Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday June 21, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
June 21 2021
Good morning from Washington, where the Biden administration isn’t stopping illegal immigrants from crossing the southern border. Criminal cartels actually wield the power, Shea Garrison writes. Union activists drive woke changes in classrooms, one teacher tells Virginia Allen. On the podcast, Rob Bluey speaks with a pastor and author about a graceful approach to racial tensions and violence. Plus: why Biden almost won Texas; the GOP’s values test; and critical race theorists hope to remake D.C. schools. On this date in 1982, would-be assassin John W. Hinckley Jr. is found not guilty of attempted murder by reason of insanity in the shootings of President Ronald Reagan and three others outside a hotel in Washington, D.C., little more than a year earlier.
“We weren’t calling for a hatred,” pastor James E. Ward Jr. recalls. “We weren’t calling for destruction. We’re calling for peace and speaking the love of God over the city. And it really went viral.”
Biden would have carried Texas over Trump in November if the vote had been limited to counties that got private funds to administer their elections, according to the Public Interest Legal Foundation.
Those pushing the LGBTQ agenda, the anti-Christian, the anti-traditional values agenda, are totally clear with themselves that this is not about peaceful coexistence, mutual acceptance, or religious liberty.
Rep. Glenn Grothman has introduced a measure pertaining to D.C. Public Schools to guard students from critical race theory’s inverted reality, where racial discrimination is being revived in school curriculums…
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WORDS OF WISDOM
To me the sea is a continual miracle,
The fishes that swim—the rocks—the motion of
the waves—the ships with men in them,
What stranger miracles are there?
President Joe Biden recently released a budget that didn’t include Hyde Amendment protections. That means, if passed, President Biden’s budget would FORCE taxpayers to pay for abortions.
Meanwhile, according to their own annual report, Planned Parenthood committed 354,871 abortions last year and raked in over $600 million in taxpayer funding.
Students for Life of America, the largest and most effective pro-life youth group in the nation with over 1,250 active campus chapters is conducting a brief survey of all pro-lifers to gauge your opinion.
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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A New Leader in Iran While Israeli Prime Minister Bennett Warns “Last Chance” for U.S. to Step Back from Iran Deal
Ebrahim Raisi—a hardline Shia cleric—won the Iranian presidential election with 61.9% of the vote. From ABC News: He has taken on a number of influential roles in the Islamic Republic, most notably as Chief of the Judiciary, and his track record comes with a long list of alleged human rights violations (ABC News). From Wall Street Journal: “We will be committed to the JCPOA as an agreement that was approved by the Supreme Leader,” Mr. Raisi said (Wall Street Journal). From The New York Post: Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett warned the US and other nations seeking to rekindle the nuclear agreement with Iran. “Raisi’s election is, I would say, the last chance for world powers to wake up before returning to the nuclear agreement, and understand who they are doing business with,” said Bennett (New York Post).
2.
Sen. Lindsey Graham: GOP Not Giving Into Democrats’ S.R. 1 “Power Grab”
From Newsweek: [Joe] Manchin, a moderate West Virginia Democrat, proposed this past week to narrow the scope of the For the People Act voting rights bill in a bid to build bipartisan consensus and push through a compromise supported by Republicans. However, a number of top GOP lawmakers came out against Manchin’s proposals (Newsweek). From The Hill: Sen. Lindsey Graham said, “In my view, S.R. 1 is the biggest power grab in the history of the country. It mandates ballot harvesting, no voter ID. It does away with the states being able to redistrict when you have population shifts. It’s just a bad idea, and it’s a problem that most Republicans are not going to sign — they’re trying to fix a problem most Republicans have a different view of” (The Hill).
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3.
Catholic Bishops Vote Amidst Debate on Whether President Biden Ought to Receive Communion
From Fox News: The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) voted overwhelmingly to draft a formal document on the meaning of the Eucharist after a contentious debate on whether President Biden and other politicians who support abortion policies are worthy of receiving Communion at Mass (Fox News). From AP: Such a stance, by a public figure, is “a grave moral evil,” according to Archbishop Joseph Naumann of Kansas City, Kansas, who chairs the USCCB’s Committee on Pro-Life Activities and believes it’s necessary to publicly rebuke Biden on the issue (AP). Daily Wire reports: Sixty Catholic Democrats from the House and Senate issued a “statement of principles” to the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops on Friday, demanding that the Conference, when drafting its document on the Eucharist due out later this year (Daily Wire).
4.
Rep. Illhan Omar Calls for Reparations in Juneteenth Celebration Tweet
From Fox News: President Biden made June 19, or Juneteenth, a federal holiday on Friday to celebrate the emancipation of Black slaves after the Civil War (Fox News). From Rep. Omar: As we reflect on the significance of what this day symbolizes, let’s keep fighting to address the lasting consequences of slavery. Next step: reparations (Twitter).
5.
GOP Fundraising Outpaces Democrats as Republicans Eye Control of Congress
Free Beacon reports: The National Republican Congressional Committee raised over $14 million last month, its third straight record-breaking month for fundraising, the group says. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee in the same month brought in just under $10 million (FreeBeacon). Fox News: House Republicans have history on their side as they aim to regain the chamber. The party that controls the White House, which is currently the Democrats, on average loses roughly 25 House seats in the midterm elections. And the once-in-a-decade redistricting process – pegged to the 2020 census – is expected to generally favor Republicans over Democrats (FoxNews).
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6.
Radical District Attorney in Los Angeles Facing Recall Effort
George Gascón has pressed Angelenos to a point that they may have had enough. New York Times: Mr. Gascón, 67, who was propelled into office by grass-roots activists in the aftermath of the police killing of George Floyd, is one of the nation’s most progressive prosecutors in one of America’s most liberal cities, and yet he is facing an intense backlash in enacting the sorts of policies demanded by protesters last year and aimed at reducing the vast racial disparities in arrests and prosecutions (NYTimes). Gascón is amidst a cadre of D.A.s who are working to “fundamentally reverse engineer” the role of the prosecutor. Heritage Foundation: In practice, that results in favoring and benefitting defendants, attacking police officers, shunning victims, and cozying up to criminal defense attorneys and radical decarceration zealots (Heritage).
7.
NEA Teachers’ Union Threatening to Strike
America’s largest union that fought in-person teaching throughout the pandemic now wants a raise. Townhall.com: The National Education Association Staff Organization (NEASO) has hit an impasse in a labor dispute over what employees at the National Education Association called a “slew of anti-union delay tactics.” The result of the impasse: a secret vote of members that yielded 98 percent support for authorizing a strike. Essentially, the union for employees of the nation’s largest union is ready to strike against said union for allegedly being anti-union (Townhall.com). According to Andrew Ujifusa: NEASO President Robin McLean: “We refuse to back down from management’s anti-union tactics” that run counter to NEA’s values (Twitter).
8.
Supreme Court Ruling May Signal Positive Direction for Religious Liberty
Though the Court did not overturn the Smith decision, the broad signal from a unanimous decision is clear. Some saw a path forward in the concurring opinion of the Court’s newest member—Justice Amy Coney Barrett. Wall Street Journal reports: The Barrett concurrence offers “a good sign for where the Supreme Court may be going on religious liberty,” said Lori Windham, an attorney with the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty who argued the case for Catholic Social Services. Current precedent “isn’t doing a good enough job to protect religious liberty, and they want to see something better,” she said, even if “they haven’t told us yet exactly what that might be” (WSJ). Hugh Hewitt: Roberts — and apparently Justices Barrett, Breyer and Kavanaugh — joined Thursday in a quiet, between-the-lines appeal to the public and its officials to lay down arms and leave believers alone. Religious belief is protected, just like free speech and a free press. That’s the bottom line. If the court is obliged to hammer that home, it will (WPost).
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9.
COVID Shutdowns and Mask Mandates Have Served the Cause of the Elites
Barton Swaim: Is the benefit of not contracting Covid-19 worth the cost of going without the bodily presence of, say, one’s children and grandchildren for months on end? Put that way, I suspect most Americans’ answers would range from “probably not” to “hell, no.” But in 2020 public-health experts and their defenders in the media proceeded as though “yes” were the only conceivable answer…. Has a year of faceless interaction, mandated by government and monitored by authority figures and busybodies, exacerbated the sense of estrangement and annoyance many Americans feel toward each other? That so many people are unwilling to take them off long after their benefits have expired would suggest unintended social consequences (WSJ).
10.
German Media Company Raises Israeli Flag in Response to Anti-Semitic Demonstrations
For the employees who had a problem with it, the message from the CEO: “Look for a new job.” From the story: The remarks by Axel Springer SE CEO Mathias Döpfner were made during a meeting last Thursday for the company’s 16,000 employees where he addressed complaints from some employees that the company had raised an Israeli flag outside company headquarters in Berlin…. “I think, and I’m being very frank with you, a person who has an issue with an Israeli flag being raised for one week here, after anti-Semitic demonstrations, should look for a new job,” Döpfner said…. (DailyWire).
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Good morning. Among its many devastating impacts, the coronavirus pandemic has made it harder for millions of families to find their next meal. Together, we can do something about it.
Morning Brew is donating $10,000 to World Central Kitchen, a nonprofit founded by chef José Andrés dedicated to providing meals following disasters. If you join our fundraiser and donate any amount, we have a very special thank you: an exclusive digital cookbook, Brunch with the Brew, featuring recipes curated from our favorite chefs, entrepreneurs, and food personalities.
Donate now to help out and receive the cookbook, or scroll down for more info.
Markets: If you’ve noticed we haven’t discussed Big Tech names here in a while, there’s a reason: Apple, Amazon, and Netflix have lagged the broader S&P this year after a gangbusters 2020.
World: Diplomats said they made progress in Vienna this weekend on bringing the 2015 Iran nuclear deal back to life. But there’s a new character in this drama: Ebrahim Raisi, a hard-line conservative who on Saturday was elected president of Iran.
Last night, the Royal Caribbean’s Freedom of the Seas departed Miami, the first time a cruise ship has sailed from a US port in 15 months.
Granted, it’s just a two-day trial run consisting of the company’s employees and their guests, but the voyage is a milestone for an industry that’s been closely linked to the pandemic ever since the Diamond Princess was forced to quarantine in Japan in February 2020.
The backstory: Given how easily germs spread on a packed ship, the CDC clamped down on cruises, first issuing a no-sail order in March 2020 then instituting a four-phased restart plan in October.
That methodical approach has frustrated Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who’s argued the federal government was unnecessarily kneecapping an industry that supports almost 159,000 jobs in his state. On Friday, DeSantis won a big legal victory when a judge ruled that the CDC’s guidelines for restarting cruises were the most “extensive, disabling, and exclusive” restrictions the agency’s ever imposed on an industry.
The judge’s decision means that on July 18, the CDC’s restrictions on cruises will become more like recommendations, similar to the health guidelines governing other hospitality-related industries like hotels and airlines.
Choppy waters still lie ahead
Last week, Royal Caribbean delayed a cruise from Fort Lauderdale scheduled for July 3 after eight crew members tested positive for Covid-19. And earlier this month, two passengers on a fully vaccinated cruise in the Caribbean tested positive.
But as Royal Caribbean CEO Michael Bayley wrote on Facebook, “Two steps forward and one step back!” The first nonexperimental oceangoing cruise ship to sail from US waters since the pandemic began, the Celebrity Edge, will depart this Saturday from Port Everglades with the CDC’s blessing.
It’s Amazon Prime Day, a holiday you can’t attack for being co-opted by consumerism because that is precisely the point.
Today and tomorrow, Amazon will offer more than 2 million deals to its Prime members to juice e-commerce sales during what is typically a lull in the shopping calendar.
This year’s event represents a return to normal after the company shifted Prime Day to October last year due to the pandemic. That turned out to be a pretty good move…
In two days, Amazon sold $10.4 billion worth of goods, up 45% from 2019.
Its third-party sellers topped $3.5 billion in sales, up nearly 60% annually.
Big picture: Inventing a holiday to get people to shop has turned out to be such a brilliant idea thatother retailers like Walmart, Target, and Kohl’s have all started offering mega-deals of their own to coincide with Prime Day.
Looking ahead…this Prime Day is Jeff Bezos’s last as CEO. He’ll step down on July 5 to make way for AWS head Andy Jassy.
Chinese bitcoin mines are closing as quickly as Blockbusters in the 2000s.
On Friday, local authorities in Sichuan province halted operations at the 26 largest local mines. Taken together with similar moves in other mining hubs, more than 90% of China’s bitcoin mining capacity is now at least temporarily offline, according to the state-run Global Times.
Why crack down? As Elon Musk has realized, bitcoin mining—the process of creating new digital tokens and maintaining the blockchain ledger—requires vast amounts of energy. Authorities are concerned about the environmental impacts of mining and the strain it puts on electrical grids.
Why it matters: The restrictions mean bitcoin mining could shift out of China, which handled 75% of the world’s mining capacity before the increased scrutiny, and arrive in…
America? Miners continue to open up facilities in states like Texas and South Dakota, and in Kentucky, you’ll even get a tax break if you spend at least $1 million on new mining equipment.
Bottom line: China’s mining crackdown is widely seen as responsible for dampening bitcoin prices, which are now 44% below their all time high.
You probably think because we are a digital media company we’re all about that #codelife—toiling away in a dark room turning 1s and 0s into nyan cat bitcoin memes.
But Quickbase has shown us how their no-code platform can help your organization improve operations through real time insights and automations across even the most complicated of processes.They utilize all of this digital transformation to do away with the rigid systems and siloed data that hold you and your team back.
First, heck yeah to all of that. But second, how does Quickbase use no-code to bring organizational agility to your org? Quickbase:
Offers solutions that work the way people do
Illuminates the path to better decisions
Brings the power of software to more people
So if you’re in need of agility, and tired of rigid systems and siloed data (who isn’t????), Quickbase is the solution.
Stat: Did you know that Cuba has five Covid-19 vaccine candidates in development? We didn’t. And one of them, the Soberana 2 vaccine, has shown 62% efficacy with just two of its three doses in late-phase trials.
Quote: “Space is hard.”
We’ll take your word for it, Shane Kimbrough. The NASA astronaut and a colleague faced a number of unexpected challenges (like a loose helmet) while installing new solar panels on the International Space Station, but they finally got the job done in a spacewalk yesterday.
Read: The small-town mystery of who bought the $731 million Powerball ticket. (Washington Post)
Economic data: Home sales data on Tuesday and Wednesday will reveal how many people still buy houses when prices are at an all-time high. Speaking of higher prices, a key inflation reading drops on Friday.
Fed talks: Fed officials have a surprising number of speaking gigs this week, and you know they’ll be grilled about their plan to raise interest rates in 2023. On Tuesday, Chairman Jerome Powell will discuss the economic recovery on Capitol Hill.
Are aliens among us? Tucked into the $2.3 billion coronavirus relief package passed in December was a requirement for the Pentagon to deliver an unclassified report on unidentified flying objects (UFOs) to Congress. That report is coming on Friday.
Also on Tuesday, Facebook will roll out its podcast product.
F9 will try to supercharge the summer box office when it arrives in theaters on Friday.
The Tour de France begins on Saturday.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
MLB’s new rules on pitchers’ applying sticky stuff to baseballs begin today.
American Airlines is cutting 1% of its July flights as it figures out how to rapidly scale up and meet rising passenger demand.
The SPAC backed by billionaire investor Bill Ackman is acquiring a 10% stake in Universal Music Group, the home of Taylor Swift and other major artists, in a complex and unusual deal.
Jon Rahm won his first golf major in a thrilling US Open.
Build a stronger portfolio with…buildings?!Fundrise is a simple, tech-driven way to invest in private market real estate with as little as $500—giving you access to a historically powerful and exclusive asset class right from your phone. Diversify your portfolio with Fundrise.*
For a kick in the butt: a YouTube page with some serious workout routines. See you here tomorrow, very sore.
Dive back into the week:
Shallow dive: Type “dvd bouncing logo” into Google search on desktop and wait five seconds
World Central Kitchen, a nonprofit founded by chef José Andrés, has partnered with thousands of local restaurants across the US during the pandemic to distribute over 36 million meals to people in need. But there’s more work to do.
For the next two weeks, the Brew is running a fundraiser with World Central Kitchen. We’ll be throwing $10,000 into the pot, and if you join us and donate any amount, you’ll get access to our exclusive cookbook, Brunch with the Brew, featuring recipes from our favorite food and business leaders.
A few favorites:
Tahini cinnamon rolls from Food Network star Molly Yeh
Spicy Greek-inspired lamb bolognese with poached eggs and aged feta from Cava cofounder Dimitri Moshovitis
The pickup driver and the two men he struck were all part of the Fort Lauderdale Gay Men’s Chorus, a tightknit group that is now in mourning. The driver, a 77-year-old man who has not been publicly identified, was a parade participant who had ailments preventing him from walking and had been selected to drive the lead vehicle for the procession.
…
Immediately after the crash, Fort Lauderdale’s mayor told reporters that it was “a terrorist attack against the LGBT community” that was “deliberate” and “premeditated.” On Sunday, he released a statement acknowledging that the facts pointed to “an accident in which a truck careened out of control.” The Fort Lauderdale Police Department said that it is still investigating.
…
Wilton Manors [north of Fort Lauderdale] is known as a haven for the LGBTQ community. Its annual [Pride parade] draws about 35,000 people. It has the nation’s second-highest percentage of gay couples and, from 2018 to 2020, was one of two cities with an all-LGBT city commission.
Why is the Texas Governor defunding the state’s legislature?
[Gov. Abbott’s veto of funding for the Texas state Legislature] follows through with a threat he made at the end of May when Democrats blocked an election reform bill by walking out of the regular legislat…
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What are the differences between Armenia’s candidates for prime minister?
Armenia’s snap parliamentary election on Sunday showed acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan leading over former President Robert Kocharyan. Pashinyan’s party had picked up around 58.5%…
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Don’t scroll past. Support credible news for everyone.
Why did regional elections in France see unprecedented low turnout?
[French President Emmanuel Macron] and his party failed to mobilize supporters, with an estimated 68% of voters shunning the polling stations – an unprecedented rate of abst…
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All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLIs domestic terrorism a bigger threat to the US than foreign terrorism?
Yes
48%
No
44%
Unsure
8%
462 votes, 57 comments
Context: President Biden says white supremacy most lethal threat to US homeland.
HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS
“Yes – The definition of “domestic terrorism” is a key threshold, but in general the facts as to plots, attempts, injuries and deaths confirm that home grown terrorism – whether driven by ideology, mental illness, racism or greed – is the larger threat and problem.”
“No – We have had only one event that I can remember that would count as “domestic terrorism,” and that was the bombing of the Oklahoma Federal B…”
“No – Given that the only shot fired at the “armed insurrection” on January 6th was by a Capitol Po…”
Vaccination will be crucial in beating the virus in Brazil, since the country has failed to reach a consensus on social distancing and masks, said Ester Sabino, an epidemiologist at the University of Sao P…
Full summaries, images, and headlines for subscribers only.
“And once the storm is over, you won’t remember how you made it through, how you managed to survive. You won’t even be sure, whether the storm is really over. But one thing is certain. When you come out of the storm, you won’t be the same person who walked in. That’s what this storm’s all about.”
― Haruki Murakam
Can Biden Survive His Foreign Adventures? – LN Radio Videocast
Critics are calling out CNN for “journalistic malpractice” after the outlet ran a story on Georgia removing 100,000 plus names from the voter registration rolls. The media organization neglected to mention that cleaning the rolls of ineligible, moved-away, or deceased voters is standard in every single state and is considered a “best-practice” in election administration.
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
It seems clear that Vice President Kamala Harris will not be visiting the southern U.S. border as part of her efforts to deal with the immigration crisis. The White House attempted to make it understood that her role will be more to deal with the “root causes” of illegal migration rather than tackling the mounting crisis directly. With this in mind, it’s worth asking the most important of questions: If Kamala Harris isn’t dealing with the border issue on the ground, who, if anyone, actually is?
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
Nina Simone’s granddaughter claims that Kamala Harris ‘bullied’ her mother to the point she ‘almost killed herself’
Legendary singer Nina Simone’s granddaughter accused Vice President Kamala Harris of causing the family to lose control of Simone’s estate while Harris was California attorney general.
“Nina’s granddaughter here,” ReAnna Simone Kelly wrote on Twitter on Saturday. “My family doesn’t run her estate anymore. It was taken away from us [and] given to white people. Our family name was DRAGGED in the media. We get NO royalties, nothing. Wanna hold someone accountable? Ask Kamala Harris why she came for my family.”
“As I said before, Ask her why she separated my family,” she continued. “Ask her why my grandmothers estate is in SHAMBLES now. Ask her why we as her family no longer own the rights to anything. Ask her why she bullied my mother in court and my mom almost killed herself from the depression.”
A 2016 settlement regarding the Nina Simone Charitable Trust refers to Harris multiple times for her “primary responsibility for supervising charitable trusts in California” as state attorney general.
“The Attorney General asserts that [Lisa Simone] Kelly breached her fiduciary duty to the Estate and to the Charitable Trust and wrongfully diverted Estate assets. The Attorney General seeks to surcharge Kelly for amounts totaling $5,937,749.42 plus over $2.5 million in interest, which the Attorney General contends is far more than one-half of the Estate’s value during [Lisa Simone] Kelly’s administration of the Estate,” the settlement reads.
In other developments:
– Secure border an ‘indispensable prerequisite‘ to immigration reform: Gowdy.
– Border crisis shows few signs of slowing as migrant encounters, fentanyl seizures stay high.
– Bindi Irwin details alleged ‘psychological abuse’ from estranged grandpa.
– Kamala Harris has gone 89 days without visit to border since being tapped for crisis role.
– Florida bartender becomes internet sensation after rescuing woman from harasser at bar.
Steve Scalise accuses Pelosi of ‘Soviet-style cover-up’ of COVID-19 origins
House Minority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La., had some fiery words for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi while speaking at the Faith and Freedom Coalition conference, accusing her of thwarting efforts to investigate the true origins of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Pelosi won’t do it,” Scalise told the crowd on the second day of the three-day conference in Kissimmee, Fla. He promised that when Republicans retake the House in the 2022 midterms, they will “hold China accountable.”
“They are covering for China right now,” Scalise said of his Democratic colleagues. “It’s a Soviet-style cover-up. We’re going to keep calling them out on it.”
Fox News has reached out to Pelosi’s press office for comment on the matter. A spokesperson referred to the House Intelligence Committee’s investigation into the origins of COVID-19.
The U.S. intelligence community said in May it is examining “all available evidence” on the origin of COVID-19 and “aggressively” working to collect and analyze new information on the issue.
Meanwhile, a push is underway on Capitol Hill and beyond for a full-scale investigation into the origins of the pandemic that has left more than 600,000 Americans dead.
It is unclear whether such a probe will ever happen, though a privately sponsored team of public health experts is already laying the groundwork for one. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– As Brazil tops 500K COVID-19 deaths, protests rage against President Jair Bolsonaro.
– Fauci doubles down on claim that attacking him is an attack on science.
– Kevin McCarthy calls for declassification of COVID origins intelligence: ‘Let the entire world know.’
– Biden admin showing ‘empty rhetoric‘ on China as questions remain about origins of COVID-19: Ratcliffe.
St. Louis couple touts new AR-15 after guns seized over BLM encounter
Despite having their weapons seized and pleading guilty to charges in connection with pointing guns at Black Lives Matter rioters on their private property during the summer of 2020, Mark and Patricia McCloskey appeared defiant Saturday, posting a picture of a new AR-15 the St. Louis couple intends to buy.
“Checking out my new AR!” Mark McCloskey tweeted along with two pictures: one with McCloskey at a gun store with the owner, and another with him and his wife, Patricia. In both, he is holding an AR-15 rifle.
The picture came just two days after the McCloskeys pleaded guilty to lesser charges and agreed to pay fines in connection with last summer’s incident involving Black Lives Matter rioters who tore down an iron gate and ignored a “No Trespassing” sign on their private street. The couple said they felt threatened and armed themselves before heading outside to warn off the crowd.
The guns that the couple used in the standoff were seized after their initial arrests in 2020 and will be destroyed. But the McCloskeys are not prohibited from purchasing new firearms.
“We’re strong advocates of the Second Amendment and we’re going to continue to exercise our rights and protect ourselves,” McCloskey told Fox News on Sunday. “We intend to keep our arms and bear them. We’re a constitutional carry state. I will replace those (guns) which the state took.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Dem mayor calls Pride crash ‘terrorist incident’ but that’s not the case.
– Florida bartender receives internet fame after rescuing woman from harasser at bar.
– NYC mayoral candidate Eric Adams says campaign volunteer has been stabbed.
– Jeep plows into family on Bronx sidewalk in suspected targeted attack.
– NYPD releases video of wild Bronx shootout.
– Naked intruder breaks into Los Angeles home, kills family pets: report.
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Alabama interstate wreck leaves 10 dead, including 9 children.
– Jon Rahm captures US Open title with clutch putts on final holes.
– Iran’s sole nuclear power plant undergoes emergency shutdown.
– Trump or DeSantis? Straw poll shows how they stack up for 2024.
– Chrissy Teigen’s cry me a river John Legend Father’s Day post.
– Bernie Sanders won’t walk back ACB criticisms even after she voted to keep ObamaCare.
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Amtrak’s regional rail expansion faces hurdle from freight trains.
– US plans to spend big on critical minerals; choosing where isn’t easy.
– Facebook, Alphabet keep rising; Apple, Netflix fade.
– Worker shortage has sparked a rent-a-staffer boom in the food industry.
– The natural-gas glut has evaporated, driving prices higher.
#TheFlashback: CLICK HEREto find out what happened on “This Day in History”
Mark Levin on Sunday called the far-left congressional ‘Squad’ nothing more than a “cabal of Marxists who hate this country.”
“They talk about the Squad. This is not a Squad, this is a cabal of Marxists who hate this country—some of them first, second-generation immigrants into the country, who bring their attitudes, who bring their indoctrination into the country, and are at war, right there in the halls of Congress, against our own country,” he said on “Life, Liberty & Levin.”
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‘President Biden, Madame Harris and members of Congress: the American flag has been hijacked as code for a specific belief. God bless those believers, they can have it.’ Read more…
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11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE
AEI’s daily publication of independent research, insightful analysis, and scholarly debate.
If our schools encourage the beliefs that the United States is a fundamentally racist country and that every institution is designed to maintain White supremacy and cannot be reformed, then it inevitably sets schools on a collision course with the society that supports them.
When the overheated economy forces the US Federal Reserve to slam on the monetary brakes to fulfill its inflation mandate, we must expect that today’s housing and equity market bubbles will burst. If past experience is any guide, they will do so with devastating consequences for the economy.
Yuval Levin | US House of Representatives Select Committee on the Modernization of Congress
Too little of Congress’ energy is directed through traditional legislative channels, so the institution’s ambition and vigor are more frequently expressed through performative conflict than authorization, appropriation, or oversight.
As US-China relations and the larger geopolitical landscape darken, financial firms from the US — and Europe — are rapidly expanding partnerships with Chinese firms and investors. How will the Joe Biden administration respond?
“President Joe Biden signed legislation [last] Thursday establishing a new federal holiday commemorating the end of slavery… Biden signed into law a bill to make Juneteenth, or June 19, the 12th federal holiday. The House voted 415-14 on Wednesday to send the bill to Biden, while the Senate passed the bill unanimously the day before.” AP News
Both sides support making Juneteenth a federal holiday:
“America is wise to make Juneteenth a federal holiday… The nation now has a unique opportunity to listen to the voices of Black women and men who helped to reconstruct American democracy against long odds. Their stories continue well into the 21st century as the racial justice protests illustrated for the world to see…
“Juneteenth offers the rare chance to foster a new national consensus, one forged not through lies, evasions or half-truths, but through the crucible of coming to terms with the full depth and breadth of American histories of racial trauma that continue to haunt our country despite efforts by some to deny their very existence.” Peniel Joseph, USA Today
“[Juneteenth] presents a teachable moment for our young people. It’s an opportunity to tell our youth the larger story of the history of slavery in America—not to shame or to divide, but to put it in its proper context as a considerable and formative part of American history that it truly was. Slavery was a part of who we were back then, and ridding ourselves of it and working toward equality for all is an integral part of who we have become…
“Juneteenth also gives us the opportunity to talk about how the principles of the founding—perfect principles espoused by imperfect people—and our constitutional order led this republic to ultimately fight against and reject slavery, and later, against segregation and the practice of separate but equal… Every nation has scars from its past, but we can use Juneteenth as a way to acknowledge our past faults, help heal current divisions, and move toward a future as a nation more united.” Kay C. James, Daily Signal
“What Juneteenth and other Emancipation days commemorate is both the promise of freedom and its delay. For June 19, 1865, doesn’t mark the day enslaved African Americans were set free in the United States but the day the news of Emancipation reached them in Texas, two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation… the original Juneteenth marks not just the start of freedom but also the short-lived promise of the period of Reconstruction, and America’s subsequent race massacres that culminate in the Red Summer of 1919 and the Tulsa Massacre 100 years ago…
“We might count Juneteenth among those things Black people have long enjoyed that white folks don’t know about — like Frankie Beverly and Maze… [But] African Americans should not have to bear the burden of this history alone. Nor should Black achievement be something that only African Americans celebrate. As James Baldwin well knew, our freedoms are interrelated — and otherwise imperiled… [And] as Toni Morrison put it, ‘the function of freedom is to free someone else.’ Juneteenth tells us that a fuller future awaits, and the work of collective freedom is ongoing.” Kevin Young, New York Times
“[Juneteenth] celebrates a crucial step in the fulfillment of America’s founding principles and our founding dream. It does not displace Independence Day but strengthens what it represents. Without Independence Day, Juneteenth (self-governed people finally fighting for and achieving liberty for those wronged by our country’s governance) could have never happened, and without what Juneteenth represents, Independence Day would mean far less than its current celebration: the beginning of a republic self-governed by men created equal by God.” Tiana Lowe, Washington Examiner
Other opinions below.
From the Left
“Many formerly enslaved people across the South became farmers — and, for the next century, they and their descendants were systematically denied bank loans and government assistance. Where were Hawley and the Republicans when Democrats, as part of the $1.9 trillion covid relief package, approved $5 billion in relief for Black farmers? They all voted against it… More than a year later, Democrats still have not been able to find 10 Republican votes in the Senate for a set of modest reforms in policing, including a ban on chokeholds… Recognizing Juneteenth as a federal holiday is a hollow victory.” Eugene Robinson, Washington Post“Efforts made during Reconstruction to transition formerly enslaved Blacks into freedom were swiftly repudiated by the former Confederate leaders Andrew Johnson appointed to Congress. As Governor Perry of South Carolina said, ‘They forget that this is a white man’s government, and intended for white men only.’ This sentiment was codified in legislation called ‘Black Codes.’ Black Codes restricted the movement, property ownership, and employment of Black Americans. Black Codes defined Black heritage and made interracial marriage illegal; the terror of lynching proved that ‘free’ Blacks were not free to own their bodies…“[Moreover] Vagrancy laws were one of the ways the country reverse-engineered the creation of slaves. After emancipation, freed Blacks were forced to stay on their plantation or risk being arrested as vagrants. Blacks could be arrested and charged a fine if they could present no proof of employment… To this very day, we see the caste system in operation. In health care access and treatment outcomes, in socioeconomic status, in vulnerability to police violence, in the effects of the coronavirus, Blacks fare worse than whites. All that together means Blacks fare worse than whites in possession of freedom.” Anthony Conwright, The Nation“[On Jan. 12, 1865] Union Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman and Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton [developed] Special Field Orders No. 15, popularly known as ‘40 acres and a mule,’ a promise to provide reparations to formerly enslaved Americans that Lincoln ultimately approved… By the first Juneteenth in 1865, some 40,000 Black men and women were living on, and farming, land allocated to them by the U.S. government. But Lincoln had been assassinated two months before, and the new president, Andrew Johnson, had already rescinded the special field orders…“To truly celebrate Juneteenth, Congress should revive Special Field Orders No. 15. Dust off the original plans for the acreage to be redistributed to former slaves. Assess the current value of that land, likely in the billions or trillions of dollars. Use that assessed value as the starting point of a reparation plan for Black Americans. Vote that plan into effect on Juneteenth. Then, America will have a worthy holiday.” Clyde W. Ford, Los Angeles Times
From the Right
“The problem of course is that Juneteenth, like just about everything these days, will become weaponized for partisan purposes. When that yankee from New York, Donald Trump… proposed making it a federal holiday in September 2020, his opponents accused him of pandering to blacks. Of course, critics of Joe Biden, he of the last slave state in the Union, make the same charge. And I hope we avoid the idea that Juneteenth is an alternative independence day for African Americans. Let’s celebrate it for what it is: a joyful date commemorating an event in the spirit of the biblical jubilee.” Mackubin Owens, American Greatness“When cranky liberals try to pin racism on the right, any Republican worth their salt will fire back with, ‘The GOP is the party of Lincoln! The party of abolition!’ Truth. So why pass up this amazing marketing opportunity? Rather than being angry about this because some deem it a ‘political’ holiday, conservatives should be taking every opportunity to remind Americans just who brought them this glorious day. You want to know how to maintain the momentum with the Black vote that Trump began? This is a great place to start…“Some conservative pundits are saying that Democrats will only politicize this holiday to bash conservatives… and possibly replace July 4th as a unifying celebration of patriotism. I can’t speak to the latter, but there is no doubt that the former is true. Democrats will politicize anything if it helps make their emotional case. So? If anything, that seems like more of an argument for the right to embrace Juneteenth and its roots…“It’s weird that it is considered pandering if Biden signs it, but when Trump proposed it we were all for it. When we’re begging elitist Republicans to pay attention to the needs of their grassroots base, we call that engagement. When we’re saying we need to be paying attention to the needs of Black voters, we call that pandering. How very hypocritical. Let’s be a little more self-aware than that.” Kira Davis, RedStateSome note that “I believe the demise of slavery clearly is worth commemorating with a holiday. But there are two problems with the bill Biden signed into law. First, there are already too many federal holidays. If a new one was to be created, an old one should have been removed from the calendar. It’s easy to see Juneteenth leading to more federal holidays. Why shouldn’t feminists demand a holiday in honor of female suffrage, a huge advance for half of the U.S. population? And as Latinos become the numerically dominant minority group in America, it’s easy to imagine pandering politicians creating a holiday to honor them…“The second problem in my view is the selection of Juneteenth to commemorate the end of slavery. Why not go with the issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation or the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment?” Paul Mirengoff, Power Line Blog
🕶️ Good morning, and welcome to summer! Smart Brevity™ count:1,478 words … 5½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
1 big thing — Scoop: Trump works refs ahead of book barrage
Graphic: Axios Visuals
Former President Trump has given at least 22 interviews for 17 different books since leaving office, with authors lining up at Mar-a-Lago as he labors to shape a coming tsunami of Trump tomes, Axios has learned.
Why it matters: Trump advisers see the coming book glut as proof that interest in “POTUS 45,” as they call him, has never been higher. These advisers know that most of the books will paint a mixed picture, at best. But Trump is working the refs with charm, spin and dish.
Offering Diet Cokes and dressed in suit and tie, Trump spent an average of about 90 minutes with each of the authors, some of whom were invited to stay and eat dinner at Mar-a-Lago (although not with him).
The interviews are mostly on the record, for use when the books publish. So Trump, who has rarely been heard on non-Fox outlets since leaving office, will see himself quoted constantly over the next year.
Between the lines: Sources tell me Trump makes each author feel they’re getting something special. And some of them are: Many of the nuggets will definitely make news. But there appears to be quite a bit of overlap in the “scoops” Trump is dishing out.
There’s intense jockeying among the authors over several publishing-date logjams in the coming 18 months, with Michael Wolff’s “Landslide” currently in pole position (July 27). The book many Trump insiders are awaiting most is Maggie Haberman’s, due next year.
Jonathan Karl of ABC News — whose first Trump book, “Front Row at the Trump Show,” was a New York Times bestseller in both hardcover and paperback — spent five hours at Mar-a-Lago, including about 90 minutes on the record with Trump.
Karl, who has also interviewed numerous Trump Cabinet members, told me: “If you thought there was no more to know, it’s been mind-blowing.”
More interviews are likely (including one with Jennifer Jacobs of Bloomberg), and several authors who’ve had one interview may get a second dip. Trump personally made all these decisions on who to see.
Five authors have gotten two interviews: Michael Wolff … Maggie Haberman … former Trump counselor Kellyanne Conway … Wall Street Journal’s Michael Bender, whose book is scheduled for Aug. 10 … and The Federalist’s Mollie Hemingway, whose “Rigged” is due Sept. 21.
Trump has given one interview each to about a dozen other book projects (several with joint authors): WashPost’s Phil Rucker and Carol Leonnig … Susan Glasser and Peter Baker … Jon Karl … Jonathan Martin and Alex Burns … Ryan Lizza and Olivia Nuzzi … Washington Examiner’s David Drucker … N.Y. Post’s Miranda Devine — whose “Laptop from Hell,” about Hunter Biden — is coming Sept. 7 … N.Y. Times’ Jeremy Peters … Ari Fleischer — whose “Broken,” about the press in the Trump era and beyond — will be out in 2022 … Variety’s Ramin Setoodeh, writing about “The Apprentice” … and The Federalist’s Ben Weingarten, writing on U.S.-China policy.
Trump said “no” to the book by Bob Woodward and Robert Costa.
The bottom line: No slowdown in sight for Trump headlines.
📚 What’d we miss? Drop me a line (mike@axios.com) with your book tip.
Tucker Carlson — the top-rated host in cable news, who’s rumored as a possible GOP presidential candidate in 2024 — told the “Ruthless” podcast he has no plans to run.
“Oh, God, come on!” Carlson told the hosts. “That seems like a fun job!” [Laughter] “No! No!”
Carlson said he has known and talked to every president for about 30 years: “I can’t think of any one whose life was improved … I guess if I was the last person on earth who could do it. But that seems pretty unlikely that I would be that guy — you know what I mean? … I’m a talk show host; I enjoy it.”
🍿 Ben Smith, in a fascinating column for the N.Y. Times (subscription), reports that while condemning journalists on the air, Carlson has been a source for many reporters on Trumpworld and Fox internal politics:
I won’t talk here about any off-the-record conversations I may have had with him. But 16 other journalists (none from The Times; it would put my colleagues in a weird position if I asked them) told me on background that he has been, as three of them put it, “a great source.”
3. Tech’s war for your wrist
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Tech’s biggest companies are ramping up competition for the real estate between your hand and your elbow, Axios’ Scott Rosenberg writes.
Why it matters: Hardware transitions only come every decade or two. In the past, they’ve given upstart contenders an opportunity to knock off the Goliaths who dominated the current generation.
The next big hardware platform after the smartphone will likely involve devices for your eyes, your ears and your wrists.
One big challenge for designers of this wearable computer of the future is where to put the central processor and the battery needed to power it. Your forearm looks like the best candidate, right now.
The Foo Fighters reopen Madison Square Garden yesterday.
The concert, with all attendees vaccinated, was the Garden’s first full-capacity event since March 2020.
5. 🎰 The psychology of vaccine lotteries
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
NBA season tickets. Scholarships. A chance at $5 million. The list of lotteries and raffles to drive up COVID-19 vaccination rates is growing, and some local officials are already reporting “encouraging” results, Axios’ Ivana Saric writes.
Nathan Novemsky, a professor of marketing and psychology at Yale University, says that people have a hard time conceiving the odds of winning lotteries — and many tend to overweight the “incredibly low” chances.
Ohio, the first state to announce a “Vax-a-Million” campaign, saw a 94% increase in vaccinations among 16- to 17-year-olds in the week after the initiative launched — the biggest surge for any age group.
6. “Axios on HBO”: HUD secretary on Black homeownership decline
Photo: “Axios on HBO”
Poor enforcement of the Fair Housing Act is to blame for the decline in Black homeownership rates, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Marcia Fudge told me in an interview for “Axios on HBO.”
“That is why we are doing things like homeownership assistance, why we’re addressing the student loan issue, why we’re looking at how credit is distributed,” Fudge said during a visit to her native Cleveland.
“For people of color, especially Black people, homeownership is wealth. It is not only wealth to us, but it is generational wealth.”
United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby told Dan Primack on “Axios on HBO” that America could be headed toward a pilot shortage, because “the military produces far fewer pilots today than they did in the Vietnam and Cold War era.”
Why it matters: With leisure air travel exceeding pre-pandemic levels, the U.S. travel industry must protect itself from future disruptions as it comes roaring back to life.
Senate Energy Committee Chairman Joe Manchin arrives at a hearing last week. Photo: Drew Angerer/Getty Images
In The New Yorker, the great Evan Osnos profiles Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), whose “sudden clout, after an unremarkable decade in national politics, has made him the subject of almost ludicrous attention”:
In Manchin’s laments about radical politics and the pace of change, one could hear the protests of a man standing athwart history, not quite yelling “Stop,” but certainly yelling “Whoa.” If Republicans regain the majority in 2022, his moment of prominence will be over as abruptly as it arrived. What he does until then will determine if the Democratic Party, to which he devoted his career, remembers him as a hero who advanced its goals or as the man who obstructed them. For all of Manchin’s hesitations, politics is changing fast, even in the terrain he calls home.
There are fresh signs that U.S. oilfield activity is increasing alongside the return of demand and higher prices, but don’t look for a return of record pre-pandemic production soon — or maybe ever, Ben Geman writes in Axios Generate.
The number of active U.S. oil rigs rose again last week, the latest increase since COVID-19 significantly lowered oil consumption and prices cratered last year.
10. An athletes’ village like no other
These recyclable cardboard beds, in an idiosyncratic Olympic Village, will greet athletes at the pandemic-delayed Tokyo summer games when they open on July 23, AP reports.
The village consists of 21 residential towers varying from 14 to 18 floors with a total of 3,600 rooms. They’re equipped with 18,000 beds.
The “Fever Clinic” is a prefab complex of isolation rooms where PCR tests will be given to athletes or staff suspected of carrying COVID.
It’s a spot nobody will want to visit — unlike a “casual dining area” that will serve famous Japanese dishes from okonomiyaki (a savory pancake) to rice balls to teppanyaki (dishes cooked on an iron grill).
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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
THE FREE BEACON’S DAILY NEWS BRIEF
Dark Money Groups Fund Liberal Push To Pass Infrastructure Without Republicans
By Collin Anderson
A trove of dark money is behind a liberal campaign to push President Joe Biden to abandon negotiations with Republicans and pass a sweeping infrastructure package filled with partisan priorities. [READ MORE]
REVIEW: ‘The President’s Daughter’ (Large Print) by Bill Clinton and James Patterson
By Andrew Stiles
First and foremost, there are no sex scenes in former president Bill Clinton’s new thriller, The President’s Daughter (Large Print), coauthored with literary oligarch James Patterson. That’s a shame, given the disgraced president’s obvious enthusiasm for all things prurient. If Jimmy Carter can do it, Slick Willy can do it better. Write what you know, as the saying goes. [READ MORE]
Wild Turkey’s Wild Ride
By Victorino Matus
Let me preface that I didn’t write about whiskey in order to get a free bottle of whiskey. Although I tried. Russell’s Reserve 13 Year Old Bourbon is, according to the press release, “one of the boldest, yet smooth, limited-edition bourbons ever.” Ever! Alas, a publicist informs me there were only a few bottles available for sampling, all of them gone. And I’m not about to expense a $70 bottle of booze. Although I tried. [READ MORE]
To Eradicate AIDS, Dems Can Learn a Lot from Republican Presidents
By Tim Rice
Anthony Fauci thinks we can end the AIDS epidemic by 2030. If history is a guide, he may have a better chance of meeting that goal under a Republican president. [READ MORE]
Representatives whose constituents are being held hostage by dictators and terrorists overseas want to put colleagues on alert about the growing problem of the international abduction of Americans through a new congressional task force.
The Nigerian government’s crackdown on Twitter is prompting concerns from national security experts who say it signals insecurity in an African country that could give a foothold to Islamic extremist groups and other foreign influencers.
House Republicans have joined a watchdog complaint against the acting director of the Bureau of Land Management, questioning whether the former environmental activist has improperly given favor to her former employees.
A new economic era has arrived, and it features greater worker power, higher housing costs and very different ways of doing business. Policymakers are also contending with inflation and how Americans will react to high rates.
The Biden administration and its international partners must “wake up” and rethink negotiations with Iran, new Israeli Prime Minister Naftali … Read More
Gov. Greg Abbott’s promise to finish former President Donald Trump’s border wall in Texas will likely be the biggest project the state undertakes during his administration as he simultaneously looks to secure a third term.
Republicans have adopted a harsher tone about the surge of noncitizens coming across the southern border, calling it not just a “border crisis” or a “constitutional crisis” but a “moral crisis” attributable to President Joe Biden.
Sen. Bernie Sanders this week unveiled a proposal to pass a $6 trillion spending package for infrastructure and social programs that even fellow Democrats say is far too expensive.
States across the West are at risk of electricity shortages because an extreme drought is crimping the amount of water used to generate hydropower, a dominant energy source in that part of the country.
Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows thinks you can add Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to the list of Republican presidential hopefuls who won’t run against former President Donald Trump in 2024 should he enter the race.
Former President Donald Trump extended Father’s Day wishes to “Losers” and the “Radical Left” as politicians from across the political spectrum marked the holiday.
The Vatican dismissed the idea of denying Holy Communion to abortion-supporting Catholics, including President Joe Biden, despite a push by a group of U.S. Catholic bishops seeking such a move.
Mark and Patricia McCloskey, the St. Louis couple who days ago pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges for aiming guns at protesters in June 2020 at the height of the protests after George Floyd’s death, have gotten new AR-15-style guns to replace the firearms state authorities will destroy as part of their plea bargains.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
June 21, 2021
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AP Morning Wire
Good morning from Johannesburg. Here’s a look at the top stories from The Associated Press at this hour to start your week. Claudette is regaining strength and expected to return to tropical storm status as it nears the coast of the Carolinas just days after 13 people died due to the storm in Alabama. President Joe Biden is settling in for what appears will be a long, hot summer of working on legislation. Congress is hunkered down, the House and Senate grinding through a monthslong stretch to draft Biden’s big infrastructure proposals into bills that can be signed into law. Perhaps not since the drafting of the Affordable Care Act more than a decade ago has Washington tried a legislative lift as heavy. In India, vaccine hesitancy is putting at risk the country’s gains against the virus. Ethiopia is starting crucial elections amid the conflict in its Tigray region.
Also this morning:
Inflation is accelerating and a top economist says it may become a persistent problem
15 months after closing for the pandemic, Radio City Music Hall is reopening in New York
Brothers set record for highline walk in Yosemite National Park
In golf, Spaniard Jon Rahm’s steady back nine paves way to winning the U.S. Open
ATLANTA (AP) — Claudette was regaining strength early Monday and expected to return to tropical storm status as it neared the coast of the Carolinas just days after 13 people died — including eight children in a multi-vehicle crash — due to the…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — Until recently, the act of governing seemed to happen at the speed of presidential tweets. But now President Joe Biden is settling in for what appears will be a long, summer slog of legislating. …Read More
JAMSOTI, India (AP) — In Jamsoti, a village tucked deep inside India’s most populous state of Uttar Pradesh, the common refrain among the villagers is that the coronavirus spreads only in cities. The deadly infection, they believe, does not exi…Read More
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — Ethiopia was voting on Monday in the greatest electoral test yet for Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed as insecurity and logistical issues meant ballots wouldn’t be cast in more than 100 constituencies of the 547 across the…Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — Two months of sharply rising prices have raised concerns that record-high government financial aid and the Federal Reserve’s ultra-low interest rate policies — when the economy is already surging — have elevated the risk of ac…Read More
SHOW LOW, Ariz. (AP) — Authorities were trying to determine why a 35-year-old man driving a pickup truck plowed into bicyclists during a community road race in Arizona, criti…Read More
Everyone who’s played it, from the late, great Ben Hogan to the guys you get paired with down at the local muni, has probably said it at one time or another: Golf is a game o…Read More
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Two brothers from San Francisco say they have set a record for the longest highline ever walked in both Yosemite National Park and California, the San Fr…Read More
NEW YORK (AP) — Fifteen months after shuttering for the pandemic, New York’s Radio City Music Hall reopened its doors Saturday for the Tribeca Festival premiere of a new Dave…Read More
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Mark Twain
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The Chicago area is waking up to damage from severe weather late Sunday night, including a tornado that touched down in southwest suburban Woodridge and Naperville.
A tornado first hit in Naperville, damaging homes, knocking down power lines and leaving five people injured, one critically, authorities there said Monday morning.
A tornado then touched down in Woodridge, leaving behind a trail of damage but no significant injuries, authorities said. Tribune reporters and photographers will bring you the latest on the damage here today.
The young woman fatally stabbed over the weekend during broad daylight in the city’s Loop was remembered as a brilliant graduate student who was working to complete a doctorate in criminology at the University of Maryland.
Mary Manching felt a disconnect between her Asian American heritage and what she was learning at Northside College Prep.
“I never saw myself represented in the history curriculum,” said Manching, a graduating senior at the selective enrollment high school in the North Park neighborhood.
That classroom gap could soon be a thing of the past after Illinois lawmakers recently approved a measure requiring elementary and high schools to teach a unit on Asian American and Pacific Islander history starting with the 2022-23 school year.
City of the big shoulders, hog butcher for the world, Chicago is looking to add another title for the digital age: cryptocurrency finance center.
From one of the Midwest’s largest cryptocurrency mining facilities to a Chicago-based Bitcoin ATM operator, Illinois is becoming fertile ground for the fast-growing digital asset industry, which has developed from an arcane concept into a booming investment in a little over a decade.
New Bears wide receiver Marquise Goodwin opted out of the 2020 NFL season to protect his wife, Morgan, and infant daughter, Marae, from COVID-19 after the family lost three sons. Now, they’re cheering him on in a city that has special meaning as he tries to lengthen his football career — and qualify for the Olympics in the long jump.
A tornado ripped through the western suburbs late Sunday night, severely damaging homes and knocking out power. No serious injuries were reported.
The tornado touchdown was confirmed about 11:10 p.m. near Route 53 and 75th Street in Woodridge, the NWS said. It also hit portions of Naperville, Downers Grove and Darien. Our reporters have more on the aftermath of the storm…
Balloons and bouquets of flowers were set up Sunday at a memorial for the man, 24, who was with a 25-year-old woman Saturday in the 3200 block of West Division Street when they were attacked by up to three males who fired shots at them.
When Fritzshall was just 13, the Nazis invaded her hometown in Czechoslovakia and sent the young Jew and her family on a train to the Auschwitz concentration camp.
“It is very affirming, it’s liberating,” said 34-year-old Brianna Sharpe at the March for Us rally. “I feel love, I feel peace, I feel joy, this is a really good feeling that I feel.”
She tried repeatedly to report her SUV was stolen, 4 hours in all, repeatedly being hung up on. An emergency 911 operator tried to help. She got hung up on, too — 4 times.
Some parents whose children drowned say they got a false sense of security from having used the ‘puddle jumpers’ and the devices don’t help children learn to swim.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Monday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths as of this morning: 601,825.
As of this morning, 53.3 percent of the U.S. population has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 45.1 percent is fully vaccinated, according to the Bloomberg News global vaccine tracker.
It’s crunch time for infrastructure talks this week as negotiators try to hammer out the details of the nearly $1 trillion bipartisan proposal and await word on whether President Biden will support it.
The G-21 framework, which would spend $979 billion over five years, is backed by 11 Senate Republicans and 10 Senate Democrats, but questions center around the pay-fors in the package. The lion’s share of attention remains on a provision that would index the gas tax to inflation. The White House opposes such a move, which it classifies as a tax increase on middle-class Americans.
Negotiators indicated on Sunday that the ball is in the White House’s court to come up with a new way to pay for the package, which includes $579 billion in new monies.
“We understand that the administration has very strong views on that,” Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) told “Meet the Press” about the provision. “But the administration, therefore, will need to come forward with some other ideas without raising taxes.”
Over eight years, the blueprint includes $1.2 trillion in funding for roads, bridges, broadband and water projects.
The Hill: Portman: Republicans are “absolutely” committed to bipartisan infrastructure bill.
The Sunday Shows: Infrastructure, voting rights in the spotlight.
The New York Times: Bipartisan infrastructure talks collide with Democrats’ goal to tax the rich.
Another key question facing the future of negotiations is where Biden stands. As The Wall Street Journal notes, Biden was set to review the bill over the weekend, having landed back in the U.S. late last week after the first foreign trip of his presidency. Republicans on Sunday called on the president to become more involved in negotiations, which were largely led at the congressional level while Biden was overseas.
“President Biden, if you want an infrastructure deal of a trillion dollars, it is there for the taking, you just need to get involved and lead,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) told “Fox News Sunday.” “You’ve got a Republican party that’s willing to meet you in the middle.”
As The Hill’s Alexander Bolton writes, the ongoing infrastructure discussions are testing his relationship with the party’s liberal base, with the G-21 bill coming under fire from top progressive senators last week. Biden’s support would almost certainly unify the party around the bill, though there are fears in progressive circles that it would make passing the White House’s agenda more difficult overall.
“This is a very stressful moment,” said one Democratic senator who is torn on whether to side with Biden if he endorses the G-21 framework.
The Upshot: Politically, a legislative victory for Biden would be welcomed by many Senate Democrats who are staring down reelection in key states next year, many of whom have already thrown their weight behind the package (The Hill).
The Associated Press: Biden and Congress face a summer grind to create legislation.
The Hill: Graham: Biden has chance to determine legacy with infrastructure negotiations.
> Jan. 6 aftermath: A growing number of GOP lawmakers don’t believe that the Jan. 6 insurrection was actually an insurrection, with nearly two dozen House Republicans having voted against a bill last week to award Congressional Gold Medals to police officers who defended the Capitol that day.
As Cristina Marcos writes, the main rationale behind the “nay” votes was that the bill describes the mob of former President Trump’s backers who were trying to stop Congress from ratifying the election results as “insurrectionists.” The vote also lays bare the uphill climb facing lawmakers to establish a bipartisan commission to investigate the day’s events.
The Hill: Democratic clamor grows for select committee on Jan. 6 attack.
The Hill: House to take big step on eliminating Trump-era rules.
More in Congress … Portman and Graham on Sunday both lobbed criticisms at the Democratic effort to overhaul the election system and voting rights. Portman called a compromise proposal by Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) a “federal takeover of the election system,” while Graham labeled the For the People Act the “biggest power grab” in history (The Hill). … Republicans are drawing red lines as Congress moves toward a debt ceiling fight as early as next month. GOP senators indicate that they won’t provide the 10 votes to raise the debt ceiling without cuts in spending, setting up a high-profile fiscal cliff with dramatic financial implications. Democrats dismiss the GOP threat as “political suicide” (The Hill).
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
The internet has changed a lot since 1996 — internet regulations should too
– Protecting people’s privacy
– Enabling safe and easy data portability between platforms
– Preventing election interference
– Reforming Section 230
LEADING THE DAY
ADMINISTRATION: With U.S. forces set to depart Afghanistan by September, the Biden administration is struggling to spell out how the country will not fall back to Taliban control post-departure.
The U.S. is more than halfway through its troop withdrawal, as The Hill’s Ellen Mitchell notes, with top Pentagon officials maintaining that military operations can still be conducted and carried out from outside Afghanistan if necessary. However, they’ve laid out very few details on logistics, including where those troops would be based. Those lack of specifics came into focus on Friday when the Afghan government’s chief peace envoy warned that the Taliban will not have an interest in reaching a peace agreement with Kabul once U.S. and NATO forces depart the country.
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told the Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday there is a “medium” risk that an extremist group could reemerge the country within two years of the departure of U.S. forces. U.S. Army Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (both seen below), backed up those claims.
“If certain other things happen, if there was a collapse of the government or dissolution of the Afghan security force, that risk would obviously increase,” Milley told the panel.
The Associated Press: New leaders, new era: U.S.-Israel relations reach crossroads.
> Domestic footing: After a trip to Guatemala and Mexico chock full of stumbles, Vice President Harris ventured back to her political comfort zone this week and turned her attention to voting rights and vaccinations.
As The Hill’s Morgan Chalfant and Brett Samuels write, Harris, fresh off the two-nation trip that earned her scores of criticism from the right and even some within Democratic circles, moved swiftly into her element last week and attended events focused on voting rights and vaccine equity. Officials who met with Harris and those close to her say that she is passionate about the two issues and that they gave her a chance to refocus her portfolio after her immigration-focused trip drew friendly fire.
The Hill: Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R): “No damage was done” from Biden’s overseas trip.
The Hill: Fiona Hill: Summit with Biden was ‘a very important’ symbolic win for Putin.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CORONAVIRUS: The U.S. delivered 2.5 million doses of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine to Taiwan on Sunday, tripling the initial pledge made to the island as it deals with a surge of cases since May.
Since the outbreak kicked off, Taiwan’s death toll has grown from only a few dozen to 549 as of Sunday, sending the island scrambling to procure doses of vaccine. Brent Christensen, the U.S.’s top official in Taiwan, said that the shipment is “proof of America’s commitment” to the island (The Associated Press).
The Hill: Jake Sullivan: US will not be issuing “threats or ultimatums” to China in COVID-19 origin investigation.
> Olympic update: The Tokyo Olympics announced on Monday that it will allow 50 percent capacity at its venues, with attendance at any single event capped at 10,000 spectators, when it kicks off in just over a month (The Washington Post).
Only Japanese fans are allowed to attend the games, with those attending events under strict rules. Those attending events must wear masks at all times, may not cheer and will be asked to go straight home afterwards rather than going to a bar or another locale. The decision also goes against the wishes of Shigeru Omi, the top Japanese medical adviser, who recommended holding the games sans fans (The Associated Press).
The news comes amid a continued struggle for Japan to vaccinate the masses. According to Bloomberg News, only 16.5 percent of Japanese residents have received one dose of COVID-19 vaccine, with only 6.4 percent being fully vaccinated.
> State watch: Arizona recorded a small spike in cases this past week when it recorded 641 new cases on Saturday, the highest reported single-day increase in about a month, after largely seeing cases decline. Arizona, not unlike most of the Southern states, is lagging behind the national vaccination rate, as 49 percent of its population has received at least one vaccine shot, compared with 66 percent nationally (The Hill).
The Hill: Anthony Fauci says he puts “very little weight in the craziness of condemning me.”
Politico: COVID-19 broke the CDC. Can Rochelle Walensky fix it?
CNBC: American Airlines cancels hundreds of flights due to staffing crunch, maintenance issues.
*****
POLITICS: A new poll out of Iowa is showing warning signs for Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) as he continues to contemplate whether to seek an eighth term in the upper chamber next year.
According to a new Des Moines Register-Mediacom Iowa poll, nearly two-thirds of voters (64 percent) say that it’s time for someone else to hold the seat, while 27 percent say they would reelect the longtime Iowa senator. Of those who say it’s due time for a new senator, 37 percent are Republicans.
Nevertheless, if Grassley, 88, decides to launch another bid, he remains the heavy favorite to hold on to the seat, which he has occupied since 1981.
> 2022 watch: Republicans have zeroed in on denying Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly (D) a second term in office and have made winning back the governor’s mansion in Topeka a top priority ahead of next year.
As The Hill’s Tal Axelrod writes, the Kansas Democrat caught lightning in a bottle to win three years ago, having run in a good year for Democrats against one of the most deeply flawed GOP general election candidates in recent memory. However, Republicans do not foresee a redux next year, with Democrats readily conceding it will be an uphill climb for Kelly to nab a second term.
“By definition, it’s no better than 50-50. Maybe you might see her favored a little bit if things are really going well, but you also might see her down to almost any Republican who’s not Kris Kobach,” said Burdett Loomis, a professor emeritus at the University of Kansas, who is in touch with top Democrats in the state.
The Hill: New York City voters set to decide on replacement for Cyrus Vance Jr. amid Trump probe.
OPINION
Can Biden save the Democrats from themselves? By Matt Bai, contributing columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3gQKPa1
Dads just want to help, by Arthur C. Brooks, columnist, The Atlantic. https://bit.ly/35KOiS1
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
Why Facebook supports updated internet regulations
2021 is the 25th anniversary of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, the last major update to internet regulation. It’s time for an update to set clear rules for addressing today’s toughest challenges.
The House meets at 9 a.m. for a pro forma session.
TheSenate meets 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 9:50 a.m. Biden will meet with financial regulators to discuss the state of the country’s financial system, among other issues.
The vice president will travel to Pittsburgh. She will be joined by Labor Secretary Marty Walsh.
➔ INTERNATIONAL: Negotiators from Iran and six world powers on Sunday adjourned talks in Vienna aimed at reviving the Iran nuclear deal, with plans to return to their respective governments for consultations. No date for a resumption of the talks has been set, though an envoy from Russia said they may begin again in as little as 10 days. The U.S. is not currently directly engaged in talks (The Hill).
➔ SPORTS: Jon Rahm won his first major championship on Sunday, taking home the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines on Sunday, becoming the first Spaniard to win the tournament in its 121 year history. Rahm, 26, won by one stroke over Louis Oosthuizen in comeback fashion. The win also comes weeks after Rahm was denied a runaway victory at The Memorial, having led the tournament after three rounds before being informed that he tested positive for COVID-19 on June 5 (ESPN).
And finally … The International Space Station received a mini-facelift over the weekend as a pair of astronauts installed the first portion of solar paneling on the orbiting satellite.
French astronaut Thomas Pesquet and NASA astronaut Shane Kimbrough overcame a number of issues, including related to their suits, but were able to unfurl the 63-foot panel and bolt it together in roughly 10 minutes.
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President Biden has not said whether he will support the $974 billion bipartisan infrastructure package negotiated by 10 Democratic and Republican senators.
New this morning — what is the White House waiting for?: White House press secretary Jen Psaki said President Biden is waiting to see more details of the bipartisan infrastructure package before deciding if he will endorse it. https://bit.ly/35GBht2
Why progressives are worried about Biden supporting the package: Progressives are worried that a bipartisan bill would leave out some of their priorities. And if Democrats try to pass a second, supplemental bill to add their priorities, the political capital will have already been spent.
The big question: Will progressives support the bipartisan plan if President Biden endorses it?
“The Senate is poised to leave town for two weeks on Thursday, while the House is in town through next week before leaving until July 19.” https://bit.ly/3gR3sdD
Happy Monday — it is officially summer!! 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
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
The internet has changed a lot since 1996 — internet regulations should too
Via The Washington Post’s Robert Barnes, “The Supreme Court ruled unanimously Monday against the NCAA’s limits on education-related perks for college athletes, upholding a lower court’s decision that was one of the most important in the movement to increase compensation for student-athletes.” https://wapo.st/3cXtjzJ
I.e.: “The court rejected the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s argument that its rules limiting such educational benefits were necessary to preserve the image of amateurism in college sports.”
The Senate is expected to vote on the major election reform bill, known as the For the People Act. https://bit.ly/3gR3sdD
Is it expected to pass?: Nope, it needs 60 votes to pass. Democrats have nowhere near the votes.
The battle Democrats are picking: Voting as a united front on the election bill. But there’s still one holdout: yep, you guessed it: Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.V.)
But the bill is dead anyway — why do Democrats really want Manchin to vote for the bill?: “Democrats are hoping to be able to unite their 50 members in support of it in an effort to put the political spotlight on Republican opposition.”
Is there a chance Manchin will vote with his party?: Yes, there are negotiations taking place. Manchin argues that the bill is too broad.
What it will take to get Manchin on board, via The Hill’s Jordain Carney: https://bit.ly/3gR3sdD
WHAT ELSE IS HAPPENING IN CONGRESS THIS WEEK:
The House is trying to nix Trump-era regulations: “The House is set to nix several Trump-era rules under the Congressional Review Act (CRA), which allows Congress to take aim at recent executive branch rules and regulations.”
^ The three rules House Dems are trying roll back:
War powers: “Congress is set to take another step toward repealing a nearly two-decade-old Iraq War authorization this week.”
And obviously more nominations: The Senate will vote on Christopher Fonzone’s nomination to be general counsel of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and Kiran Ahuja’s nomination to be director of the Office of Personnel Management.
Via The Hill’s Niall Stanage, “The political center is striking back — at least for now.” https://bit.ly/35DvSCH
One example: “Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) has become the most influential member of the Senate, occupying a perch from which he is able to mute his own party’s most ambitious goals.”
Another example: “Former Virginia Gov. TerryMcAuliffe (D), an avatar of Clinton-era centrism, easily defeated a challenge from the left earlier this month to secure the party nomination as he seeks to get his old job back.”
Another example: “New York City Democrats will go to the polls Tuesday with relative moderates holding the advantage over more progressive figures, according to polls.”
Yes, but keep in mind: “The situation in Republican circles is very different, with former PresidentTrump casting a long shadow over the party and his internal critics on the ropes. Still, it is notable that Republicans in both New Jersey and Virginia have recently chosen gubernatorial nominees who were not the most pro-Trump options available.”
Via Vice’s Todd Feathers, “A CCTV Company Is Paying Remote Workers in India to Yell at Armed Robbers: Clerks at 7-Eleven and other convenience stores are being constantly monitored by a voice of god that can intervene from thousands of miles away.” https://bit.ly/3vFjEEd
Why Facebook supports updated internet regulations
2021 is the 25th anniversary of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, the last major update to internet regulation. It’s time for an update to set clear rules for addressing today’s toughest challenges.
The Senate is in. The House is out. President Biden is in Washington, D.C. Vice President Harris is in Pittsburgh.
9:50 a.m. EDT: President Biden received the President’s Daily Brief.
10:05 a.m. EDT: Vice President Harris left for Pittsburgh.
1:45 p.m. EDT: President Biden meets with lead financial regulators for an update on the U.S.’s financial system.
2:30 p.m. EDT: Vice President Harris and Labor Secretary Marty Walsh hold a roundtable as part of the “Task Force on Worker Organizing and Empowerment.”
5:30 p.m. EDT: Vice President Harris returns to Washington, D.C.
1 p.m. EDT Tuesday: The Hill is hosting a virtual event, “Mental Health, Addiction & the COVID-19 Pandemic.” Speakers and how to RSVP: https://bit.ly/3gT2JbW
1 p.m. EDT Wednesday: The Hill is hosting a virtual event, “America’s Unfinished Business: An LGBTQ+ Summit.” Speakers and how to RSVP: https://bit.ly/3jbmJJV
WHAT TO WATCH:
Noon: White House press secretary Jen Psaki holds a press briefing. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3xFYgA2
12:35 p.m. EDT: Vice President Harris delivers remarks on Child Tax Credit Awareness Day. Labor Secretary Marty Walsh will also speak. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3gQBAXd
2:30 p.m. EDT: Defense Department Spokesperson JohnKirby holds a press briefing. Livestream: https://bit.ly/2SIuvjC
IN LIGHTER NEWS:
Today is National Peaches & Cream Day.
And because you’ve read this far, here’s a dog who got the memo that it’s summer — and is really taking it to heart:
ANALYSIS — The slim Democratic majorities that stuck together during the first winter and spring of Joe Biden’s presidency are moving apart as summer nears, clouding how much of his agenda is achievable. Biden isn’t in command of his party like he was in March, and if he can’t forge Democratic unity, neither can his leaders in Congress. Read more…
Donald Trump on Friday officially backed Kelly Tshibaka, a Republican challenging GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski, a frequent Trump critic who voted to convict the former president of inciting an insurrection on Jan. 6. Read more…
Advocates seeking humanitarian protections for undocumented immigrants from Black nations have ramped up calls for action, hoping to raise awareness at a time when the focus of congressional lawmakers has primarily been on the U.S.-Mexico border and migration from Central American countries. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
OPINION — Providing a 3.2 percent pay raise would not only help restore the living standards of federal employees to pre-recession levels, it would also help agencies recruit and retain a high-quality federal workforce, writes Everett Kelley, national president of the American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO. Read more…
In this week’s Hits and Misses: Rep. Jim McGovern says it’s “damn good to be back” for in-person hearings, Sen. Bill Cassidy celebrates Seersucker Day and Sen. Angus King is “demoted from king to chairman.” Watch here…
Senate Democrats are preparing to draft a fiscal 2022 budget resolution with up to $6 trillion in reconciliation spending during the next decade. CQ Roll Call’s Jennifer Shutt and David Lerman break down what this means for bipartisan talks on an infrastructure package and the path through reconciliation. Listen here…
This week saw the return of news conferences in the Ohio Clock Corridor and the (mostly) annual National Seersucker Day celebration. But the capper turned out to be a new law declaring Juneteenth to be a federal holiday, and our photojournalists were there to capture all of these momentous images. Read more…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2021 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
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“Love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant,” (1 Corinthians 13:4, 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.”
Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing Monday then he will attend an economic briefing. President Biden’s Itinerary for 6/21/21: All Times EDT 9:50 AM Receive daily briefing – Oval Office1:45 PM Attend briefing on U.S. economic issues – Oval Office White House Briefing Schedule 12:00 PM White …
Americans have the absolute right to defend themselves, America Herself, their states and their communities from the detrimental effects of illegal immigration and the illegal aliens, who are currently flooding across the border in record numbers. Those of us who love this country have the right and the duty to …
Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. My best pangolin wrangling days are behind me.
Hey, if there are any newer television shows that you have seen and wish would get canceled, just let me know. I’ll start watching and it’ll soon be gone. I am the kiss of death for any show with fewer than three seasons under its belt.
It’s a service I want to provide to the community. You know, give something back.
I feel better already.
We have spent a fair amount of time here in Morning Briefing Land talking about the steaming pile of horse dung that was the 2020 United States presidential election. I’ve been politely employing euphemisms like “irregularities,” and “anomalies,” because they’re easier than repeatedly writing “whatever the hell that was.”
Despite the ongoing efforts of the Democrats and their flying monkeys in the mainstream media to disenfranchise and silence 75 million people, we still keep asking questions about whatever the hell that was. Legitimate questions.
That’s the thing here. Any American truly interested in fair and free elections shouldn’t shy away from examining the kinds of things that happened last year. This, by the way, is different than Stacey Abrams running around acting like she’s the real governor of Georgia because feelings and stuff. There was a lot that went on last November that didn’t pass the smell test.
Last month I wrote about the audit in Maricopa County here in Arizona. I hadn’t been paying that much attention to it and I had just one question: why are the Democrats so afraid of it happening. If, as they claim, there were no “irregularities,” then why not welcome any chance to prove that?
Anything that can be done at this point to assuage the fears that many of us have about something being permanently amiss in our election processes needs to be done. That’s a two-pronged approach. Problems have to be identified, then they have to be corrected via legislation.
The Democrats don’t want any of that, however. Anything that’s being done to clean up last November’s mess is being stonewalled and mislabeled as “voting restrictions,” and, because they’re lazy and not very creative, “Jim Crow.”
Texas Governor Greg Abbott threatened to cut off funding for the legislature after Democrats walked out of the final session to prevent the passage of Abbott’s voter integrity bill.
The governor followed through on that threat yesterday and vetoed the sections of the state budget that fund legislative agencies and pay for lawmakers.
Abbott said in a statement that “Texans don’t run from a legislative fight, and they don’t walk away from unfinished business.”Funding should not be provided for those who quit their job early, leaving their state with unfinished business and exposing taxpayers to higher costs for an additional legislative session.”
That was a nice touch by Abbott there. Texas Dems say what he did was an “abuse of power,” but they didn’t find anything wrong with behaving like school children and shirking their responsibilities.
They’re also having a hissy fit over the fact that the state of Georgia is trying to clean up its voter rolls, which is not an unusual occurrence. In fact, it is something that’s done anywhere election integrity is a concern.
Some of the biggest stink from the last election came out of Pennsylvania, especially the Philadelphia area, which magically delivered the state to Joe Biden. Now it looks like a little bit of audit fever might be catching in the Keystone State:
Pennsylvania state Senator Dave Argall, who chairs the committee in charge of overseeing elections, told the Pennsylvania Capital-Star that a forensic audit was a “very real possibility.”
“There are a lot of things under consideration right now, and I told them to check back in a week or two and we hope to have some more detail,” Argall said regarding a meeting he had with activists who support the audit on Wednesday.
I’m not looking to overturn the 2020 election here. What I want is to ensure that my vote might have a chance of counting in future elections. The real voter suppression in America is being perpetrated by the Democrats who want elections that are almost free of rules that somehow always work out for them at the eleventh hour. They get a couple of those in a row and people like me start to lose sight of the point of voting because it would seem that our votes can’t compete with questionable voter rolls and mail-in ballots that appear out of the ether in just the right amounts to tip the election to the Democrat.
The 2020 election stink is still lingering lo these many months later. It’s time to scrub everything until it goes away.
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
Critical Race Theory Is ‘A Religion Without Grace’ . . . Dr. Voddie Bauchum is the dean of theology at African Christian University in Zambia, but he regularly returns to his native home in America in particular to fight against Critical Race Theory. In his new book, Fault Lines: The Social Justice Movement and Evangelicalism’s Looming Catastrophe, he explores the reasons for what he calls the modern spiritual war. “Things were shifting quickly and deteriorating quickly. And I’m watching families be divided, churches be divided, institutions and schools and denominations be divided over this thing. Arguably, the thing that most makes CRT incompatible with Christianity is that CRT is what Bauchman calls “a religion without grace.” Grace is, of course, the central component of Christianity. Patriot Post
Trump on Critical Race Theory in Schools: ‘A Program for National Suicide’ . . . Former President Donald Trump has weighed in on the national debate over the teaching of Critical Race Theory (CRT) in schools, urging lawmakers and parents across the nation to act against what he called “toxic” and “anti-American” indoctrination. In the op-ed that he wrote on RealClearPolitics, on Friday, Trump called CRT a “twisted doctrine” that is “rooted in the Marxist theory of class struggle, but with a particular focus on race. Trump condemned the proponents of CRT who seek to dismantle American institutions—such as the Constitution and legal system—which they deem to be inherently and irredeemably racist.
“Instead of helping young people discover that America is the greatest, most tolerant, and most generous nation in history, it teaches them that America is systemically evil and that the hearts of our people are full of hatred and malice,” Trump wrote. “Teaching even one child these divisive messages would verge on psychological abuse.” Epoch Times
The former President is 100% correct, CRT is psychological abuse. I was raised in the totalitarian socialist USSR where the communist government indoctrinated us, since kindergarten, in the Marxist- Leninist ideology. They taught us to worship Lenin, whose portrait was on the very first book, Bukvar,’ that a child gets when learning to read.
Psychological confusion sets in around high school years, when you begin to suspect that ‘Grandfather’ Lenin and those bushy eye-browed party leaders you constantly see on TV, may not be such nice people they pretend to be. As you become a teen, your confusion intensifies, especially when your parents instruct you not to believe anything that you hear on TV and at school. But as a teenager, of course, you think that your parents are wrong and you tell on them to your school teachers. The rest of the story varies for everyone, depending on whose influence prevailed on the child, the parents’ (assuming they were not Communists themselves) or the school’s, which was backed-up by ferocious TV and radio propaganda.
My parents did not believe in the Soviet system. It is why they encouraged me and my sister, since young age, to learn English, so we could go to America one day. Both my sister and I, thank God every day that we are here. We are terrified that the destructive ideologies that we fled, socialism and Marxism, are spreading like fire in America now. Our mother was not so lucky. She died in the old country, courtesy of the ‘free’ Soviet socialist healthcare.
Politics
Biden risks break with progressives on infrastructure . . . President Biden’s relationship with his party’s liberal base is being tested by a bipartisan framework on infrastructure spending, which has sparked a revolt from progressives such as Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.). The big question is whether Biden will endorse the bipartisan plan, even though many Democrats are disappointed it leaves out many of their priorities. If Biden throws his weight behind the $974 billion, five-year plan, Democratic strategists predict the party will quickly unify behind him, even if they do so reluctantly. But doing so would scar Biden’s relationship with progressives, who worry the president might fall short on his pledge to deliver big and bold change. The Hill
Dark Money Groups Fund Liberal Push To Pass Infrastructure Without Republicans . . . A trove of dark money is behind a liberal campaign to push President Joe Biden to abandon negotiations with Republicans and pass a sweeping infrastructure package filled with partisan priorities. Two liberal advocacy groups that spearheaded a June letter calling on Biden to sidestep Republicans and secure a “big, bold infrastructure bill” are backed heavily by dark money. One of the letter’s organizers, Invest in America Action, is part of an umbrella organization sponsored by the Hopewell Fund, a dark money behemoth that raked in $84.2 million in anonymous contributions for left-wing causes in 2019. Real Recovery Now!—a coalition of progressive organizations designed to urge Biden to invest big in alternative energy—also organized the letter and has ties to dark money. Washington Free Beacon
Graham on lowering filibuster threshold: ‘Not going to be extorted’ . . . Sen. Lindsey Graham, South Carolina Republican, is not changing his stance on Democrats’ voting bill over threats that Democrats would diminish the Senate filibuster if Republicans do not relent to liberals’ agenda. The filibuster rule requiring 60 votes to pass bills has obstructed liberals’ policy agenda in a Senate divided 50-50 between Republicans and Democrats. Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace asked Mr. Graham if Republicans intent on rejecting the voting bill were risking Democrats responding by lowering the number of votes needed to overcome the filibuster’s barrier from 60 to 55. Washington Times
56 House Republicans Call On Biden To Fire Harris From Border Crisis Role . . . Fifty-six House Republicans are urging President Joe Biden Thursday to remove Vice President Kamala Harris from her role in handling the border crisis. Republican Wisconsin Rep. Glenn Grothman is leading the charge, noted on Twitter that Harris has yet to visit the border. Harris was tapped by Biden to lead the administration’s response to the border crisis in March, and has faced bipartisan criticism for avoiding the border. The administration in turn has declared that her job is solely to focus on the “root causes of migration.” The Republicans, which include Reps. Madison Cawthorn of North Carolina, Louie Gohmert of Texas and Jody Hice of Georgia, express “serious concerns regarding” Harris’s “appointment as” the administration’s leader in solving the crisis. Daily Caller
‘Tip of the spear’: Texas governor leads revolt against Biden . . . In the span of a week, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has signed bills restricting the teaching of critical race theory and allowing Texans to carry handguns without a license. He’s preparing to order state lawmakers back into a special session to pass legislation restricting voting access, a GOP priority. And in the most pugilistic affront to President Joe Biden’s White House yet, he announced Texas will build its own border wall. Less than six months into Biden’s presidency, Texas conservatives are in revolt against the new administration. And Abbott, the often overshadowed governor of the nation’s biggest red state, is emerging as an unlikely leader of the Biden resistance. Politico
How Zuckerberg Money Could Have Led to Biden Victory in Texas . . . Texas lawmakers passed a law restricting use of private money for election administration almost two months after research showed that at least $36 million in grants financed by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg had the potential to alter the state’s political landscape dramatically. Though prompted by the Zuckerberg grants, the new Texas law likely will prevent a flood of private money from multiple sources to pay for running future elections, the sponsor of the measure told The Daily Signal. “Unless we get it stopped, I think we would have seen money coming in from many sources,” state Rep. Phil King, a Republican, said in a phone interview. “Uncontrolled, dark money of this nature is just very, very ripe for corruption.” Daily Signal
National Security
Iran’s New Hard-Line President Poised for Pivotal Role in Nuclear Talks . . . When Iranian diplomats resume talks with Western officials to revive a battered nuclear deal, one name will stand out on the list of individuals Tehran wants removed from the U.S. sanctions list: Ebrahim Raisi, Iran’s president-elect. The 60-year-old hard-line judge, who won Friday’s presidential election in Iran, was sanctioned two years ago by the Trump administration for his close ties to Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. As Iran’s president-elect, Mr. Raisi has emerged in a pivotal role that could determine the fate of the 2015 multination accord. While Mr. Raisi is expected to agree to reimposing constraints on Iran’s nuclear program, he is seen as a more confrontational adversary to the West than his predecessor, current President Hassan Rouhani. Analysts anticipate Mr. Raisi will be even more resistant to American efforts to curtail Iran’s military activities in the Middle East. Wall Street Journal
Israeli PM Naftali Bennett warns US to ‘wake up’ before rejoining Iran nuclear deal . . . Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett warned the US and other nations seeking to rekindle the nuclear agreement with Iran to “wake up” following the election of a hardline judge as the country’s president. Speaking at a televised cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, Bennett said Ebrahim Raisi, a protege of Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, would establish a “regime of brutal hangmen”. “Raisi’s election is, I would say, the last chance for world powers to wake up before returning to the nuclear agreement, and understand who they are doing business with,” said Bennett, who replaced Benjamin Netanyahu last week after the former prime minister failed to form a new government. “A regime of brutal hangmen must never be allowed to have weapons of mass-destruction,” Bennett said. “Israel’s position will not change on this.” New York Post
Western powers reignite Beijing’s anger after G7 and Nato warnings . . . For more than six weeks, Taiwanese military officers wondered where the Chinese fighter jets had gone. During May, only four entered the island’s air defence identification zone. In the first half of this month, there were incursions on only four days and a stretch of nine days without any activity at all. This compared to a previous pattern of as many as 20 incursions a month. But on June 15, a day after US president Joe Biden and other Nato leaders issued a statement condemning China’s “stated ambitions and assertive behaviour”, 20 People’s Liberation Army fighter jets, four nuclear-capable bombers and four additional military aircraft entered Taiwan’s ADIZ. It was the largest number of planes ever dispatched by the PLA into the zone, with some of them also skirting around the southern tip and east coast of the island before turning back. Financial Times
Newt Gingrich: Biden-Putin summit – what Russian leader’s Soviet-KGB mindset means for relations with US . . . After President Biden’s face-to-face meeting with Vladimir Putin in Geneva last week, I couldn’t help but think of my trip to Russia in 1993. I was on a congressional delegation visiting Moscow when Boris Yeltsin was president and the West had great hopes for a more open, democratic Russia. I went to see the then-vice president, who was an air force general, in his office. One entire wall of the room was a map of the Soviet Union. Being cheerfully ignorant, I said to him, “Gosh, that’s a map of the Soviet Union.” He looked at me and he responded, “Yes, and that’s what it’ll look like again.” Putin himself has expressed similar sentiments, calling the collapse of the Soviet empire the “greatest geopolitical catastrophe” of the 20th century. Fox News
Newt gets it.
International
Tokyo Olympics to Allow Spectators at Summer Games . . . The Summer Olympics in Tokyo will include up to 10,000 Japanese spectators at each event, organizers said, despite advice by leading doctors that the Games would be safer without crowds. Monday’s decision clears up the final major uncertainty about the Games ahead of the opening ceremony on July 23. Officials said in March that foreign spectators wouldn’t be permitted to travel to Japan to attend the Olympics. Guidelines released by the International Olympic Committee and Tokyo organizers said venues could be filled up to 50% capacity, with a maximum of 10,000 spectators at each event. Plans could change if infections in Japan rise sharply, they said. “If the situation becomes very dire, we would have to hold the Games without spectators,” Tokyo 2020 President Seiko Hashimoto said. Wall Street Journal
Taliban says they are committed to Afghanistan peace talks . . . The Taliban on Sunday said they are committed to peace talks, and want a “genuine Islamic system” in Afghanistan. “We understand that the world and Afghans have queries and questions about the form of the system to be established following withdrawal of foreign troops,” Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, co-founder of the Taliban in Afghanistan said in a statement. “A genuine Islamic system is the best means for solution of all issues of the Afghans,” he added. “Our very participation in the negotiations and its support on our part indicates openly that we believe in resolving issues through (mutual) understanding.” Officials have said the Taliban has not yet submitted a peace proposal upon which talks could be started. The Hill
And of course, when Taliban says something, they mean it.
Sullivan says US preparing more Russia sanctions over Navalny . . . National security adviser Jake Sullivan on Sunday said the U.S. is preparing to impose additional sanctions on Russia over the poisoning of opposition leader Alexei Navalny. On CNN “State of the Union,” Sullivan told Dana Bash that the Biden Administration has sanctioned Russia for the poisoning of Alexei Navalny. “We rallied European allies in a joint effort to impose costs on Russia for the use of a chemical agent against one of their citizens on Russian soil. And we are preparing another package of sanctions to apply in this case as well.” Sullivan also noted President Biden had already signed an executive order that would give him even more leeway to impose penalties against Russia if they continued to engage in similar activities. The Hill
This time, sanctions will work on Putin. Promise.
Coronavirus
Fauci denies scientists ‘deliberately suppressed’ lab theory . . . Dr. Anthony Fauci claimed Wednesday on “CBS This Morning” that scientists did not “deliberately” suppress information regarding theories that the coronavirus originated from a laboratory. “If you go back then, even though you lean towards feeling this is more likely a natural occurrence, we always felt that you gotta keep an open mind — all of us. We didn’t get up and start announcing it, but what we said, ‘Keep an open mind and continue to look.’ So I think it’s a bit of a distortion to say that we deliberately suppressed that,” Fauci said. Fox News
Can’t believe this clown is still allowed on TV.
Money
Biden’s tax proposal means that 60% of Americans could pay more . . . President Biden repeatedly pledged during the 2020 campaign to not raise taxes for Americans earning less than $400,000, but a new analysis suggests that nearly 60% of taxpayers would pay more under his proposals. Findings from the Tax Policy Center, a nonpartisan think tank based in Washington, show that while most of Biden’s proposed tax increases would be paid by those earning more than $800,000 annually, a small burden would also be borne by some middle-income families. Three-quarters of households earning between $75,000 and $100,000 annually would face pay an additional $440 per year in taxes under Biden’s tax hikes, according to the data. Fox Business
IRS denies tax-exempt status to Christian nonprofit group because ‘Bible teachings are typically affiliated with the Republican Party’ . . . The Internal Revenue Service denied a Christian nonprofit group tax-exempt status because the Bible’s “teachings are typically affiliated with” the GOP and its candidates.
“Specifically, you educate Christians on what the Bible says in areas where they can be instrumental including the areas of sanctity of life, the definition of marriage, biblical justice, freedom of speech, defense, and borders and immigration, U.S. and Israel relations,” read a letter from IRS Exempt Organizations Director Stephen Martin to Christians Engaged, a nonprofit group seeking tax-exempt status. “The Bible teachings are typically affiliated with the [Republican Party] and candidates. This disqualifies you from exemption under IRC Section 501(c)(3).” Washington Examiner
You should also know
After Being Forced To Forfeit Their Guns, The McCloskeys Show Off A New AR-15 . . . Mark McCloskey posted a picture Sunday showing he and his wife Patricia aren’t giving up their guns quite easily. McCloskey debuted the new AR-15 with the caption, “Check out my new AR.” The McCloskeys pleaded guilty Thursday to misdemeanor charges. They agreed to forfeit the specific guns they brandished on their property in June 2020 after a group of Black Lives Matter protesters marched past their homes. Mark pleaded guilty to misdemeanor fourth-degree assault and received a $750 fine, while his wife, Patricia, pleaded guilty to misdemeanor harassment and received a $2,000 fine. Daily Caller
Guilty Pleasures
Nation’s Libertarians Renew Push For 365 Federal Holidays A Year . . . After the passing of Juneteenth as a federal holiday, the libertarians of the nation are renewing their push for 365 federal holidays a year. “We’re glad the federal government will not be working one more day — but it’s not enough,” said local libertarian man Jake Fluglehorn of Idaho. “We will not rest until the federal government has a holiday every single day of the year.” Kinda-libertarian Rand Paul formally introduced the bill into Congress today, proposing a day off every day of the year for everyone working in the executive, legislative, and judicial branches, as well as anyone working for any of the hundreds of unconstitutional bureaucracies. In order to pass their agenda, libertarians have had to come up with more holiday ideas, proposing, among others, the following:
Dank Kush Day
Bitcoin Day
Shoot Your Firearms Up Into The Air Day
Punch A Grizzly Bear Day
End the Fed Day
Throw Commies Out Of Helicopters Day
The whole month of August will be taken off for Ron Paul’s birthday
Should the measure pass, the federal government will have to get everything done on the only non-federal holiday every four years: February 29. Babylon Bee
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The Morning Dispatch: Catholic Bishops Vote to Clarify Church Teaching
Plus: Ebrahim Raisi wins the Iranian presidential election.
The Dispatch Staff
2 min ago
Happy Monday! What a great weekend of playoff basketball. Congratulations to readers (and Dispatch interns) who root for the Milwaukee Bucks or Atlanta Hawks.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
Iranian judiciary chief Ebrahim Raisi won the presidency over the weekend in an election featuring uncharacteristically low turnout after several candidates dropped out or were otherwise disqualified. He was sanctioned by the United States in 2019 for his role in Iranian executions dating back decades.
Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Denis McDonough announced Saturday that the VA plans to reverse its 2013 ban on offering gender-reassignment surgery for veterans through its health care coverage.
Jon Rahm, 26, won the U.S. Open on Sunday, marking his first major victory on the PGA Tour.
The United States confirmed 3,894 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 0.84 percent of the 464,191 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 85 deaths were attributed to the virus on Sunday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 601,826. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 12,879 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 848,611 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 177,088,290 Americans having now received at least one dose.
Catholic Bishops Vote to Clarify Church Teaching
The United States’ Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) held its annual Spring General Assembly last week, coming together (virtually) to discuss and vote on nine “action items,” including “the development of a new formal statement and comprehensive vision for Native American/Alaska Native Ministry” and “the approval of three translations by the International Commission on English in the Liturgy (ICEL) for use in the dioceses of the United States.”
If that agenda didn’t already give it away, this meeting is usually fairly pedestrian—and not particularly newsworthy. But one USCCB action item—passed Friday in a 168-55 vote—is generating headlines and stirring up a schism between the American Catholic Church and the Vatican: “The approval of the drafting of a formal statement on the meaning of the Eucharist in the life of the Church.”
The Eucharist—or Holy Communion—dates back to the Last Supper, and is a hugely important sacrament in the Catholic tradition. Through the power of the Holy Spirit, Catholics believe, bread and wine are consecrated by a priest during Mass and literally become the body and blood of Jesus Christ in a process referred to as “transubstantiation.”
Part of the rationale for last week’s action item is public polling indicating fewer and fewer Catholics in the United States imbue the Eucharist with the significance that American clergy maintain it deserves: Only half the U.S. Catholics who responded to a 2019 Pew Research survey knew the church’s teaching on transubstantiation, and nearly 7 in 10—including more than 40 percent of those who were aware of the church’s teaching—view the bread and wine they consume at Mass as mere symbols of Jesus’ body and blood.
The text of the statement that was approved last week is not yet public—and likely won’t be until the fall—but the Jesuit America Magazine reported on a proposal that was circulated among bishops last month. “In light of recent surveys,” the proposal reads, “it is clear that there is a lack of understanding among many Catholics about the nature and meaning of the Eucharist.”
As expected, Ebrahim Raisi, a hardline cleric and current head of Iran’s judiciary, won the presidency Friday after concentrated efforts by the regime to eliminate his opponents through mass disqualifications and pressured drop-outs. But with reported voter turnout falling to just shy of 49 percent—a record low and a figure likely inflated by Tehran’s interior ministry—the election revealed the strength of opposition campaigns to boycott an election widely considered fraudulent.
In many ways, Raisi’s victory and behind-the-scenes support from Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei came in response to a growing chorus of Iranian voices within and outside the country calling for regime change. With about 40 years of experience prosecuting Iran’s political opposition, Raisi is the perfect candidate to intimidate dissenters and squash domestic unrest.
Charlotte detailed his bloodstained rap sheet, and spoke to a survivor of his political persecution, in a story on Friday.
During his two years at the helm of Iran’s judiciary, Raisi has expanded the scope of the death penalty, wielding the sentence as a tool of repression against dissenting political voices and ethnic and religious minorities.
…
But Raisi staked his claim to notoriety long before he became involved in national politics. As prosecutor of Hamedan, he led his province in the torture and execution of thousands of political prisoners in the 1980s. Between July and December 1988, the state carried out the systematic killings of dissidents, activists, militants, mothers, and children imprisoned across Iran. Hussein-Ali Montazeri, deputy supreme leader-turned-dissident, named Raisi as one of the four officials intimately involved.
Estimates vary, but reports indicate that more than 30,000 prisoners were extrajudicially killed over the course of only five months, the majority of whom belonged or had ties to the People’s Mujahedin Organization of Iran (often abbreviated as ‘MEK,’ borrowing from the Farsi transliteration).”
As American and Iranian envoys stall in their indirect negotiations to revive the 2015 Iran Nuclear Deal, Raisi’s orchestrated elevation to office threatens to derail their efforts. Raisi was sanctioned by the U.S. government in 2019 for his role in the 1988 massacre and suppression of 2009 protests; his ascension to the presidency will complicate the Biden administration’s effort to portray the regime as engaging in good-faith diplomacy.
Although none of President Biden’s own children or grandchildren have been appointed to positions within the White House, at least five children of his top aides—White House counselor, deputy chief of staff, director of presidential personnel—have thus far secured jobs in the fledgling administration, Sean Sullivan and Michael Scherer report in the Washington Post. Good-government advocates are speaking up. “While it may not be as bad as appointing your son or daughter to a top government post as Trump did with Jared and Ivanka, it is still bad,” Walter Shaub—former director of the Office of Government Ethics— said. “‘Not as bad as Trump’ cannot be the new standard.”
In a deeply reported piece for Politico, Zack Stanton looks at the GOP’s decade-long collapse in suburban Oakland County, Michigan, and what it says about the party’s ability to build toward the future. “These key suburban populations are mostly white but increasingly diverse, highly educated and relatively affluent,” Stanton writes. “They aren’t scared by immigration; they support it in their own communities—especially with highly skilled immigrants, attracted to work at businesses lured to these suburbs, in many cases, by business-minded Republican politicians. They are repelled by white-grievance politics and culture-war clashes, and concerned about the rise of violent right-wing anti-government plots, like the Jan. 6 insurrection and the thwarted plan to kidnap and execute Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. They used to think of themselves as Republicans, but nowadays the GOP seems disconnected from the things they care about; it talks less about affordable child care or student debt than banning transgender student athletes or making it harder to vote.”
The era of exit polls has obscured the differences between Evangelical and fundamentalist strains of Christianity—but those differences are key to understanding last week’s Southern Baptist Convention meeting, David argues in his Sunday French Press. “Fundamentalists often express a deep discomfort with pluralism and experience a constant sense of emergency,” he writes. “Someone is always pulling on a thread of the faith somewhere, and pull hard enough on any thread, and you risk unraveling the entire fabric. Political disputes assume outsize importance. Political differences become intolerable.”
When Juneteenth became a federal holiday last week, a vocal minority on the right lambasted it as—in Charlie Kirk’s words—“an affront to the unity of July 4th.” Jonah doesn’t buy it. In Friday’s G-File, he explores why Americans should welcome the opportunity to celebrate emancipation. “It’s a common argument among conservatives to point out that the remarkable thing about slavery in America is not that we had it, but that we got rid of it,” he writes.
On Friday’s Dispatch Podcast, Mo Elleithee—a longtime Democratic operative and executive director of the Georgetown Institute of Politics and Public Service—joined Sarah and Chris Stirewalt to break down the results of the latest GU Battleground Poll. They talk about the implications of voters’ concerns about division, the nuanced differences between attitudinal and issue polling, and how the parties’ messaging on issues they respectively “own” are shaping political dynamics heading into the midterms.
In his latest Vital Interests newsletter (🔒), Thomas Joscelyn breaks down what he sees as the biggest takeaways from last week’s Biden/Putin summit. “What did the summit accomplish?” he asks. “Not much. But that wasn’t its purpose. The Biden administration saw this as an opportunity to open up what it calls a ‘strategic stability dialogue.’ The first purpose of this dialogue is to prevent a war—nuclear or otherwise —from accidentally erupting between the two nations. The diplomatic and military channels are also intended to lay the groundwork for ‘future arms control’ talks, as well as other ‘risk reduction measures.’”
Guy Denton caught up with George Will recently, resulting in a lovely piece about the longtime conservative columnist’s political evolutions. “Some conservatives will be delighted by the direction Will’s philosophical journey has taken in recent years,” Denton writes. “Others will resent it, preferring instead to savor his more Burkean writings of days past. Progressives, meanwhile, may only read any of his work for the sake of acquainting themselves with ideas antipodal to their own. Perhaps this is what makes Will’s career so endearing: Anyone, regardless of persuasion, can derive inspiration from it.”
On the site today, Chris Stirewalt pens a tribute to West Virginia to mark the 158th anniversary of its creation. As with Juneteenth, which was celebrated as a federal holiday for the first time, the occasion is a symbol of the triumph over slavery that the Civil War represented.
Since the Biden administration appears set on reentering the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, John Hannah looks at ways Biden’s national security team could assuage critics of the deal here at home and abroad.
Vijeta Uniyal “President Joe Biden’s administration is pressing ahead to restore the Iran nuclear deal a day after regime-favored candidate Ebrahim Raisi was declared the winner of the Friday’s sham presidential election. As Biden White House negotiators on Sunday resumed the European Union-sponsored talks in Austria’s capital Vienna, the top Iranian negotiator, country’s Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, is confident that a deal can be inked soon. Biden Admin Renews Push For Nuclear Deal With Iran After Mass Executioner Raisi’s Presidential Win“
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COVID-related Lockdowns Devastated Low-Wage Earners
Recent data from Harvard University, Brown University and the Gates Foundation showed how much of a hit the COVID-related lockdowns took on working Americans while leaving higher earners better off. From the Foundation for Economic Education:
“Employment for lower-wage workers, defined as earning less than $27,000 annually, declined by a whopping 23.6 percent over the time period. Employment for middle-wage workers, defined as earning from $27,000 to $60,000, declined by a modest 4.5 percent. However, employment for high-wage workers, defined as earning more than $60,000, actually increased 2.4 percent over the measured time period despite the country’s economic turmoil.
The data are damning. They offer yet another reminder that government lockdowns hurt most those who could least afford it.”
Americans are starting to do better financially, at least in earnings, though inflation may eventually tell a different story. It’s not surprising that “Cuomo-nomics” is making New York lag behind as the rest of the country reopens. From Just the News:“New York City continues to be the main drag on the statewide numbers. According to the DOL, the city’s unemployment rate was 10.9% for the month. That’s down from 11.4% in April, but outside of the nation’s largest city, the rest of the state reported a 5.5% unemployment rate for May.
DOL data does show that the state is regaining the jobs it lost more than a year ago due to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the job recovery is happening slower than the COVID-caused freefall.”
Over the weekend, eight states ended the additional COVID-related unemployment benefits. From Fox Business:
“The average state unemployment benefit is about $330 per week. With the federal supplement, Americans are receiving about $630 in weekly unemployment benefits. (For comparison’s sake, that’s about $32,000 annually, or roughly double the nation’s minimum wage.)
But as the economy reopens, companies have complained about a lack of available workers. Labor Department data from April and May shows anemic job growth well below economists’ expectations.”
More Weekend Reads
“The great resignation”: Upwards of 40% of workers are thinking about quitting their jobs (Axios)
Americans Get Complacent Amid Slow Return To Post-Lockdown Normalcy (The Federalist)
What My Dad Taught Me, His Daughter, About Manhood — And Why It Matters (The Federalist)
‘We’re Not in Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood Anymore’
The “woke” children’s books have been around for awhile and during the Trump years were dominated by Trump Derangement Syndrome (with one notable exception I loved). Christian Toto has several examples in his latest piece for Real Clear Investigations and American Greatness, including binary and transgender characters on “She-Ra and the Power of Princess,” NBC/YouTube show called “Too Loud” featuring a trans girl, and a Netflix series called “Antiracist Baby.” More from Toto:
“Parents and activists who endorse today’s message-laden TV fare say it continues the didactic mission of classic kids’ shows such as “Sesame Street” and “Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood” by teaching the eternal values of kindness and empathy in a modern setting.
But other parents and conservative activists aren’t having it. “Modern entertainment in no way reflects Mr. Rogers’ lessons of being a good person,” says Julie Gunlock, the Center for Progress and Innovation director for the conservative-oriented Independent Women’s Forum.
“Children don’t need to be learning about sexuality from either perspective, like same-sex attraction or gender identity,” says Emilie Kao, director of the Richard and Helen DeVos Center for Religion and Civil Society at the Heritage Foundation. “They’re not at an age where sexuality is appropriate for them . . . or they’re even interested in it.”
What I’m Reading This Week
From atop a mountain in Winchester, Virginia, I’m reading yet another chicklit family drama in a beach town. From the description of The Forever Summer by Jamie Brenner:
“When a DNA test reveals long-buried secrets, three generations of women reunite on Cape Cod for the homecoming of a lifetime. Marin Bishop has always played by the rules, and it’s paid off: at twenty-eight she has a handsome fiancée, a prestigious Manhattan legal career, and the hard-won admiration of her father. But one moment of weakness leaves Marin unemployed and alone, all in a single day. Then a woman claiming to be Marin’s half-sister shows up, and it’s all Marin can do not to break down completely. Seeking escape, Marin agrees to a road trip to meet the grandmother she never knew she had. As the summer unfolds at her grandmother’s quaint beachside B&B, it becomes clear that the truth of her half-sister is just the beginning of revelations that will change Marin’s life forever.”
A Case of the Mondays
Boy sells Pokémon cards to save sick dog: ‘I don’t want Bruce to die’ (The New York Post)
I’ve been doing a Yoga with Adriene every day for over a year now and while I really enjoy her personality and style, I’m also there for glimpses of her Blue Heeler, Benji. Needless to say I was excited to see that Benji got his very own feature — Benji is One Down Dog (Texas Monthly)
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Jun 21, 2021 01:00 am
Aside from the medical and scientific community having blood on their hands over politicizing the biggest medical calamity of our time, their future credibility is shot. Read More…
Jun 21, 2021 01:00 am
A New Jersey Board of Education in Randolph, N.J. removed Columbus Day from their school’s calendar and replaced it with “Indigenous Peoples Day.” Read More…
Jun 21, 2021 01:00 am
America’s leftist universities are indoctrinating, not teaching, and they intend to keep it that why by deliberately excluding qualified conservatives. Read More…
Biden, Trump and the courts: Who’s the ‘lawless’ one?
Jun 21, 2021 01:00 am
Remember the early months of the Trump administration when a series of court decisions hamstrung the president’s ability to implement policies nationwide? Biden’s track record in the courrts is at least as bad. Read more…
The Daily Mail headline: ‘Trump was RIGHT!’
Jun 21, 2021 01:00 am
I’ll tell you why he was just proven right again, but want to note here that we’re getting used to those headlines in the six months since he’s left the White House. Read more…
From mothers to birthing people
Jun 21, 2021 01:00 am
Day after day, from attacking our history to attempting to destroy those things that unite us, the crazy left is pushing the Democrats closer to the edge of the cliff. Read more…
We Jews must set our own narrative
Jun 21, 2021 01:00 am
Much of the support of or opposition to the Jewish people stems from factors totally unrelated to actual Jewish behavior Read more…
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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott followed through on a promise to defund the Texas Legislature after Democratic lawmakers staged a walkout to protest legislation meant to strengthen election integrity. The bill was championed by Republicans, including Abbott.What is the background?During the final moments of a legislative session in late M … Read more
If an incredibly diverse film featuring woke politics and broad representation both in front of and behind the camera can’t satisfy the mob, nothing will.
While many adults believe U.S. public schools keep religion out of the classroom, that era ended with their childhoods, says two-time U.S. Attorney General William Barr.
At the behest of partisan Democrats, the organization created to protect us all from another 9/11 will now turn its forces and energy on American civilians.
The political left has a misogyny problem. For all the trumpeting of women’s rights, leftist policies frequently demean, disempower, or even endanger women.
This year, the nation’s largest Protestant body focused on three interrelated issues: the aftermath of Russell Moore’s resignation, the denomination’s presidency, and critical race theory.
Left-wing activists and reporters were quick to blame Gov. Ron DeSantis for an automobile accident as an act of anti-LGBT ‘terrorism’ before the facts came out.
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
Monday, June 21, 2021
by Linda Noakes
Hello
Here’s what you need to know.
The U.S. extends travel restrictions at land borders, bitcoin tumbles 10%, and political upheaval in Sweden
Today’s biggest stories
People participate in ‘Solstice in Times Square: Mind Over Madness Yoga’, June 20, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
U.S.
The fundraising arm of the Republican Party raised less money in May than its Democratic counterpart but spent more, shelling out millions on efforts to win back Congress, as well as $175,900 at former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort.
Severe thunderstorms tore through the Chicago area after the National Weather Service said a “confirmed large and extremely dangerous tornado” had touched down in a western suburb of the city.
The driver of a pickup truck that hit two pedestrians at the start of a gay pride parade in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, was a 77-year-old participant in the event, police said.
A supporter holds a copy of the Apple Daily newspaper during a court hearing outside West Magistrates’ Courts in Hong Kong, June 19, 2021. REUTERS/Lam Yik
Ethiopians are voting in national and regional elections that the prime minister has billed as proof of his commitment to democracy after decades of repressive rule in Africa’s second-most populous nation.
Bitcoin tumbled almost 10% as recent volatility in the cryptocurrency market showed no signs of dampening down, with market players citing jitters over China’s expanding crackdown on bitcoin mining in thin liquidity for the losses.
Billionaire investor William Ackman’s Pershing Square Tontine Holdings signed a deal to buy 10% of Universal Music Group, Taylor Swift’s label, for about $4 billion.
Goldman Sachs has launched its transaction bank in Britain, expanding the business after launching in the United States last year as it looks for steadier sources of revenue beyond its investment bank.
Amazon and Apple are the world’s most valuable brands but Chinese brands are rising up the leaders list and are more valuable than Europe’s top brands, according to a global ranking by Kantar’s BrandZ.
Quote of the day
“We acknowledge that gender identity in sport is a highly sensitive and complex issue requiring a balance between human rights and fairness on the field of play”
Asylum seeker celebrates family reunion in the U.S.
There was one word that rolled off migrant Andy Molina’s tongue as he spoke about plans to reunite with his wife and son after two years of separation: “happy.”
A new study shows coelacanths boast a lifespan about five times longer than previously believed – roughly a century – and that females carry their young for five years, the longest-known gestation period of any animal.
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The supposed expert on racism somehow never saw that simple question coming. And his fumbling around trying to answer the question was literally uncomfortable to watch. Read more…
The United Kingdom-based Christian Concern has written to the government’s Committee on Standards in Public Life to request an investigation into how a “diversity” campaign is damaging public institutions….Read more…
‘Make no mistake about it, these bills are constructed in a manner that allows governments to confiscate individuals’ firearms based on flimsy accusations coming from acquaintances, ex-partners with an axe to grind, neighbors, doctors, and school teachers.’Read more…
America’s Frontline Doctors are a group of physicians known for promoting proven treatments for COVID-19 such as hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin. Their scientific data, facts and credentials are indisputable.
So why do they suddenly find themselves censored from the highest quarters in the land? … Read more…
An organization called Teens Take Charge, which is made up of student activists, likely is violating federal tax law by publicly opposing candidates for office, a report says. The organization…Read more…
‘President Biden, Madame Harris and members of Congress: the American flag has been hijacked as code for a specific belief. God bless those believers, they can have it.’Read more…
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45.) CONSERVATIVE BRIEF
HOTTEST STORIES TODAY
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MASSIVE Discovery – 100,000 Voters in Swing State
More drama in the battleground state.
Hunter Biden Caught – Chinese Government Official Exposes Secrets To US
This is crushing news for the Bidens.
Extortion Scheme Exposed – Graham Outs Democrats
Graham is not backing down.
Biden Caved To Putin – Now Faces Consequences
They cannot hide how weak Biden was.
Lawmakers Slam Kamala – Send Biden Notice ‘Demanding Her Removal’
Things have reached a tipping point.
Dem Mayor Unveils Reparations Plan – George Soros’s Filthy Hands All Over It
Soros has taken over.
Trey Gowdy Makes Big Announcement – Pelosi Could Be OUT
This is going to rock D.C.
GOD BLESS AMERICA!
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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47.) ABC
June 21, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
US keeps close eye on Iran after new president comes to power: As Ebrahim Raisi became Iran’s president-elect over the weekend, National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan told ABC News’ “This Week” on Sunday that the U.S. is staying the course on negotiations to reinstate the Iran Nuclear Deal. “Our paramount priority right now is to prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon,” said Sullivan. “We’re going to negotiate in a clear-eyed, firm way with the Iranians to see if we can arrive at an outcome that puts their nuclear program in a box.” Raisi — who won the Islamic Republic’s presidential election with a landslide margin on Friday — has been criticized for his ideology and political ambitions over the decades. At just 20 years old, he became a prosecutor of Karaj, a city in Iran, which some say he was unqualified for and quickly moved up to the role of deputy prosecutor of the revolutionary court of Tehran. Historians said he was brought into the judiciary to quickly settle cases, mostly by issuing execution sentences. In 2019, the Trump administration sanctioned him for alleged abuses in the 1988 mass executions of prisoners who were mostly affiliated with the left and communist political groups and parties. Now that he is president, some say Americans can expect more fiery rhetoric from him. Sullivan says there’s also still a way to go before a nuclear deal is reached. “There is still a fair distance to travel on some of the key issues including on sanctions and on the nuclear commitments that Iran has to make,” said Sullivan. “But the arrow has been pointed in the right direction.”
Crash kills 10 in Alabama, including 9 children: As Tropical Storm Claudette drenched the Southeast, weather conditions became deadly for those on the roads. On Saturday, nine children were among 10 people killed in a horrific Alabama interstate crash that involved 18 vehicles, including two tractor-trailer rigs, and a bus from a home for abused, neglected and abandoned girls, authorities said. The crash occurred about 2:30 p.m. on Interstate 65 in Butler County, Alabama, and was described to ABC News by Butler County Sheriff Danny Bond as a “domino effect” crash. The Butler County coroner said one of the vehicles that set off the chain-reaction crash is believed to have hydroplaned on the wet pavement. Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey said the devastating crash marked a “tragic day” for Alabama. “My heart goes out to the loved ones of all who perished during the storm,” Ivey wrote on Twitter. In addition to the crash, Birmingham Fire and Rescue in Alabama told ABC News there were 41 water rescues in the city due to people trying to drive through standing water. Heavy rain and high winds also hit the Atlanta area. A tropical storm warning is in effect for North Carolina and South Carolina.
American Airlines cancels hundreds of flights amid staffing, maintenance issues: Hundreds of American Airlines flights have been canceled this weekend and Monday because of significant staffing and maintenance issues. As of Sunday afternoon, 123 flights were canceled Saturday, 178 on Sunday and 97 were canceled for Monday — largely because of a high number of sick calls, combined with maintenance and other staffing issues. American Airlines said cancellations could continue with at least 50 to 60 flights per day for the rest of June and 50 to 80 flights per day through July. American said it will attempt to notify customers far in advance of their flights and provide an opportunity for customers to rebook on alternative flights.
Grandfather with Alzheimer’s gives Navy-bound grandson his 1st salute: When Nicholas Allen, 22, graduated from Cornell University last month, he had hoped his grandfather, Gail Allen, would be able to be there to watch him be commissioned in the U.S. Navy. Nicholas Allen, who is going to nuclear power school with the goal of working on a Naval submarine, said he grew up hearing stories of his grandfather’s own service in the Navy and was inspired by him to join the military, too. But when Gail Allen was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease last year, he couldn’t make the trip. Instead, Nicholas Allen decided to go to his grandfather in South Carolina to do his first salute, a military tradition in which a newly pinned officer receives their first salute from an enlisted service member. The moment that Gail Allen gave his grandson his first salute was photographed and shared in a viral LinkedIn post.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Chlöe of Chloe x Halle joins us live for our Summer Concert Series to perform her rendition of Nina Simone’s “Feeling Good.” Plus, former Bachelorette Desiree Hartsock joins us to talk about her new book, “The Road to Roses.” And comedian Jim Gaffigan is dishing on his role in the Pixar movie, “Luca.” All this and more only on “GMA.”
Today we are looking at how Democratic progressives are about to hit another wall in their push to break the Senate filibuster rule. And how parents hoping for a kindergarten re-do are facing resistance from educators.
Plus you can take the prince out of Buckingham Palace, but you can’t take the palace out of the prince: Harry and Meghan’s ongoing branding battle.
While moderate Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema have been the most vocal about opposing rewriting the rules of the Senate, the worst kept secret in Washington is that they are not alone.
Numerous other Democrats have indicated in interviews that they are reluctant to kill the filibuster.
It’s a harsh reality check for progressives — both inside the Senate and outside — who had hoped their party might be provoked into nuking the filibuster so that the Biden administration’s legislative agenda could get passed with a simple majority.
Educators are bracing for the possibility this fall that many families may want to “redshirt” their children, holding kindergarteners back for a grade after what many feel was a wasted year. But educators are trying to tamp down any panic among parents and convince them not to hold back their kids.
Venues will be limited to 50 percent capacity, with up to 10,000 domestic spectators able to attend events when the games open next month, officials said Monday.
Despite the Russian government’s anti-gay restrictions and the country’s conservative views on LGBTQ issues, there are signs that some LGBTQ Russians are now publicly sharing their identities and forming communities.
Iran just elected Elbrahim Raisi president. But the U.S. should not overlook the Iranian judge’s long and brutal political rise that included serving on a so-called “death commission” that condemned at least 4,000 political prisoners — including the author’s uncle.
As the couple forges a new and unprecedented path, their words and work are casting the British royal family in a different light. “Whether they like it or not, they still seem to represent the monarchy,” said one expert. “He’s still Prince Harry. He’s still the grandson of the queen.”
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: Here are three questions New York’s mayoral primary will answer on Tuesday
There are three major questions we have about New York City’s crowded Democratic mayoral primary on Tuesday.
One, just how potent is the issue of crime in the city, especially with frontrunner Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams (who’s a former cop) making it a major part of his campaign?
REUTERS/Eduardo Munozv
“[A]mid a rise this spring in shootings, jarring episodes of violence on the subways, bias attacks against Asian Americans and Jews — and heavy coverage of crime on local television — virtually every public poll shows public safety has become the biggest concern among Democratic voters,” the New York Times wrote over the weekend.
The Times adds that “defund the police” has been a major fault line in this Democratic primary, with Adams, Kathryn Garcia and Andrew Yang all opposing it, while progressives Maya Wiley, Scott Stringer, Shaun Donovan and Dianne Morales support cutting police budgets and investing that money in communities.
(Interestingly, President Biden will address crime and safety on Wednesday.)
Two, are progressives about to strike out again – after Terry McAuliffe already won the Dem primary in Virginia’s gubernatorial contest, and after Biden won in 2020?
Of the consensus Top 4 candidates in the race – Adams, Garcia, Yang and Wiley – Wiley is the lone progressive.
And as CNN’s Harry Enten noted, a recent WNBC/Telemundo/Politico/Marist poll had just 19 percent of likely Democratic primary voters in the city identifying themselves as “very liberal,” compared with 36 percent who said they were “liberal,” 32 percent who said they were moderate and 13 percent who said they were conservative.
That ideological makeup could play a big role when it comes to the ranked-choice voting in Tuesday’s contest.
Which brings us to our third and final question: Just how is ranked choice going to play out on Tuesday?
Under New York City’s system, voters get to rank their Top 5 candidates in order of preference. After each round of voting, the candidate with the fewest numbers of votes is eliminated. And New Yorkers who picked that eliminated candidate see their vote transferred to their second choice.
When the WNBC/Telemundo/Politico/Marist poll simulated 12 rounds of voting – with the eliminated candidate’s votes getting redistributed by second choice – it found at the end Adams at 56 percent and Garcia at 44 percent.
And because of the ranked-choice voting, plus absentee ballots, we might not get an official winner until next month.
Bernie Sanders draws red line on bipartisan infrastructure deal
On “Meet the Press” yesterday, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., said he wouldn’t support indexing the gas tax or instituting a fee on electric vehicles to pay for the bipartisan infrastructure deal that’s supported by 21 senators, including 11 Republicans.
“One of the concerns that I do have about the bipartisan bill is how they are going to pay for their proposals, and they’re not clear yet. I don’t know that they even know yet, but some of the speculation is raising a gas tax, which I don’t support, a fee on electric vehicles, privatization of infrastructure. Those are proposals that I would not support,” Sanders said, per NBC’s Ben Kamisar.
And Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio – one of the 11 GOP senators supporting the bipartisan deal – acknowledged that red line by Democrats.
PORTMAN: Well, the administration has said that is out for them. We don’t have a gas tax per se. It is going forward, indexing the gas tax to inflation. It’s been the same since 1993. So the group does support that, but we understand that the administration has very strong views on that, so it’s a — it’s a user fee. We also think that the user fee on electric vehicles is appropriate. Shouldn’t electric vehicles or hybrid vehicles pay their fair share in terms of our infrastructure needs, roads and bridges? So, I think there’s some discussion left on those topics.
TODD: All right, is that code for it may end up not being in the final package?
PORTMAN: Well, it may not, but the administration, therefore, will need to come forward with some other ideas without raising taxes.
Bottom line: Progressives and the Biden White House have made clear that indexing the gas tax and user fees for electric vehicles are non-starters. And GOP senators realize that.
Which means they’re going to have to find out other ways to pay for it.
An infrastructure deal seems as close as ever, but it’s still not a done deal yet.
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
Up to 10,000: The maximum number of spectators that will be allowed at events at this summer’s Tokyo Games, under newly announced limits.
33,688,924: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 23,694 more than Friday morning.)
605,343: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News.(That’s 576 more than Friday morning.)
317,966,408: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
41.5 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per NBC News.
55.8 percent: The share of all American adults over 18 who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
TWEET OF THE DAY: It’s times like these you learn to live again
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The filibuster faces another stress test on Tuesday, when the Senate is expected to take up the For the People Act.
Nine children dead in collision amid Tropical Storm Claudette
Nine children are among the victims of a deadly collision in Albama likely caused by Tropical Storm Claudette. Also, Senate Democrats are going on the offensive this week, looking to expand voting rights and spend big on infrastructure. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
White House press secretary on child tax credits, infrastructure talks
Some of President Biden’s key legislative priorities face tests this week, as lawmakers continue to negotiate an infrastructure plan, voting rights legislation and police reform. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki joins “CBS This Morning” to discuss.
At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic last year, paramedics responded to more than 7,000 calls a day in New York City. The amount of trauma they witnessed was a heavy burden many are still carrying. Mola Lenghi reports.
Unidentified stones that lured thousands of fortune seekers to a rural South African village to mine the land with picks and shovels were not diamonds as hoped. Debora Patta spoke to government officials who informed villagers they were worthless quartz crystals.
Plus: Georgia’s voting roll purge draws media hype, Florida’s drug law hypocrisy, and more…
Another cake controversy out of Colorado. The baker at the center of a 2018 Supreme Court case concerning religious freedom, same-sex marriage, and civil rights is back in court over his refusal to serve up another cake. This time, the controversial cake was requested by a transgender woman in celebration of her gender transitioning.
Once again, Masterpiece Cakeshop’s Jack Phillips said making the requested cake would go against his morals. And, once again, the state isn’t having it…potentially setting up another prolonged showdown pitting religious liberty and freedom of expression against the application of statutes aimed at protecting LGBTQ rights.
In the last case—Masterpiece Cakeshop Ltd. v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission—the Supreme Court ruled 7–2 that Colorado was wrong to fine Phillips for refusing to make a wedding cake for a gay couple. The couple argued that this violated anti-discrimination law. Phillips said it didn’t, since he would sell regular baked goods to gay people with no problem—just not a wedding cake, as same-sex marriage was against his religious beliefs. Phillips argued that compelling him to participate in a gay couple’s marriage ceremony by baking a cake for the occasion violated his freedom of speech and religious liberty.
While the Court’s ruling was a win for Phillips, “the approach the court took guarantees that this debate is far from over,” as Reason‘s Scott Shackford noted back then. “The court did not rule that cake-baking is a protected form of free expression. Instead it said the Colorado Civil Rights Commission (CCRC) showed open hostility to the baker’s attempt to assert his religious beliefs as a reason to reject the couple’s request, and that the state thus did not neutrally enforce its antidiscrimination law.”
This left room for similar litigation going forward—and, indeed, an Oregon case involving similar circumstances came before the Supreme Court the following year. In that case, however, the Court simply ordered Oregon to take another look.So far, Phillips’ latest legal battle has only made it to state court. But it has all the fixings to go bigger.
Last week, Denver District Court Judge A. Bruce Jones ruled that Phillips was violating Colorado anti-discrimination law by refusing to make Autumn Scardina a special cake—blue on the outside and pink on the inside—to commemorate both her birthday and her gender transition. Jones ordered Phillips to pay a $500 fine.
Scardina had commissioned the cake years ago, “on the same day in 2017 that the U.S. Supreme Court announced it would hear Phillips’ appeal in the wedding cake case,” notesThe Washington Post. “Scardina said she wanted to ‘challenge the veracity’ of Phillips statements that he would serve LGBT customers, but her attempt to get a cake was not a ‘set up’ intended to file a lawsuit, Jones said.”
That last bit rings a little hollow, since Scardina didn’t simply order any old cake but a cake celebrating a gender transition, making sure the reason for the cake was known to Phillips. And his position all along has been that he wouldn’t deny service of non-message-laden baked goods to LGBTQ customers but that he also wouldn’t engage in the expressive process of making special pastries specifically to celebrate ideas or institutions he feels are an affront to his religious values.
There are surely lots of places where Scardina could get her desired cake made without having to hide anything. But clearly, this is about more than just the baking of a single cake, with both sides convinced they are sticking up for something bigger.
“Religious liberty or freedom from discrimination: Advocates on both sides insist the question is simple. In fact, it is very difficult,” opines David Von Drehle at the Post:
Two bedrock principles of the Constitution are brought into direct conflict. Americans have a right in their public lives to be free from discrimination based on who they are. This right finds expression in laws requiring businesses and agencies that serve the public to do so without discrimination.
Americans also have a protected freedom of belief and expression. They cannot be compelled by the government to express or reject any religious views or political opinions.
As with last time, however, it seems a bit unfair to describe this as simply the right to religious liberty versus the right not to be denied service based on identity. At the head of these cases is not merely some neutral service but goods expressing particular messages—and a desire to make the government compel them.
Perhaps it would help people distracted by dislike for Phillips’ beliefs to keep in mind that a state strong enough to declare that a baker must make a cake with pro-transgender messaging is also one strong enough to declare that a business must make things with anti-transgender messaging. Something tells me that folks cheering on Colorado’s claim that it can compel expressive speech via baked goods wouldn’t be so happy if bakeries were forced to make requested cakes depicting, say, same-sex couples or trans people burning in hell.
(“Underlying this dispute — the really explosive part — is a slippery slope,” notes Von Drehle. “It seems monstrous to think that artisans have no control over the expressive content of their creations. Surely a seamstress who willingly provides choir robes and judicial robes should not be compelled to make robes for a Ku Klux Klan rally.”)
Fortunately, in a free market, we don’t need the government to force either. There is surely no shortage of businesses willing to bake goods with pro-LGBTQ messages (or not to ask further questions if a part pink, part blue cake is requested), and probably at least a few that would be willing to do the opposite for the right price. Meanwhile, there are less coercive means—like boycotts and negative publicity—for people to express displeasure with businesses like Masterpiece Cakeshop.
Despite all this, people are repeatedly trying to get the government to force one particular man known to oppose these messages to violate his beliefs and do so.
Given the circumstances, it seems a lot more like bullying someone over their values and attempting to drive openly religious entrepreneurs out of business for not agreeing with prevailing orthodoxy around sexuality and gender than a principled stand for the material well-being and concerns of marginalized groups. You may not agree with Phillips’ beliefs—I don’t—but a liberal, pluralistic society requires tolerance for people of different moral beliefs coexisting without using the state to crush dissent out of one another.
FREE MINDS
Today in misplaced media hype:
Once again, a major news outlet’s headline omits the rather important detail that *every* state routinely removes moved/inactive voters from their rolls as a best practice of election administration. https://t.co/o0tm1lELFd
In Florida, growing fewer than 25 cannabis plants without a license is a felony punishable by up to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine, according to the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML). And growing more plants than that can mean up to 30 years in prison and a $15,000 fine.
QUICK HITS
• It’s a security theater milestone! Sigh…
This August marks the 15th anniversary of TSA banning liquid from carry-on luggage, and I forgot that DHS, at the time, said it would be temporary. In the way that all life on earth is temporary, I guess. pic.twitter.com/tMBdtjAdzR
• The Department of Justice weighs in on state bans on certain treatments for transgender kids:
DOJ filed two statements of interest today regarding the rights of transgender youths: One in West Virginia involving the rights of a transgender student athlete, the other in Arkansas against the state ban on gender-affirming medical care. pic.twitter.com/VtLtF0Cmd4
• Good news: The U.S. and the European Union have “hammered out an important agreement to suspend pointless retaliatory tariffs targeting a host of foods.”
• On TV, Fox News host Tucker Carlson excoriates the press. In private, he’s a chatterbox and “a great source” to journalists in mainstream media.
• President Joe Biden’s meeting last week with Russian President Vladimir Putin was “a banal event in the context of past Democratic administrations, but a remarkable one in the context of the world as the liberal Resistance interpreted it from 2016 through 2020,” notes Ross Douthat for The New York Times.
• Telemedicine abortion is here to stay, arguesSalon.
• In 2018, Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott said family separations were “tragic and heart-rending.” In 2021, he’s enforcing his own family separation policy.
• “A Southern California sheriff’s deputy is under criminal investigation after he was recorded on video kicking a pursuit suspect in the head while the man appeared to be surrendering,” the Associated Press reports.
• A new bipartisan bill called the Processing Revival and Intrastate Meat Exemption (PRIME) Act “would remove the requirement that all slaughterhouses be subject to U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) rules and inspections” and allow “states and towns to set their own rules for slaughtering livestock.”
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.
Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Playboy, Fox News, Politico, The Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.
Reason is the magazine of “free minds and free markets,” offering a refreshing alternative to the left-wing and right-wing echo chambers for independent-minded readers who love liberty.
Hearing that someone named Sheldon Whitehouse is a member at an exclusive all-white private beach club isn’t surprising. One where, and I quote, “Jewish, yes. … Blacks, not really.” Then you find out … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
06/21/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Filibuster Factor; NYC and RCV; Sports’ Big Weekend
By Carl M. Cannon on Jun 21, 2021 08:57 am
Good morning, it’s Monday, June 21, 2021. Today is the first full day of summer, and here on the East Coast, and in much of the rest of the country, it certainly feels like it. Amid deadly tornados, record daily high temperatures, and rolling power outages, Americans took refuge in Father’s Day celebrations and the soothing distraction of watching sports on television and — blessedly — in person once again.
In golf, the four-day U.S. Open was won Sunday night by a Spaniard for the first time since that tournament began in 1895 when Jon Rahm Rodriquez prevailed by sinking two spectacular birdie putts on the last two holes.
Meanwhile, a fresh crop of Olympic stars emerged at the track-and-field trials in Oregon and the swim trials in Omaha, the city that also began hosting the College World Series this weekend. There in the Nebraska heartland, an overachieving Virginia baseball team was led by Andrew Abbott and Matt Wyatt, who pitched a shutout over Tennessee. The pitchers had help from their catcher, Logan Michaels, who hit his first home run of the season while Logan’s father, Jeff, who is battling pancreatic cancer, cheered in the stands.
The New York Yankees won a tight 2-1 game Sunday over the Oakland A’s with a game-ending triple play. It was the Yanks third triple play of the season and the second in three days. If you wonder why Oakland wasn’t bunting in that situation, I had the same question. “Small ball” is not modern baseball strategy, apparently, although perhaps it should be sometimes.
As for the men and women who will represent the United States in Tokyo, they are proving to be a diverse and appealing group of athletes — some young, some not-so-young — many of whom were willing to share their politics, family stories, and religious faith with their fellow Americans. The athletes were also conspicuously gracious toward their fellow competitors. I think they will do our country proud next month.
On that note, I’d point you to our front page, which aggregates, as it does each day, an array of columns and stories spanning the political spectrum. We also offer a complement of original material from RCP reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Would Nuking the Filibuster Really Help Democrats? Sean Trende’s analysis: Opponents of the parliamentary tool should be careful what they wish for.
Dems Botched Voting Rights; They Need a New Bill. A.B. Stoddard has advice for Joe Manchin as he tries to craft a measure that can win support from at least 10 Republican senators.
What NYC Will Teach Us About Ranked Choice Voting. Bill Scher assesses the alliances being formed — and shunned — as the candidates calculate how best to win enough second-choice votes to secure a majority.
Donald Trump: The Once and Future President? Frank Miele envisions a scenario in which Trump returns to the Oval Office in 2023 (yes, 2023).
Gerrymandering and the Point of No Return. John Curiel explains why the reforms contained in H.R. 1 are unlikely to solve the problems they claim to address.
RCP Takeaway. In the latest episode, pollster John Della Volpe joins Andy Walworth, Tom Bevan and me to talk about the prospects of Biden’s agenda passing the Senate.
Groundhog Day for the Military Budget. At RealClearDefense, Mackenzie Eaglen writes that, once again, Pentagon funding is stuck on cruise control while the rest of the federal government goes on a spending spree.
Unscrambling the Health Care Cost Debate. At RealClearPolicy, James Capretta argues that discussions of how to better control rising expenses must retake center stage now that the pandemic is receding.
Marginal Pricing in Wholesale Electric Markets May Need Reform. At RealClearEnergy, Bernard L. McNamee questionswhy more of the financial benefits of low-cost renewable resources are not being passed on to customers.
Last Wednesday, President Biden told reporters in Geneva that he discussed with Russian President Vladimir Putin “the prospect that certain types of infrastructure should be off limits to attack by cyber or any other means.”
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.
Fresh from his appalling summit with one tyrant – Russia’s Vladimir Putin – President Biden’s administration is signaling that another one is in the works with China’s Xi Jinping.
Good morning. It’s Monday, June 21, and we’re covering the first named storm of the year to make US landfall, election results in Iran, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
At least 12 people were killed over the weekend as Tropical Storm Claudette battered much of the Gulf Coast. Ten of the deaths came from a multicar crash along Alabama’s Interstate 65; nine of the victims were children, including a nine-month-old girl. Officials said the cars likely hydroplaned (how it works) on wet roads. A father and son were also reportedly killed after a tree fell on their house Saturday.
The storm made landfall in southeast Louisiana early Saturday, dropping between 5 and 10 inches of rain in many areas as it moved east across Mississippi and Alabama. The system caused widespread flooding across much of the Southeast US (see photos/videos), with a number of tornadoes reported.
The first named storm of the season to make US landfall, Claudette is expected to bring heavy rain to the Carolinas through today. See the storm’s trajectory here.
Iran’s New President
Religious conservative Ebrahim Raisi has been elected as Iran’s new president, winning an estimated 62% of Friday’s vote. Raisi, the head of the country’s judicial system, will be inaugurated in August and replace moderate Hassan Rouhani, who was term-limited and did not run. Raisi has close ties with Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, with some observers calling the election a foregone conclusion.
The country has been mired in an economic crisis due to sanctions and the pandemic, and reports suggested widespread disillusionment among Iranian voters. Turnout was estimated at 49%, down from 70% in the 2017 presidential election. Raisi was allegedly a key figure in mass killings of political prisoners in the late 1980s, and is currently under sanctions by the US and European Union.
The results come as the US attempts to rejoin the 2015 nuclear agreement. Reports suggest Khamenei is seeking a new deal before Raisi assumes office.
Summer Begins Amid Heat Wave
Summer officially began yesterday, as marked by the June solstice—the point at which the sun is at its northernmost point from the celestial equator. The date comes 20 days after meteorological summer, which began June 1 and tracks annual climate cycles.
The seasons turn as much of the US Southwest, West Coast, and some Plains states continue to bake under a stifling heat wave. Palm Springs, California, hit 123 degrees Thursday, tying the highest temperature ever recorded in the city; Phoenix hit 118 degrees at its earliest date on record; and Denver saw three straight days of 100 degrees for the third time (and earliest) on record. The primary short-term culprit has been a weather phenomenon known as a heat dome (see how it works).
Over the longer term, western officials have expressed concern over water levels, including the Hoover Dam, where Lake Mead is at 36% of its full capacity.
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>Jon Rahm becomes first Spanish golfer to win US Open, his first major championship (More) | Utah Jazzeliminated by Los Angeles Clippers; Clippers advance to Western Conference finals for first time in 51-year franchise history (More)
>Tribeca Film Festival wraps with Dave Chappelle documentary at Radio City Music Hall, which reopened for first time since the pandemic (More) | Vivendi sells 10% stake in Universal Music Group, valuing the record label at $40B (More)
>Nine-time Olympic medalist Allyson Felix makes fifth Olympic track team (More) | Twelve-time Olympic medalist Ryan Lochte fails to make Team USA, likely ending his Olympic career (More) | See full US Olympic swimming trials results (More)
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Science & Technology
>India grapples with rising number of Mucormycosis, or black fungus, cases; likely linked to the use of steroids to treat COVID-19 patients (More) | Average US COVID-19 deaths fall below 300 per day, cases near 11,000 per day; see data (More)
>China launches first crewed flight to its new Tiangong space station; the successful docking marks a milestone in the country’s ambitions in space (More)
>Physicists demonstrate first-ever cooling of a human-scale object close to its quantum ground state; the 22-pound object is part of the mirror system of LIGO, the US-based gravitational wave detector (More) | Quantum Mechanics 101 (More)
Business & Markets
>US stock markets slide Friday (S&P 500 -1.3%, Dow -1.6%, Nasdaq -0.9%) as investor concerns on Fed rate increases grow; Dow closes worst week since October (More)
>Amazon’s annual Prime Day kicks off today; analysts estimate last year’s two-day event led to more than $10B in sales (More)
>TikTok owner ByteDance saw revenues more than double in 2020 to $34B; has 1.9 billion monthly active users (More)
Politics & World Affairs
>US Catholic bishops vote 168-55 to formulate conditions under which pro-choice Catholics may be denied communion; issue was reportedly raised in November following the election of President Joe Biden, a practicing Catholic (More)
>Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan says the CIA will no longer be allowed to launch operations from bases in the country; officials warn counterterrorism and intelligence gathering to decline as US withdraws from Afghanistan (More)
>One killed, one injured after truck crashes at an LGBTQ Pride parade in Fort Lauderdale, Florida; officials believe the incident was an accident (More) | See video taken after crash (More)
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Historybook: US Constitution is ratified (1788); Benazir Bhutto, first female prime minister of Pakistan, born (1953); HBD actor Chris Pratt (1979); HBD Prince William (1982); Frida Kahlo is first Hispanic woman honored on US postage stamp (2001).
“Feet, what do I need you for when I have wings to fly?”
– Frida Kahlo
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
TODAY’S MORNING JOLT WITH JIM GERAGHTY
IS PRESENTED BY
On the menu today: The Chinese Foreign Ministry argues that the Wuhan Institute of Virology deserves to win the Nobel Prize for Medicine; a look at the blatant contradictions in China’s propaganda about vaccine diplomacy; a senator shrugs off his membership in an all-white private beach club; and apparently progressives can’t find anything to enjoy this summer.
China: The Wuhan Institute of Virology Deserves the Nobel Prize in Medicine
Late last week, the Chinese Academy of Sciences nominated the Wuhan Institute of Virology for its Outstanding Science and Technology Achievement Prize, specifically naming Shi Zhengli, a.k.a. “Bat Woman,” and Yuan Zhiming, director of the WIV’s Wuhan National Biosafety Laboratory.
Chinese state-run media explained that, “The award is mainly given to individuals or research groups who have made or demonstrated significant achievements in the past five years . . . China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson stressed at Thursday’s press conference that scientists working at the WIV should be … READ MORE
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NBC News: “President Joe Biden plans to host a White House ceremony this year for the unveiling of former President Barack Obama’s official portrait… And former President Donald Trump has already begun participating in the customary process so his official portrait can eventually hang alongside his predecessors.”
“It’s unlikely Trump would follow the tradition of having his portrait unveiled at an East Room event hosted by his successor, given his false claims that Biden didn’t legitimately win the 2020 election… But a formal event with Obama and his wife, Michelle, is expected to take place at the White House — likely this fall.”
“Former President Trump has given at least 22 interviews for 17 different books since leaving office, with authors lining up at Mar-a-Lago as he labors to shape a coming tsunami of Trump tomes,” Axios reports.
Said Jon Karl, author of the forthcoming Betrayal: “If you thought there was no more to know, it’s been mind-blowing.”
Kansas City Star: “One Republican candidate in Missouri’s Senate race skipped the state party’s annual convention last week and traveled instead to Arizona, where he toured the site of a discredited 2020 election audit and falsely claimed it could lead to decertification of the results.”
“Another contender recently announced a campaign event in the St. Louis suburbs with a former Trump administration official beloved by supporters of QAnon.”
“It’s a strategy being pursued by Republican candidates in races across the country ahead of 2022, as rhetoric from those seeking to undermine the legitimacy of President Joe Biden’s decisive victory over former President Donald Trump continues to escalate.”
A new Ipsos poll the race for New York City mayor has Eric Adams at 28%, Andrew Yang at 20%, Kathryn Garcia 15%, and Maya Wiley at 13% on the first ballot of ranked-choice voting.
The Supreme Court sided with former college athletes in a dispute with NCAA over rules limiting certain benefits, the AP reports.
From the unanimous opinion: “Those traditions alone cannot justify the NCAA’s decision to build a massive money-raising enterprise on the backs of student athletes who are not fairly compensated.”
Sen. Richard Burr (R-NC) expressed bewilderment over former President Trump’s endorsement of Rep. Ted Budd in the GOP primary for the retiring senator’s seat, The Hill reports.
Said Burr: “I can’t tell you what motivates him. I’ve never seen individuals endorse a candidate a year before the primary. That’s unusual.”
“Former President Trump reportedly suggested sending Americans infected with COVID-19 to Guantanamo Bay in an effort to stem the rapidly growing number of cases on U.S. soil in the early days of the pandemic, according to a new book,” The Hill reports.
“I’ve known and talked to every president, you know, for a while, for like more than 30 years. And you know, I can’t think of anyone whose life was improved by that. I mean, I guess if like I was the last person on earth, I could do it, but I mean, it seems pretty unlikely that I would be that guy.”
— Tucker Carlson, talking about running for president on the Ruthless podcast.
Washington Post: “As the most senior non-Trump executive at the former president’s private, closely held company, Weisselberg is probably a key figure in prosecutors’ efforts to indict Trump, legal experts say. His central role in nearly every aspect of Trump’s business, revealed in depositions and news interviews over the past three decades, afforded him what former employees say is a singular view of the Trump Organization’s tax liabilities and finances.”
“Yet officials involved in the Weisselberg investigation have grown frustrated about what they view as a lack of cooperation from Weisselberg and believe he continues to regularly speak with Trump.”
Punchbowl News: “Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) is now backing Sen. Bernie Sanders’ (I-VT) plan to add dental, vision and hearing coverage to Medicare, which will cost an estimated $350 billion to $400 billion over a decade.”
“Schumer’s office wouldn’t say whether Schumer is also backing Sanders’ call to lower the Medicare eligibility age to 60, or even 55.”
“A progressive group is launching a seven-figure ad campaign aiming to pressure Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) to support abolition of the filibuster, as the Senate eyes a vote to advance major voting rights legislation,” NBC News reports.
“The group, Just Democracy, is spending $1.2 million for TV ads.”
Says the narrator in one ad: “As the GOP tries to silence our voices, she’s just standing by, supporting a Jim Crow relic instead.”
Washington Post: “The book — which draws on interviews with more than 180 people, including multiple White House senior staff members and government health leaders — offers new insights into last year’s chaotic and often-bungled response, portraying the power struggles over the leadership of the White House coronavirus task force, the unrelenting feuds that hampered cooperation and the enormous efforts made to prevent Trump from acting on his worst instincts.”
“The book offers new insights about Trump as the president careened between embracing miracle coronavirus cures in his quest for good news, grappling with his own illness — which was far more serious than officials acknowledged — and fretting about the outbreak’s implications for his reelection bid.”
Ben Smith writes in the New York Times on “one of Washington’s open secrets.”
“Mr. Carlson, a proud traitor to the elite political class, spends his time when he’s not denouncing the liberal media trading gossip with them. He’s the go-to guy for sometimes-unflattering stories about Donald Trump and for coverage of the internal politics of Fox News (not to mention stories about Mr. Carlson himself).”
“I won’t talk here about any off-the-record conversations I may have had with him. But 16 other journalists (none from The Times; it would put my colleagues in a weird position if I asked them) told me on background that he has been, as three of them put it, ‘a great source.’”
“In response to a new state law allowing local governments to set their own gun regulations, city leaders in Boulder, Colorado want to reinstate a ban on the sale and possession of weapons such as the AR-15-style pistol used in a mass shooting at a supermarket in March,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
“Gov. Jared Polis (D) signed legislation Saturday making Colorado the first state to repeal what is known as a pre-emption law. Previously the state was one of 45 that banned cities from enacting firearms regulations.”
More at Green That Life: The preemption law is an effective tool in stifling citizen engagement.
“Ammon Bundy formally announced his run for governor with a platform centered on abolishing most state taxes and claiming federal public land for the state,” the Idaho Statesman reports.
Last week, amid the fire and brimstone surrounding the market’s shocked response to the Fed’s unexpected hawkish pivot, we noted that there were two tangible, if less noted changes: the Fed adjusted the two key “administered” rates, raising…
Authored by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk.com, A climate change referendum in Switzerland just went down in flames led by 18-34 year old voters… Swiss Reject Climate Change Eurointelligence reports Swiss Reject Climate Change After Switzerland…
Authored by Joaquin Flores via The Strategic Culture Foundation, The only thing left to destroy in a world populated by elites alone, are other elites. It would seem that the desire to dominate others does not simply come to an end on…
Authored by John W. Whitehead & Nisha Whitehead via The Rutherford Institute, “Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster.” – Friedrich Nietzsche Almost every tyranny being perpetrated by…
Security researcher Carl Schou discovered a bug in Apple’s iOS that can disable an iPhone’s ability to connect to hotspots after joining a WiFi with the SSID “%p%s%s%s%s%n.” Schou tweeted, “after joining my personal WiFi with the SSID…
Back in December 2015, just days before the Fed hiked rates for the first time since the global financial crisis, in its first tightening campaign since June 2004, we said that Yellen was about to engage in a great policy error, one which…
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In his video address before the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in September 2020, President Donald Trump summed up his views on the COVID-19 pandemic: the world must hold China accountable for covering up the virulence of the virus; the United States had effectively mobilized its resources to meet the challenge; and the world’s leaders should follow the example of the United States by putting their own citizens first and rejecting the pursuit of “global ambitions.”
As the United States embarks on an effort to modernize many elements of its nuclear enterprise, it needs to consider how dependencies on modern information technologies could lead to cyber-induced failures of nuclear deterrence or to nuclear war. The Biden administration has an opportunity to address issues of cyber risk across the entire nuclear enterprise in ways that previous administrations have not.
Is a proposed “patriot” wealth tax on the accumulation of wealth in America an “assault” on high-profile billionaires or the early stage of a longer siege.
The Hoover Institution Library & Archives and the Stanford Historical Society welcome you to join us for an online discussion on Arthur C. Brown’s construction of Hoover Tower and its significance on Monday, June 21, 2021, at 4:00 pm PDT.
The Left has atomized traditionalist American culture. Campus curricula are designed to indoctrinate and graduate cultural Marxists. Society itself is already seeing the result in a general decline in services and professions as the academic quality of college graduates continues to erode. When we get official government notices, or talk to bureaucrats or read of public policy, we expect such communications to be incoherent rather than just weaponized, the work of high-schoolers not of college graduates.
“The unanimity of this decision shows just how great a divergence there now is between well-established First Amendment doctrine and popular—even academic—perceptions. Religious liberty, including the right to deviate from politically powerful norms, is an important part of our civil libertarian heritage, shared by Supreme Court justices on the left as well as the right. Conservatives should calm down; their freedom to worship in accordance with conscience is not imperiled in the America of 2021.
The core state in the Arabian Peninsula is Saudi Arabia. The rest are small countries with less than one million citizens each. Hence, if we want to talk about Gulf policy towards Iran we need to talk about Saudi policy.
The Democratic Party won the long march through journalism, but this Pyrrhic victory has meant the destruction of every principle of journalistic integrity liberals ever claimed to champion.
Economist and author Anja Shortland of King’s College London talks about her new book, Lost Art, with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. When a famous painting disappears into the underworld of stolen art, how does it make its way back into the legitimate world of auction houses and museums? Drawing on the archives of a private database of stolen objects–the Art Loss Register–Shortland discusses the economics of the art world when objects up for sale may be the result of theft.
A Professor of Education and Social Policy and of Economics at the Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern University, David Figlio, joins Paul E. Peterson to discuss Figlio’s latest research, which explores how Florida’s private school choice program affected students in public schools.
Hoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson discusses the life and legacy of the Theban general of the 4th century BC Epamenondas and Civil War general William Tecumseh Sherman.
Hoover Institution fellow Glenn Loury says the United States should “get beyond race” and reparations, which would be “disastrous” for the future of America.
Jason Riley talks with Brian Anderson about his new book, Maverick: A Biography of Thomas Sowell. They discuss Sowell’s upbringing, his work as an academic economist and a public intellectual, his research on disparities between groups, and more.
The Hoover Institution announces a new seminar series on Using Text as Data in Policy Analysis, co-organized by Steven J. Davis and Justin Grimmer. These seminars will feature applications of natural language processing, structured human readings, and machine learning methods to text as data to examine policy issues in economics, history, national security, political science, and other fields.
This third session features a conversation with Francesco Giavazzi speaking on Terrorist Attacks, Cultural Incidents and the Vote for Radical Parties: Analyzing Text from Twitter on Tuesday, June 22, 2021 from 9:00AM – 10:30AM PT and the paper under discussion can be found here.
An Economic Advisory Council to the Chief Minister would be constituted with leading experts including Nobel laureate Prof Esther Duflo, Tamil Nadu Governor Banwarilal Purohit said here on Monday in his customary address to the Assembly.
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
Thank you for subscribing to the Hoover Daily Report.
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71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief.
Good morning, it’s June 21. On this day in history, the U.S. Constitution was ratified (1788); John Hinckley, Jr., who shot President Ronald Reagan and three others outside a Washington, D.C., hotel, was found not guilty by reason of insanity (1982); and a 7.7-magnitude earthquake near the Caspian Sea in Iran killed an estimated 50,000 people and injured another 135,000 (1990).
TOP STORIES
Political Discrimination in Minnesota: Law Firm President Accused of Firing Trump Supporters
In Minneapolis, three former employees of a local law firm alleged the firm’s president fired them because he believed they were supporters of former President Trump.
The president of St. Cloud-based law firm Kain and Scott, has been accused of firing William Kain, Margaret Henehan and Kelsey Quarberg, all partners in the firm, because they shared pro-Trump posts on social media.
TheStar Tribune reported that firm president Wesley Scott told the operation manager to fire two employees he felt were racist because of their support for Trump. She refused, so Scott fired her and another employee along with them.
The allegations in the lawsuit indicate that Scott’s actions were a result of his anger over the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. He went so far as to call the police to ask them to remove Quarberg from the premises.
“Scott engaged in conduct at the firm that was inappropriate for an employee, let alone the president of the firm,” the complaint stated, according to the Tribune.
Adding to the complications, the firm is owned by the three fired partners as well as Scott, who holds the 50 percent majority share. The partners are suing for back pay, benefits and a judicial order to dissolve the firm.
ATP comment: No matter what an employer thinks about his or her employee’s political affiliations, it is completely unprofessional and inappropriate to fire someone because they support a political party or figure that, in the employer’s estimation, is polarizing or unlikable.
The problematic events that took place on January 6 were highly unsettling for most of the Nation, but the actions of the people who took part in the riot and attack on the U.S. Capitol does not justify the dismissal of employees who hold opposing political views.
In Wisconsin, Cops May No Longer Use Chokeholds
Recently, the Wisconsin state Senate voted to ban police from using chokeholds during arrests with one exception. If an officer is in a life-threatening situation, the action would be allowed.
While the Republican-controlled Senate passed the bill, some Democrats opposed the action because they didn’t like the exception.
Let’s unpack that for a minute:
Republicans in the Wisconsin Senate wanted to ban chokeholds, leaving a little room for officers who are in life-threatening situations to make a judgment call.
In opposition, some Democrats want to prohibit law enforcement from protecting potential victims or themselves in certain life-threatening situations, putting the perpetrator’s life first. How do some lawmakers feel justified in putting the life of a would-be murderer ahead of victims and men and women who work every day to protect us?
Many Wisconsin police departments have already implemented measures prohibiting chokeholds, with Milwaukee banning them under all circumstances, according to theAssociated Press.
Democratic Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers called for a fullban on police chokeholds, but in April he softened his stance slightly by ordering Wisconsin State Patrol and other law enforcement agencies to update their policies to allow for chokeholds only as a last resort.
While it is important to watch out for government overreach, it makes sense that Republicans supported this bill, as it essentially protects law enforcement who may need to use this type of force in life or death situations.
ATP analysis: The ramifications of limiting law enforcement restraint techniques, partnered with “Defund the Police” campaigns and the media’s constant scrutiny of law enforcement, will likely lead to an increase in early retirements and a decrease in recruitment.
As public servants, law enforcement officers are working for the taxpayers. It is essential that we support our cops if we are to continue employing the best of the best on the force. If the police are subjected to endless criticism and attacks, the best officers will likely move on to other careers.
In the 1970s, it Was Razor Blades in Apples, Now it’s Razor Blades in Pizza Dough
A man in Maine has been accused of slipping razor blades and screws into pizza dough sold at Hannaford Grocers.
Most of us remember our parents warning us they must inspect all candy and fruits we received when going trick or treating, because fiends might sliprazor blades into our apples.
Unfortunately now in 2021, we have the real-life case of a man who slipped razor blades into pizza dough.
Nicholas R. Mitchell was indicted by a grand jury on two counts of tampering with a consumer product. Mitchell initially pled not guilty, but has since decided to reach an agreement and change his plea to guilty.
Mitchell was arrested last October when a customer at a grocery store in Maine reported razor blades had been found in a package of Portland Pie pizza dough. Mitchell was a former associate at a company that produces pizza dough for Portland Pie, according toFox News.
In addition to razor blades, it has been reported the former forklift operator planted screws in the dough balls.
“A customer had purchased a Portland Pie pizza dough and located razor blades inside the dough. The review of store security surveillance footage revealed that a person tampered with the packaging of several Portland Pie Pizza doughs,” stated a Facebook post by Saco Police Department.
The formal plea hearing is scheduled for June 24. As part of his plea deal, Mitchell is expected to be sentenced to up to four years and nine months in prison, according to thePortland Press Herald.
Fortunately, there were no injuries as a result of the tampering.
ATP COO comment: I would still take razor blades in my pizza over mushrooms.
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 FEE Daily, your go-to newsletter for free-market news and analysis, authored by FEE.org Policy Correspondent Brad Polumbo. If you’re reading this online, click here to make sure you’re subscribed to the email list.
Good afternoon! I hope you all had a great weekend. I had a great time watching the Euros and spending time with my sister who was in town and my boyfriend who had been working nights at the hospital all of last week. Suffice it to say, we consumed a lot of iced coffee. You’ll want some too as we tackle new studies on lockdowns and a Biden tax analysis.
We Just Got Even More Proof that Stay-At-Home Orders Lethally Backfired
A new study finds that lockdown orders didn’t reduce overall mortality, and may have even increased it.
Image Credit: vperemencom
Life under lockdown was hard for all of us. From economic destruction to social isolation, the costs of restrictive government policies intended to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 have been steep. But now, yet another study suggests that the benefits wrought by our collective sacrifice were negligible at best—and that stay-at-home orders may even have increased overall mortality.
In a new paper, economists from the University of Southern California and the RAND Corporation examined the effectiveness of “shelter-in-place” (SIP) mandates, aka stay-at-home orders, using data from 43 countries and all 50 US states. The experts analyze not just deaths from COVID-19, but “excess deaths,” a measure that compares overall deaths from all causes to a historical baseline.
The authors explain that lockdown orders may have had lethal unintended consequences in their own right, such as increased drug overdoses, worsened mental health problems, increased child abuse, deadly delays in non-COVID medical care, and more. So, to find out whether stay-at-home orders truly helped more than they hurt, examining excess deaths, not just pandemic outcomes, is key.
The results aren’t pretty.
“We fail to find that shelter-in-place policies saved lives,” the authors report. Indeed, they conclude that in the weeks following the implementation of these policies, excess mortality actually increases—even though it had typically been declining before the orders took effect. And across all countries, the study finds that a one-week increase in the length of stay-at-home policies corresponds with 2.7 more excess deaths per 100,000 people.
The lockdowns simply didn’t work.
“We failed to find that countries or U.S. states that implemented SIP policies earlier, and in which SIP policies had longer to operate, had lower excess deaths than countries/U.S. states that were slower to implement SIP policies,” the authors explain.
Of course, there is tremendous resistance to acknowledging the fact that the sacrifice we all, to varying extents, endured evidently accomplished nothing—and may have even left us worse off. But we must acknowledge and grapple with this painful truth to ward off similar mistakes in the future.
The takeaway here is not just that stay-at-home orders are an ineffective public policy. It’s that politicians will always claim they can solve our problems if just given enough centralized power. But we must not fall for their rhetoric and focus only on the seen, tangible benefits of government action—like potentially slowing the spread of COVID-19—we must also consider the unseen and unexpected second-order effects and consequences.
A New Analysis Just Debunked Biden’s No-Tax-Hike Promises
There’s more here than just a politician caught in a campaign fib. (That’s not exactly earth-shattering news).
Custom Image By FEE | Image Credit PixaBay, Gage Skidmore
President Biden ran for office promising not to raise taxes on anyone earning less than $400,000. But a new analysis provides yet more proof that the president’s actual tax plans belie his rosy rhetoric.
According to the Tax Policy Center, more than 60 percent of Americans would see their taxes increase under Biden’s proposals. The average increase would come out to $2,930 per year.
It is true that wealthy Americans would bear much of the tax increase. However, the middle class doesn’t escape the burden: 75 percent of households earning $75,000 to $100,000 would see a tax increase, in the amount of roughly $440 annually. Similarly, nearly 70 percent of those families earning $100,000 to $200,000 would see tax hikes. The increases would average about $830 per year.
Clearly, these figures debunk Biden’s promise not to increase middle class taxes. However, there’s more here than just a politician caught in a campaign fib. (That’s not exactly earth-shattering news). There’s an important lesson here on the difference between the nominal assignment of taxes and who really bears the costs.
“It is the operation of the market,” wrote Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises, “and not the government collecting the taxes, that decides upon whom the incidence of the taxes falls and how they affect production and consumption.”
“Who pays the tax?” economist Murray Rothbard asked. “It would seem that the answer is clear-cut, since the government knows on whom it levies a tax. The problem, however, is not who pays the tax immediately, but who pays it in the long run.”
In other words, nominally assigning a tax to someone doesn’t mean they ultimately pick up the tab.
President Biden’s plans do say they won’t increase taxes on those earning less than $400,000. However, many of the increases included such as corporate tax increases are in reality mostly borne by workers because they lead to decreased investment, lower productivity, and thus lower wages.
So don’t fall for the president’s spin. Biden can insist until his face turns blue that he won’t raise middle-class taxes, but the reality that his tax hikes will hit everyday Americans remains unchanged.
Data of the Day: The US would have the highest top capital gains tax rate in the world under President Biden’s proposed increase, CNBCreports. Suffice it to say this would hurt the economy by putting us at a competitive disadvantage when it comes to attracting wealthy investors.
Image Credit: CNBC
Meme of the Day: This Ron Swanson joke isn’t that funny… a joke has to be at least somewhat believable to be humorous, not totally implausible.
P.S. I have a new podcast out with my friend and libertarian media whiz Stephen Kent. He breaks down the politics of Star Wars and what the saga tells us about government, fear, and control. Listen now on Apple Podcasts or Spotify or watch us on YouTube.
You don’t always have time to read a full in-depth article. Thankfully, FEE Fellow Patrick Carroll is here to give you the key takeaways from one highlighted article each day.
Note: The Daily Digest will be coming to a close tomorrow. However, we will soon be replacing it with a new section called Ask an Economist. Stay tuned for details!
Hannah Frankman got her start in entrepreneurship making hand-knitted dolls at the age of 12. She earned $24 for each doll she sold, and for a kid that age, that seemed like a lot of money.
As Hannah got older, she slowly branched out into other kinds of business and no doubt added a few zeros to her revenue numbers. But as she remarks in her latest article on FEE.org, one of the key reasons she was able to be successful was because she was homeschooled. Three distinct advantages stand out to her.
For one, homeschoolers are immersed in the business world, making connections with people and being exposed to opportunities. While most kids are in school surrounded by their peers, homeschoolers are often surrounded by adults working in the proverbial “real world,” and that gives them ideas for business opportunities they can pursue.
Another factor that helps homeschoolers become entrepreneurs is the simple fact that they have more time and freedom. When normal schooling isn’t getting in the way, kids can lean into their natural interests and pursue opportunities they otherwise wouldn’t have time for.
Finally, Hannah points out that homeschooling allows play to turn into entrepreneurship with little effort. Whether it’s hand-knitting dolls or selling baked goods to your parent’s colleagues, many activities that kids do for fun can turn into business opportunities that inevitably teach them about marketing, product development, and finance.
But since it’s just for fun, it doesn’t feel like work. And suddenly, you’re pursuing ventures because you want to, not because you have to.
The FEE Store has the books, magazines, and merchandise you’re looking for to begin or deepen your knowledge of the economic, ethical, and legal principles of a free society. 100% of the proceeds go to advance FEE’s mission. Support by shopping now!
The great liberal experiment of “defunding the police” turned out to be a completely and utter disaster. In major cities all over the United States, hundreds of millions of dollars of funding were stripped away from police departments in 2020, and many on the left were hailing this is a huge step in the right direction. Of course it was actually a huge step in the wrong direction. Crime rates soared throughout the remainder of 2020, and they have gone even higher in 2021. In fact, Fox Business is reporting that the number of homicides in the U.S. is up 24 percent since the month of January…
Of course you’ve heard the name “George Soros,” often invoked as a sort of folk demon on the American and international right, it’s likely that you have some vague notion of why you think he’s a bad guy, or maybe you think the whole thing is a bunch of hype. However, if you’re a freedom lover, there’s nothing “hype” about the influence that George Soros has around the world attacking your freedom. Indeed, you probably vastly underestimate the influence that he has on politics.
During an astonishingly sycophantic press conference after the Geneva summit with Vladimir Putin, President Biden posited an entirely hypothetical scenario about what the world would think of the United States if it were interfering in foreign elections and everybody knew it.
Anduril founder Palmer Luckey announced Thursday that his start-up has raised an additional $450 million in funding, which will be used to “turn allied warfighters into invincible technomancers.” The company is now valued at $4.6 billion. Luckey is best known for selling Oculus to Facebook in 2014 for $2 billion before he was fired in 2017 amid controversy for his political donations and financial support of far-right groups. But his announcement of the new funding was unusual.
Rogan was discussing CNN’s appalling ratings drop since President Trump left office, noting “Brian Stelter’s show keeps slipping and slipping and slipping in the ratings. Same with Don Lemon’s.”
With Klaus Schwab declaring 2021 as the year the elite must “rebuild trust” with the public, Johnny Vedmore investigates the man at the center of this effort – Richard Edelman
Yesterday, the Supreme Court reversed a lower-court ruling in favor of corporate giants Nestlé USA and Cargill, leaving human rights advocates furious.
On December 8, 2020, when most of America was consumed with what The Guardian called Donald Trump’s “desperate, mendacious, frenzied and sometimes farcical” attempt to remain president, the Senate’s Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee held a hearing on the “Medical Response to Covid-19.” One of the witnesses, a pulmonologist named Dr. Pierre Kory, insisted he had great news.
A driver slammed into spectators Saturday evening at the start of a Pride parade in South Florida, killing one man and seriously injuring six others (whose conditions are unknown).
Welcome to the Monday edition of Internet Insider, where we unpack key, underreported stories. Today:
Popular trans meme account claims to have been mass-reported by TERFS, censored by Instagram
Psst… It’s Prime Day again
Weekend headlines!
BREAK THE INTERNET
Popular trans meme account claims to have been mass-reported by TERFS, censored by Instagram
“I’m gonna be real with you,” begins a recent Instagram post from trans meme account @Autogyniphiles_Anonymous, “TERFs and @instagram have completely squashed our ability to make kind, thoughtful, or investigative posts.” (TERF stands for trans-exclusionary radical feminists, also known as transphobic feminists.)
Created in 2019, @Autogyniphiles_Anonymous is run by three trans women who are graduate students, and has garnered more than 26,000 followers.
Its meme posts center on the trans experience, gender, sex, and philosophy. Posts are usually a single slide and feature a quote from a philosopher.
After building the account and a sizable following for more than two years, the admins of @Autogyniphiles_Anonymous are scared that it will be deleted by Instagram. The admins have set up a backup account (@Angry_Autogyniphiles_Anonymous) and have resolved to make their main account private for the foreseeable future.
“But every now and then, we decide to take on an issue,” one of the admins, who preferred to remain anonymous for her own safety, of @Autogyniphiles_Anonymous told the Daily Dot. “And we try and do it with as much compassion and understanding and nuance as possible.”
The issue in question that led to the @Autogyniphiles_Anonymous account being threatened was the phrase “men suck.” The admins created a multi-slide post explaining why they felt phrase was harmful to trans women (because it alienates the gender they were assigned at birth) and trans men (because the phrase vilifies masculinity), among other reasons.
An initial version of the post included the word “faggotry.” After it was taken down by Instagram, a new version was posted without any controversial language or slurs. The new version was deleted by Instagram as well.
“We had our DMs full of people telling us that [TERFs] were mass reporting the post” as hate speech, the admin said. “They thought it promoted ‘some sort of weird, perverse trans agenda.’”
So, the admins contested that the post was hate speech by appealing to Instagram. But Instagram sided with those who reported the post and reaffirmed it as hateful.
“And for the life of me… I do not understand why” the post is labeled as hate speech,” the admin told the Daily Dot.
The three admins of the account interpreted Instagram’s insistence on labeling the post hate speech as clearly siding with users that are transphobic.
Followers of @Autogyniphiles_Anonymous fear for the account’s fate as well. The admin told the Daily Dot that she has received direct messages saying that her account is where followers “come to feel.” Some have even told her it’s “all [they] have left.”
Meme accounts like @Autogyniphiles_Anonymous that focus on the queer and/or trans experience create a safe place and sense of solidarity for the LGBTQ+ community online, which has become increasingly important as IRL gay villages and queer spaces continue to be gentrified and become too expensive for some queer folk to live in. In addition, those who aren’t out of the closet may not feel comfortable frequenting in-person queer spaces.
Thus, online communities are paramount, especially as of late for the many queer folks who were forced to quarantine with homophobic and/or transphobic family members during the pandemic.
Chris Hassan, a nonbinary trans person who follows @Autogyniphiles_Anonymous, said they enjoy sharing jokes among their identity community and the online community the account has created.
“There’s just something I love about superimposing intimate and dense quotes about trans existentialism and post modern féministe theory over anime cat girls,” they said of the account’s aesthetic. Hassan was also initially drawn to the account because of its handle: “autogyniphile” is a transphobic term, and they enjoyed the word being used as a reclamation joke.
The admin also mentioned she enjoyed reading the uplifting and fascinating conversations that are sparked in the comment sections of her posts.
“What is Instagram’s definition of hate speech?” said the admin. “I would love to know, because I’m positive that I haven’t broken it.”
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Ah, Prime Day: Your yearly reason to get a (cheap) new TV. Jokes aside, Amazon’s big sale is on, and there’s plenty to sift through. Save yourself time by checking out our roundup, which breaks out the best deals so you can get them before everyone else does.
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Powerful interviews of the week: Jeffrey Prather and Mikki Willis
We have two very important videos from the week, featuring Jeffrey Prather discussing national security and Mikki Willis (creator of the Plandemic movie) on national healing.
In this first interview, Jeffrey Prather and I discuss the China threat against the United States, covering the most likely vectors of attack and how Americans might survive the chaos of the world war that has already begun (it was started with the covid bioweapon).
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‘Those of us who were strong Trump proponents from the start knew that we didn’t support Trump’s ideas because of Trump; we supported Trump because of his ideas.’ Read more…
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Officers work the scene of a weekend shooting in Oakland, California.
Gun violence
Ten mass shootings happened across the nation this weekend, leaving at least seven people dead and more than 40 injured. It was the latest in a streak of violent weekends in America. The weekend before this, there were also 10 mass shootings that left 12 people dead across seven states. (CNN defines a mass shooting as four or more people shot, not including the shooter.) This weekend’s violence included shootings at several parties and celebrations, including in California, Indiana and Colorado. According to the Gun Violence Archive, there have been 293 mass shootings in 2021 so far.
The Senate is set to vote soon on whether to advance the For The People Act, a sweeping elections overhaul that would, among other things, make Election Day a public holiday, expand early voting and ban partisan gerrymandering. The bill doesn’t have Republican support, but Democratic lawmakers are hoping to come to some sort of compromise. Democrats believe the bill would counteract efforts by Republican-led state legislatures to restrict voting rights. As those efforts unfold, Georgia’s secretary of state announced last week the state is purging more than 100,000 names from voter registration rolls in an attempt to keep the state’s voter files “up to date.”
Russia
The Biden administration is preparing to impose more sanctions on Russia over the poisoning of imprisoned opposition leader Alexey Navalny. It’s only been a few days since President Biden met with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Geneva, when Biden made it clear the US is not happy with the situation regarding the Russian dissident. The Biden administration imposed a round of sanctions in March over Navalny’s poisoning and imprisonment. Those sanctions represented Biden’s first significant move against Moscow. National security adviser Jake Sullivan said yesterday the Biden administration is “not going to pull our punches” with regard to chemical weapons or other issues, like cyberattacks.
Ethiopia
Ethiopians are heading to the polls today for the country’s first multiparty election in 16 years. The race to elect a new parliament has been postponed twice due to the pandemic and logistical constraints, and it now comes amid nationwide unrest, famine and a raging humanitarian crisis in the country’s Tigray region. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, a recipient of the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize, is expected to be reelected. But opposition party members have said Abiy’s government has jailed and silenced political rivals and thus eliminated the possibility of free and fair elections. The US State Department said last week it “is gravely concerned about the environment” under which Ethiopia’s elections will be held. Ethiopia is an influential powerhouse in East Africa, with a population of more than 100 million people.
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Tokyo 2020 makes a spectator decision
Olympics organizers announced they will allow spectators at the Games this year amid the pandemic but set a 50% cap at venues, up to a maximum of 10,000 people. Organizers said they could restrict fan attendance further if there were an emergency or a rise in Covid-19 infections.
38,680
That’s how many people died in motor vehicle crashes in 2020, according to estimates from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. That’s the largest projected number of deaths since 2007, despite a 13.2% decrease in miles traveled from the prior year.
If you’re not involved, if you are not your best advocate, you’re asking someone else to fill that void.
Danica Roem, a member of the Virginia House of Delegates and the state’s first lawmaker to identify as transgender. Roem says LGBTQ people “have to care” about politics because “politics cares about” them, for better or worse.
one more thing
Yesterday’s newsletter mistakenly described whose lawyers are asking for former Minneapolis officer Derek Chauvin to be sentenced this week to probation and time served in the murder of George Floyd. It’s Chauvin’s own legal defense team asking for that punishment.
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(John Hinderaker)Some readers may remember that I was mysteriously booted off Twitter some months ago. Twitter was never my preferred medium, but I had around 14,000 followers. One day Twitter sent me an email saying that my account had been accessed by someone in Australia who had changed my email address. If you didn’t do that, Twitter’s email to my user name said, click here. I clicked there.
The first thing I had to do was enter a user name. I entered the same user name to which Twitter had sent an email a half hour earlier. But I got a message saying that Twitter had never heard of such a user, and they stuck to that position doggedly despite numerous emails from me and others pointing out their error. My Twitter feed went permanently dark.
I thought, that is probably just as well. Twitter sucks. On the other hand, some really good people do excellent stuff, often very funny stuff, on that platform. And not infrequently I want to embed tweets on this site. Since I was kicked off the platform, that has been iffy.
So I decided to set up a new Twitter account. I think it is the same as my old account, but Twitter doesn’t seem to mind, which I suppose is consistent with the claim that they never heard of my old account in the first place. My new account is @HinderakerJohn. Sadly, I have only one follower so far, so I have a long way to go to become relevant. A cynic might say that this is how the Left kneecaps popular conservative spokesmen.
The main reason I want to get back on Twitter is that the platform can direct traffic to Power Line. We are getting significantly fewer social media referrals than we did a year or two ago.
Also, as to Facebook: For quite a few years, I had a personal Facebook account that had around 4,000 “friends,” most of whom I had never heard of. No complaint about that, but a year or so ago I decided to set up a new account to push out political messages, while my old personal account would just be used for wedding photos and the like.
I am not sure how many of my old “friends”–I don’t mean to be cynical, I am sure that if we met we would be friends–have made the transition. The new, public Facebook page is https://www.facebook.com/johnhhinderaker. I suggest you make the switch, if you haven’t already, especially if you aren’t interested in photos of my garden.
We all know that the major social media platforms are left-wing tools. Yet as long as, for example, IowaHawk, Comfortably Smug and Ted Cruz are on Twitter, that platform has value for conservatives, too.
That said, I am trying to do my part to support alternative platforms. Thus, I have joined Parler. You can find me there at @JHinderaker. My friend George Farmer has recently become the CEO of Parler, and I hope it will have a bright future. The problem, of course, comes down to network effects: the value of a social network comes mostly from the fact that lots of people are on it. That makes it very hard for newcomers to get traction. If you would like to see the conservative movement break free from left-wing curators, I encourage you to sign up for Parler and other more-conservative alternatives to the dominant left-wing platforms. And, of course, follow me when you do.
So:
Twitter: @HinderakerJohn
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/johnhhinderaker Note the second “h”!
Parler: @JHinderaker
The power of social networks is an objective fact that can be used for good or ill. The fact that the dominant networks are left-wing should not blind conservatives to the potential of such media. Especially because we are, after all, the majority.
(Steven Hayward)This weekend’s main topic of the Three Whisky Happy Hour podcast will be an exploration of Edmund Burke, in part because we received an interesting reader email after a recent episode that prompted an argument between me and Lucretia (she is a Burke skeptic, to put it mildly). In re-reading Burke in preparation for our taping this evening, I was struck by several passages in Burke’s most famous work, Reflections on the Revolution in France, that describe the temper and disposition of the wokerati behind the genuinely revolutionary moment America is going through.
Most of these excerpts don’t need any stage direction from me to appreciate the accuracy and application of Burke for today—especially on such things as rioting, “defund the police,” the impulse to repudiate the American Founding—everything that Roger Scruton (a Burkean) summed up with his phrase for the left: the “culture of repudiation.”
All circumstances taken together, the French Revolution is the most astonishing that has hitherto happened in the world. The most wonderful things are brought about in many instances by means the most absurd and ridiculous, in the most ridiculous modes, and apparently by the most contemptible instruments. Everything seems out of nature in this strange chaos of levity and ferocity, and of all sorts of crimes jumbled together with all sorts of follies. In viewing this monstrous tragi-comic scene, the most opposite passions necessarily succeed and sometimes mix with each other in the mind: alternate contempt and indignation, alternate laughter and tears, alternate scorn and horror.
It cannot, however, be denied that to some this strange scene appeared in quite another point of view. Into them it inspired no other sentiments than those of exultation and rapture. They saw nothing in what has been done in France but a firm and temperate exertion of freedom — so consistent, on the whole, with morals and with piety as to make it deserving not only of the secular applause of dashing Machiavelian politicians, but to render it a fit theme for all the devout effusions of sacred eloquence. . .
A spirit of innovation is generally the result of a selfish temper and confined views. People will not look forward to posterity, who never look backward to their ancestors. . .
You had all these advantages in your ancient states; but you chose to act as if you had never been moulded into civil society, and had everything to begin anew. You began ill, because you began by despising everything that belonged to you. You set up your trade without a capital. If the last generations of your country appeared without much lustre in your eyes, you might have passed them by, and derived your claims from a more early race of ancestors. Under a pious predilection for those ancestors, your imaginations would have realized in them a standard of virtue and wisdom beyond the vulgar practice of the hour; and you would have risen with the example to whose imitation you aspired. Respecting your forefathers, you would have been taught to respect yourselves. You would not have chosen to consider the French as a people of yesterday, as a nation of low-born, servile wretches until the emancipating year of 1789. . .
Compute your gains; see what is got by those extravagant and presumptuous speculations which have taught your leaders to despise all their predecessors, and all their contemporaries, and even to despise themselves, until the moment in which they became truly despicable. . .
They would soon see that criminal means, once tolerated, are soon preferred. They present a shorter cut to the object than through the highway of the moral virtues. Justifying perfidy and murder for public benefit, public benefit would soon become the pretext, and perfidy and murder the end — until rapacity, malice, revenge, and fear more dreadful than revenge, could satiate their insatiable appetites. . .
Your literary men, and your politicians, and so do the whole clan of the enlightened among us, essentially differ in these points. They have no respect for the wisdom of others; but they pay it off by a very full measure of confidence in their own. With them it is a sufficient motive to destroy an old scheme of things, because it is an old one. As to the new, they are in no sort of fear with regard to the duration of a building run up in haste; because duration is no object to those who think little or nothing has been done before their time, and who place all their hopes in discovery. They conceive, very systematically, that all things which give perpetuity are mischievous, and therefore they are at inexpiable war with all establishments. They think that government may vary like modes of dress, and with as little ill effect; that there needs no principle of attachment, except a sense of present conveniency, to any constitution of the state. . .
They find themselves obliged to rake into the histories of former ages (which they have ransacked with a malignant and profligate industry) for every instance of oppression and persecution which has been made by that body or in its favor, in order to justify, upon very iniquitous because very illogical principles of retaliation, their own persecutions and their own cruelties. After destroying all other genealogies and family distinctions, they invent a sort of pedigree of crimes. It is not very just to chastise men for the offences of their natural ancestors; but to take the fiction of ancestry in a corporate succession, as a ground for punishing men who have no relation to guilty acts, except in names and general descriptions, is a sort of refinement in injustice belonging to the philosophy of this enlightened age. . .
We hear these new teachers continually boasting of their spirit of toleration. That those persons should tolerate all opinions, who think none to be of estimation, is a matter of small merit. Equal neglect is not impartial kindness. The species of benevolence which arises from contempt is no true charity. . .
(John Hinderaker)Rosemount, Minnesota is a Twin Cities suburb adjacent to my own. It used to have good public schools, but they have been wrecked, like so many others, by Critical Race Theory and attendant left-wing indoctrination. Monday evening there was a district school board meeting. A number of people spoke, including a 15-year-old boy who called Rosemount High School to account for its commitment to political indoctrination.
You should watch it all, the kid is good and it is under five minutes long. My favorite moment is at the end, when he says that he is transferring to a private school. He says that he will go on to a successful career, and it is too bad for Rosemount High School that they won’t be able to count him as an alumnus. I have a hunch the kid is right:
(John Hinderaker)Joe Biden’s disgraceful performance at the G7 meeting and subsequent appearances abroad included his peddling of lies intended to discredit his political enemies, while at the same time putting his own country in a bad light. But Biden sees no problem with that–the only enemies he cares about are in the GOP.
Thus, Biden lied about the mostly peaceful protest at the Capitol on January 6, claiming falsely that rioters killed officer Brian Sicknick:
“That’s a ridiculous comparison,” Biden said. “It’s one thing for literally criminals to break through cordon, go into the Capitol, kill a police officer, and be held unaccountable than it is for people objecting and marching on the Capitol and saying, ‘You are not allowing me to speak freely. You are not allowing me to do A, B, C, or D.’”
No one killed a police officer on January 6; the medical examiner ruled, as has been widely reported, that Sicknick died of natural causes. But Biden is happy to portray his own country as violent and lawless as long as he can cast blame on political opponents.
Similarly, Biden launched into an attack on the Republican Party during a press conference in Belgium:
The Washington Post’s Anne Gearan asked Biden about our allies worrying about the “continued hold that Donald Trump has over the Republican Party and the rise of nationalist figures like him around the world.”
Leaders of some other countries worry that we might again have a president who puts America first. Biden took pains to reassure them:
But I think it’s appropriate to say that the Republican Party is vastly diminished in numbers; the leadership of the Republican Party is fractured; and the Trump wing of the party is the bulk of the party, but it makes up a significant minority of the American people.
All of this is fantasy. The “vastly diminished” Republican party controls 61 state legislative chambers to 37 for the Democrats, and there currently are 27 Republican governors to 23 Democrats. Republicans control one-half of the Senate and are within striking distance of capturing the House, having made significant gains in 2020.
American reporters do their best to cover for the doddering Biden, but foreign observers are not fooled. In the Telegraph, Nile Gardiner writes: “A weak Joe Biden is badly out of his depth.”
The Biden Presidency’s approach so far has largely been a rerun of the Obama administration’s lacklustre “leading from behind” doctrine. Biden called for a new “Strategic Stability Dialogue” with Moscow, with echoes of Hillary Clinton’s much vaunted “Russian Reset” back in 2009. The reset was a spectacular failure, and was followed in 2014 by the Russian invasion and annexation of Crimea.
***
Agreeing to this summit was a mistake by the White House. It is hard to see what the conceivable benefit would have been for the United States.
***
Putin’s press conference was a masterclass in disinformation, with repeated attacks on the United States, combined with thinly veiled menace aimed directly at anyone who dares to oppose him at home or abroad, and he clearly relished the chance to put his poisonous messaging across to an audience of millions in the West.
***
In contrast [to President Trump], President Biden already looks out of his depth on the international stage, and both Moscow and Beijing have grown more assertive since he entered the Oval Office. Biden did not have a good G7 summit, and at times looked confused, struggling to make points coherently and mixing up countries such as Syria and Libya.
His European tour began disastrously, with a poorly judged attack on the British Government over the Northern Ireland border. On the European stage, the US president also failed to develop a coherent, robust strategy for confronting China, on top of his mixed messages on Russia. This has only served to encourage division within Europe and given cover to those countries, such as Germany, that are seeking an accommodation with Beijing and Moscow.
It’s going to be a long four years, assuming Biden can hang on that long.
(Scott Johnson)Ammo Grrrll has some advice about RAISING KIDS AND CHICKENS. She writes:
For a couple of decades now, our betters have inveighed against “inhumane” raising of chickens and promoting “free-range chickens.” Now I am not a fan of being cruel to ANY of God’s creatures, big or small, with the exception of scorpions and Communists (but I repeat myself). Haha. I kid the Communists.
I have to change the channel when the puppy mill ads come on. But I have seen chickens up close and personal and frankly prefer to see them naked, roasting in a pan. As a small child on my grandma’s farm, I was often prevailed upon to enter the squawky, feathery, smelly chicken coop with a basket and try to reach under the hens without getting pecked to death. The hens seemed rather protective of their eggs and resisted the little hands prodding them to move aside. As a further deterrent to pilfering their eggs, it seemed to me they were deliberately pooping on the eggs, like prison inmates who spit on their food.
It was not a job I enjoyed at all. When I would come into the house with, maybe, three eggs, one broken, Grandma would sigh and go herself, coming back in about 30 seconds with enough eggs for all of us for breakfast. When those hens saw Grandma coming, they lived up to their name as “chickens.” I will say this – there was NOTHING like the taste of those fresh eggs.
Grandma’s chickens roamed freely throughout the yard pecking at everything, squawking and complaining incessantly, like members of The Squad, only smarter and less arrogant. They never really seemed very happy with their lives, in the coop or out.
But Grandma had a twin sister and HER chickens were Extremely Free Range. Auntie Iva’s chickens were allowed IN THE HOUSE. They had to be shooed off the dining room table before we could eat. No wonder I have such a tremendous immune system!
So why, over the last 15 months and counting, has it been considered good for chickens to roam about, but to have children locked in their homes while teachers get paid for failing to teach, instead of the popular current practice of teaching to fail? Thank God the Teachers’ Union is in charge. If students had school choice, how in the world would the black kids learn that they are too oppressed to take the “racist” ACT or even too stupid to locate a place to get an I.D. to vote? How would white kids grasp that they are singularly privileged and evil and responsible for slavery, including the 9 million slaves still in Africa today?
Anyway, with Father’s Day coming up on Sunday, I thought I would throw out for general discussion a few thoughts on Child Raising. With particular attention to the incalculable importance of Daddies. My shorthand philosophy of child-raising is that it is a careful balance of threats and bribes overlaid with unconditional love. BEING THERE is the key step.
Did you ever notice that in ANY discussion of mothers, but particularly SINGLE mothers, you always hear two words, almost as a mantra: STRONG, INDEPENDENT women? So, “strength” and “independence” are prized qualities in women according to The People Who Decide Such Things. When was the last time you saw in print the phrase, “strong, independent men”? (I’ll wait…) MEN are never described positively as “strong”, which is seen as a threat, not an asset. And “independence” in men is not prized at all in Femi-Ninny World, lest the men grow a spine and disagree with the women who love bossing us around.
Yeah, I’m tired of that. “Strength” – of character, of adherence to values, of an ability to get through tough times, even just regular muscular, jar-opening strength – is equally good in both men and women. Many people HAVE had “strong, independent” mothers, especially if their husbands died or left them. God bless them all. But so have many of us had strong fathers, which was a blessing as well. And I have known several MEN who did all the hard work of raising children after the birthing persons, who all just happened to be women – what are the chances? — decided they couldn’t be bothered any more. (By the way, if a woman pretending to be a man can still technically be called a “birthing person,” what do you call a man pretending to be a woman? An “impregnating person”? Rachel? Anybody?) Insanity!
I have mentioned before that growing up in small town Minnesota, I did not know a single classmate whose parents were divorced. Surely, there must have been some. I had a favorite aunt who had married a man who was divorced. My dear auntie turned out to be a very accomplished birthing person who produced five kids and was married to him till he passed away as an “old guy” in his late 60s. (Or as I would describe it now, “MUCH too young.”)
Finally, as a gift to current parents, here is my Instructional Google Translate version of Parent-Speak in the 50s when this geezer was a kid:
There are clearly far too many young people today who apparently have NEVER been told “No” to anything, even such obvious things as “No, you can’t loot; no, you can’t burn down the police station; no, you can’t take a massive student loan and then not repay it.”
Boys in particular need a father because at some point, most boys cannot be adequately controlled by most women. Are there exceptions? Of course. We have all seen video of righteous large ladies dragging their mortified sons off from mostly-peaceful looting, but, in general, testosterone will win the day. Mostly, boys need a father to teach them how to be proper men and fathers themselves. “Role models” as the expression goes. Sports figures are not an adequate substitute. And girls need a Daddy to love and protect them and teach them what kind of a decent, loving man to find for themselves.
Thank you and God Bless You, all the good and even average Daddies who were trying their best. Find me the parent who says s/he has never fallen short – of patience, of even-handedness, of energy – and I will find you someone who is mistaken.
Happy Father’s Day: to my dear Daddy; to my dear husband, a spectacular Daddy; and to all impregnating people who grace us with their presence on Fridays.
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“Nothing is more certain than that a general profligacy and corruption of manners make a people ripe for destruction. A good form of government may hold the rotten materials together for some time, but beyond a certain pitch, even the best constitution will be ineffectual, and slavery must ensue.” —John Witherspoon (1776)
Parents explains to a school board that CRT teaches children to hate each other.
Today’s Opinion
RICH LOWRY
Biden’s Tribute to Trump
The old consensus on China had become unsustainable, but it took Trump to demolish it.
TONY PERKINS
The Tax Man Shunneth
The IRS says that even talking about what the Bible says on cultural issues is somehow “engag[ing] in prohibited campaign intervention.”
GARY BAUER
Demoralizing the Police
All 50 of Portland’s rapid response officers have resigned in protest.
BURT PRELUTSKY
Blacks & Whites & Reds All Over
I would like to see black ministers and black nuns and any black celebrities with the guts to display their opposition to the likes of Al Sharpton, Colin Kaepernick and LeBron James.
Please join us in prayer for our nation’s Military Patriots standing in harm’s way in defense of Liberty, for their families, and for our nation’s First Responders. We also ask prayer for your Patriot team, and our mission to, first and foremost, support and defend our Republic’s Founding Principles of Liberty, and to ignite the fires of freedom in the hearts and minds of our countrymen.
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It’s the first day of summer, Amazon’s sale of the year begins and more news to start your Monday.
Happy Monday, Daily Briefing readers. Summer is finally here! ☀️ If you’re planning on a summer vacation, experts say book it now. And there’s more good news if you’re a shopping fan – Amazon Prime Day is here, too.
🔵 New this morning: Up to 10,000 local fans will be allowed at the Tokyo Olympics, despite concerns from medical experts. The Games begin July 23. A decision on the Paralympics is still to come.
⛳ Jon Rahm rallied to edge Louis Oosthuizen by one stroke and win the 121st U.S. Open, his first major golf title.
🏃🏽♀️ Track star Allyson Felix punched her ticket to her fifth Olympic Games — and her first as a mom.
🏞 Just about everyone has heard of Yosemite, the Grand Canyon and Yellowstone. But there are plenty of less-recognizable national parkswaiting to be discovered.
🎧 On today’s 5 Things podcast, hear some tips and tricks for Amazon Prime Day from Reviewed Editor-in-Chief David Kender. You can listen to the podcast every day on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or on your smart speaker.
Here’s what’s happening today:
Claudette regaining strength after leaving at least 13 dead
Claudette was regaining strength early Monday and expected to return to tropical storm status as it neared the coast of the Carolinas, after leaving at least 13 people dead. The depression was forecast to become a tropical storm sometime Monday morning over eastern North Carolina. Ten people, including nine children, were killed in a multi-vehicle collision on Saturday that was likely caused by storm-related hydroplaning, Butler County Coroner Wayne Garlock said. Separately, a 24-year-old father and his 3-year-old son died in their home when a falling tree struck the residence in Tuscaloosa County, Alabama, police said. A 23-year-old woman also died Saturday after her car ran off the road into a swollen creek, DeKalb County Deputy Coroner Chris Thacker told WHNT-TV.
Start of summer brings travel troubles
After the longest day of the year, Monday brings about the first full day of summer. Summer solstice 2021 began Sunday at 11:32 p.m. EDT, and is often called the longest day of the year because it’s the day with the most daylight, since the sun travels its longest path through the sky and reaches its highest point. And if you’re planning on booking a summer getaway, ” you better book something now,” according to experts. Travelers are facing high lodging rates, driven by the millions of Americans who are ready to hit the roads now that COVID-19 cases have dropped. Whether they’re looking for a hotel room in Miami or a Vrbo in Myrtle Beach, demand and prices for many destinations are back to 2019 levels, or even higher, experts warn.
What else people are reading:
🗳 The Senate is poised to consider voting rights legislation this week, with a vote possibly voting coming as soon as Tuesday. Its passage looks unlikely, however.
👶 Duchess Meghan shared a rare tidbit about son Archie in her first interview since speaking with Oprah Winfrey in March.
The day shoppers have been eagerly awaiting all year has come: Amazon Prime Day . On Monday and Tuesday, the retail giant is expected to unleash more than two million discounts for members of Amazon’s Prime subscription service, which the company reports are now 200 million strong worldwide. Existing or new customers to the service will get access to tons of top-rated products at jaw-dropping discounts during the monster sale. Members will also be able to stream movies and TV on Prime Video and read thousands of books on Prime Reading (among other perks). Those on the fence can even test the service out for a free 30-day trial.
US borders with Mexico and Canada will remain closed
U.S. borders with Mexico and Canada will remain closed through Monday “to reduce the spread” of COVID-19 . The Department of Homeland Security announced Sunday that the restrictions at the borders — originally closed to leisure travelers in March 2020 — were being extended until July 21. The border restriction extension comes as about 45% of the U.S. population is fully vaccinated against COVID-19 and cases are declining in a majority of states. But the spread of the highly-contagious Delta variant among the unvaccinated could pose a new public health threat, warned President Joe Biden and the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday.
ICYMI: Some of our top stories yesterday
🏅 “Patriotism has many different looks.” The woman who photographed Simone Biles for Glamour magazine shared the story behind the iconic images.
🥵 Is it hot in here? Why Texas power companies are adjusting residents’ smart thermostats to higher temperatures.
🔵 Sha’Carri Richardson dominated the 100 meters in style to clinch a trip to the Tokyo Olympics.
US Track and Field Olympic trials continues with five finals
The U.S. Track and Field Olympic trials continue with a handful of finals and one significant absence. The finals for the pole vault, javelin throw, men’s triple jump and 800 meters, and women’s 1500 and 5000 meters will take place Monday. Notably absent from the women’s 1500M and 500M races will be Shelby Houlihan , the reigning national champion and American record-holder in the events. Houlihan was given a four-year ban for violating anti-doping rules last week when she tested positive for nandrolone, an anabolic steroid. She has strongly denied wrongdoing and believes she must have unknowingly ingested the steroid through pork in a burrito she purchased at a food truck.
📸 Happy Father’s Day! A collection of heartfelt cartoons about dad 📸
Dave Granlund, USA TODAY Network
USA TODAY Network
You dads didn’t think the Daily Briefing would forget about you, did you? Happy Father’s Day for yesterday! Cartoonists from across the USA TODAY Network have created this gallery – just for you.
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93.) ABSOLUTE NEWS
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Nancy Pelosi’s World ROCKED – Not What She Was Expecting
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Forty-four percent (44%) of likely voters say President Biden’s recent trip to Europe and meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin was a success. That’s according to a recent RassmussenReports.com poll. Forty percent (40%) of voters say the trip was not successful, according to the poll. Another 15% are not sure whether the trip was a […]
Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis ranked above former President Donald Trump in a straw poll using an “approval” scale for the 2024 Presidential race at the 2021 Western Conservative Summit. That’s according to DailyWire.com. The attendees of the conservative event at Colorado Christian University ranked DeSantis 3 points above Trump, with DeSantis receiving a 74% […]
A recent study published in the American Journal of Therapeutics gives a hearty endorsement to the effectiveness of the drug ivermectin in treating Covid-19. The study finds: Large reductions in Covid-19 deaths are possible using ivermectin Using ivermectin early may reduce the numbers progressing to severe disease Ivermectin is low cost Together, the study finds, […]
A CDC internal email released through a Freedom of Information Act request reveals just how nasty things got behind closed doors after a CDC senior scientist confessed to covering up a link between vaccines and autism, and implicated his CDC colleagues. The email, dated Sept. 2, 2018, was written by CDC’s Dr. Willam (Bill) Thompson […]
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96.) NOT THE BEE
Not the Bee Daily Newsletter
Jun 21, 2021
Guy does a PERFECT impression of a “Trump GPS” and I need this in my car immediately
Seriously, this is PERFECT:
Disney is holding a “Pride Celebration Spectacular” for your kids, complete with Kermit the Frog and that drag queen who’s appeared on Nickelodeon.
The Mouse House just decided it needed to go completely broke for woke like all the other cool kids:
Please enjoy this video of Brian Stelter getting absolutely roasted while taking live calls on C-SPAN
Oh man. This is beautiful.
DeSantis Just Beat Trump In A 2024 Straw Poll At A Popular Conservative Conference 👀
Did ya see this one coming?
Trump: Teaching Critical Race Theory In Schools Is “A Program For National Suicide”
President Trump wrote a column called “A Plan to Get Divisive & Radical Theories Out of Our Schools” and he gets so much right in it.
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You may have noticed how the cost ofeverythingis going up…
With inflation on the rise, your retirement accounts could be in danger. Could Biden’s and Fed’s policies of printing more and proposing to increase taxes make inflation even worse?
Could it be because almost 20% of all US dollars were created last year? Isn’t that an early sign of inflation?
According to Kyle Bass, chief investment of Hayman Capital Management, the actual inflation is 12%! “people that have money in the bank, in their savings, are losing, call it 5% to 12% of their purchasing power now annually.”
You need protection more than ever. Can you really afford the new policies to ruin your wealth and future? If not, then there is a way that could protect what you really care for the most.
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99.) MARK LEVIN
June 18, 2021
Posted on
On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, Massive spending by Republicans and Democrats from the Obama era and now will come home to roost. The Federal Reserve has indicated that interest rates may have to go up because there’s too much of the cash, they printed, circulating. Combine that with expanded welfare called pandemic unemployment insurance and you’ve got a recipe for inflation. The federal government is crushing individualism through its massive apparatus and power. Economic Marxism will destroy the currency and the livelihoods of middle-class income earners. The only way to control this monster, once it is unleashed, is through even harder economic measures until their benefit is realized. If such austerity measures are not taken, an economic depression will be afoot. Democrats are vying for total permanent control and sadly they don’t care what gets in the way of their thirst for power. Then, what are Democrats doing to make amends for Juneteenth? Biden didn’t even know what Juneteenth was last year and Obama failed to make it a federal holiday. Later, the Democrats’ latest scheme is to raid the Medicare Trust Fund for $716 Billion to “save” Obamacare. If any US citizen would make a Ponzi scheme maneuver like this on their taxes, they’d be in prison.
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Nicholas Kamm
100.) WOLF DAILY
Wolf Daily Newsletter
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When the U.S. Senate this week votes on a sweeping election-reform bill, Republican Minority Leader Mitch McConnell will play a role he relishes: Roadblock to the Democratic agenda.
Senate Democrats spent the weekend trying to finalize a bill that could win the support of all 50 Democrats and independents in the 100-member chamber, even as Republicans showed no signs of joining the effort…
30 years ago, I had to drop out of college. Today, I have enough money to allow my entire family – including my two young adult children – to retire whenever they want. I consider the Money Calendar – and its moneymaking power – to be the crowning achievement of my career. [Sponsored]
Authorities in the Mexican border state of Baja California say they will include immigrants in the new COVID-19 vaccination plan for border cities, which is aimed at accelerating the reopening of the shared land border with the United States.
Transgender athlete Laurel Hubbard has been selected as part of the New Zealand women’s team for the Tokyo Olympic Games, the country’s Olympics committee said on Monday.
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That’s a hellava lot of conspiracy nuts, eh? Hundreds of people concerned about the integrity of the Nov. 2020 election gathered outside the Michigan Capitol Thursday to protest and deliver roughly 7,000 affidavits claiming fraud and demanding a …
This would never have happened under President Trump. Under the weak Biden Administration the stability of the world is in a free-fall. And were only 6 months in.
“Israel has become the ball and chain that endangers their standing as good progressives.” 21st century kapos but worse – unlike the kapos, there is no gun pointed to the head of Jewish Democrats.
Crime in Atlanta has spiked due to the policies of the Democrat mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms. As such, the wealthy district of Buckhead is trying to secede from Atlanta. Buckhead’s residents no longer believe that the government of Atlanta can keep …
These are godless Jews – they worship at the church of left-wing human secularism. That’s their religion. Religious Jews overwhelmingly voted for Trump.
Did we miss anything? Let us know by hitting reply or sending an email through our site here.
We cover the news for you, and as always – you’re our best source!
102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
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June 21, 2021
Nancy Pelosi and AOC are at it again. In this episode, I discuss the biggest messaging mistake the Republican Party can make. They have an opportunity to speak out about the dignity of work and strike back against the latest AOC/Pelosi scheme.
Only 145 Miles of Texas Border Has a Wall – Gov. Abbott Vows to Build 1,100 More
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has vowed to pick up where former President Donald Trump left off, announcing plans to build over 1,000 miles of new border barrier in the state.
Despite Biden’s Campaign Promises, 60% of Americans Could See Tax Increase Under His Proposals
Analysis by the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center found the 60% of American households could see a tax increase because of Joe Biden’s legislative proposals.
Pennsylvania might conduct an Arizona-style auditThe Commonwealth of Pennsylvania is strongly considering an independent election audit of the 2020 presidential election. “The Pennsylvania state senator in charge of a key election committee is backing an…
Dems weaponize Juneteenth and violent brawls eruptFar-left Democrats have weaponized Juneteenth and it has resulted in violence during some of the celebrations. We are seeing a lot of Black Power (communist) fists. It’s the return of…
Sen Rubio slammed for condemning Marxism, aka communismSenator Marco Rubio (R-FL), who is running for reelection in 2022 and has the endorsement of former President Donald Trump. On Saturday, he criticized Marxism in a tweet for “divid…
Democrats are caught again using a tragedy for political gain, but it’s ignored by mainstream media and Big Tech! The post The Despicable Attempt by the Radical Left to Take Down Ron DeSantis appeared first on The Liberty Loft.
The rationale for the Juneteenth that we have just seen signed into law is a far cry from what we should actually be commemorating. The post Juneteenth: A Noble Cause Pushed Forth by the Ignoble appeared first on The Liberty Loft.
The federal government is once again going after farmers by shutting off water in Oregon. The post Farmers prepared to fight for water rights as Feds threaten their livelihoods to protect endangered species’ appeared first on The Liberty Loft.
Critical race theory is absolutely contrary to Christianity, says pastor, educator, and author Voddie Baucham Jr. The post Critical Race Theory Is Antithetical to Christianity, Black Pastor Says appeared first on The Liberty Loft.
Joe Biden put everything out there for Vladimir Putin. He gave him all that he needed to continue taking advantage of America. The post Biden Giving Putin All the Info He Needs appeared first on The Liberty Loft.
Joe Biden made a promise that he knew it would not be difficult to keep. All he had to do was take credit for Donald Trump’s work! The post Biden Taking Credit for Trump’s Vaccine Plan appeared first on The Liberty Loft.
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Leaked phone recordings and emails reveal a top official was prepared to use foreign troops to block Bolivia’s left-wing MAS party from returning to power.
Join us Thursday, June 24, for a timely discussion with Daniel Ellsberg and others on the dangers of treating whistleblowers as spies and the future of the Espionage Act.
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