Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday May 25, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
May 25 2021
Good morning from Washington, where at least one senator is troubled by the Federal Reserve Bank’s sudden interest in “structural racism.” Our Fred Lucas reports on that and on the reborn 1776 Commission coming out against President Biden’s support for teaching critical race theory. On the podcast, a Mexican immigrant looks back on chasing his dream in America. Plus: liberals fail Asian Americans; LA’s expensive mistake on homelessness; and a recommended biography of economist and social commentator Thomas Sowell. Sixty years ago today, President John F. Kennedy announces to Congress his goal of sending an American to the moon by decade’s end and requests funding for an accelerated space program.
In 2016, influential political leaders, activists, and media outlets in Los Angeles said they had a simple solution to homelessness: Build more housing.
“The American dream is still attainable as long as we have capitalism,” says Humberto Lopez, but he warns that “big government” is “going to take away the opportunities for … dreams [that] a lot of us…
Commission members highlight a proposed Education Department rule that “encourages and seeks to direct federal funds to the teaching of racial discrimination” in public schools.
Sowell had a concise answer when a podcaster asked what awakened him to the failures of Marxism, an ideology he had espoused in his youth. “Facts!” Sowell replied.
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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Democrats Battle Within Over Anti-Semites Among Them
Some are calling out the far-left elements (Daily Wire). But they have their work cut out, as another story notes “More than 500 Democratic staffers who worked on US President Joe Biden’s election campaign have signed a letter calling on him to take a tougher stance on Israel and hold Jerusalem ‘accountable for its actions’” (Times of Israel). A look at how Democrats refuse to condemn anti-Semitism by itself (Washington Examiner). From Gerard Baker: While politicians of all parties denounce anti-Semitic violence, the rhetoric of some leading leftist Democrats has helped nourish resentments and prejudices. It’s one thing—even if it’s wrong—to condemn the actions of the Israeli government in defending its citizens, quite another to question the character of the Jewish state itself. Rep. Ilhan Omar, with a strong track record of promoting anti-Semitic tropes, has talked of “war crimes” committed in Gaza. Her colleague Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has described Israel as an “apartheid” state, a weighty accusation of violent racism with historic resonance. The same Democrats, including President Biden, who have pounced on other examples of hate crime in the last few months—sometimes before the evidence of the criminal motivation was even clear—have been oddly silent about people throwing explosive devices at Jewish-owned businesses and shouting “F— the Jews” (WSJ).
2.
Media Suddenly Considers Virus May Have Begun in Wuhan Lab
Fox News looks at how, in the past, the media labeled anyone who dared suggest such a thing as “fringe” (Fox News). From Stephen Miller: Leading scientists and epidemiologists such as none other than Dr Anthony Fauci were so quick to dismiss the ‘lab talk’. It was first portrayed as a hare-brained wild and tacitly racist conspiracy theory driven by paranoid Republican senators and fever-dream right-wing media. Now it is seen as not only an acceptable theory worth more study, but one that has broken through into the mainstream. This has happened in a matter of days. Where does Sen. Tom Cotton go for his apology? (Spectator). From Hugh Hewitt: Some platforms covered @SenTomCotton extensively as they did the threat of the virus from December, 2019 and January, 2020, including mine. MSM dismissed threat, mocked origin, now buries record (Twitter). In his Washington Post column, Hewitt looks at why the public doesn’t trust the media (Washington Post).
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3.
Florida Law Fines Social Media Companies that Bar Politicians
From the story: Mr. DeSantis said signing the bill, which is likely to face a constitutional challenge, meant that Floridians would be “guaranteed protection against the Silicon Valley elites. If Big Tech censors enforce rules inconsistently, to discriminate in favor of the dominant Silicon Valley ideology, they will now be held accountable,” he said in a statement.
Report: Shocking Decline in Population Occurring Worldwide
From the story: The publication described ghost cities in northeastern China, South Korean universities scrambling for students, hundreds of thousands of demolished properties in Germany, and shut down maternity wards in Italy, and warned that countries like Hungary, China, Sweden and Japan are already pushing to balance the combination of “swelling” older populations with the needs of young people. Later: A host of factors, which the Times described as “an avalanche” of “demographic forces,” appear to be accelerating toward more deaths than births almost globally, except in Africa. Demographers predicted to the Times that by the second half of the century — or earlier — the global population will enter a sustained decline.
Biden Will Not Give Notre Dame Commencement After Controversy over Pro-Abortion Stance
The story notes “The decision came after students and alumni of the university petitioned Notre Dame president Rev. John Jenkins not to invite Biden due to his pro-abortion policies.”
The lowest since the pandemic began (Johns Hopkins). From Frank Luntz: A year ago, nearly 25% of COVID tests were coming back positive. Now, it’s under 2.5% (Twitter).
8.
Senator Rand Paul Received Death Threat, Package with White Powder
This follows a Tweet from the singer Richard Marx offering to reward the man who attacked Senator Paul.
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Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 5.25.21
Heat up your day with a dose of Sunburn, the premier first read of Florida politics and policy.
Rep. NickDiCeglie is officially kicking off his bid for Senate District 24 tonight, launching what will be a key race to watch heading into the 2022 election cycle.
DiCeglie filed for the seat, currently held by term-limited Sen. JeffBrandes, in late February and has already raised nearly $21,000, as of the most recent campaign filings covering activity through April. His political committee, The Economic Freedom Committee, has about $130,000 on hand.
His star-studded launch includes cameos from U.S. Rep. Gus Bilirakis, House Speaker Chris Sprowls, Reps. Linda Chaney, Traci Koster and Chris Latvala, Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri, Pinellas County Clerk Ken Burke, Pinellas County Tax Collector Charles Thomas, Pinellas Property Appraiser Mike Twitty, St. Petersburg Councilman Ed Montanari, Seminole Mayor Leslie Waters and Councilor Chris Burke, former Reps. Larry Ahern and Seth McKeel, former Pinellas County Commissioner Neil Brickfield, former Pinellas GOP Chair Jay Beyrouti, and former Clearwater Vice Mayor Doreen Caudell.
Nick DiCeglie kicks off his Senate campaign with a high-profile event that could keep opponents at bay. Image via Colin Hackley.
That’s a guest list sure to drum up a major funding boost. And DiCeglie comes with a legislative record to help propel him through a possible primary against former St. Petersburg Mayor RickBaker, and an already filed Republican, Timothy Lewis.
In 2019, he led efforts (HB 5) to make it harder for local governments to tax their citizens, a move that should help him in an eventual competitive primary.
This year, DiCeglie co-sponsored legislation to create COVID-19 liability protections for businesses. The approved bill (HB 7) increased the burden of proof on plaintiffs to prove gross negligence for COVID-19-related lawsuits. It’s applied retroactively to already filed legal action, a priority among Republicans.
But where are the Democrats?
So far, there has been almost no buzz on possible contenders from the left. Despite SD 24 being one of the best chances Dems have at reducing their minority in the upper chamber, only South Florida districts 9 and 37 a higher priority for the party. The race will be open, removing the incumbency challenge that often comes with trying to flip a seat. And as the district is currently drawn, it favors Republicans, but not so much that winning an open race is impossible.
Republicans carry a voter registration advantage, with 131,507 voters to Democrats’ 117,412. Still, it’s not insurmountable, even if their advantage grows as a result of upcoming redistricting, which could see Democrats lose ground in the district, most likely by drawing parts of the blue areas in the southern part of the district into Sen. Darryl Rouson’s already heavily blue Senate District 19.
There are some possibilities. Some insiders tell Florida Politics a candidate has already expressed interest, a woman with experience running communications for unions. But it’s not official. And an obvious choice, LindsayCross, who previously challenged Brandes, is rumored to be considering a run for Rep. Ben Diamond’s House seat, which he’s leaving to run for Congress.
Another option is former Rep. JenniferWebb. She has the chops to get it done and already proved that she could win a purple district with her 2018 victory in House District 69. But she lost that seat just one cycle later, and she doesn’t currently live in the district.
But Democrats’ best hope might be in someone who can run as a moderate. St. Petersburg City Council member BrandiGabbard comes to mind. As a Realtor, she often sides with Republicans on property rights issues and would be a palatable choice for JebBush-type Republicans and nonpartisan NPAs.
To win, which Democrats desperately need to boost morale in a party that suffered painful losses just last year, they need a candidate who cannot only bring a solid resume to the table but one who can raise a ton of money to match DiCeglie, or whoever the Republican nominee winds up being. They also likely need a moderate candidate who can appeal to NPA voters, a crucial bloc in a district where they’re already outnumbered. Gabbard checks both boxes, and it’s no secret she has future political ambitions.
The SD 24 race seems like it might be a referendum on whether Democrats can rise to the occasion and get the right candidate into the race. Stay tuned.
___
Top Senate Republicans are taking a post-Special Session fishing trip, and donors are welcome aboard.
Senate President Wilton Simpson and Sen. Kathleen Passidomo, who is set to succeed him, will be in Key West today through Thursday for a fishing fundraiser. The agenda includes a VIP dinner this evening, a welcome reception and dinner on Wednesday, and a fishing outing and dinner on Thursday.
Money raised will head to the Florida Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee, the main political committee supporting Republican state Senate candidates.
Donor tiers aren’t listed on the invitation. The invitation states all events will be held outside and asks attendees to “remember to wear a mask.”
The fishing fundraiser is not the only one on the calendar for Senate Republicans.
Wilton Simpson and Kathleen Passidomo launch the prime season with a major fundraiser. Image via Colin Hackley.
A fundraiser at the storied Pebble Beach golf course in California is back on for mid-June. Senate Republicans have made the trek several times before, with last year being a notable exception. The 2020 event — also planned for June — was canceled over coronavirus concerns.
More details on the Pebble Beach fundraiser will be made available at a later date.
Entering prime fundraising months, FRSCC has about $3.7 million in the bank. The balance reflects $1.48 million raised and $1.14 million spent in the first quarter of 2020. The Key West and Pebble Beach rakes will be reported on the committee’s next quarterly report, due in mid-July.
___
Alix Miller will take the driver’s seat at the Florida Trucking Association in a little over two months.
FTA announced Monday that Miller is taking over as president and CEO on Aug. 1. She currently works as FTA’s senior vice president and is responsible for running FTA’s communications and legislative affairs operations.
“Alix has earned the trust and respect of not just the FTA Board of Directors and members, but of the entire transportation sector,” FTA Board Chair Philip Fulmer said. “She is a knowledgeable and skilled advocate for our industry, and we are looking forward to her leadership for years to come.”
Exiting FTA President and CEO Ken Armstrong, retiring after seven years in the job, was effusive in his praise of Miller.
“FTA became a better organization the day Alix Miller came to work here in 2018. Now she and the FTA Board have made lightning strike twice. Alix deserves this new position, and she will be successful every day. My sincerest congratulations to her and FTA for a job well done and for an outstanding outlook in the future,” he said.
Miller holds a seat on several statewide transportation committees for the Florida Department of Transportation and is the liaison between the trucking industry and state and federal agencies on regulatory issues.
“Over the past three years, this Association has embraced me as family. I continue to be inspired by our members’ passion for the industry; their selfless focus on others during times of disaster; and their commitment to keeping our state’s economy moving forward,” Miller said.
___
Veteran Republican political operative Stephen Lawson is launching his own firm.
The new venture is named Battleground Strategies, a nod to Lawson’s experience in Florida and Georgia, two of the most hotly contested political states in the country.
The firm will focus on strategic communications and public relations for clients across the political, corporate, and nonprofit sectors.
“I’m excited and humbled to launch Battleground Strategies, which has been a dream of mine for some time now. In today’s media landscape, developing an effective plan, understanding your audience, and driving home a winning message is more important than ever,” Lawson told Florida Politics.
“I’ve been fortunate enough to be able to do that for some incredible leaders on some of the biggest stages in politics, and I’m looking forward to delivering that experience and expertise for my clients.”
Lawson has served on the campaign and administration side for former Gov. Rick Scott and Gov. Ron DeSantis.
Under Scott, he served as Director of Research and Writing and held several high-level positions at state agencies, including Enterprise Florida, the Department of Business and Professional Regulation and VISIT FLORIDA.
Three years ago, Lawson joined DeSantis’ gubernatorial campaign as Communications Director, overseeing all messaging, media, communications strategy and execution across 10 media markets within a $100 million campaign.
Lawson worked as the Director of Communications at the Florida Lottery after DeSantis’ inauguration.
In the 2020 cycle, he was called up to Georgia to serve as the Deputy campaign manager and Communications Director for former Georgia U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler.
The Florida native, who holds degrees from UF and FSU, now lives in Atlanta with his wife, Paige.
___
Spotted — Congratulations to Peter Murray and Rachel Chasteen, who were married this weekend at the Vault in downtown Tampa. Spotted at the wedding: Beth Murray; Caitlin Murray; Michael and Jennifer Murray; Tom and Bette Murray and their kids; Keaton Alexander; Dominic Calabro; BlaineCherry and Tara Reid-Cherry; Tom Griffin; Jack and Tabitha Heekin; Thomas and Chrissy Hobbs; Andrew and McKenzie Ketchel; Micah Ketchel; Jim Magill; RJ Myers and Vanessa Thompson; Michael and Felicia Nachef; Alan and Sarah Suskey; Justin and Dorothy Thames; Robert and Katie Weissert; and Sean White.
Congratulations to Peter Murray and Rachel Chasteen, who married this weekend in a well-attended celebration in Tampa. Cheers to the newly wedded couple!
Situational awareness
—@GovRonDeSantis: Today, Floridians are being guaranteed protection against the Silicon Valley power grab on speech, thought, and content. We the people are standing up to tech totalitarianism with the signing of Florida’s Big Tech Bill.
—@Scott_Maxwell: Taxpayers will spend a bunch of $ defending a garbage law that legislators *knew* was garbage. And the tech lawyers will point to the legislators’ own staff analysis to prove it. These people aren’t patriots. They treat the Constitution like toilet paper.
—@Mdixon55: .@GovRonDeSantis about to sign the “Stop big tech censorship” bill in Miami as the city is very publicly trying to recruit tech companies and executives to move there
—@AGAshleyMoody: TY, @GovRonDeSantis, for providing Floridians the ability to push back against Big Tech censorship. This new law comes as my office continues to work diligently to ensure a free and fair marketplace.
—@ChrisSprowls: Big tech has too much control over speech. In Florida, sunlight is the best disinfectant. Proud to hold social media giants accountable & demand transparency w/ @GovRonDeSantis as he signs SB 7072. Thank you to our Senate partners & @GovGoneWild for taking charge in the House.
—@RonFilipkowski: This is what it looks like when you have a Gov who is so afraid to take questions from the media that he has to surround reporters with his supporters to cheer on his answers and heckle reporters asking questions. The Banana Republic of FL. What a coward.
—@Carl_Hiaasen: This joke of a law will get crushed in the courts, and DeSantis will stick Fla. taxpayers with the legal bill. A page straight from Rick Scott’s old playbook.
—@KirbyWTweets: I’m fascinated by DeSantis’ framing here. He’s saying “the basics” of education are neutral and unimpeachable. I think Big Tech companies made the same bet when they, as DeSantis noted, censored the Wuhan lab leak theory months ago. Neutral facts are neutral until they’re not.
—@laflynt: Hearing @GovRonDeSantis, @isayray, & @GovGoneWild blather on about the need to “protect free speech” from “big tech” while being silent on the attempt to curb teachers’ freedom to teach history accurately is yet another sad day in the encroaching authoritarianism in Florida.
Days until
‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 3; Disaster Preparedness Sales Tax Holiday begins — 3; Memorial Day — 6; Florida TaxWatch Spring Meeting and PLA Awards — 9; ‘Loki’ premieres on Disney+ — 17; Father’s Day — 26; F9 premieres in the U.S. — 31; ‘Tax Freedom Holiday’ begins — 37; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 38; 4th of July — 40; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 45; MLB All-Star Game — 49; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 59; second season of ‘Ted Lasso’ premieres on Apple+ — 59; the NBA Draft — 65; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 67; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 73; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 91; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 101; NFL regular season begins — 107; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 112; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 122; ‘Dune’ premieres — 129; MLB regular season ends — 131; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 137; World Series Game 1 — 154; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 161; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 161; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 164; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 185; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 199; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 206; NFL season ends — 229; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 231; NFL playoffs begin — 235; Super Bowl LVI — 264; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 304; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 346; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 409; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 500; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 535.
Top story
“Ron DeSantis withdrawing Florida from federal unemployment boost” via Matt Dixon of POLITICO — DeSantis’ administration on Monday officially announced it was withdrawing from a federal pandemic assistance program that offered a $300-per-week boost to state unemployment benefits. The extra benefits have prompted some controversy as Florida’s post-pandemic economy bounces back. Republicans and business groups have argued that companies, especially in the low wage hospitality industry, are struggling to fill openings because the state’s $275-per-week maximum jobless benefits, one of the lowest in the nation, coupled with the $300 weekly in federal benefit offers more money each month than actually working.
Ron DeSantis wants to stop paying people not to work. Image via AP.
Dateline Tally
“DeSantis signs big tech censorship bill, despite constitutional concerns” via Steven Lemongello and Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — DeSantis signed the Big Tech bill into law on Monday, hailing it as a defense against Silicon Valley banning conservatives from social media, even though critics have denounced the measure as a violation of the First Amendment. The law would slap daily fines of $100,000 on Google, Facebook, Twitter, Apple, and Amazon for each statewide political candidate removed from their platforms, and $10,000 a day for other candidates. Other users must be notified when they’re banned or censored, including when a warning or other notice of false or disputed information is attached to their posts. Users also have the ability to sue companies for violating the law.
Ron DeSantis signs the bill to punish social media for ‘de-platforming’ conservatives.
“‘America’s Gov.’ DeSantis says Big Tech does Joe Biden’s bidding” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — The evolution of DeSantis from Freedom Caucus Congressman to front line national conservative continues apace, with victory laps for bills he got passed becoming routine on national outlets. Monday’s edition offered national promotion for the morning signing of legislation taking aim at the kinds of social media censorship and deplatforming that conservatives say skewed the 2020 election against Trump. Two big earned media showcases allowed the Governor to press his case against “Big Tech” and other sources of ire: a radio hit with Mark Levin, who promoted DeSantis as “America’s Governor.” From there, another trip under the klieg lights: a Fox News segment with Sean Hannity.
Tweet, tweet — @Fineout: Hannity announces that he will do a live town hall from Nashville on Wednesday with 7 governors including @GovRonDeSantis who will be there for @The_RGA meeting
“Florida TaxWatch releases 2021 Budget Turkey Watch report” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Florida TaxWatch released its 2021 Budget Turkey Watch report Monday, which spotlights 116 appropriations for DeSantis to reconsider. This year, the “turkeys” total $157.5 million. TaxWatch notes that while member project requests are down, they still remain excessive. For example, 829 member projects were funded last year compared to 675 this year. And yet, the report notes, the state this year provided $60 million more to projects. The increase in project spending comes after Florida found itself “surprisingly flush,” the report says. That’s thanks in part to $5.8 billion in federal funds. “So, while all this available money allowed for significant turkeys, it could have been worse,” the report says.
“TaxWatch recommends Governor veto nearly $28M in South Florida budget projects” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Florida TaxWatch says DeSantis should veto close to $28 million in projects across South Florida’s tri-county area contained in the 2021-22 state budget. Recommended cuts include several large transportation projects, including $3.65 million for the Blum Ambulatory Greene Cancer Center Road in Miami-Dade County. FTW also suggested vetoes for three projects valued at $3 million each: historical infrastructure improvement in central Palm Beach County, pedestrian priority zones in Miami-Dade’s Little Havana community, and funding for The Underline linear park Miami-Dade, which runs underneath the Metrorail. The Turkey List also includes $1 million line items for Blount Road in Pompano Beach, the South Royal Poinciana Boulevard median in Miami Springs and Miami-Dade’s Ludlam Trail Corridor.
“Rail safety, manatee help among TaxWatch’s Central Florida turkeys” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Florida TaxWatch red-flagged $20 million worth of projects across Central Florida, within the state’s $101.5 billion budget for the 2021/22 fiscal year. The two largest appropriations immediately affecting Central Florida that got the FTW seal of disapproval were $8 million set aside for manatee habitat restoration, money that would go mainly toward restoring seagrass beds, particularly in the Indian River Lagoon; and $4.9 million for higher-speed rail safety improvements in Indian River County. Among other Central Florida budget turkeys: $2 million for the Green Mountain bike and pedestrian trail connector; $2 million for the Wekiva Trail in Seminole County; and $1.5 million for two stabilization and restoration programs in New Smyrna Beach.
It’s ‘turkey time’ at Florida TaxWatch.
“‘I wish I could feel better about our progress’: Panel recaps Legislative Session’s harm to minority communities” via Danielle J. Brown of the Florida Phoenix — Nearing the anniversary of the murder of George Floyd by former police officer Derek Chauvin in Minnesota, a Florida lawmaker and local officials and community members gathered via Zoom in Palm Beach County to reflect about Florida’s 2021 Legislative Session’s implications for racial and LGBTQ equity. Progressive efforts to quash bills penalizing transgender athletes and restricting voting access were thwarted in the Republican-majority Florida Legislature. However, other efforts were more successful, including legislation that creates protocols limiting the use of force by law enforcement.
Happening today — Rep. Jason Shoaf will speak at a meeting of the Network of Entrepreneurs & Business Advocates, 11:30 a.m., Capital City Country Club, 1601 Golf Terrace Dr., Tallahassee.
Happening today — Rep. Rick Roth will provide a 2021 Legislative Session wrap-up for the Republican Club of the Palm Beaches, noon, Palm Beach Kennel Club, Paddock Restaurant, 1111 North Congress Ave., West Palm Beach.
Happening today — Sen. Shevrin Jones will provide a 2021 Legislative Session wrap-up and discuss the controversial new elections law (SB 90), 6:30 p.m., Koinonia Worship Center, 4900 West Hallandale Beach Blvd., Hollywood.
“Lobbying compensation: The Fiorentino Group keeps pace with $545K last quarter” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — The Fiorentino Group reeled in more than $2 million in lobbying pay last year, and their first-quarter numbers show they’re on track to do it again in 2021. The team led by founding partner Marty Fiorentino handled more than 60 clients during the January-through-March quarter and recorded $545,000 in earnings. The Fiorentino Group is the preeminent Jacksonville firm. As such, their client sheet includes most major business interests in Duval and most of the 904. Top clients include Crowley Maritime, Flagler Health, Florida East Coast Railway, PGA Tour and UF Health Jacksonville. Overall earnings ranges show the firm brought in at least $500,000 in the first. Based on per-client maximums, the firm could have earned as much as $900,000.
Statewide
“How Matt Gaetz helped make DeSantis” via Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida — “DeSantis’ ties to Gaetz could pressure the governor to answer difficult questions about whether he was aware of any alleged wrongdoing as he seeks a second term as governor and possibly the White House. As an adviser, Gaetz urged the governor to appoint several people who are also now ensnared in the federal investigation. Gaetz was also close friends with Joel Greenberg, the man at the center of a federal investigation into sex trafficking. In interviews, more than half a dozen former DeSantis campaign advisers and early administration staffers say Gaetz had huge influence over DeSantis, who in the run-up to his gubernatorial campaign was an outsider in state-level Florida politics. That was a world where Gaetz had long been an operator. Now, as DeSantis runs for reelection and is likely laying the groundwork for a 2024 presidential run, he has all-but turned his back on Gaetz.”
“Could Florida get another chance at high-speed rail under Joe Biden?” via Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times — Eleven years have passed since President Barack Obama landed in Tampa with the promise of a gift that could transform Central Florida: a federally funded high-speed rail line to Orlando. Not a single track was laid between the two cities. In Florida and across the country, the Tea Party wave brought in a new class of Republican leaders wanting to slash government spending. Among the programs they killed was Obama’s $8-billion vision for a national network of fast-moving trains. Enter President Biden, whose well-established love for train travel earned him the moniker “Amtrak Joe.”
Can Joe Biden bring high-speed rail to Florida? Image via AP.
Happening today — The Southwest Florida Water Management District Governing Board meets, 9 a.m., Southwest Florida Water Management District, 7601 U.S. 301 North, Tampa. Online link here.
“‘Florida State swagger’: Harvard vice provost Richard McCullough to be next FSU president” via Byron Dobson of the Tallahassee Democrat — FSU’s Board of Trustees on Monday unanimously selected McCullough, vice provost for research at Harvard, to replace President John Thrasher, who has served as president since November 2014. Trustees praised all three applicants as men who could have taken the helm of FSU but said McCullough had a “Florida State swagger” that pushed him over the top. McCullough now will move forward on June 23 for an interview with the Board of Governors, who have ultimate responsibility in confirming presidents of Florida’s public universities. McCullough has served as vice provost for research at Harvard since 2012, where he also is a professor of materials science and engineering. He was vice president for research at Carnegie Mellon University, 2007-2012.
2022
“Stephanie Murphy will not challenge Marco Rubio for Senate” via Marc Caputo of POLITICO — Rep. Murphy won’t run for U.S. Senate, a decision that was sealed after fellow Congresswoman Val Demings recently signaled she will likely challenge incumbent Rubio. “The reality is that Rubio will not be an easy opponent, especially if it’s on the heels of a bruising primary where Democrats spend millions attacking each other instead of using those millions to build the infrastructure we desperately need to win,” Murphy said Monday in a written statement. Murphy plans to seek reelection to her Orlando-area seat and help the state party with voter registration, organizing and strengthening the grassroots.
Stephanie Murphy is backing off a Senate run in 2022.
“Kathy Castor endorses Charlie Crist for 2022 Governor’s race” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Castor is backing fellow U.S. Rep. Crist in his bid Governor, she announced Monday. In her endorsement, Castor cited Crist’s environmental advocacy and experience in leading Floridians. “When Charlie was Governor, he worked to build unity rather than fuel division,” Castor said in a statement. The pair have close ties as Tampa Bay Democrats who share the national stage; Castor has served in the U.S. House since 2007 and was joined by Crist after his initial election to Congress in 2016. Crist is looking to corral as much support as possible while he has the spotlight as the only Democrat in the race. That won’t last long, and Crist is already on the road campaigning to reach out to more voters and fellow Democrats.
“‘Heartless leadership’: Crist blasts DeSantis over ending federal unemployment benefits” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Crist is criticizing DeSantis for cutting Florida’s weekly federal unemployment benefits, starting June 26. The Governor made the call to end the federal benefits on Monday, joining at least 22 other states who have called it quits on the program. The Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation program provides an extra $300 per week in benefits to the unemployed during the pandemic. “This is heartless leadership by Ron DeSantis, who seems more interested in scoring partisan points than taking care of Floridians,” Crist said in a statement. DeSantis credited Florida’s economic recovery for the cut, referencing the state’s nearly half a million job openings, he told reporters in Miami Monday.
“After Alcee Hastings: The race for Congress” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The conclusion of last week’s special Florida Legislative Session on gambling expansion gives congressional candidate-legislators a precious political commodity: time to campaign. State Rep. Bobby DuBose, who announced his campaign for Congress on April 20, responded immediately. State Sen. Perry Thurston did something similar. He announced his candidacy to succeed the late U.S. Rep. Hastings April 19. The day after the Regular Legislative Session ended, Thurston held his own Saturday kickoff.
The race is on for Alcee Hastings’ seat: Perry Thurston and Bobby Powell. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Democrat lawyer Adam Gentle announces U.S. House run against Mario Diaz-Balart” via Bianca Padró Ocasio of the Miami Herald — Gentle, a 39-year-old anti-corruption lawyer in South Florida and political newbie, launched a campaign against U.S. Rep. Diaz-Balart, targeting the Republican congressman over his recent vote against a commission to investigate the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol in Washington, D.C. Gentle, who calls himself a “capitalist Democrat,” announced his candidacy for Florida’s 25th Congressional District in 2022 with a four-minute video ad that features footage from the Everglades and elsewhere in the district along with videos of the violent confrontations outside the Capitol on Jan. 6.
Corona Florida
“Florida reports 1,606 new COVID-19 cases and 27 more deaths” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — New COVID-19 cases in Florida Monday dipped to a level last seen in early fall, signaling that vaccines are effective in the Sunshine State. Monday also marked the third continuous day with additional COVID-19 deaths of less than 50 per day. Florida reported 1,606 new coronavirus cases on Monday and another 27 new resident deaths linked to COVID-19. The state has now reported 2,311,941 cases since the pandemic began. The 7-day average for new cases reached as high as 17,991 on Jan. 8. It was 2,566 on Monday.
“Florida close to 10 million vaccinations against COVID-19 pandemic” via Clayton Freeman of The Florida Times-Union — Florida drew closer to the milestone of 10 million residents vaccinated by Saturday, while other numbers pointed to accelerating progress against the coronavirus pandemic. As of Saturday, the Florida Department of Health reported 9,963,783 state residents receiving a vaccination against COVID-19, including about 7.9 million fully vaccinated against the pandemic. Thus far, the age bracket receiving the greatest proportion of the vaccinations has been 65 to 74, with about 2.1 million vaccinated. Although the vaccination rate has slowed somewhat compared to the peak of the vaccine drive, the state still reported more than 100,000 doses administered Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
“Will Florida offer a vaccine lottery? Here’s what DeSantis’ office has to say” via Liz Freeman of the Naples Daily News — Don’t bet on the chance of an oversized check coming from the Florida Lottery after getting vaccinated. Four states — Maryland, New York, Ohio and Oregon — are offering incentives like cash or scholarships to boost turnout for vaccines against COVID-19, but DeSantis isn’t heading down that path, according to his press office. “No, Gov. DeSantis is not and will never consider holding a ‘vaccine lottery’ in Florida,” Christina Pushaw, the Governor’s press secretary, said in an email. “Florida’s government and public health authorities have been very clear that the vaccines are safe and effective, protecting people from serious illness, and this should be enough motivation for Floridians to get vaccinated if they so choose,” Pushaw said.
There will be no big checks for vaccinations, says Ron DeSantis. Image via AP.
“Mask mandate legal fight could be moot” via The News Service of Florida — A yearlong legal battle about a mask mandate in Alachua County could be moot after DeSantis suspended local COVID-19 restrictions, according to a new court filing. A three-judge panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal heard arguments in November in a challenge to the constitutionality of an Alachua County order that required people to wear masks at businesses such as restaurants and grocery stores. But the Tallahassee-based appeals court has not ruled in the case, and Jeff Childers, an attorney for plaintiff Justin Green, filed a document Friday suggesting that the case is moot. The filing stems from an order issued by DeSantis that suspended local restrictions, such as mask mandates, across the state.
“Floridians are eager to travel to Europe, but European visitors to Florida will have to wait” via Bradley George of WUSF — Floridians are booking trips to Europe after last week’s announcement that tourists are being welcomed back by the European Union starting this summer. However, it could be a while before visitors from Europe and elsewhere return to the Sunshine State. The past year has been grim for travel agents like Janice Sinardi. But following the EU announcement, the phone at her Temple Terrace office started ringing off the hook. “I’ve had inquiries for Spain, a lot for Italy, because Italy is one of the No. 1 places most people want to go to,” she said. Crossing the Atlantic will be easier starting next month, as British Airways returns to Tampa International Airport. Flights to Zurich resume in July, and direct service to Germany comes back in September.
Corona local
“After 200,000 shots, one final day for vaccinations at Valencia College’s FEMA site” via Kate Santich of the Orlando Sentinel — At 7 p.m. Tuesday, Orlando’s lone federally run COVID-19 vaccination site will close for good after three months and more than 200,000 shots of vaccine. “Time is running out,” said Denise Whitehead, the state spokesperson for the Valencia College West Campus vaccination clinic. “We encourage those members of the public who have been waiting to receive the COVID-19 vaccine to come now.” The site, at 1800 S. Kirkman Road in Orlando, will open at 7 a.m. Tuesday. No appointment is necessary. Meanwhile, smaller vaccination clinics run by the state, local counties, and retail pharmacies continue operating throughout Central Florida, and some doctors’ offices also carry the vaccines now.
Valencia College’s FEMA vaccination site goes dark. Image via Valencia College News.
“Amelia Concours gathers classics among crowds as the first big post-COVID-19 Northeast Florida public event” via Dan Scanlan of The Florida Times-Union — A sunny day and 240 classic cars drew a crowd to Sunday’s 26th annual Amelia Island Concours d’Elegance as the beachfront community hosted its first major public event since COVID-19 shut the world down only days after its 2020 show. A crowd predicted at more than 10,000 by law enforcement viewed classics, race cars, and motorcycles on two of the Golf Club of Amelia Island’s fairways at the Concours. The event celebrated honoree Lyn St. James, a prolific racer, writer, broadcaster, entrepreneur and motivational speaker. This was the first time the event has honored a woman driver who tackled the Indy 500 and Trans-Am, prototype and sports car racing and founded the Lyn St. James Foundation.
Corona nation
“Casinos place big bet on vaccinations as Las Vegas prepares for June 1 reopening and nation’s first large convention” via Laurie McGinley of The Washington Post — World of Concrete, the convention that is staging a bricklaying competition, is the first large, in-person trade show scheduled in the United States since the coronavirus pandemic began. The stakes are high, even for a city accustomed to high stakes. If the show hosts tens of thousands of attendees without a major problem, such as a virus outbreak, it will be a milestone. Casinos, where conventioneers are likely to spend free time, have prodded workers to get vaccinated; several large casinos say 80 to 90% of their employees have received at least one shot. Local officials announced with fanfare that the county will lift all pandemic restrictions on June 1.
Corona economics
“Biden administration moves toward making the pandemic work-from-home experiment permanent for many federal workers” via Lisa Rein of The Washington Post — As the Biden administration contemplates how to return the massive federal workforce to the office, government officials are moving to make a pandemic experiment permanent by allowing more employees than ever to work from home, a sweeping cultural change that would have been unthinkable a year ago. The shift across the government, whose details are still being finalized, comes after the risk-averse federal bureaucracy had fallen behind private companies when it came to embracing telework, a posture driven by a perception that employees would slack off unless they were tethered to their office cubicles. That position hardened during the Donald Trump administration.
Joe Biden is looking to make federal work-from-home permanent. Image via The Washington Post.
More corona
“Intelligence on sick staff at Wuhan lab fuels debate on COVID-19 origin” via The Wall Street Journal — Three researchers from China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology became sick enough in November 2019 that they sought hospital care, according to a previously undisclosed U.S. intelligence report that could add weight to growing calls for a fuller probe of whether the COVID-19 virus may have escaped from the laboratory. The details of the reporting go beyond a State Department fact sheet, issued during the final days of the Trump administration, which said that several researchers at the lab, a center for the study of coronaviruses and other pathogens, became sick in autumn 2019 “with symptoms consistent with both COVID-19 and common seasonal illness.”
Illnesses in the Wuhan lab are fueling speculation as to where COVID-19 began.
“Retailers couldn’t stock hand sanitizer fast enough. Now they can’t give it away.” via Jaewon Kang of The Wall Street Journal — Supermarkets are on a mission to get rid of hand sanitizers. Once nearly impossible to find, America is awash in it. COVID-19 cases are declining as more people get vaccinated. In recent months, health officials have said that the virus is airborne and that the disinfectants aren’t as effective as masks and distancing. Sales of hand sanitizers are down 80% to $9.2 million for the week ended May 8 from the year prior. Sanitizers, which use alcohol to neutralize viruses and other pathogens, typically expire in two years. Retailers seek to move through their inventory before that deadline and free up space on their shelves and in warehouses for other products in higher demand.
Presidential
“Biden to meet George Floyd’s family at White House” via Orion Rummler of Axios — Biden will meet privately with the family of Floyd on Tuesday to mark the anniversary of Floyd’s murder, White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Monday. The White House meeting comes after Derek Chauvin was found guilty in Floyd’s murder; a trial that advocates saw as one of the most crucial civil rights cases in decades. “This is going to be a private meeting,” Psaki said, adding that “the courage and grace of this family, and especially his daughter Gianna, has really stuck with the President.”
Joe Biden will meet with the family of George Floyd on the anniversary of his murder. Image via AP.
“As hurricane season looms, Biden doubles funding to prepare for extreme weather” via Juliet Eilperin and Brady Dennis of The Washington Post — Biden will announce Monday afternoon that he is doubling the amount of money the U.S. government will spend helping communities prepare for extreme weather events, while launching a new effort at NASA to collect more sophisticated climate data. While the $1 billion in funding is a fraction of what taxpayers spend each year on disasters, it underscores a broader effort to account for the damage wrought by climate change and curb it. Last week the President signed an executive order instructing federal agencies to identify and disclose the perils a warming world poses to federal programs, assets and liabilities, while also requiring federal suppliers to reveal their own climate-related risks. The administration will target roughly 40% of the additional money to disadvantaged areas.
“Weightlifting, Gatorade, birthday calls: Inside Biden’s day” via Ashley Parker of The Washington Post — Current and former advisers say Biden’s typical day reveals a creature of habit with well-worn routines and favorite treats, from orange Gatorade to chocolate chip cookies; a tactile politician eager to escape the Washington bubble who meets privately with people who write him letters; and the patriarch of a sprawling Irish-Catholic clan who abruptly interrupts high-level meetings to take calls from family members. It marks a sharp contrast with Trump, whose days often ran both early and late with tweets that were frequently angry or inflammatory, and whose time was often consumed by rambling rallies, spontaneous calls to TV hosts and random, unscripted activities.
Epilogue: Trump
“Top Republicans flock to Reagan Library to speak out on GOP’s future” via Paul Steinhauser of Fox News — Some leading conservative voices, including a handful of potential 2024 Republican presidential contenders, will start flocking to the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library this week to speak out on the critical questions concerning the future direction of the GOP. Kicking off the speaking series is former House Speaker Paul Ryan. The speaking series comes as the GOP searches for the best path forward after losing the White House and the Senate in the 2020 elections. Also taking part in the discussions are former Vice President Mike Pence, former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and former South Carolina Governor and former Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley.
“Republicans struggle to define a new governing coalition as Donald Trump closes grip on party” via Michael Scherer and Josh Dawsey of The Washington Post — Aggravation and drama have defined the Republican Party since Trump left office. In just the past two weeks, Republican leaders have punished his enemies, continued to pursue a revisiting of the election results and, on Capitol Hill, opposed bipartisan efforts to create a commission to investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection there. A few members expressed concern for those who broke into the building where they work. A new generation of Trumpist acolytes have announced their intention to run for high office with a set of Trump issues that motivate them. The moves pose a threat to the party’s efforts to reclaim moderate, largely college-educated voters who Trump turned off.
D.C. matters
“Lawmakers worry the toxic atmosphere on Capitol Hill will follow them home, raising safety concerns” via Marianna Sotomayor and Paul Kane of The Washington Post — Several Democrats said they are concerned that the toxic political culture on Capitol Hill could greet them back home as their communities open up, with the pandemic waning and vaccination rates rising, and there is pressure to hold more in-person events. According to people familiar with the discussions who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe the conversations, several Democratic members have privately expressed their concerns to leadership about security back home as threats have risen. Some of these Democrats said they have paid out of their own pocket to increase security at their district offices or install security systems in their homes out of an abundance of caution.
Local notes
“Miami Mayor Francis Suarez: Tech and finance wave is a ‘movement, not a moment’” via Jane Wooldridge of the Miami Herald — Pandemic seclusion and high taxes elsewhere spurred tech and finance entrepreneurs to discover the pleasures of South Florida. Though many were well on their way south last fall, Miami Mayor Suarez’s December tweet, “How can I help?” went viral, sparking even greater interest. The buzz is clearly having an impact. Though it’s too soon to ascertain just how many are actually moving to Miami, nearly every day brings an announcement of a new relocation, company office or multimillion-dollar real estate purchase. But what does the influx of wealth mean for those of us who already live here? As the revenue base grows, Miami will continue investing in infrastructure and modernizing public services to be a Miami Forever and a Miami For-Everyone.
“Amid rising anti-Semitism and increasing polarization on Israel, Jewish Democratic Caucus forms Broward chapter” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Concerned by what they see as twin threats a rise in anti-Semitism and a politicization of long-standing U.S. support for Israel, Jewish Democratic leaders in Broward are forming a new political organization. The Democratic Jewish Caucus has support from the county’s two most prominent Jewish elected officials, U.S. Reps. Ted Deutch and Debbie Wasserman Schultz. More than 200 people have signed up for Tuesday’s inaugural meeting. The recent hostilities between Israel and Palestinians showed a public rift in the Democratic Party, with younger, more progressive party activists and elected officials expressing support for Palestinians and criticism of Israel.
Ted Deutch and Debbie Wasserman Schultz help create a Broward chapter of the Jewish Democratic Caucus.
“Contamination from Piney Point has diluted in Tampa Bay, researchers say” via Zachary T. Sampson of the Tampa Bay Times — Contamination levels in part of Tampa Bay near a massive discharge of polluted water from the old Piney Point fertilizer plant site have declined, researchers said Monday. Initial results show the effects of the release in early April were relatively contained in an area of lower Tampa Bay, according to professors at the University of South Florida College of Marine Science. But many questions remain about the consequences of the spill for fish, seagrasses and what harm might emerge over time. “We’re fairly fortunate that we didn’t see a long-lived, widespread effect on that ecosystem,” said Thomas Frazer, dean of the college. Over time, the wastewater was flushed and mixed into the greater bay, reducing concentrations. Today, scientists believe levels are more in line with historic averages.
“Robert Blackmon to resign from St. Pete City Council, signaling likely mayoral bid” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Blackmon submitted a letter of resignation, effective January 6. The resignation likely means Blackmon intends to run for Mayor, a rumor that has been brewing for months. However, Blackmon has not officially filed for the seat as of Monday morning. “It has been an honor to serve as City Council member from District 1,” Blackmon wrote. “Pursuant to Florida Statute 99.012(2) & (3), I hereby tender my resignation from the Saint Petersburg City Council effective January 5, 2022, at 11:59 p.m.” That statute states that “no person may qualify as a candidate for more than one public office, whether federal, state, district, county, or municipal, if the terms or any part thereof run concurrently with each other.”
“Rick Kriseman to trim Trop redevelopment shortlist to two” via Brian Hartz of St. Pete Catalyst — Barring a curveball thrown by the Tampa Bay Rays and St. Petersburg City Council, Mayor Kriseman is set to whittle down the field of Tropicana Field redevelopment proposals from four to two. Kriseman said he expects to make his decision known within seven days, meaning an announcement could come by Friday this week. He also pushed back at City Council’s desire to “hit the pause button” on redevelopment talks until the city and the Rays have reached an agreement that will clarify the team’s future in St. Pete. The Rays’ Tropicana Field lease agreement expires in 2027. However, citing the need to get a head start on funding and financing talks, Kriseman wrote, “delaying progress on selecting and negotiating with a master developer may hinder the progress of stadium discussions with the Rays.”
“Tom Mullins the fifth candidate to enter St. Pete City Council District 4 race” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — A fifth candidate is entering the race to replace DardenRice on St. Pete City Council. Mullins announced Monday he is jumping into the District 4 race. Mullins has been an executive with Raymond James since the late 1980s, leading the firm’s investment banking practice for the transport and infrastructure industries, where he has developed particular expertise in the environmental service and transport sectors. “St. Petersburg is a thriving city, and with responsible leadership, there is more opportunity on the horizon than ever for every resident in every neighborhood,” Mullins said.
“Shifting politics of gambling could benefit Sarasota card room” via Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Much has changed in his family’s business since 1944 when Jack Collins Jr.’s grandfather purchased a greyhound racing track in Sarasota for $5,005 in back taxes. The track had burned down. Collins’ grandfather revived it. Collins grew up in the business, witnessing the decline of greyhound racing and the rise of other forms of gambling. The biggest change came after Florida legalized poker rooms at pari-mutuel gambling facilities. The Sarasota Kennel Club’s card room opened in late 2006. Now the One-Eyed Jack’s card room is the entire business.
“Jacksonville’s Edward Waters College to launch ‘potentially transformative’ social justice institute” via Beth Reese Cravey of The Florida Times-Union — Edward Waters College plans to establish the A. Philip Randolph Institute for Law, Race, Social Justice and Economic Policy, a place for scholars and students alike to “examine and exchange ideas” on a host of social issues. Initial funding for the institute — named for Florida-born civil rights activist Randolph, a former Edward Waters student — is from a $200,000, two-year grant from the Jacksonville-based Jessie Ball duPont Fund. This summer the college will launch a national search for an executive director/scholar-in-residence to lead the institute. Additional staff will be hired later. The institute will “examine and exchange ideas related to race, law/criminal justice and socioeconomic policy matters through research, lectures, symposia and scholarship,” according to the college.
“Walton County code enforcement officers issue 80 citations for double-red flag violations” via Jim Thompson of Northwest Florida Daily News — Eighty citations with the accompanying $500 fines have been issued to people caught in recent weeks on Walton County beaches violating double-red flag warnings and entering dangerous surf in the Gulf of Mexico. The $500 fine for entering the water when double-red flags are flying has been in place since February, when County Commissioners enacted several changes to the county’s beach activities ordinance. Before the increase, the fine for a first double-red flag violation had been $100. “We’re trying to get the message out (about the dangers of rip currents and other conditions that prompt the raising of double-red flags),” said Tony Cornman, the county’s code compliance director, “and hopefully it helps.”
“South Walton, ‘Birthplace of New Urbanism,’ seeks to keep unique aesthetics intact” via Jim Thompson of the Northwest Florida Daily News — With a unanimous vote earlier this month, Commissioners established a requirement for a “supermajority” vote on the Commission before any changes can be made to a provision of the land development code limiting building heights to 50 feet in the area south of Choctawhatchee Bay and the Intracoastal Waterway from the Okaloosa County line to the Bay County line. The amendment approved at their May 11 meeting is still subject to some state review. In effect, the amendment means that any changes to the 50-foot building height limit must be approved by four of the five Commissioners. The amendment was a brainchild of Commissioner Mike Barker, who brought his proposal forward last year after his November election.
Mike Barker is promoting a ‘New Urbanism’ in South Walton County. Image via MyPanhandle.com.
“Pensacola looks to expand airport terminal as air travel starts to pick up again” via Jim Little of the Pensacola News Journal — Pensacola International Airport’s daily travel numbers have been above the pre-pandemic level in the past month. “I think we’re going to need a second terminal,” Mayor Grover Robinson said Monday. “We’ve been talking about it. In the long-term plan, it’s already there.” Robinson said the airport is beginning to struggle with housing planes that land, and the airport is coming close to capacity. Spirit Airlines will begin operating at the airport in June, and Robinson said that the airport will offer flights to 30 cities when those flights come online. Last week, the number of passengers was 10% above the same week in 2019. One of those days was a record for the airport, with 5,000 passengers going through security in a single day.
Top opinion
“The year of school choice” via Jeb Bush for the National Review — The pandemic made plain that if you let adults be the priority in how you run your schools, students will always come second, at best. Public-school enrollments are down by 2%. Several school systems continued to “count” students as attending even if they had withdrawn completely from virtual-learning programs. Parents show dramatic support for direct funding of their children’s educational needs. According to a poll of 2,700 K — 12 parents, strong majorities favor the use of federal education dollars for student-centered needs; 65% said they want federal stimulus dollars to support creating more school options such as charter schools and learning pods, and 62% want direct grants of $500 per child to help parents afford whatever education needs they have.
Opinions
“Don’t stunt Florida’s growth with tax hikes” via Tom Feeney for the Tampa Bay Times — The 2017 tax reforms improved a lot of the things that were broken about our federal tax code, helping Americans keep more of their hard-earned money and bringing out the best in businesses through reductions in our corporate tax rates, which were substantially higher than those in most of the developed world. Businesses reinvested in Florida with the tax savings they found after 2017. In the two years after the tax reforms were enacted, before the pandemic hit, Florida added more than 400,000 jobs. So it doesn’t make sense that Biden and congressional leaders would try to reverse course and raise taxes, particularly when we need every economic boost we can get to overcome the pandemic’s disruption.
“Domestic energy is essential to American security” via Tom Garcia for the Fort Myers News-Press — DeSantis understands how critical energy independence is to our nation’s security. And it’s one of many reasons why DeSantis should sign House Bill 919 to protect our access to clean, abundant supplies of domestic energy sources. House Bill 919 prevents local governments from banning our access to natural gas. Natural gas is America’s most abundant energy source. According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), there is enough supply of natural gas to meet the needs of the world for 250 years. Because of the technologies and innovations that have unleashed this abundant supply of domestic energy in recent decades, we have tremendously reduced our dependence on foreign oil.
“Courts must remedy blatantly racist voter-suppression law” via Dick Batchelor, Marcus McCoy Jr., and James E.C. Perry for the Orlando Sentinel — Florida lawmakers took a page from the past when they enacted a set of new voting restrictions. Now it’s the courts’ turn to right this terrible wrong. Supporters say the measures, which DeSantis signed into law in early May, increase transparency and strengthen election security. But here’s the rub: Florida didn’t have a problem with transparency or election security. In fact, the very officials who were clamoring to pass and sign this new law were trumpeting Florida’s success with running elections not that long ago. The legislation, which limits the use of ballot drop boxes and tightens requirements for voting by mail, is simply not needed. There is no empirical evidence or data to back up claims that it is. And there’s no game plan on how to implement it.
On today’s Sunrise
Florida’s Department of Economic Opportunity will no longer be taking part in the federal program that boosted the state’s unemployment checks by $300 per week. Gov. DeSantis says that’s going to end on June 26.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— DeSantis says the federal money was a lifeline when the economy shut down, but now the benefits are so high they encourage people to stay home instead of finding a job.
— The Governor signs a bill imposing new regulations on tech giants like Facebook and Twitter. This started after social media companies de-platformed Trump for spreading lies and misinformation during the final days of his administration. Still, DeSantis claims social media censorship is the real threat.
— Under the new law, any Floridian can sue social media companies if de-platformed, censored, or shadowbanned.
— While DeSantis hasn’t signed off on the new state budget yet, Florida TaxWatch asks him to aim for more than $100 million in “turkeys” that have no business being in the budget.
— TaxWatch is also asking lawmakers to stop using a sprinkle list to add spending projects to the budget after the formal negotiations have been finished.
— Central Florida Congresswoman Murphy has decided she won’t run against Sen. Rubio next year. Murphy’s announcement clears the path for Orlando Congresswoman Demings to run against Rubio next year, and Murphy appears to be targeting Sen. Scott in 2024.
— Now that the pandemic is killing fewer Americans and mask rules are relaxing, people are getting the urge to travel again. But the folks at VISIT FLORIDA say they’re going to have to work hard to overcome all the negative publicity heaped on the Sunshine State during the pandemic.
— And finally, police are accusing a Florida Man of trying to hide cocaine where the sun doesn’t shine. Too bad for him a deputy saw the whole thing.
“Eclipse and Super Flower Moon on tap the same night this week” via Joe Mario Pedersen of the Orlando Sentinel — A rare treat will be hanging over the Orlando sky with the emergence of a Super Flower Moon followed by a lunar eclipse on the same night. Starting Tuesday night, stargazers may want to prepare their telescopes and cameras for May’s Super Flower Moon, a full moon with a larger appearance due to its closer proximity to the Earth. However, the moon’s peak illumination will not shine at maximum brightness until 7:14 a.m. Wednesday, although Wednesday night should still have a nice view of the full moon. While the diameter of a supermoon is only 7% greater than an average full moon, and 14% bigger than when the moon is farthest away, also known a micro-moon, the area of the full supermoon disk is 15% to 30% bigger.
Orlando will enjoy a special treat — a ‘Super Flower Moon.’ Image via Reuters.
“Gas prices down for Memorial Day weekend” via The News Service of Florida — The AAA auto club said the average gas price in Florida was $2.87 a gallon, down 2 cents from last week. AAA also noted that the average was $2.91 a gallon during the 2018 Memorial Day weekend. “Unless pump prices suddenly rise this week, holiday travelers will find gas prices that are slightly below what they paid on Memorial Day 2018,” Mark Jenkins, a AAA spokesman, said in a prepared statement. “While expectations of strong holiday fuel demand can carry the potential for causing higher pump prices, wholesale gasoline prices dropped 5 cents last week. That means gas prices could drift lower as the weekend approaches, but things can change quickly in the fuel market.”
Happy birthday
Happy birthday to one of the best in The Process, a great mom and wife, Ashley Ross.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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Good morning. Today marks one year since George Floyd was murdered by a police officer in Minneapolis. On Capitol Hill, legislators have failed to deliver a police reform bill that President Biden requested to be on his desk by today.
The private sector has moved slightly faster to address long-standing concerns over racial injustice in Corporate America. Our headline story today looks at the surge in hiring of diversity execs as companies try to improve minority representation within their workforces.
Markets: Not that you should check your stock portfolio daily, but if you did yesterday you’d probably see a solid upward tick thanks to a push from Big Tech. Heck, even crypto rebounded from a brutal weekend and Coinbase was handed a “buy” rating from Goldman Sachs.
Covid-19: The seven-day average of new cases (25,300 on Sunday) has fallen 24% week over week, and nine states now have 70% of adults with at least one dose.
In the 365 days since George Floyd’s murder, protests have turned a spotlight on racial inequality in Corporate America. In response, businesses have scrambled to hire leaders focused on diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives, adding to what was already a growing number of diversity execs in the leadership Slack channel.
In the five years leading up to September 2020, the number of people with the title “head of diversity” rose 107%, “director of diversity” 75%, and “chief diversity officer” 68%, according to LinkedIn.
Good luck holding on
Turnover among top diversity execs is fairly high. Recruiters estimate that the average chief diversity officer (CDO) tenure is about three years—less than one might expect considering the median comp is $600k/year at companies with $3+ billion in revenue.
While they may be fielding more offers than their colleagues, CDOs regularly run into walls at work, including unrealistic expectations and a lack of resources and support from their company’s top brass, the WSJ reports.
“It requires an emotional muscle unlike any role I’ve ever worked in,” Eli Lilly’s top diversity exec Joy Fitzgerald told the WSJ. “You have to be comfortable knowing that the norm is managing discomfort.”
CDOs have been busy
Diversity and inclusion hiring spiked last June following global Black Lives Matter protests. And in the last year, some of the bluest-chip names in biz have tied executive compensation to diversity targets, including Chipotle, Starbucks, McDonald’s, Nike, and Apple.
But hiring a CDO isn’t a quick fix. HR experts warn that a successful diversity strategy needs to tie into business results, rely on more than one leader, and focus on longer-term changes.
Zoom out: American companies have been rethinking their responsibility to society for several years, most notably in 2019 when the influential Business Roundtable said profits and shareholders aren’t everything. For many C-suites, George Floyd’s murder elevated diversity and inclusion to the top of the agenda.
Huge news for younger New Yorkers: You’re going back to school—like back, back. Mayor Bill de Blasio announced yesterday that the NYC public school system, the nation’s largest, will fully reopen in September with no remote options. “You can’t have a full recovery without full strength schools,” he said.
Why’s that? After the abysmal April jobs report, President Biden and some economists argued that greater childcare burdens placed on parents prevented them from getting back to work.
On the other hand, it might not be a factor at all. Job loss among parents accounted for a negligible share of total job loss from Q1 2020 to Q1 2021, according to a recent study from the Peterson Institute for International Economics. No study has measured parents’ stress levels while working four feet from a teen with algebra questions, but we are guessing it’s high.
Looking ahead…the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine has been authorized in the US for people as young as 12, and while some administrators worry there won’t be enough room for students to social distance, de Blasio expects CDC guidelines around schools to loosen by the fall.
Yesterday, Airbnb announced 100+ new features, including more flexibility for guests to search dates, destinations, and listings.
But many of the biggest upgrades were saved for hosts:
Listing a new property was simplified from dozens of steps to 10.
2x the number of support agents
Artificial intelligence systems will recommend names, descriptions, and the best photos to use. (Pro tip: Guests want to see the bed, not artsy shots of the credenza.)
Many of these features will take a few months to implement, but Airbnb is running short on time. And hosts. Although it has 5.4 million active listings, that will not be enough for what CEO Brian Chesky describes as a “once-in-a-century travel rebound.”
In Q1, Airbnb reported 64+ million booked nights and experiences, up 13% annually.
A quarter of trips were long-term stays (28 days or more).
Zoom out: Chesky admitted that Airbnb hasn’t been doing enough to help hosts, many of whom the company angered at the start of the pandemic when it allowed guests to cancel bookings and receive a full refund.
We might have made the term up, but you’ve likely experienced Investment Whiplash. It’s what happens when you’re trying to keep up with market volatility on your investments. With new investing trends popping up on the reg, it can be stressful to take on the risks.
But if you’re looking for something to help ease the pain of all that market volatility, Fundrise can help.
They make it easy to invest in private market real estate, an excellent alternative to the stock market. This asset class used to be the playground of the ultra-wealthy, but Fundrise was like, “Nah, we’re changing that.”
Now, with just a $500 minimum investment, you can access real estate’s historically strong, consistent, and reliable returns.
Stat: San Francisco has a major shoplifting problem. Walgreens says that thefts at its locations in SF were 4x the chain’s national average; it’s had to close 17 stores in the area mainly because of the shoplifting epidemic.
Quote: “This was a case of state-sponsored hijacking, state-sponsored piracy.”
In an interview with Ireland’s Newstalk radio, Michael O’Leary, the CEO of Ryanair, blasted the Belarusian government for forcing his company’s plane to land in Minsk so that a dissident journalist could be arrested. The gambit was heavily criticized by Western leaders, and yesterday European officials agreed to slap more sanctions on Belarus, including banning Belarusian airlines from accessing EU airports.
Watch: A history of the NRA and its outsized influence on national politics. (Vimeo)
Your mom was right, no one calls anymore. Bank of America’s Merrill Lynch Wealth Management’s advisor training program is banning cold calls and pushing its 3k trainees to use internal referrals or LinkedIn DMs to attract potential clients, reports the WSJ.
If you’re mourning the image of crowded rooms of salesmen in wide ties wooing rich people into buying stocks, that environment has been gone for a while thanks to the disappearance of landlines and the rise of spam calls. Plus, Merrill’s been in and out of hot water over reports of calling people on the national do-not-call registry.
Merrill executives said fewer than 2% of people even answer a cold call.
Zoom out: The brokerage has made big changes to its hiring strategy in recent years, moving away from recruiting established advisors from other firms and favoring homegrown talent through its “Build-a-Broker” program.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Startup formation during the pandemic was strongest in Black communities, a new study found.
SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son voiced concerns about Japan hosting the Olympics with less than 5% of its population vaccinated. The US State Department also issued a “do not travel” advisory for Japan yesterday.
The Late Show with Stephen Colbertis returning to The Ed Sullivan Theater on June 14 to tape in front of a live, fully vaccinated studio audience.
Peloton is investing $400 million into its first US manufacturing facility in Ohio, which is projected to churn out bikes and treads by 2023.
The “Charlie bit my finger” YouTube video was sold as an NFT for more than $760,000, and it’s leaving the video platform sometime soon.
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Tech Tip Tuesday: You can stream movies and watch courses all for free at Kanopy with either your library card or a university login.
But…why? The Scrappy-Doo Wikipedia page has 25,623 words, more than Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis and double the average length of an undergrad dissertation. Check it out, then read the behind-the-scenes story from the Waiting Room.
Brew mini: The secret is out—we’re going to bring you more puzzles more days of the week. Gear up for Saturday by solving this mini crossword.
[The full reopening promised by New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio] means in person, five days a week, with no remote option for students to attend school exclusively online. Almost 70% of the nation’s students attend schools that are currently offering full-time, in-person learning, according to the organization Burbio.
…
At a City Council hearing last week, officials testified that all but 10% of the city’s public schools could fit their students into classrooms 3 or more feet apart. The mayor said he believes schools could make 3-feet social distancing work, but that he expects the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to relax the requirements more by August.
…
In New York, Asian and Black families in particular have been more likely to keep their children home, according to demographic data released by the city. Parents there have cited virus safety concerns, a lack of trust in the school system and fear of discrimination in or on the way to school as reasons for keeping their children home.
Why did the Supreme Court reject an inmate’s plea to change execution methods?
Ernest Johnson was convicted of murdering three people during a 1994 robbery of a gas station. He later underwent surgery to address a brain tumor, leaving him with a…
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What does a new report suggest about the Covid-19 lab-leak hypothesis?
The report claims that three Wuhan Institute of Virology employees were hospitalized with possible Covid-19 symptoms in November 2019, according to the Wall Street Journ…
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Why was Samoa’s next prime minister sworn in outside of Parliament?
Fiame Naomi Mata’afa’s narrow election victory was set to end almost 40 years of rule by the Human Rights Protection Party (HRPP). Although Samoa’s Supreme Court ruled Su…
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All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLShould President Biden pass an infrastructure bill without bipartisan support?
No
62%
Yes
34%
Unsure
4%
418 votes, 86 comments
Context: Republicans counter to Biden’s broad infrastructure proposal with a smaller roads-focused bill.
HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS
“No – He was elected in part for being able to negotiate in a bipartisan manner. His continued willingness to force a very progressive agenda through Congress will continue rather than diminish our polarization. Like many non-Democrats, I voted for Biden because he wasn’t Trump and secondarily because he portrayed himself as a Centrist.”
“Yes – Although Biden should do his absolute best to achieve bipartisanship on as many things as possible (and I …”
“Unsure – Republicans have a much stricter definition of infrastructure because they are averse to spe…”
How did a new gene therapy partially restore eyesight for a blind man?
The patient was diagnosed 40 years ago with retinitis pigmentosa: an inherited group of genetic disorders that leads to loss of vision due to mutations that cause photoreceptor…
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“The modern American university is a right-wing institution. The right’s dominance of academia and its reign over universities is destroying higher education, and the only way to save the American university is for students and professors to take back control of campuses.”
Asheesh Kapur Siddique, assistant professor in the Department of History at UMass Amherst, writing for Teen Vogue, May 19, 2021.
In its continuing efforts to ensure that the Biden administration evades blame for a whole host of worsening problems both at home and abroad, the establishment media gave White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki a pass for refusing to even acknowledge the fact that some major American cities are being engulfed in crime waves. “Well, I would say, certainly, there is a guns problem,” Psaki said in response to a question about rising crime – a shameless attempt to discard every other social, political, and economic factor in favor of an anti-gun agenda. The most obvious factor contributing to rising crime – efforts to defund police forces in the worst-affected cities – is not even mentioned by the left-wing media.
Liberty Nation News Alert: DOJ on Trump Obstruction Memo
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
United States Capitol Police (USCP) is in crisis. Since Jan. 6, when tens of thousands of Trump supporters descended upon Capitol Hill to express their anger at what they considered to be a rigged presidential election, more than 70 USCP officers have left the force. The establishment media frequently implies that the exodus has been caused by the “trauma” these officers suffered on that day in January. Perhaps, though, some members of the USCP are just tired of the increasing anti-police rhetoric coming from the left, along with tightening budgets and legal and legislative efforts to prevent police officers from even looking sideways at someone. Or, maybe, a lot of USCP officers are ashamed that, since Jan. 6, they have been deployed to prevent patriotic Americans from exercising their First Amendment rights.
A Ryanair flight was forced to land in Minsk, and Belarusian authorities detained an opposition journalist on board. This shocking incident is yet another example of gray-zone aggression, in which an unscrupulous country can inflict damage without resorting to war.
The United States may be becoming less exceptional as Americans choose to have fewer children, but a look at the latest population data suggests there is no immediate reason to be alarmed.
Promiscuous spending on programs of questionable need with harmful side effects is not the way to proceed in long-term services and supports or elsewhere.
Thanks to recent studies showing the low risk of COVID-19 transmission in schools, we need to consider that the scale has tipped with reopening schools.
“The European Union agreed Monday to impose sanctions on Belarus, including banning its airlines from using the airspace and airports of the 27-nation bloc… Reacting to what EU leaders called a brazen ‘hijacking’ of the Ryanair jetliner flying from Greece to Lithuania on Sunday, they also demanded the immediate release of the journalist, Raman Pratasevich…
“Ryanair said Belarusian flight controllers told the crew there was a bomb threat against the plane as it was crossing through Belarus airspace Sunday and ordered it to land. A Belarusian MiG-29 fighter jet was scrambled to escort the plane in a brazen show of force by [Alexander] Lukashenko, who has ruled the country with an iron fist for over a quarter-century. Belarus authorities then arrested the 26-year-old activist, journalist and prominent Lukashenko critic.” AP News
Both sides condemn Lukashenko and call for a forceful response from the US and EU:
“Lukashenko’s actions are violations of international law and the Chicago Convention on International Civil Aviation which guarantees the right to overfly countries without landing. Forcing down an airliner with a jet fighter to arrest a passenger is a naked act of air piracy and kidnapping. If Lukashenko’s actions are allowed to go unchallenged, it might very well be the end of international air travel as we know it…
“Passengers with political enemies would have to consider how close their flights would be to countries where they were persona non grata. Airlines might have to screen passenger manifests for controversial passengers that could provoke an interception. Ultimately, attempts to intercept and divert airliners could lead to shooting on either small or large scales.” David Thornton, Racket News
“The implications of this state-sponsored hijacking aren’t pretty. A head of state used his military to order the diversion of a civilian flight between two European Union countries. His government lied about a bomb threat. And then it snatched a political opponent who was working in exile. If this is allowed to be a precedent without consequences, expect more such hijackings for the purpose of making political arrests. Imagine how Vladimir Putin or North Korea might interpret this as a license to intercept civilian planes.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“From Russian secret services unleashing nuclear material in the U.K. to Chinese operatives disappearing critics based elsewhere, from Rwandan goon squads smuggling famous opposition figures back home to assassins working at the behest of the Tajik dictator offing critics abroad, dictators have begun realizing that borders are often little more than lines on a map. These operations have been met with muted concern in the West…
“Now, with Lukashenko’s success, those same regimes—the ones entrenched in power, three decades after the fall of the Soviet Union was supposed to usher in an era of democratization—are salivating. A new tool has suddenly appeared in their arsenal. And if there isn’t massive, concerted pushback from the West, we’re going to see repeats of this new tactic from every anti-democratic regime elsewhere in the region—in Russia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, and even in places like Serbia and Hungary. If the West waffles yet again, these kleptocratic dictators will attempt even more brazen acts across Europe, testing just how far they can spread their repression before the West does anything about it.” Casey Michel, New Republic
“This particular incident is notable because, unlike the leaders of Saudi Arabia, Russia, and China, Lukashenko has so few levers of influence abroad. Belarus has little trading clout, no important investments in New York or London, no oligarchs who own British soccer teams and help normalize the dictator’s rule overseas…
“That Lukashenko is now willing to falsely detain and possibly endanger a European-owned, European-registered airplane carrying mostly European Union citizens from one EU nation to another means that he is prepared for a total break with Europe—and that he is completely confident of Russian economic and political support when it happens. Already, the head of RT, the Russian state-sponsored international television channel, has tweeted that the hijacking makes her ‘envy’ Belarus. Lukashenko, she wrote, ‘performed beautifully.’ Another senior Russian official called the hijacking ‘feasible and necessary.’” Anne Applebaum, The Atlantic
“As British foreign secretary Dominic Raab rightly observed, this hijacking would not have occurred without Moscow’s approval (the Russian intelligence services now exercise overt control of the Belarusian KGB). If Putin senses that it is possible to intercept passenger airlines and detain his adversaries without significant cost, he will do so. Or he will have supplicant regimes like Belarus do it for him…
“The United States and the EU should immediately restrict the passage of Belarusian air carriers across their airspace and into their airports [as the EU has pledged to do]. They should also go further, introducing sanctions on Belarus’s three major exports; petroleum, fertilizers, and cheese. While Russia is Belarus’s dominant export destination, accounting for nearly half of Belarus’s total export market, Ukraine, Britain, Poland, the Netherlands, and Germany are also key Belarusian export destinations. With the exception of Germany, those nations would likely support a joint sanctions endeavor.” Tom Rogan, Washington Examiner
“Sneaky actions like Belarus’s Ryanair trick are the very nature of grayzone aggression. The grayzone offers the aggressor the opportunity to use any manner of uncouth methods — but since they’re not acts of war, affected countries can’t respond by military force. This reality makes it even more important that Western leaders use the only effective response available: asymmetric retaliation so decisive that Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko and his ilk think twice. Most of them, for example, have assets in the West.” Elisabeth Braw, American Enterprise Institute
“The Biden administration should consider imposing a new round of sanctions from those authorized by Congress aimed at those who carry out repression in Belarus. Previous U.S. sanctions have done nothing to change Mr. Lukashenko’s trajectory; it is time to find some that will bite. Support for independent channels and journalists to transmit truth to the people of Belarus — as Mr. Protasevich was doing — should be ramped up, while financial networks and oligarchs who enable Mr. Lukashenko must be targeted… It is time to respond forcefully to this wily and malevolent dictator.” Editorial Board, Washington Post
☕ Happy Tuesday!Smart Brevity™ count: 1,088 words … 4 minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
⚖️ At 12:30 p.m. ET today, please join Axios’ Russell Contreras and Hope King for a Hard Truths event on criminal justice reform, with Rep. Karen Bass and The Ladies of Hope Ministries founder Topeka K. Sam. Sign up here.
1 big thing … George Floyd’s death, one year on: Minneapolis reform stalls, violence surges
Illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios
America’s year of reckoning … In the city where George Floyd was killed a year ago today, calls to defund and dismantle the police are being drowned out by new calls to throw even more resources at the beleaguered department, Axios Twin Cities reporter Nick Halter writes.
A surge in Minneapolis violence in the first half of 2021 has altered the conversation about policing in the city where national protests against racism and police brutality began.
Last summer’s pledge by a veto-proof majority of City Council members to dismantle the department was thwarted by a citizen commission, leaving that matter to be voted on in November.
Minneapolis has reported 32 homicides so far this year, up from 15 at this point last year and just eight for the same period of 2019.
In the past month, three children, ages 10 and under, have been caught in the crossfire of gun violence. Last week, 6-year-old Aniya Allen, the granddaughter of an anti-gang activist, died from a shot to the head. The two other children remain hospitalized.
Why it matters: Efforts at major policing changes in Minneapolis and the state of Minnesota have been blocked, sidetracked and watered down over the past year. The recent crime surge could further slow momentum.
Americans are rushing back out into life, despite profound distrust of strangers’ honesty about being vaccinated, Axios managing editor Margaret Talev writes from the Axios/Ipsos Coronavirus Index.
CDC confusion: Only one in five adults said the CDC has been “very clear” in its updated guidance. Half said it’s “somewhat clear,” while nearly one in three said it’s not clear.
Among those who’ve been vaccinated, 47% say they’re still wearing a mask at all times outside the home, a steep drop from 65% two weeks ago.
From competitions to send ordinary people to space, to ambitious Mars landings and Moon missions, space is increasingly accessible, Axios Space author Miriam Kramer writes.
Why it matters: The public has never been presented with so many space choices.
Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin is auctioning off a seat on its first crewed flight to suborbital space, expected to launch in July.
The current high bid is $2.8 million, after thousands of people put in their own offers for the seat during the initial phase of the auction.
Two competition TV shows — Space Hero and Who Wants to be an Astronaut? — are in various phases of production, with plans to give away a seat to space to a lucky winner.
The big picture: NASA is just one of many international and commercial space players, giving the public new ways to understand and engage with the usually insular space industry.
All of these efforts are bringing the dawn of a new space age.
Secretary of State Tony Blinken, landing at Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv today, is greeted by Israeli Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi.
5. True cost of remote learning: Trillions
Students are separated by plastic dividers during lunch at Wyandotte County High School in Kansas City, Kan., in March. Photo: Charlie Riedel/AP
The cost of school closures reaches into the trillions when you factor in long-term economic damage, Axios Future author Bryan Walsh writes.
Researchers at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania calculated that learning loss from school closures will reduce U.S. GDP by 3.6% and hourly wages by 3.5% by 2050.
That’s a result of lowered labor productivity in the workers of tomorrow, to disrupted education and inferior remote learning.
In his new book out today — “Battle for the Soul: Inside the Democrats’ Campaigns to Defeat Trump” — The Atlantic’s Edward-Isaac Dovere tells the story of a 2018 Four Seasons dinner in D.C. featuring the Democratic Party’s top power players.
The dinner’s topic: “How do we put guardrails on the primary?
The donors had brought these people together because they wanted to make sure the party didn’t stumble into choosing Bernie Sanders — or almost as bad, Elizabeth Warren — as the nominee. … No one who represented anyone near the progressive wing of the party was put on the guest list. That’s who the donors who had organized the dinner wanted to stop. …
The primary was going to be huge. Anything they tried to do to steer it would probably backfire, and they would probably be found out and embarrassed first. Maybe, [Senate Minority Leader] Schumer suggested, they could get the candidates to agree to a pact to not attack one another.
At the far end of the table [former Virginia Gov. Terry] McAuliffe stood up, as he did every time he spoke, and said, “Good f—— luck with that.”
Texas is set to remove one of its last major gun restrictions after the Republican-dominated legislature voted to allow people to carry handguns without a license, background check or training, AP reports.
Gov. Greg Abbott (R) says he’ll sign it, despite objections by law enforcement groups, which say it’ll endanger the public and police.
Gun control groups note the state’s recent history of mass shootings.
The big picture: Texas will become the 21st state, and by far the most populous, to allow some form of unregulated carry of a handgun, the NRA — which strongly supports the measures — told Reuters.
Gun-rights advocates call it a “constitutional carry” law.
8. 🗞️ America’s newspaper rollup
Tribune Publishing shareholdersapproved a $630 million takeover of the newspaper company by Alden Global Capital, a hedge fund known for cutting journalists at local papers to maximize profits, Axios Media Trends author Sara Fischer writes.
Alden, which owned one-third of Tribune, will control the Chicago Tribune, N.Y. Daily News, Baltimore Sun and other prominent local papers.
Through its Digital First Media chain, Alden owns the Boston Herald, Denver Post and San Jose Mercury News. (AP)
9. Colbert to return to live audiences
Screenshot: CBS
“The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” on CBS will return June 14 to episodes with a full studio audience, AP’s David Bauder writes.
Audience members will have to provide proof that they have been vaccinated against COVID before attending shows at New York’s Ed Sullivan Theater. Masks will be optional.
Colbert, the top-rated late-night performer, has produced 205 episodes without a live audience since the COVID shutdown in March 2020.
He taped his first monologue from the bathtub of his South Carolina home. In August, he moved to a small studio at the Sullivan Theater offices, usually only with the show’s executive producer, stage manager and occasionally Colbert’s wife.
Jimmy Fallon has taped NBC’s “Tonight” show before a partial studio audience (40% capacity) at Rockefeller Center since March 22. NBC says Fallon plans to have a full audience, fully vaccinated, in early June.
ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel has been doing shows back in his regular studio. At least some people are in the audience, but it isn’t clear how many and who they are.
Comedy Central’s Trevor Noah has been recording socially distant versions of “The Daily Show” from his home. The show, currently on hiatus, plans to keep taping from Noah’s home when it returns June 7.
Fox News Channel’s Greg Gutfeld started a late-night comedy show during the epidemic, with a small audience of about 15 people.
10. 1 fun thing: Boom times for deodorant, teeth whitener
As our masks come off, The Wall Street Journal is calling it “The Great American Cleanup” (subscription):
Deodorant, teeth whitener and condoms are in high demand. Sales of perfume, nail polish, swimsuits, sunscreen, tuxedos, luggage and alarm clocks are climbing fast … Beauty products … were big sellers during the most recent quarter at Walmart Inc., finance chief Brett Biggs said.
The internal memo was the subject of a judge’s opinion that sharply criticized then-Attorney General William Barr’s handling of the Robert Mueller investigation. The parts of it released indicate the decision to not accuse Donald Trump of a crime had been the subject of prior conversations among Justice Department leaders.
A parade of Republican 2024 hopefuls is descending on Iowa, disabusing suggestions that former President Donald Trump was freezing the field as GOP contenders awaited his decision on whether to mount a third White House bid.
President Joe Biden’s hands-off approach to policing reform will be tested after Congress failed to meet his deadline to pass a legislative response to George Floyd’s death.
A rise in violent crime is endangering slim Democratic congressional majorities more than a year out from the midterm elections and threatening to revive “law and order” as a major campaign issue for Republicans for the first time since the 1990s.
The latest unrest in the Middle East has relaunched all-too-familiar talking points from politicians about the Israel-Palestine relationship, with strategists questioning whether some of Capitol Hill’s most liberal Democrats can peel their party pivot away from the Jewish state.
A military contractor aircraft crashed in the Las Vegas Valley near Nellis Air Force Base on Monday, killing the pilot, according to the company that owned the vehicle.
A Catholic priest in La Crosse, Wisconsin, said Sunday he was asked to resign as leader of his parish by church officials after he preached negative comments about the COVID-19 vaccine.
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he often receives advice from journalists other than his brother, CNN’s Chris Cuomo, who advised the governor on how to fend off claims of sexual harassment.
Wyoming’s job losses between the third quarters of 2019 and 2020 were over 20,000, according to a state jobs report, but business leaders say they expect the economy will recover.
Former President Donald Trump’s popularity and following online has dropped significantly, and his new heavily promoted blog isn’t getting much attention, according to data from online analytics firms.
China barred Taiwan from participating in the World Health Assembly to punish its elected government for “obstinately” resisting Beijing’s efforts to assert control over the island democracy, a senior Chinese diplomat acknowledged.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
May 25, 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.
JERUSALEM (AP) — U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has arrived in Israel at the start of a Middle East tour aimed at shoring up the Gaza cease-fire. He will face the same obstacles that have stifled a wider peace process for more than a decade,…Read More
ATLANTA (AP) — Six months after Donald Trump’s loss, conspiracy theorists and Trump backers are continuing their push for repeated examinations of ballots and finding limited successes. A Georgia judge last week awarded a group the chance to review m…Read More
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The intersection where George Floyd took his final breaths was to be transformed Tuesday into an outdoor festival on the one-year anniversary of his death, with food, children’s activities and a long list of musical performers. …Read More
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — A mysterious air base is being built on a volcanic island off Yemen that sits in one of the world’s crucial maritime chokepoints for both energy shipments and commercial cargo. …Read More
TOKYO (AP) — The Japanese government Tuesday was quick to deny a U.S. warning for Americans to avoid traveling to Japan would have an impact on Olympians wanting to compete in the postponed Tokyo Games. …Read More
ROME (AP) — One night in early 2019, Rome street artist Alessia Babrow glued a stylized image of Christ she had made onto a bridge near the Vatican. A year later, she was …Read More
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — As more companies start selling tickets to space, a question looms: Who gets to call themselves an astronaut? It’s already a complicated issue …Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden’s infrastructure plan is hitting roadblocks. A policing overhaul after the killing of George Floyd is up in the air. Even a seemingly…Read More
AKSU, China (AP) — A backlash against reports of forced labor and other abuses of the largely Muslim Uyghur ethnic group in Xinjiang is taking a toll on China’s cotton ind…Read More
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Good morning, Chicago. We’re starting to see a consistent downward trend in new daily COVID-19 cases in Illinois. Yesterday, state officials reported 933 new cases, which brought the seven-day average to the lowest number it’s been since late July. Officials also said 65% of adults have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, which is nearing President Joe Biden’s goal of 70% of adults with one at least one shot by July 4.
Speaking of vaccines, in an effort to get more people to get their shots, companies have been offering incentives that range from free doughnuts to free rolled joints. Now, Chicago-based United has joined in on the encouragement, offering free flights to some vaccinated customers.
Meanwhile in Springfield, Democrats unveiled a proposed legislative map that would pit Republican incumbents against each other in eight House districts. House Republican leader Jim Durkin and other Illinois GOP members likened the map to “a kindergartner’s artwork.” As the state legislators’ spring session nears its end, here’s what to watch for.
— Nicole Stock, audience editor
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
As the Commonwealth Edison lobbying scandal has rocked state government, much of the focus has been on laws that resulted in customers paying more for a smart grid and a bailout of nuclear power plants.
But there’s a third, lesser-known measure that also has had a big impact on customers’ wallets: a 2013 law that allowed ComEd to use a trio of accounting techniques to help its bottom line. The Illinois Public Interest Research Group is out with a new analysis contending the law cost electricity users more than $600 million over the last seven years — a figure ComEd disputes.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot yesterday unveiled her long-awaited plan for civilian oversight of the Chicago Police Department, saying “the buck stops with me” in an ordinance that would keep authority for hiring and firing the superintendent and other key Police Department decisions with the mayor.
Cardinal Blase Cupich is reinstating the Rev. Michael Pfleger as senior pastor at St. Sabina Parish after the archdiocesan board that investigates sexual abuse claims found “there is insufficient reason to suspect” the iconic South Side priest is guilty of allegations of abuse dating back decades, according to a letter released to parishioners Monday.
Two adult brothers from Texas in January lodged complaints that in the 1970s each was molested by Pfleger, the high-profile pastor of St. Sabina in the Gresham neighborhood who has clashed with a succession of Catholic leaders over many matters, including his unusually long tenure at the same parish.
With Black student enrollment at Illinois colleges and universities in a steep decline, a new coalition of educators, business executives, politicians and students has unveiled its proposals for closing the equity gap between Black and white students in higher education.
Sunny skies and warm weather ahead of Memorial Day weekend have Chicagoans just begging for dinner reservations — but they’re sometimes hard to come by as restaurants and bars are in the midst of expanding their service offerings. Here’s our updated list of new restaurants and reopenings.
Louisa Chu review: How French Canadian fare at Dear Margaret nourished a pandemic-weary critic
A 76-year-old man who was paroled earlier this month in the 1972 killing of a teenage boy in Chicago while on a pass from prison to visit his grandmother is now a fugitive, according to state prison records.
Ray Larsen is listed by the Illinois Department of Corrections as an “absconder,” meaning parole officials don’t know where he is. Frank Main has the full story…
In a letter Monday to St. Sabina’s congregation, Cardinal Blase Cupich said the archdiocese’s review board “concluded that there is insufficient reason to suspect Father Pfleger is guilty of these allegations.”
Ride-hailing firms would have to notify the city of regular fare rates. They would be free to use “surge pricing” when demand is high, but capped at 150% of the regular fare. So a normal fare of $10 could increase to no more than $15.
He’d been paroled May 13 in the killing of 16-year-old Frank Casolari in Chicago in 1972. Now, he’s missing. And he’s not the only paroled killer the state of Illinois can’t find.
Instead of allowing the seven-member commission to choose Chicago’s police superintendent, Lightfoot would retain that coveted power for herself and future mayors.
Tens of millions of dollars in HUD grants may be in jeopardy if Mayor Lightfoot’s Administration doesn’t provide the agency with requested documents in a civil rights investigation.
On Monday, the Illinois Department of Public Health said about 65% of Illinois adults have received at least one dose of the vaccine and 48% of adults are now fully vaccinated.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Tuesday! 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, 589,893; Tuesday, 590,533.
More than a month ago, President Biden assured George Floyd’s young daughter, Gianna, that her father’s killing left a positive mark on the nation.
A grassroots movement had gained traction. Jurors convicted a white Minneapolis police officer of killing Floyd. Lawmakers in both parties vowed to enact reforms to try to halt more deaths of Black men stopped and confronted by law enforcement officers.
“She said to me, and I’ll never forget it, ‘Daddy changed the world,’” the president said just weeks ago. “I told her this afternoon, ‘Daddy did change the world.’ … Let that be his legacy” (NBC’s “Today”).
A year after Floyd was killed, the president today will meet privately in the Oval Office with Floyd’s relatives following months of entreaties to the nation and Congress to take action to deliver change. But as The Hill’s Marty Johnson reports, aspirations for racial equality and reforms inside U.S. police departments are proving difficult to deliver.
The Hill: Black parents are on edge a year after Floyd’s murder.
One example of the challenge is the Senate’s slow movement on the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, passed by the House in March. The renewed public focus on the bill this week compelled congressional negotiators to dictate a positive statement (The Hill).
“While we are still working through our differences on key issues, we continue to make progress toward a compromise and remain optimistic,” said three lawmakers who are leading the negotiations: Sens. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), Tim Scott (R-S.C.) and Rep. Karen Bass (D-Calif.) (pictured below).
Biden wants the Senate to break its partisan logjam. Republicans want to keep in place the legal shield against civil lawsuits known as qualified immunity, which protects police officers. Lifting immunity in order to make law enforcement officers legally accountable for their actions is a chief goal within the policing reform movement (The Hill).
The Hill’s Julia Manchester reports that Democrats are working ahead of next year’s midterm contests to better communicate to voters about reforming policing at the same time that crime rates have soared in major cities around the country. Republicans assail the majority party for what they describe as an ambition to “defund” the police, which Biden and moderate Democrats deny. Local and state races this year could preview how the issues play at the ballot box. A March poll found that 18 percent of those surveyed supported “defunding police” while 58 percent opposed the idea (The Hill).
A MESSAGE FROM UBER
Meet Fallon. Delivering with Uber Eats helps her pay for college. “I like the flexibility of driving with Uber,” she says. “I can drive when I want to.”
*Driver earnings may vary depending on location, demand, hours, drivers, and other variables.
ADMINISTRATION: Seeking to support next steps toward peace after a cease-fire between Israel and the Palestinians, Biden on Monday dispatched Secretary of State Antony Blinken to the Mideast for meetings (The Associated Press).
The White House said later that Biden had spoken with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, one of several leaders Blinken will meet with on his trip, to underscore the importance of getting assistance to Gaza.
Blinken is in Israel today and held a joint event with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, pledging the United States will make “significant contributions” to rebuilding Gaza (CNN). The secretary will also visit the West Bank, Jordan and Egypt during his Mideast tour.
Separately on Sunday, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan was in Geneva for a meeting with national security adviser Moeed Yusuf of Pakistan.
> Biden visited the Federal Emergency Management Agency on Monday and said he is doubling the amount of money the government will spend helping communities prepare for extreme weather events while launching a new effort at NASA to collect more sophisticated climate data. While the $1 billion in funding through the Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) program is a fraction of what taxpayers spend each year on recovering from disasters, it underscores a broader effort to account for the damage wrought by climate change and curb it. Under current law the administration could direct up to $3.7 billion to the BRIC program (The Washington Post).
> The president is poised to make telework a permanent policy and allow more federal employees than ever to work from home, reports The Washington Post.
The Washington Post: Biden sticks with daily routines, including orange Gatorade and family-first priorities.
*****
CONGRESS: The White House on Monday indicated that it is “eager” to continue bipartisan talks on a potential infrastructure package despite there being less than a week until the White House’s soft deadline for an agreement and chances of a deal having diminished in recent days.
“The ball is in Republicans’ court. We are eager to engage and even have them down here to the White House once we see that counter proposal,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters on Monday, adding that it is premature for Democrats to prepare to use reconciliation to pass a bill. “We’re not quite there.”
Late last week, Democrats revised their infrastructure offer to $1.7 trillion, down roughly $550 billion from their previous offer. However, it was not enough to tempt Republicans, who continue to offer a package that is a fraction of the Democratic proposal.
Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.), a close Biden ally who is also a proponent of passing a scaled down infrastructure package, believes this month is the time to strike on any deal, despite where talks stand at the moment. Instead, lawmakers will try to move the bipartisan infrastructure package that passed out of the Environment and Public Works Committee two years ago unanimously. It will be a default bipartisan bill but will be worth only $300 billion (The Hill).
Axios: Infrastructure judgment day expected after Senate recess.
Politico: “Time to move on”: Infrastructure talks near collapse.
The New York Times: State revenues pour in, raising pressure on Biden to divert federal aid.
However, the focus remains on a larger package. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, part of the administration’s team trying to sell the American Jobs Plan, told CNN on Monday that there remains “a lot of daylight” between the White House and Republican senators in ongoing negotiations regarding a potential bipartisan agreement on infrastructure.
“The president feels strongly that we should seek to do this in a bipartisan manner [but] not at any cost. As he often says, inaction is not an option, and there is a real sense of urgency to move quickly, but we’ve been having, I think, productive and honest, frank conversations with at least one group of Republican senators who put forth their idea,” Buttigieg said.
“We started out very far apart. We’ve moved closer. … There is still a lot of daylight between us. That’s how negotiations work. We want to continue speaking with them. We’ll see what they come back with and whether we have something we can work with or not,” he added (The Hill).
The Hill: Filibuster fight looms over Jan. 6 commission.
Gerald F. Seib: The consequences of not creating a Jan. 6 Capitol riot commission.
The Hill: Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) first GOP senator to say he would vote for Jan. 6 commission bill.
The Washington Post: Senate Democrats introduce legislation to ban political committees from using prechecked donation boxes.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CORONAVIRUS: How has Japan, a major developed nation and member of the Group of Seven, lagged so badly behind its peers when it comes to COVID-19 vaccine administration and the rate of coronavirus transmission? The question is front and center as the nation plays catch-up in a last-ditch effort to ensure the Tokyo Olympics go off as scheduled in less than two months.
The public health concerns continued on Monday but this time from abroad as the State Department warns Americans against traveling to Japan. A notice on the agency’s website stated that a “high level” of COVID-19 was present in the country and urged Americans to avoid nonessential travel.
“The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has issued a Level 4 Travel Health Notice for Japan due to COVID-19, indicating a very high level of COVID-19 in the country. There are restrictions in place affecting U.S. citizen entry into Japan,” read the notice (The Hill).
The Tokyo Olympics are set to begin on July 23.
While almost half of the U.S. has received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine, with almost 40 percent being fully vaccinated, Japan’s vaccination efforts have lagged far behind. As of Monday, only 5 percent of Japan’s total population has received a dose, while 2.1 percent has been fully vaccinated (Bloomberg News).
In an attempt to vaccinate the masses, especially elderly individuals, the Japanese government opened two mass vaccination sites in Tokyo and Osaka that leaders hope will inoculate 10,000 and 5,000 people per day, respectively. Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga has set out to vaccinate the nation’s 36 million elderly people by the end of July amid questions of whether that is a realistic goal (The Associated Press).
Japan late last week gave the green light to shots by Moderna and AstraZeneca (Kyodo News). Johnson & Johnson is also currently seeking approval for its jab in the country (U.S. News & World Report).
Axios: Poll: Americans trust family, co-workers, friends to be honest about their COVID-19 vaccination status — and no one else.
More coronavirus news: United Airlines announced on Monday that it is giving travelers a chance to win a year of free flights to anywhere in the world it flies in exchange for getting vaccinated against COVID-19 (The Hill) … In Ohio, the state’s incentive to vaccinate residents is paying off, as nearly 2.8 million individuals have signed up for the state’s Vax-a-Million vaccination incentive program. According to Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R), vaccinations among 16- and 17-year-olds have jumped 94 percent, the 20-49 age group are up 55 percent, and 18- and 19-year-olds are up 46 percent (The Associated Press). … New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio declared on Monday that the city’s public school system will be in person and return to normal this fall, with no remote learning options for students (The Associated Press). … Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey (R) on Monday signed a bill banning private businesses and public institutions from requiring COVID-19 “vaccine passports.” The bill overwhelmingly passed the state legislature last week (The Hill).
OPINIONS
The inflation risk is real, by Lawrence H. Summers, contributing columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3ujTrur
It’s time to stop paying Americans to stay home, by Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio), opinion contributor, Barron’s. https://bit.ly/3oL05J3
The rise of woke anti-semitism, by Gerard Baker, editor at large, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/3oOogpH
A MESSAGE FROM UBER
Meet Fallon. Delivering with Uber Eats helps her pay for college. “I like the flexibility of driving with Uber,” she says. “I can drive when I want to.”
*Driver earnings may vary depending on location, demand, hours, drivers, and other variables.
The House meets at noon for a pro forma session. Lawmakers resume legislative work in the Capitol next month.
TheSenate will convene at 10 a.m. to resume consideration of the nomination of Chiquita Brooks-LaSure to be administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
The president and Vice President Harris will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 10:15 a.m. Biden and Harris will meet at 1:30 p.m. with the late George Floyd’s relatives in the Oval Office (closed to the press). The president will fly to Wilmington, Del., in the evening for an unspecified event extending several hours and then return to the White House tonight.
Economic indicator: The U.S. Census Bureau at 10 a.m. reports on new home sales in April.
The White House press briefing is scheduled at 12:30 p.m. The administration coronavirus response team will brief reporters at 1:30 p.m.
➔ INTERNATIONAL: Iran reached an agreement with the United Nations’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) on Monday to extend the use of surveillance cameras at Tehran’s atomic sites for one additional month. The announcement comes just a day after a high-ranking Iranian politician indicated the use of cameras would not continue. According to IAEA Director-General Rafael Mariano Grossi, the decision came after last-minute discussions with Ali Akbar Salehi, the head of Iran’s civilian nuclear program (The Hill). … The international uproar grew louder on Monday in protest against Belarus’s decision to pluck dissident journalist Roman Protasevich, 26, from a Ryanair flight on Sunday as it flew from Greece to Lithuania in order to place him under arrest. … The European Union agreed on Belarus sanctions, including banning its airlines from using the airspace and airports of the 27-nation bloc (The Associated Press). … Biden and his national security adviser in statements demanded Protasevich’s release and vowed the U.S. and European nations will hold Belarus “to account.” … Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko personally ordered a MiG-29 jet fighter to escort the civilian plane to the Minsk airport. In a statement, Ryanair said the crew had been “notified by Belarus Air Traffic Control of a potential security threat on board and were instructed to divert to the nearest airport, Minsk.” Why did Lukashenko go to so much trouble? (DW.com).
➔STATE WATCH: Texas Democrats are anxiously awaiting word on whether former Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D-Texas) will launch a bid to challenge Gov. Greg Abbott (R) next year. A source told The Associated Press that while O’Rourke is mulling the possibility, he is taking no formal steps toward launching a campaign … In Florida, Rep. Stephanie Murphy (D-Fla.) will not launch a bid to unseat Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and is expected to run for reelection in the House. The news comes on the heels of indications that Rep. Val Demings (D-Fla.) will launch a Senate campaign instead of a gubernatorial bid, with Murphy saying in a statement that a nasty primary will do no one any good (Politico). … Biden on Monday signed the Alaska Tourism Restoration Act, allowing cruise ships to return to the state this year (gcaptain.com). … Texas is set to allow people to carry handguns with no license, background check or training. Law enforcement and gun control groups object to the new measure, which is expected to be signed into law by Gov. Greg Abbott (R) (The Associated Press).
➔ SUPREME COURT: Justices on Monday declined to take up a case over whether to make it easier to hold municipalities liable for civil rights violations committed by their police, rejecting an appeal involving a man fatally shot by an officer in Ohio (Reuters).
THE CLOSER
And finally … 🐻 In some states, it is now black bear hunting season, and baiting is one of the most popular methods of hunting black bears throughout the United States and Canada. If hunters can use animal carcasses, cooking grease, peanut butter and forms of engineered bait to lure their prey, is there anything that’s off limits?
In Florida, some wild bears recently won their day in court when a man and his wife pleaded guilty to exploiting the animals’ weakness for doughnuts and pastries to lure them from their habitat in Ocala National Park to be tortured for video entertainment by releasing trained dogs and then posting the macabre attack scenes online. Local authorities arrested the couple and charged them with conspiracy to commit racketeering, animal baiting and fighting, and unlawful taking of a black bear. The husband faces the possibility of two years in prison (News18, The Daily Beast).
Hoorah for the bears.
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Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) has been repeatedly equating vaccination and mask-wearing rules to the Holocaust.
What started this: Greene tweeted yesterday, “Vaccinated employees get a vaccination logo just like the Nazi’s forced Jewish people to wear a gold star. Vaccine passports & mask mandates create discrimination against unvaxxed people who trust their immune systems to a virus that is 99% survivable.” Her full tweet — let’s just say the replies are *not* friendly to her: https://bit.ly/2SqPmHs
REACTION FROM THE TOP CONGRESSIONAL LEADERS — BIG YIKES:
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) said in a statement: “Marjorie is wrong, and her intentional decision to compare the horrors of the Holocaust with wearing masks is appalling. The Holocaust is the greatest atrocity committed in history. The fact that this needs to be stated today is deeply troubling.” https://bit.ly/34hie7O
From Speaker Nancy Pelosi(D-Calif.): “At a time when the Jewish people face increased violence and threats, anti-Semitism is on the rise in the Democrat Party and is completely ignored by Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Americans must stand together to defeat anti-Semitism and any attempt to diminish the history of the Holocaust.” https://bit.ly/34hie7On
Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) from the floor: “This morning Marjorie Taylor Greene, Republican congresswoman from Georgia, once again compared preparations taken against COVID to the Holocaust. These are sickening, reprehensible comments, and she should stop this vile language immediately.” https://bit.ly/34dE1x4
From Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.): McConnell told CNN that the comments were “outrageous” and “reprehensible.” https://bit.ly/34dE1x4
OTHER REACTIONS:
From Punchbowl News’s Jake Sherman: “I’m torn here. Don’t want to give this idiotic act any oxygen, but as a Jew, I feel compelled to point out how disgusting this is. Nazis murdered 6 million Jews. This kind of bullshit drives me crazy. absolutely crazy.” https://bit.ly/3flfsow
From Politico’s Sam Stein: “As I watch Marjorie Taylor Greene equate Covid vaccination efforts to the Holocaust, I can’t escape the memory of going to Yad Vashem and seeing the exhibit of shoes, preserved from Holocaust victims.” Photo and thread of tweets: https://bit.ly/3vmKXnF
JUST NOW — GREENE RESPONDS TO THE BACKLASH:
Greene posted a seven-tweet thread about her controversial comments.
Her apology — ‘I’m sorry, but…’: “I’m sorry some of my words make people uncomfortable, but this is what the American left is all about. And they are America last in every single way.” Read her full thread of tweets: https://bit.ly/3fNnipA
It’s Tuesday. 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
It’s been a year since George Floyd was killed by former police officer Derek Chauvin after Chauvin kneeled on his neck for more than nine minutes. https://bit.ly/3wApR59
How much has changed?: “The question of how much the nation has changed in the wake of the 42-year-old Black man’s death, which sparked a national outcry, the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement and calls for police reform and racial justice in nearly every area of American life, is [a difficult question] to answer.” Where we stand, via The Hill’s Marty Johnson: https://bit.ly/3wApR59
AROUND THE COUNTRY:
What a cute photo of George with his daughter Gianna: I hadn’t seen it until today (via NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s Sherrilyn Ifill) https://bit.ly/3wKGLyr
George Floyd’s brother thinks things have changed: In an interview on CNN’s “New Day” this morning, Philonise Floyd said: “I think things have changed. I think it’s moving slowly, but it’s making progress … I just want everything to be better in life because I don’t want people dying the same way my brother has passed.” https://bit.ly/34esvkW
Black families experience ‘year from hell’: Via The Hill’s Aris Folley: https://bit.ly/3fZ8lkL
WHERE THE POLICE REFORM LEGISLATION STANDS:
The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act is stalled in the Senate, with the debate hinging on “qualified immunity” — whether to protect police officers from civil lawsuits. https://bit.ly/3wy7vlC
Where Republicans stand on the bill: “Republicans have introduced their own police reform legislation that shares significant overlap with the Floyd bill, though it leaves qualified immunity untouched.”
CALLING ALL FLIES WHO COULD BE ON THAT WALL — THIS IS YOUR TIME:
President Biden will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin next month in Geneva. https://bit.ly/3uevZyA
When: June 16
Is this a surprise?: Nah, this meeting had been in the works for a while. But choosing the location had been a complication. https://politi.co/3fjZRoV
Is Biden traveling just for the meeting?: “Biden is slated to attend a Group of Seven (G-7) summit in the United Kingdom from June 11-13 and travel to Brussels for a NATO summit and meetings with European Union leaders on June 14.”
Moderna says that its COVID-19 vaccine is safe and appears to be effective for children ages 12-17. https://cnn.it/3fkIggU
But keep in mind: “The trial wasn’t designed to look specifically at efficacy. However, initial observations found that none of the children who received the vaccine got sick with Covid-19 starting 14 days after their second dose.”
Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) has become the first Republican senator to announce support for the bipartisan commission to investigate the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol attack. https://bit.ly/2QQoVdW
How many Republican ‘yes’ votes are needed: 10 to avoid the filibuster
Which GOP senators should we be turning our attention toward?: “Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) previously told reporters that he was inclined to vote for it. Meanwhile, Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) has started discussions with Democrats about potential amendments to the House bill.”
THE THREAT OF THE FILIBUSTER IS BACK — NO REAL SURPRISE THERE:
“The Senate is heading for its first filibuster fight of the year over creating a commission to probe the Jan. 6 attack, reviving frustration over the procedural roadblock.” https://bit.ly/3fPl3Cy
MEANWHILE, WITH THE INFRASTRUCTURE TALKS — A SHOT OF ADRENALINE COULDN’T HURT, THAT’S ALL I’M SAYING:
The bipartisan infrastructure talks are basically on life support. Where they stand: https://bit.ly/2QTtzIa
Via The Washington Post’s Dan Keating and Leslie Shapiro, “The country’s declining covid-19 case rates present an unrealistically optimistic perspective for half of the nation — the half that is still not vaccinated.” https://wapo.st/3bMxZI3
How so: “As more people receive vaccines, covid-19 cases are occurring mostly in the increasingly narrow slice of the unprotected population. So The Washington Post adjusted its case, death and hospitalization rates to account for that — and found that in some places, the virus continues to rage among those who haven’t received a shot.”
What the adjusted numbers show when only accounting for unvaccinated Americans: “The national death rate is roughly the same as it was two months ago and is barely inching down. The adjusted hospitalization rate is as high as it was three months ago. The case rate is still declining after the adjustment.”
TIDBIT — NYC IS KICKING REMOTE LEARNING TO THE CURB:
Via The New York Times’s Eliza Shapiro, New York City Mayor Bill DeBlasio (D) announced that remote learning will not be an option for students in the fall. https://nyti.ms/2RLC8VR
Via The New York Times’s Jesus Jiménez,“Although cursive handwriting ‘is a dying field,’ as one teacher said, it has made a comeback in some schools, including one in Maine where two students won awards this month.” https://nyti.ms/34hoNY6
The 549-page, $303.5 billion bipartisan highway bill that the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee will mark up Wednesday may become a cornerstone of President Joe Biden’s infrastructure proposal and one of the few bright spots of bipartisanship in what has become an increasingly tense process. Read more…
A growing consensus in Congress seemed to favor stripping military commanders of authority to decide which sexual crimes in the ranks should be prosecuted and instead empowering independent prosecutors to make those calls. The reality, senators showed on the floor Monday night, is far more complicated and contentious. Read more…
OPINION — No, the die is not cast for 2022 or 2024. But instead of laying the groundwork for a more thoughtful, less partisan discussion of the challenges facing this country, the past six months have raised more questions about America’s future and the rule of law. Read more…
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Susan Wild is known for being chatty, even for Capitol Hill, but she’s no blowhard. The Pennsylvania Democrat, who came to Congress as part of 2018’s blue wave, has tried to keep a low profile — even as two devastating events pushed her into the limelight. Read more…
While Congress remains deadlocked on immigration, state legislatures across the country are advancing bills to curb private immigration detention facilities in their states, and the concept has also gained traction in Congress. Read more…
Bipartisan momentum is building behind proposals to protect kids when they’re online as lawmakers at both ends of the Capitol push measures to update child privacy laws and hold social media companies liable for content posted on their platforms. Growing support for such measures is part of a notable new trend in Washington. Read more…
Senate Appropriations Chairman Patrick J. Leahy may no longer be planning to set aside half of earmarked funds for Republicans, a commitment he made months ago that his Republican counterpart expected as part of the upcoming appropriations process. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: How Washington will mark George Floyd’s death
Presented by Facebook
DRIVING THE DAY
BREAKING WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING — WaPo: “The Justice Department late Monday night released part of a key internal document used in 2019 to justify not charging President DONALD TRUMP with obstruction, but also signaled it would fight a judge’s effort to make the entire document public.”
This puts the Biden administration in the … interesting position of working to keep Trump’s DOJ’s secrets under wraps.
GEORGE FLOYD was murdered one year ago today.
President JOE BIDEN wanted to use that grim marker as a deadline for Congress to pass a police reform bill. But with no bill in sight, Biden has instead invited Floyd’s family to the Oval Office. The 1:30 p.m. meeting is closed to the press.
The big sticking point remains qualified immunity for police, but on Monday Bass and the two lead Senate negotiators — Democrat CORY BOOKER (N.J.), whose office told us he too will be meeting with the Floyd family, and Republican TIM SCOTT (S.C.) — released a statement noting they’re making “progress toward a compromise and remain optimistic about the prospects of achieving that goal.”
WaPo’s Cleve R. Wootson Jr.’s piece on the Biden meeting notes, “Floyd’s murder, and the graphic video that showed his final breaths, sparked an often-incendiary conversation about the role race plays in criminal justice, economics, education and other aspects of American life. But a conversation about systemic racism does not equate to action to dismantle it, and as the nation passes the grim anniversary, activists say that the politicians who embraced change have often failed to enact it.”
Floyd’s murder created a mass movement to rethink policing, and many on the left adopted “defund the police” as their new rallying cry. Biden never embraced that slogan, but plenty of Democratic-run cities did. The NYT takes a look at how the spirit of “defund the police” is playing out in Los Angeles, which “is facing a rise in gun violence” and where “the police budget is growing.”
JOIN US — Trump is winning the internal GOP war over the future of the party, following the ouster of Rep. LIZ CHENEY (R-Wyo.) from leadership and the looming death of a bipartisan commission to investigate the Jan. 6 riot. Join RACHAEL and EUGENE today at 1:30 p.m. for an interview with Rep. ADAM KINZINGER (R-Ill.), a lead member of the party’s anti-Trump wing. They’ll discuss his efforts to change the direction of the party — and whether it’s even possible.Register here
BIDEN’S TUESDAY:
— 10:15 a.m.: The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 1:30 p.m.: Biden and Harris will meet with Floyd’s family in the Oval Office.
— 5:55 p.m.: Biden will depart the White House en route to Wilmington, Del., where he is scheduled to arrive at 6:50 p.m. Biden will leave Wilmington at 8:10 p.m. to return to the White House, where he is scheduled to arrive at 9:05 p.m.
— Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m. The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 1:30 p.m.
THE HOUSE will meet at noon. ANTHONY FAUCI and NIH Director FRANCIS COLLINS will testify on the NIH budget before an Appropriations subcommittee at 10 a.m.
THE SENATE is in.
THE WEEK AHEAD — First lady JILL BIDEN will travel to Grand Rapids, Mich., and Kansas City, Mo., to visit vaccination clinics Thursday, the White House announced.
PLAYBOOK READS
CONGRESS
NO DEAL — The weekslong tango between Biden and Senate Republicans over infrastructure is coming to an end, with both sides sounding pessimistic about a deal. Senate Republicans will meet today to decide whether to counter the White House’s latest proposal to lower the total cost to $1.7 trillion. But even if they do, the two sides are still about $1.5 trillion apart in new spending after a month of talks — and are nowhere near deciding how to pay for it.
Burgess Everett and Marianne LeVine talked to a bunch of senators Monday about the state of play and crafted this stellar lede: “Washington’s bipartisan infrastructure talks may soon look a lot like its cicada population: squashed after staggering around haplessly.” Here’s a sampling from the piece:
— Sen. ROGER WICKER (R-Miss.), who is part of the GOP’s negotiating group, said his party won’t go “anywhere near the number the White House has proposed,” while Senate Majority Whip DICK DURBIN (D-Ill.) said he’d be “reluctant” to support a proposal below the lower $1.7 trillion threshold.
— Sen. SHELDON WHITEHOUSE (D-R.I.) didn’t mince words: “It’s time to move on.”
— Then again, neither did Sen. ROY BLUNT (R-Mo.), also a GOP negotiator: “I didn’t think the offer last week was very good.”
As of now, Sen. SHELLEY MOORE CAPITO (R-W.Va.), the lead Republican negotiator, is sounding the most optimistic. But one Republican does not a filibuster-proof majority make.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Today Sens. CYNTHIA LUMMIS (R-Wyo.) and KYRSTEN SINEMA (D-Ariz.)will launch the Senate Financial Innovation Caucus. Sens. JOHN HICKENLOOPER (D-Colo.), TIM SCOTT (R-S.C.), MARSHA BLACKBURN (R-Tenn.), MIKE BRAUN (R-Ind.)and BILL CASSIDY (R-La)are also joining.
MCGAHN TO TESTIFY NEXT WEEK — Quick, someone give JERRY NADLER some oxygen. About two years — two years!— after he first subpoenaed DON MCGAHN to testify about allegations of obstruction of justice depicted in special counsel ROBERT MUELLER’S report, the long-lost White House counsel is finally set to answer questions. Charlie Savage at the NYT has more on Trump’s about-face on this issue after he blocked McGahn’s testimony and dragged out the probe using the court system. All of a sudden, Trump is letting this go. He must have bigger legal problems to worry about. …
THE WHITE HOUSE
NOT GIVING UP … YET — “‘Where does that leave us?’: Biden confronts the limits of his unity talk,”by Natasha Korecki, Christopher Cadelago and Laura Barrón-López: “White House officials say the president is not quite ready to end talks and begin the process of moving ahead with a Democrat-only bill. They say that discussions with Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) had been productive and that she has operated in good faith as a lead negotiator for Republicans. On Monday, Biden hosted Republican Sens. LISA MURKOWSKI and DAN SULLIVAN and Rep. DON YOUNG – all of Alaska – albeit to sign an act aimed at boosting tourism in their state, rather than infrastructure.
“But on Monday, even members of his own party on the Hill were showing signs of moving on to an all-Democratic approach to infrastructure. Senate Democrats were revving up discussions around the reconciliation process that could serve as a fallback for passing the entire package without GOP support, two sources with knowledge of the talks told POLITICO, including an aide to Sen. BERNIE SANDERS (I-Vt.), who chairs the Senate Budget Committee.”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
THE DESANTIS-GAETZ NEXIS — Our Tallahassee bureau chief Matt Dixonhas a must-read today on the once-close relationship between Florida Gov. RON DESANTIS and scandal-plagued Rep. MATT GAETZ (R-Fla.) — and the implications for a potential DeSantis presidential bid in 2024: “DeSantis’ ties to Gaetz could pressure the governor to answer difficult questions about whether he was aware of any alleged wrongdoing as he seeks a second term as governor and possibly the White House. As an adviser, Gaetz urged the governor to appoint several people who are also now ensnared in the federal investigation. Gaetz was also close friends with JOEL GREENBERG, the man at the center of a federal investigation into sex trafficking.
“In interviews, more than half a dozen former DeSantis campaign advisers and early administration staffers say Gaetz had huge influence over DeSantis, who in the run-up to his gubernatorial campaign was an outsider in state-level Florida politics. That was a world where Gaetz had long been an operator. Now, as DeSantis runs for reelection and is likely laying the groundwork for a 2024 presidential run, he has all-but turned his back on Gaetz.”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
ANDREW YANG’S wife, EVELYN, fired back at the N.Y. Daily News for publishing a cartoon by BILL BRAMHALL depicting Yang as a bumbling tourist stepping out of the Times Square subway station, which he recently declared as his favorite stop. (A choice that was ridiculed by New Yorkers for a place only beloved by tourists.) Evelyn Yang called the cartoon racist, tweeting: “I can’t believe my eyes. To publish this racist disfiguration of @andrewyang as a tourist, in NYC where I was born, where Andrew lived for 25 years, where our boys were born, where 16% of us are Asian and anti-Asian hate is up 900%.” AAPI Victory Alliance called it “disgusting and wrong,” adding, “Every single day Asian Americans have to fight the notion that we are foreigners.” Expect to hear more about this from his campaign today.
YANG TESTS THE TRUMP MODEL FOR WINNING OFFICE —“The Post-Embarrassment Media Campaign of Andrew Yang,” by NYT’s chief TV critic James Poniewozik: “[A]s a mayoral candidate, he is also testing the theory that in today’s politics, there is no such thing as bad publicity. … More than once, people have compared him with MICHAEL SCOTT of ‘The Office,’ the clueless enthusiast and tourist who praised his favorite authentic New York pizza slice, from Sbarro.
“But here’s the thing: Michael Scott somehow managed to get and keep that managerial job at Dunder Mifflin. And people happily watched his character for years. Would you want him to be mayor of Scranton, much less the largest city in America? Maybe not. But beyond the vicarious laughs over his embarrassments, viewers responded to his indomitable, unshameable optimism.”
NO HOLDS BARRED — “Texas poised to allow unlicensed carrying of handguns,” AP: “Texas is poised to remove one of its last major gun restrictions after lawmakers approved allowing people to carry handguns without a license, and the background check and training that go with it.
“The Republican-dominated Legislature approved the measure Monday, sending it to Gov. GREG ABBOTT, who has said he will sign it despite the objections of law enforcement groups who say it would endanger the public and police. Gun control groups also oppose the measure, noting the state’s recent history of mass shootings, including those at an El Paso Walmart, a church in Sutherland Springs, and a high school outside Houston.”
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
BLINKEN ON THE MOVE — “Blinken Dispatched to Middle East Amid Israel-Gaza Truce,”WSJ: “Blinken left Monday and is set to return Thursday, visiting Jerusalem, Ramallah in the West Bank, Cairo and Amman, Jordan, according to the State Department. He planned to meet with Israeli Prime Minister BENJAMIN NETANYAHU, Palestinian Authority President MAHMOUD ABBAS and other officials involved in talks.
“The U.S., together with its allies Egypt, Qatar and several European nations, worked to persuade both Israel and leaders of Hamas to end their military campaigns. Washington doesn’t have direct contact with Hamas, which governs Gaza and is designated by the U.S. as a terrorist organization.”
POMPEO TOO — “Mike Pompeo plans trip to Israel,”by Betsy Woodruff Swan and Daniel Lippman: “Pompeo’s potential trip could come the same week that Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN is also traveling there, and as conflict between Israel and Hamas has roiled the region.
“A person close to the former secretary of state said the plans are not finalized because of Israel’s Covid protocols. That person added that Pompeo, a former CIA director, would travel as a private citizen to celebrate the retirement of Yossi Cohen, the head of Israel’s intelligence agency, Mossad. Pompeo may also meet privately with nongovernmental officials, according to the person, who added that Pompeo alerted Blinken of his plans.”
DETAINED IN MYANMAR — “Metro Detroit native and journalist detained by military government in Myanmar,”Detroit News: “DANNY FENSTER, 37, managing editor of Frontier Myanmar, has worked in Myanmar for about two years, his brother, BRYAN FENSTER, told the Free Press on Monday. In February, the military in Myanmar seized power in a coup. Fenster was at the airport on his way to visit family in the U.S. when he was detained, said Bryan.”
TRUMP CARDS
SONDLAND LAWSUIT INCOMING — “Key impeachment witness Gordon Sondland sues Mike Pompeo and U.S. for $1.8 million in legal fees,”WaPo: “The suit, filed Monday in federal court in the District of Columbia, alleges that Pompeoreneged on his promise that the State Department would cover the fees after Sondland delivered bombshell testimony accusing Trump and his aides of pressuring the government of Ukraine to investigate then-presidential candidate Joe Biden and his son Hunter in exchange for military aid.”
PLAYBOOKERS
PAUL PUTS HIS ‘MARX’ ON ’80s POP STAR: Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) accused ’80s pop star Richard Marx of encouraging violence against him after he received a suspicious package containing white powder and a threatening message at his home in Kentucky on Monday, Tara reported. The Capitol Police and FBI are investigating the incident, according to Paul’s office. It’s unclear whether the sender was motivated by Marx, but Paul called him a “C-list celebrity.” Paul told POLITICO in a statement: “Just this weekend Richard Marx called for violence against me and now we receive this powder filled letter.” Marx, whose top hits include the love ballad “Right Here Waiting,”tweeted Sunday, “I’ll say it again: If I ever meet Rand Paul’s neighbor I’m going to hug him and buy him as many drinks as he can consume.” That’s the same neighbor who in 2017 pleaded guilty to assaulting a member of Congress in November 2017.
SPOTTED at a reception and screening for “Oslo,” hosted by Warner Media, HBO Films and honorary co-hosts Sens. Jim Risch (R-Idaho) and Chris Coons (D-Del.) on Monday at AT&T The Forum: Tara Grace, Bartlett Sher, Cambra Overend, Anniken Krutnes, Chris Dodd, John Breaux, Dana Bash, John McCarthy, Elizabeth Bagley, Liz Johnson, Rachel Pearson, Steve Clemons, Ryan Williams, Ryan White, James Hooley, Kevin McDonald, Alexa Green, Eileen Bliss and Virginia Coyne.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Kaitlin Fahey is joining The Win Company as a partner. She previously was chief of staff for Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.).
TRUMP ALUMNI — Nicholas Mikula is joining Invariant. He most recently was a consultant to the Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for intelligence and security and is a House Armed Services Committee alum.… Luke Lindberg is now head of global strategy and executive director of Innovation and World Clinic at Sanford Health. He most recently was chief of staff and chief strategy officer at the Export-Import Bank. … Patrick Davis has launched Patrick Davis Consulting, which does comms, political and public affairs strategy and consulting. He most recently was senior adviser at the EPA.
TRANSITIONS — John Monsif will be director of U.S. federal government relations at Carrier, which plans to open a D.C. office in the fall. He previously was director of U.S. government relations at McDonald’s. … Meghan Biery is now director of global technology and security policy at the Semiconductor Industry Association. She most recently was senior national security policy adviser at the Bureau of Industry and Security in the Department of Commerce. … Shannon Bartlett will be the first chief diversity, equity and inclusion officer at the National Geographic Society. She currently is associate dean of inclusion and engagement at Northwestern University’s Pritzker School of Law. …
… Ellie Collinson is now COO at RepresentUs. She most recently was COO of the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee.… Yvonne Gutierrez and Angélica César are joining Latino Victory Project. Gutierrez will be managing director and most recently was head of community engagement at Supermajority. César will be a finance associate and most recently was leadership development coordinator at Aliento. … Mitch Freckleton is returning to his home state of Utah to join Arena as an account manager. He most recently was political director for John James’ Senate campaign and is an RNC alum.
ENGAGED — Nick Solheim, founder of the Wallace Institute for Arctic Security and co-founder and COO at American Moment, proposed to Evie Fordham, a digital reporter at Fox News, on May 18 at Denali Basecamp in Talkeetna, Alaska. The couple met at trivia in D.C. Pics
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) (61) … Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan … Anna Palmer … David Martosko of Zenger News and Daily Mail TV … Greg Bluestein of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution … Laurie Rubiner … Megan Van Etten of PhRMA … Savannah Haeger of FedEx … Kate Ackley Zeller of CQ Roll Call … Capricia Marshall … Stefan Becket … POLITICO’s Catherine Kim and Diana Hernandez … Savanna Peterson of Klobuchar’s office (26) … Annie Clark of Sen. Susan Collins’ (R-Maine) office … Interior’s Alexandra Sanchez … Edelman’s Amy Fox … AFL-CIO’s Carolyn Bobb … former Sen. Gordon Smith (R-Ore.) … Hayley Miller … Courtney Joline … Sean Rushton … Margaret Dobrydnio Motes … Conor Powell … Matt Lakin … Mark Shields … former Reps. Steve Russell (R-Okla.) and Ed Whitfield (R-Ky.) … Ron Nessen … Emily Bittner
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.
“For the eyes of the Lord are on the righteous, and his ears are open to their prayer. But the face of the Lord is against those who do evil,” (1 Peter 3:12, ESV).
Brian Myers: When considering the responsibilities for the Christian in relation to his citizenship, we first need to consider what kind of nation we are in.
As always happens with fake outrage, the dust kicked up in the wake of Daunte Wright’s accidental shooting death settled once the utility of exploiting his circumstances dipped below levels of marginal return. There was also no more merch to loot. Readers will recall not that long ago the Minnesota …
I woke up today thinking about three movies that I believe are among the greatest underrated films ever made. Ground Hog Day, Galaxy Quest, and The Majestic. They are almost plotless, fantasy and fantastical, and centered on men who are centered on themselves. But all have, and will, stand the …
The Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act, which President Joe Biden has endorsed, would mainstream labor unions’ illegal dues collection practices, according to worker and business groups. “What this bill is about is giving union officials dramatic new powers over employees. There’s nothing in this bill that deals with …
Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing on Tuesday then he will . President Biden’s Itinerary for 5/25/21: All Times EDT 10:15 AM Receive daily briefing – Oval Office1:30 PM Meet with George Floyd’s family – Oval Office5:55 PM Depart White House en route to Wilmington, Delaware6:50 PM …
The corporate press spent the better part of a year calling the lab leak theory a conspiracy because former President Donald Trump talked about it, according to Washington Post senior reporter Aaron Blake. “Given everything we know about how Trump handled such things, caution and skepticism were invited. That (very …
Democratic Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s administration has rescinded the rule that Whitmer broke over the weekend. Whitmer apologized Sunday after photos posted over the weekend showed her dining with at least a dozen others at The Landshark Bar & Grill in East Lansing, Michigan. Breitbart News first reported the news …
An “avalanche” of “expanding and accelerating” demographic forces is driving birth rates down, demographers warned The New York Times. The publication described ghost cities in northeastern China, South Korean universities scrambling for students, hundreds of thousands of demolished properties in Germany and shut down maternity wards in Italy. Demographers predicted …
Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer made a name for herself early in the COVID-19 pandemic by enacting particularly harsh restrictions in her state and making full use of her expansive “emergency powers.” But she now finds herself joining the long list of lockdown-happy politicians caught violating their own orders. “Gov. Gretchen …
Golf is not just a game or a sport. Golf is a bridge. Golf connects generations, genders, and the chapters of one’s life. Golf is not just chasing a little ball around the links but also a game of mind and body. Golf comes to life in the spring and …
Democratic Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer apologized Sunday after she was caught dining maskless indoors with a dozen people, violating her own COVID restrictions. Photos first reported by Breitbart News showed Whitmer dining with at least a dozen other people at The Landshark Bar & Grill in East Lansing, Michigan. “Yesterday, …
In a new intelligence report, details are emerging how workers at the Wuhan Institute of Virology became so sick in November 2019, that they required hospitalization. While there were some details from a previous intelligence report issued by the Trump administration, the new details go much further. The new report …
Joe Biden has had his 100-day honeymoon. People were bound to start complaining eventually. But then something at the gas station caught my attention. As I was filling my car, I noticed that someone had put a sticky note on the gas pump. It read, “Prices Compliments of Joe Biden.” …
For those of us who had frequently indulged in consuming marijuana at some point in our pasts, hearing the term ‘cannabis equity’ could have a variety of meanings. Perhaps we indulged in pot-smoking when we were younger; before growing up and realizing that the television ad with the frying pan …
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki holds a briefing Monday. The briefing is scheduled to start at 12:00 p.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 Tuesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I think Elvis became a werewolf.
When I’m not busy trying to figure out how Legos can be LGBTQ, I like to read stories about parallel dimensions and alternative universes. I’m not reading as many of them since Joe Biden hit Washington in January with his 720 bajillion votes and his Occupy Oval Office protest.
Well, I don’t read as many of them in books, that is. Both social and mainstream media keep providing me with word snapshots of Joe Biden’s America that ostensibly describe the country I live in, but don’t jibe with the reality in front of my face.
Am I going crazier or might I be glitching between different realities in the multiverse?
I will have a column out later today that goes off on the works of pure fiction being created about the Biden presidency by the likes of WaPo and The New York Times, but the newspapers and news agencies aren’t the only members of the Democrat Media Complex engaging in a lot of creative writing these days. Pollsters are a big part of the propaganda machine, and for some reason, a lot of people still listen to them. It’s the MSM proper that keeps them in business though. Get the polls to provide the bones for a story, and the media will do the rest.
Something like this:
There is no objective way to look at this presidency and say it’s going well. None. Zero. Nada. This poll is pure fantasy. https://t.co/MmNtPILn24
I doubt that 62 percent of Joe Biden thinks that Joe Biden is doing a good job. This is no more believable than the idea that I can become an outside linebacker in the NFL.
By now, anyone who doesn’t know that polls are tools for manipulating public opinion, not for discovering what public opinion is, simply hasn’t been paying attention. And when poll results are published under the headline “The Big Lie: Over half of Republicans believe Donald Trump is the actual President of the United States,” it’s clear that we’re not dealing with honest brokers. With the recent news out of Arizona, Michigan, Georgia, Pennsylvania and New Hampshire, it’s clear that to believe that the 2020 presidential election was hardly the freest and fairest in American history is far from falling for a Big Lie. And that’s just the beginning of this poll’s dishonesty.
A research firm called Ipsos conducted the poll on behalf of Thomson Reuters. Ipsos bills itself as “the world’s third largest Insights and Analytics company,” and claims to “provide true understanding and powerful insights into the actions, opinions and motivations of citizens, consumers, patients, customers or employees.” However, Ipsos was accused of “systematic” and “massive” liberal bias in its polling during the 2016 presidential campaign, and there is no indication that it has mended its ways since then. On the basis of its “Big Lie” poll, instead of ridding itself of its biases, it is doubling down on them.
It’s as if the Democratic National Committee is providing a list of what they would like a poll to say and the pollsters whip the info off to the Keebler Elf tree and make the magic happen.
This poll also helps keep alive the great liberal myth that Americans are now more worried about white supremacist domestic terrorism than we are about the Islamic variety that keeps, you know, actually killing people. Robert picks apart the polling sleight of hand used to achieve this. As he explains in his conclusion, it’s more about what’s not there than what is:
But it’s clear that Ipsos isn’t about revealing. It’s about concealing. This poll is designed to conceal the fact that very few Americans are genuinely worried about this phantom menace of white supremacist terror that we hear so much about except in terms of genuine white supremacists committing actual terrorist attacks. It fudges its categories so that people who are concerned about jihad violence, antifa and Black Lives Matter violence, and “white supremacist” violence are all lumped together in a way that gives the impression that “white supremacists” and “gun nuts” are what most Americans are worried about. And those just happen to be the Democrats’ two primary targets today. What a coincidence.
It’s easy to dismiss all of this with a “Who cares? Nobody trusts polls anyway” attitude. Again though, they’re an integral part of the web of lies spun by the mainstream media to prop up the progressive creep who is wrecking the country. And plenty of people do believe them, usually the kind of people who can be easily swayed near election time.
There are a lot of moving parts in the Democrats’ propaganda machine. Pollsters are some of the ugliest.
New VIP Gold Chat!
The boss (Paula) will be leading the Ladies of PJ Media in a new weekly chat for our VIP Gold subscribers. Seriously, these things are a lot of fun. We can speak freely without getting dinged by the social media thought police.
TUESDAY at 1 PM: VIP GOLD Live Chat with Paula Bolyard, Megan Fox, Stacey Lennox, and Victoria Taft https://t.co/5izOgHVkNv
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
COVID-19 origin dissent ‘suppressed’ by intelligence community, House GOP report finds . . . US intelligence failures related to the COVID-19 global pandemic include suppression of dissenting views on the origin of the virus, a recent report by House Republicans on the intelligence oversight panel concluded. “We believe the [intelligence community] failed to properly support policymakers with timely products and analysis. The report that linked China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) to the pandemic’s outbreak states, “Republican members are aware of allegations that [U.S. intelligence agencies] suppressed dissenting views related to the origins of the pandemic and that the community relied upon ‘outside’ experts with concerning yet undisclosed entanglements.”
“Why is this important? This is about bioweapons. This is about biowarfare. This is very concerning,” California Rep. Devin Nunes, the ranking Republican on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, told Fox News in releasing the report last week. Washington Times
How the Liberal Media Dismissed the Lab-Leak Theory and Smeared Its Supporters . . . The hypothesis that COVID-19 may have originated in a lab in Wuhan, China, has gained more and more credibility. A week ago, 18 prominent scientists signed a letter published in Science calling for an open investigation into the virus’s origins. US intelligence reportedly believes three researchers at the Wuhan Institute of Virology became sick enough in November 2019 to require hospitalization, lending even more credence to the possibility of a lab leak. This account of the virus’s origins is highly plausible, and at least as well-grounded as the original story of an infection that naturally leapt from a bat to a person. Nevetherless, many mainstream journalists, especially the left-leaning ones, dismissed the lab-leak hypothesis out of hand as a conspiracy theory. In part, they were deceived by some especially voluble public-health experts. NYMag
My commentary to this awful situation that we are in:
Politicizing intelligence about threats to America is dangerous. It’s even more dangerous when the biased media, plays a state propaganda arm, aligned with a specific ideology, and not only doesn’t question the predominant “fake” hypothesis, but aids in spread it and suppresses alternative analysis. This type of intelligence-media “collusion” has tragic consequences.
This reminds me of what happened with the Russia threat. Similar to the COVID threat — mishandled by the Intelligence Community, the government apparatchiks, and the media — the real Russia threat, back in 2016 and before, was politicized and fell through the cracks. The Democrats, often deliberately, conflated Russia threat with the false narrative, created by corrupt intelligence officials, of “Trump-Russia collusion.” The Republicans didn’t want to “touch” the Russia threat, out of concern of casting doubt on the legitimacy of Trump’s presidency.
This is why, as a former DIA intelligence analyst, I wrote “Putin’s Playbook: Russia’s Secret Plan to Defeat America.” My hope is that another intel officer steps up and writes a book about how the COVID threat has fallen the cracks of USG bureaucracy, killing countless Americans.
Politics
Biden flips on backing Abraham Accords . . . The White House is now dismissing President Trump’s Abraham Accords between Arab states and Israel — after candidate Joseph R. Biden in 2020 effusively praised the deals and took credit for laying the diplomatic groundwork. The normalization pacts between Israel and a number of Arab states were at the heart of the Trump administration’s Middle East strategy, easing Israel’s economic and diplomatic isolation and building up a regional coalition of allies to confront Iran and its proxies. Washington Times
Psaki claims rise in crime is due to guns . . . There were more than 20,000 murders last year, the most in about 25 years. Are police afraid to do their jobs because they’ll end up being criticized by the White House for being part of the “systemic racism” that supposedly infects the country. From yesterday’s White House transcript: REPORTER: This past weekend there were more than a dozen mass shootings across this country. 4,000 more people shot and killed by guns in 2020 compared to the year before. Is there a crime problem in this country? PSAKI: Well, I would say certainly there is a guns problem, and that’s something the president would say. There are communities where local violence and community violence is an issue, and that’s one of the reasons that we have proposed and have now are implementing funding for community violence prevention programs across the country. White House Dossier
DeSantis signs bill to fine tech companies for banning politicians . . . Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed a bill Monday that will fine social media platforms that try to permanently ban political candidates. DeSantis and other Republicans have touted the bill as a way to protect Floridians over accusations of tech giants censoring GOP lawmakers, but it faced pushback from Democrats in the state legislature and the tech industry over imposing control over how platforms moderate content. The bill prohibits most tech companies from banning politicians in the state.
Trump’s 1776 Commission urges states to oppose Biden funding for CRT in K-12 . . . A Trump administration commission tasked with promoting “patriotic education” is calling on the Biden administration to withdraw a proposal to fund history and civics programs informed by critical race theory (CRT). The 1776 Commission met in D.C. Monday despite being disbanded by President Biden on his first day in office. It published its final report just two days before the presidential transfer of power. The proposed federal rule would prioritize funding for history and civics curricula that consider “systemic marginalization, biases, inequities, and discriminatory policy and practice in American history” and incorporate “racially, ethnically, culturally, and linguistically diverse perspectives.” Just the news
Rand Paul receives suspicious package containing white powder at home . . . The FBI and Capitol Hill police are investigating a suspicious package that was delivered to the home of Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.). The package also featured an image of Paul in bandages with a gun to his head. The text accompanying the image stated: “I’ll finish what your neighbor started you motherf——“. The threat referenced an assault on Paul by his neighbor in 2017 that left him with five broken ribs. Paul addressed the article about the package in a tweet, writing that he takes threats like this “immensely seriously.” “As a repeated target of violence, it is reprehensible that Twitter allows C-list celebrities to encourage violence against me and my family,” Paul wrote, slamming the social media platform. The Hill
But Senator Paul is not afraid.
Sasse Urges Biden To Punish Putin After Belarus Hijacks Plane With ‘Moscow’s Blessing’ . . . Republican Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse urged President Joe Biden to punish Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday, arguing that the Belarussian government’s recent hijacking of an airplane was done with “Moscow’s blessing.” Belarus forced down a Ryanair flight between Greece and Lithuania on Sunday and arrested a dissident journalist on board. Sasse argues the incident shows Putin and his allies are “emboldened” thanks to Biden’s decision to end sanctions against the Nord Stream 2 oil pipeline last week. Daily Caller
National Security
Russian Military Seeks to Outmuscle U.S. in Arctic . . . For Moscow it is the last geopolitical battleground where it holds the advantage over Washington and Beijing. Russia’s military laid the final stretch of reinforced concrete on a runway to Nagurskoye Airbase, located on a largely ice-locked archipelago in the Arctic Ocean, to make it long enough to handle modern jet fighters and strategic bombers. Putin is turning a once-abandoned staging point for Soviet aircraft into one of Russia’s most advanced military outposts, meant to service the Kremlin’s ambitions in the resource-rich Arctic. A new military district is formed in January under the command of the Northern Fleet, Russia’s foremost Arctic naval force. Russia’s MiG-31 war planes have been landing in Nagurskoye since last year, and the new military district is receiving its own fleet of Su-34 fighter-bombers. The goal is to project Russian power in a region where Washington is lagging. Wall Street Journal
Power projection? Well, this is a similar reaction that I would get in the IC sometimes, when I brought up some of Russia’s suspicious activities. “Nothing to worry about here. This is just for strategic targeting.”
Belarus Flight Diversion Worries Airline Industry; ‘We’re in Uncharted Territory’ . . . The forced diversion of a Ryanair flight over Belarus threatens to undermine a set of safety procedures built up over decades between commercial airlines and the governments and militaries of countries they fly over. Belarusian President on Sunday scrambled a jet fighter that escorted the Ryanair commercial aircraft to Minsk as it was passing through Belarus airspace. Belarus said it did so because of suspicion that explosives were on board. Authorities there then arrested a prominent journalist onboard, before allowing the plane to continue its journey. The European Union, the U.K., Ukraine and Lithuania banned their own airlines from flying over Belarus. Approximately 3,000 flights each week transit Belarus.
The move to avoid the country adds to restrictions already in place in the east of Ukraine following the downing of a Malaysia Airlines jet in 2014. While not presenting a major detour for most airlines, rerouting adds time and additional fuel expenses to flights predominantly between Europe and Southeast Asia. Wall Street Journal
Coronavirus
Project Veritas exposes how FB shuts down COVID-19 ‘vaccine hesitancy’ . . . Facebook is suppressing “vaccine hesitancy” behind the scenes, limiting the reach of comments that express concerns about COVID-19 inoculations or share negative experiences, even if accurate, according to an investigation released Monday by Project Veritas. Project Veritas posted a video featuring interviews with two anonymous “insiders” identified as Facebook employees, and produced alleged internal documents detailing the tech platform’s effort to “[d]rastically reduce user exposure to vaccine hesitancy.” The leaked documents indicate that the tech giant set up a “Vaccine Hesitancy Comment Demotion” tier system run on 1.5% of Facebook and Instagram accounts, which number nearly 3.8 billion worldwide. Washington Times
University of Virginia bans unvaccinated students from in-person classes, campus . . . University of Virginia students who have not been fully vaccinated against the COVID-19 vaccine will be barred from participating in in-person classes in the fall semester and cannot step foot on university grounds, school leaders announced Monday. Students will have to provide proof of vaccination by July 1. Otherwise, they cannot attend in-person classes or step foot on university grounds. Just the News
It won’t be too long before high schools and universities start mandating lobotomies for students who oppose critical race theory. Think it’s funny – look up what the Soviets did with those who opposed socialism.
International
US SECSTATE Blinken will find Hamas’ fiery Islamism nullifies two-state solution . . . When US Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrives in the region this week for the talks in Jerusalem, Ramallah, Amman, and Cairo, he will find that the prospect of a two-state solution, resurrected this time by President Biden, is more elusive than ever before. Biden hoped the Gaza conflict and ceasefire would serve US diplomacy for leveraging fresh negotiations for an independent Palestine to rise alongside the state of Israel. That plan has been overlaid by the radical Hamas’ exploitation of the Gaza conflict to spark an upsurge of violent religious extremism. It has spread its anti-Semitic tentacles into western countries thinly disguised as support for the Palestinian cause. DEBKAfile
Colombia Is Being Threatened by Leftist Violence. Biden’s Silence Is Deafening . . . Colombia, one of the United States’ oldest and most reliable allies in the hemisphere, has been rocked by political violence in the past few months aimed at destabilizing the country. The government of democratically elected President Ivan Duque has been targeted by the same violent, narco-funded, Cuban- and Venezuelan-affiliated leftist guerrillas and terrorist gangs that have been seeking to overthrow democracy in Colombia for the past seven decades. This latest eruption of deadly violence—in a country that has mourned tens of thousands of similarly needless deaths over many years—began on April 28. Daily Signal
Money
Amazon Nears Deal to Buy Hollywood Studio MGM . . . Amazon is nearing a deal to buy the Hollywood studio MGM Holdings for almost $9 billion including debt, a pact that would turn a film operation founded in the silent era into a streaming asset for the e-commerce giant. The deal would mark Amazon’s second-largest acquisition in history, behind its $13.7 billion purchase of Whole Foods in 2017, and highlight the premium that content is commanding as streaming wars force consolidation. Wall Street Journal
China’s renminbi hits three-year high against dollar . . . China’s currency hit its strongest level against the dollar in three years, posing a challenge for Beijing as it seeks to balance demand for the country’s exports with surging commodity prices. The onshore-traded renminbi gained 0.2 per cent to reach Rmb6.4052 per greenback on Tuesday, its highest point since June 2018. Financial Times
Why the Belarusian journalist was snatched from the Ryanair flight . . . Roman Protasevich was reportedly arrested during the enforced stopover of Ryanair flight FR4978 that was supposed to take him from Athens to Vilnius diverted toward Minsk. Ryanair called the forced landing an “act of aviation piracy.” Protasevich, 26, is among a group of inventive journalists who have detailed the violence used by forces loyal to Lukashenko to help him hang on to power. Belarus ranks 158 out of 180 countries in press freedom, according to the annual ranking by the NGO Reporters Without Borders. “Belarus is the most dangerous country in Europe for media personnel. Critical journalists and bloggers are subjected to threats and violence and are arrested in large numbers,” it said. PoliticoEU
You should also know
Scholar Removed From American Psychological Email Group For Saying There Are Only Two Sexes . . . An emeritus professor of psychology and neuroscience at Duke University has been removed from an American Psychological Association (APA) email group for suggesting there are only two sexes. John Staddon was removed from the Society for Behavioral Neuroscience and Comparative Psychology Division 6 listserv, which is overseen by the APA, after posing a series of questions to the group that apparently “upset others.” . Staddon believes the post that resulted in his removal from the group was one in which he asked: “Hmm… Binary view of sex false? What is the evidence? Is there a Z chromosome?”
Staddon was informed of his removal in an email from the presidential trio of the APA division, who said they had received complaints against him. Daily Wire
Socialism breeds censorship and, inevitably, snitching. In the totalitarian socialist USSR, there was also a culture of reporting on your neighbor. You were always on the look out — before you said something that could be interpreted as criticism of the socialist system — for whom else might be listening.
DeSantis Asks Reporter Why Iran Leader Allowed To ‘Talk About Killing Jews’ On Social Media But Trump Is Banned . . . Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis torched a reporter Monday who asked whether the governor signed a Big Tech censorship bill because of former President Donald Trump. “You’re loyal to former President Donald Trump, and Donald Trump is now a resident in Florida and he was de-platformed,” the unidentified reporter asks. “Is this bill for him?” “The bill is for everyday Floridians, this is what we’ve said and it will allow any Floridian to be able to provide what they’re doing. But I do think that’s another issue that has been brought to bear: when you de-platform the president of the United States but you let Ayatollah Khomeini talk about killing Jews, that is wrong,” DeSantis said, referring to the Supreme Leader of Iran.
The crowd went into thunderous applause in response. Daily Caller
The Rise of Woke Anti-Semitism . . . In the quarter-century the FBI has kept data records, hate crimes against blacks have declined dramatically—by more than a third between 1996 and 2019, the latest year of full data. By contrast, the number of anti-Semitic crimes—which are, proportionate to the share of Jews in the population, much more frequent than antiblack crime—has scarcely changed. Outbursts of anti-Semitic violence occurred at times with the encouragement of black leaders such as Louis Farrakhan or the now supposedly respectable Al Sharpton. This latest outbreak, however, has come about in direct response to the recent conflict in Gaza. The rhetoric of some leading leftist Democrats has helped nourish resentments and prejudices. Rep. Ilhan Omar, with a strong track record of promoting anti-Semitic tropes, has talked of “war crimes” committed in Gaza. Her colleague Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has described Israel as an “apartheid” state, a weighty accusation of violent racism with historic resonance. Wall Street Journal
The Child Soldiers of the Culture War . . . In New York City, adult activists use teenagers as human shields. Last October, a group of New York City parents gathered outside City Hall to defend accelerated academic programs. The city’s Department of Education had been chipping away at those programs for over two years—part of its “equity”-oriented agenda—and the predominantly Asian crowd was fed up. A group of 16- to 17-year-old students activists called Teens Take Charge started a skirmish, which was an especially bitter episode in the ongoing debate over New York City’s elite public schools, where standardized tests are an important factor in admissions. Those tests, the city’s education department has argued, are systemically racist, since very few black and Latino students do well enough on them to be admitted to top schools like Stuyvesant or Bronx Science. On the other side of the debate are parents—particularly low-income Asian parents—who see the tests as engines of upward mobility and oppose efforts to eliminate them. Washington Free Beacon
Guilty Pleasures
Kitten trapped under vehicle goes through car wash before rescue . . . Police in New York said a kitten trapped under a vehicle went through a car wash before being discovered by the driver and rescued by authorities.
The Cheektowaga Police Department said the driver had made an approximately 10-mile drive from Buffalo to Cheektowaga, gone through a car wash and parked at a mall before a bystander heard the kitten meowing in distress under the vehicle. A pair of police officers were called to the scene and climbed under the vehicle to rescue the feline. The owner of the vehicle said she did not know where the kitten could have come from, as she does not own a cat.
Happy Tuesday! Thanks to everyone who reached out yesterday to share your thoughts on our COVID-19 data, and whether we should keep the charts in the newsletter as the case numbers continue to decline.
It’s a simple process for us at this point, and since so many of you have made it a part of your morning routine, we’ll keep it up for a while yet. As one of you wrote: “Let’s watch victory over this damn thing happen day-by-day.”
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
European Union leaders sanctioned Belarus on Monday, banning the country’s airlines from using EU airspace and airports and encouraging EU-based airlines to avoid Belarusian airspace. The move came a day after the Belarusian government—led by President Alexander Lukashenko—forced a Ryanair plane carrying 26-year-old opposition journalist Roman Protasevich to land in Minsk so authorities could arrest him. President Joe Biden added yesterday he “welcomes” the EU’s actions, and has “asked [his] team to develop appropriate options to hold accountable those responsible.”
The White House announced Monday it is doubling the amount of federal government spending directed toward nationwide preparations for hurricanes and extreme weather events from $500 million to $1 billion. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said earlier this month there is a 60 percent chance this year’s Atlantic hurricane season will be “above normal,” with 13 to 20 named storms expected.
The National Guard is expected to fully vacate the U.S. Capitol grounds this week after nearly five months of guarding the premises following the January 6 attack on the Capitol.
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said Monday that the city will not offer remote learning for K-12 schools in the fall, becoming one of the first major cities to entirely do away with pandemic-style online learning ahead of the next school year.
The United States confirmed 23,485 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 3.1 percent of the 750,076 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 623 deaths were attributed to the virus on Monday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 590,516. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 22,744 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 1,170,314 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 163,907,827 Americans having now received at least one dose.
A Closer Look at the Origins of COVID
In mid-February 2020—weeks before COVID-19 upended life as we knew it in the United States—Sen. Tom Cotton went on Fox News to discuss the possibility that the virus then starting to make headlines around the world had emerged from a research facility in Wuhan, China.
“Now, we don’t have evidence that this disease originated there, but because of China’s duplicity and dishonesty from the beginning, we need to at least ask the question to see what the evidence says,” the Arkansas Republican said. “And China right now is not giving any evidence on that question at all.”
A news article in the Washington Post slammed Cotton for “repeating a coronavirus conspiracy theory that was already debunked.” The New York Times’ headline was similar: “Senator Tom Cotton Repeats Fringe Theory of Coronavirus Origins.”
But 15 months (and 590,516 American deaths attributed to COVID-19) later, the rest of the country seems ready for the conversation Cotton wanted to have more than a year ago.
A few weeks back, we linked to a Medium post from veteran science journalist Nicholas Wade that dug into the two main theories about COVID-19’s origin: that it jumped naturally from animals to humans, or that it escaped from a lab in which it was being studied. Wade noted that there is “no direct evidence” for either theory, but argued that most of the circumstantial clues pointed toward the latter. “It’s documented that researchers at the Wuhan Institute of Virology were doing gain-of-function experiments designed to make coronaviruses infect human cells and humanized mice,” he wrote. “This is exactly the kind of experiment from which a SARS2-like virus could have emerged. The researchers were not vaccinated against the viruses under study, and they were working in the minimal safety conditions of a BSL2 laboratory. So escape of a virus would not be at all surprising. In all of China, the pandemic broke out on the doorstep of the Wuhan institute.”
A few weeks later, longtime (until recently) New York Times science reporter Donald McNeil published a response on his own Medium page, admitting he initially gave little credence to Wade’s interpretation of events before reassessing his priors. “The deeper I read into the papers and articles Nick cited, the clearer it became how much new information had trickled out in the last year,” McNeil said. “I now agree with Nick’s central conclusion: We still do not know the source of this awful pandemic. We may never know. But the argument that it could have leaked out of the Wuhan Institute of Virology or a sister lab in Wuhan has become considerably stronger than it was a year ago, when the screaming was so loud that it drowned out serious discussion.”
When President Biden entered the White House in January, he did so with lofty ambitions of cajoling the Iranian regime into a “longer and stronger” diplomatic safeguard against nuclear proliferation. But the administration’s early months on the job proved difficult. By late February, Tehran had threatened to halt International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspections entirely if denied banking and oil sanctions relief. A band-aid fix extended the UN watchdog’s oversight mechanisms, albeit with “less access,” and negotiations have been ongoing ever since.
Iran and the international community hit another snag on the nuclear front Sunday as February’s temporary agreement reached its May expiration date. Preliminary reporting out of Tehran signaled the end of its quasi-cooperation with UN monitoring at various nuclear sites across the country, and the IAEA scrambled to postpone a press conference until an agreement with the Iranian regime was reached.
Rafael Grossi, the IAEA’s director general, offered some clarity Monday. According to Grossi, Iran had reached another temporary technical understanding with the watchdog—affording the U.S., European allies, and other foreign parties one month to lift sanctions or lose access to its enrichment activity.
As Iran ratchets up its uranium enrichment in both quantity and quality—to 60 percent at some sites, well above the permitted 3.67 percent—the international community believes that thorough audits on its 18 declared facilities and nine other locations are increasingly crucial. “I would say that if this understanding was important back in February, it was even in my eyes more important now,” Grossi said of the organization’s oversight capabilities, adding that the month-long extension was an “emergency device” and “not ideal.”
According to Jason Brodsky, a senior analyst at Iran International, threats by Tehran to cut off UN access is likely another of its many extortionist negotiating tactics pertaining to the nuclear program. “This is the way the regime operates. They operate through threats, ultimatums, and deadlines—which often turn out not to really be deadlines,” Brodsky told The Dispatch. “There are some in Tehran that think taking a hard line on the nuclear file and continuing to escalate will produce further concessions.”
Michael Brendan Dougherty took a look at the COVID-19 origin debate in an essay for National Review, focusing specifically on what difference it makes if we learn the virus hailed from a Chinese lab. “If COVID-19 is a man-made disaster, searching for the people, the institutions, and the governments that authored this disaster is not scapegoating, it’s necessary fact-finding before doing justice,” he argues. “What might justice look like in practice? It might include global bans on gain-of-function research. This one measure alone would constitute a kind of quiet revolution, an admission that not every kind of scientific research is in fact beneficial to humanity. The reputation of the entire scientific enterprise itself would suffer immensely from the fallout. … And if subsequent research and investigations can show that actions of the Chinese government—its stonewalling, and its manipulation of the World Health Organization at the outset of the pandemic—contributed to an overall worse global outcome, it might be time to bring up the word ‘reparations’ in international affairs again.”
Former Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels may no longer be an elected official, but he’s still got plenty of wisdom to share. “The risk of failure, of a hit to one’s reputation, or just that the gains don’t outweigh the costs, all these can deter or even paralyze a person out of fulfilling the responsibility someone has entrusted to them,” he said in his remarks at Purdue University’s commencement earlier this month. “This last year, many of your elders failed this fundamental test of leadership. They let their understandable human fear of uncertainty overcome their duty to balance all the interests for which they were responsible. … Pursuing one goal to the utter exclusion of all others is not to make a choice but to run from it. It’s not leadership; it’s abdication.”
As we’ve covered at great length in this newsletter, there was a sustained effort to overturn the result of the 2020 presidential election—an effort that failed thanks to a handful of election officials in key battleground states choosing loyalty to the Constitution and rule of law over partisanship. But as Zach Montellaro reports in a piece for Politico, several of the Republicans who championed election lies in late 2020 and early 2021 are now running to unseat the officials who stood their ground. “The campaigns set up the possibility that politicians who have taken steps to undermine faith in the American democratic system could soon be the ones running it,” he writes.
Kemberlee Kaye: “Criticalrace.org was mentioned in a House Resolution addressing critical race training in k-12. Pretty excited about that.”
Mary Chastain: “If I said how I really feel about Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (and Cuomo, Newsom, Pritzker, de Blasio) I think Professor Jacobson would fire me.Read this piece and I’m pretty sure you’ll understand.“
Leslie Eastman: “The graduates of Notre Dame this year dodged a bullet, in terms of potential commencement speakers.”
Stacey Matthews: “Here’s NY Gov. Andrew Cuomo admitting that in addition to his brother and CNN anchor Chris Cuomo that other reporters advise him ‘all the time.’ Move along, nothing to see.”
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The Groupthink Surrounding China’s Lab-leak Theory Unravels
You may remember this time one year ago. COVID19 was ravaging the country, and the American economy was largely locked down. At the time, there was some speculation as to the origin of the virus. The official narrative, enforced by the World Health Organization, was that COVID19 jumped from animal to human at a Chinese wet market. Several prominent political figures like President Trump and Senator Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), however, raised the possibility that the virus escaped from China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology — China’s only Biosafety Level-4 lab, permitted to handle the world’s most dangerous known pathogens.
Both men were ridiculed and publicly shamed in the corporate press. Many who engaged in public speculation or support of the theory on social media were suspended or a banned. Politifact, the Washington Post “fact-checker,” called the claim a “debunked conspiracy theory” and rated it “pants on fire.” (The group quietly retracted the “fact-check” last week.) USA Today called it a “myth.” CNN said Sen. Cotton was playing a “dangerous game.” The New York Times proclaimed it a “fringe theory.”
In other words, rather than engaging in the honest, objective scrutiny that used to be the hallmark of journalism, or allowing the free speech that is the germ of thoughtful inquiry, our corporate and social media enforced fact-less groupthink.
“Get all that? We’ve now heard from everyone from Rachel Maddow’s blogger to The New York Times, and from a 200-year old English newspaper to Cotton’s local editor that the senator is a racist, fear-mongering conspiracy theorist who imperils us all. But was a lick of it true?
It was hard to say at the time because the vast majority of the country didn’t know much about the virus at all — although that didn’t hold any of those above back in spouting their opinions and shutting down Cotton’s.
Now that it’s largely accepted that the disease escaped a Chinese laboratory, have any of those above issued a correction or so much as an update? Of course not. So far, the only thing like that was issued by PolitiFact for an article “fact-checking”a guest on “Tucker Carlson Tonight” who repeated the lab-leak theory.”
I’m sure all the journalists, tech CEOs, and “smart set” in Washington who mocked this very idea a year ago will repent of their arrogant dismissals and condemnations and apologize for being taken for a ride — and forcing everyone else to follow. Except this is Washington, where repeatedly failing at the core function of your profession usually just means another promotion.
The Baby Bust: Material or Cultural?
Rebeccah Heinrichs weighs in on the burgeoning discussions among the right regarding what to do about the falling birth rate and family formation. She hits on a key component of the debate which, in my view, is too rarely discussed: the influence of culture:
“We can discuss national policies that provide tax breaks or other inducements for families to have more children, and there are some interesting new proposals out there that seek to promote greater financial relief and flexibility for families. But financial inducements alone will not solve this cultural, spiritual malady. There must be a shift, or at least a pressure release, for this group of women—those with the opportunities, educational and financial—who eschew or deemphasize motherhood, but who do not want to. By failing to give the advice I gave the student, simply and compellingly, even you who wring your hands over the cultural calamity happening all around us are complicit in applying the wrong kind of societal pressure.”
Many congressional Republicans are now introducing proposals to assist the material needs of family formation. But unless they can acknowledge the cultural drivers, such assistance will be tantamount to holding up one brick as the entire wall begins to crumble.
For the Oenophiles…
Wines out of the mainstream are always my favorite to sample. If you’re looking for something different, stumble into Austria! Grüner Veltliner is Austria’s most commonly known dry white, with notes of citrus, nectarine, white pepper, and a little bit of green! Grüner is great pairing with spicy Asian food, and also holds up well to artichokes and asparagus – two notoriously difficult veggies to pair with vino. Also don’t miss Austria’s red wine, Zweigelt, which is light in body like a Pinot Noir, and makes a lovely rosé for the warmer months. If you’re up for something bubbly, try Sekt, Austria’s (and Germany’s!) version of sparkling wine.
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May 25, 2021 01:00 am
Trump Derangement Syndrome fortuitously exposed what has been metastasizing beneath the surface for many years and is now spotlighted on center stage for all to see. Read More…
May 25, 2021 01:00 am
We simply do not have good information on which to make many decisions about vaccination. So we have to try to be rational based on what little information we do have. Read More…
May 25, 2021 01:00 am
No peace is possible until Palestinians and other Arabs acknowledge the right of Israel to exist as an independent Jewish state. Read More…
Biden’s unconscionable validation of anti-Semitism
May 25, 2021 01:00 am
Anti-Americanism and anti-Semitism have long gone hand-in-hand among our enemies. Now there can no longer be any doubt that anti-Americanism and anti-Semitism are shared pathologies among our own Democrat leaders Read more…
Phony Tony the mask king
May 25, 2021 01:00 am
It’s time we consigned this pint-sized propagandist to the crossword section of the newspaper. Read more…
Why don’t Blacks seem to think Black Lives Matter?
May 25, 2021 01:00 am
A year ago today, George Floyd died. Meanwhile, over the past weekend, these blaring headlines on shootings of mostly Blacks contradicted the idea that Black lives matter. Read more…
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Sean Ono Lennon, the son of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, offered a scathing assessment of the overreach of political correctness in a series of tweets on Sunday. Lennon argued that pushing too far on political correctness has resulted in a racist backlash that has made the problem of racial relations worse. “When I was young ppl used to say raci … Read more
John Cena, the WWE star-turned actor, was bashed online Tuesday after he posted a video to Chinese social media network Sina Weibo apologizing to the Chinese people for referring to Taiwan as a “country.”Oh, and Cena delivered his mea culpa in Mandarin, the official language of China.What happened?While promoting … Read more
Murkily defined ‘cancel culture’ is becoming useless as a category because the left and right are increasingly aware some things truly warrant cancelation.
Never forget the hell that BLM rained down last summer. And on this one-year anniversary of the Floyd riots that sparked them all, remember how much progress they’ve secured: none.
There is a reason the transgender movement unleashed such immediate and intense pushback for even a mild attempt at highlighting instances of disappointment and regret with hormone therapy.
Problems for New Mexico Democrat Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham have largely flown under the radar as leader of a state overlooked by the legacy press corps.
The same homilies that made a local priest in a beaten-down part of western Wisconsin an international draw also attracted attacks from the city’s left-wing newspaper.
The Times published a false story accusing Republican-led states of preventing teachers from teaching ‘the role of slavery and pervasive effects of racism’ in schools.
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
Tuesday, May 25, 2021
by Linda Noakes
Hello
Here’s what you need to know.
53% of Republicans view Trump as the true president, labor organizers take another crack at Amazon, and a court finds British spies violated human rights
Today’s biggest stories
FILE PHOTO: Protesters Bettye and Robert Freeman raise their fist from a doorstep as they watch a rally against the death in Minneapolis police custody of George Floyd in Boston, Massachusetts, June 4, 2020. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Managers of the largest U.S. shrine to the pro-slavery Confederacy have voted to create a museum exhibit to “tell the truth” about the Georgia monument and its giant carvings of Confederate figures.
A plan to replace an elevated stretch of Interstate 81 has stirred visions of renewal in Syracuse, New York, where one in three residents lives in poverty. Some say it could make amends to the Black community which was displaced half a century ago.
A majority of Republicans still believe Donald Trump won the 2020 U.S. presidential election and blame his loss to Joe Biden on illegal voting, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll.
Palestinian Shaban Esleem collects books from his bookstore which was destroyed in Israeli airstrikes, in Gaza City, May 24, 2021. REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa
Airlines are shunning Belarus’s air space and Belarusian planes could soon be banned from Europe, potentially isolating the land-locked country apart from its border with Russia after it forced down a jetliner and arrested a dissident journalist.
Britain’s GCHQ eavesdropping agency breached fundamental human rights by intercepting and harvesting vast amounts of communications, the European Court of Human Rights ruled.
Federal Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers held unconventional closing arguments in the antitrust trial between Epic Games and Apple, peppering both sides’ attorneys for three hours about how far she could – and should – go to change Apple’s App Store business.
After a failed union-organizing effort at Amazon.com last month, labor advocates are looking to the company’s annual shareholder meeting tomorrow, hoping for a chance to get a worker on the board of directors of the world’s largest online retailer.
Residential property markets in major economies will soar this year on huge monetary and fiscal support and amid a recovery from the pandemic, according to Reuters polls. Average home selling prices have hit eye-watering levels in some countries.
Quote of the day
“We are surprised that the destiny of one person means a lot, that it is seen as valuable to the European Union. This is something that is lost in Belarus”
The drive to step up patriotic sentiment through a push to study the party’s history has been a theme since Xi Jinping became China’s leader nearly a decade ago.
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Dan Bongino’s new radio program airs during the same time slot as the late Rush Limbaugh, even though Rush’s show is continuing, and he made news with this declaration from President Trump.Read more…
Most Americans now understand the election was stolen and the courts never ruled against the merits of the case – that this was simply a case of Trump nullification. Read more…
[Editor’s note: This story originally was published by Live Action.] By Nancy Flanders Live Action Rep. Jackie Walorski (R-IN) was praying outside of the Whole Woman’s Health of South Bend,… Read more…
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47.) ABC
May 25, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
NYC public schools will all be in person this fall: As COVID-19 cases continue to decline across the country and test positivity rates remain at the lowest point on record, according to Johns Hopkins University data, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio is turning a page on the coronavirus pandemic, announcing that classrooms will be open for in-person instruction without a remote option this fall for all public schools in the city. Starting Sept. 13, de Blasio said that students will return to public schools, which will have coronavirus protocols, including mask wearing and COVID-19 testing. “It’s time, it’s really time to go full strength now,” de Blasio said. To help ease any apprehension that parents may have about their children returning to school, de Blasio said they are welcome to visit the schools over the summer so they can see the safety precautions themselves. Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent Austin Beutner also announced Monday that in-person learning will return next fall, and last week, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy announced that the state’s public schools would reopen, too.
Biden doubles funding to prepare for natural disasters, keeping climate change in focus: As hurricane season and summer wildfires loom, President Joe Biden announced on Monday his administration is doubling the amount of money the government spends to help communities to mitigate natural disasters before they hit, along with developing a new climate data effort at NASA, as the president stays focused on climate change. “We don’t have a moment to lose in preparing for 2021,” Biden said during a visit to the Federal Emergency Management Agency headquarters in Washington. The $1 billion funding for hurricane and wildfire season will go to FEMA’s Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities program, which provides support for states, territories, tribes and rural communities’ preparation efforts in advance of extreme weather events. “It’s going to help communities, including those too often overlooked, and it’s going to invest in resilience and better protect themselves to serve for other climate events we’re going to be facing,” Biden said.
US adds Japan to ‘Do Not Travel’ COVID-19 advisory list as Tokyo Olympics approach: As Japan battles another wave of COVID-19, the U.S. State Department on Monday issued the highest travel advisory for the country and advised travelers to avoid all travel to Japan. On the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website, COVID-19 levels in Japan are at level 4 — a very high level of COVID-19. The CDC advised people who need to travel to the country to get fully vaccinated beforehand. The announcement comes less than two months before the scheduled July 23 opening ceremony for the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games. While the International Olympic Committee has yet to comment on the latest U.S. travel advisory and said Friday that the games would still open even if some parts of Japan were under a state of emergency due to COVID-19, health officials are warning that the situation isn’t under control. In addition, only 4.4% of Japan’s population has received at least one vaccine dose, making it the slowest vaccination rate among the world’s wealthiest countries, according to Reuters’ global tracker.
41-year-old sends powerful message with law school graduation photo: When Amber Goodwin graduates from law school next month, she will be fulfilling a lifelong dream — and doing so at the age of 41. On June 6, Goodwin will graduate from Mitchell Hamline School of Law, in St. Paul, Minnesota, nearly two decades after she said she graduated college and was not accepted into any law schools. Goodwin said she ended up with a career on Capitol Hill, earned a master’s degree and also founded the Community Justice Action Fund, a gun violence prevention program focused on communities of color. When she entered her late 30s, Goodwin said she wanted to give law school another try. “My mentality was: I’m going to keep applying places and they have to tell me no,” Goodwin told “GMA.” “I’ll just keep trying.” Now, as Goodwin approaches graduation from law school, she’s celebrating her accomplishment and hopes her story encourages all women to celebrate each moment in their own lives. “There’s no one way to live the life you have, and life should be lived and celebrated literally every single day,” she said.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” with Memorial Day around the corner and many planning to soak up the sun, dermatologist Dr. Whitney Bowe joins us to reveal three of the newest sunscreens on the market, her top three tips to keep safe in the days ahead and the ABCs of skin cancer! And Emma Stone, star of Disney’s “Cruella,” joins us live to talk about her role as the villain, her growing family and life during the pandemic, and upcoming projects. Plus, Amy Robach sat down with all six “Friends” cast members to talk about their reunion. All this and more only on “GMA.”
On the one-year anniversary of George Floyd’s death, we’re taking a closer look at how a year of conversations – and confrontations – about race have shaped Black life in America.
Just about every corner of American life was impacted by the renewed racial justice movement spurred by George Floyd’s murder under the knee of a now convicted former Minneapolis police officer one year ago: Policing, politics, sports, art, culture, business, education, media and more.
“It was an inflection moment to take a hard look at ourselves, and it was something I think most Americans were not proud of and alarmed by,” said Cedric Richmond, director of the White House Office of Public Engagement.
The tragedy was a stark reminder, specifically for Black Americans, of the deep systemic realities underlying Black life. It brought about a renewed call for action that is still rippling through society today.
The family of George Floyd will meet with President Joe Biden, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and several senators from both parties in Washington on Tuesday, Ben Crump, the family’s lawyer, told NBC News.
Biden called for Congress to pass a police reform bill by the anniversary of Floyd’s death this past April, but lawmakers are poised to miss the deadline as both parties haggle over certain provisions of the bill.
Crump said he hopes the White House visit will “keep momentum going” toward the passage of the sweeping policing reform bill bearing Floyd’s name.
The Justice Department late Monday released part of a key 2019 memo used to justify not charging former President Donald Trump with obstruction of justice in the Russia probe. But the DOJ also said it will appeal a federal judge’s effort to make the entire document public.
In a video released by Belarusian officials and played on state television late Monday, Roman Protasevich, speaks in Russian as he says he has no health problems. But his father dismissed the video as the result of coercion immediately. “It’s not his words, it’s not his intonation of speech,” his father said.
An internal petition signed by 640 Amazon tech and corporate employees is asking the company to address the pollution problems the logistics empire leaves in communities of color where its warehouses are often concentrated.
As mask mandates ease across the country, many people are finding that they have no desire to return to their previous maskless life. Instead, they welcome the anonymity and unexpected reprieve from social expectations masks have allowed.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: In the post-Trump era, GOP gov nominee in Virginia tries to thread the needle
Two weeks before Democrats pick his opponent, Republican nominee Glenn Youngkin is hitting Virginia’s airwaves with his first TV ad of the general election in the state’s race for governor.
And Youngkin’s advertisement is all about introducing himself to Virginia’s voters – as he walks the tightrope of being a Trump supporter (and Trump endorsee) in a state the former president lost by 10 points in 2020.
AP Photo/Steve Helber
The ad, similar to one he aired before the GOP convention he won earlier this month, portrays the former Carlyle Group CEO as a political outsider who flipped eggs after his father lost his job and who earned a college basketball scholarship at Rice.
“Virginia is being tested. But what we need isn’t another politician – or worse, the same politician,” Youngkin says in the ad, making an obvious reference to the Democratic frontrunner, former Gov. Terry McAuliffe.
“It’s going to take an outsider, a new kind of leader to bring a new day to Virginia.”
Youngkin’s ad is airing statewide over the next two weeks, including in pricey Northern Virginia, at a cost of $1.6 million.
What the ad DOESN’T mention is that he’s a Republican in this state the GOP has lost in 13 out of the last 14 major statewide contests. Or that he’s embraced Trump (see this earlier Youngkin ad). Or that he’s campaigned on election integrity, although he recently pivoted to declare Biden the country’s legitimate president.
As we’ve written before, Republicans CAN win this contest; just ask the current GOP governors of Maryland, Massachusetts and Vermont.
But Youngkin has a challenge that neither Larry Hogan, nor Charlie Baker nor Phil Scott ever faced: How do you support Trump and champion his endorsement – but still win over the suburban voters who broke heavily against him in 2016 and 2020?
Especially when Trump remains so central to the GOP?
In isolation, you might rather be Youngkin than the Democrats in this race – especially given that the party holding the White House has had a difficult time winning (with McAuliffe in 2013 being the one recent exception).
But a political environment where Trump still hasn’t conceded, where Republicans have tried to downplay Jan. 6, and where the former president still plays an outsized role in his party is a much more formidable test.
Infrastructure talks have hit a wall – again
Meanwhile, the chances for a bipartisan deal on infrastructure look less and less likely.
The Washington Post: “Senate Republicans alleged that the White House had agreed to narrow the scope of its $2.2 trillion plan — only to reverse course days later.”
More: “The dispute centers on President Biden’s proposal to package new investments in roads, bridges and pipes with billions of dollars to help children and families. Republicans say Biden agreed earlier this month to seek what they describe as ‘social’ spending as part of another legislative effort, only to have his top aides take the opposite approach during the latest round of talks Friday.”
But the other reality here is that the Biden White House came down from $2.2 trillion to $1.7 trillion, while Senate Republicans have never come up from their first counteroffer of $500 billion-plus.
And if there isn’t another GOP counteroffer, you can assume this bipartisan exercise is dead.
Biden meets with George Floyd’s family
On the one-year anniversary of George Floyd’s death, President Biden and Vice President Harris meet with Floyd’s family at the White House at 1:30 pm ET.
And later in the afternoon, Biden heads to Wilmington, Del.
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
More than $60,000: The total fines faced by five passengers who were unruly on planes, per the FAA.
About 1,700: The last remaining National Guard troops at the Capitol grounds, who will depart later this week.
33,310,223: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 28,522 more than yesterday morning.)
594,404: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News.(That’s 470 more than yesterday morning.)
286,890,900: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
36.3 percent: The share of Americans who are fully vaccinated.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Not good timing
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
A federal judge is calling former attorney General Bill Barr “disingenuous” about the process behind his decision to issue a memo clearing Trump of obstruction of justice charges.
The Justice Department released part of the 2019 memo last night but intends to appeal an order requiring the government to disclose the rest of it.
Former White House counsel Don McGahn is expected to testify before a House committee next week.
Texas lawmakers have approved a bill to allow residents to carry handguns without licenses.
Some states are finding themselves flush with cash due to the economic rebound. What does that mean for federal relief funds flowing to some of the same places?
A new report is questioning the origins of the coronavirus after it found researchers at a Wuhan lab fell ill weeks before the first reported case of COVID-19. Also, President Biden is scheduled to meet privately with the family of George Floyd on the one-year anniversary of his death. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Last Friday the Navy resumed its full drug testing protocol after COVID-19. CBS News has learned that the SEAL Commander Hugh Howard called on his SEAL teams to submit immediately to tests last week. Senior investigative correspondent Catherine Herridge reports.
Democratic Senator Cory Booker joins “CBS This Morning” to discuss his latest negotiations on the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act one year since his death.
A Wall Street Journal report on previously undisclosed U.S. intelligence tied to workers at China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology is fueling new questions about the origins of the coronavirus. The White House press secretary said Monday she could neither confirm nor deny the intelligence. Nancy Cordes reports.
Plus: Georgia loses suit over anti-boycotting law, conservatives rally against Biden’s IRS plan, and more…
Texas “‘bachelor party’ prostitution stings soon grew into a booze-fueled playground for sexual exploitation,” claims a new lawsuit. Several high-ranking Harris County law enforcement officers are accused of sexually assaulting and harassing their female colleagues under the guise of stopping human trafficking. In a new federal lawsuit, women currently or formerly employed with the Harris County Constable’s Office accuse Precinct 1 Constable Alan Rosen, Assistant Chief Chris Gore, and Lieutenant Shane Rigdon of having “molested and traumatized” them in the course of conducting prostitution stings paid for by the federal government.
Rosen, Gore, and Rigdon are the leaders of the department’s federally funded human trafficking unit, notes the lawsuit, calling the unit “an opportunity for notoriety and media attention.” Like so many of its kind, it considers entrapping sex workers via undercover prostitution stings to be the main part of its mission. The unit commonly has cops pose as “johns” to get sex workers to agree to illegal acts. They then arrest them under the misguided theory that most sex workers are forced into it and if you only arrest enough of them, someone will give up “their sex traffic business handlers.”
Yet the suit presents no suggestion that any “sex traffic business handlers” or “human trafficking” rings were ever stopped (the unit did “not focus on solving cases at all,” it states), merely that sex workers—and at least one minor—were harassed by police and then arrested afterward. Several female cops were allegedly subject to similar abuse and mistreatment, only without the arrests at the end.
These female deputies—Liz Gomez, Marissa Sanchez, and Felecia McKinney—were selected for undercover operations with the unit “under the guise of legitimate police work” and subsequently harassed and mistreated “by their intoxicated male commanding officers,” states the lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas:
What began as an idea for “bachelor party” prostitution stings soon grew into a booze-fueled playground for sexual exploitation in which young, untrained deputies were subject to disgusting abuse. Both Constable Rosen and the Harris County District Attorney’s Office have known about this abuse for months, but they refused to take any action and rebuffed anyone who complained. Constable Alan Rosen attended at least one of these “parties” personally. Three of the young deputies spoke up about their abuse to their supervisors at the Constable’s Office, including Constable Rosen’s chief of staff, but they were ridiculed by their commanders, retaliated against by their abusers, and quietly reassigned to less prestigious duties.
In addition, Jacquelyn Aluotto, a “human trafficking advocate” employed by the county (and the fourth plaintiff in this suit) spoke up about went what on as part of these undercover operations and was fired the day after giving an interview to the office’s Internal Affairs division, the suit says.
Besides detailing alleged mistreatment against Aluotto, Gomez, Sanchez, and McKinney, the women’s suit offers a dismaying look at how Harris County, which encompasses Houston, is spending federal human trafficking grant money:
In Gore’s “bachelor party”operations, the division would set up surveillance in a hotel room or suite, and both male and female deputies would be present in an undercover capacity in a party–like atmosphere where the female deputies would pose as other prostitutes present for the same purpose. Ideally, this would entice any prostitutes called to the location to feel more comfortable in quickly agreeing to sex in exchange for a fee, and an arrest could be made. This type of operation did not result in more productivity; it did provide an opportunity though for the male deputies to have more fun under the guise of actual police work. Each and every one of these “bachelor party” stings were county–sanctioned operations. Despite being “in a legal gray area,” as Chief Gore would refer to the operations when discussing them with his underlings, they were done in accordance with department policy, set and approved by Rosen. …
Alcohol was purchased with HCCO–1 petty cash and consumed in abundance. The male supervisors would continually pressure female deputies to drink. Gore would tell the female deputies to “drink up,” “get loose,” and that it was time to “start the party.” The “stings” were indeed more of a party atmosphere than an actual operation.
Gomez, Sanchez, and McKinney say they were untrained for this sort of work and picked for it by Gore “based on his personal taste in women—young, attractive, and Latina.” As part of the operation, they were “continuously subjected to sexual harassment, unwarranted touching, unwanted kissing, molestation, and sexual ridicule,” their suit asserts. And this allegedly started before the stings even began:
Chief Gore instructed Gomez to purchase new and revealing clothing and send images via text to Chief Gore while shopping. Gore would relay the message “that’s not slutty enough” while Gomez was trying on the clothing at the store, and was ordered to purchase something more provocative.
Gomez was then ordered to try on the dresses for Gore in his office.
Gomez was ordered to accompany Chief Gore to an adult sex shop where he would “pick out some props”and “work on chemistry” with her. After picking up a product labeled “cock sleeve,” Chief Gore commented to the young female deputy “oh I bet you would like this.” He also instructed Gomez to purchase dildos and to “pick out the ones you would personally prefer.” These sex toys were paid for with County funds. This trip to the sex shop was also the first of several instances where Chief Gore told Liz Gomez she was not allowed to work with any other male deputies…she was “his.”
And it got worse from there, according to Gomez and the other plaintiffs:
Female deputies were … ordered that during these operations “to maintain cover” Chief Gore would be lying down on top of them, fondling their breasts and bodies. They were never warned, however, that during this conduct Chief Gore would be wearing only boxer shorts, fully aroused, drunk, kissing and licking their bodies, and giddy after every sting. …
Cameras were set up so that the entire room was viewable. Chief Gore, however, instructed the surveillance teams to ensure that none of the “party scenes” were caught on the footage that would be provided to the District Attorney’s Office for any arrests.
Lieutenant Shane Rigdon would review all surveillance of the operations the day following the evening stings and delete footage that he declared “lacked evidentiary value” before providing the evidence to the District Attorney’s Office, again in violation of criminal discovery statutes.
Gomez asked to be removed from the undercover team after partaking in two such “parties.” She was replaced by Marissa Sanchez, who says she was subject to the same sort of treatment as Gomez had been:
As the first suspects arrived and the sting began, Chief Gore immediately took off Sanchez’s bra without warning and for no real reason. He then threw her bra across the room. This conduct would become his routine at the beginning of every single operation. While her breasts and naked body were exposed due to Chief Gore’s actions, he would continuously laugh, even after the undercover operation ended.
Chief Gore would maneuver his body on top or under Sanchez, where she could feel his arousal. Chief Gore also would immediately begin kissing and licking Sanchez’s neck and chest. Chief Gore was intoxicated during these assaults due to the shots of hard liquor he insisted all undercovers consume before and during operations and the cases of beer the male deputies consumed throughout the operations.
Sanchez complained to Rosen about what happened and was transferred to another “less prestigious” unit.
Ironically, the deputy plaintiffs in this suit express few qualms about how the non-cop women in these situations were treated. And even when criticizing the way a particular victim situation was handled, Aluotto—the human trafficking advocate—expresses no reservations about the underlying premises of the work, which involved arresting suspected victims, including minors:
On one sting, Aluotto and Gore’s female “undercover partner” were interviewing a minor trafficking victim after an arrest was made. Chief Gore burst into the room, intoxicated from the evening’s festivities, and pulls his “partner” out of the interview in the middle of the child’s outcry before anything of substance was conveyed by the minor victim. Tired and intoxicated, Gore had his fun and was ready to leave. He demanded the minor female trafficking victim “hurry up” with her statement and began to yell at her. He did not care about the law enforcement work to be done.
Like her colleagues, McKinney alleges that her “experience in the undercover bachelor party stings was gruesome and gut–wrenching.” But “her most horrifying experience came from [another] operation overseen and approved by Constable Alan Rosen,” involving a male massage parlor worker accused of sexually assaulting Rosen’s chief of staff.
“McKinney was ordered to enter the parlor in an undercover capacity and wait to be sexually assaulted to give the raid signal,” despite the fact that there “was already sufficient evidence to make an arrest prior to exposing McKinney to this trauma,” her suit states. As part of the operation, she was “penetrated in both her vagina and anus by the same individual who had only days before assaulted the HCCO-1 staff member.” She says she was then forced to drive herself to a sexual assault exam and report the charges to the district attorney herself.
The suit accuses Harris County of retaliation and of violation of equal protection by loss of bodily integrity, and accuses Rosen, Gore, and Rigdon, and Harris County of sexual harassment and sexual battery.
“I have a zero-tolerance stance against sexual assault and sexual harassment and would never allow a hostile work environment as alleged,” said Rosen in a statement. “This lawsuit is an effort to impugn the good reputation of the hard-working men and women of the Precinct One Constable’s Office. I believe our system of due process works and that justice and truth will prevail as facts in this case come to light.”
Conservative groups rally against Biden’s IRS expansion plan. I wrote about the plan—which involves hiring 87,000 new IRS staffers and expanding their access to information about Americans’ financial accounts—in Roundup last week.
“Conservative groups have launched a campaign of TV ads, social media messages and emails to supporters criticizing the proposal to hire nearly 87,000 new IRS workers over the next decade to collect money from tax cheats,” notesPolitico. More:
They accuse the Biden administration of pushing for the IRS expansion as a way to raise taxes, increase dues paid to left-leaning unions, and increase oversight on political organizations, as happened with the rise of Tea Party groups during the Obama presidency.
The campaign further dampens already remote prospects for bipartisan negotiations. Biden and fellow Democrats have held out hope that the $80 billion proposal to crack down on tax evasion by high-earners and large corporations could be an area of agreement between the two parties, even if the GOP is skeptical about the amount it could raise.
Many Republicans have already expressed opposition to the other ways Biden wants to raise money, including taxes on corporate and wealthy Americans, to pay for his roughly $4 trillion worth of plans to repair roads and bridges and offer free community college and paid family leave, among other proposals.
And some Republicans, who have long worked to shrink the IRS, hope opposition to the IRS proposal — which the administration says will raise $700 billion over a decade — could help defeat Biden’s costly spending plans altogether.
The Massachusetts Democrat is proposing to give the IRS a mandatory annual budget of $31.5 billion, up from the $11.9 billion the agency received from Congress for fiscal year 2021. Warren’s legislation would remove the agency’s funding from the annual appropriations process, so that it wouldn’t change based on the year-to-year whims of Congress.
• Secret recordings reveal officials discussing the “filthy” conditions of 4,632 immigrant kids held in a Texas detention camp, reportsReason‘s C.J. Ciaramella.
By forcing websites to host speech, this bill takes us closer to a state-run internet where the government can cherry pick winners and losers. By carving out companies like Disney and Universal, Florida’s legislature revealed its anti-tech fervor and true intent to punish social media for allegations of anti-conservative bias:
• A bipartisan coalition in Congress “has introduced the TRUST Act (S. 1295), which would set up a bipartisan legislative process to keep the Social Security, Medicare, and highway trust funds solvent.”
• “Seven Republican lawmakers in the Maine House of Representatives lost their committee posts on Monday after they were recorded entering a legislative building without masks despite rules requiring them,” The Hill reports.
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.
It’s been a minute since we’ve heard from Kevin Spacey. The actor was best known for winning an Oscar as a guy trying to sex up his teenage daughter’s bestie in American Beauty. Then he go … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
05/25/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Police Reform; the Expert Trap; Steps Forward and Back
By Carl M. Cannon on May 25, 2021 07:43 am
Good morning, it’s Tuesday, May 25, 2021. On this date in 1787, 55 delegates met in Philadelphia to draft a Constitution to replace the unwieldy Articles of Confederation. Did those delegates, all of whom were white and male, do their best? That’s a fraught question.
It’s a matter of record that they were literally revolutionaries who had risked their lives, fortunes, and their family’s future for the idea of self-determination.
Even so, they also seem obtuse today: A new country devoted to independence that granted neither freedom nor equality to a majority of its citizens? That’s also a historic fact. Yet, these imperfect men produced a set of founding documents that created a framework for progress — and for future generations to be liberated from the confines of late 18th century thinking.
It hardly happened overnight, and even after the Civil War and the passage of the 14th and 15th amendments (and the 19th Amendment) social progress came only gradually. Yet progress did come, along with constant reminders of how far we have yet to go. Today, these themes are pitted against one another, as though only one can be true. This is folly. They are both true, as today’s date reminds us.
It was on a May 25 in 1935, that Babe Ruth hit home run number 714. Statistically, Ruth is far and away the best baseball player in history, but how do we really know? The great black ballplayers of his day were prohibited from competing against Ruth. The same day that the Bambino stroked his final homer, track star Jesse Owens set three world records and tied a fourth at a Michigan track meet.
A year later, Owens would single-handedly demolish the myth of Aryan supremacy at a track meet in Berlin — the 1936 Olympic Games.
Sometimes it seems as though we take one step forward and two steps back, but usually that’s only an illusion. It was 10 years ago today that the last episode of “The Oprah Winfrey Show” aired on national television. Oprah went out on top. But it was one year ago today that George Floyd, an unemployed black man down on his luck, was murdered by a clueless Minneapolis police officer. We have miles to go before we rest on our laurels.
With that, I’d point you to our front page, which aggregates, as it does each day, an array of columns and stories spanning the political spectrum. We also offer a complement of original material from RCP reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Bipartisan Police Reform in Reach on Anniversary of Floyd’s Death. Susan Crabtree reports on progress being made by Sens. Tim Scott and Cory Booker and Rep. Karen Bass.
Beware of the Experts. Bruce Abramson examines the funding and career advancement issues that shape — and can compromise — the work of scientists.
To Fight Climate Change, NEPA Must Be Retired. At RealClearEnergy, Oliver McPherson-Smith explains why the National Environmental Policy Act of 1970, with its byzantine review processes, actually blocks environmental progress.
California Has $75B Surplus But Got $26B “Bailout.” At RealClearPolicy, Adam Andrzejewski, of OpenTheBooks, spotlights another example of wasteful government spending.
Broadband Doesn’t Need Taxpayer Rescue. Also at RCPolicy, Rick Boucher warns that the Biden infrastructure bill would overbuild existing privately funded networks rather than focus solely on closing gaps in coverage.
Achievements and Challenges as Charter Schools Turn 30. At RealClearEducation, Chester E. Finn Jr. and Bruno V. Manno provide this overview.
Civic Education and the Withering Away of the United States. At RealClear’s American Civics portal, Michael DiMatteo argues that teachers have allowed radicals to hijack our nation’s classrooms.
Suppose Mt. Fuji was rumbling, sending out tremors, venting steam, and scientists were 90% sure it would soon erupt. Japanese citizens would feel a sense of crisis, as would the Japanese government. And they would prepare and take countermeasures.
In Los Angeles, a Palestinian gang assaulted Jews outside a Sushi restaurant. Rioters asked whether victims are Jewish before assaulting them. Other video showed Arab men outside a restaurant spitting on Jewish diners.
Jews are often the proverbial “canaries in the mineshaft.” When societies tolerate, let alone enable, anti-Semitic sentiment and even attacks, they are usually in decline.
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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Good morning. It’s Tuesday, May 25, and we’re covering India’s surge in COVID-19 deaths, the anniversary of the killing of George Floyd, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
The number of COVID-19 deaths reported in India surpassed 300,000 yesterday, the third-highest pandemic death toll worldwide behind the US and Brazil. The figure follows an unprecedented surge of infections in the country—one which many experts say was underreported—which saw cases peak at more than 400,000 per day in early May.
Deaths typically lag a rise in new cases by two to three weeks, and while cases in the country have dropped by more than 30% over the past two weeks, the average death toll remains above 4,000 per day.
Separately, the Biden administration yesterday called for an independent probe into the origins of the pandemic, following US intelligence reports three researchers at China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology were hospitalized with COVID-19-like symptoms in November 2019. Beijing maintains the first confirmed case was identified more than a month later.
The number of reported cases in the US continues to decline, averaging less than 25,000 per day (see data). The country is averaging roughly 500 new deaths per day, down 75% since the beginning of March, with almost 62% of US adults having received at least one vaccine shot.
George Floyd Anniversary
A number of communities around the country will gather today to mark the one-year anniversary of the killing of George Floyd, who died while being taken into custody by former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin. Chauvin—who pinned Floyd in a prone position for almost nine minutes—was convicted of murdering Floyd by a jury in April.
Floyd’s death sparked waves of protests across the country and globe. The demonstrations pushed a number of cities to reexamine their budgets for policing while considering a range of other reforms. Critics have argued the efforts have led to a spike in violent crime ($$, WSJ)—the homicide rate in Minneapolis, where 200 officers have resigned or gone on leave, doubled year-over-year.
A police reform bill, which the Biden administration had aimed to pass by the anniversary of Floyd’s death, has stalled in Congress, with lawmakers gridlocked on the issue of qualified immunity for police officers.
Belarus Sanctions
European Union officials agreed to level sanctions against Belarus yesterday over the government-led diversion of a commercial airliner to arrest a political dissident. Most notably, Belarus will be banned from using the airspace or airports of the 27-member bloc of countries.
The spat ignited Sunday after a Belarusian fighter jet intercepted a Ryanair passenger jet, forcing it to land in the capital city of Minsk. Ryanair is an Irish-based airline, and the flight was en route from Greece to Lithuania—all of which are EU member countries. Reports allege President Alexander Lukashenko called for the diversion to arrest opposition journalist Roman Protasevich (see background). State media said the plane was rerouted due to a bomb scare, though no explosives were found.
Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary referred to the incident as “state-sponsored hijacking.”
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Worried that you missed the boat on Bitcoin? Good news: It’s not too late to be early. You’re just a few taps away from what may just be the future of finance.
>US Department of State and health officials warn against travel to Japan due to COVID-19 ahead of Tokyo Summer Olympic games set to begin July 23 (More)
>Twenty-one ultra-marathon runners die in China from extreme cold weather (More) | University of Cincinnati soccer player Ally Sidloski dies of drowning at Ohio state park (More)
>NBA’s social justice coalition calls for police reform on anniversary of George Floyd killing (More) | Utah Jazz’s Jordan Clarkson wins NBA Sixth Man of the Year award (More)
Science & Technology
>Florida passes law fining social media companies for restricting the speech of politicians; critics call the measure unconstitutional, court challenge likely (More)
>Gene from light-sensing algae helps blind patient regain partial vision; study is the first to demonstrate the successful treatment of disease using optogenetics (More)
>Combined blood and memory test predicts the onset of Alzheimer’s disease in patients with 90% accuracy within four years (More)
>Tech companies lead surge in US stock markets (S&P 500 +1.0%, Dow +0.6%, Nasdaq +1.4%); Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies rebound Monday (More)
>Sources say Amazon is closing in on acquisition of MGM Studios for a reported $9B (More)
>Shares of electric automaker Lordstown Motors fall near 10% after company announces 2021 production will be half of expectations and the need to raise additional capital (More)
>New York City says schools will return to all in-person learning in the fall, ending remote learning options (More) | Health officials investigate rare cases of temporary heart inflammation in teens potentially linked to two-shot COVID-19 vaccines (More)
>Death toll from Mount Nyiragongo eruption, Africa’s most active volcano, rises to at least 20 (More) | See drone footage of the destruction (More)
>Gordon Sondland, the former US ambassador to the European Union, sues former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo for legal fees incurred while testifying during former President Donald Trump’s first impeachment inquiry (More) | Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) receives death threat; FBI examining suspicious package sent to Paul’s house (More)
IN-DEPTH
History’s Greatest Wine Fraud
The Hustle | Zachary Crockett. Rudy Kurniawan burst on the vintage wine scene in the early 2000s as an enigmatic—but deep-pocketed—aficionado. It took the FBI and billionaire Bill Koch to expose Kurniawan as a serial fraudster. (Read)
‘Who Is This Monster?’
ProPublica | Catherine Rentz. Two decades after she went undercover in an attempt to catch Baltimore’s notorious Sunglass Rapist, Rose Brady finally captured her suspect. (Read)
From our partners:Artificial ingredients? Not here. Kettle & Fire’s bone brothsare packed with collagen, amino acids, and the nutrients your body needs—without preservatives, additives, coloring, or artificial flavors. It’s the perfect afternoon snack to get you through the day; just use code 1440 for 25% off, then simmer and sip.
Clickbait: Spanish man perishes trying to retrieve phone from a stegosaurus.
Historybook: Constitutional Convention convenes in Philadelphia (1787); Author Ralph Waldo Emerson born (1803); RIP businesswoman Madam C.J. Walker (1919); “Star Wars” premieres in theaters (1977).
“All life is an experiment. The more experiments you make, the better.”
– Ralph Waldo Emerson
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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May 25, 2021
Supply-Side Neoliberalism Sure Beats the Alternative
By Richard M. Salsman | “The near-phobic disdain for supply-side economics and neoliberalism this century is part of a new wave of anti-capitalist sentiment. We have seen this movie before. It is a horror film. The true friends of rationality,…
Some Problems with the ‘Repatriating Critical Supply…
By Donald J. Boudreaux | “Even if political pressures were miraculously to disappear, government officials would remain ignorant of most of the detailed bits of knowledge about how resources are, and potentially can be, used. And so any errors…
Papers, Please! Oregon Now Requires ‘Proof of Vaccination’
By Jordan Schachtel | “With the corrupt policies being pursued by the authorities in statewide office, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that not everyone in the state is thrilled with the policies being pushed by Salem. On Tuesday, 5 Oregon…
By Robert E. Wright | “According to one study, it will take 450 years for some of these masks to degrade. That’s a lot of dead baby birds and a lot of wasted energy, almost for naught. Great job, Homo personatus!”
By Peter C. Earle | In times of trauma, people inevitably look to the past for comfort. A 2015 study found that nostalgia can bring stability, and a 1995 paper found that we are prone to nostalgia during periods of transition. This logic may…
By James R. Harrigan & Antony Davies | “The American version of the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand, the event that began the steady march toward oblivion, was the passage of the Social Security Act in 1935. The dominos have been falling ever…
Edward C. Harwood fought for sound money when few Americans seemed to care. He was the original gold standard man before that became cool. Now he is honored in this beautiful sewn silk tie in the richest possible color and greatest detail.
The red is not just red; it is darker and deeper, more distinctive and suggestive of seriousness of purpose.
The Harwood coin is carefully sewn (not stamped). Sporting this, others might miss that you are secretly supporting the revolution for freedom and sound money, but you will know, and that is what matters.
In 1826 the famous novelist and poet Sir Walter Scott entered an economic policy debate. Adopting a pseudonym, his Letters … from Malachi Malagrowther, Esq., on the Proposed Change of Currency fiercely defended the Scottish banking system from a British government proposal to ban banknotes under five pounds. Malagrowther built cogently on Adam Smith’s explanation of how the voluntary substitution of paper banknotes for specie in circulation enhances an economy’s stock of productive capital. The Letters ignited Scottish public opinion, and the government decided to exempt Scotland from the small note ban.
On the menu today: President Biden issues a — sigh — “tough” statement against the Belarusian state-run hijacking of an Irish airliner, pledges to “develop appropriate options to hold accountable those responsible,” and follows the European lead. Meanwhile, the lab-leak-theory party gets larger.
Belarus and the Weak, Toothless, ‘International Order’
Americans don’t spend a lot of time thinking about Belarus. It’s been ruled by a Vladimir Putin and Russia-aligned dictatorship for more than a quarter century. As the Editors characterized it with appropriate scare quotes last summer, Alexander Lukashenko “won” his latest “election” on August 9 by “80 percent.” They summarized, “he quickly turned Belarus — which had enjoyed democracy for a scant three years — into a personal fief. He took control of the courts, the banks, the universities, and so on. The Belarusian intelligence agency works for him, strictly. Charmingly, it is the only such agency in the post–Soviet … READ MORE
An analysis done by Voto Latino, and provided to the Washington Post, “showed that during the 2020 election, the group collected 617,714 complete voter registration applications — a 123% percent increase over their projected goal for the cycle.”
Said María Teresa Kumar, CEO of Voto Latino: “The younger Latinx was a larger share of the overall Latino electorate, the state swung for Biden: Arizona, Nevada, Georgia, and Pennsylvania. If this trend holds true: Texas and North Carolina will be next in play as younger Latinos eclipse older generations.”
She added: “Florida, where the Latino vote share is older, will be harder to flip.”
Five days after her remarks, House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) rebuked Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) for comparing mask-wearing to the Holocaust.
Of course, I remember when McCarthy rebuked Donald Trump for inciting the January 6 insurrection.
“In the early days of the pandemic, Rep. Tom Malinowski (D-NJ) scolded those looking to capitalize on the once-in-a-century health crisis,” the AP reports.
Said Malinowski: “This is not the time for anybody to be profiting off of selling ventilators, vaccines, drugs, treatments, PPE, anywhere in the world.”
“He did not heed his own admonition. Since early 2020, Malinowski has bought or sold as much as $1 million of stock in medical and tech companies that had a stake in the virus response… The trades were just one slice of a stock buying and selling spree by the congressman during that time, worth as much as $3.2 million, that he did not properly disclose.”
“Former President Donald Trump lashed out against state Attorney General Mark Brnovich (R) over his tepid support of the ongoing review of ballots in Maricopa County, a blow to the potential Republican contender in Arizona’s 2022 U.S. Senate race,” the Arizona Republic reports.
Said Trump: “As massive crime in the 2020 Election is becoming more and more evident and obvious, Brnovich is nowhere to be found. He is always on television promoting himself, but never mentions the Crime of the Century, that took place during the 2020 Presidential Election, which was Rigged and Stolen.”
Dan Pfieffer: “I understand the impulse. Ted Cruz is incredibly annoying. He is one of the most transparently cynical human beings to walk the planet. If the two most annoying people in your high school class had a child, that child would be Ted Cruz.”
“But every reply, quote tweet, and clever dunk aids them and gives them the thing they strive for most: attention. Every time someone yells at Cruz online, it makes him happy because it means his strategy is working.”
Anil Dash: “A reminder that may not be obvious: amplification on social networks has monetary value. Twitter’s algorithm counts it as engagement even if you shared a tweet to criticize it or mock it, and uses that signal to amplify the tweet further. Only RT what you would pay to promote.”
Texas Land Commissioner George P. Bush, on the verge of challenging incumbent Ken Paxton in the GOP primary for attorney general, has discussed his political options with former President Donald Trump, the Dallas Morning News reports.
Said Bush: “We talked about the importance of putting the right team on field, because the Democrats are targeting our state. We talked about my race and the vision that I have for the state of Texas.”
Apparently Bush is not concerned about Trump repeatedly insulting his own father.
Wisconsin Public Radio: “The Republican-controlled state Legislature is expected to take no action Tuesday during a special session called by Gov. Tony Evers to expand Medicaid in Wisconsin and accept $1 billion in additional federal funds.”
“The $1 billion is an additional incentive from the federal government for states that have not yet taken the expansion. Evers has proposed a slew of ways to spend that money, including $200 million for broadband internet expansion, $100 million for lead pipe replacements, $100 million for bridge and local road projects and funding more than a dozen local construction projects across the state.”
The Louisiana House approved a bill that would require high school students to get instruction on the Holocaust and World War II but rejected efforts to add a list of Black historical figures to the new teaching requirements, the Baton Rouge Advocate reports.
Stuart Rothenberg: “So, we have one party, the GOP, that is led by a bully who relies on cheap shots and untruths to keep his critics in check — and who has no respect for norms established since the birth of the republic. It’s a party that punishes Cheney but sees no reason to distance itself from the paranoid ramblings of Greene or Trump stalwart Michael Flynn.”
“Meanwhile, the Democrats head toward the midterms with one of their own in the White House and technical ‘control’ of both chambers of Congress — even though they really have little control given the 50-50 Senate and the hesitancy of a few Democratic senators to act unilaterally.”
“In other words, Democrats have the responsibility to deal with a range of crucial issues but lack the ability to do much, which in the past has tended to be a prescription for political defeat.”
Nathaniel Rakich: “Take a look at the 10 House seats that have sat vacant the longest since 1997. Nine of them have something in common: Not only did the vacancies take place in the past 10 years, but the representatives who vacated the seats did not belong to the same party as the governors of their states.”
“This lopsided difference suggests that governors are increasingly delaying special elections to deprive their political opponents of a voice and vote in the House.”
Senate Democrats are unlikely to try using the FY 2021 budget resolution to put together another reconciliation package for President Biden’s infrastructure plan, Punchbowl News reports.
Democratic leaders privately say they don’t believe they can finish work by the end of the fiscal year, which is September 30.
This means the infrastructure debate is likely to slip into the fall, which will put it on a collision path with the debt-limit fight.
Former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA) explained his firing from CNN in a Fox News interview, after the network fired him over past comments about Native American culture.
Said Santorum: “You get savaged for telling the truth.”
He added: “CNN has a right to fire me if they don’t like what I’m saying or what they are doing. I have no animus, I appreciate the opportunity that they gave me, but it shows that the left is intolerant. They are worried, I’m sure that their viewership which is very left was going to pay a price.”
Ashley Daniels and Pearl Dowe: “We expect Demings will have a good chance, given her strong fundraising history and her connection to Black female voters in community and civic organizations. Our research finds that Black women’s organizations are critical in mobilizing support and votes.”
“When a statewide Democratic candidate takes full advantage of these networks, engaging regularly with Black female voters, that constituency can give her a competitive edge — at times enough to win historically Republican states.”
“That’s what we saw in 2017, when Doug Jones won the U.S. Senate race in Alabama, backed by Black women. And it’s what we saw when both Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff won the 2021 Senate runoffs in Georgia.”
New York Times: “A late amendment to the bill exempts companies from the law if they own a theme park or an entertainment venue larger than 25 acres. That means the law is unlikely to apply to websites owned by Disney, which operates the Walt Disney World Resort, and Comcast, which owns Universal Studios Florida.”
If the law isn’t struck down, expect Facebook and Twitter to start theme parks.
New Yorker: “According to a 2018 article in the Washington Post, if you apply for a job in Schumer’s office, he will quiz you about where various senators fall on an ideological spectrum from zero (most conservative) to 100 (most liberal). It’s important to know that there is a correct answer for Schumer; it’s 75.”
Said Democratic consultant Rebecca Katz: “I remember when he had nothing nice to say about anyone to his left. Now every five minutes you turn on the TV and he’s doing another press conference with someone on the left.”
“This is what it means to be a 75 in 2021. The equation stays the same, but the variables are subject to change.”
The FBI and Capitol Police are investigating a suspicious package containing white powder that was sent to Sen. Rand Paul’s home in Kentucky, Politico reports.
New York Times: “Fourteen men, women and children died in a massacre in a remote coca-growing region of Peru, the Defense Ministry said, reviving memories of the country’s brutal left-wing insurgency just weeks ahead of presidential elections that are playing out along the conflict’s ideological fault lines.”
“Authorities have blamed the attack on a dissident faction of the Shining Path, a Maoist rebel group that terrorized Peru before being brutally put down by the authoritarian leader Alberto Fujimori in the 1990s. Local media reported that pamphlets attributed to the terrorist group were found with the bodies.”
As millions of high school seniors prepare to receive their diplomas, most Americans doubt this year’s graduates are ready to enter the workforce or to succeed in college.
Authored by Jack Posobiec via HumanEvents.com, A source within the Biden State Department wishing to remain anonymous has shared with Human Events News a document that indicates that all U.S. “Diplomatic and Consular posts” are being…
Authored by Paul Joseph Watson via Summit News , Left-wing website website Vox has been caught stealth editing an old article from March 2020 “debunking” the lab origin of COVID following numerous prominent officials now saying the lab…
The Outagamie County Sheriff’s office told residents of Appleton, a city just north of Lake Winnebago, to avoid calling the police when a train of lights appears in the night sky because they’re just satellites. “We have seen a lot of…
Authored by Nicole Hao via The Epoch Times, The Chinese communist regime announced on May 23 that 21 athletes, including China ’s marathon champions, died at the Gansu ultramarathon due to the extreme weather . The death list includes…
There was a ton of hype last week when Ford Motor Company unveiled its all-electric F-150 Lightning pickup truck. As of Friday, Ford secured more than 44,000 reservations for the new truck. Ford’s first all-electric truck is expected…
The White House on Monday deflected after Fox News’ Peter Doocy put spox Jen Psaki on the spot following a Wall Street Journal report that three workers at the Wuhan Institute of Virology fell ill with COVID-19 symptoms in December of…
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In a two-part conversation series, Hoover scholars examined the illiberal forces that are currently undermining public confidence in democratic institutions worldwide. They also provided policy recommendations for deterring aggression by autocrats ruling the People’s Republic of China, the Russian Federation, and the Islamic Republic of Iran.
This article explores the origins and evolution of the institutional, policy, and legal frameworks that define the defensive and offensive aspects of UK and US cyber strategies. There is a strong degree of convergence, particularly from a defense perspective, but there are also important variations, especially in the degree to which the countries’ most capable operators—the National Security Agency and the Government Communications Headquarters—are integrated into non-intelligence activities.
California’s governor is an elected official—as such, not to be confused with a monarch. But when facing a recall election and serving as the Golden State’s chief executive, it’s good to be the king, as it were.
The Department of Defense’s new “nuclear bunkers” could be a series of dining room tables across the world, linked together by internet companies and cellular data networks. After the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19) exposed the U.S. national security community’s unpreparedness for the gambit of potential global threats to its traditional structures, the need to use telework to protect defense may change the DoD’s approach to remote collaboration.
The Hoover Institution and the Center on U.S.-China Relations at the Asia Society hosts Toward a Democratic China:What Role Can Outsiders Play? on Monday, May 24 from 10:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m. PDT.
Hoover Institution fellow Michael Spence offers his view of the global economic recovery from the pandemic, the potential jobs impact of the digital transformation, and where he would focus U.S infrastructure spending.
Hoover Institution fellow Scott Atlas notes that the American people have been harmed tremendously by a lack of oversight and the lack of transparency and consistency in the medical profession.
In an interview in 2018, the economist Thomas Sowell had a concise answer when podcaster and commentator Dave Rubin asked what awakened him to the failures of Marxism, an ideology he had espoused in his youth.
mentioning Andrew Grotto via Stanford Cyber Policy Center
On Wednesday, May 26 at 10 am pacific time, please join Andrew Grotto, Director of Stanford’s Program on Geopolitics, Technology and Governance, for a conversation with Nicole Perlroth, New York Times Cybersecurity Reporter, about the underground market for cyber-attack capabilities.
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
Thank you for subscribing to the Hoover Daily Report.
This email was sent to: rickbulow1974@gmail.com
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71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief.
Good morning, it’s May 25, 2021. On this day in history, the Constitutional Convention convened in Philadelphia, where 55 state delegates later drafted the U.S. Constitution (1787); George Lucas‘ film Star Wars was released, launching one of the most successful franchises in motion picture history (1977); and George Floyd died during his arrest in Minneapolis, Minnesota, setting off massive protests around the country (2020).
TOP STORIES
National Missing Children’s Day Should Be On Everyone’s Calendar
National Missing Children’s Day is commemorated to honor those who have gone above and beyond to protect children and to remember the missing children who were never recovered. It’s a great time to brush up on the wealth of information available to help prevent our own children from disappearing. Today, we decided to feature a couple of recent stories of children narrowly escaping predators. We hope they will inspire parents to work with their own kids to teach them what they need to know to stay safe.
Caught ‘Blue-Handed’: Girl Escapes Grasp of Predator
A man in Pensacola, Florida, was caught onvideo attempting to abduct an 11-year-old girl waiting at the bus stop.
Around 7 a.m., as the young girl sat in a grassy area next to the road waiting for her bus, a white SUV pulled up. In an instant, the driver jumped out of the car, armed with a knife as he made a rush at the girl. The man grabbed the victim and attempted to pull her back toward his car. The girl fought back, kicking and pushing, until they both stumbled to the ground. It was at this point she was able to make her escape. The man quickly drove off.
Deputies arrested Jared Paul Stanga, 30, and charged him with attempted kidnapping of a child under 13, aggravated assault and battery.
“We have caught the animal,” stated Escambia County Sheriff Chip Simmons in a press briefing.
Simmons explained that time was of the essence. Law enforcement was concerned they may only have a short window to track down the perpetrator before he attempted to “ditch this van or leave town.”
Deputies found Stanga in his home, wearing the same clothing as in the video, and with “blue slime” on his arm. The victim was playing with blue slime at the time of the attack.
Stanga is no stranger to the law. He has an “extensive” criminal history that includes a previous charge involving a sex offense with a child.
It was revealed that Stanga attempted to approach the girl two weeks prior, at which point she told her parents, teachers and the school principal.
“We applaud the efforts and the resilience of an 11-year-old girl,” Simmons said. “She did the right thing — she fought and she fought and she fought, and she never gave up. And then she went straight to her parents, which she should have done, told her parents what was going on, who, in turn, contacted the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office.”
ATP comment: May 25 is National Missing Children’s Day, and we are grateful to hear this young girl didn’t become a statistic. Sexual predators are everywhere, and it is essential that children are taught to be aware of the dangers and also how to react. This girl’s quick actions and willingness to tell trusted adults immediately likely saved her life.
We encourage parents to consider enrolling their kids in a martial art or self-defense class at an early age so if they are ever in a dangerous situation like this, they will be well-prepared to fight back.
Who Doesn’t Love a Good Heroic Dog Story?
Recently,WKBN reported on a 12-year-old girl in Ohio who was followed by an unknown man in a pickup truck. At one point, the man exited the vehicle and pursued her on foot, according to the police report.
As the girl ran up the driveway to her dad’s shop, the nearby family dog recognized the child was in trouble and jumped to action. The dog charged at the predator and knocked him to the ground. The man scrambled to his feet and ran back to his truck, quickly driving off.
The predator has not yet been identified, but there is a CCTV photo of the 1970s model truck driving away.
The police report stated the dog “got him pretty good.”
ATP assessment: Team ATP are handlers to Baden K-9 dogs. These dogs are some of the world’s best, working alongside Special Forces units, as police K-9s, and protecting families all over the U.S.
Having a dog is one of the biggest deterrents against home invasion and violence against women and children.
As humans, we also must be situationally aware of the dangers out there. Even with a dog, we cannot be complacent.
As adults and parents, we need to educate our children about the dangers in the world and cyberspace. Children, themselves, can be a formidable deterrent when they know the signs and indicators of a predator.
Educate and prepare yourselves and your kids, and maybe one day we won’t need National Missing Children’s Day.
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
What you’ve missed: Psaki won’t confirm when VP Harris will visit the Mexican border while crisis rages on, and Governor Abbott will sign a bill barring Texas cities from defunding the police.
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60 Minutes’ Leslie Stahl dug into the questions about transgender medicine on Sunday night, speaks to doctors, advocates, and to people who had undergone gender transition, and then found themselves needing to “detransition.”
Stahl spoke to Grace Lidinsky-Smith, who underwent gender transition in her early 20s. Her account of coming out as trans and undergoing medical treatment is shocking because there appears to have been so little medical or psychological oversight.
“I can’t believe that I transitioned and detransitioned, including hormones and surgery, in the course of, like, less than one year. It’s completely crazy,” Lidinsky-Smith said.
Lidinsky-Smith was depressed when she came across the concept of gender transition, and she thought it would bring her out of her depression. Instead, it made everything worse.
“Did the therapist not question you about how deep the feeling was and what it was stemming from?” Stahl said.
“She didn’t go – really go into what my gender dysphoria might’ve been stemming from,” Lidinsky-Smith said. “We only did a few sessions.”
But Lidinsky-Smith was over 18, she didn’t need anyone’s consent to undergo this treatment, and signed off on the consent forms. “They asked me: ‘So, why do you wanna go on testosterone?’ And I said, ‘Well, being a woman just isn’t working for me anymore.’ And they said, ‘Okay.'”
“So, that was that. You got your prescription for testosterone?” Stahl asked. Lindinsky-Smith said that she did. And it was just four months after she started on cross-sex hormones, testosterone injections, that she was approved to have her breasts removed.
But Lidinsky-Smith said this was “traumatic.” Stahl was surprised, because she’d heard that those who have gender dysphoria and undergo this kind of extreme treatment are happy once they undergo voluntary surgery.
A video of Conservative Party leader Erin O’Toole tricked Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during an early May Question Period has gained traction online.
In the video, O’Toole sets up the scenario of an attack on freedom of expression in the form of Bill C-10. The bill he was describing, however, was not Canadian at all, and was instead on the worrying attack on free expression currently ongoing in Hong Kong.
“It is very interesting, Mr. Speaker. That Reuters headline I was talking about was actually referencing new legislation being introduced in Hong Kong. It should worry Canadians that the Prime Minister could not tell the difference between what is happening in Hong Kong and his own bill, Bill C-10. Of course, we should not be surprised, because last fall he told Canadians that free speech has limits.”
Trudeau did not acknowledge his flub, and instead responded by saying that Bill C-10 was not about restricting Canadians’ expression, but was instead about making “web giants” pay their fair share.
Multiple experts have voiced serious concerns over Bill C-10, including the former commissioner for the CRTC itself.
In an interview with The National Post, former CRTC commissioner Peter Menzies said that Bill C-10 “doesn’t just infringe on free expression, it constitutes a full-blown assault upon it and, through it, the foundations of democracy.”
Priscilla Bergmair, the wife of MindGeek majority owner Bernd Bergmair, was interviewed on Sunday, wherein she discussed her husband’s desire to distance himself from the current mess Pornhub finds itself in.
MindGeek is Pornhub’s parent company, and is currently the subject of a class-action lawsuit at the federal level in the US. The lawsuit alleges negligence on Pornhub’s part, since it appears that many videos were uploaded with no age verification process required.
It has also come to public attention that many of the people appearing in these videos are possibly victims of sex trafficking.
Priscilla Bergmair expressed concern for all concerned, saying during the course of the interview:
“To be honest, I never knew of this [legal issue]. I was totally out of this … The only thing he told me is that he wishes he was not in this, and I think he will not be very soon.”
“It’s not easy. It’s something, maybe, that the government has to work on … making rules.”
The Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act has actually been on the books since it was enacted in 1988, and makes up a key part of the legal framework whereby companies like MindGeek are open to civil and criminal legal actions for not verifying the age of participants in pornographic videos.
“Everyone wants the best to be done. Because people have children. I have children now … We all want things to be right,” concluded Ms. Bergmair.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed legislation on Monday that looks to crack down on attacks on freedom of speech by big tech companies such as Facebook and Amazon.
The bill will aim to make it illegal for tech companies to remove candidates for office from their social media platforms.
When pressed by a reporter on whether he enacted this bill as a “favor” to deplatformed President Donald Trump, DeSantis asserted that the bill was for everyone and said:
“When you deplatform the President of the United States by you let Ayatollah Khamenei talk about killing Jews, that is wrong.”
DeSantis called big tech sites the modern day equivalent of the “public square,” saying that “big tech oligarchs” and “Silicon Valley” are “acting as a council of censors; they cancel people when mobs come after somebody. They will pull them down.”
“What we’ve been seeing across the US is an effort to silence, intimidate, and wipe out dissenting voices by the leftist media and big corporations. Today, by signing SB 7072 into law, Florida is taking back the virtual public square as a place where information and ideas can flow freely,” Lieutenant Governor Jeanette Nuñez said on Monday.”
Those who break the bill would face fines of up to $250,000 per-day for the crime of deplatforming candidates for elected office. Fines of $25,000 would be faced for lower level offenses.
The Florida House voted 77-38 in favor o the bill, the Senate, 23-17, reports WFLA.
Dr. Jason Johnson on MSNBC claimed that the GOP is pushing legislation across the country to “ban teaching [the] history of slavery.” His evidence? Lots of states are moving to prohibit schools from teaching critical race theory and the Pulitzer Prize-winning 1619 Project, conceived by Nikole Hannah-Jones and published by The New York Times.
What are these bills that Johnson is concerned with? A close look at these bills in Idaho, Texas, New Hampshire, Louisiana, and Tennessee show that they prohibit the teaching that any person is superior or inferior to any other by virtue of their race, sex, ethnicity, or national origin.
The removal of Hannah-Jones from the tenure process at UNC has the leftist media in fits. Republican lawmakers across the country are looking to prevent the 1619 Project, and other elements of critical race theory, from arriving in classrooms. This has been framed by the media as some kind of ban on accurate history.
But teaching about the history and legacy of enslavement in America is not what the 1619 Project of critical race theory is about. Instead, these are an account of the nation as a failed state that may very well be irredeemable.
Last year’s coup in the embattled North African nation of Mali – where France is finally withdrawing military forces after a nearly decade-long “unwinnable war” against Islamists operating within the country’s borders – is already crumbling as military officials once again move to detain the president, prime minister and defense minister of the Intermin government, marking the start of yet another coup, the second to topple Mali’s government in a matter of months.
The Wall Street Journal (WSJ), citing an alleged previously undisclosed U.S. intelligence report Sunday, claimed three researchers working for the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) were hospitalized with coronavirus-like symptoms in November 2019
U.S. intelligence failures related to the COVID-19 global pandemic include suppression of dissenting views on the origin of the virus, a recent report by House Republicans on the intelligence oversight panel concluded.
The FBI is investigating a suspicious package, filled with white powder and bearing an image threatening violence, that arrived at Republican Sen. Rand Paul’s home in Kentucky Monday.
You have probably heard about the videos in which people appear to be able to get magnets to stick to their arms where they have received COVID vaccines. Initially, I ignored this because I was seeing a bunch of TikTok videos. I completely avoid TikTok.
VICE has managed to snag an interview with Jacob Fauci, a Jewish New Yorker from Long Island who went viral for telling a Palestinian woman complaining about him stealing her home that “If I don’t steal it someone else is going to steal it.”
Children in Canada as young as 12 are being given free ice cream to take Pfizer’s experimental mRNA therapy “vaccine,” with no parental permission required.
With other nations moving in a similar direction, it’s tempting to conclude that the days when competition over finite supplies of energy was a recurring source of conflict will soon draw to a close. Unfortunately, think again: while the sun and wind are indeed infinitely renewable, the materials needed to convert those resources into electricity – minerals like cobalt, copper, lithium, nickel, and the rare-earth elements, or REEs — are anything but.
The news business just can’t stop clowning itself. The latest indignity is an international fact-checking debacle originating, of all places, at a “festival of fact-checking.”
Valve, the company behind Life and Counter-Strike, has just announced that the video games giant is ushering humanity into a Brave New World. How so? By merely including new technologies called brain-computer interfaces in its games.
Last summer Ukraine’s security service SBU tried to play dirty trick on Lukashenko. Russian volunteers, who had fought on the Novorossiyan side in the Ukrainian civil war were made a fake job offer, “security” work on Syrian oil fields. The Wagnerites (as private military contractors are called in Russia) were to gather in Minsk. A Turkish airways flight would then take them to Syria.
Top Russian and American diplomats are meeting on Wednesday in an effort to reduce tension in the Arctic as Washington blames Moscow for ‘provocations’ in the region and warns they may have ramifications for its national security.
Recently, the Biden Administration announced the establishment of what is essentially a pre-crime surveillance program. This program comes as no surprise to those of us with any concern for our civil rights as we saw this coming a thousand miles away. Of course, the program will combat “violent domestic extremism” and “violent white supremacy.” (Because all those years of blaming Muslims was just to get silly white people to give up their rights so the surveillance and police state could be turned back on them.)
Questions over the ethics of social media censorship policies that previously characterized the Wuhan lab leak theory as “misinformation” are being asked following a new report bolstering the explanation and Dr. Fauci admitting it’s a possibility.
The last two years have greatly shaken America, and our country will never be the same as a result. If you would have told someone two years ago that in 2021 millions of people would run around wearing masks all day and that the federal government would be relentlessly pushing a large scale mass injection campaign, that person probably would have thought that you were nuts. But now this is the “new normal”. Our freedoms and liberties have been permanently eroded, and now that they have gotten away with pushing the envelope so dramatically, government entities on all levels will be ready to flex their muscles again once the next major crisis comes along.
Red states, along with lone Democrat-controlled Vermont, topped the charts in lowest unemployment rates in April, while blue states recorded the highest jobless rates, according to the Commerce Department.
After months of consideration, a judge in Fulton County, Georgia, has ruled that absentee ballots from the 2020 presidential election will be unsealed and examined for evidence of fraud.
Welcome to the Tuesday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect tech and politics unfolding online. Today:
FTC sues Frontier for misrepresenting internet speeds
Man targeted by D.C. police for sharing hacked data speaks out
1 million people signed up for FCC’s broadband discount program the week it launched
BREAK THE INTERNET
FTC sues Frontier for misrepresenting internet speeds
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and several states are suing Frontier Communications, an internet service provider (ISP), for allegedly not providing customers with internet speeds it promised.
They allege Frontier Communications advertised and sold internet speeds based on download speeds but it did not provide customers with the speeds they were promised. Instead, the FTC alleges, the speeds “often fell far short of what was touted in the plans they purchased.”
“In numerous instances, Frontier has sent consumers advertisements for DSL Internet service at speed tiers that Frontier could not provide to them,” the complaint reads.
The complaint says Frontier has been advertising and selling internet service at speeds that Frontier “did not, or often could not” provide to customers since January 2015.
In a statement to the Daily Dot, a spokesperson for Frontier called the lawsuit “without merit” and said that it would “present a vigorous defense.” The spokesperson added: “Frontier’s DSL Internet speeds have been clearly and accurately articulated, defined and described in the Company’s marketing materials and disclosures.”
The 40 best documentaries on Amazon Prime from any mood or interest
Whether you’re looking to learn more about politics or just want an escape from the endless misery of life, Amazon Prime has a documentary to match your mood. From the unbelievable story of the lost Fantastic Four movie to Stacy Abrams’ fight to restore American democracy there’s something for everyone.
The man, whose identity has not been publicly released, spoke with the Daily Dot after MPD released his photo and described him as a “person of interest” on Twitter.
More than 250GB of data was posted to the dark web last week after the department was targeted by a ransomware gang in late April. The man says he shared some of the hacked files on Instagram, which ultimately led to his account being disabled.
“I know for a fact it was deleted because my page was gaining too much attention and awareness,” the man told the Daily Dot. “The original post I made got shared 30,000 times before it got shut down.”
MPD’s Twitter post on Monday was met with backlash over concerns that the man was being targeted merely for sharing the hacked data.
Reposting newsworthy material obtained through a hack, so long as the individual sharing it wasn’t involved, is generally considered to be protected by the First Amendment. Social media sites have tried to clamp down on hacked data, however, being spread on their platforms.
The Daily Dot reached out to MPD to inquire about the allegations but was not provided any information.
“This is an active investigation and there are no updates at this time,” the department said.
1 million people signed up for FCC’s broadband discount program the week it launched
More than 1 million people have signed up for the FCC’s Emergency Broadband Benefit, a coronavirus pandemic-related program that offers monthly discounts to help people pay for broadband service.
The program allows for Americans who meet certain criteria to get a monthly discount of up to $50—or $75 for Tribal lands—to help pay for their internet access.
Congress allocated $3.2 billion for the program late last year, and the benefit will continue until that funding runs out or six months after the the federal government declares an end to the pandemic.
The FCC set up a website for people to learn more about eligibility and to sign up. People from all 50 states; Washington D.C.; the Virgin Islands; and American Samoa have all enrolled, the FCC said.
If you thought the store closures and bankruptcies in 2020 were surprising… you haven’t seen anything yet. Something much bigger is just around the corner. See it HERE.
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We now have the final puzzle pieces falling into place, confirming that covid vaccines are efficient extermination weapons targeting humanity.
Today we have begun to release each day’s Situation Update podcast in multiple parts, plus a “full” version with all the parts combined.
Each part will be from 15 – 45 minutes (typically) and focus on one area of analysis, such as economics, culture, vaccines, the plandemic, nutrition and health, survival, etc., all depending on what news is breaking that day.
Today we’ve released four parts, for a total of around 2 hours of podcast analysis. You can pick and choose the parts that you want to hear the most.
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82.) SEAN HANNITY
83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
Digg Editions
Tue, May 25
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One year has passed since George Floyd was murdered and more news to start your Tuesday.
Good morning, Daily Briefing readers. Today marks a year since George Floyd was murdered by former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, sparking months of protests around the world. President Joe Biden is scheduled to meet with Floyd’s family later, as the police reform legislation named in his honor has still not been passed.
🔴 New this morning:George Floyd. Trayvon Martin. Sandra Bland. For many Black Americans, these deaths – and others like them – have caused lasting trauma.
🔵 “A public lynching.” Bernice King, Keisha Lance Bottoms, Nick Cannon, Julian Castro and other Americans reflect on George Floyd’s murder.
✈️ A Southwest Airlines flight attendant was assaulted by a passenger and lost two teeth. “Unfortunately, this is just one of many occurrences,” said a union official.
🎧 On today’s 5 Things podcast, we look at the state of police reform one year after George Floyd’s murder. You can listen to the podcast every day on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or on your smart speaker.
Here’s what’s happening today:
George Floyd’s family struggles with loss, a year since murder
One year ago, George Floyd was murdered at the hands of police , a day that sparked protests for social justice worldwide. Floyd, 46, died on May 25, 2020, after former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin pressed his knee into his neck for more than nine minutes. To millions around the world, the final minutes of Floyd’s life unleashed months of protests worldwide against police brutality and systemic racism. But for those closest to Floyd, his death was a theft: the abrupt loss of a friend and confidant. The one-year mark of his murder will be observed with a block party in the Houston housing projects where he grew up.
President Biden to meet with Floyd’s relatives amid delay in police reform legislation
One year after the murder of George Floyd, President Joe Biden hoped to have signed police reform legislation. But the anniversary of Floyd’s murder will go without lawmakers on Capitol Hill coming to a deal to pass legislation that is named in Floyd’s honor. The White House has downplayed the delay of the George Floyd Justice and Policing Act being passed by the one-year mark of Floyd’s death, a deadline that Biden himself set. Instead of focusing on the talks, the president will commemorate Floyd’s death with his relatives, who will visit the White House in a private meeting.
What else people are reading:
💉 Health officials are looking into reports of heart problems in young adults and teens who have received two-dose COVID-19 vaccines. Tap here for the latest coronavirus updates.
🔵 A Louisiana State Police officer at the scene of the deadly 2019 arrest of Ronald Greene, a Black man, falsely told internal investigators that he was a threat to flee.
🏈 Amid rampant speculation about whether his 10-year run with the Atlanta Falcons could be coming to an end, Julio Jonesfurther fueled rumors.
Stars come out tonight in NBA playoffs
The NBA offers up a playoff tripleheader Tuesday, starting off with Game 2 of the series between the Boston Celtics and Brooklyn Nets (7:30 p.m. ET). The Nets finally have their “big three” of James Harden, Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving all together – and they combined for 82 points in a win on Saturday. The second game pits the Phoenix Suns against the Los Angeles Lakers (10 p.m. ET). The Suns won Game 1, but lost point guard Chris Paul for part of the game to a shoulder injury. The nightcap (10:30 p.m. ET) has the Los Angeles Clippers hosting the Dallas Mavericks.
Texas lawmakers pass bill that would allow handguns without a permit
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott could soon sign a bill that would allow the permitless carry of holstered handguns , after the state legislature approved the law on Monday. Abbott has said he would sign the bill that would make Texas the 19th state to allow handguns to be carried without a permit, according to gun control nonprofit Everytown for Gun Safety. House Bill 1927 would allow anyone over the age of 21 who can legally possess a firearm in Texas to carry a handgun in public without a permit. Current state law allows residents 21 or older to carry a handgun only after completing the required training and criminal background check to obtain a license to carry.
Package containing white powder sent to Sen. Rand Paul’s home
An investigation is underway on Tuesday after a package containing white powder was sent to the Kentucky home of Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky. The FBI’s Louisville office “is working with the Warren County Sheriff’s Office by providing forensic and technical support for this investigation,” agency spokesman Tim Beam told the Louisville Courier Journal, part of the USA TODAY Network. Capitol Hill police are also involved in the investigation, according to Politico, which first reported the news. “I take these threats immensely seriously,” Paul wrote on Twitter on Monday.
📸 Visitors are back at the Smithsonian National Zoo 📸
Visitors watch giant Panda Xiao Qi Ji, right, with his mother Mei Xiang, 22 years of age, at the Smithsonian National Zoo on May 21, 2021 in Washington DC.
Jack Gruber, USA TODAY
Giant panda Xiao Qi Ji celebrated his 9-month birthday with his mother Mei Xiang as visitors returned to the Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington on Friday.
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– May 25, 2021 – Statement by Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the United States of America A new Ipsos/Reuters poll ‘Beliefs Among Republicans’ shows 53% believe Donald Trump is the true President (I always knew America was smart!). 2020 Election was tainted 56%. The Election was stolen (and Rigged!) 61%.
The following is a news analysis. In the fake fact-check industry, information and truth are casualties The Poynter Institute’s “Politifact” recently had to do an embarrassing reversal of its fact check that called the idea of Covid-19 originating in a lab a “debunked conspiracy theory.” The fact check by Li-Meng Yan was first published last […]
– May 24, 2021 – Statement by Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the United States of America New Hampshire’s Election Audit has revealed that large-scale voting machines appear to count NON-EXISTING VOTES. State and local communities are seeking confirmation. It’s probably true, but we’ll soon know. Why aren’t Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and Republicans doing […]
Police say pro-Palestinian Waseem Awawdeh is charged with hate crimes in the beating of a 29-year old Jewish man named Joseph Borgen. Awawdeh, 23, is reportedly a college student. Awawdeh has reportedly been released from jail while the case against him moves forward. He allegedly told a jail employee, “if I could do it again, […]
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.
There are 4 foods that can hijack the chemicals in your brain. These foods can cause you to experience tiredness, memory loss, low energy, skin problems – and worst of all, they could be the reason why you are gaining weight. These foods can “rewire” your brain and cause you to crave fat, sugars, and carbs, even when your stomach is full. Fortunately, there is a method you can do right at home that can reverse these cravings.
Ontario is now handing out tickets for SHAKING HANDS
As a Michigander, I live pretty dang close to the new totalitarian nightmare that is Canada.
Super-Catholic Biden did not speak at Notre Dame’s commencement and did not get the honorary degree they usually give presidents. Wanna guess why?
Did you guys know that Joe Biden is Catholic, and that he’s probably the most Catholicly Catholic who has ever lived?
This UMass professor is seriously arguing that universities are “right-wing institutions” 💀
This may be the world record for grasping at straws, courtesy of Asheesh Kapure Siddique, Assistant Professor of History at the University of Massachussets:
Oh? Fauci now says we need to investigate the Wuhan lab — he’s “not convinced” Rona developed naturally!
Dr. Anthony Fauci, also known as the Hero of the Republic or Flippy McFlopperson (depending who you talk to), has a new thought for us commoners this week:
Another FIFTY-FIVE people were shot in Chicago over the weekend
In another devastatingly average Chicago weekend, 55 people were shot with 11 of them killed from Friday night to Monday morning in the Windy City AKA Chiraq.
A critical race professor at the University of Colorado says rampant black-on-Asian hate crimes are a product of white supremacy
Here’s something that probably won’t surprise you:
NFT of OG viral video “Charlie Bit My Finger” just sold for $761K
CHAW-LAY!
After losing to transgender athletes “time after time,” female track star says woke policies have taught her that her “body isn’t good enough” and that she’s “unlikely to succeed” because she is a woman.
I have to hand it to misogynists everywhere: who would have guessed that the Handmaid’s Tale would be ushered in through woke ideology??
The Jim Henson Company’s “inclusive” puppeteering workshop excludes straight white men.
You know who wouldn’t have been permitted to attend the Jim Henson Company’s puppeteering workshop?
Get ready for Critical Looks Theory — the idea that attractive people “benefit from a violent system of lookism”!
Critical theory and other socialist-adjacent woke theories are all about jealousy.
So this is how you pull teeth in Canada, I guess…
Hockey kids are built different, indeed.
Gov. Whitmer busted in Facebook bar photo violating own Covid orders … “We didn’t stop to think about it”
Whoopsie daisy, Big Gretch!
Lego says “Everyone is awesome,” but they don’t really believe that
Seeing that the Lego company was planning on affirming and promoting the LGBT movement with a newly designed product was no surprise for me or anyone else who has been paying attention to the calculated corporate strategy of recent years. Large companies know there is a price to be paid for lack of compliance with radical social movements who have a well-oiled outrage machine just itching to release a barrage of boycott hashtags.
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
05/25/2021
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Coronavirus Bulletin
TOP CORONAVIRUS NEWS
U.S. to Investigate Wuhan ‘Lab Leak’
U.S. intelligence agencies are examining reports that researchers at a Chinese virology laboratory were seriously ill in 2019 a month before the first cases of COVID-19 were reported, according to U.S. government sources. Read more.
U.S. Virus Cases, Deaths Plummet
The U.S. last week reported the lowest number of new COVID-19 cases in nearly a year – with new infections dropping 26% from the previous seven days – and the fewest weekly deaths since March 2020. Read more.
New York City Schools to End Remote Learning
New York City public schools, the nation’s largest school district, will fully reopen in September in person without a remote option, the city’s mayor announced Monday. Read more.
Corporations Stop Short of Vaccine Mandates
Public health officials fear that requiring jabs on the job would create a noisy, counterproductive backlash. Read more.
U.S. Adds Japan to ‘Do Not Travel’ List
The U.S. State Department on Monday urged against travel to Japan due to a new wave of COVID-19 infections, issuing a “Do Not Travel” advisory just two months before the Tokyo Olympics are set to take place. Read more.
Find the Latest Coronavirus Information by State
Each state, plus U.S. territories and Washington, D.C., has online resources about COVID-19. Here’s a guide.
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Democrats Push Cashless Currency Legislation. WARNING: It Resets Your Retirement To Zero
Soon to be forced upon you: Federal Reserve Digital Wallets with 0% privacy. The World Economic Forum Says “You’ll Own Nothing, And You’ll Be Happy.”
Dear American Patriot,
It’s called the Great Reset.
Nancy Pelosi tried to sneak these Digital Federal Reserve accounts or digital wallets into the $2 Trillion (national debt) Pandemic Stimulus Bill but, she pulled it out of the legislation at the last minute.
The draft bill outlined a concept called “FedAccounts.”
With a “FedAccount,” the new Democrat Gestapo will give you what he deems you are worthy of for compensation based on a whim. If you’re overweight, there will be prohibitions placed on your FedAccount. No money in your Digital FedAccount Wallet will be allowed to be spent on unhealthy foods like cakes, cookies, or twinkies. If you own guns, you may be declined because ammunition is non-essential.
Entire business categories that Democrats disagree with will be wiped out once these FedAccounts are implemented.
Grab this Complimentary Protection Guide. It will give you a game plan to grow and protect your savings.
Every transaction tracked and monitored by the federal government.
Pelosi pulled the new Digital Dollar Legislation from the stimulus package, but not long after, on March 24th, Senator Sherrod Brown proposed a new pro-digital dollar draft. S.3571 – Banking for All Act.
Democrats are coming for any wealth that you have. Once this legislation is enacted and put into place, If you’re not an elitist like them, then you and your children and your children’s children forever in perpetuity will live on the pittance, they hand out..
You need to protect yourself by protecting your assets and your retirement Savings.
You’ll learn about the one particular account that all wealthy people have and why you should have one.
You’ll learn about the world’s most powerful anti-inflation fighter.
You’ll learn what to do – what not to do – to protect your retirement.
You’ll learn about one secret IRS Loophole that could literally save you $1,000s in taxes.
Jump on this now. Get this Complimentary Protection Guide. It contains insider information on protecting your retirement savings.
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99.) MARK LEVIN
May 24, 2021
Posted on
On Monday’s Mark Levin Show, Retired Science Editor at The New York Times Nicholas Wade questioned how much Dr. Anthony Fauci knew about the Coronavirus in an interview with Mark Levin on the Fox News Channel. Wade outlined the case that it was not likely that the coronavirus was transferred from animals to humans. The bats at the wet market was a cover-up promoted by the Chinese Communist Party and the media was too happy to blame President Trump to even look into it. Conversely, currently available scientific information supports the hypothesis that the virus leaked from a lab at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. What will the Biden Administration do anything about China’s role in the virus? Jen Psaki says there is no underlying data available to take any action. The White House will rely on the World Health Organization. Serious economic pressure must be out on the Chinese government and Fauci and the US must also get to the bottom of who signed off on third-party funding. Later, not a single mosque was attacked in the United States amidst the Hamas attacks on Israel but several synagogues and Jews across America have been terrorized for publicly gathering to support Israel. Similarly, leftists that embrace Critical Race Theory continue attacking the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King’s concept of a color-blind society. Finally, Governor Ron DeSantis discusses his legislation against Big Tech censorship. If Big Tech censors enforce rules inconsistently and discriminate in favor of the dominant Silicon Valley ideology, they will be held accountable in Florida.
There is reality and then there is the communist propaganda that the Democrat media complex shovels. as news. Believe none of it. We are closer to civil war the people know.
Not a peep from the Democrat media complex. But leave bacon outside of a mosque and you’ll do jail time. Beat Jews and you’ll be exalted by Democrats especially if you’re a Muslim.
Old Joe Biden’s handlers have done a great deal to exacerbate divisions in American society. And no group has borne the brunt of this more than American Jews.
Did we miss anything? Let us know by hitting reply or sending an email through our site here.
We cover the news for you, and as always – you’re our best source!
102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
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May 25, 2021
Listen to today’s show:
Liberals don’t know much. And what they “know” is mostly wrong. They’re living in an alternate reality. In this episode, I discuss the latest troubling news story about policing and COVID and why liberals are confused.
St. Louis Mayor Plans to Defund Police, Shut Down Jail, Even as Murder Rates Soar
St. Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones ran as a race-obsessed anti-cop leftist, so her decision to get rid of a city jail, divert $4 million from the police to social programs and not fill 100 open positions in the St. Louis police force is no surprise. This comes despite the fact that city has the highest murder rate in America.
Washington Post “Fact Checker” Does a 180 on Wuhan Lab Leak Theory
Back in early 2020, the Washington Post’s alleged fact checker Glenn Kessler declared the Wuhan lab leak theory bunk on numerous occasions. The entirety of the media (and Dr. Fauci) rejected the lab leak hypothesis right off the bat, seemingly on the sole basis that President Donald Trump had floated it.
In a move that at this point should surprise no one, Joe Biden has just crushed the hopes and dreams of American miners in favor of overseas mining operations and… Read more…
U.S. intelligence agencies are examining reports that researchers at a Chinese virology laboratory were seriously ill in 2019 a month before the first cases of COVID-19 were reported, according to… Read more…
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