicz of The New York Times — “They lie about me because I tell the truth about them, and I’m not gonna stop,” Gaetz said at the event. “I know this: Firebrands don’t retreat, especially when the battle for the soul of our country calls.” … “Big government, big tech, big business, big media — they’d all breathe a sigh of relief if I were no longer in the Congress fighting for you.”
“Gaetz loses another staffer as fallout around investigation continues” via Ryan Nobles of CNN — Devin Murphy, the legislative director for Rep. Gaetz, has resigned his post, making him the second staffer to leave the Florida Congressman’s office as the pressure continues to mount surrounding a federal investigation into sex trafficking allegations. A source directly connected to Murphy said he left the job, not specifically because of Gaetz’s legal troubles, but because the “media circus” surrounding the Republican made it difficult to accomplish “meaningful congressional work.” Murphy’s decision comes after Gaetz’s former communications director Luke Ball quit his job shortly after the FBI probe was revealed.
“Florida Republicans see opening as Gaetz’s legal peril rises” via Gary Fineout of POLITICO — Gaetz insists he’s not resigning amid an ongoing federal investigation. Still, Republicans in his deep-red Florida district are already eyeing his seat. Several Republican elected officials and others who live in the sprawling Panhandle district said they received a robocall over the weekend asking voters if they thought Gaetz would step down due to his legal woes. They were also asked about potential candidates, including Laura Loomer, the provocateur who mounted an unsuccessful campaign for a South Florida congressional seat last year. Florida’s 1st congressional district, one of the safest Republican districts in the country, has only come open three times in the last 40 years.
“How the forces inside the GOP that pushed out John Boehner led to Gaetz” via Paul Kane of The Washington Post — A decade ago, as he fulfilled his political dream of claiming the speaker’s gavel, Boehner quickly learned how his party was changing, evolving from an ideologically conservative outfit into an emotionally driven grievance caucus. He failed, miserably, to tame those forces, and by the fall of 2015, they helped push him into retirement. Before a reported criminal investigation into possible sex crimes threatened his career, Gaetz devoted himself to an entirely media-driven approach, epitomizing the group that caused Boehner so much trouble. Whether in a committee room or on the House floor, he focused on using the conservative media echo chamber to go viral.
The same ideology that squeezed John Boehner out was the one that brought Matt Gaetz in. Image via AP.
“Boehner says Gaetz should resign if indicted — or be expelled” via Susan Page of USA Today — Boehner told USA TODAY that embattled Rep. Gaetz should resign if he is indicted. If the Florida congressman refuses, Boehner said, House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy should move to expel him from the House. “When a member gets in trouble, it splashes back on all the members,” Boehner said in an interview about his memoir. On eight or 10 occasions, Boehner said, he called in congressional Republicans enmeshed in scandals. “Is there more to this?” he would ask. “Yes? All right, you’ve got one hour to resign, or I’m going to go to the floor and move to throw you out.’ He said all the members who received that warning chose to resign.
“The sprawling federal case against Joel Greenberg: Here’s what each charge against him means” via Jeff Weiner of the Orlando Sentinel — The news that a plea agreement is in the works for Greenberg, Seminole County’s disgraced former tax collector, came more than a week after prosecutors filed their fourth indictment against him, raising the number of federal charges he faces to a staggering 33. Although Greenberg is a first-time offender, if convicted on all counts, his potential sentence could also be staggering: He faces a mandatory 10-year sentence on a sex-trafficking charge, while the other counts could tack on more decades behind bars. The unlawful use of a means of identification charge has a maximum of five. The maximum for his production of an identifying document charge is 15 years.
“’Like the Tiger King got elected tax collector’: inside the case that ensnared Gaetz” via Patricia Mazzei, Michael Schmidt and Katie Benner of The New York Times — Greenberg went from being a wealthy but troubled teenager who drifted through young adulthood before turning to local politics five years ago. In the end, Greenberg went from being an outsider elected on an anticorruption platform to, prosecutors say, becoming corrupted himself. The world he built quickly fell apart when he was first indicted in June. He resigned and dropped his reelection bid. Greenberg acted unlike any other tax collector in Florida. His small-time position left him dissatisfied. His friendships gave him a taste of greater power. He tested the boundaries until it all imploded. “Seminole County elected a criminal into office, unknowingly,” said J.R. Kroll, a Republican who was elected tax collector last year.
Joel Greenberg was a rich kid who broke bad.
“Chris Dorworth resigns from lobbying firm as reports link Greenberg probe to web of allied power brokers” via Jason Garcia, Martin E. Comas of the Orlando Sentinel — Dorworth resigned from his firm on Friday, after his name had surfaced in a pair of unfolding scandals that have rocked Florida politics in recent weeks involving Greenberg and Gaetz. And then there’s an investigation out of South Florida into allegations of staging dummy third-party candidates in high-profile state Senate elections last year, which has led to charges against former state Sen. Frank Artiles. Both controversies have in common Dorworth, the former Republican lawmaker-turned-lobbyist from Seminole County and longtime friend of both Gaetz and Artiles. Dorworth, Gaetz and Artiles have been close friends, powerful forces, and divisive figures in Florida politics for a decade now.
Dateline Tallahassee
“Ron DeSantis’ anti-riot bill advances in Senate despite criticism it infringes on free speech” via John Kennedy of The Lakeland Ledger — DeSantis’ “anti-riot” bill, which has become one of the Legislature’s most controversial measures, finally advanced Friday in the state Senate. Dozens of Floridians testified against the legislation, with many condemning it as a racially tinged attack on free speech. Republican legislators who spoke in favor of the measure echoed DeSantis’ stance that it’s needed to protect businesses and communities from violence. The Governor proposed the legislation following the Black Lives Matter protests last year that followed George Floyd‘s killing by Minneapolis police. Some of the demonstrations around the nation turned violent, with stores burned and looted, while protesters and police were injured in confrontations.
Despite First Amendment concerns, Ron DeSantis’ anti-protest bill goes full speed ahead.
“He was arrested at a Black Lives Matter protest. Now, he’s warning others about Florida’s anti-riot proposal.” via Tim Craig of The Washington Post — Hundreds of people in Plant City, including Vintwan Lee Brooks, marched on a local highway last year in response to Floyd’s death to decry racism and call for policing changes. Under a new proposal, a person who attends a protest that becomes violent can be charged with a third-degree felony, punishable by up to five years in prison. The crime rises to a second-degree felony, punishable by up to 15 years in prison if 25 or more people are present at a disruptive event. Brooks and other Black Floridians say the legislation would silence their opposition to Confederate symbols while handing police even more power.
“Legislation to fight sea level rise goes to Governor” via Bobby Caina Calvan of The Associated Press — Legislation hailed as some of the most robust yet to defend U.S. coasts against sea level rise is headed to DeSantis, a proposal that would provide millions of dollars annually to communities threatened with losing ground to rising oceans because of climate change. With 1,350 miles of coastline, Florida is among the most vulnerable places on earth amid the global fight against rising atmospheric temperatures. Without debate, the House unanimously approved legislation already advanced by the Senate to establish a fund providing up to $100 million annually for so-called resiliency projects. It would also require the state to identify and map out areas most at risk from coastal flooding and rising seas.
“Pending plans would spell end of petition campaigns” via Bill Cotterell of the Tallahassee Democrat — About 50 years ago, when legislators wrote rules for putting constitutional amendments on the ballot, they spoke of a homespun ideal of democracy, with the people telling the politicians what Florida needs. Republicans now in charge really don’t like the public dictating anything, even when the end product can be manipulated. That’s why many legislators want to effectively end the public-initiative method of amending the Constitution. Oh, it would still exist, but with new hoops for advocates to jump through. There’s a bill, for instance, to raise the threshold for passage from 60 percent to 66.6 percent of the public vote. It lowers the vote opponents would need to kill an amendment, from 40 percent to one-third. Another plan would put a $3,000 cap on contributions to petition-gathering campaigns.
Tally 2
“Florida Senate unveils scaled-down gambling bills with no sports betting” via Skylar Swisher of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Sports betting isn’t on the table in scaled-down gambling legislation unveiled Wednesday in the Florida Senate. A trio of gambling bills omits another closely watched item, gambling license “portability” that could allow betting at Trump’s golf club in Doral and the Fontainebleau Resort in Miami Beach. Billionaire real estate mogul Jeffrey Soffer has been pushing to transfer a gambling license from Hallandale Beach’s Big Easy Casino to the Fontainebleau Resort, which his family owns. The legislation would also allow pari-mutuel permit holders to operate card rooms without offering jai-alai, harness, or quarter horse racing. This is known as “decoupling.”
Jeffrey Soffer may be closer to getting a gambling license for the Fontainebleau.
AFP announces campaign backing union dues bill — Americans for Prosperity-Florida announced a statewide campaign today to increase support for SB 78, a bill before the Senate that will give teachers more control over their paychecks. The legislation would end automatic paycheck deductions, increase transparency and ensure workers are not forced to join or remain in a union. The campaign includes digital outreach and direct mail focused on how this legislation will put students, parents, and teachers before unions.
Leg. sked
House Minority Co-leader Evan Jenne and Rep. Fentrice Driskell will hold a virtual media availability, 10 a.m. Zoom link here, and it will also be livestreamed on The Florida Channel.
The Florida Public Service Commission Nominating Council meets to consider five candidates to replace Julie Brown on the state Public Service Commission, 10 a.m., Reed Hall, House Office Building.
The Senate Regulated Industries Committee meets to consider two bills, SPB 7076 and SPB 7080, that would create a state “Gaming Control Commission,” removing the requirement that many pari-mutuel facilities must hold live horse racing or jai alai games to offer card rooms, 3 p.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
Also:
The Revenue Estimating Conference will discuss issues related to a tax collection enforcement diversion program, 9:30 a.m., Room 117, Knott Building.
The Revenue Estimating Conference meets to examine monthly revenue estimates, 10 a.m., Room 117, Knott Building.
2022
“Death of congressman Alcee Hastings sets off political showdown, as candidates line up to replace him” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Long before congressman Hastings died, candidates who wanted to succeed him were plotting strategy, lining up potential supporters, assessing the opposition, and figuring out how to pay for it all. Some of the politicking was open. Broward County Commissioner Barbara Sharief officially declared her candidacy more than four months ago. Others operated less publicly before the death of Hastings, who had been diagnosed in late 2018 with Stage 4 pancreatic cancer. The inside game is about to become much more public and crowded, with at least 13 candidates considering a run.
Alcee Hastings’ death created a political vacuum that needs to be filled quickly.
“Don’t delay, DeSantis: Call election to replace Hastings” via Steve Bousquet of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The death of Hastings leaves more than a half-million Floridians with no voice in Congress for the first time in three decades, including many Black and brown voters who need a strong advocate without delay. Simply by doing nothing, DeSantis could score points with conservatives as he plots a run for the White House. That also would disenfranchise many Democrats in South Florida, but since when did Republicans care about that? DeSantis may well call a special election quickly, and that would be the right call because holding a special election should not be a partisan decision.
Happening today — State candidates, political committees and parties face a deadline to file reports on campaign finance activity through March 31.
Autopsy redux: House Democrats select panel to help review and revamp campaign operations — The House Victory Caucus is putting together a seven-person panel to help strategize and make improvements ahead of the 2022 campaign cycle, which features a gubernatorial contest at the top of the ticket. House Democratic Leader-Designate Ben Diamond announced the effort in a message to fellow members last week. “In order to systematically review all aspects of recent House Democratic activities, we have organized a committee of former legislators, candidates, and operatives to conduct a thorough analysis of all functions of the House Caucus operation,” Diamond wrote.
“More than 100 corporate executives hold call to discuss halting donations and investments to fight controversial voting bills” via Todd Frankel of The Washington Post — Executives from major airlines, retailers and manufacturers, plus at least one NFL owner, talked about potential ways to show they opposed controversial voting measures, including by halting donations to politicians who support the bills and even delaying investments in states that pass the restrictive measures. While no final steps were agreed upon, the meeting represents an aggressive dialing up of corporate America’s stand against controversial voting measures nationwide, a sign that their opposition to the laws didn’t end with the fight against the Georgia legislation passed in March.
Statewide
“Why DeSantis’s 2024 stock is rising” via Arian Campo-Flores and Alex Leary of The Wall Street Journal — DeSantis has burnished his brand with a COVID-19 response that has enthused the Trump voter base while also impressing the kind of moderate and suburban voters who turned away from Trump in 2020. As the GOP looks to rebuild after losing the presidential election last year, that formula could give DeSantis an advantage over rivals who similarly are trying to forge their own path in the shadow of Trump. Over the past year, DeSantis rejected most public-health experts’ advice and reopened the state’s economy early, resisted mask mandates and other restrictions, and made Florida one of the most permissive settings in the U.S.
By bucking conventional wisdom, Ron DeSantis is rising in stature among Donald Trump’s voter base.
Happening today — Agriculture Commissioner Fried is hosting a news conference to discuss illegal gas pump “skimmers” and security legislation, 2 p.m. RaceTrac, 12401 N.W. 57th Ave., Hialeah.
“Florida order waives passage of state exams for graduation or promotion during pandemic” via Ryan Dailey of the News Service of Florida — Answering the question of how the state would handle standardized testing this year, the FDE issued an emergency order Friday waiving accountability measures tied to state exams. Concerns about the consequences of testing had loomed as exams kicked off this week for some students. Education officials and lawmakers grappled with the issue because of the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on schools, including many students learning remotely. State assessments were canceled last year because of the pandemic.
“Medical marijuana is legal in Florida. Why are there no job protections?” via Alexi C. Cardona of the Miami New Times — A West Palm Beach city employee was fired last month for failing a drug test. Jason McCarty, the city’s deputy chief of information technology, disclosed before taking the urine test that he had smoked a joint at home the previous night for his anxiety and insomnia. His lawyer said McCarty didn’t want to take a sedative and risk feeling groggy at work the next day. Despite McCarty’s assurances that he hadn’t smoked during working hours or at his place of employment, the city let him go. Laws in 20 states prohibit employers from discriminating against workers because of their medical pot use.
“To ‘The Fellowship of the Springs,’ Florida is selling out an environmental treasure” via Oscar Corral of the Miami Herald — Thomas Greenhalgh risked his job and career in 2019 when he sued his own employer, the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, to challenge the state’s plans to protect Florida’s imperiled springs from increasing pollution. Judge Francine M. Folkes let the state rule stand. It basically compels farms to implement ineffective “best management practices” that allow them to comply with the rule — but without meeting water quality standards. This legal drama is just part of an upcoming documentary covering two years of grassroots efforts to preserve the world’s largest collection of natural springs, “The Fellowship of the Springs.”
“Florida citrus production faces sour predictions for 2020-21 season” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — In the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s most recent estimate of orange production, Florida fell behind California as it continues to see declines in predicted production, a telling sign of how the Sunshine State’s citrus industry is faring. The USDA predicted a 7% decrease from March for all Florida orange production, from 55.5 million to 51.7 million boxes. The state’s current predicted production is also down 23% from last year’s season. While Florida has continued to see a reduction in its forecast as July approaches, California’s production has stayed steady. The most recent report put California at 52 million boxes, the same number from the March forecast.
“Florida is full of invasive species. They’re coming for the rest of us.” via James Chapin for The Washington Post — Rest easy: You are safe from the Burmese python. The invasive constrictors show little interest in moving beyond the Florida Everglades. The same can’t necessarily be said, though, for some other scourges currently using Florida as a staging ground. Creatures like the tegu, a dog-sized toothed lizard, are gaining a foothold in the woods of central Florida. Or the lionfish, an aquarium escapee with long, venomous spines. Call it Floridafication: A number of the state’s nastiest living attributes are rapidly migrating outward. Florida has long been home to a thriving captive wildlife industry. This has contributed to its status as the place with the highest number of introduced animals in the United States.
Tegu, a dog-sized toothed lizard, is one of the latest species to call Florida home. Image via Outdoor Life.
Corona Florida
“YouTube pulls video of DeSantis panel discussion urging no masks for children” via Meryl Kornfield of The Washington Post — YouTube has pulled a video featuring DeSantis over allegations it contains misinformation about the coronavirus and mask-wearing. The video is of a March 18 roundtable discussion in Tallahassee the Governor hosted with panelists who have publicly spoken against lockdowns and other measures enacted to reduce the spread of the coronavirus. According to platform spokeswoman Elena Hernandez, the video was taken down Wednesday because it violated a policy related to “COVID-19 medical misinformation,” according to platform spokeswoman Elena Hernandez. One panelist wrote that he viewed the discussion as a “policy forum” and raised objections to mask-wearing based on evidence that masks could hinder a child’s ability to learn and interact with others.
Video of a Ron DeSantis ‘anti-mask’ policy forum gets yanked from YouTube. Image via NBC News.
“Many long-term care staffers in Florida refused the vaccine. Now they have more infections than residents.” via Cindy Krischer Goodman, Kate Santich and Adelaide Chen of the Orlando Sentinel — At Florida’s long-term care facilities, more workers are now infected with COVID-19 than elderly residents, a dramatic shift from earlier in the pandemic. Despite state and federal attempts to offer vaccinations at all nursing homes and assisted-living centers in the state, 62% of staffers have declined, posing the single biggest threat to the more than 25,000 elderly people in those facilities who are also unvaccinated. “These are the folks from the beginning that were bringing it in,” said Mary Daniel, a caregiver and advocate for families of residents. As of April 9, 344 of Florida’s long-term care workers tested positive for COVID-19, compared to 276 residents. The good news is overall cases are down, only a tenth of what they were in January.
“Florida evangelicals on vaccine: Right thing to do or mark of the beast?” via David Fleshler of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Few communities have been more divided over the vaccines than the sprawling expanse of Christian churches and denominations classified as evangelical. Among religious demographic groups, white evangelicals were the most likely to reject COVID-19 vaccines, with 45% saying they would not get the shot. At the other end of the spectrum, the group least likely to reject the vaccine were atheists. What experts call “vaccine hesitancy” has emerged as a significant obstacle in the fight against the disease, particularly with the rise of more transmissible variants of the virus.
Corona local
“She coughed on a Jacksonville Pier 1 shopper during the pandemic. Now she’s heading to jail.” via Dan Scanlan of The Florida Times-Union — A Fernandina Beach woman seen giving the finger to another shopper on video that went viral then coughing in her face at a St. Johns Town Center store before storming out has been sentenced to 29 days in jail for assault. The decision ended several hours of testimony and questions during Debra Jo Michele Hunter‘s sentencing hearing that went into Thursday evening and came despite an August plea agreement that had consisted of only probation with conditions. Duval County Court Judge James Ruth first heard testimony from Hunter’s husband, friends, and family, who said she has a “really huge heart” and is “brokenhearted” over how she coughed on cancer patient Heather Sprague.
“Vaccine outreach to underserved in Palm Beach County at full throttle” via Jane Musgrave of The Palm Beach Post — When cash-strapped families lined up for food this week at the Palm Beach Outlets in West Palm Beach Beach, they got an unexpected surprise: Along with a box of groceries, they were offered coronavirus vaccines. The double dose of assistance is part of the latest efforts to reach those who have been overlooked even as nearly 4.2 million people in Florida have been vaccinated, including 323,000 in Palm Beach County. The mission took on added urgency this week when cases continued to spike. Florida added another 7,121 cases on Friday, including 470 in Palm Beach County. “We want to make sure our families have fair and equitable access to food as well as health care,” said Paco Velez, CEO of Feeding South Florida.
“COVID-19 deaths in Collier County reach 500. Here’s a look at what we know about them.” via Dan DeLuca of the Naples Daily News — Collier County has reached a grim milestone, reporting its 500th COVID-19 related death. Collier became the 16th Florida county to reach this deadly threshold on Friday, April 2. Together, these 16 counties accounted for about 78% of the state’s 33,586 resident deaths as of that date. While Collier County is 16th in overall COVID-19 deaths, its death rate of 1.6% was 10th among counties with at least 500 coronavirus fatalities. Marion has the highest death rate among those 16 counties at 3.2%. A total of 369 days passed between Collier’s first reported death and its 500th. The median age of Collier County residents who have died of COVID-19 is 81.
Corona nation
“States have been slow to order allotted vaccine doses, spurring calls for new approach” via Isaac Stanley-Becker of The Washington Post — States have delayed ordering hundreds of thousands of vaccine doses available to them even as coronavirus outbreaks escalate, a sign the nation is moving past its supply pinch and now faces more acute challenges related to demand, staffing, and inoculation of hard-to-reach populations. What’s most mystifying at this stage in the pandemic is the number of states waiting to order all the doses they’ve been allotted. At one point last week, 13 states had more than 100,000 doses apiece available and not ordered. The delays have gained notice inside the federal government, where officials have discussed whether performance metrics and getting them to vulnerable groups should be part of allocation decisions.
“Plunging Johnson & Johnson vaccine supply dents state inoculation efforts” via Sharon LaFraniere, Noah Weiland and Jennifer Steinhauer of The New York Times — Supplies of Johnson & Johnson’s one-dose coronavirus vaccine will be extremely limited until federal regulators approve production at a Baltimore manufacturing plant with a pattern of quality-control lapses. With allocations of the company’s vaccine set to plunge by 86 percent next week, Governors across the country warned that the loss of supplies they had been counting on would set back their vaccination drives. Federal officials said Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech could make up some of the shortfall. They also pointed out that some states were not currently using all the vaccines allocated to them.
A shortage of the Johnson & Jonson vaccine puts a speedbump on state vaccination efforts.
“Red states are vaccinating at a lower rate than blue states” via Harry Enten of CNN — One of the biggest obstacles in America’s race to vaccinate against the coronavirus has been that substantial proportions of certain groups choose not to vaccinate. The polling has suggested all along that Republicans would be less likely to get vaccinations than Democrats, and this is now being seen in the real world. Blue states are starting to outpace red states when it comes to vaccinations, and the instances where that isn’t the case are often explained by other expected demographic patterns. Right now, 46% of those 18 and older in the average state Biden won have had at least one dose of the vaccine. That drops to 41% in the average state Trump won.
More corona
“Nursing newborns are not having reactions to COVID-19 vaccine” via Miriam Fauzia of USA Today — On social media, vaccine apprehension and hesitancy live on, with one claim alleging breastfeeding babies are experiencing adverse reactions because of their vaccinated mothers. Shared to Facebook on March 30, the text above an image of an unidentified child covered in rashes asks if “anyone heard anything about babies having reactions when their nursing moms get the COVID-19 vaccine?” A Facebook comment below the image appears to explain. Caitlyn RN, who originally made the post, clarified the rash-covered child pictured in the image and the child referred to in the March 17 post are not the same. USA Today has not been able to verify whether the infant death discussed in the original post actually happened.
A Facebook post warning of the dangers vaccines pose to infants may have been a hoax.
“For immigrants, IDs prove to be a barrier to a dose of protection” via Akilah Johnson of The Washington Post — Immigrants have been turned away from pharmacies and other places after being asked for driver’s licenses, Social Security numbers, or health insurance cards — specific documentation not mandated by states or the federal government but often requested at vaccination sites across the country. Often the request comes in English, a language many of the vaccine-seekers don’t fully understand. Some state agencies and businesses that provide vaccinations have acknowledged the problem and vowed that it would stop. The federal government says everyone has a right to the coronavirus vaccine regardless of immigration status.
“Effectiveness of Chinese vaccines ‘not high’ and needs improvement, top health official says” via Gerry Shih of The Washington Post — The head of the Chinese CDC conceded that the efficacy of Chinese coronavirus vaccines is “not high” and that they may require improvements, marking a rare admission from a government that has staked its international credibility on its doses. George Gao‘s comments come after the government has already distributed hundreds of millions of doses to other countries, even though the rollout has been dogged by questions over why Chinese pharmaceutical firms have not released detailed clinical trial data. China is “formally considering” options to change its vaccines to “solve the problem that the efficacy of the existing vaccines is not high,” Gao said.
Presidential
“Joe Biden seeks huge funding increases for education, health care and environmental protection in first budget request to Congress” via Tony Romm of The Washington Post — Biden asked Congress to authorize a massive $1.5 trillion federal spending plan later this year, seeking to invest heavily in several government agencies to boost education, expand affordable housing, bolster public health and confront climate change. The request marks Biden’s first discretionary spending proposal, a precursor to the full annual budget he aims to release later in the spring that will address programs including Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. The president’s early blueprint calls for a nearly 16 percent increase in funding across nondefense domestic agencies. Biden’s new plan calls for a less than 2 percent increase for the military in the upcoming fiscal year.
Joe Biden’s first budget — go big or go home. Image via AP.
“Biden’s agenda faces crucial test as moderate Democrats draw lines and GOP rallies opposition” via Mike DeBonis and Seung Min Kim of The Washington Post — President Biden’s legislative ambitions face a crucial test in the narrowly divided Congress this month, with key Democratic Senators signaling they want to pump the brakes as party leaders move to quickly pivot from last month’s $1.9 trillion pandemic relief act to an even larger infrastructure and jobs bill and other pressing policy items. Republican leaders, meanwhile, are beginning to mount fierce opposition to those plans, even as a subset of GOP centrists share rising frustration about a lack of meaningful outreach from Biden, who has billed himself as a bipartisan dealmaker.
“Four ways of looking at the radicalism of Biden” via Ezra Klein of The New York Times — In the Senate, in the Obama White House, in the Democratic Party’s post-Trump reckoning, Biden was rarely, if ever, the voice calling for transformational change or go-it-alone ambition. But you’d never know it from his presidency. The standard explanation for all this is the advent of the coronavirus. That may explain the American Rescue Plan. But the American Jobs Plan, and the forthcoming American Family Plan, go far beyond the virus. Put together, they are a sweeping indictment of the pre-pandemic status quo as a disaster for both people and the planet. Biden still talks like he believes bipartisanship is possible in Congress, but his administration has put the onus on Republicans to prove it.
Epilogue: Trump
“Trump lashes his enemies anew as GOP dances around his presence” via Shane Goldmacher, Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Martin of The New York Times — With Trump determined to keep his grip on the Republican Party and the Party’s base as adhered to him as ever, the coming together of the RNC’s top donors in South Florida this weekend is less a moment of reset and more a reminder of the continuing tensions and schisms roiling the GOP. As donors and GOP leaders looked on Saturday night, Trump quickly cast aside his prepared remarks and returned to his false claims that the election was stolen from him. He saved much of his vitriol for Sen. Mitch McConnell, the minority leader. Trump praised the crowd that attended his rally on Jan. 6, admiring how large it was.
At a GOP donor event, Donald Trump called Mitch McConnell a ‘son of a bitch.’
“Could DeSantis be Trump’s GOP heir? He’s certainly trying.” via Patricia Mazzei of The New York Times — With Florida defying many of the gloomy projections of early 2020 and feeling closer to normal, DeSantis, 42, has positioned himself as the head of “the free state of Florida” and as a political heir to Trump. DeSantis owes a mightier debt than most in his party to Trump, who blessed his candidacy. DeSantis’s political maneuvering and extensive national donor network have allowed him to emerge as a top Republican candidate to succeed Mr. Trump on the ballot in 2024 if the former president does not run again. The Governor’s brand of libertarianism — or “competent Trumpism,” as one ally called it — is on the ascent. Seizing on conservative issues du jour, he has forged strong connections with his party’s base.
“Florida’s only lead factory finds itself in damage-control mode” via Corey G. Johnson, Rebecca Woolington and Eli Murray of the Tampa Bay Times — Federal safety regulators descended on the Gopher Resource lead smelter in Tampa, reviewing company documents, collecting dust samples and hooking up workers to monitoring devices so that air quality could be measured. Inspectors arrived Monday and stayed all week. They combed through the plant, where hundreds of workers have been exposed to high neurotoxin levels and other chemicals. Before this week, OSHA inspectors hadn’t set foot in the plant in five years. OSHA’s inspection followed mounting calls for government action in response to the newsroom’s investigation, which detailed dangerous conditions inside the factory that spanned years and went unnoticed by regulators.
Tampa’s Gopher smelting plant is on the defense.
“Deputies back off noise complaint — after they’re told the Sheriff is at the party” via Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A loud birthday party one Saturday night brought sheriff’s deputies to a home in Parkland, but they wound up looking the other way when told about one of the revelers inside: their own boss, Broward Sheriff Gregory Tony. Several partygoers who met the deputies outside the home on March 27 boasted that the sheriff was a guest inside. It led to an awkward encounter in which the deputies hesitated to confront the sheriff and then backed off entirely. “You guys do whatever you want,” one deputy said, starting to walk away. “Have a nice night.” The sheriff’s report doesn’t identify the guest and doesn’t mention the discussion of the sheriff.
“Former Escambia Sheriff David Morgan files for Pensacola Mayor in 2022” via Jim Little of the Pensacola News Journal — Morgan filed the necessary paperwork to become a “pre-filed” candidate for the top city office with the Escambia County Supervisor of Elections Office on Friday. Morgan served as Escambia County Sheriff for 12 years, and when he stepped down last year, he publicly speculated that he might run for Mayor in the future. “If I was to run for something, Mayor is it,” Morgan told the News Journal last year. The filing Friday ends that speculation. Morgan said he and his wife have been discussing running for the last six months and decided to file after Mayor Grover Robinson dropped out because “the sooner, the better.”
First in Sunburn — “Another City Council colleague of Darden Rice — Amy Foster — endorses Ken Welch for St. Pete Mayor” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Foster is endorsing Welch, former Pinellas County Commissioner, for Mayor, his campaign announced. “Ken will be a great Mayor for St. Petersburg because he is a leader who listens, collaborates, and thinks deeply about how to make this city even greater. He is a unifier who knows how to bring people together, and that’s what St. Petersburg needs today with so many big issues before us,” Foster said in a statement. Foster is the third sitting City Council member to endorse Welch over their colleague, Rice, in the race to succeed current Mayor Rick Kriseman. Kriseman is not seeking reelection due to term limits. Other City Council endorsers include Lisa Wheeler-Bowman and Deborah Figgs-Sanders. Former City Council member Charlie Gerdes has also offered his support.
More local
“Who will be next City Manager in Miami Beach? Commission to pick from 6 finalists” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — Nearly four months after Miami Beach City Manager Jimmy Morales resigned, the City Commission will soon decide who will run the city government going forward. The new City Manager will be selected as soon as April 21 from a list of six finalists that includes three current senior city officials. Commissioners have conducted one-on-one interviews with the shortlisted candidates, and they will hold a virtual meeting next Thursday to meet with them publicly one week before an expected final vote. Whoever is chosen will inherit a city recovering from a budget-bruising pandemic and the fallout from a spring break period that resurfaced long-standing tensions between residents and the party scene in South Beach.
Jimmy Morales is out. Who’ll take his place? Image via Miami Herald.
Top opinion
“Don’t cut funding to hospitals, which have been a lifeline during the pandemic” via Jerry Demings for the Orlando Sentinel — Conditions are improving amid widespread vaccinations and safety measures, but this crisis isn’t over. We still have hundreds of citizens infected with the virus daily, and deaths continue to occur. That is why I am concerned to learn that state lawmakers are considering cutting funding for our local hospitals. While it is still early in the budget process, legislation proposed in the state House and Senate could cut anywhere from $328 million to $533 million in funding for the year ahead. Legislators argue that hospitals are able to absorb the proposed cuts because they received federal funding under the CARES Act. That legislation was intended to cover revenue losses caused by the halt in elective surgeries, along with heightened costs for staffing and supplies, such as personal protective equipment.
Opinions
“It’s too early for mask burning, Florida. A new ‘double mutant’ COVID-19 variant is looming” via Fabiola Santiago of the Miami Herald — With vaccinations now open to people over 18, too many people are shedding their masks and declaring victory over the virus. In Fort Lauderdale, where the maskless have been packing bars for months, a group is staging a “mask burning” party on Las Olas on Saturday. Double mutated strains of COVID-19 have reached at least 41 of Florida’s 67 counties, and South Florida is the leader in variant infections. All it takes is a symptomless person infected with a variant traveling to the state. Some health experts are warning about signs of a fourth surge in the making if people don’t vaccinate in large numbers in a timely fashion, if we become lax about wearing a mask, or, if once vaccinated, begin behaving as if the pandemic were over.
“Florida gears up to address climate change” via Jackie Toledo for Florida Politics — Today, electric vehicles promise to improve our air quality and help address climate change. That’s why I am sponsoring electric vehicle (EV) legislation. My bill, HB 817, will help drivers take advantage of decreasing prices and the growing number of EV models available to consumers. Florida is currently #2 in electric vehicle sales in the U.S. but lags in supporting infrastructure. HB 817 would expand electric vehicle infrastructure in Florida and incorporate emerging technologies into the Department of Transportation’s (DOT) mission while creating a grant program to help increase electric vehicle charging stations across Florida. Sen. Jeff Brandes is carrying the Senate companion bill.
“Fixing Florida’s digital divide” via Jason Shoaf for Florida Politics — How can we expect students to learn from home if they can’t log in to class? This Legislative Session, in partnership with Sen. Dennis Baxley, I proposed legislation to help Florida’s school districts bridge the digital divide to ensure all students have access to the internet and devices that are required for virtual learning. Currently, more than 800,000 students across the Sunshine State don’t have access to broadband internet. More than half a million students don’t have adequate digital devices to use when logging into class, reading online resources, or completing their homework. The legislation will establish a baseline and understanding of what digital tools their students can access.
On today’s Sunrise
After a marathon eight-hour meeting, the Senate Appropriations Committee advances HB 1, the anti-protest bill that no one seems to like.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— It appears the only people who support HB 1 are Gov. DeSantis and GOP leaders in the Legislature — but that’s all it takes to pass the bill.
— Over the past week, Florida had 42,407 new cases of COVID-19 and 347 newly reported deaths. Compared to the previous week, the number of deaths is down while the number of new cases is up … but there’s something fishy about the fatalities. We’ll tell you why.
— Gaetz has been getting lots of coverage lately … the kind most lawmakers would be ashamed of discussing. But not Gaetz. He talked about those allegations during a speech in South Florida.
— On Sunrise SoapBox, the Cliff Notes version of the speech.
— How would you spend $3.5 billion from the federal government? Would you believe in fixing state buildings and other properties? The technical term is “deferred maintenance.” You’ll hear the House Speaker’s spirited defense of deferred maintenance.
— And finally, a Florida Woman crashed her car and told police she was Harry Potter. It might have been funny except for the federal judge she ran over on the sidewalk.
“A Texas man ran from Disneyland to Disney World. Here’s why” via Lauren M. Johnson of CNN — A Texas man, wanting to raise awareness of diabetes, just finished running from Disneyland in Southern California to Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida. Don Muchow, 59, started his goal of running across the United States in February 2020. He hoped to finish the daunting feat by May, but as we all know, COVID-19 had other plans. In March 2020 he had to put his run on hold due to the start of the pandemic. He restarted his final push to finish on March 2 and made it to Disney World on April 5, a trip of more than 2,500 miles. “I’ve been on cloud nine ever since,” Muchow told WESH.
Don Muchow made the coast-to-coast run between Disney parks. Image via Don Muchow.
“Dolphins raise more than $5 million for cancer research at annual charity bike ride” via David Wilson of the Miami Herald — They came across the finish line in bunches and felt accomplished. Cyclists pedaled all across South Florida on Saturday and finished their rides in Miami Gardens, where they could celebrate their individual accomplishments and the knowledge they were helping raise millions of dollars for charity as part of Dolphins Challenge Cancer. They also, in some cases, got to celebrate with Dolphins coach Brian Flores. “It’s really a family out here,” said CEO Tom Garfinkel, who took part in the 15-mile ride. “It’s a Dolphins initiative and everybody’s out here working together to fight cancer.” By Saturday, the team had already raised about $5.1 million, Garfinkel said, and Miami will keep raising money via the event through April 29
Happy birthday
Happy birthday belatedly to Jose Gonzalez of Disney and Janet Owen, recently featured in INFLUENCE Magazine of the University of Central Florida.
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, A.G. Gancarski, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Good morning. 60 years ago today, Yuri Gagarin became the first human to enter outer space. A few interesting facts about that feat:
He was just 27 years old.
567 people have gone to outer space since.
Here’s an interesting question: If 568 people have traveled to space in the last 60 years…how many will go in the next five? Our completely uneducated guess is ~500 additional people will go to space by 2026.
Markets: Stocks heated up in April and have posted meaty year-to-date gains, as you can see above. Energy and financials are having a big 2021 after getting clobbered by tech in 2020.
Covid: The US hit a daily record for vaccines administered on Saturday: 4.6 million!
Economy: On 60 Minutes last night, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said the economy is at an “inflection point,” meaning if the US is able to defeat the virus in the coming months, we could see big job gains and growth ahead.
We’ve faced a number of shortages over the past year—toilet paper, GrapeNuts, joy. But one shortage continues to stand above the rest in its ability to damage the global economy: semiconductors.
Senior execs from almost 20 companies are heading to the White House today to discuss the current chip shortage and ensure more supply chain chaos doesn’t break out in the future.
The roster includes leaders of Ford, Intel, and Alphabet, highlighting how a tiny piece of technology is critical for the everyday operations of a wide range of industries.
How did this start?
As the world went into hibernation in spring 2020, manufacturers called up their chip suppliers and said, “Welp, looks like we won’t be needing much of your stuff in the near future.”
But the economic crisis took a very different shape than originally projected, and demand, instead of dipping…spiked. People loaded up on electronics as they worked/studied/gamed at home. Flush with stimulus checks and wary of public transportation, Americans kept buying cars.
But because they dramatically lowered their chip orders, car manufacturers were stuck making jigsaw puzzles with a missing piece.
You can’t put 100% of the blame on Covid. That wild weather in Texas and other factory hiccups also knocked out chip production, compounding the problem.
But it’s a big problem
The chip shortage has affected “virtually every major car company in recent months,” according to the WSJ, forcing automakers to halt production of their most popular cars.
Both GM and Ford said the shortage could knock profits by at least $2 billion.
Sony said the chip shortage is the reason why there are so few PS5s available.
Looking ahead…don’t expect today’s WH meeting to conclude with a “mission accomplished” banner. Covid-19 exposed deeper, systemic issues within the semiconductor supply chain (over-reliance on China, simply not enough chipmakers). Those will take years and hundreds of billions worth of investments to resolve.
A new analysis from the Wall Street Journal found that chief executives’ median pay at 322 major public US companies rose to $13.7 million last year, up from $12.8 million in 2019. 206 of the 322 CEOs surveyed received a raise, with a median increase of nearly 15%.
It’s more than a simple pay bump.Salary accounts for less than 10% of most major CEOs’ total comp, and many trimmed those salaries early in the pandemic to boot. Instead, CEOs are forming new money piles with equity and bonuses.
Case in point: Paycom CEO Chad Richison
He’s the newly crowned highest-paid CEO in the S&P 500 with a total compensation of $211 million in 2020. And that package is covered with the human equivalent of catnip to keep Richison motivated: 1.61 million restricted shares that will vest if the company hits stock price targets.
It’s not just CEOs securing the bag: Chris Cox was awarded about $69 million to take back his title of Chief Product Officer at Facebook in 2020, and will receive $4 million more on his one-year anniversary.
It was a busy weekend in the wide world of sports biz. Cue the SportsCenter theme music.
The future of college football? The University of Central Florida allowed its players to wear their social media handles on the backs of their jerseys during the spring game on Saturday. “This is a new age of personal branding. We’re going to embrace it,” said UCF coach and verified cool dad Gus Malzahn.
The Timberwolves are getting new owners: Fresh off losing a bidding war for the NY Mets, baseball star-turned-businessman Alex Rodriguez is teaming up with e-commerce legend Marc Lore to buy the NBA’s Minnesota Timberwolves and the WNBA’s Minnesota Lynx. The current owner of both teams, Glen Taylor, bought the Timberwolves in 1994 for $88 million…he’s selling it for $1.5 billion.
Golf history: With his victory at the Masters, Hideki Matsuyama became the first male Japanese golfer to win a major tournament. Japan is very into golf—it has as many courses as the UK + Ireland combined.
Just reading about the 75 vitamins, minerals, and whole-food sourced ingredients in every scoop of Athletic Greens has us at our most efficient and dialed-in—we’re like marketing maestros over here.
Athletic Greens works to fill gaps in your nutrition, increase your energy and focus, aid your digestion, and even offer immune support all in one product.
Which, like, usually we don’t just list a bunch of stuff, but there’s just SO. MUCH. STUFF.
That’s why Athletic Greens is one of the most nutrient dense nutritional beverages on Planet Earth (and Mars too, but the bar is low)—and they have the quality to match.
So if you’re like us and very busy and perpetually late, Athletic Greens is the one scoop to rule them all.
Stat: Nearly 70% of US teens own AirPods, according to a new survey from Piper Jaffray. 88% have an iPhone.
Quote: Chinese vaccines “don’t have very high protection rates.”
Gao Fu, the director of the China Centers for Disease Control, admitted on Saturday that the country’s vaccines don’t exactly give Covid-19 a knockout blow. One study from Brazil found that the vaccine from the Chinese company Sinovac was 50.4% effective, compared to Pfizer’s 97%. Fu said the government is looking for ways to boost effectiveness.
Read: America is about to go Botox wild. (The Atlantic)
Economic data: The biggest report of the week is Tuesday’s Consumer Price Index, which will reveal how worried we should actually be about inflation. Retail sales (Thursday) and housing starts (Friday) are two other data points to watch.
Earnings: Earnings season is upon us—get hyped. Big banks including JPMorgan and Wells Fargo kick off the festivities on Wednesday; other companies reporting quarterly financials this week include PepsiCo and Delta Air Lines. Side note: Corporations have trounced analyst expectations for the past three quarters.
Everything else:
Coinbase will go public on Wednesday
Ramadan begins today
On Saturday, all US National Parks will be free to enter
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
More than 100 business leaders hopped on a Zoom call to talk about voicing more criticism of controversial voting bills, per the WaPo.
Iran called a blackout at one of its nuclear sites “nuclear terrorism.” We don’t have many details, but experts are suggesting it may have been a cyberattack carried out by Israel.
The Chinese government fined Alibaba a record $2.8 billion as it ramps up antitrust oversight of its own tech giants.
LG Energy and SK Innovation, two South Korean battery makers, agreed to settle a dispute that could have threatened the US’ electric vehicle ambitions.
Microsoft is in talks to buy AI company Nuance Communications for $16 billion, per Bloomberg.
We’ll take our burger medium robot. Flippy is the burger flippin’ robot set to revolutionize the QSR industry, helping businesses increase margins by about 300%. Don’t flip out, but you can invest in this cash cow of a robot here.*
Meet this free meat. ButcherBox delivers only the highest quality meat directly to your door. And now new members can get The Essentials Bundle—that’s 7 lbs of chicken breast, pork chops, and ground beef—for free with their first box. Get $10 off your box and The Essentials bundle here.*
Life hacks: Someone on Reddit asked about life hacks that seem fake but are actually real. Check out the answers.
Dive back into the week:
Shallow dive: When the most famous people on Earth lived and died
[U.S. Army Lt. Caron Nazario] conceded in his complaint that he didn’t immediately pull over. He instead put on his emergency lights and continued for another 100 seconds, driving under the speed limit, so he could safely park in a well-lit gas station parking lot less than a mile down the road.
…
Footage also showed Nazario being pepper-sprayed multiple times, “causing him substantial and immediate pain,” the [Nazario’s lawsuit] said. It also led to “substantial property damage to Lt. Nazario’s vehicle and choked Lt. Nazario’s dog, who was sitting in the rear of Lt. Nazario’s vehicle, secured in a crate,” according to the suit.
…
Nazario was ultimately not criminally charged or cited for any traffic violation, his attorney said. A new vehicle tag was clearly visible in Lt. Nazario’s rear window, [Nazario’s attorney Jonathan Arthur] claimed. [One of the officers, Joe Gutierrez] was later fired, [the town manager William Saunders] said.
YESTERDAY’S POLLShould police officers have a Bill of Rights?
Yes
48%
No
36%
Unsure
16%
413 votes, 150 comments
BEST COMMENTS“Yes – Police should be protected by a reasonable bill of rights, but should be subject to dismissal just as everyone else in America. The police union needs to be dramatically reformed or eliminated.”
“No – Police officers don’t need special rights. They are …”
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How is Iran responding to a cyberattack on a nuclear facility?
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Texas Republican Governor Greg Abbott has called upon the Biden administration to reinstate former President Trump’s southern border policies. The scathing attack comes as Mexico announces that it has no more room for migrants from Central America that Biden planned to expel.
Start Spreading the News: A Comeback for New York?
CNN is bringing the culture war to Fox News, accusing the media outlet of not doing enough to save lives because it fails to put out enough “vaccine selfies.” “I get it’s a personal choice…but everyone else is doing it,” CNN’s Brian Stelter said, adding that the top hosts are “choosing not to spread the word.”
During an interview for 60 Minutes, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said it was “highly unlikely” that the central bank would raise interest rates this year. Powell believes the U.S. economy is at an “inflection point,” which is often code for “we have no idea what’s going on.”
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) declined to join those calling on Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) to resign, saying: “It is up to the Republicans to take responsibility for that. And it is up to the Republican leader, Mr. McCarthy, to act upon that behavior.”
Bernie Sanders (D-VT) says that Joe Biden’s proposed infrastructure plan should include spending on “human infrastructure,” meaning housing, health care, childcare, and education – basically, a government takeover of the economy.
Is Wokeness Overwhelming America? – LN Radio Videocast
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
David Hogg is stepping down from his nascent Spite Store, Good Pillow, citing family commitments and other projects. When Hogg first floated the idea that he would be bringing the fight to Mike Lindell of MyPillow fame, the liberal bandwagon was gleeful that a supporter of Donald Trump would be facing stiff market competition. The lesson here is perhaps it takes more than spite and politics to start a hugely successful company.
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day
Rep. Jordan slams Biden admin for limiting media’s access to migrant facilities amid surge at border
Ohio Republican Rep. Jim Jordan argued on Sunday that the reason the press is not allowed to visit migrant facilities is because the Biden administration does not “want the American people to know what’s going on.”
Jordan made the comment on “Sunday Morning Futures” during an exclusive interview with host Maria Bartiromo following a recent trip to the U.S. southern border where he toured a migrant facility in Donna, Texas.
Bartiromo noted that he and the group of lawmakers he toured the facility with were barred from taking any photographs and when they asked for written permission to film “they were told by Biden’s handlers it’s a moot point.”
Jordan acknowledged that was the case and stressed that the press weren’t allowed in to the facility.
He stressed, that based on what he had witnessed during his trip to the border, “these conditions are just not appropriate at all.”
Jordan noted that in “one pod that we looked at in the Donna facility” there “were supposed to be 33 kids in this area, [but] there were 527.”
In other developments:
– Arizona AG: ‘It’s important’ Kamala Harris, Health Sec. Becerra visit border amid immigration crisis
– Rep. Malliotakis: Biden administration can stop migrant surge by reversing border policies
– Texas Gov. Abbott warns border woes ‘will get worse,’ points to ‘bipartisan response’ to Biden admin
– US to keep migrant families in hotels amid rush for space
Sen. Ted Cruz doubles down after John Boehner told him to ‘Go F*** Yourself’
U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz doubled down on his response to former House Speaker John Boehner after he told the Texas Republican to “go f**k yourself” in a leaked audio recording.
“I think he was probably recording at nine or ten in the morning so obviously he had too much wine that day already,” Cruz told the Daily Caller on Saturday. “This guy is a little unhinged.”
Cruz on Friday mockingly tweeted that he wears Boehner’s “drunken, bloviated scorn” proudly alongside a clip from an upcoming CBS News interview with Boehner in which he calls Cruz a “jerk” and accuses him of “making a lot of noise” but not being especially productive in Congress.
“The Swamp is unhappy,” Cruz tweeted. “I wear with pride his drunken, bloviated scorn. Please don’t cry,” the lawmaker joked, referencing Boehner’s reputation for appearing publicly emotional at various points throughout his career.
The ex-speaker has taken several shots at Cruz, including while recording his audiobook when he reportedly told Cruz to “f—” himself in several off-script moments. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Ted Cruz mocks John Boehner’s ‘drunken, bloviated scorn’
– Boehner tells Cruz to ‘go f—- yourself’ while recording audio book: report
– Cruz, AOC go at it on Twitter over immigration debate
– Cruz accuses Biden of trying to hide ‘egregious failures’ on border after Mayorkas bars press from tour
Minnesota cop cars damaged after police shoot suspect attempting to outrun traffic stop
A Sunday afternoon traffic stop in Minnesota turned into an officer-involved shooting and a car accident.
Brooklyn Center Police said in a news release that the stop for a traffic violation was initiatied on the 6300 block of North Orchard Ave. shortly before 2 p.m.
Authorities said that the driver of the vehicle had an outstanding warrant.
As officers attempted to take the individual into custody, the driver re-entered the vehicle. An officer then discharged their firearm, striking the driver.
The vehicle traveled for several blocks before striking another vehicle. Responding officers and emergency personnel performed live saving measures, but the driver was later pronounced dead on scene.
The Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office plans to release the individual’s name following a preliminary autopsy and family notification. However, according to the Minneapolis Star Tribune, relatives have identified the individual as 20-year-old Black man Daunte Wright.
A female passenger in the vehicle was also hurt but is expected to be okay and has been transported to North Memorial Hospital in Robbinsdale. People inside the vehicle struck during the crash were not injured, according to police. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Seattle mass shooting leaves at least three people – including toddler – injured, police hunt for gunman
– Long Island cop in critical condition after being stabbed during traffic stop
– Harvey Weinstein secretly indicted on rape charges by grand jury in Los Angeles
– Illinois man turned wannabe ISIS terrorist sentenced, tells judge he’s a big ‘teddy bear’
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– California mother suspected of killing 3 kids ‘unwell’ for months, family member says; father ‘devastated’
– CA teacher caught berating students in leaked Zoom over push for in-person learning, ‘Come at me’
– Chris Wallace grills Buttigieg on false jobs claim: ‘Why mislead people?’
– Florida woman who coughed on cancer patient sentenced to 30 days behind bars, mental health evaluation
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Some Walmarts are going to start looking a little different
– Why Amazon workers in Alabama voted against union
– Fed’s Powell: Economy at an ‘inflection point’
– Senate GOP assails Biden infrastructure plan as job killer that will give China, Russia a say in US tax laws
#The Flashback: CLICK HEREto find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., joined host Steve Hilton on Sunday’s “The Next Revolution” to blast President Biden and Democrat’s plans to redefine American “infrastructure,” telling Hilton “The Biden administration should rename the package ‘The Green New Deal,’ because the almost half the money being spent in this monstrosity, as you defined it, could be spend on Green New Deal-type of wasteful spending.”
“In addition,” she said, “you have the left defining – redefining – infrastructure as child care, social justice as infrastructure, care giving as infrastructure. The majority of the bill – the vast majority of the bill – 70 percent – has absolutely nothing to do with what we would call transportation and infrastructure,” Mace added.
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“The United States is the capitalist nation par excellence,” Irving Kristol once wrote, and he was right. Americans have long enjoyed the benefits (and headaches) of a dynamic economy because our country encourages vibrant competition in the private sector while ensuring the state’s hand, if sometimes heavy, never becomes oppressive. But that is changing.
President Joe Biden’s plan to spend over $2.3 trillion on infrastructure upgrades is laudable. However, many of the assorted activities in the proposed legislation will go to projects not defined as infrastructure. Worse yet, the proposal sharply increases corporate taxes while ruling out higher fuel taxes or mileage-based user fees.
Daniel Shoag, Michael R. Strain, and Stan Veuger | AEI Economic Policy Working Paper Series
Using a new survey of truck drivers, the authors find that those who are most concerned about automation are, counterintuitively, also most likely to say they intend to reinvest in driving. This arms race for remaining positions is socially inefficient.
A government commission finds the UK is no longer ‘deliberately rigged’ against minorities. Cue the outrage and racial attacks on its chairman, Tony Sewell.
“President Joe Biden has ordered a study on overhauling the Supreme Court, creating a bipartisan commission [last] Friday that will spend the next six months examining the politically incendiary issues of expanding the court and instituting term limits for justices, among other issues.” AP News
“Justice Stephen Breyer [last] Tuesday said liberal advocates of big changes at the Supreme Court, including expanding the number of justices, should think ‘long and hard’ about what they’re proposing. Politically driven change could diminish the trust Americans place in the court, Breyer said.” AP News
The left is skeptical of the commission and argues in favor of structural changes to the Supreme Court.
“When the White House released the list of commission members on Friday, it swiftly won praise — from members of the conservative Federalist Society… while the author of one of the most significant attacks on Obamacare in the last decade is on Biden’s commission, none of the leading academic proponents of Supreme Court reform were appointed…
“The commission does not include law professors Daniel Epps and Ganesh Sitaraman, authors of a highly influential proposal to expand the Supreme Court to 15 justices and have the key members of the Court be chosen in a bipartisan process that is intended to make the Court less ideological. And it does not include Aaron Belkin, a political science professor and leader of Take Back the Court…
“In choosing the members of this commission, the White House appears to have prioritized bipartisanship and star power within the legal academy over choosing people who have actually spent a meaningful amount of time advocating for Supreme Court reforms.” Ian Millhiser, Vox
“The first red flag here is the commission’s task: not to produce action items or recommendations, but to study issues that have already been studied to death. Congress repeatedly altered the size of the Supreme Court throughout the 19th century… Looking at the membership and goals of this commission, it seems obvious that Biden does not really want to pursue court reform…
“Rather, he appears eager to scrape the issue off his plate by tossing it to (and I say this lovingly) a bunch of eggheads who have spent their careers marinating in the fantasy that the Supreme Court is apolitical. It’s a nice dream, and if I had the option, I wouldn’t want to wake up from it, either…
“But if you are a pregnant teenager in Texas terrified that SCOTUS will let the government veto your abortion, or a same-sex couple in Indiana scared that SCOTUS will let the state dissolve your marriage, or a transgender child in Arkansas worried that SCOTUS will let lawmakers cut off your medical care, you do not have that luxury.” Mark Joseph Stern, Slate
“There would be far less talk of court enlargement if McConnell and Trump had not abused their power [to block Merrick Garland’s nomination and confirm Amy Coney Barrett right before elections]. Nor would enlargement be on the table if conservative justices had not substituted their own political preferences for Congress’s decisions, notably on voting rights and campaign finance reform, 5-to-4 rulings on which Breyer, rightly, joined the dissenters…
“So I respectfully dissent from the skepticism Breyer expressed about court enlargement… In his speech, Breyer declared that ‘the Constitution itself seeks to establish a workable democracy and to protect basic human rights.’ That’s a bracing vision, and it’s what advocates of court enlargement are trying to protect.” EJ Dionne Jr., Washington Post
Others argue that “Court-packing isn’t the right fix for our courts. Ending life tenure is… The broad mandate Mr. Biden has assigned the commission allows it to examine what is a valid area for potential Supreme Court reform: replacing life tenure, instituted in 1788, at a time of much shorter life expectancy, with an 18-year term…
“That would drain some of the intensity from Supreme Court politics by providing both parties with foreseeable, regular opportunities to nominate justices — thus lowering the stakes of each vacancy. It would allow presidents to nominate the most qualified justices, rather than looking for the youngest plausible nominees.” Editorial Board, Washington Post
From the Right
The right is critical of the commission and argues against structural changes to the Supreme Court.
“The commission will have an unwieldy 36 members, who tilt markedly to the political left. The co-chairs are Bob Bauer, Barack Obama’s former White House counsel, and Cristina Rodriguez, a former official in the Obama Justice Department… The commission includes a few legal conservatives, notably scholar Adam White, who has contributed to these pages; Princeton professor Keith Whittington ; and Caleb Nelson, a University of Virginia law professor and former clerk to Justice Clarence Thomas…
“The danger is that these conservatives will lend a bipartisan patina to a commission that by its very existence is meant to pressure the Supreme Court. The threat of court-packing is intended to make the Justices think twice about rulings that progressives dislike. Many of our legal friends think the threat has already had a notable impact on Chief Justice John Roberts on gun rights and abortion cases…
“The irony of this commission is that the Democratic Party is already in a position to shape the federal courts through normal channels. Judges appointed by Democrats have begun to retire, and most of Mr. Biden’s nominees will sweep through the Democratic-controlled Senate.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“The court works just fine as it is and indeed enjoys the highest approval rating of any branch of the federal government. Two of the liberal high court titans of the past three decades, the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and current Justice Stephen Breyer, have argued strongly against court-packing. Ginsburg did so as recently as 2019, and Breyer did so just this week in a sharply worded speech at Harvard Law School…
“The problem isn’t how the Supreme Court operates, but rather how the Senate runs the nomination process. The political Left has turned the process into a blood sport, regularly attacking the character and motives of Republican nominees in vicious fashion (and in ways almost never reciprocated by conservatives)…
“The use of anonymous leaks, the abuse (and subsequent elimination) of filibusters as a weapon in confirmation battles, and the level of vitriol are all out of control. If Biden wanted to appoint a commission to recalibrate that system, to make it fairer to the nominees, and less of a star chamber, that would make sense.” Quin Hillyer, Washington Examiner
“[Biden was] once an opponent of court-packing, calling former President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s attempt to add seats to the bench a ‘bonehead idea’ and a ‘terrible, terrible mistake.’ He accused Roosevelt of being ‘corrupted by power’ and praised congressional Democrats for standing up to his attempted ‘executive overreach.’… ‘It put in question there for an entire decade the independence of the most significant body in this country,’ Biden said in 1983.” Kaylee McGhee White, Washington Examiner
“The commission has enough balance that we’re not likely to see it go all in on something as extreme as court packing. That’s probably because Biden himself doesn’t think it’s a good idea…
“One of the other things the commission will look at is the possibility of term limits for SCOTUS justices. I’ve seen some people talking about limiting them to 18-year terms and others suggest the justices rotate such that every president gets 1 or 2 nominations. My guess is that in six months when the report is turned in we’ll hear a lot more about those ideas, if nothing else because it’ll be a way for the White House to take the focus off court packing.” John Sexton, Hot Air
☕ Good Monday morning. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,185 words … 4½ minutes.
1 big thing: Warning signs of a longer pandemic
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
All the things that could prolong the COVID pandemic are playing out right in front of our eyes, Axios health care editor Sam Baker writes.
Why it matters: Although the pace of vaccinations is still strong, experts fear it’s about to slow down. In some parts of the country, particularly the South, demand for shots has already dropped.
Here’s a preview of what our future could hold if the vaccination push loses steam:
Variants are beginning to infect more kids, even as schools are on the fast track to reopening, making the pandemic “a brand new ball game,” as University of Minnesota epidemiologist Michael Osterholm put it.
New researchconfirms that our existing vaccines don’t work as well against the South African variant.
The U.K. variant is driving another surge in Michigan, and Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has resisted reimposing lockdown measures.
What’s next: If we don’t control the virus well enough, we could spend years living through new variants — some of which might be more deadly, and some of which might be more resistant to vaccines.
2. CEOs plan $$$ threats to lawmakers over voting laws
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Top CEOs plan to get dramatically tougher on state legislators over proposed new restrictions on voting:
After a weekend Zoom summit, the CEOs are threatening to withhold campaign contributions — and to punish states by yanking investments in factories, stadiums and other lucrative projects.
The call included a long list of business luminaries, including James Murdoch, Ken Chenault, Ken Frazier, LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, Levi Strauss CEO Chip Bergh, Atlanta Falcons owner Arthur Blank, and executives of Delta, United and American Airlines.
Why it matters: After a slow response to Georgia’s new limits, corporate America is suddenly making voting access a foremost issue — and is going beyond words with sweeping economic threats.
Saturday’s historic Zoom summit was organized by Professor Jeffrey Sonnenfeld of Yale School of Management, who told me they “fortified each other”: “There was no sense of fear.”
The call included 90 business leaders, plus 30 other experts and aides.
A post-summit statement said: “CEOs who participated in a live poll indicated they will re-evaluate donations to candidates supporting bills that restrict voting rights and many would reconsider investments in states which act upon such proposals.”
3. 💰 CEO pay surges in pandemic
Median pay for CEOs of the largest U.S. public companies hit $13.7 million last year, up from $12.8 million the year before, a Wall Street Journal analysis found (subscription).
Pay rose for 64% (206) of the 322 CEOs in the Journal study.
“The median raise was nearly 15%.”
Between the lines: “Salary cuts CEOs took at the depths of the crisis had little effect,” The Journal reports. “The stock market’s rebound boosted what top executives took home because much of their compensation comes in the form of equity.”
4. New tension in Minnesota
People run last night as police attempt to disperse a crowd at the Brooklyn Center Police Department. Photo: Carlos Gonzalez/Star Tribune via AP
The fatal shooting of a Black man by police during a traffic stop in Brooklyn Center, Minn. — 10 miles from the Chauvin trial — sparked a night of unrest, Axios Twin Cities authors Torey Van Oot and Nick Halter report.
A stand-off between law enforcement and protesters in the suburb continued late into the night, as police in protective gear deployed tear gas after the crowd ignored orders to disperse outside the station.
Brooklyn Center police said that after determining the driver had an outstanding warrant, police tried to arrest the driver. The driver reentered the vehicle and drove away, the police said.
What we know: Relatives identified the man as 20-year-old Daunte Wright, MPR News reports. They said he was going to get his car washed when he was pulled over, and that he called his mother during the stop.
5. Scoop: White House targets McConnell, McCarthy
Photo illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios. Photo Mark Makela/Getty Images
The White House is selling President Biden’s $2.2 trillion infrastructure plan by projecting how much it will help each state — starting with Kentucky and California, Axios’ Sarah Mucha reports.
Why it matters: Tagging the homes of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (Calif.) puts them on the defensive — and warns other Republicans they’ll have to explain their votes on this bridge or that highway.
Republicans plan their own offensive, Jonathan Swan reports:
“Described as both a ‘jobs’ plan and an ‘infrastructure’ plan, the proposal undermines both,” reads a memo from the Senate Republican Conference. “‘Biden’s Partisan, Job-Crushing Slush Fund’ spends just 5% of the total $2.7 trillion on roads and bridges.”
The big picture: The House and Senate are coming back from recess today for a busy session, as Democrats work to pass the president’s infrastructure bill — or at least “make real progress” — by Memorial Day.
One White House tactic: Publishing report cards for each of the 50 states outlining the “cost of inaction” on the package.
The Business Roundtable today will release a survey in which 98% of 178 CEOs polled said that increasing the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28%, as President Biden proposed, would have a “moderately” to “very” significant adverse effect on their company’s competitiveness.
75% of CEOs said an increased tax burden on U.S. companies would negatively affect investments in R&D and innovation.
71% of CEOs said it would negatively affect their ability to hire.
Nearly two-thirds said it would result in slower wage growth for U.S. workers.
BRT President & CEO Joshua Bolten: “This survey tells us that increasing taxes on America’s largest job creators would lead to a reduced ability to hire Americans, slower wage growth for workers, and reduced investments in research and development — all key components needed for a robust economic recovery.”
Corporate giants would be barred from acquisitions, and century-old antitrust laws would get sharper teeth, under a “Trust-Busting for the Twenty-First Century Act” that Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) shared exclusively with Axios.
“This country and this government shouldn’t be run by a few mega-corporations,” Hawley told me in an interview.
Why it matters, from Axios’ Scott Rosenberg and Ashley Gold: Hawley, a possible 2024 presidential candidate, is among the Senate’s most conservative members. But his attack on corporate power shows the depth of Republican anger at what they see as “censorship” by Big Tech.
Between the lines: Hawley’s plan is more than a salvo against Silicon Valley. Its rules on mergers would cover dozens of U.S. giants in virtually every economic sector, from banking and health to retail and media.
How’s thisfor a fun fact? The oldest millennials are turning 40 this year.
And after years as the “renter generation,”they’re ready to buy.
About 5 million millennials turn 30 in 2021, Axios’ Brianna Crane writes.
This wave of new buyers will shape the market for years to come.
Where they’re going: Millennials are leaving big cities and heading west or south. Migration patterns, according to SmartAsset, show five of the 10 most popular states among millennials have no income tax.
9. Sneak peek … Pelosi: “Politics is every minute of every day”
Cover: Twelve
Susan Page, USA Today’s Washington bureau chief, conducted 10 interviews with Speaker Pelosi for a biography, “Madam Speaker: Nancy Pelosi and the Lessons of Power,” that’s out April 20.
Pelosi unloads on the Squad, at one point adopting a child-like voice when discussing Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and offers the Squad this blunt advice: “You’re not a one-person show. This is the Congress of the United States.”
Pelosi scoffs at President Obama for not being able to deliver his home state votes for Obamacare — “Why are we having a problem with Illinois?” — and bristles at Obama getting sole credit for the deals she got through Congress.
The speaker said she learned the art of politics from her father, Baltimore Mayor Thomas D’Alesandro: “What I learned from my father was everything … I breathed it in … Politics is every minute of every day. It is part of you.”
Hideki Matsuyama, 29, after becoming the first Masters champion from golf-mad Japan, and Japan’s first man to win a golf major:
It’s thrilling to think that there are a lot of youngsters in Japan watching today … Hopefully in five, 10 years, when they get a little older, hopefully some of them will be competing on the world stage. But I still have a lot of years left, so they are going to have to compete against me.
It is not just Derek Chauvin’s use of force on George Floyd that is in the spotlight, but also officers’ willingness to break the “blue wall of silence” and the justice system’s ability to police its own.
President Joe Biden is readying an executive order that would require companies to disclose the risks they face from climate change, special climate envoy John Kerry says.
President Joe Biden has pitched his infrastructure package as a weapon essential to keeping pace with China, calling it a “blue-collar blueprint” that his administration says will create millions of jobs and better position the United States to compete with Beijing.
A massive immigration holding center in Texas is hardly being used amid the worsening border situation as the Biden administration instead opts to dole out multimillion-dollar, taxpayer-funded contracts to house families in hotels.
Voters in Ecuador appeared to turn to a conservative businessman in Sunday’s presidential runoff election, rebuffing a leftist movement that has held the presidency for over a decade marked by an economic boom and then a yearslong recession, while in neighboring Peru a crowded field of 18 candidates was virtually certain to result in a second round of presidential voting in June.
A CNN report that said embattled Rep. Matt Gaetz was denied a meeting with former President Donald Trump at his Mar-a-Lago resort is fake news, according to the congressman’s office and Trump team.
After repeated violations of YouTube’s “presidential election integrity policy,” the video platform terminated the channel for a radio show hosted by Sebastian Gorka, a onetime aide to former President Donald Trump.
The Pentagon police officer who was charged in connection with the murder of two people faces a new accusation that he assaulted a woman in a separate incident.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
April 12, 2021
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AP Morning Wire
Good morning from Warsaw. Iran blames Israel for a sabotage attack on a nuclear facility and vows revenge. In the U.S., the prosecution case nears its end in the trial of a former police officer charged in the death of George Floyd. It’s been 60 years since Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first person to travel in space. And the AP offers a look at how the portrayal of Prince Philip in the Netflix drama “The Crown” compares with the real man, husband of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II, who died on Friday.
Also this morning:
U.S. colleges weigh how far they should go in urging students to get the COVID-19 vaccine
Top Chinese official admits China’s vaccines have low effectiveness
Chilly weather doesn’t dampen Britons’ joy at lockdown easing
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman has blamed Israel for sabotage attack at underground Natanz nuclear facility. Saeed Khatibzadeh made the comment Monday, warning Iran……Read More
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Jay Copan doesn’t hide his disregard for the modern Republican Party. A solid Republican voter for the past four decades, the 69-year-old quickly regretted casting his…..Read More
MOSCOW (AP) — Crushed into the pilot’s seat by heavy G-forces, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin saw flames outside his spacecraft and prepared to die. His voice broke the tense silence at groun…Read More
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The trial of a former Minneapolis police officer charged in George Floyd ‘s death enters its third week Monday, with the state nearing the end of a case built on searing w…Read More
LOS ANGELES (AP) — In “The Crown,” a dishy naval officer captures the heart of a future queen. But he chafes at playing royal second fiddle and crosses the boundaries of decorum and, maybe,….Read More
BOSTON (AP) — U.S. colleges hoping for a return to normalcy next fall are weighing how far they should go in urging students to get the COVID-19 vaccine, including whether th…Read More
LONDON (AP) — The death of Prince Philip has left a “huge void” in Queen Elizabeth II’s life, their son Prince Andrew said Sunday, as well-wishers continued to leave floral t…Read More
BEIJING (AP) — In a rare admission of the weakness of Chinese coronavirus vaccines, the country’s top disease control official says their effectiveness is low and the governm…Read More
NEW DELHI (AP) — Tens of thousands of Hindu devotees gathered by the Ganges River for special prayers Monday, many of them flouting social distancing practices as the coronav…Read More
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Meanwhile, also Sunday, officials announced that the United Center mass vaccination site will switch to the single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine beginning next week. Here’s that will mean if you received a first dose of Pfizer there.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
River North’s predominant ZIP code has nearly double the percentage of residents fully vaccinated than the ZIP code covering South Shore. But River North also has twice the number of new COVID-19 cases, relative to population size.
It’s part of what may seem like a surprising trend in Chicago: Some of the city’s more vaccinated areas also are seeing higher case rates. Health officials say the reasons are complex.
With vaccine supply still limited in the Chicago area, many city residents and suburbanites are traveling hundreds of miles across the state to get inoculated, often finding appointments in Quincy, Danville, Springfield and other downstate cities.
Now some Chicago-area residents are trying to reschedule that second dose closer to home, with mixed results.
As President Joe Biden pushes a $45 billion plan to replace every lead water line across the nation, dozens of cities already have a head start in eliminating the lingering threats to public health. One glaring omission: Chicago.
Despite having more lead pipes known as service lines than any other U.S. city, Chicago denied for years it had a widespread problem. The first sign of change came this month, when Mayor Lori Lightfoot launched a small pilot program to target the brain-damaging hazards in low-income neighborhoods.
The Humboldt Park Gators, a youth baseball team named after the neighborhood’s illustrious former resident, are a baseball team composed entirely of girls. That’s still a rarity in Chicago, not to mention the rest of the country. After being delayed a year by the pandemic, they’re about to start their first full season — and most of their competition will be boys.
Off Color Brewing released a beer last year meant to pair well with tacos. It was bright, salty, fruity and tart — like a margarita — and in a nod to the basic nature of the inspiration, Off Color gave the beer a basic name: Beer for Tacos. It was a hit.
The “Beer for” series has pushed Off Color toward a broader and more accessible audience, and offered an unlikely financial lifeline during a COVID-19 pandemic.
City officials were closely involved three years ago in numerous steps leading up to the controversial relocation of the car-shredding operations of General Iron to the Southeast Side, a review of hundreds of pages of emails shows.
The behind-the-scenes involvement with top officials of former Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s administration are now among the activities being scrutinized in two federal civil rights complaints that allege environmental racism as the city helped move a source of pollution out of the white, wealthy Lincoln Park neighborhood to a Latino-majority community in Chicago’s 10th Ward, which already suffers from poor air quality. Brett Chase has the story…
Some conservative media outlets and other critics twisted the quick visit — with its clear small minority business development intent — to jab Harris over how she is handling her border assignment.
Challenges overcome by Myasia Madkins, through the Partnership to Educate and Advance Kids, a tuition and mentoring program, spotlights the challenges faced by so many youth this past year.
“I was terribly affected by it, and I wasn’t the only one,” Little Village resident Antonio Quinones said at the rally. “No one told us what was going to happen.”
From weekly food distribution to creating public green spaces on the Southwest Side, the council has helped its community and helped their neighbors help each other during the pandemic.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Today is Monday! 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 as of this morning: 562,066.
As of this morning, 35.9 percent of the U.S. population has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 21.9 percent is fully vaccinated, according to the Bloomberg News global vaccine tracker.
Congress returns to Washington this week with its focus trained squarely on the future of President Biden’s $2.3 trillion infrastructure and jobs blueprint as lawmakers kick off high-stakes negotiations.
The week ahead is crucial for Biden and Democrats as they explore whether bipartisan legislation is a pipedream. Biden, who signed into law a $1.9 trillion stimulus bill that passed without GOP support in March, is set to meet with top Republicans starting today as Democrats keep open the option of passing a bill via reconciliation and 51 votes in the Senate (Reuters).
“I have no doubt that we will have a great bill in the House. I hope that it will be bipartisan. I’ve been in Congress long enough to remember when bipartisanship was not unusual and that actually growing, building infrastructure has never been a partisan issue,” Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) told CBS’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday. “Hopefully, the need is so obvious now that Republicans will vote for it.”
The Hill: This week: Congress returns with lengthy to-do list.
The Wall Street Journal: Biden’s infrastructure plan tops priorities as Congress returns to work.
The Hill: Eight lawmakers from both parties set to meet with Biden today.
The administration’s infrastructure push dominated the Sunday talk shows. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm continued the administration’s sales pitch. Buttigieg said the White House is open to making adjustments but suggested wholesale changes are unlikely.
“I think the president will have an open mind,” Buttigieg said of planned discussions with lawmakers. “Of course, a plan gets better when you get input — from our party, from their party.”
The former South Bend, Ind., mayor dismissed a suggestion that the administration will need to return to the “drawing board” with a smaller plan that can attract sufficient votes. Biden wants to pass a measure by Memorial Day, Buttigieg added. Previously, House Democrats said their target time frame was by July 4 (The Hill).
The Hill: Buttigieg: Lawmakers can call an infrastructure package “whatever they like” but “it’s good policy.”
The Hill: Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.): “There are Republicans who would vote” for a smaller infrastructure bill.
The New York Times: Biden’s infrastructure push spurs a flurry of lobbying in Congress.
With talks heating up, competing factions within the House Democratic Caucus are going to be under even more pressure to fall in line on upcoming legislative priorities — headlined by the infrastructure bill — as they return to town facing a slimmer majority and little margin for error. The death of Rep. Alcee Hastings (D-Fla.), coupled with the swearing in of Rep.-elect Julia Letlow (R-La.), means House Democrats will be able to only have two defections and still pass legislation, assuming Republicans stick together en masse.
Letlow will officially take the seat her late husband, Luke Letlow, won in November, only to die weeks later from COVID-19.
As The Hill’s Cristina Marcos and Scott Wong note, the looming 218-212 margin in the House means that progressives — who generally have backed bills even if they don’t get everything they want — will have even less room for protest votes. Democratic leaders, mindful of protecting the centrists representing the swing districts that are essential to keeping their majority in next year’s elections, have limited ability to allow legislation to veer too far to the left.
The Washington Post: Biden seeks huge funding increases for education, health care and environmental protection in first budget request to Congress.
The Hill: White House sends mixed message on higher taxes.
The Hill: Democrats see political winner in tax fight.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, appearing on CBS’s “60 Minutes,” suggested the U.S. economy is poised for robust recovery and would have been “so much worse” without the coronavirus stimulus measures enacted in the last year (The Hill). Describing the economy at an “inflection point” (Reuters), the head of the central bank predicted the nation’s productivity is “about to start growing much more quickly and job creation coming in much more quickly.” The primary risk to that forecast: renewed spread of COVID-19, he added.
Powell’s appraisal, consistent with his past remarks, is viewed by some Republicans in Congress as a rationale for spending less than Biden seeks for what he calls his jobs plan.
The Hill: Pelosi on whether Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) should resign: “That’s up to the Republicans to take responsibility for that.”
The Hill: Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) says allegations against Gaetz, with whom she’s been an adversary at times, are “sickening.” She refused to say if she believes the congressman should resign.
CNN: Embattled Gaetz is denied a meeting with Trump.
CORONAVIRUS: In the United States, COVID-19 headlines seem to take four steps forward for each step back. The good news this morning: An astonishing 4.6 million doses of vaccine were administered on Saturday, setting a new record. More than one fifth of the adult population is fully vaccinated. In a country with 330 million people — and with more states this week offering vaccination appointments to anyone 16 and older — the progress is encouraging.
San Jose Mercury News: Nearly half of all California adults have received a vaccine shot.
More worrisome: First, there are still rising infection rates in some states, including Michigan. Second, the United States will see an 85 percent drop this week in the allocation of doses of the one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine distributed by the U.S. government. Only about 785,000 Johnson & Johnson doses are expected to head to states and other jurisdictions, compared with 5 million doses last week (USA Today).
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) publicly called on Biden last week to send her state more vaccine doses to combat a spike in infections, a request that was rebuffed because the administration said many states still need more doses. U.S. vaccine hesitancy means some states have thousands of unfilled appointments and excess doses on hand, a growing concern (The Hill).
ABC News: Alarming caseloads in Michigan, but Whitmer rejects new virus mandates.
CBS News: Former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said Sunday that in his opinion, the Biden administration should have surged vaccine doses to Michigan “weeks ago.”
Then there’s the U.S. military. Close to 40 percent of U.S. Marines have declined to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, while 61 percent of Marines have accepted shots (CNN). The Hill’s Ellen Mitchell reports the Pentagon is struggling to show how many service members have accepted coronavirus vaccines at the same time that the administration is striving to achieve something close to national herd immunity and overcome high vaccine hesitancy among some demographics (such as Republican men).
The Atlantic: Vaccine resistance results in higher health care costs for everyone.
The administration is taking steps toward an expanded role in global vaccination efforts but is feeling the heat from international aid groups, reports The Hill Nathaniel Weixel.
The Washington Post: The effectiveness of Chinese COVID-19 vaccines is “not high” and needs improvement, according to a rare admission by the head of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
The Hill: South Korea officials said on Sunday they would resume administering the AstraZeneca vaccine for adults between ages 30 and 60. In Europe and the United Kingdom, rare fatal blood clots experienced as a side effect of the drug complicate the future of the “workhorse” vaccine. Regulators now appear to be considering issuing their first formal warnings about side effects. At least 94 countries of varying income levels have administered doses, and most scientists and health officials still say the benefits outweigh the risks in older people, who appear less susceptible to the clots (The New York Times). The UK nears 40 million first and second vaccine doses administered. Its economy begins to reawaken (Reuters).
POLITICS: Former President Trump escalated his feud with top Republican Party leaders on Saturday by panning Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and a host of others, leaving many in the GOP unamused.
On Sunday, Republicans heaped criticism on the 45th president, who reportedly used his 50-minute, off-the-cuff remarks to top GOP fundraisers at his Mar-a-Lago resort as a forum for settling scores and going after opponents instead of promoting party unity and focusing on the looming midterm elections. McConnell earned the most pointed insult, with Trump calling him a “dumb son of a bitch.”
“Trump was predictably chaotic. … The friendly fire is going to distract McConnell from slowing down Joe Biden,” Dan Eberhart, a prominent GOP donor, told the Morning Report.
“It simply isn’t helpful,” Eberhart continued. “Trump needs to help Republicans win in 2022 to be successful in 2024, and last night was not a good start to that objective.”
Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson (R), who recently was the target of Trump’s ire after he vetoed an anti-transgender bill in his home state, told CNN’s “State of the Union” that the remarks were hardly productive, adding that it wasn’t a unifying message.
“Anything that’s divisive is a concern and is not helpful for us fighting the battles in Washington and at the state level,” Hutchinson said. “In some ways, it’s not a big deal, what he said, but, at the same time, whenever it draws attention, we don’t need that. We need unity.”
ADMINISTRATION: National security adviser Jake Sullivan, White House national economic adviser Brian Deese and Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo today will convene a virtual summit about shortages of semiconductors in the United States, a persistent problem that is hobbling manufacturing and jobs. They’ll be joined by top representatives from at least 19 major companies, including Ford Motor Co., General Motors, Dell Technologies, HP Inc., Samsung, Intel Corp., Northrop Grumman and Alphabet (the parent of Google) (The Washington Post).
Biden, who in February ordered a review of chip shortages, would like to see more semiconductors made in America. His executive order mandated a 100-day review of supply chains for four areas: semiconductors, large-capacity batteries used in electric vehicles, pharmaceuticals, and rare-earth elements that are key to technology and defense. He also ordered a separate, one-year review of supply chains covering six broader sectors, from technology to food production (The Wall Street Journal).
> Immigration: By June, there may be 35,000 migrant children in the care of the Biden administration, a number far beyond current U.S. capacity. One former U.S. official called the projection “terrifying.” The crisis carries broad policy and human repercussions, and the Health and Human Services Department is at the center of the Biden administration’s governance challenges (The New York Times).
>State Department: Russia’s ominous buildup of troops along the border with Ukraine will be the subject this week of discussions in Brussels involving Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who is returning to Europe (Reuters).
The Hill’s Niall Stanage analyzes some of the major foreign policy challenges the Biden administration is juggling, including China, Russia and Israel. “Unfortunately, U.S.-China relations are at perhaps their lowest point since the establishment of diplomatic relations in 1979,”Derek Grossman, a senior defense analyst at the Rand Corporation, tells The Hill.
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Sunday in Tel Aviv that the U.S. commitment to Israel is “enduring an ironclad.” Austin arrived as Iran reported that its underground Natanz nuclear facility lost power just hours after starting up new advanced centrifuges capable of enriching uranium faster. If Israel caused the blackout, it would further heighten tensions between the two nations. Austin made no public mention of Iran (The Associated Press).
NBC News: There are 400 Senate-confirmable positions in the government for which Biden has not made nominations, including the heads of the Food and Drug Administration, Customs and Border Protection and the Office of Management and Budget. The president will mark 100 days in office on April 29 and advocates for good government are wringing their hands about power vacuums in cases where nominees are not in the pipeline.
The Hill: Biden and the White House are racing forward with a big agenda and a short timetable.
OPINIONS
Court-packing isn’t the right fix for our courts. Ending life tenure is, by The Washington Post editorial board. https://wapo.st/3uFEhQx
A once-in-a-century crisis can help educate doctors, by Molly Worthen, opinion contributor, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/3s8Yexy
A MESSAGE FROM TAX MARCH
FedEx made $1.2 BILLION in profits last year but paid NOTHING in federal income taxes. Now FedEx is trying to protect their tax breaks by lobbying against President Biden’s plan to create millions of jobs and rebuild America. Tell Congress: it’s time corporations like FedEx pay their fair share.
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at noon. Legislative work resumes on Tuesday at 7 p.m.
TheSenate convenes at 3:30 p.m. and resumes consideration of the nomination of Polly Trottenberg to be deputy secretary of Transportation.
The president and Vice President Harris will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 10 a.m. Biden will participate in a White House summit at noon to discuss an ongoing shortage of semiconductor chips, which is currently hobbling U.S. manufacturing (Bloomberg News). The president and Harris will meet at 1:45 p.m. with lawmakers to discuss infrastructure legislation.
The White House press briefing will take place at 12:15 p.m. The administration’s COVID-19 briefing for the news media is scheduled at 11 a.m.
➔ INTERNATIONAL: Iran on Sunday described a blackout at its underground Natanz atomic facility as an act of “nuclear terrorism,” raising regional tensions. Ali Akbar Salehi, the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, stopped short of directly blaming anyone for the incident (The Associated Press). … In Jordan, King Abdullah and former crown prince and half-brother Prince Hamza made their first joint appearance since a rift shook the country, attending a ceremony on Sunday marking 100 years of independence (Reuters). … In Great Britain on Sunday, Prince Andrew said the death on Friday of his father, Prince Philip, 99, “left a huge void” in Queen Elizabeth II’s life (BBC). The funeral for the late Duke of Edinburgh is scheduled Saturday (ABC News).
➔ COURTS: The state may rest its case as early as today in the murder trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin. Day 10 wrapped Friday with key testimony from the medical examiner who conducted George Floyd‘s autopsy (CBS News). … Biden’s newly created expert commission tasked with weighing potential Supreme Court changes has heightened public debate about expanding the court beyond nine justices, ending lifetime tenure for justices and whether the oldest justice among the court’s liberal wing, Stephen Breyer, 82, should resign so Biden can nominate a younger successor while Democrats still hold a narrow Senate majority (MSNBC and Politico Playbook). Biden wants any decision about how long Breyer serves on the court to be Breyer’s own, the White House said last week (The Hill).
➔ STATE WATCH: What is pandemic burnout? Ask the nation’s mayors, many of whom are heading for the exits (The New York Times). … At the same time, New York City’s mayoral race is heating up ahead of the June 22 primaries (The New York Times). … In Ohio, Gov. Mike DeWine (R) cited a shortage of lethal injection drugs and lack of movement by Ohio lawmakers to switch execution methods as he delayed three remaining executions scheduled this year (Spectrum News 1). … Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (D) on Sunday ordered an investigation by the Virginia State Police of a traffic stop in December during which two police officers held an Army second lieutenant who is Black and Latino at gunpoint in the southeast part of the state. Body-camera footage shows police pepper-spraying, striking and handcuffing Caron Nazario, 27, who is suing the officers (The Washington Post). … More than 18 state legislatures, including Arkansas, proposed or passed measures seeking to ban transgender treatments for young people. The legislative trend worries some medical experts and advocates for the LGBT community, who warn of increased suicide risks. Backers of such legislation, however, say they want to protect children from making irreversible decisions about their bodies (The Hill).
THE CLOSER
And finally … Shōsha! 🏌 Hideki Matsuyama of Japan won the 85th Masters on Sunday at Augusta National to become the tournament’s first Asian-born champion and the first Japanese man to win a major golf championship.
Matsuyama, 29, shot a one-over-par 73 on Sunday to finish the tournament at 10 under par. His victory made him a national hero in golf-crazed Japan (The New York Times). He won the Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship in 2010 and 2011. He is a five-time PGA Tour winner and an eight-time Japan Golf Tour victor.
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President Biden and Vice President Harris are meeting with a bipartisan group of lawmakers at the White House today to discuss his infrastructure package. https://bit.ly/3tbCPFb
The lawmakers joining the meeting: Sens. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.), Deb Fischer (R-Neb.), Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) and Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) Plus: Reps. Garret Graves (R-La.), Donald Payne Jr. (D-N.J.), David Price (D-N.C.) and Don Young (R-Alaska).
What to expect: “Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg told Fox News’s Chris Wallace on Sunday that Biden would have an ‘open mind’ toward changes to the size and funding of his $2.25 trillion infrastructure plan, but he added that the president would not accept inaction.”
Happy Monday. 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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RSVP today for The Hill’s virtual Sustainability Imperative summit
Environmental sustainability is no longer optional; it’s become an imperative. Join The Hill for a national multi-day virtual event including multiple tracks of programming featuring fireside chats with policy leaders and practitioners in the sustainability ecosystem including White House Climate Advisor Gina McCarthy, former GE CEO Jeff Immelt, Gov. Jay Inslee, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, fashion designer Tracy Reese and many more. View the full schedule and RSVP today.
The House and Senate are returning to Washington this week for the legislative session that will bring them to the end of President Biden’s first 100 days. https://bit.ly/329bveU
The big ticket item this week: Working on Biden’s infrastructure package.
Is this a ‘work together because we’re all one big happy family’ kinda situation?: Welllll. Biden and Senate Democrats have signaled that they want to work with Republicans to make the package bipartisan, but they also seem willing to bypass the filibuster and pass it without Republican support.
The gist of Republicans’ complaints with the bill: Republicans argue this package is too expensive, includes too many measures that are not infrastructure — and do not want tax hikes.
HOW TO PAY FOR THIS — THE WHITE HOUSE IS SENDING MIXED SIGNALS ON HIGHER TAXES:
Via The Hill’s Naomi Jagoda, “The White House has sent mixed signals over its plans to raise taxes on the wealthy to pay for some of its policies, providing a lack of clarity about how President Biden’s $400,000 threshold for tax increases would work.”
Timing: “The absence of details comes as Democrats are already debating privately how to pay for their programs, an issue when it comes to taxes that splits the party not only on philosophic lines but also on regional ones.”
HOW PROGRESSIVES ARE FIGHTING FOR LEVERAGE IN THEIR EVER-SHRINKING MAJORITY:
“Protests erupted in Minnesota overnight after an unarmed black man was shot and killed by a police officer during a traffic stop.” https://bit.ly/3dUM6LJ
What happened: “The Brooklyn Center officer shot the man after learning that he had an outstanding warrant and attempting to arrest him on Sunday afternoon, authorities said.”
Via The Star Tribune’s Mara Klecker and Kim Hyatt, “Relatives of Daunte Wright, 20, who is Black, told a tense crowd gathered at the scene in the northern Minneapolis suburb Sunday afternoon that Wright drove for a short distance after he was shot, crashed his car, and died at the scene.”
Politico is reporting that President Biden will name Cindy McCain to serve as the U.S. ambassador to the U.N. World Food Programme. https://politi.co/3g8uRcn
Just as a refresher: Cindy McCain is the widow of the late-Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.)
Keep in mind: McCain would be Biden’s first Republican nominee to a Senate-confirmed role.
Remembering Capitol Police Officer Billy Evans: “William “Billy” Evans, the police officer who died in the line of duty from the car attack at the Capitol on April 2, will lie in honor in the Rotunda on Tuesday.
On crimes targeting Asian Americans: “[Senate Majority Leader CharlesSchumer (D-N.Y.)] has teed up legislation for this week from Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) to address an uptick in hate crimes targeting Asian Americans during the coronavirus. The bill requires the Justice Department to designate an individual responsible for overseeing the expedited review of coronavirus-related hate crimes.”
On employers and salaries: “The House will vote this week on the Paycheck Fairness Act, which previously passed the chamber last year. The bill would bar employers from inquiring about prospective employees’ salaries and ban retaliation against employees who compare wages.”
And, of course, nominations: “Schumer has teed up votes on several nominations: PollyEllen Trottenberg to be deputy secretary of Transportation, Wendy Sherma to be a deputy secretary of State, Gary Gensler to be a member of the Securities and Exchange Commission and Brenda Mallory to be a member of the Council on Environmental Quality.”
RSVP today for The Hill’s virtual Sustainability Imperative summit
Environmental sustainability is no longer optional; it’s become an imperative. Join The Hill for a national multi-day virtual event including multiple tracks of programming featuring fireside chats with policy leaders and practitioners in the sustainability ecosystem including White House Climate Advisor Gina McCarthy, former GE CEO Jeff Immelt, Gov. Jay Inslee, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, fashion designer Tracy Reese and many more. View the full schedule and RSVP today.
Via CNBC’s Berkeley Lovelace Jr., “Regeneron Pharmaceuticals said Monday it will ask the Food and Drug Administration to allow its Covid-19 antibody therapy to be used as a preventative treatment.” https://cnb.cx/3d73Eox
The treatment is already being given to COVID patients, but: “Regeneron said it is seeking to expand the use of its treatment in the U.S. after a phase three clinical trial, jointly run by the National Institutes of Health, found the drug reduced the risk of symptomatic infections in individuals by 81%.”
Meghan, The Duchess of Sussex who is pregnant with the couple’s second child, will not attend Prince Philip’s funeral.
TIDBIT — PRINCE WILLIAM POSTED A TRIBUTE TO HIS GRANDFATHER:
“I will never take for granted the special memories my children will always have of their great-grandpa coming to collect them in his carriage and seeing for themselves his infectious sense of adventure as well as his mischievous sense of humour!” https://bit.ly/3wMf3C1
The full post — including a photo taken by Kate, The Duchess of Cambridge: https://bit.ly/3g3AUPj
^ Back story If you didn’t watch the Masters yesterday: “[29-year-old] Hideki Matsuyama made history on Sunday as the first male golfer from Japan to win a major championship.” https://es.pn/3wISU7L
ON TAP:
The Senate meets this afternoon. The House is out. President Biden and Vice President Harris are in Washington, D.C.
10 a.m. EDT: President Biden received the President’s Daily Brief.
Noon: President Biden joins the virtual CEO summit on Semiconductor and Supply Chain Resilience. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, National Economic Council Director Brian Deese and Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo attend.
1:45 p.m. EDT: President Biden and Vice President Harris meet with a bipartisan group of lawmakers to discuss the American Jobs Plan.
3 p.m. EDT: The Senate returns!
5:30 p.m. EDT: The Senate holds a cloture vote on a nomination. The Senate’s full agenda today: https://bit.ly/3dctvdo
You’re invited — Wednesday: The Hill is hosting a virtual event, “The Sustainability Imperative.” Details and how to RSVP: https://bit.ly/3wZ80pQ
ANALYSIS — Projecting races and results 20 months from an election can be a risky proposition in a normal cycle. Add in the extra layer of uncertainty with redistricting and it’s hard to take any projections about individual races in 2022 very seriously right now, writes Nathan L. Gonzales. Read more…
Florida Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz is being investigated by the House Ethics Committee after published reports about allegations that include sexual misconduct, illicit drug use, campaign finance violations and other potential violations of federal law and House rules. Read more…
President Joe Biden signaled his commitment to addressing racial disparities Friday, putting equity front and center in his fiscal 2022 discretionary budget request. The largest race-related proposal is a $20 billion increase to the Department of Education’s grants to schools in high-poverty areas, to $36.5 billion total. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
New York GOP Rep. Tom Reed is being investigated by the House Ethics Committee after a former lobbyist said he drunkenly groped her in 2017. Reed initially said the account was not accurate. Two days later, he apologized and said he would neither challenge Gov. Andrew Cuomo nor run for reelection in the House. Read more…
The White House on Friday unveiled a $1.52 trillion discretionary spending request for the coming fiscal year that would pump billions of additional dollars into education, health care and environmental protection while essentially holding the line on defense spending. Read more…
President Joe Biden’s departure from the principle of “parity” in his first budget request — or equal increases in defense and nondefense discretionary spending — signals a rocky road ahead for next year’s appropriations bills. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Scoop: Cindy McCain set to land Biden ambassadorship
Presented by Facebook
DRIVING THE DAY
President JOE BIDEN is preparing to name Republican CINDY MCCAIN to a coveted ambassador post in Western Europe in what would be his administration’s first Republican appointee to a Senate-confirmed position.
McCain is undergoing vetting to be nominated for U.S. ambassador to the U.N. World Food Programme, a mission based in Rome, according to two sources with knowledge of the matter. This comes after the administration declined to install at least one member from the opposing party in a Cabinet position — a practice of three consecutive presidents (BILL CLINTON, GEORGE W. BUSH and BARACK OBAMA) before DONALD TRUMP broke the streak.
Cindy McCain, the wife of the late Sen. JOHN MCCAIN, gave Biden a critical boost in Arizona with her endorsement of the Democrat over Trump. Biden was the first Democratic presidential nominee to carry the state since Clinton in 1996.
McCain, 66, is undergoing a background check for the post. The Biden administration is expected to announce most of its ambassadors at the same time, rather than individually.
As chair of the McCain Institute board of trustees, McCain has worked on curbing world hunger and human trafficking. During the 2008 campaign, she traveled to Georgia with the U.N.’s World Food Programme to visit wounded soldiers after a Russian invasion and also monitored the program’s work in Southeast Asia and Africa.
SENATE BARRELS TOWARD POSSIBLE FIRST LEGISLATIVE FILIBUSTER OF 2021 — There’s been a lot of talk in recent months about whether Democrats should kill the filibuster — even though Republicans haven’t blocked a single major piece of legislation this year.
That could change this week.
Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER will move in the coming days to hold a vote on Sen. MAZIE HIRONO’S (D-Hawaii) hate crimes bill, aimed at stopping the uptick in violence against Asian Americans. Republicans typically oppose these sorts of measures, which they say give the federal government broad, unspecified authority to police speech. So, many Hill watchers expect we could see that bill fail to muster the supermajority needed for passage.
Technically, Republicans haven’t whipped against the bill yet. And it’s unclear whether the politics of hate crime legislation have shifted. But the legislation, if blocked, will only increase the chatter surrounding going nuclear.
Good Monday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook, your unofficial guide to official Washington. Congress is back and somehow it’s already mid-April? Where has the year gone? Got a news tip? A document to share? Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
HAPPENING TODAY: BIDEN HUDDLES WITH BIPARTISAN GROUP ON INFRASTRUCTURE — Biden and VP KAMALA HARRIS will meet at 1:45 p.m. with a group of Republicans and Democrats to gauge how much bipartisan support he can muster for his $2 trillion infrastructure-jobs package. Sources tell us several moderate Republicans who could deal are still peeved about Biden’s remark last week suggesting they decided not to compromise on pandemic relief. One source called it a flat-out “mischaracterization” to say Republicans didn’t make an effort — particularly because GOP moderates made a counteroffer to Biden’s initial proposal, only to see him wave it off.
The group of Republicans visiting the White House today isn’t exactly known for bipartisanship. The White House has invited ranking members on relevant committees, rather than the GOP members with a history of brokering deals with Democrats. Today’s GOP batch includes: Sen. ROGER WICKER (Miss.), Sen. DEB FISCHER (Neb.), Rep. GARRET GRAVES (La.) and Rep. DON YOUNG (Alaska), who once notoriously put a knife to JOHN BOEHNER’S throat during a disagreement.
Democrats who will join them include Sens. MARIA CANTWELL (Wash.) and ALEX PADILLA (Calif.) and Reps. DONALD PAYNE JR. (N.J.) and DAVID PRICE (N.C.).
SPEAKING OF …
BRING OUT THE PORK — The NYT’s Emily Cochrane, Pranshu Verma and Luke Broadwater point out in a story up today that Biden has one form of bait to tempt Republicans to get on board: pork for their districts. In fact, some members eager to get their pet projects in the package are already hounding White House officials behind the scenes — though they appear to be mostly Democrats so far.
“Senior lawmakers have started collecting lists of requests from their colleagues for what should be included in the bill, while top White House officials are fielding a torrent of calls from rank-and-file lawmakers, all of whom have their own ideas. ‘My phone is blowing up,’ Pete Buttigieg, the transportation secretary, said in an interview. Nearly every lawmaker ‘can point to a road or a bridge or an airport’ in his or her district that is in dire need of repair,’” the trio writes.
“Representative Mikie Sherrill, Democrat of New Jersey, wants to tackle the Gateway rail tunnel under the Hudson River. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the minority leader, has suggested that surely the ‘functionally obsolete’ Brent Spence Bridge in his state should receive funding. …
“Representative Peter A. DeFazio of Oregon, the chairman of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, and the committee’s top Republican, Representative Sam Graves of Missouri, are also asking lawmakers to identify priorities in their districts.”
BUT, BUT, BUT …
INTERNAL SENATE GOP MEMO PANS BIDEN PLAN AS A ‘SLUSH FUND’: Ahead of this meeting, the Senate Republican Conference is sending around a memo to all GOP comms staff, jabbing at the White House for calling its infrastructure bill a “jobs plan.” What they’re calling it instead? “A partisan plan to kill jobs and create slush funds on the taxpayer dime.” The memo includes dozens of headlines about tax increases and the price tag.
From the memo: “Biden’s Partisan, Job-Crushing Slush Fund spends just 5% of the total $2.7 trillion on roads and bridges. The rest is: a wish list of non-infrastructure spending on failed Obama policies; a dog’s breakfast of slush funds for Democrats’ pet projects without any accountability or transparency; expensive green energy mandates on Americans; a ban on the right to work; and a flurry of tax hikes that will to drive companies out of the U.S. and give China and Russia a say in the United States’ tax laws. As a result, the plan will eliminate at least 1 million jobs.”
Meanwhile, WaPo’s Ashley Parker interviewedANITA DUNN about the White House trying to redefine “bipartisanship.” Here’s what the senior Biden adviser told Parker: “If you looked up ‘bipartisan’ in the dictionary, I think it would say support from Republicans and Democrats … It doesn’t say the Republicans have to be in Congress.”
BIDEN’S MONDAY — The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 10 a.m. Biden will briefly join the virtual CEO Summit on Semiconductor and Supply Chain Resilience at noon, with national security adviser JAKE SULLIVAN, NEC Director BRIAN DEESE and Commerce Secretary GINA RAIMONDO also attending. At 1:45 p.m., Biden and Harris will meet with the members of Congress to discuss the American Jobs Plan.
— The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 11 a.m. Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:15 p.m.
THE SENATE returns at 3 p.m. and will vote at 5:30 p.m. on POLLY TROTTENBERG to be deputy secretary of Transportation. THE HOUSE is back Tuesday.
PLAYBOOK READS
CONGRESS
WHERE MITCH AND JOE ARE ALLIES — There aren’t many policy areas where Biden and MITCH MCCONNELL agree. But this morning, our Andrew Desiderio has a deep dive on one where the president and Senate minority leader are not only in sync but working together behind the scenes right now: restoring democracy in Myanmar.
McConnell is known for many things. To Democrats, he’s the “Grim Reaper.” To Republicans, he’s a champion of conservative judges and fighting campaign finance reform. Few think of him as a freedom fighter for a place run by military juntas more than 8,000 miles away. Yet McConnell has a longtime close relationship with AUNG SAN SUU KYI, the legitimately elected leader of Myanmar. He has championed democracy in the region since the early 1990s, even secretly sharing notes with the once-activist while she was under house arrest for years.
Since February, when the nation also known as Burma slipped back into military rule, Andrew writes that Biden and Sullivan have been consulting with McConnell on what to do. Sullivan is quoted praising McConnell, and the Republican leader compliments Biden in return. “On the domestic front, I have not yet witnessed something that I’ve been happy about,” McConnell (R-Ky.) said in an interview. “But in this area, I think their instincts are good. I think they’re trying to do the right thing.” An interesting read.
MORE GOP FUNDRAISING RECORDS — House Minority Whip STEVE SCALISE (R-La.) today will announce that he’s raised $7.1 million, more than anyone in his job in the first quarter of a non-election year — despite the corporate PAC ban. In a release that will go out this morning, Scalise will say that $4.4 million of that fundraising haul is going into the NRCC’s coffers to flip Democratic seats or defend GOP incumbents.
— “Hawley hauls in $3M after attempt to block election results,”by Alex Isenstadt: “Hawley received more than 57,000 donations during the first quarter, according to a person familiar with the totals. He managed to raise nearly $600,000 during the two-and-a-half weeks following the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, despite temporarily halting his fundraising outreach.
“It represents a massive increase for Hawley. By comparison, he raised just $43,000 during the first quarter of the last election cycle, immediately after taking office. The senator is not up for reelection until 2024, and his totals are unusual for a senator who is not in-cycle.”
THE AFTERMATH OF JAN. 6 — “Congressman opens up about post-traumatic stress after Jan. 6 insurrection,”NBC: “NBC News’ Hallie Jackson sat down with Rep. Dan Kildee, who took that familiar photo of officers with their guns drawn in the House chamber, for an exclusive interview where he opens up about his mental health struggles since the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
WHAT MCCONNELL IS READING — “More than 100 corporate executives hold call to discuss halting donations and investments to fight controversial voting bills,”WaPo: “Executives from major airlines, retailers and manufacturers — plus at least one NFL owner — talked about potential ways to show they opposed the legislation, including by halting donations to politicians who support the bills and even delaying investments in states that pass the restrictive measures, according to four people who were on the call, including one of the organizers, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a Yale management professor.
“While no final steps were agreed upon, the meeting represents an aggressive dialing up of corporate America’s stand against controversial voting measures nationwide, a sign that their opposition to the laws didn’t end with the fight against the Georgia legislation passed in March.”
THE WHITE HOUSE
INSIDE BIDEN’S SHIELD-THE-BOSS PRESS STRATEGY — Biden has settled on a press strategy, per EUGENE, who sums it up like the ex-football player that he is: Protect the quarterback and let his media-proficient Cabinet take the hits. “The president is not doing cable news interviews. Tweets from his account are limited and, when they come, unimaginably conventional. The public comments are largely scripted. Biden has opted for fewer sit down interviews with mainstream outlets and reporters. He’s had just one major press conference—though another is coming—and prefers remarks straight to camera for the marquee moments. The White House is leaning more heavily on Cabinet officials to reach the audiences that didn’t tune into his latest Rose Garden event.
“It’s the Hippocratic Oath for engagement with the fourth estate. And if it means criticism from the press and opponents about Biden’s availability, so be it.” Full story here.
— Also new from POLITICO: “Biden White House puts its police oversight commission on ice,” by Laura Barrón-López: “The White House is putting the creation of a national police oversight commission on hold, nixing a campaign pledge made by President Joe Biden to establish one within his first 100 days … The decision to shelve the commission underscores the ways in which campaign promises can clash with the realities of governing and potentially trip up a president’s agenda.
“Biden first promised to set up an oversight commission last June, roughly one week after Floyd’s killing. As numerous cities staged mass protests against the killing of Black people, Biden called for reforms to policing, including a national database of police misconduct and a ban on the use of chokeholds. But he refrained from endorsing the biggest policy demands from the Black Lives Matter movement on issues like police liability, and declined to embrace their call to ‘defund the police’ and reallocate funding to social programs and community priorities.”
“Within two weeks of taking office, Biden signed an executive order to rebuild and enhance federal programs to resettle refugees … Biden also revoked some restrictive immigration policies Trump had put in place, including ones that sought to ban refugees from certain countries. In February, Biden announced he was raising the annual cap on refugee admissions to 125,000 for the fiscal year that starts Oct. 1, up from Trump’s historically low limit of 15,000.
“However, Biden has yet to do one thing that would make all of those changes official: sign what is known as a presidential determination. Without that action, Trump’s old policies and his 15,000-person cap on refugee settlements remain in effect.”
— We interviewed Omar, the Minnesota progressive Democrat and former refugee herself, about this a few weeks ago. And we know she brought up her concerns about the lack of momentum on this issue during a meeting with Biden chief of staff RON KLAIN at the White House recently. So far the plea appears to be falling on deaf ears.
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
WHAT WARREN AND SANDERS ARE HATE-READING — “CEO Pay Surged in a Year of Upheaval and Leadership Challenges,” WSJ: “Median pay for the chief executives of more than 300 of the biggest U.S. public companies reached $13.7 million last year, up from $12.8 million for the same companies a year earlier and on track for a record, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis.
“Pay kept climbing in 2020 as some companies moved performance targets or modified pay structures in response to the Covid-19 pandemic and accompanying economic pain. Salary cuts CEOs took at the depths of the crisis had little effect. The stock market’s rebound boosted what top executives took home because much of their compensation comes in the form of equity.”
MONDAY LISTEN — Navajo Nation President JONATHAN NEZ is on the latest episode of “Dispatch.” Nez criticizes the Trump administration for how hard Navajo was hit by the coronavirus, specifically pointing to a “lack of resources,” and calling the difference of support from Trump to Biden “night and day.” He also takes aim at surrounding states for not enforcing mask mandates, saying that it has contributed to a rise of cases in Navajo Nation. “Other jurisdictions around us do not take this pandemic seriously,” Nez says. Listen and subscribe
MEDIAWATCH
BEN SMITH’S NYT COLUMN: “Why We’re Freaking Out About Substack”: “Substack has captivated an anxious industry because it embodies larger forces and contradictions. For one, the new media economy promises both to make some writers rich and to turn others into the content-creation equivalent of Uber drivers, even as journalists turn increasingly to labor unions to level out pay scales. … This new ability of individuals to make a living directly from their audiences isn’t just transforming journalism.
“It’s also been the case for adult performers on OnlyFans, musicians on Patreon, B-list celebrities on Cameo. In Hollywood, too, power has migrated toward talent, whether it’s marquee showrunners or actors. This power shift is a major headache for big institutions, from The New York Times to record labels. And Silicon Valley investors, eager to disrupt and angry at their portrayal in big media, have been gleefully backing it. Substack embodies this cultural shift, but it’s riding the wave, not creating it.”
RACIAL RECKONING — “When a cardiologist flagged the lack of diversity at premier medical journals, the silence was telling,” Stat: “When cardiologist Ray Givens read the article in the Journal of the American Heart Association, it stopped him in his tracks. Written by a fellow cardiologist, it claimed educational affirmative action programs were promoting underprepared Black and Hispanic trainees who would not gain admission to top medical schools or become the best doctors. …
“So began a deep dive by Givens into the race and ethnicity of the editors and decision-makers at top-tier medical journals. His findings were stark, and stretched beyond the heart association publication, to the nation’s two premier medical journals. … Both the New England Journal and JAMA said they have increased the number of editors of color on their boards since October … But Givens and other critics say the troubling overall lack of diversity on editorial boards may be one reason the issue of health inequities that shorten the lives of people of color have received less clinical and research attention than they should.”
TRANSITIONS — Logan Hollers is starting today at Invariant. He most recently was policy adviser and counsel to Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), and is a Debbie Wasserman Schultz alum. … Elizabeth Kelley is joining the Duberstein Group as a VP. She most recently was VP of philanthropic partnerships at the Urban Institute and is an Obama White House alum. …
… Jessica Skaggs is now deputy comms director for the House Ways and Means GOP. She previously was press secretary for Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas). … Kristin Lance is now director of marketing at the Better Business Bureau National Programs. She previously was director of marketing at the Chamber of Commerce and is a POLITICO alum.
ENGAGED — Tom Zigo, comms director at the MPA, proposed to JP Tarangelo, senior program analyst at G2 Global Solutions, on Saturday in the Teddy Roosevelt suite at The Willard. They met through their mutual friend Kyle Hreben. Pic… Another pic
— Emily Mayer, co-founder of progressive Jewish organization IfNotNow, and Waleed Shahid, spokesperson for Justice Democrats, got engaged Wednesday in Philadelphia. They met at Haverford College, where they went to school together. Pic
— Ian Mariani, comms director for Rep. Cindy Axne (D-Iowa), and Baillee Brown, legislative director for Rep. Scott Peters (D-Calif.), got engaged recently while visiting family in Arizona and California. They originally met at Occidental College in Los Angeles and began dating in D.C. three years ago. Pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Derrick Plummer, who recently started as director of public affairs and crisis comms at Intuit, and Anita Plummer, an assistant professor at Howard University, welcomed Jonathan A. Plummer on Thursday.Pic
BIRTHWEEK (was Sunday): CNN’s Jonathan Auerbach … Citi’s Ed Skyler … Netflix’s Erika Masonhall
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Rep. Tim Walberg (R-Mich.) (7-0) … Rep. Jesús “Chuy” García (D-Ill.) … Fred Ryan … Rachel Overboe … Mindy Myers … Amber Goodwin … Brad Elkins … CBS’ Rita Braver … Katherine Rodriguez of DCI Group … Gretchen Andersen … Sindy Benavides … Anthony Bellmon … Meredith Friedman … Peter Scher of JPMorgan Chase … Former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-Hawaii) (4-0) … Tim Waddell … Paula Helfer … Christian Datoc … Shayna Englin of 42 Comms … Jacob Hay … Laly Rivera Perez … Nick Iacovella… National Student Legal Defense Network’s Aaron Ament … Audra McGeorge … Chris Gorud … Reed Galen … Vice’s Eric Ortega … Shalla Ross … WaPo’s Carrie Camillo … Jack Pandol Jr… Chris Harvey … Corry Robb… Diane Crawford … AARP’s Timothy Gearan … CNN producer Greg Clary … Julie Asher … Woody Johnson … Ben Baker of the Open Society Foundations … Eric Leckey
Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
Commander Jim Lovell saw something disturbing, telling Houston:
“We are venting something out into the — into space. It’s a gas of some sort!”
The gas was oxygen, used to produced air, water, and to power the rocket engines.
With the command module having 417 knobs, levers, switches, selectors and buttons, it took 15 minutes to isolate the problem.
Mission Control, led by flight director Gene Kranz, eventually identified that an exposed wire in an oxygen tank ignited an explosion, irreparably damaging the craft.
In the next two hours, all on-board oxygen was lost, which disabled the hydrogen fuel cells that provided electrical power.
Temporary battery power, oxygen and propulsion was provided by the lunar landing module, which acted as a life boat.
The crew of Apollo 13, Jim Lovell, Jack Swigert and Fred Haise, faced life-threatening conditions as carbon dioxide levels were rising and poisoning the air.
Following Houston’s instructions, and using what they had on board, the crew pieced together a carbon dioxide filter, called a scrubber, using a piece of cardboard, a plastic bag, a hose from a pressure suit, duct tape and a sock to connect to the command module scrubbers.
With the only remaining power source being three re-entry batteries intended for use during the last two hours of the mission, power had to be cut back so there would be enough to restart the engines for reentry.
For 90 hours, the astronauts shivered in the dark in temperatures equivalent to a refrigerator.
They had to go to one-fifth water rations, with each astronaut receiving only six ounces of water per day.
The Apollo 13 crew had to manually adjust their flight trajectory to swing around the moon, and head over 200,000 miles back to Earth.
The most complicated part of this was a five-minute engine burn that would give them just enough speed before it ran out of fuel.
After rounding the moon, they had to make one more adjustment, using the sun as an alignment point, then firing the lunar module’s small descent engine.
Flight director Gene Kranz refused to give up, with his attitude being described as: “Failure is not an option.”
Thousands prayed:
in New York City’s Times Square,
at Chicago’s Board of Trade,
at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem, and
in St. Peter’s Square where the Pope led 50,000 people in prayer for the astronauts safe return.
President Richard Nixon asked the nation observe a Day of Prayer.
The New York Times reported, April 15, 1970, “Plight of 3 Apollo 13 Crewmen Stirs World Interest”:
“In the United States there was an outpouring of prayer …
… The Senate and House passed resolutions yesterday asking all Americans to pray, at 9 o’clock Eastern standard time last night, for the safe return of their countrymen …
and … urged businesses and communications media to pause … for the prayers at that hour.
… Special services and masses were called for in thousands of churches and synagogues around the country — at St. Patrick’s Cathedral and St. Thomas Episcopal Church and Temple Emanu-el in New York City …
… Rabbi Abraham Gross, president of the Rabbinical Alliance of America, called on all clergymen to pray for the safe return of Apollo 13 …
… In Baltimore, Frank Gunter Jr., Maryland chairman of the National Conference of Christians and Jews, asked all residents of the state to observe a minute of silent prayer at 4 P.M. yesterday …
… At West Point, N.Y., where the Empire National Bank was holding its stockholders meeting in the Hotel Thayer, the session was closed with a prayer for the astronauts …”
The New York Times continued, April 15, 1970:
‘Oh, God, I hope they return safely,’ a woman in the streets of Budapest said …
Everywhere, people prayed.
… In the Vatican, Pope Paul offered prayers for the safe return of the three men.
Thousands of people of all faiths flocked to churches in Georgetown, Guyana, to pray …
And in Cheshire County, N.H., in the southwest corner of the state, at noon yesterday, all the church bells pealed.”
TV newsman Walter Cronkite reported:
“Perhaps never in human history has the entire world been so united by such a global drama.”
In 1995, Ron Howard produced the movie Apollo 13, based on Jim Lovell’s novel Lost Moon, starring Tom Hanks, Kevin Bacon, Bill Paxton, Gary Sinise, Kathleen Quinlan, Ed Harris, Loren Dean, and Clint Howard.
During the time of freezing temperature, moisture from their breath froze on the inside of the spacecraft.
In preparing for reentry, the astronauts restarted the command module and the temperature rose, causing the water to rain down on the electrical panel.
Thankfully, none of the switches short-circuited.
After jettisoning the lunar module and service module, Jim Lovell looked out his window at them and exclaimed to Mission Control:
“There’s one whole side of that spacecraft missing!”
Not knowing if the explosion had also damaged the reentry capsule’s heat shield, they were apprehensive that they might burn up upon entering Earth’s atmosphere.
They manually steered the capsule to land in the ocean, avoiding a raging hurricane.
As they approached the period of reentry when there is a communication blackout, Swigert gave a farewell to Houston, saying:
“I know all of us here want to thank all you guys down there for the very fine job you did!”
The blackout began, and everyone at Mission Control held their breath, counting the seconds.
After an entire minute passed when they should have reestablished contact, Kranz said,
“A sinking feeling, almost a dread, filled the room.”
Finally, a minute and 28 seconds late, they heard Swigert’s voice.
After the successful landing, April 19, 1970, TIME Magazine’s cover photo showed the crew on the deck of the aircraft carrier with their heads bowed in prayer.
President Richard Nixon spoke at Kawaiahao Church, one of the oldest Christian Church in Hawaii:
“When we learned of the safe return of our astronauts, I asked that the Nation observe a National Day of Prayer and Thanksgiving today …”
Nixon continued:
“This event reminded us that in these days of growing materialism, deep down there is still a great religious faith in this Nation …
… I think more people prayed last week than perhaps have prayed in many years in this country …
We pray for the assistance of God when … faced with … great potential tragedy.”
Summary: President Joe Biden has no public events on his schedule for Sunday. President Biden’s Itinerary for 4/12/21: All Times EDT 10:00 AM Receive daily briefing – Oval Office12:00 PM Attend virtual CEO Summit on Semiconductor and Supply Chain Resilience – Roosevelt Room1:45 PM Meet with members of Congress in …
Joe Biden is not a moderate. Joe Biden is not a unifier. Joe Biden has no interest in working with Republicans or even with Congress. Joe Biden was sent to Washington to promote and initiate a Progressive Agenda put together by the Radical Left of the Democrat Party. Joe Biden …
Ray Cardello. April 10, 2021 The only thing missing in the Rose Garden on Thursday when President Joe Biden started his assault on the Second Amendment was Beto O’Rourke wearing a t-shirt proclaiming “We are coming for your guns”. It was nice to see our Vice President be able to …
President Joe Biden fulfilled his promise when he took executive action on gun control just a few short days ago. He called on Congress to act but took measures that he believed would be acceptable to the American public as he and the radical-left started their war on guns in …
China Joe Biden’s pen has been busy lately. He has signed new Executive Orders that will begin to dismantle our Second Amendment. Sleepy Joe said it himself. He’s doing it to ‘keep the American people safe.’ How will we be safer if we can’t defend ourselves? Oh, I almost forgot. …
In the early twentieth century, known as the “progressive era,” the United States embarked on a spree of regulatory projects. One such project was airline regulation, which led to the creation of the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB). The CAB controlled entry into the market, air routes, and airfares. Fortunately, realizing …
Most critically-thinking individuals have long surmised that the mainstream media can no longer report objectively any story involving a conservative. Especially if that conservative is a popular and dynamic governor like Florida’s Ron DeSantis, as evident by the hit-piece orchestrated by CBS News’ “60 Minutes, in which reporter Sharyn Alfonsi …
YouTube and every other state-run social media site is overloaded with videos like this one, and this one, and this one, that show doctors, and other important-looking people explaining why you still have to wear a mask and “social distance” even after receiving a vaccine. Is this why they plan …
The Democrats are poised to shatter the glass ceiling by providing us with the first female president of the United States. If recent events are any indication, this accomplishment may happen sooner rather than later. The first indication is the memo recently issued by the White House directing all personnel to refer …
Saturday evening, liberal activist David Hogg decided to quit his work on the liberal pillow company he had started to compete with MyPillow. In his Twitter comments, Hogg put out a series of a dozen tweets sharing his thoughts on the company and it moving forward. In tweet 7, he …
Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. The voices in my head are having a superspreader event.
I sincerely hope you all had a wonderful weekend. I had my second Pfizer shot and a beer chaser, which I figured would work better than aspirin.
Self-medicating has its moments.
It’s no secret that almost all members of Congress have egos that are disproportionately sized relative to their actual popularity. One of the unfortunate consequences of these big heads is that they all think they should write memoirs. I don’t even want to read about the few members of Congress I like.
I definitely don’t want to read about John Boehner.
The former speaker of the House of Representatives has a new memoir coming out this week and he has been spending most of his book tour crapping on other Republicans, which he also does in the book. Like so many Republicans who never really did anything helpful for the party, Boehner has figured out that he can get more face time with the thoroughly corrupt mainstream media if he bashes Republicans all the time.
Boehner has been doing pre-publicity for the book for a couple of weeks and it’s safe to say there won’t be a lot of conservatives lining up to buy the old sot a drink. Tyler wrote at the beginning of the month about Boehner going off on the very people who made him Speaker:
The article focuses on the new Congress of 2011 after the Republican banner year of 2010. Boehner recalled trying to explain to the freshman representatives “how to actually get things done.”
“A lot of that went straight through the ears of most of them, especially the ones who didn’t have brains that got in the way. Incrementalism? Compromise? That wasn’t their thing. A lot of them wanted to blow up Washington. That’s why they thought they were elected,” the former GOP leader wrote.
He’s complaining, of course, about the Tea Party Republicans who were elected in 2010. The feckless establishment Republicans hate them, for the most part. Johnny Boozesweat can revise this history all he wants but the simple fact of the matter is this: he only became Speaker because the Tea Party movement formed in 2009 to save the GOP from itself. After Barack Obama was elected, Beltway Republicans were flailing and lost. James Carville predicted that the party was about to begin a lengthy exile from power and there really was no reason to believe he was wrong.
Boehner was an idiot about it all then and he’s still an idiot.
Robert Spencer wrote a piece over the weekend previewing Boehner’s latest useful idiot turn, this time on CBS Sunday Morning:
No one could possibly be glad to see former House Speaker John Boehner (R-McCain) back in the arena, with the possible exception of his ideological kin such as Mitt Romney and Lisa Murkowski, but he is newly useful to the political and media elites, and so we are once again being treated to his leathery visage on the morning shows. Boehner, you see, has a new memoir out in which he viciously slams Trump and other Republican leaders, thus giving the media a new example they can trot out of what Republicans really ought to be: docile, submissive, supportive of the leftist agenda, and vituperatively hostile to Republicans who genuinely oppose the political establishment. On CBS Sunday Morning set to air on April 11, Boehner reserved particular venom for Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) and Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), whom he called “political terrorists.”
Cruz is the monster under Boehner’s bed. He complains about him almost reflexively. If his mouth is open near a camera there’s a good chance that he’ll whine about Cruz.
The most insidious thing about Boehner’s lapdog tour is that he’s pimping the Democrat media lies about January 6th:
What’s really unfortunate is that Boehner, who is throwing his party colleagues under the bus to sell his new book, On the House: A Washington Memoir, also carries water for the increasingly ridiculous establishment narrative that the January 6 Capitol riot constituted an “insurrection” incited by Trump, despite the fact that no one involved seems to have had any guns, and Trump didn’t tell anyone to storm the Capitol building or do anything but protest peacefully.
Any Republican (looking at you, Liz Cheney) parroting these lies is doing the bidding of some of the most partisan, anti-American Democrats in this nation’s history. The MSM is evil right now and anyone aiding and abetting them is evil too.
John Boehner was a useless speaker of the House. He was really good at grandstanding and not so much on getting anything done. He was fond of blaming his ineptitude on those uppity Tea Part types. The reality was that Boehner was the epitome of everything that was wrong with the pre-Trump GOP. Deep down, the squishes know they were and are useless, which is why they act out so much. Boehner won’t be remembered kindly by conservatives, history, or the media liberals he’s been sucking up to all month. In fact, it’s the latter group that will probably savage him the most once he ceases to be useful.
Which he never was to Republicans.
Everything Isn’t Awful
Jersey Mike’s Donated 100% of Sales From 1,900 Stores in Their Biggest ‘Day of Giving’ in 11 Years 💰
PJ Media senior columnist and associate editor Stephen Kruiser is a professional stand-up comic, writer, and recovering political activist who edits and writes PJ’s Morning Briefing, aka The Greatest Political Newsletter in America. His latest book, Straight Outta Feelings, is a humorous exploration of how the 2016 election made him enjoy politics more than he ever had before. When not being a reclusive writer, Kruiser has had the honor of entertaining U.S. troops all over the world. Follow on: Gab, Parler, MeWe
Iranian nuclear facility suffers outage as US Defense secretary meets Israeli officials . . . An underground nuclear site in Iran suddenly and mysteriously lost power on Sunday after the facility started up advanced centrifuges that will allow it to enrich uranium faster as negotiations continue on the nuke accord that the US pulled out of in 2018. Iranian officials investigated the outage in Natanz as media outlets in Israel suggested the outage could be the result of cyberattacks. The Natanz facility is the cornerstone of Iran’s uranium enrichment program and is monitored by the International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN watchdog. New York Post
Iran Says Its Foes Targeted Nuclear Plant to Derail Potential Talks With US . . . Iran said saboteurs caused a blackout at the country’s main nuclear-enrichment plant, accusing the alleged culprits of attempting to derail informal talks with the U.S. on reviving a 2015 nuclear accord that could pave the way for rolling back sanctions on the Islamic Republic. Tehran didn’t disclose any details about the electrical malfunction at Natanz. Israeli media, quoting Western intelligence sources, said Israeli intelligence agency Mossad had orchestrated a cyberattack at the Natanz site, causing severe damage. Israeli officials declined to respond to the reports that Israel was behind the alleged attack at Natanz. In Washington, a spokeswoman for the White House National Security Council declined to comment. Wall Street Journal
Pentagon Chief Austin Declares ‘Ironclad’ US Commitment to Israel . . . U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Sunday declared an “enduring and ironclad” American commitment to Israel, reinforcing support at a tense time in Israeli politics and amid questions about the Biden administration’s efforts to revive nuclear negotiations with Israel’s archenemy, Iran. Austin’s first talks in Israel since he became Pentagon chief in January come as the United States seeks to leverage Middle East diplomatic progress made by the Trump administration, which brokered a deal normalizing relations between Israel and several Arab states. By coincidence or not, the defense secretary arrived as Iran reported that its underground Natanz nuclear facility lost power just hours after starting up new advanced centrifuges capable of enriching uranium faster. Epoch Times
Coronavirus
Here’s why women report more side effects from COVID vaccine than men . . . Among nearly 7,000 reports processed through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System from Dec. 14 to Jan. 13, more than 79% of them came from women. The most frequently reported side effects were headache, fatigue and dizziness. Women also are more likely than men to experience some of the vaccine’s more unusual side effects, such as an itchy red rash that appears at the injection site commonly known as COVID arm or Moderna arm, because about 95% of the reactions occur with the Moderna vaccine. Overall, women account for 77% of the Moderna vaccine’s reported side effects. These side effects – even if unusual – are a good sign the vaccine is working to arm the body’s immune system against the coronavirus. But why are women more likely to experience them than men? Health experts say it may be the result of biological differences, inconsistent reporting by men and gender bias in clinical trials. USA Today
Pentagon insists vaccine rollout a success despite spotty data . . . The Pentagon is touting its rollout of coronavirus vaccines even as it is unable to say how many service members have actually received COVID-19 vaccinations. Defense Department officials say they have delivered more than 2 million shots, but a lack of hard numbers has made it difficult to determine how many of those have gone into the arms of troops versus military families and civilian employees. The uncertainty was apparent on Friday when the Navy’s 7th Fleet claimed 96 percent of its personnel were fully vaccinated, only to pull back that assertion after it appeared it had overstated the results. And on Saturday, reports emerged that nearly 40 percent of active duty and reserve Marines declined the vaccine. The Hill
Covid Drug Prevents Symptomatic Disease in Study, Regeneron Says . . . An antibody drug from Regeneron Pharmaceuticals reduced the risk of developing symptomatic Covid-19 infection by 81% compared with a placebo in people living with someone infected by the new coronavirus, a study found. Regeneron said Monday it would ask the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to expand the drug’s authorization among people exposed to the virus who haven’t yet been vaccinated, which could provide temporary stopgap protection as people await vaccines. So far, 21.3% of the U.S. population has been fully vaccinated, and 35.3% has received at least one shot. Wall Street Journal
Politics
Left Is Using Supreme Court Commission to Change Court’s Decisions . . . President Joe Biden has signed an executive order creating the Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States. The White House announcement and the members chosen for this commission raise serious questions about its real purpose and concerns about its impact on the independence of the judiciary. The most obvious question is why the Supreme Court needs to be examined at all. The simple answer is that the left wants a judiciary in general, and a Supreme Court in particular, that is likely to decide cases that will further a leftist political agenda. Results that are politically correct—not judicially correct—are what matter to the left, and the left is not satisfied with the current Supreme Court’s decisions of late. Therefore, it wants to create one in its own image. Daily Signal
Major Corporations Plan To Oppose Election Integrity Measures . . . The leaders of over 100 major corporations spoke via Zoom on Saturday about how they could combat election integrity laws similar to the one passed in Georgia. The executives on the call reportedly expressed concern about legislation that they view as restricting voting rights. They included the owner of the Atlanta Falcons, who also co-founded Home Depot, the chairwoman of the Starbucks board, and the CEO of AMC Entertainment. Daily Caller
Zuckerberg group gave Detroit $7.4 million to ‘dramatically’ expand vote in city key to Biden win . . .The Center for Tech and Civic Life’s donations to blue strongholds are attracting increased attention, controversy. The Center for Tech and Civil Life (CTCL), a voter advocacy group funded by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, donated $7.4 million last year to Detroit to, among other things, “dramatically expand strategic voter education and outreach” in a blue city key to Joe Biden’s 2020 election win, according to memos obtained by Just the News under an open records request. Detroit received three grants in 2020 from CTCL for $200,000, $3,512,000, and $3,724,450, according to the records released under Michigan’s Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). Just the News
Progressives fight for leverage amid ever-slimming majority . . . Progressives are ascendant in the Democratic-controlled Congress, but they may not have the political leverage to dramatically shape legislative priorities like President Biden’s infrastructure and jobs package as they return to Washington this week with an even slimmer majority. Democrats will need near-total cooperation among everyone in their House and Senate caucuses to pass any bills on their own without GOP support. And while it means only a handful of Democrats can hold up a bill, it also means that they will all be under more pressure than ever to stick together. The Hill
After BLM Protests, Police Lethal Force Decreases . . . Places where Black Lives Matter (BLM) protests occurred from 2014 to 2019 experienced a decrease in lethal use of force by police but an overall increase in murders, according to an upcoming soon-to-be peer-reviewed academic study. The study from the University of Massachusetts–Amherst may bolster the so-called Ferguson Effect hypothesis, which holds that police officers are reluctant to do their jobs and follow proper police procedure when dealing with blacks because they fear their actions will be characterized as examples of race-driven police brutality. After violent protests in Ferguson, Missouri in 2014, police reforms followed, including the U.S. Department of Justice distributing 21,000 police body cameras to law enforcement. The study came as Patrisse Khan-Cullors, a self-described Marxist and co-founder of the well-funded, influential Black Lives Matter movement provoked a headline-grabbing backlash by purchasing a $1.4 million home in Topanga Canyon, an exclusive, overwhelmingly white suburb of Los Angeles. The movement took in at least $90 million last year and led nationwide protests following the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis in police custody in May 2020. Epoch Times
Pentagon takes step toward new screening procedures to weed out extremists . . . Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin is moving to set up new screening procedures at the Pentagon as part of an effort to weed out extremists in the military, according to a memo released Friday. The immediate steps include setting up a working group tasked with finding ways to address the issue as well as launching a study on extremist behavior in the ranks. The Pentagon chief said he wants the working group to review and update the military’s definition of extremism, create standardized questionnaires to screen recruits with current or previous extremist behavior, and come up with new training and procedures for veterans to deflect and report the targeting of them by extremist groups after they leave service. The Hill
National Security
Major DC insurance provider hacked by ‘foreign cybercriminals’ . . . CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield’s Community Health Plan District of Columbia (CHPDC) suffered a data breach carried out by what it described as a “foreign cybercriminal” group in January that potentially impacted sensitive data. The company wrote that the breach had taken place Jan. 28, and that the company had notified both the FBI and the Office of the Attorney General for the District of Columbia, and was working with cybersecurity group CrowdStrike in responding to the security incident. After analysis, CHPDC assessed the attack was likely carried out by a “sophisticated, foreign cybercriminal enterprise.” The Hill
Amid a Wave of Hacks, Biden Moves to Fill Key Cyber Posts . . . President Biden is expected to name two former National Security Agency officials to high-level cybersecurity positions Monday, as the White House looks to round out its personnel in the wake of two recent hacks linked to foreign governments. Mr. Biden is expected to nominate Jen Easterly, a former senior counterterrorism and cybersecurity official at NSA with experience at the Obama White House, to lead the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, an arm of the Department of Homeland Security responsible for election security and protecting civilian government networks from hackers. Separately, Chris Inglis, the former deputy director of the NSA, is expected to be nominated as the first ever national cyber director, the position, housed within the Executive Office of the President. The role is intended to coordinate cybersecurity efforts across the federal government and will include its own office with up to 75 dedicated staff. Wall Street Journal
SECSTATE Blinken to return to Brussels to discuss Russia, Ukraine tensions . . . Secretary of State Antony Blinken will join Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin for discussions at NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, regarding Iran, Russia and Afghanistan, a top U.S. official said on Saturday. The official told Reuters that Blinken’s discussions would focus on Iran, Afghanistan, and the ongoing buildup of Russian military forces near its border with Ukraine. Russian President Vladimir Putin accused Ukraine of committing “dangerous provocative actions” in the contested Donbass region in eastern Ukraine, further raising fears that Russia could send troops in to support pro-Russian separatists in the region. Russia has amassed more troops in the region than at any time since it annexed Crimea in 2014. The Hill
All eyes on Taiwan as US-China tensions heat up . . . Secretary of State Blinken sends shot across Beijing’s bow, warning it would be a ‘mistake’ to invade Taiwan. Chinese and U.S. aircraft carriers are patrolling near the Taiwan Strait. Taipei is running military drills and increasing emergency defense spending. And America’s top diplomat is upping the ante, starkly warning Beijing not to invade.
“It would be a serious mistake for anyone to try to change the existing status quo by force,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken declared Sunday. This spring as Communist China takes an increasingly aggressive posture to its neighbor Taiwan that it has long wanted to annex and reunify with. Just the News
International
England reopens with pints pulled, shopping sprees and hair cuts . . . People queued up outside retailers across England on Monday to release their pent-up shopping fever and some grabbed a midnight pint or even an early haircut as England’s shops, pubs, gyms and hairdressers reopened after three months of lockdown. After imposing the most onerous restrictions in Britain’s peacetime history, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the reopening was a “major step” towards freedom but urged people to behave responsibly as the coronavirus was still a threat. Reuters
Prince Philip thought Harry and Meghan’s Oprah interview was ‘madness’ . . .Prince Philip reportedly thought that his grandson Harry and Meghan Markle’s explosive Oprah Winfrey interview was “madness.” Philip, who died Friday at age 99, also felt that “no good would come of” the early March tell-all, his biographer Gyles Brandreth wrote Sunday in the Daily Mail. Markle sent shockwaves through the Royal household when she claimed during the interview that undisclosed members of the family expressed concern of the color of son Archie’s skin. “I know from someone close to him that he thought Meghan and Harry’s interview with Oprah Winfrey was ‘madness’ and ‘no good would come of it,’ ” Brandreth wrote, referring to The Duke of Edinburgh. New York Post
Prince Harry arrives back in UK for Prince Philip funeral . . . Prince Harry, whose explosive interview alongside his wife Meghan plunged the royal family into its biggest crisis in decades, has arrived back in Britain for Prince Philip’s funeral on Saturday. Philip, the husband of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth who had been at her side throughout her 69-year reign, died at Windsor Castle on Friday.Harry, Philip’s grandson, arrived in London on Sunday from Los Angeles on a British Airways flight. Buckingham Palace said Meghan, who is pregnant, will not attend on the advice of her doctor. Reuters
Money
Former treasury secretary criticizes the scale of Biden’s fiscal policy . . . The world economy is struggling to escape the economic shock of Covid-19. During the worst of this pandemic, high-income countries provided a scale of fiscal and monetary largesse previously only seen in world wars. Now, however, US President Joe Biden is proposing to do more than double down on already generous support. But Lawrence (Larry) Summers of Harvard, a Democrat, has criticized the approach as the “least responsible” in 40 years. Summers is an influential economist and policymaker on the US centre left. He has been chief economist at the World Bank, Treasury secretary under Bill Clinton and head of Barack Obama’s National Economic Council. In 2013, he reintroduced the idea of “secular stagnation”, to explain the combination of a long period of easy, or ultra-easy monetary policy, with weak demand and disappointing growth. He then became the leading economist arguing in favor of less reliance on monetary policy and more on active fiscal policy. Summers is criticizing both the scale and direction of the administration’s fiscal policies, warning they will lead to significant overheating and waste of resources. Financial Times
You should also know
BLM activist charged with hate crimes against Asian Americans . . .A Black Lives Matter protester who was charged with hate crimes against Asian Americans spent time in Seattle’s Capitol Hill Occupied Protest zone last summer. Hamner was arrested last month and charged with hate crimes for “violent, anti-Asian behavior” stemming from multiple occurrences. One woman, Pamela Cole, said he threatened her and her children during a traffic incident. Hamner frequently protested with Black Lives Matter last summer and had posts on social media showing him within Seattle’s CHOP zone, which was established as a police-free zone that saw multiple shootings, deaths, reports of sexual assault, vandalism, and theft. Washington Examiner
Judge Prohibits Release of Undercover Pro-Life Activist’s Recordings . . . A judge permanently banned the release of undercover videos that show Planned Parenthood employees discussed the alleged sale of fetal body parts. William Orrick, a judge for the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, ruled Wednesday that pro-life videographer David Daleiden was in breach of contract when he secretly recorded videos of the National Abortion Federation’s conferences. The ruling bars Daleiden from ever releasing the videos he recorded at the conference, meaning hundreds of hours of footage will never see the light of day. Washington Free Beacon
Spotify ‘cancels’ 42 episodes of ‘Joe Rogan Experience’ . . . Streaming service Spotify has reportedly thus far cancelled 42 Joe Rogan Experience episodes from its digital platform archive. The discreet deletions purportedly includes podcasts with conservative provocateurs Milo Yiannopoulos, Gavin McInnes, and Owen Benjamin, as well as comedian Chris D’Elia, among others. All of Alex Jones’ discussions with Rogan are apparently gone, with the exception that the most recent interview is apparently still available.
A possibly too-raunchy live show with a group of Rogan’s fellow comedians has also been removed, Digital Media News also noted that there are “potentially more shows quietly getting removed from the catalog.” Some triggered Spotify employees tried to stage a potential mutiny last year when Rogan first signed the $100 million contract with the company to move his massively popular podcast there exclusively. Business & Politics Review
Meanwhile, profanity-laced “music” is still available on Spotify, for anyone, including children. If it weren’t for all the good podcasts that live on Spotify, I would have cancelled the darn thing myself.
Law enforcement knows it really is Hunter Biden’s laptop — not Russian disinformation: Ratcliffe . . . Former President Donald Trump’s top spy chief claims law enforcement knows the laptop purportedly belonging to Hunter Biden is indeed the laptop of President Joe Biden’s son, blasting the former intelligence officials, politicians, and members of the media who suggested the laptop story was a Russian disinformation operation. Last week, Hunter Biden falsely claimed the intelligence community publicly concluded that his laptop saga is “Russian disinformation.” During the media blitz to promote his memoir, Beautiful Things, he admitted that the laptop allegedly dropped off for repairs at a Delaware repair shop in 2019 “certainly” could be his and suggested it could have been stolen, could have been hacked, or Russian intelligence services could have been involved. He provided no evidence. Washington Examiner
Ecuador shuns socialism with surprise election . . .Ecuadorean banker Guillermo Lasso unexpectedly won the nation’s presidency on promises to revive an economy battered by coronavirus as his rival’s vows of a return to socialist largesse failed to win over a skeptical electorate. Lasso took 52% of the vote in the runoff following a campaign that pitted free market economics against the social welfare plans of economist Andres Arauz, a win likely helped by a ballot spoiling campaign that left one in six ballots void. “A third of Ecuadoreans live in poverty, and just three in 10 have access to employment,” Lasso said at a campaign rally last week.
Lasso’s third campaign for the presidency centered on bringing in foreign investment to create jobs and on expanding investments in the agricultural sector. It differed sharply from Arauz’s promises of handing out $1,000 to a million poor families and returning the country to the social welfare programs of former President Rafael Correa, Arauz’s mentor. Reuters
Even the Ecuadoreans have figured out that the socialism thing ain’t working. Never will.
Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin made pioneering spaceflight 60 years ago . . . Crushed into the pilot’s seat by heavy G-forces, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin saw flames outside his spacecraft and prepared to die. His voice broke the tense silence at ground control: “I’m burning. Goodbye, comrades.” Gagarin didn’t know that the blazing inferno he observed through a porthole was a cloud of plasma engulfing Vostok 1 during its re-entry into the Earth’s atmosphere, and he was still on track to return safely. It was his quiet composure under pressure that helped make him the first human in space 60 years ago. Gagarin’s steely self-control was a key factor behind the success of his pioneering 108-minute flight. The April 12, 1961, mission encountered glitches and emergencies — from a capsule hatch failing to shut properly just before blastoff to parachute problems in the final moments before touchdown. Associated Press
Guilty Pleasures
Adventures in Wilderness Wayfinding: Figuring out how to get home after the first and last flight of a United Airlines diversity hire . . . Cartoon. Patriot Post
United by Division? Lives at stake when a major airline promises to count by race when hiring pilots . . . Don’t miss the almost hilariously bad irony that an airline called “United” is now going to start dividing by race when it comes to hiring pilots. This “woke” HR department run amok is what taxpayers get for last year’s $5 billion federal bailout. The title of the company’s press release is “United Sets New Diversity Goal: 50% of Students at New Pilot Training Academy To Be Women and People of Color.” Out of a planned 5,000 pilots to be trained, United says its “plan is for half of them to be women and people of color.” The company’s current percentages are 7% women and 13% minorities. It should go without saying that no one is clamoring to block women or minorities from becoming pilots. Nor is anyone insisting that 50% of pilots ought to be Republican so as to represent the nation’s political divide. The ultimate measure for any number of career choices, including pilots, is (or should be) qualification and expertise. Patriot Post
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Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
There will be a dip in availability of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine this week—and possibly longer—due to a manufacturing problem at a Baltimore facility, the White House said Friday. Johnson & Johnson still expects to deliver 100 million doses of the vaccine by the end of May, officials said, a goal they set when the vaccine was approved.
The White House announced Friday that Roberta Jacobson—President Joe Biden’s “border czar” on the National Security Council—will step down at the end of the month. Jacobson says she only intended to serve about 100 days, but the news comes amid a growing surge of migrants to the southern border.
One day after Iranian President Hassan Rouhani officially inaugurated advanced centrifuges at the underground Natanz nuclear facility Saturday, a blackout struck its electrical grid in what the head of Iran’s nuclear program called an act of “nuclear terrorism.” While no countries have publicly taken or cast blame, several American and Israeli intelligence officials told the New York TimesIsrael was responsible.
The incident, if the work of Jerusalem, could complicate already fraught nuclear talks between the U.S. and Iran underway in Vienna. A senior State Department official clarified Friday that the U.S. will not lift all Trump-era economic sanctions on Iran, despite Tehran’s demands.
The House Ethics Committee announced Friday it has opened an investigation into whether Rep. Matt Gaetz “engaged in sexual misconduct and/or illicit drug use, shared inappropriate images or videos on the House floor, misused state identification records, converted campaign funds to personal use, and/or accepted a bribe, improper gratuity, or impermissible gift.” Gaetz dismissed the accusations as a “smear campaign.”
Maryland became the first state in the country to repeal its police Bill of Rights on Saturday when the Democratic-controlled legislature passed a series of police reform bills overriding Republican Gov. Larry Hogan’s vetoes. The package, Hogan argued, “will result in great damage to police recruitment and retention, posing significant risks to public safety throughout our state.”
Workers at Amazon’s Bessemer, Alabama warehouse voted 1,798 to 738 against unionization efforts organized by the Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Union (RWDSU).
The United States confirmed 46,015 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 3.2 percent of the 1,433,211 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 281 deaths were attributed to the virus on Sunday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 562,061. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 33,919 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 3,579,422 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 119,242,902 Americans having now received at least one dose.
Biden Unveils Supreme Court Commission
In the months leading up to the 2020 Democratic primary, Joe Biden was one of a handful of candidates who opposed packing the Supreme Court. Back in July 2019, he said he was against the idea because “we’ll live to rue that day.” In a debate that October, he argued Republicans and Democrats would cycle through adding justices until the country begins “to lose any credibility the court has at all.”
But as calls from the Democratic base intensified—and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was replaced with Justice Amy Coney Barrett—Biden went quiet on the issue, deflecting any time a reporter asked him if his position had changed. Eventually, that approach became untenable, and Biden came up with an answer.
“The last thing we need to do is turn the Supreme Court into just a political football, whoever has the most votes gets whatever they want,” he told CBS News’ Norah O’Donnell a few weeks before the election. “If elected, what I will do is I’ll put together a national bipartisan commission of constitutional scholars: Democrats, Republicans, liberal, conservative. And I will ask them to—over 180 days—come back to me with recommendations as to how to reform the court system. Because it’s getting out of whack the way in which this is being handled.”
On Friday, President Biden signed an executive order doing exactly that. The 36-person, bipartisan commission will be tasked with compiling a report that examines the “role and operation of the Supreme Court in our constitutional system” and “the principal arguments in the contemporary public debate for and against Supreme Court reform.” Once the commission holds its first meeting, it will have 180 days to submit its analysis.
Although many Democratic activists are calling for court packing in expressly partisan terms—Brian Fallon’s Demand Justice group deems it necessary to “undo the damage Republicans did by stealing multiple Supreme Court seats”—Biden himself has expressed skepticism. And some see the formation of this commission as an effort to punt on the issue.
“Historically, presidential blue ribbon commissions have been a way to kick an issue down the road so the president doesn’t have to deal with it immediately,” Ilya Shapiro, director of the Robert A. Levy Center for Constitutional Studies at the Cato Institute, told The Dispatch. “And hopefully when the commission report comes out, there’s less controversy.”
But the move was met with outrage from Republicans in Washington, who decried the commission as an attempted power grab. “This faux-academic study of a nonexistent problem fits squarely within liberals’ years-long campaign to politicize the Court, intimidate its members, and subvert its independence,” said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. “This is not some new, serious, or sober pivot away from Democrats’ political attacks on the Court. It’s just an attempt to clothe those ongoing attacks in fake legitimacy. It’s disappointing that anyone, liberal or conservative, would lend credence to this attack by participating in the commission.”
There are conservatives on the commission—including former Bush administration Assistant Attorney General (and Dispatch contributor) Jack Goldsmith, Adam White of the American Enterprise Institute, and Princeton University Professor Keith Whittington (a frequent guest on The Remnant). But it will be co-chaired by the Biden campaign’s legal adviser Bob Bauer and Obama administration deputy assistant attorney general Cristina Rodriguez. “By my count, the ratio of progressives to non-progressives is three to one,” Shapiro said, adding that it skews heavily academic. “There are two former judges and there are three leading legal progressive activists. … All the rest are professors.”
The commission will examine a variety of reform proposals—“the length of service and turnover of justices on the Court; the membership and size of the Court; and the Court’s case selection, rules, and practices”—but the court-packing debate carries particular weight, for obvious reasons.
The Constitution does not specify any fixed number of Supreme Court justices; the size of the bench fluctuated between five and 10 throughout early American history. But it’s held steady at nine since 1870, with the only serious threat coming in 1937 when President Franklin D. Roosevelt became frustrated with the Court declaring some of his New Deal programs unconstitutional. Roosevelt’s plan to pack the Court never got far, but voters punished Democrats for it anyway: Republicans picked up 81 seats in the House in 1938, and eight in the Senate.
Justice Stephen Breyer—the oldest member of the Court, appointed by President Bill Clinton in 1994—warned against putting additional justices on the bench in a lecture at Harvard Law School last week. “It is wrong to think of the Court as another political institution, and it is doubly wrong to think of its members as junior league politicians,” Breyer said. “Structural alteration motivated by the perception of political influence can only feed that perception, further eroding that trust.”
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg opposed the move as well. “I think that was a bad idea when President Franklin Delano Roosevelt tried to pack the Court,” Ginsburg told NPR in 2019. “If anything would make the Court appear partisan it’d be that: One side saying, ‘When we’re in power we’re going to enlarge the number of judges so we’ll have more people who will vote the way we want them to.’”
The commission could come back with additional reform proposals beyond simply expanding the number of justices on the bench, Shapiro explained, including amending Senate rules to require a confirmation vote within a certain number of days of nomination, or reintroducing the filibuster for Supreme Court justice confirmations. Scholars have also put forth ideas like rotating lower court judges through the Supreme Court or implementing term limits for justices.
But Shapiro is doubtful the commission will propose reforms that we haven’t seen before, or that both parties can get behind. “I’m very curious to see what they come up with,” he said, “but I’m skeptical that they will come up with anything that is both bipartisan and feasible—and also then actually improves the court.”
Amazon Workers Vote Against Unionization
A few weeks ago, we wrote to you about a unionization push at an Amazon fulfillment center in Bessemer, Alabama that had quickly become central to the organized labor movement and national political debates. Amazon is the second-largest private employer in the United States, and growing; if the Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Union (RWDSU) was successful in getting the Bessemer workers on board, it could have had a domino effect nationwide.
But voting came to a close last week, and the Alabama employees overwhelmingly rejected attempts to unionize, 1,798 to 738 (several thousand eligible workers did not vote). “I work hard for my money, and I don’t want any of it going to a union that maybe can get us more pay, or maybe can get us longer breaks,” Melissa Charlton Myers, a 41-year-old Amazon employee that voted against unionization, told the Wall Street Journal. “It’s not worth the risk.”
In a statement Friday, Amazon attempted to reframe the “company v. workers” debate many politicians and journalists claimed the vote represented. “Amazon didn’t win—our employees made the choice to vote against joining a union,” it read. “Our employees are the heart and soul of Amazon, and we’ve always worked hard to listen to them, take their feedback, make continuous improvements, and invest heavily to offer great pay and benefits in a safe and inclusive workplace.” Amazon provides employees a $15-per-hour minimum wage nationwide (Alabama’s is $7.25/hour), as well as health care coverage, a 401(k) retirement plan, parental leave, and child care. Workers have, however, complained about a lack of break times and the physically grueling nature of the work. Documents obtained by The Verge in 2019 showed that Amazon frequently fired employees for not meeting “productivity quotas.”
But the unionization vote suggests that Amazon employees are, on the whole, happy with their conditions. Walter Olson—a senior fellow at the Cato Institute who wrote a book on employment law—noted that Amazon’s Bessemer workers have highlighted their pay and benefits in interviews. “They have a sense of what wages—and especially benefits—are like in jobs of that sort in the neighboring community,” he told The Dispatch. “They believe that they’re being paid well above the market standards for that sort of job in their community.” Olson noted that workers often feel that “once that line is drawn and you are represented by the union, you will not be recruited into management.”
Despite Bessemer workers having dealt the union a more than 2-to-1 defeat, RWDSU President Stuart Appelbaum is not yet waving the white flag. “We won’t let Amazon’s lies, deception and illegal activities go unchallenged, which is why we are formally filing charges against all of the egregious and blatantly illegal actions taken by Amazon during the union vote,” he said Friday, making clear he’d bring his case to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). “Amazon knew full well that unless they did everything they possibly could, even illegal activity, their workers would have continued supporting the union.” The RWDSU has alleged Amazon pressed the U.S. Postal Service for a mailbox on company property that would give workers the false impression their mail ballots would be tallied by their employer, and that the company offered a financial incentive for unhappy workers to quit, diluting the pro-union pool. (Amazon says this incentive is offered to warehouse employees across the country every year.)
Workers at the facility had no doubt which way their employer wanted them to vote: Amazon set up a “Do It Without Dues” website decrying a union as unnecessary, held mandatory meetings for employees in which anti-union sentiment was shared, and distributed “Vote No” pamphlets and pins for workers to wear.
Mike Elk, a reporter for the Payday Report, asked several workers who voted against unionization for their rationale. “I’ve been a member of unions in the past and was actually a member of this same union,” said 59-year-old Ken Worth. “I don’t really feel like they represented us well. I think that unions could do a whole lot more.”
Ashley Beringer, 32, didn’t want to mess with the status quo. “I don’t want someone coming in and changing everything, especially if certain things are good in the situation,” she said. “And if [the union] comes in, I don’t know how it’s gonna be.”
Although public sector union membership has held relatively steady, membership in private sector unions has been declining for decades: Data compiled by researchers at Georgia State University show just 6.4 percent of private sector workers were part of a union in 2018, compared to 24.2 percent in 1973. That trend—alongside the Democratic Party’s relative strength with union workers—may have played a role in President Biden’s decision to intervene in the Amazon push last month, when he released a video calling workers’ votes to organize unions “vitally important.”
Asked by a reporter Friday about the results in Alabama, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Biden will wait for the NLRB to certify the election before he weighs in again.
Worth Your Time
In a thoughtful piece for The New Atlantis, Taylor Dotson argues that an obsession with the idea of facts and certainty is actually harming our politics. “The belief that misinformation is today’s main threat to democracy blinds us to the pernicious effects of a broader preoccupation with certitude,” he writes. “This obsession has been tearing at American politics throughout the Covid pandemic, and continues to imperil debates over vaccination, masking, and lockdowns. But the problem will remain with us long after the virus has been beaten. … Our leaders have a powerful incentive to stay the course of fact-ist politics: It excuses them from having to lead. Handing challenging decisions off to experts, or blaming a corrupt scientific cabal for all our problems, allows our leaders to duck ownership over hard decisions.”
If you read this newsletter—or anything from The Dispatch—you’ve probably heard that, for the first time since Gallup has been polling, less than 50 percent of Americans currently consider themselves members of a church. In his latest column, Ross Douthat argues these numbers will continue to fall as long as the intelligentsia and professional class continue to forgo faith. “Most of these people … would be unlikely models of holiness in any dispensation, given their ambitions and their worldliness,” he writes. “But Jesus endorsed the wisdom of serpents as well as the innocence of doves, and religious communities no less than secular ones rely on talent and ambition. So the deep secularization of the meritocracy means that people who would once have become priests and ministers and rabbis become psychologists or social workers or professors, people who might once have run missions go to work for NGOs instead, and guilt-ridden moguls who might once have funded religious charities salve their consciences by starting secular foundations.”
In his Sunday French Press, David reflects on a book from Calvin University history professor Kristin Kobes Du Mez entitled Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation. Evangelical culture’s “unhealthy attachment to a particularly aggressive vision of masculinity” has a history of encouraging or enabling abuse within the church, David writes, summarizing Du Mez’s argument. But he also thinks she paints with too broad a brush. “I served with heroic Christian men in Iraq,” David writes. “They stood side-by-side with brothers of all faiths and turned the tide against a truly evil enemy. One need not obsess over male strength to understand that virtuous male courage is a cultural necessity.”
Author Julia Galef joined The Dispatch Podcast on Friday to discuss her new book—The Scout Mindset—with Sarah and Steve. “The scout’s role, unlike the soldier, is not to go out and attack or defend,” she explains. “It’s to go out, and see what’s really out there as clearly as possible and to put together as accurate a map of the territory or a situation as you can.”
In his Friday G-File, Jonah argues President Biden has succumbed to the Democratic Party’s long history of New Dealism, envisioning himself as a modern-day FDR. “Joe Biden’s trillion-here, trillion-there approach is as ad hoc as FDR’s in many ways,” Jonah writes. “You look at some of the outlays in his proposals—a hundred billion for this, a hundred billion for that—and it becomes clear that the important thing is just to spend a hundred billion, or $2.4 trillion; what the money actually goes to is an afterthought.”
Leslie Eastman: “Next year, for a milestone birthday and because he loves me, my husband is organizing a multi-week trip to Egypt for the spring of 2022. I may be able to see the newly revealed “Lost City of Gold”. I am truly grateful to be able to share my love of ancient Egypt with the Legal Insurrection family. Ancient Egypt’s “Lost City of Gold” Discovered near Luxor“
Samantha Mandeles: “In response to the Biden Administration’s efforts to appease the ayatollahs of Iran, foreign policy-focused Congressmembers have proposed new measures to reign in Iran’s revolutionary regime, publicly expose Khamenei’s complicity with the murder of Americans, and strongly condemn his abuse of human and civil rights.”
David Gerstman: “Iran suffered another mysterious attack at the Natanz nuclear enrichment facility. The second one in less than a year. Don’t you hate it when that happens? It comes at a time that Iran was threatening to ramp up its uranium enrichment in expectation of further concessions from the Biden administration in the new expected negotiations. How unfortunate.”
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Biden Considering Cash Payments to Slow Rush to US Border
On Friday, Reuters reported that the Biden Administration is considering sending money to Latin American countries in order to slow down the rush to the US border since he took office. Reuters reported, “The possible cash transfer program would be targeted at people in the Northern Triangle region of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, Roberta Jacobson, the White House’s southern border coordinator, told Reuters in an interview, without saying who exactly would receive the cash.”
The Washington Post reported that March 2021 has been the busiest month at the border since 2001:
“During the busiest month along the Mexico border in nearly two decades, U.S. authorities took 172,331 migrants into custody in March. The total included 18,890 teens and children who arrived without parents, a record quantity that overwhelmed U.S. shelter capacity and produced crisis-level crowding inside government border tents.”
So, where is the person assigned to oversee the border crisis? In an updated story, Fox News reports:“It was the 18th day that Harris went without holding a news conference regarding her duties on the issues, since receiving the assignment from President Biden.
On Saturday, the Washington Examiner published an article headlined, “Kamala Harris MIA on border crisis.” It recapped the vice president’s recent travels to Connecticut, California and Illinois on matters unrelated to the migrant situation along the southern border.
The same story quoted White House press secretary Jen Psaki, reacting Wednesday to questions about when Harris would be visiting the border region.
Also Saturday, NBC News published an article titled, “Confusion clouds Harris immigration role.”
It seems they’re dealing with the border the same way they dealt with the 2020 election — throw money at the problem and stay hidden.
End Woke Corporate Extortion
On Saturday, more than 100 corporate leaders participated in a call that “focused on how to respond to proposed changes in state voting laws.” Among the companies were United, American Airlines, Viacom, Twitter, the Atlanta Falcons, Walmart, Levi Strauss, AMC Theaters, and LinkedIn.
In a timely piece, Thaddeus McCotter at American Greatness writes about the trend of woke corporate extortion:
“Historically, the reason for corporate pressure tactics has been the economic benefit of the organization; and, the corporatists would argue, for the economic benefit of their community. When wading into political waters, corporations were always careful to find the least offensive causes in which to participate, such as supporting school literacy or our troops. In instances where the corporations have specific policy causes with less than overwhelming public support, such as school choice, the corporations do not threaten to boycott a state if its legislature doesn’t submit to their demands.
Now, however, there is no longer a direct financial benefit spurring the corporation’s actions; and, indeed, there is a clear, if hypothetical, increase in the risk of financial detriment to the corporation, due to half the country potentially deciding to cease patronizing them. Yet, the woke corporate extortionists expressly target for punishment a state’s residents and legislature until its political—not business—demands are met.”
Also, The Federalist’s Ben Domenech noted the corporate media’s role: “These corporations are now wading into increasingly partisan political battles and using the authority that they have to try to affect policy in response to the requests that they receive, both from the leftist mob that you mentioned, but also from members of the media.”
By the way, it’s also worth noting that the Wall Street Journal reported that CEO salaries have surged during the last year despite the economic hardships many Americans are feeling during the pandemic.
More Weekend Reads
Who could have predicted associating “woke” with something you sleep on was such a bad business idea? (Hint: Everyone) David Hogg drops pillow venture launched during spat with Mike Lindell (New York Post)
No Vaccine Passport Act Proposed by House Republicans (Washington Times)
A Pandemic And Power Failures Made Prepping Every Smart Person’s Strategy (The Federalist)
Greg Gutfeld’s New Show Already Dominating Late Night Ratings (Bongino Report)
What I’m Reading This Week
This week I’m reading Objects of My Affection by Jill Smolinski. From the description:
“Lucy Bloom is broke, freshly dumped by her boyfriend, and is forced to sell her house to send her nineteen-year-old son to drug rehab. Although she’s lost it all, she’s determined to start over. So when she’s offered a high-paying gig helping clear the clutter from the huge home of reclusive and eccentric painter Marva Meier Rios, Lucy grabs it. But she soon learns that the real challenge may be taking on Marva, who seems to love her objects too much to let go of any of them.
While trying to stay on course toward a strict deadline—and with an ex-boyfriend back in the picture, a new romance on the scene, and her son’s rehab not going as planned—Lucy discovers that Marva isn’t just hoarding, she is also hiding a big secret. The two form an unlikely bond, as each learns from the other that there are those things in life we keep and those we need to let go—but it’s not always easy to know the difference.”
Follow up on last week’s read: I highly recommend Atomic Habits by James Clear!
A Case of the Mondays
Return To Normal: Texas Announces They Will Go Back To Shooting People Wearing Masks On The Assumption They’re Stagecoach Robbers (Babylon Bee)
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Apr 12, 2021 01:00 am
Biden is not an absent-minded grandfatherly and politically moderate occupant of the White House but the most dishonest, deceitful and mendacious person in a position of power in American history Read More…
Apr 12, 2021 01:00 am
This could be a valuable legal tool with which to attack all state laws that require people to pay for licenses to own or purchase firearms. Read More…
Apr 12, 2021 01:00 am
Do they not understand, or is this deliberate, using identity politics to destroy America from within, part of the great reset? Read More…
Apr 12, 2021 01:00 am
The New York liberal elite edges out blacks, first responders, and the truly vulnerable in their rush for COVID vaccinations. Read More…
The New York Times and Natanz: a study in contrasts
Apr 12, 2021 01:00 am
Whatever actually happened at Natanz, the s power outage is a reminder that Obama-style appeasement of the ayatollahs is not the only way of dealing with Iran. Read more…
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Hundreds of Canadian Christians gathered on Sunday at the GraceLife Church in Edmonton, Alberta. Government officials shut down the church for allegedly violating public COVID-19 health orders. Authorities … Read more
Dr. Anthony Fauci says Americans should not congregate to eat or drink indoors even if they’ve been vaccinated against COVID-19. What are the details?In a Sunday discussion with MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan, the infectious diseases expert warned people against congregating indoors to consume food and beverages in any fashion while un … Read more
Prosecutors are preparing to rest their case this week against Chauvin, bolstered by police testimony and emotional eyewitness descriptions. We spoke to Benjamin Crump, the civil rights lawyer who is fighting for Floyd’s family.
Meanwhile, one of two police officers in Virginia accused of assaulting a U.S. Army lieutenant by pointing their guns and pepper spraying him during a traffic stop has been fired.
↑ A demonstrator confronts police during a protest after police allegedly shot and killed a man in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, U.S., April 11, 2021. REUTERS/Nick Pfosi
WORLD
↑ Naga Sadhus, or Hindu holy men, take a dip in the Ganges river during the second Shahi Snan at Kumbh Mela in Haridwar, India, April 12, 2021. REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis
India reported a record daily tally of 168,912 COVID-19 infections, the world’s highest, while worries are growing over a further spike, as hundreds of thousands of devotees gather for a ritual bath in the Ganges river.
Iran blames regional arch-foe Israel for a sabotage incident at its key Natanz nuclear site and will exact revenge, state TV quoted its foreign minister as saying, in what appeared to be the latest episode in a long-running covert war.
Ecuadorean banker Guillermo Lasso unexpectedly won the nation’s presidency on promises to revive an economy battered by coronavirus as his rival’s vows of a return to socialist largesse failed to win over a skeptical electorate.
Prince Harry, whose explosive interview alongside his wife Meghan plunged the royal family into its biggest crisis in decades, has arrived back in Britain for Prince Philip’s funeral. Meghan, who is pregnant, will not attend on the advice of her doctor.
Most CEOs on a call to discuss a new push against U.S. state voting restrictions said they will reassess donating to candidates who fail to support voting rights, while many will consider holding back investments in states that restrict voting access, according to people familiar with the matter.
Bill Reith felt the blast of February’s freak cold snap in Texas almost immediately – from inside his office in northern Indiana. We look at how the storm sent a chill through America’s RV industry.
Remember when plug-in hybrid cars were the go-to technology for the climate-conscious driver? Turns out, they’re not good for the environment, and they could be phased out by carmakers in the face of tougher European rules.
Who decides the sex of your child? Biology? Not anymore, if some people have their way. Did you know that there is a growing movement to give the choice of personal gender to children without input or prior consent from their parents? Check out these 2 quotes. The first quote from The American Mind:
A few minutes later, the doctor slinked out and waved goodbye without a word. On the way to the car, the boy told me what happened. “She talked to me about drugs and alcohol. And she told me when I have sex to use a condom.”
And finally, the kicker: “Then she asked me if I was comfortable with my gender.”
He thought the gender question was absurd and funny. But he was outraged about the condom question. “Mom, she told me to use birth control. Until I’m twenty-five! I’d be committing a mortal sin.” He’s so good. I don’t deserve him. I got angrier and angrier as we drove home. Here was this doctor my son had seen in person a total of five times in his life probing his most intimate secrets. Does the white coat magically melt away kids’ stranger danger and cause them to open up to middle-aged harridans holding clipboards? Guys, they really do want to separate you from your children and dictate their own agenda to them! It’s not just theoretical anymore. This time it’s personal.
I realized too late that I don’t know anything about our doctor, I don’t know her beliefs or her politics, because it never occurred to me that a pediatrician visit would become political.
Are you comfortable with doctors impressing their politics and ideas of gender reassignment on your 10-year old child? If so, then this next quote will not disturb you either. Its from The National Pulse’s article, “Biden’s HHS Pick Advocates Sex Changes For Kids.”
Most alarmingly, Dr. Levine has advocated for sex changes for pre-pubertal people, otherwise known as “children.”
A professor of Pediatrics and Psychiatry at the Penn State College of Medicine, Levine has given lectures in various settings since at least 2012 on how to perform sex changes and gender conversion therapy on children.
According to Levine, children ought to be given the latitude to choose their own gender. Levine has advised adults to “try not to force them one way or other [sic]” and instead to follow the child’s lead.
I find this VERY concerning. In my view, gender reassignment surgery is an adult decision and not something a child should be making. Why? As they mature, they might regret the decision. Check out this quote from the Daily Mail:
‘Hundreds’ of transgender people who have transitioned want to un-do their surgery, a campaigner who decided to stop identifying as male has revealed. Charlie Evans, 28, from Newcastle, was born female but identified as male for almost ten years before deciding to identify as a woman again.
‘Hundreds’ of people have contacted her, including 30 in Newcastle alone, asking for guidance around detransitioning – the process of becoming the gender they were born – after she went public with her decision last year, she told Sky News.
‘I’m in communication with 19 and 20-year-olds who have had full gender reassignment surgery who wish they hadn’t, and their dysphoria hasn’t been relieved, they don’t feel better for it,’ Ms Evans said.
Risky procedures, like gender transformation, require a greater depth of informed consent. Some pediatric ethicists argue that, based on our understanding of adolescent brain development, adolescents should never be asked to make independent decisions about life-altering medical treatments, such as refusal of life-sustaining treatment or participation in risky research.
General medical ethical principles for children and adolescents emphasize that the capacity for decision making increases, at different rates, with age, experience, cognitive development and emotional development. Ethicists often counsel that pediatricians and families should avoid making choices for children that they will be able to make for themselves as adults – such as genetic testing for adult onset conditions for which there is no ameliorating treatment available during childhood. So it would be inadvisable for parents to consent to gender transforming surgery a child wants, if the child does not have full decision making capacity.
What makes this issue so incendiary, I think, is that in many cases (not all) the very thought of children considering gender reassignment is not even their own. Indeed, some children have been victims to indoctrination efforts where an adult tells the child they are transgender until the child accepts it as truth and parrots the sentiments back to them. An example of this is in this video.
Transgender politics have taken Americans by surprise, and caught some lawmakers off guard. Just a few short years ago, not many could have imagined a high-profile showdown over transgender men and women’s access to single-sex bathrooms in North Carolina. But transgender ideology is not just infecting our laws. It is intruding into the lives of the most innocent among us—children—and with the apparent growing support of the professional medical community.
In the article, the author dropped several “truthbombs” that I had never heard before and I read a lot. These were a few of them:
Pediatric “gender clinics” are considered elite centers for affirming children who are distressed by their biological sex. This distressful condition, once dubbed gender identity disorder, was renamed “gender dysphoria” in 2013.
In 2014, there were 24 of these gender clinics, clustered chiefly along the east coast and in California. One year later, there were 40 across the nation.
With 215 pediatric residency programs now training future pediatricians in a transition-affirming protocol and treating gender-dysphoric children accordingly, gender clinics are bound to proliferate further.
(Indeed, they likely will since there is a financial benefit to the phenomenon.) The author then makes several bold statements supported by medical researchstudiesthat I would encourage you to read further. And they are:
Twin studies prove no one is born “trapped in the body of the wrong sex.”
Gender identity is malleable, especially in young children.
Puberty blockers for gender dysphoria have not been proven safe.
There are no cases in the scientific literature of gender-dysphoric children discontinuing blockers.
Cross-sex hormones are associated with dangerous health risks.
Neuroscience shows that adolescents lack the adult capacity needed for risk assessment.
There is no proof that affirmation prevents suicide in children.
Transition-affirming protocol has not solved the problem of transgender suicide.
The author concludes with, “Bottom Line: Transition-Affirming Protocol Is Child Abuse.” Wow.
Without a doubt, the debate will rage on with some arguing its okay and others, its not okay. If you ask me, no one under 21 should be making that decision. That’s my opinion and I’m sticking to it. What do you think?
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including us
Just when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.
For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip.
It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics.
The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth.
The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled.
There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies.
During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
There have been zero reported instances of people being forced to go to Tinhorn Flats Saloon & Grill against their will. But judging by the City of Burbank’s reactions to the longstanding business’s desire to stay open, one would think owner Lucas Lepejian had gone door-to-door with a shotgun in hand to drive the people of Burbank to his bar where they would catch Covid-19.
Of course, chances are strong any such person would recover quickly if they even showed symptoms at all. That’s the narrative that’s buried within the fearmongering from the authoritarians who are using Covid-19 as the excuse to solidify authoritarian control. This is all about Big Government keeping the piece of the freedom pie they stole when we started “15 Days to Slow the Spread” over a year ago.
Lepejian has been arrested for a third time. His legal defense fund is here. A fence has been erected around his establishment to prevent them from committing the “crime” of serving food and beverages to hungry and thirsty people, a people who could once consider themselves free. Today, they are not. They are beholden to the City of Burbank and the State of California. At least that’s what the city and state want residents to believe.
The fence was erected around the business at 2623 W. Magnolia Blvd. to prevent the owners of Tinhorn Flats Saloon & Grill from reopening with unsafe conditions due to a court-approved shutoff of electricity and a preliminary injunction granted Friday to prevent the restaurant from operating without a County Health Permit and City Conditional Use Permit, said Burbank police Lt. Derek Green.
The demonstrations have continued for several days, and crowds of dozens of demonstrators have strained police resources, especially during busy weekend nights, Green said.
Celebrity attorney Mark Geragos is representing the restaurant and there was some hope that tensions would have calmed down since indoor dining is opening up again in the county:
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge told Mark J. Geragos, on behalf of the Tinhorn Flats, that he was welcome to file a motion to modify the injunction @TinhornFlats
Hope fell like a rock when Burbank Police took steps to secure the premises. It’s like a scene from an old WWII movie. The Nazis are there, guns in hand, to pass down judgment in the most draconian fashion allowable right now.
Other restaurants are open now that the lockdown orders have finally been lifted. But Tinhorn Flats committed the unthinkable crime of standing up for their constitutional rights and opposing a counterproductive lockdown that has been demonstrated time and again to be ineffective. This is about retribution. They are making an example of a business that stood up to their self-declared authoritarian powers.
This should make you angry. Very angry. It doesn’t matter if you live in Burbank or anywhere in California. It doesn’t matter if you’re a Republican or Democrat, conservative or progressive. Tinhorn Flats did absolutely nothing wrong other than run counter to a destructive agenda. If anything, they are the heroes in this whole ordeal. They are the ones who fulfilled our duty as Americans to stand up to unconstitutional overreach by government.
The people who are saying are saying they should have just complied would have been the people defending England during the Revolutionary War. Cowardice is the greatest tool used by authoritarians like the City Council of Burbank. They rely on the fears of the citizens who put them in office in order to maintain their control over our lives. This is why it’s so important to them to destroy Tinhorn Flats. Anything less than complete annihilation will not suffice in their grand plan to establish that THEY control our lives, not us.
Tinhorn Flats is the oldest bar in Burbank. In March of 2020 they shut down in compliance with state guidelines. They reopened in November 2020, and when the second lockdown was announced their defiance began.
Burbank authorities first cited and fined Tinhorn Flats. Lucas refused to pay and stayed open. Burbank authorities cut their utilities. Lucas brought in generators and stayed open. Burbank authorities Red tagged his restaurant and locked the doors. Lucas cut the locks and reopened. Burbank authorities boarded up the doors and ‘red tagged’ again as unsafe. Lucas sawed off the boards and reopened his business. Burbank police then arrested Lucas. Lucas made bail and was released.
Regular protests then began to support Lucas. Burbank authorities came back and replaced the boards (thicker w/ security nails). Lucas sawed off those boards and reopened business. Burbank police then arrested Lucas the second time. Lucas made bail and was released. Burbank authorities again replaced the boards on the doors and added sand bags; (police later announced that anyone moving a sandbag would be arrested). Lucas removed the sandbags. Lucas was arrested, made bail and was released.
Today the city of Burbank installed fences around the property…. the battle continues.
Tinhorn Flats is every business in America and Lucas Lepejian is every American. The City of Burbank is telling all of us that totalitarian control is our near-future fate. If we do nothing, that fate is sealed and ready to be delivered.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including us
Just when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.
For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip.
It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics.
The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth.
The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled.
There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies.
During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
If you thought the Covid vaccines would help bring life back to normal in America, you obviously haven’t been watching Dr. Anthony Fauci. The flip-flopping “physician” has taken on so many contradictory positions over the last year, it’s practically impossible to keep up.
His latest contradiction starts with his calls for people to take one of the Covid vaccines in order to gain immunity. But he then says doing so does not mean people should be eating or drinking indoors.
“No, it’s still not okay for the simple reason that the level of infection, the dynamics of infection in the community are still really disturbingly high,” Fauci told Mehdi Hasan, host of MSNBC’s The Mehdi Hasan Show. “Like just yesterday, there were close to 80,000 new infections, and we’ve been hanging around 60,000, 70,000, 75,000.”
With the number of vaccinated Americans rising steadily every day, one would think infection levels would be dropping dramatically. If the vaccines worked, there would be no need for vaccinated people to continue to live in lockdown. But Fauci was clear, for once, in saying that the lockdowns must continue even for those who have been inoculated.
He also put the damper on those who think they can ditch the face diapers.
“So, if you’re not vaccinated, please get vaccinated as soon as vaccine becomes available to you, and if you are vaccinated, please remember that you still have to be careful and not get involved in crowded situations, particularly indoors where people are not wearing masks,” he stated. “And for the time being, until we show definitively that a person who’s vaccinated does not get this subclinical infection and can spread to others, you should also continue to wear a mask.”
Americans are becoming increasingly concerned about Fauci’s power over policy, especially as more doctors are coming forward calling out his claims. NOQ Report interview Dr. Andy Lazris, who said we’re suffering from “Faucism.” Fellow NOQ writer Jim Strout wondered if Fauci should be fired.
Maybe its me, but that comes off as a bit arrogant; as if his experience makes him the sole authority that can never be questioned. I do not fault his confidence. He certainly has the track record to be confident. However, to posture yourself as being beyond error is too much hubris. You can clearly see it, I think, in the feud Dr. Fauci has with Senator Rand Paul.
As Peter Navarro recently reminded, Fauci’s involvement with the Wuhan Virology Lab is unquestionable.
Fauci funded the Wuhan lab and authorized gain of function genetic engineering at Wuhan to make bat viruses more dangerous. If SARS-CoV-2 came from Wuhan Lab, Fauci is Father. US biologist Bret Weinstein s 90 per cent chance it leaked from the labhttps://t.co/SjM1arJ9xk
The longer this drags out, the more Fauci is going to have to contradict himself in order to maintain a fearmongering narrative. Some are waking up, which is why the authoritarians are doubling-down.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including us
Just when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.
For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip.
It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics.
The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth.
The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled.
There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies.
During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
CNN revealed the sinister plot behind the government’s continuous lock down policies. The tyrannical, controlling intent behind government lockdowns was revealed for all to see in a recent broadcast that featured disgraced anchor, Chris Cuomo, and former Planned Parenthood president, Dr. Leana Wen.
“We need to make it clear to them (Americans) that the vaccine is the ticket back to pre-pandemic life,” said Wen. “And the window to do that is really narrowing. You were mentioning about how all these states are reopening. They’re reopening at 100%.”
“We have a very narrow window to tie reopening policy to vaccination status,” she continued. “Because otherwise, if everything is reopened, then what’s the carrot going to be? How are we going to incentivize people to actually get the vaccine?” Vaccine Passports were the secret plan all along.
Government lockdowns are being used to usher in total slavery, segregation and discrimination via Vaccine Passports
The government lock downs are part of a plan to terrorize and coerce people to give up their body autonomy and critical thinking skills, so the vaccine and tech industry can enforce bodily requirements on all people and set up a digital surveillance system as a prerequisite to “freedom.” These digital surveillance systems will enslave the world to vaccine permission scans, DNA surveillance and medical mandates, while segregating and isolating anyone who doesn’t follow along. The ongoing tyranny of lockdowns and medical edicts is simply a behavioral training program that coerces people to seek permission for their freedom and live in fear of false authorities.
These Vaccine Passports train everyone to give up their inherent freedoms, forcing people to seek permission from false authorities in order to gather, travel, buy, sell and participate in democracy. Freedom will be completely forgotten if this system is put in place. Medical fascists and central planners have been plotting to control people’s lives for years, and they are joining forces with big tech, corporations and big government policy makers to accomplish their goals.
Back in December 2020, these vaccine passport systems were already in the advanced stages of development in the United Kingdom. The London Guardian Today documented several accounts in 2020 where health ministers lied to the public about the existence of Vaccine Passports. Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove told the public there were no plans to issue “vaccination passports” that would require people to inoculate in order to enter bars, restaurants and other venues. Now, UK vaccine minister Nadhim Zahawi is coming clean about the “track and trace” app by the NHS, which records information on vaccine status and applies it to government lock down policy. The UK’s vaccine passport infrastructure includes facial recognition scans that tie bio-metrics and vaccine status together to restrict and control people throughout society.
Vaccine Passports, once considered a conspiracy theory, have been in development for over a year
A Swiss-based consulting firm, Zühlke Engineering, got involved with the NHS track and tracing app on December 17, 2020. The Guardian leaked the plan, which “details research into possible public attitudes to a Covid certificate, sometimes called a domestic Covid passport.” This passport system “would use vaccination status, a recent negative Covid test or proof of coronavirus antibodies to allow people into potentially packed places when the country opens up.”
The covid-19 testing requirements were one of the first steps toward implementing these totalitarian passports. These DNA-swabbing mandates slowly trained individuals to give up their rights, brainwashing them to believe that they are guilty subjects who have to prove their innocence in order to travel. The abusive swabbing of healthy people is now being replaced by vaccine requirements.
The app-based covid certificates include QR codes that are connected to the NHS app. These QR codes are used to grant vaccine-compliant people exclusive access to certain venues. The official Covid pass is a digital ID card that essentially creates a two-tiered society that discriminates and segregates against innocent people, stripping them of due process, accusing them of spreading diseases they do not have, and barring them from the rest of society. In nations governed by the rule of law, this Vaccine Passport should be dead on arrival because it violates the medical privacy of individuals upfront and turns people into property, subject to bodily requirements. Vaccine passports, once considered a conspiracy theory, are now being pushed onto people as a mark of the beast system.
The British government contracted with multiple firms last year to develop Covid “freedom passports.” When Prime Minister Boris Johnson suggested that pubs would be able to use the vaccine passes at their discretion, backlash quickly ensued. Boris appeared generous when he threw a bone to the people and announced that pubs and restaurants would be exempt from the requirements. The Vaccine Passport is being sold to the public in its most draconian form, so that populations can be slowly weakened into accepting bits and pieces of its oppression. The deceit and oppression of the Vaccine Passport is the kind of attack on freedom that warrants tribunals and quite possibly, a new world war.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including us
Just when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.
For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip.
It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics.
The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth.
The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled.
There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies.
During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Remind the American public that Dr. Fauci is the highest paid ($434,312) of all 4 million federal employees, including the President.
Cite numerous findings about Dr. Fauci’s evolving and contradictory advice on COVID-19.
Reduce Dr. Fauci’s salary to $0 until a new NIAID Administrator is confirmed by the Senate.
Direct GAO to conduct a study about the correspondence, financials, and policy memos inside the NIAID before COVID through the end of this year. This will allow us to see what Fauci and the NIAID knew, when they knew it, what they spent money on, and how the agency responded to the virus.
1) Dr. Fauci says he warned Trump in January that the US was in real trouble but that is not what he said publicly. In January 2020, Dr. Anthony Fauci told Newsmax TV that the United States “did not have to worry” about the coronavirus and that it was “not a major threat.”
“This is not a major threat…”
WATCH : Dr. Anthony Fauci’s original thoughts about the severity of the COVID-19 outbreak are revisited from a January interview with Newsmax TV’s @gregkellyusa. pic.twitter.com/0KmHxxkeBp
4.) On March 20th Dr. Fauci jumped in and “corrected” the president during a press briefing on hydroxychloroquine treatment for coronavirus saying, “You got to be careful when you say ‘fairly effective.’ It was never done in a clinical trial… It was given to individuals and felt that maybe it worked.”
Exactly two weeks later hydroxychloroquine was deemed the most highly rated treatment for the novel coronavirus in an international poll of more than 6,000 doctors.
5.) Dr. Fauci pushed these garbage models every step of the way.
Three weeks ago Dr. Fauci claimed 1 million to 2 million Americans would die from coronavirus. Then he said 100,000 to 200,000 Americans will die from the virus. Then last week he agreed 81,766 Americans would die from the coronavirus. Then by Wednesday the experts cut the number of deaths to 60,415 projected deaths.
6.) On Sunday Dr. Fauci said President Trump should have shut down the economy in February…That’s not what Dr. Fauci said ON FEBRUARY 29th!! (Below is a quote from a now deleted tweet.)
But in late February Fauci told the TODAY Show on February 29 that you don’t need to “change anything you’re doing.”
Dr. Fauci has been blasted constantly by political pundits who debunk his statements constantly. While none of them, to my knowledge, have a background in epidemiology, their logic seems sound in several cases. This RedState article – “One Chart Shows How Useless Dr. Fauci’s Advice Is” being one example.
Of course, Fauci’s expertise is highly debatable. Yes, he has the credentials, but credentials hardly make someone right when they start opining on things that may lack good answers. That’s never been more true than the coronavirus, where Fauci has flipped and flopped on numerous issues while being shown to be outright wrong on others. Despite his checkered record, he still chooses to target red states like Florida while celebrating dumpster fires like New York.
This morning, I stumbled across a chart that shows how truly useless Fauci’s “advice” is. Take a look. Why, it’s almost as if Fauci’s chosen prescriptions of lockdowns and mask-wearing (and until recently, closing schools) aren’t having the effect he said they’d have.
It’s been a while since I updated the chart of Florida, Fauci’s favorite target for criticism, vs. all the states that blindly follow his advice
Shockingly, nearly 3 months after he said Florida was “asking for trouble”, they’re still having the best results pic.twitter.com/f8yHPgRz1Z
So, how does Dr. Fauci feel about being criticized. Well, he pushes back. For instance, on the podcast “Learning Curve” he defended himself this way. (HT: Independent Sentinel)
“One of the problems we face in the United States is that unfortunately, there is a combination of an anti-science bias that people are — for reasons that sometimes are, you know, inconceivable and not understandable — they just don’t believe science and they don’t believe authority,” he said.
“That’s unfortunate because, you know, science is truth,” he said. “It’s amazing, sometimes, the denial there is.”
“I think the people who believe are people who understand and who have trust in someone who has a very, very long track record of always speaking the truth based on evidence,” he said, “and I’ve done that through six administrations.”
Maybe its me, but that comes off as a bit arrogant; as if his experience makes him the sole authority that can never be questioned. I do not fault his confidence. He certainly has the track record to be confident. However, to posture yourself as being beyond error is too much hubris. You can clearly see it, I think, in the feud Dr. Fauci has with Senator Rand Paul.
Senator Rand Paul has publicly challenged Dr. Fauci with medical research data that seems to irk Dr. Fauci. In one exchange, Paul said to Fauci in a Senate hearing:
“There’s virtually zero percent chance you’re going to get it and you’re telling people that have had the vaccine who have immunity — You’re defying everything we know about immunity by telling people to wear masks who have been vaccinated.”
Its important to note that Senator Paul is a medical doctor as well. You can watch them exchange quips in this video clip. Despite Senator Paul’s logic, Dr. Fauci has since doubled down on his position, even suggesting that the world needs to continue wearing masks until 2022 and that children should be wearing them in order to play together, even until they are all vaccinated from the age of 6 months. (HT: Summit News) This is why Senator Rand Paul trolls Dr. Fauci with science whenever possible. 2 examples:
Dr. Fauci, great news! T cell immunity after natural infection shown to include variants. Do we still need to wear multiple masks after we’ve recovered or been vaccinated?https://t.co/sSsE66wJbs
And one more thing, as I get to my point because I do have one. The NY Post reported that 2,000 migrants entering the USA illegally were not tested for Covid. The Department of Homeland Security won’t test thousands of migrants either before releasing them into the USA. Texas Governor Greg Abbott sharply criticized the federal government, claiming an unknown number of migrants caught crossing the border illegally had been allowed to travel freely after being diagnosed with Covid-19.
And now, the point of all these facts.
Dr. Fauci is well credentialed but, has been proven wrong with data on numerous occasions resulting in catastrophe to our society and economy.
Dr. Fauci seems to refuse scientific research that goes contrary to his opinion and indeed, doubles down due to (presumably) ego.
And now, with thousands upon thousands of immigrants surging our border with extremely high potential for Covid-19, he is silent on the public health ramifications. I assume to shield the missteps of the Biden Administration.
I think the “Fire Fauci” legislation by Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene is timely and sensible. I hope it is successful and that Fauci is replaced with someone who is as qualified (or better), someone who is willing to change his position based on new information and above all places public health above politics and ego.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including us
Just when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.
For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip.
It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics.
The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth.
The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled.
There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies.
During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
When GraceLife Church near Edmonton, Alberta, Canada was fenced off on Wednesday for violating Covid rules, it was assumed there would be protesters coming out on the first Sunday since the closure. Knowing this, the Canadian government took no chances. They sent over 200 officers from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police to “guard” the church from… something.
Two layers of fencing were already erected by the government to prevent entry following repeated violations of Covid rules. The church was raided on Wednesday, prompting conservative and Christian media reports. Mainstream media in both Canada and the United States largely ignored the plight of church leadership and their members.
I count thirteen vehicles as part of this police raid on a church. They’re erecting steel fences around it. Like China does when they uncover an illegal “house church”. Except this is in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The same church whose pastor was thrown in prison for 35 days. pic.twitter.com/qJlnHHGGdV
According to Alberta Health Services, the church was closed after repeated violations of their rules designed to protect people against Covid-19. But as many have pointed out, areas where there are stricter lockdowns have seen no benefits in efforts to prevent the disease from spreading.
Today, April 7, 2021, Alberta Health Services (AHS) physically closed GraceLife Church (GLC) and has prevented access to the building until GLC can demonstrate the ability to comply with Alberta’s Chief Medical Officer of Health’s (CMOH) restrictions.
For several months, AHS has attempted to work collaboratively with GLC to address the ongoing public health concerns at the site. Steps taken prior to physically closing the site include:
An order issued by AHS on December 17th, 2020, requiring GLC to comply with CMOH restrictions.
A Court of Queen’s Bench Order obtained on January 21st, 2021, requiring GLC to comply with the previous order.
A Closure Order issued on January 29th, 2021, requiring closure until compliance with the restrictions was attained.
On March 27, 2021, AHS sent a letter to Pastor Coates providing him with information on the continued spread of COVID-19. Last week, AHS invited Pastor Coates to meet virtually to discuss the risks presented by COVID-19, however the church has not provided any dates to meet.
A crowd gathered early Sunday morning with reports ranging from 200-500. But the mammoth law enforcement presence was a show of force intended to intimidate anyone who thought to try to enter the church.
Other protesters called for their allies to stop taking down the fence, leaving it as a symbol of the persecution they were experiencing at the hands of tyrannical government and overly ambitious law enforcement. At one point, the crowd started chanting “leave the fence” just as law enforcement rushed over.
The Covid police state is rearing its ugly head in Canada, the United States, and most other nations around the world. It seems that churches are being targeted regularly. To date, no strip clubs have been raided and fenced off for Covid violations.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including us
Just when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.
For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip.
It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics.
The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth.
The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled.
There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies.
During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Over the past few months, world leaders have been pushing for the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines. People have started looking forward to the end of the coronavirus pandemic even as new mutations of the virus continue to appear, confident that herd immunity will soon take over.
But liberals are singing a different tune. In a recent article on Bloomberg, investment banker-turned-journalist Andreas Kluth warned that things might never go back to normal. In his article, Kluth said pharmaceutical companies will never be able to develop COVID-19 vaccines fast enough to keep up with mutations of the virus.
It would be wise to assume, said Kluth, that SARS-CoV-2 – the official name of the Wuhan coronavirus – has already mutated in most poor countries that have yet to receive COVID-19 vaccines, even if their youthful populations keep mortality manageable. This just means that people around the world should start planning for a “permanent pandemic,” said Kluth.
But libertarian and political commentator Tom Mullen begs to disagree. Mullen, whose website proclaims he is working to dismantle the government “one lie at a time,” pointed out that this push to make pandemic life permanent undermines people’s liberties. But these narratives are nothing new.
Liberals tout defeatist propaganda that undermines freedom
In his fatalistic article, Kluth said SARS-CoV-2 can only be moving along one of two evolutionary paths. In one, the virus becomes more severe, infecting and killing more people, but its growth remains linear.
In the other path, the virus never ceases to mutate. It becomes more contagious but not deadlier. In this case, a constantly mutating virus causes exponential, not linear, increases in the number of infections and deaths.
Either way, the result is the same: safety protocols, such as mandatory mask-wearing and social distancing, are retained. In other words, the world may never “get back to normal,” as Kluth puts it so succinctly. It is this idea of never getting back to normal that Mullen challenged in his own article.
If “normal” is viewed vis-a-vis the lack of protocols that now dictate people’s lives, it becomes clear that getting back to normal means recovering the “relative liberty” that people already had prior to the pandemic. Mullen says “relative liberty” because people were already overly regulated by the government prior to the pandemic.
To Mullen, the coronavirus pandemic is just the latest in a long series of crises that somehow lead authorities to the same conclusion each time: people can no longer afford their freedoms.
Government rehashes same old crisis narrative
Mullen argued that the coronavirus pandemic wasn’t the first time that the powers that be have used narratives that undermine freedom of movement, assembly and other civil liberties. Government authorities have long been terrorizing citizens into relinquishing their liberties under the guise of keeping them safe.
For instance, Americans were told that “the world changed” after 9/11. Authorities had people believe that they needed better protection against what they said was the “new threat of terrorism.” And that protection came in the form of warrantless surveillance of calls, text messages, electronic messages, financial records and physical searches even without probable cause of an actual crime.
But it seems as if history is repeating itself. Mullen argues that the fearmongering that happened then isn’t that different from the left’s own fearmongering about many so-called crises, such as climate change. The story goes that in order to save the planet and beat climate change, people would have to ditch gasoline-powered cars, limit air travel and limit meat consumption.
But these crisis narratives don’t just assault civil liberties, added Mullen. They also lead to dire predictions that turn out to be false. Additionally, they lead to solutions that turn out to be ineffective.
For instance, environmentalists have been predicting end-of-the-world disasters decades before New York Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was born. Ocasio-Cortez made headlines in 2019 after warning that the world will end in 12 years if world leaders do not address climate change.
Kluth is no different. There is little to no sense of proportion when so-called experts discuss the pandemic, said Mullen. For instance, there have been breakthrough cases of people spreading SARS-CoV-2 even after inoculation. But even medical experts studying the virus don’t fully understand such cases.
Similarly, health authorities have justified the need for lockdowns time and again by claiming that it is possible for asymptomatic people to spread SARS-CoV-2. Yet medical experts themselves find it difficult to estimate the contribution of asymptomatic COVID-19 patients to outbreaks.
Nevertheless, governments continue to enforce draconian safety protocols like lockdowns and mask mandates, the effectiveness of which are questionable at best. Such “solutions” demand more of people’s freedom even though they haven’t been proven to work, said Mullen. “It’s always all pain and no gain.”
Pandemic.news has more articles with updates about the coronavirus pandemic.
Iran’s top uranium enrichment facility was hit with a major “power outage” today that resulted in the complete shutdown of the huge complex. Initial reports from Iran of the event at the Natanz nuclear plant being “unexplained” quickly turned to accusations of sabotage by Israel.
There has been no confirmation from Israel, nor will they be. Unlike other nations that often take credit for successful operations, Israel tends to remain coy about such things. The infamous “Stuxnet” cyberattack in 2010 on the same facility that destroyed over 1000 centrifuges has never been confirmed by the Israeli government, but it is widely accepted that it was a joint operation between American intelligence agencies and Israel’s Mossad. According to Jerusalem Post:
The Mossad was reportedly behind the cyberattack at the Natanz nuclear plant on Sunday that caused extensive damage to Iran’s main uranium enrichment facility.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the security cabinet’s first meeting in two months to discuss Iran next Sunday amid increased tensions with Tehran.
Western sources quoted in Israeli media said the attack, which was initially referred to as an “accident” by Iran, was carried out by the Mossad.
Iran admitted on Sunday evening that the so-called “accident” was the result of a “terrorist” act.
The country’s nuclear chief, Ali Akbar Salehi, said the international community and the International Atomic Energy Agency needed to deal with what he called nuclear terrorism. Iran reserves the right to take action against the perpetrators, he was quoted as saying.
The alleged attack took place on Iran’s National Nuclear Technology Day, one day after Iranian President Hassan Rouhani announced to the world that they were moving forward with the relaunch of the facility. There are no reported casualties nor contamination.
Assuming this action was performed by Mossad, it raises the question of the political ramifications. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been tasked with forming a new government. If he is unable to put together a coalition of 61 Knesset Members in the next three weeks, the mandate could go to one of his opponents or a fifth election in just over two years could be called.
This move demonstrates the boldness that has been a trademark of the longest-serving Prime Minister in Israeli history. While it’s unlikely that this was done purely as a publicity stunt, the timing is important as it shows Netanyahu is continuing to make decisions on behalf of his people despite the political strife that has engulfed the lone Middle Eastern democracy since 2019.
At an Independence Day event on Sunday with the heads of the security branches, Netanyahu said, “The struggle against Iran and its proxies and the Iranian armament efforts is a huge mission.”
In a possible reference to the reported Mossad operation taking the uranium enrichment machines off-line within hours of their launch, he said, “The situation that exists today will not necessarily be the situation that will exist tomorrow.”
While Iran continues to rattle its sabers and bully most of the international community, including President Biden, Israel stands athwart their nuclear ambitions. Along the way, Benjamin Netanyahu is building political stock.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including us
Just when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.
For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip.
It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics.
The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth.
The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled.
There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies.
During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology.
We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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‘Americans are craving news and information that is not filtered through the radical worldview of today’s liberal media intelligentsia, or deep state actors.’Read more…
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Morning Rundown
Protests ensue after Minnesota police officer fatally shoots driver during traffic stop: A Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, police officer fatally shot a driver during a traffic stop Sunday afternoon, police said. Officers initiated a stop for a traffic violation shortly before 2 p.m., Brooklyn Center Police Chief Tim Gannon said, after they determined the driver had an outstanding warrant. “At one point as officers were attempting to take the driver into custody, the driver re-entered the vehicle,” Gannon said. “One officer discharged their firearm, striking the driver.” He said the vehicle traveled several blocks before crashing into another vehicle. Officers and medical personnel “attempted life saving measures,” Gannon said, “but the person died at the scene.” Gannon said officers wore body cameras and the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal apprehension is now investigating the incident. “I am closely monitoring the situation in Brooklyn Center. Gwen and I are praying for Daunte Wright’s family as our state mourns another life of a Black man taken by law enforcement,” Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz tweeted Sunday night, referring to the driver. ABC News affiliate KSTP spoke to Wright’s mother, who identified him as the person shot, though police have not revealed his identity. Moments after the shooting, crowds of protesters gathered at the scene holding Black Lives Matter signs. At around 9 p.m CT, the crowd of protesters began making their way toward the Brooklyn Center Police Department headquarters. Officers then declared the demonstration outside the police station an unlawful assembly, and fired less-lethal rounds and flash bangs to disperse protesters in the area. No injuries have been reported and it is unclear if any arrests have been made.
Pfizer asks regulators to give vaccine to kids as young as 12: Pfizer, the first vaccine to become authorized in the U.S., on Friday asked federal regulators to authorize its vaccine for kids as young as 12, insisting that recent clinical trials showed it’s both safe and effective. The news came as health officials warned that youth sports were now driving new COVID cases in states like Minnesota and Michigan, where COVID cases are surging to alarming levels according to Michigan health officials. While younger people are less likely to get sick from the virus, they can spread it to other unvaccinated adults. In addition, children tend to have mild cases of COVID-19, though some have gotten seriously ill and died from the virus, so getting vaccinated can help protect them. In Franklin County, Ohio, high schoolers are being prioritized to get the Pfizer vaccine — the only one currently authorized for those as young as 16. And last week, Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus launched an initiative with the local health department to hold teen vaccination clinics at every public school district across Franklin County. Meanwhile, as 4.6 million Americans received the COVID-19 vaccine on Saturday, many states are now considering or have already created vaccine “passports.” But while New York state created its own digital pass, states like Florida and Texas attempted to outlaw them. Click here to learn more about these credentials.
Remembering Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip’s 7-decades-long marriage: As many around the world paid tribute to Prince Philip over the weekend following his death on Friday at the age of 99 at Windsor Castle, many are also remembering his and Queen Elizabeth’s seven-decade marriage. The Greek-born Prince Philip first met Elizabeth, who was then a princess, in 1934 at the wedding of Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark and Prince George, the Duke of Kent. In 1946, Philip was given permission by King Geoge VI to marry his daughter, on the condition that they wait until Elizabeth was 21. They married the following year in a royal wedding and Philip renounced his Greek and Danish titles, adopting the anglicized surname of his mother’ family, calling himself Lt. Philip Mountbatten. Life as a royal wasn’t always easy for Philip, who navigated his relationship with Elizabeth amid scrutiny by the public, and was reportedly upset when he learned after his wife’s accession that his children would never bear his last name. Despite it all, Philip took an active role in the upbringing of his children: Charles, Anne, Andrew and Edward. He also became known as one of the hardest-working members of the royal family. Philip and Elizabeth celebrated their last wedding anniversary together, their 73rd, on Nov. 20, 2020. “He has, quite simply, been my strength and stay all these years,” Queen Elizabeth said in 1997, paying tribute to her husband on their golden wedding anniversary. “I, and his whole family, and this and many other countries, owe him a debt greater than he would ever claim, or we shall ever know.” A service for Prince Philip will be held Saturday, April 17, at St. George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle.
Teen born in Starbucks reunites with barista who helped deliver him: An 18-year-old has reunited with the Starbucks barista who helped his mom give birth in the coffee shop’s restroom in 2002. Griffin Baron was working as the shift manager at the Starbucks in Wilmette, Illinois, when Lisabeth Rohlck unexpectedly delivered her child. Baron, a Chicago-resident, told “GMA” that he sold Rohlck a bottle of water before she headed to the women’s restroom. “I just heard these high-pitched screams,” Baron recalled, adding that a customer instructed him to call 911. “I’m 21 … All I knew was you get hot towels, because that’s what you see in movies.” Baron said that Rohlck’s son, Jonathan Celner, was born four minutes later, and EMTs soon arrived to take the new mom and son to the hospital. Baron, now 39, said he always wondered what came of the mom and her baby. After an online search, Baron learned that Rohlck died in 2012 from complications from breast cancer and that her husband, Thomas Celner, also died in 2020. But after connecting with Jonathan Celner on Facebook, the two were finally able to meet at the Starbucks where he was born. “When Griffin reached out, it came full circle, which was cool,” Celner told “GMA.” “The story always reminded me of my mom, which I really enjoy.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” we’re searching for the truth behind the real power of crystals, as some advocates believe they release positive energies while others remain skeptical. Plus, Carey Mulligan joins us live to talk about her role in “Promising Young Woman,” which has been nominated for five Oscars. And in part 1 of our series “Insta-Parents,” we talk to postpartum nurse Karrie Locher, who shares practical tips for parents to help ease the transition from hospital to home. She’ll also join us live to talk about why it’s important for new parents to get out of the house – and how to plan ahead to make your first trip manageable. All this and more only on “GMA.”
The fatal police shooting of a young black man after a traffic stop sparked angry protests overnight in Minnesota, the Democrats’ majority is looking precarious as Congress, and Prince Philip’s death puts the spotlight on the royals’ next generation.
Here is what we’re watching this Monday morning.
Fatal police shooting near Minneapolis followed by unrest, tear gas and rubber bullets
Protests erupted after police shot and killed a Black man on Sunday during a stop for a traffic violation, sparking unrest in a town just miles from where George Floyd was killed during an arrest in Minneapolis last May.
The man killed by police was identified by relatives and Minnesota Governor Tim Walz as Daunte Wright, 20.
The state mobilized the National Guard after crowds gathered in front of the Brooklyn Center Police Department on Sunday evening, and a curfew was ordered through Monday morning. Officers fired rubber bullets and tear gas, NBC News affiliate KARE reported.
Wright’s mother, Katie Wright, told reporters at the scene that she received a call from her son on Sunday afternoon telling her that police had pulled him over for having air fresheners dangling from his rear-view mirror, illegal in Minnesota.
“I heard police officers say, ‘Daunte, don’t run,'” she said through tears. After the call ended she dialed his number again, and his girlfriend answered and said he had been shot.
Democrats’ narrow edge is poised to get even narrower this week when Congress returns from a two-week recess with big ambitions to bolster infrastructure spending, expand the safety net and confirm more of President Joe Biden’s nominees.
Virginia state authorities to investigate police who threatened Black Army officer
State authorities in Virginia will investigate an encounter captured on body camera that appears to show a police officer threatening to execute a Black Army officer during a traffic stop, officials said Sunday.
The first major real-world organizing efforts by white supremacists since 2018 were hyped by organizers as events that would make “the whole world tremble.” But the rallies ran into a major problem: Hardly anyone showed up.
Prince Philip’s death brings young royals into focus for British monarchy
The death of Prince Philip brings the next generation of royals into sharp focus, with observers questioning how the traditional institution might take shape in younger hands. See more of NBC News’ coverage in the wake of Prince Philip’s death here
‘Getting a clearer picture’: Black Americans on the factors that overcame their vaccine hesitancy
In a survey last month 55 percent of Black respondent said they would immediately get vaccinated, while 24 percent were holding back to wait and see about the vaccine’s effects.
OPINION
Manchin’s filibuster defense contradicts the Senate legacy he claims to protect
The senator from West Virginia says he sees himself as a defender of the late Sen. Robert C. Byrd. If we review Byrd’s legacy, however, it’s clear Manchin is not doing that.
A 3,000-year-old “lost golden city” that was found under the sands of Egypt has been revealed to the world — offering a rare glimpse of a working Egyptian city in ancient times.
I’m filling in for Petra Cahill while she has a week off. If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: patrick.smith@nbcuni.com.
If you’re a fan, please forward it to your family and friends. They can sign-up here.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: What’s changed — and what hasn’t — in 100 days since Jan. 6
A lot has changed in the nearly 100 days since the violent Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.
Some 370 Americans have been charged for their roles in the attack. An outgoing president was impeached and ultimately acquitted. Members of Congress say it’s more difficult to work across the aisle with those who voted to object the Electoral College results. And one member – Rep. Dan Kildee, D-Mich. – tells NBC’s Hallie Jackson that he’s suffered from post-traumatic stress from that day.
But a lot hasn’t changed since Jan. 6.
Photo by ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP via Getty Images
There’s still been no creation of a 9/11-style commission to study what happened.
There’s also been no official account of former President Trump’s activity from the White House after the attack started.
Trump continues to be unmoved, telling GOP donors over the weekend that he was “so disappointed” that former Vice President Pence certified the election results, as well as praising those who attended his “Save America” rally on Jan. 6 before the Capitol was stormed, NBC’s Monica Alba reports.
And Trump remains the unofficial leader of the Republican Party, doling out endorsements and delivering speeches to donors and activists.
A month after the Jan. 6 attack, we wrote that the two political parties have had two vastly different reactions to that day – with Democrats haunted by it, and with Republicans largely moving on (despite some exceptions like Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo.)
And the result, almost 100 days later, is a Congress and Washington that have no shared memory of Jan. 6, and that have taken no collective course of action to prevent it from happening again.
Biden’s bipartisan meeting on infrastructure
Those divisions and differing attitudes about Jan. 6 provide part of the backdrop to today’s bipartisan meeting at the White House to discuss President Biden’s $2 trillion infrastructure/jobs bill.
At 1:45 pm ET, Biden and Vice President Harris will meet with Democratic and Republican members Congress, including Sens. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., Alex Padilla, D-Calif., Deb Fischer, R-Neb., and Roger Wicker, R-Miss., as well as Reps. Garrett Graves, R-La., and Don Young, R-Alaska.
Meanwhile, NBC’s Garrett Haake reports that the Senate Republican Conference is out with their talking points opposing Biden’s infrastructure package.
The topline attack you’re going to hear from them: The package is a “slush fund” for liberal priorities, and it will kill jobs.
TWEET OF THE DAY: It keeps on happening
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
More than 400: The number of Senate-confirmed positions for which Biden has not yet put forward a nominee.
31,330,430: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 194,535 more than Friday morning.)
566,097: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,905 more than Friday morning.)
187,047,131: Number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
19.9 percent: The share of Americans who are fully vaccinated
17: The number of days left for Biden to reach his 100-day vaccination goal.
Business leaders continue to discuss voting restrictions
“More than 120 CEOs, business leaders, lawyers and experts came together Saturday afternoon to discuss further action against voting legislation nationwide, attendees on the call said,” NBC’s Jane Timm writes.
More: “The group discussed numerous options to push back against the Republican-led efforts to restrict access to the ballot box, including pulling their donations, refusing to move business or jobs to states that pass restrictive measures, and relocating events, said one of the call’s organizers, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld.”
“‘It was incredibly concrete,’ said Sonnenfeld, a professor at the Yale School of Management.”
The meeting was first reported Sunday by The Wall Street Journal.
And the number of the week is… 9 percentage points
Don’t miss the pod from over the weekend, when we looked at the share of Americans who now identify with each party, according to Gallup.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Congress is back from a two-week recess this week, with Democrats facing an even narrower majority than before.
Some immigration advocates worry that the voting bill being pushed by Democrats in Washington might inadvertently hurt non-citizens who are in the country legally.
More than 187 million COVID-19 vaccine doses have been distributed in the U.S., but variants and rising cases in parts of the country are complicating the fight against the pandemic. Also, protests erupted in Minnesota where police shot and killed a driver at a traffic stop. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Family members say Daunte Wright was killed by Brooklyn Center, Minnesota police Sunday afternoon after he was pulled over. The shooting sparked protests in the city, just miles from the murder trial of Derek Chauvin in Minneapolis. Jamie Yuccas reports.
Bodycam and cellphone video shows how a Virginia officer pepper-sprayed a Black and Latino Army lieutenant during a traffic stop in December. Christina Ruffini reports on the details of the stop and the lawsuit against the officers.
Kids can get long-haul COVID, too. Recovery can take months
At the request of CBS News, one hospital in Omaha documented how it is trying to help a girl who is struggling with the lingering effects of coronavirus.
Former House Speaker John Boehner on future of GOP
Former House Speaker John Boehner joined “CBS This Morning” to discuss his new book, “On the House: A Washington Memoir.” In it, he discusses the lawmakers he calls “political terrorists,” and the future of the Republican Party.
Plus: Tyler Cowen on libertarianism now, inflation fears, and more…
Are airplanes more dangerous now than they were during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic? No, of course not. Yet that’s what CNN implied on Sunday, in an article on “how to fly safely.” Correctly noting that the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are only 90 percent protective against COVID-19, CNN went on to assert (incorrectly) that “translated into reality, that means for every million fully vaccinated people who fly, some 100,000 could still become infected.”
From our partners at The Dispatch
It isn’t easy to find journalists today who are honest about where they are coming from. It’s even harder to find true conservative journalists – individuals deeply committed to bedrock conservative principles and who engage opposing viewpoints with honesty and charity. The Dispatch does all of these things. And it does them well. The Dispatch provides engaged citizens with much-needed fact-based reporting and commentary on politics, policy, and culture – all from an unapologetic conservative perspective.
COVID-19 can and has spread on flights, of course. But even before people started getting vaccinated, confirmed cases of transmission were relatively small. “The risk of contracting coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) during air travel is lower than from an office building, classroom, supermarket, or commuter train,” an article in The Journal of the American Medical Association noted last fall. If CNN’s estimate were true, that would mean many more vaccinated people getting infected on planes as overall case counts dwindle than unvaccinated people did at the pandemic’s peak.
Luckily, CNN’s estimate is dead wrong. “NO NO NO. That’s not what that number means,” tweeted University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Professor Zeynep Tufekci yesterday, adding “this didn’t even happen when millions flew unvaccinated. So how could it make sense now?”
When we talk about a 90 percent vaccine efficacy rate, it does not mean that every single vaccinated person who is exposed to COVID-19 has a 10 percent chance of getting it; individual immune responses and other factors still apply. And it certainly doesn’t mean that 10 percent of vaccinated people in the world, a country, or a given place will catch COVID-19.
“What a ‘90% effective vaccine’ means is that the number of people who would otherwise have gotten COVID is 90% lower. It doesn’t mean that only 90% of vaccinated people are immune,” Australian journalist and University of Technology Sydney fellow Josh Szeps points out.
This would be like saying if 1,000 people go to the grocery story, 100 of them will get Covid. https://t.co/4CNrle6LMr
One million vaccinated people flying does not mean all one million people will be on flights where another passenger has COVID-19.
Even if that were the case, it does not follow that conditions—air circulation patterns, ventilation system operation, masking, proximity to the infected person, etc.—would make it possible for each vaccinated person on a flight to be significantly exposed.
And even if that were the case—the highly, highly unlikely scenario that every vaccinated person is exposed to COVID-19 in-flight—it does not follow that 10 percent of those travelers will definitely catch it. Who catches it upon exposure isn’t just a pure percentages game; it also depends on individual immune responses, amount of exposure, and more.
“One common misunderstanding is that 95% efficacy means that in the Pfizer clinical trial, 5% of vaccinated people got COVID,” writes Anna Nowogrodzki at LiveScience. “But that’s not true; the actual percentage of vaccinated people in the Pfizer (and Moderna) trials who got COVID-19 was about a hundred times less than that: 0.04%.”
Reason‘s Ronald Bailey recently looked “at what a 95 percent vaccine efficacy rate would mean in a hypothetical case in which a population of 100,000 people have all been vaccinated.”
“Applying the 1 percent rate at which unvaccinated folks became ill during the vaccine trials over three months suggests that 1,000 people in an unvaccinated population of 100,000 would fall ill,” notes Bailey. “But because all 100,000 people are vaccinated, the actual rate in the vaccinated population would be just 50 cases (0.05 x 1,000 = 50 cases).”
The CNN article has since been updated to say that while the vaccines are 90 percent protective, “that means it’s still possible to get infected.” A correction at the end of the article says “A previous version of this article incorrectly extrapolated vaccine efficacy and the probability of becoming infected with Covid-19 aboard airplanes. The risk is much lower than stated in the original version.”
FREE MINDS
Tyler Cowen sketches out a new vision of libertarianism, after declaring last year that the libertarian movement was “pretty much hollowed out.” Taking a second look, Cowen asks: “What does it mean to be libertarian now? I would say that the purer forms of libertarianism are evolving: from a set of policy stances on political questions to a series of projects for building entire new political worlds.” With many past battles around regulation and communism won, and other old battles seemingly lost forever (health care) or unable to sustain much public interest (anti-war efforts), Cowen suggests that “much of the intellectual effort in libertarian circles is concentrated in two ideas in particular: charter cities and cryptocurrency.”
But Cowen’s piece ignores many areas where U.S. libertarians have long been focused, continue to focus, and could do real good—for the movement, and for the country more broadly—by focusing even more. Things like ending the drug war (which is arguable just as strong and destructive as ever, despite moving away from marijuana as a target), other criminal justice/police/prison reform efforts, fighting the surveillance state, dismantling oppressive occupational licensing, staving off a bloated and all-powerful antitrust regime, and fighting for free markets and free speech despite major political party figures who increasingly can’t stand either, to name a few. And anti-war efforts seem valuable even—or especially—in the face of waning popularity.
Cryptocurrency is great, and charter cities intriguing. But U.S. cities and systems as they exist leave plenty of room for valuable, influential, and perhaps even some winnable libertarian fights, too. Building new political worlds is all good, but libertarians shouldn’t give up just yet on the one we have, either.
FREE MARKETS
Are we headed for 1970s-style inflation? Reports about current commodity markets are eerily reminiscent of the ’70s, TheWall Street Journalsays:
In 1973, the U.S. was coming off a two-year experiment in wage and price controls, which artificially depressed prices and muted signals that the economy was overheating. Then, too, the Fed pursued an easy-money policy, keeping interest rates low—though considerably higher than now, and without today’s purchases of bonds and mortgage securities….
In 2021 we’re emerging from the pandemic shutdown, which cratered growth and slammed the economy—depressing price pressures, not unlike what the price-control program did 50 years ago. Today’s Fed policies are even more expansive. And Congress has just enacted a $1.9 trillion stimulus bill—on top of earlier relief bills costing another nearly $2 trillion, a lot of which remains unspent and will continue to fuel demand this year and beyond.
Does that mean that we’re doomed to repeat the earlier disaster? Today’s fiscal stimulus clearly dwarfs anything even considered in the 1970s. Moreover, there is a palpable excitement that Americans will finally be able to discard the shackles of Covid and spend the money they saved last year and the wages they’re starting to earn again. So demand is likely to soar.
As was the case 50 years ago, there are constraints on supplies: shipping delays are blocking deliveries; manufacturers can’t get parts to ramp up production; real-estate values are skyrocketing, while lumber shortages constrain home building; and most commodity prices are rising precipitously. Experts reassure us that the annual inflation rate will rise only to about 2%. We hope they’re right, but when demand increases faster than supply, prices tend to go up.
QUICK HITS
@TheAtlantic has a new article, suggesting we should worry about the courts of appeals in 20 years b/c many Trump appointees will be Chief Judges and might manipulate panel assignments (creating more 2R/1D panels). This piece is *deeply problematic* and misreads my scholarship.🧵 https://t.co/rs9fNfW7ph
• The term “‘BIPOC’ isn’t doing what you think it’s doing,” write Andrea Plaid and Christopher Macdonald-Dennis at Newsweek.
• “The Texas Supreme Court voided a restraining order against a salon owner who was jailed and fined last year for keeping her store open despite executive actions requiring the business to be closed,” reportsThe Hill.
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.
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Bipartisan Voting Rights; Bullies Pulpit; Diversity to the Fore
By Carl M. Cannon on Apr 12, 2021 09:39 am
Good morning, it’s Monday, April 12, 2021. By the time you read this, Hideki Matsuyama will have returned the green jacket he won at August National Golf Club yesterday to its storied closet before heading back to Japan for a hero’s welcome.
A reticent star even in normal circumstances, Matsuyama all but conceded afterward that the absence of a huge contingent of Japanese sports journalists (we’re still in COVID world, remember) probably helped him stay calm as he cruised to victory in the 85th Masters Tournament.
Matsuyama is the first Masters champion from Japan, a place where the sport is hugely popular but PGA tour champions are rare: No Japanese golfer had ever finished in the top three at Augusta National or, for that matter, won a “major” (the Masters, the PGA, the U.S. Open, and the British Open). That’s not true anymore, as no less an authority than five-time green jacket winner Tiger Woods noted Sunday.
“Making Japan proud Hideki,” Woods tweeted. “Congratulations on such a huge accomplishment for you and your country. This is historical @TheMasters win will impact the entire golf world.”
Matsuyama’s win is also good for the Masters itself, and for the worldwide march toward inclusiveness and diversity in a vasty array of human endeavors outside athletics. I’ll have more on this in a moment. First, 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. We also offer a complement of original material from RCP’s reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Bipartisan Voting Rights Bill Is Possible. Bill Scher writes that distrust can be overcome if both parties acknowledge that many of the assumptions they hold are deeply flawed.
Businesses Taking Political Positions Further Divide the Nation. Andy Puzder laments that stances taken by Delta, Coca-Cola and MLB in response to Georgia’s voting law have further politicized daily life.
The Schoolyard Bully Morphs Into the Corporate Bully. Frank Miele also weighs in on the subject.
Putting Biden’s Gun Control Claims to the Truth Test. John R. Lott Jr. and Thomas Massie fact-check the president’s assertions last week.
The Trouble With Sheldon Whitehouse’s Amicus Act. At RealClearPolicy, Tyler Martinez explains the downside of proposed legislation forcing any group filing an amicus brief in a federal court case to disclose its donors.
“Rebate Walls” and Drug Costs. At RealClearHealth, Madelaine Feldman and Wayne Winegarden spotlight policies that force patients to “fail first” on certain medications before more effective medicines are covered by insurance.
What If Sweden Had Had a COVID Lockdown? RealClearScience editor Ross Pomeroy examines a new study comparing the less restrictive nation’s economic and health outcomes with those of more restrictive neighbors.
Top 10 Books on Family Life and Manhood. Max Yenor compiled this list at RealClearBooks.
* * *
The first Masters was held in 1934 at a golf course designed for that purpose. Augusta National and the tournament itself were the brainchild of Atlanta-born golfing legend Bobby Jones. Needless to say, the Deep South was segregated in those days, but it was hardly alone — as baseball fans know well. So, saying that the Masters has “racist roots,” which was fashionable this year, is not untrue exactly, but imprecise. The more salient criticism is how slow Augusta National Golf Club was to reform itself: By the time Lee Elder became the first black player invited to the Masters, Gary Player, a white South African, had already won it twice. That was in 1975, 28 years after organized baseball’s notorious color line was broken. Moreover, Augusta didn’t admit its first black member until 1990, and the first women weren’t admitted — under pressure — until 2012.
The first two female club members were South Carolina philanthropist Darla Moore and Condoleezza Rice, a native Alabaman living in California who achieved numerous historic firsts in her career and who happens to love golf. “This is a joyous occasion,” Augusta National Chairman Billy Payne said at the time. He was right, although it was long overdue.
Barriers are made to be broken; some just take too long. Golfers such as Lee Elder — and Teddy Rhodes and Charlie Sifford, who were never allowed to play Augusta — carved out the trail that others followed. For starters, they opened paths to golfers of color who were yet unborn: Tiger Woods was born to a black father and an Asian mother the year Elder integrated the Masters. But these pioneers also liberated whites, if you will. Freeing them from the restricting blinders of bigotry. After Gary Player burst on the international golf scene by winning the U.S. Open in 1965, he openly defended South Africa’s system of apartheid, which engendered protests against him. By 1971, however, Player invited Lee Elder to golf with him in South African tournaments. By the 1980s, Player was denouncing apartheid as “a cancerous disease.”
It was an evolution, all right, and Gary Player wasn’t the only one it happened to. Although this year’s Masters ended with a Japanese golfer winning for the first time, it was launched with pomp and nostalgia four days earlier by a triumvirate of octogenarian golf greats: Elder, Player, and Jack Nicklaus, who himself had been slow to recognize the injustice of all-white golf tournaments.
At his own press conference after winning the Masters, 29-year-old Hideki Matsuyama demurred on the question of whether he is Japan’s greatest golfer ever, but he did say, “I am the first to win a major. If that’s the bar, I’ve set it.” In words that Elder could appreciate, he added, “It’s thrilling to think a lot of youngsters in Japan are watching today.”
Two deals involving Iran have caught global attention in recent weeks. The first is the much ballyhooed 25-year economic cooperation agreement between Tehran and Beijing.
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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Good morning. It’s Monday, April 12, and we’re covering a blackout at one of Iran’s key nuclear facilities, Prince Philip, and an eruption in the Caribbean. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
An explosion reportedly rocked Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility yesterday, knocking out power and possibly compromising a number of centrifuges. The once-secret underground complex is the country’s central location for enriching uranium and has long been a target of clandestine attacks by rival powers. Reports suggest the facility’s ability to enrich uranium may be delayed for up to nine months.
No country took responsibility, though Israeli media claimed the operation was carried out by the country’s Mossad intelligence service. It follows the assassination of Iran’s top nuclear scientist in November and a mysterious fire at Natanz last summer. A joint US-Israeli operation destroyed a number of centrifuges in 2010 using the Stuxnet virus ($$, WIRED).
The attack came just days after the US and Iran began indirect talks around the US possibly rejoining the 2015 nuclear deal, and three days ahead of Yom Ha’atzmaut, Israel’s Independence Day. Iran called the attack an act of “nuclear terrorism.”
Royal Funeral Planned
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, will be laid to rest in a small, televised ceremony Saturday. Philip, married to Queen Elizabeth II, died from undisclosed causes at age 99, two months shy of his 100th birthday.
Born into Greek and Danish royal families—his mother, Princess Alice of Battenberg, has her own fascinating story—Philip served in the British navy during World War II. He renounced his titles in 1947 upon becoming engaged to then-Princess Elizabeth, ultimately becoming the longest-serving royal spouse and the third-longest-lived member in the history of the royal family.
Prince Harry will attend the ceremony, though his wife, Meghan Markle, will not. The couple, who stepped away from royal duties last year, cited medical reasons—Markle is pregnant with the couple’s second child. It will be the first meeting between Harry and the royal family since a high-profile interview in which the couple made allegations of a racist atmosphere at Buckingham Palace.
A Caribbean volcano dormant for more than four decades erupted over the weekend, including a Friday blast that spewed an ash cloud 6 miles into the air above the island of St. Vincent. A second eruption yesterday knocked out power across the island. Geologists first noticed an uptick in seismic activity in December after the formation of a new lava dome—a feature arising from cooled magma accumulating around the volcano’s vent.
It’s the fifth major eruption on record for the volcano, named La Soufrière, in four hundred years, and its behavior can be difficult to predict. Its magma is sticky and viscous, making it easier to trap gas and increasing the chances of an explosive event. Scientists say the activity could last for weeks; no deaths have been reported.
Did you know it takes just three weeks of practice to become conversational in a completely new language?
That is, if you start using Babbel. Babbel is the top-selling language learning app in the world, and it shows. Built by over 150 linguists, you can choose between 14 different languages like Spanish, French, German, Russian, or even Indonesian. And they don’t focus on abstract grammar or useless vocab—with a Babbel course, you’ll be on your way to actually speaking your new language. In fact, the average Babbel user is able to have a simple conversation in their new language within only five hours of starting.
>Rapper DMX, who had five No. 1 albums, dies at 50 after suffering heart attack brought on by alleged drug overdose(More) | See reactions from the music world (More)
> “Nomadland” wins Best Film at British Academy Film Awards (More) | See full list of BAFTA winners (More)
>Hideki Matsuyama wins the 2021 Masters and becomes the first Japanese male golfer to win a major championship (More) | Alex Rodriguez and ex-Walmart CEO Marc Lore to buy NBA’s Minnesota Timberwolves and WNBA’s Minnesota Lynx for $1.5B (More)
Science & Technology
>Elon Musk’s The Boring Company reveals underground mile-long transportation tunnels underneath the Las Vegas Convention Center (More) | Musk’s Neuralink demonstrates a monkey playing a video game via brain-computer interface (More)
>NASA delays first flight of its Martian Ingenuity helicopter until at least Wednesday (More) | Odyssey orbiter snaps photo of dunes on Mars’ northern polar ice caps (More)
>Study suggests relationship between aluminum and Alzheimer’s disease, finding the element is colocated with tau proteins, molecules that interfere with neuronal function; origin or specific role of aluminum in the development of the disease is still unknown (More)
>Amazon warehouse employees in Bessemer, Alabama, voted against forming a union by more than a 2-1 decision; effort viewed as a bellwether for the broader labor movement in the US (More)
>Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba fined $2.75B for antitrust violations by Chinese regulators (More)
>US airlines grounded more than 60 737 MAX jets after Boeing asked to address a potential electrical power system issue (More)
>Protests sparked in Minneapolis suburb after man is killed by police; 20-year-old Daunte Wright was reportedly shot as he tried to flee as officers attempted to detain him on an outstanding warrant (More) | Prosecution in Derek Chauvin murder trial expected to rest case early this week (More)
>Biden administration submits its first budget to Congress; separate from the stimulus proposal, the $1.5T package bumps domestic spending by almost 16% and defense spending by 1.7% (More) | Federal budget process 101—the president proposes, Congress disposes (More) | Administration to study expanding the Supreme Court (More)
>India passes Brazil for second-most COVID-19 infections, notching almost 169,000 new cases in 24 hours (More) | US death toll at 562,066 as of this morning; 46% of adults have received at least one vaccination dose (More)
Whether you don’t know the first thing about learning a new language, or you’re a polyglot looking to brush up on your Swedish, Babbel has a home for you.
Historybook RIP American Red Cross founder Clara Barton (1912); RIP Franklin D. Roosevelt (1945); HBD David Letterman (1947); Yuri Gagarin becomes first person in space (1961); RIP boxing great Joe Louis (1981).
“There are many ways of going forward, but only one way of standing still.”
– Franklin Delano Roosevelt
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63.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
TODAY’S MORNING JOLT WITH JIM GERAGHTY
IS PRESENTED BY
On the menu today: While the Chinese make fortunes selling their vaccines to other countries, the head of the country’s CDC admits their vaccines just aren’t very effective; another series of white-supremacist rallies fizzles, raising the question of whether the country is worrying about an overhyped threat; Joe Biden’s promised migrant policy and the reality are not even distant cousins; and a particularly implausible excuse from the Biden administration’s “migrant czar.”
Jordan Peterson is back with twelve more lifesaving principles and strategies for overcoming the cultural, scientific and psychological forces causing us to tend toward tyranny. In Beyond Order, Peterson teaches us how to rely on instinct to find meaning and purpose, even – and especially – when we find ourselves powerless.
If you’ve been thinking of becoming a Political Wire member, I’d welcome your support. You’ll get exclusive analysis, a trending news feed, no advertising, and more.
“Leading progressives like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez had a choice after they won election in 2018 and expanded their ranks in 2020: challenge Democratic leaders from the sidelines, or get in the game,” Bloomberg reports.
“Now their decision to play by Congress’ rules is giving them clout in a government under unified Democratic control with President Joe Biden.”
“Members of Representative Ocasio-Cortez’s so-called Squad are taking leadership roles in the House and building experience on Capitol Hill, turning them into not just ideological purists but also strategic legislators. They’re gently pushing a bolder Democratic strategy and meeting regularly with White House aides, bringing liberal dreams like a $15 federal minimum wage and a permanent child tax credit within reach.”
Will Smith’s movie Emancipation is the first project to withdraw its production from Georgia over the state’s new restrictive election laws, the New York Times reports.
“The slavery-era drama, which is being produced and financed by Apple Studios, is the first major production to cite the law as a reason to leave the state, which offers generous tax incentives to Hollywood productions and has become a major hub for Marvel Studios, Netflix and other industry heavyweights.”
Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers criticized both the scale and direction of the Biden administration’s fiscal policies in a Financial Times interview.
Instead of applauding its boldness, he fears they will lead to significant overheating and waste of resources: “I’m concerned that what is being done is substantially excessive.”
“If Summers is wrong, it will matter little. If he is right, the hopes for a transformative presidency are likely to end in catastrophic economic and political disappointment. It is an immensely important argument.”
“With Lara Trump still on the sidelines and landing a new gig on Fox News, Republican candidates are preparing to move on without her,” the Raleigh News and Observer reports.
“Three-term U.S. Rep. Ted Budd (R-NC) is now ‘leaning towards’ running for the Senate seat — an indication that Trump may not enter the race for several months or at all.”
Said Club for Growth President David McIntosh, “It would be best if they weren’t both running.”
“Nevada’s Republican Party voted to censure the secretary of state, accusing her of failing to fully investigate allegations of fraud in the 2020 election,” the Washington Post reports.
Said Barbara Cegavske, the only Republican statewide office holder in Nevada: “Regrettably, members of my own political party have decided to censure me simply because they are disappointed with the outcome of the 2020 election. While I have been loyal to the Nevada Republican Party during my over two decades as an elected official, I have been unwavering in my commitment to oversee elections and administer Nevada’s election laws in a neutral, nonpartisan manner.”
A new Economist/YouGov poll finds that among Americans who say they don’t plan to get the coronavirus vaccine — roughly a quarter of adults surveyed — half say they trust Donald Trump’s advice a lot or somewhat — far more than the advice of the CDC or the country’s top infectious-disease expert Anthony Fauci.
Charles Booker (D) — who narrowly lost the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate in Kentucky in 2020 — announced in a video that he’s forming an exploratory committee to challenge Sen. Rand Paul (R) in 2022.
“President Biden will nominate Chris Magnus, the police chief of Tucson, Ariz., and a critic of the Trump administration’s anti-immigration policies, to lead Customs and Border Protection, one of six new installments of leadership at the Department of Homeland Security,” the New York Times reports.
Senate Republicans have sent around a memo calling President Biden’s infrastructure package a “slush fund,” ahead of a bipartisan meeting at the White House on Monday, The Hill reports.
Wall Street Journal: “A Supreme Court decision that threw out the fraud convictions of two political aides to former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is rippling through other white-collar cases, possibly buttressing appeals by other defendants who say federal prosecutors have become too aggressive in using antifraud laws to go after dishonest conduct.”
“A member of the First Family publishing a book is not without recent precedent: Ivanka Trump released Women Who Work, a frilly ode to Girl Boss capitalism, in 2017, and her brother Donald Trump Jr. later published Triggered, a rant about woke dogma, and Liberal Privilege, a screed against Joe Biden. But that was just shallow marketing literature designed to promote the Trump brand. In 2021, on the other hand, a genuine gut-spiller from the First Fuckup, detailing in his own words all the major personal issues the right-wing media has tried and failed to weaponize for years — that had the potential to derail a presidency. Yet Hunter Biden’s ballad of the black sheep landed quietly in Washington.”
Said one senior White House official: “I’m shocked. I get stuff on the dogs all the time. I’ve been so surprised I didn’t get anything on Hunter.”
“Whether they had braced for a media frenzy or not, members of the Joe Biden administration report that, internally, the arrival of Hunter’s book (which was ghostwritten by the journalist Drew Jubera) on April 6 was a big nonevent.”
“More than a year and a half ahead of the 2022 general election, a Democratic state lawmaker is mounting a bid to unseat Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC), saying her campaign — with the aim of registering 150,000 new voters across South Carolina — has what it takes to tighten the margin Democrats have struggled to close in statewide elections,” the AP reports.
Said state Rep. Krystle Matthews (D): “This is a true grassroots effort, focusing on voter registration, engagement and mobilization. We’re going to meet and engage as many people as we can, particularly people who haven’t voted in a while.”
“A new report examining voting access across all 50 states and Washington, D.C., finds that more than 70% of states offer all voters access to a mail ballot and early voting, while 15 others lag in the methods available to cast a ballot,” CBS News reports.
President Biden is preparing to nominate a slate of ambassadors, and among them will be Cindy McCain, the widow of Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and a key Biden backer in Arizona last year, Politico reports.
McCain is being vetted as the U.S. envoy to the United Nations Food Programme in Rome, a “coveted ambassador post in Western Europe in what would be his administration’s first Republican appointee to a Senate-confirmed position.”
It’s an interesting strategy to nominate ambassadors all at once.
“Iran’s foreign ministry has blamed Israel for an attack on a nuclear plant, as US intelligence sources claimed the incident would set back Tehran’s nuclear program by nine months,” The Guardian reports
“Israel has not confirmed it was behind a cyber-attack on the heavily guarded Natanz facility, but its security officials have done little to dispel the notion.”
Democrats in Congress want to raise the hourly minimum wage to $15, but while most Americans support increasing the minimum – currently $7.25 an hour – they balk at proposals to more than double it.
Thirty-nine percent (39%) of Likely U.S. Voters think the country is heading in the right direction, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey for the week ending April 8, 2021.
By now, we know that Bill Hwang was a mentor to Cathie Wood and that both investors had a penchant for bringing religion into their investing methodology, as we noted in a report we published days ago. But a new Bloomberg piece shines…
It’s been a long time coming, and now it’s almost here. Last August we reported that China’s Commerce Ministry had released fresh details of a pilot program for the country’s central bank digital currency (CBDC) to be expanded to several…
Authored by Jeffrey Tucker via The American Institute for Economic Research, Going to the grocery store in Massachusetts in 2020 guaranteed you would breathe heaps of sanitizer. A full-time employee scrubbed down shopping carts between…
Update (2446ET): Protests erupted earlier today in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, after a police officer shot and killed a man during a traffic stop. Members of the community protested the police killing of the man that soon turned violent.
The Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing and Treasury’s fiscal stimulus have resulted in the greatest monetary experiment of all time. The result of trillions of dollars pumped into the economy has lifted prices of all assets, everything…
Huntington Beach police declared an unlawful assembly in Downtown Huntington Beach, California, Sunday afternoon following a “White Lives Matter” rally that resulted in social unrest. Hundreds of people gathered in Downtown Huntington…
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Black Lives Matter co-founder and self-described Marxist Patrisse Khan-Cullors has bought not just one, but four high-end homes, according to…Read more…
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Wolfgang Reitzle is one of Germany’s premiere business executives, and Klaus Boldt, part of the editorial leadership of Die Welt, one of the foremost business journalists. The wide-ranging interview here points to the multiple dimensions of the problems facing Germany at the end of the Angela Merkel era.
Championship basketball coach Roy Williams of the University of North Carolina recently announced his retirement, saying he was “no longer the right man for the job.” People speculated on what he meant because he won a national championship only four years ago, but ESPN commentator and former coach Seth Greenberg doubtless got it right when he said it was the “business of college basketball” that drove him out.
via Battlegrounds: International Perspectives On Crucial Challenges To Security
In this episode of Battlegrounds, H.R. McMaster and Yousef Al Otaiba discuss the Abraham Accords, the humanitarian crisis centered on ongoing crises in Syria and Yemen, the threat from Iran, and great power competition in the Middle East.
The Hoover Institution hosts China’s Battle for Global Public Opinion on Tuesday, April 13 from 9:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. PT. Featuring Ms. Sarah Cook, Research Director for China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan Freedom House. Followed by conversation with Dr. Glenn Tiffert, Research Fellow, Hoover Institution.
Psychologist Emiliana Simon-Thomas of the University of California, Berkeley talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the science of happiness–what research can teach us about happiness.
The National Director of Research at the American Federation for Children, Corey DeAngelis, joins Paul E. Peterson to discuss DeAngelis’ new report, which investigates the likelihood of school reopenings amid the pandemic against funding in each district.
Since 2019, my home state New Mexico has committed to an active climate policy. It is a member of the U.S. Climate Alliance and has pledged to reduce its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions of at least 45 percent by 2030 from 2005 levels. One major action was the passage of the Energy Transition Act, which contains bold renewable energy and zero-carbon electricity mandates. Several states have similar central-planning features.
Hoover Institution fellow Shelby Steele says President Biden and his fellow Democrats have proven themselves “expert” at “virtue signaling” on issues of race.
interview with Lanhee J. Chen via Crossing Lines with Lanhee Chen
Hoover Institution fellow Lanhee Chen talks with Troy Senik about the coming recall election of Governor Gavin Newsom. What caused it (spoiler alert: decades long single party rule), how it might play out, and what the long-term implications it may have for the state and possibly for the country.
Hoover Institution fellow Andrew Roberts remembers the life of Prince Philip after his death at 99 years old and his portrayal in “The Crown” compared to the man he really was.
A documentary film about an African American lawyer who rose from poverty and oppression in the Deep South to the highest court in the land would seem a natural for Black History Month. Yet, in February, at the very time its Prime Video service was featuring films highlighting black history makers, Amazon without explanation stopped offering digital streams of “Created Equal: Clarence Thomas in His Own Words.”
The Civics Secures Democracy Act sounds like what we need. It’s bipartisan. It would spend $1 billion annually for six years to reemphasize the teaching of history and government in elementary and secondary education.
Former President Trump will address some of the Republican Party’s most influential donors this weekend at a time when some are uneasy over the tight grip Trump continues to have over the party.
Former President Donald Trump staked his claim to the Republican Party in a closed-door speech to donors Saturday night, casting his populist policies and attack-dog politics as the key to future Republican success.
Seven Stanford University scholars have been awarded 2021 Guggenheim Fellowships. This prestigious honor recognizes mid-career scholars, artists and scientists who have demonstrated a previous capacity for outstanding work and continue to show exceptional promise.
President Joe Biden on Friday ordered a 180-day study of adding seats to the U.S. Supreme Court, making good on a campaign promise to establish a bipartisan commission to examine the subjects of expanding the court or setting term limits for justices.
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.
Thank you for subscribing to the Hoover Daily Report.
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71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief.
Good morning, it’s April 12, 2021. On this day in history, Fort Sumter was attacked by the Confederacy, starting the American Civil War (1861); Bill Haley and His Comets recorded “Rock Around the Clock” (1954); and Soviet Yuri Alexeyevich Gagarin was the first man to travel in space (1961).
In China, Christians Rounded Up and Tortured as a National Security Threat
Radio Free Asia and other news agencies are reporting that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is using the State Security Police and Religious Affairs Bureau to detain Christians. Members of “house churches” are being rounded up and placed in detention facilities. The operations appear to be mobile, moving from town to town, creating improvised holding areas in basements. People are being held against their will, tortured and forced to renounce their faith.
The CCP strongly espouses atheism and views Christianity as a threat to national security.
There are almost 1.4 billion people living in China. Sixty-eight million are Protestants and less than a third of them worship in state-affiliated churches known as the Three-Self Patriotic Association. There are also 9 million Catholics; most are members of state-sponsored organizations.
ATP Assessment: Reports of the CCP using secret police to detain and torture citizens designated as dissidents is not groundbreaking news. This is a country that has been persecuting its people for years. Recognizing the threat, the U.S. has fought against the rise of Communism for about a century.
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR AMERICANS
With the support from the Left-leaning media, groups in the U.S. have built two major grassroots movements: cancel culture and inclusion.
The push to wipe historical figures from books and pillars, so to speak, is arguably a form of posthumous “cancel culture.” These actions deprive young Americans of the opportunity to learn and understand fully about our history: the good, the bad and the ugly.
Inclusion, on the other hand, is a very strategic ploy to remove what are perceived, by some, to be barriers. Activists assert that these barriers prevent certain segments of the population from having a fair shake at achieving their goals and desires, particularly in the workplace and on school campuses. This often subjective perception is frequently characterized by activists as discrimination.
The proposed amendment to the Equality Act is paving the way for what some consider an infringement on religious freedom. It would seem that a number of legislators have forgotten the 1st Amendment of the U.S. Constitution:
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
If some in Congress have their way, many churches and religious schools could be subjected to restrictions and requirements that undermine their core religious beliefs and convictions.
Additionally, there is concern that certain factions in the Government and the media have drawn an association between white supremacists, Christian conservatives and domestic terrorists. We assess this could cause some American Christians to be labeled a national security concern.
ATP continues to stand up and promote fair, ethical and Biblical values through our media platforms. We encourage our readers not to cower in fear, but instead, as Matthew 10:16 reminds us, “Be wise as serpents and harmless as doves,” in both our private and public lives.
Bye Bye Portland: Many Police Officers Have Had Enough
After a horrendous year of protests, violence, anti-police rhetoric and a general lack of support from both politicians and the community, many Portland police officers are calling it quits.
The Oregonian reported a record number of first-responder retirements back in September. The numbers have continued to grow. At present, 115 officers have left the department since July 1 of last year. In 31 exit interviews, the officers expressed disillusionment and frustration with their jobs. Many Portland cops have simply had enough.
This couldn’t come at a worse time for the city. Murders are on the rise and detectives cannot keep up with the sheer number of cases.
Although no longer making nightly headlines, the city is still inundated with violent “Defund the Police” protesters.
In a policy reversal, Mayor Ted Wheeler recently announced he was requesting $2 million to fund the police and outreach programs in an attempt to curb gun violence.
Is it too little too late?
ATP Comment: Anyone who has visited downtown Portland knows the city is a volatile powder keg. Our own COO visited the riots firsthand last year in order to get a grasp on what was actually taking place, and the report was troubling. You can read about it here and here.
On one hand, many of Portland’s residents are striving to create the peace-loving, community-oriented, environmentally conscious utopia they once imagined. But a community attitude of tolerance briefs well, but has its limitations. To be frank, it is a magnet for lawlessness and riff-raff. There is an alarmingly dangerous and destructive side to the city that cannot be ignored.
Homelessness and substance abuse are through the roof. As tolerance for vagrancy and panhandling continues, more and more improvised tents are being erected throughout the downtown and seeping into the suburbs. Sidewalks are littered with trash, drug paraphernalia and human excrement. It’s nearly impossible for visitors to park their cars, shop or dine out without being harassed by the downtown area’s street residents and addicts. Protests and riots seem to have no end in sight. Business owners are planning a mass exodus from the city in search of a safer place to conduct business.
Accepting the unacceptable seems to be the status quo. But the last thing Portland needs is less policing and enforcement. We applaud Mayor Wheeler’s decision to request additional funding for the police, but it’s important for Wheeler and other Liberal politicians in the city to recognize that if they want to enjoy the safety and security that strong policing can provide, they must stop entertaining protest rhetoric, appeasing rioters and hand-tying the officers doing the hard work needed to create a safe environment.
Politicians and city management must support law enforcement and do everything in their power to restore the “Rose City” of Portland to a safe, secure place where people want to visit, shop, dine, do business and enjoy life.
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In Spite of Everything, the World Has Never Been So Free
By Vincent Geloso | “From the late 19th century to the eve of the pandemic, there were multiple crises that could have permanently eroded economic, political and civil liberties. Yet, on net, these liberties have actually expanded since the…
AIER Leading Indicators Index Hits Highest Level Since 2018
By Robert Hughes | AIER’s Leading Indicators Index posted another gain in March, hitting the highest level since June 2018. The Leading Indicators index came in at 92 following an 83 reading in February and four consecutive months at 75 from…
By Jeffrey A. Tucker | “How many years will it take before people can come to terms with the embarrassing and scandalous reality that much of what posed as Science last year was made up on the fly and turns out to be wholly false?”
By Ethan Yang | “It goes without saying that societal institutions exist for a reason and abruptly pulling them out from underneath everyone’s feet may have dire consequences. That is what policy makers have done with lockdowns. They have…
By John Tamny | “Yellen plainly feels individual U.S. tax rates aren’t high enough, so she seeks global tax harmonization on the corporate level in order to get another swipe at individuals. On their own, Yellen’s desires rate ridicule.
By Scott Scheall | “The perpetuation of the myth of ‘The Scientific Method’ encourages the pretense that we understand science. More to the point, it encourages the false notion that, because we understand science so well, we can always rely on…
Thomas Paine’s writings and political advocacy are a stark reminder to us all of a period in history when it was a noble cause to defend your fellow countrymen’s dignity and human rights.
Thomas Paine (1737-1809) was an English-born American political activist and philosopher who advocated American independence and for the French Revolution. Often regarded as one of the most instrumental figures in the revolutionary wars, Paine went to battle against European monarchs with his pen and ink. His writings greatly influenced the Founding of the United States and French republics keeping him a household name to this very day.
There were so many lies in Vice President Kamala Harris’ and President Joe Biden’s presentations on guns Thursday that it is hard to know where to start. One thing is certain, though: The media fact-checkers won’t question their claims.
Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt on Friday declared that Tucker Carlson “must go” for daring to calmly discuss how Democrats importing voters dilutes the voting power of current American citizens and is a form of disenfranchisement.
According to a recent investigation by the state of New Hampshire’s attorney general’s office, a state-run youth detention center has been ground zero for an utterly horrifying child torture and sex abuse ring spanning the course of decades. According to officials and a recent lawsuit, hundreds of victims have come forward alleging the abuse by over 100 government employees, and multiple arrests have been made.
A Black Lives Matter co-founder and self-professed ‘trained Marxist’ has raised eyebrows by purchasing a $1.4 million Los Angeles home, in a largely white district.
The first indelible image of the war in Afghanistan for many Americans was probably that of CBS anchorman Dan Rather, wrapped in the voluminous drapery of a mujahedin fighter, looking like a healthy relative of Lawrence of Arabia (albeit with hair that seemed freshly blow-dried, as some viewers were quick to point out). From his secret mountainside “somewhere in the Hindu Kush,” Rather unloaded on his audience a barrowload of nonsense about the conflict. The Soviets, Rather confided portentously, had put a bounty on his head “of many thousands of dollars.” He went on, “It was the best compliment they could have given me. And having a price put on my head was a small price to pay for the truths we told about Afghanistan.”
Any government efforts to ban Bitcoin would be “foolish,” said Hester Peirce (aka “Crypto Mom”), a very Bitcoin-friendly commissioner at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), during a MarketWatch virtual conference earlier this week, according to Cryptoslate reporter Liam Frost.
A report published last year by the WEF-Carnegie Cyber Policy Initiative calls for the merging of Wall Street banks, their regulators and intelligence agencies as necessary to confront an allegedly imminent cyber attack that will collapse the existing financial system.
With the White House continually provoking tensions against Russia and China, the doyen of American foreign policy, Henry Kissinger, dramatically warned Washington last week to either agree to a new international system or continue pushing tensions that are leading to a situation similar to the eve of World War One.
As the S&P 500 and DJIA soared to new closing records on Monday even as New York State is reportedly on track to adopt a groundbreaking state wealth tax (the latest effort by Gov. Andrew Cuomo to distract from the twin scandals over sexual harassment of female aides and his office’s efforts to cover up the number of COVID deaths in the state’s nursing homes), the Institute for Policy Studies has published the results of its latest review of billionaire wealth.
Iran’s Atomic Energy commission has announced an “incident” has disrupted the power grid of the Natanz uranium enrichment facility on Sunday, which suspiciously comes after the opening days of nuclear talks in Vienna involving the US “indirectly” negotiating with the Iranians in what have been reported as “positive” engagements.
First the Ukraine said it would use force to recover the renegade Donbass region as well as Crimea. It then moved heavy troops towards the contact lines. The ceasefire at the contact line was broken multiple times per day. Several Ukrainian soldiers died while attempting to remove a minefield in preparation of an attack.
There is a whiff of unease in the air as beneath the cheery veneer of free money for almost everyone, inequality and polarization are rapidly consuming what’s left of common ground in America.
Just shy of 40 percent of Marine Corps service members have refused to take the coronavirus jab, new data provided to the media shows. The revelation comes as Democratic lawmakers push to make the vaccine mandatory for soldiers.
An anti-war activist was visited by California Highway Patrol officers after posting video of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s bumbling comments on Israel-Palestine. The action, which AOC denies triggering, was initiated by a call to US Capitol Police.
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Welcome to the Monday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect the weekend online. Today:
‘Leave him alone!’ Live streamer saves Asian man from attacker during broadcast
Popular TikToker accused of stealing from smaller creators, threatening to sue Black TikToker who exposed him
‘This is stealing’: TikTokers’ trick to getting ‘unlimited Domino’s pizza’ sparks debate
BREAK THE INTERNET
‘Leave him alone!’ Live streamer saves Asian man from attacker during broadcast
The well-documented rise in anti-Asian violence over the past year has prompted many advocates to recommend bystander intervention training for concerned citizens. While it’s unclear if they took such training, bystanders did go viral over the weekend for intervening in two separate attacks against Asian people. In one instance, an IRL streamer rescued an Asian man from a suspected mugger who was attacking him during a live broadcast. In the other, a group chased down a man and apprehended him after he allegedly beat up an Asian senior citizen in New York, where the NYPD has reported a 1,900% uptick in anti-Asian hate crimes.
Meanwhile, a daycare center in Georgia is being accused of racism after a live stream captured caregivers in one classroom apparently feeding white kids before the Black children. A parent dropped in on the live stream to check on their 2-year-old when they noticed only the white children eating lunch. The 2-year-old’s family posted a screenshot of the scene to Instagram, where it went viral. “Why does every white kid have their food? Not one black child has food in front of them! Thank God for cameras in classrooms because there is no way to hide this racism!” they wrote.
Catch up on more you may have missed this weekend below.
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Popular TikToker accused of stealing from smaller creators, threatening to sue Black TikToker who exposed him
Popular comedy TikToker Kane Trujillo, known as @neumane on the app, has been accused of stealing content from smaller creators.
TikToker Joey Bailey posted a video on March 15 showing side-by-side comparisons of Trujillo’s videos and other creators’ content. The videos are nearly identical. Bailey later shared how Trujillo threatened him with a “false accusation lawsuit” in response to the video.
Trujillo has over 2.7 million followers, and his videos garner millions of views. Most of the other creators have over a million fewer followers than Trujillo, and many of them are Black.
The Daily Dot spoke with some of the creators Trujillo is accused of stealing from. While some believe having content stolen is simply part of TikTok culture, others, like Bailey, are pointing out how the platform can lead to opportunities and money and how Trujillo seemingly fails to credit the original creators while posting a replica of their videos.
“The thing with (Trujillo) is that he doesn’t steal ideas, he steals the video word for word, uses the same sound, the same gestures, and even the same wording without giving any credit to the creator whatsoever,” Brodie Falgoust, known as @brodiefalgoust, told the Daily Dot. “That is how he gained all of his following, and continues to do it still (even after being called out). I get ripped off all the time but It’s frustrating as a smaller creator who is constantly coming out with original content when a person with a big following comes and takes credit for your originality.”
TikTok trends do often involve the recreation of viral dances, transitions, and joke formats, but app etiquette—especially for larger creators—is to attribute the idea to the person who originated it, either through the use of their original sound or by tagging them in a caption. Even so, the app has an ongoing, well-documented history of popular white and non-Black influencers capitalizing off of the dances, sounds, and ideas of smaller Black creators who often go uncredited.
Trujillo did not respond to the Daily Dot’s request for comment.
‘This is stealing’: TikTokers’ trick to getting ‘unlimited Domino’s pizza’ sparks debate
A group of students’ trick for getting free pizza from Domino’s has some TikTokers debating the ethics of their choices.
The video, which has been viewed nearly 4 million times so far, shows the group of friends piling slices of pizza into containers they brought into the restaurant. The container gets slid into bags under the table, and a new pizza is eventually brought out by a Domino’s server.
The original uploader, @gurpreet_gillx, explained in a comment that their Domino’s, located in Spain, has “a deal where you get a free pizza everytime you finish a pizza.”
Some praised the students for their creative thinking. Others shamed them.
“If I worked at domino’s I wouldn’t even care cause at the end of the day that doesn’t affect my pocket so I would just pretend I didn’t [notice] that,” one viewer said.
“This is stealing,” another alleged. “Because it is in house consumption only. Same with an all u can eat buffet. U r not allowed to bring containers and take it with u.”
“Yeah because a couple of students struggling with money is going to affect a multi billion dollar company,” a third pushed back.
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82.) SEAN HANNITY
April 12, 2021
Latest News
MINNEAPOLIS ERUPTS: National Guard Activated as Rioters Loot, Destroy Property After Police Shooting
Chaos erupted in Minneapolis late Sunday night after demonstrations turned viole […]
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“Liberty can have nothing to fear from the judiciary alone, but would have everything to fear from its union with either of the other departments.” —Alexander Hamilton (1788)
Getting rich off of race-bait burning, looting, and murdering.
Prepared for battle!
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Understand why the Georgia voting law forced this virtue-signaling decision.
Today’s Opinion
RICH LOWRY
Ron Desantis Is What the Post-Trump GOP Should Look Like
The latest media attack contributes to his ongoing ascent in the Republican political firmament.
MATTHEW CONTINETTI
Biden Builds Back Obama’s Middle East
And makes a mockery of his democracy agenda.
TONY PERKINS
Libs’ Infrastructure: a Bridge to Nowhere
The idea that the president is trying to pass off his extreme tax, environmental, housing, and social wish list as highway construction irked even the liberal media.
GARY BAUER
Biden Targets the Second Amendment
He made a number of obviously false statements to advance his left-wing agenda.
KEN BLACKWELL
Biden Must Put Human Rights Front and Center in Iran Policy
Otherwise, crackdowns on dissent will grow even bloodier in the near future.
Please join us in prayer for our nation’s Military Patriots standing in harm’s way in defense of Liberty, for their families, and for our nation’s First Responders. We also ask prayer for your Patriot team, and our mission to, first and foremost, support and defend our Republic’s Founding Principles of Liberty, and to ignite the fires of freedom in the hearts and minds of our countrymen.
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Crowd gathers in Minneapolis suburb after driver shot by police officer, the holy month of Ramadan begins and more news to start your Monday.
Good morning, Daily Briefing readers. Protests erupted in the Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Center last night after reports that a 20-year-old Black man named Daunte Wright was shot by police following a traffic stop before getting back into his car, driving away, and crashing. The incident came as Minneapolis was already on edge as the trial of former police officer Derek Chauvin in the death of George Floyd enters its third week.
🏌🏽♂️Congratulations to Hideki Matsuyama, who made history Sunday by becoming the first Japanese male golfer to win a major championship by wrapping up the 2021 Masters title and earning kudos from the biggest name in the golf world: Tiger Woods.
And today marks the beginning of the holy month of Ramadan. Ramadan Mubarak to all who are observing!
Here’s what people are reading right now:
🌧 A cluster of severe storms swept across the South over the weekend, leaving at least three dead, damaging buildings and leaving thousands without power.
🙌 It’s Instagram official: “Justice League” star Henry Cavill is dating Hollywood executive Natalie Viscuso – and the proof is on social media.
🍗 A public health alert has been issued for approximately 211,406 pounds of raw ground turkey products potentially linked to salmonella.
🎧 On today’s 5 Things podcast, listen for what to expect this week in the trial of Derek Chauvin. You can listen to the podcast every day on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or on your smart speaker.
The holy month of Ramadan begins Monday and will span through May 12 when it culminates with Eid al-Fitr, which will break the sunrise-to-sunset fasts for Muslims. Because Ramadan is tied to the lunar calendar, its exact date varies from year to year. Community, tradition and celebration are all part of the sacred month, with families gathering for the early morning meal, known as suhoor, and the post-sunset meal, known as iftar, to break their fasts together. After closing its doors for Ramadan last year due to COVID-19, Masjid Al-Salaam in Dearborn, Michigan, will be hosting in-person service, but food will be served in drive-thru style. “It’s going to be difficult like last year,” said Nabeel Bahalwan, a volunteer at the mosque.
Week 3 of the Derek Chauvin trial to begin with more medical testimony
Jurors are expected to return Monday in the murder trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin in the death of George Floyd to hear more medical testimony by the prosecution. Here’s what has happened so far:
•
Last week, the state called experts and police officials to testify about proper use of force as well as medical professionals to testify about how Floyd died. Prosecutors have also asked experts to testify about the role of drugs found in Floyd’s system, trying to head off the defense’s argument that they played a key role in his death.
•
The defense has highlighted the effect meth and fentanyl may have on the heart and lungs. The defense has also argued the crowd of bystanders gathered near the scene distracted and threatened the officers, preventing them from giving care to Floyd and meriting additional force.
Chauvin is charged with second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in Floyd’s death.
Biden to meet with lawmakers on infrastructure plan
President Joe Biden will meet with a bipartisan group of U.S. House and Senate lawmakers Monday to discuss his proposed $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan. It aims to rebuild the nation’s aging infrastructure, support electric vehicles and clean energy and boost access to caregivers and their pay. But the comprehensive bill will likely face an uphill battle, chugging its way through both chambers of Congress by the summer, which is when the administration aims to approve the package.
Application opens for FEMA’s COVID-19 funeral assistance program
With more than 560,000 people who have died of COVID-19 in the U.S., the Federal Emergency Management Agency is offering up to $9,000 per funeral to ease the financial burden on those left behind. FEMA will accept applications starting Monday. “The COVID-19 pandemic has caused immense grief for so many people,” acting FEMA Administrator Bob Fenton said. “Although we cannot change what has happened, we affirm our commitment to help with funeral and burial expenses that many families did not anticipate.”
Hairdressers, beauty salons, gyms, nonessential shops and bar and restaurant patios reopen Monday in Britain as its steady march out of a three-month lockdown remains on track . A ban on overnight stays away from home in England will also be lifted, and outdoor venues such as zoos and drive-in cinemas can operate again. “We set out our road map and we’re sticking to it,” said Prime Minister Boris Johnson. He added: “We can’t be complacent. We can see the waves of sickness afflicting other countries, and we’ve seen how this story goes.” Britain has recorded almost 127,000 coronavirus deaths, the highest toll in Europe. The government aims to give all adults at least one shot of vaccine by July, and hopes that a combination of vaccination and mass testing will allow indoor socializing and large-scale events to return.
•
In the race to stay ahead of COVID-19 variants, US lags globally
ICYMI: Some of our top stories from yesterday:
•
Referee Bert Smith’s fall in men’s NCAA Tournament game didn’t kill him. It saved his life
•
Virginia cops pepper-sprayed Black and Latino Army officer who had hands raised during traffic stop, video shows
•
Supreme Court leaves major conservative cases waiting in the wings, from abortion to guns
•
Trevor Lawrence’s weekend: Masters, marriage and high-tech toaster from Jaguars fans
After being called a “jerk” and told to “go f—” himself by former Republican House Speaker John Boehner, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) fired back at the former Ohio representative.
Hundreds of Canadian Christians worshiped outside GraceLife church in Edmonton, Alberta, on Sunday, many of them traveling great distances to join an outdoor celebration after national authorities had built a chain-link fence around the complex to prevent access.
A South Carolina senate bill, which would require all higher education students to study U.S. founding documents, will be considered by the state house on Wednesday.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in an interview published on Tuesday that, “[t]here is racism physically built into some [U.S.] highways.”
Tricia Foster, chief operating officer for Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D-MI), took a vacation to Florida last week, just after Whitmer warned Michiganders on April 2 about traveling for spring break, specifically mentioning Florida as a concern due to COVID-19.
It was announced Saturday that Robert Shook, 38, the sole survivor of the South Carolina shooting by an ex-NFL player on Wednesday, has died. He passed away at home from injuries sustained in the shooting.
Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-TX) underwent surgery for a detached retina in his left eye on Friday. He said that although the “surgery went well,” he will be “off the grid for the next few weeks” because he will be “effectively blind for about a month.”
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96.) JAMIE DUPREE
The Easter Break is over for the Congress. Democrats now have to figure out how to press ahead on the President’s infrastructure plans. And Matt Gaetz says he’s not going anywhere. This is “Regular Order” for April 12, 2021.
THEY’RE BACK. After a two week break for Easter, the House and Senate return to legislative business on Capitol Hill. Hanging over everything else in terms of the legislative agenda will be President Biden’s infrastructure plan. The President meets with a bipartisan group of lawmakers this afternoon on his American Jobs Plan.
SENATE. Senators kick off the week with a vote this evening on President Biden’s pick for Deputy Transportation Secretary. Several other nominations are ready for votes, including the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
HOUSE. The big legislative highlight for the House this week will be a debate and vote on H.R. 7, the ‘Paycheck Fairness Act.’ The bill’s goal is to specifically outlaw wage discrimination based on sex, a person’s sexual orientation, gender identity, and whether a woman is pregnant.
INFRASTRUCTURE. With Congress back at work this week, President Biden will host a group of eight lawmakers – four from each party, split between the House and Senate – to talk about his infrastructure package. The afternoon meeting at the White House is just the start of the President’s outreach. Finding bipartisan agreement may be a bridge too far.
TIMING. “I would hope that our part in the House would be largely done before the Fourth of July,” Speaker Pelosi told reporters last week, aiming for final action ‘before the August break.’ In other words, it seems like it’s going to be an ‘Infrastructure Summer.’
ROADS AND BRIDGES. The House Transportation Committee hosts a briefing for Congressional staff today – on how to request local projects for their districts. House members face an April 23 deadline to make their transportation requests.
TOLLS. A brewing fight between New York and New Jersey is a reminder of how tolls can seem like an answer to highway and bridge funding – but it can also cause controversy. It costs between $11.75 and $16 to drive a car over the George Washington Bridge from Jersey to New York City. A traffic congestion plan from New York might nearly double that – and Jersey politicians are not happy.
TOLL ROADS. With Congress unwilling to raise the federal gasoline tax to fund new roads and bridges, tolling is one option for interstate highways. In 1998, Congress gave states the option to rebuild and rehab interstates – and then levy tolls to pay for that work. But states have not taken up the option.
GUNS. Along with work on infrastructure, look for Democrats to at some point try to act on gun control legislation in the Senate. The House has already approved bills which would expand background checks to all gun purchases, and a bill which closes what’s known as the ‘Charleston Loophole’ on background checks.
DEMOCRATS. “The American people are demanding action from Congress,” Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer said. But, at this point, Democrats do not have 60 votes in the Senate. No date for action has been set.
REEFER MADNESS. Another issue Schumer is vowing to work on is legalizing pot at the federal level. “It’s long past time to end the federal prohibition on marijuana,” Schumer tweeted on Sunday. “The failed drug war must end, and that begins with legalizing marijuana,” said Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ).
FAMILIAR ROADBLOCK . The House last December voted for the first time to end federal criminal penalties for marijuana. Even if the House could pass that again this year, the bill would likely face a filibuster in the Senate.
POLICE VIDEO. A newly-released video showing police in Virginia pepper-spraying and manhandling a black U.S. Army uniformed officer during a traffic stop quickly drew the attention of lawmakers, as several called for a federal investigation.
DEMOCRATS. “Lt. Caron Nazario was threatened, harassed, held at gun point, and pepper sprayed because he had the audacity to drive while Black,” said Rep. Donald McEachin (D-VA). “I was horrified,” said Rep. Bobby Scott (D-VA). Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT) simply observed on Twitter, “wtf.”
IMMIGRATION. Republicans return to Capitol Hill today still blasting President Biden and Democrats over the surge of illegal immigrants across the border with Mexico. “This situation is not only unsustainable, it’s dangerous,” said Sen. Rob Portman (R-OH) on Sunday, as Portman and other Republicans directly blame Mr. Biden for reversing Trump Administration policies.
GOP. “Speaker Pelosi says we’re on a ‘good path’ at the border,” said Rep. Debbie Lesko (R-AZ). “What world is she living in?” The latest figures from March show over 170,000 people made it across the border – higher than at any point under President Trump.
GEORGIA ELECTIONS. There’s more fallout on Capitol Hill from the fight over election changes by the GOP in Georgia and other states. “These corporate elites don’t care about our values,” said Rep. Jason Smith (R-MO) on Sunday, amid reports of CEO’s meeting virtually over the weekend, ready to challenge those GOP efforts.
VOTING LAWS. At some point, Senate Democrats will bring their election reform bill to the Senate floor, where a GOP filibuster is expected. But the fight over how states run their elections – in the aftermath of the multiple false claims of fraud in 2020 by Republicans – is going to be a major flash point this year.
WATERGAETZ. The troubles for Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) continue to grow. The House Ethics Committee on Friday announced it was starting an investigation of the Florida Republican. Gaetz shrugged off his troubles in a Florida speech. “I’m built for the battle and I am not going anywhere,” Gaetz said.
GAETZGATE.The list of possible infractions for Gaetz was long: “sexual misconduct and/or illicit drug use, shared inappropriate images or videos on the House floor, misused state identification records, converted campaign funds to personal use, and/or accepted a bribe, improper gratuity, or impermissible gift, in violation of House Rules, laws, or other standards of conduct.”
PROBLEM SOLVER. The committee has also started an investigation into Rep. Tom Reed (R-NY), citing reports that ‘Reed may have engaged in sexual misconduct.’ The New York Republican recently acknowledged issues with alcohol, as he announced he would not run for another term in Congress.
BIDEN BUDGET. The White House on Friday finally released overall numbers for various agencies and departments in the Fiscal Year 2022 budget from President Biden. The numbers will give Congress some guidance in getting next year’s budget work underway.
BUDGETARY NERD NOTE. As part of his $715 billion defense budget, President Biden is proposing that Congress get rid of the ‘Overseas Contingency Operations’ fund – which was really a back door way for Congress to funnel more money to the Pentagon. OCO funding had reached over $70 billion a year.
SPENDING BILLS. The House Appropriations Committee holds nine hearings this week on various agencies. Lawmakers have just over four months to get their spending work done on time. (Narrator: ‘It won’t happen again this year.’)
TERM LIMITS. Last week’s announcement by President Biden of a Supreme Court reform review prompted a number of people to message me and express their support for term limits in Congress. That always allows me to point out to people that much more change goes on than you realize. Let’s take the House as an example.
THREE TERMS. Most term limit proposals would limit service in the House to three terms, or six years. So, let’s go back just four years to 2017, and see what the turnover has been in the House. Any guesses? Comparing today to this date in 2017, 34.7 percent of the House members are different.
ABOUT HALF. By the time we reach January of 2023 – the six year point after 2017 – it will probably be close to 50 percent turnover in six years in the House. That’s about normal – but much higher than what most people would guess.
CASUALTY LIST. So far, seven House members have decided not to run for re-election in 2022. Five Senators are retiring at this point, which is already above average for the past four midterm elections. The House average is 35 members departing on their own in the midterms since 2006.
MUSE OF HISTORY. April 12, 1864. On this date, Confederate troops led by Nathan Bedford Forrest massacred several hundred black Union soldiers who were attempting to surrender in Tennessee at Fort Pillow. It took only a few days for reports of the Confederate massacre to reach Capitol Hill, as an immediate investigation was undertaken by the ‘Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War.’ The final report detailed the assault. “All around were heard cries of ‘No quarter! ‘No quarter!’ ‘Kill the damned niggers; shoot them down!’” One Union doctor told lawmakers what he saw was horrible. “They were the worst butchered men I have ever seen.”
I’m Cade Courtley, former Navy SEAL Platoon Commander, sniper, and author of the SEAL Survival Guide.
If 2020 has taught us anything… it’s not IF you need a backup plan… it’s WHEN.
A deadly pandemic, blackouts sweeping the nation, wildfires, hurricanes, social unrest and crumbling power grids.
Crisis mode has become the new normal.
Facts are facts. It’s sad, but true. And you see the need to protect yourself and your family.
Let me be clear. One of the best ways to protect your own safety and comfort is to guarantee you’re fully ready, even when the power goes out.
Nothing feels more vulnerable than that split second when you realize you’re sitting in a dangerous blackout.
All your critical devices are now on borrowed time. Communications, comfort and protection – all of it is suddenly called into question.
You simply have to have a backup power plan, no matter what your situation or budget.
Well now you can.
Because for the FIRST TIME EVER you can get a breakthrough NEW solar device…
That can harness the limitless and FREE energy from the sun, and that’s safe to use inside because it’s fume-free, silent and never needs gasoline to run.
But if you want one, you better hurry…
Because customers have been practically begging for this product to hit the market.
And now that the first batches of units are ready to ship from Utah, USA… these mini solar generators won’t be around for long.
You’re among the first to know about…
The NEW Patriot Power Sidekick
Finally… a Mini Solar Generator that Never Needs Gas and that Costs Less than an iPhone!
“I really like how many things the Sidekick can run. I can charge my cell phone and iPad at the same time, run an electric razor, my radio, an electric blanket and so much more. It’s so easy to take with you anywhere – very light!”
Craig W.
Police Officer
Indiana
October 2020
Small and mighty, the Patriot Power Sidekick is your personal “portable power plant” that can power your phones, laptops, medical devices, radios and more!
You’ll also be able to run a toaster oven, a CPAP machine through the night, your TV, radios, GPS devices, lamps, small personal space heaters, fans, a mini fridge, electric blankets…
And you can use it right inside your home, because it’s fume-free and SAFE.
You can’t say that about a typical generator. Not by a long shot.
So you can have the ultimate peace of mind that you and your family will stay connected when disaster strikes.
$190 in FREE Bonuses
Silent, Fume-FREE & Safe
Fast Recharge
Long-Lasting Battery
Recharge 2,000 Times!
Easy to Use
Completely Portable & Easy to Use!
Powers Your Favorite Devices
FREE Portable 40-Watt Solar Panel Included
and more!
That’s why it’s our privilege to introduce to you:
“You can charge your phone 28 times and still have some juice left over. It has no shortage of power. It’s very reliable and very good. It’s the perfect addition to all of your other 4Patriots products.” – Dan W.
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April 12, 2021
Listen to today’s show:
We all know the radical Democrats are looking to destroy America. But what if we had their battleplan for doing it? Would we be able to better respond? In this episode, I discuss an incredibly informative article that lays out the liberal plan to ruin the country.
Biden Commission To Study Expanding SCOTUS Sees Unlikely Opposition
Joe Biden announced a commission that will study the possibility of expanding the number of seats on the Supreme Court amid pressure from progressives to pack the court with a more ideologically friendly balance.
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For Kendrick Fulton, the COVID-19 pandemic opened the door to an unexpected opportunity to rebuild his life in Round Rock, Texas, after serving 17 years behind bars for selling crack cocaine. As officials scrambled last year to stem the spread of the coronavirus in prisons, the Justice Department let Fulton and more than 23,800 inmates like him serve their sentences at home.
Former President Donald Trump sought to position himself as the Republican Party kingmaker on Saturday, telling party donors he will help them win seats in 2022 congressional elections but shed no new light on whether he will seek a second term in 2024.
This group of 26 men have launched the biggest tech stock successes… Tesla Motors. YouTube. LinkedIn. Facebook. SpaceX. Palantir. Plus, they’ve made billions investing in early stage tech startups including Lyft, Airbnb, Stripe, and Spotify. Today the PayPal Mafia is launching a brand-new company. [Sponsored]
The global chemical weapons watchdog has “reasonable grounds to believe” that Syria’s air force dropped a chlorine bomb on a residential neighborhood in the rebel-controlled Idlib region in February 2018, a report released on Monday said.
Billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk’s brain-chip startup released footage on Friday appearing to show a monkey playing a simple videogame after getting implants of the new technology.
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NNPA NEWSWIRE — House Bill 35 repeals part of the law that requires placement in newspapers announcements about tax increases, special elections, and other public notices. Estimates suggest that such notices provide the state’s 100-plus newspapers with millions of dollars in annual revenue. The Republican-sponsored measure passed this week by an 85-34 vote. Read on »
NNPA NEWSWIRE — More than sharing my personal experiences in that two year stretch with one of the most widely recognized names in music entertainment, singing some of the most popular songs of all times, including “YMCA,” “Macho Man,” and “In the Navy”, consider this — I have no idea how I ended up there. Read on »
NNPA NEWSWIRE — There are thousands – perhaps millions – of Americans who have not only found the pandemic as tough a challenge to navigate as any, but whose need for socialization rationale is among the litany of “secrets” they’ve kept to themselves during the first year of COVID-19. Read on »
NNPA NEWSWIRE — As federal lawmakers ponder H.R. 40, legislation led by Congresswoman Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-Texas) that forms a commission to study reparations, some U.S. municipalities have moved to address systemic racism and forms of redress to African Americans. Read on »
THE AFRO – Among the things Mrs. Obama said in her landmark speech were, “Do not ever let anyone make you feel like you don’t matter, or like you don’t have a place in our American story.” Mrs. Obama went on, “It is our fundamental belief in the power of hope that has allowed us to rise above the voices of doubt and division, of anger and fear.” “If we work hard enough and believe in ourselves, we can be whatever we dream, regardless of the limitations that others may place on us.” Read on »
NEW ORLEANS DATA NEWS WEEKLY – “More than 22 million women have been forced out of the workforce in the past year, and many of them were Black women,” said Vice President Kamala Harris in her opening remarks for the 10th Annual Black Women’s Roundtable National Virtual Summit titled “Women of Power” this year. Read on »
POST NEWS GROUP – There is a long history of bigotry and legal discrimination that directly targeted Asian immigrants and Asian Americans. Over the past year, that hostility was inflamed by bigoted rhetoric from former President Donald Trump describing COVID-19 as the “Kung flu” and warning that if he weren’t re-elected Americans would have to learn Chinese. Read on »
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