Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday May 20, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
May 20 2021
Good morning from Washington, where President Biden’s “infrastructure” bill would advance California climate craziness. A Kansas lawmaker explains. Why are Arizona Republicans brawling over one county’s presidential election results? Fred Lucas has some answers. On the podcast, a Florida congresswoman recalls horror stories at the southern border. Plus: “Problematic Women” tracks the fight to keep biological males out of women’s sports; a GOP budget aims to right America’s ship; and CNN airs its bias on riots. On this date in 1996, the Supreme Court strikes down, in a 6-3 decision, an amendment to the Colorado Constitution preventing any jurisdiction in the state from acting to protect the rights of gays and lesbians.
“I really didn’t know what to expect. I just know that males are much faster than females. So, how is this going to be fair?” Mary Kate Marshall recalls of anticipating her first race against a male.
Arizona Republicans at the state level square off against counterparts at the county level over an election audit, even as leaders on both sides agree that Joe Biden defeated Donald Trump in the state.
If House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez continue to have their way, families across the U.S. will pay more in taxes so that millionaires in California can write off a new Tesla.
Compared to current law, the Republican Study Committee budget would reduce total spending $14.4 trillion over the next decade, balancing the budget in five years.
On the same night that Fareed Zakaria was decrying Capitol rioters, CNN aired an episode of “United Shades of America” that celebrated the leftist protesters of Portland.
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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
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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Texas Gov. Abbott Signs One of Most Life-Affirming Abortion Laws in the Country
Texas Tribune: Gov. Greg Abbott signed into law Wednesday a measure that would prohibit in Texas abortions as early as six weeks—before some women know they are pregnant and open the door for almost any private citizen to sue abortion providers and others (Texas Tribune). From USA Today: The restriction puts Texas at the vanguard among states challenging the boundaries of Roe v. Wade, the 1973 landmark Supreme Court case that established a woman’s legal right to an abortion (USA Today). From Richard Dawkins: In 2014, Dawkins commented it would be immoral to bring a child with down syndrome into the world (Twitter). National Review: When eliminating suffering because society’s first priority — instead of protecting innocent human life—it very easily metastasizes into eliminating the sufferer. And the suffering need not even be that of the person eliminated, but of family or society. Utilitarianism always leads to justifying killing (National Review).
2.
As Rocket Fire Continues, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Leads Effort to Undermine U.S Support of Israel
New York Post: A group of House Democrats led by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez introduced a resolution Wednesday to halt the Biden-approved sale of $735 million in weapons to Israel. “Approving this sale now, while failing to even try to use it as leverage for a ceasefire, sends a clear message to the world — the U.S. is not interested in peace, and does not care about the human rights and lives of Palestinians,” Tlaib argued in a statement released at the same time (New York Post). Katie Pavlich: Democrat Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is dishonestly accusing Israel of purposely targeting civilians in Gaza through military strikes on schools, hospitals and media outlets (Townhall.com). The latest attacks from AOC and the left is calling Israel an apartheid state (Jerusalem Post). From Nikki Haley: … The media wasn’t targeted, a terrorist organization was (Twitter).
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3.
George W. Bush: Effort of Hamas and Iran Is to “Break Up” Abraham Accords
Speaking to Fox News: “I think it’s very difficult at this stage,” Bush said. “I wish, obviously, all of us should hope there’s not violence, but what I think you’re seeing playing out is Iranian influence targeted toward Israel, and trying to break up alliances that were formed in the previous administration called the Abraham Accords.” He went on to call Iran “dangerous” for stability. “I think the best approach with regard to Iran is to understand that their influence is dangerous for world peace, that they are very much involved with extremist movements in Lebanon and Syria and Yemen, and they are aiming to spread their influence” (Fox News).
4.
BLM Stands With Palestine in Attacking Israel
Fox News: The leading Black Lives Matter organization declared “solidarity with Palestinians” Monday, a week after Hamas terrorists in Gaza began firing a relentless barrage of rockets into Israel, indiscriminately shelling civilian targets as well as dropping some missiles short and blowing up buildings within its territory (Fox News). From Black Lives Matter: We are a movement committed to ending settler colonialism in all forms and will continue to advocate for Palestinian liberation (Twitter). From New York Post: The message was quickly picked up by the controversial BDS movement, which has for years called for an economic embargo of Israel (New York Post).
5.
California Church Wins in Lawsuit Settlement, Freeing Houses of Worship
The settlement is a First Amendment victory for California churches—allowing them to worship without fear of further governmental interference (PasadenaNow). The lawsuit comes from the California church Harvest Rock. LifeSite News: Once entered by the District Court, this full settlement will be the first state-wide permanent injunction in the country against COVID restrictions on churches and places of worship. Under the agreed state-wide permanent injunction, all California churches may hold worship without discriminatory restrictions (LifeSite). The governor has been ordered to pay $1.3 million in legal fees. If only the $1.3 million could come from the Newsom personal estate.
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6.
American Medical Association Pushing Critical Race Theory on Medical Profession
Daily Wire: The AMA, the nation’s largest professional association of physicians, published its “Organizational Strategic Plan to Embed Racial Justice and Advance Health Equity” last week. The 86-page document outlines a three-year plan to implement “anti-racist” initiatives, including pushing “critical race theory” specifically in the medical community. The plan announces a five-pronged approach to embracing equity. The AMA makes a commitment to “embed racial and social justice throughout” the organization’s policies and practices, and promises to “build alliances and share power with historically marginalized minoritized physicians” (Daily Wire). The AMA: With the input of many both inside and outside of AMA, this strategic plan serves as a three-year roadmap to plant the initial seeds for action and accountability to embed racial justice and advance health equity for years to come (The AMA).
7.
Seattle Police Department Down 20 Percent
CBS: The Seattle Police Department is struggling under the backlash of recent police reforms. The state of Washington has just enacted a dozen police reform laws, following nearly a year of protests over police brutality. More than $840 million were cut from U.S. police budgets in 2020. This has caused a shortage of police in Seattle. The police chief tells CBS News that 260 officers, which is almost 20 percent of the force, have left in the past year and a half (CBS). From Police Tribune: “Morale is not good, and that’s because we don’t have the political support from our elected officials,” Seattle Police Officers Guild President Mike Solan stated. “And as we’re seeing officers flee this area, it’s a direct result of that lack of political support” (Police Tribune).
8.
Corporations Start to See Pushback From Embrace of Left-Wing Political Activism
An ad campaign has launched this week: Each ad treats the companies like a political candidate would an opponent, hitting the company’s reputation and contrasting its high-minded social-justice rhetoric with its other behavior. Nike embraced Colin Kaepernick, the woke former quarterback, one ad says, but “rather than hiring Americans, Nike chose China.” The ad mentions CEO John Donahoe and claims the company produced shoes in a factory and regions suspected of using forced Uyghur labor (WSJ).
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9.
Commencement Season Is on Us: A Call to Courage
Ryan Anderson at Trinity Law School in Orange County, California: Sometimes doing the right thing—doing the reasonable thing—is costly. We fear it, for grave evils stand in our way. Courage is the virtue that helps us stay the course. C.S. Lewis taught that courage is the form of all the virtues. He explains that “courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point” (PublicDiscourse).
10.
Your Auto Correct May Have Just Become More Woke
If you use Google Docs: Google Docs will now make more “inclusive” suggestions and edits in its predictive text algorithm. The technology will now correct gendered words such as “mailman” to “mail carrier,” or “chairman” to “chairperson….” Product leaders told Reuters that the technology had to be changed to avoid offending users (DailyWire).
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Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 5.20.21
Don’t miss your first look at stories driving today’s agenda in Florida politics.
As expected, the Seminole Gaming Compact passed the House Wednesday, one day after getting the OK from the Senate.
The Legislature’s work is done.
That was the easy part.
The historic 30-year deal between Florida and the Seminole Tribe now heads to the U.S. Department of Interior’s Office of Indian Gaming, which must also sign off before it goes into effect.
While the Compact moves along to D.C., probably the biggest question will be how the feds will respond to a provision allowing the Tribe to offer sports betting across the state with wagers handled by servers located on Tribal land.
These deals, otherwise known as “hub and spoke,” are challenging, in part because the feds enacted the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act more than three decades ago — in 1988.
It might as well have been the ice age, technologically speaking.
Those days, we measured connection speeds (dial-up!) in bauds rather than gigabits.
The Tribe is confident the deal will win approval, but a few are not so sure.
And even if it does get thumbs-up from the feds, the Compact is almost certain to face legal challenges over whether it runs counter to the 2018 constitutional amendment requiring any expansion of gaming to go before voters. The group behind the amendment, No Casinos, is already preparing to file a challenge.
“This fight is just the beginning,” No Casinos President John Sowinski said Wednesday.
We will see.
The Seminole Compact may be D.C.-bound, but the pushback has just begun. Image via AP.
Gaming experts and lawmakers — including many of those who voted for the Compact — concede that No Casinos makes a compelling case. Rep. Randy Fine, a former casino executive and chair of the House Select Committee on Gaming, said as much.
“Me personally,” Fine said, “I don’t think it’s going to survive.”
So, when will Floridians get to place their first bets? Odds are, it may be a little while.
Situational awareness
—@RepValDemings: The January 6th Commission would be bipartisan and tasked solely with seeking and reporting the truth. Members of Congress who oppose it are engaged in a cover-up on the insurrection against our republic
—@jacobogles: It appears the only Florida members to vote in favor of the commission were @RepCarlos (Giménez) and @RepMariaSalazar. All Dems supported it. All other #FlaPol GOP members were opposed.
—@RepDarrenSoto: We @NRDems look forward to reviewing this proposed Fla gaming deal along with @SecDebHaaland. It requires @Interior approval to go forward. Shady side deals and unfair treatment of local tribes will be given particular scrutiny.
Tweet, tweet:
—@JasonFischerFL: I support Gov. @RonDeSantisFL’s Compact and I applaud him & our legislative leadership for being bold on solving this issue, which has lingered for years.
—@AnnaForFlorida: I voted against the Gambling Compact because we should let the voters decide on the expansion of gaming — something that is made clear in our State Constitution! There was also no commitment to how new gambling money would be spent. That’s super concerning to me.
—@micheleforfl: So proud of my friend + colleague and a person I have the utmost respect for, @RamonAlexander for becoming leader designate. This caucus is in good hands!
—@FentriceForFL: It is an honor to be elected by my colleagues as the first Black woman to lead @FLHouseDems. We have a big task ahead of us, but I’m confident that our caucus will reach new heights to expand our team and deliver substantive policy reforms for the betterment of Florida.
—@fineout: Rep. @VoteRandyFine — who was in charge of the committee that reviewed deal with Seminole Tribe — is voting yes, but says he personally doesn’t think the sports betting portion will survive a legal challenge. But say other parts of deal will still guarantee $ to state
—@MaryEllenKlas: @WALLACHLEGAL, a gambling consultant who has studied Florida’s laws, argues that the sports betting model will likely be rejected by the courts or federal regulators, and rather than eliminate sports betting, it will give the Tribe a monopoly over the games.
—@TroyKinsey: See you in court: on the heels of the FL Legislature’s ratification today of @GovRonDeSantis’ gaming compact with the Seminoles, @NoCasinos President John Sowinski says, “This fight is just beginning. We are committed to ensuring that the will of the people … will be respected.”
Days until
‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 8; Disaster Preparedness Sales Tax Holiday begins — 8; Memorial Day — 11; Florida TaxWatch Spring Meeting and PLA Awards — 14; ‘Loki’ premieres on Disney+ — 22; Father’s Day — 31; F9 premieres in the U.S. — 36; ‘Tax Freedom Holiday’ begins — 42; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 43; 4th of July — 45; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 50; MLB All-Star Game — 54; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 64; second season of ‘Ted Lasso’ premieres on Apple+ — 64; the NBA Draft — 70; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 72; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 78; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 96; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 106; NFL regular season begins — 112; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 117; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 127; ‘Dune’ premieres — 134; MLB regular season ends — 136; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 142; World Series Game 1 — 159; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 166; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 166; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 169; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 190; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 204; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 211; NFL season ends — 234; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 236; NFL playoffs begin — 240; Super Bowl LVI — 269; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 309; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 351; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 414; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 505; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 540.
Top story
“Florida OKs sports betting operated by Seminole Tribe” via Brendan Farrington and Bobby Caina Calvan of The Associated Press — The House voted 97-17 to approve a gambling compact that DeSantis and the Seminole Tribe signed last month. The Senate approved it Tuesday. It still needs to be approved by the U.S. Department of the Interior, which oversees tribal gambling operations, and even lawmakers supporting the deal expect legal challenges. The approval is a victory for DeSantis. His predecessor, now Sen. Rick Scott, signed a deal with the Seminole Tribe in 2015 to allow craps and roulette, but it never received legislative approval. Under the agreement, the Seminoles could begin sports betting on Oct. 15 and sports wagering at horse tracks, jai alai frontons, and former dog tracks for a share of the income. Online sports betting operated by the Tribe also would be allowed.
Randy Fine joined most of his House colleagues to approve the Seminole Compact overwhelmingly. Image via AP.
“‘People are going to sue’: Gaming Compact lawsuits expected” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — The Gaming Compact now awaits DeSantis’ signature before it heads from Tallahassee to Washington, where the U.S. Department of the Interior has 45 days to sign off on the agreement under the federal Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. But the federal government isn’t the only hurdle the Compact will face. Under a 2018 constitutional amendment, any expansion of gambling in the state requires a voter referendum. Opponents say Floridians should vote on the mobile sports betting component. Even Fine is uncertain about the viability of the mobile sports betting component.
“No Casinos hints at challenge after Gaming Compact’s passage” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — Shortly after both chambers of the Legislature approved an agreement to make sweeping changes to the state of gambling in Florida Wednesday, a group opposed to the changes is once again hinting at a legal challenge. “This fight is just the beginning. We are committed to ensuring that the will of the people, who voted by a remarkable 72% landslide to give Florida voters the exclusive right to authorize casino gambling in our state, will be respected,” Sowinski said in a written statement, referring to a constitutional amendment passed in 2018 by 71% of Florida voters that states any expansion of gambling in the state requires a voter referendum.
“State gaming commission proposal headed to Governor’s desk” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The bill (SB 4A), a major component of the gambling expansion agreement between the state and Seminole Tribe, would establish the Florida Gaming Control Commission and crown it Florida’s lead law enforcement agency on gambling. Under the measure, now headed to DeSantis, a five-member committee — which must include an experienced lawyer, accountant, and law enforcement member — would have criminal justice authority over gaming laws and pari-mutuel institutions such as card rooms and horse racing. Under the bill, members would be appointed to four-year terms by the Governor pending confirmation by the Senate. According to a staff analysis, members would make $136,000 per year, an amount based on the salaries of other public service commissions.
“Charity-based bingo comes out a winner, removed from new gambling regulations” via Laura Cassels of the Florida Phoenix — Northwest Florida bingo players and others around the state are safe from legislative efforts to change the game they love; thanks to State Sen. George Gainer. The Panama City Republican made clear in the Special Session that bingo, largely a social activity involving small bets that mostly go to charities, should be off-limits. And so it is. The Senate tabled its bingo legislation, which would have elevated the game to pari-mutuel facilities using electronic “card minders,” and the House never showed any interest in the matter. “I represent northwest Florida, and we don’t care how much roulette or blackjack you play, but don’t mess with bingo,” Gainer previously warned.
Special Session
“Chris Sprowls: ‘Nobody has asked me if they could be on the Gaming Commission’” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — House Speaker Sprowls refuted speculation that nepotism motivated the removal of a provision that would’ve delayed the pathway for an outgoing public official to join the state’s soon-to-come gaming commission. The proposal to create a gaming commission (SB 4A) — passed Wednesday in the House — is a major component of the state’s newly-minted gambling expansion agreement with the Seminole Tribe. Speculation around the Commission began Tuesday after Republican Sen. Travis Hutson, the bill sponsor, introduced an amendment that removes language barring elected officials from serving on the Commission for at least two years after leaving office. Speaking Wednesday, Sprowls told reporters neither he nor staff spoke with legislators about interest in joining the Commission.
Will Chris Sprowls join the Florida Gambling Commission? He hasn’t been asked — yet. Image via AP.
“Last-ditch effort fails to save harness racing at Pompano Park” via Skyler Swisher of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A last-ditch effort to save harness horse racing at Pompano Park came up short on Wednesday, meaning the likely end of a decades-old tradition at Florida’s last remaining track. Rep. Dan Daley led the charge to block a provision that allows Isle Casino Pompano Park to drop live racing and continue to offer other slots and poker. With a massive redevelopment project planned, the Isle Casino Pompano Park, which Caesars Entertainment owns, would have little incentive to preserve harness racing, Daley said. “The horsemen have no leverage,” said Daley, whose family is active in harness racing. “The property could basically say, ‘Hey horsemen, this will be your last racing season. Thanks so much. See you later.’”
“Associated Industries of Florida lauds Compact’s ratification” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — AIF Senior Vice President of State and Federal Affairs Brewster Bevis released a statement following the House’s vote to approve the Compact. “On behalf of AIF and our members, I commend Gov. Ron DeSantis for his leadership on this issue and Senate President Wilton Simpson and House Speaker Sprowls for their decisive action in reconvening the legislature and prioritizing the ratification of this compact that will benefit our state,” Bevis said. “It is truly a great day in the state of Florida as our leaders continue to drive our economy forward with their bold, action-oriented leadership.” AIF represents business interests in Florida. The association was created in 1920 to foster an economic climate to grow and develop industry and business in the state.
Dateline Tally
“Ron DeSantis: Army Corps ‘must do better’ to prevent Lake O discharges to St. Lucie river” via Max Chesnes of TC Palm — As the threat of blue-green algae looms on Lake Okeechobee, DeSantis and Rep. Brian Mast are pressuring the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, tasked with determining when, for where and how much lake water is sent east and west to coastal estuaries. In a letter sent Monday to Corps leadership in Washington D.C., DeSantis told the agency it “must do better” to manage the lake and prevent releases carrying potentially toxic cyanobacteria to the Caloosahatchee and St. Lucie Rivers.
Ron DeSantis calls on the Army Corps of Engineers to do a better job on Lake O discharges.
“House Democrats elect Ramon Alexander and Fentrice Driskell as future Leaders” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — Tampa Rep. Driskell was unanimously elected to lead House Democrats for the 2024-2026 term. Driskell, a lawyer, will be the first Black woman to lead the Caucus. House Democrats also voted Rep. Alexander to lead the Caucus in the absence of Rep. Ben Diamond, who was slated to lead the lower chamber Democrats for the 2022-2023 term but is leaving his state position to run for a congressional seat vacated by Charlie Crist, who is running for Governor. Driskell is already serving as the House Democratic Caucus Policy Chair for the 2020-22 term. Alexander is serving as the House Democratic Caucus Whip for the 2020-22 term.
“Jane Castor pans Florida’s transgender sports ban as ‘senseless’” via Mitch Perry of Spectrum News — The Tampa Mayor blasted the Florida Legislature’s recently passed bill that bans transgender athletes from women’s and girls’ sports. “I think it’s completely unnecessary and, frankly, it’s mean-spirited,” said the Mayor, an all-state basketball and volleyball player at the University of Tampa in the early 1980s. The measure — known as the Fairness in Women’s Sports Act — passed largely along party lines in the legislature last month. It had been postponed at one point in the Florida Senate after the NCAA Board of Governors released a statement saying that it would only hold such events at locations “free of discrimination.”
Lobby regs
“Lobbying compensation: Capital City Consulting earns more than $4M in Q1” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Capital City Consulting earned more than $4 million during the first quarter, according to newly filed compensation reports. The firm represented nearly 200 clients during the first three months of the year, including 178 in the Legislature, where they netted an estimated $2.17 million. In the executive branch, Capital City Consulting represented 195 clients, earning an estimated $1.91 million. At the top end, the firm could have earned $5.75 million, $2.97 million in the Legislature, and $2.78 million in the executive branch. CCC’s legislative lobbying report included two clients that paid more than $50,000 apiece for the quarter: Florida Power & Light Company and the Florida Institute of Technology.
“Lobbying compensation: Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney collects $439K in Q1” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — The eight-person lobbying team at Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney earned an estimated $439,000 in the first quarter, new compensation reports show. Firm lobbyists Brett Bacot, Marnie George, Mike Grissom, Mike Harrell, Mark Kruse, Jim Magill, Kimberly McGlynn, and Crystal Stickle represented more than 40 clients last quarter, pulling in $259,000 in the Legislature and another $180,000 in the executive branch. Based on overall ranges, the firm earned no less than $350,000 and may have earned as much as $620,000. The Q1 report is a step up from the firm’s reports in the second half of 2020. In Q3, for example, the firm collected an estimated $350,000 in fees.
“Lobbying compensation: Hopping Green & Sams tallies $435K in first quarter” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — The lobbying team at Hopping Green & Sams earned an estimated $435,000 last quarter. The contracts added up to an estimated $315,000 in legislative lobbying pay and another $120,000 in executive branch earnings. The firm’s legislative compensation report was topped by Mosaic Fertilizer, which paid $35,000 to retain the firm last quarter. Three $25,000 clients followed — American Resort Development Association, Florida Electric Power Coordinating Group and SAS Institute. If each of Hopping Green & Sams’ clients paid the maximum amount in their reported range, the firm would have earned $580,000 last quarter.
“Personnel note: GrayRobinson taps Scott Cole to lead higher ed practice” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Former University of Central Florida Vice President and General Counsel Cole has joined GrayRobinson as shareholder and chair of the law firm’s higher education practice. “Having the honor of working with UCF since its inception, GrayRobinson is proud to welcome one of its very own, Scott Cole, to our firm,” GrayRobinson President and CEO Dean Cannon said. “Scott is highly regarded within the education community, and his skill set and experience at the university level will be invaluable to our clients.” Cole has a wealth of experience in policy development, personnel investigations, and student conduct issues ranging from sexual harassment to expulsion. Cole’s experience makes him well-equipped to advise on emerging issues facing presidents and governing boards of educational institutions.
Scott Cole gives GrayRobinson some big higher-ed chops. Image via UCF.
Statewide
“Hurricane Center ups Atlantic disturbance’s odds of formation to 40%” via Joe Mario Pedersen of the Orlando Sentinel — A nontropical low-pressure system is forecast to develop late Thursday afternoon northeast of Bermuda, according to the National Hurricane Center’s 2 p.m. forecast. The system has a 10% chance of developing into a tropical depression or storm in the next 48 hours and a 40% chance of doing so in the next five days. Should the May storm develop, it would form several days before the start of hurricane season June 1 and receive the name Ana. The NHC has not issued its preseason forecast at this time, but director Ken Graham said last week during a press meeting all signs are pointing to an active season.
“Ashley Moody, tax collectors team up to fight crime” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Attorney General Moody rolled out a new alliance with tax collectors. She addressed media in Jacksonville, where her remarks focused heavily on a statewide Crime Stoppers tip line (**TIPS) recently rolled out to replace 27 different numbers around the state. Moody, with tax collectors from around the region and the state, said the effort would allow “citizens in the state of Florida to help us stop crime. That includes everything from the opioid epidemic to human trafficking, and finally, any type of crime where someone might have information and wants to report that crime anonymously.” Tax collectors, Moody said, are natural resources in the fight against crime for Florida law enforcement.
Ashley Moody joins tax collectors to bust crime.
“How Florida’s school choice programs create good citizens” via John Legg in the Tampa Bay Times — 11 high-quality research studies have examined the impact of private school choice programs on core democratic values such as political tolerance and civic engagement. According to the meticulous research and advocacy group EdChoice, six found a positive impact, five found no impact, and none found a negative impact. To some, this is counterintuitive. Aren’t public schools the place where those values are instilled? How could students who choose private schools become more tolerant, more likely to volunteer for community service, more likely to better grasp basic knowledge about government and politics? I think this is the good that comes when people are afforded the dignity and respect that comes with the freedom to determine the educational destinies of their children.
“What should Florida kids learn about U.S. history? A rule is in the works.” via Jeffrey S. Solochek of the Tampa Bay Times — A new rule proposed by education commissioner Richard Corcoran would require Florida teachers to align their civics lessons to a traditional view of American history. The move won praise from Republicans but was blasted by critics who say it would prevent students from studying critical truths about the nation’s past. The rule would address a concern raised by DeSantis, who wants to make sure “critical race theory” — an approach to teaching the role of racism in U.S. society — isn’t used in public schools. The measure, now headed to the State Board of Education, says teachers “may not define American history as something other than the creation of a new nation based largely on universal principles stated in the Declaration of Independence.”
“Javier Manjarres ordered to pay $25K in defamation suit vs. Florida GOP official” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — Manjarres is taking another loss — this time in court — after a judge ordered him to pay $25,000 for violating a settlement agreement with Republican Party of Florida State Committeeman Richard DeNapoli. The newest judgment dates back to a 2014 defamation lawsuit DeNapoli filed against Manjarres after Manjarres published multiple articles alleging DeNapoli was lying about serving in the military. After wrangling in court for a few years, the case wrapped with a confidential settlement agreement in 2016. That should have been the end of it, but DeNapoli reopened the suit in 2018 and accused Manjarres of breaking the settlement agreement by continuing to attack DeNapoli on Twitter and in now-deleted posts to Manjarres’ website.
“Surge of New Yorkers relocating to Florida, new numbers show” via Matt Papaycik of WPTV — According to new data from the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, 33,565 New York residents got Florida driver’s licenses between September of last year and March of this year. That’s a 32% increase from the same period the year before. The picture-perfect views, waking up to palm trees and Florida’s loose restrictions during the pandemic are just a few reasons Nicole Rascionato decided to move to Palm Beach County from New York. “I feel free here compared to back at home where that’s not happening, at least not yet,” Rascionato said.
“Colonial Pipeline CEO tells why he paid hackers a $4.4 million ransom” via Collin Eaton of The Wall Street Journal — Joseph Blount, CEO of Colonial Pipeline, said he authorized the ransom payment of $4.4 million because executives were unsure how badly the cyberattack had breached its systems, and consequently, how long it would take to bring the pipeline back. Blount acknowledged publicly for the first time that the company had paid the ransom, saying it was an option he felt he had to exercise, given the stakes involved in a shutdown of such critical energy infrastructure. “I know that’s a highly controversial decision,” Blount said. “I didn’t make it lightly. I will admit that I wasn’t comfortable seeing money go out the door to people like this. … But it was the right thing to do for the country.”
Joseph Blount explains why Colonial had to pay up.
“Some Florida manatees still struggle with starvation after peak die-off” via Zachary T. Sampson of the Tampa Bay Times — Even as temperatures have warmed this spring and some Florida manatees have left the Indian River Lagoon, where many of them died this winter without enough food to eat, researchers are finding survivors up and down the coast struggling with prolonged effects of starvation. “This event is not over yet. We are still picking up occasional cases with the effects of starvation,” said Martine de Wit, a veterinarian in the state’s marine mammal pathology lab. “These animals started to eat, but their bodies could not resolve those effects of prolonged starvation.” As of late last week, 738 manatee deaths had been recorded this year, according to reports from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.
2022
“As Val Demings looks at Senate run, Aramis Ayala eyes her congressional seat” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — With Demings now clearly positioning herself for a 2022 U.S. Senate bid, Democrat Ayala may be swapping her ambition from the Senate to Demings’ Orlando-based House seat. Orlando’s former State Attorney put out a video earlier this month indicating she is exploring a Senate campaign. But that was before widespread reports this week that Demings is likely to run in that election. In a new statement released Wednesday, Ayala praises Demings and suggests Demings’ Florida’s 10th Congressional District will need “a progressive champion” who can build on Demings’ work. “I will be making an announcement soon — but one thing is clear: Floridians are yearning for bold ideas and a fresh start at every level of the ballot,” she added.
As Val Demings looks to move up, so does Aramis Ayala.
“Nikki Fried says weighing gubernatorial run ‘makes sense,’ but holds off on official announcement” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Fried is continuing to tease a 2022 gubernatorial run, as an expected official announcement is now less than two weeks away. Earlier this month, Fried released a hype video previewing a June 1 announcement, where many expect her to dive in officially. Fried again declined Wednesday to declare a candidacy many see as inevitable. But during a Forum Club of the Palm Beaches event, she did give credence to the idea that a run is in her future. “You’re going to have to wait for June 1 for that,” Fried answered coyly. “But certainly, as our only statewide elected Democrat, it makes sense for me to be talking about running for Governor.”
“Anna Eskamani backs Darden Rice in St. Pete Mayor’s race” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Rep. Eskamani is endorsing Rice for St. Petersburg Mayor. Eskamani, a progressive Democrat from Orlando, has been a leading voice in her caucus since her initial election in 2018. The Representative has become one of the most frequent voices heard on the House floor, usually questioning sponsors of GOP-led initiatives and making sharp critiques in closing debates. “I am proud to endorse Darden Rice for Mayor of St. Petersburg because she has been a passionate advocate for working people her entire career,” Eskamani said in a news release. Eskamani joins several organizations that have also announced support for Rice, including Equality Florida Action PAC, the LGBTQ Victory Fund and LPAC.
Darden Rice gets the backing of a rising Democrat star.
“Should Broward have an elected County Mayor? Voters may get a say next year.” via Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Broward voters may be allowed to decide next year whether they want an elected Mayor to lead the county. The idea of having an elected county Mayor has been debated for decades. Under the latest proposal, county commissioners could agree to let voters decide at the ballot in November 2022 if they want the position to exist. If voters were to approve it, the first mayoral election would be in 2024. The Mayor’s salary would be $220,000. The benefits and costs for the Mayor’s four support staff would cost about $700,000 a year. Under the latest proposal, the county administrator job still would exist, and that person would still be in charge of the day-to-day county operations.
Corona Florida
“COVID-19 in Florida: New infections below 3,000 for fourth day in a row” via Tiffini Thiessen of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida added 2,811 coronavirus cases Wednesday to bring the cumulative total to 2,299,596. With 44 more fatalities, 36,271 Florida residents are now dead. Cases and deaths continue to decline statewide. As of Wednesday’s report, the latest seven-day case count is 21,047, compared to 24,620 in the seven previous days. Resident fatalities are also down. The latest seven-day death toll is 389, compared to 404 in the seven days before that. Statewide, 9,749,726 people have received at least one vaccination shot, including 7,728,153 who have completed their shot regimen, whether it’s the two-dose Pfizer or Moderna option or the one-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine.
“Moody not backing down from CDC cruise suit” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Moody addressed ongoing litigation with the federal government on Wednesday, saying mediation would not affect the state’s position in its showdown with Washington over cruise sailing. The state sued the federal government to permit cruises earlier this year. Still, a federal judge ordered mediation Tuesday in the ongoing legal fight between the state’s chief legal officer and the Joe Biden administration, HHS and the CDC over the ongoing no-sail order. “We have been asked by the court to mediate. That’s not unusual. As a judge for over a decade, I have often referred parties to mediate. But that doesn’t mean we’re going to stop pursuing the mission of that suit and successfully allowing our cruises to operate,” Moody said.
Ashley Moody stands her ground on the lawsuit against the CDC over the cruise industry.
“Judge refers Florida’s cruise line suit against CDC to mediator” via David Lyons of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Cruise lines and their customers will have to wait to see if a neutral mediator can help the state of Florida and U.S. Government resolve their dispute over when and how idled cruise ships can start sailing again. Mediators are typically summoned in the hopes of coaxing both sides into settling their differences outside the court. In the cruise line dispute, U.S. District Judge Steven Merryday was required to name a mediator under local rules governing civil cases in the Middle District of Florida, said Robert Jarvis, a law professor at Nova Southeastern University. “The idea is to get cases out of the system as fast as possible,” Jarvis said. “In many cases, you don’t need a trial.”
“Realtor’s group challenges eviction moratorium” via The News Service of Florida — A major Florida real estate group is challenging a federal moratorium on evicting renters during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Florida Realtor’s group filed a lawsuit Monday in federal court in Tampa that described the moratorium imposed by the CDC as “an unprecedented and unlawful federal administrative order.” The lawsuit contends that the CDC overstepped its legal authority in imposing the moratorium, which is scheduled to expire June 30. Through a series of actions, federal and state officials moved to halt evictions last year as COVID-19 caused massive job losses, illnesses, and deaths. While Congress and DeSantis had taken earlier steps to halt evictions, the CDC issued an order in September that was extended through subsequent orders.
“Majority of Florida college football teams plan for full capacity this fall” via Mark Bergin for Florida Politics — The majority of Florida’s college football teams are planning to allow full fan capacity this fall at their stadiums. On Monday, the University of Florida announced it would start the 2021-2022 academic year on June 28, which also marks when the school will return to pre-pandemic operations. FSU is planning to allow 100% fan capacity at Doak Campbell Stadium, according to FSU senior associate communications director Derek Satterfield. Hard Rock Stadium officials have yet to announce fall plans, according to a University of Miami spokesperson. Several schools across the country have also announced plans to allow 100% capacity for the upcoming season after limiting attendance in 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Corona local
“Palm Beach County: The epitome of the COVID-19 vaccination struggle” via Cindy Krischer Goodman and Aric Chokey of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — In the national effort to get Americans vaccinated for COVID-19, Palm Beach County exemplifies the struggle. Areas of Palm Beach County with wealthy retiree populations are more vaccinated than those with low-income residents. The pockets where migrant workers live show little progress in getting even one dose into arms, while nearly everyone on the ritzy island of Palm Beach has had at least one dose of vaccine. Overall, 56% of people 16 or older in Palm Beach County are vaccinated for COVID-19 with one or more doses. In ZIP codes that include cities like West Palm Beach, Lake Worth, Riviera Beach and Greenacres with large Black or Hispanic populations, vaccination rates are in the 30% range.
“A Tamarac Commissioner’s church is under review over COVID-19 relief loan” via Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported last month that Tamarac Commissioner Marlon Bolton’s church received more than $36,000 in federal loans to meet payroll for 12 employees, but the state says it has no record of those workers. Under Florida law, employers must provide workers’ compensation insurance for their employees, but the state says the church provided no record of having the employees, as is required, and there is no record of the church requesting an exemption. After receiving a complaint, “the Department is conducting a workers’ compensation compliance review relative to the matter. No further details are available at this time,” said John O’Brien, spokesman for the Florida Department of Financial Services, in an email Wednesday.
Marlon Bolton’s church is raising eyebrows with its COVID-19 relief money.
“Downtown Orlando’s lunch crowd isn’t back to normal as office employees work from home” via Austin Fuller of the Orlando Sentinel — Some office workers might not return to the central business district anytime soon as companies continue to allow employees to work remotely, potentially stalling the recovery of lunchtime sales from the coronavirus pandemic. The office vacancy rate downtown was at 15.7% in the first quarter of this year, according to a report from real estate and investment management firm JLL. In April, Red Lobster CEO Kim Lopdrup said his company was looking to sublet up to 52,744 square feet of its 91,000-square-foot headquarters in downtown’s CNL Center Tower 1. The move came as more than 80% of employees said in surveys they would be willing to give up dedicated workspaces so they could work from home more than once per week.
Corona nation
“Anthony Fauci says the public is ‘misinterpreting’ the CDC’s latest mask guidance” via Michael Birnbaum, Katerina Ang, Jennifer Hassan, Lateshia Beachum and Reis Thebault of The Washington Post — “I think people are misinterpreting, thinking that this is a removal of a mask mandate for everyone. It’s not,” he told Axios. “It’s an assurance to those who are vaccinated that they can feel safe, be they outdoors or indoors.” Fauci emphasized that the health agency did not explicitly tell unvaccinated people to go without masks but instead communicated to vaccinated individuals that they will not get infected indoors or outdoors. “People either read them quickly or listen and hear half of it. They are feeling that we’re saying: ‘You don’t need the mask anymore.’ That’s not what the CDC said,” he said.
Anthony Fauci says people are misunderstanding the new CDC guidelines.
“COVID-19 booster shot will likely be needed within a year of vaccination, Fauci says” via Virginia Langmaid and Amir Vera of CNN — A booster vaccine for people who have already been vaccinated may be needed as soon as eight to 12 months after their second shot, according to Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla and Fauci. “We know that the vaccine durability of the efficacy lasts at least six months, and likely considerably more, but I think we will almost certainly require a booster sometime within a year or so after getting the primary,” Fauci said. According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data, roughly 47.9% of the U.S. population has received at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose as of early Wednesday. About 37.8% of the population is fully vaccinated.
“Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine can be stored in refrigerator for a month, U.S. says” via Reuters — The Food and Drug Administration authorized storage of Pfizer and German partner BioNTech’s COVID-19 vaccine at standard freezer temperatures for up to one month, to make the vaccine more widely available. Unopened, thawed vials of the vaccine can be stored in a refrigerator at 2 to 8 degrees Celsius up to a month, up from a previous maximum limit of five days. “This change should make this vaccine more widely available to the American public by facilitating the ability of vaccine providers, such as community doctors’ offices, to receive, store and administer the vaccine,” said Peter Marks, director of FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research.
Corona economics
“SEC distributes $23 million to UF, other member schools to offset losses due to pandemic” via the Orlando Sentinel — The SEC plans to infuse the Florida Gators, along with the league’s other 13 member schools, with $23 million each to offset massive financial losses sustained during the COVID-19 pandemic. In the case of the Gators, a source said, the pandemic’s price tag during the 2020-21 fiscal year is expected to be around $60 million in lost revenues during the fall. The SEC announced Wednesday that the league is financing the $322 million distribution through future earnings on a lucrative media-rights deal with ESPN that begins in 2024. UF’s financial struggles this year offer a snapshot of the financial struggles schools experienced leaguewide. Stadium capacity in the Swamp was reduced from 88,548 to 17,000 people, or about 80% fewer fans.
The Swamp is getting a cash influx.
“USF receives over $100 million in federal aid” via Emma Lail of The Oracle — As part of the Biden administration’s American Rescue Plan, USF will be receiving its biggest federal relief package to date of over $100 million to help struggling students and fund some of its own operations. The U.S. Department of Education will be providing $102.29 million of aid to USF as part of the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund III, and the university is following guidance from the DOE to establish a plan for distributing the funds. Out of the total allocation, around $52 million will be designated to student aid and $50 million to institutional purposes, according to the DOE. There is no finalized time period when the funds will be released to students or an official distribution plan.
More corona
“Seller of vaccine disinformation has YouTube channel removed” via Michelle R. Smith of The Associated Press — The Truth About Vaccines was removed from YouTube, days after an AP investigation detailed how they work with other spreaders of false information to make money. The channel had about 75,000 subscribers, but some of its videos had a much broader reach, including one with over 1.5 million views and featured Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., a prominent voice in the anti-vaccine movement. A message that greets visitors to the channel says the account was “terminated for violating YouTube’s Community Guidelines.” YouTube said it terminated the account because it violated its policies barring “COVID-19 medical misinformation” and had three strikes in a 90-day period.
Anti-vaxxers Ty and Charlene Bollinger get shut down by YouTube.
“Haiti authorizes use of AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine as deaths, infections rise” via Jacqueline Charles of the Miami Herald — Haiti has authorized the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine as COVID-19 cases surge following months of delays. Dr. Jarbas Barbosa, assistant director of the World Health Organization’s Americas branch, said the President of Haiti informed them that the country will accept the AstraZeneca vaccine. The government had previously expressed concerns about the shot’s safety, despite being offered free doses. “Yesterday, we received the confirmation from the minister of health that Haiti is sending a letter to Gavi … confirming that they will receive the 130,000 doses that are available to Haiti,” he said. Gavi is the vaccine alliance that co-runs the COVAX Facility, a United Nations-backed platform created to get COVID-19 vaccines to middle- and low-income countries.
“Masks are off and nobody recognizes each other” via The Wall Street Journal — Katana Scannell arrived at work at Sam’s Club in Athens, Georgia, early Friday before opening hours and headed to the back of the store. She was greeted by a young woman walking the other way: “Good morning, Katana!” Scannell, who is 21, felt baffled and unsure who the person was: “I was like, ‘Hi?’ ” Minutes later, it registered: it was Jaenise Jones, her co-worker. Previously, both of them always wore masks. But on that Friday morning, Jones didn’t — and Scannell hadn’t recognized her peer’s bare face.
Presidential
“Despite Joe Biden’s call for de-escalation, Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu ‘determined’ to continue Gaza operation” via Fares Akram and Joseph Krauss of The Associated Press — In a statement from his office Wednesday, Netanyahu said that he “greatly appreciates the support of the American President,” but said Israel will push ahead “to return the calm and security to you, citizens of Israel.” Earlier, Biden told Netanyahu “that he expected a significant de-escalation today on the path to a cease-fire,” the White House said. Biden had previously avoided pressing Israel more directly and publicly for a cease-fire. But pressure has been ramping upon him to intervene more forcefully as other diplomatic efforts also gather strength.
Despite what Joe Biden says, Benjamin Netanyahu is determined to continue bombing Gaza.
“Floridians urge Biden to pick Robert Wexler as U.S. ambassador to Israel” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — From Tel Aviv to Washington, D.C., political insiders have been speculating for months who President Biden would pick as U.S. ambassador to Israel — and the speculation has extended to Florida. The high-profile and sensitive post is even more important given the current heightened hostilities between Israel and the Palestinians. One possible pick for ambassador: former South Florida Congressman Robert Wexler, one of Israel’s most prominent supporters during his time in the House.
“‘We definitely have our work cut out for us.’ Biden’s Supreme Court commission holds its first public meeting.” via Charles Savage of The New York Times — Biden’s commission to evaluate proposed overhauls to the Supreme Court held its first public meeting on Wednesday. The 36-member, ideologically diverse panel of scholars, lawyers, political scientists, and former judges was formed after calls by some Democrats to expand the number of Supreme Court justices. In addition to a working group examining the court’s size, it will have groups on other possible changes to the court, including creating term limits or mandatory retirement age; placing greater restrictions on the court’s ability to strike down laws as unconstitutional; expanding the number of cases the court is required to hear, and limiting its ability to decide major issues without a full briefing and arguments.
Epilogue: Trump
“Moody mum on Donald Trump’s New York legal woes” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Moody, a strong Trump backer in the 2020 campaign, had little to say about the New York Attorney General’s declaration that the civil probe into the Trump Organization extended into criminal matters. “That’s a different jurisdiction. I don’t know anything about that matter,” Moody told Florida Politics after an event highlighting a new statewide Crime Stoppers hotline, **TIPS. “Certain attorneys general offices have different jurisdictions, so I don’t have any comment on the matter.” For his part, Trump has dismissed the matter as an “investigation that is in desperate search of a crime.”
Ashley Moody has a lot to say. About Donald Trump, not so much.
“Barack Obama had harsh words on Trump, book claims” via Mark Lunganello of the New York Post — Former President Obama called Trump a “corrupt motherf — ker,” “madman” and a “racist, sexist pig” to people behind the scenes, a new book claims. Obama had actually preferred Trump as President over Sen. Ted Cruz when the two were locked in a Republican primary battle, a forthcoming book by writer Edward-Isaac Dovere says. “I didn’t think it would be this bad,” he later told donors, the Guardian reported, citing Dovere’s “Battle for the Soul: Inside the Democrats’ Campaigns to Defeat Trump.” “I didn’t think we’d have this racist, sexist pig,” Obama is quoted as saying.
D.C. matters
“Byron Donalds: Institutional racism no longer denies Black children opportunities” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — U.S. Rep Donalds, during a discussion on Black voices in politics, maintained there’s no longer systemic racism in America. “We are now two generations from the Civil Rights Act passing. Two generations away in America,” the Naples Republican said. “I will largely tell you that if you are a Black or Brown child in America, your opportunities for success today are significantly higher than they were two generations ago. That’s beyond question.” He made clear prejudice on an individual level still impacts Black Americans. But he also said it’s more important to remove bureaucratic barriers to advancement and said there are no longer intentional forces at play within government limiting freedoms based on race.
Byron Donalds denies systemic racism exists in America. Image via AP.
“Congress OKs bill to fight hate crimes vs. Asian Americans” via Brian Slodysko of The Associated Press — Congress approved legislation intended to curtail a striking rise in hate crimes against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, sending Biden a bipartisan denunciation of the spate of brutal attacks that have proliferated during coronavirus pandemic. The bill, which the House passed on a 364-62 vote, will expedite the review of hate crimes at the Justice Department and make grants available to help local law enforcement agencies improve their investigation, identification and reporting of incidents driven by bias which often go underreported. It previously passed the Senate 94-1 in April after lawmakers reached a compromise. Biden has said he will sign it.
“Ballard Partners to help Freedom for All Americans with Equality Act push” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Ballard Partners recently signed a lobbying deal with Freedom for All Americans, a Washington-based nonprofit working to secure passage of the Equality Act. The Equality Act would expand the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to prohibit discrimination based on sex, gender identity, and sexual orientation for public accommodations, housing, loan applications and education, among other things. The lobbying disclosure for Ballard Partners lists firm founder Brian Ballard and lobbyists Ana Cruz and Trent Morse. The measure has broad public support, including from groups such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers. However, some religious groups are opposed. It has passed the House but needs 60 votes to make it through the Senate.
Crisis
“House votes to create panel to investigate Jan. 6 insurrection, sending bill to uncertain future in Senate amid GOP opposition” via Mary Clare Jalonick, Alan Fram and Lisa Mascaro of The Associated Press — The House voted Wednesday to create an independent commission on the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, sending the legislation to an uncertain future in the Senate as Republicans increasingly line up against the bipartisan investigation and align themselves with Trump. Democrats say an independent investigation is crucial to reckoning what happened that day. Modeled after the investigation into the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the legislation would establish an independent, 10-member commission that would make recommendations by the end of the year for securing the Capitol and preventing another insurrection. The bill passed the House 252-175, with 35 Republicans voting with Democrats in support of the commission.
Mitch McConnell is no fan of the House’s proposed Jan. 6 commission. Image via AP.
“GOP defections over Jan. 6 commission deliver rebuke to Kevin McCarthy” via Melanie Zanona, Nicholas Wu and Olivia Beavers of POLITICO — The big bipartisan vote was a major rebuke to House Minority Leader McCarthy, who worked hard to minimize the brewing rebellion in his ranks over the commission. During the vote, McCarthy huddled in the back of the chamber with his staff, watching the vote tally tick upward as Republican after Republican registered their “yes” vote. McCarthy’s handling of his party’s internal divisions this week has revealed potential weaknesses in his leadership style — and offered a preview of how the California Republican might run the House one day. Once it looked like dozens of Republicans might break ranks, McCarthy grew nervous about the prospect of defections and took more informal steps to build opposition to the bill, multiple GOP sources said.
“Mitch McConnell comes out against Jan. 6 commission, imperiling its chances of becoming law” via Mike DeBonis of The Washington Post — Republican leaders are trying to sink legislation establishing an independent commission on the deadly Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. The bill passed the House on Wednesday, but its chances of clearing the Senate dimmed after Senate Minority Leader McConnell came out against it earlier in the day. He said he opposes the legislation because it is a “slanted and unbalanced proposal,” a day after he said his members were open to voting for the plan but needed a chance to read the “fine print.” In between those comments, Trump released a statement Tuesday evening slamming the bill and decrying it as a “Democrat trap” while urging McConnell and other GOP leaders to start “listening.”
“Neptune Beach man charged with violence in U.S. Capitol riot” via Steve Patterson of The Florida Times-Union — A Neptune Beach man faced a federal judge Wednesday over his role in the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol that investigators say he called “the rowdiest thing I’ve ever done.” Daniel Paul Gray, 41, could be sentenced to up to 37 years in prison if he’s convicted on all nine charges prosecutors outlined involving an afternoon of struggles with police. A complaint filed this week in federal court in Washington called Gray “one of the first persons attempting to break through the police line” protecting Capitol offices. It said he recounted rioters’ confrontation and claimed to have stormed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office in later messages on social media.
Local notes
“In 13-6 vote, Jacksonville City Council backs gas tax increase. But the final tally could change.” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — Jacksonville City Council tilted in favor Wednesday of approving a gas tax increase when the first round of votes showed 13-6 support for the measure that will get a final up-or-down verdict next week. “Nobody wants to raise taxes, but sometimes to make the city a better place to live, we have to,” Council Member Sam Newby said. If the 13-6 margin holds up when the council convenes for another special meeting on May 26, it would be above the requirement that at least 11 of 19 council members back the legislation. But three council members — Michael Boylan, Randy DeFoor and Terrance Freeman — prefaced their “yes” votes by saying they continue to evaluate the legislation and get feedback from constituents.
“Jacksonville faces a stark choice. Can it rise to the occasion?” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — At what point does unfulfilled potential become simply who you are? How long can we say this about Jacksonville? We live in one of the lowest taxed cities in one of the lowest taxed states in the nation, and contrary to the belief of the city’s forefathers and some of its modern progenies, this status has not led Jacksonville to prosperity. It is actually our staggering weakness. Mayor Lenny Curry has decided to try something different. He opted to roll out his new policy — increasing the gas tax — in an inclusive, cooperative way. He is, for the first time, in the mind of this skeptic, putting the full weight of his office behind an effort to invest equitably in Jacksonville neighborhoods.
Lenny Curry makes a bold proposal. Is Jacksonville up to the challenge? Image via First Coast News.
“DeSantis reappoints former Miami Commissioner Marc Sarnoff to FIU Board of Trustees” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — DeSantis announced he would reappoint Sarnoff to the Florida International University Board of Trustees late Wednesday. Sarnoff has been on the FIU Board since 2016 when former Gov. Scott appointed him to a five-year term. That term expired this year. Sarnoff is currently a partner at the high-powered law firm Shutts and Bowen, where he handles real estate work, as well as land use and government relations issues. He also served on the Miami City Commission from 2006 to 2015. Sarnoff represented District 2, which spanned downtown Miami, Brickell, Coconut Grove, Omni and the Upper Eastside. Sarnoff also served two terms as Commission Chair. Sarnoff’s reappointment to the FIU Board of Trustees is subject to Florida Senate confirmation.
“Port Everglades gets OK to pursue talks with Disney Cruise Line for year-round terminal” via Richard Tribou of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Disney Cruise Line is shopping for a second year-round Florida home, and now it can enter into discussions with Port Everglades after a vote from the Broward County Commission on Tuesday. The commission voted unanimously to forego competitive selection requirements the port would normally have to go through for a terminal agreement. Disney Cruise Line currently has four ships in its fleet, basing two at Port Canaveral and migrating two others among various seasonal ports. Disney has been sailing from PortMiami to some degree since 2012, and the line has a deal in place that would let them sail year-round through 2024, except that would mean sharing a terminal built by another cruise line — MSC Cruises.
“Bay County runoff 2021: Lynn Haven elects new Mayor, 2 Commissioners in runoff” via the Panama City News Herald — Lynn Haven voters have spoken. After all three races went to a runoff, voters took to the polls Tuesday to choose their new mayor and two commissioners. Receiving 1,481 votes (50.46%), Jesse Nelson was elected Lynn Haven’s Mayor, defeating Ellyne Fields by 27 votes. Jamie Warrick was elected to Seat 3 with 1,943 votes (66.61%), and incumbent Judy Tinder will retain her Seat 4 after garnering 1,730 votes (59.43%). “I’m honored and humbled by the fact that the citizens of Lynn Haven elected me as the next mayor of this great city. I’m thankful for God’s grace. Also, for the opportunities that are coming our way,” Nelson said.
Jesse Nelson becomes Lynn Haven’s new Mayor.
“Bay County sees spurt of teacher resignations after failure of tax hike for pay raises” via Tony Mixon of the Panama City News Herald — Bay District School Board Member Brenda Ruthven says she is concerned about the number of teachers and support personnel who are resigning after the school year. Superintendent Bill Husfelt called Arnold High School Principal Britt Smith up to the podium to describe what has been said to him in the exit interviews. “The first one I spoke to, excellent teacher, loved by parents and so forth, the statement on his resignation is to pursue better economic opportunities,” Smith said. Another teacher Smith described said that he would rather clean condos because the salary he is being paid isn’t enough. Smith said the teachers approached him about resigning after voters rejected a proposal to raise property taxes to fund teacher raises.
“Pensacola State College to open charter high school for military families, at-risk kids” via Madison Arnold of the Pensacola News Journal — Pensacola State College is working to open a new charter school targeted for high school students who are from military families or are considered at-risk. College officials announced plans for the Pensacola State College Charter School during an event Tuesday morning. It’s scheduled to open in August 2022 at the college’s Warrington campus and will provide students an opportunity to earn college credits and even potentially graduate high school with an associate degree. “(Military) children may be in one school for two years, another one for two years, another one for two years. Their parents are always looking for quality opportunities for their children, so this gives them another choice,” said Capt. Tim Kinsella, base commander of NAS Pensacola.
“Brightline shows off progress on huge train garage at Orlando International Airport” via Kevin Spear of the Orlando Sentinel — Trains will begin to arrive at Brightline’s massive garage that adjoins Orlando International Airport in about five months, easing through doors 18 feet high and 18 feet wide into a space equipped for tasks ranging from cleaning bathrooms to changing out locomotive engines that weigh 30,000 pounds. “This facility will be home to our state-of-the-art, American-made, eco-friendly train sets,” said Brightline’s President Patrick Goodard. Construction of the link between South and Central Florida, which includes 48 bridges and four tunnels, is scheduled for completion next year, and passenger service starts in 2023. The facility next to the Orlando airport, where Brightline has a train station, takes up more than 60 acres, which provides room to grow.
Top opinion
“Joe Henderson: A long legal battle is ahead for Florida’s Gaming Compact” via Florida Politics — Passing the bill just sounded the starting gun on what could be a long and bitter legal battle, with billions of dollars hanging in the balance. After DeSantis signs the bill — which he will — what’s the over/under on how long it will take opponents to file their lawsuits to derail the plan? It could take years to wind through the legal machinery, and it will be a fascinating argument. Opponents will say: “Hey, that Amendment 3 to the state constitution in 2018 says that we, the people, get the final say on gambling expansion.” And yes, the opponents are correct. However, supporters say, “No, we’re not expanding gambling in our fair state. Why that would be wrong!”
Opinions
“Tentative signs of sanity among the House Republicans? We’ll see.” via Karen Tumulty of The Washington Post — Springtime is here. Is it possible that some fragile green shoots of sanity are sprouting in the tangled patch of weeds that is the House Republican Conference? That was certainly the impression Republicans were trying to give, as the House debated and passed a measure that would establish an independent, bipartisan commission to investigate the horrific violence that Trump’s supporters inflicted on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. In the final tally, 35 House Republicans voted in favor of the commission. That represents only a minority within the minority. But it also is a marked increase from the 10 who supported impeaching Trump over what he did — and didn’t do — on that day.
“Hey Floridians, have you paid your $378,184 in taxes yet?” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — The typical Floridian can expect to fork over $378,184 in taxes, according to a study by Self Financial Inc. That may sound like a lot, but it’s less than half the $931,698 paid by the average person in New Jersey, the state with the highest individual lifetime tax bill. In fact, Florida slips in at No. 37, right between Georgia and Idaho. Of course, much higher incomes in some of the states helped inflate the tax bills. More income generally leads to higher taxes, at least in a study like this one. Average residents in Washington, D.C., for instance, can expect to earn almost $1 million more than the typical Floridian. They will also keep about $500,000 more after paying all those taxes.
“Why I will miss masks when they’re gone” via Stephanie Hayes of the Tampa Bay Times — Most folks still wore masks in my local store, but not everyone. Because of new Centers for Disease Control guidance, it has become harder to tell where people stand, the way you can’t tell if someone has had those jeans since freshman year 1992 or bought them new and runs a successful TikTok. Never has it been so easy to disguise yourself while running errands. Add sunglasses and a hat, and you might as well be undercover. It’s satisfying to wear fun lipsticks again, but those who use makeup have saved time and money applying products only to the tops of our faces. Now, we’ll have to budget emotional space for chin grooming.
“Olé for Orlando City Soccer — the rare sports team that paid for its own stadium” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — Things seem to be going well for the Lions, who are near the top of their conference and in high demand as the deep-pocketed Wilf family, which also owns in the Minnesota Vikings, is buying the team. The deal looks like good news for the team, the city and fans. But let me tell you why all this success for the team is also good for taxpayers and public policy: Because it proves you can build — and sell — a successful sports franchise without forcing taxpayers to pay the freight. Orlando’s soccer team, after all, is one of the few sports teams in America that paid for its own stadium or arena. That’s how it should be for every professional team.
On today’s Sunrise
On today’s Sunrise:
— Both chambers of the Legislature approved the new Seminole Gaming Compact by lopsided margins. Opponents made their last stand Wednesday in the House.
— Supporters admit there could be legal problems, especially the sports-betting provision … but Rep. Fine says Florida wins either way.
— Fine was also responsible for the most cringeworthy comment during the debate when he forced lawmakers to imagine him naked. Pass the brain bleach, please …
— When the Session was done, House Speaker Sprowls said passage of the Seminole Compact was history in the making.
— But it’s not over yet. The deal still to be approved by the U.S. Department of Interior to see if it complies with the Indian Gaming Regulation Act; opponents promise a court challenge because there’s a provision in the state constitution that says the voters must approve any expansion of casinos.
— The Governor’s lawsuit to try to force the CDC to let cruise ships get back in business is going to mediation, which means the whole thing is pretty much moot. The chances are good that they’ll be sailing again before the mediation process ends.
— Agriculture Commissioner Fried makes a virtual appearance at the Forum Club of the Palm Beaches, where she was asked if she’ll announce a run for governor race next month.
— And finally, a Florida Man faces 20 years in prison after pledging his support for ISIS and posting a video on how to make a bomb. In reality, the FBI made the video, and if you follow the instructions, it doesn’t explode.
“SeaWorld’s new CEO aims to open hotels and add rides, but don’t expect orcas to go anywhere” via Gabrielle Russon of the Orlando Sentinel — SeaWorld Entertainment is poised to get into the hotel business for the first time with the Orlando and Tampa Bay theme parks included on the list of possible sites, the company’s new CEO Marc Swanson said. Swanson made it clear his Orlando-based theme parks company is seeking to go into expansion mode and seriously consider building hotels now that it appears to have weathered the pandemic crisis that shut down all its parks last year. After last week’s changing guidelines from the CDC, “We’re pretty much at full capacity now” at the Florida and Texas theme parks, Swanson said, adding he feels confident about safety since guests have hundreds of acres outdoors to spread out.
Marc Swanson has big plans for Sea World properties.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to state Sen. Jason Pizzo, state Rep.Eskamani, William Arnold, lobbyist Matt Brockelman, activist Tim Heberlein, Data Targeting’s Matt Mitchell, Jim Rosica’s better half, Erin, and Steve Uhlfelder,
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Markets: Initially down big, stocks mounted a comeback over the course of the afternoon to close only slightly lower. But the real action of the day was in crypto, which we’ll get to in just a sec.
Economy: Minutes from the Fed’s meeting in April show that a “number” of officials seemed ready to roll back some of the central bank’s pandemic-era stimulus measures. But that was before the big jobs report miss, which may have changed calculations.
It’s possible we upset the cryptocurrency gods when we bragged about only mentioning “crypto” once in yesterday’s newsletter. As the Brew entered your inbox early yesterday morning, many cryptocurrencies crashed, including the big two:
Bitcoin’s value fell to nearly $30,000 per coin, down from over $50,000 a week ago, before bouncing back to about $38,000.
Ether, the second-largest crypto, slid from over $3,350 to about $1,900 before also ticking back up.
During the plunge, both cryptos hit their lowest levels since January, and experienced one-day drops not seen since March of last year—you know, when we thought drinking “quarantinis” was cute and shiba inu owners weren’t stopped on the street because “lol dogecoin.”
Any reason why?
On Tuesday, the People’s Bank of China reminded financial institutions that they cannot conduct business with cryptocurrencies following China’s 2017 ban of bitcoin exchanges. It added that virtual currency is “not a real currency” and called recent surges in the space “speculation.”
Investors interpreted it as an omen of future government regulation on crypto—and not just in China.
Some other reasons investors could be hopping off the crypto coaster:
New crypto investors may have learned Monday that the IRS treats cryptocurrency as property, not currency, and taxes it as such.
Elon Musk, who can send crypto prices soaring or dipping with the stroke of a key, made bitcoin boosters nervous when he said last week that Tesla would no longer take bitcoin as payment due to environmental concerns. But yesterday, amid the market chaos, Musk confirmed his support for bitcoin with a tweet: “Tesla has ”
On a crazy day for crypto, everyone had something to say
Let’s pass the mic…
PwC’s global head of crypto Henri Arslanian: “I would not be surprised to see other regulators and policymakers do the same [as the Chinese rules] over the coming weeks as they warn investors over the risks of speculative trading or crypto market volatility.”
Major crypto investor Mike Novogratz: “Now we’ve got a liquidation event…Humpty Dumpty never gets put back together in two days…when he cracks. It’s going to take a while. The market will consolidate. It will find a bottom somewhere.”
Tom Brady tweeted, “Over here we just buy the dip!”
And that’s pretty much crypto investing in a nutshell. Some are concerned retail traders will get hurt, some are extremely bullish, and others are treating it like a game.
In an extravagant event last night, Ford unveiled its all-electric F-150 Lightning. The F-150 has been America’s top-selling vehicle for decades, and there’s a lot more riding on it than a bunch of teens coming in from a long day of loading hay bales.
Speaking on Tuesday at a Ford plant in Michigan, President Biden used the release of the new F-150 to drum up support for his proposed $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan, specifically the part that allocates $100+ billion to EV manufacturing and battery development.
Big picture: The reveal of the F-150 Lightning, whose base model starts near $40,000, is a watershed moment in the auto industry’s dramatic pivot to electric. Since EVs are sometimes considered the domain of the Berkeley crowd, Ford hopes that an electric version of the ubiquitous F-150 could change perceptions.
Looking ahead…transportation contributes 29% to the US’ total emissions, per the EPA, but an electric truck won’t lower that number if no one wants to drive it. A crucial test for Ford awaits.
If you’ve been craving a currywurst, you’re in luck because the European Union just agreed to let fully vaccinated non-EU travelers head on over. The decision yesterday streamlines the hodgepodge of travel restrictions across different countries in Europe.
Back stateside: While some American travelers are waiting for the final EU approval that will likely come later this month or next before booking international flights, domestic travel has already taken off. Southwest, the airline that ensures you’ll always be in the last boarding group, noted that fares for leisure travel are almost to 2019 levels and the company expects its May capacity to be down only 18% from 2019.
Looking ahead…Dr. Anthony Fauci said yesterday that travelers who are fully vaxxed could safely fly without a mask, but because there’s no vaccine passport system in the US, it’s a “complicated issue.” So until a better solution arrives, we’ll have to find more creative ways to shovel Biscoffs into our mouths.
O’ remote employees, spread out under spacious skies, logging on across all 50 states.
Beautiful, isn’t it? But if you’re an employer, the logistics of this new American workforce can be a lot to handle—unless you , which makes it simple to pay and manage remote employees across all 50 states.
Whether your employees are working from purple mountains, amber waves of grain, or fruited plains, Justworks helps you navigate employment-related regulations and requirements.
Don’t have time to fly to Alaska to onboard Mike the freelance developer? No worries. helps you onboard new employees with ease in an intuitive online platform. They’ll also help you access national health insurance plans, so you can give your employees coverage from sea to shining sea.
For all that plus 24/7 expert support from real people, .
Stat: The highest bid for a seat on Blue Origin’s New Shepard spacecraft was $2.8 million, as of last night. It’s received more than 5,200 bids from 136 countries in the first round of the auction. The mission, which will send six passengers into suborbital space, is set to launch July 20.
Quote: “I know that’s a highly controversial decision. I didn’t make it lightly. I will admit that I wasn’t comfortable seeing money go out the door to people like this. But it was the right thing to do for the country.”
Joseph Blount, the CEO of Colonial Pipeline, explained to the WSJ why he reluctantly paid $4.4 million to the criminal group DarkSide, which had hacked the company’s computer systems and caused a six-day shutdown of the largest gasoline pipeline in the country.
Read: Hundreds of PPP loans went to fake farms in absurd places. (ProPublica)
That little “e” icon you always passed over with your mouse before clicking on another browser is being sent to the Recycle Bin of history.
Microsoft said yesterday it is retiring its Internet Explorer desktop application on most versions of Windows 10 on June 15, 2022.
The Buzz to Internet Explorer’s Woodyis Microsoft Edge, the browser Microsoft first introduced in 2015 on Windows 10 and Xbox One. After Edge’s release, it was a matter of when, not if, Internet Explorer would be retired.
“Not only is Microsoft Edge a faster, more secure, and more modern browsing experience than Internet Explorer, but it is also able to address a key concern: compatibility for older, legacy websites and applications,” Microsoft said in a blog post.
Zoom out: Internet Explorer has been around for more than 25 years, but it’s steadily lost ground to competitors. In 2013, Google Chrome overtook Internet Explorer as the most popular browser in the US and hasn’t looked back. According to NetMarketShare, Chrome owns 69% of the market, Edge 7.8%, Firefox 7.5%, and Internet Explorer 5.2%.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
The CEO of TikTok owner ByteDance, Zhang Yiming, is stepping down and moving to a new role.
Target picked up what other retailers were putting down, growing sales overall 23% and apparel sales more than 60%.
The New York tristate area ended most Covid-19 restrictions yesterday; businesses can once again operate at full capacity.
Are your old insurance policies dying on the vine? Then make this the season to use Policygenius to look for better, less expensive home and auto insurance. Their customers have saved up to $1,055 per year over what they were paying, and the Policygenius team will handle all the paperwork. Get your quotes here.*
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Calling all creators: If you are trying to turn your content into a viable side-hustle, or even a full-time job, here’s your bible of all the platforms that can help you on your journey.
Smell that? Here’s a list of 52 fragrances and how to think about them.
Greenwood Financial’s digital banking platform plans to offer everything you’d expect from a bank: spending and savings accounts, a mobile app, a sleek card that’s heavy enough to make a good thwap sound on a table after a fancy meal with your parents while you say, “I got this.”
But there’s one notable difference: Greenwood’s mission is “modern banking for the Culture.”
In today’s installment of our series Black Wall Street, 100 Years Later, we profiled Greenwood and explored the challenges and opportunities for digital platforms to give more access to the unbanked. Give it a read here.
+ For more context on the event we’re commemorating this week, the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921, check out Part 4 of our TikTok series.
If you thought the Dear Evan Hansen movie photos were outrageous, just wait until you read the headlines we found for today’s game. Here are four news stories, but one of them is a lie, a faker, a bigger scam than Ben Platt playing a 17-year-old. See if you can figure out which one isn’t real:
“Philadelphia lost race for Amazon HQ2 because new CEO is a Giants fan: report”
“Gender reveal party with 38 exploding watermelons causes $5 million in property damage”
“Meet the marine worm with 100 butts that can each grow eyes and a brain”
“High traces of Viagra in Seoul’s sewers, research shows”
ANSWER
We made up the gender reveal one, though it is extremely plausible.
McConnell called the proposal for the commission, which gained some bipartisan support after negotiations from rank-and-file Republicans, “slanted and unbalanced” during his floor remarks. McConnell also said it’s unclear whether a commission is needed with multiple Senate and police investigations already ongoing.
…
It’s unclear where the votes now stand with Senate Republicans, many of whom have not been paying attention to the issue until Tuesday. There are a handful of Republicans who might vote to support a commission, including some of the seven who voted to convict Trump for “incitement of insurrection.”
…
McConnell’s comments came after former President Donald Trump released a statement Tuesday night warning that “Republicans in the House and Senate should not approve the Democrat trap of the January 6 Commission.” While the House passed the bill Wednesday evening, the Senate won’t take up the legislation until after the Memorial Day recess.
All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLIs US federal funding for scientific research programs a must to compete against China?
Yes
72%
No
16%
Unsure
12%
275 votes, 78 comments
Context: Bipartisan bill to fund National Science Foundation to better compete against China.
HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS
“Yes – There are very few areas that I think more federal spending is valuable, but pure science research is one of them. This is an area that often is not viable to accomplish in the free market due to a lack of near term economic incentive, but has a huge positive impact on both advancing society and improving the economy.”
“No – The US has almost singlehandedly turned China into the powerhouse they are today by sending all of our manufactur…”
“Unsure – I think it would be better if the US looked to tr…”
Ambassadors from the 27 E.U. countries agreed on Wednesday to ease the criteria for non-E.U. nations to be considered a “safe country,” from which all tourists can travel….
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
Why are American and Russian diplomats meeting to discuss the Arctic?
Russia’s new Arctic ambitions are challenging the members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, who are convening, with Russia, in Reykjavik this week for a meeting of the…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
Don’t scroll past. Support credible news for everyone.
Who is Ford targeting with its upcoming F-150 electric pickup?
In a splashy presentation Wednesday night, Ford unveiled an electric version of its popular F-150 pickup truck called the Lightning. Ford’s F-Series trucks, including the F-150, make…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
“Thirty-five House Republicans chose the truth and American democracy over Donald Trump’s personality cult.” So read the opening line in an “analysis” article on CNN this morning. It seems the idea of what the word “analysis” actually means has undergone a severe shift in recent years.
Brotherly Love Is for Progressives in Philly – LNTV
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
There are still 391 migrant children at border facilities who have not yet been reunited with their parents. A swath of media stories decries the actions of President Trump in creating this separation. But why are no media outlets – or politicos – pointing out the painfully obvious. The “parents” know full well where the children are; if they wanted them, they just have to come and claim them. So, either these are people who would willingly abandon their children, or – as is more likely – the children were brought across by folks who had rented, stolen, or borrowed them. This callous action is a fact of life when you have a border policy that encourages bringing children.
Nicholas Eberstadt believes there is a logic to a US–Republic of Korea alliance, one that outlasts the North Korean state. If Seoul also does, it should spell out that logic more fully during the summit.
President Joe Biden is right: No one should be allowed to game the system and turn down an offer of suitable work to continue collecting unemployment benefits.
As Congress debates major overhauls to the US drug market, new research highlights the increasingly bifurcated nature of domestic drug prices. Among the starkest findings are the low, and rapidly falling, prices paid by Medicaid.
The left supports the commission, arguing that it is necessary to understand the events leading up to and on January 6.
“Bipartisan, congressional or presidential commissions have traditionally been set up to investigate some of the most traumatic and consequential events in American history. President Lyndon Johnson tasked the Warren Commission to investigate the assassination of his predecessor John Kennedy. The 9/11 Commission was established by Congress to investigate al Qaeda’s attacks on New York and Washington in 2001…
“Such probes often identify weaknesses in US defenses that enemies were able to exploit — for instance, in aviation security and poor cooperation between intelligence agencies in 2001. Commissions also provide a moment of national accounting for history and an agreed-upon version of the facts and help to debunk conspiracy theories — one reason Republicans who are whitewashing Trump’s assault on the US democratic system itself may oppose such a panel now.” Stephen Collinson, CNN
“McCarthy’s putative reasons for rejecting the commission boil down to two main points. First, he calls the hearing ‘duplicative,’ citing an ongoing criminal investigation by the Justice Department and hearings in the Senate Homeland Security Committee. McCarthy has not previously evinced much concern over the damage of duplicative hearings, having supported ten investigations into Benghazi, six of them in the House, the last of which he frankly described as an effort to damage Hillary Clinton’s poll numbers…
“Second, he claims that the January 6 investigation fails to appropriately emphasize the events he wishes to use as deflections… It is true that this investigation of a violent insurrection by the president’s allies, intending to pressure Congress to overturn the election results and hand the sitting president an unelected second term, does not principally focus on other, different violent episodes…
“Many Republicans do not want an impartial panel to remind the public of their party’s role in the event. A fair inquiry would examine how GOP lawmakers fed the election lies that inspired the mob, and how they built Jan. 6, which should have featured a pro forma counting of electoral votes, into a showdown over the 2020 presidential election. Republican lawmakers who signed a spurious lawsuit seeking to overturn the results bear some guilt; those who went on to object to the counting of electoral votes from several swing states bear even more.” Editorial Board, Washington Post
“[McConnell noted] that staff ‘would only be appointed by the Democrat chairman and that Republicans would not have a say in that,’ and he worried that the Dec. 31 deadline for the commission to finish its business would be unmeetable…
“The complaint about staffing makes no sense at all. The bill text on staff hiring is identical to that of the bipartisan 9/11 commission, which no one had a problem with, as well as that of a separate Jan. 6 commission proposal introduced by House Republicans in January… The Dec. 31 deadline is a more plausible complaint… [But] Given that these complaints are technical ones, there should technically be a possibility that the Senate could amend the House bill on a bipartisan basis to fix some of these issues Republicans say they have.” Jim Newell, Slate
“Democrats gave Republicans everything they could possibly want – including an equal number of members, meaning if a subpoena were to be issued, it would require at least some bipartisan support… And yet Republicans [rejected the proposal]…
“Voters have entrusted Democrats with the tools of the majority. They should not hesitate to use them to root out the full and complete truth behind Jan. 6. Republicans will attack their efforts as partisan and politically motivated. Guess what? Nothing Democrats can do will ever stop Republicans from making those charges, so who cares.” Kurt Bardella, USA Today
From the Right
The right is generally opposed to the commission, arguing that it is an effort by Democrats to gain partisan advantage.
“Hidden in the fine print are tools empowering Democrats. The bill gives the chairman unilateral authority to demand information from federal agencies and appoint senior staff. ‘Thanks to powers invested in the Chairperson alone, the Democratically-appointed members would have significant control over the direction of the investigation’ and the ability to stop GOP members from ‘engaging in mischief,’ New York University law professor Ryan Goodman reassured a Washington Post writer…
“Multiple investigations of the Jan. 6 events are already underway. The Justice Department has announced 445 arrests, and the Office of the Architect of the Capitol has been allocated $10 million to conduct a security review. Congressional committees, led by Democrats, have been holding hearings and will no doubt issue reports…
“Unless a commission could work together, its effort would be redundant. It’s a shame to say it, but there isn’t enough shared trust in Washington these days to pull off a bipartisan inquiry on so polarized a subject… better to let Congress and law enforcement do their job in regular order, and be held accountable for it.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“In the grand scheme of things, why would a short-lived riot where the only person killed was by police need a commission to study it? There is no great mystery here. There was no grand scheme to overthrow the government. There were some cosplaying morons who trespassed, damaged property, and skirmished with police. It was unacceptable, but it was not 9/11, where 3,000 people were murdered by Islamist terrorists. Treating it as such is insulting to everyone’s intelligence…
“All Republicans have to do is not be stupid leading into 2022 and they are likely to score a resounding victory. Helping Democrats relitigate the past is a recipe for disaster, and it’s one the GOP should not oblige. Hopefully, enough Republican senators have a backbone and filibuster this bill because if they don’t, then the GOP deserves what it gets from its voters.” Bonchie, RedState
Some argue that “Everyone knows what happened on January 6, 2021: The United States Capitol was breached by Trump supporters who hoped to block Congress from certifying Joe Biden’s 2020 victory. Explaining why it happened is much harder, which is why America needs a January 6 Commission…
“[None of the current criminal or congressional investigations] has universal jurisdiction to comprehensively evaluate the attack from a 360-degree perspective. And this full and complete picture is exactly the information that must be collected and made publicly available if future attacks on our elections—both in terms of disinformation and physical force—are to be prevented…
“A bipartisan commission, with support from Republicans and Democrats both inside and outside Washington, might be our last best hope in terms of establishing any kind of baseline of truth about the 2020 presidential election before the next contests get underway.” Amanda Carpenter, The Bulwark
Others note that “Trump was impeached and left office in disgrace, even without being convicted by the Senate. Over 400 people have been charged for participating in the riots, and federal prosecutors expect to add at least 100 more to that total…
“So what exactly is left? We know Trump bears moral (not legal) responsibility for what happened. The actual participants have been legally charged and await trial. There has already been a review of Capitol security. Is there anything that a commission could uncover that would truly change those previous outcomes? It’s not likely…
“Democrats are playing defense with a thin House majority. Relitigating Jan. 6 would allow them to rev up the base once again, as well as attempt to drag down support for House Republicans in swing districts. It will also help President Joe Biden bury the disasters he’s dealing with, from inflation and the border crisis to Hamas terrorists and, most recently, his gift to Russian President Vladimir Putin with the Nord Stream 2 pipeline [for which he just waived sanctions].” Zachary Faria, Washington Examiner
1 big thing: Business under new pressure to save society
Business is now the most trusted institution in the world, Axios’ Sara Fischer writes from a midyear Edelman Trust Barometer report, “A World in Trauma.”
Companies assumed that role during the pandemic, when people realized governments couldn’t develop and roll out vaccines alone.
Why it matters: People now expect corporations and CEOs to keep focusing on big social and political issues, even after the pandemic.
Trust in the government is at an all-time low globally, Edelman found this spring from polling in 14 nations.
Globally, the majority (60%) of people say their country won’t be able to overcome its challenges without business’ involvement.
People say businesses have outperformed government across every issue measured — COVID, job creation, health care, education, disinformation, climate and addressing systemic inequalities.
Most people (77%) said their employer has become their most trusted institution, putting more pressure on CEOs to prioritize societal and political issues in addition to shareholder value.
Roughly 80% of employees expect their companies to act on vaccine hesitancy, climate change, automation, misinformation and racism.
What to watch: The study finds that businesses could be in this position for a long time.
The bottom line: Before the pandemic, customers were considered the most important business stakeholders. Now, it’s employees.
2. Vaccine boosters coming as soon as September
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
The first Americans to get COVID vaccinations could require a booster shot — for many, a third shot — as soon as September, the CEOs of Pfizer and Moderna tell Axios’ Caitlin Owens.
“The data that I see coming … are supporting the notion that likely there will be a need for a booster somewhere between 8 and 12 months,” Dr. Albert Bourla, Pfizer CEO and chairman, said during an Axios virtual event.
Moderna CEO Stéphane Bancel said in an email: “I would do [a] September start for those at highest risk,” including health care workers and the elderly.
What’s next: You don’t need to worry that you’ll wake up tomorrow having lost all of your immunity. Any decline in protection would be gradual, and researchers around the world are gathering data.
Fortune 500 firms have been scrambling to hire chief diversity officers in response to racial justice protests in the year since George Floyd’s death, Axios’ Erica Pandey writes.
The number of people with the title “head of diversity” jumped 104% from 2015 to 2020, according to LinkedIn data. The number of people with the “chief diversity officer” title increased 68%.
The CDO job — and the field of diversity and inclusion — are still new. And those stepping into the job face hurdle after hurdle.
Met with resistance in making systemic changes, many CDOs find themselves running one-off diversity trainings for staff, which don’t accomplish much.
The bottom line: Companies that don’t hire diverse workforces will fall behind in appealing to an increasingly diverse population.
Above, friends from a church group raise a birthday toast at the Tiki Bar on Manhattan’s Upper West Side.
“New York City shut down 423 days ago, on a Sunday night in March 2020,” the N.Y. Times’ Michael Wilson tweeted. Yesterday, “officially, it largely reopened to 100% capacity.”
Above, waiters in Paris pose in front of “cafés en terrasse.”
Six months after a nationwide lockdown, restaurants and bar terraces reopened yesterday at 50% capacity for groups up to six, and the curfew was pushed back from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. (France 24)
5. Our weekly map: COVID cases fall 20%
COVID infections continue to plummet across the U.S., Axios’ Sam Baker and Andrew Witherspoon report.
Why it matters: Experts have warned many times over the past year that it wouldn’t be safe to rush back into pre-pandemic life without containing the virus. Now, we’re containing the virus.
The U.S. averaged about 30,000 cases per day over the past week.
The progress is happening remarkably fast, and across the board.
It was just last week that average daily cases dropped below 40,000, for the first time in months. This week’s figures are a 20% improvement over last week.
The bottom line: This is all happening because of the vaccines. The more people get vaccinated, the better it’ll get.
“Bitcoin’s value has dropped almost 50% in two weeks to below $40,000, dragging siblings like ether with it,” Reuters reports.
“Culprits include China, which on Tuesday banned financial firms dealing in cryptocurrencies, and Tesla boss Elon Musk, who has backed away from a previous plan to buy, hold and accept payment for his electric cars in bitcoin.”
7. Big investors plunge into “climate risk”
Big-name investors are pouring capital into “climate intelligence” — sophisticated analytics that companies and governments need to spot and reduce risk in a warming world, Axios Andrew Freedman writes.
Why it matters: With the effects of climate change already visible in extreme weather events and sea-level rise, companies face increasing pressure from investors and regulators to grapple with climate risk.
For a hotel chain, vulnerabilities might take the form of exposure to sea level rise in coastal cities. But hotels could also have business threatened by extreme heat events in other areas in which they operate.
Pay inequality is worsening by many measures, Axios’ Hope King writes from the U.S. Private Sector Job Quality Index (JQI).
Why it matters: Worker pay is at the heart of debates over the slowly recovering labor market.
The latest index finds that 55% of workers were in low-quality jobs (weekly wages below national average) vs. 45% in high-quality.
Broken down by race, the index shows drastic inequality: 28% of Hispanic American workers held high-quality jobs in 2020, compared with 29% of Black Americans and 61% of Asian Americans.
Since 2007, Black Americans have seen a 6% decline in job quality — versus a less than 1% decline for all workers, a 29% increase for Hispanic workers and a 66% increase for Asian American workers.
Axios is first to report the new findings from the group of research and industry analysts who publish the JQI monthly. They include economists from the Coalition for a Prosperous America, a trade group representing domestic businesses, including farmers and manufacturers.
9. Push for national training standards for police
Police in Clearwater, Fla. Photo: Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
Police training needs more emphasis on de-escalating conflicts rather than just using force, Axios managing editor David Nather writes from a police reform report out today.
Why it matters: The recommendation by the Council on Criminal Justice’s Task Force on Policing, a group of law enforcement and civil rights leaders, adds weight to suggestions by other training experts that the federal government needs to develop national standards.
The Ford F-150 Lightning electric pickup truck can power an entire work site. Photo: Ford
Ford is pitching its electric F-150 Lightning pickup, unveiled last night, as a generator on wheels — with batteries that can power a home for three days in a blackout, Axios’ Joann Muller writes from Detroit.
For construction or camping, owners can power tools or appliances from outlets in the truck’s cabin, bed and “frunk” — the massive front trunk where the engine would usually be.
The big picture: Electric vehicles have finally hit the mainstream. The Ford F-series pickup truck, America’s most popular vehicle model, is going electric at a decidedly mass-market price: $39,974.
Why it matters: Until now, EVs have appealed mostly to wealthy technology fans or environmentalists. The F-150 Lightning is aimed at everyday truck owners — making it a potential turning point in the electric vehicle revolution.
The truck can send your smartphone an alert if you’re in danger of running out of juice.
The morning’s most important stories, curated by Post editors.
An observer watches as contractors for Cyber Ninjas, hired by the Arizona State Senate, examine and recount ballots from the 2020 general election on May 8 in Phoenix. (Courtney Pedroza for The Post)
The most prominent example is in Arizona’s Maricopa County, but the ramifications of former president Donald Trump’s ceaseless attacks on the 2020 election are increasingly visible farther afield.
By Amy Gardner and Rosalind S. Helderman ● Read more »
Laurie Cox couldn’t believe her ears when she heard Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm recently admit that a pipeline was the best way to transport oil across the country.
President Joe Biden and South Korean President Moon Jae-in will debut a more sober approach to North Korea during Moon’s working visit to the White House this week after four years of former President Donald Trump.
With much of Congress on Israel’s side as it wages a defensive war against the terrorist group Hamas, a swath of House lawmakers is expressing hostility to the Jewish State.
New double-layer border wall that stretches from the Pacific coast into the mountains of Southern California is pushing human smugglers out to the sea as they hope to move people from Mexico to the U.S. by boat, according to federal authorities.
A renewed Democratic push for a commission to investigate the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol is the latest complication in Republican efforts to move on from re-litigating former President Donald Trump’s time in office.
Senate Republicans will introduce legislation Thursday to allow state and local governments to redirect federal government grants they receive to go toward paying down the growing national debt instead.
The Biden administration’s grant of a sanctions waiver for an energy project linked to Russian leader Vladimir Putin drew bipartisan backlash on Capitol Hill.
Video of a 2019 arrest showing the violent moments that led up to the death of Ronald Greene, a 49-year-old black man in Louisiana, was leaked to the public on Wednesday.
While Ohioans began registering Tuesday morning for a chance to win millions by getting the COVID-19 vaccine, state lawmakers continued to criticize the idea, with one saying Gov. Mike DeWine should end it immediately.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
March 19, 2021
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AP Morning Wire
Good morning. Here is today’s selection of top stories from The Associated Press at this hour to begin the U.S. day.
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — Israel unleashed a wave of airstrikes across the Gaza Strip early Thursday, killing at least one Palestinian and wounding several others. The latest strikes came after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pushed back against…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — The House voted to create an independent commission on the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, sending the legislation to an uncertain future in the Senate as Republican leaders work to stop a bipartisan investigation th…Read More
It’s a story Joe Biden has loved recounting over the decades: A chain-smoking Golda Meir welcoming the 30-year-old senator to Israel on his first visit in 1973 and giving him a grandmotherly hug before schooling him on the Six-Day War and the dangers…Read More
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The Minnesota Court of Appeals will hear oral arguments Thursday on whether three former Minneapolis police officers charged in George Floyd ‘s death should face an additional count of aiding and abetting third-degree murder. …Read More
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Louisiana state troopers can be seen on a dark roadside stunning, punching and dragging a Black man as he apologizes for leading them on a high-speed chase — body camera video of the moments leading up to the man’s death that The A…Read More
URUMQI, China (AP) — China has highlighted an unlikely series of videos this year in which Uyghur men and women deny U.S. charges that Beijing is committing human rights …Read More
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel is at war with Hamas, Jewish-Arab mob violence has erupted inside Israel, and the West Bank is experiencing its deadliest unrest in years. Yet thi…Read More
ALAMEDA, Calif. (AP) — Residents of a San Francisco Bay Area city flocked to an abandoned gas station to get a whiff of a corpse flower — so-called because of the stench …Read More
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Arnold Schwarzenegger chanted with enthusiasm, “We are back! We are back!” before he spoke Wednesday about the importance of resurrecting the theatrica…Read More
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Mark Twain
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Good morning, Chicago. There were 1,633 new cases of COVID-19 in Illinois yesterday, according to health officials, and 28 additional deaths. There was a huge jump in the number of vaccines reported yesterday — 117,381 doses were recorded administered Tuesday — but that number is so high because of the data delays that skewed the daily numbers this week.
In other news, my colleague Josh Noel reported yesterday that the city’s beer industry is facing a reckoning amid claims of sexual harassment. The Chicago-based Cicerone Certification Program — which certifies beer professionals globally — has suspended an employee accused of what it calls “indefensible behavior.” Read his full report here.
— Nicole Stock, audience editor
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
The Illinois State Board of Education has adopted a resolution requiring daily in-person learning next school year with limited exceptions for remote learning. The vote came after several parents asked the board to reject the proposal in consideration of children who may still be too young in the fall to receive COVID-19 vaccinations.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Wednesday announced a deal with aldermen to create an online database of closed complaints against Chicago police officers, but the city’s government watchdog quickly labeled the plan inadequate.
Hotels are ramping up after Tuesday’s announcement that Chicago’s largest music festival, Lollapalooza, will return to Grant Park at full capacity July 29-Aug. 1. The return of large events has given hotels confidence, but it comes with the grim prospect that a full hotel recovery isn’t expected until 2024, Michael Jacobson, president and CEO of the Illinois Hotel & Lodging Association, said.
Lollapalooza 2021 lineup released: Megan Thee Stallion, Post Malone, Foo Fighters, Miley Cyrus, DaBaby, Journey and more to headline
Rex Huppke column: Lollapalooza is back! Navy Pier is reopening! Time to get out and … can we still stay 6 feet apart?
Michael Libberton felt like a U.S. citizen his entire life. After all, since arriving in the U.S. from Colombia in 1978 as a toddler brought here for adoption by his parents, he assumed he was. Five years ago, he found out he wasn’t.
Despite being adopted by U.S. citizen parents, federal law has limited citizenship options for some international adoptees. A bill introduced in March, and supported by Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., would ensure all internationally adopted children can become citizens.
When Tribune food critic Nick Kindelsperger spoke to the co-owners of Oooh Wee Is It, the wait was over two hours. That’s impressive for any restaurant, Kindelsperger writes, especially for one that just opened its doors Feb. 28. But behind the restaurant’s phenomenal success has been years of hard work, a successful pandemic pivot and one incredible sweet tea recipe.
Early last year, the Chicago Police Department quietly started a contract with the developer of a controversial facial recognition tool in an apparent bid to solve more crimes in the city.
Leaked emails now show the arrangement blindsided Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s office, which apparently didn’t learn of the two-year, $49,875 contract with Clearview AI until weeks after it took effect and days after a New York Times exposé laid bare the app’s alarming capabilities. Tom Schuba has the full story…
A City Council committee OK’d a revised ordinance that calls for the city to create a first-ever license for tow truck operators, require a $250 license for every truck they use and license the locations where towed vehicles are stored.
Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th) said he views the issue as one that “needs to be addressed systemically,” through the courts and through legislation, to “prevent [this practice] from happening again.”
Hacked emails show the city only learned police were using technology developed by Clearview AI — which faces multiple suits claiming it violated the state’s biometrics privacy act — until after inquiries last year by the Sun-Times.
The board of directors of the Fraternal Order of Police issued a vote of no confidence for Mayor Lori Lightfoot, Police Supt. David Brown and First Deputy Supt. Eric Carter, the union representing rank-and-file Chicago police officers said Wednesday.
Acting Illinois Transportation Secretary Omer Osman said that the plan would renew the transportation sector in Illinois after “the most challenging year ever experienced in our industry.”
As part of a joint announcement Wednesday, Lyric Opera of Chicago revealed plans for a seven-production season beginning Sept 17; Joffrey Ballet will present a four-program season beginning Oct. 13.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Thursday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 585,970; Tuesday, 586,359; Wednesday, 587,219; Thursday, 587,874.
The House on Wednesday voted to create a bipartisan commission to investigate the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and report findings and recommendations to Congress by the end of the year.
Thirty-five Republicans bucked their leaders to help pass the measure by a vote of 252 to 175. The legislation, backed by the White House but opposed by a majority of Republicans as well as former President Trump, faces an uncertain future in the narrowly divided Senate (The Hill).
The vote came after a wave of opposition from Republican leaders, including House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (Calif.) and House Minority Whip Steve Scalise (La.), who panned the bill. House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) said on Wednesday that the measure, negotiated with Rep. John Katko (R-N.Y.), the panel’s top Republican, had been understood to have McCarthy’s agreement before the minority leader changed his position (The Hill).
Upshot:The Wednesday vote was another indication of how intensely the House Republican Conference wants to keep Jan. 6 and questions about Trump’s involvement in the party’s rearview mirror.
Katko spoke out forcefully on the floor in support of the bill despite being brushed aside post-negotiations by McCarthy. Katko, a moderate who voted to impeach Trump in January, pleaded with his GOP colleagues to support the commission compromise, invoking the members of the Capitol Police who were killed and injured following the riot.
“I urge all of you in the body, all of you on both sides — not just my side, not just your side, all of us — to set aside politics just this once … and pass this bill,” Katko said. “Imagine being a family member of these officers who do this. So let’s take a deep breath and think about what’s really important here. These people every single day are willing to lay down their lives for us. They deserve better.”
The Republicans who voted aye: Reps. Don Bacon (Neb.), Cliff Bentz (Ore.), Stephanie Bice (Okla.) Liz Cheney (Wyo.), John Curtis (Utah), Rodney Davis (Ill.), Brian Fitzpatrick (Pa.), Jeff Fortenberry (Neb.), Andrew Garbarino (N.Y.), Carlos Gimenez (Fla.), Tony Gonzales (Texas), Anthony Gonzales (Ohio), Michael Guest (Miss.), Jamie Herrera Beutler (Wash.), French Hill (Ark.), Trey Hollingsworth (Ind.), Chris Jacobs (N.Y.), Dusty Johnson (S.D.), Dave Joyce (Ohio), Katko, Adam Kinzinger (Ill.), David McKinley (W.Va.), Peter Meijer (Mich.), Mariannette Miller-Meeks (Iowa), Blake Moore (Utah), Dan Newhouse (Wash.), Tom Reed (N.Y.), Tom Rice (S.C.), Maria E. Salazar (Fla.), Mike Simpson (Idaho), Chris Smith (N.J.), Van Taylor (Texas), Fred Upton (Mich.), David Valadao (Calif.) and Steve Womack (Ark.).
The New York Times: House backs Jan. 6 commission, but Senate path dims.
Politico: GOP defections over Jan. 6 commission deliver rebuke to McCarthy.
Trump early this week advised House Republicans to vote against a commission. The most notable critique came Wednesday when Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) panned the legislation.
“After careful consideration, I’ve made the decision to oppose the House Democrats slanted and unbalanced proposal for another commission to study the events of Jan. 6,” McConnell said from the Senate floor.
The GOP leader argued a commission is unnecessary, pointing to ongoing months-long probes by the Justice Department and Senate committees. McConnell also objected to the potential limits on the commission’s scope and echoed McCarthy that any commission should also examine instances of political violence before and after the Jan. 6 attack.
The Kentucky Republican’s decision cast a shadow over the legislation’s future. Ten Senate Republicans would need to break ranks to pass the measure through the upper chamber (The Hill). Seven Senate GOP members voted to convict Trump in January. Among others who could potentially throw their weight behind the commission’s formation are retiring GOP senators — Sens. Rob Portman (Ohio), Richard Shelby (Ala.) and Roy Blunt (Mo.).
However, as The Hill’s Jordain Carney writes, blocking the bill would create potential political headaches for some Senate Republicans, as it would put them in a politically awkward spot of blocking a probe of an attack many condemned vociferously. Instead, lawmakers are more interested in moving past the Jan. 6 debacle and have indicated that they prefer to focus on committee-level inquiries.
According to Blunt, a forthcoming report by the Senate Rules Committee and the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee on the Jan. 6 insurrection is expected to be released by June 8 (The Hill).
The Hill: Capitol Police Board signals resistance to reform.
More in Congress … Rep. Karen Bass (D-Calif.), chief architect of the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, said Wednesday that a sweeping police reform bill won’t be ready for a vote by the May 25 deadline set by President Biden that coincides with the first anniversary of Floyd’s murder (The Hill). … Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer’s (D-N.Y.) tactics on the China competitiveness bill are revealing his broader trade strategy (The Hill). … A goal of overhauling the troubled U.S. Postal Service has bipartisan support, judging from a Senate bill introduced on Wednesday (The New York Times).
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The internet has changed a lot since 1996 — internet regulations should too
– Protecting people’s privacy
– Enabling safe and easy data portability between platforms
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– Reforming Section 230
LEADING THE DAY
ADMINISTRATION: Biden on Wednesday spoke again with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, urging “significant de-escalation” of Israel’s continued bombardment of Gaza (The Hill). Hours later, Netanyahu responded that Israel was “determined to continue” to weaken Hamas and its attacks against Israel, and more strikes against Hamas targets, including homes, occurred Thursday (The Associated Press).
The prime minister said he “greatly appreciates the support of the American president,” but said Israel will push ahead “to return the calm and security to you, citizens of Israel.” He added that he is “determined to continue this operation until its aim is met” (Fox News).
The Hill: A spokesman for Israel’s military said on Wednesday that there is no end in sight to violence in Gaza. During an MSNBC interview, Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus said the trend is heading in the opposite direction.
Mousa Mohammed Abu Marzook, the deputy head of the Hamas political bureau, said Wednesday evening that he anticipated a cease-fire agreement within days, Israeli media reported. Earlier, an Israeli political official confirmed that Israel was heading toward a cease-fire agreement with Hamas through Egyptian mediation, according to Haaretz.
“I think a ceasefire mediation will work. The equation was clear — if they escalate, weescalate. If they stop firing at Gaza we’ll stop firing at Tel Aviv. Israel’s actions inJerusalem and Sheikh Jarrah have caused the al-Aqsa Brigades to enter the campaign,” he said. “Any negotiations for a cease-fire must address that” (The Jerusalem Post).
Meanwhile, German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said he hoped to fly to Israel for talks Thursday with Israelis and Palestinians about ending the conflict. “My plan is to fly to Israel tonight and hold talks in Jerusalem and Ramallah,” Maas told reporters on Wednesday (The Associated Press).
Losing patience with Israel, some House Democrats moved Wednesday to introduce a resolution seeking to block a $735 million sale of precision-guided weapons to the country, a symbolic response to the conflict meant to publicly showcase lawmakers’ concerns about alleged human rights violations by Israel against Palestinians (Reuters and The Hill).
The Associated Press: Biden and Netanyahu, who have known each other for decades (pictured below in 2010), face a rough early test of the U.S.-Israel relationship, a test the president had hoped to avoid.
> U.S.-Russia: Biden on Wednesday called off key sanctions on a Russian gas pipeline as Secretary of State Antony Blinken holds his first bilateral meeting with his Russian counterpart. The decision drew criticism from Russia hawks in Congress who want the United States to block the multibillion-dollar Nord Stream 2 project because they say it gives Moscow leverage over U.S. allies in Europe (The Washington Post).
> UFOs: U.S. intelligence agencies will testify to the Senate Intelligence Committee next month about government sightings of flying crafts moving at incredible speeds. The Pentagon has been interested in UFOs because they could pose threats to national security and has established the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force to investigate and “gain insight” into the “nature and origins” of unidentified flying objects. In 2019, the department declassified three videos taken by Navy pilots — one from 2004 and two from 2015 — that showed mysterious objects flying at high speeds across the sky. A separate leaked Navy video, captured in July 2019, showed a sphere-shaped unidentified object flying over water near San Diego. The footage, obtained by a documentary filmmaker and shared with NBC News, appeared to show the mysterious object flying for a few minutes before disappearing into the water (NBC News). A report to Congress next month is the result of a provision in the $2.3 trillion coronavirus relief law and an appropriations bill that Trump signed last year calling for a “detailed analysis of unidentified aerial phenomena data and intelligence” from the Office of Naval Intelligence, the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force and the FBI.
> VEEP:The Hill’s Amie Parnes writes that four months into Vice President Harris’s tenure, she is still sorting out how to make a mark. “I don’t think it’s been as seamless as it appears,” said one Democrat who has spoken to aides in the White House about the matter. Biden put Harris in charge of immigration problems at the U.S. southern border, tasked her to conduct outreach to constituencies, including Black and Asian Americans, and said during a joint address to Congress that she would supervise the government’s drive to bring high-speed internet to all communities.
*****
CORONAVIRUS:Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told a Senate subcommittee on Wednesday that mask policies can be guided by the federal government but should be customized by local communities to reflect their COVID-19 infection rates and populations of fully vaccinated residents.
In testimony before an Appropriations subcommittee about her agency’s budget, she defended last week’s shift in CDC recommendations that announced most vaccinated Americans can eschew masks indoors and out.
“We moved at the speed science gave us,” she said, noting that new research had confirmed that the vaccines are working in the real world, that they are working against the variants that are currently circulating in the United States, and that they prevent not only illness but also transmission of the virus. “That scientific data was enough for us to move forward” (The Boston Globe).
CNN: McCarthy effort to lift mask rules for the House floor fails.
NBC News: Confusing rules, loopholes and legal issues: College vaccination plans are a mess.
Anthony Fauci, the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, added on Wednesday that Americans do not have a full understanding of the latest CDC guidelines.
“I think people are misinterpreting, thinking that this is a removal of a mask mandate for everyone. It’s not,” Fauci told Axios on Wednesday. “It’s an assurance to those who are vaccinated that they can feel safe, be they outdoors or indoors” (The Hill).
Meanwhile, on Capitol Hill on Wednesday, Emergent BioSolutions CEO Robert Kramer told members of the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis that its embattled plant in Baltimore could resume manufacturing doses of Johnson & Johnson’s coronavirus vaccine “within a matter of days.”
“We have made significant progress against all of those commitments, we are very close to completing them, and I would expect we would be in a position to resume production within a matter of days,” Kramer said.
As The Hill’s Nathaniel Weixel notes, Kramer told lawmakers that there are more than 100 million doses of J&J’s vaccine on hold, the first time the company has disclosed how much of the vaccine has been affected. The company’s chief added that unsanitary conditions, including mold, were present at the facility, noting that staff was inadequately trained at the locale.
Kramer also said that Emergent BioSolutions has been in communication with the Food and Drug Administration and is close to correcting the issues cited by the agency.
Reuters: The United Kingdom begins “booster” shot trial of seven different COVID-19 vaccines.
The Associated Press: Pennsylvania voters impose new limits on governor’s powers.
The Associated Press: Spain, in bid to rally its economy, wants tourists to visit within weeks.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
POLITICS: Trump on Wednesday lashed out at state and local prosecutors in New York after they announced that two offices are conducting a joint criminal investigation into his company. Trump in a lengthy statement dismissed the criminal probe as a politically motivated effort to attack him.
The Hill: Trump’s woes are mounting in criminal probe.
The Washington Post: Seven questions about New York’s investigations of Trump.
Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance Jr. (D) obtained Trump’s tax returns in February after a protracted legal battle with the former president that reached the Supreme Court twice. During the court case, the office’s prosecutors hinted at the contours of their investigation, citing media reports about purported tax schemes at the Trump Organization.
And New York Attorney General Letitia James (D) has taken the company to court over the past year to obtain internal documents and testimony in what was then a civil investigation into whether the Trump Organization had inflated the value of its assets to attract investors and favorable loans (The Hill).
> In Georgia, embattled Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger says he is running for reelection, despite facing a GOP primary challenger, Georgia Rep. Jody Hice (The Hill). Last month, a handful of county Republican groups in the state voted to censure Raffensperger and Georgia Gov. Brain Kemp (R) for refusing to overturn Trump’s loss last year. Raffensperger has defended his stance, saying he upheld the rule of law in the face of efforts to undermine it. In an interview with The Hill last month, he said that his actions had resonated with “commonsense Republicans.”
OPINIONS
Meet four kinds of people holding us back from full vaccination (and how health officials can target strategies with them in mind), by Sema Sgaier, opinion contributor, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/3f6YIRP
Vaccine certificates could help avoid a chaotic post-pandemic world, by The Washington Post editorial board. https://wapo.st/3u6X7PY
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Why Facebook supports updated internet regulations
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TheSenate will convene at 10:30 a.m. and resume consideration of the Endless Frontier Act.
The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:30 a.m. Biden at 2 p.m. will sign the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act into law in the East Room. He and Harris will speak.
First lady Jill Biden and Fauci will visit the vaccination clinic at Children’s National Hospital in Washington, D.C., at 1:15 p.m. The first lady will also deliver live remarks at TheDream.US virtual commencement at 7 p.m.
The White House press briefing is scheduled at 12:30 p.m.
➔ ECONOMY: The Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee in April signaled an eventual shift from easy-money pandemic policies, according to minutes of the meeting, released on Wednesday. Fed officials want to begin planning for tapering from the central bank’s bond-buying program (The Wall Street Journal). … Surprising U.S. economic data about inflation coupled with disappointing jobs numbers last month put economists in some limbo about the economy’s true trajectory coming out of a pandemic-induced slumber. The uncertainty surrounding monthly data may not lift for months (The Hill). The New York Times’ “The Daily” podcast discusses this phenomenon with journalist Ben CasselmanHERE.
➔ STATE WATCH: The Florida legislature on Wednesday approved a plan that will allow the Seminole Tribe to operate sports betting at casinos, horse races and online. The state House voted 97-17 to approve the bill, which came after the tribe reached an agreement last month with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R). The vote came a day after the state Senate approved the bill. The Seminole Tribe will also be able to add roulette and craps to its seven casinos, with the state receiving about $2.5 billion over the next five years. The 30-year deal is expected to rake in $20 billion for the state (The Associated Press). … The legislative package will dramatically expand gambling in the state and set the stage for Trump to pursue a casino license at his Doral golf resort (The Washington Post). … Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott on Wednesday signed legislation creating a ban on abortion after six weeks of pregnancy, one of the nation’s most restrictive such laws because most women are not aware they are pregnant at six weeks. The law permits any private citizen to sue doctors or abortion clinic employees who perform or help arrange for the procedure (The New York Times).
➔ SPACE DEFENSES: A 197-foot-tall United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket, tipping the scales at 950,000 pounds at liftoff, left Cape Canaveral Space Force Station atop a plume of exhaust on Wednesday carrying a billion-dollar early warning satellite that can detect missile launches from Earth’s orbit (CBS News).
THE CLOSER
And finally … It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for this week’s Morning Report Quiz! Inspired by the recent 23rd anniversary of the “Seinfeld” finale’s airing (which is very contentious), we’re eager for some yada yada yadas about the show about nothing’s nine-season run.
Email your responses to asimendinger@thehill.com and/or aweaver@thehill.com, and please add “Quiz” to subject lines. Winners who submit correct answers will enjoy some richly deserved newsletter fame on Friday.
Which of the following characters made the most appearances during the course of the show?
Susan Ross
J. Peterman
Morty Seinfeld
Uncle Leo
Who provided the voice for then-New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner?
Jerry Seinfeld
Larry David
George Steinbrenner
Billy Crystal
Which character coined the phrase a “show about nothing”?
Jerry Seinfeld
Susan Ross
George Costanza
An NBC executive
Which of the following about Elaine Benes is untrue?
She dated former Mets star Keith Hernandez
She’s pro-life
She grew up in Baltimore
She’s a bad dancer
The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!
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The House just passed a $1.9 billion spending bill to increase Capitol security after the Jan. 6 attack. https://bit.ly/2QzNawH
^ This a.m.: Via The Hill’s Cristina Marcos, “House GOP leaders [had been urging] Republicans to vote against a $1.9 billion supplemental appropriations bill to bolster security at the Capitol in the wake of the Jan. 6 insurrection.” https://bit.ly/2SeWypV
Example of what’s in the bill: “$529 million for upgrading security at the Capitol, including a retractable fence, hardening doors and adding more security screening vestibules and cameras … Another $40 million would go toward covering the costs of fixing physical damage to the Capitol.”
TIMING:
Yesterday, 175 House Republicans voted against the bipartisan commission to investigate the Jan. 6 attacks on the U.S. Capitol. https://bit.ly/3f1o3fE
The bill passed 252-175, including the support of 35 House Republicans.
Happy Thursday afternoon! I’m Cate Martel with a quick recap of the morning and what’s coming up. Send comments, story ideas and events for our radar to cmartel@thehill.com — and follow along on Twitter @CateMartel and Facebook.
Did someone forward this to you? Want your own copy? Sign up here to receive The Hill’s 12:30 Report in your inbox daily: http://bit.ly/2kjMNnn
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The internet has changed a lot since 1996 — internet regulations should too
444,000 people applied for unemployment insurance claims last week, a new record low since the pandemic began. https://bit.ly/3yBRFrY
For context: Last week’s revised total of unemployment claims was 478,000.
What this means: “The steady decline of jobless claims is an encouraging sign for the U.S. economy amid intense debate over why many businesses have reported trouble hiring new workers. The conflict over jobless benefits boiled over earlier this month after the April jobs report fell far short of expectations, showing a gain of 266,000 jobs despite projections of more than 1 million jobs created.”
Via The New York Times’s Edgar Sandoval and Dave Montgomery, “Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas signed into law on Wednesday one of the nation’s most restrictive abortion measures, banning the procedure after six weeks of pregnancy and thrusting the state into the advancing national debate over reproductive rights.” https://nyti.ms/2QAGtdP
Why six weeks is notable: Women often do not know they are pregnant by the six-week mark.
How you may have heard of the law: It’s often referred to as the “heartbeat law.”
Did we see this coming?: “The bill in Texas also comes two weeks before the end of one of the most staunchly conservative biennial legislative sessions in recent state history. Beyond abortion, Texas lawmakers have taken a very hard-right approach to a number of major issues and culture war subjects, including voting, gun ownership, policing and L.G.B.T.Q. rights.”
Via The Hill’s Niv Elis, “An onslaught of surprising economic data is raising difficult questions for President Biden as he attempts to steer the recovery without derailing it.” https://bit.ly/2RwAKWQ
Where Republicans stand: “Republicans have pounced on unexpectedly high inflation readings and a disappointing jobs report for April, arguing they are the products of an overzealous government response that could kneecap the economy.”
Where Democrats stand: “Democrats counter that price hikes will be temporary, and that government programs and spending are needed to ensure a quick rebound and avoid the kind of multiyear sluggish recovery that followed the Great Recession.”
What the neutral arbiters — economists — think: “Economists say both sides, to a certain degree, are flying blind given the potential quirks of an economy reawakening from a pandemic-induced slumber. It could take months before either side is vindicated.”
Via The Hill’s Amie Parnes and Morgan Chalfant, “Four months into her time as vice president, Kamala Harris is still finding her footing in the role.” https://bit.ly/3f2414I
The learning curve: “She has struggled to break through as she juggles an evolving portfolio, adapts to a new staff and builds a relationship with Biden, who has a completely different style than her own.”
Keep in mind — Harris is a huge asset to Biden: “Harris is seen as a major reason why President Biden won the White House, and she’s considered an heir apparent for the Democratic nomination in 2024 or 2028.”
Via Reuters’s Nidal Al-mughrabi and Jeffrey Heller, a day after President Biden told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he expects de-escalation in Gaza, Israeli airstrikes have resumed. https://reut.rs/3v4L7zR
Via The Washington Post’s Anne Gearan and Sean Sullivan, “President Biden’s unusually blunt demand Wednesday that Israel de-escalate its military attack on Gaza is creating a rare rift between the two countries and dismaying some of Israel’s supporters in the United States, while heartening Democrats who have increasingly pushed for a tougher U.S. stance toward Israel.” https://wapo.st/3v4c0Us
Why this is big: “It was the clearest evidence yet of a rapidly changing political dynamic, at least among Democrats, that is far less accepting of actions Israel says it is taking in self-defense.”
“Once votes are finished this morning, the House won’t vote again until June 14” (Via Punchbowl News’s John Bresnahan) https://bit.ly/3yjRp0q
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The House and Senate are in. President Biden and Vice President Harris are in Washington, D.C.
9:30 a.m. EDT: President Biden received the President’s Daily Brief.
10:30 – 11:30 a.m. EDT: First and last votes in the House. The House’s full agenda today: https://bit.ly/3f3H4hs
Noon: A roll call vote in the Senate.
1:30 p.m. EDT: Another roll call vote in the Senate. The Senate’s full agenda today: https://bit.ly/3f8UJnP
WHAT TO WATCH:
12:30 p.m. EDT: White House press secretary Jen Psaki holds a press briefing. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3oADrmE
2 p.m. EDT: President Biden signs the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act into law. President Biden and Vice President Harris deliver remarks. Livestream: https://bit.ly/2QAsIMl
NOW FOR THE FUN STUFF…:
Today is National Quiche Lorraine Day.
And because you stuck with me today, here’s a pigeon showing off with a backflip: https://bit.ly/3oxngGB
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The problem of extremism in the military isn’t new, and the military’s response has often been haphazard and inconsistent, allowing extremism to spread in the ranks undetected or ignored by some commanders until the issue is thrust into the forefront. Read more…
The House voted 252-175 on Wednesday to create a commission to investigate the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by pro-Trump rioters, garnering minimal Republican support in what is a bleak harbinger for the measure’s chances in the evenly divided Senate. Read more…
OPINION — Almost every Black person gets a certain bit of oft-repeated advice: “You have to work twice as hard to get half as far.” But even if you follow it to the letter, as Justice Department nominee Kristen Clarke did, you might get smeared when you dare to be excellent while Black and use that excellence to make life better for all. Read more…
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It took two years, five months and 18 days for the slaves in Galveston, Texas, to learn they had been freed by the Emancipation Proclamation. It may take longer than that to get the date — June 19, 1865, known and celebrated as Juneteenth — recognized as a federal holiday. Read more…
Robert Santos is on the verge of becoming the first Latino director of the U.S. Census Bureau. Santos, a third-generation Mexican American, heads into the confirmation process with the backing of much of the advocate community surrounding the 2020 census. Read more…
Congress’ doctor says continued mandates that masks be worn on the House floor and in committee rooms can be enforced, as fines grow for members breaking the rules. Some House Republicans have begun to revolt against the remaining House mandates, calling on Democrats to “trust the science.” Read more…
The Senate Environment and Public Works Committee tentatively plans to mark up its highway bill next week, a schedule that the chairman acknowledges is “a bit aggressive.” Sen. Thomas R. Carper, D-Del., told reporters Wednesday that his committee has penciled in its markup for May 26. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Biden’s big Bibi test
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
On Wednesday night, it seemed like Israeli PM BENJAMIN NETANYAHU might be heeding JOE BIDEN’S call for peace.
Case in point, this news breaking late last night:“Israel and Hamas Near Cease-Fire Amid Mounting Pressure,”WSJ: “A cease-fire in the fighting between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas could come as early as Friday, according to people involved in the discussions, as pressure mounts from Washington and other foreign capitals to bring an end to airstrikes and rocket fire that have claimed a rising number of civilian casualties.”
But this morning, we’re learning, maybe not. The AP posted a story around 3 a.m. about the latest wave of airstrikes across Gaza, which killed “at least one Palestinian and [wounded] several others.”
From the story, headlined “Israel unleashes strikes after vowing to press on in Gaza,”: “Explosions shook Gaza City and orange flares lit up the night sky, with airstrikes also reported in the central town of Deir al-Balah and the southern town of Khan Younis. As the sun rose, residents surveyed the rubble from at least five family homes destroyed in Khan Younis. There were also heavy airstrikes on al-Saftawi Street, a commercial thoroughfare in Gaza City.”
A TEST FOR THE BIDEN-BIBI RELATIONSHIP — In a call with Netanyahu on Wednesday (the fourth in a week), Biden again used the c-word — cease-fire — that had been so difficult for him to utter earlier in the conflict. “The President conveyed to the Prime Minister that he expected a significant de-escalation today on the path to a cease-fire,” according to a White House readout.
A couple of notable things about the statement: It omitted the usual boilerplate language about Israel’s right to self-defense. And Biden added the word “today.”
NYT: “Although [administration officials] portrayed the call as consistent with what Mr. Biden had been saying, his decision to set a deadline was an escalation.”
Until Wednesday Biden had avoided going public with his private admonishments to Netanyahu, partly because of fears they would be ignored. Later in the day, that fear seemed justified. After the call with Biden, the Israeli leader announced that Israel was “determined to continue this operation until its aim is met.”
And while overnight reports about a potential cease-fire suggest Israel may indeed be poised to wind down hostilities, the violence erupting this morning isn’t a hopeful sign. If the bloodshed continues, it will be a direct rebuke of Biden in his first test of American influence.
WaPo writes that Netanyahu’s “public defiance underlined his disconnect with Biden,” while the AP notes the current crisis is “plunging the two leaders into a difficult early test of the U.S.-Israeli relationship” and that “their current differences over the war in Gaza create a challenge that Biden was trying mightily to avoid.”
Meanwhile, the U.S. has continued to prevent the U.N. Security Council from using the c-word, a position that is seen at the U.N. as increasingly untenable.
WSJ: “‘Everybody is concerned and the most of members are saying that the Council can’t remain silent any more, and it’s time to take action,’ a European diplomat said.”
Biden faced escalating demands from Democrats to help end the hostilities, which as of 5:45 a.m. have killed 12 Israelis, who have been targeted with Hamas rockets, and 230 Palestinians, who have been killed by Israeli airstrikes. A band of House Democrats introduced a resolution Wednesday to halt a recently approved military aid package to Israel, though it has no prospects for passage.
The congressional pressure has had an impact, though. In addition to the Biden-Netanyahu call Wednesday, there were calls between Secretary of State TONY BLINKEN and Israeli Foreign Minister GABI ASHKENAZI as well as one between Secretary of Defense LLOYD AUSTIN and Israeli Defense Minister BENNY GANTZ.
Axios: “Israeli officials said on all three calls, the issue of domestic political pressure from Congress for a ceasefire was mentioned.”
WaPo: “The White House has told Netanyahu in recent days that the ground is shifting in the United States, even among some lawmakers who have long been supportive of Israel.”
BREAKING LATE LAST NIGHT — “NY attorney general has been looking into the taxes of Trump Organization CFO for months, sources say,”by CNN’s Kara Scannell and Sonia Moghe: “The New York attorney general’s office has opened a criminal tax investigation into top Trump Organization officer ALLEN WEISSELBERG, increasing the legal pressure on the long-time aide to former President Donald Trump, people familiar with the investigation say…”
“Prosecutors are seeking to find leverage that could sway Weisselberg into cooperating with authorities, people familiar with the investigation said, potentially raising the legal stakes for Trump and his family. It’s a common tactic used by prosecutors to try to get individuals to ‘flip’ to help build a case higher up the corporate ladder.”
— Interesting nugget from the piece: Weisselberg’s former daughter-in-law Jennifer Weisselberg, an ex-ballerina married to his son Barry for 14 years, is cooperating with authorities. “Her attorney Duncan Levin previously told CNN that she has 25 years-worth of bank records, credit card records and tax records in her possession.”
INFLATION WATCH— In Wednesday’s big market drop, boosters of bitcoin, dogecoin and other cryptocurrencies took a hit — and so did inflation skeptics.
WSJ: “U.S. stocks, commodities, overseas shares and bitcoin dropped in turbulent trading Wednesday as investors’ risk appetite diminished and the Federal Reserve signaled an eventual shift away from its easy-money pandemic policies.
“The Dow Jones Industrial Average declined as much as 587 points in morning trading before paring its losses to less than 200 points, while other markets steadied as well.
“Investors continued to fret about the quickening pace of inflation. Fed officials also acknowledged that evidence of mounting inflation and a robust economic recovery could lead to an earlier review of near-zero interest rates and its massive bond-buying program.”
WHY THE DEATH OF THE 1/6 COMMISSION MATTERS— It’s all but official: Senate Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELLjoined forces with House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY to dash the already dim hopes for an independent commission to investigate the Jan. 6 riot. It’s worth pausing for a minute to just think about all the things we still don’t know about what happened that day — and may never actually learn. Some of the biggest questions remain shrouded in mystery, including whether Trump refused to give a go-ahead to send in the National Guard, what exactly he was doing as lawmakers were running for cover and leadership was begging for backup, and how White House staff and military leaders surrounding him worked with then-VP MIKE PENCE to ultimately break the logjam.
Yes, Senate committee chairs looking into the matter will release a report as early as June on everything we know so far about what happened. But it will lack testimony from key players who were at the White House that day and can speak to Trump’s actions, including former chief of staff MARK MEADOWS, former White House counsel PAT CIPOLLONE and members of Trump’s national security apparatus.
WHAT’S NEXT? There’s already talk on the Hill about whether Democrats should empanel their own select committee, or do a deep-dive investigation of their own. Technically NANCY PELOSI can do that with a simple vote of the House, just as Republicans did to probe the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya.
But when it comes to changing the minds of Republican voters, an investigation led by one party will not have the same effect a bipartisan investigation could have. And chances are Democrats will run into the same problem that has dogged their oversight efforts for two years and counting: Trump officials refusing to comply with their subpoenas.
— Video of the day: Rep. TIM RYAN (D-Ohio) blasting Republicans for chasing HILLARY CLINTON on Benghazi for two years but refusing to back a commission. Watch here
— Here’s a listof the 35 Republicans who bucked McCarthy and backed the commission.
— And here are the Republicans who co-sponsored a bill calling for a commission that looked strikingly similar to the final product, but who voted no anyway: JAMES COMER (Ky.), JIM BANKS (Ind.), ASHLEY HINSON (Iowa), TED BUDD (N.C.), MICHAEL MCCAUL (R-Texas), DOUG LAMALFA (Calif.), MICHELLE STEEL (Calif.), AUGUST PFLUGER (Texas), KAT CAMMACK (Fla.), JAKE LATURNER (Kan.), RALPH NORMAN (S.C.), JEFF VAN DREW (N.J.), DIANA HARSHBARGER (Tenn.), BETH VAN DUYNE (Texas), CLAY HIGGINS (La.) and JACKIE WALORSKI (Ill.).
BIDEN’S THURSDAY — The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:30 a.m. Biden will sign the Covid-19 Hate Crimes Act into law at 2 p.m. in the East Room, where he and VP KAMALA HARRIS will deliver remarks.
— Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m.
THE SENATE is in. HUD Secretary MARCIA FUDGE and Transportation Secretary PETE BUTTIGIEG will testify about infrastructure before the Banking Committee at 10 a.m. The Commerce Committee will take up the nomination of ERIC LANDER to head the Office of Science and Technology Policy at 10 a.m. The Judiciary Committee will take up judicial nominations including KETANJI BROWN JACKSON at 10:30 a.m.
THE HOUSE will meet at 9 a.m., with last votes at 3 p.m. ZALMAY KHALILZAD, special representative for Afghanistan reconciliation, will testify before an Oversight subcommittee at 9 a.m. Director of National Intelligence AVRIL HAINES will testify before an Appropriations subcommittee behind closed doors at 9:30 a.m. Pelosiwill hold her weekly presser at 10:45 a.m. McCarthywill host a press conference for Cuban Independence Day at 11:30 a.m.
— Meanwhile, Democrats on the House Foreign Affairs Committee are expected to meet with someone from the Biden administration as early as today about the $735 million arms sale to Israel. The huddle comes days after Chairman GREGORY MEEKS (D-N.Y.) privately floated the idea of crafting a letter asking the administration to delay the sale, an idea promptly panned by Democratic leaders in the House. WaPo’s Karoun Demirjian has the curtain-raiser.
PLAYBOOK READS
POLITICS ROUNDUP
LATEST ON GAETZ-GATE — “Grand jury subpoena names another person in Gaetz probe,” by Marc Caputo: “A new name has surfaced tied to the scandal engulfing Florida Rep. MATT GAETZ: JOE ELLICOTT, a close friend and former employee of the elected tax collector who pleaded guilty to a host of crimes Monday. Ellicott was listed in a federal grand jury subpoena sent to a different individual and obtained by POLITICO. …
“The Dec. 28, 2020 subpoena states that the grand jury is investigating alleged crimes ‘involving commercial sex acts with adult and minor women, as well as obstruction of justice’ and seeks any communications, documents, recordings and payments the individual had with Ellicott, Gaetz and [JOEL] GREENBERG from January 2016 until now. Two sources familiar with the investigation say Ellicott is also being scrutinized for alleged sex trafficking of a minor.
“Ellicott was one of Greenberg’s closest friends and was a groomsman at the former tax collector’s wedding to his wife, ABBY GREENBERG. Before he was elected to office in 2016, Greenberg paid to broadcast a local sports-themed radio show, and Ellicott would sometimes appear as ‘Big Joe.’”
KNIVES OUT FOR LUNTZ — “GOP pollster Frank Luntz claimed to be impartial — but was paid by Ted Cruz during 2018 Texas race,”Salon: “On Oct. 15, 2018 … HBO aired a VICE News focus group orchestrated by Luntz, which had been filmed three days earlier in Dallas. … [P]articipants were chosen by Luntz, who also decided what questions would be asked. But what neither HBO nor VICE News told their audience — possibly because they didn’t know — was that Luntz was being paid by the Cruz campaign. …
“On Oct. 23, a week after the show aired, Ted Cruz for Senate paid Luntz’s company FIL, Inc. $51,129.87 for ‘survey research/travel.’ … Luntz did not respond to Salon’s requests for comment through his website.”
TOP-ED — The WSJ editorial page highlights a backlash from the right against what it calls “woke corporate politics” — companies that have taken liberal stands on charged issues like voting rights and transgender athletes, including Nike, Coca-Cola and American Airlines. Consumers’ Research, a conservative nonprofit, is spending millions on ads calling out those companies for their own alleged misdeeds, like Nike making shoes in low-wage factories in China and Coke contributing to obesity.
“These attacks are sometimes excessive, as political ads usually are, since Covid-19 is the cause of airline layoffs and sugary drinks aren’t the only cause of obesity,” the Journal writes. “But when CEOs take sides in political fights unrelated to their business interests or regulation, they have to expect to be treated like politicians themselves.”
MEDIAWATCH
INVESTING IN THE ALT-YOUTUBE — “Peter Thiel, J.D. Vance Invest in Rumble Video Platform Popular on Political Right,” WSJ: “The investment is being led by Narya Capital, a Cincinnati-based venture-capital fund co-founded by [J.D.] VANCE and COLIN GREENSPON, and by [PETER] THIEL, who is also a Narya investor, in a personal capacity. Colt Ventures, the family office of Dallas investor and former Trump adviser DARREN BLANTON, is also part of the investment group.
“[The WSJ] previously reported that a group of conservative investors, including Mr. Blanton, were eyeing an investment in Rumble as some on the right seek to set up an alternative social-media ecosystem outside mainstream platforms that they see as excessively restricting speech. … The size of the transaction wasn’t disclosed.”
TENURE DENIED — “After conservative criticism, UNC backs down from offering acclaimed journalist tenured position,”NC Policy Watch: “UNC-Chapel Hill’s Hussman School of Journalism and Media pursued [NIKOLE] HANNAH-JONES for its Knight Chair in Race and Investigative Journalism, a tenured professorship. But following political pressure from conservatives who object to her work on ‘The 1619 Project’ for The New York Times Magazine, the school changed its plan to offer her tenure — which amounts to a career-long appointment.
“Instead, she will start July 1 for a fixed five-year term as Professor of the Practice, with the option of being reviewed for tenure at the end of that time period. ‘It’s disappointing, it’s not what we wanted and I am afraid it will have a chilling effect,’ said SUSAN KING, dean of UNC Hussman.”
BEHIND THE SCENES — “Inside Trump’s push to oust his own FBI chief,”by Daniel Lippman: “Trump sought to oust FBI Director CHRISTOPHER WRAY last spring and replace him with counterintelligence head WILLIAM EVANINA, according to three former Trump officials familiar with the episode.
“Under the plan, the former officials said, KASH PATEL — a former aide to Rep. DEVIN NUNES (R-Calif.) and a fierce critic of the Russia probe — would have become the bureau’s deputy director. Previously unreported details of the proposal reveal just how seriously the former president took his grievances against the intelligence and law enforcement establishment.”
KIMBERLY WEHLE puts on a fine point on things in THE ATLANTIC: “The Country Is on the Cusp of a New Era: America is inching closer to a possibility it has never seen before: the indictment and trial of a former president.”
MORE ON THE TRUMP ORG DRAMA — WaPo’s in-house Trump Org gurus have a pair of stories you should read to get caught up on all things related to the ex-president’s legal issues —and future business plans.
— And Jonathan O’Connell and Lori Rozsa looking forward with“Florida GOP eases path for Trump to pursue casino license”: “The legislation includes a 30-year compact with the Seminole Tribe of Florida, negotiated by Gov. RON DESANTIS (R), a Trump ally. The compact includes a provision barring the tribe from interfering should the state issue a gambling license to a facility more than 15 miles ‘in a straight line’ from the tribe’s Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Hollywood.”
STILL A MONEY MAKER — “Trump, even in exile, is the Republican Party’s cash cow,”by Meridith McGraw and Sam Stein: “Even without his usual social media platforms to give him a fundraising boost like Twitter or Facebook, Trump continues to rake in money for his leadership PAC. A Trump adviser said Save America PAC currently has over $90 million. But his rift with the RNC was quickly resolved after party officials worked to smooth things over— and for the most part disregarded Trump’s demands. Trump remains in regular contact with RNC Chairwoman RONNA MCDANIEL.”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
THE LEFT’S ANTI-ANTI-CHINA CAUCUS — “Progressives warn Biden, Congress against fueling hatred with anti-China measures”by Gavin Bade: “More than 60 activist groups and at least four prominent lawmakers are stepping up their criticisms as the Senate pushes through this week a package of anti-China bills that enjoy backing from members of both parties and the White House.
“Any coordinated opposition could gum up the ongoing amendment process on the Senate floor, or throw a wrench in future efforts to reconcile the measure with the House’s slower-moving initiatives against China. … For now, many members of Congress aren’t willing to publicly challenge the rising anti-China sentiment, and none are yet planning to oppose China-related bills.”
EYEING OTHER ELECTION AUDITS — “Trump allies seek to import Arizona’s election audit to Georgia,”CNN: “A day after Trump said in a statement that Georgia should follow Arizona’s lead, former Georgia state Rep. VERNON JONES, a Trump supporter who is challenging incumbent Republican Gov. BRIAN KEMP in next year’s GOP primary, proposed an audit Wednesday. … Despite the failure to find any evidence of fraud, Trump’s supporters there and in Arizona have continued to assert that more reviews of the 2020 election results are needed.” WaPo tracks the same lies spreading across the country
PLAYBOOKERS
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Gavin Newsom’s political guru Peter Ragone, Republican consultant Matt Mackowiak and PR exec Darius Fisher have teamed up to form a political action committee that advocates for transparency on … UFOs. UFOPac is the first PAC dedicated to “finding the truth on UAPs [Unidentified Aerial Phenomena] and UFOs,” according to their press release. The organization will raise money and press the government to “disclose, declassify, and demystify all information related to UFOs.”
Ragone, who was also a senior advisor to New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, said in a statement: “It’s rare that there is an issue that most Americans can agree on these days. It’s very clear that getting to the bottom of this issue is one of them.” Even former President Barack Obama recently admitted there are just some things the government can’t explain.
— Erin McPike and Corey Chambliss have joined the Facebook policy comms team. McPike most recently was a managing director at Tusk Strategies, and Chambliss was head of comms at Industrious. Both are Bloomberg campaign alums.
GIVING NEW MEANING TO EPICURIOUS — They tasted “a tiny bit nutty” but not at all like shrimp — despite suggestions that they’re the “shrimp of the land.” That’s NPR White House correspondent Tamara Keith’s takeaway after eating … cicadas. You’ll recall that over the weekend, Keith tweeted out a picture of a jar full of the creepy crawlers, accompanied by a request for people to send her their best recipes. Thinking it must be a joke, we followed up with Keith, only to be appalled to learn it wasn’t.
After freezing them— which Keith said is the customary and “humane” way of preparing the bugs — she deep-fried them in some sort of Old Bay batter. Keith tells us she ate two “but wouldn’t necessarily recommend it, at least not the preparation I went with.” But at least “my kids enjoyed laughing at me as I ate bugs, which was really what got this whole adventure started.” Bon appetit!
FROM OBAMA, TO TRUMP, WITH LOVE — “‘Madman … racist, sexist pig’: new book details Obama’s real thoughts on Trump,”The Guardian: “According to a new book, Obama called Trump a ‘madman’, a ‘racist, sexist pig’, ‘that fucking lunatic’ and a ‘corrupt motherfucker’. … Dovere reports that Obama first preferred the prospect of Trump as president to Ted Cruz, because Trump was nowhere near as clever as the hard-right Texas senator, the runner-up in the Republican primary in 2016. But from 2017, as reality swiftly set in, Obama reacted like many in the US and around the world.”
SPOTTED: Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) on a flight from DCA to Charleston. … Preet Bharara and Andrew Ross Sorkin having dinner on the outside patio Wednesday night at Marea in Manhattan.
WHITE HOUSE ARRIVAL LOUNGE — Tara Schwetz is now assistant director for biomedical science initiatives at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. She most recently was associate deputy director of NIH.
OMB ARRIVAL LOUNGE — Isabel Aldunate is now deputy associate director for comms at OMB. She most recently was surrogates comms director for the Presidential Inaugural Committee, and is a Biden campaign and Chuck Schumer alum.
TRANSITION — Mike Sistak is now engagement and coalitions director for the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. He most recently was director for grassroots program development at the American Farm Bureau Federation.
WEEKEND WEDDING — Cassie Leonard, director of congressional affairs at the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives, and Jimmy Ballard, legislative director for Rep. Rodney Davis (R-Ill.), got married Saturday in a small ceremony at the Carlyle House Historic Park in Alexandria, Va. The two met five years ago for a night of dinner and drinks in D.C. and now live with dog Emmett in Virginia. Pic, via Sarah Botta Photography
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) (7-0) … Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo … Delaware Gov. John Carney … Cindy McCain … Jon Meacham … former Rep. Mark Walker (R-N.C.) … Craig Melvin … Phil Elliott of Time … George Condon … Marie Royce … former Rep. Nick Rahall (D-W.Va.) … American Airlines’ Stacy Day … WaPo’s Amber Phillips … USA Today’s Rebecca Morin … Cassie Smedile of America Rising … CoBank’s Sarah Tyree … ABC’s Dan Abrams … APCO Worldwide’s Margery Kraus … Michael Oren … WSJ’s Chad Day … Rebecca Eichmann … Mia Phillips … Aylon Berger … Lauren Wolman … Amazon’s PJ Hoffman … Ryan Kuresman … Jacob Daniels … Brian Darling … Amy Leveton … Walter Isaacson … former Rep. Harold Ford Sr. (D-Tenn.) … Gabriel Muller … former New York Gov. David Paterson … POLITICO’s Jen Scott, Eric Busch, Shaw Newman and Casey Arbaugh … Michael Law … Christina Bellantoni of USC Annenberg … Gail Kaufman
Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
Shane Vander Hart: Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization represents the best opportunity pro-lifers have had to overturn Roe v. Wade since Casey.
A children’s show on PBS featured drag queen and author “Little Miss Hot Mess” singing, dancing, and reading a book about drag queens to an intended audience of three to eight-year-olds. “I think we might have some drag queens in training on our hands,” Little Miss Hot Mess said after …
A group of scammers in New York City allegedly ripped off millions from the state’s super-charged pandemic welfare system. They were busted after (rather foolishly) posting pictures of themselves with massive money stacks on social media and now face prosecution. “A group of young men is accused of ripping off …
Former Trump administration border officials asked President Joe Biden to dismiss Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas for failing to protect the U.S., according to a statement provided to the Daily Caller News Foundation Wednesday. Three Trump-era officials, now with the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), criticized Mayorkas …
Sometime before the Earth-tilting events of the earlier months of 2020, the psychologist Steven Pinker authored “Enlightenment Now” — a brick-sized tome which made the case that empirical reasoning and liberal humanism had birthed a world of glittering progress, with humans living freer, healthier and safer lives across the world. There were two …
There’s nothing wrong with fiction. From Homer to Hemingway, and from Shakespeare to Shaw, storytellers have entertained us for millennia. There’s also nothing wrong with non-fiction, aka factual narratives. Non-fiction books are some of the most successful on the market, and documentaries by the likes of Ken Burns and Martin …
PHARR, Texas—U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Office of Field Operations (OFO) at the Pharr International Bridge arrested a 28-year-old woman, a United States citizen from Edinburg, Texas after discovering $1,500,000 worth of alleged heroin hidden within Volkswagen Jetta she was driving. “Our officers’ relentless dedication to CBP’s border security mission …
The tradition forever in America has been that our elected politicians made every attempt to keep the citizens who voted for them employed, healthy, wealthy, protected by the local police force and defended by our armed forces, and for this attention to the citizens’ welfare on the part of the …
Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced Wednesday that Texas had passed an abortion ban protecting “every unborn child with a heartbeat.” “The heartbeat bill is now LAW in the Lone Star State,” Abbott tweeted Wednesday. “This bill ensures the life of every unborn child with a heartbeat will be saved …
Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing, sign the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act and deliver a speech. President Biden’s Itinerary for 5/20/21: All Times EDT 9:30 AM Receive daily briefing – Oval Office2:00 PM Sign COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act into law and deliver a speech [Live Stream] – …
Black Lives Matter PAC, which was founded and led by Patrisse Cullors, paid an art company run by the father of her only child $148,300 to co-produce a live stream in November, records show. It was mired with technical issues. The owners of two video production companies told the Daily …
Throwing Bill Gates Under The Bus The so-called ‘main stream’ corporate media have been attacking Bill Gates. One might even say he’s being pushed under the bus. That bus contains Jeffrey Epstein and his criminal behavior. It seems Gates spent far more time with the convicted pedophile than he earlier …
Some police departments are having a hard time recruiting potential officers as others gear up for what could be another summer of civil unrest. Demonstrations criticizing officer’s use of force and demanding general police reform last year hurt departments’ recruitment efforts leading to widespread strain, Axios reported Wednesday. Other departments …
Progressive candidates were victorious in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh’s Democratic primaries Tuesday night, winning races by wide margins after a yearlong surge in violent crime. In Philadelphia, progressive District Attorney Larry Krasner cruised to a second term, beating moderate, police-backed primary challenger Carlos Vega by 30 points, even as multiple reports …
Anthony Fauci accused Americans of “misinterpreting” the federal government’s latest mask guidance, which allows vaccinated individuals not to wear masks in most settings. People have misinterpreted the updated Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidance released, White House coronavirus adviser Anthony Fauci told Axios on Wednesday. Many Americans haven’t …
Officials won’t explain why a Space Force commander was fired after joining a podcast to promote his book about Marxist ideas within the U.S. military. Lt. Col. Matthew Lohmeier joined L Todd Wood on the “Information Operation” podcast to discuss his book “Irresistible Revolution: Marxism’s Goal of Conquest & the …
One dysfunctional federal welfare program is contributing to a national labor shortage. Now, we can add Texas to the increasingly long list of states opting out. The program in question is the federal government’s pandemic expansion of unemployment benefits. At the start of the crisis, Congress expanded benefits to new …
President Biden Participates in the United States Coast Guard Academy’s Commencement The event is scheduled to begin at 11:00 a.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details.
Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. It’s rough around these parts when the pickles run low.
I have the urge to disappear into the desert for a while. Elon Musk needs to get that satellite internet into the middle of nowhere up faster. We’ve all been a little light on changes in our geographical perspective this past year and I’m a big fan of bugging out for a few days to try and see things differently. The desert does have that ability to bake one’s thoughts down to their purest form, too. I don’t know why I’m sharing this tangent.
Do we ever know anything about my tangents?
The Democrats have apparently stopped following the science. Not only that, they’re done worshiping at the altar of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), an organization that we’ve been told for over a year speaks nothing but the Gospel truth. It’s not as if I’m surprised by the flip-flopping. People who wander through life unburdened by morals, convictions, or the cognitive ability to process logic aren’t exactly known for their consistency, after all.
As long as the CDC could be used by the COVID tyrants as a cudgel to keep the masses oppressed in the name of public health, the Democrats treated it as most holy and righteous. Now that the CDC has said that we vaccinated folk don’t need to be wearing masks (which Doctor Diarrhea Mouth thinks we don’t understand), the Democrats have fallen out of love.
The Democrats talk about masks ad nauseam because, let’s face it, what else are they going to talk about?
Foreign policy? LOL.
The border crisis? WHAT CRISIS?
The roaring jobs market? Oops.
The hilarious thing here is that these paste-eating Democrat mask freaks are knee-capping the only real success that this administration has had, which is the vaccine distribution. Perhaps they’re struggling with the fact that Biden’s big win was only made possible by Donald Trump.
Granny Boxwine has decided that the House of Representatives needs to remain masked up at work, even though they got access to the vaccine long before we commoners did.
So what’s Pelosi doing here? Is she saying the CDC’s recent announcement may be political? A sort of wag the dog strategy to distract the nation from Biden’s terrible, no good, awful presidency to date?
Or is she a vaccine skeptic who thinks they don’t really work?
Or is her continued mask mandate just more COVID theater?
Honestly, on my list of Top 100 Faces I’d Be OK With Never Seeing Again, Nancy Pelosi ranks really, really high. Stay masked up forever, Nan. In fact, let all of the mask fetishists keep the cult alive. They tend to be pinched, bitter people anyway. No one needs to see their faces, especially when we’re out in public trying to enjoy a meal.
If a mask can save just one lunch…
Unfortunately, the Senate got rid of its mandate, so we’re going to be seeing more of Chuck Schumer now.
PJ Media senior columnist and associate editor Stephen Kruiser is a professional stand-up comic, writer, and recovering political activist who edits and writes PJ’s Morning Briefing, aka The Greatest Political Newsletter in America. His latest book, Straight Outta Feelings, is a humorous exploration of how the 2016 election made him enjoy politics more than he ever had before. When not being a reclusive writer, Kruiser has had the honor of entertaining U.S. troops all over the world. Follow on: Gab, Parler, MeWe
House Intel Republicans say COVID Wuhan lab leak is no conspiracy theory . . . Republicans on the House Intelligence Committee say there is “significant circumstantial evidence” that the COVID-19 outbreak stemmed from a leak at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, urging the federal government to put “more pressure on China” to allow for a “full, credible investigation” into the source of the global pandemic. Committee Ranking Member Devin Nunes, R-Calif., and Republicans on the panel released a report Wednesday, first obtained by Fox News, saying it is “crucial for health experts and the US government to understand how the COVID-19 virus originated” to prevent “or quickly mitigate future pandemics.” Fox News
Keep digging, Congressman Nunes.
Politics
Kamala Harris grapples with challenges as vice president . . . Four months into her time as vice president, Kamala Harris is still finding her footing in the role. Harris is seen as a major reason why President Biden won the White House, and she’s considered an heir apparent for the Democratic nomination in 2024 or 2028. But she has struggled to break through as she juggles an evolving portfolio, adapts to a new staff and builds a relationship with Biden, who has a completely different style than her own. “She’s gotta figure out what kind of VP she wants to be,” said one Democrat close to the White House. “She’s the future of the party and people want to see what she’s going to do.” The Hill
Jill Biden said Kamala Harris could “go f— herself” during the campaign . . . The political marriage between Joe Biden and Kamala Harris is one of convenience, or more accurately, opportunity. He needed her to get elected, and he took her. She figured it would be a good idea to be vice president. First lady Jill Biden said Harris can “go f— herself” in a call with campaign donors, Dovere writes in his forthcoming book shared with Fox News, “Battle for the Soul” by Edward Isaac Dovere, to be published May 25. White House Dossier
House approves Jan. 6 commission over GOP objections . . .
The House on Wednesday passed a bill to establish a commission to investigate the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, earning relatively little support from Republicans as GOP leaders sought to quash a bill negotiated by one of their own members. Lawmakers passed the bill in a 252-175 vote, with 35 Republicans joining all Democrats in support. The legislation’s chances appear increasingly slim in the Senate after both Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) came out in opposition to the bill. The Hill
Biden Intel Nominee Grilled for Huawei Work . . . A Biden administration nominee for a senior intelligence post admitted to doing contract work for Chinese tech giant Huawei while employed at the company’s top lobbying firm. Christopher Fonzone, the nominee for the director of national intelligence’s general counsel position, would join the DNI office from Sidley Austin LLP, one of Huawei’s top lobbying firms in the beltway. Fonzone told Sen. Ben Sasse (R., Neb.) he did work for the Chinese tech company—widely considered a national security threat—while employed by the firm. Washington Free Beacon
Who cares about America’s security when you can make a few yuans? What a great person to occupy the position of a chief lawyer at the top US intelligence agency! These are the types who ran the “Trump-Russia collusion” psychological operation on the American people back in 2016.
Ocasio-Cortez leading effort to block arms sale to Israel . . . A group of progressive House Democrats led by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez introduced a resolution Wednesday aimed at blocking a $735 million arms sale to Israel. The resolution is largely symbolic as Democratic leaders who support the sale are unlikely to give the legislation a vote and the window for lawmakers to force a vote to block the sale closes in a couple of days. The Hill
What’s not symbolic is her dangerous, radical views. She’s gotta go.
Socialist AOC’s Tesla Parked Illegally Outside Whole Foods in Posh DC Neighborhood . . . Like most celebrities, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D., N.Y.) doesn’t always play by the rules. The socialist congresswoman’s white Tesla was parked illegally outside the Whole Foods near her posh apartment complex in Washington, D.C. Ocasio-Cortez’s office did not immediately return a request for comment on the parking scandal. There is more than sufficient evidence, however, to conclude that the illegally parked white Tesla belongs to her. Washington Free Beacon
Totalitarian socialists don’t play by the rules. They make the rules for us, the “lesser mortals,” to obey.
Trump’s 3-point checklist: How he weighs decision on 2024 run . . . Longtime Trump political brain truster Corey Lewandowski goes inside the still-popular (and polarizing) former president’s thought processes regarding 2024. There are three key factors former President Trump will assess in weighing a campaign to recapture the White House 2024, according to Lewandowski: health, political clout, and money. Trump “turns 75 on June 14th, so the first factor, obviously, is his health,” Lewandowski told “Just the News AM” on Wednesday. Were Trump to be elected in 2024, he would be 78 years old (Biden’s current age) when he assumed office. The former president takes seriously the element of his age — including both physical and mental health. Trump, however, is “in incredible shape and is obviously a very active individual,” said Lewandowski. Just the News
National Security
More than 61,000 illegal immigrants release into US under Biden . . . This covers February, March, and April. Whether these people are carrying disease, are criminals, or are terrorists, we have no idea. “More than 61,000 immigrants who illegally crossed the U.S.-Mexico border have been released into the United States since President Joe Biden took office, according to federal data. White House Dossier
DHS wants Pentagon to extend troop deployment at southern border . . . The Department of Homeland Security wants military members to stay at the U.S.-Mexico border past the Sept. 30 date they were expected to return home, the Pentagon has confirmed.
About 4,000 National Guard troops are currently at the southern border as part of a mission that began in late 2018 and was meant to end by the start of October. But DHS on May 12 requested that the Defense Department “extend DoD support to Customs and Border Protection into fiscal year 2022. The Hill
Pentagon tries to deny Capitol riot is being used as pretext to completely transform military . . . The Pentagon is allegedly planning to launch a program via a private firm named Babel Street that would monitor the social media of military personnel and search for “extremist material” in order to avoid First Amendment protections. The social media screening program reportedly will “continuously” monitor platforms for “concerning behaviors,” as part of the Biden administration’s plan to combat domestic extremism. The Pentagon’s top spokesman John Kirby denied the existence of the program. However, President Biden’s Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin has previously said that the Defense Department cannot do its job of “keeping America safe from our enemies if some of those enemies lie within our own ranks.” In April, Austin sent out a memo calling for a number of immediate actions to be taken to combat “extremism” and ordered the formation of the Countering Extremism Working Group. Business & Politics Review
Didn’t the apparatchiks just remove a Space Force commander for exposing the Pentagon’s suspect training materials intended to prepare the military to combat domestic extremism? The colonel opposed the fact that senior leaders were promoting CRT and Marxist ideology without understanding the true anti-American nature of both? My former intel colleagues reported receiving similar training that they believe targets conservatives.
US denies disrupting Russian cyber group behind Colonial pipeline hack . . . The United States did not take action against the cyber criminal group that was behind the ransomware attack on Colonial Pipeline earlier this month, according to four U.S. officials speaking the condition of anonymity. Military cyber operators reportedly did not take steps to disrupt cyber group DarkSide, nor did any other U.S. agency. The Hill
Why?
Colonial Pipeline CEO Tells Why He Paid Hackers a $4.4 Million Ransom . . . Joseph Blount, CEO of Colonial Pipeline Co., told The Wall Street Journal that he authorized the ransom payment of $4.4 million because executives were unsure how badly the cyberattack had breached its systems, and consequently, how long it would take to bring the pipeline back. For years, the Federal Bureau of Investigation has advised companies not to pay when hit with ransomware, a type of code that takes computer systems hostage and demands payment to have files unlocked. Doing so, officials have said, would support a booming criminal marketplace. But many companies, municipalities and others debilitated by attacks do pay, concluding it is the only way to avoid costly disruptions to their operations. Wall Street Journal
Mr. Blount, you might want to consider hiring someone competent to do a BDA (battle damage assessment) on your computer systems, because ‘Russia-based’ hackers will be back for more, before too long. Or, I have another idea – secure your networks!
Oh, wait, never mind, Ivan says he already has placed a back-door code.
Coronavirus
Face Masks and First Amendment . . . Masking has become a form of virtue signaling. David Rivkin, a Washington lawyer, teamed up with The Wall Street Journal’s James Taranto to explore how mask wearing fits with the First Amendment. They concluded that if wearing a mask conveys a political message, mandating it is constitutionally suspect. To wear a mask in public is to affirm a viewpoint no less powerful than the Pledge of Allegiance: that Covid poses a crisis so dire as to demand unprecedented government control of our lives and a transformation of the norms of interpersonal behavior. “There is no reason to deny any American the freedom” to decide for himself or herself whether to continue wearing a mask.Patriot Post
International
Israel’s Defense Chief tells IDF to work fast in the time left before a truce . . . Defense Minister Benny Gantz ordered IDF chiefs to use the short time left before a ceasefire is agreed to achieve its goals. He laid stress on destroying Hamas’ underground commands and arsenals and targeted assassinations of its senior officers. Hamas is intent on hitting a high-profile target in the time left. Government and military officials were drafting a carefully worded text on Thursday about winding down Gaza campaign ahead of the release of a unilateral announcement in a day or two that the operation is over. DEBKAFile
Israeli PM Rebuffs Biden’s Push For De-Escalation . . . Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he’s “determined” to continue the Gaza operation, despite President Joe Biden’s push on Wednesday for “a significant de-escalation.” Biden spoke with Netanyahu on Wednesday in the leader’s third call this week and “conveyed to the Prime Minister that he expected a significant de-escalation today on the path to a ceasefire,” according to the White House. Daily Caller
US and Russia’s top diplomats meet face-to-face for first time as tensions grow . . . US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov spoke of their differences during their first face-to-face talks Wednesday in the Icelandic capital of Reykjavik. “We seek a predictable, stable relationship with Russia,” Blinken told Lavrov, echoing comments made by President Joe Biden, who has proposed a summit with Russian leader Vladimir Putin next month. But even before Wednesday’s talks the two diplomats had laid down near diametrically opposed positions for the meeting, previewing what was likely to be a difficult and contentious exchange over myriad issues including Ukraine, the Arctic, Russia’s treatment of opposition figure Alexey Navalny and accusations of cyber malfeasance, including the recent cyber attack on a key US pipeline by Russia-based hackers. “However, if [stable and predictable] includes constant and predictable sanctions, that’s not what we need,” Lavrov stated. Lavrov dismissed Blinken’s criticism of Russia’s military activities in the Arctic, stating that Arctic “is our territory, our land.” Fox News
Biden should not meet with Putin and embarrass the country. He is no match for “killer” Putin. And he already has given away the store to the Russians by waiving the sanctions on NordStream 2 pipeline.
Money
Peter Thiel, JD Vance investing in YouTube alternative . . . Conservative venture capitalists Peter Thiel and J.D. Vance are investing in YouTube alternative Rumble, a platform popular among conservatives. The investment group consists of Narya Capital, founded by Colin Greenspon. It also includes Vance and Colt Ventures, the family office of former Trump adviser Darren Blanton. The deal was closed last week and announced on Wednesday, Rumble Chief Executive Chris Pavlovski told The Hill
You should also know
Lawmaker Calls for Reinstatement of Space Force Commander . . . A group of 23 lawmakers led by Rep. Doug Lamborn (R., Colo.,) is calling for the reinstatement of a Space Force officer after he was relieved of duty for criticizing the military’s embrace of critical race theory. Lamborn, a member of the House Armed Services Committee and cofounder of the Space Force Caucus, warned that the decision to bounce the officer from command raises an “inescapable fact” senior Pentagon officials can no longer ignore: Critical race theory undermines the military’s ability to win wars. “We cannot allow temporary political appointees at the Department of Defense who are ideologically motivated to purge those men and women in uniform who do not agree with the cultural or political fads of the moment.” Washington Free Beacon
Obama on UFOs: There are things we can’t explain and things he can’t tell us . . . Barack Obama was asked on The Late Late Show Monday night about UFOs, and he certainly didn’t say that we haven’t been visited by aliens. “When it comes to aliens, there’s some things I just can’t tell you,” Obama said. “There’s footage and records of objects in tens skies that, we don’t know exactly what they are. We can’t explain how they move, their trajectory. They did not have an easily explainable pattern.” White House Dossier
UFOs that were noted during the previous Democratic administration were eventually explained. It turns out they were lamps being thrown by Hillary Clinton at Bill’s head.
Guilty Pleasures
Police swarm home of mortified mom who left her ‘corpse’ outside . . . A U.K. woman was mortified after an errantly placed Halloween prop prompted a squad of 10 police officers to surround her home on the suspicion that she’d committed murder. The fiasco was sparked by a dummy wrapped in garbage bags and duct tape that the mother of two had used as a spooky decoration at a holiday kids’ party. Cara Louise, 28, had kept the faux cadaver in the garden since November. However, the hairdresser had recently relocated the holiday holdover behind some garbage bins while gardening and forgot to put it back before picking up her elder son from school.
The macabre prop sparked suspicion among Louise’s neighbors, who dialed the U.K. emergency number, 999, prompting a whopping 10 officers to descend upon the unsuspecting mother’s home. She did recall asking the police how they could think the prop was a person with “legs that short.” “You might have cut them,” was the police’s reported reply. “I said, ‘Oh, did you check my bins?’ she recounted, adding that “they looked a bit concerned and asked, ‘Should we?’ ” Fox News
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Happy Thursday! LeBron James hit an off-balance 3-pointer with the shot clock expiring last night to lead the Los Angeles Lakers past the Golden State Warriors 103-100 and put the defending NBA champs into the playoff bracket. Don’t worry: Cubs updates will return next week.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
As Israel and Hamas continued into their 10th day of fighting on Wednesday, President Joe Biden told Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a phone call that “he expected a significant de-escalation today on the path to a ceasefire,” according to a White House readout of the conversation. Netanyahu rejected Biden’s support for a ceasefire, tweeting Wednesday that he is “determined to continue this operation until its goal is achieved, to restore peace and security to you, the citizens of Israel.”
The House of Representatives voted 252-175 Wednesday to create a bipartisan commission to investigate the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Thirty-five Republicans voted in support of the bill—bucking GOP House leadership, which had urged the conference against it. The bill now goes to the Senate, where it will need at least 10 Republican votes to pass.
Before the House vote, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell announced he would follow the lead of his colleagues in House leadership by opposing the commission legislation. “It’s not at all clear what new facts or additional investigation yet another commission could lay on top of the existing efforts by law enforcement and Congress,” McConnell said on the Senate floor Wednesday.
Federal Reserve officials signaled Wednesday that the Central Bank could adjust its easy-money monetary policy in the near future.“A number of participants suggested that if the economy continued to make rapid progress toward the committee’s goals, it might be appropriate at some point in upcoming meetings to begin discussing a plan for adjusting the pace of asset purchases,” read the minutes from the Fed’s meeting from late April that were released Wednesday. The Fed has kept interest rates near zero over the past several months, and it has previously said that it won’t adjust its monetary policy until the economy reaches its targets of 2 percent inflation and full employment.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signed a bill on Wednesday banning abortions after a fetal heartbeat can be detected, which is as early as six weeks into a pregnancy. The law empowers private citizens to sue abortion providers who violate the measure, a novel strategy proponents say is intended to make the measure harder to block in court.
The European Union announced Wednesday that it will open its borders to fully vaccinated Americans and other international travelers. EU officials said Wednesday that the new protocol will likely take effect sometime within the next week or two.
The United States confirmed 29,504 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 3.9 percent of the 765,700 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 664 deaths were attributed to the virus on Wednesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 587,867. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 26,415 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 1,754,966 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 159,174,963 Americans having now received at least one dose.
Bitcoin Takes a Plunge
Over the past year, the value of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum has skyrocketed due to a combination of factors: an increasing number of companies accepting them as payment, celebrity businessmen like Tesla’s Elon Musk talking them up as promising technology, and retail investors with stimulus money to burn and dollar signs in their eyes piling into shares of the coins.
But in recent weeks, all has not been sunshine and roses in the crypto market. Cryptocurrencies took another hit Wednesday when Bitcoin, the highest-valued digital currency worldwide, nose-dived to nearly $30,000 a coin for the first time since January. Between mixed signaling from Elon Musk about Tesla’s investment portfolio and efforts by the Chinese government to curtail the purchase of foreign digital assets, the crypto market lost valuable footing in May that it had gained earlier this year.
Bitcoin dropped about 50 percent from its April high of $65,000 yesterday morning, but crept back up to about $39,300 by 6 p.m. Like tech stocks, cryptocurrencies are speculative assets, meaning they are more susceptible to dramatic swings in the market.
When its value soared over the course of 2021, however, investors grew optimistic that Bitcoin would soon emerge as a stable investment. Part of this growing valuation of the technology has been bolstered by the fact that only 21 million bitcoins will ever be mined. Bitcoin’s finite supply has boosted confidence among investors that it could act as a hedge against inflation. Audrey explained the cryptocurrency in a piece for the site in December:
Unlike paper currencies, Bitcoin is powered by blockchain technology, a decentralized digital database that tracks the whereabouts of every single coin in circulation. New transactions create new blocks of data that are linked together in a chain-like sequence. The interconnectedness of each block in the financial ledger means that all transactions are added in chronological order and are therefore irreversible.
There is no central authority that regulates Bitcoin. Instead, thousands of computers around the world called “nodes” verify transactions in a collective network, preventing any singular actor from falsifying data or counterfeiting coins. The process is transparent, efficient, and doesn’t require a middleman for account transfers.
But yesterday’s dip, one of many over the course of two weeks, complicates matters as compounding factors threaten to halt cryptocurrencies’ momentum.
Flash flooding in parts of the Gulf Coast region has left millions of people living under flash flood warnings and thousands without power. Five weather-related deaths are being investigated in Louisiana.
The National Weather Service has issued flash flood warnings and watches to parts of Oklahoma, Arkansas, Texas, and Louisiana. Many of those warnings will remain in effect through Thursday morning and may be extended.
While some of the worst of the rain has moved past the Dallas area, Lamont Bain, meteorologist at the National Weather Service office of Fort Worth, told The Dispatch the area saw near-record levels of flooding over the weekend. In Dallas, White Rock Creek entered what’s called a “major flood stage,” meaning the river crested at 91.16 feet, nearly breaking the record set in 2018 which was 91.6 feet.
Like the arts? Buckle in for a grim read. “It doesn’t take a Leonardo-level intellect to figure out that the pandemic has been devastating for the arts economy,” William Deresiewicz writes in Harper’s. “Still, I don’t think most of us appreciate just how bad things are … What has been happening across the arts is not a recession. It is not even a depression. It is a catastrophe.” In grisly detail, Deresiewicz breaks down the situation: How precarious art incomes already were prior to the pandemic given how accustomed people have become to getting their content for free. How, to compensate for this, the art economy had grown to rely nearly solely on live events—plays, concerts, book tours, art shows—as its dominant income stream. The pandemic throttled that income stream overnight. And how, even as things now inch back toward reopening, industry titans and tech companies are busy restacking the deck to take an even bigger slice of the pie for themselves. “We need an art movement like the one we have for food,” he writes, “a movement for responsible consumption.”
In June 2019, Kamala Harris caused perhaps the most memorable moment of the Democratic primary when she criticized then-frontrunner Joe Biden for his 1970s record on busing as he worked alongside segregationist lawmakers in the Senate. Harris told a story about her own experience being bused to attend an integrated public school in California: “That little girl was me,” she said during the second night of the first Democratic debate. In a piece for Politico,reporter Edward-Isaac Dovere walks readers through Biden and Harris’ thorny relationship that followed that viral moment before the current vice president was able to charm her way onto Biden’s 2020 presidential ticket.
In meetings this week, California’s Instructional Quality Commission is debating a K-12 mathematics curriculum proposal that claims that “the concept of mathematics being purely objective is unequivocally false,” and that “students must develop a critical consciousness through which they challenge the status quo of the current social order.” The manual, which says junior high students should no longer be on track to take Algebra I in eighth grade, is titled “A Pathway to Equitable Math Instruction: Dismantling Racism in Mathematics Instruction,” and could be ratified later this year by the California school board. “This program is quite a comedown for math, from an objective academic discipline to a tool for political activism,” writes Williamson Evers, a senior fellow and director of the Center on Educational Excellence at the Independent Institute, in a Wall Street Journal op-ed. “Society will be harmed: With fewer people who know math well, how are we going to build bridges, launch rockets or advance technologically? Students will pay the heaviest price—and not only in California. As we’ve seen before, what starts in California doesn’t stop here.”
In this week’s Capitolism, Scott Lincicome brings us up to speed on the ongoing turmoil in the economic recovery, including the latest uptick in inflation reported by the Labor Department earlier this month. Check out Wednesday’s newsletter to learn more about how the pandemic, government policies, international factors, and even freak events have contributed to the “big and uncertain imbalance between supply and demand for all sorts of goods and services.”
In his midweek G-File, Jonah takes on “geopolitical structural antisemitism”—the perennial and perverse way international institutions treat Israel as one of the world’s worst human rights abusers. “The rules for Israel are different,” he writes. “Right now, China has a gulag archipelago of concentration and reeducation camps for Muslims. It is well into its fourth decade of ethnic cleansing in Tibet. Outrage over these facts has increased in the last year or so, but it would have to quintuple and quintuple again to reach the institutionalized outrage Israel is subjected to constantly. Saudi Arabia has been doing in Yemen what Israel is routinely—and falsely—accused of doing. Burma’s treatment of the Rohingya is far more brutal than the worst excesses—real or even alleged—of the Israel Defense Forces. How often do you hear speeches about that from the Alexandria Ocasio-Cortezes and Cori Bushes of the world?”
Kemberlee Kaye: “Have you registered for our next event yet?”
Mary Chastain: “Can Fauci just go away? We already knew he wore masks for theater and not science.“
Fuzzy Slippers: “Good, we need more of this from Republican-controlled states.”
Leslie Eastman: “Outrage is now circling a Pentagon advisor who now is planning to “continuously” trawl the social media accounts of military personnel for “extremist behavior and views.” Bishop Garrison plans to use a private security company to shield itself from concerns that it’s violating the First Amendment. Now, many conservatives of scouring his social media accounts, and have already turned-up some eye-popping tweets.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “Ahead of the next month’s summit between President Joe Biden and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, the White House has waived key sanctions linked to the Russian-German Nordstream 2 gas pipeline. The 760-mile Baltic Sea pipeline, nearing its completion, will allow direct Russian gas supply to Germany and other countries of Western Europe. This will be a game-changer for Kremlin, making Europe energy-dependent on Russia. More than 40 percent of gas exported to European Union countries already comes from Russia.”
Stacey Matthews: “Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot continues to compete with NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio for the ‘worst mayor in America’ distinction.”
David Gerstman: “Mary Chastain blogged that Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said that she would grant one on one interviews only to black or brown journalists on the occasion of her two-year anniversary in office. Glad to see that one Latino journalist took a stand.”
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Diplomatic Malpractice
What does the Biden administration’s engagement with Iran have to do with the violence erupting between Israel and Palestine? A lot. From IWF’s Ellie Cohanim in The Hill:
“[W]here the Biden administration is engaging in diplomatic malpractice is in its desperate efforts to reenter the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), commonly known as the Iran deal, which would give the Iranian regime—Hamas’ benefactor and supplier—billions of dollars in sanctions relief. Iran has been designated by the State Department as the world’s leading state-sponsor of terrorism, and according to reports, Iran has been funding Hamas with $30 million monthly for intelligence on Israeli missile capabilities.”
“Additionally, the Israeli military has confirmed that many of the rockets being used by Hamas since their attacks began this week are of Iranian origin. Any U.S. release of funds to the Iranian regime will likely wind up in Hamas coffers to be used in terror activity against our ally Israel.”
… “[I]f the Biden administration continues down the path of pursuing the Iranian regime for reentry into the JCPOA, we can all expect more regional instability and more needless bloodshed in the Middle East. We are seeing the consequences of emboldening the world’s greatest state sponsor of terrorism, Iran, in real time.”
Conditional Compassion
If you click on one link today, make it this: The story of Helen Raleigh, a conservative Asian-American who tragically lost her baby boy at birth. In an effort to honor her son who was a stillborn and help other parents in her situation, Raleigh began advocating for a one-time child tax credit for families experiencing stillbirth.
What happened next is shocking, tragic, and instructive of the Left’s double standard when it comes to race and hate. Read Raleigh’s story here—and share.
The Bitcoin Bubble?
Trouble abounds in the cryptocurrency market. Yesterday, Bitcoin fell to more than a three-month low, dropping to about $30,000 at one point. “Part of the reason for Bitcoin’s weakness seems to be at least a temporary reversal in broader acceptance for cryptocurrency, as well as regulatory concerns and weakness in more speculative areas of financial markets,” reports CNBC. Also likely influencing the drop was Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s announcement last week that Tesla would no longer accept bitcoin as payment, and Biden’s anxiety-inducing data on prices and jobs.
About Biden’s Tax Returns
Did anyone in the media actually read them? “[W]hile the White House emphasized the release of Biden’s returns, it does not want reporters to scrutinize the content of those returns, because doing so would highlight a pattern of hypocritical behavior by the current president and his family,” writes The Federalist’s Christopher Jacobs. “To wit: For the fourth year running, the First Family used a questionable tax loophole to avoid paying more than $500,000 in Medicare and Obamacare taxes — a loophole that the Biden administration now claims it wants to close.” More here.
Kelsey Bolar is a senior policy analyst at Independent Women’s Forum and a contributor to The Federalist. She is also the Thursday editor of BRIGHT, and the 2017 Tony Blankley Chair at The Steamboat Institute. She lives in Washington, DC, with her husband, daughter, and Australian Shepherd, Utah.
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May 20, 2021 01:00 am
Joe Biden has had his 100-day honeymoon. People were bound to start complaining eventually. But then something surprising caught my attention Read More…
It’s possible that Biden faked a basic task
May 20, 2021 01:00 am
Nothing seems real about the Biden presidency so when a video seemingly catches Biden faking a basic life task, we shouldn’t be surprised. Read more…
American Thinker is a daily internet publication devoted to the thoughtful exploration of issues of importance to Americans.
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By Kyle Kondik
Managing Editor, Sabato’s Crystal Ball
KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE
— The reapportionment of House seats and pending redistricting has prevented us from releasing U.S. House ratings so far this cycle.
— While Republicans stand to gain from this process, they would be favored to win the House even if the district lines were not changing.
— Rating the House races based on the current lines shows many more Democratic seats in the Toss-up column than Republican ones. These hypothetical ratings are guided by developments in the 2022 campaign so far as well as the normal tendency for the president’s party to lose ground in the House in midterms.
Assessing the House if the maps were not changing
Every state with more than one U.S. House district will be redrawing their district lines this cycle to account for population changes, and that process is on hold because of delays in the U.S. Census. The Census Bureau won’t be releasing the granular data states need to draw new maps until later this year. While some states are trying to get a head start — Oklahoma, for instance, drew new state legislative districts using older data — we likely will not get a good handle on what new maps will look like until the fall. Among those delayed by the stalled census is us: We have not released House ratings yet as we await the new districts.
On balance, we expect the reapportionment of House seats — which we analyzed late last month — to benefit Republicans to a small extent. Redistricting seems likely to also help Republicans. Given that the Democrats only won a 222-213 edge in the House last year, Republicans only need to net five seats to win the House. That kind of small gain could come from reapportionment and redistricting alone.
This doesn’t even take into account the usual advantages that the party that does not control the White House typically has in midterm House elections: Since the end of World War II, the average seat loss by the presidential party in midterms is 27 seats. In those 19 midterm elections, the presidential party has lost seats 17 times. The exceptions were 1998 and 2002, when the president’s party made small gains.
House Democrats are facing twin challenges next year: The overall consequences of reapportionment and redistricting, as well as midterm history. The combination of the two will be difficult for Democrats to overcome. But what if they only had to overcome one of these challenges? What if no district lines were changing? Could Democrats hold the House under the current map?
What follows is hypothetical Crystal Ball House ratings of all 435 House districts under the current maps and with the same apportionment as last decade.
Just so we’re clear: These are not real House ratings. We have not rated any 2022 House races yet this year, and we won’t until we start getting finalized maps.
These ratings also mix an alternate reality, in which no redistricting is occurring, with our actual reality, in which redistricting is occurring. This means we are taking into account developments that have happened in the real world that might not have happened in a world where no redistricting was happening. For instance, Reps. Charlie Crist (D, FL-13) and Tim Ryan (D, OH-13) have both announced statewide bids, and both of their seats are Toss-ups as open seats. It may be that the prospect of their districts being made more competitive (Crist) or being eliminated altogether (Ryan) is part of why these two members decided to run statewide. In an alternate reality with no redistricting, they would have nothing to fear from redistricting, so perhaps they would both be running for reelection instead of opting for statewide runs — in which case we would not have their districts as Toss-ups (both would probably be in the Leans or Likely Democratic columns). Redistricting may also be playing a role in what recent reporting has described as likely Senate bids by Reps. Val Demings (D, FL-10) and Stephanie Murphy (D, FL-7) in Florida and Rep. Conor Lamb (D, PA-17) in Pennsylvania. We took these likely bids for higher office into account when formulating these ratings (as open seats, FL-10 is Safe Democratic as currently drawn, while PA-17 is listed as a Toss-up and FL-7 as Likely Democratic).
With those caveats out of the way, here’s Table 1, our ratings for the House if no districts were changing. As per usual, the vast majority of the 435 House seats are not really competitive in general elections. Those districts not listed are rated safe for the incumbent party.
The overall takeaway from these hypothetical ratings is this: The Democrats would be underdogs to hold the House under the current district lines.
Table 1: Crystal Ball House ratings if no district lines changed
What stands out here is the tiny number of Republicans in the Toss-up column, just two, versus the large number of Democrats there (19).
The Democratic seats held by incumbents in the Toss-up column were all decided by four points or less with just one exception: Rep. Elaine Luria (D, VA-2) won by about half a dozen points in her swingy Hampton Roads seat. However, she has drawn a potentially strong challenger: state Sen. Jen Kiggans (R), who won a competitive state Senate race in 2019. The open FL-13 and OH-13 were mentioned above: Crist won by six points and Ryan won by eight. Several of the incumbents here did not face well-regarded challengers in 2020 but still had close races. Given that most of the members listed here won by roughly two-to-four points in 2020, they can’t afford much slippage, but it has been common in recent years for members of the presidential party to perform worse in a midterm compared to the previous presidential election year. Also included here as a Toss-up is IL-17, a Donald Trump-won district from which former Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Chairwoman Cheri Bustos is retiring. It’s hard to know how redistricting may have played into her thinking: a Democratic gerrymander could have helped her, although she also may not have gotten much help. In this scenario, IL-17 probably would be a Toss-up even if Bustos was running for reelection: Army reservist Esther Joy King (R), who held Bustos to a four-point win in 2020, appeared poised to challenge her in a rematch and officially entered the race immediately after Bustos retired.
Speaking of rematches, some others figured into these ratings. A number of other Republicans who lost close races in 2020 have already indicated that they will run again, such as veteran Wesley Hunt (R). He challenged Rep. Lizzie Fletcher (D, TX-7) in 2020 and lost by three points. That is a district we might have called Leans Democratic if Hunt wasn’t running again. For the purposes of these ratings, we’re assuming a Fletcher-Hunt rematch. In the real world, a Texas Republican gerrymander could end up making Fletcher’s district safer as a way to shore up Republican chances elsewhere, which hypothetically could prompt Hunt to run somewhere else (or maybe Republicans will hurt Fletcher and improve Hunt’s odds of beating her). Rep. Tom Malinowski (D, NJ-7) holds the most Democratic district of any Democrat in the Toss-up column based on 2020 presidential results — Joe Biden won his district by about 10 points — but Malinowski only won by a little over a point against state Senate Minority Leader Tom Kean Jr. (R), who is not running for reelection to the New Jersey Senate this year and is widely expected to challenge Malinowski in a rematch. Assuming NJ-7 doesn’t change much in redistricting and Kean does in fact run, we’ll probably start this race as a Toss-up in our “real” ratings too (the same applies to the aforementioned VA-2).
Remember, though, that a Toss-up rating does not equate to “sure loser.” This is just a way of illustrating Democratic exposure in the House even under the current lines.
Let’s now turn to the competitive Republican-held districts. Republicans swept the closest House races in 2020: They won all seven races decided by less than 5,000 votes, including victories by six (IA-2), 109 (NY-22), and 333 (CA-25) votes. (Malinowski, the narrowest Democratic winner by raw vote margin, won by about 5,300 votes.) Yet we are starting most of these close GOP 2020 winners in the Leans Republican column.
Why? Because incumbents from the non-White House party very rarely lose in midterm general elections. No Democratic House incumbents lost in 2006 or 2018 when they won control of the House during Republican presidencies, and no Republican House incumbents lost in the 1994 general election, when the GOP won the House majority for the first time in four decades during Bill Clinton’s first midterm. Just two Republican incumbents lost in both 2010 and 2014 when Republicans flipped the House (2010) and then elected their biggest House majority since the Great Depression (2014). There were extenuating circumstances for those incumbents, as noted here. Even in 1998 and 2002, two cycles in which the presidential party bucked the usual midterm slide, only a few non-presidential party incumbents lost in the general election. Five incumbent Democrats lost in George W. Bush’s first midterm, 2002, but all five were hurt by redistricting — a factor we’re ignoring for the purposes of this article, but one that will end up contributing to incumbent losses in both parties in real life. Five incumbent Republicans also lost in 1998 during Clinton’s second midterm, although one of those five — Bill Redmond (R, NM-3) — was something of an accidental winner in a 1997 special election (for more, see our piece from last month on special elections). The other four were either first or second-term incumbents. So while Democrats will go after a number of Republicans, we wouldn’t expect many to lose if no maps changed.
Overall, we have just two House Republicans in the Toss-up column: Reps. Mike Garcia (R, CA-25) and Young Kim (R, CA-39). They represent two of the three most Democratic districts held by any Republican based on 2020 presidential results (Biden won each of their districts by 10 points). Rep. David Valadao (R, CA-21) holds the most Democratic district held by a Republican — Biden +11 — but he previously served in the House and won surprisingly easy reelections prior to a 2018 loss, so we’d give him an edge to start. Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R, IA-2), whose six-vote margin of victory was so narrow that her Democratic opponent, Rita Hart, tried to get the U.S. House to intervene in the contest, also gets the benefit of the doubt largely because she holds a Republican-leaning district at the presidential level (Trump +4).
A couple of open seats in New York — Rep. Lee Zeldin (R, NY-1) is running for governor and Rep. Tom Reed (R, NY-23) is retiring — also may have been impacted by real-world redistricting considerations: Democrats may be able to gerrymander the state, which could have endangered both members. However, allegations of misconduct also played a role in Reed’s decision to retire, and Republicans would be favored to retain both seats under the current lines.
We don’t want to dwell too much on the reasoning behind every single rating: After all, these ratings are just hypothetical. If you have quibbles, we’d love to hear from you on Twitter or via e-mail at goodpolitics@virginia.edu.
The larger point of this exercise is that we would start many more Democratic-held seats as Toss-ups than Republican-held ones even if no district lines were changing.
Overall, these ratings show 211 districts at least leaning to the Republicans, 203 at least leaning to the Democrats, and 21 Toss-ups (19 held by Democrats, two held by Republicans). Splitting the Toss-ups roughly down the middle — let’s say 11-10 Republican — would result in a 222-213 Republican majority, good for a nine-seat Republican net gain and a narrow majority the same size as the one Democrats elected in November.
In other words, Republicans already appear set up to significantly threaten the Democratic House majority, and the net impact of reapportionment and redistricting may make their task easier. Republicans are not guaranteed to win the House next year, but the majority is clearly there for the taking.
NOW AVAILABLE: A Return to Normalcy? Our Book on the 2020 Election
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Firefighters made a gruesome discovery when a woman called them panicking after she awoke in her Texas apartment to find blood being spattered onto her from her ceiling fan. Ana Cardenas was understandably distraught when she called 911 from her apartment in El Paso. She … Read more
The American university system has scammed students long enough, now forcing us to be experiments for emergency-use vaccines that healthy students don’t need, but Big Pharma desperately wants.
‘I have been struck since my first day on the campaign trail back in 2018 by the overwhelming whiteness and maleness of Chicago media outlets, editorial boards, the political press corps.’
The term ‘apartheid’ is employed by those who know that the latest outbreak of violence is a result of Hamas attacking the Jewish state with no basis for provocation.
As today’s left increasingly believes America is an evil place to be dismantled, activists and revolutionaries are sought in place of dutiful citizens.
MSNBC and other outlets painted a narrative claiming Rep. Nunes attempted to identify the owner of a parody Twitter account with a DOJ subpoena. False.
‘There is a clear link between Krasner’s election and an uptick in violent crime which has caused certain Philadelphia neighborhoods to descend into shooting galleries.’
After student and faculty agitation against his conservative affiliations, University of Colorado President Mark Kennedy announced earlier this month he would step down after a brief two years.
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
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40.) REUTERS
The Reuters Daily Briefing
Thursday, May 20, 2021
by Linda Noakes
Hello
Here’s what you need to know.
How Russia’s new Gulag tries to break convicts like Navalny, how Ford burned $12 billion in Brazil, and is bitcoin a bust or a buy?
Today’s biggest stories
A cicada from Brood X clings to a tree after emerging from 17 years underground to join the trillions of cicadas that will surface in eastern states in the coming weeks, at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, May 19, 2021. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
U.S.
The U.S. House of Representatives voted to create an independent commission to probe the deadly January 6 attack on the Capitol by former President Donald Trump’s supporters, as one in six Republicans defied party leaders’ attempts to block it.
Newly published bodycam footage shows Louisiana state troopers punching, dragging and stunning a Black man who died in custody two years ago, raising fresh questions about a case that is already the subject of a federal civil rights investigation.
A Moroccan boy swims using bottles as a float near the fence between the Spanish-Moroccan border in Ceuta, Spain, May 19, 2021. REUTERS/Jon Nazca
WORLD
Spain’s defence minister has accused Morocco of “blackmail” over its passivity in the face of a surge in migrant arrivals in the Spanish enclave of Ceuta earlier this week. In one of the most dramatic moments since the surge began, Reuters TV showed a boy swimming to Ceuta’s beach with a dozen empty plastic bottles tied to his body.
Former inmates of the jail holding Vladimir Putin’s main rival have told Reuters they were subjected to beatings, medical neglect and severe psychological pressure. “They are crushing the prisoner as an individual,” says a former prisons inspector. In a special report, we investigate Russia’s new Gulag.
Diplomatic moves towards a ceasefire in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict gathered pace after U.S. President Joe Biden called for a de-escalation, but Israel kept up its bombardment of Gaza and Hamas rocket fire resumed after a pause.
India has ordered tighter surveillance of a rare fungal disease hitting COVID-19 patients, piling pressure on hospitals struggling with the world’s highest number of daily coronavirus infections. Doctors believe that the use of steroids could be causing the rash of cases.
MARKETS
A selloff in cryptocurrencies, high-growth stocks and other high-flying assets may be signaling a more cautious outlook among market participants after a stretch of rampant exuberance, investors and analysts say.
Bitcoin regained some lost ground to trade near $40,000, a day after a brutal selloff on concerns over tighter regulation in China and unease over the extent of leveraged positions in the cryptocurrency world.
The market value of Tesla’s bitcoin holdings has fallen by half to $1.26 billion, close to the electric car maker’s purchase cost. Chief Executive Elon Musk signaled that the company is still not selling, tweeting symbols for diamond hands to his 55.3 million followers.
A century ago Henry Ford established the town of Fordlandia in Brazil, hoping to become an Amazonian rubber baron, but retreated deep in the red. Now the automaker he founded is once again licking its Brazilian wounds.
Zhang Yiming will step down as chief executive of TikTok-owner ByteDance, leaving the task of navigating a rising number of Big Tech regulations worldwide to college roommate, long-time colleague and current human resources head Liang Rubo.
A decade ago, private equity couldn’t get enough of plastic packaging. They snapped up companies making bags, films and trays to contain everything from food and fashion to drink and drugs. Now many buyout firms are steering clear, and some of those holding assets are struggling to offload them at what they consider attractive prices.
Quote of the day
“Being in a big, dark room with strangers – screaming and laughing and experiencing the power of that – is a human, natural need”
‘You can help us get justice,’ Tulsa massacre survivors tell Congress
Viola Fletcher, her younger brother Hughes Van Ellis and Lessie Benningfield Randle recounted their experiences surviving the massacre 100 years ago when a white mob killed and burned its way through one of the largest and wealthiest Black communities in the United States.
The eerie image of a church bell tower emerging from Lake Resia became so famous it inspired a book and a Netflix series. Now the remains of the surrounding village, which has been under water for more than 70 years, have been revealed again.
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IDF searches for hidden terror tunnels in the Gaza Strip,
used by Hamas to carry out attacks on Israelis.
by I & I Editorial Board: For journalists of a certain age, the Associated Press was the gold standard for hard, objective news. Facts mattered, opinions didn’t. It influenced the world. Even now, its website brags that “More than half the world’s population sees AP journalism every day.”
If true, that might not be a good thing. After recent revelations about its bias in reporting on Israel’s conflict with Hamas, the AP has again shown itself to be just another left-biased media outlet. When it comes to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, AP’s reporting can’t be trusted.
This is a tragedy for journalism. Generations of reporters knew they could cull facts and quotes from AP stories and trust that they were accurate and unbiased.
That’s no longer the case.
“Once considered the epitome of neutrality and fairness,” the American Spectator recently wrote, “the AP has become a woke organization.”
Its reporting simply isn’t reliable. AP’s rage over the Israel Defense Forces’ destruction of its offices in Gaza is a perfect example.
The AP has worked out of the 12-storey al-Jalaa Tower in Gaza for 15 years. But it wasn’t the sole occupant. Along with the rabidly anti-Israel news organization al-Jazeera, Hamas intelligence operatives were also tenants. They used the offices to plan terrorist attacks against Israel.
Not surprisingly, after Hamas unleashed a barrage of thousands of missiles against Israeli civilian targets, the Israeli Defense Forces struck back. After warning the tower owner an hour ahead of time that it planned to attack, the IDF obliterated the building.
AP came under heavy criticism for housing its bureau in the same facility as Hamas. CEO Gary Pruitt was indignant, saying the news organization “had no indication Hamas was in the building or active in the building.” He went on to assert that “this is something we actively check to the best of our ability. We would never knowingly put our journalists at risk.”
And he added: “This is an incredibly disturbing development. We narrowly avoided a terrible loss of life.”
These assertions are all false. In fact, AP knew about Hamas’ presence for years. It was warned well ahead of time to leave the building. And the AP often “knowingly” puts journalists at risk around the world. Going into dangerous zones is part of their job.
The British Daily Mail reported that Israel had shown hard evidence for the presence of Hamas in the bulding: “A source close to (Israeli) Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi said: ‘We showed them the smoking gun proving Hamas worked out of that building.’ He added Biden had ‘found the explanation satisfactory,’ providing details of the evidence.”
So Pruitt’s defense of AP was disingenuous at best. And to be blunt, the AP has had a pro-terrorist, anti-Israel slant for years. But since those same biases are held by much of the rest of the mainstream big media, it’s gone largely unnoticed and unremarked upon.
But not entirely.
Former AP correspondent Matti Friedman, writing in 2014 for the Atlantic Monthly, described AP’s operations in Gaza this way:
“The AP staff in Gaza City would witness a rocket launch right beside their office, endangering reporters and other civilians nearby — and the AP wouldn’t report it, not even in AP articles about Israeli claims that Hamas was launching rockets from residential areas. (This happened.) Hamas fighters would burst into the AP’s Gaza bureau and threaten the staff — and the AP wouldn’t report it. (This also happened.) Cameramen waiting outside Shifa Hospital in Gaza City would film the arrival of civilian casualties and then, at a signal from an official, turn off their cameras when wounded and dead fighters came in, helping Hamas maintain the illusion that only civilians were dying. (This too happened; the information comes from multiple sources with firsthand knowledge of these incidents.)”During the 2014 conflict, AP ran a story on deaths in Gaza that claimed 508 of 844 dead Gazans, or more than 60%, were women, children and old men, thus “all presumed to be civilians.”
But that much-discussed piece turned out to be misleading. A 2015 article in the online Observer looked into the AP report and found that reporters would often take death tolls from Gaza’s “Health Ministry,” a propaganda arm of the Hamas terrorist group that rules Gaza, with no skepticism at all.
AP’s devastating report made it look as if Israel wantonly murdered civilians in cold blood.
“The AP had merely regurgitated Hamas claims,” as National Review’s David Harsanyi recently wrote of the Observer’s investigation. “In an effort to portray Israel as ‘wantonly and indiscriminately slaughtering civilians’ — feeding into the prevailing narrative of anti-Semites across the world — the AP failed to properly identify sources and causes of death, it used partial and misleading quotes, and it relied on posed photos and Palestinian disinformation.”
In short, it misinformed and misled the public, knowingly.
This isn’t the first time, nor will it be the last. The Associated Press is yet another major media outlet that has chosen fashionably leftist politics and Woke culture, including a reflexive loathing for the state of Israel, as its journalistic lodestars. The 175-year-old organization became famous for valuing facts over fiction, truth over narrative. No more.
——————————— Written by I & I Editorial Board.
Tags:I & I Editorial Board, Media Bias, How ‘Woke’ AP Got Caught, Lying (Again), About Israel, Terrorist HamasTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Caroline Glick: Until Wednesday, President Joe Biden had maintained a fairly supportive posture towards Israel in the face of the Hamas terror regime in Gaza’s launch of its newest round of war against the Jewish state. In the first week of the new war, Biden’s administration blocked the UN Security Council from adopting anti-Israel statements and resolutions three times.
Until Wednesday afternoon Israel time, Biden avoided publicly calling on Israel to halt its counterstrikes against Hamas and expressed his support for Israel’s right to protect its citizens from Hamas’ missiles.
So it wouldn’t be surprising if some Israelis were flabbergasted when Biden told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Wednesday afternoon that he “expected a significant de-escalation today on the path to a ceasefire,” effectively ordering Israel to stand down by day’s end.
But Biden’s week of professions of support for Israel were hardly the last word on his administration’s positions on Israel and the war. Indeed, they weren’t even its first word.
Biden’s actual policies regarding Israel, are revealed in three different ways. First, there are the policies that Biden had already adopted before Hamas opened its missile offensive from Gaza and its spate of organized anti-Jewish pogroms in mixed Arab-Jewish cities throughout Israel.
Biden’s courtship of Iran through the renewal of nuclear talks in Vienna, in which he has signaled his willingness to end U.S. economic sanctions on Iran; and through his administration’s persuasion of Iraq and South Korea to unfreeze billions of dollars in Iranian oil revenue have signaled Iran and its terror proxies including Hamas that the Biden administration is abandoning the U.S. alliance with Israel and the moderate Sunni states in favor of Iran and its proxies.
Likewise, Biden’s announcement that he is restoring U.S. funding to UNRWA and the Palestinian Authority despite their funding of terrorism were a tailwind for Iran and Hamas plans to attack Israel. With U.S. funding and sanctions relief, not only did they realize that the U.S. had their back, Iran and Hamas gained the economic wherewithal to wage war. So too, Hamas was able to use America’s abandonment of Israel as a means to persuade Israeli Arabs that they could safely participate in pogroms against their Jewish neighbors and accept Hamas as their representative.
The second indication of Biden’s actual policies were the people he appointed to positions responsible for managing U.S. ties with Israel in his National Security Council, at the State Department, the Defense Department and the U.S. intelligence agencies. Most of the people that Biden has appointed to these key positions have public records of hostility towards Israel. For instance, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Israeli and Palestinian Affairs Hady Amr was an anti-Israel activist until his appointment. Amr has a long record of statements hostile to Israel and supportive of Palestinian terrorists, including Hamas. When supposedly moderate Secretary of State Anthony Blinken decided to send an envoy to the region, it was Amr that he dispatched last week. Appointments like Amr, and Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Colin Kahl are the sort of appointments that one would expect from an anti-Israel president, not from a pro-Israel president.
Finally, there is the political climate in Biden’s Democrat Party. From the moment Hamas launched its current offensive against Israel, radical Democrat lawmakers in Congress have escalated their anti-Israel rhetoric and actions to unprecedented levels. On Monday, Congresswomen Rashida Tlaib, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Cori Bush and others adopted rank anti-Semitic language against Israel referring to Israel as an “Apartheid” state and insisting that Israel is not a democracy because “Apartheid states aren’t democracies.” The State Department itself has determined that accusing Israel of being an “Apartheid” state is an anti-Semitic act.
No “responsible adult,” not Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer or House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and definitely not Biden, called them out for their bigoted behavior. Instead, Schumer along with Senate Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman and longtime Israel supporter Senator Bob Menendez both called for a ceasefire on Tuesday, with full knowledge that such a demand harms Israel, not Hamas.
If that weren’t bad enough, Monday, Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee Gregory Meeks announced his intention to place a hold on a routine sale of $735 million worth of precision guided missiles to Israel that Biden approved. Meeks was acting under pressure from the likes of Omar, Cortez and Tlaib Betty McCollum. He only relented when House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer placed even greater pressure on him. Meeks, it should be mentioned, was until recently considered a pro-Israel lawmaker. His stunning interference in a routine arms sale that enjoys the support of a wide majority of members of Congress indicates that the radical wing of the Democratic Party controls the party’s discourse on Israel today.
Biden himself underlined this point on Tuesday. As Tlaib was expanding her anti-Semitic assaults on Israel, Biden praised her in a speech in Detroit. He referred to the woman who has made rejecting Israel’s right to exist her signature issue as a “fighter.” Biden said to Tlaib, “I want to say that I admire your intellect, I admire your passion and I admire your concern for so many people.”
So although Biden seemed to distinguish himself from his administration in his support for Israel as its cities are pounded with missiles from Hamas-controlled Gaza, the fact is that his support was barely skin deep and never dependable. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was right to reject Biden’s demand for a ceasefire.
Going forward, Israel must devise a national strategy that starts with the presumption that the Biden administration has replaced America’s traditional support for Israel with a policy of supporting its enemies.
————————————- Caroline Glick is the Senior Contributing Editor of Israel Hayom and the Director of the David Horowitz Freedom Center’s Israel Security Project. For more information on Ms. Glick’s work, visit carolineglick.com.
Tags:Caroline Glick, Israel Hayom, Biden’s Skin-Deep Support, for IsraelTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Patrick Buchanan: President Donald Trump’s Abraham Accords, in which the UAE, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan established relations with Israel, appear now to be on hold. For, on Sunday, a statement by the 57-nation Organization of Islamic Cooperation called for an immediate halt to what it described as Israel’s barbaric attacks on Gaza and blamed “systematic crimes” against the Palestinians for the fighting which has lasted for a week.
“Israel is Winning Battles, Hamas is Winning the War.”
So ran the headline in the Jerusalem Post atop an analysis of the Gaza war, which began, “The IDF is registering great achievements in Operation Guardian of the Walls, but meanwhile the house appears to be collapsing from within.”
Hard to disagree.
Consider this New York Times commentary about Israel’s prime minister from the runner-up to the Democratic presidential nominee in the primaries of 2016 and 2020, Sen. Bernie Sanders:
“Mr. Netanyahu has cultivated an increasingly intolerant and authoritarian type of racist nationalism …(and) legitimized these forces … by bringing them into the government. … Racist mobs that attack Palestinians on the streets of Jerusalem now have representation in its Knesset.”
Sanders’ wing of the party is moving toward the Palestinian side of the conflict. “Israeli air strikes killing civilians in Gaza is an act of terrorism,” says Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota.
Tweets Michigan’s Rep. Rashida Tlaib: “Israel targeting media sources is so the world can’t see Israel’s war crimes led by the apartheid-in-chief Netanyahu. It’s so the world can’t see the killing of babies, children and their parents. It’s so the world can’t see Palestinians being massacred.”
Wisconsin Rep. Mark Pocan concurs: “We cannot just condemn rockets fired by Hamas and ignore Israel’s state-sanctioned police violence against Palestinians — including unlawful evictions, violent attacks on protestors & the murder of Palestinian children … US aid should not be funding this violence.”
While Israeli attacks are killing Hamas commanders and destroying the sites from which Hamas has fired 3,000 rockets, Israel is suffering serious and intangible losses.
Palestinians in Jerusalem and on the West Bank have risen in solidarity with Arabs and Muslims in Gaza. A dozen were slain last week.
Arab citizens of Israel are daily fighting Jews in cities like Jaffa, Acre and Lod. Writes the Post: “With riots shaking all parts of Israel,” the country “is being torn apart from within.”
Beyond Gaza, Jerusalem, the West Bank and Israel, Lebanese and Jordanians are protesting on the border. In U.S. and European cities like Berlin, London, Paris and Madrid, protesters numbering in the thousands and tens of thousands are marching in solidarity with the Palestinians and condemnation of Israel as a racist and an “apartheid” regime.
Saturday’s morning attack that brought down Gaza’s 12-story tower that housed the Associated Press and Al Jazeera caused a backlash in much of Western media against Israel, which claims the building contained an Hamas intelligence center and was a legitimate target.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and President Joe Biden have come out in defense of Israel’s right to attack sites from which rockets are being fired into Israel. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, however, has been more muted in backing Israel’s attacks on Gaza.
The GOP seems more solidly behind Israel. More than three dozen Senate Republicans last week urged Biden to “unequivocally” support Israel’s right to defend itself and to “immediately” end negotiations with Iran on sanctions relief, charging Tehran with supporting terrorist activity by Hamas against Israel.
In a letter to Biden, 44 Republican senators wrote:
“Over the past couple days, Palestinian terrorists in Gaza, who are funded by Iran, have launched a series of rocket attacks into Israel. They are targeting Israeli civilians and cities, including Israel’s capital Jerusalem.”
Where Israel goes from here, however, is currently unclear.
President Donald Trump’s Abraham Accords, in which the UAE, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan established relations with Israel, appear now to be on hold.
For, on Sunday, a statement by the 57-nation Organization of Islamic Cooperation called for an immediate halt to what it described as Israel’s barbaric attacks on Gaza and blamed “systematic crimes” against the Palestinians for the fighting which has lasted for a week.
The OIC statement came after a virtual meeting in which Saudi Arabia condemned Israel’s violation of the sanctity of Muslim holy sites and evictions of Palestinians from their homes in East Jerusalem.
Clearly, the principal winner from this conflict is Bibi Netanyahu, who was within days of being replaced as prime minister by an opposition coalition when fighting erupted. He is now seen by Israelis as a decisive war leader, defending the country from thousands of rockets and severely pushing the enemies firing those rockets.
As for the two-state solution to which the world has been committed for decades, that prospect seems further from reality than ever.
Having seen what Hamas is capable of and willing to do, what Israeli will be eager to enter a peace agreement with the Palestinians that would mean vacating much of the West Bank, sharing Jerusalem as the capital of both countries, and a Palestinian right of return to lands from which their families were driven in the 1948-1949 Israeli War of Independence, which Palestinians remember as the Nakba, or catastrophe.
A military truce may be at hand, but that is all it will be — a truce before the next round of fighting.
——————————- Patrick Buchanan (@PatrickBuchanan) is currently a blogger, conservative columnist, political analyst, chairman of The American Cause foundation and an editor of The American Conservative. He has been a senior adviser to three Presidents, a two-time candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, and was the presidential nominee of the Reform Party in 2000.
Tags:Patrick Buchanan, conservative, commentary, Bibi & Hamas, Only Winners in Gaza WarTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by John Stossel: America has a record 8.1 million job openings.
The media call it a “labor shortage.”
But it’s not a labor shortage; it’s an incentive shortage.
“No one wants to work,” says a sign on a restaurant drive-thru speaker in Albuquerque, New Mexico. “Please be patient with the staff that did show up.”
I never wanted to work. I got a job because I had to support myself. That was good for me. It forced me out of my comfort zone. It made me a better person.
Had government offered me almost equal money not to work, I never would have applied.
Today, government takes away that incentive.
The American Rescue Plan, passed in March, increased unemployment payments by hundreds of dollars and extended them for up to 73 weeks. Given the cost of commuting, etc., many people find they are better off financially (SET ITAL)not(END ITAL) working.
Denmark once offered workers five years of unemployment. Then they noticed that workers found work after exactly five years. So, Denmark cut the benefit to four years. Then most workers found jobs after four years. Now Denmark, wisely, has cut benefits in half.
Incentives matter.
America’s unemployment handouts began during the Great Depression when desperate people really needed help. Still, you could collect for only 16 weeks. Barack Obama extended unemployment benefits to up to 99 weeks.
“There are no jobs!” people I interviewed waiting in line for benefits in New York City once told me.
But that wasn’t true. There were lots of entry-level jobs within walking distance.
My staff visited 79 nearby stores. Forty said they wanted to hire. Twenty-four said they’d hire people with no experience.
People in the unemployment line also said that the government should do more to train them for jobs. But New York already offered “job training” centers, so I sent an intern out to see what they did. The first offered to help her get welfare. A second told her to apply for unemployment. Neither place suggested looking for a job.
When she insisted that she wanted work, not handouts, they directed her to yet another building. There she was told she could not receive help because she didn’t have a college degree.
Finally, a fourth office offered her an interview at the sandwich chain Pret a Manger. The boss there told her she’d wasted her time going to the government Jobs Center because she could have gotten that same interview using Craigslist.
Some politicians understand that handouts encourage dependence. Sixteen states are now ending extra unemployment benefits early. Montana and Arizona replaced extra unemployment benefits with a bonus for people who find work.
Even President Joe Biden has noticed the unintended consequences of his party’s benefits. “If you’re … offered a suitable job, you can’t refuse that job and just keep getting unemployment,” he said.
Seems more than reasonable. Yet a New York Times headline says, “Some say it presents an undue hardship.”
The reporter interviewed a “Mx. San Martin, 27, who uses the pronouns they and them.”
Mx. Martin wants to work with pets. They complained that “there simply weren’t enough jobs that I would actually want.” Restaurant work “is not in my field of interest.”
Too bad.
Bad for all of us when people think they’re entitled to our tax money if bureaucrats don’t get them the exact job they want.
—————————— John Stossel is author of “No They Can’t! Why Government Fails — But Individuals Succeed.” Article shared by Rasmussen Reports.
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“Under this measure, the federal government will just presume every state’s election laws are racist and if anyone pushes back on it, they’ll be labeled a racist, as well.” Jenna Ellis said. by Catherine Mortensen: Democrats, who have so far been unsuccessful in passing their election rigging bill in the Senate, S1, have a Plan B for stealing the 2022 midterm elections. Their fall-back plan is the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, a measure introduced by Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.). The Leahy bill is unjustified and unneeded and would be a dangerous violation of state sovereignty.Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning spoke with former Trump campaign attorney Jenna Ellis on her show “Just the Truth” about why it is such a threat to fair and honest elections.“What this bill would actually do is allow the Department of Justice to take over state elections. For example, under this measure, if a state or local jurisdiction wanted to move a polling place hundred yards down the street, the Department of Justice would have to approve that.”
As a result of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, for nearly 50 years the DoJ required a cluster of southern states with a history of racially discriminatory election practices to seek “preclearance” from the federal government before they could make even minor changes to polling locations or operations. The Supreme Court eliminated the “preclearance” requirement in 2013.
Ellis said Leahy’s amendment appears to be a way to bring back DoJ control, but not just to a limited number of states with a history of discrimination, but to every state.
“This looks like a pretext for the federal government to go in and do anything that it wants and to dictate to the states whatever they want in terms of maneuvering the election laws,” Ellis explained. “This is just an opportunity to federalize state and local elections.”
According to Manning, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), opposes S1 but supports the Leahy bill.
“Sen. Manchin wants this to apply to all 50 states,” Manning explained. “There wouldn’t even be a process of determining if a state has a history of discrimination. States would automatically be presumed guilty, and hence, any changes in election law by that state would be subject to clearance by the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division.”
Manning noted that this is the same DoJ Civil Rights Division that ignored all of the irregularities in the in the 2020 presidential election. “Now we’re going to trust them with basically running our entire elections in the future?”
Ellis said it appears that moderate Democrats such as Sen. Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) can oppose S1 but vote for the Leahy bill as a “compromise,” but one that is just as bad as S1.
“Under this measure, the federal government will just presume every state’s election laws are racist and if anyone pushes back on it, they’ll be labeled a racist, as well,” Ellis said.
Manning added that he hopes every Republican senator will oppose the bill because “the reality is that every single one of their states will be put under this law. Every single one of their states will be presumed racist without having any proof. The left has already said that we have systemic racism in America, and that would apply to the election laws themselves.”
The John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act is a solution in search of a problem. There is no voter-suppression epidemic. Americans today have an easier time registering and voting than at any time in our nation’s history.
——————————– Catherine Mortensen is Vice President of Communications at Americans for Limited Government.
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by Daniel Greenfield: In utterly unsurprising news, the Biden administration is going the usual route in response to Hamas attacks on Israel.
1. Pressuring Israel behind the scenes into accepting a Hamas “cease-fire” which just means restarting this conflict when the terrorists get more Iranian rockets to shoot off.
2. Accusing Israel of “destabilizing the region” which as everyone knows is very stable.
3. Supporting the UN’s campaign against Israel out of one side of its mouth while promising to support Israel out of the other
The Biden administration is increasingly hopeful that the deadly conflict between Israel and Palestinian militants is in its final stages, and U.S. officials are confident their mostly behind-the-scenes intervention helped avert an early Israeli ground invasion of the Gaza Strip.This is par for the course.
American officials have privately urged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his aides to wind down his country’s operations against the Gaza Strip… At the start, the person familiar with the situation said, Israel appeared on the verge of pushing forth with a ground invasion, a move that could have led to significantly more bloodshed and possibly a longer conflict. U.S. influence was important in preventing a ground operation, the person said.Wind down, that is to say, bail out Hamas. Also bail out Hamas, literally.
That being said, the Biden administration and others already are looking at ways to send in humanitarian assistance to Gaza, a densely packed seaside territory of 2 million people.How much of that “humanitarian assistance” will go to Hamas? Assume that plenty of it will in one way or another.
On Monday, Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, conveyed a sense of urgency when he warned that the longer the conflict drags on, the more it risks destabilizing the region.“It’s in no one’s interest to continue fighting,” Milley said.This is a region with multiple civil wars and insurgencies, in which Iran’s proxies are bombing Saudi Arabia out of Yemen, Syria’s Shiite government is bombing the Sunnis, Turkey is in the midst of a prolonged campaign against the Kurds, Iraq is on the verge of another civil war, Libya is in a permanent state of civil war…and I could go on. But it’s the Israelis who are destabilizing the region because of a brief campaign against Hamas terrorists.
And, oh yes, don’t expect the Biden administration to back up Israel on the Hamas building bombing.
Israel’s operations drew heightened criticism in recent days after its armed forces leveled a building that housed several media offices, including that of The Associated Press. Israel – which warned people to evacuate the building about an hour before striking it – has said it has shared information with the United States showing that Hamas based some of its assets in that facility.The person familiar with the situation confirmed that Israel has shared some classified intelligence with America about the building, but declined to characterize it other than to say it suggested the Hamas presence was significant, including involving operational activity. The United States has told Israel that it should share more information publicly about this intelligence.Sure. Share that classified information publicly. Don’t expect us to vouch for you.
——————————— Daniel Greenfield writes for FrontPage Mag.
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by Mark Chesnut: In a world of growing uncertainty, there’s one thing you can count on: Nearly every time President Joe Biden (D) gets in front of a camera or audience, he’s going to tell some falsehoods about guns, gun laws, and gun owners.
Let’s take a look at a handful of his favorites, and why they miss the mark when it comes to the truth.
1. The 1990s Gun Ban “Worked”
Last April, Biden discussed his proposed “assault weapon” and “high-capacity” magazine ban during a joint session of Congress, claiming, “We’ve done it before, and it worked.” Biden is, of course, referring to the Clinton gun ban of the 1990s that banned many semi-automatic firearms by categorizing them according to cosmetic features. That ban also forbid the sale of magazines holding more than 10 rounds of ammo.
His statement that the ban “worked” is, indeed, a lie. A congressionally mandated study of the federal “assault-weapon ban” of 1994 to 2004 found that the ban had no impact on crime. It concluded: “Should it be renewed, the ban’s effects on gun violence are likely to be small at best.” Additionally, research conducted later by the Rand Corporation found no conclusive evidence that banning so-called “assault weapons” or “large-capacity” magazines had an effect on either mass-murder events or violent crime.
Gunmakers Have Blanket Immunity From Lawsuits
Biden has repeatedly said that gunmakers can’t be sued; he even went so far in a recent gun-control speech to say, “If I get one thing on my list—the Lord came down and said, ‘Joe, you get one of these’—give me that one. Because I tell you what, there would be a ‘come to the Lord’ moment these folks would have real quickly. But they’re not. They’re not. They’re exempt.”
What Biden is talking about is repealing the Protection of Lawful Commerce In Arms Act (PLCAA), which he falsely says gives gun makers blanket immunity from being sued. Passed in 2005 with bipartisan support, the law actually was reaction to gun haters who were attempting to run gun makers out of business with frivolous lawsuits that forced manufacturers to spend millions of dollars to fight the suits. In truth, the PLCAA simply keeps gunmakers and sellers from being sued for the criminal misuse of their safe, lawfully made products.
Closing the “Charleston Loophole” Would Save Lives,/br> “The second thing is, close what is known as the ‘Charleston loophole,’” Biden said during a White House gun-control speech. “There’s a process. If [it] wasn’t done in three days, according to [the] Charleston loophole, you get to buy the gun.”
In truth, what Biden and other gun-ban proponents call the “Charleston loophole” is a safeguard built into the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) that says if the FBI does not determine that an individual is statutorily prohibited from purchasing a firearm through the “instant” background check in three working days, the firearm licensee may proceed with the sale. That so-called “loophole” is the only thing standing between the ability to purchase a gun and an FBI being able to delay any and all guns sales indefinitely.
Besides, the Charleston church murderer first attempted to buy his gun on April 11 of that year, but was delayed due to a prior arrest for drug possession. The gun was actually transferred to him on April 16—five days after his initial attempt to purchase it. The crime he later committed didn’t occur until June 17, more than two months after he first tried to buy the firearm. During that time, the FBI investigation was not impeded because the firearm was transferred, and the person who purchased the firearm and later committed the crime was not prohibited from purchasing a firearm due to the earlier drug arrest.
You Don’t Need 100 Rounds to Hunt DeerIn a recent rant about “high-capacity magazines that hold 100 rounds that can be fired in seconds,” Biden ignorantly quipped, “Talk to most responsible gun owners, most hunters—they’ll tell you there’s no possible justification for having 100 rounds—100 bullets—in a weapon.” While this is, of course, not an outright lie, the way Biden repeatedly uses it is both disingenuous and misleading.
First, the proposal the president and other gun-ban proponents are pushing is a law to outlaw magazines that hold more than 10 rounds, not 100. Furthermore, the Second Amendment protects the rights of all law-abiding gun owners, irrespective of whether or not they own those firearms for hunting. Biden’s constant blabbering about 100-round magazines and hunters is just a way to exaggerate and obfuscate the situation, and take away attention from the fact that the current proposal would ban magazines that come standard with the majority of semi-auto rifles and handguns sold today—even sub-compact handguns popular for concealed carry.
His Proposals Don’t Infringe on the Second AmendmentDuring a recent speech, Biden said, “Nothing—nothing I’m about to recommend in any way impinges on the Second Amendment. They’re phony, arguments suggesting that these are Second Amendment rights at stake from what we’re talking about.”
This might be Biden’s biggest lie of all. Of course, nearly every proposal Biden supports would infringe on the right to keep and bear arms—exactly what the Second Amendment protects American citizens against. Biden actually knows that his proposals violate the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding American gun owners. That’s why he also strongly favors changing the make-up of the U.S. Supreme court by adding a number of justices to the current mix that would support rulings based on political ideology, rather than constitutionality. By him making such appointments, it would ensure the high court ruled against the Second Amendment for the next generation.
——————————– Mark Chesnut writes for NRA America’s 1st Freedom.
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by Mario Murillo Ministries: It is clear that a new breed of weapon is about to emerge. They are the wounded healers. Who are these people? Well, they do not have every hair in place or a clean record. They are not the sanitized, immaculate version of the Body of Christ.
They have messed up and then gotten back up. Trampled and left for dead, God restored them! They have no image to protect or ego to wound. They are the most dangerous people that Satan will ever face!
They gained all new appetites in the furnace of affliction. They do not need the glory, and they eschew titles and awards. Their unswerving passion is to show compassion and take prisoners of love. You cannot get them to fight over doctrine, because they have been to the Cross. They know the Blood that bought them, and then brought them back to life.
They are like Peter at Pentecost. Only a soul who has been handed another chance after denying the Lord three times will understand the inner fire of a wounded healer. Who could write such a dangerous song as Amazing Grace but John Newton whose plaque says, “Once an infidel and libertine / A servant of slaves in Africa / Was, by the rich mercy of our Lord and Saviour JESUS CHRIST / restored, pardoned, and appointed to preach the Gospel which he had long laboured to destroy.”
You cannot find such zeal in religious do-gooders who never brave beyond ivied halls of respectability. You will not find this flame in the bleachers where the cold souls sit and keep score, but who will never take the field.
Wounded healers do not boast of clean uniforms and of battles evaded, but of scars and gates of hell invaded. They have no preaching pedigree, only a song that sets the captive free.
We all know of the verse in Daniel 11:32 that says,” Those who do wickedly against the covenant he shall corrupt with flattery; but the people who know their God shall be strong, and carry out great exploits.“ What we tend to overlook is the verse that comes later that speaks of the wounded healers. Daniel 11:35 says,” And some of those of understanding shall fall, to refine them, purify them, and make them white, until the time of the end; because it is still for the appointed time.”
This is a word for you my friend! Your attack is not to destroy you but to refine you! Your rejection and your abandonment are not meant for shame, but for purity. It does not matter how your garments appear to Pharisees, only that they are white before God.
The most incredible news is this… though religious voices have disqualified you; your destiny is yet for an appointed time! The door that God holds open, stays open!
Now let us look at another aspect of the Wounded Healer. They are able to reach the masses that the regular church cannot. Therefore, they are the perfect weapon for this moment, at the end of all things. If only these special-ops believers could see who they are, and lose their need for the approval of cookie cutter Christians, then they will become God’s tractor beam for lost souls.
Getting rid of the fear of man was the principal prize that so many of you gained in adversity. So many of you wrote to me about the horrific events of your life and in the face of everything else, it became so real, how much God meant everything and the approval of your judges meant nothing. Truly, you shouted, “If God is for us, who can be against us!”
Many wrote of the life of power that rose out of the ashes of despair. They felt equipped to do more than ever. They felt useful and lethal!! AMEN!! This has to be the purest meaning of 2 Corinthians 1:3, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our tribulation, that we may be able to comfort those who are in any trouble, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God.”
Look around you and you will see how a new generation of leader is coming to the fore. They do not wait for committee approval. They rent a school auditorium in a bad area and just start preaching. They preach raw sermons with an open heart and crowds come from everywhere.
Their frontline ministry is unlisted in the who’s who of the council of Churches but Jesus feels just fine showing up every time they meet! Look again and see others who carry “unlicensed weapons”. They open their homes to youth. They send out food, clothes and love in the most unconventional ways imaginable all with the smile of God.
Wounded healers may not wear denominational labels. They do not schmooze in the right rooms, but they carry the fight to where it matters the most. They operate under direct orders of the King of Kings!
When you see one, you will know them. They will not judge you and no matter how far gone you feel, they will see you through the lens of the Holy Spirit. They will see you as you will look after your miracle has come. You will feel welcome in their presence and you will look priceless in their eyes. They do not view the sinner as a commodity, but as kidnapped royalty.
What about you? What will you do with your adversity, pain and shame? All I can do is tell you what I did. At the lowest point of my life, God was waiting for me to make a choice. I chose to minister wherever the door opens, and to preach from now on as if each message is my last.
Deciding to go on when you feel nothing but agony, is the greatest victory that you will ever win. Not caring who gets the credit will rip the lid off your limits.
What are you and I waiting for? We have loved ones to snatch back! We have miracles to unleash on lost souls. There is a whole world out there that has never even heard of church fights or legalistic regulations.
When Elijah told the widow to go and get as many containers as she could and God would fill them with oil, she realized that the condition of the cans, bottle, pails, or pots was not important. God put oil in all of them. Wounded healers are not perfect containers, they are simply full of oil and that is all that truly matters.
God knows what he is doing. Saul of Tarsus was the wounded healer who surpassed all of the twelve disciples. He felt unworthy to be a disciple and said so in no uncertain terms. Yet, he attributed his unsurpassed labor for Christ to his awareness that he was a broken vessel
Jesus showed another power of the wounded healer in Luke 7:44- 47, “Then He turned to the woman and said to Simon (the Pharisee), “Do you see this woman? I entered your house; you gave Me no water for My feet, but she has washed My feet with her tears and wiped them with the hair of her head. You gave Me no kiss, but this woman has not ceased to kiss My feet since the time I came in. You did not anoint My head with oil, but this woman has anointed My feet with fragrant oil. Therefore, I say to you, her sins, which are many, are forgiven, for she loved much. But to whom little is forgiven, the same loves little.”
Therefore, to all you wounded healers, I say, you will not get credit from the religious peanut gallery, so you will have to be content with accomplishing more than any of them will for Christ, and loving the Lord more than they can ever imagine!
——————————— Mario Murillo is an evangelist Mario Murillo, minister, blogger.
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by Bill Donohue: On his CNN show of May 17, Chris Cuomo made several remarks about abortion that deserve a rebuttal. The occasion of his comments was the decision by the U.S. Supreme Court to hear a Mississippi case that bans abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy.
Cuomo is upset that we haven’t impaneled experts to decide what science says about fetal viability. Here is how he phrases it. “When does what is inside a woman become a person with rights under the law?”
Pro-abortion enthusiasts such as Cuomo find that discussing this subject can be a linguistic minefield. They have to proceed in tippy-toe fashion, always being careful not to mention the obvious, namely that the pregnant woman is carrying her baby. They have to resort to talking about “what is inside a [pregnant] woman,” as if it were a mystery.
Contrary to what Cuomo’s secular faith believes, science is not ambiguous about “what is inside a [pregnant woman].” If uninterrupted, what is conceived at conception will develop into a fully formed human being. All the properties that make us a unique individual—the contents of our DNA—do not suddenly manifest themselves at birth. No, they are there from the get-go, which is to say fertilization. In other words, “what is inside a [pregnant] woman” is another human being.
Cuomo needs to follow the science. If he does, he will quickly learn that science validates what the Catholic Church teaches. It is not the Church that is out-of-step with science—it is Cuomo.
Moreover, his injection of ideology into this debate belittles his position: it is not about race or religion. When he uses boogey-man terms like “far-right white fright,” and speaks derisively about pro-life Americans—they are people who “get up in their religion”—he comes across as a philistine.
Cuomo says that “Most Americans want the court to uphold Roe v. Wade.” Not exactly. As reported by CBS last year, a Marist poll found that “65% of Americans are likely to vote for a candidate who believes an abortion should be outlawed after the first three months of a pregnancy; allowed only in cases of rape, incest, or to save the life of the mother; or not permitted under any circumstance.”
In other words, most Americans expressly reject what Roe v. Wade permits, which is the unfettered right to an abortion for any reason and at any time of gestation.
Cuomo does not want to see Roe v Wade overturned, arguing that we need to respect “stare decisis,” or legal precedent. People like him have no problem telling us how we need to unsettle “settled law” when it comes to reinterpreting the meaning of marriage, or what it means to be a man or a woman.
It all comes down to “what is inside a [pregnant] woman.” If this cannot be answered, then abortion is not a moral issue. If it can—and of course it can—then it is. Indeed, attempts to justify it are patently immoral.
—————————- Bill Donohue is president of Catholic League.
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by Gary Bauer: Mixed Messages On The Middle East
While Joe Biden continues to figure out how he can surrender to Iran, he has found a way to surrender to the socialist Squad.
In recent days, Biden has signaled support for Israel’s right to defend itself as the terrorists of Hamas fire thousands of rockets at Israeli civilians. But the progressive wing of the Democrat Party upped its attacks on the “apartheid state of Israel,” a disgusting smear against the most diverse and most democratic state in the Middle East.
Sadly, Biden is changing his rhetoric. Now, he’s pressuring Israel for a cease-fire. This pressure is misguided. Israel isn’t the problem. The genocidal terrorists of Hamas and their Holocaust-denying sponsors in Iran are the problem!
The bottom line is that the more the White House caves to anti-Israel radicals, the more likely it is that there will be a major war in the Middle East.
The region knows that Israel is unbeatable, especially if the United States stands solidly with the Jewish state. But if there is any question about the U.S.-Israeli alliance, it will hasten the day when Israel is set upon by its enemies.
Ironically, the socialist Squad is attacking Biden for not being sufficiently critical of Israel, when in fact he is engaged in the one thing that could literally result in the destruction of Israel.
While thousands of rockets rain down on the Jewish state, our negotiators are still sitting at a table in Vienna desperately trying to negotiate a deal that will provide Iran’s ayatollah with billions of dollars of sanctions relief.
That money will immediately be used not only to replenish the rockets that have been fired into Israel, but to give Hamas and Hezbollah even more powerful rockets and missiles to kill even more Israelis.
If Biden can’t stand up to radicals like AOC, Omar, and Tlaib, how can we expect him to stand up to the mullahs of Iran?
Just in case you have any doubt that anti-Semitism is driving much of the left’s opposition to Israel, just ponder these examples:
Adeel Raja has worked as a freelance writer for CNN since 2013. He was fired over the whttps://www.breitbart.com/europe/2021/05/16/pro-palestinian-convoy-london-neighbourhood-yelling-f-jews-rape-their-daughters/eekend after tweeting, “The world today needs a Hitler.” Such disgusting statements were not unusual for Raja.
In London, anti-Israel protesters were heard , “F–k the Jews. F–k their mothers. F–k their daughters. Rape their daughters.”
And in another sign of growing division on the left, Black Lives Matter has publicly declared its support for Hamas. Yesterday, the group tweeted this:
“Black Lives Matter stands in solidarity with Palestinians. We are a movement committed to ending settler colonialism in all forms and will continue to advocate for Palestinian liberation. (Always have. And always will be.) #freepalestine”
Standing With Israel
Former Vice President Mike Pence came out swinging against Biden’s policy in the Middle East. In a new “must read” opinion piece at National Review, Pence warns that Biden has “replaced strength with weakness, moral clarity with confusion, and loyalty with betrayal. . . and Israelis are paying the price in blood.”
Marxists In The Military
I’d like you to imagine a nightmare scenario. Imagine that communists, whether Soviet-era communists during the Cold War or the Chinese communists now, infiltrated our military.
Imagine that they were teaching our brave men and women in uniform that the country they are being asked to fight and die for is actually an evil nation built on white supremacy, slavery and discrimination.
If an enemy could ever do that to us, America would be doomed. No army is going to fight and die for a nation it believes is evil. But that is exactly what is happening in the American military right now.
Under the guise of fighting racism, our military personnel are being required to read books and watch videos promoting critical race theory, which is simply repackaged Marxism based on the lie that people’s lives are determined by their race. It teaches that white people are inherently oppressors, and that America is evil.
Lieutenant Colonel Matthew Lohmeier of the Space Force, an important new wing of our military, recently had to read a book that repeatedly called America “a white supremacist nation.”
He was shocked at what was being taught to the troops, like the lie that America began in 1619 when the first African slaves were brought to the British colonies. America began in 1776, and it wasn’t founded on slavery!
Lohmeier blew the whistle on this radical ideology, and now he’s fighting to keep his job.
Whatever happens, he’s already a hero. He is battling domestic enemies who are undermining the very idea of America and trying to erase over 100 years of racial progress. Lt. Col. Lohmeier doesn’t deserve to be fired. He deserves a medal.
Little League Too?
Sadly, the left’s poison continues to infect all aspects of society. Believe it or not, all Little League coaches in Alexandria, Virginia, have been ordered to cancel practices on May 24th so they can attend a course on “diversity, equity and inclusion,” as if there is a big problem with racism in Little League.
During this course, which costs as much as $10,000, local Little League coaches will be instructed on now they can identify “their own ‘internalized racism’ and ‘potential institutional racism’ in the community.”
In other words, the coaches are going to sit through a course to be told how racist they are and what a bunch of bigots their neighbors are.
This is insane!
Strength In Numbers
As we have noted in previous reports, several states have passed laws to protect girls’ sports. In most cases, the laws are very simple: If you’re going to play school sports, you have to play on the team that matches your biological sex. (Oh, the horror!)
The whole point of girls’ sports is so they don’t have to compete against a biological boy who claims to be a girl. If we can’t maintain that simple standard, then we may as well abolish girls’ sports entirely and make every sport unisex.
Last week, Tennessee Governor Bill Lee signed legislation into law that also preserves private spaces such as bathrooms and locker rooms, so that women and girls are not forced to share bathrooms with biological men. This seems perfectly reasonable, yet it is stunning that we’re even having to debate this.
Major corporations are threatening states that pass these commonsense laws. Upping the ante even more, the NCAA said it would ban major games and championships in states that passed such laws. Some governors lost their nerve.
But several states refused to be intimidated, and now the NCAA has apparently caved. It announced Sunday that several significant tournaments will be held in Alabama, Arkansas, Tennessee and Oklahoma – states that require athletes to play on teams that match their biological sex.
The lesson here is that there is safety in numbers. There are 23 states with Republican governors and Republican legislatures. If conservative elected officials stick together, there is no way corporations and organizations can boycott half the country.
And politicians who can’t stare down woke corporations and bureaucrats in the NCAA, should get out of politics. They are precisely the kind of feckless wimps who frequently disappoint conservative voters as they move up the political ladder.
———————– Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
Tags:Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Mixed Messages, Marxists In The Military, Strength In NumbersTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:What A Drag, Dr. Fauci, keeps pushing, limiting America’s freedoms, in perpetuity, even against science, Editorial Cartoon, AF “Tony” BrancoTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
The justices protected the Fourth and Second Amendments from so-called “community caretaking” laws. by Thomas Gallatin: The U.S. Supreme Court just issued a unanimous decision on a case that could have reverberating impact on the Fourth and Second Amendments. On Monday, all nine justices agreed to overturn a First Circuit Court of Appeals ruling against Rhode Island resident Edward Caniglia, who contended that his Fourth Amendment rights were violated when law enforcement officers who were administering a welfare check elected to search his home and confiscate his firearms without a warrant.In 2015, Caniglia had an hours-long argument with his wife of 22 years, during which he put his unloaded handgun on a table and asked, “Why don’t you just shoot me and get me out of my misery?” His wife then left the house and stayed in a motel overnight. The next morning she called police and requested a welfare check, saying she feared her husband was suicidal. When police arrived at the house, they spoke with Caniglia, who eventually agreed to go to the hospital for a mental health evaluation on the condition that the police would not seize his firearms. The officers agreed, but after Caniglia left for the hospital they entered his home and confiscated his two firearms anyway. They did so without obtaining a warrant, arguing that he represented a threat to himself and others.Upon Caniglia’s return from the hospital that same day, after he was cleared of any mental health concerns, he discovered that his firearms had been seized. He contacted the police requesting their return. The police refused, citing a “community caretaking exception” as justification for both entering and searching his house and seizing his firearms. Caniglia subsequently sued, claiming a violation of his Fourth Amendment rights against unlawful search and seizure.
In their ruling, the justices homed in on the “community caretaking” exemption to the Fourth Amendment, an exemption based upon the 1973 Cady v. Dombrowski ruling in which the Supreme Court said law enforcement can legally search a vehicle without a warrant for reasonable cause. Justice Clarence Thomas observed a significant difference: “What is reasonable for vehicles is different from what is reasonable for homes.” Yet Thomas further asserted, “The First Circuit’s ‘community caretaking’ rule, however, goes beyond anything this Court has recognized.”
Justice Brett Kavanaugh disputed the notion that the Court’s ruling in support of Fourth Amendment protections would jeopardize the ability of police to legally enter a home. “If someone is at risk of serious harm and it is reasonable for officers to intervene now, that is enough for the officers to enter,” Kavanaugh stated.
Also of significance from this decision are the unanswered questions surrounding the constitutionality of so-called “red flag” laws meant for gun confiscation. Clearly, Justice Samuel Alito sees this as an issue that the Court needs to address. “We have addressed the standards required by due process for involuntary commitment to a mental treatment facility but we have not addressed Fourth Amendment restrictions on seizures like the one that we must assume occurred here, i.e., a short-term seizure conducted for the purpose of ascertaining whether a person presents an imminent risk of suicide,” he wrote. “This case also implicates another body of law that petitioner glossed over: the so-called ‘red flag’ laws that some States are now enacting. … Provisions of red flag laws may be challenged under the Fourth Amendment, and those cases may come before us. Our decision today does not address those issues.”
SCOTUS’s decision was a win for upholding Americans’ Fourth Amendment and Second Amendment rights. While the issue of how best to prevent mentally unstable individuals from accessing firearms remains a significant challenge, yesterday’s ruling was a firm reminder that the definition of the term “mentally unstable” is debatable. That’s why lawmakers cannot run roughshod over constitutional rights in the name of protecting the community. Due process must be respected and maintained.
——————————– Thomas Gallatin is a Features Editor at The Patriot Post.
————————— Tags:The Patriot Post, Thomas Gallitin, Firearm Confiscation, Checked by 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!
by Seton Motley: If you can’t beat them – pretend to join them.
The Left knows its ideas are terrible. And thus very unpopular in all but the most ridiculously partisan portions of the country. So running to win as Democrats – the Party of the Left – is rarely a good idea.
So you cheat. You do things like run Leftist candidates as fake Republicans.
I saw a great deal of this while living in Texas in the 2000s. A bunch of trial lawyers funded a bunch of “Republican” primary candidates in state House and Senate races. Looking to defeat actual conservative candidates – and populate the Capitol with their guys…just wearing different Party hats.
Of course this is evergreen chicanery. It is practiced all the time everywhere – at all levels of government.
Like in Ohio – right now.
Stewart Announces Run for Congress:“Brian Stewart, District 78 Representative to the Ohio House,…has announced his bid for U.S. Congress.”Stewart is an alleged Republican state Rep – running to be an alleged Republican US Congressman. In his announcement, he talks a little bit of a good game:
“Th(e)se challenges – whether from the extreme left, or an adversarial nation – must be dealt with aggressively and with conviction.”Speaking of “the extreme left” – remember George Soros?
George Soros: Godfather of the Left:“Say the name George Soros and liberals see dollar signs – literally….
“(I)nstead of gaining a mighty reputation for his philanthropy, or his investment prowess, Soros is reviled abroad and criticized here in his adopted country. Most everywhere Soros, his foundations or his investing have gone, trouble has followed. He’s helped foment revolutions, undermined national currencies and funded radicals around the world.”
“Steyerville.com launched Thursday by Power the Future (PTF), a non-profit that advocates the benefits of fossil fuels. The website holds an interactive map displaying the stories of communities in three states smothered by environmental policies.
“‘We started Steyerville to demonstrate the danger the eco-left poses…,’ PTF Executive Director Daniel Turner told The Free Beacon.”Soros and Steyer are enviro-mental. They fund LOTS of highly destructive and insane environmental things. Like funding fake conservatives pretending to be Republicans – so as to advance their highly destructive and insane environmental things.
And now we’ve arrived at our harmonic convergence moment. Stewart is a Soros-Steyer Republican.
Please enjoy the following awful, awfully uncritical reporting. With the hard-sell inflation of the “conservative” credentials of Stewart and his fellow Soros-Steyer Republicans. (The short article uses the word “conservative” twenty times.)
Alternative Energy Freeze Debate Rages:“Members of Ohio’s conservative community gathered at the Ohio Statehouse Thursday to announce the launch of the Ohio Conservative Energy Forum, a coalition designed to be a voice for conservative support for a common-sense, all-of-the-above state energy policy. The announcement comes as the Ohio General Assembly considers updates to Ohio’s clean energy standards.
“Mike Hartley, a seasoned conservative grassroots leader in Ohio, serves as OHCEF’s executive director….
“The OHCEF Leadership Council is made up of…Brian Stewart….”So Stewart is leading this environmental group. Proudly so – here’s his Tweet proudly announcing it.
“The self-described Conservative Energy Network, an umbrella group for environmental activists who favor ‘clean energy solutions’ in the form of taxpayer-funded wind and solar boondoggles, have been working to make inroads with conservative audiences….
“Take a hard look at what these foundations advocate and it becomes clear they are devoted to undermining cheap, affordable energy sources while expanding the size and influence of government….
“(A report from the Civitas Institute, a North Carolina free-market advocacy group, details some of this funding. Other network members include The Western Way, based in Denver, the Michigan Conservative Energy Forum, and the Ohio Conservative Energy Forum.”Emphasis ours. Because there’s the group Stewart proudly led.
Oh: And President Joe Biden’s ridiculous “Climate Czar” Gina McCarthy? She of the radical policy prescriptions and fake email accounts?
She served on the Board of the same Leftist group alleged Republican Stewart had been proudly leading.
Where there’s smoke – there’s fire.
Where there are a bunch of enviro-radical Leftists totally surrounding an alleged Republican – the alleged Republican isn’t actually a Republican.
He’s a Soros-Steyer Republican. Which isn’t a Republican at all.
——————————- Seton Motley is the President of Less Government and he contributes articles to ARRA News Service.
Tags:Seton Motley, Less Government, George Soros, Tom Steyer, Their Fellow Radicals, Invade, House Republican PrimaryTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Paul Jacob: Florida Governor Ron DeSantis is pardoning mask and social-distancing scofflaws.
He says the pandemic mitigation rules amount to overreach. “These things with health should be advisory, they should not be punitive.”
I agree. But could he (and other governors) do more to help non-criminals?
At Reason.com, Billy Binion argues that there’s lots of over-criminalization that DeSantis could tackle. Consider the drug war. If you’re arrested in Florida for possessing up to 20 grams of pot, you “face a $1,000 fine and up to a year in prison”; more than 25 grams, three to 15 years in the hoosegow.
DeSantis rejects the idea of legalizing recreational cannabis, so his “overreach” critique of public health law is limited.
Severely.
Yet it is not as if the states don’t take numerous punitive actions against persons guilty only of naivety, carelessness, or being in the wrong place at the wrong time:
Depending on the state, it can be a bad idea to drive down the road with guns you legally own in your car trunk.
Collecting signatures for an initiative petition has sometimes been treated as a prison-worthy offense.
It can be a lousy idea to carry your life savings in the form of cash if there is any chance an official might notice and confiscate it.
That latter problem, of civil asset forfeiture, would be tricky to fix at the back end, since if you’re not arrested for having the money, you can’t exactly be pardoned. But surely chief executives could take other actions to right such obvious wrongs.
Any state governor (or president) could do worse than spend, say, half of his or her time issuing pardons and finding other ways to help people caught by unjust government snares.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
—————————– Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
Tags:Paul Jacob, Common Sense, Pardon All, Non-CriminalsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Lawmakers seek answers to the source of virus, not to point blame or seek revenge, but to ensure we are better prepared to prevent another pandemic in the future. by Catherine Mortensen: As Americans begin to slowly emerge from the government’s Covid restrictions, Members of Congress are demanding to know the origins of the virus but face an administration that is not forthcoming.Representatives Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) and Bill Posey (R-Fla.) are leading the fight for transparency in the House. In the Senate, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) has been outspoken in his efforts to get answers about the possibility that U.S. taxpayers funded research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.Nunes, Ranking Member of the House Intelligence Committee, along with Republicans on the committee, sent letters late last week to President Joe Biden and Avril Haines, Director of National Intelligence pushing them to declassify intelligence related to the Wuhan lab, carry out a full investigation into the origins of Covid-19, and release information about any U.S. funding for the Wuhan lab.
“I want to call to your attention the fact that U.S. government funds — whether directly or indirectly — are supporting dangerous dual-use scientific research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. Our findings, though incomplete, suggest the United States supported such work despite clear evidence of the People’s Liberation Army’s involvement at the WIV,” Nunes wrote to Biden.
In their letter to Haines the Republicans wrote,
“As Members of Congress responsible for overseeing U.S. intelligence agencies, we believe the IC [intelligence community] failed to properly support policymakers with timely products and analysis. Further, the IC has not been forthcoming about what processes it undertook to make seemingly authoritative statements early in the pandemic about the origins of the virus — conclusions that are now in question. This casts doubt on the validity of early judgments as well as the analytic integrity of COVID-19-related intelligence reporting.”
Nunes revealed he sent the letters during an appearance on Sunday Morning Futures on Fox News. On the show, he spoke about COVID-19’s origins, arguing that “there’s building circumstantial evidence that indeed this did come from a lab and indeed likely there was money that flowed from the U.S. government through non-profits that was actually supporting this type of research that was going on in China.”
A Nov. 2017 study on bat-to-human Covid transmission co-authored by the Director of the Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases at the Wuhan lab, Dr. Shi Zheng-li, was “jointly funded by… the National Institutes of Health.
However, in questioning from Sen. Paul on May 11, Dr. Anthony Fauci, who heads the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases stated “[The] NIH has not ever and does not now fund gain-of-function research in the Wuhan Institute of Virology.”
When Paul asked if “Covid 19 could not have occurred through serial passage [a method of creating a virus] in a laboratory,” Dr. Fauci stated, “I do not have any accounting of what the Chinese may have done and I am fully in favor of any further investigation of what went on in China,” and added, “However, I will repeat, the NIH…categorically has not funded gain of function research to be conducted in the Wuhan Institute of Virology.”
All of which raises questions about whether Dr. Fauci is being fully forthcoming to Congress as it attempts to conduct oversight, as members raise questions about what role both the Wuhan Institute and federal funding could have played in the pandemic, if any. If it is even possible that the virus came from a lab, then the American people have a right to know what really happened.
To get answers, U.S. Rep. Bill Posey (R-Fla.) is proposing H.R. 834, which would create a bipartisan commission to look at the origins of the virus. In a Feb. 26 oped at the Washington Examiner, Posey argued, “To find these answers and to holistically address the numerous problems that the pandemic has revealed, Congress should establish a bipartisan commission to obtain a full account of the events of the pandemic and provide guidance for future actions. We must resolve to know with the greatest degree of certainty the origins of the virus, what steps could have been taken to slow its spread, lessons learned from lockdowns, developing effective therapies and vaccines, pandemic preparedness, and importantly, how we can best prevent such pandemics in the future.”
If you would like to send an email to your member of congress asking them to cosponsor H.R. 834, click here.
With more than 3.3 million dead from the virus worldwide and counting, the American people have a right to know if the science they are funding through USAID and the NIH could have created Covid in a laboratory with their tax dollars, or if it simply grew in the wild. This will tell the world whether this type of research is simply too dangerous to continue to be permitted, if it was essential in developing a vaccine, or both. But saying U.S. tax dollars were not going to Wuhan is not going to fly any more.
——————————— Catherine Mortensen is Vice President of Americans for Limited Government.
Tags:Catherine Mortense, Americans for Limited Government, Republican Lawmakers, Uphill Battle, To Learn Origins, of Covid-19 VirusTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by NRA-ILA: The researchers behind The Violence Project mass shooting database launched the next phase of their work on Friday, May 14th. The Off-Ramp Project is a set of resources designed to help prevent mass shootings by getting people in crisis the help they need. Criminologist James Densley and psychologist Jill Peterson begin with an insightful model built on years of work but ultimately kiss the ring of gun control.
Densley and Peterson built their database, in part with a grant from the Department of Justice, to understand the pathway to violence and to develop methods to reroute that pathway. The database strives to include more than 160 variables on the perpetrators of mass shootings, including life history and experience variables to help understand the root causes of mass shootings to prevent them. The off-ramp approach is focused on recognizing the signs of crisis and intervening properly, even beyond the moment of crisis.
They detail “gun violence” by type: suicides, homicides, domestic violence, and mass shootings. They note that the types of firearms commonly used in mass shootings are “mostly handguns, but a larger proportion of rifles than in other categories of shootings.” They also note that the most commonly used firearms in criminal homicides are “illegally possessed handguns.” Rifles are not commonly used in murders or suicides, so a “larger proportion” used in mass shootings is not necessarily an indicator of really anything.
The Off-Ramp Project website lists resources at the state and national levels for crisis-intervention, mental health, and advocacy. The “advocacy” links are resources for shelters and mental health advocates. The researchers’ gun control leanings were first exposed when the increase in gun sales last year was mentioned in a list of reasons for an increase in “gun violence” in the same period. The casual reference to a “policy” section on their website piqued our curiosity but ultimately soured us on their objectivity.
The policy page presents a different sort of advocacy – unabashed gun control. Five of the first six listings on the Policy page are gun control organizations and the sixth is H.R. 8, a background check bill that is the beginning of a firearms registry.
Brady, Stop Handgun Violence, Moms Demand Action, Giffords, and Everytown are listed as “policy-relevant organizations,” revealing precisely the sort of policies the researchers believe are relevant.
The researchers promoted red flag laws, permits to purchase, universal background checks, and limiting magazine capacity – though Densley also said assault weapons bans should be discussed – as opportunities to prevent mass shootings. Densley claimed that there was a lot of research to support red flag laws, that permits to purchase are a mechanism to close loopholes, and that magazine capacity limits – and assault weapons bans – are driven by data.
The “Science of Gun Policy” review team at the Rand Corporation couldn’t find that data. They concluded that licensing and permitting requirements have an uncertain effect on suicide, on homicides, and on mass shootings; that private-seller background checks have an uncertain effect on firearms homicides and all background checks have an uncertain effect on mass shootings; and that assault weapons bans have uncertain effects on homicides and on mass shootings. Red flag laws are still quite new and the only available research has been observational, but it has shown that, in many cases, the subject of the red flag order is neither arrested nor transported for a mental health evaluation. The subject is required to turn over any firearms and then left to his or her own devices – in a home that may very well contain knives, automobiles, toxic chemicals, and/or many other potential implements of harm.
The prestigious heads of the gun control research centers at UC Davis and the Bloomberg School of Public Health found that comprehensive background checks have no effect on homicide rates. The Review Panel investigating the Virginia Tech mass shooting recognized that magazine capacity limits would not have made much difference in the incident.
The Off-Ramp Project has a lot of promise in terms of encouraging interventions that could prevent violence. It’s a shame they’ve let their brand and their work be co-opted by organizations that politicize mass shootings to promote a radical anti-gun agenda.
——————————– NRA-ILA Helping Those in Crisis – and Gun Control.
Tags:NRA-ILA, Helping Those in Crisis, Gun ControlTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Ron Paul: April’s 4.2 percent past year increase in the Consumer Price Index is not likely to dissuade the Federal Reserve from continuing its policy of near-zero interest rates. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell believes the rising prices are just a temporary phenomenon caused by the ending of lockdowns releasing pent-up consumer demand.
Powell may be right that the ending of lockdowns would inevitably be accompanied by a rise in prices. However, this is just the latest reason the Fed has given for putting off increasing interest rates. Powell does not want to admit that the real reason the Fed will continue to keep rates low is that increasing rates will cause the federal government’s interest payments to rise to unsustainable levels.
One way the Fed increases the money supply — and thus lowers interest rates — is by purchasing US Treasury securities. These purchases increase demand for US government debt, keeping government’s borrowing costs low. An expansionary monetary policy thus enables increased federal spending and deficits. Since the lockdowns, the Fed has worked overtime to monetize federal debt, doubling its holdings of Treasury securities.
A Truth in Accounting report from April concluded the real federal debt is 123 trillion dollars — over four times larger than the 28 trillion dollars “official” debt. The higher debt calculation includes the federal government’s unfunded liabilities. The biggest unfunded liabilities are the 55 trillion dollars in promised but unfunded Medicare benefits and the 41 trillion dollars in promised but unfunded Social Security benefits.
Congress could transition away from entitlement and welfare programs without harming current or soon-to-be beneficiaries by cutting spending on militarism and corporate welfare. Part of the savings from these cuts could be used to pay down the debt, and part could be used to provide payments for current and soon-to-be beneficiaries of government programs while we transition to a free market.
Unfortunately, there is not much appetite in Congress for spending cuts. The main Democratic criticisms of President Biden’s 1.52 trillion dollars budget, which increases spending by 8.4 percent, are that Biden is not proposing bigger increases in spending and debt, or in taxes on “the rich.” Biden’s budget increases are in addition to the trillions in other spending Biden is pursuing, including related to Covid, infrastructure, and his “American Families Plan.”
Republicans are making obligatory attacks on Biden’s spending, while also attacking Biden for increasing military spending to “only” 753 billion dollars. Republican complaints about Biden’s big spending ring hollow given their support for Presidents Donald Trump and George W. Bush’s spending increases and Republicans’ proposals to spend billions on infrastructure.
Some conservatives have even embraced the madness of Modern Monetary Theory. These conservatives are urging people to stop worrying about spending and debt and instead figure out how to use Fed-financed government spending to advance conservative ends.
The refusal of Congress to cut spending means the Fed will keep increasing its balance sheet in an effort to monetize skyrocketing debt. Eventually, the increasing debt and inflation will lead to a major economic meltdown. The meltdown will likely include a rejection of the dollar’s world reserve currency status.
The only way to avoid the crash is to spread the truth among enough people to force Congress to reverse course. Early steps in reversing course are blocking Biden’s big spending plans and passing Audit the Fed so the American people can finally know the truth about the Federal Reserve’s actions.
——————————— Dr. Ron Paul (@ronpaul), Chairman of the Ron Paul Institute for Peace and Prosperity, is a former U.S.Congressman (R-TX). He twice sought the Republican nomination for President. As a MD, he was an Air Force flight surgeon and has delivered over 4000 babies. Paul writes on numerous topics but focuses on monetary policies, the military-industrial complex, the Federal Reserve, and compliance with the U.S. Constitution.
Tags:Dr. Ron Paul, Big Government, Big InflationTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by I & I Editorial Board: Military officials are trained to stand silently on the sidelines of politics, saying nothing but what relates to their mission, whatever it might be. But a recent open letter signed by 124 former flag-level officers warning of the dangerous effects of our nation’s sharp sudden turn to the left overturns that tradition. What do they know that the rest of us don’t?
The letter was not couched in military jargon or bureaucratese; it was plain-spoken and blunt in its concern about America’s course. It starts with a call for protecting our free and fair elections, but then turns toward the ominous political and cultural trends of recent years. No need for a translation:
“Aside from the election, the current administration has launched a full-blown assault on our constitutional rights in a dictatorial manner, bypassing Congress, with more than 50 executive orders quickly signed, many reversing the previous administration’s effective policies and regulations. Moreover, population control actions such as excessive lockdowns, school and business closures, and, most alarming, censorship of written and verbal expression are all direct assaults on our fundamental rights. We must support and hold accountable politicians who will act to counter socialism, Marxism, and Progressivism, support our constitutional republic, and insist on fiscally responsible governing while focusing on all Americans, especially the middle class, not special interest or extremist groups which are used to divide us into warring factions.”They warned about the negative trends in a number of areas, ranging from our increasingly open borders and social media exercising control over speech, to Joe Biden’s return to the fatally flawed Iran nuclear deal and the failure to protect the rule of law.
The letter somberly noted that “our country has taken a hard left turn toward socialism and a Marxist form of tyrannical government which must be countered now by electing congressional and presidential candidates who will always act to defend our constitutional republic. The survival of our nation and its cherished freedoms, liberty, and historic values are at stake.”
Sadly, that’s not hyperbole.
No surprise that those on the left treated the letter as some sort of extremist tract, or a call to arms against a Democratic president. One critic even referred to the letter as “GOP talking points.”
Such sarcasm wasn’t in evidence back in October 2019, when left-leaning retired Adm. William McRaven in the New York Times called for President Donald Trump’s removal from office, “the sooner, the better.” Note that he didn’t call simply for Trump’s impeachment; the clear implication was he might even support a coup.
He was seconded later by former Adm. Mike Mullen, Barack Obama’s ex-head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Mullen and McRaven made the media rounds, deriding Trump’s leadership and undermining his administration’s attempts at military reform. In an interview with NBC’s “Meet The Press,” Mullen said he was “very concerned about the Trump loyalists who have now gone to work in the Pentagon.”
Yesterday’s military can best be summed up by the motto of West Point: “Honor, Duty, Country.” Today’s motto might better be “Wokeness, Race, Gender.” More than ever, we see a sharp generational and ideological split, one reflected within our current military leadership, as noted above. Today’s ultra-woke military under Biden Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin is undergoing a dangerous “progressive” transformation. If not halted, the radical changes will make America a superpower in name only.
How bad is it? One hundred days into his job, with crises erupting around the globe, Austin declared his new top priority: curbing sexual assault. His other major political priorities included fighting “extremism” and boosting vaccines.
No one should be surprised, since even before he took his post he called coronavirus the nation’s top security challenge, and warned that global warming posed an “existential threat” to our country.
While the military leadership wallows in its Wokeism, we face growing real threats from real enemies, among them, China, Russia, Iran, North Korea and Islamist terrorist groups. No doubt, they’re licking their chops at the prospect of undermining our military.
Meanwhile, the military is rooting out at least one kind of enemy: ideological ones. Lt. Col. Matthew Lohmeier was relieved of command of the 11th Space Warning Squadron at Buckley Air Force Base in Colorado for possible “partisan political activity.” That is, he spoke out about the new left-wing politics of the military under Biden.
“The diversity, inclusion and equity industry and the trainings we are receiving in the military … is rooted in critical race theory, which is rooted in Marxism,” Lohmeier said on a podcast, calling the leftist politicization of the military “a warning sign.”
We agree. The military’s new Woke politics will not make troops more ready or able to fight. It will only lead to more anger, racial division, sexual grievances, social schisms and a lack of military preparedness. And that will leave us all vulnerable in the next major war, by ignoring or downplaying what our potential enemies are doing.
Americans of whatever political stripe would be wise to take their former military leaders’ open letter seriously. No doubt, Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin, both masters of Marxist propaganda, do.
—————————— Written by the I&I Editorial Board.
Tags:I&I Editorial Board, Top Retired Officers, Are Right, Biden’s Leftism, And ‘Woke’ Military, Threaten U.S. SecurityTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
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Morning Rundown
House approves Jan. 6 commission bill: The House on Wednesday approved a measure creating an independent commission to investigate the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, with some rank-and-file Republicans even voting with Democrats in defiance of their party leaders who warned against the effort. Ahead of the vote, which was 252-175 with 35 Republicans voting with Democrats, House Democratic leaders argued that they had made several concessions to Republicans to reach a compromise. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said GOP leaders raised last-minute objections because they’re “afraid of the truth.” The vote on the commission comes as some Republicans have tried to minimize the violence on Jan. 6 and downplay the riot, which left several people dead, including a Capitol Police officer who died of natural causes after clashing with protesters, and one rioter who was fatally shot when trying to enter the House chamber. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., on Wednesday morning came out against the measure, and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy also called the proposal “potentially counterproductive” and “duplicative” as law enforcement efforts to pursue rioters who entered the Capitol and clashed with police officers are ongoing, as well as the several bipartisan committee investigations in the House and Senate. Still, Democrats are determined to investigate the Capitol attack. “We need the answers, not political rhetoric, which is what this bipartisan commission can provide for all of us, for our country,” said Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich. “Let the truth shine in.”
Biden calls for ‘significant de-escalation today’ in 4th call with Israel’s Netanyahu: Amid growing pressure from world leaders, human rights groups and progressive faction of his own party to push Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to stop Israeli strikes on Gaza, President Joe Biden spoke to the Israeli leader Wednesday — the fourth time in a week — and called for “significant de-escalation” and a “path to a cease-fire.” The latest call was new for the deadline Biden appeared to lay out in use of the word “today” for de-escalation — the most strongly worded yet from the U.S. side, even as Biden has repeatedly backed Israel’s right to defend itself against Hamas’ constant barrage of rocket fire. Still, Netanyahu resisted global calls for an immediate halt to the hostilities between Israeli security forces and Hamas, the militant group that governs the Palestinian people of Gaza. Since the fighting erupted nearly two weeks after Israeli forces’ assault on al-Aqsa Mosque and the ongoing litigation over Sheikh Jarrah evictions — the latest deadly span in the decades-old conflict — hundreds have been killed and thousands wounded, including 63 children. The White House declined to provide more details of the Wednesday call, but Biden conveyed the message that he could only provide Netanyahu’s government cover for so long from the growing calls in Congress and around the world for Israel to take a different approach to Gaza.
‘Pose’ actor Billy Porter announces he’s been living with HIV for 14 years: Emmy, Tony and Grammy winner Billy Porter has already blazed a trail in Hollywood as an out and proud gay Black man, and he’s doing it again by fearlessly declaring he’s been living with HIV for 14 years. In an intimate interview with The Hollywood Reporter, the “Pose” actor detailed the trauma he’s experienced in his life, from sexual abuse at the hands of his stepfather when he was a child to his diagnosis as HIV-positive in 2007 during what he called “the worst year of my life.” “I was on the precipice of obscurity for about a decade or so, but 2007 was the worst of it,” Porter recalled. “By June, I was diagnosed HIV-positive.” His role as Pray Tell in “Pose,” who was also diagnosed with HIV on the show, allowed him to “say everything that I wanted to say through a surrogate.” Today, Porter says he’s the healthiest he’s been in his life and that he’s so much more than his diagnosis. “It’s not the only thing I am,” he said. “And if you don’t want to work with me because of my status, you’re not worthy of me.”
Princess Beatrice pregnant with 1st child: Another great-grandchild is on the way for Queen Elizabeth. The queen’s granddaughter, Princess Beatrice, and her husband, Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi, are expecting a baby this fall, Buckingham Palace announced Wednesday. “The Queen has been informed, and both families are delighted with the news,” the palace said in a statement. Beatrice and Mapelli Mozzi’s baby will be the 12th great-grandchild for Queen Elizabeth and her late husband, Prince Philip, who passed away in April. The queen currently has 10 great-grandchildren, with another — a second child for Prince Harry and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex — expected to be born this summer.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Ginger Zee is live from a lake in Guanajuato, Mexico, where a once submerged church is now visible due to a drought. And Tory Johnson brings us six fun deals that will help you get into the summer spirit. Plus, Deborah Roberts sat down with author Stacey Swann to talk about our May “GMA” Book Club pick, “Olympus, Texas.” All this and more only on “GMA.”
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: Senate GOP readies to let Trump off the hook — again
“A disgraceful dereliction of duty.” “Practically and morally responsible for provoking the events of that day.”
That’s how Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell back in February describedDonald Trump’s actions leading up to the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol – right after he voted to acquit Trump in his impeachment trial (because the former president was no longer in office).
REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
And that once again looks like the script for McConnell and Senate Republicans when it comes to the Senate now considering a bipartisan independent commission to examine Jan. 6: Are they really going to deny any further investigation into – or accountability of – Trump’s actions?
On a technicality? And via the first Senate filibuster of the Biden Era?
On Wednesday, the House approved the creation of a Jan. 6 commission by a 252-175 vote, with 35 House Republicans joining all Democrats in passing the bill. Those 35 House GOPers in support were more than three times the number of House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump in January (10).
But McConnell says he’s opposed to the commission, arguing that there have already been other investigations into the Jan. 6 attack. (But as we wrote yesterday, there has yet to be any look into Trump’s actions after he returned to the White House that day.)
And at least one Senate Republican who voted to convict Trump back in February – retiring Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C. – is against the commission, per Axios.
Ten Senate Republicans will need to join with all Democratic senators to avoid a GOP filibuster on the measure.
We get McConnell’s strategy: He’s decided to take any political heat NOW to avoid any future political heat arising from this commission LATER.
But in the process, he’s letting Trump off the hook, once again allowing the former president to slip accountability (either by exhausting his allies and the opposition, or simply by taking them hostage).
This commission shouldn’t be controversial: The top House Republican on the Homeland Security Committee negotiated it with the top Democrat.
Yet unless something changes, what McConnell and Senate Republicans are doing is capitulating to Trump – different from House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s capitulation.
But it’s capitulation none the less.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Naming names
It’s debate time in Virginia
The five Democrats running for Virginia governor – Terry McAuliffe, Jennifer Carroll Foy, Jennifer McClellan, Justin Fairfax and Lee Carter – will participate in their third debate ahead of the June 8 primaries.
Our friends at NBC 4 Washington are hosting the debate, and it’s being moderated by one of us!
The debate airs statewide beginning at 7:00 pm ET, but the virtual debate is being pre-taped earlier in the day.
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
The third out of four: Tonight’s Democratic gubernatorial debate in Virginia, hosted by NBC 4 Washington – with one of us serving as one of the moderators.
As early as six weeks into pregnancy: When abortions could be banned under a new Texas law signed by Gov. Greg Abbott.
54: The number of additional migrant children separated from their families whose parents have now been located by lawyers, according to a new court filing.
33,190,985: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 30,250 more than yesterday morning.)
591,878: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 572 more than yesterday morning.)
277,290,173: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
34.9 percent: The share of Americans who are fully vaccinated.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Trump is calling the New York investigation into the Trump Organization a probe “in desperate search of a crime.”
Why exactly is the New York AG teaming up with the Manhattan DA on the Trump case?
Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov met last night.
It’s not just Maricopa: Trump loyalists around the country are revisiting the 2020 results.
House Democrats are taking their complaints to the White House about an arms sale to Israel.
Trump critic Russell Moore is leaving the Southern Baptist Convention’s leadership.
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We have an analysis of how vaccine rules have created problems for college students, the latest from the Israel-Gaza conflict and the first meeting of America and Russia’s top diplomats since President Joe Biden took office.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Thursday morning.
For college students the pandemic has meant anything but a normal campus experience.
The introduction of three Covid-19 vaccines in early 2021 seemed to present an exit from patchwork reopenings and restrictive rules.
But an NBC News analysis of nearly 400 colleges and universities that are requiring vaccination found that the vast majority have unclear directives, loopholes or legal complications that are leaving professors frustrated, students unmotivated and a potential public health crisis come fall.
Nova Southwestern in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, told all staff and students to get a vaccine in April — but in May a new state law barred schools from requiring proof of vaccination.
“I am frustrated with the state,” said Charles Zelden, a professor of history and politics at Nova Southeastern. “They are getting in the way of my classroom, my purpose to educate my students.”
Despite a growing sense that a cease-fire could be imminent and pressure from Washington to de-escalate, Israel launched a fresh wave of airstrikes across the Gaza Strip early Thursday, while rocket attacks from Palestinian militant group Hamas resumed after an overnight lull.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov struck a polite tone Wednesday as they sat down for the first face-to-face engagement between high-level U.S. and Russian officials since President Joe Biden took office.
As Western states head into what experts say could be another catastrophic fire season, federal wildland firefighters are faced with staffing shortages amid a worsening drought and an exhausted workforce.
Lovato’s femme sheen doesn’t negate their expansive gender identity any more than Jonathan Van Ness’ beard negates theirs, writes Mary Emily O’Hara from GLAAD, which counters LGBT discrimination.
By Keri Blakinger, The Marshall Project | Read more
Online dating sites like Match, Tinder and eHarmony ban people convicted of felonies, which civil rights advocates say extends an unfair practice of imposing “collateral consequences” long after people have finished their sentences.
Even people who run, bike or otherwise get their heart pumping every morning won’t get the life-extending benefits of exercise if they sit the rest of the day, a new study has found.
Want to receive the Morning Rundown in your inbox? Sign up here.
Silk sleepwear doesn’t have to be pricey. We found highly-rated silk pajamas under $200 from Nordstrom, Lunya and more.
One fun thing
On the day before her 75th birthday, Cher is gifting fans with the news that an official biopic of her life is in the works.
The untitled film is set at Universal Pictures, with “Mamma Mia!” producers Judy Craymer and Gary Goetzman on board to produce and Eric Roth penning the script, Variety has confirmed.
Cher announced the film in a tweet, writing: “Ok Universal is Doing Biopic With My Friends JUDY CRAYMER,GARY GOETZMAN PRODUCING. THEYY PRODUCED BOTH MAMMA MIA’S,& MY DEAR DEAR Friend 4 YRS, & OSCAR WINNER..ERIC ROTH IS GOING 2 WRITE IT.”
Plus: Three things that aren’t as bad as they seem, Tennessee bans certain treatments for transgender minors, and more…
Is every federal agency a surveillance unit now? With a plethora of law enforcement and intelligence agencies deputized to monitor American communications, it seems insane to think that the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) would also be enlisted for this task. But indeed it has been, as Yahoo Newsrevealed earlier this year. Now, new details have emerged about the postal service’s Internet Covert Operations Program (iCOP), including the fact that the agency has been using facial recognition software from Clearview AI and has a specific program to monitor people posting about protests.
As part of the iCOP program, postal service employees have been monitoring Americans’ social media posts and sharing things they deem suspicious with law enforcement agencies. “Yet the program is much broader in scope than previously known and includes analysts who assume fake identities online, use sophisticated intelligence tools and employ facial recognition software,” writesYahoo News‘ Jana Winter:
Among the tools used by the analysts is Clearview AI, a facial recognition software that scrapes images off public websites, a practice that has raised the ire of privacy advocates. The U.S. Postal Inspection Service uses Clearview’s facial recognition database of over 3 billion images from arrest photos collected from across social media “to help identify unknown targets in an investigation or locate additional social media accounts for known individuals,” according to materials reviewed by Yahoo News.
Other tools employed by the Inspection Service include Zignal Labs’ software, which it uses to run keyword searches on social media event pages to identify potential threats from upcoming scheduled protests, according to Inspection Service documents. It also uses Nfusion, another software program, to create and maintain anonymous, untraceable email and social media accounts.
USPS has defended its practices by saying that it’s simply part of keeping postal workers safe. But the agency’s internal communications raise doubts:
The iCOP intelligence bulletin obtained and published by Yahoo News targeted protests planned by largely right-wing groups and discussed on Facebook, Twitter and Parler.
iCOP found no credible threats, but compiled what it described as “inflammatory” posts.
The iCOP program has also monitored protests associated with Black Lives Matter and racial justice, according to Yahoo News.
“Why has the USPS been using anything other than intelligence from the Department of Justice for monitoring events which may pose risks to normal mail delivery? Why were these resources used to monitor First Amendment-protected protest rallies like those in the wake of George Floyd’s death last year?” asks Rayne at national security and civil liberties blog emptywheel.
Postal service surveillance reports are uploaded to a portal run by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and shared with task forces, surveillance centers, law enforcement units, and government agencies across the country—including the National Security Agency—as well as stored for future access.
“The retention and dissemination of these reports could allow federal agencies to receive information they are not allowed by statute to collect themselves,” Winter suggests.Whether the USPS is actually authorized to undertake such surveillance and reporting is not clear, let alone whether it is doing so in ways respectful of free speech and due process rights.
Some members of Congress have been skeptical of the Postal Service’s iCOP program.”I do not doubt that @USPS has some legitimate law enforcement responsibilities (theft, fraud, etc) but shoehorning in a massive social media surveillance operation using AI facial recognition software under the guise of a loosely-defined homeland security mission is just insane,” tweeted Rep. Peter Meijer (R–Mich.) yesterday.
“Like all Americans, I am skeptical when any government agency pries into our personal and private lives under the guise of rooting out ‘threats.’ But for such an invasion of privacy to be carried out by the Post Office, of all agencies, is a major concern,” wrote Rep. Nancy Mace (R–S.C.) in an April op-ed.
On April 30, Rep. Matt Gaetz (R–Fla.) introduced a bill “to prohibit funds from being used to implement the Internet Covert Operations Program under the United States Postal Inspection Service.” It has attracted nine co-sponsors so far—all Republicans.
Congressional Democrats have been largely silent about the issue.
FREE MINDS
Three things that aren’t as bad as they seem. In an interview with Reason, Scott Winship of the American Enterprise Institute casts doubt on conventional wisdom about fertility rates, income inequality, and economic mobility. Americans “have always been suckers for declension narratives—the idea that the Golden Age ended sometime in the past and we have the bad luck to live in a world that is uniquely awful, unfair, and corrupt,” notes Reason‘s Nick Gillespie:
Three of today’s most widespread declension narratives involve fertility rates, income inequality, and economic mobility. We have fewer children than ever, goes the popular story, because nobody—even the wealthy!—can afford them anymore. The spread between rich and poor has never been bigger and it’s only increasing. Kids today will be the first generation in America to have a lower standard of living than their parents.
But according to Winship, these narratives are misleading to just plain false. Listen to his interview with Gillespie here.
FREE MARKETS
Tennessee bans certain sorts of health care for transgender teens. “The move makes Tennessee just the second state in the United States to enact such a ban after Arkansas approved a similar version earlier this year over a veto from Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson,” says ABC News. The new Tennessee law would ban doctors from providing hormone treatments or puberty blockers to anyone under age 18, in addition to prohibiting minors from receiving sex reassignment surgeries.
QUICK HITS
• Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has signed into law an anti-abortion measure that makes abortion illegal about two weeks after a woman first misses her period due to pregnancy and lets anyone who thinks the rules have been breached sue abortion providers plus those suspected of abetting them.
• A new coronavirus that transmits from animals to humans has been found in some Malaysian patients. “The patients had what looked like regular pneumonia,” reports NPR. “But in eight out of 301 samples tested, or 2.7%, Xui and Gray found that the patients’ upper respiratory tracts were infected with a new canine coronavirus — a dog virus.”
• “Arrest warrants have been issued for two former Colorado police officers in connection with the violent arrest last year of a 73-year-old woman with dementia,” reports CNN.
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.
Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Playboy, Fox News, Politico, The Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.
Reason is the magazine of “free minds and free markets,” offering a refreshing alternative to the left-wing and right-wing echo chambers for independent-minded readers who love liberty.
The Democrats who control Joe Biden have been chirping about a “domestic war on terror” since January 6 and even before that while ignoring all the domestic violence their side was committing all thro … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
05/20/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Kilimnik Speaks; Coke and Woke Politics; the Icebreaker Gap
By Carl M. Cannon on May 20, 2021 08:53 am
Good morning, it’s Thursday, May 20, 2021. The carnage in Gaza and Israel continues, the push for a Jan. 6 commission is roiling Congress, and COVID’s grip on the nation continues to diminish. All serious matters, so forgive this next mention of two other development of a less consequential nature. They’re eye-catching bookends of a sort, and both involve baseball: Last night, the Yankees’ Corey Kluber pitched a no-hitter, the sixth of MLB’s young season, itself an extraordinary development. On the same day, the sports world learned of the death of Rennie Stennett, who had seven hits in a game for the Pittsburgh Pirates back in 1975. He was the second player to do so in a nine-inning game, with the previous feat occurring in 1892. Talk about rarities. What those twin events tell us about baseball and high-velocity pitching of recent years, will be left for another discussion on another day.
For now, I’ll point you to RCP’s front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters, columnists, and contributors:
* * *
Kilimnik Speaks — and Evidence Backs His “No Collusion” Account. In an exclusive interview with Aaron Maté of RealClearInvestigations, the man cast as a linchpin of Trump-Russia collusion theories vigorously disputes efforts to brand him a Russian spy.
Peddlers of Russiagate Won’t Take Truth for an Answer. J. Peder Zane writes that the Biden administration is using a stealth campaign, aided by friendly media outlets, to target the truth-tellers who exposed the conspiracy to negate the 2016 election.
Coke Tempers Its Politics After “Woke Capitalism” Ad Campaign. Susan Crabtree reports on a $1 million effort to call out companies that, campaign organizer say, have put politicians before their customers.
Biden’s Icebreaker Remark Reveals Cracks in Arctic Strategy. Alaskan and others officials argue that the dearth of Coast Guard icebreakers has given China and Russia a commanding geopolitical advantage. Phil Wegmann has the story.
Sanctions Targeting Russia’s Bad Actors: Effective or Not? At RealClearDefense, John V. Parachini and Ryan Bauer examine whether steps taken by the U.S. and E.U. have curbed Vladimir Putin’s behavior.
“Inflation Tax” Targets the Poor and Middle Class. Alfredo Ortiz spotlights the reduced value of one’s earnings when prices rise.
Ending the Shame of Blaine. At RealClearPolicy, Nicole Stelle Garnett and Daniel T. Judge highlight legal challenges to state constitutional amendments that have kept private schools from sharing in federal coronavirus funds.
COVID Has Exposed Barriers to Better Medical Care. At RealClearHealth, David Herbst and Tori Venable write that the pandemic has shown states the counter-productivity of certificate-of-need laws.
Reimagining 2020, Sans Fauci, Redfield, Et Al. RealClearMarkets editor John Tamny engages in a thought experiment.
The Limitations of a Green Mandate. At RealClearEnergy, Larry Behrens outlines the costs and shortcomings of Biden’s electric power plan.
PA College Ditches Its Fraternities and Sororities. At RealClearEducation, John Hirschauer reports on action taken by Bloomsburg University.
Level the Playing Field for Adult Learners. Also at RCEd, Becky Klein-Collins urges policymakers and postsecondary leaders to expand prior learning assessment of students returning to school later in life.
On the night of May 17th, residents of the Israeli city Haifa witnessed bright flames coming from a natural gas platform in the Mediterranean, causing some to worry whether it had come under attack by Hamas.
On December 20, 2019, President Donald Trump signed the 2020 National Defense Organization Act, officially creating the United States Space Force as the first and currently only independent space military service branch.
Condemnation came swiftly from local politicians and Jewish groups. It was one of several area incidents that have occurred in recent days that appeared to be targeting Jews.
The top American and Russian diplomats met today in Iceland. The good news is that Tony Blinken was not publicly humiliated by this adversary’s representative – unlike when he submissively tolerated a diatribe against America by his Chinese counterpart two months ago.
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60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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Good morning. It’s Thursday, May 20, and we’re covering a possible end to the fighting in Israel, a suspect arrested in an epic jewel heist, and more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
A ceasefire in the fighting that has gripped Israel and the Gaza Strip may come as early as Friday, according to overnight reports. The truce is being mediated by Egyptian negotiators.
The news comes as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed yesterday to continue Israel’s efforts against Hamas militants, with the country’s military shifting its focus to targeting senior Hamas officials. The comments came despite increasing pressure from the US, with President Joe Biden calling for de-escalation by the end of yesterday.
Israel has also focused on dismantling the group’s infrastructure, most notably the so-called “Hamas Metro,” a series of underground tunnels used by the group to smuggle goods and weapons and move undetected throughout Gaza. Officials say 31 missile manufacturing sites have also been destroyed.
Precipitated by a number of events, Hamas launched rockets into Israel for the first time since 2014 last Monday, prompting retaliatory airstrikes. Since then, Hamas has fired more than 3,000 rockets (see range of fire), with Israel conducting hundreds of strikes. To date, 217 Palestinians (including a reported 63 children) and 12 Israelis (one child) have been killed. International aid groups have warned of a looming humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
Observers warn a ceasefire will end short-term violence, but is unlikely to halt the ongoing cycle of conflict.
Art Thief Nabbed
German police announced the arrest of the fifth and final suspect in a daring 2019 burglary of one of the country’s most famous museums. The suspect, 22-year-old Abdul Majed Remmo, is the twin brother of the already arrested Mohammed Remmo, and evaded authorities during a raid last year.
Considered one of the greatest jewel heists in modern history, the group broke into Dresden’s renowned Green Vault Museum, which contains Europe’s largest treasure collection (see photos). The haul, estimated to be worth $1.1B, included the 49-carat Dresden White Diamond, an elaborate sword with more than 700 diamonds, and other items (see list). The operation was fairly low-tech—the burglars started a fire that disarmed the security system and climbed in through a window. The suspects are part of the same family responsible for the theft of a 220-pound Canadian gold coin from Berlin’s Bode Museum in 2017.
See the best of the rest of the historic jewel heists in recent history.
Jan. 6 Commission
The US House passed legislation yesterday establishing a 9/11-style commission to investigate the origins and details of the Jan. 6 storming of the US Capitol. Rep. John Katko (R, NY-24) helped develop the proposal, and 35 Republicans joined Democrats to approve the bill in a 252-175 vote. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R, CA-23)—likely to be subpoenaed by such a commission—did not support the bill, arguing it should investigate a broader range of political violence.
The commission faces an uphill battle in the Senate, where it needs 60 votes to overcome a filibuster (see 101). Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has come out against the proposal, and 10 Republican senators would have to support the bill in the evenly divided chamber.
See how the hypothetical commission would work here.
Congrats to Mary M. from Wilmington, NC—she won $1,440 just for sharing 1440.
The Motley Fool’s team is no stranger to the immense value in the digital entertainment industry. They recommended a little-known DVD rental company called Netflix in 2007. Since then, it’s up a whopping 17,483%.
>Billy Porter—the Tony, Grammy, and Emmy Award-winning actor—announces he’s been HIV-positive for 14 years (More) | Paul Mooney, actor and comedian best known for work on “The Richard Pryor Show,” dies at 79 (More) | Singer and actor Demi Lovato comes out as nonbinary; announces they/them as pronouns (More)
>LeBron Jameshits late-game three to propel the Los Angeles Lakers past the Golden State Warriors in Western Conference play-in game; Warriors will face the Memphis Grizzlies for final spot (More) | How the play-in games work (More)
>“Friends” reunions drops trailer for May 27 special on HBO Max; each star was reportedly paid $2.5M to take part (More) | Cher biopic in the works from “Mamma Mia!” producers (More)
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Science & Technology
>Microsoft to retire Internet Explorer, one of the oldest and most widely used web browsers, next June after 25 years of operation; all company products will shift to Microsoft Edge (More)
>Researchers advance toward using gene therapy to restore hearing for the congenitally deaf; new functions for a gene linked to healthy sensory hairs in the inner ear discovered (More)
>Experiment finds tardigrades, also known as water bears, can survive an average bullet impact up to speeds of 3,000 feet per second (More) | Meet the water bear, the world’s toughest animal (More)
Business & Markets
>US stock markets slide again (S&P 500 -0.3%, Dow -0.5%, Nasdaq -0.03%) on continued inflation fears and crypto sell-off (More)
>Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies see sharp sell-off after China bans financial institutions from providing crypto services; Bitcoin fell near 30% yesterday before recovering to $39K (More)
>Website development giant Squarespace trades down 12% in first day as public company, valuing company at more than $6B (More) | Oat milk producer Oatly to start trading today following initial public offering; analysts expect company to be valued near $10B—investors include Oprah, Jay-Z, and former Starbucks chief Howard Schultz (More)
Politics & World Affairs
>India sets record for reported COVID-19 deaths in a single day at 4,529; new reported cases have begun to decline, currently at 280,000 per day (More) | US averaging just over 31,000 new cases per day, the lowest total since June (More) | European Union reopens borders for vaccinated travelers (More)
>Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) signs fetal “heartbeat” bill, prohibiting most abortions after a heartbeat can be detected; could ban the procedure as early as six weeks into pregnancy (More)
>Leaked video reveals long-withheld police body camera footage of the 2019 arrest of Ronald Brown in Louisiana after a high-speed chase; Brown died while being detained, video contradicts early police reports of what occurred (More)
IN-DEPTH
The ‘DuckTales’ Bandit
New Yorker | Jeff Maysh. The strange story of Germany’s bomb-building artist-turned-extortionist, who styled his criminal persona after Scrooge McDuck. (Read, $$)
The Push to Legalize Psychedelics
Axios Re:Cap | Dan Primack. (Podcast) A look at the push by companies and medical experts to allow the use of psychedelics to treat mental health issues, and how they must navigate regulatory approval. (Listen)
But—as we’ve learned—if there’s one thing better than a stock recommendation from David or Tom, it’s a recommendation from David and Tom. These so-called “Ultimate Buys” have seen an average return of 1,430% and have only happened a total of 28 times in the history of The Motley Fool. Learn all about the latest Motley Fool Ultimate Buy when you sign up for Stock Advisor today.
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Historybook: Christopher Columbus dies (1506); Charles Lindbergh makes first nonstop flight across the Atlantic (1927); HBD singer-songwriter Cher (1946); First photograph from space sent from Hubble Space Telescope (1990).
“Until you’re ready to look foolish, you’ll never have the possibility of being great.”
– Cherilyn “Cher” Sarkisian
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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
Daily Intelligence Brief.
Good morning, it’s May 20, 2021. On this day in history, President Abraham Lincoln signed the Homestead Act, providing 160 acres virtually for free to those who lived on/cultivated it at least five years (1862); Levi Strauss and Jacob Davis patented using copper rivets to strengthen trousers (1873); and Cuba gained its independence from the United States (1902).
TOP STORIES
Cyberattack on U.S.’s Largest Gas Pipeline: When Infrastructure is Compromised
Recently the American Military News reported that the largest gasoline pipeline in the U.S. had to halt operations due to a cyberattack. The essential pipeline supplies 45 percent of the East Coast and southern U.S. states with fuel.
A Colonial Pipeline announcement stated, “On May 7, the Colonial Pipeline Company learned it was the victim of a cyber security attack. In response, we proactively took certain systems offline to contain the threat, which has temporarily halted all pipeline operations, and affected some of our IT systems.”
CNBC reports the company is responsible for the transport of 2.5 million barrels of gasoline, diesel, jet fuel and other refined products every day. The pipeline stretches 5,500 miles, transporting fuel from the Gulf to the East Coast.
The implications are serious. Such a disruption in the flow of fuel means a potential crisis for major metropolitan areas like New York.
Former NSA computer scientist and cyber security expert at the University of Notre Dame Mike Chapple explained to The Washington Post, “This pipeline shutdown sends the message that core elements of our national infrastructure continue to be vulnerable to cyberattack.”
Currently, no one seems to be discounting the possibility of ransomware attacks from criminal groups. Federal agencies are currently investigating the source.
ATP assessment: Cyberattacks on American installations are a far more significant concern than most people realize. The Biden administration will likely need to increase the awareness and protection of private industries susceptible to future attacks.
As a nation, we may hold to the principle of never negotiating with terrorists, but, unfortunately, private companies do not have that luxury.
The FBI confirmation that “Darkside Ransomware” is responsible for the hack of the Colonial Pipeline is only half the equation. In the larger game of terrorism and sabotage, Darkside is only the technology supplier, not the instigator.
Colonial Pipeline paid Darkside a $5 million ransom. It’s useful to think of this exchange like the weapons dealers of the old days. “Darkside Ransomware” and others like them are in it for the money and will sell to the highest bidder.
The Biden administration now needs to confirm which state actor paid for and executed this sabotage. Officials believe Russia is responsible due to Darkside’s potential location in Russia. This is one possibility, but China, Turkey and Iran also have means and motives.
Violent Protests in Portland Lead to Armed Standoff, Beating
Portland has been the center of the American protest movement for a good part of a year. Recently, during one of the marches to support the “Justice for Patrick Kimmons” movement, an unsuspecting driver with some bad luck ended up in the hospital.
The New York Post is reporting that a 53-year-old handyman has been hospitalized as the result of a severe beating after he accidentally drove himself into the midst of the protest.
After swerving to avoid a collision with a moped, Joseph Hall found himself blocked in behind another vehicle. Spotting an opportunity, the protestors decided to surround the truck. As the man described the incident, “All of the sudden I have three or four people around me” with what appeared to be AR-15s.
In his vehicle, he had a non-lethal pellet gun, which he grabbed in hopes of scaring off the people who were bearing down on him.
The man stated that he was trapped and unable to escape the blocked street. He stepped out of his vehicle and held the gun out as another man aimed a rifle at him. Someone pushed him to the ground at which time the crowd attacked, kicking and beating the man mercilessly.
The angry mob dislocated the man’s shoulder, broke his clavicle and also five ribs.
Some are attempting to claim that Hall was deliberately trying to plow through the crowd, but the victim stated he wasn’t even aware of a protest going on.
“All I wanted to do is leave,” he said. “I work with all race, creed, color, everybody. I will not sit back and let anybody that’s out there on social media call me anything other than what I really am. I’m a human being. My life was threatened.”
Hawaii Is Reportedly Close to Herd Immunity
Fox News is reporting that Hawaii is getting close to reaching herd immunity in the battle against COVID-19. Herd immunity has become a household phrase over the past year as our Nation has struggled to find ways to end the pandemic.
Hawaii’s state epidemiologist Dr. Sarah Kemble explained, “What does herd immunity actually mean? It has to do (with) when we vaccinate enough people that we actually slow the virus down, that we aren’t seeing sustained transmission. It’s one of those frustrating questions when we’ll kind of know it when we get there, but I do believe we are getting close.”
It’s an exciting development for Hawaii and hopefully gives the Continental U.S. states some hope for the future as well.
The Daily Intelligence Brief, The DIB as we call it, is curated by a hard working team with a diverse background of experience including government intelligence, investigative journalism, high-risk missionary work and marketing.
From All Things Possible and the Victor Marx Group we aim to provide you with a daily intelligence brief collected from trusted sources and analysts.
Sources for the DIB include local and national media outlets, state and government websites, proprietary sources, in addition to social media networks. State reporting of COVID-19 deaths includes probable cases and probable deaths from COVID-19, in accordance with each state’s guidelines.
Thank you for joining us today. Be safe, be healthy and
Creator of the controversial 1619 Project for The New York Times, Nikole Hannah-Jones will not yet be receiving tenure in her professorial post and will instead be given a five-year fixed contract as Professor of Practice with the option of being reviewed for tenure at the end of that period, NC Policy Watch reports.
Hannah-Jones was being pursued for a tenured professorship position as UNC-Chapel Hill’s Hussman School of Journalism and Media Knight Chair in Race and Investigative Journalism, with Hannah-Jones beginning the tenure process last summer.
According to Dean of UNC-Hussman Susan King, Hannah-Jones has submitted a tenure package that was as well-received as any she had ever seen, and added that Hannah-Jones received enthusiastic support along the way, up until reaching the UNC-Chapel Hill Board of Trustees who chose not to take action on her application.
“I’m not sure why and I’m not sure if that’s ever happened before,” King said.
UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz told board members that Hannah-Jones was a strong candidate, such that he was willing to offer the five-year fixed term position.
Knight Chairs, which are sponsored by the Knight Foundation, are filled by influential and experienced journalists who split their time between working in classrooms and continuing as journalists. The position doesn’t have to be tenured, but since 1980 when UNC started working with the program, all have been granted tenure.
One UNC-Chapel Hill Board of Trustees member, speaking with Policy Watch on conditions of anonymity called the fixed-term position “A work-around.”
“It’s maybe not a solution that is going to please everyone. Maybe it won’t please anyone. But if this was going to happen, this was the way to get it done,” the trustee continued, adding that “politics” was the reason she didn’t receive tenure.
The Children’s Hospital in Eastern Ontario (CHEO) and Children First Canada have declared what is called a Code Pink, saying that school closures, lack of access to recreation, and social isolation have led to “devastating effects on the health and well-being of kids and youth.”
A press release from the group says that the aforementioned problems “have resulted in children being one of the hardest hit populations during the COVID-19 pandemic,” a release said.
“Suicide attempt admissions have increased by 100 per cent on average during the pandemic,” the release says. “Admissions for substance-use disorders have increased by 200 per cent.”
“There has been a 61 per cent increase in ER visits among children and youth for mental health conditions over the last decade,” advocates say. “(Toronto’s SickKids Hospital reports a further 25 per cent increase during the pandemic.”
The term Code Pink will be used, along with the #CodePink hashtag, to “declare a pediatric emergency.
The campaign is calling on “the federal and provincial/territorial governments to act immediately to address this emergency.”
The groups are calling for an urgent meeting of Canada’s First Ministers “to take immediate action to address this crisis facing the 8 million kids in our country.”
“This includes safely reopening schools, camps, parks and other recreational facilities as quickly as possible. We’re also urging government leaders to scale up virtual care programs, reduce backlogs for surgeries and rehabilitation, invest in new models of mental health programs to meet the urgent and rising demands, and plan now for a safe return to school in the fall.”
Israel was at the forefront of heavy criticism last week after the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) leveled a building in Gaza that housed multiple media offices, including the Associated Press. However, Israel confirmed that the Palestinian terrorist organization, Hamas, was heavily operating out of the building and that this is why it was targeted.
According to Politico, Israel provided intel to the United States which indicated Hamas based a significant portion of its assets out of that facility.
“The person familiar with the situation confirmed that Israel has shared some classified intelligence with America about the building, but declined to characterize it other than to say it suggested the Hamas presence was significant, including involving operational activity. The United States has told Israel that it should share more information publicly about this intelligence.”
The IDF warned individuals occupying the building to evacuate an hour before striking it down with missiles;
They also indicated that Israel’s intentions were not to target civilians.
Israel shared classified intelligence with the US about Hamas operating out of the building, but only mentioned that Hamas had a significant presence in that facility, a source familiar with the situation told Politico.
An Israeli Embassy spokesperson declined to provide further comment on Israel’s intelligence briefing with the United States, Politico reported.
Stop calling it January 6th. The riot at the Capitol was a slovenly mess. By turns it was a violent street clash, but also a peaceful protest with police permission, it featured justifiably frightened lawmakers, but also silly selfies and ridiculous outfits. A woman tragically died, but not at the hands of protestors. What the incident was not however, no matter how many people say so, was any serious threat to the United States of America. And that is why some grand austere commission to study it is not even remotely needed.
9/11, December 7th, and June 6th. These are dates etched into the American memory. That is because the attack on the World Trade Center, the bombing of Pearl Harbor, and the invasion of Normandy were world altering events. The cosplay at the Capitol altered nothing about our society or political moment. No matter how hard Democrats and too many Republicans tried to make it a tidal sea change that would leave Donald Trump and his supporters high and dry, that simply did not happen.
Insisting that this event was a major turning point in history doesn’t make it so. It obviously wasn’t the “worst attack on our democracy since the Civil War,” as Joe Biden pathetically claimed. There were not subsequent attacks furthering the “coup.” This was not because such attacks were thwarted by the pure theater of tens of thousands of National Guard Troops in Washington, DC, over the weeks that follow, it’s because nobody was plotting such attacks––because there was no coup.
Bitcoin dropped to around $30,000 Wednesday morning, down more than 30 percent on the day amidst international sell-offs of the cryptocurrency that began a week ago, CNBC reports.
The cryptocurrency fell as low as $30,001.51 Wednesday morning, falling to its lowest since January.
Broad sell-offs of the crypto come in the wake of Tesla’s announcement that it would halt vehicle purchases using the coin after expressing concerns over environmental impacts of the mining process that uses high-powered computers. Over $300 billion was reportedly wiped off the cryptocurrency market that day.
Tesla had previously announced that it had purchased $1.5 billion in Bitcoin back in February, which skyrocketed Bitcoin in value.
Bitcoin is also down more than 50 percent since hitting the record high in mid-April of $64,829.
The next drop came on Tuesday when three Chinese banking and payment industry bodies warned financial institutions to cease virtual currency-related businesses.
Since a 2017 crackdown in local crypto exchanges and the banning of initial coin offerings, Chinese cryptocurrency operations have moved abroad.
Bitcoin wasn’t the only cryptocurrency seen plunging on Wednesday. Ether, which powers the Ethereum blockchain, fell more than 30 percent to $2,235, while Dogecoin fell more than 30 percent as well to around 32 cents.
According to CNBC, Bitcoin is still up 30 percent year-to-date and up around 300 percent over the last 12 months.
President Biden – not satisfied indoctrinating the US military with Critical Race Theory and scouring their social media accounts for ‘extremist content’ – is now directly insulting Americans in uniform with a “please clap” moment.
In the same week that the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously declared that police cannot carry out warrantless home invasions in order to seize guns under the pretext of their “community caretaking” duties, the Biden Administration announced its plans for a “precrime” crime prevention agency.
Ford Motor will halt or cut production at eight North American plants for varying periods of time through June due to an ongoing shortage of semiconductor chips impacting the auto industry.
A group of House Democrats led by New York’s Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has proposed a resolution blocking the $735-million sale of bombs to Israel, citing its current bombing of Gaza. It is unlikely to actually succeed, however.
In a case of incredible timing, the state of New York announced on Tuesday that it’s opened a criminal investigation into the Trump organization, just as former President Trump re-enters the political fray ahead of the 2022 midterm elections.
The only way forward is for the people of the U.S. and beyond to get organized and directly oppose and reject the forced vaccine mandates and calls for vaccine passports. Anything less than a unified opposition will fail to stop the march of COVID1984.
In May 1983, amid the rapidly escalating AIDS crisis, a doctor at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) promoted a stunning theory about the newly encountered disease in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). Noting that the same issue of the journal contained an article documenting one of the first cases of the immunodeficiency disease’s appearance in an infant, the author sounded an alarm about “the possibility that routine close contact, as within a family household, can spread the disease.”
Sadly, instead of addressing the problem of child sex trafficking among the politically elite, this case will be used by partisan hacks to make “the other party” look bad.
The singular Technocrat purpose of vaccine passports is to force holdouts to get vaccinated, ignoring and suppressing the fact that experimental gene therapy shots have already killed more recipients than all other vaccines since 2000, combined.
Ansar Allah, who has enjoyed staggering success in staving off the wholesale invasion of their country by the U.S.-backed Saudi military, is eager to export its resistance mentality and battlefield knowledge to Palestine.
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The student, Emily Hines, told Breitbart News that she felt this was censorship and that she was treated unfairly. Although the video was taken down, according to Breitbart and LGBTQ Nation, it included Hines dancing to the Bee Gees lyrics, “more than a woman, more than a woman to me,” while pointing at a photo of Levine.
She said that she received an email from the organization letting her know that she had been terminated after meeting with some of its executive board members, who said that she had violated the sorority’s social media policies in posting discriminatory content. Meanwhile, Hines re-shared the video on her Instagram account.
“It’s just them trying to censor the opposition out of existence, but it does the exact opposite, by fueling conservative voices to speak out even more, and louder,” Hines told Breitbart.
Pink News reported that the sorority made its beliefs clear in a Facebook post last year in response to Black Lives Matter protests and isn’t required to keep members who violate their policies.
Join the #MaskUp movement and be a part of the solution
Want to do something to help slow the spread of COVID-19, but don’t know where to start? The #MaskUp Project is a non-profit initiative with a mission: Educate the masses on masks and get them in the hands of those in need.
There’s nothing more empowering than truly understanding the science behind why masks protect us and others. If you’d like to join our cause or encourage your business or organization to match, take the #MaskUp pledge and make a donation.
The more masks we can get out into the world, the sooner we can all go back to work, share meals together, and watch our children hug their grandparents. But to get there, we have to take a stand—and we need your help.
Pet adoptions exploded during the pandemic. Now veterinarians are feeling the burn
The coronavirus triggered a wave of pet adoptions in 2020 as millions of people who were stuck indoors turned to dogs and cats to ease their stress and anxiety. But the pandemic hasn’t been easy for veterinarians.
According to a study by the American Pet Products Association, approximately 12.6 million U.S. households adopted a new pet in 2020 after the pandemic was declared.
But while many animal shelters could cut back hours and operations dramatically, veterinarian practices across the country quickly became overwhelmed by all the new adoptions caused by COVID.
Vets have been forced to extend hours and hire new staff, but many still can’t keep up. The result has been extreme burnout and fatigue among vets and staff.
Dr. Diona Krahn, who left her Raleigh veterinary practice in early 2021, told the Associated Press that she saw an average of five to seven new clients a day during the pandemic, compared to maybe three or four puppies a week previously.
Banfield Pet Hospital, one of the largest national providers of preventive veterinary medicine, reported approximately 500,000 more pet visits in 2020 than in 2019, and its telehealth service more than doubled in volume. Thrive, a veterinary hospital primary care group with 110 facilities across the country, likewise saw a 20% increase in demand during the pandemic.
“With COVID-19, a lot of people became powerless to the ones closest to them,” Claire Pickens, a senior director at Thrive, told the AP. “But the one thing they still had the ability to control was caring for their pet.”
After a year of writing my own thoughts about self-care in this newsletter, I’m branching out—but not too far. I’m asking my Daily Dot co-workers about how they integrate self-care rituals and a treat-yourself mentality into their days.
Andrew Wyrich, deputy tech editor, spends his days reporting on internet freedom and politics. (His other full-time job is being a Mets fan.) But off the clock, he reads—right now, Stephen King’s Mr. Mercedes—and plays Halo with a group of gamer friends that started up at the beginning of quarantine.
He doesn’t necessarily call it “self-care,” but Wyrich tells me he believes in the power of logging off.
How do you define self-care? Is it important to you?
Self-care is about making space for yourself. Over the past year-and-a-half during the pandemic, we’ve all been so plugged in and always online. I think it’s important for people to take a step back and breathe or do something that is enjoyable to you.
Do you set aside specific time and activities for-self care?
I’ve always been an avid reader, but over the past year I’ve really found it as a great way to unwind and get lost in something that isn’t part of that constant buzz of everyday life.
What are some of your hobbies/usual activities outside of work? Or, is there something you’d like to pursue?
I actually really enjoy building stuff, not exactly woodworking—I’m nowhere near that talented—but just building things with wood. Over the past few years, I’ve designed and built a dock and a couple of benches for my family’s cabin that I’ve been taking care of. There is a real sense of accomplishment after doing something like that.
Any other thoughts on self-care?
I think it’s incredibly important, and I suspect that I’m not the only one who says they need to make it more of a priority.
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The COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act will become law, the latest on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and more news to start your Thursday.
Good morning, Daily Briefing readers. President Joe Biden is expected to sign the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act into law during a ceremony at the White House. And, Israel has unleashed more airstrikes on Gaza, despite Biden’s more forceful call for a cease-fire.
🚨 Two reporters for the USA TODAY Networkwere arrested while covering a protest for Andrew Brown Jr., an unarmed Black man who was shot and killed by deputies.
🔴 From the world of sports: LeBron James hit a huge shot late to help send the Los Angeles Lakers out of the play-in tournament and into the playoffs. In Texas, New York Yankees pitcher Corey Kluber threw Major League Baseball’s sixth no-hitter of the 2021 season.
🎧 On today’s 5 Things podcast, national correspondent Marc Ramirez discusses theU.S. hitting a record for the killings oftransgender people . You can listen to the podcast every day on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or on your smart speaker.
💻 Join us at 7 p.m. ET Thursday on Twitter Spaces! Our journalists will be talking aboutour coverage in Minneapolis before, during and after the Derek Chauvin trial for the murder of George Floyd. Follow @usatoday on Twitter to see the Space when it goes live.
USA TODAY’s “This is America”
USA TODAY graphic
Here’s what’s happening today:
Biden to sign COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act into law
President Joe Biden will sign the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act into law Thursday, according to his official schedule. The House overwhelmingly passed the bill Tuesday, which sent it to Biden’s desk as reports of hate incidents against Asian Americans have drastically climbed for more than a year. After a mass shooting in Georgia in March that killed eight people – six of whom were women of Asian descent – lawmakers in both chambers of Congress called for quick action on the legislation, which will become law during Asian Pacific American Heritage Month. Rep. Judy Chu, D-Calif., said Tuesday “after a year of the Asian American community crying out for help,” that “Congress is taking historic action.”
Israel unleashes more airstrikes after vowing to press on in Gaza
Israel unleashed a wave of airstrikes across the Gaza Strip early Thursday, killing at least one Palestinian and wounding several others. The strikes came after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pushed back against U.S. pressure to wind down the offensive against Gaza’s militant Hamas rulers, who have fired thousands of rockets at Israel. Israel’s Foreign Ministry says ministers from Germany, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia will arrive in the country Thursday “to express their solidarity and support” for Israel during its campaign against Hamas. Israel faces mounting international pressure to de-escalate hostilities after 10 days of heavy fighting in Gaza.
🔵 Comedian and actor Paul Mooney, known for his writing for Richard Pryor and appearances in “Bamboozled” and “Chappelle’s Show” has died at the age of 79.
🔵 You’ve likely started to hear the term “nonbinary” more. Singer Demi Lovato announced they were nonbinary and changed their pronouns to they/them. Here’s what that means.
Demi Lovato performs during the OBB Premiere Event for YouTube Originals Docuseries “Demi Lovato: Dancing With The Devil” in March 2021.
Getty Images for OBB Media photo; USA TODAY graphic
Apple introduces new features for Global Accessibility Awareness Day
Thursday is Global Accessibility Awareness Day, which promotes digital access and inclusion for people living with disabilities. To mark the day, Apple will roll out SignTime , which lets customers communicate with AppleCare and other retail services by using American Sign Language in the United States, British Sign Language in the United Kingdom, and French Sign Language in France through a web browser. Customers visiting Apple Stores in those countries can also use SignTime to remotely access a sign language interpreter without booking one ahead of time.
Newsmakers in their own words: At AAPI event, Harris denounces efforts to restrict voter rights
Vice President Kamala Harris delivers remarks virtually at the Asian Pacific American Heritage Month Unity Summit on May 19, 2021.
Actor Danny Masterson in court facing rape allegations
A judge in Los Angeles will determine whether there is enough evidence for “That ’70s Show” and “The Ranch” star Danny Masterson to stand trial accused of raping three women in the early 2000s. Graphic testimony at a preliminary hearing Wednesday saw a woman identified in court only as Christina B., who was five years into a relationship with Masterson, say she awoke one night to find he was raping her. Masterson, 45, has pleaded not guilty and his lawyer, Thomas Mesereau, has said he would prove his client’s innocence.
PGA Championship tees off in South Carolina
The 103rd PGA Championship begins Thursday from Kiawah Island Golf Resort’s Ocean Course in South Carolina. Collin Morikawa won last year’s event, which was played in August due to the COVID-19 pandemic. He will open the tournament alongside 2021 Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama and 2020 U.S. Open winner Bryson DeChambeau. Tiger Woods, golf’s most recognizable player, is still recovering from injuries sustained in a car accident and will not play.
ICYMI: Some of our top stories published Wednesday
📸 Photo of the day: Italian village emerges after decades underwater 📸
The village of Curon, Italy, was submerged underwater in 1950 when Lake Resia was created. Now, tourists can see the once lost town after maintenance required the lake to be temporarily drained.
Courtesy: Luisa Azzolini
The lost Italian village of Curonis resurfacing for the first time in over 70 years. Hundreds of people lived there before it was flooded for a hydroelectric plant and the merger of two nearby lakes in 1950, according to BBC News.
The lake is being temporarily drained for maintenance, giving tourists and locals the chance to see the village for the first time. Check out more photos from the scene.
The U.S. Supreme Court recently unanimously agreed that a warrantless search and seizure of a man’s firearms from within his home was unconstitutional. The case involved a domestic argument between a husband and wife. The husband placed a handgun on the dining room table and asked his wife to “shoot [him] now and get it […]
– May 19, 2021 – Statement by Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the United States of America A loan of $1.2 billion has closed on the asset known as the Bank of America Building (555 California Street) in San Francisco, CA. The interest rate is approximately 2%. Thank you!
The coronavirus pandemic highlighted the need to secure life-saving medical equipment. But when those vital machines break, there’s a fight over fixing them you might not know about. Repair technicians say they can’t do their job because manufacturers withhold information to keep the repairs and profit to themselves. Critics say that costs time and lives. […]
– May 18, 2021 – Statement by Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the United States of America Republicans in the House and Senate should not approve the Democrat trap of the January 6 Commission. It is just more partisan unfairness and unless the murders, riots, and fire bombings in Portland, Minneapolis, Seattle, Chicago, and […]
My last batch of signed books is now available. The timing couldn’t be better. Give to somebody you care about in these uncertain times. Information is power. Find out what’s behind the death of the news, and who’s behind big tech censorship. There’s hope.
This FREE chapter from Pastor Doug Wilson’s book “How to Exasperate Your Wife” will give you fresh, practical insight into the female mind and how you can bug the heck out of it. Already know how to bother your wife? Want to learn what a happy marriage looks like? That’s what the rest of the book is for…
I’m sure we’ve all been in a situation where a young kid wouldn’t stop asking us questions and we just wanted to get away. Well, one man in South Carolina appears to have learned that lesson the hard way.
A few days ago, we shared this A+ impression of Dr. Fauci by comedian Tyler Fischer, who mocked the doctor’s incessant devotion to masks. The clip received more than 400,000 views on TikTok alone.
This guy was a mafia boss stealing $8M a WEEK. Then he became a Christian and walked away from the life. Hear his crazy story.
Michael Franzese was profiled in a 1986 Fortune magazine feature titled “The 50 Biggest Mafia Bosses” … the other 49 of them are now dead.
An unnamed hero saved the lives of his neighbors on Saturday when an unhinged 26-year-old man began shouting for everyone to come out of an apartment complex in Fort Smith, Arkansas:
Here’s a video for all the Malthusian friends in your life who like to harness their inner Thanos by crying about overpopulation and the production of food:
Supreme Court rules 9-0 that authorities cannot seize guns in our homes without a warrant, upholding the Constitution 🇺🇸
The Second and Fourth Amendments are happy this week after the Supreme Court (surprisingly) ruled unanimously that police can’t take your guns from your home without a warrant.
The unfolding tragedy of “exvangelicalism”
Kevin Max, the Grammy award-winning singer from the band DC Talk, has become the latest prominent Christian to announce his departure from evangelicalism; that is, the belief salvation is received by grace alone, through faith in Christ’s substitutionary death and resurrection.
“Mr. President, can I ask you a quick question on Israel before you drive away?” “No, you can’t. Not unless you get in front of the car as I step on it.”
Oh my gosh, this is hilarious [laughter].
Texas will no longer allow any of its public schools to require face masks for students or staff
Governor Greg Abbott of Texas — Republican, of course — just issued an executive order yesterday BANNING public schools from requiring students or staff or anybody under the sun to wear face masks.
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If you have any kind of job that requires you to sit for long periods of time, you’re at a serious health risk. That’s not an exaggeration — your chair is literally killing you.
That’s because 99% of what you sit on locks your pelvis in place. You get stuck, forced to constrict your body to whatever un-ergonomic shape the makers half-baked. You lose mobility and support and your lower spine curves in, caves, and quits. Your abs and core go soft. You hunch. Worst of all you are not remotely aware of it.
The complete lack of mobility of your lower spine and pelvis is what causes degeneration in your bones and joints. You need movement in your lower spine, hips and pelvis. The very act of sitting stops that.
For hundreds of years people have been designing chairs to support the back.
That’s stupid, because the back is just the recipient of the pain.
It’s your rear end that’s attached to the chair. Therefore you need a chair that supports the gluteus maximus, pelvis and thoracic spine… and then you’ll also have a chair that supports the back.
You don’t need a chair with a revolutionary supportive back. You need one with a revolutionary solution for your fanny.
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Get Your Butt In Line
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99.) MARK LEVIN
May 19, 2021
Posted on
On Wednesday’s Mark Levin Show, President Biden is pressuring Israel to relent in the face of 4000 rockets being fired by Hamas and proxy-funded by Iran. Consequently, Biden has been working to restore funding to Iran by restoring the JCPOA. Israel’s military operation called guardian of walls is shaping up to be one of the most accurately executed in military history. Despite minimal civilian casualties, and of course, all lives should be protected, the Israeli Defense Forces have gone through every effort to protect civilian lives. The House of Representatives voted against a Resolution to condemn Hamas’s terrorist attacks on Israel and every single democrat defended Hamas and voted against the Resolution, while all the Republicans voted for the measure. Later, Major Doron Spielman, spokesman for the IDF, joins the show to explain that one Hamas official had a rocket launcher hidden in his home because Hamas hides in plain sight amongst their own civilians. Spielman added that Hamas has also suffered friendly fire including their own power plant and killing their own people in Gaza. Then, Critical Race Theory didn’t just happen, it’s been creeping into society and now the people are accepting it. This poisonous thinking has slipped into the US military and the highest levels of law enforcement. Let alone, the damage that’s been done in our college and university system and newsrooms. Afterward, the prosecutorial misconduct continues as the civil probe into former President Trump’s business, the Trump Organization, has been leaked to be a criminal probe. The left and the media are creating controversy to scare innocent people into buckling and admitting to crimes they did not commit. Zero charges have been filed against Trump. This is the kind of prosecution that is seen in third-world dictatorships. Finally, Breitbart’s Alex Marlow calls in to discuss his new book “Breaking the News: exposing the Establishment Media’s Hidden Deals and Secret Corruption.”
Make no mistake, these barbarians (Cortez, Omar, Tlaib, Pocan etc) would have supported the Third Reich. We are under siege by America’s most depraved enemy – the left. Stealing the election was the great deathstroke against the very soul of our …
Dan Crenshaw just tweeted a video that destroys the leftist narrative pushed by Rashida Tliab that Hamas is innocent in the Israel/Gaza conflict. Read more…
Israel and America hating Democrats introduced a resolution today to block a $735 million sale of precision guided weapons to Israel, as Reuters reports: “Democratic U.S. lawmakers on Wednesday introduced… Read more…
Republican Texas Governor Greg Abbott on Wednesday signed into law a “fetal heartbeat” abortion bill that bans the procedure after about six weeks of pregnancy and grants citizens the right… Read more…
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In its first official statement, Hamas denies Israel’s allegation that the building housing the AP and other news media was used for military intelligence.
The Senate majority leader continues to push the all-encompassing For the People Act, while the West Virginia senator is narrowly focused on reauthorizing the Voting Rights Act.
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Florida’s second-most populous county is the state’s first to offer illegal immigrants identification cards so they can obtain taxpayer-funded services, including COVID-19 vaccines. Elected officials in Broward County, situated in southeast Florida with a population of about two million, unanimously passed the measure with ardent support from the county’s top law enforcement officer, Sheriff Gregory Tony. Republican Governor Ron DeSantis appointed Tony to the elected position after suspending former Broward Sheriff Scott Israel for mishandling the 2018 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland.
Judicial Watch: Montgomery County Public Schools Spent $454,000 on ‘Anti-racist System Audit’
Judicial Watch
The documents, obtained under the Maryland Public Information Act, reveal that students of “Maryland’s Largest School District” who attended Thomas Pyle Middle School’s social justice class were taught that the phrase “Make America Great Again” was an example of “covert white supremacy” that is “socially unacceptable.” The phrase is ranked on a pyramid just below, “lynching,” “hate crimes,” “the N-word” and “racial slurs.” They were also taught that “white privilege” means being favored by school authorities and having a positive relationship with the police.
Biden’s border crisis “victimizes everyone involved,” including unaccompanied minors, Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton noted Friday. As Fitton further explained, the administration’s failure to enforce the security at our border hasn’t only hurt our national sovereignty, and by extension, the rights of millions of Americans; it has contributed to what might appear to be a true humanitarian crisis involving the lives of thousands of unaccompanied, often smuggled children. In response to three recent reports of child abuse and neglect at the Freeman Coliseum in Texas, Judicial Watch has sued the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) for records about the abuse of children at U.S. border facilities.
With weeks to go to elections that will decide New York City’s next mayor and the powerful post of Manhattan district attorney, rising crime suddenly is at the center of the political action. The stakes are high—and not just for New York.
As Bitcoin’s price fell by up to 30 percent, its partisans went on Clubhouse and Twitter to offer reassurances and advice to “go outside, go exercise—just don’t follow the swings.”
by Jacob Silverman
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His recent ruling shreds a precedent that offered criminal defendants a chance to challenge unjust sentences—and reveals how the court’s conservative bloc has no boundaries.
Every day, at 6:30 p.m. sharp, a siren blares through the town of Minden. For citizens of the Washoe nation, the sound carries a painful, violent memory.
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