Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday April 21, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
April 21 2021
|
Good morning from Washington, where Senate Democrats try to convince America that Jim Crow is back to repress blacks and other minorities. Republicans call them out during a hearing on Georgia’s new election law, as Fred Lucas reports. He also has a scoop on California’s demand for financial information from a nonprofit started by a Black Lives Matter founder. On the podcast, an experienced lawyer describes what he would have done differently than Derek Chauvin’s defense counsel. Plus: Ben Shapiro on the redefinition of identity. Five years ago today, the rock star Prince is found dead at 57 in his Minnesota home and recording studio of what turns out to be an accidental fentanyl overdose. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Add morningbell@heritage.org to your address book to ensure that you receive emails from us.
You are subscribed to this newsletter as rickbulow1974@gmail.com. If you want to receive other Heritage Foundation newsletters, or opt out of this newsletter, please click here to update your subscription. |
2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
You’ve been selected to participate in a special 2021 PRO-LIFE SURVEY. Do you OPPOSE the pro-abortion extremism coming out of Washington, D.C.? Begin your survey now to sound off! SPRING INTO ACTION As you have probably heard, the Hong Kong Epoch Times printing press was attacked on April 12th by four masked men wielding sledge hammers. While Hong Kong might seem far away, if we do not continue to spread the Truth and prevent the spread of communism, it may just be a matter of time before attacks like this start happening on American soil. We are asking you to help us by subscribing to The Epoch Times.
WORDS OF WISDOM “Pleasure is seldom found where it is sought. Our brightest blazes are commonly kindled by unexpected sparks.” SAMUEL JOHNSON MORNING BRIEF TOP NEWS POSITIVE NEWS EPOCH OPINION A WORD FROM OUR SPONSOR Students for Life of America, the largest and most effective pro-life youth group in the nation with over 1,250 active campus chapters is conducting a brief survey to gauge the enthusiasm of pro-lifers under the new Biden-Harris administration. The nation’s largest abortion vendor, Planned Parenthood, committed 354,871 abortions last year and raked in over $600 million in taxpayer funding. Meanwhile, they spent a whopping $45 million to elect pro-abortion politicians in 2020. Do you agree Planned Parenthood must be DEFUNDED? Click here to begin your PRO-LIFE SURVEY >> EPOCH PREMIUM VIDEOS PUZZLE CENTER Feedback: Let us know what you think by taking this survey. If this email has been forwarded to you and you would like to sign up, please click here. Copyright © 2021 The Epoch Times, All rights reserved. The Epoch Times, 229 W 28th St, Fl.5, New York, NY 10001
With social media censorship sidelining many important headlines, our Morning Brief email is how we make sure you get the latest developments that our reporters have curated from around the world. It’s our way of keeping you truly informed so that you can make the decisions that align with your values. We hope you enjoy our coverage. Manage your email preferences here.
|
3.) DAYBREAK
|
4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 4.21.21
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, A.G. Gancarski, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
Unsubscribe Having trouble viewing this email? View in browser
© 2021 Extensive Enterprises Media 204 37th Avenue North, #182 St. Petersburg, FL 33704 |
5.) MORNING BREW
|
BECOME SMARTER IN JUST 5 MINUTES
Get the daily email that makes reading the news actually enjoyable. Stay informed and entertained, for free.
6.) THE FACTUAL
|
7.) LIBERTY NATION
|
|
|
8.) FOX NEWS
|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||
|
9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
10.) JUST THE NEWS
11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE
|
12.) THE FLIP SIDE
- Subscribe
- Past Issues
- RSS
- Translate
|
13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
☕ Good Wednesday morning. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,039 words … 4 minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
- 🚨 Situational awareness: Chinese President Xi Jinping will attend President Biden’s virtual climate summit this week. And a UN-backed umbrella group responsible for over $70 trillion in assets announced the broadest financial industry effort yet on climate change.
🌐 You’re invited — today at 12:30 p.m. ET: an Axios Virtual Event for Earth Week, featuring conversations with GE CEO Larry Culp, Senate Energy Chair Joe Manchin and Southern Company CEO Tom Fanning. Sign up here.
Overnight: Much of the nation sighed with relief at the speed and sweep of the guilty verdicts against Derek Chauvin, Axios Twin Cities reporter Nick Halter writes.
- The conviction marks “the first time in Minnesota history that a white police officer was convicted of killing a Black civilian on the job,” according to the Minneapolis Star Tribune.
City and state officials had spent months bracing for unrest.
- But in the end, they didn’t even call a curfew.
Philonise Floyd, George Floyd’s brother, said at a news conference in Minneapolis: “They’re all saying the same thing: ‘We won’t be able to breathe until you’re able to breathe.’ Today we are able to breathe again.”
- “Justice for George means freedom for all.”
🗞️ For history …
Courteney Ross, Floyd’s girlfriend and a witness at the trial, on CNN before the verdict was read:
- “I think it will mean change. It’s a first step in a long road to recovery. We have a lot of work to do in Minneapolis. But I believe Floyd came here for a reason. … Maybe we are the epicenter for change. Maybe we are making the world look at things in a different way.”
New mourning: A Black teenager was killed by police in Columbus, Ohio.
- “Family members … identified the victim to local media as 16-year-old Ma’Khia Bryant,” WashPost reports.
“Body-camera footage shows a white officer emerge from a vehicle as the victim appears to chase someone, who falls onto the sidewalk. The teen then turns toward someone else wearing a pink sweatsuit and takes a swing at her head. The officer fires four shots at the girl, leaving her sprawled next to a car in the driveway,” per The Post.
- “‘She had a knife. She just ran at her,’ one officer says on the footage.”
- The victim’s aunt “maintained that the girl dropped the knife before she was shot,” the Columbus Dispatch reports.
Axios’ Russ Contreras was on a flight from Dallas to D.C. when the verdict was announced.
- As the guilty counts were read, several Black passengers hugged.
Tawney Coburn, the 49-year-old mother of two Black sons, wiped away a tear.
- “Honestly, this wasn’t just Black people speaking out against injustice,” she said of the verdict.
- “A large part of America was watching.”
Chris Christie talks to ABC’s Lindsey Davis on Election Night. Photo: Lorenzo Bevilaqua/ABC via Getty Images
Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is seriously considering running for president in 2024, three people familiar with his thinking tell Axios’ Jonathan Swan.
While Christie, 58, isn’t saying anything publicly about his thinking — besides telling radio host Hugh Hewitt he’s not ruling it out — people close to him have an early sense of the rationale and outlines of a potential candidacy.
- Christie has told friends that he’d be the only person in the 2024 field with executive experience who has run a presidential race before.
- That’s a clear shot at one potential rival — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who’s enjoying a surge of Republican popularity for his media-bashing and handling of COVID, but hasn’t endured the scrutiny of a presidential race.
Christie could run on a reputation for toughness that appeals to Trump’s base, minus the former president’s recklessness, said one source. Another said he has a mix of combativeness and charisma that Republicans are looking for to take on President Biden and Democrats.
- He has potential crossover appeal to blue-collar and suburban right-of-center voters.
- And his experience as a former federal prosecutor could help distinguish him in debates.
Christie has told associates that former President Trump’s decision about running again in 2024 won’t affect his own decision-making.
Not a single ball was kicked.
- Plans for the Super League collapsed spectacularly as six English clubs walked away from the plan only two days after it was announced, reports Axios Sports editor Kendall Baker.
- Just after midnight in Europe, the Super League released a statement confirming the project had been suspended.
Apple debuted a paid podcast marketplace that will help creators monetize their content, Axios’ Sara Fischer reports.
- The service includes an Apple Podcasters Program, featuring tools needed by creators to offer premium subscriptions on Apple Podcasts for $19.99 annually.
- Some subscriptions allow listeners to unlock new content. Others offer perks — bonus episodes or an ad-free experience.
What’s next: As soon as next month, Spotify is set to announce a “subscription podcasting model that would let certain podcasters charge listeners for access on the streaming service,” The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
- Go deeper: Yesterday’s other Apple announcements.
People of means from Latin America are chartering planes, booking commercial flights, buying bus tickets and renting cars to get the vaccine in the U.S. due to lack of supply at home, AP reports.
- They’re traveling thousands of miles — in some places taking a shuttle directly from the airport to COVID vaccine sites.
- They include politicians, TV personalities, executives and a soccer team.
USDA announced it’ll extend universal free lunch through the 2021-2022 school year “to reach more of the estimated 12 million youths experiencing food insecurity,” the WashPost reports.
- “Child nutrition program waivers, which aimed to cut through red tape to allow kids to eat free even outside normal meal times, were implemented at the beginning” of the pandemic.
Netflix added 4 million global subscribers last quarter — a far cry from the 6 million additions anticipated by Wall Street analysts, Axios’ Sara Fischer writes.
- Why it matters: The streaming giant faces increased competition, particularly in the U.S. and increasingly abroad.
Entertainment preferences of Gen Z (born 1997 to 2007) aren’t good for Hollywood, the L.A. Times reports from a study by Deloitte:
- 26% of Gen Zers “cited playing video games as their favorite entertainment activity, compared to 14% for listening to music, 12% for browsing the internet and 11% for engaging on social media. Only 10% said they would rather watch a movie or TV show at home.”
💡 Axios AM is written in Smart Brevity®. Learn how your team can communicate in the same smart, clear style with Axios HQ.
14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
|
Copyright © 2021 MEDIADC, All rights reserved.Washington Examiner | A MediaDC Publication 1152 15th Street NW Suite 200 | Washington, DC 20005 |
You received this email because you are subscribed to Examiner Today from The Washington Examiner. Update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive.We respect your right to privacy – View our Policy Unsubscribe |
18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
April 21, 2021 View in browser AP Morning Wire
Good morning from Johannesburg. The guilty verdict of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin for the death of George Floyd has made waves across the United States, with President Joe Biden welcoming the jury’s decision as bringing in a new era of justice for Black Americans and accountability for the country’s police and justice systems. The jury’s swift verdict set off jubilation mixed with sorrow across the city of Minneapolis and around the nation. Biden said the conviction of Chauvin “can be a giant step forward” for the nation’s fight against systemic racism. But he declared that “it’s not enough.”
Also this morning:
ANDREW MELDRUM Africa News Editor The Associated Press Johannesburg
The Rundown MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — After three weeks of testimony, the trial of the former police officer charged with killing George Floyd ended swiftly: barely more than a day of jury deliberations, then just minutes for the verdicts to be read — guilty, guilty and guilty — and Derek Chauvin was handcuffed and taken away to prison. Chauvin, 45, could be sent to prison for decades when he is sentenced in about two months a case that triggered worldwide protests, violence and a furious reexamination of racism and policing in the U.S. The verdict set off jubilation mixed with sorrow across the city and around the nation. Hundreds of people poured into the streets of Minneapolis, some running through traffic with banners. Drivers blared their horns in celebration….Read More NEW YORK (AP) — When the verdicts came in — Guilty, Guilty, Guilty — Lucia Edmonds let out the breath she hadn’t even realized she’d been holding. The relief that the 91-year-old Black woman felt flooding over her when white former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was convicted for killing George Floyd was hard-earned, coming after a lifetime of seeing other cases end differently. “I was prepared for the fact that it might not be a guilty verdict because it’s happened so many times before,” the Washington, D.C., resident said. She recalled the shock of the Rodney King case nearly three decades ago when four Los Angeles officers were acquitted of beating King, a Black motorist. …Read More MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Relief, even if fleeting and momentary, is a feeling that Black Americans have rarely known in America: From slavery to Jim Crow segregation to enduring punishments for living while Black, a breath of fresh air untainted by oppression has long been hard to come by. Nonetheless, the conviction of ex-cop Derek Chauvin for murdering George Floyd nearly a year ago allowed many across this city and the nation to exhale pent up anxiety — and to inhale a sense of hope. But what might they feel hope for? …Read More WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden said the conviction of former Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin in the killing of George Floyd “can be a giant step forward” for the nation in the fight against systemic racism. But he declared that “it’s not enough.” Biden spoke Tuesday from the White House hours after the verdict alongside Vice President Kamala Harris, with the pair saying the country’s work is far from finished with the verdict. “We can’t stop here,” Biden declared. …Read More COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Police shot and killed a teenage girl in Columbus on Tuesday afternoon, according to newspaper reports, just as the verdict in the George Floyd murder trial was being announced. The Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation was at the scene Tuesday night on the city’s southeast side, The Columbus Dispatch reported . Officers had responded to an attempted stabbing call when police shot the girl at about 4:45 p.m., the newspaper reported. The 911 caller reported a female was trying to stab them before hanging up, according to the Dispatch. …Read More
OTHER TOP STORIES India has been overwhelmed by hundreds of thousands of new coronavirus cases daily, bringing pain, fear and agony to many lives as lockdowns have been placed in Delhi and…Read More WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. is set to meet President Joe Biden’s latest vaccine goal of administering 200 million COVID-19 shots in his first 100 days in office, as the Wh…Read More BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union reached a tentative climate deal that should make the 27-nation bloc climate-neutral by 2050, with member states and parliament agreein…Read More CORONA, Calif. (AP) — A Southern California man is recovering after he was bitten by a rattlesnake when he tried to pick up the poisonous reptile using barbecue tongs, au…Read More
“There are only two forces that can carry light to all the corners of the globe … the sun in the heavens and The Associated Press down here.” Mark Twain
GET THE APP Download the AP News app to get breaking news alerts from AP on your phone, tablet or watch.
Unsubscribe | About us © 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. 200 Liberty St., New York, NY 10128 |
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
|
21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Chicagoans react to Derek Chauvin’s murder conviction
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
|
23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
|
24.) ROLL CALL
|
Morning Headlines
House Democrats voted Tuesday to kill a resolution from Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy to censure Rep. Maxine Waters for saying over the weekend that Black Lives Matter protesters would need to “get more confrontational” if Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was acquitted of murdering George Floyd. Read more…
The House Select Committee on the Modernization of Congress is building its agenda for the next two years. The panel will meet in private this week, with Reps. Derek Kilmer and William R. Timmons IV presenting an outline of issues and hearing topics for the next year and areas of focus for future recommendations. Read more…
Plan on it: Voter turnout next year will be down
ANALYSIS — Turnout in the 2022 midterm elections will be down, guaranteed, because turnout is always down in midterm elections compared with presidential years. The more pertinent question is: How low will turnout go? It likely will fall close to or just below 2018 levels, Nathan L. Gonzales writes. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Rep. Grace Meng on fighting COVID-19 and hatred aimed at Asian Americans
CQ Roll Call talked with Rep. Grace Meng, a fifth-term Democrat who represents a diverse portion of the New York City borough of Queens, shortly after last month’s Atlanta shootings about the rise in violence and discrimination against Asian Americans, as well as what she and others in Congress plan to do about it. Read more…
For Congressional Black Caucus, relief and resolve after Chauvin verdict
Shouts and gasps could be heard as nearly 20 members of the Congressional Black Caucus huddled around a laptop computer and a mobile phone in an ornate room steps from the House floor Tuesday to learn that a jury found Derek Chauvin guilty of murder and manslaughter in the death of George Floyd. Read more…
Senators squabble over voting rights, underscoring deep division on state efforts
A divisive Senate Judiciary Committee hearing Tuesday made it clear that Senate action on voting rights remains highly unlikely under the chamber’s current rules, as 47 states consider hundreds of proposed laws that would make it harder to vote. Read more…
Military commanders disavow notion of extremists in their ranks
Two top military officers on Tuesday told senators there are “zero” white supremacists under their command, despite evidence of a simmering problem within the ranks that came to the forefront after the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol involving some currently serving military personnel and veterans. Read more…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2021 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
1201 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Suite 600
Washington, DC 20004
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: The verdict: A rush of relief as eyes turn to Congress
DRIVING THE DAY
A personal reflection from Eugene to start us off this morning …
For four straight nights after GEORGE FLOYD was murdered by DEREK CHAUVIN, I cried myself to a fitful sleep. One of those mornings, I woke up heaving and sweating through my clothes. Like millions around the world, I watched the killing of Floyd over and over again — on cable news, on Twitter, on Facebook and in my own head. It was too much.
Every Black person I know was feeling the same. It was a reminder of many interactions we’ve had with police. Every time we’ve been asked, “What are you doing in this neighborhood?” Or when we’ve called our moms after getting stopped by police, or been terrified that the wrong placement of a hand or a reach for the glove compartment might be it.
After Floyd’s killing, I watched as people I never thought would speak out against racism, implicit bias and the like took to the streets to protest.
As the trial unfolded on TV the past several weeks, we wondered whether the video recorded by a teenager named DARNELLA FRAZIER that launched months of marches would be enough. As the verdict was read Tuesday — guilty on all counts — crowds outside the courthouse cheered and chanted.
They and I felt a wave of relief. For a moment, I thought, this could be a turning point for treatment of Black people by police, before being reminded that this is just one case. And an extraordinary one at that — with a nearly 10-minute video of the crime as well as the defendant’s fellow police officers, including the chief of police, taking the stand to confirm that Chauvin violated department policies on use of force.
President JOE BIDEN and VP KAMALA HARRIS promised the Floyd family and the nation that the verdict was just a first step. But it’s now in Congress’ hands, not exactly a confidence-inspiring group for people hoping to see reform.
On Capitol Hill, lawmakers in both parties said Tuesday night they want to see police reform move forward. But as our Burgess Everett, Marianne LeVine and Nicholas Wu write, Republicans and Democrats are at loggerheads over what that looks like.
The House-passed George Floyd Justice in Policing Act won’t attract the 10 Senate Republicans needed because it would eliminate qualified immunity, which shields police officers from lawsuits. And the GOP’s top policing proposal, authored by Sen. TIM SCOTT (R-S.C.), the only Black Senate Republican, has been panned as toothless by Democrats.
Scott, Rep. KAREN BASS (D-Calif.) and Sen. CORY BOOKER (D-N.J.) have been talking privately on this issue for a while, and those conversations are expected to heat up now. But one person familiar with the ongoing negotiations admitted Bass’ late-May timeline for sending Biden a bill is very ambitious. “Everyone is approaching this with a healthy dose of skepticism,” this person told us. “We are cautiously optimistic.”
More Chauvin verdict reads …
— Two good look-aheads: “Chauvin is guilty. Now comes the hard road ahead,” by Brakkton Booker, the author of The Recast, POLITICO’s new newsletter on race and identity … “The Death of George Floyd Reignited a Movement. What Happens Now?” NYT
— Jelani Cobb talks to David Remnick: “The Significance of the Derek Chauvin Verdict,” The New Yorker
— POLITICO Magazine surveys 21 experts on what it meant
— The moment Biden and Harris called the family
— The NANCY PELOSI comment that made people cringe … and the cleanup
— Pic and videos captured by our SARAH FERRIS and CBS’ ALAN HE of Congressional Black Caucus members, huddled around a laptop and a member’s cell phone, watching the Chauvin verdict come down.
Good Wednesday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
JOIN US — A day after testifying before the Senate about the Biden administration’s $2 trillion infrastructure and climate plan, Commerce Secretary GINA RAIMONDO will join RYAN and EUGENE today at 1:30 p.m. to discuss the plan’s prospects. They’ll also cover Biden’s relationship with corporate America, the administration’s milestones as it approaches the 100-day mark and what to expect from Biden’s address to Congress. Register here to watch live
BIDEN’S WEDNESDAY — The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:50 a.m. He’ll deliver remarks about the pandemic response and the state of vaccinations at 1:15 p.m.
— Happening at noon: Leaders of the New Democrat Coalition will meet with RON KLAIN, STEVE RICHETTI and LOUISA TERRELL, one day after the moderate Blue Dogs, another centrist coalition, did the same. (Here’s a shot of Blue Dog leaders — Reps. ED CASE, STEPHANIE MURPHY, TOM O’HALLERAN and KURT SCHRADER — coming out of the West Wing.) Today’s attendees include: coalition chair SUZAN DELBENE and leadership team ANNIE KUSTER, SCOTT PETERS, SHARICE DAVIDS, CHRISSY HOULAHAN, DEREK KILMER and KATHY MANNING.
— Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:15 p.m.
THE SENATE is in session. The Commerce Committee will hold a hearing at 10 a.m. on nominees including BILL NELSON for NASA administrator and LINA KHAN for FTC commissioner.
THE HOUSE will meet at noon, with votes on several bills expected between 3:45 p.m. and 6:45 p.m. EPA Administrator MICHAEL REGAN and HUD Secretary MARCIA FUDGE will testify before Appropriations subcommittees at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., respectively. The Administration Committee will hold a hearing at 2 p.m. about Jan. 6, with Capitol Police IG MICHAEL BOLTON testifying.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE REFUGEE FIASCO
WAPO AND POLITICO GET THE GOODS — “‘The wheels fell off’: How Biden’s misgivings on border surge upended plan on refugees,” WaPo: “President Biden overruled his top foreign policy and national security aides, including Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN, when he kept in place the Trump administration’s record low cap … Biden harbored concerns about what the sharp increase in migrants at the southern border meant for the government’s capacity to handle an influx of refugees from elsewhere …
“In the end, the president’s own misgivings fueled the decision more than anything else … The president was particularly frustrated by the government’s struggle to deal with unaccompanied minors at the border and became increasingly concerned about the Office of Refugee Resettlement’s response to the crisis … Those concerns are also likely to inform where the president lands with a revised figure for refugee admissions.”
— “‘Gasoline on top of that fire’: Why the White House wanted to avoid the refugee issue,” by Natasha Korecki and Laura Barrón-López: “Avoiding an escalation of conservative attacks against President Joe Biden’s immigration policies was one of the factors the White House considered when it initially decided to keep his predecessor’s controversial cap on refugees.”
THE WHITE HOUSE
IMMIGRATION TRIPLE LINDY — “Biden’s open to doing immigration through reconciliation, Hispanic lawmakers say,” by Laura Barrón-López and Nicholas Wu: “[Biden] left the impression that it would not just be a portion of his upcoming address to a joint session of Congress, but that he’d support moving immigration measures through budget rules allowing a simple majority vote in the Senate.
“‘Biden said that he generally ‘supports passing certain immigration reforms by reconciliation if we can’t get the 10 Republican votes,’ [Rep. DARREN] SOTO (D-Fla.) said after the meeting, referring to the number of GOP votes needed in the Senate to meet the 60-vote threshold required for most legislation. ‘And he would make a statement in the State of the Union.’”
Rachael says: After the parliamentarian ruled against doing a minimum wage hike via reconciliation, it’s hard to see how immigration reform would pass muster. But it’s a no-cost move for Biden to try: It will win him chits with the base while letting the parliamentarian be the bearer of bad news.
PONYING UP TO THE NEW PRESIDENT — “Corporate America boosts Biden’s inaugural committee,” by Theo Meyer: “Many of them opened up their checkbooks for Biden’s inaugural committee, helping him raise more than $61 million to fund his largely virtual festivities. The list included companies with major business before the federal government — on everything from taxes to regulations — such as Uber, Lockheed Martin, Comcast, AT&T, Bank of America, Pfizer and Qualcomm, all of which gave the maximum $1 million.”
— FORBES: “Bill Gates, Ken Griffin Among Billionaire Donors To President Biden’s Inaugural Committee”
CONGRESS
THE DAILY MARJORIE — DCCC Chair SEAN PATRICK MALONEY (D-N.Y.) is calling on Republican leaders and the NRCC to reject a $175,000 pledged donation from lightning rod Rep. MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE following the latest controversies surrounding the Georgia Republican.
After the Chauvin verdict Tuesday night, MTG took to Twitter to claim Black Lives Matter “has now proven itself to be the most powerful domestic [terrorist] organization in our country.” SPM quickly sent Playbook his reaction to what the DCCC called “her racist rhetoric … attacking Black activists that have marched against police violence” — and calling on House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY and NRCC Chair TOM EMMER (R-Minn.) to return the money.
“In her brief time as a Republican star,” the DCCC chief wrote, “she has peddled QAnon inspired conspiracies, promoted rhetoric that egged on the insurrection at the United States Capitol, planned a white supremacist caucus in Congress, and tweeted a racist statement in the wake of the Derek Chauvin verdict. While Democrats are fighting for racial justice, Republicans continue to let Taylor Greene’s disgraceful actions go unpunished.”
Meanwhile, Forbes’ Andrew Solender is reporting that Rep. JIMMY GOMEZ (D-Calif.) is once again talking about pushing his resolution to expel Greene. Leadership talked him down from forcing the vote a while back, but after Republicans went after Rep. MAXINE WATERS (D-Calif.) this week, Gomez is apparently feeling emboldened to try again.
ICYMI — “House rejects GOP attempt to censure Rep. Maxine Waters over remarks about Chauvin trial,” WaPo
INFRASTRUCTURE YEAR
GOP TO LAY DOWN A MARKER — “GOP senators float $600-800 billion infrastructure counteroffer,” by Tanya Snyder, Marianne LeVine and Burgess Everett: “[Sen. SHELLEY MOORE] CAPITO proposed paying for the plan with user fees that would extend to electric and hydrogen-powered cars, which don’t pay gas taxes but which as yet make up a vanishingly small minority of vehicles on the road, and with money left over from the Covid relief package, people in the [GOP lunch] meeting said. Public-private partnerships would also be a component of the plan.”
SEN. ROB PORTMAN’S TAKE: “Tax Hikes Will Stifle the Recovery,” WSJ
POLICY CORNER
PRE-SUMMIT READING — “Biden readies ambitious pitch to make the U.S. the global climate leader,” by Zack Colman: “The U.S. officials have a lot of ground to make up after years of the federal inaction, and Biden has pushed his team led by [JOHN] KERRY and national climate adviser GINA MCCARTHY to move quickly by organizing the global summit less than 100 days into his tenure. That scramble has left a lot of questions circulating about exactly what to expect from the speeches from the 40 nations invited to participate in the virtual event Thursday and Friday.”
HEY NOW, YOU’RE AN ALL STAR — “Biden assembled an all-star climate team. Now he has to deliver,” by Michael Grunwald: “It’s often said in Washington that personnel is policy, and it would be hard for the president not to push the climate envelope after hiring so many envelope-pushers. If Biden has recruited the climate equivalent of America’s 1992 Olympic ‘Dream Team’ — as ALI ZAIDI, McCarthy’s deputy, describes it — his Michael Jordans and Charles Barkleys will all expect to hoop. …
“There just isn’t much subtlety about the Biden team’s enthusiasm for climate action. … Team members say their meetings are a bit surreal — not only because they’re all virtual, but because the participants all understand without ever saying so explicitly that their goal is decarbonizing the country. … To Washington Republicans, all this unabashed green cheerleading reflects a liberal government stocked with radical ideologues by a supposedly moderate president.”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
IN OHIO — “Columbus police release body camera footage in shooting of 16-year-old Ma’Khia Bryant,” Columbus Dispatch: “The video shows an officer approaching a driveway with a group of young people standing there. In the video, it appears that the 16-year-old, identified now as Ma’Khia Bryant, who was moments later shot by police, pushes or swings at a person, who falls to the ground. Bryant then appears to swing a knife at a girl who is on the hood of a car, and the officer fires his weapon what sounds like four times, striking Bryant, who died a short time later.”
IN MISSOURI — Our Alex Isenstadt reports that “MARK MCCLOSKEY, the gun-toting St. Louis attorney who drew headlines last year for brandishing an assault rifle at Black Lives Matter protesters — says he’s looking at running for Missouri’s open Senate seat.”
TED KENNEDY’S LEGACY — “A ‘Fundamental’ Shift: Harvard Institute of Politics Marred by Tensions, Turnover as Kennedy School Asserts Increase,” The Harvard Crimson: “Held up as a model and copied at more than a dozen universities nationwide, the IOP has a rich history as a non-academic institute focused on providing public service opportunities to undergraduates — despite its home within the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, a graduate school. Its John F. Kennedy Jr. Forum events and study groups with fellows allow undergraduates to rub shoulders with some of the nation’s top political figures, while other programs offer College students public service leadership and volunteer opportunities.
“Historic Kennedy family documents never previously made public reveal, though, that there have long been fears that the IOP’s placement within the Kennedy School could jeopardize its independence and undergraduate-focused mission.”
PLAYBOOKERS
SPOTTEDS: A sign that D.C. is coming back to life: Symone Sanders brunching, maskless and fully vaccinated, at the Blue Duck Tavern on Sunday with CNN’s Abby Phillip, businesswoman Lauren Leslie Wilson, 1063 West Broad founder Alencia Johnson, Bonnti CEO Maude Okrah and publicist Mercy Chikowore. Instapic … Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), known for her flamboyant style, coming out of the senators’ briefing on Afghanistan wearing gold knee-high go-go boots and a mini-skirt… Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) at dinner at O-Ku. Pic
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The DSCC is staffing up its comms shop for the 2022 cycle: David Bergstein as comms director, Stewart Boss and Amanda Sherman Baity as senior comms strategists, Jazmin Vargas as national press secretary and Shea Necheles as deputy press secretary. Bergstein most recently was at the DNC, Sherman Baity most recently was on M.J. Hegar’s Texas Senate campaign, and Vargas is currently press secretary for Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.); Boss and Necheles were already at the DSCC.
— Derek Harley is joining the Select Committee on the Modernization of Congress as GOP staff director. He most recently was SVP of federal affairs at Shumaker Advisors Ohio, and is a Brad Wenstrup and Wally Herger alum.
STAFFING UP — Caroline Ciccone has been appointed comms director at the Office of Personnel Management. She most recently was executive director of Accountable.US, and is an Obama SBA alum.
TRANSITIONS — Jess Smith will be chief of staff for Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.). She most recently was COO of J Street, and is a DOJ, FEMA and Jim Webb alum. … Aquila Powell is now a managing director at Prime Policy Group. She most recently was senior director at Acreage Holdings and VP at the Cannabis Trade Federation. Jahan Wilcox has launched JRW Strategies. He most recently was comms director for Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) and is an EPA alum. …
… Erica Borghard is now senior fellow for technology and international affairs at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and is still a senior director on the Cyberspace Solarium Commission. She most recently was senior fellow for the New American Engagement Initiative at the Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security at the Atlantic Council. … Justin Sykes will be associate director for the Southeast region at the American Petroleum Institute, based in North Carolina. He currently is senior manager of government relations at American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers.
HOT JOB ALERT from Forbes’ @AndrewSolender: “Capitol Police searching for a permanent chief, accepting applications through May 17.” The job posting
BURNOUT ON THE HILL — “Capitol Hill staffers are burned out and heading for the exits after a hellish year bookmarked by a pandemic and an insurrection,” Insider: “Staffers at all levels, from fellows to chiefs of staff and everyone in between, have struggled with burnout, several current and former employees told Insider. They described the line between their work and personal lives, already razor thin prior to the pandemic, being completely obliterated by remote work.”
MEDIAWATCH — The new season of Slate’s “Slow Burn” podcast launches today, hosted by Noreen Malone, on the road to the Iraq War. It’ll include interviews with Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Franklin Miller, Tom Daschle, Rend al-Rahim Francke, Dan Rather, Bill Kristol, Ann Curry, Bob Baer, Kanan Makiya and more.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Kayla Tausche, senior White House correspondent for CNBC, and Jeff Izant, assistant U.S. attorney for the district of Maryland, on Monday welcomed Grace Lincoln Izant, who came in at 7 lbs, 8 oz. Pic
— Chris Benderev, a reporter and producer at NPR, and Maddie Benderev, senior manager of digital strategy at Zero to Three, welcomed Daniel Nicholas Benderev on April 10. Pic
— Jessica Monahan, policy adviser at Arnold & Porter, and Matt Monahan, managing director at KPMG, welcomed Luke Joseph Monahan on April 13.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: NYT’s Jodi Kantor … Queen Elizabeth II (95) … Ken Duberstein … Saagar Enjeti … Matt Rivera … Felix Salmon of Axios and the “Slate Money” podcast … Farmer Mac’s Greg Lyons … Collin O’Mara of the National Wildlife Federation … Jay Cranford of CGCN Group … Will Boyington … Brad Cheney of the Majority Group … WSJ’s Katherine Finnerty … Mercury’s Jon Reinish … Paige Reffe … Steven Chlapecka … Eric Weisbrod … Paul Haenle of the Carnegie-Tsinghua Center … Dominic Bellone … Harry L. Williams of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund … Chuck Colbert … Marty Steinberg … POLITICO’s Gloria Gonzalez and Amanda Hayes … Terrence Clark … Craig Johnson of Long Point Advisors (5-0)
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.
Follow us on Twitter
26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
David Brainerd “It might have convinced an atheist, that the Lord was indeed in the place!” – American Minute with Bill Federer
David Brainerd “Oh how precious is time…that God would make me more fruitful” – American Minute with Bill Federer
- George Whitefield,
- Gilbert Tennent,
- Ebenezer Pemberton, and
- James Davenport.
- “Here am I, send me; send me to the ends of the earth; send me to the rough, the savage lost of the wilderness … send me even to death itself, if it be but in your service, and to promote your kingdom.”
- “I care not where I go, or how I live, or what I endure so that I may save souls. When I sleep I dream of them; when I awake they are first in my thoughts.”
- “We should always look upon ourselves as God’s servants, placed in God’s world, to do his work … not with a design to grow rich and great, but to glorify God, and do all the good we possibly can.”
- “It is impossible for any rational creature to be happy without acting all for God … There is nothing in the world worth living for but doing good and finishing God’s work, doing the work that Christ did.”
- “I see nothing else in the world that can yield any satisfaction besides living to God, pleasing Him, and doing his whole will.”
- “I cared not where or how I lived, or what hardships I went through, so I could but gain souls to Christ.”
- “Let me forget the world and be swallowed up in the desire to glorify God.”
- “There is a God in heaven who overrules all things for the best; and this is the comfort of my soul.”
- “Give yourself to prayer, to reading and meditation on divine truths: strive to penetrate to the bottom of them and never be content with a superficial knowledge.”
- “Oh! one hour with God infinitely exceeds all the pleasures and delights of this lower world.”
- “I love to live on the brink of eternity.”
- “Take heed that you faithfully perform the business you have to do in the world, from a regard to the commands of God; and not from an ambitious desire of being esteemed better than others.”
- “I have received my all from God. Oh, that I could return my all to God.”
- “If you hope for happiness in the world, hope for it from God, and not from the world.”
- “It is sweet to be nothing and less than nothing that Christ may be all in all.”
- “I have appointments with God. From these silences I come forth with spirit refreshed, and with a renewed sense of power. I hear a voice in the silences, and become increasingly aware that it is the voice of God.
- “Whatever else you fail of, do not fail of the influence of the Holy Spirit; that is the only way you can handle the consciences of men.”
- William Carey, missionary to West Bengal, India, who said “Expect great things from God. Attempt great things for God”;
- Adoniram Judson, missionary to Burma, who said “If you succeed without sacrifice it is because someone has suffered before you. If you sacrifice without success it is because someone will succeed after”;
- Oswald J. Smith, internationally known pastor, church planter and author, who said “The church that does not evangelize will fossilize,” “The fullness of the Spirit is not a question of our getting more of the Holy Spirit, but rather of the Holy Spirit getting more of us,” “I want Thy plan, O God, for my life. I want it; oh, I want it.”
- Jim Eliot, missionary-martyr to Ecuador, who said “He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose” ; and
- John Wesley, who wrote: “What can be done to revive the work of God where it is decayed? Let every preacher read carefully over the life of David Brainerd.”
- “Lord, let me make a difference for you that is utterly disproportionate to who I am.”
- “The Lord help me to press after God forever.”
- “Oh, how precious is time, and how it pains me to see it slide away, while I do so little to any good purpose. Oh, that God would make me more fruitful.”
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
|
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
|
29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Chauvin Guilty but Unhinged Leftists Still Complain
Top O’ the Briefing
Chauvin Verdict Predictably Leaves Commies Still Miserable and Whining
Happy Wednesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I’m wearing my festive power cummerbund right now.
I’m binge-watching Criminal Minds while I work because it’s cheerier than the day-to-day news in America. I’m only on season five so Netflix should be able to get me through the next few months of mostly peaceful unrest. As I lamented on Twitter last night, I’ve almost run out of true crime serial killer fare on my many streaming services.
Never tell me I don’t know struggle.
Another chapter closed in the tragic George Floyd saga yesterday but I think we all know that it won’t be the final chapter. This is going to be an American societal horror version of Proust’s In Search of Lost Time and we’re only about one-third of the way through the first of the seven books.
Derek Chauvin was found guilty on all three charges that he faced. I think most people were certain that the second-degree manslaughter charge would stick. Some may have been surprised that he was so quickly convicted on the other two counts. As Victoria wrote, there will almost certainly be an appeal. And as the judge who presided over the trial mentioned yesterday, Maxine Waters may have given Chauvin some fodder for that.
This was the best possible outcome for all of the people who couldn’t wait to get in front of cameras and demand that justice be done. Our idiot fake president even put down his crayons long enough to tell the nation that he was “praying” for this to happen.
So this verdict was being celebrated by those who insisted that this was about justice for George Floyd, right?
Nah, the leftist perma-victim crowd never stops whining.
It took a mere minutes before a lot of the usual suspects hit social media to start the complaining.
One of the first ones to weigh in was the man who is in charge of justice in the state of Minnesota:
Helpful rhetoric from Minnesota’s chief law enforcement officer. https://t.co/FlveqPkVpI
— SFK (@stephenkruiser) April 20, 2021
In a rush to be even less helpful, America’s Dumbest Bartender opened her mouth even bigger, which was covered over at Townhall:
AOC tells her supporters the Chauvin verdict is not enough
“This is not justice… frankly, I don’t even think we call it full accountability” pic.twitter.com/BOlhWtDjGU
— Jewish Deplorable (@TrumpJew2) April 20, 2021
And on it went.
One of the MSNBC empty talking heads went so far as to say he was “furious” about the verdict:
MSNBC’s Jason Johnson is FURIOUS with the verdict, calling it “a cultural make-up call”: “I’m not happy. I’m not pleased. I don’t have any sense of satisfaction. I don’t think this is the system working…This is the justice system trying to say, hey, this is one bad apple.” pic.twitter.com/W3JLcujpfd
— Curtis Houck (@CurtisHouck) April 20, 2021
Oh.
These reactions shouldn’t surprise anyone. Leftists are inherently miserable people. They really aren’t interested in justice. They want reasons to be angrier and they are pathologically devoted to trying to make everyone else as miserable as they are.
And no, unhinged trolls, this isn’t me saying that I think Chauvin should have been acquitted. I thought the manslaughter charge was legit. I also thought that there was undue pressure on the jurors from people like Maxine Waters. Both opinions can exist in the same person. I don’t believe for a moment that the jurors were completely shielded from outside news. Not in the information age.
Another reason for the dissatisfaction is that an integral component of the leftist rage mob’s plan to remake the United States of America into a Third-World communist hellhole is to keep the “systemic racism” false narrative rolling along. Being pleased with this verdict wouldn’t help that at all. Predictably, Drooling Joe’s puppet masters pulled the moron’s strings and made him play along.
The end game for the Left right now isn’t to make America change, it’s to make it cease to exist. There is no level of legal justice or capitulation that will satisfy them. This isn’t going to end until we have some adults in charge again. And that may never happen if they have their way with anti-American initiatives like HR 1.
The one thing that we can count on is that, no matter how all of this turns out, AOC’s gaping maw will not have closed during any of it.
LOL Oops
Pat Sajak accidentally solves ‘Wheel of Fortune’ puzzle during show. No one caught it. https://t.co/toCgiiiGef
— NBC News (@NBCNews) April 21, 2021
Everything Isn’t Awful
Security cameras caught something pretty amazing.
We don’t deserve dogs… pic.twitter.com/kLnRmZ4xDk
— Rex Chapman🏇🏼 (@RexChapman) April 20, 2021
PJ Media
The Verdict Is in on Derek Chauvin. An Appeal Is Sure to Follow.
Nancy Pelosi Celebrates Chauvin Guilty Verdict by Thanking George Floyd for Dying
Excellent. WATCH: Arizona Gov. Ducey Declares Border Emergency Because Biden Won’t
VodkaPundit: Insanity Wrap #190: Who Hates America More, Protestors in Iran or Minnesota?
No, the New Florida Riot Law Does Not Say You Can Mow Down Protestors With Your Car
Most won’t now. New Dispatch From The Brady White Files: Why Risk Your Life if You’re A Cop?
Democrat Disarray: Moderate Democrats Are Mad at Maxine Waters as They Worry About 2022
Burgess Owens Eviscerates Democrats’ ‘Jim Crow’ Narrative on Election Integrity
Trump Is ‘All in’ For 2022, Teases a 2024 Presidential Run
Islamic State Executes Another Coptic Christian in New Video
Top-Ten Hit Singer SZA Claims She Stopped Wearing Hijab After 9/11: ‘I Was So Scared’
Townhall Mothership
Fox News’ Gutfeld: Chauvin Verdict Was Extortion by the Left-Wing Mob
Still evil. Mad Maxine Survives Censure Push…For Now
Trump Reminds Americans Why He Put a Limit on Refugees
Critic Calls on Kids Cartoon About Canines to Include Disabled Characters and ‘Dogs of Color’
Joe Biden’s American Rescue Plan Is More Harm Than Help To Seniors
Chicago Mayor Demands Federal Gun Control For Her Failures
Columnist Accidently Reminds Us How Important Filibuster Is To Gun Rights
Cam & Co. Is The Supreme Court A Lost Cause?
There’s An Anti-Gun Witch Hunt Underway In Massachusetts
Aaron Blake’s take on ‘whataboutism’ leaves a lot to be desired
Politico: Did Trump blow his shot at a “vaccination legacy”?
#OldSchool. Death row inmate seeks firing squad
VIP
The Kruiser Kabana Episode 117: Jesse Kelly’s Hopeful Message on Cultural Guerilla Warfare
Thank God DeSantis Is Fighting: Why the COVID Ban on Cruises Is Personal For My Family
American Cities Are Preparing for the Worst with Chauvin Verdict
GOLD Disaster-in-Chief: Joe Biden Has No Clue What He’s Doing
GOLD Ouch: Nonpartisan Nonprofit Delivers Bad News to Democrats About Georgia’s Voter ID Law
GOLD ‘Unredacted with Kurt Schlichter’: Maxine Waters Is the Worst Person in the Universe
Around the Interwebz
It has been disappointing lately. Netflix subscriber growth is stalling as it runs low on hits
Chad’s President Idriss Déby dies after clashes with rebels
Netflix To Spend $17B On Content In 2021
20 Amazing Historical Discoveries in the Last 20 Years
Reduct This
CDC Announces It’s Safe to Start Texting ‘Hey, How’ve You Been?!’ to Your Friend With a Pool: https://t.co/bOpJSw6QtC pic.twitter.com/lbwOlWDBrN
— Reductress (@Reductress) April 19, 2021
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Random
— Stained Glass Zealot ♱ (@glass_zealot) April 20, 2021
Kabana Gallery
Juan-les-Pins, 1888 https://t.co/TCiw9Zm1Xo #monet #claudemonet pic.twitter.com/Yp0rnkOnTz
— Claude Monet (@artistmonet) April 20, 2021
Kabana Tunes
LOL…this song might resonate with me a little more than when I first heard it sixteen years ago.
I was thinking of having a meaningful conversation then people showed up.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
|
Editor
8409 Lee Hwy
#3984
Merrifield VA 22116-9998
USA
Unsubscribe | Change Subscriber Options
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Chauvin Found Guilty
Plus: New details about the death of Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick.
The Dispatch Staff | 2 min ago | 1 |
Happy Tuesday! First things first: Ted Lasso is coming back on July 23—and we’ve got a trailer!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- A jury on Tuesday found former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin guilty of all three charges brought against him following the death of George Floyd: Second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder, and second-degree manslaughter.
- The European Medicines Agency concluded Tuesday that blood clotting should be listed as a “very rare” side effect of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine, but that the “benefits of the vaccine continue to outweigh the risks for people who receive it.”
- U.S. ambassador to Russia John Sullivan—a holdover from the Trump administration—said Tuesday he will return to Washington for consultations with the Biden administration on U.S.-Russia relations, but plans to head back to Moscow over the next few weeks. U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price emphasized that Sullivan “has not been expelled” but is “returning now at an opportune time to undertake consultations here, to see his family.”
- Idriss Déby—president of Chad since 1990—died from wounds sustained during a visit to frontline troops battling rebel insurgents outside the capital, Chad’s military announced Tuesday. The country’s parliament has dissolved, and Déby’s son took over as interim president until another election can be held.
- The Senate voted 98-2 on Tuesday to confirm Lisa Monaco—former President Barack Obama’s homeland security adviser—as deputy attorney general.
- The United States confirmed 53,827 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 3.7 percent of the 1,446,224 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 759 deaths were attributed to the virus on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 568,449. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 38,073 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 1,806,929 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 133,266,995 Americans having now received at least one dose.
Chauvin Guilty on All Charges
The nation held its collective breath yesterday afternoon when news broke that the jury in the Derek Chauvin trial had—after just 10 hours of deliberation—reached a verdict. About 90 minutes later, just after 5 p.m. ET, Judge Peter Cahill removed a piece of paper from an envelope and read its contents aloud:
“We, the jury, in the above entitled matter as to count one, unintentional second-degree murder while committing a felony, find the defendant guilty.”
“We, the jury, in the above entitled matter as to count two, third-degree murder perpetrating an eminently dangerous act, find the defendant guilty.”
“We, the jury, in the above entitled matter as to count three, second-degree manslaughter, culpable negligence creating an unreasonable risk, find the defendant guilty.”
This outcome was not necessarily unexpected. The whole world saw the 9-minute video last summer in which Chauvin refused to remove his knee from George Floyd’s neck well after Floyd became unresponsive, and prosecutor Steve Schleicher relied heavily on that footage in his closing argument earlier this week. “You can believe your own eyes,” he told the jury. “This case is exactly what you thought when you saw it first, when you saw that video.”
Securing a conviction in police misconduct or abuse of force cases like Chauvin’s, however, has long proven difficult. Police officers in the United States kill approximately 1,000 people per year in the line of duty. According to data collected by Bowling Green State University criminal law professor Philip Stinson, 121 officers have been arrested on charges of murder or manslaughter since 2005, and 44 of those 121 were convicted (some on lesser charges).
But legal experts generally agree the prosecutors here had the facts on their side, and that they made their case well. “Of course, the video itself was incredibly powerful evidence—and in a sense, not much more was needed,” Ted Sampsell-Jones, professor at Mitchell Hamline School of Law in Minnesota, told The Dispatch. “The state’s case was both emotional and methodical. And the prosecutors did a masterful job cross-examining the defense experts. So by the time deliberations started, I don’t think there was much doubt left about the result. Defense counsel Eric Nelson did a good job too, but this was not a winnable case from the defense side.”
Sicknick Autopsy Released
In the weeks following the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, the death of Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick became a flashpoint in the partisan debates over the severity of what transpired that day. In a January 7 statement following his death, the Capitol Police asserted that Sicknick had “passed away due to injuries sustained while on duty.” That week, the New York Times reported, citing Capitol Police sources, that Sicknick had been clubbed to death with a fire extinguisher—reporting that was noted by Democratic impeachment managers during President Donald Trump’s subsequent impeachment trial.
But the story of what had actually happened to Sicknick quickly grew murkier. On January 8, ProPublica reported that the officer had texted his family the evening of the insurrection, saying that he had been pepper-sprayed by rioters but was “in good shape.” A month later, the Times updated their story, saying that police sources “were at odds over whether he was hit,” but that Sicknick had not died of blunt force trauma.
This week, the D.C. medical examiner finally announced the results of Sicknick’s autopsy report. Sicknick died of natural causes, examiner Francisco Diaz said—specifically, two strokes at the base of the brain stem. The Washington Post, which spoke to Diaz, reported that the examiner “could not comment on whether Sicknick had a preexisting medical condition, citing privacy laws.” Diaz also said, according to the Post, that there was “no evidence the 42-year-old officer suffered an allergic reaction to chemical irritants”—in fact, “there was no evidence of internal or external injuries” at all.
Worth Your Time
- You have the right to remain silent when you’re under arrest, but you also have the right to remain politically silent whenever you want. In an essay for Arc Digital, Spencer Case argues that accompanying the freedom of speech outlined in the Bill of Rights should be the freedom from speech—and we’re missing that in our hyper-polarized society. “If most major corporations, scientific organizations, universities, and other prominent entities are committed to political goals—especially the same political goals—then personal neutrality will be difficult or impossible to maintain. Many people will be conscripted into political speech when they’d rather remain silent,” he writes. “Politics has its place, but that place shouldn’t be everywhere, all the time. When politics is pervasive, it is worse. There must be space for political neutrality, and this means that we must be able to remain silent on political matters in most contexts without (too many) adverse social consequences.”
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
McEnany lectures Biden: ‘It’s the role of the president of the United States to stay back, to not inflame’
Toeing the Company Line
- Uphill is infrastructure. Check out Haley’s latest for a rundown on the status of Biden’s sweeping American Jobs Plan: Will Senate Democrats pass the package in one fell swoop, or opt instead to divide and conquer in lip service to bipartisanship? The newsletter also takes a look into the GOP debate over efforts to restore earmarks.
- In Tuesday’s Sweep, Sarah takes a look at some recent research showing that parties running strong down ballot candidates even in unwinnable races may boost turnout further up the ticket. Plus: Chris Stirewalt dissects the Cook Political Report’s latest Partisan Voter Index score, and Andrew takes an early look into the Missouri Senate race to replace GOP Sen. Roy Blunt.
- David’s latest French Press (🔒) delves into the contradictions surrounding “bipartisan” efforts to expand government oversight on Big Tech. Both sides “agree on the need for more federal power,” he writes, but “they disagree about how that power should be used.” While progressives push for intervention to combat “misinformation” and “hate,” Republicans contend that the government is needed to prevent outsize scrutiny of conservative speech.
- Senior Manhattan Institute fellow Brian Riedl joined Jonah on The Remnant yesterday to talk debt, inflation, and testifying before Congress sans-pants. They also hone in on Riedl’s assessment of Biden’s American Jobs Plan, legislation which is much broader in scope than its branding would lead you to believe.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Haley Byrd Wilt (@byrdinator), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
1 |
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
|
33.) THE DAILY WIRE
|
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) AMERICAN THINKER
|
|
36.) BRIGHT
37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
View this email in your browser
Listen live to Blaze Radio Tune in to the next generation of talk radio, featuring original content from hosts like Glenn Beck, Pat Gray, Stu Burguiere, Steve Deace and more!
One last thing … Family members say a 16-year-old girl was fatally shot by police in Columbus, Ohio, Tuesday afternoon. The city’s mayor confirmed that a “young woman tragically lost her life,” but police remained mum on the incident hours later. What are the details? WBNS-TV reported that the girl shot by police was 16-year-old Ma’Khia Bryant, according to th … Read more
© 2021 Blaze Media LLC. All Rights Reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted in to receive emails from Blaze Media. Privacy Policy | Manage your preferences | Unsubscribe 8275 S. Eastern Ave, Ste 200-245 Las Vegas, Nevada, 89123, USA
|
39.) THE FEDERALIST
|
40.) REUTERS
|
41.) NOQ REPORT
NOQ Report Daily |
- There will be no justice in America until the killer of Ashli Babbitt gets the same treatment as Derek Chauvin
- Nan Hayworth: Hail King Fauci! Vaccine or virus, the choice is yours
- How government subsidizes obesity
- Chauvin’s ‘verdict-by-mob’ on threats from domestic terrorists marks the end of America
- The danger of the war on disinformation
- India’s health ambassador dies one day after taking Covid vaccine
- Chauvin found guilty on all counts
- Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey taints jury by implying Derek Chauvin killed George Floyd
There will be no justice in America until the killer of Ashli Babbitt gets the same treatment as Derek Chauvin
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 10:11 PM PDT Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was convicted of murdering George Floyd yesterday. Meanwhile, the police officer who killed Ashli Babbitt hasn’t been arrested. It was announced last week that he won’t be charged. In fact, we aren’t even allowed to know his name. This seems to indicate an unambiguous disconnect in the way justice is delivered in the United States today. In his opening monologue last night, Fox News host Tucker Carlson asked an important question about the Chauvin jury’s verdict. He asked, “Can we trust the way this decision was made? That’s the promise of our justice system, that it’s impartial, that it’s as fair as human beings can make it, that the cop who killed Ashli Babbitt will be held to the very same scrutiny as the cop who was just convicted of killing George Floyd, that political or ethnic considerations will play absolutely no role in jury deliberations, that justice will be blind. Can we say all of that in this case, and if we can’t, why can’t we?” It’s crystal clear that the answer to every part of his question is a series of resounding negatives. One does not need to be listening to the jury deliberate to know that they did not treat the case as fair as possible because political and ethnic considerations played a roll. In this case, justice was not blind. Not one bit. They convicted him of second degree murder, which means they believe Chauvin targeted Floyd for harm in a way that unintentionally led to his death. That is wrong prima facie, as several minutes of video leading up to him dying on the ground clearly indicates. Chauvin was trying to arrest him. He tried multiple times from multiple angles to get Floyd into the police SUV. It was Floyd who then fell to the ground. Was it proper policing to put his knee in the back of Floyd? No. He was prone with his hands cuffed behind his back. Did he need to kneel there for nine minutes? No. But again, the bar for second degree or even third degree murder is much higher than poor policing. I would have been okay with a second degree manslaughter conviction, though one can argue that the burden of proof for the lower charge was not met based on the Fentanyl in Floyd’s system. But we’re not here to debate that case. It will be appealed and we’ll get to relive all of this all over again. What won’t see a day in court or another headline on mainstream media is the case of the Capitol police officer who shot and killed Ashli Babbitt. Let’s look at the similarities first. Derek Chauvin is a White police officer convicted for killing George Floyd, a Black man. The unnamed Capitol police officer is a Black man who shot and killed Ashli Babbitt, a White woman. Both deaths were widely considered to be unwarranted use of force against victims who were not legitimate threats to the officers or anyone else at the time of their deaths. Both were suspected of committing crimes before their killings. Both victims were killed on camera. Based on the similarities, we should expect in a fair justice system that if one was convicted, the other should at least be charged. But it’s in the differences that we see the real obliteration of truth in America. One notable difference is that Capitol police participated in allowing and even encouraging entry into the Capitol Building in the first place. Many conspiracy theorists have given credible evidence that it was not only planned but potentially staged to yield exactly the results that have happened to those involved on January 6th. The real difference, of course, is the manifestation of outrage. Those who want Ashli Babbitt’s killer to be identified, charged, and tried are just as adamant about it as the Black Lives Matter “activists” who have been looting businesses, burning down buildings, tearing down statues, intimidating random people, and committing assaults and even murders for over a year. But instead of lashing out with violence against innocent people, those who want justice for Ashli Babbitt have been peaceful. What message is this sending? That’s obvious. If you are peaceful in your demands, you get nothing from government or law enforcement. If you torch buildings and harm countless innocent people, you get the guy you want to be identified, charged, arrested, tried, and convicted to a degree far greater than what the law prescribes. It’s a tale of two extremes. Justice for Floyd resulted in prosecutorial overkill while justice for Babbitt is nonexistent. So, to answer Carlson’s question, the cop who killed Ashli Babbitt will not be held to the very same scrutiny as the cop who was just convicted of killing George Floyd. Not even close. As I noted yesterday, the Chauvin jury handed down a verdict-by-mob. In no sane society does Chauvin get convicted on all charges while Babbitt’s killer doesn’t even get identified. Are those of us who want justice for Babbitt supposed to take to the streets and start burning down buildings or looting Nike stores? Based on the lessons being taught by Black Lives Matter, the answer is unequivocally affirmative. That puts us in a horrible situation. Those who profess a conservative worldview, which makes up the vast majority of those calling for justice for Babbitt, have as part of our very nature an appreciation of law and order. Meanwhile, Black Lives Matter wants to defund the police to promote their anarcho-communist philosophy that will enable the rapid rise of Neo-Marxism in America. How do we fight back if the only viable way of doing so is to embrace the lawlessness that seems to have achieved BLM’s goals? This is where I get to the same complaint I’ve had about the conservative movement for years. We need to march. We need to take part of BLM’s playbook and be disruptive without breaking the law. With enough people, we can be in front of the Capitol Police Department, Capitol Hill, and anywhere else we need to be in Washington DC to let those who are covering up Babbitt’s killer know we are not letting this go. That’s the real strength in BLM’s tactics. The looting and rioting are just manifestations of their nature as radical progressives. The real strength is in the legal disruptions they cause with their protests. Our protests must be constant and they must be sustained until we get what we want. Our strategy doesn’t adopt everything from their playbook. We must not get violent. We must not loot or burn down buildings. We must present a show of force in exercising our constitutional right to assemble. And in doing so, we must be large and loud. We need tens of thousands of patriotic Americans protesting every day until justice takes its proper course. Some would say that without violence, we will not be heard. That’s not true. The reason violence was so effective for BLM in this case is because their goals were much broader than ours. We want justice, which means a fair trial of the officer who killed Babbitt. BLM wanted to coerce the verdict, which they did. They also have other, more nefarious reasons for flexing their intimidation muscles all over the place which we can discuss at another time. For now, suffice to say that our goals are righteous, legal, and fair. We must not stoop to their level by making victims of innocent Americans who simply built their business on the wrong street corner. We can be powerful while still being respectful of our Constitution. The problem with the conservative movement is we’re generally lazy when it comes to things like this. I often hear the excuse of “we have jobs and they don’t,” and frankly, that may be partially true. But if we had the will to fight back, we absolutely could. It’s not just for Ashli Babbitt. We need to start fighting back against the expanding forces of evil that have infiltrated this nation and crept into every facet of our lives. As my good friend “Col. Mike” often says, if we don’t march and protest we will never get anything done. The criminal justice and judiciary systems are our last line of defense against, well, every domestic foe. If we lose this battle, one whose importance should be so blatantly obvious to all patriotic Americans, then how can we expect to keep the republic? We will not have a country if we do not fight for justice with equal or greater force as BLM does, but with the Constitution as our guide. We cannot have justice if we do not deliver it to the man who killed Ashli Babbitt. ‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including usJust 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. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn The post There will be no justice in America until the killer of Ashli Babbitt gets the same treatment as Derek Chauvin appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Nan Hayworth: Hail King Fauci! Vaccine or virus, the choice is yours
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 09:01 PM PDT
You know, the other day the TV was on playing the news in my office and it stated that there was a meteor that was going to come so close to the earth that it may actually put this entire planet out of its misery. For a small moment, all the dreary dark and disgusting news stopped. The clouds parted and the sun shined through feeling the warmth of the sun on my face, the hope that soon all of this would be over. But… the meteor never came and king Fauci keeps showing up on the television set going back and forth about what the sheep are supposed to believe today. Leaving me here writing to all of you while imprinting my forehead deeper and deeper into the wood grain of my desk, because yes… everything is stupid. COVID sent us all into a completely different world last year, turned our free nation into a police state. Telling people that they have to wear muzzles over their faces, how late you could stay out at night, how many people you could have over, and how far you had to be from everyone else. For a small while, we did what we were told. This was all new, we didn’t know how deadly COVID was, how it was spread, the precautions to take, or even how to treat it. Therefore I can’t really blame anyone for the first few months of this, because we were all learning, testing, and trying to come to grips with the reality of the situation. That was the problem though wasn’t it. They told us to listen to the “experts” and to place our trust in what they told us, some of us did, and some didn’t. The thing is, there were no experts, how in the world can there be an expert on a disease that just recently emerged from a virology lab in China? Fauci, criticized us for wearing masks, claiming that “they won’t do anything to stop the spread and we should save them for medical professionals” and then a few weeks later he’s telling us “You all need to wear masks!” At first I sort of gave him the benefit of the doubt, because the virus was so new, maybe he was changing his directives based on incoming information. But, now we all should realize that this is nothing more than a massive power grab to keep you all dependent on the government for your precious $1,200 “stimulus” checks. While you were scraping in the cushions of your couches for spare change so you can make ends meet, king Fauci was making a comfortable $417,608 (Source: Forbes) making him not only the highest paid doctor in the federal government, but the highest paid out of all 4 million federal employees. Don’t you worry though, it’s all for your well being, its all to make sure you’re safe from a disease that has a 99% survival rate. He only has your best interests at heart. Thanks to Donald Trump initiating operation “Warp Speed” that helped create a vaccine for this virus in record timing is nothing short of a miracle. The part where everything gets stupid is the conversation around the vaccine as to whether it’s safe or not to take. Now look, before you go off throwing a fit, I’m truly not blaming a single average person whether they take the vaccine or not. Rather, all of my blame is on the political elites of both sides. This whole thing has gotten so darn political that I’m convinced that if this virus had a 40% survival rate, some people would not take the vaccine just to virtue signal to their political base, and as they breath their final breaths, they wheeze, “but at least my political party is proud”. It’s idiots like Fauci and the media, but I repeat myself, that have thrown us into this mess. They tell us to get the vaccine through one side of their mouths while telling us that after we get the vaccine we can still be carriers of it, and we need to remain quarantined. So does the dumb thing work or not? If it works, then I’ll take it and get on living a normal life, if your telling me I need to social distance and wear a mask after getting it then obviously the vaccine doesn’t work, and I’m not going to pump myself full of Kung Flu, to appease king Fauci. The confusion surrounding the vaccine, has left everyone adhering to whatever information their political party is putting out there without leaving any real, solid, foundational evidence of the vaccine one way or the other unless you really dig for it. When I say dig for it, I’m not talking about reading articles put out by your favorite “insert political party here” outlet, I’m talking about non-political doctors that are giving their findings, and reading actual case studies on this vaccine as well as the virus. Just so you know where I’m at on this whole stupid thing is that I’m a young healthy dude, who will be totally fine getting COVID. Considering I know more about the WuFlu than I do about this vaccine, I feel more comfortable contracting COVID than some chemical cocktail. In that same breath, I’m not discounting the vaccine nor do I think of anybody less for getting the vaccine, we are all grownups and we can all make our individual choices, and with how absolutely jacked up the information is in regards to the vaccine, I find it hard holding the average individual accountable. I really recommend checking out this podcast with Dr. Nan Hayworth who attended the same school as Fauci and get her take on the vaccine. We tried asking her as deep of questions as we could in regards to how the vaccine works, and it was really eye opening for myself, and I think it was for many others who tuned in. Take in as much information as you can, dig deep for the answers, but most of all take the choice for yourself, not your political identity. -The Shoe.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including usJust 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. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn The post Nan Hayworth: Hail King Fauci! Vaccine or virus, the choice is yours appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
How government subsidizes obesity
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 09:00 PM PDT Austrian mathematician Abraham Wald was a World War II hero. He worked out of a nondescript apartment building in Harlem for the Applied Mathematics Panel. Wald’s ability to see the unseen was a significant factor in the Allied victory in World War II. Article by Barry Brownstein from AIER. Allied bomber planes were being shot down at such an alarming rate that bomber airmen were called “ghosts already.” The Air Force concluded that more armor was needed on the planes but adding armor would add weight. David McRaney, the author of several books on cognitive biases, tells the story of how Wald saved the military from a major blunder: “The military looked at the bombers that had returned from enemy territory. They recorded where those planes had taken the most damage. Over and over again, they saw that the bullet holes tended to accumulate along the wings, around the tail gunner, and down the center of the body. Wings. Body. Tail gunner. Considering this information, where would you put the extra armor? Naturally, the commanders wanted to put the thicker protection where they could clearly see the most damage, where the holes clustered. But Wald said no, that would be precisely the wrong decision. Putting the armor there wouldn’t improve their chances at all.” Wald looked at the same bullet holes and saw a pattern revealing “where a bomber could be shot and still survive the flight home.” Wald didn’t fall for survivorship bias. Here is what he advised: “What you should do is reinforce the area around the motors and the cockpit. You should remember that the worst-hit planes never come back. All the data we have come from planes that make it to the bases. You don’t see that the spots with no damage are the worst places to be hit because these planes never come back.” McRaney writes, “The military had the best data available at the time, and the stakes could not have been higher, yet the top commanders still failed to see the flaws in their logic. Those planes would have been armored in vain had it not been for the intervention of a man trained to spot human error.” We easily succumb to what you see is all there is (WYSIATI) mindset bias. In his book Thinking, Fast and Slow, Daniel Kahneman explains, “You cannot help dealing with the limited information you have as if it were all there is to know. You build the best possible story from the information available to you, and if it is a good story, you believe it.” Think of the last time you looked to a “survivor” for career and life advice, eager to learn their ticket to success. McRaney writes, “The problem here is that you rarely take away from these inspirational figures advice on what not to do, on what you should avoid, and that’s because they don’t know.” We make faulty decisions when we ignore the evidence from those who did not survive a selection process. As an example of entrepreneurial success, Kahneman took a look at narratives of how Google beat its competition. Kahneman writes of such narratives: “The story could give you the sense that you understand what made Google succeed; it would also make you feel that you have learned a valuable general lesson about what makes businesses succeed. Unfortunately, there is good reason to believe that your sense of understanding and learning from the Google story is largely illusory. The ultimate test of an explanation is whether it would have made the event predictable in advance.” Cleary, any story of the rise of Google will not meet a forecasting test. Kahneman writes, “No story can include the myriad of events that would have caused a different outcome. The human mind does not deal well with nonevents.” We are all too ready to ignore our ignorance, especially when there is much that is unknown. At the same time, in our ignorance it is easier to construct a story. Kahneman explains, “Paradoxically, it is easier to construct a coherent story when you know little, when there are fewer pieces to fit into the puzzle. Our comforting conviction that the world makes sense rests on a secure foundation: our almost unlimited ability to ignore our ignorance.” In short, we don’t spend a lot of time wondering about what we don’t know. Kahneman warns that to “focus on what we know and neglect what we do not know… makes us overly confident in our beliefs.” Throughout the Covid-19 pandemic, the media and politicians have insisted we rely on the “judgment calls” of their proclaimed experts to guide policy. Facile but incorrect stories about lockdowns dominated. In March, Dr. Fauci again incorrectly predicted that doom was upon us when Texas relaxed its pandemic rules. Kahneman writes: “It is wrong to blame anyone for failing to forecast accurately in an unpredictable world. However, it seems fair to blame professionals for believing they can succeed in an impossible task.” Perhaps, Kahneman is too kind. With Covid, predictions are founded on politics, not science, as Bill Maher recently pointedly and humorously explained. We are ignorant of our ignorance. It is time to look for new patterns in the evidence of those who have not survived. Who Didn’t Come Back from CovidThe military was wise enough to listen to Wald. It would have been perverse to ignore the cockpit and reinforce parts of the plane that could survive bullet hits. Policy makers, politicians, and the media have largely ignored the cockpit of good health: the human immunological system. Maher pointed to a recent CDC study that reported the vast majority (78%) of those hospitalized or dead from Covid have been overweight or obese. Of Americans aged 20 and over 73.6% are overweight; 42.5% are obese. (Obesity is defined as a body mass index (BMI) of over 30.) Many studies explain how obesity decreases resistance to infection. Obesity is linked to type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease, which increase the odds of hospitalization from Covid. The Covid survival narrative has focused attention on lockdowns, masks and vaccinations. Maher pointed out the role that obesity played: “People died because talking about obesity had become a third rail in America.” Maher continued, “the last thing you want to do is say something insensitive. We would literally rather die. Instead, we were told to lock down. Unfortunately, the killer was already in the house and her name is Little Debbie.” Little Debbie, of course, is Maher’s reference to heavily processed foods that are ubiquitous in the American diet. A significant factor in the startling numbers of overweight Americans is the consumption of high-fructose corn syrup in heavily processed foods. The total per capita consumption of all sugars in the United States is approximately 150 pounds a year. Of that, the average American consumes over 50 pounds of corn sweeteners a year. Sugar is heavily subsidized by the US government through loans, purchases of sugar, and tariffs on imported sugar. Government incentives have created a high-fructose corn syrup industry which didn’t exist prior to the 1970s. US sugar prices can be up to twice the world price. From 1995-2020, corn subsidies in the United States totaled $116.6 billion. The subsidized and surplus corn ends up not only as processed food but as animal feed. In The Omnivore’s Dilemma, Michael Pollan explains, “Read the ingredients on the label of any processed food and, provided you know the chemical names it travels under, corn is what you will find.” Pollan describes the corn food chain: “Corn is what feeds the steer that becomes the steak. Corn feeds the chicken and the pig, the turkey and the lamb, the catfish and the tilapia and, increasingly, even the salmon, a carnivore by nature that the fish farmers are reengineering to tolerate corn. The eggs are made of corn. The milk and cheese and yogurt, which once came from dairy cows that grazed on grass, now typically come from Holsteins that spend their working lives indoors tethered to machines, eating corn. Head over to the processed foods and you find ever more intricate manifestations of corn. A chicken nugget, for example, piles corn upon corn: what chicken it contains consists of corn, of course, but so do most of a nugget’s other constituents, including the modified corn starch that glues the thing together, the corn flour in the batter that coats it, and the corn oil in which it gets fried. Much less obviously, the leavenings and lecithin, the mono-, di-, and triglycerides, the attractive golden coloring, and even the citric acid that keeps the nugget “fresh” can all be derived from corn. To wash down your chicken nuggets with virtually any soft drink in the supermarket is to have some corn with your corn. Since the 1980s virtually all the sodas and most of the fruit drinks sold in the supermarket have been sweetened with high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS)—after water, corn sweetener is their principal ingredient.” You might say at least we are getting cheap food for our tax dollars but not so fast. Heavily processed foods appear less expensive than they are, shifting consumption away from foods that do not promote obesity. Notably, the cow is a ruminant animal and is meant to thrive on grass, not grains. Pollan explains why subsidized feedlot farming places your health at stake: “We’ve come to think of “corn-fed” as some kind of old-fashioned virtue, which it may well be when you’re referring to Midwestern children, but feeding large quantities of corn to cows for the greater part of their lives is a practice neither particularly old nor virtuous. Its chief advantage is that cows fed corn, a compact source of caloric energy, get fat quickly; their flesh also marbles well, giving it a taste and texture American consumers have come to like. Yet this corn-fed meat is demonstrably less healthy for us, since it contains more saturated fat and less omega-3 fatty acids than the meat of animals fed grass. A growing body of research suggests that many of the health problems associated with eating beef are really problems with corn-fed beef. (Modern-day hunter-gatherers who subsist on wild meat don’t have our rates of heart disease.) In the same way ruminants are ill adapted to eating corn, humans in turn may be poorly adapted to eating ruminants that eat corn.” Pollan explains how corn subsidies distort many aspects of animal production: “To help dispose of the rising mountain of cheap corn farmers were now producing, the government did everything it could to help wean cattle off grass and onto corn, by subsidizing the building of feedlots (through tax breaks) and promoting a grading system based on marbling that favored corn-fed over grass-fed beef. (The government also declined to make CAFOs [concentrated animal feeding operations] obey clean air and clean water laws.)” Consequences of subsidized corn production abound, Pollan points out, “which are never charged directly to the consumer but, indirectly and invisibly, to the taxpayer (in the form of subsidies), the health care system (in the form of food-borne illnesses and obesity), and the environment (in the form of pollution), not to mention the welfare of the workers in the feedlot and the slaughterhouse and the welfare of the animals themselves.” Throughout this pandemic, corn subsidies have continued unabated. Americans have continued to consume heavily processed foods while health consequences are ignored. Indeed, lockdowns fueled the consumption of junk foods. Yet, as Maher pointed out, it is not acceptable to point to the pattern of obesity in many who suffered and died from serious cases of Covid. It is not a stretch to say that subsidizing foods known to increase obesity has killed people. Of course, we are all responsible for our food choices but there is no need to incentivize poor choices. Other patterns can be observed linking government policy and Covid deaths. Parks were closed and outdoor activities prohibited. A recent study found that “people who tended to be sedentary were far more likely to be hospitalized, and to die, from Covid than those who exercised regularly.” We know too that Vitamin D is essential for a healthy immunological system. Government policy dictated that we stay home rather than get outdoors, exercise, and allow the human body to manufacture Vitamin D from exposure to sunshine. Heavily processed foods are designed to excite the taste buds. The illusion of tasty has killed Americans. Change begins with the willingness of individuals and families to overcome ignorance of what weakens the immunological cockpit of the human body. We can learn from those that didn’t come back from Covid. We can strengthen our immunological system by rejecting a diet of subsidized, heavily processed calories. ‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including usJust 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. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn The post How government subsidizes obesity appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Chauvin’s ‘verdict-by-mob’ on threats from domestic terrorists marks the end of America
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 04:35 PM PDT If justice is dead in America, then America is on the brink of death. That’s not hyperbole. We cannot survive as a nation if we do not mete out justice based on evidence and circumstances. We’re just not made for the sort of judicial corruption that is commonplace in so many other countries. Our nation was built an a foundation that is naturally attracted to truth and fairness. Without that foundation, we might as well be Cuba. The guilty verdict for Derek Chauvin on all counts was based almost solely on the jurors’ desire to protect themselves, their families, and their community. Sure, they may have seen evidence that helped them justify the decision within themselves, but give them each a dose of sodium pentothal and they’ll admit the threat of violence against them and others played a major role in their decision. It took nine hours for them to release their verdict. We can assume that some if not all of them had come to their conclusion long before deliberating. They’ve seen the news. They’ve heard of the rioting and looting perpetrated by Black Lives Matter and Antifa. They’ve seen the threats made against anyone and everyone who dares to stand up to these domestic terrorists. They’ve seen businesses with “BLM” signs clearly visible on their windows get busted out and looted. Some may have heard from family members that there have been threats made against them. In 2021, nobody’s identity in a jury can be kept secret for long. The evidence seemed clear enough to warrant a not guilty verdict on the second and third degree murder charges, at the very least. George Floyd had ingested enough Fentanyl to kill him whether there was a knee in his back or not. Video of his behavior leading up to the knee going into his back may not have justified Chauvin’s actions, but it demonstrated that Chauvin and the other officers struggled for a while just to try to get Floyd into the police vehicle. That alone should negate the possibility of murder, leaving only the manslaughter charge to apply. Ian Miles Cheong broke it down in a Tweet, posting, “Just think about Chauvin’s guilty verdict for a moment: they convicted him of intentionally murdering George Floyd on the basis of race.”
But manslaughter wasn’t going to be enough. The jurors knew anything short of guilty on all counts would leave them vulnerable to repercussions. They made the decision, conscious or not, to put the full force of the law on Chauvin regardless of evidence that pointed to the contrary. And they did this in nine hours. They wanted this behind them and they wanted to send a message. No, that message was not one of justice. It was a message of, “Hey, we did our part. Please don’t hurt us.”
This is verdict-by-mob, period. The only difference between the pressure applied by Black Lives Matter and pressure applied by mafia enforcers is that the former was given the stamp of approval by leftists and endorsed by mainstream media. The entirety of the Democratic Party and far too many so-called Republicans have backed this play whether they publicly support domestic terrorists or not. All the while, one man’s life and another man’s death were pushed around like pawns on a political board. We can game out the possible scenarios of how things will play out going forward, but we cannot get around the lack of fairness in this pursuit of justice. Perhaps Chauvin was doomed from the start, damned to be made an example of by Cultural Marxists and anarcho-communists. Or, perhaps this was the verdict that was necessary to allow for proper appeals, which is certainly what’s going to happen. It doesn’t matter. Chauvin was played. Floyd was played. America was played. Like fiddles. Unfortunately, the mob justice doesn’t stop with Chauvin, as Daniel Horowitz pointed out, referring to Representative Maxine Waters. “Yeah, but we live with mob justice. Which judge would have the guts?”
I’m not going to justify Chauvin’s poor policing just as I wouldn’t justify Floyd’s drug problems. Both men clearly played a role in the events that have brought us to here even if Chauvin’s knee didn’t contribute to Floyd’s death. But the evidence points to acquittal on both murder charges at the least and possibly even the manslaughter charge. We didn’t get an evidence-based verdict. We didn’t even get an emotionally charged verdict, as some are claiming. This was a mob’s verdict, and that’s not what America in the 21st century is supposed to be about. Our Constitution was built to protect people like George Floyd AND Derek Chauvin. Moreover, the expansion of our legal code has added more protections. Combine this with the evolving sentiment favoring diversity and we should be seeing the clearest paths to appropriate verdicts that we’ve ever seen in this nation, perhaps the whole world. But the Cultural Marxist factor has changed things. Progress away from bigotry hasn’t been reversed, per se, but it has been redirected. The bigotry of today comes very blatantly from the radical left and manifests in forms unlike anything we’ve experienced. The lucid activists of the past like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, pushed against segregation while today’s “activists” promote segregation above all things. They want the nation divided. This, more than anything else, is why we had the verdict saw today. America cannot continue down this path. It is our destruction. If threats and riots are enough to sway political decisions as we’ve seen very clearly in Democrat-run cities and states for a while, we can address that by voting them out. If companies go “woke,” we can do our business elsewhere. But if the legal system is less interested in justice and more interested in fear-induced social justice, there is no recourse. The “legal” power over life and freedom will be wielded by the mob. That’s what happens in other nations. It cannot be allowed to become the new normal here. Some will argue, perhaps rightly, that all of the posturing is not for the sake of a Derek Chauvin guilty verdict but to force a reversal. This theory has some legs. If we’ve learned anything over the last couple of years, it’s that the left seems to be thinking much further ahead than the right. While most conservatives seem to focus on fixing immediate problems, progressives are focused on creating tomorrow’s problems. A “victory” today with the verdict that is eventually overturned would prolong and exacerbate all of the rioting we’re seeing today. A guilty verdict may slightly subdue some of the domestic terrorism today, but a successful appeal will spark a revolution. This is what the radical left so desperately wants. We’re all getting played like fiddles right now. ‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including usJust 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. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn The post Chauvin’s ‘verdict-by-mob’ on threats from domestic terrorists marks the end of America appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
The danger of the war on disinformation
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 02:50 PM PDT
Everywhere you turn, everyone is talking about disinformation. On the new platform Clubhouse, entire rooms are dedicated to figuring out how to combat the sinister disinformation that is threatening the very fabric of our society. According to the Left, it was disinformation that led to the fiasco that occurred on January 6th at the Capitol Building. Now, to be clear, they’ve redefined the world “disinformation” to mean whatever doesn’t fit their narrative. They begin with the presupposition that they are correct, and then label anything that goes against their propaganda as “fake news” or “disinformation.” The same thing can be applied to virtually every aspect of COVID-19. Think about it, the Left says that it’s disinformation whenever we cite the fact that it came from Wuhan, China or that face masks are useless… or even that there are serious side effects with the COVID-19 vaccines. That is all considered “false information”… despite the fact each of these are factually accurate. Clearly, there’s a danger in labeling true statements and disinformation. Doing so discredits the claim before anyone can even “fact check” to see whether it is true or not. The Left has mastered the art of controlling the narrative, discrediting all opposing thought as either racist or disinformation. Only the official narrative from the Democrat Party is considered to be truth. Now, let’s take a look at actual disinformation… actual false statements. Should we ban all disinformation from American society? Should Twitter censor false information? What do we do with actual cases of disinformation? I would make the case that it is actually dangerous to ban “disinformation.” Here’s why: Who decides what is true or false? Whoever is in power at that time. Throughout history we’ve seen what happens if you give centralized control of the information that people consume… it is hijacked and manipulated so that that those in power retain indefinite control. Take a look at the nation of China today… the CCP is the arbiter or truth in their nation, which gives them complete control over the populous. We cannot allow this to happen in the United States of America. Our Founding Fathers were extremely clear not only in the concept of Free Speech, but also Freedom of the Press. This means that the government cannot restrict or “fact check” people from putting forth what they believe is truth. The exception to this is knowingly slandering someone… or, in other words, saying something that you know is false in order to cause harm to someone else. If we shutdown “disinformation,” we’ll give centralized control of the narrative to the Federal Government and the Elitist Corporations who run this country. Is that really the world that we want to live in? This will make it to where all we get is propaganda. Don’t believe me? Just turn on any of the mainstream media outlets and you’ll see exactly what I’m talking about. All the networks are saying the exact same thing, over and over again. It’s essentially state-run media. Now is the time to support independent news sources, such as NOQ Report, The GateKeepers and Freedom First Network. We producing shows and writing articles to report on the actual news and provide expert commentary to help you understand what is actually going on. We’ve been targeted for taking this stand, being deplatformed from companies such as YouTube, Spotify and Transistor. Our mission must continue, however, finding new ways to bypass the restrictions put in place by these Big Leftist Corporations. It takes innovation and constant brainstorming, always trying to be a step ahead of the censors. This is a whole new world we find ourselves in, but if we want to save America and reinstate Freedom for All, the battle over the soul and minds of the people is the fight we must win.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including usJust 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. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn The post The danger of the war on disinformation appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
India’s health ambassador dies one day after taking Covid vaccine
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 02:49 PM PDT A well-known Indian actor and state health ambassador died just one day after getting injected for the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19), reports indicate. Vivekh, a comedian and the Tamilnadu state’s ambassador for public health messages, had pushed his followers to get the jab, touting it as “safe and effective.” He then got jabbed himself, only to die of cardiac arrest less than 24 hours later. The 59-year-old was said to be in critical condition at a Chennai hospital after being brought in unconscious around 11am the day after his injection. At the facility, Vivekh underwent a coronary angiogram followed by angioplasty. A medical bulletin explained that Vivekh was on ECMO support, which pumps and oxygenates blood outside the body. The next morning at around 4:35am, Vivekh died. One of Vivekh’s main tasks was to convince people in his state to abide by government health and medical intervention guidelines. In this case, Vivekh was tasked with convincing people who live in the region to get injected in order to “stop the spread.” Vivekh was given India’s Covaxin injection at the Tamil Nadu Government Multi Super Specialty Hospital in Chennai. He told others to come there as well to get injected. Vivekh’s injection was public. He filmed it during an event with television channels carrying video and photographs of the shot being put into his arm. Vivekh also uploaded video of his injection to his Twitter account. Since Vivekh quickly died following the injection, many began to question whether the shot was to blame. Government authorities, however, insist that the two events are completely unrelated. According to officials, Vivekh suffered from a mysterious bout of acute coronary syndrome and cardiogenic shock. He experienced 100 percent blockage of a blood vessel, though the government says this had nothing to do with the injection. GreatGameIndia investigated not only Vivekh’s death but also many other deaths in the area from similar causes. The common link between them all is that the now-deceased had previously been vaccinated with Covaxin. Coronavirus jabs are deadly – why would anyone take them?The Covaxin jab, as we earlier reported, had already been linked to “neurological and psychological breakdown.” At least one recipient who participated in a clinical trial claims the injection caused him to develop acute neuro-encephalopathy, leaving him “totally disoriented” to the point that he could no longer identify or recognize certain family members and relatives. This individual tried to sue the center that administered the vaccine to him, only to have the facility sue him back. The Indian government, meanwhile, insists that Covaxin is “110 percent safe” and would never hurt anyone. “After having many links to case after case of people dying soon after being vaccinated, it disgusts me to know that BIG PHARMA still denies a link between the two,” wrote one GreatGameIndia commenter. “Anyone who allows BIG PHARMA to inject them with their poisons is foolish.” This same commenter went on to note that all vaccines contain some combination of mercury (Thimerosal), aluminum, and / or formaldehyde, which makes them all risky and dangerous. What makes these latest jabs for the Chinese virus even worse is that some of them contain gene-altering messenger RNA (mRNA) technology. “It is an mRNA virus which attaches to the RNA (messenger) of the DNA which means that the virus then becomes a part of the DNA,” this commenter wrote. “When the heck will people wake up and do their own research to find the truth? Apathy is what will destroy nations.” More of the latest news about the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19) injection frenzy can be found at Depopulation.news. Sources for this article include: ‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including usJust 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. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn The post India’s health ambassador dies one day after taking Covid vaccine appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Chauvin found guilty on all counts
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 02:48 PM PDT Well, the Cultural Marxists at Black Lives Matter got their wish. At least, they got what was supposed to be their wish. We’ll see shortly if it’s enough to prevent the wanton destruction of cities across the nation as Derek Chauvin, the former police officer whose knee was held near the neck of George Floyd for nine minutes before he died, was found guilty on all counts. The verdict came the day after the jury began deliberating. All of this follows over a week of rioting and looting in Minneapolis and other cities. It also follows calls by numerous major Democratic figures, including Representative Maxine Waters and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, for Chauvin to essentially be turned into an example. Will this verdict bring and end to the rioting? No. Eric Matheny asked, “What’s the reason for rioting if the verdict is a guilty across the board?”
According to The Gateway Pundit: Police Officer Derek Chauvin pleaded not guilty to charges of second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. On Monday Judge Peter Cahill told defense attorney Eric Nelson that Rep. Maxine Waters’s interference on the case could be grounds for a retrial. On Tuesday Judge Cahill read the verdict. Reactions on Twitter from conservatives have ranged from angry to dumbfounded. Cassandra Fairbanks asked a fair question, “Holy s–t. Did the jurors not watch the same trial I did?!!”
Jack Posobiec repeated his standard warning, “Get out of cities.”
Laverne Spicer believes the verdict was racist. “#DerekChauvin guilty verdict makes me think maybe there is something to these systemic racism charges, but not the way we think.”
National File reported: Floyd’s girlfriend, Courtney Ross, also revealed that she thought she would die after taking pills with Floyd, and that their drug dealer was in the car with them at the time of his arrest. A medical expert further testified that Floyd’s death was caused by a combination of a preexisting heart condition, the inhuman amount of fentanyl and methamphetamine in his system, and exposure to carbon monoxide in the form of car exhaust from a nearby squad car. The guilty verdict would come as no surprise to many, with multiple instances of seeming intimidation against the jury from activists and elected officials. “If George Floyd’s murderer is not sentenced, just know that all hell is gonna break loose,” warned Black Lives Matter activist Maya Echols. “Don’t be surprised when buildings are on fire. Just sayin’.” Echols later deleted the video after backlash. “This is guilty for murder. I don’t know whether it’s third degree, but as far as I’m concerned it’s first degree murder,” said Representative Maxine Waters last weekend. She added that, should Chauvin not be convicted for first degree murder, then “we gotta stay on the streets, we gotta get more active, we got to get more confrontational, we got to make sure they know we mean business.” Judge Peter Cahill, who presided over the case, described Waters’s comments as “abhorrent,” suggesting that they could be used as evidence in any appeal case by Chauvin. Things are going to get ugly across America. The left will be perpetually angry and violent regardless of the situation, but now the right has a reason to match that anger. Perhaps it was always going to be this way. This story is developing. ‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including usJust 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. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn The post Chauvin found guilty on all counts appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey taints jury by implying Derek Chauvin killed George Floyd
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 09:27 AM PDT Jurors in the Derek Chauvin trial must determine if he murdered George Floyd. A guilty verdict got a huge bump when the Mayor of the city in which Floyd died declared that he “was killed at the hands of police.” Mayor Jacob Frey made the inflammatory remarks during a press conference intended to position himself properly in case a not guilty verdict is reached. He had to for the sake of his political career, which is apparently much more important to him than the freedom of a man who served on his police force.
Chauvin is charged with second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder, and second-degree manslaughter. The known facts are that Chauvin held down a Floyd, who was resisting arrest, with his knee near Floyd’s neck. Floyd had enough Fentanyl in his body to kill him. Those are the facts that are not contested. What is contested is whether or not Chauvin’s actions resulted in the death of George Floyd. But according to Frey, that’s not in doubt. This is a clear case of irresponsible politics at best and jury tampering at worst. Twitter let him have it. Nick Searcy said, “Prosecute jury tamperers like @jacobfrey and @RepMaxineWaters”
Catturd posted, “In a sane world this would be enough for a mistrial … what an absolute POS.”
Matthew Kolken posted, “Another example illustrating how Democrats want to eliminate the presumption of innocence.”
Stephen L. Miller reminded everyone about the future if Chauvin is convicted. “Appeal is going to be fun.”
John Cardillo berated Frey, saying, “Blatant violation of his oath of office and the separation of powers.”
Ben Shapiro got close to the truth. “It’s as though elected Democrats don’t care about the possibility of a mistrial. Because they don’t. it’s all politics.”
Derek Hunter may have won the best take by pointing out what I humbly believe is the truth. “If you wanted a mistrial or a successful appeal, you’d do exactly what Democrats are doing.”
And there it is. What are Maxine Waters, Jacob Frey, and all the other gaslighters doing? They’re not “risking” a mistrial or appeal. They’re banking on it. Nothing helps the Cultural Marxists more than racial upheaval. This is purposeful. ‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including usJust 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. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn The post Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey taints jury by implying Derek Chauvin killed George Floyd appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
You are subscribed to email updates from NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. |
Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
ARRA News Service (in this message: 16 new items) |
- An Officer Died & The Left Lied, Waters Is Out Of Order, Bush Is Back
- The Left’s Plan to Commandeer the Supreme Court
- GOP Trustbusters Are Embracing Progressives’ Agenda
- Who Will Be the Next ‘America First’ President?
- Biden’s Fabled Bipartisanship
- Trigger Lock
- Media Corrections
- Biden Will ‘Lower’ Internet Prices – The Way Obama-Biden ‘Lowered’ Health Insurance Prices
- Troubled Waters: California Rep. Eggs on Rioters
- Lost for Decades, a Marine World War II Hero Finally Comes Home
- Who is really going to get stuck Paying Biden’s higher corporate taxes?
- The Tyranny Of Meaninglessness
- The Unabomber and other transgender pioneers
- Chinese-Made Drones in US Are Spying on Us. Congress Must Put an End to This.
- Why Can’t We ‘Just March Out’ Of Afghanistan
- Biden Finally Admits It’s a Border Crisis
An Officer Died & The Left Lied, Waters Is Out Of Order, Bush Is Back
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 06:35 PM PDT by Gary Bauer: An Officer Died & The Left Lied Officer Sicknick was a U.S. military veteran, and he did his job protecting the Capitol. His family deserves our full support and prayers. Yet, in spite of his family’s pleas not to politicize his death, that’s exactly what the left did for its own political gain. It would have been better if the breach of the Capitol Building had never happened on January 6th. But it is absolutely clear that there was an intentional effort by the left to label those events as an “insurrection,” and to smear the entire conservative movement as illegitimate, violent and a danger to the country. For weeks, virtually every media outlet referred to January 6th as a “deadly insurrection.” Many outlets also said that Officer Sicknick had been bludgeoned to death by Trump supporters. All of that was a lie, and we knew it very early on. But the New York Times didn’t correct its inaccurate reporting until well after the false narrative had taken root all over the country, and, most tellingly, only after the president’s impeachment trial had concluded. So, now we know that the only person who suffered the consequences of deadly force on January 6th was Ashli Babbitt, a former U.S. military veteran who served in Afghanistan and Iraq. To this day, we still do not know the name of the Capitol Hill security officer who shot her. The Left’s Propaganda
None of this was taken by the media as evidence of an extremism problem on the left that needed to be subdued and dealt with. But after just one event on Capitol Hill, in which no one died other than Trump supporters, the entire federal law enforcement apparatus and the media have established a false narrative that conservatives are violent and the left is just seeking social justice. That is the very definition of propaganda. Waters Is Out Of Order Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz said Waters “borrowed precisely from the Ku Klux Klan” by trying to intimidate the jury, which is now deliberating the fate of Police Office Derek Chauvin, who is facing charges of second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the death of George Floyd. Not surprisingly, Chauvin’s defense team seized on the congresswoman’s remarks to demand a mistrial. Judge Peter Cahill denied the request, but then said this: “Congresswoman Waters may have given you something on appeal that may result in this whole trial being overturned. . . “I wish elected officials would stop talking about this case, especially in a manner that is disrespectful to the rule of law and to the judicial branch. . . if they want to give their opinions they should do so in a respectful [manner] . . . consistent with their oath to the Constitution, to respect the co-equal branch of government. Their failure to do so is abhorrent!” When Donald Trump encouraged his supporters to go Capitol Hill and peacefully let members of Congress know how they felt, every Democrat and virtually every media outlet said that was an “incitement to insurrection.” Yet, when a Democrat committee chairwoman goes to a city where there is a violent insurrection taking place night after night and urges people to be “more confrontational,” that’s just free speech. Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Maxine Waters had nothing to apologize for. And as Professor Jonathan Turley noted, Waters just undermined her own lawsuit against President Donald Trump’s alleged “incitement.” Some reports suggest that other congressional Democrats are seething at Waters. I’m not reassured at all. I haven’t heard one House Democrat publicly speak out against her, proving yet again that the radical left is in full control of the Democrat Party. Bush Is Back I know the former president fairly well. I competed against him in the 2000 Republican presidential primaries, and was in a number of presidential debates with him. But I am sorry to say that George W. Bush is a globalist. He’s all in for virtually unregulated international trade. To this day, he seems clueless about the damage so-called “free trade policies” inflicted on working and middle-class Americans in the heartland. In one of the most heated exchanges we had in the debates, Bush dug his heels in on more trade with communist China. Bush said I would be shocked at how quickly trade would change communist China if only we engaged with their entrepreneurs. Well, as we know, trade with China didn’t change communist China. It changed us. It turned American capitalists into lobbyists for communist China. It made American businessmen apologists for the regime’s repeated atrocities. Sadly, Bush is proving once again that he is tone deaf about the mood of America. His new project is promoting more immigration. Obviously, the public opposes illegal immigration. But Bush might be shocked to find that the public doesn’t want more legal immigration either. Recent polling shows that 60% of swing voters want legal immigration cut in half. That’s understandable given that we’re still recovering from the pandemic. Twenty million Americans are still unemployed or underemployed. Why President Bush thinks this is the time to go all in on sending more of our jobs overseas while bring more of the world into America beats me. I am begging him to find something else to do in his retirement. Trump’s Plans President Trump also said he was “all in” on helping Republicans retake Congress in 2022, saying, “It’s very important that we get the right people. That means in the Senate, that means in the House.” I couldn’t agree more that we need the right people, not just more “Republicans.” And that’s exactly why I formed Campaign for Working Families! We need committed conservatives who will proudly defend our Constitution, and fight for President Trump’s America First agenda. Tags: Gary Bauer, An Officer Died & The Left Lied, Waters Is Out Of Order, Bush Is BackTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
The Left’s Plan to Commandeer the Supreme Court
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 05:57 PM PDT And control all three branches of the federal government.
by Joseph Klein: The fate of America’s constitutional republic hangs in the balance as the leftwing progressive base of the Democratic Party tries to parlay Democrat control of the White House and Congress to obliterate the independence of the Supreme Court.President Joe Biden has kicked things off by naming a 36-member commission to examine possible changes to the size and jurisdiction of the Supreme Court as well as proposals to set term limits for Supreme Court justices. The commission has 180 days to report back on its study of the issues, although it has not been given a mandate to make any formal recommendations.While advertised as being bipartisan, the commission’s co-chairs, Bob Bauer and Cristina Rodriguez, both worked for the Obama administration. Even so, establishing a commission to analyze a hot button issue is often regarded as a convenient way to bury the issue. Not this time, however. The left won’t allow Biden or the Democrat-controlled Congress off the hook so easily. Even on the rare occasions when Biden’s old centrist instincts seem about to kick in, he quickly backtracks in the face of blowback from his left flank. What then-Senator Biden called a “bonehead” idea in 1983 and an “institutional power grab” in 2005 is now very much in play during Biden’s presidency.The left sees immediate radical change to the structure and composition of the Supreme Court as necessary to cement its permanent control over the third branch of the federal government. That can only happen, however, after first nuking the Senate filibuster to pass their misnamed “For the People Act.” Also referred to simply as S.1, this bill would federalize slipshod election procedures across the country, eliminating state protections against potential election fraud, voter intimidation, illegal votes, and inaccurate vote counts. Passage of the bill will help Democrats guarantee their enduring control of Congress and the White House. With the filibuster already cast aside, Democrats will then be able to push through major changes to the Supreme Court this term with their slender majority. The result will be the left’s tight grip on the Supreme Court, while ensuring that the other two elected branches remain firmly in their pockets in future elections. On April 15th, four Democrats in Congress decided not to even wait for Biden’s commission to complete its work. House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, Rep. Hank Johnson, Rep. Mondaire Jones, and Senator Edward J. Markey introduced the Judiciary Act of 2021 to expand the Supreme Court by adding four seats, creating a 13-justice Supreme Court. This would represent the first change in the size of the Supreme Court since 1869. “Some people will accuse us of packing the court. We’re not packing the court, we’re unpacking it,” Nadler sneered. Markey claimed that the “legislation will restore the Court’s balance and public standing and begin to repair the damage done to our judiciary and democracy, and we should abolish the filibuster to ensure we can pass it.” Even House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is not willing to oblige these demagogues just yet. Pelosi said that she “has no plans” to bring their bill to the House floor at this time. She wants to wait for Biden’s commission to finish its work before taking any further steps. But Pelosi has not ruled out supporting such a change down the road. “It’s not out of the question,” Pelosi said. “It has been done before.” Yes, Congress has the constitutional authority to alter the size of the Supreme Court. However, it has chosen not to do so during a span of 152 years for good reason. When FDR tried to push forward his court packing scheme in 1937, the Democrat-controlled Senate Judiciary Committee issued a report at the time declaring that “we would rather have an independent Court, a fearless Court…than a Court that, out of fear or sense of obligation to the appointing power, or factional passion, approves any measure we may enact.” FDR’s plan was shot down by his own party. Democrats in Congress today no longer show such respect for the independence of a co-equal branch of the federal government. They are willing to increase the size of the Supreme Court solely for the purpose of turning it into a rubber stamp for their radical agenda. So long as Democrats succeed with their strategy to lock in continuing Democrat control of Congress and the White House by doing away with state law safeguards against election shenanigans, they have nothing to worry about. There will be no future Republican Congress and president elected who will be able to add more conservative justices. However, there have been a few liberals with a conscience who have spoken out in recent times against court packing, as Joe Biden did when he was his own man in the Senate. The late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg – the liberals’ heroine replaced by Justice Amy Coney Barrett – told NPR in July 2019 that “Nine seems to be a good number. It’s been that way for a long time. I think it was a bad idea when President Franklin Roosevelt tried to pack the court.” Justice Ginsburg worried that court packing “would make the court look partisan,” adding that “it would be that — one side saying, ‘When we’re in power, we’re going to enlarge the number of judges, so we would have more people who would vote the way we want them to.’ ” At Harvard Law School’s annual Scalia lecture on April 6th, Justice Stephen G. Breyer warned about how court packing would “reflect and affect the rule of law itself.” Justice Breyer added, “If the public sees judges as ‘politicians in robes,’ its confidence in the courts, and in the rule of law itself, can only diminish, diminishing the Court’s power, including its power to act as a ‘check’ on the other branches.” Progressives dismiss such arguments, of course, and indeed are pressing for Justice Breyer to retire so that a much younger and more left leaning justice can replace him. However, a few moderate Democrats in the House may be wary of supporting a bill to pack the Supreme Court, fearing the issue would be hung around their necks in Republican ads during the next election cycle. Democrat Senator Joe Manchin has declared his opposition to court packing legislation, which means it would be dead in the Senate even if the filibuster were eliminated or severely weakened. Court packing also does not have widespread public support. In a New York Times/Siena College poll conducted last October during the height of the presidential campaign, a question was asked: ”If Amy Coney Barrett is confirmed to the Supreme Court and Joe Biden is elected president, do you think that Democrats should or should not increase the size of the Supreme Court to include more than nine justices?” 58 percent said no. 31 percent said yes. 11 percent said they didn’t know or refused to answer. Thus, Democrats may decide to rally around a seemingly less drastic alternative to immediately expanding the Supreme Court to 13 members – term limits for future Supreme Court justices. There is more public support for term limits than for court packing. But the proponents of this idea are wolves in sheep’s clothing. Term limits for Supreme Court justices are arguably unconstitutional since Article III, Section 1 of the Constitution states that “The Judges, both of the supreme and inferior Courts, shall hold their Offices during good Behaviour…” Except in the case of impeachment or early retirement, this provision has been interpreted to mean a lifetime term. The term limit advocates try to get around the constitutional issue by arguing that their reform would only apply to future justices. Moreover, they propose that, after a future justice’s Supreme Court term has expired, the justice would be free to remain in the judiciary as a senior appellate judge. They believe this demotion would satisfy the Constitution’s good behavior term language since the justices would still be judges. However, the Constitution’s text appears to tie the “good behavior” term for Supreme Court justices to their specific “Office” of Supreme Court justice, not to any post in the judicial branch. In her interview with NPR, Justice Ginsburg said that the term limits idea was unrealistic because of this constitutional provision and because, as she pointed out, “Our Constitution is powerfully hard to amend.” In any case, on a policy level, Democrats proposing term limits for future Supreme Court justices are selling snake oil. Take, for example, legislation proposed by Reps. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) and Don Beyer (D-Va.) that would apply only to future justices and would limit their service on the Supreme Court to 18 years. New justices would be appointed in the first and third years of each presidential term. Since, under this plan, none of the current justices would be forced off the Supreme Court, there will be a period during which more than nine justices will be serving at the same time. It is just a slower way of achieving the same objective as court packing. If something like the Khanna-Beyer bill is passed in 2021, for example, President Biden would get to appoint one justice this year. This would expand the Court to ten until one of the current justices retires or dies. By a simple majority in the Senate (with Vice President Harris casting a tie-breaking vote), a progressive will be added to the Supreme Court. Biden’s next appointment would occur in 2023, even if there is then no vacancy on the bench. That could mean eleven justices until one of the current justices retires or dies. Assuming the Senate remains in Democrat hands, with the help of vote cheating enabled by the falsely entitled “For the People Act,” another progressive will be added to the Supreme Court. A Democrat White House and Senate in 2025 will ensure yet another progressive added to the Supreme Court, tilting the Supreme Court in a leftward direction. And so on. If a vacancy occurs during one of the off years, it would be filled temporarily by a lower court judge, until the following year when the president nominates, and the Senate confirms, the next term-limited justice. The combined effect of the Democrats’ federalizing of elections to slant the outcomes in their direction and the passage of court packing or term limit legislation for the Supreme Court will be to institute permanent one party rule in Washington D.C. for all three branches of government. Separation of powers and checks and balances will be dead. “Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction,” Ronald Reagan once said. We are at that crossroads right now. We must fight the leftwing progressives’ attempt to turn this country into their tyrannical domain lest, as Reagan warned, we “spend our sunset years telling our children and our children’s children what it once was like in America when men were free.” Tags: Joseph Klein, FrontPage Mag, The Left’s Plan, to Commandeer, the Supreme CourtTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
GOP Trustbusters Are Embracing Progressives’ Agenda
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 05:39 PM PDT
by Stephen Moore: It’s not too often that Republicans embrace the agenda of leftist Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. But it’s happening. Sen. Josh Hawley, the young Republican senator from Missouri, has introduced a bill in Congress entitled: “Trustbusting for the Twenty-First Century Act.” It may be the most dangerous bill to our economy from a Republican in ages. It would reduce American competitiveness, cost millions of jobs, penalize companies for growing and being profitable, kill funding for small-business startups, and empower unprecedented new regulatory powers to the deep state lawyers and bureaucrats in Washington. Hawley is no fan of the politics of Big Tech — who is? — so he wants to put new teeth into antitrust laws that were birthed during America’s first “Progressive Era.” His bill would 1) ban mergers and acquisitions by firms with a market cap over $100 billion; 2) change the standard of “‘monopolistic” behavior from causing “consumer harm” to one that emphasizes “the protection of competition”; and 3) greatly expand the power of federal regulatory agencies to rein in domestic firms in the high-tech sector. Hawley, who has a background as a lawyer, defends his bill by saying, “This country and this government shouldn’t be run by a few mega-corporations.” The Republican Party “has got to become the party of trust-busting once again.” Yikes. That’s like saying we should bring back small pox. Trustbusting is based on the century-old leftist fairy tale that America had been taken over by rapacious “robber barons.” Economist Burt Folsom has exploded these progressive lies in his classic book “The Myth of The Robber Barons,” which shows definitively that J.P. Morgan, Henry Ford, Andrew Mellon, Andrew Carnegie, Cornelius Vanderbilt and John D. Rockefeller were anything BUT villains who raped consumers with their monopolistic behavior and “stockpiles of wealth.” They were the captains of whole new life-changing industries. The left disparaged the prosperity from the “Gilded Age” when these titans of industry helped convert America into the unrivaled industrial superpower that it became in the 20th century. They were heroes who built or supplied the railroads, the steel and aluminum, our modern financial system, the oil and gas, and the automotive industry, to name a few. Monopolies were supposedly evil because they used their market power and domination to gouge consumers with ever-rising prices. But then, as now, in every industry that was supposedly controlled by monopolists, prices fell rapidly; energy prices, transportation prices, financial services, cars and mass consumer items became affordable to the middle classes for the first time in world history. Now Hawley is echoing liberal Democrats in his charge that America’s total dominance in the trillion-dollar high-tech industries — Apple, Amazon, Google, Microsoft and the like — “hasn’t been a success for the consumer.” Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Sergey Brin — villains. Really? In our lifetimes, the cost of cellphones has fallen by 95%; the cost of the internet has fallen by 98%; the cost of internet transactions has fallen by more than 80%. Globalization has moved more than 1 billion people out of poverty. How are these companies “gouging” consumers? A cellphone 30 years ago would be clunky and expensive; a cellphone today costs $300 from Apple and has 100 times the capabilities and computing power. It’s the greatest bargain in history, except for a Google search — which is free. I’m not defending the behavior of companies like Facebook, Twitter and Google that discriminate against conservatives with their business practices and political interventions. In too many instances, these companies have muzzled conservative opinions and voices. But, as Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio notes, “Antitrust laws aren’t the right remedy for political attacks on free speech.” No advocate of free enterprise should ever invoke the Sherman and Clayton antitrust laws to expand the size and scope of government and to bash entrepreneurs whose “crimes” are to build better mouse traps at lower costs. That is what capitalism is all about. America has come to dominate the tech world and hold at bay China, Japan and the European Union — all of which want to replace us as globally dominant. Break up Apple, Google or Amazon and the big winner will be Beijing, as they seek to win the race for artificial intelligence, robotics and 5G networks. All Republicans should reject the comeback of progressive antitrust assaults against our free market system. If Hawley wants to break up monopolies, his efforts would be much better spent trying to break up the government school monopoly. Tags: Stephen Moore, GOP Trustbusters, Embracing Progressives’ AgendaTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Who Will Be the Next ‘America First’ President?
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 05:22 PM PDT by Patrick J. Buchanan: As domestic concerns are predominant — the COVID-19 pandemic, the invasion across our Southern border, soaring crime rates, race relations as raw as they have been in decades — it is time for U.S. statesman to look out for America and Americans first, and let the world look out for itself. When President Joe Biden announced he would withdraw all U.S. troops from Afghanistan by the 20th anniversary of 9/11, GOP hawks like Sens. Mitch McConnell and Lindsey Graham responded predictably. “Grave mistake,” muttered McConnell. “Insane,” said Graham, “dumber than dirt and… dangerous.” Of more interest were the responses of conservative Republicans who commended the president. Among them were Sens. Rand Paul, Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley and ex-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, a group that contains several potential candidates for the GOP nomination in 2024. Donald Trump himself weighed in Sunday, saying Biden’s decision was “wonderful,” but Joe should have stuck to Trump’s May 1 deadline for withdrawal from Afghanistan. Adding a veteran’s voice to the broad consensus was the American Legion which called for an end to America’s “forever war,” and repeal of congressional authorizations to fight this war. While many older Republican leaders remain wedded to a Bush foreign policy, some of the prospective leaders of the party seem to be adopting their own versions of “America First.” Opportunity may be at hand. The door may be open for a leader to articulate a new U.S. foreign policy vision, beginning with a review of our Cold War commitments that became irrelevant with the collapse of the Soviet Empire and breakup of the Soviet Union three decades ago. Consider. NATO, which dates back to 1949, today contains 30 allied nations, while U.S. security treaties with South Korea, Japan, the Philippines, Australia and New Zealand all date back to the 1950s. How do all these war guarantees to other nations secure our vital interests, when our first vital interest is to stay out of any great war? According to The New York Times, a 2020 survey by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs found, “Republican voters preferred a more nationalist approach, valuing economic self-sufficiency, and taking a unilateral approach to diplomacy and global engagement.” Almost half of Republicans surveyed agreed that the “United States is rich and powerful enough to go it alone, without getting involved in the problems of the world.” A survey by pollster Tony Fabrizio found that “only 7 percent of Republicans prioritize national security and foreign policy issues.” The opportunity is transparent. As domestic concerns are predominant — the COVID-19 pandemic, the invasion across our Southern border, soaring crime rates, race relations as raw as they have been in decades — it is time for U.S. statesman to look out for America and Americans first, and let the world look out for itself. Biden is a perfect foil — a trans-nationalist and globalist committed to the whole panoply of old security treaties and war guarantees that had existed for a generation even before he came to Washington 50 years ago. The favorable reaction to his pullout from Afghanistan should have told Biden that. And it should tell Republicans that now may be the time to seize the moment. Let Republicans openly reject the Biden administration’s unilateral commitments to fight China for tiny reefs claimed by the Philippines in the South China Sea and Japan in the East China Sea. And, surely, it is time for that “agonizing reappraisal” of NATO promised by Secretary of State John Foster Dulles in the 1950s. Why are we still committed, under NATO, to go to war with Russia on behalf of Germany, when the Germans, with their Nord Stream 2 pipeline, are doubling their dependency on Russia’s natural gas? According to the Atlantic Council President Richard Haas, the U.S. should abandon its policy of “strategic ambiguity” as to what we would do if China attacks Taiwan — and make a commitment to defend Taiwan. But why should the United States commit to a war with China for an island President Richard Nixon conceded in 1972 was part of China? Among the reasons Trump won in 2016 is that he offered a foreign policy of easing tensions with Vladimir Putin’s Russia, getting us out of the endless wars of the Middle East, and making free-riding allies pay the cost of their own defense. Yet, though, currently, we have commitments to fight for 29 NATO nations, there is a push on among our foreign policy elites to add new nations, such as Ukraine, Georgia, Moldova, Finland and Sweden. But, again, why surrender our freedom to decide whether to fight? As for South Korea, Japan and Taiwan, each could build a nuclear deterrent, as Israel, Pakistan and India have done. If a war were to be fought with China that could go nuclear, why would we want to be a mandatory participant? Among the reasons the U.S. emerged victorious in the 20th century was that we stayed out of the two world wars longer than any of the other great powers. “Don’t ever take a fence down until you know the reason it was put up,” wrote G. K. Chesterton. Sound advice. But some of these fences were built before most Americans were born, and the world has changed. Tags: Patrick Buchanan, conservative, commentary, Who Will Be the Next ‘America First’ President?To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Biden’s Fabled Bipartisanship
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 05:10 PM PDT
by David Limbaugh: I haven’t seen much humor in life during the past year or so, but one thing that has been uproariously hilarious lately is the orchestrated media narrative that President Joe Biden is bipartisan and conciliatory. Please give me a moment to catch my breath. I think it was Karl Rove who recently observed that the media’s effective definition of bipartisan legislation is not that significant numbers of both parties’ lawmakers support a bill but that some poll somewhere shows that a large percentage of Americans of each party support some vaguely described initiative, even if zero Republican legislators support the actual bill. You can frame a poll question to get the result you want. I can’t claim to be prophetic for having warned in my last book that if Democrats were to recapture the presidency, they would launch the most radical agenda in modern times. Indeed, you would have to have been almost blind or willfully naive to think otherwise. Yet never-Trumpers and many Democrats denied the radical wing of the party would have that much influence. But here we are. Saying “I told you so” doesn’t give me much solace. Whoever is pulling Biden’s strings was able to get him elected using the carefully crafted message that he was a moderate, especially compared with Bernie Sanders. These same puppet masters are now imposing their will, and they mean to complete former President Barack Obama’s fundamental transformation of this nation, which is quite fitting considering that he is one of the key masters and probably the main one. Many of us cautioned that they would try to pack the Supreme Court, and complacent scoffers waived their hands at us dismissively. But now Sen. Ed Markey and Rep. Jerry Nader are set to offer legislation to add four more seats to the court and fill them with liberal-activist justices who would convert the court to a rubber stamp for the left’s unconstitutional measures, rather than maintain it as a critical, nonpartisan check on excesses of the political branches. Do they have your attention yet? Please don’t say this is renegade Democratic lawmakers, not Biden. You know better, notwithstanding his previous comments that it would be a “boneheaded” move and a terrible, terrible idea. He’s the leader of the party. Then there’s Biden’s radical reversal of Trump’s border policies, which were designed to restore a sane and orderly immigration system. Biden has single-handedly caused a crisis at the border by incentivizing migrants to come here with promises of monetary benefits, health benefits and sanctuary. Why would any nation-respecting president engage in such reckless behavior to the detriment of United States citizens and then pretend that this rush to the border is Trump’s fault or the result of certain “root causes” in the migrants’ home countries? By root causes, does he mean undemocratic, tyrannical governments — the kind that he and Democrats are trying to usher in here? And how about their constant stirring of the racial pot? Biden and the Democrats are firmly behind this disturbing wokeness trend now dominating our culture, as evidenced by Biden’s nomination of Kristen Clarke to head the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. As Sens. Tom Cotton and Ted Cruz demonstrated in their questioning of Clarke at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Wednesday, Clarke supported measures to defund the police, despite claiming she now opposes them. Media fact-checkers are scrambling to deny the obvious, but it’s pretty hard to sell that narrative when Clarke penned an op-ed titled “I Prosecuted Police Killings. Defund the Police — But Be Strategic.” If Biden (or his handlers) isn’t pushing an extremist, race-laced agenda, why would he nominate someone so obviously obsessed with race? As former House Speaker Newt Gingrich noted, those who are pushing to defund the police are at war with Western civilization. That’s not all. Biden’s United Nations ambassador, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, believes and preaches that the United States is guilty of systemic racism. She told the Human Rights Council that “the original sin of slavery weaved white supremacy into our founding documents.” She added, “We have to acknowledge that we are an imperfect union — and have been since the beginning — and every day we strive to make ourselves more perfect, and more just.” She said that this “imperfect union” must approach issues of “equity and justice at the global scale … with humility.” She actually told this council, which includes such human rights abusers as China, Cuba, Venezuela, Saudi Arabia and North Korea, that the United States needs to “engage trailblazing groups like yours” to “improve.” Kind of makes Obama’s notorious world apology tour look like a paean to America as founded. Note also Biden’s incendiary rhetoric about Georgia’s election integrity bill, which is designed not to suppress minority voters, as maliciously claimed, but to ensure fairness in the election process. Biden referred to the law as “Jim Crow in the 21st Century,” “Jim Crow on steroids” and “an atrocity.” Remember that during Jim Crow, blacks were threatened and beaten, and their houses sometimes burned down, to keep them from voting. The main provisions of the Georgia law impose voter identification requirements for absentee ballots and limit the use of ballot drop boxes. It is undeniably insulting and patronizing to minorities to imply that they can’t be expected to produce personal identification to vote. Know that some 70% of blacks reportedly support voter ID laws. If none of this strikes you as particularly radical, then what do you think of Biden’s proposed multitrillion-dollar “infrastructure” bill that is only marginally about infrastructure? Trump haters would have us believe that they just wanted to have the adults back in charge of our government. Well, if deliberately bankrupting the United States and destroying the U.S. dollar is adult behavior, I’d prefer adolescents at the helm. As my dad used to say, “There’ll be a day of reckoning.” Tags: David Limbaugh, Biden’s Fabled Bipartisanship To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Trigger Lock
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 03:49 PM PDT Democrats want to Pack SCOTUS because they stand in the way of their radical socialist agenda.
Tags: SF Branco, editorial cartoon, Trigger LockTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Media Corrections
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 03:39 PM PDT by Paul Jacob: “Our focus was to get Trump out of office,” explains CNN Technical Director Charlie Chester in video surreptitiously recorded and recently released by the gotcha video journalists of Project Veritas. The group had reached higher at the cable network, last December, unveiling comments made by CNN Worldwide President Jeff Zucker and Political Director David Chalian during an internal conference call to spike coverage of the Hunter Biden laptop story . . . with plenty of obvious political prejudice. Last summer, as the presidential campaign settled into a two-man race pitting Republican Donald Trump against Democrat Joe Biden, The New York Times reported that, “Russia Secretly Offered Afghan Militants Bounties to Kill U.S. Troops, Intelligence Says,” adding, “The Trump administration has been deliberating for months about what to do about a stunning intelligence assessment.” “There may not have been Russian bounties on US troops in Afghanistan after all,” reads the Military Times’ headline, after the Biden Administration acknowledged “low to moderate confidence” in the intel that previously seemed gospel-true. Calling it “one of the most-discussed and consequential news stories of 2020,” Glenn Greenwald notes, “It was also, as it turns out, one of the most baseless.” Yet another big narrative has unraveled with the Washington, D.C., medical examiner concluding that Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick “suffered two strokes and died of natural causes.” “So The New York Times on January 8 published an emotionally gut-wrenching but complete fiction that never had any evidence — that Officer Sicknick’s skull was savagely bashed in with a fire extinguisher by a pro-Trump mob until he died,” Greenwald summarizes at Substack, “and, just like the now-discredited Russian bounty story also unveiled by that same paper, cable outlets and other media platforms repeated this lie over and over in the most emotionally manipulative way possible.” That’s “the news”? This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. Tags: Common Sense, Paul Jacob, Media Corrections, corruption, mainstream media, media, propagandaTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Biden Will ‘Lower’ Internet Prices – The Way Obama-Biden ‘Lowered’ Health Insurance Prices
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 03:18 PM PDT
by Seton Motley: Hint: Obama-Biden did no such thing. Remember the “Affordable Care Act?” Colloquially known as Obamacare? Remember all the promises made as pretense to get it passed? Obama: ‘If You Like Your Doctor – You Can Keep Your Doctor’ MontageDemocrats then jammed us with Obamacare – in what is now a familiar fashion. Speaking of Democrat lies, “universal coverage” and “lower prices”…. But Biden presses on – utterly undaunted by facts. Telling nigh the exact same lies about government Internet – he and his told about government health insurance. Those of us who do not know history – are doomed to look really, REALLY stupid all over again. The rest of us just get royally screwed – yet again. Tags: Seton Motley, Less Government, Biden Will, ‘Lower’ Internet Prices, The Way Obama-Biden, Lowered, Health Insurance PricesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Troubled Waters: California Rep. Eggs on Rioters
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 02:41 PM PDT by Tony Perkins: Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) doesn’t represent the people of Minneapolis. In fact, when she stands in front of a crowd and spews dangerous rhetoric, she doesn’t even represent Los Angeles County. When she travels to Minnesota to tell the mob to “stay in the streets” and “get more confrontational,” she only represents one thing: the fringe Left. Apparently, today’s liberals don’t just start riots in their own cities — they’ll travel halfway across the country to start one in yours. Of course, the woman they call “Kerosene Waters” has been starting fires for years, but in Minneapolis, the situation is different. The entire city is hanging on by a thread. Thanks to the perfect storm of the Derek Chauvin trial and the shooting of Daunte Wright, a community that’s been on edge for days is one court verdict away from a full-scale firestorm. The last thing anyone there needs is an excuse to turn the city into another pile of smoldering ash. And yet, this congresswoman certainly seemed determined to give them one. “We’ve got to stay on the street, and we’ve got to get more active,” Waters told the protestors Saturday night. “We’ve got to get more confrontational. We’ve got to make sure that they know that we mean business.” If Chauvin isn’t convicted of George Floyd’s death, she warned, “We cannot go away… We’ve got to demand justice. We’ve got to make sure that they know that we mean business.” If that means Minneapolis burns to the ground, well, it’s not her district. If violence breaks out on the streets, it won’t be her constituents that could lose businesses, property, their sense of safety, and sleep. As for the Left’s double standard on violence, Waters is the current standard-bearer. After all, this is the same woman that thought Donald Trump should be impeached for “inciting violence” on January 6. “We’re not going to support these kind of dangerous protestors,” she insisted. Three months later, she’s not just supporting dangerous protestors — she’s leading the charge! Outraged Republicans like House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) couldn’t believe his ears. “Maxine Waters is inciting violence in Minneapolis — just as she has incited it in the past. If Speaker [Nancy] Pelosi doesn’t act… I will bring action this week,” he warned. As the video of her comments started to spread, the condemnation got even louder. “Why is Maxine Waters traveling to a different state trying to incite a riot? What good can come from this?” Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) demanded to know. Obviously, Congressman Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) said, “The radical Left don’t care if your towns are burning, if there’s violence in your streets, or if the police are too defunded to defend their communities. As long as the Left appeases their anti-America base, their job is done.” Democrats are “actively encouraging riots and violence,” Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) warned. “They want to tear us apart.” By Sunday night, #ImpeachMaxineWaters started trending on social media — forcing the congresswoman onto MSNBC to try to clean up the mess. I was only there, she argued, as “kind of an Auntie Maxine” to lend support. “We have to give support to our young people,” she argued. “…Minneapolis is a great example of what is wrong with the criminal justice system, what’s wrong with policing. And so those of us who hold significant positions must stand up. We must support them, we must speak out, we must call for justice.” But confrontation isn’t justice. And while the freedom of speech gives Maxine Waters — and every American — the right to say irresponsible and stupid things, the hypocrisy here is astounding. By her own standards, the New York Post editors write, “Maxine Waters should be impeached and removed.” And yet her own party — the one who tried to remove President Trump for lesser crimes — is silent. So are the woke CEOs who cut ties with Republicans after January 6. Where are the heads of Apple, Disney, Walmart, and Amazon who were supposedly so committed to “the principles of democracy” and a “peaceful transfer of power” that they stopped contributions to senators who condemned the Capitol siege? M.I.A. And when it comes to incivility, this is hardly Waters’s first offense. Back in 2018, she urged Democrats to flat-out harass Trump officials. “If you see anybody from that cabinet in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and you create a crowd. And you push back on them. And you tell them they’re not welcome anymore, anywhere.” This weekend’s comments were just as volatile. And yet, she still has a Twitter account, a Facebook profile, and her committee assignments. If anyone’s waiting for justice, it’s conservatives. Tags: Tony Perkins, Troubled Waters, California Rep. Eggs, RiotersTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Lost for Decades, a Marine World War II Hero Finally Comes Home
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 02:21 PM PDT by Gustavo Arellano: The word came in the morning, as Grace Cruz and her children gathered at the family home in Boyle Heights on Christmas Eve, 1943. Her oldest son, Jacob, was dead. A telegram from the United States Marines said the 18-year-old private was killed in action but divulged little else. The ongoing Pacific campaign meant Jacob would be buried in a temporary grave in the Tarawa Atoll, where he and more than 1,000 other Marines and sailors died fighting the Imperial Japanese Army. Weeks turned into months and into years. The military finally admitted it couldn’t find Jacob’s burial place. His name was etched at the Courts of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Hawaii. Jacob’s family tried to honor him for the rest of their lives. Grace opened a diner named after him in Boyle Heights and kept his letters, newspaper clippings of his death and his medals — a Purple Heart and Silver Star, among others — in a cosmetics case. His four siblings shared stories of their brother with their own children, some of whom joined the military. Nephews who never knew their tío tattooed their arms and legs with his name and face and years of life. Grace died in 1974, and Jacob’s siblings followed until only two, Isaac Cruz Jr. and Ruth Soto, were left. Tears eventually dried, replaced by a longing for closure the family assumed would never come. Then, in April of last year, Ruth’s daughter, Ruthie, received a phone call at work: Jacob was coming home. The news was so impossible to believe that she hung up mid-conversation to gather herself. Born in Arizona, Jacob Cruz moved to Boyle Heights with his family in the 1930s. As the oldest son, it was his job to help out his single mother, a Mexican immigrant who worked as a cleaning lady at White Memorial Medical Center. She had to give him permission to enlist since Jacob was only 17 and a junior at Roosevelt High School. “She didn’t want him to sign,” Ruth said, “but he said, ‘I have to go to protect all of you.'” He wrote dozens of letters while at infantry training at Camp Elliott in San Diego in 1943, all addressed to “Ma + Family” and usually signed “General Cruz.” Jacob teased his oldest sister, Esther, about her love of hair dyes and asked for pictures of her newborn son. He asked his younger sister, Olga, to send him home-baked chocolate chip cookies. He threatened Isaac Jr. with a “kick in the Axis” if he didn’t stop bugging their sisters, and he told Ruth, “Don’t forget to write every day from now on.” The teen was short — barely over 5 foot 6 — and lean, with a stern face that made him seem far older than his years. “He was terrific,” said Ruth. “Just so responsible but loving. A happy-go-lucky guy.” His last letter came on Oct. 29, just before Jacob’s division shipped off to the Pacific theater. “Please don’t worry about me Mother, because I am fine and healthy,” he wrote. The last six words were bolded. On Nov. 22, Jacob and his company found themselves under a heavy counterattack during the Battle of Tarawa. It was his first day of combat, and he ran ammunition boxes to gunners on the front line until two bullets struck him down, killing him instantly, according to a letter his sergeant sent to Grace months later. The sergeant added this detail: The morning of his death, Jacob spent his down time under the shade of a coconut tree reading a Bible. He and the other American casualties were buried in shallow graves with hastily built markers that Navy Seabees soon replaced with white crosses. A letter to the Cruz family said the military would try to retrieve his body “upon cessation of hostilities.” But in the rush to win World War II, the locations of many graves were forgotten. An Army review board in charge of tracking down the bodies of fallen troops declared Jacob “non-recoverable” in 1949. The news shattered his mother and siblings, said Alta Vargas, the daughter of Isaac Jr. — even more so because they had grown up without a man in the house. “When they lost him, it was like they lost their father,” she said. Grace regularly attended the Memorial Day service at the All Wars Memorial in Boyle Heights that honors the many Mexican Americans from the Eastside who have served in the military. She always made sure to take her grandchildren to learn about their uncle, said Mike Mahar-Soto, Ruth’s son. “She’d go up onstage, and they’d give her a corsage,” said the 61-year-old Glendale resident. “Then she’d say a couple of words about my tío Jacob, about what a good boy he was.” When Grace died, the cosmetics case with Jacob’s letters and other ephemera went to another grandson, Isaac III, Alta’s brother. He recently shared its contents at his home in Maywood. “She always had a smile when she talked about my uncle,” said the 70-year-old as he opened the frayed box. “She was just happy to talk about him.” He carefully unfolded yellowed newspaper clippings and took out his uncle’s letters from brittle envelopes. Preserved in plastic slips was the original telegram — “DEEPLY REGRET TO INFORM YOU…” — announcing Jacob’s death, along with condolence messages from Marine officials, Roosevelt High’s principal and Los Angeles Mayor Fletcher Bowron. A certificate signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt assured Grace and her children that Jacob continued to live “in a way that humbles the undertakings of most men.” The lofty words were right, in a sense. He turned from son to brother to legend to myth with each passing generation. “My dad would tell us that my uncle was a hero, but we just never realized the extent of it,” said Alta, 66. She envisioned visiting Tarawa, but the logistics were too hard. “We were just little kids and would just think, ‘Oh yeah, our uncle. So sad that he died at such a young age.'” “I know he was good,” said Isaac III. “He took care of everybody. He was already a man by the time he died.” As for Jacob’s two surviving siblings, their memories of him were warm, if vague. Ruth talked to Jacob on the phone before he shipped out but can’t recall the conversation or much about her brother. She was only 11 when he died and admits her memories mostly begin after that painful day. Isaac Jr., who was 14 at the time, had more stories: How the two of them walked along train tracks looking for iron scraps to sell and make money for their mom. Jacob’s love of sports, especially baseball and football. The time he tried to go steady with a Russian girl, but her parents didn’t approve because Jacob was Mexican. During basic training, Ruth recalled, “he’d come back on the weekends from camp with his dirty clothes.” Now 88 and living in Glendale, she wore dog tags with a photo of Jacob in uniform. A fabric painting of him hung in the dining room. A display case with copies of his medals and citations stood on an end table. “Jacob had a job for everyone except me, because I was the baby,” she said. “I never forgot him.” Neither had the military. Advancements in DNA and forensic technology have allowed the military and private groups to identify remains and return them to families across the country. In 2009, Isaac Jr. and Ruth donated DNA samples at the request of military officials. For decades, investigators had sought the plot where Jacob was buried. Known as Row D, it became “lost in the scheme of everything,” said Jordan Windish, an osteoarchaeologist with History Flight, a Virginia-based nonprofit devoted to finding and repatriating missing American servicemembers. Windish and her colleagues suspected Row D was under a house built in the 1950s in Tarawa, now part of the Republic of Kiribati. For a decade, the local housing commission declined their requests to search underneath its concrete foundation. A storm destroyed the house in 2019, and the commission finally let History Flight dig. They unearthed 32 service members, including Jacob. He still had his boots on. His remains were shipped to a military laboratory in Hawaii on the Fourth of July. Scientists with the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency identified Jacob through dental records and the DNA that Isaac Jr. and Ruth had donated a decade earlier. Ruth confessed she “always had hope that he was alive somewhere,” so when her daughter Ruthie told her the news last April, she couldn’t believe, even decades later, that Jacob truly was found. “I thought that it was a dream,” she said, “and I’d wake up, and [his body] wasn’t there.” Her voice cracked as tears welled in her eyes. “Seventy-seven years is a long time.” Because of COVID-19 restrictions, the Cruz family delayed Jacob’s return until November. The winter surge convinced Isaac Jr. to delay just a couple of months more. On March 24 at the Los Angeles International Airport, a contingent of Marines, Los Angeles police officers and airport workers stood silently alongside the Cruz family as the flag-draped casket descended from an airplane. Mike pushed his mother in a wheelchair so she could be the first to welcome back Jacob. She gently touched the casket with her hand. “To have a sibling that still remembers one of these soldiers is rare,” said Windish, who accompanied the family that day. “Ruth was holding my hand and looking into my soul. She kept saying, ‘Thank you so much for bringing my brother back.'” Jacob’s hearse traveled to Guerra & Gutierrez Mortuary in East Los Angeles with an escort provided by Patriot Guard Riders. Law enforcement and firefighters saluted from overpasses on the 105 Freeway. The motorcade drove by Plaza Mexico in Lynwood, where a giant marquee flashed Jacob’s photo with the words “A Hero Remembered Never Dies.” The following day, Jacob’s family packed into vans provided by History Flight for his funeral at Los Angeles National Cemetery in Westwood. Cousins who hadn’t spoken in at least 20 years sat next to one another. Now, they talked nonstop about their uncle Jacob. “It was kind of shocking to see how affected everybody was,” Mike said. “Not that I thought others didn’t care. I just didn’t know how large my uncle loomed in these various households.” It was Jacob’s birthday. He would have turned 96 that day. He received a three-volley salute and a helicopter flyover. A niece sang the gospel classic “His Eye is on the Sparrow.” When she hit the final line — ” I know he watches over me” — a wind blew over the wreaths near the grave. Jacob’s sister, nieces, nephews and their children grieved doubly that day. The week before, Isaac Jr. had died of complications from a fall at his home in Boyle Heights. He was 91. One of his last outings had been walking into Guerra & Gutierrez to arrange a wake for his brother. Tags: Gustavo Arellano, Military.com, Lost for Decades, Marine, World War II, Hero Finally Comes HomeTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Who is really going to get stuck Paying Biden’s higher corporate taxes?
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 02:03 PM PDT Politicians would have you believe that “big business meanies” and the Richie Riches of the world will pay Biden’s higher taxes. But the truths is, taxes are not necessarily borne by whomever statutorily pays the tax.
by Catherine Mortensen: A new study by the Heritage Foundation finds that Joe Biden’s plan to hike the corporate tax rate to 28 percent will reduce long-run GDP by about 1 percent – meaning a cost of about $1,650 per American household. Heritage economist Parker Sheppard also finds the higher tax rate harms both shareholders and workers. Sheppard’s model predicts under Biden’s tax hikes over the next ten years, wages will fall by about 1.27 percent as less investment lowers productivity.Politicians would have you believe that “big business meanies” and the Richie Riches of the world will pay the higher taxes. But the truths is, taxes are not necessarily borne by whomever statutorily pays the tax. This is because taxes raise costs, and people adjust their behavior in response to the new cost.In a blog this week for the Foundation for Economic Education Brad Polumbo explained that the exact shares of the burden that fall on capital and labor are a point of debate in the literature, but there is agreement that it is not just corporate shareholders that pay the tax. “Because people change their behavior as a result of tax increases—raising prices, decreasing investment, changing consumption habits, and so on.”As Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises noted, “It is the operation of the market, and not the government collecting the taxes, that decides upon whom the incidence of the taxes falls and how they affect production and consumption.” Polumbo wrote, “In the case of corporate taxation, an overwhelming body of research confirms this theory and shows over the run, the costs are mostly borne by workers via reduced wages and partially by consumers via higher prices. Because corporate tax increases make investment more expensive, and investment in productivity improvements is key to wage growth.” As Mises added, “More investment of capital means: to give to the laborer more efficient tools.” As investment allows workers to become more productive, their wages will soon rise. But Polumbo explained in the case of corporate tax hikes, the opposite happens: investment is reduced and wages fall as a result. The Heritage’s Sheppard explained, “Workers with newer or improved equipment, or places to work, are more productive and can command a higher salary. If the corporate tax causes firms to reduce their investment and operate with less capital, they will pay lower wages as a result.” The Heritage study finds that Biden’s proposed corporate tax hike will significantly decrease investment into new business equipment and structures. The Heritage Foundation study concludes by urging Congress to keep taxes low and spending in life with revenue. The proposal to raise the corporate income tax is motivated in part by a desire to pay for $2.65 trillion in spending over the 10-year budget window. Many of the provisions in the American Jobs Plan, such as building energy-efficient housing and producing electric vehicles, are things that the private sector is already doing. Providing public funding for those activities and raising corporate taxes merely produces the same goods at a higher cost. Taxes lead to market distortions and inefficiencies as households and businesses adjust to the costs that they impose. The reduction in trade benefits no one, as the government cannot collect tax revenue on income that is not produced. The best policy to promote prosperity for all households in the United States is to keep taxes low and to keep spending in line with revenue. This is a common-sense approach that Americans for Limited Government has been advocating for years. It’s how families run their households. “Economists, and certainly politicians, frequently overcomplicate things,” said Rick Manning, President of Americans for Limited Government. “It’s really important that we approach government spending and taxes from the perspective of our own finances. Just as we know that living off our credit cards is not sustainable, neither is it sustainable for the government. Politicians would have you believe they have some magic formula for paying for their reckless spending sprees. They don’t. Eventually, it is the taxpayer, the little guy, who ends up stuck with the bill.” Tags: Catherine Mortensen, Who is really going to get stuck, Paying Biden’s, higher corporate taxesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
The Tyranny Of Meaninglessness
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 01:41 PM PDT by Daniel Greenfield: Joe Biden is always redefining things by Bidenizing them into random strings of gibberish like “lying, dog-faced pony soldier” or turning them into Bidenisms. But these days his administration is ambitiously trying to redefine the entire English language. “I want to change the paradigm,” Biden told reporters. “I would like elected Republican support, but what I know I have now is I have electoral support from Republican voters. Republican voters agree with what I’m doing.” Like every other word that comes out of Biden’s mouth, that’s a lie. A Gallup poll in March found that Biden’s approval rating among Republicans is at 8%. That’s down from 12% in February. “What’s become crystal clear is that Biden has redefined bipartisan,” Obama crony Rahm Emanuel argued. “And Washington is slow to catch up to the Biden definition.” The Biden definition of bipartisan is having the support of 8% of Republicans. Not only is Washington D.C. slow to catch up to the Biden definition of bipartisan, but so is the dictionary. Biden’s advisers however argue that the dictionary’s arc bends toward Biden. “If you looked up ‘bipartisan’ in the dictionary, I think it would say support from Republicans and Democrats,” Anita Dunn, who has advised Biden and Harvey Weinstein, argued. “It doesn’t say the Republicans have to be in Congress.” It doesn’t say that the Democrats have to be in congress either if it’s a book club. But if it’s bipartisan governing, then it has to be Republican and Democrat elected officials. “The Biden definition of bipartisanship is an agenda that unifies the country and appeals across the political spectrum,” Mike Donilon, a senior Biden adviser, argued. “Presumably, if you have an agenda that is broadly popular with Democrats and Republicans across the country, then you should have elected representatives reflecting that.” The Framers also thought so which is why they put into place a system of elected officials chosen by the people to represent them. Biden would like to replace that with claiming that Republicans support him in a poll so he can eliminate the filibuster, pack the Supreme Court, add Puerto Rico, D.C., and his family home as states, and rule a one-party state. Fresh off redefining ‘bipartisan’, the Biden administration also redefined ‘infrastructure’ to mean funding the Democrat welfare state. “I mean, what is infrastructure? Historically, it’s been: What makes the economy move,” Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm, contended. Since everything makes the economy move, in one direction or another, then everything is infrastructure. But if everything is infrastructure, then nothing is infrastructure. In the hands of lefty linguists, infrastructure, like the Constitution or bipartisanship, ceases to be tethered to the dictionary or the meanings imbued by a bunch of old white male racists, and becomes a universal concept. Or as Granholm argued, “as the president said this week, that infrastructure evolves to meet the American people’s aspirations.” Infrastructure, like the living constitution, is constantly evolving to meet lefty aspirations. One day it’s a bridge, another day it’s abortion, and the end of free speech. “We don’t want to use past definitions of infrastructure, when we are moving into the future,” Granholm whined. Definitions are static. They exist in the past. But the party of progress, as embodied by a 78-year-old man who keeps stumbling over words and falling down, is using definitions from the future for Newspeak dictionaries that haven’t even been invented yet. If ‘infrastructure’ or ‘bipartisanship’ mean whatever Biden says it does, then he’s an absolute dictator, and reality means whatever lying, dog-faced pony soldier decides it does this week. But Biden is always redefining things. The serial Democrat lecher started out, like Bill Clinton, by redefining sex. Except that Biden, in one of his first executive orders, redefined sex to mean some intangible psychologically subjective concept of sex not based on science or biology, rather than men and women. Once you’ve redefined women out of existence, redefining bipartisan to mean a one-party state, and infrastructure to mean social services is easy. All it takes is the refusal to be bound by the narrow categories of the past and then bridges, gender, and tyranny can be surprisingly fluid. Last year, Biden had already redefined being a Catholic. “Biden Could Redefine What It Means to be ‘a Catholic in Good Standing,” the Washington Post argued. Predictably, the argument was all about a more fluid definition of Catholicism and “what kinds of Catholicism they think most urgently needs to be advanced”. The Biden brand involves “poverty, refugees and the environment” which has as much to do with Catholicism as Tikkun Olam’s emphasis on “poverty, refugees, and the environment” has to do with Judaism. But when you’re already redefining the Constitution, gender, and the meaning of simple words, why not also redefine religion away from narrow categories of belief, and into an evolving religion of the future in which things mean whatever we want them to mean at any moment. When words mean nothing, then ideas mean nothing, and it’s easy to redefine Catholicism and Judaism to mean Muslim immigration, Obamaphones, and subsidies for luxury ‘green’ SUVs. As George Orwell rightly noted, the refusal to allow words to mean anything is tyranny. Without objective meanings, there are no laws and therefore no rights. There are no restraints on the power of the state when it refuses to be bound by the mere definitions of words. Democrats spent generations trying to nullify the Second Amendment of the Bill of Rights by arguing about the meaning of “arms”. Now they’re trying to do the same thing to the First Amendment by putting forward exciting new definitions of “speech” and the “press”. Recent mainstream media editorials attacking free speech include “Why Is Big Tech Policing Free Speech? Because the Government Isn’t”, “Free Speech is Killing Us” and “Why America Needs a Hate Speech Law.” That last one was written by a Biden transition official, who sneered that, “the intellectual underpinning of the First Amendment was engineered for a simpler era” and that, “the framers believed that this marketplace was necessary” from which “magically, truth would emerge.” An important prerequisite for the emergence of truth is the magic of allowing people to speak and for words to mean something. When there’s no free speech or meaningful speech, truth dies. In our exciting leftist future, we know that speech, like gender, infrastructure, and bipartisanship, have to be redefined to mean whatever the government has decided that it should mean. The truth can only emerge from the government and its political media partners. And if you doubt that, you probably believe that infrastructure means roads, that women exist, that free speech means the freedom to speak, rather than being told what you can say. Bad speech “undermines the values that the First Amendment was designed to protect: fairness, due process, equality before the law,” the Biden transition official argued. The only way to save the true values of the First Amendment is to destroy its literal meaning. This is the same argument that you will find behind every Biden redefinition which insists on a definition so inclusive that it includes everything except what it actually means. Catholicism and Judaism mean everything except their own traditional teachings. Sex means everything except men and women. Infrastructure means everything except roads and bridges. And bipartisanship means everything except elected officials from two parties working together. America also needs to be redefined from a country and a people to an idea that includes the entire world and everything in it, except its own citizens and a country with borders. When America, like religion and words, means everything then it means nothing. And who better than Joe Biden, who redefines sentences into incomprehensible word salads randomly assembled from a Scrabble session, to usher in the end of the English language. Tags: Daniel Greenfield, The Tyranny Of Meaninglessness TAGSTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
The Unabomber and other transgender pioneers
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 01:25 PM PDT
by Cliff Kincaid: Abortion Is Health Care” was the actual headline over an email I received from the Center for American Progress, with a message quoting a young woman as saying, “I celebrate my abortion, and no one can take that away from me.” This is today’s “progressive” point of view. The actual destruction of a human being is passed off as “heath care.” Such radical viewpoints also make their way into “news” stories. The quote about celebrating abortion was actually taken from a story in Teen Vogue, a magazine devoted to fashion, beauty, and entertainment news for teens. Another example is the phrase “common-sense gun safety measures.” This means taking away Second Amendment rights from law-abiding citizens. To cite another recent example, consider the phrase “gender-affirming” when discussing surgeries and chemical castration that are used on children. The media’s agenda today is to glorify perversion and make kids into pawns of the sexual revolution. They promote an industry, much like the abortion industry, which profits from destroying the biological basis of human life. The agenda is either to kill kids or make them into something they are not. By any objective measure, this is child exploitation and child abuse. As a veteran media critic, I’ve gotten pretty good at documenting the insidious inventory of slanted journalism techniques that constitute media bias. I’ve written many books on media misdeeds, including media malpractice – that is, deliberate deception or bias through gross negligence. But the media bias today has sunk even lower, to the extent of masking harm to children in benign and even favorable terms. It is shocking that some Republicans have fallen for it. Exhibit number one is a story from the fashionable and corporate-supporting Axios, a media outlet on the cutting edge of societal transformation, about “transgender children.” The story, by somebody named Orion Rummler, is one of the best examples of a style of “journalism” that is designed to undermine everything that is wholesome and good about growing up as boys and girls, based on DNA and the biological facts of life. Here’s how the story began: “Arkansas’ Republican-controlled House and Senate on Tuesday overrode GOP Gov. Asa Hutchinson’s veto of a bill that criminalizes gender-affirming care for transgender children.” The bill was the “Save Adolescents From Experimentation Act.” Writing for the Washington Post, an unusual outlet for a conservative governor, Hutchinson claimed he was for limited government and opposed to making the state into “the definitive oracle” in such matters. Medical experiments on minors The term “gender-affirming” is actually DNA denial, a form of child abuse that exploits children so they can be made into cogs of the ongoing sexual revolution that is now expanding on the basis of the deranged belief that boys can be girls, and vice versa. Not one critic of this insidious practice of sexual mutilation of young people was quoted in the piece. Instead, sexual activists and doctors in the business, as well as the ACLU, are quoted in favor of somehow changing boys into girls. In order to understand this form of Cultural Marxism, please note the case of the Harvard-educated Unabomber, Ted Kaczynski, about whom a psychiatric report said his mental state had deteriorated to the point where he had “fantasies of being a female” and “became convinced that he should undergo sex change surgery.” This modern-day Luddite staged an 18-year bombing campaign that killed three people and injured many more before his capture by the FBI in 1996. Today, such bizarre thoughts are apparently considered completely normal by the Democratic Party and Republicans like Hutchinson. The founder of the modern gay rights movement, Harry Hay, was a member of the Communist Party who wore a dress and promoted the North American Man-Boy Love Association and the occult. He divorced his wife, after being diagnosed with a sexually transmitted disease, before heading off on his perverted journey, finally declaring himself to be a “Radical Faerie.” Or consider Leslie Feinberg, a male-to-female transgender member of the Workers World Party who also pioneered this “lifestyle.” Feinberg was described by his supporters as “an anti-racist white, working-class, secular Jewish, transgender lesbian, female, revolutionary communist.” Another prominent advocate of “transgender liberation” is Bradley/Chelsea Manning, the former U.S. Army analyst sentenced to prison for espionage for his/her collaboration in the release by WikiLeaks of thousands of top-secret intelligence reports. Former President Obama commuted Manning’s sentence, which was originally 35 years in prison for espionage, after only seven years in prison. Manning was an open homosexual in the Army before deciding to become a woman. Be all you can be One can argue that adults in the civilian sector should have the “right” to try to change genders, even though their DNA remains the same DNA they were born with. But children? The obvious agenda is to confuse and capture youth, making them into cannon fodder for the revolution – voting Democrat. These are confused young people, some of whom go through phases, who wonder about their sexuality. They need parental help and counseling. Most will outgrow their delusions. It would have been appropriate for Axios reporter Orion Rummler to have quoted the ex-transgender Walt Heyer about the young people he has counseled who regret being forced to go through “transgender” surgeries and chemical treatments. His website is “Sex Change Regret.” He was on my TV program talking about the destructive nature of transgenderism. It was easy to find a story about this Axios reporter participating in transgender events in college. The name on “his” Twitter page includes the words “He/him, trans man.” Links are made to the groups “Trans Journalists Association” and “The Association of LGBTQ Journalists,” known as NLGJA. The journalistic associations devoted to these special interest causes make sure reporters toe the line. But no pressure was needed here. Rummler went through a “training program” with the Association of LGBTQ Journalists and also says, “I wrote a story covering the LGBTQ community in Palm Springs, California during the NLGJA’s 2018 conference and received mentorship from reporters and editors with the New York Times, AP, and Fox News.” Despite the good work of people like Tucker Carlson on this issue, Fox News has always been a financial backer of the NLGJA. Journalists are activists and advocates Here’s another story by the same reporter carried by Yahoo! News: “Biden issues first-ever presidential proclamation for Trans Day of Visibility.” The term “gender-affirming” is propaganda that obscures the reality of DNA as the most fundamental determinant of the physical characteristics of a human being. From a religious perspective, beyond science and human biology, one can argue that this is a full-blown assault on God’s plan for the human family. The Axios story followed another such obscenity from CNN on the same topic, and you may have heard about this one. The sensational article by CNN breaking news and politics reporter Devan Cole claimed, “It’s not possible to know a person’s gender identity at birth, and there is no consensus criteria for assigning sex at birth.” A quick search also discloses political activities by this “journalist” when he was in college at George Washington University. These are current examples of “bias” that fall into the realm of dishonest story-telling that is designed to make the themes of Cultural Marxism acceptable to Americans. These “journalists” are doing real damage to young people. Exposing these lies is a critical part of the process of restoring our nation to moral and spiritual health. Tags: Cliff Kincaid, RenewAmerica.com, The Unabomber, and other, transgender pioneersTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Chinese-Made Drones in US Are Spying on Us. Congress Must Put an End to This.
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 12:48 PM PDT
by Charlotte Y. Santomero & John Venable: It’s a basic concept of national security: Don’t invite a hostile nation to imbed its gifts into the innermost sanctums of your society. That was true long before the Trojans wheeled the Greek’s gift of a horse into the city of Troy some 3,000 years ago, and it is no less true today. Still, like so many lessons from history, we are learning it again with Chinese drones. Unmanned aircraft systems, better known simply as “drones,” are used much more commonly throughout the U.S. than one might expect, and are now essential assets for the military, law enforcement, emergency services, infrastructure, and especially agriculture. In the last few days of the Trump administration, the president signed an executive order designed to prevent U.S. taxpayer dollars from being used to procure drone technology that is produced by foreign adversaries. The president was essentially saying, “Don’t give our enemies the keys to our kingdom, and if you already have, take them back.” And yet, the Biden administration may disregard the magnitude of this threat and move to revoke that executive order and its commonsense approach to security. In recent years, the number and type of drones flown by the government, industry, and the general populace have exploded, growing from 2.5 million to 7 million in just the last five years. When combined with the accompanying advances in camera and other sensor technology, the amount of information drones can amass has grown exponentially. These systems can now collect and transmit terabytes of data, including images of people, buildings, and critical infrastructure that are caught in those frames, tagging the locations of everything they capture with the incredible fidelity of GPS. The issue lies not so much in the information the drones collect, but in the fact that images and data collected by well-meaning Americans can then be transmitted unknowingly to hostile entities and governments. This introduces a large and largely unknown security risk. The vast majority of drones owned and operated in the United States are manufactured by Chinese corporations, the largest of which is Da-Jiang Innovations, or DJI, as it is more commonly known in North America. Many of those drones are being employed by federal, state, and local agencies and departments in and around some of the most critical activities and infrastructure we possess. It is important to remember that all companies in China are required by law to give the Chinese Communist Party access to all of their information, despite any disingenuous protests to the contrary. That means that Chinese technology is anything but secure, and its employment by government agencies presents a risk to our national security. One ominous example is DJI’s gift of 100 Chinese-made drones to law enforcement and emergency service agencies throughout the U.S. to monitor social distancing and public interactions during the COVID-19 outbreak. This overtly generous gift placed those drones in our heartland, and they are now being employed in ways that are eerily similar to the way they are flown in the totalitarian state of China—all the while collecting terabytes of images and data. And there is little question where the data and images collected by those DJI drones and their supporting systems are going. Last year, two different cybersecurity firms, one American and one French, reverse-engineered DJI applications. Both firms found that the apps collected an individual’s private information without their permission or knowledge and transmitted that data back to the developers in China. The connective tissue between those Chinese developers and the Chinese Communist Party, coupled with that government’s duplicity, present an insidious threat—one that elements of our government have thus far received with open arms. This goes beyond the concept of a Trojan horse in that the Chinese have wooed U.S. government entities into doing their collection for them. It is the equivalent of banks asking known thieves to design and build their vaults. For the sake of the security and continued prosperity of this nation, the link must be broken. President Joe Biden should not just endorse the Trump administration’s executive order on drones, but should also encourage Congress to include its provisions of that order in the 2022 National Defense Authorization Act. This is wake-up call for America, and we can’t afford to miss it. Tags: Charlotte Santomero, John Venable, The Heritage Foundation, Chinese-Made Drones in US, Are Spying on Us, Congress Must, End ThisTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Why Can’t We ‘Just March Out’ Of Afghanistan
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 12:00 PM PDT by Ron Paul: Last week President Biden announced a “full” US withdrawal from Afghanistan – the longest war in US history – by the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attack on the United States. While this announcement is to be welcomed, the delayed US withdrawal may result in Americans and Afghans dying needlessly for good PR optics back home. We all remember how many Americans died after President Bush’s “Mission Accomplished” stunt in Iraq. The war has been a disaster from day one. So why wait to end it? The previous Trump Administration had negotiated an agreement for the US to be out of Afghanistan by the first of May, but in its obsession with tossing out anything associated with Trump, President Biden will continue to keep US troops in harm’s way in this pointless war. The Taliban have kept their end of the “Doha Agreement” signed under then-President Trump: no Americans have been killed in Afghanistan for more than a year. However, the US side under President Biden will formally violate the Agreement by keeping US troops in-country after May 1st. The Taliban has announced that it will hold the US “liable” for remaining in-country after the agreed-upon departure date. That means more Americans may be killed. The outcome of the war will not be altered in the slightest by keeping US troops in Afghanistan four additional months. The withdrawal is already announced and no one paying attention expects the corrupt US-backed Kabul government to survive. It is another Saigon moment, proving that the intellectually bankrupt US foreign policy and military established has learned absolutely nothing from history. So if another American is killed, who is going to explain to the grieving family why their loved one had to remain in harm’s way for a good 9/11 photo-op? A recent article in the Military Times lays out the massive disaster of the US two-decade war on Afghanistan: more than two trillion dollars spent – much of it going to fund crooked practices in Afghanistan and here at home. And even worse, the Cost of War Project has estimated that a quarter of a million people have been killed in the war. We do applaud President Biden’s decision to ignore the demands of all the neocons who have flocked to support his Administration, but as is most often the case, when it comes to Washington you have to really read the fine print when something sounds too good to be true. In this case, the fine print is that the US will not actually be leaving Afghanistan at all. As a recent article in The Grayzone points out, the Afghan war will continue with US special forces, CIA paramilitaries, and guns-for-hire taking the place of US soldiers. The war is not going to end, it’s just going to be “privatized.” My philosophy has always been simple: we just marched in, so we can just march out. As we have learned recently, that is exactly what President Trump tried to do in the final days of his presidency, only to get cold feed after his military and national security “experts” told him it was a terrible idea. When the history of the Trump Administration is written, it will sadly be filled with stories of Trumps’ excellent instincts tossed aside by his inability to demand that those working for him follow his orders. It’s tragic. We need to be completely out of Afghanistan. Yesterday. Tags: Ron Paul, Why Can’t We, Just March Out, Of AfghanistanTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Biden Finally Admits It’s a Border Crisis
Posted: 20 Apr 2021 11:43 AM PDT Meanwhile, the administration attempts to muddy the waters by conflating refugees with illegals. by Thomas Gallatin: Now it’s a crisis. With his poll numbers tumbling over his failed handling of the massive influx of illegal immigrants, President Joe Biden on Saturday finally called the border situation a “crisis.” Biden’s comments came as he walked back his administration’s decision the day prior to refrain from lifting the refugee cap placed by Donald Trump. And this was due to immediate blowback from the Left. Attempting to explain his sudden about-face, Biden tied the refugee cap to the “crisis that ended up on the border with young people.” He then explained, “We couldn’t do two things at once. And now we are going to increase the number [of refugees].” So, after months of refusing to acknowledge the crisis at the border, Biden now blames his initial refusal to lift the refugee cap on the border crisis he and his administration vehemently denied existed. Recent polling shows that Americans are now more concerned with illegal immigration — a border crisis that Biden brought on by rolling back Donald Trump’s effective border enforcement policies — than they are with COVID-19. Obviously, from a political standpoint, this is disastrous news for Democrats, which explains Biden’s convoluted attempt to now address the situation. Strategically speaking, while in practice embracing a de facto open-borders policy for politically motivated calculations, the Biden administration must attempt to show some semblance of engaging in border enforcement and limiting illegal immigration. Thus the convoluted, and likely intentionally so, explanation of the actions taken on lifting refugee limits. What the Biden administration is doing is seeking to erode and expand the definitional distinctions the U.S. has long had in place when it comes to recognizing genuine refugee status. Refugees are those fleeing their home nation for issues related to suffering due to political, religious, or ideological persecution, and not, as the Left is now insisting on including, economic limitations. While many refugees may be poor, poverty alone has never been accepted as a legitimate rationale for asylum. If the Democrats can get more of the American public to buy into this redefinition of illegal immigrants as refugees deserving of asylum status, then it will serve to blunt criticism of their de facto open-borders policy. But why are Democrats so set on bringing in such a large influx of illegals when just a decade ago they were singing a different tune? It has everything to do with California. As Power Line’s Steven Hayward astutely observes, “California used to be a fairly reliable Republican state in presidential elections even though it has long had a Democratic majority in registered voters; indeed it was the anchor of the GOP’s dominance of the electoral college from 1968 through 1988. But following decades of large-scale hispanic immigration, California is now a rock solid Democratic state (or so the legend goes — I think there is much more to this story than merely changing demographics). Thus Democrats think that with enough hispanic immigration to the rest of the country, they can flip Texas and Florida, solidify Colorado, Arizona, and Nevada, and rule forever.” Or does Biden think it’s a crisis?
————————– Tags: Thomas Gallatin, The Patriot Post, Joe Biden, Finally Admits, It’s a Border CrisisTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
You are subscribed to email updates from ARRA News Service. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. |
Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
43.) REDSTATE
44.) WORLD NET DAILY
|
45.) CONSERVATIVE REVIEW
Copyright © 2021 Conservative Review. All rights reserved.
This email was sent by: Conservative Review 8275 S. Eastern Ave, Ste 200-245 Las Vegas, Nevada 89123 USA
Privacy Policy | Manage Your Preferences | Unsubscribe
To view this email as a webpage, go here. |
46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
|
|
47.) ABC
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Wednesday, April 21, 2021
Good morning, NBC News readers.
From relief to tears of joy, there was an emotional outpouring across the country in response to Derek Chauvin’s murder conviction in the death of George Floyd.
Here’s the latest on the response from the streets of Minneapolis to the White House.
The news that Derek Chauvin was found guilty on all counts Tuesday for killing George Floyd sparked emotional reactions from the streets of Minneapolis to the White House.
Outside the courthouse in downtown Minneapolis, which had been enclosed with razor wire, the crowd erupted into cheers when word of the verdict filtered out.
“All three counts! All three counts!” the crowd chanted as cars honked and people danced on the blocked off streets, some of them waving Black Lives Matter flags and carrying signs that said “Justice for George Floyd.”
But many also cautioned that Chauvin’s conviction was only the beginning of a movement they hoped would lead to widespread police reforms and fewer deaths at the hands of police.
“It doesn’t make up for all the lives lost to police violence,” said Amy Powers, a retired Minneapolis firefighter outside the courthouse. “But it’s a start.”
President Joe Biden called the guilty verdicts “a step forward,” but also said the nation still has to reckon with systemic racism in all walks of life, including policing.
“It was a murder in the full light of day, and it ripped the blinders off the whole world to see,” Biden said in an emotional statement from the White House. “Systemic racism is a stain on our nation’s soul.”
While the president praised the guilty verdicts, he said they are “not enough, we can’t stop here.”
Still for George Floyd’s family, who Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris spoke to over the phone Tuesday, there was finally a sense of relief and “tears of joy.”
“Today we are able to breathe again,” Philonise Floyd, George Floyd’s brother, said at a press conference surrounded by civil rights activists.
While the final outcome was far from certain during the trial, prosecutors pursued a clear strategy. Here’s what legal analysts and policing experts say they did right.
Wednesday’s top stories By Andrew W. Lehren and Laura Strickler | Read more A year after a Connecticut company was awarded almost $1.3 billion in federal loans and contracts to supply an essential syringe for the Covid-19 vaccine rollout, no syringes have been made. The syringe hasn’t received even the first of a series of approvals it needs from the federal government before it can be manufactured, and a factory promising 650 jobs remains unbuilt.
By Rachel Elbaum | Read more Days after the funeral of her husband of 73 years, Queen Elizabeth II turned 95 on Wednesday. Marking a milestone birthday without him by her side, her long reign enters a new era.
By Martha C. White | Read more The pandemic wreaked havoc on the finances of millions of households, but that pain was not spread evenly. Black poverty is now close to double that of the overall rate, and childhood poverty has soared to 17.4 percent.
OPINION By Dorian Warren and Seft Hunter | Read more Instead of looking to stamp out police brutality, (mostly Republican) politicians are turning against the movement leading our overdue national reckoning, two social justice organizers argue in an opinion piece.
By Dylan Byers | Read more Recent broadcast news shakeups betray a larger trend: In the era of streaming and social media, when the audience for broadcast news is in sharp decline and the companies are navigating a tricky transition to digital, the entire industry faces an unsettled future, writes NBC News’ senior media reporter.
BETTER By Linda Carroll | Read more What are the differences between allergies and coronavirus? Experts discuss common symptoms of both and what you need to know.
Want to receive the Morning Rundown in your inbox? Sign up here.
Also in the news …
There are affordable iPad alternatives to the new iPad Pro that cater to every type of tablet user, according to experts.
One big sigh of relief “We Matter.” For many, the news of Derek Chauvin’s guilty verdict was a moment of emotional catharsis. See images here of the cheers, tears and hugs seen across the nation.
|
49.) NBC FIRST READ
|
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: Chauvin verdict ends a painful chapter on 2020, but huge challenges remain
One way to view yesterday’s guilty verdict in the murder trial of George Floyd is to see it as the last major unresolved moment of 2020.
Photo by Nathan Howard/Getty Images
The outcome of the presidential election was decided, although it took days to determine that Joe Biden won the contest.
The economic recession appears to be in the rearview mirror.
And the nation’s coronavirus challenge, while still killing hundreds of Americans a day, is drawing closer and closer to a conclusion with mass vaccinations.
But it wasn’t until yesterday that we learned how the story of George Floyd’s murder – and the protests across the country that followed it – would finally play out.
A jury found officer Derek Chauvin guilty of second-degree and third-degree murder, as well as second-degree manslaughter, and he now faces up to 75 years in prison.
But while the trial’s outcome resolved the individual case into George Floyd’s death, the larger challenge on policing and race remains.
In fact, here’s another story from Tuesday: “A Columbus, Ohio, police officer fatally shot a teen girl Tuesday afternoon while responding to a call about someone armed with a knife, officials said.”
And here was President Biden in his own remarks from yesterday: “In order to deliver real change and reform, we can and we must do more to reduce the likelihood that tragedies like this will ever happen and occur again; to ensure that Black and brown people or anyone — so they don’t fear the interactions with law enforcement, that they don’t have to wake up knowing that they can lose their very life in the course of just living their life,” Biden said.
The case into George Floyd’s murder is finally over.
But the larger challenge isn’t.
|
TWEET OF THE DAY: Without cameras, it could have been a different story
|
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
Up to 75: How many years Derek Chauvin could face in prison after being found guilty of three charges in the murder of George Floyd
8 weeks from now: When’s Chauvin’s sentencing is expected to take place
46 percent: The share of Americans in a recent Monmouth poll (taken before the verdict) who said that a guilty verdict would not have a significant effect on race relations in America.
37 percent: The share who said a guilty verdict would have a positive effect.
216-210: The party-line House vote yesterday to table a resolution censuring Maxine Waters for her comments before the Chauvin verdict
11.7 percent: The estimated poverty rate last month, even as the unemployment rate fell
$1.3 billion: How much the Trump administration awarded a firm for Covid vaccine syringes — which remain unapproved by federal regulators
572,560: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 823 more than yesterday morning.)
213,388,238: Number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
23.6 percent: The share of Americans who are fully vaccinated
8: The number of days left for Biden to reach his 100-day vaccination goal.
|
What Trump commented on yesterday – and what he didn’t
Former President Donald Trump yesterday responded to a poll that John Bolton’s PAC released (which found that Trump’s grip on the GOP might not be as strong as the conventional wisdom suggests).
Here was the release from Trump’s Save America PAC under his pollster’s name: “John Bolton’s failed warmonger views are completely out of touch with today’s Republican Party and the majority of Americans. President Trump’s successful America First policies kept us safe. This is a big reason why Republicans want him to run again.”
But guess what Trump did NOT comment on yesterday: Derek Chauvin being found guilty of murder.
|
Biden to deliver remarks on the coronavirus
At 1:15 pm ET today from the White House, President Biden will give a speech on the United States’ vaccination drive in fighting the coronavirus.
|
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Here’s what U.S. lawmakers are saying about the Chauvin verdict.
Republicans criticized Stacey Abrams and some blue state voting rules in a high-profile Senate hearing yesterday.
Some prominent Georgia religious leaders are calling for a boycott of Home Depot after the company declined to weigh in on voting issues.
GOP state lawmakers around the country are enacting harsher penalties for protestors.
The New York Times looks at what happened behind the scenes as the Biden administration broke its promise on refugee admissions — and then swiftly backtracked.
|
|
|
Download the NBC News Mobile App
|
50.) CBS
|
|
|
||
|
|
51.) REASON
|
|
|
|
|
52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
No sooner than the Derek Chauvin verdict was announced did the media start trying to create a new story. We take you to Columbus, introduce you to Ma’Khia Bryant, and expose all the things the media’s lying about. We also give our thoughts on the Chauvin trial. Can someone say “mistrial”? Also, the cringiest liberal reactions to the results.
If you aren’t already a Mug Club member, there is no better way to tell Big Tech where to stick it than by subscribing right now. Stop supporting Big Tech. Support freedom of speech and join Mug Club. Now.
8275 S. Eastern Ave, Ste 200-245 Las Vegas, Nevada 89123 USA
Privacy Policy | Unsubscribe | View in browser |
54.) TOWNHALL
|
||
FACEBOOK TWITTER |
ADVERTISEMENT | ||||||||
|
|
|
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions You can unsubscribe by clicking here. Or Send postal mail to: * Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers. |
55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
|
||||||||||||
|
56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
|
57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Wednesday, April 21, and former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was found guilty on all counts yesterday. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWChauvin Found GuiltyFormer Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was found guilty on all counts yesterday for the May killing of George Floyd. Judge Peter Cahill also revoked Chauvin’s bail—he had been out on bail since fall—and scheduled a sentencing hearing for June. Watch as the verdict was delivered here. Chauvin was convicted on three counts: second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder, and second-degree manslaughter (see overview). The charges carry maximum sentences of 40, 25, and 10 years, respectively, but guidelines for those without prior arrests—as in Chauvin’s case—are 12.5, 12.5, and four years. Analysts say the sentences are likely to run concurrently, as opposed to consecutively, which would significantly shorten any jail time. Cities across the US had braced for the verdict after protests, many of which grew violent, swept across the nation last summer. There were few reports of clashes with police or violence yesterday, with most protests turning celebratory following the conviction. See Floyd’s family react to the verdict. The conviction is expected to be appealed. Experts say Chauvin’s defense may argue the widespread publicity of the case influenced juror perception and focus on Cahill’s denial of requests to sequester the jury or move the case from Minneapolis. See more on what an appeal may look like. Three other former officers involved in the killing—Tou Thao, J. Alexander Kueng, and Thomas Lane—go on trial Aug. 23 for charges they aided and abetted Chauvin. Russian Buildup Russia has amassed more than 100,000 troops near the Ukraine border in recent weeks, according to US intelligence. Satellite images also reveal the country has moved a number of fighter jets, armored ground units, attack helicopters, and other forces to strategic locations across the region. Western officials say the buildup is larger than that seen in 2014, when Russia invaded Ukraine and took control of the Crimean Peninsula. Analysts say it’s unclear whether Russia is posturing or planning significant action; Ukrainian officials worry Russia is looking for a pretext to invade the eastern Donbas region, which has a strong separatist movement. Moscow also plans to close parts of the Black Sea through October for military exercises (see map)—likely restricting Ukraine’s ports along the Sea of Azov. Separately, read about the Kremlin-backed Wagner Group, a private mercenary firm reportedly active in Ukraine. Déby Dies FightingChad’s President Idriss Déby died yesterday from injuries sustained during clashes with rebels in the northern part of the country over the weekend. While details are murky—army generals said only that he died from gunshot wounds—his death would mark a rare instance of a modern world leader dying in active combat while holding office. A French-trained fighter pilot, Déby assumed control of the central African country in 1990 after ousting his former ally (see timeline), Hissène Habré, in a successful coup. Déby’s death comes just days before the country’s election commission was expected to certify him as the winner of an April 11 election that experts allege was rife with fraud (Déby claimed almost 90% of the vote). The country’s parliament was dissolved on the news, with a curfew implemented and borders shut. Déby’s son, Mahamat Idriss Déby, will reportedly lead a transitional government with the promise of elections next year. 100% IN ON 0% APRGot bills? Are they multiplying? Credit card balance losing control? You better shape up. This card—highlighted by The Ascent—offers a 0% intro APR on balance transfers until almost 2023. That’s right, if approved you can chip away at credit card debt over 18 months, all while paying $0 in interest charges. Better yet, it has no annual fee, giving you the chance to get out of debt faster while paying less. It’s one of the longest 0% interest periods on the market. Apply today for a decision within two minutes; it’s electrifying! Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & Culture> Manchester United, Chelsea among six English clubs that reverse course and pull out of European Super League that was announced just three days ago (More) > Kate McKinnon tapped as Carole Baskin, John Cameron Mitchell cast as Joe Exotic in NBC’s “Joe Exotic” limited series (More) > Jim Steinman, legendary rock composer best known for “Bat Out of Hell” and “Total Eclipse of the Heart,” dies at 73 (More) | Former president of Hollywood Foreign Press Association Philip Berk expelled as member after alleged racist email (More) Science & TechnologyBrought to you by Lustre > Archaeologists conclude a mass Tyrannosaurus gravesite discovered in Utah suggests the predator may have been a pack animal, not a solitary hunter as previously believed (More) > Lack of sleep identified as a risk factor for elderly dementia; three-decade study shows less than six hours of consistent sleep in your 50s and 60s is linked to a 30% increased risk of dementia in your late 70s (More) > Two new neural network computing approaches allow researchers to solve families of partial differential equations—complex equations that describe real-life systems like the weather—in record time (More) From our partners: Find Amazon overwhelming? Here’s a free tool that does extensive product research for you—from reviews to prices—so you always get the best product at the best price. Start saving time and money. Get Lustre here for free. Business & Markets> US stock markets down (S&P 500 -0.7%, Dow -0.7%, Nasdaq -0.9%) driven by declines in travel and tech sectors (More) > Netflix shares slide more than 8% in after-hours trading after adding 4 million subscribers in Q1 versus Wall Street expectations of 6.2 million (More) > Venmo to roll out ability to hold, buy, and sell cryptocurrencies, in a move similar to parent company PayPal last year (More) Politics & World Affairs> European rollout of Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine to resume with warning label citing a very rare risk of blood clots; nine cases and one death have been possibly linked to the drug in the US, out of almost 7 million shots (More) | More than 51% of US adults have received one vaccine dose, 40% fully vaccinated (More) > Pakistan parliament debates whether to expel the French envoy from the country, a move pushed by Islamist factions angry over France’s allowance of caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad (More) > House rejects measure to censure Rep. Maxine Waters (D, CA-43) in party-line 216-210 vote; Waters sparked backlash with comments suggesting protesters should be “more confrontational” if Derek Chauvin was found not guilty (More) | See clip of original comments (More) | … and Judge Peter Cahill’s response to the comments (More) ERASE INTEREST UNTIL LATE 2022In partnership with The Ascent This card from The Ascent is an absolute no-brainer if you’re looking to eliminate your credit card debt. Combine 0% APR on balance transfers, 0% APR on purchases, and zero annual fee to make a card designed to help you pay off debt. If you have $10K of credit card debt, this card can help you save $1,863 in interest charges alone. It takes just two minutes to get a decision. Learn more and apply today! Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAVisualizing America’s varying population density. Harriet Tubman’s lost Maryland home has been found. Every country’s most popular superhero. This startup aims to delay menopause by 15 years. Water pollution remains Americans’ top environmental concern. Photo captures the Northern Lights above an erupting volcano. Will ASKA be the flying car that redefines urban living? Watch an Indian railroad worker save a child from a train. Clickbait: Because sometimes you just need photos of ducks that look like George Washington. Historybook: RIP American author Mark Twain (1910); HBD Queen Elizabeth II (1926); 100,000 students begin protests at Tiananmen Square (1989); RIP singer-songwriter Nina Simone (2003); RIP legendary musician Prince (2016). “Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear—not absence of fear.” – Mark Twain Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com. Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here! |
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
|
|
65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
|
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
|
72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
74.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
BlackListed News Updates |
- Company Sells Sex Robot ‘Clones’ Of Dead Partners Using 3D-Modeling Technology
- Derek Chauvin found guilty of all three charges for killing George Floyd
- Facebook Plans To Launch Stablecoin That Will Compete With Dollar Early Next Year
- Trudeau minister says internet censorship bill will make Canadians ‘safer’
- Bill Gates Criticized For Blocking The Equitable Distribution Of COVID Vaccines
Company Sells Sex Robot ‘Clones’ Of Dead Partners Using 3D-Modeling Technology
Posted: 19 Apr 2021 09:00 PM PDT For many people who have lost their significant others, sex dolls have provided one way to ease the pain of grief and loneliness. However, sex robot company Lux Botics is taking things one step further – by offering a clone of dead partners using state-of-the-art three-dimensional modeling. |
Derek Chauvin found guilty of all three charges for killing George Floyd
Posted: 19 Apr 2021 09:00 PM PDT The former Minneapolis Police officer who kneeled on George Floyd’s neck for over 9 minutes last year was found guilty Tuesday of all three charges against him in one of the most consequential trials of the Black Lives Matter era. |
Facebook Plans To Launch Stablecoin That Will Compete With Dollar Early Next Year
Posted: 19 Apr 2021 09:00 PM PDT A couple of days ago, Morgan Stanley warned that China’s new digital renminbi – the first “central bank digital currency” (or CBDC) – could cement its status as the next reserve currency. But as government and Wall Street continue their embrace of virtual currencies that, some say, threaten to blow up the industry status quo and eliminate the need for banks, corporations are also striving to create the stablecoin of the future, challenging governments’ long-held monopoly on money. |
Trudeau minister says internet censorship bill will make Canadians ‘safer’
Posted: 19 Apr 2021 09:00 PM PDT Guilbeault revealed that the legislation being tabled is the first step in creating a “safer environment for all people online and not just for a handful,” regulating hurtful content beyond what is already covered by the Criminal Code, according to Blacklock’s Reporter. |
Bill Gates Criticized For Blocking The Equitable Distribution Of COVID Vaccines
Posted: 19 Apr 2021 09:00 PM PDT Nearly 1 billion COVID vaccination shots have been distributed around the world, but in more than 120 countries, not a single dose has been received, much less administered. And as we explained recently, one man is to overwhelmingly to blame for this sorry state of affairs: Microsoft founder Bill Gates. |
You are subscribed to email updates from BlackListed News. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. |
Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Hello! Every Wednesday, our internet culture staff discusses the world of streaming entertainment. In today’s Insider:
NOW STREAMING It’s Taurus season: Here’s what to stream It’s now officially Taurus season, which always kicks off on 4/20, and that’s definitely not a coincidence.
There are core Taurus values—sleep, comfort, food, stability, sensuality—but we also enjoy a sensory experience, as evidenced by this photo of Grace Jones‘ dressing room rider, which calls for oysters on ice (unshucked), sashimi and sushi, fresh towels, a sofa, and several vintage red and white wines.
In honor of the season, here are some appropriate streaming recommendations that feature Taurus celebs:
Senior Writer
SPONSORED Why masking up matters
Wearing a mask in your everyday life may seem like a new and unwelcome intrusion, but they’ve been around for a long time. Face coverings have been recommended for protection during respiratory pandemics since the 14th century. Mask wearers were onto something way back then—and they didn’t even have Twitter to start a #MaskUp movement! In honor of those pioneers of safe health practices, we’ve built a comprehensive, science-driven database that’s just as easy to understand as it is to share.
REVIEWS Hulu’s ‘Sasquatch’ turns into an investigation of memory “This place is fucked up beyond belief,” David Holthouse says in the final episode of Sasquatch, assessing an area and a story that has apparently haunted him for decades.
In the new true-crime docuseries, produced by Jay and Mark Duplass and directed by Joshua Rofé (Lorena), investigative reporter David Holthouse attempts to reconstruct a story he overheard in 1993, when he was working at a pot farm in Northern California: Three cannabis farmers were murdered on Spy Rock Road and a suspect was never caught, but there are rumors that a Sasquatch was responsible.
Sasquatch tries to excavate facts from fuzzy memories and overgrown rumors. But, as Holthouse says in the final episode, when he suggests he might have misinterpreted the story from the very beginning: “Memory is tricky.” —A.S.
CULTURAL OBSESSIONS Why Captain America’s shield is the MCU’s best MacGuffin Marvel loves MacGuffin-based storytelling. A significant portion of the MCU revolves around the Infinity Stones, a series of props that rarely hold much emotional weight. Of course, MacGuffins don’t have to be interesting in themselves. That’s kind of the point. But right now, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier is making a compelling case in favor of Captain America’s shield. That glorified frisbee is far more compelling than some of the apocalyptic superweapons we see elsewhere in the MCU.
In a practical sense, the shield is only valuable as a chunk of vibranium. Its real power is symbolic. The U.S. government could probably manufacture a decent replica, and anyone could independently declare themselves to be the new Captain America. But Sam, Bucky, and John Walker all care deeply about Captain America’s legacy, so for them, only the real deal will do. They’re actually more invested in that shield than its original owner, Steve Rogers. Staff Writer
BTW Copyright © 2021 The Daily Dot, All rights reserved.
Don’t want to hear from us anymore? We understand, but it won’t be the same without you! Click here to unsubscribe To view in your browser, click here. |
77.) HEADLINE USA
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
78.) NATURAL NEWS
79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) THE INTERCEPT
|
MOST READ |
Derek Chauvin Found Guilty of Murdering George FloydRobert MackeyThe formal jury of Chauvin’s peers assembled in court reached the same verdict as the dozen bystanders who watched him murder Floyd.
|
Wall Street’s Cooked Books Fueled the Financial Crisis in 2008. It’s Happening Again.Jon Schwarz, Ryan GrimThis time, the issue is not a bubble in the housing market but rather apparent widespread inflation of the value of commercial businesses, on which loans are based.
|
Protecting freedom of the press has never been more important. Be the next person to support The Intercept’s independent journalism by becoming a member today.Top Stories
|
Chemical Industry Lobbyist in Trump EPA Suppressed Evidence of Cancer RiskSharon LernerThe EPA inspector general found that Bill Wehrum, who ran the agency’s office of Air and Radiation, buried data about cancer risks from ethylene oxide pollution.
|
As Biden Continues Trump’s War on Asylum, Danger Mounts in the Deadly Sonoran DesertRyan DevereauxDangerous nighttime expulsions are surging in Northern Mexico while organized crime and government security forces prey on stranded asylum-seekers.
|
Elizabeth Warren Suggests U.S. Explore Conditional Aid to IsraelAkela LacyIn a speech, the Massachusetts senator proposed the restriction of military aid from use in occupied Palestine.
|
Progressive Groups Fight AT&T and T-Mobile’s New Texting RulesRachel M. CohenCritics say the rules, known as “10DLC,” will hamper their organizing and worsen private tech overreach.
|
Local Cops Said Pipeline Company Had Influence Over Government AppointmentAlleen BrownSheriffs in Minnesota worried about who would oversee an escrow account, funded by pipeline giant Enbridge, to reimburse the costs of policing protests.
|
Podcasts
|
The New Mexico SpringDeconstructedHow progressives took power in the state’s Democratic Party.
|
First Look Media Works is a 501(c)(3) charitable organization (tax ID number 80-0951255).
The Intercept’s mailing address is: The Intercept is an award-winning nonprofit news organization dedicated to holding the powerful accountable through fearless, adversarial journalism. Our in-depth investigations and unflinching analysis focus on surveillance, war, corruption, the environment, technology, criminal justice, the media and more. Email is an important way for us to communicate with The Intercept’s readers, but if you’d like to stop hearing from us, click here to unsubscribe or update your subscription preferences. Become a member of The Intercept today and support our independent journalism.
|
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) SEAN HANNITY
|
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
|
83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) AMERICAN CONSEQUENCES
85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
News From Up Coming Special House Elections In LA, TX, NM, And OH No images? Click here You are receiving this newsletter because you signed up for it along with free access to our election night results. DDHQ Election Round Up
Campaign Announcements
LA-2: Special Election Set to Be Latest Battle for the Soul of the Democratic PartyBy Nick Field Many will say that the most anticipated event of this coming weekend is the Oscars. If you’re reading this, however, odds are you believe that the most anticipated event really is the Louisiana 2nd Congressional District special election. On Saturday, the 2nd district will be the latest battleground in the fight between the establishment and insurgent wings of the Democratic Party. The 2nd is the sole Democratic district in Louisiana, with about a 62% Black population, running from the capital city of Baton Rouge down to New Orleans. The seat in question was previously held by Cedric Richmond, an early supporter of Joe Biden’s 2020 presidential campaign who scored a job as a Senior Advisor to the President and Director of the Office of Public Liaison. Richmond’s promotion led to a March 20th special election under Louisiana’s unique ‘Jungle Primary’ rules. Instead of traditional party primaries followed by a general election, all candidates are placed on the ballot and the one who wins a majority is declared the victor. If no one reaches that threshold, the top two finishers advance to a run-off. The latter scenario occurred last month when State Sen. Troy Carter received 36.8% of the vote, while State Sen. Karen Carter Peterson secured 22.9%. Carter is the preferred candidate of Richmond, the Times-Picayune and the AFL-CIO, whereas Peterson is backed by Stacey Abrams, EMILY’s List and Our Revolution. These endorsements give the impression that Carter is running as an insider and Peterson an outsider, and both contenders are eagerly embracing that dynamic. For instance, Carter pitches himself in one ad as someone who “will get things done” through his connections with Richmond and the Biden Administration. Peterson, on the other hand, pledges in her announcement video that she’s “never been afraid to shake things up to get results.” While Carter’s high-profile endorsements and March 20th plurality suggest he is the front-runner, Peterson has her own unique advantages. She’s already run in this district once before, when in 2006 she unsuccessfully sought to unseat former Congressman William Jefferson (the man who rather famously hid $90K in his freezer). She’s also no stranger to party politics, after all she chaired the state party from 2012 to 2020. Peterson’s strongest asset, though, is the support of Gary Chambers Jr., who finished in third place back in March with 21.3%. Chambers ran to the left as well in the primary, securing the support of several progressive activists. Additionally, while Carter and Peterson both represent parts of New Orleans, Chambers is from Baton Rouge. All these factors combined arguably gives her a clearer path to 50% than Carter. If Peterson does in fact prevail it will be a significant feat for progressives. Many of their most notable recent victories occurred when long-time white incumbents fell out-of-touch with their increasingly diverse districts. Since this contest is between two well-known Black officials, however, a Peterson win would be a clear ideological victory rather than a demographic one. Conversely, a Carter triumph would supply the Biden Administration with a reliable vote and boost Richmond’s standing in Washington. More Races to Come Just a week after LA-2, another special House election will be held in Texas’ 6th Congressional District. This race is to replace Ron Wright, who passed away in February of complications from COVID-19. TX-6 consists of a slice of Fort Worth and some surrounding suburbs. Dozens of candidates are running in a similar primary system to LA-2, where the top finishers advance to the run-off regardless of party. Further down the line there is another special contest set for June 1st in New Mexico’s 1st Congressional District. This Albuquerque-based district was represented by Deb Haaland until she left to become the Secretary of the Interior. Democratic nominee State Rep. Melanie Stansbury starts out as the favorite over Republican nominee State Sen. Mark Moores in this D+9 seat. Finally, there’s a special election set for the regular Election Day on November 2nd in Ohio’s 11th Congressional District. The Cleveland-based seat opened up after Marcia Fudge was picked to be Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. Several candidates are competing in the August 3rd primaries.
Nick Field (@nick_field90) is a contributor to Decision Desk HQ. |
88.) DIGG
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Twitter • Facebook • Tumblr • YouTube Advertise on Digg digg.com • Unsubscribe© 2020 Digg Holdings 18 Shipyard Drive, Hingham, MA 02043 |
89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – INSIDER’S EDITION
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
|
92.) DISRN
|
93.) ABSOLUTE NEWS
94.) JUDICIAL WATCH
95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
96.) JAMIE DUPREE
97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
|
99.) MARK LEVIN
April 20, 2021
On Tuesday’s Mark Levin Show, Derek Chauvin was found guilty on all counts, his actions were sickening, this is not appropriate or normal police conduct. Rep. Maxine Waters and President Biden have not been held accountable for their incendiary comments. This case is not indicative of all police interactions in inner cities. The police aren’t killing unarmed people all over the inner city — people in the inner city are killing people in the inner city. The majority of Americans wanted justice in this case. Most agreed that George Floyd was murdered so what were the riots for? No one believed that Chauvin was going to walk, what happened was wrong and justice has been done. Yet, Minnesota Attorney General, Keith Ellison, says that this verdict wasn’t justice, it was solely accountability. Later, Chief James Craig of the Detroit Police Department calls in to reject what Rep. Rashida Tlaib said about abolishing all police. Chief Craig shared that his officers have been under attack more than ever. He added that he appreciated the support he receives for his police work from the majority of people he’s encountered across the country.
THIS IS FROM:
The Post Millennial
Derek Chauvin found guilty on all counts
Bongino
Detroit Police Chief Demands Rashida Tlaib Resign After Her “Reckless” Comments About Cops
Breitbart
Dershowitz: Derek Chauvin Conviction Should Be Reversed on Appeal
The Post Millennial
CNN defends Maxine Waters incitement of violence against police
Right Scoop
BLM activist calls for more looting because America owes black people
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Scott Olson
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
|