Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday June 18, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
June 18 2021
Good morning from Washington, where the Supreme Court again has let Obamacare stand and also struck down Philadelphia’s intolerance for a Catholic foster care agency. We have commentary from John Goodman and Kassie Dulin, respectively. In an ominous move, the IRS nixes a tax exemption for a Christian group, Fred Liucas reports. On the podcast, former Trump communications aide Tim Murtaugh surveys the media’s debunked narratives about the former president. Plus: the Biden-Putin nothingburger, and House Democrats cover for China. With the president’s signature yesterday, today marks the first observance of Juneteenth as a federal holiday commemorating June 19, 1865, when word reached Texas of slavery’s end two months after the Confederacy surrendered.
A top IRS official tells a Christian group that “Bible teachings are typically affiliated” with the Republican Party as a rationale for denying tax-exempt status.
Both leaders described the meeting as constructive, but nothing of substance was agreed upon. Putin denied responsibility for cyberattacks on U.S. institutions and wouldn’t mention Alexei Navalny’s name…
When law enforcement cleared protesters from Lafayette Square a year ago, media outlets reported that Trump ordered the move to get a photo-op in front of St. John’s Church. But now that’s been debunked.
House Democrats vote against an amendment that would have required companies to inform shareholders if they engage with a Chinese official or company using forced labor.
Jack Phillips has maintained for years that his Christian faith doesn’t allow him to create custom cakes celebrating certain things—including same-sex marriage, gender transitions, adultery, and Halloween.
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3.) DAYBREAK
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A 9-0 Win for Religious Liberty at the Supreme Court
The decision comes in the case of Catholic Social Service (CSS), where the City of Philadelphia essentially made the charity choose between fidelity to their Catholic conviction or capitulation in order to continue providing foster services. The decision came from Chief Justice John Roberts: so long as the government can achieve its interests in a manner that does not burden religion, it must do so (SCOTUS). Wall Street Journal: “It’s a beautiful day when the highest court in the land protects foster moms and the 200-year-old religious ministry that supports them,” said Lori Windham, an attorney with the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty who represented Catholic Social Services before the Supreme Court. “Taking care of children, especially children who have been neglected and abused, is a universal value that spans all ideological divides” (WSJ). Ryan Anderson: The Court ruled unanimously in favor of the free exercise of Catholic Social Services of Philadelphia. It ruled unanimously against the religious bigotry of the city of Philadelphia (EPPC). So much for a court hopelessly divided.
2.
After Supreme Court Win on Obamacare, President Biden Seeks to Expand on “Landmark Law”
Breitbart: The Supreme Court ruled 7-2 in favor of the law rejecting a challenge brought to the court by the state of Texas. Biden boasted that Obamacare survived more than a decade of political attacks from Republicans and survived three significant Supreme Court challenges. “It is time [to] move forward and keep building on this landmark law,” the statement said (Breitbart). From Townhall.com: Joining the majority in upholding the ACA was a justice the Democrats fearmongered would be the deciding vote in ending Obamacare. Justice Amy Coney Barrett proved the Left wrong (Townhall.com).
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3.
Juneteenth Established as a Federal Holiday
The effort to make the day marking emancipation a Federal Holiday on June 19th passed in the House by an overwhelming 415-14 vote and in the Senate by unanimous consent (CNBC). President Biden signed the bill on Thursday: Juneteenth National Independence Day will become the 12th legal public holiday, including Inauguration Day, and the first new one created since Martin Luther King Jr. Day was signed into law in 1983 by then-President Ronald Reagan (CNBC). Is it some new woke holiday? Kay C. James, President of the Heritage Foundation: It is not. Juneteenth has been celebrated since 1866, mostly by Black Americans; yet it’s a day that’s worthy of celebration by every American, as it represents a critical turning point in American history, not just Black history. It is the day that we as a people finally began to live up to one of the greatest principles wed professed: a nation devoted to liberty for all (WashTimes). Marco Rubio: The abolition of slavery was the single biggest step ever taken in our nation’s 245 year journey towards fully living up to the ideals of our founding (Twitter). Charlie Kirk was not enthusiastic, warning: you’re not paying attention to what the left is truly trying to accomplish (Twitter).
4.
Is Senator Joe Manchin Going Wobbly in His Defense of Filibuster?
From the Intercept: West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, in a private call on Monday with a group of major donors, provided a revealing look at his political approach to some of the thorniest issues confronting lawmakers. (Intercept). National Review: Manchin said a proposal to change the 60-vote rule to a 55-vote rule is one of the many “good suggestions” he’s received (NationalReview). The filibuster is viewed by progressives as the key roadblock to their agenda. It’s also key to American governance as we know it (Heritage).
5.
President Biden Gave Putin a List of Targets That are “Off Limits” for Cyberattacks
Fox News: President Biden told reporters Wednesday he gave President Vladimir Putin a list of 16 critical infrastructure entities that are “off limits” to a Russian cyberattack. Those entities include energy, water, health care, emergency, chemical, nuclear, communications, government, defense, food, commercial facilities, IT, transportation, dams, manufacturing and financial services (Fox News). Does that mean the rest of American enterprise is fair game?
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6.
Entire Portland Police Rapid Response Team Quits
After an officer was charged. The Police Tribune: All members of the Portland Police Bureau’s (PPB) Rapid Response Team (RRT) unanimously voted to resign from the team on Wednesday. The agency will no long have an RRT, which has been the primary unit handling the violent uprisings that have erupted on a regular basis in downtown Portland for more than a year now. The now-former team members are all sworn members of the PPB and will continue serving in their regular assignments, according to the press release (The Police Tribune). Portland Police Bureau: The Rapid Response Team is an all-hazard incident response team that has received advanced specialized training to respond to incidents requiring higher levels of technical expertise (Portland Police Bureau).
7.
Los Angeles District Attorney Establishes Panel to Re-Evaluate LAPD Actions
The Factual Analysis Citizen Consulting Team (FACCT) is the work of L.A.’s radical leftist District Attorney George Gascón. Recruited to serve on the panel: An organizer from Black Lives Matter in Los Angeles. The independent counsel will, “re-examine fatal shootings by law enforcement officers that were previously deemed justified” (DailyWire). The move is certain to discourage quality candidates from engaging in dangerous public service. Remember: Portland cut police funding and got a 2,000% surge in murders (WashEx).
8.
Speaker Pelosi Refuses to Answer Whether or Not a Fetus Is a Human Being
National Review: During a press briefing on Capitol Hill Thursday, Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi dodged a reporter’s question about whether a 15-week unborn baby constitutes a human being. The reporter, citing a Mississippi bill waiting to be heard by the Supreme Court that bans abortions after 15 weeks, asked, “Is an unborn baby at 15 weeks a human being?” “Let me just say that I am a big supporter of Roe v. Wade,” Pelosi responded. “I am a mother of five children in six years. I think I have some standing on this issue as to respecting a woman’s right to choose” (National Review).
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9.
The Swift Elimination of Dissent in Hong Kong
Apple Daily has been a key newspaper for freedom advocates in Hong Kong since its founding in 1995. They are going to have a hard time continuing their efforts now. The Journal reports: More than 500 officers on Thursday searched the newsroom of Apple Daily, founded by jailed Beijing critic Jimmy Lai, and arrested five executives, including its editor-in-chief Ryan Law, who was led away in handcuffs from his home (WSJ). More from Kevin Williamson: on Wednesday the Beijing junta arrested its editor-in-chief, Ryan Law, along with other top editors, and seized its assets and bank accounts, which will, in effect, dissolve it as a business. Though police officers were seen hauling away boxes of paperwork and scrolling through computer files, Apple Daily’s offense is not keeping secrets but refusing to keep them. Apple Daily’s crime is saying what everyone knows to be true (NationalReview).
10.
Father Dismantles Critical Race Theory at School Board Meeting
Daily Wire: A black father in Illinois sounded off in a viral speech at a local school board meeting about the dangers of Critical Race Theory, saying that the far-left ideology “deliberately” teaches kids “to hate each other” (Daily Wire). According to Benny Johnson: “Watch this parent absolutely obliterate Critical Race Theory at an Illinois school board meeting: “How do I have two medical degrees if I’m sitting here oppressed” (Twitter)?
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Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 6.18.21
Your day is better when you start it with a first read on what’s happening in Florida politics.
Good Friday morning.
Unless there is so much breaking news that we’d feel guilty not putting out an edition of Sunburn, I am taking Sunday off for Father’s Day.
Sunburn will be back in your inbox Tuesday morning.
___
The 2021 Legislative Session is in the rearview, and most major bills that made it through the Legislature have already hit the Governor’s desk.
Now, it’s report card season.
Many organizations grade lawmakers for their votes on key bills, but the Florida Chamber of Commerce’s annual Legislative Report Card is the most comprehensive. Most years, it tabulates about 4,000 votes made in committee hearings and on chamber floors. The 2021 edition approaches 5,000.
It’s report card time from Mark Wilson and the Florida Chamber.
Among the many Chamber priorities this year were bills to protect businesses from COVID-19 liability lawsuits, require out-of-state retailers to collect sales tax for online purchases, expand and streamline school choice, cut the commercial rents sales tax, address cost drivers in the property insurance market, and boost voluntary pre-kindergarten accountability.
For the most part, the Chamber’s wishes came true.
“Florida’s economy won with the Florida Chamber-backed, pro-jobs policy passed during the 2021 Legislative Session,” said Florida Chamber of Commerce President & CEO Mark Wilson. “The actions taken by Gov. (Ron) DeSantis and Florida’s lawmakers will go a long way in continuing to build momentum toward creating the more than 2 million jobs necessary to take Florida from the 17th largest economy in the world to the 10th largest by 2030 and securing Florida’s future.”
Bills and policies on the test were outlined in the Florida Chamber’s pre-Legislative Session agenda, “Where We Stand.” A copy was sent to every lawmaker before their first votes were cast.
The average lawmaker scored 79% on the Chamber’s scale, a C+ on some scales but a flat C in the chamber rubric. The average Senator scored an 80% — good enough for a B.
Overall, 88 lawmakers earned an A, 13 landed a B, and eight skated by with a C, and a dozen are staring at a D. The other 39 lawmakers failed, and there are no summer school opportunities at the Capitol.
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“Potential Tropical Cyclone 3 prompts tropical storm warning along Gulf Coast, hurricane center says” via Joe Mario Pedersen and David Harris of the Orlando Sentinel — The National Hurricane Center issued tropical storm warnings for parts of the Gulf Coast as the system now designated as Potential Tropical Cyclone 3 makes its way north, according to Thursday’s 5 p.m. update. The warning is in effect from Intracoastal City, Louisiana, to the Alabama/Florida border. As of 5 p.m., the system was located 475 miles south of Morgan City, Louisiana, and moving north at 9 mph. It will approach the north-central Gulf Coast late Friday or early Saturday and turn northeast after landfall. Maximum winds are at 30 mph, but strengthening is in the forecast Thursday night and Friday. Rainfall totals could fall between 4 and 8 inches with as high as 12 inches in some areas.
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Personnel note: BaughmanMerrill taps David Gracin as new marketing director — BaughmanMerrill hired Florida-based former campaign manager and strategist Gracin to lead the firm’s marketing efforts for 2022. Gracin has managed local, legislative, and congressional campaigns, including for Oz Vazquez in CD 18 and Harry Cohen for Tampa Mayor in 2019. “We are thrilled David will be taking the lead on our marketing efforts to build on our portfolio of clients and expand BaughmanMerrill’s services to Democratic candidates, organizations, and independent efforts …,” BaughmanMerrill partner and creative director Duane Baughman said. Partner and national campaign director Katie Merrill added, “As a former manager, David brings a depth of campaign knowledge from his years in the trenches that we’re proud to offer to our clients, both present and future.”
Situational awareness
—@POTUS: Juneteenth is officially a federal holiday.
—@paimadhu: As North America & Europe vaccinate their way out of the COVID crisis, Asia, South America and Africa will get ravaged by the Delta variant. We must advocate for #VaccinesForAll & end the pandemic everywhere!
—@jaredlholt: If Republicans actually believed that Jan. 6 was an “inside job,” they’d support a commission to investigate what happened that day and before. That they would rather outsource that role to misinfo swamps online says about everything one needs to know about the genuineness here.
—@ddiamond: June 28, 2012: ACA survives*, 5-4 … June 25, 2015: ACA survives, 6-3 … June 17, 2021: ACA survives, 7-2
—@loriberman: .@GovRonDeSantis and @AGAshleyMoody used taxpayer money in support of a legal challenge to overturn Obamacare, which would’ve stripped health care away from over 20 million Americans. The country is thankful that they failed.
—@fswisen: By stacking the Florida Supreme Court with conservatives gen x or older, we ended up with a court whose judicial activism on cannabis is far out-of-step with the views of younger conservatives. I wonder what that means for the next 25 years of Florida pot.
Tweet, tweet:
—@carigebin: No one wants to go to a restaurant and have to scan in a QR code to get a menu. No one. I hope this trend dies a million painful deaths.
—@TamaraLush: ME: Yeah, I live in St. Pete. It’s like a little oasis of sanity in Flor- *reads article about my congressional district* *closes computer*
Days until
Father’s Day — 2; Amazon Prime Day — 3; New York City Mayoral Primary — 4; Microsoft reveals major Windows update — 6; F9 premieres in the U.S. — 7; Bruce Springsteen revives solo show, “Springsteen on Broadway” — 8; ‘Tax Freedom Holiday’ begins — 13; Fourth of July — 16; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 21; MLB All-Star Game — 25; Jeff Bezos travels into space on Blue Origin’s first passenger flight — 32; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 35; second season of ‘Ted Lasso’ premieres on Apple+ — 35; the NBA Draft — 45; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 47; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 53; Florida Behavioral Health Association’s Annual Conference (BHCon) begins — 61; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 67; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 76; NFL regular season begins — 83; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 88; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 94; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 98; ‘Dune’ premieres — 105; MLB regular season ends — 107; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 112; World Series Game 1 — 131; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 137; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 137; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 139; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 153; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 161; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 175; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 185; NFL season ends — 205; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 207; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 207; NFL playoffs begin — 211; Super Bowl LVI — 240; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 280; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 322; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 349; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 385; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 476; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 511.
Top story
“Affordable Care Act survives latest Supreme Court Challenge” via Adam Liptak of The New York Times — The Affordable Care Act survived a third major challenge as SCOTUS turned aside the latest effort by Republicans to kill the health care law. The law has been the subject of relentless Republican hostility. But attempts to repeal it failed, as did earlier SCOTUS challenges, in 2012 and 2015. With the passing years, the law gained popularity and was woven into the fabric of the health care system. On Thursday, in what Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. called, in dissent, “the third installment in our epic Affordable Care Act trilogy,” the Supreme Court again sustained the law. Its future now seems secure. Justice Clarence Thomas, who had dissented in the earlier decisions, was on the majority in the 7-2 decision.
Three is enough: The Affordable Care Act survives one last challenge. Image via AP.
“Florida Democrats hail Supreme Court Obamacare ruling that deals GOP defeat” via Antonio Fins of The Palm Beach Post — A yearslong legal battle waged against the Affordable Care Act by Republican leaders in states such as Florida ended in a resounding defeat Thursday. The Supreme Court ruled 7-2 against a legal challenge filed by the Donald Trump administration to void the law. Instead, the high court left the law, known broadly as Obamacare, intact and in place. Florida Democrats, who have long railed against efforts to strike down the law in the courts, hailed the victory. They noted that state GOP leaders and officials, who backed the lawsuit attacking Obamacare, had placed in jeopardy an extremely popular law in the Sunshine State, which typically has led the nation in Affordable Care Act health plan enrollment.
2022
“Florida GOP under fire for tweet accusing Democrats of antisemitism” via Matt Dixon and Gary Fineout of POLITICO — The Republican Party of Florida on Tuesday night tried to brand 2022 statewide Democratic candidates “antisemitic” in a now-deleted tweet, a move that drew immediate backlash and prompted the party to delete the post on social media and claim it was a “typo.” Included in the GOP’s post was Nikki Fried, who is Jewish. The Florida GOP’s tweet included a video of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi trying to defend Rep. Ilhan Omar, a Muslim Democrat from Minnesota who came under fire recently when a handful of Democrats accused her of equating Israel with the Taliban and Hamas. Fried supporters also defended Charlie Crist, whose time as Governor included traveling to Israel in 2007 to put a note in Jerusalem’s Western Wall asking that God protect “Florida from storms and other difficulties.”
Really?
Assignment editors — Gubernatorial candidate Crist joins St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Kriseman, Rep. Ben Diamond and Michele Rayner, Hillsborough State Attorney Andrew Warren and former Pinellas County Commissioner Ken Welch for a news conference to call on DeSantis to take on Florida’s connections to The Capitol insurrection of January 6, 10 a.m. RSVP at press@charliecrist.com.
“Florida Supreme Court snuffs out another effort to legalize marijuana” via Kirby Wilson of the Tampa Bay Times — For the third time in three months, the Florida Supreme Court dashed the hopes of Floridians who want to see expanded access to cannabis. In a 5-2 ruling on Thursday, the state’s highest court found a ballot initiative to legalize marijuana to be misleading. The initiative, titled “Regulate Marijuana in a Manner Similar to Alcohol to Establish Age, Licensing, and Other Restrictions,” also would have allowed Floridians to grow cannabis at home. Justices Charles Canady, Ricky Polston, Carlos Muñiz, John Couriel and Jamie Grosshans concurred Thursday that Sensible Florida’s ballot initiative misled voters because the 75-word summary of the proposed amendment was unclear on the word “use.”
“Records link big business group to Florida elections probe” via Jason Garcia and Annie Martin of the Orlando Sentinel — Investigators searching for the source of more than half-a-million dollars spent last year in support of spoiler candidates that helped Republicans win three key state Senate races have obtained bank records for an organization tied to a dark-money group linked to Associated Industries of Florida. The records were obtained as part of a criminal case in Miami, where prosecutors have charged former Republican Sen. Frank Artiles with five felonies. Authorities say Artiles paid a financially struggling friend, Alexis Pedro Rodriguez, to run as an independent candidate in a state Senate race in South Florida. Only Artiles and Rodriguez have been accused of crimes. Ryan Tyson, a former AIF VP, said the group “has no control or knowledge of our activities around the country.”
“David Smith’s reelection campaign pulls in $23K in May” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Smith‘s reelection campaign raised $23,355 in May, topping legislative fundraising campaigns across Central Florida in a month that saw only four candidates raise much money. Smith’s May effort was in House District 28, where he’s campaigning to win a third term in 2022 to represent eastern Seminole County. Across Central Florida, only four candidates raised as much as $10,000 in May, none in Senate races. Smith was joined by Republican candidate Rachel Plakon, who collected $15,606 for her bid for the open seat in House District 29 in western Seminole; Democratic Rep. Anna Eskamani, who raised $10,818 for her campaign for a third term in House District 47 in central Orange County; and Republican Rep. Fred Hawkins, who raised $10,000 to get reelected to a second term in House District 42 in Osceola and Polk counties.
“Margaret Good launches Democratic organizing effort in Southwest Florida” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Former state Rep. Good launched a new Democratic effort to boost grassroots support in Southwest Florida. Fried is offering her support for the effort. Good is the only Democrat living in Southwest Florida to win election to the Florida Legislature in more than a decade, flipping a Sarasota district in a 2018 Special Election and holding onto it in a subsequent election the same year. Sarasota political organizers David Lapovsky, Kay Mathers and Dennis Rees will also play key roles in the committee. Mathers, who previously worked with Good on past campaigns and in her legislative office, said this should help motivate voters in a place where enthusiasm can be hard to muster.
Margaret Good is pushing Democratic voter engagement in Southeast Florida.
“Florida’s new voting law leaves elections supervisors confused, frustrated” via Jake Sheridan of the Miami Herald — Florida’s new elections reform law is causing headaches and confusion for the state’s 67 county elections supervisors — and several vented their frustrations to Secretary of State Laurel Lee and other state officials during a conference Wednesday. “We’re all still struggling with how vague some of the new things put into law are,” Okaloosa County election supervisor Paul Lux said following a sometimes-heated discussion on the controversial new law during the Florida Supervisors of Elections’ summer conference. “We need answers.” Recognizing that tensions over the law, SB 90, might be high, the state had asked that questions for Wednesday’s session with Florida Division of Elections Director Maria Matthews be submitted ahead of time.
Dateline Tally
“Ron DeSantis refuses to answer whether he thinks 2020 election was rigged” via J.B. Biunno of WFLA — DeSantis was asked point-blank Thursday whether he believes the 2020 Presidential Election was rigged against Trump. His answer: Florida did its job. DeSantis was in St. Petersburg to host a roundtable with environmental officials on the recent red tide advisories issued in the Tampa Bay area. After the roundtable, a reporter in attendance asked DeSantis whether Joe Biden’s victory in last year’s election was rigged. “I think we had the best-run election in this state [than we’ve] probably ever had,” DeSantis responded. “I’m proud of what they did.” As the reporter attempted to interject about the lack of a response to the question, Gov. DeSantis moved on to the next question from a different reporter.
Ron DeSantis sidesteps the issue of a rigged 2020 election.
“Senate Democrats protest DeSantis’ Mexico border deployment” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Florida’s 16 Democratic Senators are protesting DeSantis‘ deployment of law enforcement officers to the Mexican border and urging him to reverse his order. The Democrats, led by Democratic Leader Lauren Book, wrote DeSantis Thursday afternoon decrying the deployment as questionable in need and likely political in motivation and dangerous for Floridians, who now are protected by fewer officers. In the letter, the Democrats contend that the federal government already is deploying people into border areas so there is no need for DeSantis to “sacrifice the safety of our state for what appears to be political posturing.”
“DeSantis signs bill to rename conservation area after Kristin Jacobs” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — DeSantis has signed legislation renaming the Southeast Coral Reef Ecosystem Conservation Area after the late Rep. Jacobs. Legislators approved the measure from Rep. Christine Hunschofsky (HB 217) in early April. Jacobs prioritized environmental issues during her legislative career before passing away in April 2020 after a cancer battle. “Rep. Kristin Jacobs was a fierce advocate for the environment, a friend, and is sorely missed,” Hunschofsky said after DeSantis signed the bill late Wednesday. She also posted a video tribute from the House, which lawmakers played the day they signed the legislation. Hunschofsky holds Jacobs’ former seat in House District 96, making her the natural leader on the House measure. Democratic Sen. Book sponsored the Senate companion (SB 588) and released a statement upon the Governor’s signing.
“DeSantis signs DFS agency bill” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — DeSantis signed a bill Thursday that bolsters services provided by the Department of Financial Services. The bill (HB 1209) increases the department’s ability to support firefighters, protect sexual harassment victims, and protect Floridians from fraud. Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis applauded the Governor for signing the legislation. Under the bill, the DFS risk management program can provide cancer coverage to state agency firefighters. It also designates the Division of Public Assistance Fraud as a criminal justice agency and makes the impersonation of a DFS officer illegal. Sen. Danny Burgess and Rep. Elizabeth Fetterhoff sponsored the legislation.
“DeSantis signs Purple Alert bill” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — DeSantis signed a bill Wednesday implementing an alert system to help locate missing individuals with cognitive disabilities. Sponsored by Palm Beach Democratic Sen. Lori Berman, the bill establishes a Purple Alert system under the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE). The Purple Alert system will dispatch alerts when an endangered adult goes missing with a mental or cognitive disability, a brain injury, or another physical, mental or emotional disability. The bill passed nearly unanimously in both chambers. Wandering can be a danger to a person with limited cognitive abilities, according to the bill analysis. About 12% to 60% of individuals with a cognitive disability wander, and about 5% of wandering instances result in physical harm.
“Bill targeting health disparities signed” via The News Service of Florida — DeSantis signed a bill that details a series of requirements for the state Office of Minority Health and Health Equity. The bill (HB 183) will require the office to coordinate with agencies, organizations and medical providers across the state on such things as gathering and analyzing data “regarding disparities in health status, health outcomes, quality of health care and access to health care services for racial and ethnic minority populations in this state.” It also will require the Florida Department of Health, where the office is housed, to post updated data about health disparities online at least annually.
“DeSantis signs off on protections for domestic violence centers” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis signed a bill on Wednesday to help keep the location of domestic violence centers anonymous. The bill will create a new first-degree misdemeanor for those who maliciously publish or disclose any information or image that identifies the location of a domestic violence center. Repeated offenses would be a third-degree felony. First-degree misdemeanors are punishable by up to one year in prison or a $1,000 fine. Third-degree felonies are punishable by up to five years in prison or a $5,000 fine. Currently, Florida law shields identifying information for domestic violence centers, but there is no crime for disclosing the information.
“DeSantis signs bill to increase credit card security measures at the pump” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — DeSantis signed a bill Wednesday that will require gas stations to increase credit card security measures at their pumps. Under the legislation, gas stations will need to implement a secondary security measure in addition to pressure-sensitive security tape. Gas stations must also report credit card-related security breaches to the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services within 90 days of an incident. Sponsored by Sen. Ana Maria Rodriguez, the bill comes as state officials struggle to thwart credit card skimmers and other fraud schemes. Skimmers are electronic devices that collect a consumer’s credit card information, according to a staff analysis.
“DeSantis signs law preempting gas station regulations” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — Florida cities aren’t allowed to tell gas stations to add electric vehicle charging stations under a new law. Meanwhile, the state is spending its own money to add fast-charging stations on Florida’s highways. DeSantis signed the gas station regulation preemption (HB 839) legislation Wednesday. The new law shields gas stations and their related infrastructure from being outlawed by local governments. The issue arose after some cities looked at policy options that want to encourage clean energy. Under the new law, local governments can still regulate things like zoning, building codes, and necessary transportation issues. A salient part of the new law is that a local government will not require a gas station to add electric vehicle charging stations.
“DeSantis signs auto insurance flexibility bill” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis on Wednesday signed a bill to allow auto insurance policyholders to fully exclude members of their household from their policy. Currently, the Office of Insurance Regulation requires that insurers provide the minimum coverage even for explicitly excluded drivers from the policy. As a result, one driver can potentially drive up the rates for the entire household, pushing the household away from an insurance company they trust. Under Clearwater Republican Sen. Ed Hooper‘s proposal, policyholders can completely exclude drivers, such as a reckless teenager, from their policy to keep their premiums down or maintain coverage. The excluded driver will need to have their own car and own policy to keep driving.
Ed Hooper’s auto insurance bill could give policyholders an option to make premiums cheaper. Image via Colin Hackley.
Engineers praise urban search and rescue bill signing — The American Council of Engineering Companies of Florida and the Florida Engineering Society praised the Governor on Thursday for signing a bill (SB 1060) that would provide liability protection to search and rescue structures specialists. Florida has lost 60% of search and rescue engineers — who are volunteers — since 2017. “With hurricane season upon us, this new law will help ensure Florida has enough structures specialists during declared disasters to help first responders safely enter and navigate collapsed buildings to rescue victims,” said Allen Douglas, Executive Director of ACEC-FL and FES. The organization also thanked sponsors Sen. Jennifer Bradly and Rep. Kaylee Tuck, as well as CFO Patronis, for his vocal support during Session.
Statewide
Jimmy Patronis, search and rescue teams urge hurricane prep — Patronis, flanked by members of the Urban Search & Rescue Florida Task Force 4, urged Floridians to prepare for disasters now before the next hurricane hits. Experts predict an active 2021 Hurricane Season with the possibility of three to five major hurricanes. Currently, a potential tropical storm in the Gulf of Mexico could bring heavy rain and possible flooding to the Panhandle. “It is critical that residents heed all warnings from local authorities and take the proper precautions to stay safe before, during, and after a storm. As we’ve seen in the past, hurricanes can form and strengthen quickly, leaving little time to prepare and evacuate.” Floridians can find detailed information on how to prep for storms at PrepareFL.com.
Jimmy Patronis joins search and rescue crews to remind Floridians it’s never too soon to get ready for a storm.
Assignment editors — Patronis will hold a news conference to highlight Urban Search and Rescue Task Force 6 and the importance of preparing for the 2021 hurricane season, 10:30 a.m. Eastern time, San Carlos Park Fire Protection and Rescue Service District Station #53, 19591 Ben Hill Griffin Parkway, Fort Myers.
“Florida Supreme Court asked to weigh gun law” via CBS Miami — A coalition of local governments and Agriculture Commissioner Fried want the Florida Supreme Court to take up a dispute about a 2011 state law that threatens tough penalties if city and county officials approve gun-related regulations. Attorneys for the local governments and Fried filed notices Wednesday that are initial steps in asking the Supreme Court to hear the case. As is common, the notices do not provide detailed legal arguments. But they stem, in part, from a decision last month by the 1st District Court of Appeal to deny a request to send the case to the Supreme Court — a request known as certifying “questions of great public importance.”
“Proliferation of pumping permits produces preposterous pipeline proposal” via Craig Pittman of the Florida Phoenix — As first reported by Politico last week, the Suwannee River Water Management District is considering “spending hundreds of millions of dollars to pipe Suwannee River water to nearby Ichetucknee Springs State Park to restore the aquifer that feeds the springs.” Yes, you read that right: The agency is considering piping water taken from one spring-fed river to bolster the flow of another spring-fed river less than 20 miles away. This is a little like withdrawing $100 from the ATM and then walking into the bank to deposit it back in your account. You’re not likely to show a big profit from that transaction.
“What Mosaic is doing with its ‘gypstack’ to prevent another Piney Point disaster” via Steve Newborn of WUSF — Mosaic is the only fertilizer producer left standing in Bone Valley, where Polk, Hillsborough, Manatee and Hardee counties meet. It’s the largest phosphate producer in the world. That’s not the case at Piney Point, where a bankrupt company operating the gypstack there this spring failed to prevent a tear in the liner, sending hundreds of millions of gallons into Tampa Bay. Dennis Black, the gypstack manager at Mosaic’s Bartow plant, says that’s not likely going to happen here. “We’re up here seven days a week, doing maintenance activities,” said Black, who has worked at Mosaic for 25 years. “And also we have technicians running around. They’ll be doing visual inspections and documenting their inspections multiple times throughout the day.”
“Amid red tide outbreak, Florida beckons visitors to beaches” via Bobby Caina Calvan of The Associated Press — Plumes of toxic oceanic bacteria known as red tide continued to move up the western Florida coast, strewing thousands of dead fish on beaches while state officials tried to reassure Floridians and potential tourists Thursday that the outbreak was being taken seriously but isn’t as bad as it would seem. DeSantis on Thursday assembled a team of experts in St. Petersburg to describe the work that is underway to better understand and control the latest outbreak. The governor said it was important to let “folks know that these places are open. The hotels, the restaurants, the beaches are open.” Widespread images of rotting fish and empty beaches could be catastrophic to the state’s tourism industry, which use the state’s ample sunshine, sand and water to lure visitors to the state.
Corona Florida
“Nearly 5 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine sit unused in Florida” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the Orlando Sentinel — Close to 5 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine sit in freezers in doctors’ offices, pharmacies, or clinics in Florida, waiting for someone to want protection from the virus. As Florida’s surplus grows and demand weakens, providers say they can’t help but waste doses and fear vials stored in their freezers will expire before they can be used. As of June 4, the most recent statistics available, more than 33,400 doses were wasted or spoiled after being removed from cold storage. Fair tickets, raffles, liquor shots for a shot, and countless other giveaways have failed to significantly motivate Floridians who are reluctant to get the vaccines; only about 42% of the population is fully vaccinated.
There are millions of unused vaccines in Florida. Image via AP.
“Schools vaccinating students against COVID-19 as academic year approaches” via Stephanie Colombini of WUSF — Only 24% of 12- to 19-year-olds living in Florida have received a COVID-19 vaccine, according to the latest state data. Some county health departments partner with school districts to get students’ shots before returning to their classrooms in August. Sitting on bleachers inside the gymnasiums of Robinson and Sickles high schools in Hillsborough County, teenagers shared why they got vaccinated against COVID-19: “Because the new variants were kind of scaring me,” said Rasara Weerasuraya, 15. Sports inspired Alonso High athlete Colin Valentin, 17, to get his shot. For Robinson High rising senior Luka Gudelj, 17, it was about social responsibility.
“Florida was one of the first to cut back to weekly COVID-19 reports. Did it move too soon?” via Ben Conarck of the Miami Herald — About two weeks after Florida health officials discontinued publicly reporting some data and stopped issuing their daily COVID-19 summaries detailing cases, test positivity and vaccinations, some researchers remain concerned that the moves were made too early. Even as the pandemic wanes, scientists such as Jennifer Nuzzo, a leading epidemiologist at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, say that state health departments should be presenting more data, not less, while the medical and science communities continue to gauge the effectiveness of a still-fresh vaccination campaign. Florida health officials contend they are monitoring flare-ups internally and would alert the public if one were simmering.
“U.S. Virgin Islands Governor implores DeSantis to permit vaccinated cruises” via Wendy Rhodes in Health News Florida — One day after Royal Caribbean announced that two guests on the first cruise ship to sail from a U.S. port since the pandemic shutdown have tested positive for COVID-19, the governor of the U.S. Virgin Islands implored Gov. DeSantis to allow cruise lines to mandate vaccinations. Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. said the infection of vaccinated passengers is precisely why cruise lines need the freedom to require vaccinations. While vaccines do not eliminate risks, Bryan said that not having them could be catastrophic, including those in the islands that cruise passengers visit. “It emphasizes the need for us to have these protocols,” Bryan said.
“Pandemic takes toll on caregivers” via The News Service of Florida — About 70% of caregivers reported having at least one adverse mental-health condition during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a report by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The report was based on a survey of 10,444 U.S. adults in December, February and March. Anxiety and depression were the most common mental health symptoms, with 55.3% of caregivers reporting having those symptoms. The study listed three caregiving categories: people with children under age 18; caregivers of adults; and parents who watch children and adults. Among the 2,391 respondents who reported being parents and caregivers, about 85% experienced one or more adverse mental- health symptoms, and about 50% reported past-month “serious suicidal ideation.”
“Sarasota Memorial’s ICU is COVID-19-free for first time in over a year” via Allyson Henning of WFLA — Sarasota Memorial Hospital is celebrating a major milestone in the ongoing fight against COVID-19. For the first time in over a year, the hospital’s intensive care unit has no COVID-19-positive patients. The hospital’s epidemiologist, Dr. Manuel Gordillo, found out the ICU was COVID-19-free Wednesday. He admits, he was overcome with emotion. Dr. Gordillo diagnosed Florida’s first COVID-19 case in February last year at another local hospital. He says we’ve come a long way since that point and have learned a lot along the way, but we aren’t out of the woods just yet.
“Barbs and praise for Tampa Bay stores that still require masks” via Christopher O’Donnell of the Tampa Bay Times — It’s been more than a month since the Governor suspended coronavirus restrictions statewide, including mask mandates. Since then, most bars, shops and restaurants have adopted the Centers for Disease Control guidelines that fully vaccinated people no longer need masks in most settings. Local schools are following suit, making face coverings optional when students return after summer break. But some Tampa Bay stores are continuing to require masks. That stance has led to heated exchanges, frustrated patrons and even vows never to shop there again. Stores have Florida law on their side. The Governor’s order does not prohibit businesses from requiring masks or refusing service to those who don’t wear them — just as they could for those shopping with no shoes and no shirt.
St. Petersburg is divided over businesses that still require masks. Image via AP.
“For COVID-19 and hurricane season, tech is prep” via Florida Politics — Florida Division of Emergency Management Director Kevin Guthrie is emphasizing his agency’s increased use of technology to better manage the COVID-19 pandemic and the upcoming hurricane season, along with improving overall agency operations and response, at the 2021 National Hurricane Conference in New Orleans. Guthrie walked through several examples of technology implementations that helped emergency managers across the state manage a year-plus-long pandemic and multiple hurricanes on the horizon. He highlighted specific projects: Establish a comprehensive shelter management platform, collect information directly from constituents for disaster documentation, track thousands of volunteers across the state during vaccine distribution, keep accurate, real-time data from state-supported vaccination sites.
Corona nation
“A pill to treat COVID-19? The U.S. is betting on it.” via Carl Zimmer of The New York Times — The U.S. government is pouring more than $3 billion on a neglected area of research: developing pills to fight the virus early in the course of infection, potentially saving many lives in the years to come. The new program, announced on Thursday by the Department of Health and Human Services, will speed up the clinical trials of a few promising drug candidates. If all goes well, some of those first pills could be ready by the end of the year. Several other viruses, including influenza, HIV, and hepatitis C, can be treated with a simple pill. But despite more than a year of research, no such pill exists to treat someone with a coronavirus infection before it wreaks havoc.
A pill to treat viral diseases like COVID-19 is the Holy Grail being pursued by the U.S. government. Image via AP.
“CDC’s travel warning for cruise ships eases, COVID-19 risk high for unvaccinated” via Taylor Dolven of the Miami Herald — The CDC lowered its travel warning for cruise ships Wednesday, recommending only unvaccinated passengers avoid cruise travel. Previously, the CDC recommended all passengers avoid cruise travel. The changes come as the cruise industry prepares to restart from U.S. ports in the coming weeks. The first test cruise is scheduled for Sunday — Royal Caribbean International’s Freedom of the Seas ship from PortMiami — and the first revenue cruise for June 26 — Celebrity Cruises’ Celebrity Edge ship from Port Canaveral. The agency recommends that all cruise travelers get tested for COVID-19 one to three days before their trip and three to five days after their trip. Unvaccinated passengers should self-quarantine for seven days after a cruise, even if they test negative.
Corona economics
“U.S. jobless claims tick up to 412,000 from a pandemic low” via Paul Wiseman of The Associated Press — The Labor Department said Thursday that jobless claims rose 37,000 from the week before to 412,000. As the job market has strengthened, the number of weekly applications for unemployment aid has fallen for most of the year. The number of jobless claims generally reflects the pace of layoffs. Weekly unemployment applications had dropped for six straight weeks, and economists had expected another dip last week. Still, the report showed the four-week average of claims, which smooths out week-to-week ups and downs, fell by 8,000 to 395,000 — the lowest four-week average since the pandemic began in March 2020. For jobless claims to rise slightly “should not be cause for concern yet,″ said AnnElizabeth Konkel, an economist at the Indeed Hiring Lab.
The U.S. unemployment ticked up a bit. Image via AP.
“Florida sees small increase in jobless claims” via The News Service of Florida — Florida saw a slight uptick in new unemployment claims last week, yet the numbers continued to be among the lowest since the start of the coronavirus pandemic in early 2020. The U.S. Department of Labor on Thursday estimated 8,889 initial jobless claims were filed in Florida during the week that ended June 12, up from a revised count of 6,552 during the week that ended June 5. The department had initially estimated 5,800 claims were filed during the week that ended June 5. The state is running a four-week average of 8,395 new claims a week. That is the lowest four-week average since before March 15, 2020, which the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity marks as the start of the pandemic in considering unemployment claims.
More corona
“Two weeks later, Tucker Carlson’s attack on Anthony Fauci has quietly collapsed” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — Nearly 3 million people tuned in to Carlson’s Fox News show on the evening of June 2, a number equivalent to nearly 1% of the country. Among the things those viewers heard from Carlson that night was a staggering accusation of duplicity if not illegality on the part of the country’s top infectious disease expert, Fauci. Carlson accused Fauci of lying under oath, lying during a news conference, and being somehow implicated in criminal activity based on the contents of several emails released publicly under a Freedom of Information Act request. Those emails included a heavy dose of redacted sections but included enough Lego pieces for Carlson to build what he wanted to build.
Tucker Carlson’s anti-Anthony Fauci stance is quietly fading away. Image via AP.
“FDA says hand sanitizer may be hazardous, in certain conditions” via The News Service of Florida — Hand sanitizer meant to help prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus might be hazardous to people’s health if applied in enclosed spaces or places with poor air circulation, the FDA warned Wednesday. “We have received increasing reports of these side effects since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Most people experienced minor or minimal effects; however, some cases required treatment by a health care professional,” according to an update from the agency. Hand sanitizer should be used in well-ventilated areas, and hands should be completely dry before it is applied.
Presidential
“Federal employees to get Friday off as Joe Biden signs legislation making Juneteenth a national holiday” via John Wagner, Colby Itkowitz and Eugene Scott of The Washington Post — Biden, having returned to the White House from his first trip abroad as president, plans Thursday to sign into law a bill creating a federal holiday to commemorate Juneteenth, the day marking the end of slavery in Texas. Because June 19 falls on a Saturday this year, most federal employees will get this Friday off.
It’s official; Juneteenth is a federal holiday.
“Miami lawmaker bears witness as Biden makes Juneteenth a federal holiday” via Alex Daugherty of the Miami Herald — For years, Democratic Rep. Frederica Wilson commemorated Juneteenth with her Congressional Black Caucus colleagues, and Black celebrities frequently joined lawmakers in Washington to celebrate. But this year, Wilson, South Florida’s only Black member of Congress, celebrated by watching Biden sign a bill making Juneteenth a federal holiday, the first new federal holiday since Martin Luther King Jr. Day was added in 1983. Wilson and a group of lawmakers attended a White House ceremony Thursday afternoon marking the occasion. The June 19 holiday will be observed Friday, the White House confirmed. “It kind of spread around. After George Floyd and the reckoning on race, justice and equality, the new buzzwords are equity and inclusion,” Wilson said of why the bill sped through Congress.
“‘We didn’t win.’ Donald Trump appears to admit Biden won election in Fox News interview” via Mike Stunson of McClatchy — More than seven months after the 2020 election, Trump appeared to admit his defeat on Wednesday. In an interview with Sean Hannity on Fox News, Trump said the results of the 2020 election were “shocking.” Biden won the election with 306 electoral votes to Trump’s 232, but the results continue to be disputed. “We got them by surprise in ‘16, and in ‘20, we did much better than we did in ‘16,” Trump told Hannity. “Shockingly, we were supposed to win easily at 64 million votes, and we got 75 million votes. We didn’t win, but let’s see what happens on that. The whole thing was shocking.”
Finally? Donald Trump seems to admit defeat to Sean Hannity.
“Who is Trump reaching?” via Peter Nicholas of The Atlantic — Ahead of the midterm elections, the GOP seems to be casting about for an identity. If you open the National Republican Senatorial Committee website, you’ll see a slew of Trump-themed merch. But when you click around to other parts of the site, you’ll see a link to send Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska a campaign donation. After losing badly in 2020, the GOP wants candidates who can win in 2022. But the party’s biggest star seems less concerned with fellow Republicans’ electability than with their fealty. Trump aims to punish incumbents who voted for his impeachment and reward those who support the culture war he’s stoked, but reaching his loyalists gets trickier every day. One by one, the platforms Trump used to command attention are disappearing.
Crisis
“Justice Department releases harrowing new bodycam footage from January 6 attack” via Marshall Cohen and Katelyn Polantz of CNN — The Justice Department on Thursday released horrifying new police body camera footage from the January 6 assault on the US Capitol. The footage was used in the case against Thomas Webster, a former Marine and retired police officer from the New York City Police Department accused of participating in the Capitol attack. Prosecutors say that the 56-second tape shows Webster, wearing a red coat among a large crowd of pro-Trump rioters, screaming profanities at officers, threateningly wielding a flagpole, and finally rushing at the officers, who engaged in hand-to-hand combat with him and other members of the mob.
D.C. matters
“Supreme Court backs Catholic agency in case on gay rights and foster care” via Adam Liptak of The Washington Post — SCOTUS on Thursday unanimously ruled that Philadelphia may not bar a Catholic agency that refused to work with same-sex couples from screening potential foster parents. Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for six members of the court, said that since the city allowed exceptions to its policies for some other agencies, it must also do so in this instance. The Catholic agency, he wrote, “seeks only an accommodation that will allow it to continue serving the children of Philadelphia in a manner consistent with its religious beliefs; it does not seek to impose those beliefs on anyone else.” Philadelphia stopped placements with the agency, Catholic Social Services, after a 2018 article in The Philadelphia Inquirer described its policy against same-sex couples.
Philadelphia stopped orphan placements with Catholic Social Services after an article in The Philadelphia Inquirer described its policy against placing children with same-sex couples. The Supreme Court sided with the agency.
“Rick Scott seeks end to federal mass transit mask mandate” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — The Stop Mandating Additional Requirements for Travel (SMART) Act would remove governmental mask requirements from airplanes, trains, and other forms of mass transit. It does not address those imposed by businesses themselves. “Americans are working hard to recover from the devastation of COVID-19, and travel is critical to getting our economy fully reopened. Since the start of the pandemic, I have supported wearing a mask to protect yourself and others. Now, the science has shown we can change course, and mask mandates are being lifted across the country,” Scott contended. “The science just doesn’t support keeping this policy in place.”
Assignment editors — Sen. Scott will hold a roundtable discussion with small business owners to discuss the impact of rising inflation, 3 p.m., Las Vegas Cuban Cuisine, 8552 NW 53rd Street, Doral. RSVP to press@rickscott.senate.gov.
“Inside Matt Gaetz’s breakup with Fox News” via Robin Bravender and Tom LoBianco of Business Insider — Since news broke that Gaetz is at the center of a federal sex-trafficking investigation, the Florida Republican hasn’t appeared on the network. It’s a major lifestyle change for the lawmaker, a darling of Fox hosts for years during the Trump administration and early into Biden’s term. He juices ratings with punchy sound bites that trash “wokeness,” “cancel culture,” and the COVID-19 poster doctorFauci. In March, Gaetz appeared on Fox shows at least 19 times. In April, May, and so far in June, he hasn’t appeared once. Gaetz has been “excommunicated within the Fox News circles,” said a former Gaetz staffer who spoke on condition of anonymity. It’s not worth it for the conservative network to risk putting Gaetz on its airwaves while the high-profile sex-trafficking investigation is playing out, according to Republican insiders and media watchdogs.
Local notes
“High hopes, dashed dreams: Texts chart medical marijuana entrepreneur’s $325K encounter with Scott Maddox” via Jeffrey Schweers of the Tallahassee Democrat — Being a stranger to the inner workings of the Florida Legislature, David Raab knew he needed help. So he sought out a knowledgeable guide who could navigate the political channels. On the recommendation of a now-dead former Lake County sheriff who had a farm nearby, Raab contacted Maddox, who he didn’t know was a sitting Tallahassee City Commissioner when he represented him. Their business relationship is captured in a series of text exchanges obtained by the USA Today Network-Florida that may be used as evidence in J.T. Burnette’s trial. They chart the optimistic early days where Maddox was working to ease the rules for nursery growers to the bitter end when Raab and his partners failed to win a license after paying Governance $325,000.
Failed: Despite getting paid six figures, Scott Maddox couldn’t help a marijuana entrepreneur secure a Florida license.
“Orlando Police chief vying for position at Fort Lauderdale Police Department” via Katie Rice of the Orlando Sentinel — Orlando Police Chief Orlando Rolón is in the running to become chief of police at the Fort Lauderdale Police Department, records show. A list of eight semifinalists for the open chief position provided by the City of Fort Lauderdale lists Rolón among its candidates, and Orlando Police Department spokesperson Autumn Jones confirmed Thursday that Rolón is “in a selection process” for the position. Rolón declined to comment on the application process. OPD referred further questions to the Fort Lauderdale Police Department.
“Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office transferring jail inmates ahead of Orange Crush Festival” via Teresa Stepzinski of the Florida Times-Union — The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office plans to temporarily transfer about 100 Duval County jail inmates to neighboring facilities in preparation for the possibility of numerous arrests at this weekend’s Orange Crush Festival. According to law enforcement authorities, about 60 inmates will be housed in the St. Johns County Jail, while another 30 or 40 are expected to be held in Flagler County. Sheriff’s Office spokesman Christian Hancock declined to reveal specifics but said the agency is taking precautions should trouble arise as up to 20,000 people are expected at the festival’s events scheduled throughout Jacksonville and the Beaches.
“Twice booted from office, ‘demon buster’ Kim Daniels seeks return to City Hall” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — Call it a less-divine resurrection of sorts: Daniels filed last week for the open District 10 City Council seat, and she did so as a Democrat even though she doesn’t much like the party, and the party isn’t terribly fond of her. That tends to happen after proclaiming Jewish people “own everything,” that gay people should use her divine services to exorcise demons from their bodies, or that American chattel slavery was a favor from God — merely a sampling of the peculiar and wicked things Daniels has said over the years. Rep. Angie Nixon was the second public official to righteously boot Daniels out of office. Years before, a moderate Republican kicked her out of an at-large City Council seat.
“After arrest, Lake Wales City Commissioner is back at meetings. Some want her removed” via Dustin Wyatt of The Ledger — Lake Wales Commissioner Kristen Fitzgerald was back behind the dais Tuesday night, her first public meeting since her arrest. Several residents used public comment time to voice support for the commissioner, who hasn’t had her day in court and has yet to be convicted of a crime. Others said she should be replaced — a decision that would need to come from Gov. DeSantis, not the city. And while at least one resident urged Fitzgerald to resign immediately, she has no plans to do so. Fitzgerald was arrested June 4 and spent a night in the Polk County Jail on charges that she used a gun to threaten an 11-year-old boy she’d picked up without the parents’ permission.
“Manatee County abortion ban is hypocritical” via Chris Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — James Satcher, the very same elected official who refused to wear a mask during the pandemic because, you know, how dare the government tell him what to do with his body, is now telling women what they should do with theirs. Satcher, a county commissioner for just six months, set match to tinderbox last week when he proposed Manatee County explore a ban on future abortion clinics, which, of course, there currently are none. He received unanimous support from his fellow Commissioners to allow the county attorney to research the legality of such a statute. Satcher’s proposal is political grandstanding at its core, as he is using an issue that does not exist to illuminate a personal belief.
“Pinellas schools will pay $1,000 to employees who didn’t get state bonuses” via Jeffrey S. Solochek of the Tampa Bay Times — The Pinellas County School Board decided to use $7.3 million of the federal stimulus funds it received to give $1,000 bonuses to about 7,000 non-classroom teachers, support personnel and all other full-time staff. To qualify, they will have to have worked in the district since Dec. 19 and remained employed through April 30. The representatives for the administration and bargaining units signed the agreement on June 7. “We have talked about, and meant all along, that every person in our district worked all year to innovate, to re-imagine what they were doing,” board chairperson Carol Cook said. “Everybody had to stop and look at things differently. They all deserve it.”
“Trump birthday reveler accused of defacing LGBTQ intersection with pickup” via Austen Erblat of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A Trump birthday reveler faces multiple charges in the vandalism of a Delray Beach intersection painted to recognize Pride Month, police said Thursday. Alexander Jerich, 20, of Delray Beach, is charged with criminal mischief over $1,000, reckless driving and evidence of prejudice, which enhances the charge to a felony, police said. He turned himself in to police Thursday and was taken to the Palm Beach County Jail. Video of the incident posted on social media shows a pickup truck doing a tire burnout across the intersection as other drivers honk their horns. The drivers were part of a birthday rally for Trump, whose birthday was Monday.
“West Palm Beach’s 4th of July celebration is back on after coronavirus cancellation” via Wayne Washington of the Palm Beach Post — A year after the coronavirus forced its cancellation, West Palm Beach is once again hosting its 4th on Flagler holiday celebration at the waterfront. This year’s event will be held from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., Sunday, July 4, along the waterfront on Flagler Street between Banyan Boulevard and Fern Street. Refreshments will be available for purchase. There will be entertainment, the inaugural Bill Bone 5K, a patriotic salute and a fireworks show. “4th on Flagler is one of the city’s fan-favorite signature events,” West Palm Beach Mayor Keith James said in a news release announcing the return of the celebration. “I am so pleased that this event will return this year.”
Bring on the sparklers: Keith James is bringing fireworks back to West Palm Beach.
“FAMU receives $5M donation from Google to expand minority STEM representation” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — FAMU is receiving a $5 million donation from Google as part of the company’s initiative to increase the number of underrepresented groups in the tech industry. FAMU is one of 10 HBCUs getting a cut of Google’s $50 million effort to fund scholarships, invest in infrastructure for in-class and remote learning, as well as develop curriculum and career support programs for minority students. University President Larry Robinson called the measure “mutually beneficial” by allowing recipients to expand their programs while expanding the tech workforce. Google and the rest of Silicon Valley are plagued with an ongoing lack of racial diversity. Black Americans make up 12% of the nation’s workforce, but Black employees account for less than 4% of Google’s workforce.
“FSU poised for change at the top” via Ryan Dailey of News Service of Florida — The FSU Board of Trustees on Thursday approved a five-year contract for incoming President Richard McCullough, as retiring President John Thrasher reflected on his nearly seven years at the helm. McCullough, who was selected last month to lead the university, would earn an annual base salary of $700,000. McCullough’s appointment needs final approval from the state university system’s Board of Governors, which will consider it during a meeting Wednesday. Thrasher will preside July 30 over two more commencement ceremonies for students graduating during the summer semester. Thrasher’s contract will end on Aug. 15, and McCullough’s contract would begin on Aug. 16.
Top opinion
“Sending Florida’s police to Texas and Arizona? Try helping us closer to home, Gov. DeSantis” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Florida’s Governor is sending police to the border. Not Florida’s border. The border in Texas. And the one in Arizona. His ostensible reason for this attention-grabbing move is to help quell waves of migrants coming from Mexico, the desperate and poor who seek a new life in the United States. When the Republican Governors of the two states asked for help, DeSantis sprang into action. Such a noble gesture. We’re sure it has absolutely nothing to do with any presidential aspirations in 2024. But hold on. Where was all that “stepping up” during the recent spate of gun violence in Miami-Dade County — which is in DeSantis’ very own state? It’s not like he hasn’t been in South Florida, either.
Opinions
“Embracing Juneteenth is entirely consistent with the pushback against discussing racism in schools” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — The Senate unanimously approved the establishment of Juneteenth as a new federal holiday, and the House overwhelmingly agreed a day later. The difference between embracing Juneteenth and embracing education on the persistence of racism in American society and institutions is the difference between an evil that has been addressed and an ongoing injustice. While focused largely on how Black Americans are treated by police, the Black Lives Matter movement has also increased awareness of how systems more broadly can exhibit racism. One result of that focus was that in 2018, for the first time on record, more Americans saw the weaker economic position of Black Americans as being a function of ongoing discrimination than saw it being a function of inherent flaws in Black people.
“We need another Freedom Summer” via Raymond Arsenault and Howard Simon for the Tampa Bay Times — The assault on democracy and voting rights is so widespread, taking place in so many states, young volunteers can devote a summer, or perhaps even a full year, working for democracy in their home state or temporarily relocating to other states where voting rights are under attack. But this call for a new Freedom Summer is directed primarily toward a new generation of high school and college-age Americans, urging them to accept the challenge of assuming the mantel of their courageous activist predecessors. What an opportunity to serve, to learn, to expand horizons. What an opportunity for young people, once again, to do great things for their country.
“DeSantis thinks he can just defy state law and bypass the Cabinet (he can’t)” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — Gov. DeSantis had a wildly successful lawmaking session this year because the Legislature rubber-stamped almost anything he wanted. That’s not the case with the Florida Cabinet, at least not when it comes to picking the next person to lead Florida’s most important environmental agency. At a Cabinet meeting this week, DeSantis said he thinks the state constitution lets him choose a Department of Environmental Protection Secretary without getting approval from the Cabinet. Instead, DeSantis said, he can replace departed DEP Secretary Noah Valenstein by simply choosing to get confirmation from the state Senate. Florida law clearly states that DeSantis’s pick for DEP secretary must be approved by all three Cabinet members plus the state Senate.
“Florida Democrats shouldn’t be punishing internal dissent” via Bill Cotterell of the Tallahassee Democrat — In addition to money and incumbency, Florida Republicans have another enormous advantage as we head into the 2022 campaign season. That’s the Democrats’ historic tendency to start a big race by slashing their Achilles tendons. If the party has an embarrassing little weakness, something it would like to downplay in the face of certain Republican attacks, you can count on some Democrats, somewhere, finding a way to remind everybody of what we don’t like about them. Now, in this era of cancel culture and conspicuous virtue-signaling, we see signs that the Democrats want to demand a rigid orthodoxy regarding race, clearly the most difficult issue of our time.
On today’s Sunrise
The conservative majority on the state Supreme Court rejected a constitutional amendment that would have legalized the recreational use of marijuana in Florida. It’s the second pro-pot amendment rejected by the high court in the past two months.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Florida’s former chief science officer says the more than 200 million gallons of wastewater from Piney Point that ended up in Tampa Bay is NOT the cause of a red tide outbreak along the beaches of Pinellas County.
— It may not have been the cause, but Dr. Tom Frazer says the Piney Point discharge made the red tide worse.
— Once again, DeSantis refuses to say whether he believes last year’s election was rigged against Trump. DeSantis answered, but it had nothing to do with the question.
— The woman who wants to replace DeSantis next year — Agriculture Commissioner Fried — is holding a news conference to talk about an investigation of a Texas charity involved in conspiracy theories related to the 2020 presidential election.
— Another Democratic rival, Congressman Crist, is also holding a news conference where he will ask DeSantis to investigate Florida’s ties to the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.
— One more week before the end of federal unemployment benefits that have helped Floridians during the COVID-19 crisis. The state is dropping out more than two months early because business leaders claim people won’t work while those $300 per week federal benefits are available.
— And finally, there’s a Florida Man who stole from sick kids and a Florida couple busted after playing around at a playground.
Facing South Florida with Jim DeFede on CBS 4 in Miami: The Sunday show provides viewers with an in-depth look at politics in South Florida, along with other issues affecting the region.
Florida This Week on Tampa Bay’s WEDU: Moderator Rob Lorei hosts a roundtable featuring USF-St. Petersburg John Hope Franklin Professor of Southern History Emeritus Ray Arsenault, Tampa Bay History Center Black History Curator Fred Hearns, Hillsborough County District 5 Commissioner Mariella Smith and Tampa Bay Estuary Program Executive Director Ed Sherwood.
In Focus with Allison Walker on Bay News 9/CF 13: Juneteenth is the subject, featuring a discussion about the history of the holiday and the state of race relations in Florida with Sen. Randolph Bracy and Dr. Larry Walker, College of Community Innovation and Education Assistant Professor at the University of Central Florida.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete: a closer look at Biden’s meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Geneva and previews Tuesday’s St. Pete mayoral debate.
Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: Ybeth Bruzual speaks to Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith about bills passed during the Legislative Session and House Speaker Chris Sprowls addresses proposed environmental legislation.
This Week in Jacksonville with Kent Justice on Channel 4 WJXT: Incoming Jacksonville City Council President Sam Newby, Jacksonville City Council District 8 Ju’Coby Pittman and SouthEast Development Group Principal Steve Atkins.
This Week in South Florida on WPLG-Local10 News (ABC): A discussion with Rabbis from South Florida who recently returned from Israel.
Aloe
“Massive cloud of dust sweeps across Atlantic, heads toward U.S.” via Kevin Byrne of AccuWeather — Radiant sunsets are in the forecast for parts of Florida thanks in part to a weather pattern currently underway across another continent. Dust kicked up across the Sahara Desert and carried by trade winds has been pouring off the coast of Africa in recent weeks and floating clear across the Atlantic Ocean toward the Caribbean and Florida. The dusty air is brought about by a weather pattern known as the African easterly jet, which consists of strong low to midlevel winds in the atmosphere over central Africa. “These features will bring more dust, but we can’t tell at this point whether there will be any mega dust outbreaks like we saw last year. We will just have to wait and watch,” AccuWeather Hurricane Expert Dan Kottlowski said.
Grab your Dustbusters; it could soon get a little dusty in the South. Image via AP.
Good morning. Your friendly reminder that with the summer solstice arriving on Sunday, this upcoming weekend will have the most daylight of any weekend this year (in the Northern Hemisphere). Enjoy it!
Markets: Investors must be distracted by the beautiful weather here in NYC, because stocks had a subdued day after the Fed moved up its projections for a rate hike. Not subdued was the giant chipmaker Nvidia, which popped off for its fourth-straight record close thanks in part to a price target upgrade from Jefferies.
Economy: For the first time since April, jobless claims rose week over week to 412,000. But it’s not time to start worrying about the labor market’s recovery, economists say.
Yesterday, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) nabbed its third “You may pass Go” card from the Supreme Court. In a 7–2 vote, justices ruled that Texas and 17 other Republican-led states don’t have the legal standing to challenge the law in federal court.
The ACA, aka “Obamacare,” is a controversial healthcare bill enacted in 2010. It’s known for adding protections for individuals with preexisting conditions, allowing young adults to remain on their parents’ plan until age 26, and making preventative services (including birth control on private plans) free.
With their 6–3 majority on the court, some conservatives hoped this case might finally find the fatal chink in the ACA’s legal armor. Although they fell short again, each major legal challenge threatens serious disruption to the healthcare industry and the 31+ million Americans who get their insurance through the ACA.
What they were fighting about
The ACA’s most controversial measure, the individual mandate, required Americans to pay a tax penalty if they didn’t have health insurance. It was made irrelevant in 2017 when a Republican-led Congress reduced that penalty to $0.
For their case, Republican state officials argued that a zeroed-out mandate is unconstitutional and the entire ACA should go. The court said the plaintiffs couldn’t prove the law had hurt them, but it did not rule on whether the mandate is unconstitutional.
Even if they haven’t succeeded in overturning the entire law, Republicans aren’t giving up on challenging parts of it. Another lawsuit is winding its way through federal courts over the ACA’s preventative care coverage.
Zoom out
Although the ACA’s popularity is at a record high, only 54% of Americans view the healthcare law favorably, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. Premiums have fallen the last three years, per the Urban Institute, but the ACA continues to face criticism for high out-of-pocket costs.
President Biden plans to build off his old boss’s signature legislative achievement. In March’s Covid relief package, Biden approved higher federal subsidies for private health plans offered through the ACA and larger federal Medicaid payments for states that expand insurance coverage to more lower-income adults.
President Biden signed a bill yesterday establishing Juneteenth as the 12th federal holiday. The June 19 celebration marks the day in 1865 when news of emancipation finally reached Galveston, TX—two-and-a-half years after the Emancipation Proclamation was signed, officially ending slavery in the US.
Over 2 million federal employees in the US will now have the day off, but some big companies like Nike, JCPenny, and Target already recognized Juneteenth as a paid holiday.
The NYSE said it won’t close markets today for this year’s Juneteenth, but might next year.
Big picture: Texas was the first state to establish Juneteenth as an official holiday in 1980, and throughout the years, some groups have pushed to recognize it on a national scale. Last year, after the police killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and other Black Americans, Juneteenth entered the national conversation again. It’s the first federal holiday created since Martin Luther King Jr. Day in 1983.
While everyone waited for the Biden-Putin chat and the Fed meeting to wrap up Wednesday, the US Department of Education was busy erasing $500+ million of debt for 18,000 former ITT Technical Institute students.
Education Secretary Miguel Cardona has been slowly chipping away at claims made through the borrower defense program, which was created to forgive federal loans if your school Punk’d you—schools like ITT Tech.
ITT was found to have misled students about their job prospects, and it shut down in 2016 after getting hit with sanctions from the Obama admin.
Many students actually found that it was harder to get jobs if they listed ITT Tech on their resumes.
Zoom out: This is the second round of loan discharges for students who were defrauded by for-profit schools since Biden moved into the White House. It’s a major U-turn in strategy from the Trump administration, which viewed student loan forgiveness under the borrower defense program as “free money.”
Yieldstreet makes it accessible AF (“as finance”) for everyday investors to generate passive income with alternative investments.
With their intuitive platform, you can invest in deals backed by luxury cars, real estate, art, and various other things which movie villains (and many savvy investors) hold dear.
Seriously though: With typically low stock market correlation, short durations, and low minimums, Yieldstreet can power your investing portfolio with alternatives.
Diversifying in this way used to be expensive. To that Yieldstreet said, “Ummmmm what if it wasn’t?” And by golly they did it: Yieldstreet’s alternative investments start as low as $1k.
Stat: The cost of mapping a genome has fallen by about 100,000% over the last 15 years, according to an estimate by Jefferies. One of the companies that’s taken advantage of that technological breakthrough, 23andMe, started trading publicly for the first time yesterday.
Quote: “There was no intention of being duplicitous.”
Rob Wiesenthal, the CEO of Blade, the “Uber for helicopters,” admitted that he and colleagues made up the persona of Simon McLaren as the company’s director of communications. The ruse, which involved Wiesenthal imitating McLaren during TV interviews, lasted for years until Insider started asking questions about McLaren’s identity.
Read: Inside Victoria Secret’s most extreme pivot in recent memory. (New York Times)
Yesterday at the French tech conference VivaTech, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg talked about virtual reality technology the way your mom talks about the duck you drew in 1st grade.
He predicted VR would expand beyond gaming into areas like business meetings and fitness. “Think about it like Peloton, where you have a subscription, but instead the device is VR and you put on your headset, and you’re in this amazing environment and you’re doing a boxing class with an instructor, or a dance class,” he said.
Facebook is all-in on VR. In the last four years, it’s scooped up a number of VR gaming companies as well as a Roblox-style build-and-share platform. And on Wednesday, the company announced it would start testing ads inside its Oculus headset.
Bottom line: After Facebook acquired another VR gaming company, BigBox VR, last week, tech reporter Alex Heath predicted, “Facebook is going to probably have a near monopoly in VR software before it even matters.” In that sense, it could be dusting off its playbook from 2012, when it bought Instagram in what many consider one of the savviest business acquisitions in history.
Japan eased its state of emergency as the country prepares for the Olympics in July.
The US will spend $3.2 billion to develop antiviral pills used for treating Covid-19 and other highly contagious viruses.
David Guetta is reportedly selling his recorded catalogue to Warner Music for more than $100 million, reflecting soaring demand for music rights.
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Dot dot dot: Here at the Brew we like to make you think, but we’re also not above a mindless internet game. Play it here.
Follow Friday: Shameless plug for the Brew’s TikTok account, where you’re guaranteed a three-chuckle minimum per video or your money back.
Harley Finkelstein, president of Shopify, recently joined us on Business Casual to discuss how the ecommerce platform behind many of your favorite stores has democratized entrepreneurship and sparked a digital shift in retail.
(We had to talk about Rihanna moving Fenty Beauty to Shopify, too.)
This one might take some time, but…it’s Friday and you’re probably going to check out of work around noon anyways.
Here it goes: The words “work” and “jerk” rhyme, even though their vowels are different. Can you name 4 common, uncapitalized four-letter words, each of which has exactly one vowel, and all of which rhyme, even though all four vowels are different?
ANSWER
Bird, curd, nerd, and word is one possible solution
The most recent lawsuit was a holdover from an earlier era of Obamacare politics. Filed by state attorneys general in 2018, it sought to eliminate Obamacare entirely and has taken years to wend its way through the courts. The Supreme Court did not dive into the merits of the case, but instead found that the plaintiffs did not experience any harms that would give them standing to challenge the law.
…
The Affordable Care Act still has holes that have proved challenging to fix. The 2012 Supreme Court decision that upheld the individual mandate also made the law’s Medicaid expansion provisions optional. Twelve states do not participate in that program, leaving millions of low-income Americans without coverage.
…
Obamacare enjoys higher-than-ever public support, with most Americans now favoring the law. The waning repeal effort has given Democrats their first chance in a decade to press forward on a new campaign: moving the country toward a system of universal health coverage.
All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLWould you take a pay cut if it meant being able to work remotely?
No
48%
Yes
44%
Unsure
10%
312 votes, 39 comments
Context: Morgan Stanley and other banks mandate their employees return to the office.
HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS
“No – Companies actually save money on expenses when people work remotely. Salaries should be raised for workers who are productive when working remotely. Any company manager that feels “butts in seats” equals productivity is living in the 1950’s.”
“Yes – Absolutely. My wife and I had to move hundreds of miles away from any support structure in order for me to pursue my ca…”
“Unsure – I can understand large companies paying…”
Why did the Supreme Court unanimously rule in favor of a Catholic adoption agency?
The U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled Thursday that Philadelphia could not cancel a contract with [Catholic Social Services] over its refusal to let same-sex cou…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott did not specify how long the border wall would be, where it would be built or the total cost of the project, saying that those decisions will need to be determined by a prog…
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Why is the House of Representatives moving to restrict presidential war powers?
The House voted Thursday to repeal the 2002 Authorization for Use of Military Force, a nearly two-decade old war powers measure that gave clearance to then-President Geor…
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How is the Biden administration funding antiviral pills to treat Covid-19?
The new program – called the Antiviral Program for Pandemics – is a “whole-of-government effort” that will speed up clinical trials of promising drug candidates and develop…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
The truth about “summits” between world leaders is that they mean little, beyond being symbolic nods to international diplomacy. Treaties and agreements are hashed out by teams of negotiators during separate meetings. Yet, the left-wing American media are beside themselves with admiration for how Joe Biden apparently delivered a metaphorical beatdown to Russian President Vladimir Putin. In reality, nothing that was said by either Putin or Biden in Geneva will have any lasting effect on relations between the two countries. The outpouring of adoration for Biden is as staged and meaningless as the summit itself.
Former Media Star Michael Avenatti Awaits Sentence
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
It is hard to imagine congressional Democrats, bolstered by their media allies, scoring a political victory against Republicans by claiming that the latter refuses to honor hero cops. While BLM and Antifa raged against police across the country – even calling openly for their murder, in a few cases – Democrats said nothing in defense of the men and women in blue. Many of them pushed to defund police departments and limit law enforcement powers. Now, they are fuming that Republicans will not acknowledge the “heroic” actions of Capitol Police officers on Jan 6. Is it that, to Democratic Party officials, the only time police officers are to be commended is when they are protecting organs of the federal government?
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
Portland cops quit riot team after officer charged with assault on photographer All 50 of thePortland Police Bureau’s highly trained rapid response unit officers resigned this week after the recent indictment of Officer Corey Budworth for allegedly assaulting a photographer during an overnight riot last summer.
“Unfortunately, this decorated public servant has been caught in the crossfire of agenda-driven city leaders and a politicized criminal justice system,” the Portland Police Association said Tuesday after a Multnomah County grand jury charged Budworth on one count of fourth-degree assault related to the Aug. 18 incident.
A Portland police statement said the resignations were effective Wednesday, and it was unclear what the implications would be for the law enforcement response to future protests in Oregon’s largest city.
The officers who agreed to resign will no longer work as part of the Rapid Response Team – but will remain employed by the police department, according to the police bureau. Participation in the riot team is voluntary.
In other developments:
– Iowa governor signs ‘Back the Blue‘ bill that increases penalties for protest-related crimes
– Las Vegas murder suspect lunges for cop’s gun after allegedly confessing to killing toddler: report
– Georgia police officer killed after being dragged by car identified, honored as ‘a model officer’
– Ohio woman seen in McDonald’s brawl pleaded guilty in 2014 to separate attack
– Minneapolis residents shocked after ‘fresh’ human remains found at 2 locations: report
Biden must undergo cognitive test to assess ‘mental impairment,’ Dr. Ronny Jackson, other lawmakers say
Dr. Ronny Jackson, a former White House physician who is now representing a Texas district in Congress, called on President Biden to immediately undergo a cognitive test and prove to the American public that his mental capabilities are sound.
“We can’t sit on this any longer,” Jackson told “Hannity” on Thursday night, citing Biden’s “embarrassing” performance overseas this week with world leaders. “He’s not physically or cognitively fit to be our president right now.”
Jackson and 13 of his House GOP colleagues wrote to Biden on Thursday expressing “concern” with his cognitive state and citing several examples of potential memory lapses, including apparently forgetting the name of his defense secretary, telling an Amtrak story with a timeline that didn’t add up and seemingly blanking on the often-quoted first line of the Declaration of Independence.
“Unfortunately, your mental decline and forgetfulness have become more apparent over the past 18 months,” Jackson and the GOP reps wrote in their letter to Biden, the White House physician and Dr. Anthony Fauci.
Jackson was Donald Trump’s White House physician. He was subject to his own Inspector General investigation in March that found he “disparaged” and “belittled” subordinates and engaged in “inappropriate conduct” involving alcohol use. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Biden signs bill making Juneteenth a national holiday
– Hannity questions why Biden’s staff doesn’t let him answer questions
– CNN’s Zeleny panned for fawning that Biden ‘carried himself with a seasoned air of confidence’ at Putin summit
– Analysts scoff as media praise Biden’s ‘tough’ persona with Putin: ‘The press are spinning this fiasco’
– The Biden-Putin summit: Winners and losers
Unvaccinated West Point cadets face growing and severe retaliation, sources say
The push for coronavirus vaccinations at the U.S. Military Academy began once the first shots became available back in January – but even as the inoculation rate rises and deaths and new cases both fall, the families of unvaccinated cadets say they are facing increasing pressure, coercion, and even threats to get the jab.
West Point does not have a vaccine mandate, nor does the military as a whole.
Still, there are only about three dozen unvaccinated cadets at West Point, which accommodates more than 4,500 students.
The unvaccinated few, many of whom say they have gained natural immunity from catching the virus earlier, face stricter quarantines and other restrictions now than at the height of the pandemic, according to multiple sources. The new limits include a seven-day quarantine for unvaccinated cadets in the break before summer training. That requirement took a full week away from their time off.
“It’s like solitary confinement – for a disease we don’t have,” said one cadet, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution.
New York state, where West Point is located, has lifted its COVID-19 restrictions – but Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines still urge unvaccinated individuals to continue to mask up. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Tucker Carlson: US military is intensifying a political purge of the ranks
– Japan’s ‘Dr. Fauci‘ suggests having no spectators at Olympics is safest option amid ongoing COVID pandemic
– US-Mexico border drugtrade led by American smugglers
– Coronavirus outbreak at US Embassy in Kabul turns deadly, over 100 infected
– Veteran charter school teacher blasts online learning during pandemic: ‘We called school inessential’
– Japan to ease COVID-19 state of emergency ahead of Olympics
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Joe Rogan torches CNN’s Brian Stelter: ‘Hey motherf—er, you’re supposed to be a journalist’
– Pelosi’s answer whenasked if ‘unborn baby at 15 weeks is human being’
– California man who allegedly shot and killed 6-year-old got into another road rage incident the next week: DA
– St. Louis couple who stared down BLM mob pleads guilty, loses guns
– Dad publicly shames neighbor who reported family’s treehouse
– Goldberg-McCain’s tit-for-tat spat over Biden stuns viewers
– Tropical storm warning in effect as storm barrels toward Gulf Coast
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– JPMorgan, UBS, Wells Fargo toallow US employees to take day off for Juneteenth
– Delaware Dem lawmakers pass bill raising minimum wage to $15 per hour by 2025 over Republican objections
– Uber can challenge California lawsuit alleging drivers were misclassified, judge rules
– $950 billion infrastructure bill gets bipartisan Senate support
– Senate proposes 25% tax credit for semiconductor manufacturing
– Kroger sees jobapplications spike from June hiring event
#TheFlashback:CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History”
“Aspredicted by any objectivemeasure, the meeting was anutter train wreck,” the “Hannity” host said. “Putin basically gave Joenothing, the United States nothing.He made not a single concession.There were zero agreements andafter the meeting, Putin held asolo press conference where,let’s see, he mocked and trashedthe U.S. at length.”
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The U.S. Supreme Court embraced religious rights over LGBT rights on Thursday by ruling in favor of a Catholic Church-affiliated agency that sued after Philadelphia refused to place children for… Read more…
‘Basically, he explained throughout his life, specifically white males had taken from him, and also what he described as “military-looking white males” had taken from him.’ Read more…
The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday threw out a lawsuit accusing Cargill Inc and a Nestle SA subsidiary of knowingly helping perpetuate slavery at Ivory Coast cocoa farms, but sidestepped… Read more…
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AEI’s daily publication of independent research, insightful analysis, and scholarly debate.
Bitcoin’s status as the widely preferred cryptocurrency — including its designation as a legal tender in El Salvador — is a product of both bitcoin’s merits and its dominance in a “holy war” of currencies.
“The Supreme Court on Thursday rejected another effort to dismantle the Affordable Care Act… The justices did not reach the main issue in the case: whether the entirety of the ACA was rendered unconstitutional when Congress eliminated the penalty for failing to obtain health insurance. Instead, by a vote of 7-2, the justices ruled that neither the states nor the individuals challenging the law have a legal right to sue, known as standing.” SCOTUSblog
“The Supreme Court [also] ruled Thursday [in Fulton v. City of Philadelphia] that Philadelphia violated the First Amendment’s free exercise clause when the city stopped working with a Catholic organization that refused to certify same-sex couples as potential foster parents… The problem, [Justice] Roberts made clear, is the existence of a ‘formal mechanism for granting exceptions’ in the first place, because such a scheme ‘‘invite[s]’ the government to decide which reasons for not complying with the policy are worthy of solicitude.’…
“The city, Roberts wrote, has not shown that its goals of maximizing the number of foster families and minimizing the city’s legal liability will be jeopardized by giving CSS an exemption from the non-discrimination policy. To the contrary, Roberts suggested, ‘including CSS in the program seems likely to increase, not reduce, the number of available foster parents.’ Roberts acknowledged the city’s ‘weighty’ interest in the ‘equal treatment of prospective foster parents and children,’ but he concluded that it was not sufficient to ‘justify denying CSS an exception for its religious exercise,’ especially when the city has a system of exemptions.” SCOTUSblog
Here’s our prior coverage of the ACA lawsuit and Fulton. The Flip Side
Both sides are critical of the lawsuit challenging the Affordable Care Act:
“It was an audacious ask of the Supreme Court — requesting the justices strike down the entire law despite only claiming that a single provision of Obamacare is unconstitutional. Especially since the provision that the plaintiffs challenged literally does nothing at all… Yet that didn’t stop 18 Republican state attorneys general from bringing this futile effort to kill Obamacare. In the end, they lost because of a simple fact: No one is injured by a law that requires them to pay zero dollars. As Breyer writes, ‘the IRS can no longer seek a penalty from those who fail to comply’ with the requirement to buy insurance. Thus, ‘there is no possible Government action that is causally connected to the plaintiffs’ injury.’” Ian Millhiser, Vox
“This lawsuit was never likely to bring down the whole statute, and to that extent, the outcome today was the right one. Fevered Democratic predictions that Amy Coney Barrett would be the fifth vote to tear down the whole statute were proven to be the fantastical nonsense we always knew they were…
“Nobody comes out of this case looking particularly good. The Republican effort, embraced by the Trump Justice Department, to use a too-clever-by-half theory to do what a Republican Congress couldn’t, lost resoundingly. The Democrats’ trumpeted claims that the Court was about to toss the statute were revealed as false propaganda…
“The Obama-era arguments about the essential need for the individual mandate were revealed as a dispensable pretense… But the Court may finally have put an end to a decade of Obamacare cases in which it has contorted law and reason to save the statute, and only bought itself more political pressure and less respect.” Dan McLaughlin, National Review
Other opinions below.
From the Right
“[Justice] Thomas’ concurring argument laments that ‘this Court has gone to great lengths to rescue the [Affordable Care] Act from its own text.’ He also takes a swipe at the defendants, noting that they first represented the individual mandate penalty as a ‘linchpin’ of ObamaCare, and now claim it was ‘a throwaway sentence.’ Even with all that, Thomas writes, this new challenge is especially weak sauce…
“[This] should bring the legal challenges to the Affordable Care Act to an end. Even the most conservative jurist on the Supreme Court isn’t inclined to indulge judicial activism to kill it. If Republicans want to get rid of the ACA, they’ll have to do so in Congress — and they’ll need to come up with a better alternative first. How’s that coming along, by the way?” Ed Morrissey, Hot Air
Regarding Fulton v. City of Philadelphia, “Unanimity is achieved at the Supreme Court for really only two reasons: The case is easy, or they want to send a message in controversial ones. Here, they are clearly sending a message that will allow us to, hopefully, finally put to rest the slanderous charge that, as Philadelphia put it, [LGBTQ rights] laws ‘protect its people from discrimination that occurs under the guise of religious freedom’ (emphasis added)…
“Religious groups that run adoption and foster-care agencies, hospitals, food banks, houses of worship, schools, day-care centers, and universities are not cynically and fraudulently ‘using religion’ when they serve the poor or the needy. They are exercising religion in all sincerity…
“By its actions the Court is saying people with sincere faith-informed understandings of social issues that cut against the grain of secularist thought aren’t to be treated as bigots, and government needs to back off… here is the most important line of the case: ‘The question . . . is not whether the City has a compelling interest in enforcing its non-discrimination policies generally, but whether it has such an interest in denying an exception to CSS.’ To which the Court answered with one voice, no.” Roger Severino, Bench Memos
“The good news is that no Justice took Philadelphia’s side. But it’s hard not to read the Court’s narrow opinion, written by Chief Justice John Roberts, as another example of his mode of seeking consensus by watering down principle. He wants to win over liberal Justices and he is reluctant to take the heat from overturning even dubious precedents. But the cost is less protection for religious belief that is increasingly under siege by the state…
“The Little Sisters of the Poor, who object to ObamaCare’s contraception rule, have been to the Supreme Court twice, and President Biden has pledged to keep harassing the nuns. Unlike the liberals of 30 or even 10 years ago, today’s secular progressives are openly hostile to religious liberty, which needs a Supreme Court willing to defend it.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“Today’s pair of rulings should confound the partisans on both sides who claim that the opposition justices vote in ideological lockstep. Today, we saw the conservative wing of the Court, including two of the three justices appointed by Donald Trump, vote to preserve Obamacare while the liberal wing voted en masse to uphold religious liberty over a law protecting same-sex couples.” David Thornton, Racket News
From the Left
“The fact is, that no matter how controversial the origins of a landmark social program, the longer it survives the harder it becomes to overturn… During the first 15 years of the program, Social Security (also known as old-age assistance) repeatedly came under attack. Congressional conservatives, for example, froze Social Security taxes in the early 1940s as a way to undermine the fiscal health of the policy. But the efforts ultimately didn’t work…
“Over the years, more workers were brought into the program and a greater number of legislators in both parties came to see the virtues of a social safety net for elderly Americans. Older Americans also organized to defend the benefit. By the time President Dwight Eisenhower, a Republican, was in office — from 1953 to 1961 — he understood that Social Security wasn’t going away… With each passing year, [the ACA] will only become stronger and [more] cemented.” Julian Zelizer, CNN
“So many of the horrors that many Republicans predicted the law would produce have not come to pass. Some 23 million people rely on the law for health coverage. The law has filled an important gap during the covid-19 pandemic: One million people signed up for coverage in a special enrollment period President Biden opened earlier this year. The ACA drastically slashed the uninsured rate in the United States, a trend that began to reverse when President Donald Trump did what he could to pick apart the law by executive order…
“Rather than continuing their crusade to undermine a successful policy, a decade-long effort in which many Republican leaders have denied health-care coverage to as many vulnerable people as they could, it is past time for Republicans to help make it work better. About 2 million low-income people could get coverage immediately if states such as Georgia, Florida and Texas would expand their Medicaid programs as the law envisioned. When put to a popular vote, Medicaid expansion has passed even in the deepest-red of states… A willingness to accept the ACA as settled law would set the stage for Congress to make improvements.” Editorial Board, Washington Post
Regarding Fulton v. City of Philadelphia, “At the oral argument… Breyer and Kagan asked whether Philadelphia could refuse to contract with a social services agency that refused to place children with interracial couples because of its religious beliefs. The lawyer for Catholic Social Services immediately said the city could refuse to contract because that involved race discrimination, whereas this case concerns sexual orientation discrimination. But there is no basis for this distinction: There is a compelling government interest in stopping both forms of discrimination.” Erwin Chemerinsky, Los Angeles Times
Yet “This ruling could have been worse… This is neither the first nor the last time the court will have to address the tension between anti-discrimination provisions and religious freedom, which is guaranteed not only by the 1st Amendment but also by state and federal laws, including the Religious Freedom Restoration Act signed by President Clinton in 1993. In balancing those interests, the court must not allow religious freedom to become an all-purpose license to discriminate. Thanks to Roberts’ judicious approach, it stopped short of creating such a blanket exception in this case.” Editorial Board, Los Angeles Times
Happy Friday!Smart Brevity™ count: 1,294 words … < 5 minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
🎬 Next on “Axios on HBO”: Jonathan Swan travels to Pakistan to interview Prime Minister Imran Khan on his relationship with the U.S., what he makes of President Biden, what’s next in Afghanistan, China’s growing influence and more. Airs Sunday at 6 p.m. ET on HBO and HBO Max.
1 big thing: The Juneteenth milestone
Two branches of government haven’t acted in concert this speedily in at least 10 years:
The Senate passed a Juneteenth national holiday on Tuesday, the House followed Wednesday, President Biden signed it yesterday, and today is an official federal holiday (although the Postal Service will operate, saying there wasn’t time to shut down).
The annual holidaywill be June 19. Because that falls on Saturday this year, the government is observing it today.
Why it matters: The holiday is a way future generations will remember America’s year of racial reckoning.
Juneteenth National Independence Day is a permanent marker of a cultural shift that was swifter and surer than we could have imagined before the police killing of George Floyd mobilized millions.
Niala Boodhoo, host of our “Axios Today” podcast, talked with Harvard law professor Annette Gordon-Reed, who attended yesterday’s East Room ceremony, and other historians about the dizzying pace of passage.
“All of a sudden, I was getting texts, messages — and an invitation to the White House,” said Gordon-Reed, author of the historical memoir “On Juneteenth,” a current New York Times bestseller.
“It really matters to young people, who will grow up seeing Juneteenth alongside July 4, Memorial Day and Martin Luther King Jr. Day.”
The newest federal holiday commemorates June 19, 1865 — the day Union Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger rode into Galveston, Texas, with word that the Emancipation Proclamation had been signed by President Abraham Lincoln more than two years before.
Ibram X. Kendi, Boston University professor and author of “How To Be an Antiracist,” told Axios he was elated that the holiday has finally come to fruition, but added: “I think we’ll be in a battle over how we celebrate Juneteenth and how we utilize this day.”
📱 At 12:30 p.m. ET today, please join Axios for a virtual event on Juneteenth, with discussions of the day’s historical significance and Black political power in the U.S. Sign up here.
2. Dems may provoke huge fight with health-care industry
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Democrats are considering including major health-care reforms in a massive package that could pass without Republican votes, teeing up a grueling fight with the industry, Caitlin Owens reports for Axios Vitals.
Why it matters: Expanding coverage and lowering drug prices have long been top priorities for Democrats. This may be their best chance.
Democrats are preparing a multi-trillion-dollar infrastructure package to pass through budget reconciliation, allowing legislation to pass the Senate with a simple majority.
They’re considering including measures that would lower Medicare eligibility from 65 to 60, expand benefits and lower drug prices, The Washington Post reported.
Between the lines: The prescription-drug industry is opposed to giving Medicare the ability to negotiate prices. Providers and insurers hate the idea of lowering the Medicare age.
So Democrats could face simultaneous pressure campaigns from some of the most powerful industry groups in the country.
3. 🚨 Breaking: China may lift all birth restrictions by 2025
“Chinese officials are drawing up plans to further loosen birth restrictions and transition toward policies that explicitly encourage childbirth,” The Wall Street Journal scoops (subscription).
Why it matters: The move reflects “increased urgency in Beijing as economic growth slows and China’s population mix skews older.”
Details: “Policy makers are discussing the possibility of fully doing away with birth restrictions by 2025, the end of the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s current five-year economic plan,” The Journal says.
One source expects China to “begin by eliminating birth restrictions in provinces where the birthrate is the lowest before enacting nationwide changes.”
4. Dreading the return of social obligations
Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios
The curbing of COVID in the U.S. means the return of dinner parties, movie dates and brunch — along with lots of things you don’t really want to do, Erica Pandey writes for our new Axios What’s Next newsletter.
Why it matters: Many of us spent over a year stuck in our homes by default — not having to decline social engagements we weren’t keen on. Now it’s time to re-learn the fine art of saying “no.”
Mark Leary, a Duke psychology professor, said we’ve now “realized that there’s a certain portion of our social interactions that were never all that rewarding.”
Our brains are wired to maintain a finite number of social connections — around 15, Leary says. So spending the last year with just close friends and family felt comfortable for those who could do it.
It’s not just you who’s been wondering about this … “At an ice cream shop in Rockville, Md., gloved servers scoop the frozen treat into cups, but a sign taped to the front window says, ‘No cones: Covid,'” Marc Fischer writes on today’s Washington Post front page.
“At McDonald’s outlets along I-95 in Virginia, yellow police-style tape cordons off self-serve beverage stations. And at Nationals Park, baseball fans use a QR code and digital menu rather than ordering directly from the person who hands them their hot dog.”
Why it matters: “None of these precautions provide meaningful protection against … the coronavirus,” The Post reports.
Why it’s happening: “Defenders of hygiene theater argue that some restrictions that seem nonsensical or outdated may nonetheless be useful in helping people dive back into society.”
6. Exclusive poll: Broad support for new tech regs
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
New pollingfrom the left-leaning Data for Progress, shared exclusively with Axios, shows broad support for stricter regulation of tech platforms, Ashley Gold writes.
A survey of 1,203 likely voters, taken May 14-17, found that 82% of respondents were somewhat or very concerned about children being radicalized by online content. 76% were concerned about becoming addicted to online platforms.
The poll showed wide support for new rules for social media firms, with equal backing by Republicans and Democrats.
7. North Korea threatens “confrontation” with U.S.
In this photo provided by the North Korean government, Kim Jong Un leads a Workers’ Party meeting in Pyongyang on Thursday. Photo: Korean Central News Agency via AP
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said the country should “get prepared for both dialogue and confrontation” with the U.S., and “especially to get fully prepared for confrontation,” AP reports.
Why it matters: Kim’s statement indicates he’ll push to strengthen his nuclear arsenal, and increase pressure on Washington to give up what North Korea considers a hostile policy — but also wants talks.
8. Portland officers quit team en masse
In September, Portland police use chemical irritants and crowd control munitions to disperse protesters. Photo: Noah Berger/AP
Portland officers on the crowd control unit, the Rapid Response Team, resigned from the unit after one was indicted for fourth-degree assault due to a baton strike against a protester’s head last summer, The Oregonian reports.
Why it matters: The 50 officers, detectives and sergeants voted to disband their volunteer team “due to perceived lack of support … The indictment of one of the team’s officers appeared to be the last straw.”
9. Mapped: Delaying motherhood
The lower map shows that the U.S. birthrate fell fastest (brown scale) over the past decade “in places with the greatest job growth — where women have more incentive to wait,” the N.Y. Times reports(subscription).
Why it matters: “[A]s more women of all social classes have prioritized education and career, delaying childbearing has become a broad pattern among American women almost everywhere.”
Nielsen has a new way to measure how many people are watching streaming video and for how long: Hardware can now track streaming via internet routers, Axios Media Trends expert Sara Fischer reports.
Why it matters: Streaming is exploding, but the industry has lacked a uniform way to measure consumption.
In the debut report of “The Gauge” (graphic above), Nielsen found that streaming takes up more than a quarter (26%) of all TV consumption in the U.S., officially surpassing broadcast (25%).
📬Thanks for reading! Please invite your friends, family, colleagues to sign up here for Axios AM and Axios PM.
14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
THE FREE BEACON’S DAILY NEWS BRIEF
In Corporate America and Academia, Silence Speaks Volumes
By Washington Free Beacon Editors
As protests and riots consumed the country last summer in the wake of George Floyd’s death, the nation’s top corporate leaders weighed in almost in unison to condemn Floyd’s murder and voice solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement. [READ MORE]
What I Learned from the Beadle
By Matthew Continetti
I was learning from Fred Barnes long before I met him. In the early 1990s the Continetti household devoted Saturday evenings to politics. No, we didn’t knock on doors. We gathered around the television to watch Fred square off against Eleanor Clift on The McLaughlin Group. My memory is hazy—I was 10 years old—but I remember that my dad and I always sided with Fred. Thirty years later, not much has changed. [READ MORE]
Parent Group Calls On Teachers’ Union Head To Denounce Anti-Semitic Statements
By Alex Nester
A national parent group is calling on American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten to condemn two California teachers’ unions that made anti-Semitic statements. [READ MORE]
Chinese Propaganda Outlet Trots Out Anonymous Scientists To Combat Lab-Leak Theory
By Jack Beyrer
A Chinese propaganda outlet is using anonymous sources—described as virologists “close to the China-WHO joint investigative research mission”—to push back against the growing suspicion that the COVID-19 pandemic started as a result of a lab leak. [READ MORE]
GOP lawmakers on the House Foreign Affairs Committee are probing the Biden administration for lifting sanctions last week on Iran’s terrorism enterprise without first consulting Congress, a decision they say was meant to keep lawmakers in the dark and skirt oversight.
Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, scientists implored the public to trust and abide by their expert opinions. Those who questioned their judgment were denounced as ignorant rubes. By their own admission, however, these expert opinions weren’t based on science at all, but rather on a partisan dislike of Republicans and former president Donald Trump.
In signing the measure — which resulted in an unexpected day off Friday for federal workers — President Biden called for more aggressive action on voting access and other racial equity measures.
With crime on the rise in New York City, Democratic candidates running for mayor have focused intensely on law and order in a race that has highlighted the challenges the party may have in pushing liberal policies against the backdrop of increasing violence.
As the controversy over critical race theory in public schools heats up, activists on both sides of the debate have spent massive amounts of time and money on a topic that takes aim at white privilege in America.
Heart inflammation cases tentatively linked to the coronavirus vaccine, prompting an emergency meeting of the panel that advises the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on vaccines, may be the result of a microbe known as the enterovirus.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott have both been on a tear lately with new conservative and populist initiatives, creating the impression they may compete for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination in the lane dominated for years by former President Donald Trump.
President Joe Biden met with Russian leader Vladimir Putin and received criticism for violating an unwritten rule about politics during his trip abroad.
Ghislaine Maxwell’s jail cell was allegedly flooded with raw sewage following a list of complaints about the conditions at a Brooklyn federal prison where she is being held.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against a company called “Blessings in No Time” (BINT), alleging that it ran a pyramid scheme during the coronavirus pandemic.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
June 18, 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.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Black Americans rejoiced Thursday after President Joe Biden made Juneteenth a federal holiday, but some said that, while they appreciated the recognition at a time of racial reckoning in America, more is needed to change policies…Read More
GENEVA (AP) — The U.N. refugee agency says war, violence, persecution and human rights violations caused nearly 3 million people to flee their homes last year, even though the COVID-19 crisis restricted movement worldwide as countries shut borders …Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court’s latest rejection of a Republican effort to dismantle “Obamacare” signals anew that the GOP must look beyond repealing the law if it wants to hone the nation’s health care problems into a winning political issue…Read More
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran voted Friday in a presidential election tipped in the favor of a hard-line protege of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, fueling public apathy and sparking calls for a boycott in the Islamic Republic….Read More
VATHY, Greece (AP) — Around dawn one recent spring day, an inflatable dinghy carrying nearly three dozen people reached the Greek island of Samos from the nearby Turkish coast…Read More
The coelacanth — a giant weird fish still around from dinosaur times — can live for 100 years, a new study found. These slow-moving, people-sized fish of the deep, nicknamed …Read More
A busy week in the region sees photos from the European soccer championships taking place across the continent, along with the Group of Seven summit meetings in Cornwall, Engl…Read More
GABORONE, Botswana (AP) — A huge diamond weighing more than 1,000 carats, which could be the third-largest mined in history, has been discovered in the southern African countr…Read More
“There are only two forces that can carry light to all the corners of the globe … the sun in the heavens and The Associated Press down here.”
Mark Twain
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For more than 150 years, Juneteenth has been recognized as “Freedom Day,” commemorating the moment when the last enslaved African Americans learned of their emancipation. Some may be celebrating this day alongside family and friends at a barbecue. Others may celebrate in solitude with a slice of red velvet cake and washing it down with a bottle of strawberry soda. Either way, Juneteenth is an opportunity to reflect on the sweet triumphs of progression.
One year after millions watched George Floyd take his last few breaths from TV and phone screens, society seemed to have come to an awakening. Whether marching at protests, posting messages of solidarity on social media or spending money at Black-owned businesses, people are taking time to not only appreciate the African American community, but also educate themselves about history and culture.
Among the traditions explored was Juneteenth. Typically, Juneteenth would be celebrated at church services or at gatherings where people would share stories and songs of inspiration. When sharing a meal, red foods such as red velvet cake or beets and drinks such as strawberry soda or hibiscus tea are served because red represents the bloodshed and resilience during slavery.
Though one of the oldest days to be celebrated in the country, many were and still are learning about what Juneteenth is for the first time. But, this year, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed the bill for June 19 to be a state holiday and President Joe Biden signed legislation establishing it as a new federal holiday.
As COVID-19 restrictions continue to be lifted, people are embracing their freedoms and finding ways to create a new normal. The same can be said for Juneteenth. The holiday nods to an ignoble past but presents the chance to move forward and continue learning, acknowledging and celebrating Black life and culture.— Tatyana Turner, reporter
The Bears have submitted a bid to buy the Arlington International Racecourse property. Should they build a new stadium on the Arlington Heights site, they could increase capacity for home games and theoretically build a venue with a roof that could attract events such as the Final Four and the Super Bowl. The catch? The team has a lease at Soldier Field through 2033, and Mayor Lori Lightfoot has no interest in letting the Bears bolt to the suburbs.
In the latest effort to persuade people to get their shot, Illinois will offer $7 million in cash prizes and $3 million in college scholarships through a lottery open to residents who have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine in the state, Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced Thursday.
The money, taken from federal coronavirus relief funds, will be given out through weekly drawings beginning July 8.
Two more coal-fired power plants are shutting down in Illinois, a publicly traded corporation announced Thursday amid a fierce debate about Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s plans to wean the state from lung-damaging, climate-changing fossil fuels.
Gordon Ramsay plans to open his first restaurant in Chicago in the River North neighborhood.
Gordon Ramsay Burger will take over the former Wahlburgers space on the northeast corner of Ontario and State streets. The new celebrity burger joint is expected to open in late 2021 or early 2022 with 120 seats, 5,000 square feet and a full bar. The chef answered questions for the Tribune ahead of the opening.
Juneteenth has been declared a statewide and federal holiday, and more formal concerts and celebrations have become part of the city’s fabric. Two such events — a weekendlong festival in Garfield Park and a livestreamed jazz music performance — kick off the celebration. Here are the details.
With $1 million goal, Black People Eats enlists 95 Black-owned restaurants in Chicago for Juneteenth special. Search our map to find one near you.
“It’s the ‘Chicago Bears,’” one fan tweeted after team president Ted Phillips announced the Bears have placed a bid to buy the Arlington International Racecourse property.
Some religious orders have balked at posting lists of predator priests. But the Claretians’ U.S. websites don’t even mention the scandal, how they’ve responded or how victims can complain.
“At almost every single point in our city’s history, racism has taken a devastating toll on the health and wellbeing of our residents of color — especially those who are Black,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot said.
RMG said in a court motion filed Thursday that the city encouraged it to keep building a new $80 million facility even as scrutiny grew over its plan to relocate a metal shredder to the Southeast Side.
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Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 599,769; Tuesday, 599,945; Wednesday, 600,285; Thursday, 600,680; Friday, 600,934.
The Supreme Court on Thursday voted 7-2 to turn aside a third major challenge brought before justices by Republicans seeking to kill the 2010 Affordable Care Act, otherwise known as ObamaCare.
The law remains intact after the high court ruled that Texas, other GOP-led states and two individuals had no standing to bring their lawsuit in federal court (The Associated Press, The Hill and The New York Times).
The Supreme Court did not tackle a larger issue posed in the suit, that is, whether the bulk of the law could stand without a provision that initially required most Americans to obtain insurance or pay a penalty. Because a third challenge failed, a larger Supreme Court majority joined forces this time, and the law is deeply woven into the U.S. health system after more than a decade, many analysts believe the signature legislative hallmark of the Obama era appears to be a constitutional survivor.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) assailed the GOP for attempting to scuttle the Affordable Care Act in the midst of a global public health crisis. “We will never forget how Republican leaders embraced this monstrous suit to rip away millions of Americans’ health care in the middle of a deadly pandemic,” she said in a statement.
A record 31 million Americans have health insurance through the Affordable Care Act, according to the Health and Human Services Department. A majority of all U.S. adults favor the law, according to the latest tracking poll published by the Kaiser Family Foundation, consistent with support since at least late 2019.
The Hill: Five takeaways from the Supreme Court case.
The Hill: “It’s still a BFD”: Democrats applaud ruling upholding ObamaCare.
The Atlantic, Jonathan Cohn: The real reason Republicans couldn’t kill Obamacare (adapted from the book, “The Ten Year War: Obamacare and the Unfinished Crusade for Universal Coverage”).
The Washington Post: Both parties have been spurred to new strategies following the Supreme Court decision.
The Associated Press: GOP needs new health care target. ObamaCare survives again.
Meanwhile in the healthcare battlefield, the progressive-backed public option insurance concept is on a shelf for now. Left-leaning Democrats are concentrating on tucking other health goals into pending Biden-backed legislation this year, such as ensuring affordable drug pricing and lowering the eligibility age for Medicare. “Crafting a public option is much more difficult than lowering the Medicare eligibility age, and expanding benefits,” House Progressive Caucus Chairwoman Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) says (The Hill).
The Hill: Separately, the Supreme Court on Thursday sided with a Catholic adoption agency that turned away same-sex couples.
Politico: Decisions handed down on Thursday revealed an emerging rift among conservative justices on the Supreme Court.
LEADING THE DAY
CONGRESS: Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) on Thursday teed up a vote early next week on a package to overhaul voting rights and elections, giving Democrats limited time to cobble together a deal to unify their 50 members behind a bill.
As The Hill’s Jordain Carney reports, the Democratic leader informed his caucus of the plan during a closed-door huddle on Thursday, according to a Senate Democratic source familiar with the meeting. The For the People Act has zero shot of garnering the needed 60 votes to break a filibuster, but the main Democratic goal is to unify behind a singular blueprint in an attempt to highlight the expected unanimous GOP opposition rather than their own internal divisions.
The lone holdout on the Democratic side remains Sen. Joe Manchin (W.Va.), who opposes the package in its current form. The West Virginia moderate has outlined to Schumer and his colleagues what he does and doesn’t support, joking to reporters that he “spoke a lot” during the Thursday meeting.
“It was a very good, constructive dialogue,” Manchin said, adding that his colleagues were “very receptive” to his suggestions.
Despite his opposition, Manchin’s decision to come to the table has Democrats optimistic ahead of Tuesday’s vote.
“We’re all constructively engaged on the substance. It was a serious and constructive conversation,” said Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii).
> Big spending: While bipartisan infrastructure talks move forward, Senate Democrats are discussing passing a spending bill in the neighborhood of $6 trillion via budget reconciliation and with only support on the Democratic side of the aisle.
Senate Budget Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), on Thursday said the proposal builds on Biden’s American Jobs Plan ($2.25 trillion) and American Families Plan ($1.8 trillion), and would include a large expansion of Medicare and move to lower the cost of prescription drugs.
“Yeah, absolutely,” Sanders said when asked whether Democrats are discussing going it alone on a proposal as big as $6 trillion, a huge sticker price that has already attracted nervous pushback. “The president has given us a framework, I think it’s a comprehensive and serious framework. It is the function of the Congress now to take that framework and go with it,” the chairman said.
“Everything is in movement. This is a proposal, it’s a draft, it’s going to change every day,” Sanders added (The Hill).
NBC News: Democrats face a divide over how to craft a multi-trillion-dollar bill without the GOP.
Politico: Senate Democrats weigh $6 trillion infrastructure bill, without GOP.
The Associated Press: Back home: Biden has a daunting to-do list after his European tour. He was briefed on Thursday about the status of his domestic legislative plans and next week will gauge the likelihood of a bipartisan deal.
The new Democratic push comes amid signs of momentum for the bipartisan infrastructure plan, which saw its support level grow to 21 senators on Wednesday. However, as The Hill’s Alexander Bolton writes, there remains potential stumbling blocks for the group, including whether the pay-fors assembled by the group would actually cover the cost of the plan.
The New York Times: A draft outline of the newest bipartisan proposal in circulation: $110 billion in new funding for roads and bridges, $65 billion for broadband, $25 billion for airports and $55 billion for water infrastructure.
Another concern continues to center around repurposing $120 billion in unspent pandemic relief and a potential provision that would index the gas tax to inflation — which Biden has said he does not support. As The Hill’s Hanna Trudo reports, Biden’s stance on the gas tax is being backed by both liberals and centrist Democrats.
“This is not the way to go,” Jayapal told The Hill.
The Hill: Pelosi rejects gas tax to cover infrastructure costs.
Morning Consult: Voters back corporate income taxes over targeted gas, mileage taxes to pay for infrastructure investments.
The Hill: Schumer vows he “will not pass” an infrastructure measure that excludes Biden’s climate provisions.
The Hill: Lawmakers rally around cyber legislation following string of attacks.
Politico: Senate confirms Chris Inglis as Biden’s top cyber adviser.
CORONAVIRUS: A $3.2 billion federal program is underway to support the development of antiviral pills to help people with COVID-19, medication that could start arriving by the end of this year, reports The New York Times.
“I wake up in the morning, I don’t feel very well, my sense of smell and taste go away, I get a sore throat,”Anthony Fauci told the Times while describing the concept. “I call up my doctor and I say, ‘I have COVID and I need a prescription.’”
Fauci’s support for research on antiviral pills stems from his experience fighting AIDS three decades ago. In the 1990s, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, which he heads, conducted research that led to some of the first antiviral pills for HIV, “protease inhibitors,” which block an essential virus protein and can keep the virus at bay for a lifetime.
In the early 2000s, researchers found that an antiviral called sofosbuvir could cure hepatitis C close to 100 percent of the time. Tamiflu, an over-the-counter pill for influenza, can cut the time it takes to recover from an infection, and reduce the chances that a bout of the flu will land someone in the hospital.
> July 4 vaccination goal: Biden set an ambitious vaccination goal of 70 percent for at least one dose among adults in the United States by the Fourth of July, hoping to encourage Americans to view the economy and their everyday lives as more normal by Independence Day if they were safely on their way to being fully vaccinated. A 70 percent goal would approach herd immunity and would provide some protection against the highly infectious coronavirus variants circling the globe. In mid-June, about 53 percent of U.S. adults have had at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine, yet millions of Americans say they remain hesitant or are refusing to be vaccinated. On Thursday, White House officials would not venture a prediction about whether the president’s goal can be met by the Fourth of July (The Hill).
The New York Times: High hopes for Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine have fizzled in the U.S.
> Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) on Thursday said all COVID-19 restrictions would end in her state on Tuesday. About 55 percent of the Michigan population has had at least one dose of vaccine and COVID-19 positive test results have dropped, according to state’s data (The Hill). Whitmer has been under intense political pressure for much of the past year based on the tough COVID-19 restrictions she imposed. In April, she described four benchmarks that had to be met to lift Michigan’s restrictions.
> United Kingdom surge in cases: The delta variant of COVID-19 in Great Britain has worried scientists for months. Coronavirus cases have climbed to their highest level in the U.K. since February, despite an adult vaccination rate there of more than 80 percent. The variant, first detected in India, is expected to become the dominant strain in the United States in three to four weeks, according to some researchers, which is one of the reasons Biden, Fauci and other federal officials are publicly urging Americans to get doses of vaccine as soon as possible (Axios).
Medical News Today: What do we know about the delta strain of coronavirus? “We’ve seen that when the delta variant spreads among unvaccinated people, it can become dominant very, very quickly,” Fauci has said.
> Middle East: Israel says it will share 1 million COVID-19 vaccine doses with the 4.5 million Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza. The doses are soon to expire and the agreement is a swap with doses the Palestinians expect to receive later this year (The Associated Press).
OPINION
Could the Southern Baptists be tiptoeing away from Trump? by Karen Tumulty, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3iWBcca
Supreme Court’s ACA ruling is a win for common sense, by Noah Feldman, columnist, Bloomberg Opinion. https://bloom.bg/3gFCSEv
WHERE AND WHEN
Most of the federal government today observes a new holiday, Juneteenth (ABC News7).
The House meets on Monday at 9 a.m. for a pro forma session.
TheSenate meets on Monday at 3 p.m. and will resume consideration of the nomination of Christopher Fonzone to be general counsel of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
The president receives the President’s Daily Brief at 10:30 a.m. He will speak about the U.S. COVID-19 response and vaccination program at 2:15 p.m. from the State Dining Room. Biden will depart the White House at 3 p.m. to spend the weekend in Wilmington, Del.
Vice President Harris will travel to Atlanta for events designed to urge people to get COVID-19 vaccinations.
➔ INTERNATIONAL: The results of Iranian presidential elections today are set to pose a new challenge for the United States as it pursues indirect negotiations with Tehran to reenter the 2015 nuclear deal. Favored to win the contest is hardline-candidate Ebrahim Raisi, the head of Iran’s judiciary and sanctioned by the United States in 2019 (The Hill).
➔ STATE WATCH: Connecticut on Thursday passed legislation that will make it the 18th state to allow residents to use marijuana for recreational purposes. Gov. Ned Lamont (D) is expected to sign the bill (WTNHNews8, The Hill and CTPost.com). … Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) signed a bill into law on Wednesday making concealed carry without permits legal in the state. At a signing ceremony, Abbott said that the new law will help turn the Lone Star State into a “Second Amendment sanctuary” (The Texas Tribune).
➔ POLITICS: Hmmm, who are they emulating?Abbott has announced he is building a wall at the Texas border with Mexico. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) announced on Thursday that he is pardoning people in his battleground state who were arrested or fined for mask- or other COVID-19 violations (CBS Miami). Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is talking tough about China’s role in the pandemic and announced a political action group this week to keep his hand in the 2022 midterms. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) takes repeated aim at the administration’s approach to China and Cuba, appealing to conservatives in South Florida. Former Vice President Mike Pence is reaching out to Christian conservatives this summer. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) this week bashed Fauci as “political and not scientific.”
➔ DRINK UP: Scotch single malt whisky makers applauded on Thursday after the United States agreed to suspend tariffs on one of Scotland’s main exports in the wake of the resolution of a long-standing trans-Atlantic trade row over subsidies to aircraft companies Boeing and Airbus. Former President Trump imposed the 25 percent tariffs in 2019 on certain whisky products from the European Union. The tariffs applied until this week, when the U.S. and the EU reached an agreement that lifts the punitive levies for five years (The Associated Press).
And finally … 👏👏👏 A big round of applause for this week’s Morning Report Quiz winners!
Here’s who knew their trivia about the lengthy history of U.S.-Russia (and Soviet Union) relations on the heels of Wednesday’s summit in Geneva: Patrick Kavanagh, DIck Baznik, Mary Anne McEnery, Pam Manges, Daniel Bachhuber, Candi Cee, Michel Romage, Chuck Schoenenberger, Lesa Davis, Luther Berg and John Donato.
They knew that the 2001 summit where former President George W. Bush said that he was able to “get a sense” of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “soul” was held in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
As was chronicled in the wonderful ESPN 30 for 30 “Of Miracles and Men,” the Soviet Union first allowed a player to sign with the National Hockey League in 1989 (Viacheslav Fetisov with the New Jersey Devils).
Edward Snowden spent 39 days in Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport before he was granted asylum by Russia in 2013.
Finally, in by far the most important answer in today’s quiz, cinema’s Rocky Balboa improbably earned $0 for his trek to Moscow to fight Ivan Drago in “Rocky IV.”
The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!
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President Biden signed a bill yesterday to make Juneteenth a national holiday, effective immediately.
What Juneteenth is commemorating: The end of slavery in the United States. The New York Times has a helpful explainer on the holiday: https://nyti.ms/30Un1vu
QUESTIONS YOU MAY HAVE:
Are banks open today?: Via USA Today’s Jessica Menton, yes, most banks will be open because of the fast turnaround: https://bit.ly/2Uffnum
And is the stock market open?: Yes, it will be open today and Monday, according to Barrons: https://bit.ly/3vHFh6N
Here’s how states scrambled to shut down for the national holiday: Via CNN’s Paul LeBlanc: https://cnn.it/3xznSyv
What’s open and closed: In The Washington, D.C., area specifically, here’s a list of what’s open and what’s closed, via WTOP: https://bit.ly/3qf9jxW
ONLY ONE STATE DOES NOT RECOGNIZE JUNETEENTH AS A STATE HOLIDAY OR DAY OF OBSERVANCE:
That state is South Dakota. Interesting read from The Hill’s Reid Wilson: https://bit.ly/2SAgapj
A lighter tidbit: Reuters’s Pete Schroeder tweeted, “We should announce new holidays with less than 24 hours notice more often. I like the gleeful chaos.” https://bit.ly/3xuUA4f
Happy Friday! 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
Via The Hill’s Alexander Bolton, “Centrists have gained leverage in the Senate battle over an infrastructure package after 11 more senators backed a $974 billion infrastructure framework.” https://bit.ly/3q81BFI
How so: “Twenty-one senators in all are supporting the proposal, which is much smaller than what the White House and liberals prefer. The group includes 11 Republicans, nine Democrats and an independent who caucuses with Democrats.”
Meanwhile with progressives: “Liberals who were calling on fellow Democrats to ‘cut bait’ only a few days ago now grudgingly acknowledge they will have to review the details of what the centrists will come up with before deciding their next move.”
Via The Hill’s Nathaniel Weixel, “The public option insurance plan has fallen off the national radar, despite being a major point of contention between moderates and progressives just a year ago during President Biden’s campaign.” https://bit.ly/3iQYSi9
The redirected attention: “But rather than holding Biden’s feet to the fire on the issue, progressives are concentrating on other health care priorities, like ensuring drug pricing reform and expanded Medicare are included in a massive infrastructure package.”
FIVE TAKEAWAYS ON THE SUPREME COURT’S OBAMACARE DECISION:
Via The New York Times’s Noah Weiland, “When Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose coronavirus vaccine was authorized for emergency use in late February, it was seen as a breakthrough for reaching vulnerable and isolated Americans, a crucial alternative to vaccines that require two shots weeks apart and fussier storage.” https://nyti.ms/2UkMTzv
Yes, but: “With only 11.8 million doses administered in the United States so far — less than 4 percent of the total — the ‘one and done’ vaccine has fallen flat.”
Doses are starting to expire: “States have warned for weeks that they may not find recipients for millions of doses that will soon expire, partly because the vaccine’s appeal dropped after it was linked to a rare but serious blood-clotting disorder and injections were paused for 10 days in April.”
The House and Senate are out. President Biden is in Washington, D.C., and is heading to Wilmington, Del. this afternoon. Vice President Harris is in Atlanta today.
9:30 a.m. EDT: Vice President Harris left for Atlanta.
10:30 a.m. EDT: President Biden received the President’s Daily Brief.
11:55 a.m. EDT: Vice President Harris toured a pop-up COVID-19 vaccination site at Ebenezer Baptist Church.
2:55 p.m. EDT: President Biden leaves for Wilmington, Del.
4:40 p.m. EDT: Vice President Harris meets with community leaders at Clark Atlanta University to discuss voting rights.
6:15 p.m. EDT: Vice President Harris returns to Washington, D.C.
Launching Monday — a new newsletter on the block!: The Hill’s Sustainability Newsletter will focus on the best and most promising practices and policies that ensure society’s needs of the present don’t undermine the needs of the future. Sign up here:https://bit.ly/3jtvjBL
WHAT TO WATCH:
1:40 p.m. EDT: Vice President Harris delivers remarks at a vaccination mobilization event at Clark Atlanta University. Livestream: https://bit.ly/35AhhIg
2:15 p.m. EDT: President Biden delivers remarks on the COVID-19 vaccination effort. Livestream: https://bit.ly/35wE1Jc
NOW FOR THE FUN STUFF…:
Today is National Picnic Day. And for weekend planning purposes, tomorrow is National Martini Day and Sunday is National Vanilla Milkshake Day!
The cicada population is beginning to die out! According to Smithsonian entomologist Floyd Shockley, who spoke with Washingtonian’s Rosa Cartagena, the Brood X cicadas will basically disappear by the end of the month. https://bit.ly/2SekMkM
COME. ON: The Washington Post’s Capital Weather Gang writes, “Cicadas are dying off, but leaving behind a stench.” Here’s that story if you’re so inclined: https://wapo.st/3wDnf7d
Someone please make a remembrance slideshow to this tune: The Washington Post posted recordings of the loudest cicadas they could find. Listen: https://wapo.st/3q5zw1T
President Joe Biden on Thursday signed legislation to make Juneteenth a federal holiday. In an East Room signing ceremony, he connected the move to his legislative agenda, including efforts to counter new GOP-backed voting laws being adopted at the state level. Read more…
Republicans on the House Ways and Means Committee clashed with Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen on Thursday over President Joe Biden’s tax proposals, while panel Democrats welcomed them and pushed for additional policies beyond the president’s plans. Read more…
The Senate overwhelmingly voted Thursday to confirm Tommy Beaudreau, an energy lawyer with a wide array of former fossil and renewable energy clients, to be deputy secretary of the Interior Department, the No. 2 slot behind Secretary Deb Haaland. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
OPINION — Over time, Congress has ceded its grip on the “power of the purse” — and the executive branch has gladly stepped in to absorb it. But amid recent interest in clawing back this essential power, lawmakers should use the budget process to follow through. Read more…
A massive filibuster-proof budget reconciliation package worth as much as $6 trillion over a decade — of which half could be deficit-financed — is taking shape within the Senate Democratic caucus, according to a source familiar with the discussions. Read more…
Democratic lawmakers and much of the health care industry cheered the Supreme Court’s ruling Thursday to uphold the 2010 health care law. Hospitals, physicians, insurers and others stood to lose financially if the law had been overturned. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: ‘I want to be the next John McCain’
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
‘THEY ALL F—— HATE ME’ — Check out the excerpt in POLITICO Mag today of WSJ reporter MIKE BENDER’Sforthcoming book, “Frankly, We Did Win This Election: The Inside Story of How Trump Lost.” It’s about how the former president handled the immediate aftermath of GEORGE FLOYD’S murder and, in his own estimation, “made Juneteenth very famous.”
Here’s a taste: “For Father’s Day in 2020, what DONALD TRUMP mostly wanted was to avoid his son-in-law. It was JARED KUSHNER who had talked the president into hiring BRAD PARSCALE to run a campaign that was now, just months before the election, in freefall. And when most Americans rejected Trump’s unreasonably truculent response to the civil unrest that was sweeping the country, the president also blamed Kushner. … Trump privately told advisers that he wished he’d been quicker to support police and more aggressive in his pushback against protesters.
“Trump had staked nearly his entire campaign in 2016 around a law-and-order image, and now groaned that the criminal justice reform that Kushner had persuaded him to support made him look weak and — even worse — hadn’t earned him any goodwill among Black voters.
“‘I’ve done all this stuff for the Blacks — it’s always Jared telling me to do this,’ Trump said to one confidante on Father’s Day. ‘And they all f—— hate me, and none of them are going to vote for me.’”
EMULATING MCCAIN — KYRSTEN SINEMA’S advisers heard it constantly from her during her 2018 campaign for Senate: “I want to be the next JOHN MCCAIN.”
After she won, Sinema called the late senator a “legend” and “my personal hero.” This year, when she voted against a minimum wage hike, she rankled the left by mimicking McCain’s iconic thumbs-down that tanked the GOP’s effort to kill Obamacare.
Now Sinema’s commanding the spotlight not only as a rare swing vote in a hyperpartisan Congress but as a lead negotiator on an infrastructure deal that could determine the success of President JOE BIDEN’S first term. If she pulls it off, she will establish herself, like McCain, as a legislative force inside the Senate.
McCain is obviously a singular figure who spent decades building his stature in the chamber. But Sinema’s current and former colleagues say the two do share some traits: She doesn’t like to be told what to do. She’s also unafraid to buck her party, and at times seems to relish it.
— WHAT MEGHAN SAYS: We asked McCain’s daughter what she thought of the comparison.
“I do believe when she makes decisions she thinks about what [John McCain] would do, which is both surprising and nice and interesting — and not what I expected from her at all,” MEGHAN MCCAIN said.
She added that her father was also “obsessed” with his predecessor BARRY GOLDWATER’S legacy.
“I think she’s pretty fearless,” McCain said. Sinema, she added, has the mindset, “‘What’s the worst that can happen to me?’ She’s not scared of being uncool with the woke left. Politically she’s pretty well tuned to the state in a lot of ways.”
— HER GOP CHARM OFFENSIVE: Sinema doesn’t really fit in with Democrats. She’s been known to skip party lunches and votes and even missed VP KAMALA HARRIS’ dinner with female senators this week. (Her staff said it was because Sinema broke her foot.) All the while she’s been on a charm offensive with Republicans, many of whom adore her. They say they can trust her, that she keeps her word.
“I think Sen. Sinema is comfortable with who she is,” Sen. DEB FISCHER (R-Neb.) told Playbook. The two senators have become close friends and regularly have dinner together, most recently two weeks ago at Charlie Palmer with Sens. SHELLEY MOORE CAPITO (R-W.Va.) and CYNTHIA LUMMIS (R-Wyo.).
“She is certainly willing to step in in a needed way to bring people together, and she does go her own way. I would say she’s probably similar to McCain in that way. They’re willing to take the slings and arrows from their own side when they’re trying to accomplish something.”
— DEMS SAY SHE’S GOT IT WRONG: On the flip side, some Democrats worry that she’s feeling the love from Republicans only because they need her while they are in the minority.
“She’s still new, that’s the bottom line,” said a senior Democratic Hill official. “Do you think if the Republicans were in the majority they would care about Sinema? She has to be wary of the relevancy trap. You can easily be beguiled by the moment. It’s a mistake of early legislators who want to make inroads with the other side at the expense of their own caucus, of their advancement and at the expense of their state.”
Sinema was the first Democrat to win an Arizona Senate seat since 1995, and she won by a small margin. A former Sinema aide warned that she’s not reading the Democratic Party in Arizona if she thinks McCain is the person to emulate.
“She’s trying to brand herself as a brand of Arizonan that won’t exist anymore,” the aide said, referring to the leftward shift of the state, which narrowly backed Biden in November. “It’s misguided to look backward than forward. You can’t be a carbon copy because it won’t work.”
Happy Friday! Indeed,happy days are apparently here again: Our colleague Olivia Beavers tweeted a photo Thursday night of … what seems to be quite a good time somewhere in the Rayburn House Office Building. Thanks for reading Playbook and feel free to drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
SMOKING HOT IN THE MAYORAL RACE — As KATHRYN GARCIA surges in the polls in the final days of the NYC mayoral primary, a widely known secret about the sanitation commissioner has been revealed: She smokes up to a pack of Marlboro Golds per day, according to the N.Y. Post’s Julia Marsh. Yes, cowboy smokes. This feels like a 360 from the days of MIKE BLOOMBERG, the nanny mayor who banned indoor smoking and waged war on sugar and salt. The last mayor to openly smoke in office was ROBERT WAGNER, who left office in 1965. Garcia told the Post she vows to quit — if she wins she’ll try the patch, exercise, whatever. Godspeed.
Meanwhile, Rep. ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ (D-N.Y.)dropped an ad Thursday night for MAYA WILEY, who polled third in the race in a survey this week. After her late-in-the-game endorsement, AOC seems to be doubling down with an ad in which she’s featured hugging Wiley. “We have an option of a candidate that has a lifetime of dedication to this,” the lawmaker says. “Racial justice, economic justice and climate justice.”
WHILE WE’RE ON THE TOPIC — The race for NYC mayor is the marquee election of this year, and it’s full of drama — for starters, around whether frontrunner ERIC ADAMS actually lives in the city he’s hoping to run. With primary day Tuesday, POLITICO New York’s SALLY GOLDENBERG and TARA — both N.Y. Post alums — unpack the race while producer OLIVIA REINGOLD pounds the pavement to find out what New Yorkers really think. Listen to the latest episode of Playbook Deep Dive here
BELOW BOARD —Daniel Lippman reports that the third-ranking House Republican, ELISE STEFANIK (N.Y.), “who questioned the legitimacy of the 2020 election and voted against certification of Joe Biden’s win, currently serves as a board member for a revered U.S. organization dedicated to the promotion of democracy.”
“The congresswoman’s position on the National Endowment for Democracy’s board has rankled fellow Republicans, foreign policy scholars and some former NED board members, who say her statements, along with her support for GOP-authored election laws, are at odds with the organization’s mission.”
ALSO still on a board:LES WEXNER. The scandal-scarred former client and friend of JEFFREY EPSTEIN still sits on the board of the prestigious Aspen Institute, according to its website. He’s listed as a “lifetime trustee.” The position involves being “responsible for providing advice concerning strategic issues facing the organization,” and lists him among the likes of LEONARD LAUDER, MADELEINE ALBRIGHT and SANDRA DAY O’CONNOR. His position is outdated: It states that he is the president and chair of the board of The Limited Inc., a role he was stripped of after his close connections to the pedophile were revealed. Aspen Institute didn’t get back to us as to whether that trustee position is truly for a lifetime.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Former President BARACK OBAMA and former A.G. ERIC HOLDER are participating in a virtual town hall Monday. The pair will talk to grassroots supporters of the anti-gerrymandering “All on The Line Campaign” about “getting involved in the redistricting process to strengthen our democracy and support Senate action on voting rights legislation.”
— 10:30 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 2:15 p.m.: Biden will speak about the pandemic and the vaccination push.
— 2:55 p.m.: Biden will depart the White House for Wilmington, Del., arriving at 3:50 p.m.
HARRIS’ FRIDAY:
— 9:30 a.m.: The VP will travel to Atlanta.
— 11:55 a.m.: Harris will visit a pop-up vaccination site at Ebenezer Baptist Church.
— 1:40 p.m.: Harris will speak at a vaccination mobilization event at Clark Atlanta University.
— 4:40 p.m.: Harris will take part in a voting rights discussion with community leaders at Clark Atlanta University.
— 6:15 p.m.: Harris will head back to D.C.
THE HOUSE and THE SENATE are out.
PLAYBOOK READS
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — More than 20 civil society groups are sending Congress and A.G. MERRICK GARLAND a letter today imploring the House and Senate to investigate the Justice Department’s surveillance of members of Congress (and their staffs and families) during the Trump administration. They’re specifically calling for public hearings and new legislation that goes beyond just internal DOJ reforms. The organizations, led by the Project on Government Oversight, include the ACLU, the Brennan Center, CREW and PEN America. The letter
CAPITOL HILL
THE FUTURE OF ‘FOR THE PEOPLE’ — “McConnell vows to block voting legislation, spurning Manchin’s compromise offer,” by WaPo’s Mike DeBonis and Vanessa Williams: “The pledge from Senate Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL (R-Ky.) all but guarantees that Republicans will filibuster a sweeping voting bill that Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER (D-N.Y.) is sending to the floor Tuesday. … The only remaining question is whether all 50 Democratic senators will unite in support of debating the bill, known as the For the People Act, and how they will react once Republicans block the legislation.”
DISORDER IN THE COURT — “‘Alito was just pissed’: Trump’s Supreme Court breaks down along surprising lines,”by Josh Gerstein: “Those rifts burst wide open on Thursday with two of the highest-profile decisions of the court’s current term. In both the big cases — involving Obamacare and a Catholic group refusing to vet same-sex couples as foster parents in Philadelphia — conservative justices unleashed sharp attacks that seemed aimed at their fellow GOP appointees for failing to grapple with the core issues the cases presented.
“Some liberal legal commentators noted that the most carefully dissected rhetorical sparring is now taking place among members of the new six-justice conservative majority, with the three remaining liberal justices often left as mere spectators.”
THIS AND THAT
REMEMBER THESE TWO? — “St. Louis gun-waving couple plead guilty to misdemeanor charges,”St. Louis Post-Dispatch: “MARK MCCLOSKEY, 64, will pay a $750 fine after pleading guilty to fourth-degree assault, a Class C misdemeanor. PATRICIA MCCLOSKEY, 62, must pay a $2,000 fine after pleading guilty to second-degree harassment, a Class A misdemeanor. Mark McCloskey could have faced up to 15 days in jail; Patricia McCloskey could have spent up to a year behind bars. Neither will face jail time.
“The McCloskeys also agreed to forfeit the weapons they used when they confronted a throng of protesters marching past their Portland Place mansion on June 28, 2020. The McCloskeys emerged from their home and waved guns at the demonstrators. They claimed the protesters were trespassing by entering their gated, private street.”
WHOOPSIE — In a letter led by Rep. RONNY JACKSON (R-Texas), and signed by 13 other Republicans, lawmakers asked Biden to take a cognitive test. The Daily Kos’ David Nir pointed out, though, that the lawmakers had their own mental lapse in drafting the letter, repeating a line almost verbatim … about the president’s alleged forgetfulness.
“Unfortunately, your forgetfulness and cognitive difficulties have been prominently on display over the past year,” followed by, “Unfortunately, your mental decline and forgetfulness have become more apparent over the past eighteen months.” Yikes. Niu’s tweet
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week”: Kaitlan Collins, Anne Gearan, Garrett Haake and Pete Williams.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
CBS
“Face the Nation”: Fiona Hill … Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) … Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie Bunch III … Scott Gottlieb.
FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.). Panel: Karl Rove, Susan Page and Juan Williams. Power Player: Greg Olsen.
Gray TV
“Full Court Press”: Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.).
ABC
“This Week”: Panel: Rachel Scott, Rahm Emanuel, Chris Christie and Laura Barrón-López.
NBC
“Meet the Press”: Panel: Cornell Belcher, Amna Nawaz, Ashley Parker and Brad Todd.
CNN
“Inside Politics”: Panel: Julie Pace, Paul Kane, Kaitlan Collins, Joan Biskupic and Eva McKend.
PLAYBOOKERS
IN MEMORIAM — “Janet Malcolm, Provocative Journalist With a Piercing Eye, Dies at 86,”NYT: “Janet Malcolm, a longtime writer for The New Yorker who was known for her piercing judgments, her novel-like nonfiction and a provocative moral certainty that cast a cold eye on journalism and its practitioners, died on Wednesday in a hospital in Manhattan. She was 86. The cause was lung cancer, said her daughter, Anne Malcolm.
“Over a 55-year career, Ms. Malcolm produced an avalanche of deeply reported, exquisitely crafted articles, essays and books, most devoted to her special interests in literature, biography, photography, psychoanalysis and true crime. Her writing was precise and analytical; her unflinching gaze missed nothing.”
ZOOM FAIL: We thought the worst of virtual pandemic life was behind us and then … Rep. Donald Payne (D-N.J.). Make the Zoom fails stop.
SPOTTED: Usher at the bill-signing ceremony to make Juneteenth a federal holiday.Pic via NPR’s Asma Khalid … Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) at the Waterfront Safeway. Pic
MEDIAWATCH — Bloomberg’s D.C. bureau is adding Megan Scully as a Congress editor and Ed Harrison as a senior editor on the markets team. Scully most recently was senior editor at CQ Roll Call. Harrison was managing editor at Real Vision. … Malcom Thomas is now an associate producer at MSNBC. He previously was an editorial producer at CNN. Talking Biz News
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Kevin Grout is joining RunSwitch PR as an account director in Louisville, Ky. He previously spent five years as a speechwriter for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.
WHITE HOUSE ARRIVAL LOUNGE — Eli Fenichel is now assistant director for natural resource economics and accounting in the Office of Science & Technology Policy. He’s on leave from his position as the Knobloch family professor of natural resource economics at Yale.
TRANSITIONS — Sarah Horning is now digital content director for the RNC. She previously was senior director of digital for Stand Together. … Tiffany Waddell has been named director of government relations at the National Governors Association. She most recently was senior adviser and director of federal relations for Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan. …
… Niambé Tomlinson is now senior director of comms for external affairs and advocacy for the National Urban League’s Washington bureau. She most recently was comms manager for the House Office of Diversity & Inclusion, and is a Kirsten Gillibrand alum. … Eliana Goldsher will be a senior policy associate on Cargill’s government relations team. She previously was an associate manager at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s China Center.
ENGAGED — Max Berger, editorial director at More Perfect Union, proposed to Kimberly Dodson, a performer, director and co-founder of Everybody Black, in Sherwood Gardens, a Baltimore park where her aunt Donna used to take her as a kid. He proposed in the center of a spiral created by her childhood best friend and artist Lauren Gilson, inspired by their old Waldorf School rituals. The couple started dating in New York City in 2015, and then reconnected after a break at a talk by Michelle Alexander. Pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Jason Farkas, VP and general manager at CNN Business, and Laura Paterson, senior director of experiences at Vogue, welcomed Amelia Farkas. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Reps. Jerry McNerney (D-Calif.) (7-0) and Paul Tonko (D-N.Y.) … Robert O’Brien … Axios’ Nick Johnston … White House’s John McCarthy … Niall Stanage of The Hill … David Drucker … Jim Stinson … MPA’s Rachel Alben … the House’s Kate Knudson … CNN’s DJ Judd and Devan Cole … Clare Bresnahan English … Will Kinzel of Molson Coors … BuzzFeed’s Mary Ann Georgantopoulos … Bert Gómez … Tom Readmond … Meryl Governski … Narric Rome … Dina Powell McCormick … Ron Rosenblith … former Sens. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.) and Mike Johanns (R-Neb.) … Daniel Epstein … Bulgarian President Rumen Radev … POLITICO’s Shannon Rafferty … National Investor Relations Institute’s Gary LaBranche (58) … Fred Barbash
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.
“And I will give you a new heart, and a new spirit I will put within you. And I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and give you a heart of flesh,” (Ezekiel 36:26, ESV).
John Owen imagines Christ’s invitation for us: “Come I entreat you; lay aside all procrastinations, all delays; put me off no more; eternity lies at the door.”
John Hendrickson: Learning from Secretary Mellon and the 1920s can help us restore fiscal sanity and continue to create economic growth and opportunity for all Americans.
Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing on Friday. Then, he will deliver another speech on Coronavirus and fly to his family home in Delaware. President Biden’s Itinerary for 6/18/21: All Times EDT 10:30 AM Receive daily briefing – Oval Office2:30 PM Deliver a speech on Coronavirus – …
A parent-led rebellion against Critical Race Theory is storming school boards across the country and demanding accountability for what is being taught to American children. At least 165 local and national groups have formed to combat Critical Race Theory (CRT) instruction in schools across the U.S., an NBC analysis found. …
A professor at Columbia University shared a letter Wednesday purportedly from an anonymous student who alleged psychological pains of being exposed to what he described as anti-white male education. Professor John McWhorter drew attention to the letter, which has not yet been verified by The Daily Caller News Foundation, in a …
President Joe Biden signed a bill establishing Juneteenth as the newest federal holiday Thursday, two days before its commemoration nationwide. The bill, known as the “Juneteenth National Independence Day Act,” passed the Senate via unanimous consent Tuesday and sailed through the House Wednesday, with just 14 Republicans voting against it …
The Department of Health and Human Services will invest $3.2 billion to develop and manufacture COVID-19 antiviral medicines, it announced Thursday. The initiative, funded as part of the American Rescue Plan, is designed to accelerate research into antivirals as well as build platforms for urgent response to future viral threats, …
Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced a $250 million “down payment” on the state-funded border wall with Mexico on Wednesday. The Texas Department of Criminal Justice initiated a transfer of $250 million to the governor’s disaster fund to pay for the state’s response to the border crisis, according to Abbott’s …
The number of vaccine-related deaths reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), maintained by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), showed a jump of 723 new deaths over a week in its latest data dump on June 11, but the push by the corporate media and politicians to …
The Supreme Court slammed Texas and other Republican-led states’ attempts on Thursday to take down Obamacare. The 18 Republican states challenged whether the individual mandate, a requirement by law for people to purchase healthcare, can be cut from the rest of the law or if they can repeal the legislation …
The House of Representatives Thursday voted to repeal the 2002 bill that cleared the way for the multi-decade conflict in Iraq, a first step in Congress’ bid to rein in presidential war powers. The bill passed with bipartisan support, reflecting both parties’ growing opposition to presidential war powers that have …
The United States Supreme Court has unanimously sided with a Catholic adoption agency in a religious freedom case regarding same sex unions. The court ruled 9-0 that the city of Philadelphia’s refusal to contract with Catholic Social Services (CSS) unless CSS agreed to ‘certify same-sex couples as foster parents” violates …
The third-ranking Senate Republican, John Barrasso of Wyoming, said President Joe Biden should withdraw his nominee to lead the Bureau of Land Management for deceiving his committee about her involvement in an “eco-terrorism” case in her early 20s. Tracy Stone-Manning told Barrasso’s committee in writing in May she had never …
Coincidences are interesting things. They’re considered remarkable because their combined occurrence seems improbable. But sometimes, improbable occurrences really happen. Lightning really has struck the same location twice — on rare occasions. But when coincidences start to stack up, their probability of jointly occurring becomes exceedingly low. One begins to wonder …
House Democrats voted against an amendment Wednesday that would have required companies to inform their shareholders if they engaged in activities with a Chinese official or company using forced labor. The amendment, introduced by Kentucky Republican Rep. Andy Barr, would require companies to disclose to shareholders annually their activities with …
The House of Representatives passed a bill establishing Juneteenth as a federal holiday, doing so one day after the Senate and sending the legislation to President Joe Biden’s desk. Juneteenth, already celebrated in the majority of states on June 19, commemorates the official end of slavery in Confederate states on …
Where do the rulers of America get the nerve to pay China to develop diseases that will likely be used to kill American citizens? And where do Democrats get the idea that they can lie about EVERYTHING, as long as a conservative is in the Oval Office? First Fauci said …
Happy Friday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I actually do want to know how the sausage is made.
I don’t know how many of you have ever been to Portland, but it was once a great city. It had all that Oregon-ness about it that I love visiting but would never want to live in. Yeah, it’s full of hippies, but hippies do serve a purpose. They’re usually great for coffee, beer, and food. Portland was top-notch for all of those. Entertainment provided by heavily-tatted leftists who pretend they hate capitalism is always worth the money.
I wouldn’t steer you wrong.
Unfortunately, the City of Roses is being crushed under the weight of its leftist lust and the idiot commies who have been running it for far too long.
Portland has played a game of “Left and More Left” politically ever since the George Floyd peaceful-but-flammable protests broke out last summer. Its mayor is a lefty loon who kept standing amid the peaceful wreckage left in the wake of every antifa and Black Lives Matter protest and assuring everyone that all was well with the world.
Not surprisingly, Portland was an early adopter of the “defund the police” madness. We all know how that’s been going.
You want the cops gone? Deal. Portland’s entire Rapid Response Team, cops who volunteer for riot control duty, voted unanimously to resign on Wednesday, effectively leaving the city in the hands of antifa. The riot cops’ decision follows the criminal indictment of one of their own for assault, stemming from a riot in August 2020, a police source told The Post Millennial.
On the night of August 18, 2020, antifa skirts threw a Molotov cocktail firebomb into the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Department Headquarters as the Rapid Response Team struggled to contain the riot. Rapid Response Officer Budworth hit a rioter from behind with a baton, as seen in a video with no context whatsoever.
In a statement released after the indictment, District Attorney Mike Schmidt said, “In this case, we allege that no legal justification existed for Officer Budworth’s deployment of force, and that the deployment of force was legally excessive under the circumstances.”
“Now that the riot team is no more, we have no clue what’s going to happen. We don’t have enough patrol officers to be pulled from the road to handle huge crowds,” a Portland police officer told The Post Millennial. “We are only backups with no gear like the riot team has.”
‘Tis a conundrum, ’tis it not?
The topsy-turvy world of blue city priorities is at its worst in Portland. Criminal organizations like Antifa and BLM are given free rein to sow their seeds of destruction while the peacekeepers are vilified and railroaded by the local kangaroo justice system.
The idiots in charge might finally be figuring out the flaw in that approach:
It’s not likely that anyone can save Portland. Its politics are left of Havana, its citizens too stoned and woke to see what’s happening in front of them. There doesn’t seem to be any level of awfulness that would prompt a correction back to law and order.
It will be interesting to see how all of this plays out in other blue municipalities. There seem to be different levels of crazy on the American left, and Portland happens to be the worst of them. The situation in Washington isn’t going to help. His handlers program the alleged president to bark every far-left talking point that fires up groups like antifa and BLM. They’re going to continue to be emboldened as long as he is befouling the Oval Office.
Obviously, the biggest question is whether the Democrats who inhabit these cities will continue to participate in the progressive lemming run off the cliff of sanity and fall to the madness below. It looks like many of them aren’t as down with the struggle as they thought they might be a year ago.
Sadly, the Dems of Portland all seem to have made the trip over the cliff already.
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
White House ‘Domestic Extremism’ Report Puts Target On Democrats’ Political Opponents . . . The Biden administration just released a “National Strategy for Countering Domestic Terrorism.” It calls for abuses of state power to combine elements of totalitarian government with social and cultural engineering. It is such an obvious attempt to try to crush political dissent, you wonder if they thought no one was paying attention. If you aren’t, you need to be, because this is marching orders for a whole-of-government approach to crushing Democrats’ political enemies. They are banking on the natural instinct of most Americans to oppose terrorism by branding some constitutionally protected practices “domestic terror.”
This ensures the democrats’ control of the state security apparatus is not in jeopardy from un-Woke folks. They think they have the legal right and even a moral requirement to conduct a political and ideological purge. This is the most blatant plan to move past the Constitution an elected government in this country has ever proposed. We must not let this stand. The Federalist
Terrifying. There appears to be a well thought-out, planned and organized strategy to subvert the country. Who, the heck, is driving all this?
Politics
Biden Justice Department goes after state transgender laws affecting youths . . . One of these laws bans giving chemicals to youths to change their sex. Biden thinks that’s discrimination.
The Justice Department argued in court filings Thursday that GOP-backed laws related to the rights of transgender youth in West Virginia and Arkansas are unconstitutional, setting up a likely legal clash in the coming months. Federal attorneys asserted in a statement of interest filing that a West Virginia law banning transgender youth athletes from participating in women’s sports was unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment and Title IX of Education Amendments of 1972. The Justice Department argued the law should be overturned. The Justice Department made a similar argument in a statement of interest on a lawsuit related to a law in Arkansas, which banned “gender-affirming care” such as hormone therapy and puberty blockers for transgender youth. “Prohibiting medically necessary care in the manner proscribed by Act 626 amounts to intentional discrimination against transgender minors on the basis of sex,” the DOJ said. White House Dossier
Not only the state encourages child abuse by pushing “chemical castration” and surgical mutilation on children, the government also is making it illegal for the parents to step in and protect their kids from this atrocious form of child exploitation.
Supreme Court unanimously sides with Catholic adoption agency that turned away same-sex couples . . . The Supreme Court unanimously ruled on Thursday that the city of Philadelphia ran afoul of religious protections when it cut ties with a Catholic adoption agency over its refusal to place foster children with same-sex couples. Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for six members of the court, said that Philadelphia violated the First Amendment’s Free Exercise clause by rebuffing the Catholic Social Services (CSS) agency. “CSS seeks only an accommodation that will allow it to continue serving the children of Philadelphia in a manner consistent with its religious beliefs; it does not seek to impose those beliefs on anyone else,” Roberts wrote. All nine justices agreed with the judgment. The Hill
Yess.
IRS Denies Tax Exemption to Religious Group Because Prayer, Bible Reading Boost the GOP . . . An IRS official denied tax-exempt status to a Texas group that encourages church members to pray for state and national leaders, regardless of their party affiliation, because it benefits “the private interests of the [Republican] Party.” “You do not qualify as an organization described in IRS Section 501(c)(3). You engage in prohibited political campaign intervention,” wrote Stephen A. Martin, director of the IRS Office of Exempt Organizations Rulings and Agreements, in a May 18 letter (pdf) to Christians Engaged, the Garland, Texas-based prayer group recognized by Texas officials as tax-exempt. “You are also not operated exclusively for one or more exempt purposes within the meaning of Section 501 (c)(3), because you operate for a substantial non-exempt private purpose and for the private interests of the D party.” The “D party” is a reference to the Republican Party, according to a novel “legend” that Martin provided at the top of his letter to the Texas group. Epoch Times
Pelosi should punish Omar, rabbis say; inaction signals Democrats tolerate anti-Jewish hate . . . More than 200 rabbis have joined the call to oust Rep. Ilhan Omar from her seat on the Foreign Affairs Committee, telling House Speaker Nancy Pelosi that her lack of response demonstrates the Democratic Party’s tolerance of hatred against Jewish people. The rabbis leveled the charge in a letter this week to Mrs. Pelosi, California Democrat, after she failed to take action against Ms. Omar for equating the U.S. and Israel with Hamas and the Taliban. “Without anything resembling a forceful response from the Democratic Party, tolerance of anti-Jewish hatred has proliferated,” wrote the rabbis who are members of the Coalition for Jewish Values. Washington Times
National Security
Biden’s ‘off-limits’ list for Russian cyberattacks criticized as ‘green light’ to target everything else . . . President Biden’s list of 16 key infrastructure entities that are “off-limits” to Russian cyberattacks has effectively given the Russians a green light to target everything not on that list without facing serious repercussions, national security experts and senior Republicans tell Fox News. Biden told reporters Wednesday he gave President Vladimir Putin a list of 16 critical infrastructure entities that are “off limits” to a Russian cyberattack: “I talked about the proposition that certain critical infrastructure should be off limits to attack — period — by cyber or any other means. I gave them a list, if I’m not mistaken — I don’t have it in front of me — 16 specific entities; 16 defined as critical infrastructure under U.S. policy, from the energy sector to our water systems.” Fox News
What a naive and incompetent individual. At this point, Joe Biden is a national security risk.
Biden starts to call Putin ‘President Trump’ at press conference . . . President Biden raised eyebrows with an odd gaffe during his press conference following a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin, in which he appeared to mistakenly use the name of his own predecessor when discussing the Russian leader. Biden spoke after Putin gave a separate press conference, and was reflecting on what he said about the Arctic. “I caught part of President, uh, Tru– uh, Putin’s press conference, and he talked about the need for us to have some kind of modus operandi where the Arctic was in fact a free zone,” Biden said.
Joe must have thought that Putin and Trump have “colluded” into a single person.
GOP lawmakers, led by ex-White House doc, ask Biden to take cognitive test . . . More than a dozen Republican House members, led by former White House doctor Ronny Jackson, asked President Biden Thursday to undergo a cognitive test and release the results “so the American people know the full mental and intellectual health of their President.” “The American people should have absolute confidence in their President,” reads the letter to Biden in part. “They deserve to know that he or she can perform the duties of Head of State and Commander in Chief. They deserve full transparency on the mental capabilities of their highest elected leader.” New York Post
Biden gives Putin a pair of Massachusetts-made aviators . . . Russian President Vladimir Putin took a little of piece of Massachusetts with him after his meeting with President Biden this week. The U.S. president gave his Russian counterpart a pair of custom aviator sunglasses manufactured by Randolph Engineering, based in Randolph just south of Boston, according to the White House. The gift was the company’s Concorde teardrop aviators, in 23-karat gold finish with 57mm polarized American gray lenses, the company posted on its blog. Washington Times
What a nice guy.
Unvaccinated West Point cadets face growing and severe retaliation, sources say . . . The push for coronavirus vaccinations at the U.S. Military Academy began once the first shots became available back in January – but even as the inoculation rate rises and deaths and new cases both fall, the families of unvaccinated cadets say they are facing increasing pressure, coercion, and even threats to get the jab. West Point does not have a vaccine mandate, nor does the military as a whole. Still, there are only about three dozen unvaccinated cadets at West Point, which accommodates more than 4,500 students. The unvaccinated few, many of whom say they have gained natural immunity from catching the virus earlier, face stricter quarantines and other restrictions. Fox News
Russian Nuclear Submarines ‘On Par’ With US, Top General Says . . . Gen. Glen VanHerck, the head of U.S. Northern Command and the U.S.-Canadian North American Aerospace Defense Command, told lawmakers that Moscow’s continued buildup of nuclear submarines will be a “persistent” threat to America in the years ahead. “Russia just fielded their second Sev-class submarine, which is on par with ours,” VanHerck said. “Within a five-year period or so, they’ll have eight to nine of those submarines, which will be a persistent proximate threat off of our east and west coasts that we haven’t had ever in the past.” “Washington Free Beacon
Milley downplays report of 1,900 lost or stolen military firearms . . .The U.S. military’s top general on Thursday downplayed a recent Associated Press report that found at least 1,900 military firearms had gone missing or stolen over the past decade, claiming the real figure was “much less.” “That’s not to say it’s zero, but it’s much less. So, I need to square the balance here. I owe you a firm answer,” he added. The extensive AP report found that at least 1,900 U.S. military firearms — including rifles, handguns, machine guns, grenade launchers, rocket launchers, mortars and shotguns — were lost or stolen across the Army, Marine Corps, Navy and Air Force. Daily Caller
Smuggling Illegal Aliens Around Border Patrol Is Booming Business for Drivers . . . Social media platforms, encrypted messaging apps, and Google map pin drops are being utilized to move thousands of illegal aliens around Border Patrol checkpoints and eventually to large U.S. cities. In Texas, drivers are being recruited on social media—lured by the promise of quick cash—to haul illegal aliens to San Antonio, Houston, Austin, or Dallas. One U.S. citizen-driver told The Epoch Times he was promised $1,000 per person for the seven Guatemalans he was moving from Kinney County to San Antonio. Epoch Times
McCloskey’s Agree To Forfeit Guns, Plead Guilty To Misdemeanors . . . Mark and Patricia McCloskey pleaded guilty Thursday to misdemeanor charges and agreed to forfeit the specific guns that they brandished on their property. Mark pleaded guilty to misdemeanor fourth-degree assault and received a $750 fine. His wife, Patricia, pleaded guilty to misdemeanor harassment and was fined $2,000. While the couple has to forfeit the guns used in the incident, they can continue to own firearms. A spokesperson for McCloskey’s senate campaign told the Daily Caller the state was supposedly adamant about the couple giving up their guns. Daily Caller
The government is defunding the police, letting scores of criminals into the country, and inciting violence with a racially-charged rhetoric – all this while disarming the law-abiding citizens and actually penalizing them for exercising their right to self-defense, and arming themselves with private security details. What a brilliant strategy by the government nomenklatura.
International
Presidential frontrunner Ebrahim Rais would bolster Iran’s anti-West hard line . . . Iran’s presidential election today has raised more alarm signals in the West and Israel because the ultra-radical, anti-West Ebrahim Rais, 60, is practically assured of winning after his path was smoothed by supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. This successor of the diplomatically accessible Hassan Rouhani promises would be a far tougher nuclear negotiator than heretofore, as well as an instigator of greater repression at home. Rais would prefer to eschew all contact with the United States (“Big Satan”) – except that he is pragmatic enough to see that engaging the big powers over a nuclear deal is the only way to get rid of sanctions. His pathway to victory in the presidential election was cleared by the disqualification of 600 other candidates, leaving only six. Four share Rais’ extremist views, and only two are either “moderates” (in foreign relations) or “reformists” (more liberal on social freedoms). DEBKAfile
Top Israeli military official warns about renewed fighting with Hamas . . . The Israel Defense Forces chief of staff held a meeting with top military officials on Thursday and told them to prepare for new fighting with Hamas as tensions have remained high since a cease-fire halted a conflict last month. The IDF took to Twitter to announce the second night of airstrikes in response to arson balloons that were launched from Gaza. The military said it struck military compounds and a rocket-launch site that belonged to Hamas. Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kohavi, who is set to visit Washington this weekend, held the briefing with top military brass and warned them to prepare for a fight. Fox News
Taliban advance as Pentagon chiefs warn of potential Al Qaeda resurgence in Afghanistan . . . As Taliban forces continue to gain footholds in Afghanistan, the Pentagon’s two top leaders said Thursday that within two years an international extremist militant group may regenerate there with enough strength to threaten the American homeland. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley gave the assessments while appearing June 17 before the Senate Appropriations Committee in Washington, D.C. SECDEF Austin said that “it would take possibly two years” for Al Qaeda “to develop the capability” to rebound in Afghanistan. Just the News
E.U. Recommends Opening to Americans to Rescue the Summer . . . The European Union recommended on Friday that its member states lift the ban on nonessential travel for visitors from the United States, a move sure to be welcomed by Americans eager to travel to the continent after more than a year of tight restrictions. The recommendation is nonbinding, and each member state can decide what regulations, including quarantines, to impose on visitors. Americans have been mainly banned from Europe as the United States grappled with one of the highest caseloads in the world. New York Times
China Considers Lifting All Childbirth Restrictions by 2025 . . . Chinese officials are drawing up plans to further loosen birth restrictions and transition toward policies that explicitly encourage childbirth, according to people familiar with the matter, reflecting increased urgency in Beijing as economic growth slows and China’s population mix skews older. Policy makers are discussing the possibility of fully doing away with birth restrictions by 2025, the end of the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s current five-year economic plan, according to one of the people. The party said late last month that it would allow all couples to have as many as three children, weeks after a once-in-a-decade census showed China, the world’s most populous nation, on the cusp of a historic downturn in its population. Wall Street Journal
Watch out.
Coronavirus
Scientists: Yeah, We Dismissed COVID-19 Lab Leak Theory for Totally Unscientific Reasons, Because of Trump . . . Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, scientists implored the public to trust and abide by their expert opinions. Those who questioned their judgment were denounced as ignorant rubes. By their own admission, however, these expert opinions weren’t based on science at all but, rather, on a partisan dislike of Republicans and former president Donald Trump. Yahoo! News reports that many scientists have finally acknowledged that the so-called lab leak theory (regarding the origin of COVID-19) deserves to be taken seriously and investigated further. It’s a rather infuriating development, given the sanctimonious fashion in which numerous scientists, journalists, and Democratic politicians rejected it as a racist “conspiracy theory.” Washington Free Beacon
Money
US Reliance on Russian Oil Surges to Record High Amid Tensions . . . Russian oil imports have set a new record in the United States despite the strained relationship between Washington and Moscow. Industry experts believe the Biden administration’s climate policies will make the country more dependent on foreign oil producers. The United States imported record levels of crude oil from Russia in March and is expected to continue importing at high levels in coming months, according to the Western Energy Alliance, a trade association that represents 200 independent natural gas and oil producers in the United States. Epoch Times
Nice work, Joe.
You should also know
Father’s Day: Fatherless, America’s Top Domestic Problem . . .A powerful new documentary called “The Streets Were My Father” features three Chicago men, two Hispanics and one black, who grew up without fathers. All three did hard time for serious offenses, including murder. The film, with no narrator, just lets the men talk. None blames “systemic racism.” All concede they made bad choices, but choices nonetheless. All talked about the pain they felt growing up without a father figure to instruct, scold, guide, motivate, and instill confidence and direction. I highly recommend it. In former President Barack Obama’s first book, “Dreams From My Father,” he talked about the hole in his soul, having last seen his father, briefly, when Obama was 10: There was only one problem: My father was missing. He had left paradise [Hawaii], and nothing that my mother or grandparents told me could obviate that single, unassailable fact. Their stories didn’t tell me why he had left. They couldn’t describe what it might have been like had he stayed. Daily Signal
A Parent-Led Rebellion Against Critical Race Theory Is Storming School Boards Across The Country . . . A parent-led rebellion against Critical Race Theory is storming school boards across the country and demanding accountability for what is being taught to American children. At least 165 local and national groups have formed to combat Critical Race Theory (CRT) instruction in schools across the U.S., an NBC analysis found. Many of these groups were founded by parents appalled to discover what was being taught to their children. Their advocacy has launched small town CRT debates onto the national stage, spurring far-left activists and establishment media outlets to accuse conservatives of ignorance and in some cases, racism. Daily Caller
Texas Firearms Bill Revives Gun-Rights Strategy Rejected by U.S. Courts in Past . . . Texas is renewing a strategy that seeks to circumvent federal gun-control laws, one that lawmakers hope makes its way to the Supreme Court to test longstanding doctrine on gun regulation. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott gathered with Republican lawmakers at the Alamo Thursday to ceremonially sign several gun-related bills passed during the recent legislative session, including one making the open carry of handguns without a license legal, and another allowing state residents to buy Texas-made gun silencers without a federal license. While the open carry bill drew national attention, the less-noticed silencer bill revives a strategy to avoid federal regulation of guns, a strategy that federal courts have blocked in other states. Gun-rights advocates think they have a better shot now because of the addition of three conservative justices appointed by former Republican President Donald Trump. Wall Street Journal
Hunter Biden was banned from Chateau Marmont for ‘drug use’ . . . Hunter Biden was banned from the legendary celebrity hangout Chateau Marmont because of “drug use,” and the then-soon-to-be first son had to send someone to retrieve his personal belongings still on the property, according to texts from his laptop.
The Sunset Boulevard hotel is home to Academy Awards after-parties and has been a favorite of stars from actors Jean Harlow to Elizabeth Taylor to Leonardo DiCaprio. But Chateau Marmont also has a dark side: Actor John Belushi died there from a heroin overdose in 1982, and later, singer Rick James overdosed there, too, but was brought back to life. All of this is chronicled in a book, The Castle on Sunset: Life, Death, Love, Art and Scandals at Hollywood’s Chateau Marmont. Washington Examiner
SpaceX launches GPS satellite aboard reused rocket for US Space Force . . . “We have liftoff! The Falcon 9 rocket carrying the latest GPS III satellite has launched!” the Space Force Space and Missiles Systems Center said, retweeting SpaceX’s Twitter video of the moment. Deployment of the Lockheed Martin-built satellite was confirmed more than an hour and a half later. It is expected to maneuver into a 12,550-mile-high orbit, according to Spaceflight Now, and join the current constellation of satellites. The U.S, military plans to launch a total of 10 upgraded GPS satellites to replace some older ones already in space. The next-generation satellites will include “new technology and advanced capabilities” and meet the “needs of the military to mitigate threats” to GPS infrastructure, according to Lockheed Martin.
This is great news that Elon Musk’s SpaceX is coming through with its robust space launch capability. Believe it or not, the United States, for years, was dependent on Russia for certain space launches, such as manned space and the launches of some military satellites – courtesy of the USG stupidity, as always. (Probably the same idiots who had Kaspersky “anti-virus” software developed by the “former” KGB office, installed on US government systems). Thanks to Elon Musk, this space launch dependency has declined. Go capitalism.
I am thinking, my next book might be about the idiocy of USG bureaucrats who undermine US security by their incompetent decisions. What do you all think?
Guilty Pleasures
Bear tears up car, leaves beer cans unopened after getting trapped inside vehicle in Colorado . . . A case of beer in the back seat may have been the enticement for a bear that got itself trapped inside a car in Douglas County, Colorado, for at least an hour on Tuesday. A Colorado Parks and Wildlife officer and a sheriff’s deputy eventually managed to safely remove the animal. “He was just doing what they do, which is just kind of pinballing around in there, trying to figure his way out,” District Wildlife Manager Casey Westbrook told the station. The bear had reportedly gotten into the unlocked car and couldn’t figure out how to get out. The animal shredded part of a door and the ceiling of the car, according to FOX 31. The case of beer also got slightly banged up but none of the cans appeared to have been opened. Fox News
Well, the bear preferred a Modelo, that’s all.
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The Morning Dispatch: A Big Day at the Supreme Court
Plus: Breaking down a trendy conspiracy theory about January 6.
The Dispatch Staff
5 min ago
Happy Friday! President Joe Biden signed the legislation establishing Juneteenth as a federal holiday into law yesterday, and because June 19th falls on a Saturday this year, most government agencies are opting to observe Juneteenth today. So happy Juneteenth observed!
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
In a 7-2 ruling yesterday, the Supreme Court dismissed a challenge to the Affordable Care Act brought by several Republican state attorneys general arguing the law’s lack of an individual mandate should render it moot entirely. “[The plaintiffs] have failed to show that they have standing to attack as unconstitutional the Act’s minimum essential coverage provision,” Justice Stephen Breyer wrote for the majority.
The Supreme Court also handed down a decision in Fulton v. Philadelphia yesterday, siding unanimously with Catholic Social Services foster home, with whom the city of Philadelphia had stopped placing children in 2018 due to the home’s policy against matching children with same-sex couples. “The refusal of Philadelphia to contract with CSS for the provision of foster care services unless it agrees to certify same-sex couples as foster parents cannot survive strict scrutiny, and violates the First Amendment,” Chief Justice John Roberts wrote.
The House voted 268-161 on Thursday to repeal the 2002 Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF) in Iraq, with 49 Republicans voting in favor compared to just 10 last year. If the Senate passes the legislation, President Biden is expected to sign it. The 2001 AUMF passed following 9/11 remains in place.
Hong Kong police on Thursday arrested five editors and executives of a pro-democracy newspaper—Apple Daily—on charges of colluding with foreign powers. Made under China’s national security law, the arrests are expected to have a dramatic chilling effect on press freedom. Hong Kong’s security secretary added that anyone caught “associating with these criminals” will “pay a heavy price.”
The United States confirmed 10,680 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard. An additional 286 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 600,934. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 13,826 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 2,054,216 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 175,867,860 Americans having now received at least one dose. (There was another glitch with the Johns Hopkins testing data yesterday.)
A Big Day at the Supreme Court
Yesterday, the Supreme Court handed down two consequential rulings in California v. Texas and Fulton v. City of Philadelphia. In the first, a majority dismissed a challenge to the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act, and in the second, the court narrowly (but unanimously) sided with a Catholic adoption agency that declined to certify same-sex couples for adoption referral. But in both cases, the court’s decision did not fall along predictable partisan lines.
In the Obamacare case—or, as Justice Samuel Alito described it, “the third installment in our epic Affordable Care Act trilogy”—two individuals joined Texas and 19 other Republican-led states to sue the federal government in an effort to strike down the entire law. The penalty enforcing the individual mandate, the part of the ACA which required Americans to purchase some health insurance coverage, was zeroed out by Congress in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. The plaintiffs argued that since the mandate was no longer tied to any monetary penalty, it was no longer a constitutional exercise of Congress’ taxing power. In addition, their suit contended that the mandate could not be divorced from the rest of Obamacare and so the entire law had to be struck down if the mandate was unconstitutional.
The Supreme Court, however, took a different view. Writing for a 7-2 majority, Justice Breyer wrote that neither the states nor the individuals in the suit had standing to sue the government, since the penalty associated with the individual mandate—the basis for filing the suit—did not pose any financial harm to the plaintiffs.
“No one claims these other provisions violate the Constitution,” Breyer wrote. “Rather, the state plaintiffs attack the constitutionality of only the minimum essential coverage provision. They have not alleged that they have suffered an ‘injury fairly traceable to the defendant’s allegedly unlawful conduct.’ For these reasons, we conclude that the plaintiffs in this suit failed to show a concrete, particularized injury fairly traceable to the defendants’ conduct in enforcing the specific statutory provision they attack as unconstitutional. They have failed to show that they have standing to attack as unconstitutional the Act’s minimum essential coverage provision.”
On Thursday, Democrats celebrated the ruling, calling it a victory for Americans who have come to rely on the ACA for health coverage. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who last year contended that “millions of families’ health care [would] be ripped away” if Justice Amy Coney Barrett was confirmed to the court, labeled the decision “a landmark victory for Democrats’ work to defend protections for people with pre-existing conditions.” President Biden offered a similar assessment, tweeting a reference to his 2010 hot mic comment calling the law a “big f—king deal.”
The fact that a court with six Republican-appointed justices upheld the constitutionality of the ACA by the widest margin yet came as a surprise to many observers. Michael Kolber, a healthcare attorney at Manatt Health, told reporters that this case will have political as well as legal repercussions. “A 7-2 decision with several Trump appointees in the majority signals to some litigants and some policymakers and some politicians the direction the court is going on these cases.”
Justices Alito and Neil Gorsuch, however, offered a sharp critique of the majority opinion in their dissent, writing that “once again the Court has found a way to protect the ACA.” The dissenters argued that the majority had “duck[ed] the issue” by being “selectively generous” in deciding when states’ injuries would be sufficient grounds to sue.
“A tax that does not tax is allowed to stand and support one of the biggest Government programs in our Nation’s history. Fans of judicial inventiveness will applaud once again. But I must respectfully dissent,” Alito wrote in his conclusion.
Also on Thursday, the Supreme Court released its opinion in Fulton v. City of Philadelphia, a religious liberty suit brought by Catholic Social Services (CSS) against a city ordinance requiring the agency to screen same-sex couples interested in adopting children. In 2018, the city told CSS that it would no longer refer children to the agency or renew its contract unless CSS complied with Philadelphia’s non-discrimination policy. While CSS was willing to certify gay or lesbian individuals as single foster parents or to place gay and lesbian children, the city refused to negotiate.
Although Philadelphia’s position was upheld by both the district court and the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, the Supreme Court ruled that the city’s refusal to contract with CSS was unconstitutional. Writing for a unanimous majority, Chief Justice Roberts explained, “CSS seeks only an accommodation that will allow it to continue serving the children of Philadelphia in a manner consistent with its religious beliefs; it does not seek to impose those beliefs on anyone else. The refusal of Philadelphia to contract with CSS for the provision of foster care services unless it agrees to certify same-sex couples as foster parents cannot survive strict scrutiny, and violates the First Amendment.”
But while all the justices joined Roberts in his opinion, the Supreme Court was divided on a broader question—whether a precedent established more than 30 years ago in Employment Division v. Smith about religious exercise should be upheld. In that case, former Justice Antonin Scalia wrote that individual religious beliefs do not exempt individuals from following “generally applicable laws.” Moreover, the Smith ruling held that laws incidentally burdening religion are not subject to strict scrutiny—the highest and most rigorous form of judicial review.
In three separate concurrences, the justices offered their opinions about how the court should view the conflict between government policy and free religious exercise. In her opinion, Justice Barrett suggested that while she believed the textual and structural arguments against Smith were “compelling,” she was “skeptical about swapping Smith’s categorical antidiscrimination approach for an equally categorical strict scrutiny regime.”
In his 77-page concurrence—which at times read more like a dissent—Justice Alito went further, calling the majority ruling “a wisp of a decision that leaves religious liberty in a confused and vulnerable state.”
In an interview with The Dispatch, UCLA Law Professor Eugene Volokh argued there is now a 3-3-3 split on the court regarding religious liberty exceptions.
“Three justices take the view that, generally speaking, religious objectors ought to get exemptions from generally applicable laws,” Volokh said. “Three more justices say, well, they might often get exemptions, but under a more pro-government, less pro-objector standpoint. And the other justices didn’t opine on the subject. So what’s going to happen when the court considers the big picture again—the big picture question about religious exemptions from generally applicable laws? When it’s going to reconsider that, I don’t know.”
John Bursch, the senior counsel and vice president of appellate advocacy at the Alliance Defending Freedom, said there would be no issue with establishing a strict scrutiny test in the future.
“The reason why Justice Scalia wrote Employment Division v. Smith was that he was concerned about a case like speed limits—someone creating a new religion and [saying] that gives them the unilateral right to drive on the road as fast as they want,” he told The Dispatch. “But a strict scrutiny test could actually satisfy that problem. You’d have to demonstrate that it was a sincere religious conviction … and on top of that, the government could show that it has a compelling interest in making sure that people on the road are safe. So it’s not that a strict scrutiny test is unworkable, it just means that it needs to be fleshed out so the justices see how it can work.”
The Latest Fad for January 6 Truthers
In the days following January 6, many on the pro-Trump right began circulating a conspiracy theory that those who stormed the Capitol that day weren’t actually Trump supporters, but Antifa rioters and other false-flag operatives. As more and more people connected to January 6 are arrested and charged, however, that theory has begun to fall out of favor.
But something new is bubbling up to take its place, and Andrew has the latest in a piece for the site today: “The real ringleaders of the 1/6 violence may in fact have been undercover federal agents.”
Where is this conspiracy theory coming from?
Here’s Tucker Carlson, host of the most-watched show on cable news, on Tuesday: “FBI operatives were organizing the attack on the Capitol, on January 6, according to government documents.” Here’s Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene reacting to that segment on Twitter: “We need names and answers about the FBI operatives, who were involved in organizing and carrying out the Jan 6th Capitol riot.” And here’s Rep. Louie Gohmert making the same claim Thursday on the House floor: “We don’t like to see government agents stirring up trouble, or finding that there are criminal acts that would not likely have occurred had not the federal government been participating. … This is not only third-world stuff, this is like Putin kind of activity.”
It’s a remarkable charge: 1/6 was an inside job! You can see why Darren Beattie—the Revolver News writer behind the story, who appeared on Tucker’s show to discuss it—told the host, with an apparent lack of irony, that “I’m hearing from people that this is the most important and the darkest investigative piece they’ve seen in years.” One of those people is Beattie himself, who in the piece describes his own work as a “ground-breaking report” and a “seismic exposé.”
The only problem is that there isn’t any particular reason to believe it’s true.
The case is predicated on a simple question: If the government is trying to throw the book at these rioters, why have some of the people described as participating in planning or coordinating the attack not been charged?
These mystery participants, known as “unindicted co-conspirators,” are common features of charging documents. When criminal activity is described, involved actors whom the government has not yet charged are typically referred to anonymously. Criminal penalties aren’t the only undesirable outcomes of being associated with a crime: If they were named, people whom the government describes as committing crimes but don’t face charges would face major reputational damage while lacking the opportunity charged people have to try to clear their names in court.
There are several reasons why government officials might choose not to charge someone in this situation: They believe they have insufficient evidence to get a conviction, they don’t know for sure who the person in question is, or the person has agreed to cooperate with the government in exchange for charges being dropped. In this case, however, Beattie writes each of these possibilities off—judging it far more likely that at least some of the unindicted co-conspirators mentioned in charging documents were preexisting government informants, or even undercover agents.
…
Many others have already pointed out that it would be highly unusual, if not impossible, for FBI agents or pre-embedded informants to be referred to as unindicted co-conspirators in charging documents. One Duke law professor told the Washington Post that “undercover officers and informants can’t be ‘co-conspirators’ for the purposes of establishing an agreement to violate the law, because they are only pretending to agree to do so.”
But the inside-job account falls apart at a still more fundamental level than this. In order to start layering on the hypotheticals and suspicions, Beattie first needs to establish that the existence of these unindicted co-conspirators in the charging documents is suspicious in the first place. He purports to do this by explaining why the usual reasons prosecutors would refer to people in this way supposedly don’t make sense here.
Beattie argues that none of the January 6 rioters could have flipped on their compatriots as early as January 27, because the first plea deal wasn’t filed in court until April 16. But April 16 isn’t the date the government reached an agreement with the person in question (Jon Schaffer, a founding member of the Oath Keepers militia)—it’s the date that agreement was entered into the court’s public record. By that point, Schaffer had already been cooperating with the government for an unknown amount of time.
The idea that a person can work backward from a public record of plea deals to ascertain which unindicted co-conspirators might or might not have been granted immunity is laughable. In some cases, the government may not strike an official plea agreement until after the co-conspirator has followed through on a pledge to testify. In others, the government may strike an agreement, but keep it under seal until the perp’s use as an informant has run its course.
Worth Your Time
As we mentioned up top, President Biden signed into law yesterday legislation establishing Juneteenth as the United States’ 11th federal holiday. The Washington Post put together a great interactive piece—overflowing with pictures and videos of celebrations from the past 150 years—that explains both the significance and the origins of the day. Once you’ve read that, check out U.S. historian Kenneth Davis’ piece on the holiday from 2015. “Juneteenth is viewed by many of those who are aware of it as an ‘African-American holiday,’” Davis writes. “That perception unfairly diminishes the fundamental significance of Juneteenth. The day should be recognized for what it is: a shared point of pride in the symbolic end of centuries of racial slavery — a crime against humanity and the great stain on America’s soul. As meaningful as Independence Day itself, Juneteenth completes the circle, reaffirming ‘life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness’ as the rights of all, not a select few.”
The technology sector is a pretty easy punching bag these days—on both the left and the right—but the past year and a half would have been a whole lot worse without it. “We are coming out of the pandemic quicker with more businesses and livelihoods preserved than we had any right to expect,” venture capitalist Marc Andreessen writes in Future. From vaccine technology, to telemedicine, to communication platforms, to streaming services, innovation played a huge role in allowing the world to continue turning. “The experience of COVID has made crystal clear both how important our technology is to human flourishing, and how well we can deliver. Technology helped save the world.”
The latest Hangover with Chris Stirewalt is here, and it’s a good one. Chris sits down with Parker Poling, the 2019-2020 executive director of the National Republican Congressional Committee, to discuss why Republicans entering the party without any Trumpian baggage were able to outperform the former president. Plus, how the GOP made strides in diversifying its cohort and advice for freshman members of Congress.
You’ve been waiting all term for this one: David and Sarah are here to walk you through Thursday’s big Supreme Court rulings on the latest Advisory Opinions. Plus, possible Supreme Court infighting?
Repeat Remnant guest David Bahnsen made his fifth appearance yesterday to talk all things economics. Do the rich need to be taxed more? Are growing pains to be expected as we fully reopen the economy after a year and a half? Are we on the precipice of an inflationary death spiral?
SCOTUS Defends Religious Freedom
The Supreme Court defended Catholic Social Services’ right to follow the organization’s founding religious beliefs, unanimously agreeing that the city of Philadelphia had no right to force the adoption agency to allow same-sex partners to foster children through them.
Jordan Davidson explains the case background in The Federalist, writing:
“Philadelphia originally said in 2018 that it would no longer refer foster children to Catholic Social Services, which has partnered with the city’s foster care program for more than 50 years, due to the agency’s refusal to recognize same-sex couples. The city said this “violated both a non-discrimination provision in the agency’s contract with the City as well as the non-discrimination requirements of the citywide Fair Practices Ordinance,” which only applies if the “goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages or accommodations are extended, offered, sold, or otherwise made available to the public.”
As noted in the background for the ruling, however, “other private foster agencies in Philadelphia will certify same-sex couples, and no same-sex couple has sought certification from CSS.”
Anyone who values the First Amendment ought to value that a religious organizations is allowed to follow Church teachings without government interference, even as I personally disagree with their stance. However, this legal win is far from an overwhelming victory, and the fact that a clear legal matter seems almost revolutionary in its defense of a First Amendment protected right to free expression.
It’s a great read and emphasizes the importance religious freedom as it is continually under assault. Yet, even while the opinion sets an imperfect precedent, and there are seemingly endless legal cases attacking the right to free speech, wins like these deserve to be celebrated.
IRS Claims the Bible Is Political
According to the IRS, Biblical teachings are the sole purview of Republicans, as they denied a nonprofit, Christians Engaged 501(c)(3) status due to their activism on Christian issues, some of which happen to line up with the GOP platform. Globe News Wire reported:
“The IRS states in an official letter that Biblical values are exclusively Republican. That might be news to President Biden, who is often described as basing his political ideology on his religious beliefs,” said Lea Patterson, Counsel for First Liberty Institute. “Only a politicized IRS could see Americans who pray for their nation, vote in every election, and work to engage others in the political process as a threat.”
Tristan Justice explained the hypocrisy further in The Federalist:
“Certified non-profit groups encourage their members to vote in accordance with their values all the time. One would be hard-pressed to find a culturally-engaged 501(c)(3) listed entity not. What they can’t do is endorse specific political actions or candidates. But according to the IRS under Biden, merely advocating for biblical values in government is an infringement on non-profit bans against overt political activism.”
What to Watch – Total Drama
Twenty-two teenagers spend a summer at a disgusting summer camp where they compete to win $100,000 dollars through increasingly dangerous and absurd challenges constructed by a psychopathic host Chris McLean in an animated Survivor parody, Total Drama. The Cartoon Network series is endlessly odd and hilarious. It has an adolescent sensibility, but the show is hilarious, with ridiculous situations grounded by specific and likable characters.
Total Drama exists in a nice middle ground between children and adult animation and is therefore accessible to fans of both sides of the medium. I watched this show religiously as a kid, having never seen an episode of Survivor, so Total Drama was my introduction to competition shows.
The second and third seasons, which trade in the rundown camp for a film set and a world tour respectively, maintain the show’s high quality. All subsequent offerings do not even merit mention aside from a warning to avoid them.
Total Drama is a wildly fun show and is currently available on Netflix. If animated comedies, reality competitions, or nostalgic tv content are your thing, you should definitely check this out. Though warning: you will definitely have the theme song “I Wanna Be Famous” stuck in your head.
Paulina Enck is an intern at the Federalist and current student at Georgetown University in the School of Foreign Service. Follow her on Twitter at @itspaulinaenck
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Jun 18, 2021 01:00 am
Whether it’s a coincidence or not, the media, social media, and the government have faithfully applied these strategies to sell their COVID line. Read More…
Jun 18, 2021 01:00 am
Fauci’s unelected, unchecked power flows from the code of the Fourth Branch of Government: “The Bureaucrat is the smartest person in the room.” Read More…
Jun 18, 2021 01:00 am
Here’s what Congress and the president’s administration can’t seem to understand: government does not make investments. Read More…
The Supreme Court issues another important unanimous decision
Jun 18, 2021 01:00 am
Not only is this a victory for religious rights and for the Constitution itself (as written), the Court’s unanimity may be pushback against the Democrat plan to keep adding justices until there’s an activist majority. Read more…
California, liberal COVID sink-hole
Jun 18, 2021 01:00 am
Progressives constantly boast about their fealty to science but in California, when it comes to masks and vaccines, irrational thinking and discrimination rule. Read more…
Iranian society is inching towards violence
Jun 18, 2021 01:00 am
Poverty, societal breakdown, and a corruption election to place the man behind a massacre in the president’s office do not bode well for Iranian stability. Read more…
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Podcast behemoth Joe Rogan crushed the mainstream news media during his podcast show and took particular aim at CNN’s Brian Stelter. Rogan was speaking with progressive commentator Kyle Kulinski when he went on a tirade against a CNN panel for complaining that some YouTube personalities have more views than CNN. “They didn’t even understand th … Read more
Podcast behemoth Joe Rogan crushed the mainstream news media during his podcast show and took particular aim at CNN’s Brian Stelter. Rogan was speaking with progressive commentator Kyle Kulinski when he went on a tirade against a CNN panel for compl … Read more
The Philadelphia foster care case represented yet another failure by the high court to definitely end the ongoing governmental targeting of faith-based organizations.
Smart, funny, and sure to entertain, the story of ‘Georgetown’ translates expertly to the screen via the impressive directorial debut of Christoph Waltz.
Jerry Seinfeld’s memoir, ‘Is This Anything?’, proves to be an enjoyable meditation on the pleasures of comedy as well as a reminder that it’s a dying art form.
Should we be shocked that a so-called journalist is criticizing a legal process used by people to understand what their own governments are doing? Absolutely not.
A pastor who endorses claims of racial ‘systemic injustice,’ Ed Litton, has been elected president of the largest U.S. Protestant denomination, the Southern Baptist Convention.
As most of the nation sees normal return, Americans must not become apathetic to the mitigation efforts that threaten to linger, such as hybrid learning systems and airline masking.
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
Friday, June 18, 2021
by Linda Noakes
Hello
Here’s what you need to know.
Iranians go to the polls, a Pacific undersea cable project sinks, and a Danish ‘meme stock’ plunges
Today’s biggest stories
U.S. President Joe Biden is applauded as he reaches for a pen to sign the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act into law in the White House, June 17, 2021
U.S.
U.S. Senate Democrats scrambled to unite around a sweeping election reform bill they hope to begin debating next week, in the face of Republican opposition and moves by several states to pass laws placing new restrictions on voting.
An independent commission in Colorado will reveal a preliminary map of new congressional districts next week, putting the state at the forefront of efforts to draw battle lines for the 2022 election and strip party politics from the process.
All members of the crowd control team of Portland police have resigned from their positions in the unit after an officer was indicted on an assault charge stemming from alleged illegal use of force during a protest last year.
A baking heatwave that has gripped the U.S. Southwest for three days spread eastward to Iowa and Missouri, while punishing the hardest-hit areas with record high temperatures that have strained power systems.
Russian soccer fans react as they watch the Finland v Russia Euro 2020 game in a fan park in Moscow, June 16, 2021
Iranians are voting in a presidential election likely to be won by a hardline judge subject to U.S. sanctions, though many are expected to ignore the ballot amid economic hardship and calls for a boycott by liberals at home and abroad.
Gunmen killed a police officer and kidnapped at least 80 students and five teachers from a school in the Nigerian state of Kebbi. The attack is the third mass kidnapping in three weeks in northwest Nigeria, which authorities have attributed to armed bandits seeking ransom payments.
BUSINESS
A hawkish shift from the Federal Reserve has woken up a slumbering dollar, sending the U.S. currency to its highest level in months and stoking expectations that an unwind of bearish positions could fuel more gains.
A World Bank-led project declined to award a contract to lay sensitive undersea communications cables after Pacific island governments heeded U.S. warnings that participation of a Chinese company posed a security threat, two sources told Reuters.
Boeing is readying the largest member of its 737 MAX family for its maiden flight, as the planemaker tries to close a sales gap with a competing Airbus jet. The first voyage of the 737 MAX 10 is expected around 10 a.m. local time from the Seattle area.
Orphazyme slashed its financial forecasts after U.S. health regulators rejected its key drug candidate, sending shares in Denmark’s first so-called meme stock tumbling 75%. The biotech company is yet to have a drug approved or make money.
Quote of the day
“This ruling reaffirms what we have long known to be true: the Affordable Care Act is here to stay”
Rohingya learn photography to document refugee life
Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh are learning to visually document their lives and the settlements they live in, from a photography school in their own camp.
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by Gary Bauer: Biden’s Big Day
Today is the culmination of President Biden’s European trip – his summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Of course, the fawning media are hailing Biden as a master of diplomacy, especially compared to that “ogre” Donald Trump.
Let me be absolutely clear about this: The outcomes of such summits are generally settled well before they take place. Little is left to chance. The foreign policy establishment does not like surprises or leaders who think outside the box. That’s why Donald Trump so unnerved the foreign policy establishment.
No matter what the photo-ops look like and no matter what the White House spin is after the fact, Putin has already won this round.
Putin won when Biden greenlighted the Russian gas pipeline to Europe, a strategic Russian asset that will give Putin billions of dollars in revenue and make our NATO allies more dependent on Russian energy. Putin won’t have to hack European energy companies; he’ll just shut off the valve on his new pipeline.
Putin won when Biden declared war on our energy industry, killing thousands of American jobs and undermining one tremendous advantage we have over our enemies, including communist China.
Putin won when Biden submitted a massively bloated budget with unimaginable spending, shattering previous debt records, without providing one additional dollar for defense.
Putin won when he dared Biden to back up his “killer” comments in a live televised debate, knowing full well Biden wasn’t up to the challenge and would never accept.
Putin won when Biden, unlike any previous recent president, refused to hold a joint press conference after their summit. Biden told reporters, “This is not a contest about who can do better in front of a press conference or try to embarrass each other.” He’s right about that — it wouldn’t be a contest at all.
Both men would be expected to aggressively articulate a strong defense of their nation. Putin can do that in his sleep. But Biden can’t do that without putting us to sleep.
A CBS News poll found that the American people overwhelmingly want Biden to be tougher with Russia. Don’t hold your breath. This president isn’t up to the job.
Trump To The Border
While Joe Biden is touring Europe, former President Donald Trump announced that he will tour the “decimated Southern border” with Gov. Greg Abbott at the end of the month. Clearly, our former president cares more about the border crisis than our current “border czar,” Kamala Harris, who refuses to visit the border.
As we previously reported, Gov. Abbott announced that Texas will begin building border barriers on state property. I admire his boldness, but it won’t be easy to do. Left-wing activists and the Biden Administration will fight him tooth-and-nail.
I couldn’t help but notice the irony that Joe Biden has insisted that Russia must understand it cannot cross the border into Ukraine and must respect Ukraine’s sovereignty.
So, once again, we’re going all out to protect the borders of some other place in the world, while scandalously leaving our own border wide open as people from more than 160 countries pour across it.
By the way, our “America Last” president just shut down an office Donald Trump established to assist the American victims of crimes committed by illegal aliens. It is being replaced with an office dedicated to assisting illegal immigrants.
Just one more reason why we must retake Congress and restore some balance and common sense to government!
Biden Goes Full Big Brother
Yesterday, while listening to Attorney General Merrick Garland announce the Biden Administration’s new war on domestic terrorism, I felt like I was in Russia.
Garland announced that in the view of our politically biased FBI, the top domestic extremist threat comes from those who advocate white supremacy.
To be clear, no one of any consequence in the United States condones white supremacy. Racism is a sin. It should always be condemned, and violence of any kind should be prosecuted.
And it seems equally clear to me after last year’s Antifa/BLM riots — which killed dozens of people, injured hundreds of police officers and did billions of dollars of damage to public and private property — that white supremacy is not the greatest domestic threat facing this country, but rather the violent Marxist Left.
Nevertheless, to combat white supremacy, Garland declared that the Biden Administration is working closely with social media companies to suppress “disinformation.” So, the leftists in Big Government are working closely with the leftists in Big Tech, who have been routinely censoring conservative speech, to “educate” the American people about what the “truth” really is.
The left has been attacking traditional values for a long time, but now it’s very concerned about the family. It’s not what you think.
The Biden Administration is developing a special program to make it easy for Americans to report to the government any friend or family member whose behavior may indicate they are being radicalized.
What could that disturbing behavior be? Well, just last week a New York Times editorial board member said it was disturbing to see pickup trucks with American flags.
Some suggest that the iconic Gadsden flag is a sign of white supremacy. Colin Kaepernick said the Betsy Ross flag was a symbol of slavery.
Pro-life activists have been accused of being haters of women. Those who support the border wall have been called “xenophobic bigots.” If you’re concerned about extremists like Ilhan Omar, you’re an “Islamophobe.”
Over and over and over again we were told that MAGA hats and the phrase “Make America Great Again” were symbols of white supremacy.
What could possibly go wrong? Unfortunately, a lot is likely to go wrong.
This is the kind of government surveillance we see in communist China. Every totalitarian regime throughout history has been marked by getting families to spy on their own relatives.
Language Matters
After 9/11 and other terrorist attacks that followed, the media and various government agencies adamantly opposed the term “Islamic terrorism.” Every time a Muslim committed a terrorist act, the media and our government leaders were quick to lecture us.
“Don’t rush to judgment. This has nothing to do with Islam,” they said, insisting that “Islam is a religion of peace.”
To counter such spineless nonsense, I started referring to “Islamofascism” and “Islamic supremacism.” And, of course, I was condemned by many on the left for smearing an entire faith.
Yet the words “white supremacy” slides off liberal lips as easily as saying, “Good morning.” The same left that cautions us against pointing fingers at any Muslim is eager to point fingers at every Caucasian.
This administration and the left-wing media and political establishment are guaranteeing — short of divine intervention — that racial discord will get worse in this country with each passing day.
But they’re also creating a huge foreign policy and national security problem for the United States.
When pressed by reporters today about threats against dissidents in Russia, Vladimir Putin declared “Black Lives Matter” to condemn the United States. Communist China is already using the words of Biden, Harris and the radical left against the United States.
It is beyond bad when the talking points of our enemies are being written at the DNC, BLM and the White House.
————————- Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
Tags:Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Biden’s Big Day, Trump To The Border, Biden Goes Full Big BrotherTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by I & I Editorial Board: Most Americans believe in law and order. But they don’t believe that the federal government should suppress their entirely legitimate political beliefs. Which is exactly what the Biden administration’s now doing.
We all count on robust public safety. Every one of us. Unfortunately, taking a page from Critical Race Theory, President Joe Biden seems to think – or, his far-left aides do, anyway – that the only people who need to be watched are non-Democrats and those on the right.
How else to explain his recently released “strategy” for fighting domestic terrorism? In March, Biden’s National Security Council determined “that domestic violent extremism posed a ‘heightened threat’ in 2021.”
“Today’s domestic terrorists espouse a range of violent ideological motivations, including racial or ethnic bigotry and hatred as well as anti-government or anti-authority sentiment,” the document said.
Go through it and you’ll see all of the examples are so-called right-wing militias and even the misguided Jan. 6 demonstrators at our nation’s Capitol.
There are no mentions or even allusions in Biden’s “National Strategy” to the literally hundreds of riots and dozens of killings that accompanied the far-left uprisings in more than 140 cities across our nation over the the last year, perpetrated by Black Lives Matter and Antifa and heartily supported by leftist Democrats.
Those leftist riots cost as much as $2 billion and killed 27 people while injuring more than 2,000 police officers. The Jan. 6 “insurrection,” by contrast, led to $1.5 million in damage and one person dead: military veteran Ashli Babbitt, a protester shot by a U.S. Capitol Police officer. Or maybe not. The name of the shooter is being withheld from the public as if it’s a state secret. Which it is.
The Bidenites are clear who they’re targeting, and it isn’t BLM or Antifa: They call the “two most lethal elements” of domestic terrorism “racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists who advocate for the superiority of the white race” and “anti-government or anti-authority violent extremists, such as militia violent extremists.”
This isn’t just boilerplate. Biden is turning the Department of Justice, FBI and CIA into politicized arms of the state, with huge resources to go after those the White House doesn’t like.
As American Greatness’ Julie Kelly recently tweeted about “Biden’s ‘domestic terrorism’ plan of attack. At least $100 million, she says, will dedicated to the ‘DOJ, FBI, and DHS to ensure that the federal government has the analysts, investigators, prosecutors, and other personnel and resources it needs to thwart domestic terrorism.’ ”
So, yes, this is quite serious. And by the way, Biden and others on the left are ratcheting up their rhetoric against even their political opposition in Congress and a former sitting president of the United States. The danger to our constitutional rights hasn’t been this great since World War I, when Democratic President Woodrow Wilson signed the Espionage Act, followed by the Sedition Act.
Those laws, in effect, made it illegal to “incite disloyalty” or even to oppose government policies. They even outlawed “disloyal, profane, scurrilous or abusive language” against symbols of the nation. Anyone convicted for crimes against these laws could be fined heavily or even imprisoned for up to 20 years.
Wilson, a bitter racist who also re-imposed segregation on the nation’s capital, remains a much revered member of the “progressive” pantheon. Is Biden taking a page from him?
As part of his domestic terrorism campaign, Biden now is even encouraging Americans to “report” friends and families whom they think are radicalized. This sounds like the USSR or Nazi Germany during the 1930s and 1940s, when citizens were encouraged and even rewarded for giving up their neighbors and family to the government.
But this is America, right? Well, guess what – as we noted recently, Biden’s definitions of “domestic terrorism” fit his own followers far better than those on the other end of the spectrum. So his focus on the right side of the spectrum is highly suspect.
And yet, with supposedly “moderate” Attorney General Merrick Garland as his bulldog, Biden intends to go after those who disagree with him, including those who think there was fraud in the last election.
Just look at Garland’s recent veiled threat that the DOJ will be ” ‘applying scrutiny’ to post-election audits and will offer ‘guidance.’ ” What kind of “scrutiny”? What kind of “guidance”? The states, not the federal government, run elections. Article I, Sec. 4 of the Constitution is clear. Do Biden and Garland agree with congressional Democrats that this is another area that should be taken over by an over-reaching federal government?
And where do the incursions end? Unless it has clear evidence of a federal crime, the DOJ should butt out.
This is no mere policy difference. The Constitution guarantees your right to free speech and free conscience. This makes America special. It does not make the federal government our nannies, supervising our thoughts, beliefs and politics.
Biden’s path leads to an omnipotent ideological police state, and ends in the loss of our most sacred rights.
———————————- Written by I & I Editorial Board.
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by Tony Perkins: Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) and Rep. Matt Rosendale (R-Mont.) are to be commended for successfully blocking two dangerous yet largely overlooked bills on the floor of the House of Representatives last night. The LGBTQ Business Equal Credit Enforcement and Investment Act (H.R. 1443) and the Equal Access to Contraception for Veterans Act (H.R. 239) would have both pushed harmful ideologies through what should have been a routine procedural mechanism for the House to pass uncontroversial bills. While these two destructive bills were blocked last night, by votes of 249-177 and c240-188, an alarming number of Republicans (31 and 22) voted for each.
The LGBTQ Business Equal Credit Enforcement and Investment Act would have redefined the term “sex” and included the term “transgender” in the definition of LGBT-owned businesses. The Equal Access to Contraception for Veterans Act would have increased insurance coverage to 100 percent for all FDA-approved forms of contraception for veterans. This includes “emergency contraceptives” like Plan B and Ella, which act as abortifacients by preventing implantation or ending the life of an embryo before implantation. American taxpayers should not be forced to pay for abortifacient drugs, but that is exactly what H.R. 239 mandates.
Thankfully, some Republicans — like Reps. Boebert and Rosendale — refuse to waver on social issues. Boebert stood up against the LGBTQ Business Equal Credit Enforcement and Investment Act by asking for a recorded vote so she could know which Republicans are sticking with their principles. Especially during “Pride Month,” many Republicans are tempted to think that appeasing the LGBT movement will help attract younger voters to the party. Yet, Boebert understands that no one will be attracted to politicians who abandon their principles in the face of opposition, and they should not be. Though Boebert was cut off when she stood up to oppose H.R. 1443, her bold actions will be remembered by the many conservatives across America who want to see their leaders take a courageous stand.
Rep. Rosendale, meanwhile, helped lead the charge against the Equal Access to Contraception for Veterans Act. Like Boebert, Rosendale asked for a recorded vote on the bill, challenging his fellow members of the GOP to consider where they truly stand on social issues.
Rosendale has repeatedly shown his loyalty to the pro-life cause, and recently got over 130 Republicans to sign his letter to Veterans Affairs (VA) Secretary Denis McDonough asking him to provide assurances that the VA will not change its rules and try to provide abortion or abortion-related services under the new administration.
“The Republican conference embraces, supports, and defends life,” Rosendale said of the broad support for his letter among Republicans. “The Democratic Party is the party of death.”
We are grateful for elected leaders like Boebert and Rosendale who refuse to conform to the Left’s increasingly radical social agenda. Some Republicans may falter, but with courageous leaders like Boebert and Rosendale who are willing to stand up for what they believe in, the GOP will remain the party of social conservatives.
———————————- Tony Perkins is president of Family Research Council.
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Bill Donohue comments on the results of a new Gallup poll:
Gallup has been tracking values and beliefs for many years, and its latest survey reveals that Americans continue to be dismayed with the state of moral values. Indeed, more than 84% call them “only fair” or “poor,” and two-thirds believe conditions are getting worse. Interestingly, the way Republicans and Democrats see things are demonstrably different, the former being much more critical than the latter.
A record-high 66% of Republicans say our moral values are “poor” and 92% believe matters are getting worse. Yet only 30% of Democrats think our moral values are “poor” and just 49% say conditions are worsening.
In previous surveys of this nature, such as the one Gallup did in 2007, it asked about specific moral concerns. For example, it asked respondents if they morally approved of such issues as the death penalty, gambling, buying and wearing clothing made of animal fur, doctor-assisted suicide, abortion, homosexual relations, and so on. The latest poll takes a more macro approach, thus making it somewhat more difficult to analyze.
The poll’s results suggest that both Republicans and Democrats are at least somewhat guided in their response by who the White House occupant is. Thus, under Trump Republicans were not as pessimistic as they are now under Biden; the reverse is true for Democrats. However, there may be more in play than just this factor.
It is plausible to assume that among the reasons why Republicans are less happy about the state of our moral values are such issues as crime, race and sexuality. Homicides have risen sharply across the nation, and in some cities they are at record levels; urban riots have also plagued the nation. Critical race theory in the schools, along with the transgender agenda, have generated even more concerns.
To be sure, Democrats are not happy with surging crime rates as well, though it must be said that it is in cities run by left-wing members of their party where the situation is most out of hand. Moreover, critical race theory and the transgender movement are viewed in a mostly positive light.
No doubt there are issues where both sides could come together. Road rage, texting while driving, rudeness, belligerence, self-centeredness—these are just some moral issues where a partisan split is unlikely.
President Biden was elected, in part, because he said unity was his goal. But it is hard to see how this can be achieved when those fomenting division remain largely unaccountable. Perhaps the real question is how much unity really matters.
———————————- Bill Donohue (@CatholicLeague) is a sociologist and president of the Catholic League.
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A recently revealed email exchange shows just how malicious Michigan’s Dana Nessel can be. by Douglas Andrews: Marlena Pavlos-Hackney knows statist tyranny when she sees it. As a teenager, she fled Polish communism to start a new life in a foreign land, the United States. That’s in large part why she has more guts, more moxy, and more Liberty-loving spirit than most of her fellow Americans.It’s also why she was arrested before 6 a.m. on March 19 and taken to jail in ankle shackles and wrist cuffs. She’s the proprietor of a small business — Marlena’s Bistro and Pizzeria — in the West Michigan town of Holland, and she’d had the nerve to defy the draconian lockdown orders of Michigan’s governor, Gretchen Whitmer. Worse yet, she’d decided two days earlier, on March 17, to tell her story of resistance to Fox News’s Tucker Carlson.
Hackney’s defiance was clearly too much for the state’s leftist attorney general, Dana Nessel, who, after learning of her plans to appear on Carlson’s show, wrote in a March 12 email to her staff, “Do we know her whereabouts? We should just have her picked up before she goes on. This is outrageous.”
It is outrageous, because Nessel is a purveyor of precisely the kind of authoritarianism that Hackney warns us about. And were it not for a Freedom of Information Act request sought by The Mackinac Center for Public Policy, we’d never have known about the AG’s thuggery, even after three months. “Should I be prepared to respond to this?” asked Nessel in an email thread that followed. “I hope she gets the full 93 days [in jail] for this.” And in another exchange, she showed just how obsessed she was with this single private citizen in a state of 10 million: “Does [the Michigan State Police] intend to go find her? Or are they planning to wait until next week?”
Much to Nessel’s chagrin, Hackney was released a few days later. But that’s neither here nor there. Kelly Rossman-McKinney, a spokeswoman for Nessel’s office, released the following statement in response to the revelation of her boss’s brutish email exchange:
Ms. Pavlos-Hackney willfully violated the state’s food laws, public health orders and orders of the court — a dangerous act that may have exposed dozens of diners and employees to the virus following the discovery that one of Marlena’s customers tested positive for the virus within two days of eating there. Ms. Pavlos-Hackney’s decision to then go on national television and flaunt her noncompliance compromised the state’s ability to protect public safety during a global pandemic and likely emboldened others to break the law.Someone should’ve told Nessel that arbitrary lockdowns and onerous masking requirements don’t work and aren’t legitimate — that all they do is crush law-abiding, Constitution-loving citizens and small business owners like Hackney.
Indeed, there’s a small sign that’s posted on the front window of Hackney’s bistro. It reads, “Welcome. We are a Constitutionally Compliant Business. We are not infringing on anyone’s inalienable rights. By law, we do not follow any of the governor’s, mayor’s, health department’s, or other government agency orders or suggestions pertaining to social distancing or mask-wearing.”
Dana Nessel will claim otherwise, but Hackney was thrown in jail for daring to speak out against what she saw as an oppressive and overreaching government. “This was never going to end with censorship on social media,” Carlson noted recently. “If they can control what you write, why can’t they control what you say and think and do? Why can’t they throw you behind bars if you disagree with them or criticize their policies? They can — and as Dana Nessel proved — they will.”
Leave it to Marlena Pavlos-Hackney, a grateful immigrant who fled communist tyranny and came to our shores as a child, to remind us that we have a Constitution and individual liberties well worth fighting for.
———————————- Douglas Andrews at The Patriot Post addressed “Exposing Michigan’s Thuggish Attorney General.”
Tags:The Patriot Post, Exposing Michigan, Thuggish Attorney General, Dana NesselTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:Editorial Cartoon, Biden, Lost in SpaceTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page Thanks!
by Kerby Anderson: Yesterday I talked about how even some liberal commentators are very concerned about the arguments for Critical Race Theory. It turns out that if you are a critic of Critical Race Theory, you will be labeled as ignorant and racist.
Tom Gilson addresses those charges in a recent commentary. He quotes from a Texas state board of education member who writes that critics “have no idea what critical race theory is, what it does, who the founders are. They’ve never read a book, much less a paragraph on it.” From there she goes on to use language I won’t use on radio or in this commentary.
He also quotes from another article that argued that critics don’t want to talk about racial disparities because they want to normalize the behavior and allow current patterns of behavior to continue. Tom Gilson says that the words “talk” or “talking” showed up eight times in the article. But Critical Race Theory isn’t just about “talking about” racial disparities.
He quotes from a standard source (Understanding Critical Race Theory) written four years ago and hardly the most controversial book on the subject. That book provides the quote that I mentioned yesterday. It explains that “critical race theory questions the very foundations of the liberal order, including equality theory, legal reasoning, Enlightenment rationalism, and neutral principles of constitutional law.”
The book also argues that “radical measures are in order” because society is so racist. When it was written, the authors may not have meant “radical” involved riots, protests, and burning cities. But we have seen the natural result of arguing that America is systemically racist, full of white privilege, and in need of a social revolution to overturn the existing order.
I agree with Tom Gilson, He concludes that the critics of Critical Race Theory oppose it not from ignorance but because they truly understand its dangers.
———————————- Kerby Anderson (@KerbyAnderson) is an author, lecturer, visiting professor and radio host and contributor on nationally syndicated Point of View and the “Probe” radio programs.
Tags:Kerby Anderson, Point of View, Critic of CRT, Critical Race TheoryTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Backs up calls for crack down on opponents with $100 million in new spending for FBI, DHS, DoJ by Catherine Mortensen: Attorney General Merrick Garland called for a “whole of society approach” to fighting domestic terrorism in a speech Tuesday, going along with the administration’s national strategy for stamping out violent extremism.“We need not only a whole of government approach but a whole of society approach,” Garland said after praising members of the public for submitting more than 100,000 pieces of digital media to help the FBI investigate in the aftermath of Jan. 6.
“We must not only bring our federal resources to bear. We must adopt a broader societal response to tackle the problem’s deeper roots,” he continued.
Garland’s speech came hours after the Biden administrationunveiled its national strategy for countering domestic terrorism, with officials telling Fox News it’s designed to cut across the political spectrum, while warning that White supremacy and “militia violent extremists” currently present the “most persistent and lethal threats.”
“In the FBI’s view, the top domestic violence extremist threat comes from racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists, specifically those who advocated for the superiority of the White race,” Garland said.
This is the type of language we’ve come to expect from autocrats in failed states. It is chilling to hear our nation’s top law enforcement officer go after his opponents so brazenly and promising to use the vast resources of the federal government to do so. We don’t have to wait for the feds to abuse their powers. It is already happening.
Two months ago, the FBI raided the home of an Alaska couple who had attended former President Donald Trump’s Jan. 6 peaceful rally near the White House.
“Paul and Marilyn Hueper, owners of Homer Inn & Spa, woke with a start at 9 a.m. April 28 when a dozen armed FBI agents kicked down their front door in an investigation associated with Rep. Nancy Pelosi’s stolen laptop, which was taken during the Jan. 6 siege of the nation’s Capital.
“Homer resident Marilyn Heuper (left), posted this photo on Facebook to show the physical differences between her and the woman who FBI agents were looking for when they raided her home on April 28.
“Speaking April 29 to Kenai-based radio host Bob Bird of the Bird’s Eye View, Paul recalled that he was alarmed and shocked to come out of his bedroom with seven guns pointing at him and his wife.
“It was a little alarming when I turned around the corner,” Paul said. “The first thing they did was start barking out commandments.”
“Ultimately, the couple was handcuffed and interrogated for the better part of three hours before being released. In the end, it was a case of mistaken identity.”
Bird later weighed in on the near tragedy with these comments in the Alaska Watchman, “[This] is an example of what happens when a lawless and completely illegitimate political party and administration come to power. The Democrats are utilizing the proven techniques of communism and fascism, and weaponizing federal law enforcement for political purposes. They are now reaping the fruits of the November’s compromised election. Its aftermath spells the end of freedom in America. It is no longer a threat. It is here, and none of us are safe.”
Despite assurances from senior administration officials saying their strategy is directed at violent extremists from the left and right alike, many conservatives are skeptical.
Some Republicans have taken issue with the Justice Department’s focus on the Capitol riot, alleging a disproportionate focus on the riot as opposed to criminal behavior during the protests and riots across the country after the May 2020 death of George Floyd.
Senate Homeland Security Committee member Ron Johnson, R-Wis., railed against the “unequal application of justice” he sees between the suspects involved in the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot and those involved in Antifa and Black Lives Matter protests in cities like Philadelphia, Portland, New York City and Washington over the past year that devolved into criminal activity.
Our basic constitutional liberties including the Fourth and Fifth Amendments have been eviscerated by the administrative state at the Justice Department that has been put on steroids by President Joe Biden and Attorney General Garland.
Citizens of the United States have a right to the presumption of innocence, a right protecting them from the government engaging in malicious prosecutions against political opponents and to be free from the surveillance state snooping into personal business with no probable cause.
In addition to the raid on the Alaska couple, government agents raided Roger Stone’s home and then maliciously prosecuted him for crimes he did not commit just because he was Trump’s friend.
They have raided Rudy Giuliani’s home on a fishing expedition just because he was Trump’s personal attorney and supporter.
It is time that Congress wake up regardless of party and stand against executive branch abuses of power and the ongoing politicization of federal law enforcement agencies by any means available, including withholding funding in this year’s appropriations bills.
Tags:Catherine Mortensen, Americans for Limited Government, Biden Administration. Calls for .‘Whole of Society Approach.’ to Fighting Political OpponentsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Mario Murillo Ministries: The Left blackmailed corporate America by saying, “Do what we say or else we will mark you as racist and homophobic.” It worked. Now leftists, flush with their power over big business, are raising the ante. “We got you to bankroll fraud voting, promote BLM, and critical race theory, now you must save abortion.”
So, Wall Street and Big Business—at the behest of the leftists—will now weaponize their wealth and power to preserve abortion on demand.
At first it was only out of fear. Then something really evil happened: greedy businesses found they could make money by being traitors, and Wokeness became a sound business model.
Leftists and big business? This new band of villains are not even trying to hide it. They all believe they own us.
Nathanael Blake tells us how this started: “New York Times columnist Linda Greenhouse recently lauded corporate CEOs for using the economic clout of the businesses they manage to push States around on election security and LGBT issues. In Greenhouse’s view, managerial corporate oligarchs deciding social and political issues of the country is awesome, and we need more of it. After praising their previous interference in our democracy, she then begged the “executive class” to impose more economic sanctions on conservative portions of the country, this time targeting states that are trying to restrict abortion.”
This is a shameless attack on freedom. Big business knows it, but it does not matter, if they can profit by it. And, as Hamlet put it, “Assume a virtue, if you have it not.”
Big business, virtuous? How rich. The hypocrites! As Nathanael observed, “There is hypocrisy here, insofar as the same corporate class that is staking a moral claim to rule the United States, is also eager to do business with the evil regimes elsewhere. They are sanctimonious at home while cozying up to tyrants and relying on slave labor abroad; apparently, social justice stops at the water’s edge.”
But calling out their hypocrisy will not change them. They have no conscience to appeal to, and no ethics. So we, as Christians, face a hard battle. Defeating them will not be easy.
Conservatives have come to love the slogan, “Get woke, go broke,” but that only works in Red States. Conservatives and Christians have limited influence in the Blue States. It is sobering to think about the extremes they will go to in order to keep the depravity of abortion alive.
But we do not despair – there is hope. The answer must come from another sector: Everyday people. They were not supposed to be the in the forefront of the battle, but they are now.
Here are the three specific weapons that are becoming key in starting the uprising that we need.
–Those videos of moms yelling at school boards over the sexual indoctrination of their children. Because nothing is more compelling than a mom trying to protect her child.
–The free thinkers of the black community who refuse to stay on the leftist plantation. They destroy stereotypes and show that the three pillars of Wokeness are lies: 1. that there is systemic racism in America, 2. whiteness is evil, and 3. critical race theory is science.
–Immigrants who came here from communist nations. They are crying out warningsabout how America is going down the same exact path that Russia and China did.
The real vanguard against this evil was supposed to be the American Preachers. They were supposed to send up a war cry so loud and compelling that it would have unified and fired up Christians from all traditions to rise up against the evil. But they did not.
What I say now gets to the heart of why I write these blogs. From every angle and by every possible verification I can employ, I have endeavored to warn and provoke the Church to wake up.
It breaks my heart to say that just as Wall Street and Big Business are profiting from Wokeness—many pastors make money by avoiding controversy and sleeping through the harvest. They are overwhelmed with self-preservation. They let the government control their church and they are afraid to openly oppose abortion.
Our version of leftist blackmailers is lukewarm believers—believers who threaten pastors and steer them away from preaching against abortion. The pew-warming ostrich-Christians may use different words, but it is the same blackmail that the Left uses on Big Business.
The compromised preacher acts just like the Woke corporation―saying the right things, but avoiding action in battle.
Last August I went against the grain when I said that we could lose Trump, the firewall that God provided, if we do not act. We took some action, but it was totally inadequate.
Today, the church is overconfident that we can end this atrocity of abortion—the most evil holocaust ever to see the light of day.
In truth, we will only end abortion when our preachers’ moral outrage against abortion exceeds the Left’s pagan worship of abortion.
Deliver those who are drawn away to death, and those who stagger to the slaughter, hold them back [from their doom]. If you profess ignorance and say, Behold, we did not know this, does not He Who weighs the heart perceive it? And He Who guards your life, does not He know it? And shall not He render to every man according to his works? (Proverbs 24:11-12).
———————————— Mario Murillo writes for Mario Murillo Ministries.
Tags:Mario Murillo, Ministries, The Left, Destroy The States, That Are Anti-AbortionTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Tom Balek: I am an overnight radio addict and always listen to the Salem Radio Network. Salem is a syndicate of radio stations providing affiliates with conservative programming including Larry Elder, Hugh Hewitt, Mike Gallagher, Charlie Kirk , Sebastian Gorka, Dennis Prager, and Erik Metaxas.
Lately I can’t help but notice a flood of ads on Salem’s stations from leftist corporate sponsors such as Coca-Cola, Facebook, AT&T, Nissan and others. These overnight ad spots used to be filled with PSAs (public service advertisements) which radio stations provide free of charge to fill unsold segments. There is almost no room for PSAs now; in fact, I heard three Coke ads in a row last night.
Obviously these sponsors are desperately feeling the pinch of the conservative boycott! They are spending big money trying to win us and our dollars back. And in doing so, they show how out-of-touch with reality they really are. The Coca-Cola ads are pathetically infantile, and are not the ads you hear on other media. The ads targeted for us sound right out of the 1950s, using one- or two-syllable words and simplistic, non-threatening messages like “it’s a nice weekend for a barbecue, don’t forget to stop by the store and buy some Coca-Cola”. They are clearly targeting Trump voters and following the script that says we are a bunch of uneducated, Nascar and barbecue simpletons clinging to our guns and bibles.
The Facebook ads run in the same lane, defending section 230 of the Communications Decency Act that protects them from liability for censoring and manipulating content. Their ads also use simple language and are read very slowly, because you know we are “slow learners”. They condescendingly instruct us about the danger in breaking up their monopoly. Conservatives know that Mark Zuckerberg will stop at nothing to empower the far-left radical agenda that his Democrat buddies pursue, including controlling elections and destroying truth.
At first I was angry at Salem for taking these ads, and wondered if they ticked off other loyal conservative listeners like me. But then I realized: hey! the good guys are taking money from the bad guys! And I’m just fine with that, because Trump supporters are not going to be sweet-talked into stopping on the way home from work to load the station wagon with Coca-Cola.
——————- Tom Balek (@TomBalek) is a fellow conservative activist, blogger, musician and contributes to the ARRA News Service. Tom resides in South Carolina and seeks to educate those too busy with their work and families to notice how close to the precipice our economy has come. He blogs at Rockin’ On the Right Side
Tags:Tom Balek, Boycott, “Woke” Companies, is WorkingTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
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One of 18 scientists who recently published a letter acknowledging the plausibility of the coronavirus lab-leak theory made a stunning admission about the pandemic’s origin.
It has nothing to do with science and everything to do with politics. … Read more…
The U.S. Supreme Court announced it will take up a major abortion case that could directly challenge Roe v. Wade, sparking hope in pro-life advocates and fear among abortion proponents.
But if the landmark ruling Roe v. Wade is overturned, the Texas governor took a bold stance on the issue. … Read more…
‘What happens to confidence in public health and USG if ivermectin turns out to be safe and effective for COVID, and the genetic vaccines turn out to have [significant] safety issues?’Read more…
Biden’s Fed inaction means money will continue to be very cheap to borrow, driving an overheated economy with key inflation indicators exploding to levels not seen since 1992.Read more…
We need restaurants, grocery stores, plumbers, car mechanics, roofers, electricians, dentists and innumerable other businesses. And those businesses need employees! Read more…
If the federal government won’t complete the building of the southern border wall on land seized for that purpose, we want it back so we can do the job ourselves…. Read more…
The U.S. Supreme Court announced it will take up a major abortion case that could directly challenge Roe v. Wade, sparking hope in pro-life advocates and fear among abortion proponents.
But if the landmark ruling Roe v. Wade is overturned, the Texas governor took a bold stance on the issue. … Read more…
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SCOTUS Rules 7-2… Two Trump Justices Side With DEMS
Trump nominated justices stabbed Republicans in the back.
Biden Mental Health Bombshell – WH Doctor Goes Public
He may not make it the full four years.
Lawmakers Are Fed Up – Demand Biden Replace Kamala Harris
She has been a total failure.
Historic 9-0 Decision, SCOTUS Drops The Constitution On Dems
This is a major win!
Republicans Make Power Move: They Just Torpedoed Nancy Pelosi’s Radical Bills
Pelosi did not see this coming.
Fox News Host LEAVES Network After 20 Years
He was with Fox from almost the very beginning.
GOD BLESS AMERICA!
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47.) ABC
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Morning Rundown
Supreme Court upholds Obamacare, rejecting GOP challenge: After a long-anticipated decision, the Supreme Court on Thursday rejected a challenge to the Affordable Care Act in a case targeting its individual mandate. The mandate would have increased the number of uninsured people by 21 million, end the ACA’s major coverage expansions and impact millions of Americans. In a 7-2 ruling, the court struck down a lower court ruling and said the plaintiffs — Texas and 17 other GOP-led states — did not have standing to sue. For years, Republicans have sought to dismantle the ACA, which was former President Barack Obama’s landmark legislation. Prior to Thursday’s decision, the Supreme Court has upheld the health care law against legal challenges twice. But despite the challenges it has faced over the past decade, a record 31 million people have access to health care through the law, according to the White House. “Because of this law, they don’t have to worry about being denied coverage due to a pre-existing condition like diabetes or watching their coverage being capped during a cancer treatment,” said President Joe Biden in a statement on the significance behind the Supreme Court’s decision.
Delta COVID-19 variant is now in more than 80 countries, WHO says: The delta COVID-19 variant, which was first detected in India, has now been reported in more than 80 countries, according to the World Health Organization. Last month, the WHO declared the delta variant a “variant of concern,” and this week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention upgraded its classification of delta from a “variant of interest” to a “variant of concern.” “If it can spread more easily, then more people can get infected quickly,” said Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO’s technical lead for COVID-19, at a WHO briefing Wednesday. “And if a system is overwhelmed, and many systems are overwhelmed already, it can overburden the health system.” To help stop the spread of the virus and more variants from popping up, experts stressed the importance of the COVID-19 vaccine. “We’ve got to get everybody vaccinated, but we need to understand how these viruses are mutating and overcoming our defense mechanisms,” said Nevan Krogan, a molecular biologist at the University of California, San Francisco. “The virus has always been a couple of steps ahead of us. We’ve got to get a step ahead of it.”
Biden signs bill making Juneteenth a federal holiday: Federal workers have the day off today after President Joe Biden signed a bill making Juneteenth — a day celebrating the end of slavery in the United States — a federal holiday. It’s a day African Americans have celebrated yearly since the Civil War era and the culmination of a decades-long effort by advocates to get national recognition for the momentous development in American history. “These are days when we, as a nation, have decided to stop and take stock, and often to acknowledge our history,” Vice President Kamala Harris said on Thursday at a White House event marking the new legislation. Harris had co-sponsored the legislation when she served in the Senate. “We must learn from our history. And we must teach our children our history,” she added. To celebrate Juneteenth, ABC News is hosting a Soul of a Nation special with former President Barack Obama and Michael Strahan, with performances by H.E.R., Leon Bridges and more. Watch “Juneteenth: Together We Triumph – A Soul of a Nation Special Event” tonight at 9 p.m. ET on ABC and next day on Hulu.
These dads are changing the narrative around Black fatherhood: When Tim Matthews’ 12-year-old son, Sean, received nearly all As this past school year, Matthews said he wanted to do something special to celebrate his achievements. So, he decided to give his son’s bedroom the makeover of his dreams. “I just wanted to show him a little bit of love,” said Matthews, who filmed the room reveal and shared the video on Instagram where it received thousands of views. For Matthews, celebrating his son is part of a larger message about erasing the myth of the absentee father. “People still see Black fathers as MIA or they like to associate us as being deadbeat dads, and it’s just not the truth,” said Sean Williams, a Black father of three who launched The Dad Gang, after he was approached by a woman in a store commending him for “sticking around” for his kids. Williams, who was shopping with his kids at the time that moment happened, was shocked. Since then, he’s been on a mission to change society’s inaccurate perception of Black fathers and has connected fathers from around the globe. “I hope we change the world and the way the world views us,” said Williams.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” ahead of the ABC News special “Juneteenth: Together We Triumph,” Michael Strahan sits down with former President Barack Obama to talk about what Juneteenth means to him and so many Americans, and the state of our country. Also, Chance the Rapper performs his songs “Work Out” and “The Heart & The Tongue” for the “GMA” Summer Concert Series. Plus, after more than a year of the pandemic, we are highlighting the special ways pets made a difference in the lives of so many during dark and lonely times. All this and more only on “GMA.”
Today we take a comprehensive look at how the U.S. highways program damaged Black and Latino communities, and what’s being done to reverse it, as well as analysis on the Supreme Court’s Obamacare ruling and a rampaging bear.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Friday morning.
Between 1957 and 1977 the largest public works program ever attempted in the United States tore apart Black and Latino communities in cities across the country to make room for ribbons of new highway.
The highways program displaced over 475,000 households and 1 million people, according to the Department of Transportation.
Now, as many of these hulking structures reach obsolescence, the federal government and many states and cities are belatedly recognizing the harm they caused, and are working with communities to design alternatives that repair the damage.
And in many cases, those plans are reopening old wounds and leading to protracted debates that politicians and engineers are struggling to solve.
NBC News has examined three urban neighborhoods that show the range of proposals underway to redress the harms caused by the construction of interstates: Syracuse, New York; New Orleans’ bustling Tremé and Los Angeles’ Boyle Heights neighborhood.
The former president promised that his Supreme Court picks would overturn the Affordable Care Act. He met the court’s ruling with the deafening silence of defeat, writes NBC News’ senior national politics reporter.
After years of advocacy, Congress has finally made Juneteenth a national holiday. But the move shouldn’t substitute for real racial equity in America, organizers say.
LGBTQ protections can coexist with faith-based adoption agencies if we all follow the golden rule of child welfare: Put the kids’ interests first, writes social worker Corina Dulecki.
Amazon wants to cut carbon emissions by 2040 through its no strings attached pledge program. Here what experts have to say about Amazon’s Climate Pledge, as well as Climate Pledge Friendly-labelled products.
One fun thing
Did you know you might be pronouncing some celebrities’ names incorrectly?
You’re not alone — as TODAY points out this week, more than a few people struggle with the likes of actors Saoirse Ronan (“SUR-sha Ronan”) and Gal Gadot (“Gal Gah-dote”).
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: GOP candidates’ performances of loyalty to Trump underscore ex-president’s grip on the party
If you want to see how Donald Trump remains the driving force in Republican politics, just look at the activity from GOP politicians who are up for re-election or running in Republican primaries next year.
AP Photo/Jill Colvin
Eric Greitens, who’s running in a crowded field of candidates for Missouri’s open Senate seat, traveled to Arizona to observe that so-called audit of the 2020 presidential results there.
Other GOP incumbents and candidates are calling for Dr. Anthony Fauci to be fired (here and here); they’re denouncing Critical Race Theory (here, here and here); they’re hiring former Trump aides and operatives to work on their campaigns (here, here and here); and they’re going out of their way to wish the former president happy birthday on their Twitter feeds (here, here and here).
Another way to look at all of it: When a party no longer offers a new party platform or new public-policy ideas, the way for its politicians to distinguish themselves is through symbols, gestures, performance art and – above all – loyalty to the former president.
Even seven months after that former president’s defeat and five months after Jan. 6.
Talking policy with Benjy: The final Obamacare surrender
It’s the third time in a decade we’ve seen the same headline: “SUPREME COURT SAVES AFFORDABLE CARE ACT.” But there are signs this one might be the last hurrah for existential threats to the health care law, NBC’s Benjy Sarlin writes.
Unlike past rulings, there were few complaints from prominent Republicans about the 7-2 decision or accusations that the conservative justices sold them out. Instead, some Republicans gloated that Democrats had falsely warned Justice Amy Coney Barrett would overturn the ACA ahead of the election.
The implication was a little odd: Democrats were stupid to worry that a lawsuit backed by President Trump, endorsed by his Justice Department, and led by 18 Republican attorneys general, might succeed in front of a Supreme Court with three of his appointees?
But the GOP reaction showcased how the politics of the issue had shifted in recent years. Even before Thursday’s decision, Democrats had passed a big expansion of ACA subsidies in the last COVID bill with minimal backlash on the right. Republicans, burned by unpopular and unsuccessful attempts to repeal and replace the ACA under Trump, have been reluctant to engage on Obamacare for years, preferring instead to attack new targets like Medicare for All.
Many Republicans would likely have been happy to move on after their repeal attempts failed in 2017, but the lawsuit – and Trump’s support for it – dragged the issue on. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W. Va., running in a state Trump won by more than 40 points, shot a copy of the lawsuit in a campaign ad, while Republicans tried to convince voters they supported the law’s protections for pre-existing conditions. In the 2020 cycle, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said in a re-election debate that “no one believes the Supreme Court is going to strike down the Affordable Care Act.”
There are plenty of health care fights on the horizon. Republicans are dead-set against attempts to expand government health coverage, either through Medicare or a public option. Red states that didn’t expand Medicaid through the ACA face ongoing debates over whether to accept the money. There are looming issues with drug pricing, where there may be more room for bipartisanship. There could even be lawsuits over other aspects of the ACA, some of which might find favor with conservative judges.
What the party does seem inclined to move past, though, is the era of trying to kill the law in one grand swoop. And the longer it sits on the books, the harder it becomes to imagine removing it.
33,665,230: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 12,243 more than yesterday morning.)
604,767: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News.(That’s 575 more than yesterday morning.)
314,969,386: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
41.0 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per NBC News.
55.2 percent: The share of all American adults over 18 who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Juneteenth, 156 years later
VA-GOV: Third-party candidate qualifies for ballot
In 2013, Terry McAuliffe won Virginia’s gubernatorial contest by 56,435 votes.
And the third-party candidate in the race, Libertarian Robert Sarvis, got 146,000 votes.
Well, for this year’s VA-GOV race, another third-party candidate qualified for the ballot. But this time, she’s Black and not coming from the Libertarian right.
“Princess Blanding, a Richmond activist whose brother was fatally shot by a city police officer in 2018, will be on the ballot this November as a third-party candidate for governor,” the Richmond Times-Dispatch writes.
“Blanding became a prominent figure during the protests over police brutality in Richmond last summer, when the death of her brother attracted renewed attention.”
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The Supreme Court’s move yesterday showed that Trump was wrong about his hand-picked justices and the health care law, writes Jonathan Allen.
What’s next for Democrats on the health care front after yesterday’s Supreme Court decision?
More than 200 records were broken across the country after a mega heat wave comes days before the official start of summer. Also, the Supreme Court upheld Obamacare, 7-2. The majority includes two Justices appointed by former President Donald Trump. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
President Joe Biden’s National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan joins “CBS This Morning” to discuss what was accomplished during Biden’s first trip abroad as President – namely what the President gained from his Geneva summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
As the school year begins to wind down, there is a growing nationwide teacher shortage that is expected to carry into the fall. The pandemic didn’t cause the shortage, but experts say it did make it worse. Meg Oliver takes a look at the shortage and what can be done to address it.
Day six of the heat wave and as sweltering conditions persist from California to Iowa and Missouri. The high temperatures are taking an even bigger toll on drought-hit areas. Jonathan Vigliotti takes a look at a community in California drying up.
Editor-in-Chief of Women’s Health Magazine, Liz Plosser, joins “CBS This Morning” to discuss how to get back to moving your body and working out safely after a long break.
Plus: The federal government gets a jump-start on celebrating Juneteenth, the masks come off in California, and more…
We’re now 50 years into the war on drugs, and drugs continue to post their Ws. On June 17, 1971, President Richard Nixon declared that “public enemy number one is drug abuse.”
“In order to fight and defeat this enemy, it is necessary to wage a new all-out offensive,” the president said at the time, announcing more funding for anti-drug efforts, the creation of a new anti-drug organization within the White House, and calling for “the American people [to] all join in” on the fight.
Decades later, most people seem to have switched sides in this conflict. Some 60 percent of Americans said they support the legalization of medical and recreational marijuana in an April 2021 poll conducted by Pew Research Center.
Gallup found an even higher 68 percent of people supported marijuana legalization in a November 2020 poll. That’s up from about 16 percent in 1971.
Nixon stressed in his remarks 50 years ago that the fight against drugs needed to be bipartisan. Today, members of both political parties are increasingly willing to live and let live. That Pew poll found 47 percent of Republicans support the legalization of recreational marijuana, alongside 72 percent of Democrats.
The shift in public opinion has been complemented by the slow rollback of drug prohibition in the states.
Just yesterday, the Connecticut Senate passed a bill legalizing recreational cannabis for those 21 and older. Once Gov. Ned Lamont (D) signs it into law, the Constitution State will become the 19th state to legalize recreational marijuana.
As of early April, about 138 million Americans live in a state where recreational marijuana is legal, according to U.S. News and World Report.
And while the increasingly widespread legalization of marijuana is the most obvious sign of drug prohibition on retreat, there’s also been progress in liberalizing the law’s treatment of other substances, too.
On Thursday, the Maine House of Representatives approved a bill decriminalizing the possession of small amounts of all drugs. That legislation is modeled off a similar law approved by Oregon voters in 2020. That same year, Oregon voters also approved a ballot initiative that legalized psychedelic mushrooms.
Other cities, from Denver to Washington, D.C., have passed measures decriminalizing mushrooms or deprioritizing enforcement of their prohibition.
Of course, it’s not all good news when it comes to ending the war on drugs. Plenty of people still remain incarcerated for possessing or selling illicit substances. Millions more have had their lives upended by a drug arrest or conviction.
And even though marijuana policy might be getting better across the country, that progress has been counteracted by the federal government’s crackdown on opioids, which has deprived patients of needed pain medicine and led to a massive rise in fatal drug overdoses.
That aside, there’s still plenty for supporters of drug legalization to cheer.
FREE MINDS
President Joe Biden signed a bill yesterday making June 19, or Juneteenth, a federal holiday to commemorate the end of slavery. Zuri Davis explained the history and importance of the day for Reason in 2019:
Juneteenth, America’s other day of independence, is celebrated by black Americans in commemoration of the day the last of the slaves heard the news of the Emancipation Proclamation. On June 19, 1865, two years after the proclamation, Union General Gordon Granger led 20,000 troops to Galveston, Texas, and read from Order No. 3. Jubilation followed, and the day lives on as a joyful memory of a moment when the nation’s founding ideals were finally applied to black Americans.
The bipartisan bill Biden signed establishes June 19 as Juneteenth National Independence Day (not to be confused with the other Independence Day on July 4). The legislation passed unanimously in the U.S. Senate. Only 14 members of the House voted against creating the holiday.
Rep. Matt Rosendale (R–Mont.), one of the new holiday’s few detractors, took to Twitter to explain his opposition to commemorating the end of slavery.
Their intent is to replace the Fourth of July with this new day, one that will inevitably focus on America’s darkest moments.
— Matt Rosendale (@RepRosendale) June 16, 2021
Thanks, Matt.
On the flip side, federal employees were so eager for the new holiday that they preemptively gave themselves June 18 off, despite the fact that Juneteenth is not a floating holiday and falls on a Saturday this year.
That’s a little ironic given that the original Juneteenth wouldn’t have happened if federal employees hadn’t shown up to work. Nevertheless, the official creation of a new holiday to celebrate the end of slavery kicking off a one-day government shutdown feels like a win for libertarians.
FREE MARKETS
California’s post-pandemic reopening is continuing apace. The state’s top workplace safety regulator announced that vaccinated employees no longer need to wear masks. The San Francisco Chronicle has the details:
The standards board for the California’s Division of Occupational Safety and Health, or Cal/OSHA, voted 5-1 Thursday to replace stricter rules in effect since November to stop the spread of the virus in work settings. Those rules included strict masking and physical distancing, among other requirements. Gov. Gavin Newsom signed an executive order on Thursday that allows the rules to be implemented as soon as they are filed with the California secretary of state. Normally there would be a 10-day review period before the rules become active.
The new standards dictate that unvaccinated employees have to keep their masks on indoors, in line with state health department and federal recommendations. Those who haven’t received the shots can also request N95 masks from their employers to reduce the chance of being infected with the virus.
• Russian President Vladimir Putin criticizes the U.S. media for their unfair portrayal of Biden.
• A reporter for TheClarion-Ledger in Jackson, Mississippi, live-tweeted an incredible feat of strength and endurance:
I am coming to you live from a Brandon, Mississippi Waffle House. I, a total loser, came in last place in my fantasy football league. As punishment, I spend 24 hours in a Waffle House. Every waffle I eat shaves an hour off the clock. It’s 4:07 Central. pic.twitter.com/oRugzU7rQT
• Los Angeles County is considering an ordinance to ban the feeding of peacocks, which have apparently become a nuisance in some neighborhoods.
• The European Union is recommending its member states lift their ban on nonessential travel from the U.S.
• A national “right-to-repair” bill has been introduced in Congress, reports Vice. See Reason‘s video on the topic from 2018.
• A graduate student tried to correct a misleading COVID-19 narrative. Rebekah Jones tried to ruin his career for it, the National Review reports.
• Porn production appears to be a felony now in Texas:
Yesterday, @GregAbbott_TX signed HB1540 into law, making it a FELONY in Texas to hire someone to have sex, either with you or another person. Be careful Creators, porn production is now a felony in Texas. https://t.co/gZZNUzZokrpic.twitter.com/1SRYPbJsIB
Christian Britschgi is an associate editor at Reason. After graduating from Portland State University with a degree in political science, Christian worked in public relations before moving into journalism by way of an internship at Reason’s D.C. office.
He has since written for a number of news outlets, including The College Fix, The Lens,Watchdog.org, The Orange County Register, The New York Daily News, and Jacobite. You can follow him on Twitter @christianbrits.
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.
In every boy’s life, there were two iconic moments growing up. The first Playboy he found in the woods. And the first Victoria’s Secret catalog that was accidentally delivered to his address instead o … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Diane Hessan Q&A; Trump on CRT; Quote of the Week
By Carl M. Cannon on Jun 18, 2021 09:34 am
Good morning, it’s Friday, June 18, 2021, the day of the week when I reprise quotations intended to be uplifting or educational. Today is also a brand-new federal holiday, although Juneteenth is hardly a new idea in the collective consciousness of black America. It dates, as the whole country now knows, to June 19, 1865. On that date, Gordon Granger, the U.S. Army commander of the Union forces occupying Galveston, issued a general order that essentially required recalcitrant whites in Texas to honor an earlier wartime order issued by Abraham Lincoln: the Emancipation Proclamation.
And though “Juneteenth” is an amalgamation of June and the word nineteenth, it’s actually a more precise rendition than “June 19.” The reason is that Galveston is a port city, and when Union troops arrived by ship days earlier, word began circulating among freed and enslaved African Americans along the wharf that freedom was truly at hand. A Confederate major named H.A. Wallace later recalled seeing ex-slaves shouting joyously and tossing their hats in the air at a Galveston pier on June 17, 1865. When he asked what they were celebrating, he was told, “We’s free now.”
What makes you free? Wallace asked.
“Yankees come down on ships on the outside to free us!” was the response.
Ensuing celebrations took place over the next three days — and for many years afterward in mid-June. So, it’s historically apt that President Biden signed the Juneteenth bill on June 17, that today, the 18th, is the official holiday, and that tomorrow, the 19th, is the actual anniversary for Gen. Granger’s order. For much of the rest of the 19th century, emancipation was celebrated by blacks all across the South on both June 19 and Jan. 1, the date in 1863 when Lincoln’s proclamation became official.
And yet the immediate aftermath of the Civil War was also a time for reflection, for searching, for trepidation among those who had previously been enslaved. Were they really free of white domination? How would they make a living — and where would they go? Could they reunite with family members cruelly torn from them?
When he discusses this fraught time in U.S. history, Smithsonian Institution Secretary Lonnie G. Bunch III (previously the first director of the National Museum of African American History & Culture) invokes the reaction of a former slave named Hawkins Wilson, who lived outside Galveston. His first affirmative act as a free man was to write a letter to the Freedmen’s Bureau. “I am anxious to learn about my sisters, from whom I have been separated many years,” Wilson proclaimed. “I am in hopes that they are still living.”
In a second letter, he wrote. “Your little brother Hawkins is trying to find out where you are and where his poor old mother is. I shall never forget the bag of biscuits you made for me the last night I spent with you.”
There is no evidence that this reunion ever took place, at least here on earth, but Hawkins Wilson’s letter survives as a tangible refutation to the wishful notion among some whites that the effects of slavery somehow magically ended with Lee’s surrender or Gen. Granger’s June 19, 1865, general order. I’ll amplify on this point in a moment. First, I’d point you to RCP’s front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters, columnists, and contributors:
* * *
Diane Hessan on “Our Common Ground.” In this video, A.B. Stoddard interviews the author of RealClear Publishing’s latest release, subtitled “Insights From Four Years of Listening to American Voters.”
A Plan to Get Divisive & Radical Theories Out of Our Schools. Former President Trump weighs in on critical race theory.
Unfairly Maligned Brian Kemp Is the Model GOP Governor. Erich J. Prince lauds Kemp for holding firmly to his policies amid pressures from both left and far right.
Why Georgia’s Election Reforms Make Sense. At RealClearPolicy, Jonathan Bain argues that the new law addresses system flaws that weaken voter confidence, regardless of one’s political persuasion.
Will Tax Benefits Reverse Declining Fertility Rates? Also at RCPolicy, Patrick T. Brown considers the impact of a proposed universal child benefit.
Mercy for Jeffrey Toobin. Jason Garshfield writes that the disgraced CNN commentator is being tarred with too broad a brush.
Costly Climate Policies Will Harm the Poor in Africa. Adam Houser explains at RealClearEnergy.
The Suffering and Perseverance of Elisabeth Elliott. At RealClearReligion, J. John spotlights the missionary whose sacrifice set a challenging example of discipleship for Christians.
* * *
In my view, the excesses and underlying fallacies of critical race theory and its toxic cousin, “anti-racism,” should be apparent to anyone with an open mind. And it’s unfortunate that this topic has become polarized along predictable partisan lines. But it’s just as obvious to me that until recently, educators and other keepers of this country’s flame have done a woefully and willfully inadequate job of weaving the facts and stories of America’s violent racial history into our national narrative.
It’s scandalous that many white Americans are only now learning about Juneteenth. Shouldn’t as many Americans know about Hawkins Wilson’s heartbreaking search for his family as know about Pickett’s Charge? For that matter, where are the days of national recognition for the likes of Susan B. Anthony, Helen Keller, Cesar Chavez, Chief Joseph, Mas Masuda, and Frank Kameny?
Americans can be proud of their story, the true story, the un-whitewashed version. It is a story of a people forming a country in the name of freedom and then, for two-and-a-half centuries steadily extending those freedoms to formerly disadvantaged groups of people. It required argument, sacrifice, demonstration, even war, and sometimes we took one step forward and two steps back. But in the long arc of the moral universe, to use a famous phrase, our progress took us in the right direction. That is something to be celebrated. And while it can’t involve covering up the past, it certainly doesn’t entail shaming Americans because their ancestors did awful things. Instead, it requires a shared sense of purpose along with the courage to face history honestly — and, if need be, to right old wrongs. All of which can be conducted in a spirit of grace.
“Won’t it be wonderful,” Maya Angelou once offered, “when Black history and Native American history and Jewish history and all of U.S. history is taught from one book. Just U.S. history.”
As Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Joe Biden met in Geneva, the Russian Navy is conducting a naval exercise 300-500 miles off the coast of Hawaii.
Long the leading voice in the Senate for pro-Israel initiatives such as moving the U.S. Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and robust American support for the Iron Dome missile defense system that has saved so many civilian lives, Senator Ted Cruz visited the Jewish state late last month to express his unconditional support for the U.S.-Israel alliance in the wake of Hamas’ most recent attacks.
Good morning. It’s Friday, June 18, and we’re covering a new federal holiday, a pair of major Supreme Court decisions, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
President Joe Biden signed into law yesterday a bill establishing June 19 as the newest federal holiday. Also known as Juneteenth, the date recognizes the formal end of slavery across the US. The bill garnered strong bipartisan support, having been approved 415-14 in the House and passed by unanimous consent in the Senate. Federal workers will have the day off today in recognition of the Saturday holiday.
Long celebrated by Black communities, Juneteenth honors the 1865 reading of Order No. 3 by Union officers in Galveston, Texas. Though the Civil War had ended two months prior, and the Emancipation Proclamation signed two-and-a-half years earlier, Texas remained a remote slave state at the time. The declaration legally abolished slavery in the final Confederate state.
It becomes the first new federal holiday recognized since Martin Luther King Jr. Day in 1983; see a timeline of when each holiday was created here.
Iran Elections
Voters in Iran head to the voting booth today, casting ballots in a national election to determine the country’s next president. Conservative cleric Ebrahim Raisi, viewed as the preferred candidate of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is expected to win the race. Raisi would be a significant change from current President Hassan Rouhani, generally viewed as a moderate, who is ineligible to run due to constitutional term limits.
The election comes amid growing disillusionment among voters, with the country grappling with dual economic crises from renewed economic sanctions and the pandemic. Inflation of the rial, the country’s currency, has risen more than 40% since 2018, while analysts say unemployment may be as high as 20% (the official reported rate is 11%).
Ultimate power in the country lies with the religious hierarchy, most notably Khamenei—see how the Iranian government works here.
SCOTUS Decisions
The Supreme Court yesterday rejected a challenge to the Obama-era Affordable Care Act, sidestepping the primary issue in the case in a 7-2 vote that found the defendants did not have legal standing to challenge the law. It was the third time the law has survived challenges at the high court.
An initial 2012 decision found the law’s individual mandate was constitutional because an accompanying fine acted as a de facto tax. The fine was reduced to zero as part of the 2017 tax reform package, prompting opponents to challenge the entire law, who argued the effective tax no longer existed. Justices Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch dissented; read the opinion here (California v. Texas).
Separately, the court delivered a unanimous decision, ruling a Philadelphia-area Catholic adoption agency could not be excluded from city contracts over its refusal to work with LGBTQ couples due to religious beliefs.
Know someone who needs smart, objective news? Introduce us.
You may already have a stock brokerage account, but are you on a crypto exchange that gives you exposure to cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin or Ethereum?
As it turns out, those can be the same thing. Try searching for symbols: GBTCand ETHE today to find Grayscale Bitcoin Trust and Grayscale Ethereum Trust in your brokerage account. They give you digital assets exposure without the challenges and inconvenience of storing them and signing up for a new platform. Grayscale is a world leader in digital currency asset management, with the longest track record running, and they’ve created a clear path for you to be able to invest in the asset class you hear so much about these days.
> Naomi Osaka withdraws from Wimbledon less than three weeks after withdrawing from French Open; will return for Tokyo Olympics (More) | Twenty-time Grand Slam champ Rafael Nadal to miss both Wimbledon and Olympics (More)
>US Olympic track and field trials begin today in Oregon; see full preview and how to watch(More) | … and US Olympic swimming trials are ongoing (More)
>Janet Malcolm, famed journalist and essayist, dies of cancer at 86 (More) | “WKRP in Cincinnati” star Frank Bonner dies at 79 (More)
Science & Technology
>Coelacanths live up to a century, more than five times longer than previously believed; once thought to be extinct, a new study also shows the fish have a gestation period up to five years (More) | See video of the fish in the wild (More)
>NASA’s Ingenuity helicopter unexpectedly kicks up dust while landing on the Martian surface, allowing study of the dynamics of the planet’s thin atmosphere (More)
>Mutations in a specific gene linked to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease; CRISPR gene-editing technique shows removing TP73 gene leads to impaired development of nerve cells (More)
Heard about CRISPR but not sure what it is? Check out our newly launched CRISPR resource page, curated by experts and 1440 staff to help you get the basics down. Explore the page here.
Business & Markets
>Tech stocks lead Nasdaq (+0.9%) higher, while S&P 500 (-0.04%) and Dow (-0.6%) decline (More)
>An estimated 412,000 Americans filed initial jobless claims last week, increasing over last week after six consecutive weeks of decline (More)
>Content delivery network provider Akamai caused online outages at banks and airlines yesterday morning (More)
Politics & World Affairs
>House repeals war powers authorization used for the 2002 Iraq War by 268-161 vote; declaration gave the White House latitude over military operations in the region without congressional approval (More) | Explaining the AUMF (More)
>Israel launches rocket strikes in Gaza Strip for second time this week after incendiary balloon devices were floated into Israel by activists; no injuries were reported, strikes targeted Hamas sites (More)
>More than 330,000 people hit with power outages in Puerto Rico; more than 1 million people have lost power at some point since June 1 (More)
IN-DEPTH
Rethinking the Great White
Down East | Kathryn Miles. A fatal great white shark attack off the coast of Maine last year—the first in state history—has forced both residents and scientists to rethink what we know about the predator. (Read)
A Disease From Another Era
Australian Broadcasting Corp. | Staff. Polio had been nearly eradicated in the Asia-Pacific region for decades—until a vaccine-derived form of the virus sparked a new outbreak. (Read)
The Netflix of Wellness
Hollywood Reporter | Courtney Rubin. How popular exercise brand Peloton took a cue from Hollywood to turn itself into a billion-dollar content brand. (Read)
Airbnb’s Nightmare Solvers
Bloomberg | Olivia Carville. Inside the online rental marketplace giant’s global emergency response team, built to respond to the company’s worst-case scenarios. (Read, paywall)
You’re interested in the world of cryptocurrency, but it’s challenging to know where to start. And that’s normal—the number of options and recommendations can be incredibly overwhelming.
From our partners: This game-changing brand helps men find the right regimen for their skin type (based on a 30-second quiz) and makes said routine short and easy to stick to. Get started for as low as $20. #Ad
Historybook: US declares war against Great Britain as War of 1812 begins (1812); HBD Paul McCartney (1942); HBD Blake Shelton (1976); Sally Ride becomes first American woman in space (1983).
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– Paul McCartney, “The End”
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On the menu today: A really good interview on NPR, detailing the evidence supporting the lab-leak theory, is welcome — but also illuminates how dramatically the institution’s conventional wisdom has flipped; China blames the global COVID-19 pandemic on a bunch of vapors in Milwaukee; and all the Supreme Court analysis you could ever need.
NPR Does a Lab-Leak Theory 180
Terry Gross of NPR did a lengthy interview with Katherine Eban about her Vanity Fair article, “The Lab-Leak Theory: Inside The Fight To Uncover COVID-19’s Origins.” It’s a great interview, and Eban offers detailed answers to every question, admits uncertainty where we simply don’t have answers yet, and lays out a coherent and logical potential sequence of events.
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65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief.
Good morning, it’s June 18. On this day in history, U.S. President James Madison declared war against Great Britain, beginning the War of 1812; Napoleon was defeated at Waterloo (1815); and Sally Ride became the first American woman in space (1983).
TOP STORIES
Latest COVID-19 Vaccine Controversies: From Myocarditis to Magnetism, What’s Real?
Recently, U.S. federal health officialsreported a higher-than-expected number of cases of myocarditis in young people who received their second mRNA COVID-19 vaccine.
Data coming in is preliminary and limited, but experts are working to determine if the link is indeed related or unconnected to administration of the vaccine.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration have both stated that it is too early to establish a rate for how frequent myocarditis — an inflammation of the heart muscle — might occur, particularly for different age groups.
What has been determined is that cases were more frequently found in men than women, which is consistent with the normal rates of myocarditis between the sexes. It is also more common in younger adults, unrelated to the vaccine.
The current position of the FDA vaccines advisory committee is that, particularly in young men, both the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines “might raise the risk” of myocarditis and perhaps pericarditis — inflammation of the tissues surrounding the heart.
Israeli health officials concur, seeing a “possible link between the second dose and the onset of myocarditis among young men aged 16 to 30.”
The good news is that most people who developed myocarditis had mild cases, and they have already fully recovered.
In order to determine if there is an actual connection between the vaccine and a potential side effect, experts compare the reported number of cases to the number of cases they might see in the population without the vaccine.
Now let’s have a look at becoming “magnetized.”
A nurse in Ohio claimed the COVID-19 vaccine made her magnetic. Many of us watched in utterdisbelief as the nurse attempted to stick a key to her neck while testifying in front of Ohio lawmakers.
COVID-19 injectionsdon’t contain metal or a microchip. These claims have already been vigorously debunked.
Although some other types of shots do contain aluminum, the amount is similar to what is found naturally in all foods and water.
Takeaway: Nonsense theories tend to distract and devalue legitimate health concerns surrounding the vaccine. Myocarditis concerns are real, magnetism problems are not. We must be discerning with these claims and verify sources before sharing potential misinformation.
Cancel Indiana Jones? 1981 Indiana Jones Has 2021 Audiences Wondering, ‘Was He a Pedophile?’
Recently Karen Allen, the actress who played Marion Ravenwood in “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” found herself defending a fictional character from the 40-year-old film.
The controversial dialog involves an exchange between Allen’s character and Harrison Ford’s Indiana Jones. In the conversation, the couple alludes to having had a romantic past that was not well-received by Ravenwood’s father. At one point Ravenwood says, “I was a child!”
“You knew what you were doing,” replied Jones.
While there were no further details about the circumstances, this conversation has led some modern viewers to accuse filmmakers Stephen Spielberg and George Lucas of depicting a romantic relationship between an adult and a minor.
Allen spoke to Uproxx about the controversy, explaining that she believes the character may have been 16 while Jones was 26, but there was nothing concrete to back up the idea. She said it was left deliberately mysterious on purpose in order to give the couple a history before bumping into each other in the now controversial scene.
As Allen went on to explain, “… we don’t even know what it is. I mean, they could have kissed a few times, and she was just completely bowled over, and he could have just not wanted to get involved with someone so young.”
The bottom line is that we don’t know the intention of the writers, but the actress doesn’t see the Jones character as a pedophile.
ATP comment: Are we seriously trying to cancel Indiana Jones? Anyone who has seen films from the ’80s knows the standards have changed.
While we can point to some film plots that have sadly imitated real life — yes, we are looking at you “Manhattan” writer Woody Allen — the vast majority of these types of risqué dialogs were not even a little controversial in their time. Are we even going to mention Roman Polanski?
In the case of Indiana Jones, our first impression about the line,“I was a child,” could easily be construed as Rosewood feeling she was immature, not necessarily jailbait.
Pedophilia is a serious and insidious crime. If people want to address the real problem, they ought to invest their energy into demanding actual pedophiles and sex traffickers be brought to justice instead of attacking ambiguous fictional movie characters from the 1980s.
ATP COO comment: If you want to take this crime seriously, we are releasing a brand new Sex Trafficking Awareness Course.
For a limited time, please take advantage of our Pay What You Can pricing. For as little as $1, you can access the course. Proceeds go toward ATP’s fight against sex trafficking and pedophiles.
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
Welcome to the Friday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect the week online. Today:
What’s your AC turned to this week?
Why a celebrated author’s Twitter essay sparked backlash
Batman is embroiled in an oral sex controversy
BREAK THE INTERNET
What’s your AC turned to this week?
Who willingly sleeps in a room set at 82 degrees Fahrenheit during a hot, humid day? That’s a question Texans have been asking each other this week after a graphic (which appears to be from 2019) that showed recommendations for conserving energy was widelyshared online. The recommendations also included turning your thermostat to 78 degrees while at home—which is a little more reasonable! People responded to the recommendations with memes (more on that below) and criticism. But what is the solution—and how did we get here this early into the summer season?
For those not in Texas or who aren’t following the saga, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) operates the state’s independent power grid. On Monday, it asked residents to conserve energy in order to avoid blackouts—due to high demand and offline power plants, we were in danger of reaching our energy capacity. This was, of course, worrying to people who had survived through days-long outages during the winter storm back in February. It made people wonder what weather conditions the Texas power grid could handle. ERCOT asked people to conserve energy only through Friday evening—so it appears that we likely won’t see a power outage this week. But we haven’t even seen the hottest temperatures of the season, so this probably isn’t the last time Texas will be threatened with a power outage. Meanwhile, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has spent the week tweeting about building a border wall—which he expects to be funded partially through donations.
Americanah author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie posted an essay to her personal site Tuesday, addressing alleged attackson her by two writers, and critiquing how Twitter can stunt and warp discourse. It was widely shared—at one point her website even crashed. But critics claim the lengthy essay is also a response to being called transphobic.
Adichie doesn’t name the writers by name, by one of them is apparently Nigerian writer Akwaeke Emezi, who graduated from Adichie’s workshop. Last year, Emezi, who uses they/them pronouns and identifies as nonbinary, called out Adichie’s defense of J.K. Rowling’s essay on gender from last summer. Emezi, whose latest novel Dear Senthuran: A Black Spirit Memoir was released last week, addressed the essay on Instagram, saying the emails were published without consent, and that the piece was “designed to incite hordes of transphobic nigerians to target me.”
This revelation emerged via the TV show Harley Quinn, an animated adult comedy with an irreverent attitude to DC icons like Batman and Superman. Speaking to Variety‘s Joe Otterson, the show’s co-creator Justin Halpern explained that they wanted to include a scene “where Batman was going down on Catwoman.” However, DC put the kibosh on this idea because “heroes don’t do that.”
Naturally, this revelation led to a flood of mockery on Twitter. Even Val Kilmer, who played the character in 1995’s Batman Forever, offered commentary on the topic in the form of a GIF.
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Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger acknowledged this week that Fulton County has been unable to provide ballot chain of custody documentation related to drop boxes used in November’s election…. Read more…
The long and very winding road to the truth about an Arizona county’s general election apparently runs all the way to Montana. CNN tried to get to bottom of reports… Read more…
President Joe Biden got scorched playing one-on-one against Russian leader Vladimir Putin, according to former President Donald Trump. Biden met the Russian leader Wednesday in Geneva and, according to Trump,… Read more…
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The Supreme Court has dismissed a challenge to the Affordable Care Act brought on by Republican-led states. The justices decided that the opponents in this case, who urged justices to dismiss the entire 2010 law, weren’t actually harmed by ACA provisions because Congress has reduced the penalty for failing to buy health insurance to zero. This was the third major challenge to the landmark healthcare reform law, and while the decision has preserved the ACA for now, there will undoubtedly be more Republican challenges. One such lawsuit is currently brewing in Texas, in which a group of individuals and businesses are arguing that an ACA provision requiring insurers to offer certain free preventative services is unlawful. About 31 million Americans have health coverage through the Affordable Care Act.
Juneteenth
Juneteenth is now officially a federal holiday. President Joe Biden signed a bill into law yesterday commemorating June 19, 1865, the day slaves in Texas were told of their emancipation. Juneteenth is the first holiday to be approved since Martin Luther King Jr. Day, which was established in 1983. Since Juneteenth falls on a weekend this year, some state government offices may be closed today in observance. Juneteenth gained wider recognition following the wave of racial justice activism last summer. While many have welcomed the new holiday, other nationwide issues related to race and equality are still being met with division. Congress is all but stalled on police reform legislation, debates are roiling about teaching critical race theory in schools, and several states have passed or are trying to pass laws threatening the voting rights of underserved communities.
Voters are heading to the polls today in Iran for a controversial election that is all but guaranteed to deliver a hardline president after all the other serious contenders were barred from the race. The practically uncontested frontrunner is Ebrahim Raisi, a close associate of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Raisi lost a 2017 election and has headed the country’s judiciary for the last two years. He emerged as the likely victor after an election supervisory body barred his main rivals from the race in a widely criticized move. If he wins, Raisi and his government will have to confront an economic crisis exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic, calls for constitutional reform and growing questions around the succession plans for Khamenei, 81, who is the final arbiter of all Iranian affairs.
China
A coronavirus outbreak in a powerful shipping region in China could end up snarling holiday shopping, even though the holidays are half a year away. Last month, authorities in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong — home to some of the world’s busiest container ports — canceled flights, locked down communities and suspended trade along its coastline to bring a rapid spike in Covid-19 cases under control. Things have improved, but the shipping damage is already done. The shutdown created a huge backlog of shipping containers and vessels waiting to dock. This congestion has led major shipping companies to warn clients of delays, changes to vessel routes and destinations and spikes in fees. The whole situation could take months to clear.
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A mannequin is going to the moon, and you can help NASA name it
It’s currently being called a “moonikin” and frankly, that’s going to be hard to top.
This disgusting ‘house from hell’ is listed for $600,000 … and getting multiple all-cash offers
The real estate agent said “you can feel the smell.” Looking at the pictures, she’s definitely right.
Amazon has a promotion right now that can help you save even more money on many products sold during Prime Day when you use cash back from select Discover cards.
And who are YOU?
In honor of Father’s Day this weekend, an all-time dad video, in which a baby meets her father’s twin brother and gets INCREDIBLY confused. (Click here to view)
(Steven Hayward)Forget Friday Night Lights. How about Feddie Night Fights—Federalist Society style?
Two weeks from now, on Wednesday June 30 at 8 pm eastern time, I’ll be refereeing a Federalist Society student division online webinar on the issue of whether the Declaration of Independence should inform judicial interpretation of the Constitution. This is a live issue on the right, and I’ve written an outline of the two sides of this issue, but for this event I’ll be the fight referee, intervening only when the combatants are in a clinch or tangled on the ropes.
Our two heavyweight pugilists will be Hadley Arkes, emeritus professor of jurisprudence from Amherst and founder of the James Wilson Institute, and Lee Strang, professor of law at the University of Toledo School of Law.
The poster for the event is below, but the direct link to sign up for the primary Zoom platform for the webinar is here. (You will also be able to watch on YouTube, Facebook live, and Twitter if you like, none of which require you to register.) Put it on your calendar and join us if you can.
(Paul Mirengoff)In January 2021, the general counsel of Coca-Cola sent a letter to the law firms that represent it. The letter demanded, among other things, that these firms “commit that at least 30% of each of billed associate and partner time will be from diverse attorneys, and of such amounts at least half will be from Black attorneys.”
In response to this outrageous policy, the American Civil Rights Project (of which I am a board member) has sent a letter to the company on behalf of concerned Coca-Cola shareholders. The letter demands that the Coke either (1) publicly retract the discriminatory outside-counsel policies it announced in January or (2) provide access to the corporate records related to the decision of Coca-Cola’s officers and directors to adopt and retain those illegal policies.
The letter is signed by Daniel I. Morenoff, who heads the American Civil Rights Project. You can read the full text here.
The letter points out to Coke that “by adopting Policies of contracting, refusing to contract, and altering the terms of signed contracts on the basis of the race of Coke’s counterparties, the [directors] have exposed Coke and its shareholders to material risk of liability” for unlawful race discrimination under 42 U.S.C. Section 1981.
Furthermore:
The Policies additionally expose the company to potential litigation on other theories, including (without waiving the right to later note more):
(a)the Policies order outside counsel to discriminate on the basis of race, ethnicity, sex, gender, and disability status in hiring, promotional decisions, firing, staffing, and internal compensation structures. In doing so, the Policies order outside counsel to violate Title VII of Civil Rights Act of 1964,Title IX of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Americans with Disabilities Act.
(b)in requiring the disclosure of individual outside-counsel “team member[’]s” disability status, the Policies separately compel the violation of the confidentiality provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
The letter states that, at the time of its January announcement, Coke knew or should have known that the policies it set forth are illegal. In the unlikely event that Coke didn’t know this, it was so informed by critics and certainly by Boyden Gray in an open letter to the company in April.
Yet, on the same day it received Gray’s letter:
[Coke] executed and filed with the SEC a Form 10Q omitting any reference whatsoever to the [illegal contracting] policies or Coke’s related liabilities. Given the total omission of these material liabilities, that document, by all appearances, did not “contain[ ]” or “fairly present[ ], in all material respects, the financial condition…. of the Company.” Thus, [Coke] executed and submitted to the SEC a false “Certification Pursuant to 18 USC Section 1350, as Adopted Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
(Emphasis added)
The letter concludes with this demand:
The Stockholders therefore demand that you immediately publicly retract the Policies in their entirety. If we do not receive a response to these demands within 30 business days, we will understand. . .Coke. . .to have refused to address these matters themselves. At that point, the Stockholders will be forced to seek judicial relief to protect Coke and the Stockholders’ interests in the company from your continued breaches of your fiduciary duties.
I hope that after you have reviewed this letter, you will be in touch to inform us of how Coke will comply with these demands.
The letter is dated June 11, 2021. The clock is ticking.
(Paul Mirengoff)Secretary of State Antony Blinken is no one’s idea of a hardliner. For example, he’s leading the charge to appease Iran in the hope that, with the pot sweetened, the mullahs will permit the U.S. to reenter the nuclear deal.
But Blinken is what passes for a hardliner in the feckless Biden administration. Reportedly, he strongly urged Joe Biden to sanction the company and the CEO behind the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. That pipeline is vital to Russia’s interests in its quest to use oil and gas to isolate Ukraine and leverage its way to power in Europe.
Blinken was joined in his push for sanctions by his deputy, Wendy Sherman, a major foreign policy player in past Democratic administrations. Key congressional Democrats, including Senate Foreign Relations Committee head Robert Menendez, also wanted the sanctions.
But Biden declined to impose them. And in related news, Biden also decided not provide a package of lethal and non-lethal aid to Ukraine. Congress authorized him to supply the aid, worth tens of millions of dollars, but Biden didn’t follow through.
Donald Trump made the opposite decisions. He stood in the way of Nord Stream 2 and he suppled congressionally-authorized aid to Ukraine, albeit after trying briefly to leverage it to his political advantage.
Imagine if, instead, Trump had done what Biden is doing. He would be accused of selling out to Russia and, indeed, of being Putin’s stooge.
Yet, Biden’s decisions barely rate a mention in the mainstream media. There’s a good chance you didn’t know about the decision to withhold aid to Ukraine.
What are Team Biden’s excuses for these decisions? On the pipeline, his apologists, such as the Washington Post, argue that Biden didn’t want to “inflame relations” with Germany and that the pipeline is basically a fait accompli at this point. (The Post, by the way, calls Biden’s Russia policy “a mix of confrontation and cooperation.” There’s a name for that: incoherence.)
These excuses are self-contradictory. If the sanctions won’t stop the pipeline, it’s impossible to believe that sanctions aimed at halting it will have a significant effect on our relations with Germany.
Anyway, since when does Germany dictate U.S. policy towards Russia? If Ronald Reagan had listened to Europeans during the Cold War, that conflict might have lingered on for at least another decade.
The excuse for not aiding Ukraine is that Russia withdrew troops from the Ukrainian border. So what? Russia could bring back its troops and send them into Ukraine in short order. Indeed, the less well-equipped Ukraine is, the more likely it is that Putin will launch an attack.
The notion that foreign troops need to be amassed on one’s border before a nation fully prepares to defend itself from an enemy is ludicrous. No nation follows this policy. If Biden were serious about opposing Russia, he wouldn’t have put Ukraine in that position.
When Trump was president, Joe Biden pretended to be serious about opposing Russia. Now that Biden is in power, he is still pretending.
And by the way, where are those hand-wringing Ukraine and Europe hands who testified so earnestly (or mock earnestly) during the first impeachment proceedings about Trump’s betrayal of Ukraine? Can they be reached for comment now?
If anything, the need to take a hard line on Russia is greater now than during the Trump administration (when, by the way, Trump did take a hard line through his actions, if not always his words). Russia is behind ransom ware attacks on U.S. infrastructure (the real thing, not the Democrats’ idea of infrastructure).
Biden’s response? Following in Barack Obama’s footsteps when Russian election interference was the issue, he told Putin, in effect, to cut it out.
Biden then listed 16 sectors considered critical infrastructure under U.S. policy that should be off-limits from attack. He thus seemed to imply that it’s okay to attack other sectors or entities.
(Scott Johnson)Winston Boogie Smith was the target of a North Star Fugitive Task Force arrest operation that cornered him on the afternoon of June 3 at the top of the parking ramp adjacent to Uptown’s Seven Points (better known as Calhoun Square). Smith appears to have engaged in a gun battle with members of the task force when they sought to arrest him on an outstanding warrant.
The woman who was in Smith’s car at the time of the shootout has retained counsel. What does she need a lawyer for? Perhaps she awaits a big payday, along with Smith’s family. See part 4 of the continuing saga of Winston Boogie Smith, “father of three.”
The task force operated under the auspices of the United States Marshals Service. Smith’s shooting by law enforcement members of the task force is being investigated by the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension.
Yesterday two search warrants were filed in the case. KARE 11’s Lou Raguse has a good straight news summary here. Citing the affidavit signed by BCA Special Agent James Reyerson, Lou reports:
According to the search warrant receipt, agents collected a Smith and Wesson M&P 380 handgun from the front driver side of [Winston Smith’s] Maserati. They also collected six Blazer 380 Auto cartridge cases from the driver’s side, center console and passenger side in the front of the SUV.
In addition, they collected a loaded Smith and Wesson M&P 380 magazine with seven rounds in a duffel, according to the warrant.
Outside the Maserati on the passenger side where officers fired, the BCA collected fifteen FC 9mm Luger cartridge cases on the ground.
The agents also collected many bullet fragments, several phones, clothing and more than $800 cash as evidence in the case, according to the search warrant.
Smith promoted war with the police and did his best to wage it when the time came. Smith skipped a May 19, 2021 sentencing hearing and a new warrant in Minnesota was issued for his arrest. He was a bad dude whose supporters now seek to enroll him in the annals of the sainted, Minneapolis style — with an “autonomous zone” dedicated to him.
I am not clear on the status of the zone. The Star Tribune has posted video (below) of the police efforts to clear the heavily trafficked intersection on Tuesday evening with this caption:
Police and protesters clashed Tuesday night as the City of Minneapolis cleared barricades erected across Lake Street in Uptown. The street had been occupied by protesters as a memorial to Winston Smith and Deona Knajdek. Some protesters struck officers with debris, who then responded with less lethal weapons. Smith’s death during an attempted arrest by U.S. marshals — who were not wearing body cameras — launched daily protests at the Uptown intersection of Lake Street and Girard Avenue. Protester Deona Knajdek was killed in the zone Sunday when a driver collided with another car being used as a roadblock to prevent vehicles from driving into demonstrations in the middle of the street.
The driver who killed Deona Knajdek “in the zone” on Sunday has now been charged with murder. Minneapolis itself is “in the zone” of crime, chaos, and illegality. Its police force has shrunk by 25 percent in the past year and the boy mayor of the city has asked the governor to place National Guard troops in standby.
(Scott Johnson)I am scheduled to join Jon Justice, Drew Lee, and producer Samantha Sansevere for the weekly Justice & Drew round table tomorrow morning from 7:00-9:00 a.m. The show runs from 6:00 to 9:00 a.m. weekdays on Twin Cities News Talk AM 1130. It is available via live stream here and in podcast form here.
The show covers local and national news with a sense of humor and an upbeat twist. Entertaining while they educate, Jon and Drew provide a crucial counterpoint to the editorial cowardice and stupidity of the Star Tribune.
They have been extraordinarily hospitable to John Hinderaker and me as well as John’s colleagues at the Center of the American Experiment. Along with Alpha News, Justice & Drew is the most important source of local news in the Twin Cities. Please check it out tomorrow if you might find it of interest.
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
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This is a news alert we send to update you on stories receiving significant attention online.
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Many employees take the day off for the newest federal holiday, the Gulf Coast braces for storms and more news to start your Friday.
Happy Friday, Daily Briefing readers! Many people across the country are getting a day off for the newest federal holiday, Juneteenth. If you’re one of them, enjoy sleeping in! And, an ominous warning for those on the Gulf Coast – you may have to deal with more dangerous storms.
🎧 On today’s 5 Things podcast, hear about the latest COVID-19 vaccination efforts. You can listen to the podcast every day on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or on your smart speaker.
What else is happening today:
Federal employees take the day to celebrate Juneteenth, the country’s newest holiday
Most federal employees are off work this Friday in honor of Juneteenth , which commemorates the day in 1865 that the final enslaved people in the Confederate states learned about the end of slavery. President Joe Biden signed the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act into law Thursday, flanked by Vice President Kamala Harris, the nation’s first Black vice president, who said: “Today is a day of celebration.” Biden said: “This will go down for me as one of the greatest honors I will have as president.” Long observed among Black Americans, Juneteenth has gained higher prominence in recent years after racial justice movements increased interest in the holiday and more states and cities have passed legislation commemorating emancipation.
President Joe Biden signed the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act Thursday.
Gulf Coast bracing for tropical storms, heavy rain
An ominous weather system slowly rolling toward the Gulf of Mexico was threatening to strengthen into Tropical Storm Claudette before slamming onto shore across four states. The National Hurricane Center issued a tropical storm warning for southeast Louisiana to the Alabama-Florida border. Coastal Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and the Florida panhandle could face heavy rains and flooding Friday and into the weekend . AccuWeather meteorologists pinpointed late Friday to Saturday as the most likely time frame, and the Louisiana coastline is the most likely place for landfall, though it may occur anywhere from near the Texas-Louisiana border to the western part of the Florida Panhandle.
US Olympic officials reverse course, boot banned runner Shelby Houlihan
Hours after USA Track and Field indicated runner Shelby Houlihan would be allowed to take part in the U.S. Olympic trials, the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee said that she won’t be eligible to run after all.
Shelby Houlihan is the American record holder at 1,500 and 5,000 meters.
Ohio governor to end COVID-19 emergency declaration
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine announced the end of the state’s COVID-19 emergency declaration will come Friday. “We’ve come to the conclusion it really does not impact what we need to do in this pandemic based on this point” in time, DeWine said. The governor had declared the emergency on March 14, 2020, which allowed the state to suspend competitive bidding, draw down assistance and make emergency rules. DeWine said state requirements on visits to nursing homes, such as limiting the number of visitors, will also be lifted Friday. Most of the state’s health orders, including the state mask mandate, ended June 2.
Newsmakers in their own words: Salma Hayek on being cast as a superhero
Mexican actress Salma Hayek has transitioned from a formidable Oscar-nominated actress to butt-kicking, world-saving action star. Hayek stars as Samuel L. Jackson’s lethal spouse in “The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard” (in theaters now). Ryan Reynolds also stars.
Actress Salma Hayek at the 78th Golden Globe Awards
NBCU photo via Getty Images; USA TODAY graphic
Later this year, Hayek, 54, will star in Oscar-winning director Chloé Zhao’s “Eternals” as Ajak, “the wise and spiritual leader,” according to Marvel’s website. She explained some of the difficulties of the role, but said “it was worth it.”
Who to look out for during the Olympics track and field trials
The U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials are taking over Eugene, Oregon, starting Friday. The meet will feature former gold medalists, NCAA champions and young professionals across a packed eight-day schedule. One of the most anticipated races will be the women’s 400-meter hurdles, which will see world record holder Dalilah Muhammed face off against Sydney McLaughlin, who holds the second-fastest time ever in the event. The men’s short sprints will also be competitive. Noah Lyles, a two-time gold medalist at the 2019 World Championships, is a favorite to qualify in both the 100 and 200-meter dash.
Disney+ releases its newest Pixar flick, Luca
The newest animated feature from Pixar, “Luca,” premiered on Disney+ Friday morning . Two young sea monsters visit a town on the Italian Riviera for gelato, pasta and a heartwarming story of friendship and acceptance. The two leads, voiced by Jacob Tremblay (“Good Boys,” “Room”) and Jack Dylan Grazer (“Shazam!”), can appear as human boys out of the water. While in town, they quickly bond with a quirky girl, voiced by Emma Berman, take on the local bully, train for a triathlon and also tackle their own fears and insecurities in a very Pixar way.
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The following is a new analysis. A Florida appeals court has ruled one county’s series of emergency mask mandates to be “presumptively unconstitutional.” Alachua County’s mask mandate was in effect for over a year through a series of emergency orders. A local resident challenged the mandate in court in Fall of 2020. He initially lost […]
The following is an excerpt from a story in the New York Post. The Alabama TV anchor who broke news of the infamous 2016 “tarmac meeting” between former President Bill Clinton and then-Attorney General Loretta Lynch died Saturday in an apparent suicide, according to reports and his employer. Christopher Sign, 45, was found dead by […]
Listen to top scientists and editors from esteemed medical journals and you can’t help but conclude there is such a thing as a “scientific establishment.” And it’s been as corrupted by politics and misinformation as many in politics and the media. In my 2017 investigation into “Fake Science,” Dr. Marcia Angell, the first woman to […]
CDC is postponing its emergency safety meeting about Covid-19 vaccine, indicating their experts do not see an emergency safety risk in the reports of heart inflammation in young people, which they are scheduled to examine. Read the announcement below: The June 18, 2021 COVID-19 meeting is being rescheduled due to the observation of the Juneteenth […]
“Natural Painkiller Better than Morphine… Yet Safer Than Aspirin!?”
Imagine taking a pill that gave you the pain-relieving rush of morphine…Only without the risk of addiction or death. As crazy as that might sound…An Austrian doctor used this natural, non-addictive painkiller to relieve the chronic pain of celebrities like JFK, Marilyn Monroe, and Pablo Picasso.Covered up for years, this “Holy Grail” painkiller is finally available.
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Together, Let’s Expose the Left’s Coup Attempt to Overthrow the Supreme Court
The radical Left is attempting to use court packing to overthrow the U.S. Supreme Court and turn a once-independent judiciary into a tool for raw political power. They call it court “reform,” but let’s call it what it is…it’s a coup. A coup by political elites to force their radical agenda into place, take away your freedoms, and fundamentally change America. It’s URGENT that we stand our ground and REJECT this coup attempt before it’s too late. First Liberty is leading the charge to stop this coup as the largest legal organization in the nation dedicated to defending religious liberty—but we can’t do it without you.
Pink Floyd founder Roger Waters rejects Facebook’s request to use a song in an ad, calls Mark Zuckerberg “one of the most powerful idiots in the world”
Roger Waters, founding member of Pink Floyd (and probably now considered a terrorist in America due to his anti-government lyrics), announced that he recently turned down a huge offer from Facebook, who wanted to use one of his songs in an advertisement.
Kamala hosted a nice dinner for female senators and the woke mob ate her alive for hanging out with “rich white women” and “being served by Black servants”
The Woke Monster comes for all, and it’s coming for Kamala Harris sooner rather than later.
Climate change protest group dissolves itself because it’s too white
The Auckland chapter of a New Zealand based climate activism group, School Strike 4 Climate (SS4C), announced that they are disbanding in a lengthy statement on Facebook.
Check out this unbelievable tornado footage captured by a dude circling one in a glider 😲
This is absolutely spectacular:
Crazy person: “Have you ever wanted to eat tempura-battered cicadas?”
No amount of editing, trendy music, spices, or batter can make this anything but gross:
Top scientist on why it took a year to investigate the Wuhan lab: “At the time, it was scarier to be associated with Trump and to become a tool for racists” 🤦♂️
The woke have obliterated our nation’s ability to critically think and respond to crises:
Watch: The Chinese Communist Party used 5,200 drones to celebrate 100 years of oppressing the masses
Sure, the Chinese government is a totalitarian nightmare that controls the lives of 1.4 billion people and counting, but they sure do know how to celebrate their 100th anniversary coming up on July 1st!
Take a moment to unwind with a video of a baby seal swimming for the first time
You came here because you knew it was going to be adorable, and I can promise you that you won’t be disappointed. Enjoy this moment of zen:
The State Dept keeps referring to illegal immigration as “irregular migration.” Let me explain why this is ridiculous.
Here’s a term that you can expect to see everywhere now:
Victoria’s Secret is swapping its “Angels” for lesbian soccer player Megan Rapinoe, a transgender model, and more
Well, that’s one way to declare bankruptcy!
Watch this Tesla Model S Plaid zip past several McLaren and Porsche supercars at LIGHTSPEED 👀
This here is a Tesla Model S Plaid beating out expensive supercars with ease:
Big religious liberty win! SCOTUS just ruled unanimously that Catholic foster agency cannot be forced to place children with same-sex couples
Do you need some good news today? Here, have some:
The Fed just “considerably raised its expectations for inflation this year” 👀
Remember, the experts say that EVERYTHING IS FINE and that lockdowns and trillion-dollar spending sprees will have zero affect on the financial wellbeing of our nation.
Oh look! Super duper woke Apple is censoring 27 LGBT apps in China
Whoa whoa whoa wait a minute! What do we have here?
Trump weighs in on Biden’s meeting with Putin: “It was a good day for Russia” 🤣
You knew that Trump was going to weigh in on Biden’s slow shuffle across Europe, didn’t you?
The mask charade has become deranged superstition
Throughout this pandemic I’d like to think I was flexible, compliant, and cooperative with the authorities even when I failed to see wisdom in some of their decisions.
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
06/18/2021
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Coronavirus Bulletin
TOP CORONAVIRUS NEWS
States Set to End COVID Jobless Aid
Eight states will end federally enhanced unemployment benefits Saturday, part of a 25-state crackdown on the additional $300 benefit included in the coronavirus relief package in March. Read more.
U.K. Virus Cases Surge as Variant Spreads
New confirmed COVID-19 cases rose above 10,000 for the first time in nearly four months in the U.K. as a result of the spread of the more contagious delta variant. Read more.
Japan to Lift State of Emergency Before Olympics
The prime minister said the number of new COVID-19 infections has declined and the strain on the health care system is easing. Read more.
Drop in Cases Boosts Cuban Vaccine Hopes
Coronavirus infections have halved in Havana since authorities started administering Cuba’s experimental vaccines en masse in the capital a month ago, official data shows. Read more.
Can You Mix and Match COVID-19 Vaccines?
Experts say mixing and matching different two-dose COVID-19 vaccines is likely safe and effective, but data still needs to be collected on the practice to know for sure. 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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99.) MARK LEVIN
June 17, 2021
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On Thursday’s Mark Levin Show, The Supreme Court ruled on the Obamacare tax case and effectively upheld it, despite Justice Alito’s brilliant dissent. Justices Coney-Barrett, Kavanaugh, and Thomas voted on the wrong side of this issue. Then, a US Navy Admiral is insisting that all sailors read Professor Ibrahim X. Kendi’s book which contends that capitalism is effectively racist. Military leaders that uphold these destructive teachings should be booted from the US military. Should we expect more divergent views, like racial supremacy, in the future? Later, the Court now says that the State of Texas cannot build its own border wall because it has no jurisdiction over federal issues like immigration. However, the Kelo decision written by Justice Sandra Day O’Connor allows states to use the ‘takings clause’ to obtain property for public purposes including the protection of a state’s sovereignty. Afterward, Trump’s Advisor Stephen Miller calls in to explain that AG Merrick Garland is taking a series of steps to change the US immigration system through courts run by the US Department of Justice. Garland recently overruled two Trump policies on asylum, making anyone across the globe suffering from crime or gang violence eligible for asylum in the US.
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Drew Angerer
100.) WOLF DAILY
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“The prosecutor dropped every charge except for alleging that I purposely placed other people in imminent risk of physical injury, right, and I sure as heck did,” Mark McCloskey said after the court hearing…
The governor of Texas has signed into law a bill allowing people to carry concealed handguns without any permit, joining 20 other states that already have such measures.
An independent commission in Colorado will reveal a preliminary map of new congressional districts next week, putting the state at the forefront of efforts to draw battle lines for the 2022 U.S. election and strip party politics from the process.
U.S. authorities pursuing a sweeping fraud investigation suspect some 4,000 Iraqis of filing fraudulent applications for resettlement in the United States as refugees,…
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Scumbag. Politicized science isn’t science at all – it’s dangerous, criminal treachery. The left has destroyed the public trust in science. Never again will we trust them. Democrats lied, people died.
Facebook Twitter Google+ This is what desperation looks like. Nikki Fried knows that she can’t defeat Governor DeSantis on the issues. That is why she is playing the race card. A very typical tactic from the Left. When they can’t win an …
The economy should be blowing up after locking down the country. Instead the Democrats are paying people NOT to work with money we do not have. Treason.
Freedom of speech is the foundation of a free society. Without it, a tyrant can wreak havoc unopposed, while his opponents are silenced. Putting up with speech that offends is essential in a pluralistic society in which people differ on basic …
Nail meet coffin. ⚰️ “When the world was changing, we were too slow to respond,” Martin Waters, the chief executive of Victoria’s Secret told The New York Times. “We needed to stop being about what men want and to be about what women …
Democrats. Much of the incompetent Jewish leadership in the United States still refuse to confront the Left, out of fear of being ostracized from the Democrat Party. This is the result. Out of control and open antisemitism in America.
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102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
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June 18, 2021
Explosive new information emerges about a spy from China who defected, and provided bombshell information about the coronavirus coverup. In this episode, I discuss the new details, along with a new story about the coming collapse of critical race theory.
Rand Paul and Devin Nunes to Appear on “Unfiltered With Dan Bongino”
This week’s guests on Unfiltered With Dan Bongino will be Representative Devin Nunes and Senator Rand Paul. Unfiltered airs on Fox News at 10PM EST.
Sen. Paul has been making headlines in recent months for being one of Dr. Anthony Fauci’s fiercest critics. The two often spar at hearings, with Fauci coming up with increasingly creative ways to avoid answering questions.
President Joe Biden has seen his approval rating fall six points in the last two months as he struggles to get his agenda off the ground and battles with increasing inflation.
A familiar Supreme Court outcome for the Affordable Care Act. The GOP rejects a Joe Manchin bid at compromise on election reforms. And yet another reminder that January 6 was not about tourism. This is your free weekly edition of “Regular Order.” Step up to a daily subscription and support independent journalism on Capitol Hill.
ACA SURVIVES AGAIN. In a 7-2 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday struck down a lawsuit led by the state of Texas which sought to overturn the Obama health law. The decision found those GOP states did not have legal standing to sue over the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate. It was yet another victory for supporters of the health law at the High Court.
OBAMA HEALTH LAW. Ever since the ACA was signed into law by President Obama in 2010, Republicans have been trying to repeal it, whether in the Congress, or through the courts. “At this point, it sure seems like the ACA isn’t going away for the foreseeable future,” said Larry Levitt of the Kaiser Family Foundation.
BFD. Down the street, Democrats celebrated the decision. “The Affordable Care Act is (still) the law of the land,” tweeted Rep. Bill Foster (D-IL). “It’s a big deal that the Affordable Care Act is here to stay,” President Biden said, leaving out one particular word that he used after the law’s original approval.
FOR THE RECORD. It should be noted that Democrats loudly declared last year that Justice Amy Coney Barrett (nominated by President Trump) would be the fifth vote on the Supreme Court to get rid of the ACA. Instead, Barrett was the seventh vote to throw out a GOP lawsuit against it.
ELECTION REFORM. It only took 24 hours for Senate Republicans to brush aside a compromise offer from Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) on election reform and voting rights. Manchin had laid out a series of changes to the sweeping package from Democrats – but GOP Senators swiftly said, ‘No thanks.’
MCCONNELL. “I think all of you surely know how all Republicans feel about this proposal,” Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters at the Capitol on Thursday. “It’s a solution in search of a problem,” as McConnell led Republicans in again denouncing the plan as a federal ‘takeover’ of elections.
NEXT WEEK. Democrats say they’ll still bring the bill to the floor, but Republicans are expected to filibuster the motion to start debate on the bill. And Democrats certainly don’t have 60 votes to overcome that opposition.
JUNETEENTH. Congressional offices and most federal government offices will be closed today to mark the nation’s newest federal holiday – Juneteenth, after it was signed into law on Thursday at the White House by President Biden. The action came a day after the House gave the plan final approval in a strong bipartisan vote.
WHITE HOUSE. “By making Juneteenth a federal holiday, all Americans can feel the power of this day, and learn from our history, and celebrate progress, and grapple with the distance we’ve come but the distance we have to travel,” President Biden said.
GOOD MORNING SUNSHINE. The new day off did not please Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY), one of the 14 House Republicans to vote against the holiday, grumbled about it on Twitter Friday morning. “This week, you’re apt to be labeled a racist if you didn’t vote for the 11th paid federal holiday,” Massie tweeted.
SVOG GRUMBLING. Lawmakers in both parties are still not happy with the rollout of a new COVID relief program targeted at live music venues, museums, theaters, and performing arts groups. Government figures show 411 grants have been awarded for $304 million – out of the $11.5 billion requested so far.
CONGRESS. In another letter to the Small Business Administrator, lawmakers from both parties are demanding faster action by the SBA on what’s known as Shuttered Venue Operator Grants. “The slow pace is becoming increasingly untenable for the small businesses in our districts,” the latest letter reads from over 200 House members.
FAKE SHOOTING. Twitter lit up for a few minutes on Thursday about a shooting in a U.S. House office building. But it was not true. Instead, it was part of an online game through the global platform known as Roblox, where someone created a Capitol Hill, and role-played as the Capitol Police.
GAMING. If Roblox is your thing, that’s fine. But when you are tweeting about shootings on Capitol Hill that did not happen, that might be a problem if other people don’t know you are in a game. The person behind the Twitter account @apcapitolpolice apologized, but it was deactivated by Thursday evening.
BACK THE BLUE. Republicans in Congress often talk proudly of their support for police. But there seems to be an exception when it comes to the January 6 attack on the US Capitol. My column this week for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
DEMS. “It’s true some GOP members of Congress who are treating Capitol Police like shit were the most scared on the floor,” Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-AZ) tweeted Thursday night. “Jody Hice (R-GA) took apart a hand sanitizer station to make into a club, Gosar & Biggs (R-AZ) were the first to leave the floor and Rep. Clyde (R-GA) was screaming like a banshee,” Gallego said.
CAPITOL ATTACK. If you need a reminder of what the Capitol Police and D.C. Police went through that day – here’s some new video released on Thursday by the Justice Department of officers being attacked. The guy in red swinging the flagpole at police is a former NYPD officer.
Jamie Dupree @jamiedupree
June 17th 2021
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JANUARY 6. Some Republicans initially tried to blame Antifa and BLM elements for the Capitol Attack, instead of Trump supporters. That didn’t work. Now some in the GOP say the FBI was involved. Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-TX) put that forward on the floor of the House. Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) pressed it on conservative TV.
EARMARK OF THE DAY. Rep. Judy Chu (D-CA) has requested $1.5 million to provide free public Wi-Fi at 15 parks and park facilities in Pasadena, California, ‘to further increase access to broadband for underserved communities, students and all residents.’ All of Chu’s local funding requests can be found at this link. Links to funding requests of all House members.
MUSE OF HISTORY. June 18, 1945. On this date, massive crowds lined Pennsylvania Avenue up to the Capitol to get a glimpse of American war hero Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, who rolled through the streets of Washington, D.C. in an open Army Jeep. “My imagination cannot picture a more dramatic moment than this in the life of an American,” Eisenhower told lawmakers gathered in the House chamber, as he paid tribute to the American and Allied forces who vanquished Nazi Germany. “The American fighting man has never failed to recognize his dependence upon you at home,” the General said. With battles still raging in the Pacific against the Japanese, Eisenhower ended his speech by saying, ‘we know that final victory is certain.’ Little did anyone know that Eisenhower would be back at this same lectern giving a State of the Union Address in 1953.
Cultures around the world have believed the heart was the epicenter of the body and responsible for our feelings, thoughts, and behavior.
Interestingly enough, science today is starting to support this perspective, finding that our energetic heart — not our brain — acts as the gateway to our higher self.
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Jun 17, 2021 05:15 pm
Matt Agorist – Instead of investigating these legitimate concerns, governments have taken to issuing bribes and mandates in order to increase vaccine uptake.
Jun 17, 2021 04:19 pm
Megan Redshaw – For the fifth time since the onset of the COVID pandemic in early 2020, the skyrocketing price of Moderna stock has produced a billionaire.
Waking Times – Awakening the highest expression of the Self
Waking Times is an online magazine founded by Dylan Charles and Anna Hunt. It seizes on the transformational power of information to trigger personal change and influence humanity’s evolution.