Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday July 14, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
|
2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
WORDS OF WISDOM “Mistakes are the portals of discovery.” JAMES JOYCE MORNING BRIEF TOP NEWS Every American who is willing to work hard deserves the right to pursue the American Dream. But as we have seen recently, the freedoms that make the American Dream possible are being slowly stripped away, one by one. We believe that reporting the news to you in Truth and Tradition is our first line of defense. Please help us in Defending America by subscribing to The Epoch Times today and get your first 4 months for just $1: And as an added bonus, you will also get Epoch TV 100% FREE with your new subscription! NOTE: This is our best offer ever, and it expires soon.
POSITIVE NEWS EPOCH OPINION A WORD FROM OUR SPONSOR It Looks Like Gold is in Trouble EPOCH TV PUZZLE CENTER Feedback: Let us know what you think by taking this survey. If this email has been forwarded to you and you would like to sign up, please click here. Copyright © 2021 The Epoch Times, All rights reserved. The Epoch Times, 229 W 28th St, Fl.5, New York, NY 10001
With social media censorship sidelining many important headlines, our Morning Brief email is how we make sure you get the latest developments that our reporters have curated from around the world. It’s our way of keeping you truly informed so that you can make the decisions that align with your values. We hope you enjoy our coverage. Manage your email preferences here.
|
3.) DAYBREAK
|
4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 7.14.20
Las Vegas Sands spent the better part of a decade trying to build a casino in South Florida, but the company appears to have shifted its focus a few hundred miles north.
The casino company made waves Monday when it was found to have pumped $17 million into a political committee that would back a then-unspecified gambling amendment in 2022.
A spokesperson said the company was “contemplating various options with no intention to violate the recently passed Compact/revenue sharing agreement” with the Seminole Tribe of Florida.
Documents obtained by Florida Politics show the political committee, Florida Voters in Charge, has two pitches for the ballot that both point to Jacksonville as the new target for a resort-casino.
One proposed amendment would authorize up to three existing card room license holders to offer full-fledged casino gaming if they’re located at least 130 miles away from tribal lands and the owners agree to spend no less than $250 million on development and construction costs.
The wording would apply to the bestbet locations in Northeast Florida as well as Gretna, but the Jax area would be the obvious choice for a nine-figure capital investment.
The other proposal would allow for up to three new casinos in the state. The gambling licenses, which would be put up for competitive bid, would require the new facilities to be located at least 100 miles away from tribal lands. Applicants would also have to show they would spend at least $500 million on development and construction.
The second proposal could allow a new player to set up shop down the road from existing card rooms, which would be sure to rile up pari-mutuel interests.
No matter which option Las Vegas Sands picks, Jacksonville is the only major population center that fits the bill.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@sabrod123: DHS Sec. [Alejandro] Mayorkas to Haitians and Cubans: “The time is never right to attempt migration by sea … this risk is not worth taking. Let me be clear: If you take to the sea, you will not come to the United States.”
—@mkraju: Just asked Mitch McConnell about [Donald] Trump’s insult that he’s an “Old Crow.” McConnell’s response: “Actually, it’s quite an honor. Old Crow is Henry Clay‘s favorite bourbon.”
—@LEBassett: My entire feed is politics reporters asking who Olivia Rodrigo is, and I’m deeply embarrassed for all of you old nerds
Tweet, tweet:
—@mlafferty1: Yah, except the Florida law isn’t just about burning buildings and dragging people out of cars. It goes after people who stand in the traffic, which is what’s happening not only in Cuba but in Tampa and Miami. Ask someone who was on the Palmetto Expressway or Dale Mabry today.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
Jeff Bezos travels into space on Blue Origin’s first passenger flight — 6; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 9; second season of ‘Ted Lasso’ premieres on Apple+ — 9; the NBA Draft — 14; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 16; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 23; Marvel’s What If …? premieres on Disney+ — 28; Florida Behavioral Health Association’s Annual Conference (BHCon) begins — 35; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 41; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 51; NFL regular season begins — 57; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 62; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 68; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 72; ‘Dune’ premieres — 79; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 79; MLB regular season ends — 81; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 86; World Series Game 1 — 105; Florida TaxWatch’s Annual Meeting begins — 105; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 111; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 111; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 115; Disney Very Merriest After Hours will debut — 117; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 128; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 135; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 149; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 156; NFL season ends — 179; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 181; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 181; NFL playoffs begin — 185; Super Bowl LVI — 214; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 254; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 296; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 323; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 359; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 450; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 485.
“Cubans, broken by pandemic and fueled by social media, confront their police state” via Anthony Faiola of The Washington Post — Cuban soldiers and police patrolled the streets of the capital Monday, the day after the apparently spontaneous eruption of the broadest unrest seen in Cuba since the early years of the revolution, and the security presence was increased in other major cities. In seeing the images of fearless masses overturning police cars and standing defiant in the face of official force, dissidents in Cuba and the exile community in South Florida embraced a historic moment they had long sought. Yet even if authorities can quell the current unrest, the breadth of the protests suggests the most significant threat to the government since the collapse of the Soviet Union and one that could grow.
“Raúl Castro reappears in emergency meeting prompted by massive protests in Cuba” via Nora Gámez Torres of the Miami Herald — Castro, the octogenarian leader who is still the ultimate authority in Cuba, came out of retirement to attend an emergency meeting of the Communist Party’s Politburo to deal with the islandwide protests that have shaken the six-decade-old regime. The meeting, reported by the official Communist Party daily Granma, took place on Sunday, the day a massive popular uprising against the government erupted in several Cuban cities, including Havana. It is unclear why Granma waited till Monday to publish the information. The paper repeated accusations by Cuba’s hand-picked president, Miguel Díaz-Canel, that the U.S. was behind the protests. U.S. officials have dismissed those claims.
“‘There’s no turning back:’ Cuban dissidents feel emboldened despite crackdown” via Ernesto Londoño and Frances Robles of The New York Times — In the aftermath of a remarkable wave of demonstrations across Cuba over the weekend, the government detained dozens of people in a crackdown that activists described as the largest in years, perhaps even decades. One longtime human rights activist said that the nationwide sweep of arrests was comparable only to the crackdown that preceded the 1961 invasion at the Bay of Pigs. Human rights groups said it may take several days to get a clear picture of the scale of the government response because spotty phone and internet connections have made it difficult to track how many people were taken into custody. But Cubans reported seeing a strong presence of security forces on the streets on Monday and Tuesday.
“Ron DeSantis hosts meeting in Miami as dissidents call for regime change in Cuba; defends “riot” law against charge of hypocrisy” via Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — At a meeting hosted by DeSantis in Miami, Cuban refugees and Cuban American elected officials on Tuesday called on President Joe Biden’s administration to do more to support the demonstrators who took to the streets Sunday to protest the communist government there. “The people have made their view very, very clear: they want an end to the regime. They don’t want a reform to the regime,” said Marcell Felipe, a Miami attorney. “The Cuban people have spoken — they’re not taking a step back.” Dissidents called for stricter economic sanctions on Cuba’s communist government, assistance in making sure internet access is available, and broader international support for protesters.
Tweet, tweet:
—”Cuban exiles in Polk County hope change finally comes for Cuba” via Gary White of The Lakeland Ledger
“Homeland Security chief warns Cubans and Haitians not to come to U.S. by sea” via Michael Wilner of the Miami Herald — Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas warned Cubans and Haitians not to try to come to the United States illegally by sea and said they would not be allowed in. The warning comes as Cuba is seeing rare protests nationwide and Haiti is facing a political crisis in the aftermath of the assassination of its president. “Any migrant intercepted at sea, regardless of their nationality, will not be permitted to enter the United States,” Mayorkas said at a news conference. DHS is closely monitoring from the air for any increase in either incoming or outgoing “unsafe and irregular” traffic throughout the Florida straits amid unrest in the Caribbean, he said. “We have not seen a surge at this time.”
Miami-Dade prepped for influx of Cuban, Haitian students — As political unrest in Cuba and Haiti swells, Miami-Dade Schools is preparing for a possible flood of new students. Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida reports that MDC Schools started planning for the possibility on Tuesday. “This school district will continue its long-standing history of opening our arms to welcome, embrace, and educate all students,” Superintendent Alberto Carvalho said in a statement. The county has taken in international students under similar circumstances, but the COVID-19 pandemic is a complicating factor this time. Miami-Dade Schools said its plan encompasses procedures for registration, food services and transportation for the new students. School leaders also said they will work with local, state, and federal authorities to handle the potential influx.
“Protesters in solidarity against the Cuban government shut down major Miami expressway” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — In a show of solidarity with Cuban people protesting against the country’s communist dictatorship, South Florida demonstrators shut down a major expressway Tuesday afternoon in Miami-Dade County. The Palmetto Expressway/State Road 826 was closed for hours, starting at about 1 p.m. Video from television station helicopters showed the highway closed in both directions, and there was an extensive police presence. Video from multiple TV stations showed people of all ages, many with Cuban flags draped over their shoulders, converged on the highway and remained through the afternoon rush hour. Miami-Dade Police encouraged people to disperse, to no avail.
—“Cuba protests blocking lanes of Dale Mabry in Tampa” via Spectrum News
“Is Cuban Americans’ highway protest in Miami breaking Florida’s new anti-riot law?” via Ana Ceballos and Charles Rabin of the Miami Herald — Dozens of people supporting the growing anti-government protests in Cuba clogged one of Miami’s busiest highways all afternoon and well into rush hour Tuesday, a show of solidarity that could put them in violation of a new law championed by DeSantis. The new law, known as the “anti-riot” law, is clear: A person shall be cited for a pedestrian violation if they “willfully obstruct the free, convenient, and normal use of a public street, highway or road.” For instance, if a person stands or remains on a street, highway or roadway, they would be in violation of a section in state laws that would subject them to a $15 traffic citation.
“Lane change: DeSantis’ “anti-riot” law appears not to apply to protest that blocked the palmetto” via Alan Halaly and Alexi C. Cardona of the Miami New Times — In Florida, political gain appears to trump consistency. The largest protests in decades erupted in Cuba on Sunday, with Cubans banding together to speak out against a crumbling economy, food and medicine shortages, and the Cuban government’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. Along with Miami Republicans like U.S. Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar and Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, DeSantis immediately took to social media to show solidarity with the resistance on the island. Thousands of Cubans in Miami also responded to the protests over the weekend, massing in Little Havana and Hialeah and shutting down public thoroughfares.
— LATEST ON SURFSIDE —
“As search nears end, Florida condo death toll becomes clearer” via Patricia Mazzei of The New York Times — The death toll from a catastrophic condominium collapse in Florida last month, once feared to be well more than 100 people, is expected to land between 95 and 99 people, with the search-and-recovery operation at the disaster site nearing its end. Champlain Towers South in Surfside partially crumbled early on June 24. In the 20 days crews have searched for victims, slowly removing layer after layer of rubble from the 13-story building, they have found the remains of 95 people. Eighty-five of them have been identified. The other 10 victims will be considered unaccounted for until the medical examiner’s office in Miami-Dade County can identify them through various forensic techniques, including comparing DNA samples of family members.
“Nikki Fried blasts decades of deregulation for Surfside condo collapse” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Fried said more than two decades of building deregulations led to the condo collapse in Surfside that killed at least 95, left 14 missing, and displaced scores of residents. An NBC News report on Thursday identified a Florida law repealed in 2010 as a possible factor in the collapse. The law, initially passed in 2008, could have accelerated the repair process for major structural damage that may have led to the building’s failure. U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist, Fried’s opponent in the 2022 Democratic Gubernatorial Primary, was the Governor who signed the repeal bill. But Fried refrained from singling out Crist when Florida Politics asked about his signature.
“Beefed-up building inspections on the way in Palm Beach County after Surfside tragedy” via Wells Dusenbury of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Palm Beach County took the first step Tuesday toward an enhanced inspection policy for taller buildings in the wake of the deadly condo collapse in Surfside. County Commissioners said they supported new measures to safeguard older and taller buildings, including recertification inspections. Broward and Miami-Dade counties require structural and electrical safety inspections for condo buildings every 40 years. Inspections are carried out every 10 years, and building owners must make corrections on any issues found. Palm Beach County, however, has no such law. Currently, inspectors approve new buildings, then inspect again if someone files a complaint or alerts them of potential unsafe buildings.
“League of Cities: Time for Tallahassee to step up after Surfside condo collapse” via John C. Pacenti of The Palm Beach Post — When it comes to making sure a Surfside-type cataclysmic collapse of an older condominium building doesn’t occur in Palm Beach County, the real fixes and repairs need to occur at the state Capitol in Tallahassee, said the executive director of the local League of Cities. Richard Radcliffe, director of the organization that represents 39 municipalities, said state lawmakers need to ensure that money is there for critical repairs by requiring condo boards to hoard a specific percentage of assessments for future repairs. The Palm Beach County League of Cities, for its part, has created an ad hoc technical group of experts who are starting by looking at existing structures that fit the profile of Champlain Towers South.
— 2022 —
Charlie Crist to make SW Florida swing — Crist will make stops in Sarasota and Fort Myers Wednesday as part of his campaign for Governor. The Sarasota event begins at 9:30 a.m. and is billed as a grassroots event to announce his “Clean Water for All” plan. The Democratic former Governor will then embark on a Caloosahatchee River Watershed boat tour with the Sanibel-Captiva Conservation Foundation at noon.
First on #FlaPol — “William Braddock drops out of FL CD-13 race following threatening recording” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Braddock has dropped his bid for Florida’s 13th Congressional District, his campaign first confirmed to Florida Politics. Braddock’s withdrawal comes after recordings of the former candidate leaked of him allegedly threatening to kill fellow Republican candidate Anna Paulina Luna. Braddock’s campaign finance committee filed a termination report on June 18. The report was approved on June 23, making Braddock’s campaign account inactive. Last Friday, a Pinellas County judge approved a temporary injunction order filed by Luna against Braddock earlier in June. Luna sought an injunction against Braddock after recordings surfaced of him allegedly threatening to make Luna “disappear.” The recording was secretly taped by Erin Olszewski, a right-wing activist who has also filed a restraining order against Braddock.
“Perry Thurston rakes in $280K for CD 20 Special Election” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — Thurston raised $280,000 for his bid for the congressional seat vacated when Rep. Alcee Hastings died earlier this year, his campaign announced Monday. Thurston, who gave up his Senate leadership post to run, is in a crowded race with several other current and former elected leaders to represent Florida’s 20th Congressional District. Thurston has blown by the quarter-million mark. But Monday’s report from first quarter fundraising includes a $100,000 donation Thurston made to himself, his campaign says. “I am extremely grateful for the early support from the community in my community,” Thurston said.
— “Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, largely self-funding CD 20 bid, adds $2.4 million in Q2” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics
—“Nick DiCeglie pulls in $35K in June for Senate bid” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics
—“Hillary Cassel adds nearly $14K in June, continues to lead HD 99 fundraising” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics
—”Daniel Perez hauls $50K+ in June, campaign and committee funds hit $1.16 million” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics
—“Demi Busatta Cabrera crosses $80,000 raised for HD 114 reelection” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics
“Matt Caldwell won’t run for Agriculture Commissioner in 2022” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Caldwell will not run for Florida Agriculture Commissioner in 2022. The Lehigh Acres Republican said in a social media post he’s focused on his family and the office he currently holds. That means he will not run for any higher office next year. “I do not intend to run for another office in 2022 and look forward to continuing to serve Florida in my current roles,” Caldwell wrote. Caldwell won his Lee County constitutional office in November when he was also elected as Lee County Republican Committeeman. But many wondered if he still had his eye on the Cabinet job. Supporters have also asked if he will run for Congress, he said, and potentially other statewide positions.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“DeSantis: Teacher, principal bonuses coming in August” via The News Service of Florida — DeSantis said Tuesday that he expects $1,000 bonuses promised to teachers and principals using federal coronavirus relief funds to be delivered in August. DeSantis began touting the plan to use $216 million in federal stimulus money for educator bonuses in March. But in a letter to state Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran sent June 30, U.S. DOE Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy and Programs Ian Rosenblum questioned whether Florida’s plan would be allowable under federal guidelines for the use of what are known as “ESSER” funds. According to the federal education agency, the pot of money that states can use to provide bonuses is at issue.
“DeSantis promotes new Florida civics education program offering teachers $3,000 bonuses” via John Kennedy of the Florida Times-Union — Civics education in Florida schools continued Tuesday on a bumpy course under DeSantis, who touted a new, $3,000 bonus program for teachers after vetoing civics literacy legislation just last month. DeSantis struck down the civics literacy measure only weeks after the state’s Board of Education complied with his demand and banned the teaching of so-called critical race theory in Florida’s K-12 schools. Critical race theory, which explores the impact of slavery and racial injustice on society, is not directly taught in Florida schools. However, talk of the concept has inflamed conservative TV, and the Governor was quick to respond.
“Facing ethics complaint, Geraldine Thompson charges political persecution” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Democratic Rep. Thompson accused DeSantis and Secretary of State Laurel Lee Tuesday of pushing an ethics complaint against her as political revenge for when successfully sued to block Renatha Francis’ nomination to the Florida Supreme Court last year. Thompson said the complaint centers on a state budget appropriation that she pushed in 2016. She said it alleges a conflict of interest because some of the money went to an African American history museum she founded in Orlando, but Thompson had not been on the nonprofit’s board of directors since 2012, according to its annual reports. Under its rules, the Florida Commission on Ethics could neither confirm nor deny that such a complaint exists against Thompson Tuesday.
“Kelly Skidmore hosts women’s health care panel, talks impact of COVID-19 pandemic” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Skidmore organized a virtual Zoom meeting Monday where she and several panelists discussed women’s health care issues, including the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on health care access. Dr. Charmaine Chibar, pediatrics director for the Health Care District of Palm Beach County, said while telemedicine allowed doctors and patients to stay connected, virtual visits weren’t as effective in ensuring patients came in for annual screenings. “We have had, unfortunately, less cervical cancer screenings, breast cancer screenings, colon cancer screenings in the past year due to the lack of office visits during the pandemic,” Chibar said. Skidmore also posed questions on various topics regarding abortion access, contraceptive options and hygiene products, among others.
— STATEWIDE —
“Florida applies for $1.1B in additional Medicaid funds” via Christine Sexton of News Service of Florida — DeSantis’ administration is asking the federal government for an additional $1.1 billion in federal Medicaid dollars over the next two years to bolster access to home- and community-based programs and steer hundreds of millions of dollars to poor, elderly and disabled Floridians to purchase technology and make home improvements that enable them to age in place. The additional federal Medicaid funding the state is seeking is available under the American Rescue Plan Act. If the Biden administration signs off on the plan, none of the money could be spent without approval from the Legislative Budget Commission, a 14-member panel, composed of seven state representatives and seven state Senators.
“Judge blocks property insurance law” via Jim Turner of The News Service of Florida — A federal judge has blocked the state from enforcing a key part of a new property-insurance law designed to combat fraud that prohibits roofing contractors advertising to potential customers. Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Walker supported the call for a preliminary injunction from Gale Force Roofing & Restoration, which argued the law signed by Gov. DeSantis violates First Amendment rights by directly penalizing protected speech. “It is also clear that the threatened injuries to plaintiff from banning plaintiff’s truthful commercial speech outweighs the state’s interest in preventing fraud, protecting consumers from exploitation, and stabilizing the insurance market,” Walker wrote in a ruling issued Sunday.
“Florida judge won’t toss out sanctions against Grim Reaper lawyer” via Haley Brown of Florida Politics — A lawyer who walked Florida’s beaches dressed as the grim reaper during the pandemic will continue fighting for his career after a Northwest Florida judge refused to throw out a lawsuit seeking possible sanctions against the Santa Rosa Beach lawyer. Daniel Uhlfelder grabbed headlines in March 2020 when he filed a lawsuit seeking to force DeSantis to close beaches because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Uhlfelder donned a grim reaper costume while walking the beach to draw attention to the issue. The lawsuit, and subsequent statements Uhlfelder made to media outlets, resulted in a three-judge panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal taking the rare step of ordering State Attorney Ginger Bowden Madden to pursue discipline against Uhlfelder.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“DeSantis touts Florida vaccinations while downplaying new cases” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Florida has done a good job distributing COVID-19 vaccinations to people who want it, DeSantis declared Tuesday though he stopped short of offering any encouragement to get one. Speaking in Orlando at a news conference highlighting his civics education initiatives, the Governor lauded his administration’s efforts to distribute vaccines but said nothing about whether he thinks people should get the shots. He also downplayed reports of rising COVID-19 numbers in many parts of Florida, saying they show a seasonal rise in cases that were expected.
“Amid Florida COVID-19 spike, Miami hospital’s virus patients are younger, unvaccinated” via Ben Conarck of the Miami Herald — Florida’s COVID-19 epidemic is on the rise again, driven by outbreaks in the Miami area, Jacksonville and the Panhandle. Several months after highly effective and safe vaccines have been made available to the general public over the age of 12, physicians at Miami-Dade’s public Jackson Health System treated about twice as many COVID-19 patients over the weekend as they had been earlier this month. As of Monday, 101 patients with the SARS-CoV-2 virus were admitted throughout Jackson Health System. Dr. Lilian Abbo, chief of infectious diseases at Jackson, said her team watched the trend carefully. She attributed the uptick to behaviors in the community, though there are other factors at play, including hotter and wetter weather driving more people indoors, and the spread of highly infectious variants of the virus.
—“Leon County’s COVID-19 cases up 62.1%” via Mike Stucka of the Tallahassee Democrat
“It’s official: Masks to be optional in Sarasota County schools” via Ryan McKinnon of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Masks will be optional in Sarasota County schools this fall, following a unanimous vote Tuesday by the Sarasota County School Board. During a packed board meeting, the vote creates an official policy that students, staff, and visitors to campuses can wear masks if they wish, but they are not mandatory. The policy makes it clear that masks are optional for everyone, regardless of vaccination status. Several parents and community members attended the meeting, speaking out in favor of lifting the mask policy. The most recent guidance from the CDC states that anyone age 2 or older who has not been vaccinated should still wear a mask, and many parents urged the board not to allow the agency’s latest recommendation to dissuade them from making masks optional.
“Norwegian challenges ban on COVID-19 vaccination ‘passports’” via News Service of Florida — Norwegian Cruise Line filed a lawsuit asking a federal judge to block a state law banning COVID-19 vaccination “passports” so the company’s fleet can resume operations. In court documents filed Tuesday, Norwegian argued that the legal action is the company’s “last resort” to resume operations “in the way that this cruise line has determined will be best for all concerned — with the benefit of documentation confirming that all of its passengers and crew have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19.” The lawsuit, filed in the Southern District of Florida, names Florida Surgeon General Scott Rivkees as a defendant. Norwegian also filed a motion Tuesday for an expedited preliminary injunction seeking to block the law.
— CORONA NATION —
“U.S. virus cases rising again, doubled in 3 weeks” via The Associated Press — The COVID-19 curve in the U.S. is rising again after months of decline, with the number of new cases per day doubling over the past three weeks, driven by the fast-spreading delta variant, lagging vaccination rates and Fourth of July gatherings. Confirmed infections climbed to an average of about 23,600 a day on Monday, up from 11,300 on June 23. Even with the latest surge, cases in the U.S. are nowhere near their peak of a quarter-million per day in January; still, health authorities in places such as Los Angeles County and St. Louis are begging even immunized people to resume wearing masks in public.
“J&J, AstraZeneca explore COVID-19 vaccine modification in response to rare blood clots” via Jenny Strasburg and Parmy Olson of The Wall Street Journal — Johnson & Johnson, AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford, along with outside scientists, are conducting early-stage research into whether potential modifications of their COVID-19 vaccines could reduce or eliminate the risk of rare but serious blood clots associated with the shots, according to people close to the process. According to some of these people, fast-developing clues into how the clots form are boosting hopes of identifying the cause and possibly re-engineering AstraZeneca’s shot by next year. It is too early to know whether either shot can be modified, or whether doing so would make commercial sense, these people say.
“Tennessee’s former top vaccine official: ‘I am afraid for my state’” via Michele Fiscus for the Tennessean — Today, I became the 25th of 64 state and territorial immunization program directors to leave their position during this pandemic. That’s nearly 40% of us. And along with our resignations or retirements or, as in my case, push from office, goes the institutional knowledge and leadership of our respective COVID-19 vaccine responses. I will not sit quietly by while our public health infrastructure is eroded in the midst of a pandemic. It was at a June 16 meeting that the Department was accused of “targeting” youth through Facebook messaging, and its actions were described as “reprehensible” by one Committee member. That member went on to call for the “dissolving and reconstitution” of the Department of Health in the midst of a pandemic.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Airbus soars past Boeing by showing little mercy to struggling customers” via Benjamin Katz of The Wall Street Journal — Last summer, while his airline was burning through more than $1.2 million an hour, Deutsche Lufthansa AG CEO Carsten Spohr signed onto a video call to meet his counterpart at Airbus, the world’s biggest plane manufacturer. At the top of Spohr’s agenda: He wanted a respite from the billions Lufthansa owed for aircraft it had ordered years before the pandemic. Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury said no. Mr. Faury spent the bulk of the pandemic trying to force his biggest and most loyal customers, some of whom were teetering on the brink, to live up to their ironclad contractual obligations. That gamble, which bucked industry convention, has helped lift Airbus into the strongest competitive position in its history against rival Boeing.
“Here’s who will be left behind in the housing boom” via Ali Wolf for The New York Times — When COVID-19 first hit, those of us in the real estate industry predicted a collapse of the housing market. In just the first two months of the pandemic, 22.4 million Americans lost their jobs, while GDP fell at the fastest rate in modern history. Instead, what unfolded was a transformation of the housing market, fueled by what I call “migration mania.” But this is not an equal-opportunity boom. The housing rebound has been fueled by buyers whose wealth allowed them to win bidding wars often with a high down payment and a bid over asking price. Those living on local incomes, which are often modest compared with those of relocating newcomers, are losing the ability to buy a home.
“Prices rise 5.4% in June over last year as questions mount over whether inflation will be here to stay” via Rachel Siegel of The Washington Post — Prices rose 5.4% in June compared to a year ago, marking the largest spike since 2008 as the pandemic-battered economy regains its footing and questions build over how long this steady climb in inflation will last. Inflation has been on a steep rise for about four months as the recovery gains steam. Policymakers at the Federal Reserve and the White House have consistently said the price pops aren’t here to stay, and that it will take patience for the economy to come back to full strength and for prices to simmer down. However, that message is being increasingly tested, especially as Americans feel the strain at the grocery store, gas station, and housing market.
— MORE CORONA —
“A graphic COVID-19 ad prompts a backlash in Australia.” via Livia Albeck-Ripka of The New York Times — Australians have lashed out at the government after the release of a graphic advertising video that depicts a woman with severe symptoms of COVID-19, arguing that it unfairly blames younger people, most of whom are ineligible for vaccination. The campaign, released on Sunday and aimed at encouraging Australians to get vaccinated, depicts a sweating woman lying in a hospital bed gasping for air. Her eyes are desperate. She claws at the breathing tube in her nose. “COVID-19 can affect anyone,” reads the text that follows. “Stay home. Get tested. Book your vaccination.” On Tuesday, the authorities reported 89 new cases and Australia’s second death from the virus this year as concerns continue over a slow vaccine rollout.
To watch the ad, click on the image below:
Video Player
“Immunized but banned: EU says not all COVID-19 vaccines equal” via Maria Cheng of The Associated Press — Millions of people vaccinated through a U.N.-backed effort could find themselves barred from entering many European and other countries because those nations don’t recognize the Indian-made version of the AstraZeneca vaccine for travel. Although the AstraZeneca vaccine produced in Europe has been authorized by the continent’s drug regulatory agency, the same shot manufactured in India hasn’t been given the green light. EU regulators said AstraZeneca hadn’t completed the necessary paperwork on the Indian factory, including details on its production practices and quality control standards. But some experts describe the EU move as discriminatory and unscientific. Health officials say the situation will complicate travel and frustrate fragile economies and undermine vaccine confidence by appearing to label some shots substandard.
“‘We have rights’: the French health workers furious about COVID-19 vaccine order” via Caroline Pailliez of Reuters — Holding up the vaccine as the only path to leading a normal life, French President Emmanuel Macron said inoculation was a matter of individual responsibility but also a matter of collective freedom as the Delta variant spurs the rapid spread of new infections. Faced with a highly contagious new variant and a sharp drop in the vaccination rate, he said it was necessary to compel health workers to get the COVID-19 shot and incentivize the general public to follow. The vaccination order marked a U-turn for a president who in December tweeted: “I’ve said it before, and I’ll repeat myself: vaccination will not be compulsory. We are the country of enlightenment and (Louis) Pasteur.”
“El Salvador bans mass gatherings amid coronavirus surge” via The Associated Press — El Salvador’s Congress voted Tuesday overwhelmingly to impose a 90-day ban on sporting events, concerts, festivals, and other mass gatherings because of a surge in coronavirus cases. Face masks will be mandatory at any public event still allowed. Fines and closures will be assessed against any venue or organizer that violates the ban. Officials reported 2,284 news cases in the first 10 days of July, 35% more than in the same period of June. El Salvador has so far received enough coronavirus vaccine doses to cover about half the country’s 6.5 million people. The country has registered 81,644 coronavirus infections and 2,457 COVID-19 deaths.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Joe Biden warns that American democracy is under threat — a message targeting many in his own party” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — Biden has been president of the United States for 174 days. On at least 21 of those days, about 1 in every 8, he has talked about the threat posed by autocracy. Often, as he did Tuesday in Philadelphia, he has warned about the risk of an ascendant autocratic movement in the United States, one fomented by his predecessor and one that many in his own party seem to be underestimating. Biden’s speech was broadly focused on protecting voting rights. He spoke about the need to ensure that Americans had both the right and access to vote, the latter of which has become a focal point of much of his party in the face of widespread Republican efforts to restrict it.
“GOP state voting restrictions ‘un-American,’ Biden declares” via Jonathan Lemire, Brian Slodysko, and Zeke Miller of The Associated Press — Biden declared that preserving voting rights is an urgent national “test of our time,” as Texas Democrats took dramatic action to stymie Republican efforts to tighten ballot restrictions in their state. Biden, who has proclaimed protecting ballot access the central cause of his presidency, has faced sharp criticism from allies for not doing more, though political headwinds and stubborn Senate math have greatly limited his ability to act. He avoided any mention of trying to alter the Senate filibuster rule that stands in the path of federal legislation. Speaking at the National Constitution Center, Biden called the efforts to curtail voting accessibility “un-American” and “undemocratic” and launched a broadside against his predecessor.
“Biden to participate in CNN town hall in Cincinnati next week” via CNN — Biden will participate in a CNN town hall on Wednesday, July 21 in Cincinnati, Ohio, a little more than six months after being sworn into office. CNN anchor Don Lemon will moderate the event that will air at 8 p.m. ET and is expected to focus on a wide range of issues facing the nation ranging from COVID-19 to the economy. The event comes as the administration has made progress in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic with a strong vaccine rollout, but concerns are rising over the slowing of the pace of vaccinations in recent weeks. The US now faces an uptick in COVID-19 cases, driven largely by the highly transmissible Delta variant. Forty-five states are experiencing a surge in new cases, and the daily pace of people becoming fully vaccinated is down 84% since mid-April.
—”Biden to pick former West Virginia health official as nation’s drug czar” via Dan Diamond of The Washington Post
—”White House appoints new director to steer key climate change report” via Jason Samenow of The Washington Post
“Biden’s view of the economy is tested by new inflation data.” via Jim Tankersly of The New York Times — A Labor Department report showed prices rising at their fastest monthly pace since 2008 in June and presents a new political challenge for Biden’s economic team, which has quietly concluded that rising prices could linger in the economy slightly longer than administration officials initially expected. Biden’s aides continue to say that the current rate of inflation is temporary and largely a product of special circumstances from the pandemic. They point to snarled supply chains in areas like automobile manufacturing, where a shortage of semiconductor chips is slowing production and contributing to a rapid rise in used car and truck prices. Used vehicles accounted for one-third of June’s price increases, the Labor Department said.
— EPILOGUE: TRUMP —
“Donald Trump unloads on Brett Kavanaugh in new Michael Wolff book” via Mike Allen of Axios — Trump, in a book out Tuesday by Wolff, says he is “very disappointed” in votes by Supreme Court Justice Kavanaugh, his own hard-won nominee, and that he “hasn’t had the courage you need to be a great justice.” … “There were so many others I could have appointed, and everyone wanted me to,” Trump said in an interview with Wolff. “Where would he be without me? I saved his life. He wouldn’t even be in a law firm.” After the election, Trump saved his worst venom for people he believed owed him because he got them their jobs. Wolff writes that Trump feels betrayed by all three justices he put on the court but “reserved particular bile for Kavanaugh.”
“Trump Org CFO began resigning his positions days before he was indicted, documents show” via David A. Fahrenthold and Shayna Jacobs of The Washington Post — Allen Weisselberg resigned from his positions at dozens of the company’s subsidiaries in late June — several days before he was indicted on charges of tax fraud and grand larceny. The Trump Organization submitted the letter to New Jersey liquor regulators last week, asking to remove Weisselberg’s name from the liquor licenses for two golf courses. The Post has identified at least 54 Trump entities where Weisselberg has recently resigned from his positions. The resignation letter — and the reshuffling of responsibilities that followed it — has shed new light on the impact of Weisselberg’s indictment on 15 felony counts in Manhattan on July 1. New York prosecutors said Weisselberg had helped organize a 15-year “scheme to defraud.”
“Mitch McConnell responds to Trump’s ‘Old Crow’ insult: ‘It’s quite an honor’” via Manu Raju of CNN — Trump took a whack at Senate GOP leader McConnell last weekend, calling him an “Old Crow” as he railed against the Kentucky Republican. On Tuesday, McConnell took it in stride. “Actually, it’s quite an honor,” McConnell said. “Old Crow is Henry Clay‘s favorite bourbon.” McConnell, who has long revered Clay, a fellow Kentuckian, responded to Trump’s attack of the retiring GOP senator from Alabama, Richard Shelby, for endorsing Katie Boyd Britt, a former Shelby chief of staff who is the head of the Business Council of Alabama. Trump has endorsed Alabama Rep. Mo Brooks to fill Shelby’s seat next year, while McConnell has not picked a candidate in the race to this point.
— CRISIS —
“Are Jan. 6 rioters traitors? So far, criminal charges say no” via Michael Tarm of The Associated Press — Plotted to block the certification of Biden’s election victory: Check. Discussed bringing weapons into Washington to aid in the plan: Check. Succeeded with co-insurrectionists, if only temporarily, in stopping Congress from carrying out a vital constitutional duty: Check. Accusations against Jan. 6 rioter Thomas Caldwell certainly seem to fit the charge of sedition as it’s generally understood, inciting revolt against the government. And the possibility of charging him and others was widely discussed after thousands of pro-Trump supporters assaulted scores of police officers, defaced the U.S. Capitol, and hunted for lawmakers to stop the certification. Some called their actions treasonous.
“Kevin McCarthy not yet sold on naming Republicans to Jan. 6 investigation” via Jonathan Custodio of POLITICO — House Minority Leader McCarthy said on Tuesday he has not decided on whom to name to the select committee that will investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection, or even whether he would appoint any fellow Republicans. “I haven’t made a decision yet, even to appoint,” McCarthy said. “I’m discussing it with my members. I have a real concern, the scope of what we’re looking at.” Legislation to create a select committee to investigate the Jan. 6 siege of the Capitol was approved by the House. Before its creation, an independent, bipartisan commission was moving forward but was thwarted by Senate Republicans. Six GOP senators did vote to advance the proposed commission, which would have had five Democrats and five Republicans.
“Punta Gorda man accused of involvement in Capitol riot, Oath Keepers affiliation” via Zach Oliveri and Jack Lowenstein of WINK News — According to a criminal complaint made by an FBI task force member on July 2, David Moerschel, 43, of Punta Gorda, was arrested for the activity he’s accused of with the Oath Keepers group during the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol. The FBI shared a picture showing an individual, who the bureau identifies as Moerschel, wheeling a cart with at least one long gun case onto an elevator at a hotel in Arlington, Virginia. The FBI also says it secured encrypted messages, an account linked to Moerschel attending 17 Oath Keeper-affiliated meetings. Moerschel faces charges for conspiracy, obstruction of justice/Congress, and unlawful entry into restricted buildings or grounds.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Democrats eye immigration action in budget, but outlook hazy” via Alan Fram of The Associated Press — Congressional Democrats and immigration advocates are staring at their best chance in years to overcome Republican opposition and give millions of people in the U.S. without legal authorization a way to become citizens. Their goal is to stuff the language into a huge measure this fall, financing many of Biden’s priorities that would be shielded from a Republican Senate filibuster. That bill-killing procedure requires a virtually impossible 60 votes to overcome, but erasing that danger with a Democrat in the White House means they could score an immigration triumph by themselves after years of Republican blockades. “This is the chance to finally get it done,” said Kerri Talbot, deputy director of the Immigration Hub.
“Mary McLeod Bethune statue on its way to D.C.” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — On the 146th anniversary of her birth, Bethune’s form debuted larger than life, practically immortal and destined to take a place in history. An 11-foot, 4-ton likeness of the trailblazing educator and civil rights activist, was unveiled Saturday in Pietrasanta, Italy, beginning the journey that will end in the National Statuary Hall in Washington, D.C., where it will be the first statue of an African American to take a place there. Bethune will replace a statue of General E. Kirby Smith, who surrendered the last armed Confederate force in the Civil War. “My heart swelled with pride as we unveiled the iconic statue of Dr. Bethune in front of Pietrasanta City Hall with music, a blessing and inspirational speeches paying tribute to Dr. Bethune’s legacy,” said U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor, a Tampa Congresswoman who championed Bethune’s place in the nation’s Capitol.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Key West Commission pushes back on state preemption, calls for new cruise ordinance” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — With cruise ships expected to return to the Port of Key West in September, City Commissioners have called for an ordinance limiting how the vessels may operate in its seaways. The move, meant to guard the quality of the city’s waters and the health of its nearby coral reefs, may invite lawsuits from affected businesses and challenges by the state, City Attorney Shawn Smith said. Commissioners Monday directed Smith to draft an ordinance that will put a cap on the size of ships allowed to enter the Port of Key West and the daily number of passengers permitted to disembark onto the city’s docks. Such limitations track with referendums city voters approved last year.
“Donald Fennoy resigns as Palm Beach Schools superintendent” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Palm Beach County Schools Superintendent Fennoy announced Tuesday that he plans to resign, ending a three-year tenure that started successfully but turned tumultuous during the pandemic. His contract requires three months’ notice, so he said his last day will be Oct. 11. The decision comes after a difficult year in the school district, marked by multiple controversies, including when to reopen schools during the pandemic, whether the district should pledge to combat “white advantage,” and whether to rehire a principal who made comments questioning whether the Holocaust was real. Fennoy, who makes $306,167 a year, also received a mediocre evaluation from the School Board last fall, with some board members wanting to put him on a performance review.
“No Red Tide relief in sight as dead fish overwhelm St. Petersburg” via Zachary T. Sampson and Gabe Stern of the Tampa Bay Times — The Sunshine City and its sparkling waterfront parks have become the center of Tampa Bay’s Red Tide crisis. Rafts of dead fish are washing ashore more quickly than crews can gather the carcasses. Workers have picked up 477 tons of dead fish from the coastline in recent weeks, according to Mayor Rick Kriseman. That accounts for the overwhelming majority of more than 600 tons picked up across Pinellas County.
“Jacksonville City Hall’s top lawyer is out. That’s a big deal” via Nate Monroe of the Florida Times-Union — Jason Gabriel, is resigning to take a job in the private sector, creating an imminent vacancy in one of the most powerful jobs in city government. Mayor Lenny Curry tapped Gabriel in 2015 to head the city’s Office of General, following a year as the office’s interim leader under Curry’s predecessor. Gabriel, an affable attorney, found himself entangled in complicated and divisive issues surrounding pension reform, public school taxation and, most controversial of all, the potential sale of JEA, Jacksonville’s public electric, water and sewer utility. “It’s been a great ride,” Gabriel said. “I’ve been at the Office of General Counsel for 11 years, the last seven of which were as general counsel under both Democratic and Republican administrations.”
“‘Someone I trusted’: Federal prosecutors call first witnesses in J.T. Burnette corruption trial” via Jeff Burlew of the Tallahassee Democrat — Federal prosecutors called their first witnesses in the trial of Burnette, accused of taking part in a bribery scheme with former Tallahassee City Commissioner Scott Maddox. Melissa Oglesby, the owner of KaiserKane construction management company and a close cousin of J.T. Burnette, took the stand as part of an immunity deal with prosecutors. She said she bought a small company from Burnette in 2005 and changed the name to KaiserKane. Burnette, who sold her the company for $5,000, served as a mentor, helping it grow into a business with $25 million in annual sales, she said. She said KaiserKane often lent Burnette money, sometimes in increments of a million dollars or more.
“Hundreds of Airbnb owners are delinquent on county taxes and they have no idea” via Emma Kennedy of the Pensacola News Journal — A change in Tourism Development Tax requirements has left some short-term rental owners confused about how much they need to pay Escambia County, and it’s left the clerk’s office with a heavier workload trying to review hundreds of files that have in many cases become inadvertently delinquent. The county’s Tourism Development Tax rate increased from 4% to 5% in April, meaning that property owners who rent their homes on sites like VRBO and Airbnb must send five cents of every dollar they make in rental income to the county, in addition to any state taxes owed. The problem is, there’s a lag between the county’s implementation of the tax and Airbnb’s software, which has left hundreds of Airbnb owners delinquent on their TDT taxes.
“Naples ethics commission to self-start investigations based on informal complaints” via Omar Rodríguez Ortiz of the Naples Daily News — The Naples Commission on Ethics and Government Integrity can self-start investigations based on the information it receives through informal complaints, the commission voted unanimously last month. The new rules allow the commission to begin investigations if it obtains ethical misconduct allegations about city employees, officers, board members and contractors via unsworn statements such as anonymous sources, emails and calls. The commission can “investigate complaints on its own initiative,” according to the city’s charter. Mike Murawski, the commission’s executive director, said in a meeting last month he proposed the rules so the commission could have a way to address complaints that are not submitted through a formal process.
— TOP OPINION —
“The U.S. has the duty to act in support of the Cuban people” via Jordan Valdés of the Tampa Bay Times — For Cuban Americans around the country, the last few days have been filled with emotion as we watch friends and loved ones in Cuba take to the streets and demand change from their government for the first time in decades. For many of us, the most reliable sources of information have been through some combination of family on the ground and updates on social media. The stories these interactions tell are of people whose day-to-day conditions are intolerable.
— OPINIONS —
“Republicans refusing to get vaccinated are owning no one but themselves” via Eugene Robinson of The Washington Post — What used to be the conservative movement in this country is becoming a death cult. The measure of its power is less in ballots cast than in how many people die needlessly in service of this twisted worldview. This reality was on view over the weekend in Dallas at CPAC, where attendees cheered when Alex Berenson, who has made himself a Fox News folk hero for spreading misinformation about COVID-19 vaccines, crowed about the fact that fewer Americans were getting their shots than public health officials had hoped. “It’s horrifying,” Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said.
“Florida’s anti-protest politicians shift their tone for Cuba protesters” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — In Cuba, protesters are taking to the streets with some blocking traffic, overturning police cars, throwing rocks at officers, and looting stores. Cubans are saying enough is enough. They are fighting for their lives and fighting for freedom. Their cause is just, and their methods are legitimate. But if that were happening in Florida, protesters would face tough new criminal charges for rioting and face the scorn of politicians who insist demonstrations must be peaceful and orderly. Unless it’s in Cuba. In that case, the architect of Florida’s tough new anti-protest laws, DeSantis, has nothing but praise for the demonstrators, feverishly defending their right to protest.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Florida’s COVID-19 surge continues with more than 20,000 new cases over the past four days, but the Governor won’t be changing policies or imposing any mask mandates.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— DeSantis wants the federal government to help the demonstrators in Cuba; he supports their street protests against the Cuban government. Quite a change for the guy who wanted to lock up Black Lives Matter protesters in America.
— DeSantis says one thing the U.S. can do to support the dissidents in Cuba is to provide satellite internet after their government pulled the plug on the net.
— Florida will be spending more than $100 million to beef up civics education this year, including a new emphasis on debate in high school.
— Agriculture Commissioner Fried is asking for your suggestions to help encourage what’s known as “energy equity.”
— Fried runs the state energy office and says studies have shown that Black, Hispanic and low-income families face an energy burden three times higher than other consumers.
— And finally, a Florida Woman went to jail after refusing to wear a mask on an airplane, spitting on her fellow passengers as she was being removed from the plane.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“‘An institution’: Cypress Restaurant is shutting down after two decades in Tallahassee” via TaMaryn Waters of the Tallahassee Democrat — Cypress Restaurant, a culinary treasure nestled in downtown Tallahassee, is slated to close its doors after more than 20 years. Its owners, Elizabeth and David Gwynn, have a trio of small businesses: Cypress, Vertigo Burgers and Fries, and Grove Market Café. After years of winning Florida Trend’s Golden Spoon Awards, Cypress cemented a reputation for fine dining in an inviting environment that evolved into a beacon for politicos flooding the capital during the Legislative Session. “We’re not trying to make a huge deal out of it, even though it might be, (because) friends are saying Cypress is an institution and that we’ve been around for over 20 years,” Elizabeth Gwynn told the Tallahassee Democrat.
“SeaWorld announces first haunted house for its first Howl-O-Scream” via DeWayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — SeaWorld Orlando has announced the theme for the first haunted house for its first-ever Howl-O-Scream. According to the theme park’s website, the initial haunt for the fright fest will be called Dead Vines. “Is this jungle alive … or undead?” warns the Howl-O-Scream page. There’s also talk about a “merciless mistress of ivy and evil,” along with a video featuring a mysterious character emerging from dark greenery. The park also revealed its first scare zone: Witchcraft Bayou with a voodoo theme/dark magic theme and a themed bar experience called Poison Grotto. SeaWorld debuts its Howl-O-Scream event on Sept. 10, and it will run on 27 select nights, mostly weekends, through Oct. 31.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Happy birthday to Melanie Bostick of Liberty Partners of Tallahassee, Justin Homburg, Holly Tomlin, and Mike Vasilinda.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
5.) MORNING BREW
|
BECOME SMARTER IN JUST 5 MINUTES
Get the daily email that makes reading the news actually enjoyable. Stay informed and entertained, for free.
6.) THE FACTUAL
|
7.) LIBERTY NATION
|
|
|
8.) FOX NEWS
|
|||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
|
9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
10.) THE FEDERALIST PAPERS
|
11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE
|
12.) THE FLIP SIDE
- Subscribe
- Past Issues
- RSS
- Translate
|
13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Bonjour, and happy Bastille Day! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,184 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
🔋 Join Axios’ Ben Geman today at 12:30 p.m. ET for a virtual event on the future of alternative energy. Guests include Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) and American Clean Power Association CEO Heather Zichal. Register here.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Infectious disease experts say the Tokyo Olympics don’t have strong enough protocols for testing or ventilation, either in competition venues or in the Olympic village, Axios health care editor Tina Reed reports.
The IOC’s playbook calls for attendees to physically distance themselves from others, to wear masks, and to get tested daily. They are also required to use a location-enabled contact tracing app on their smartphones.
- But it’ll be too easy for cases to slip through the cracks and then spread, said Annie Sparrow, a professor at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital.
- “What about the workers, the volunteers, the bus drivers exposed for 14 to 16 hours a day who are going into the village and then going back home to their families?” said Sparrow, who helped advise the WNBA through the pandemic.
The experts said the IOC’s final playbook fails to distinguish the risks posed in contact sports or those that occur indoors.
- Some IOC suggestions — athletes should open windows in the Olympic Village every 30 minutes — aren’t supported by science, said Michael Osterholm, infectious disease expert at the University of Minnesota.
- Share this story.
In one of his clearest attacks on his predecessor (without mentioning his name), President Biden said yesterday at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia: “Bullies and merchants of fear and peddlers of lies are threatening the very foundation of our country.”
- “We’re facing the most significant test of our democracy since the Civil War,” Biden continued. “That’s not hyperbole. Since the Civil War. The Confederates back then never breached the Capitol as insurrectionists did on January the 6th.”
What I’m hearing: I got calls and texts asking me why this wasn’t a prime-time address. Some Biden allies now want him to re-up it as an address to the nation.
- 👀 A source tells me this isn’t Biden’s last speech on this topic.
Go deeper: Full text of the speech.
Illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios
Inflation is at its highest level since 2008, thanks in very large part to a single item whose price has been going through the roof: Cars.
- Used car and truck rental prices rose 12% in June, and 88% from the year before. Used car prices were up 11% in June and 45% from a year ago, while new car prices were up 2% and 5%, respectively.
There are strong indications — including data last week from prominent used car marketplace Manheim — that the unprecedented rise in auto prices is peaking, Axios’ Felix Salmon writes.
- So if you’re in the market for a car and can wait a few months, you should probably do that.
What’s happening: The cause has been a shortage of new cars, which results from a shortage of the computer chips needed to make any modern car run.
- New-car prices haven’t risen enormously — sticker prices are sticky, it turns out.
- But the new-car shortage has meant that car-rental companies, faced with booming demand, have become buyers rather than sellers of second-hand vehicles, upending the market’s normal delicate balance.
Photo: Jon Super/AP
In Manchester, England, street artist Akse P19 repairs his mural of Marcus Rashford, which was defaced with bigoted graffiti after the 23-year-old missed a penalty kick in Sunday’s Euro final.
- Now, Rashford’s hometown mural is covered with hundreds of messages of support and consolation. (BBC)
The cost of doing business (including tax climate and incentives) and vitality of infrastructure (transportation systems) took on bigger weight in this reopening edition of CNBC’s annual “Top States for Business.”
- CNBC rated states on 85 metrics, including a new category — Life, Health and Inclusion.
Cuba has restricted access to WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram and some Telegram servers in the wake of the largest anti-government protests in decades, Axios’ Ina Fried reports, citing internet watchdog NetBlocks.
- Why it matters: Authoritarian governments have increasingly turned to partial or complete internet shutdowns as a response to political unrest.
🎧 Listen to Axios Latino author Marina Franco discuss the latest developments out of Cuba on the Axios Today podcast.
President Biden’s picks for ambassador show he’s trying to buck up a State Department that felt disrespected in the Trump years, writes Axios politics editor Glen Johnson, author of “Window Seat on the World: My Travels with the Secretary of State.”
- Biden’s nominees so far, a mix of career servants and political supporters, come as a relief to a Foreign Service that has been shaken by cuts.
Biden yesterday packaged his announcement of former Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake for ambassador to Turkey with the nomination of Kent Logsdon — previously deputy chief of mission in Berlin, and trip planner for former Secretary of State John Kerry — for ambassador to Moldova.
- Biden ping-ponged between several other political and career announcements, too.
Flake was a Biden colleague in the Senate. As a Republican, Flake allows the president to exhibit some bipartisanship.
- Last month, Biden nominated Cindy McCain to be ambassador to the Rome-based UN Agencies for Food and Agriculture.
Republicans’ House campaign arm is putting up huge fundraising numbers as the party seeks to win back control of the lower chamber in the midterms, Axios’ Lachlan Markay reports.
- The NRCC’s June fundraising figures topped $20 million, and its total for the second quarter was more than $45 million — a record quarterly haul during a year without a national election.
- House Dems’ DCCC raised $14.4 million in June, bringing its second-quarter total to $36.5 million — its best-ever Q2.
Between the lines: GOP fundraising has been bolstered by former President Trump, whose name continues to dominate fundraising pleas, AP reports.
Photo: Matthew Stockman/Getty Images
Players on both sides climbed to the dugout rails to watch L.A. Angels sensation Shohei Ohtani, age 27 (above), who became the first two-way All-Star — both a pitcher and a position player (designated hitter).
- Ohtani’s 100 mph heat and perfect first inning made him the winning pitcher before the near-capacity 49,184 crowd at Coors Field in Denver, The Denver Post reports.
- The AL beat the NL (5-2) for the eighth consecutive time — its 20th win in the past 24 games.
Go deeper: Everyone hated the uniforms, which looked like jumpsuits or pajamas.
Swimply lets owners list when their pool is available for interested swimmers to rent by the hour, Axios Twin Cities‘ Audrey Kennedy writes.
- Depending on the pool, renters can bring between 10 and 25 guests.
- Typical prices range from $30 to $45/hour (and include WiFi access).
What’s next: Swimply is building a waiting list for JoySpace, which will offer per-hour use of private basketball courts, tennis courts, hot tubs, home gyms, docked boats, home studios and “majestic backyards.”
📬 Please invite your friends, family, colleagues to sign up here for Axios AM and Axios PM.
14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
|
|
|
17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
|
Copyright © 2021 MEDIADC, All rights reserved.Washington Examiner | A MediaDC Publication 1152 15th Street NW Suite 200 | Washington, DC 20005 |
You received this email because you are subscribed to Examiner Today from The Washington Examiner. Update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive.We respect your right to privacy – View our Policy Unsubscribe |
18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
|
21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Crisis call changeup: Mental health workers instead of cops for some 911 calls
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
|
23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
|
Morning Headlines
In a much-anticipated speech, Joe Biden on Tuesday cast the threat to democratic institutions from deceitful statements and voting rights restrictions in some of the starkest terms of his presidency. “Make no mistake, bullies and merchants of fear, peddlers of lies are threatening the very foundation of our country,” he said. Read more…
Democrats on the Senate Budget Committee reached agreement Tuesday night on an overall target of $3.5 trillion for a budget reconciliation package to implement President Joe Biden’s infrastructure, child care, education, climate and other initiatives without needing GOP votes. Read more…
Election Day 2022 will be Independents’ Day
OPINION — While Joe Biden’s support from his base remains strong enough to offset GOP opposition, several recent polls show his job approval rating starting to slip with the most crucial voter group: independents. If this continues, Dems could face strong headwinds in 2022 as they try to maintain slim majorities in the House and Senate. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
This designer drew the internet’s worst reviews of national parks
For many, the Statue of Liberty is a beacon of hope and a reminder of the immigrants who sailed toward Ellis Island and a new life in America. But at least one online reviewer saw something else: “A big green statue and that’s it.” That critique is part of a collection of colorful prints by illustrator and graphic designer Amber Share. Read more…
Targeted by Trump for opposing his ‘lies’ about election fraud, Rep. Liz Cheney raises $1.9 million
Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney raised nearly $1.9 million during the second quarter of this year as she prepares to battle for her political survival as one of former President Donald Trump’s top targets in next year’s Republican primaries. The latest three-month haul nearly totals what Cheney spent on her past two reelections combined. Read more…
OMB backs off change to ‘city’ definition
The Office of Management and Budget on Tuesday backed off from a proposed change to the federal definition of “city” that could have scrambled billions of dollars in federal spending for more than 100 communities across the country. Read more…
Padilla says citizenship path in reconciliation is ‘realistic’
Sen. Alex Padilla, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee’s immigration panel, said Tuesday it was his “understanding and expectation” that a pathway to permanent status for undocumented immigrants would be included in Democrats’ budget reconciliation package. Read more…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2021 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
1201 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Suite 600
Washington, DC 20004
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: What we’re watching for as Biden starts twisting arms
DRIVING THE DAY
Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER proclaimed Tuesday night that Democrats are “very proud” of the $3.5 trillion budget agreement he had just unveiled, before adding: “We know we have a long way to go.”
“Long” is one way to put it. “Painstaking” and “treacherous” are a few others.
With no votes to spare in the Senate and only four in the House (soon to be three, with Republicans expected to win a runoff in Texas), President JOE BIDEN heads to the Senate today to begin the hard work of whipping the party in line behind the Democrat-only deal. He got a head start when Budget Chair BERNIE SANDERS endorsed the deal, even as the Vermont independent spent much of the first part of the Democrats’ presser looking at his shoes.
(When WaPo’s Seung Min Kim asked him about having to swallow the $3.5 trillion top-line number a day after panning it, Sanders truly sounded like a member of Democratic leadership: “This is the most significant piece of legislation passed since the Great Depression, and I’m delighted to be part of having helped to put it together.”)
Here are four dynamics we’re watching as the whipping operation gets underway:
1) The other Joe with veto power: Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) balked at Sanders’ original $6 trillion proposal, suggesting maybe he could back $2 trillion. Will he be OK with almost double that? On the other hand, Dems vowed Tuesday night that the deal will be paid for, which Manchin has insisted on.
— A sub-dynamic: Has Sen. MARK WARNER (D-Va.), a centrist on the budget panel, been negotiating as a proxy for Manchin? We’re about to find out. Either way, we expect to hear plenty from Manchin, who likes to flex his muscles in these situations.
2) Progressives and the Squad: Just because Bernie is on board, does that mean House progressives will follow? We should get a good read when the Congressional Progressive Caucus holds an afternoon call with reporters. We know for certain this plan falls short of what they want, not to mention what Biden promised on the campaign trail. For example, while Schumer boasted that the plan will include a “robust expansion” of Medicare, including coverage of dental and vision, that’s hardly the public option Biden promised.
Still, progressives — including some members of the so-called Squad — have insisted they’re no Freedom Caucus, i.e. willing to kill legislation because it’s not perfect, even if they get much of what they want. Will they fight for a higher number, or swallow hard like Sanders did?
— Rep. RO KHANNA, a progressive from California, seemed noncommittal Tuesday night, which might actually be a good sign for leadership: “I need to see the details and what climate provisions are in there,” he said.
3) Which priorities get cut? Even if Democrats fall in line with $3.5 trillion, there will be ongoing spats about where that money goes. Some want to prioritize continuing the generous child tax credits that just started flowing. Others want cash for climate initiatives or help for caretakers. The smaller top-line number will trigger a lobbying battle over whose pet issues stay or get axed.
4) How does this impact the BIF? Some of the 11 Senate Republicans who agreed to the bipartisan infrastructure framework might balk at this number and use it as an excuse to bail. As Schumer noted, if you add the $600 billion in new spending in the bipartisan infrastructure framework and the $3.5 trillion reconciliation number, the Democratic majority will be spending $4.1 trillion this year — not counting pandemic relief. Do Republicans want to be seen as helping pass that amount of spending?
The coverage: WaPo … WSJ … POLITICO
Good Wednesday morning, and thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
POLITICO NEWS ACROSS THE POND — Beginning in September, Suzanne Lynch and Jakob Hanke Vela will be the new authors of Brussels Playbook, taking over from Florian Eder. Suzanne is currently Washington correspondent for the Irish Times, and Jakob is a trade reporter for POLITICO Europe. Florian will move to a new beat in Germany. Read and subscribe to Brussels Playbook here
PULLOUT FALLOUT — A war-weary American public is still behind Biden’s effort to remove U.S. troops from Afghanistan, but there are wide partisan fissures on the issue. That’s the takeaway from the latest POLITICO/Morning Consult poll out this morning, which finds that 59% of registered voters support the plan to withdraw all troops by the end of next month, compared to only 25% opposed. The support includes 76% of Democrats, 59% of independents and 42% of Republicans.
On the broader contours of the Afghanistan debate, the margin is a little narrower. Fifty-one percent of voters agree with the idea that the U.S. has been there too long, compared to 33% who think the U.S. needs to keep troops there. And voters remain worried about what we’ll leave behind: More than seven in 10 are concerned that the country will become a safe haven for violence and terrorism. Toplines … Crosstabs
CLOSE THE DOOR BEHIND YOU — Members of DONALD TRUMP’S inner circle say they won’t miss JENNA ELLIS after she announced on Newsmax on Monday that she’s leaving the GOP. Trump’s former campaign attorney made the proclamation in response to a leaked email in WaPo in which RNC lawyer JUSTIN RIEMER called her a “joke” over her election fraud claims. Ellis then tweeted a meme to insinuate that she is closer to Trump than is RNC Chair RONNA MCDANIEL, with the hashtag #Ronnamustgo.
But sources close to Trump said that they’ve been trying to create distance between Trump and Ellis, whom many blame for giving bad legal advice and selling him on the fantasy that he won the election. “Everything she told the president was wrong,” said a Trump adviser. “She knew the only way she was staying was parroting everything [RUDY] GIULIANI said.”
Another adviser said Trump “liked her on TV because she was loud and she knew how to position herself as a legal-minded person. I can’t take away her loyalty, but she’s not particularly helpful.” Others think her fight with the RNC chair is an attempt to boost her own profile since signing a contract with Newsmax in June. A spokesperson for Trump declined to comment.
Ellis responded in a statement: “Anyone siding with Ronna is simply outing themselves as the self-serving politicians that have continued to undermine Trump and America for years. These people aren’t living by principles and truth; they’re siding with corruption and lies for political expediency.”
BIDEN’S WEDNESDAY:
— 10 a.m.: The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 3 p.m.: Biden will talk about the bipartisan infrastructure framework with governors and mayors from both parties, Harris, Commerce Secretary GINA RAIMONDO and Labor Secretary MARTY WALSH.
HARRIS’ WEDNESDAY: The VP will also talk voting rights with disabilities advocates at 11:45 a.m.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m.
THE SENATE will meet at 10 a.m., with cloture votes on the nominations of JOCELYN SAMUELS to be a member of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and SEEMA NANDA to be solicitor for the Labor Department at 11:30 a.m. After a recess until 2 p.m., potential confirmation votes will follow at 2:35 p.m. Walsh will testify before an Appropriations subcommittee at 10 a.m. USAID Administrator SAMANTHA POWER will testify before the Foreign Relations Committee at 10:30 a.m. VA Secretary DENIS MCDONOUGH will testify before the Veterans’ Affairs Committee at 3:30 p.m.
THE HOUSE is out. Fed Chair JEROME POWELL will testify before the Financial Services Committee at noon. Power will testify before the Foreign Affairs Committee at 2 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
POLITICS ROUNDUP
IT’S THE BIF, STUPID — Burgess Everett has a good story today about a subject that hasn’t gotten much attention amid the deluge of coverage on the infrastructure negotiations: how the bipartisan deal — if it happens — will play in 2022. With parties planning to paint their opponents as Sanders disciples or Trump apologists, notching a big across-the-aisle accomplishment could go a long way in helping candidates in competitive states or districts project a more pragmatic profile. Burgess zeroes in on Sen. MAGGIE HASSAN (D-N.H.), who’s bracing for a stiff challenge from Republican Gov. CHRIS SUNUNU.
“Republicans are painting Hassan, along with Sens. MARK KELLY (D-Ariz.), RAPHAEL WARNOCK (D-Ga.) and CATHERINE CORTEZ MASTO (D-Nev.), as uncritical supporters of liberals in Congress, but shaking off doubters to notch a bipartisan achievement could help the vulnerable Democrats’ cases for winning reelection and keeping control of the Senate. That group of red and purple-state senators would join President Joe Biden in showing they can work across the aisle on a subject that previous administrations talked about but could not deliver on. …
“For Hassan to beat Sununu, she’ll need to emphasize her centrism and independence from liberals by talking up her efforts at moderation. … Supporters say part of their challenge for someone like Hassan is to make sure voters understand her work even when she’s not in the headlines every day.”
NRCC TAKES FUNDRAISING EDGE OVER DCCC — It’s not often that the NRCC outraises the DCCC. This morning, though, the NRCC is announcing it raised $45.4 million in Q2 and more than $20 million in June, a record-breaking sum and, more importantly to them, more than the Dems raised. (Last week, the DCCC announced its own record haul of $36.5 million in Q2 and nearly $14.4 million in June.) The numbers come well before the battle for the House kicks into high gear, but signal that the fight is on for Democrats, who already face an uphill battle in keeping the majority.
EYE-POPPING MONEY FOR TIM SCOTT — “As national profile rises, GOP Sen. Tim Scott raises $9.6 million,” by Roll Call’s Bridget Bowman: “The $9.6 million haul is the highest total a senator up for reelection next year has released so far this cycle. It’s more than four times what Scott raised in the first quarter of the year, and $3.4 million above what he raised in winning his first full term in 2016.”
THE WHITE HOUSE
BIDEN’S BIG SPEECH — “Biden chides Republicans on voting laws: ‘Have you no shame?’” by Laura Barrón-López and Jonathan Custodio: “‘We’re facing the most significant test of our democracy since the Civil War,’ Biden said.”
‘VAX THAT THANG UP’ — “Biden’s Covid vaccine campaign is sputtering. Juvenile thinks he can help,” by Eugene Daniels: “This is not the JUVENILE of old, the one with the signature oversized white tee and backwards cap whose platinum records made him a fixture of awkward prom dances across America. For one, the bling is much more understated … The bigger tell, however, is in the video he’s just produced, the one he’s jumped on Zoom to talk about. The beat gives you flashbacks to his 1999 hit, ‘Back that Thang Up.’
“And the video opens up with an homage to the original — a cloud of smoke that fades away; Juvenile standing behind four women with knees bent ready to … well, how do we say this journalistically … back that ass up. But the words don’t reflect the cultural excesses of the late ’90s; instead, they are squarely drawn from the age of the Covid-19 pandemic. ‘Girl, you look good, won’t you vax that thang up. You’s a handsome young brother, won’t you vax that thang up. Date in real life you need to vax that thang up. Feeling freaky all night you need to vax that thang up.’ … Yes, the Cash Money rapper has recast himself as the ambassador of the jab.”
HOT LARRY SUMMER — “New concern for Biden: Could Larry Summers be right about inflation?” by Ben White: “There is a new fear circulating inside the West Wing of the White House: Maybe LARRY SUMMERS was right. The former Treasury secretary has been warning since February that President Joe Biden’s big-spending agenda was creating the risk of an inflation spike this year, potentially cutting into the economic recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic. For the moment at least, Summers is looking prescient.”
— @jeneps: “Scoop: Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers was at the White House [Tuesday] meeting with top economic advisers BRIAN DEESE and CECILIA ROUSE. He’s been raising alarms about inflation for months and visit came on the day when surging June inflation numbers were reported.”
CONGRESS
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: SENATE GOP TO TAKE ON BIDEN OVER TITLE 42 — While Washington focuses on Democrats’ budget agreement, a group of Senate Republicans are heading to the border today in what’s expected to be a sizzling political issue this summer: Biden’s move to lift an order allowing Homeland Security officials to expel immigrants with the coronavirus.
Trump instituted the order invoking public health authority in Title 42, arguing that having infected individuals in close proximity to others was bad not only for immigrants but for the nation. Many Dems viewed it as an excuse to crack down on asylum-seekers. Now, even Biden allies are worried about the avalanche of GOP attacks he’ll endure for reversing the order.
Here’s an excerpt of a letter they’re sending to Biden today: “We urge you in the strongest possible terms not to take this action … Immigration facilities are overwhelmed. Revoking the authority … without a clear plan in place to handle the stress this population will place on the system and on border communities will further exacerbate the crisis at the southwestern border … The administration’s first priority must be to protect the American homeland. Allowing political considerations to overrule the clear public health threat created by the spread of COVID-19 at the border is reckless and irresponsible.”
Co-signers include: Sens. JOHN BARRASSO (Wyo.), MITCH MCCONNELL (Ky.), ROGER MARSHALL (Kan.), SUSAN COLLINS (Maine), SHELLEY MOORE CAPITO (W.Va.), BILL HAGERTY (Tenn.), LINDSEY GRAHAM (S.C.), CYNTHIA LUMMIS (Wyo.), MIKE BRAUN (Ind.), DEB FISCHER (Neb.), KEVIN CRAMER (N.D.), JOHN HOEVEN (N.D.), JOHN BOOZMAN (Ark.) and THOM TILLIS (N.C.).
Read the full letter. And the AP has more on what’s expected from the White House on this front.
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
TEXAS TICK-TOCK — “Inside the secret plan for the Texas Democratic exodus: A phone tree, a scramble to pack and a politically perilous trip,” by WaPo’s Amy Gardner, Eva Ruth Moravec, Dan Rosenzweig-Ziff and Nicole Asbury: “They said they had no other recourse, and they admitted that they have no end game, as [Texas Gov. GREG] ABBOTT promised to keep calling special sessions, over and over, until the election legislation has its day. But they chose Washington, a hideout in full view, for a reason: to garner national attention and escalate the stakes in a long-running effort to pressure Congress and Biden to approve federal voting-rights protections that would outlaw the kinds of restrictions Texas Republicans — and dozens of other legislatures across the country — are trying to enact.
“By Tuesday, more than 46 House Democrats had arrived in Washington, joined by nine Senate Democrats, including some who hopped on a Southwest Airlines flight Monday night to join them. For now, they are planning to bunk at a local hotel, which they asked not to be identified for security reasons.”
OUT THIS MORNING — The Arizona Republic published a six-month investigation into how Arizona Gov. DOUG DUCEY, and former and current high-level staffers, tried to help GOP megadonor G. BRINT RYAN secure more than $100 million in tax refunds. The investigation comes as the governor has butted heads with both Biden and Trump, and as Ducey is seen as a potential 2024 Republican presidential candidate. Read it here
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
CURIOUSER AND CURIOUSER — “Russia’s most aggressive ransomware group disappeared. It’s unclear who disabled them,” by NYT’s David Sanger: “Days after Biden demanded that President VLADIMIR PUTIN of Russia shut down ransomware groups attacking American targets, the most aggressive of the groups suddenly went off-line early Tuesday. The mystery is who made it happen.”
UNLIKELY DYNAMIC — “GOP senators fight to preserve Biden’s war powers amid tensions with Iran,” by Andrew Desiderio
MEDIAWATCH
SCANDAL DU JOUR — “Bill O’Reilly’s Accuser Finally Breaks Her Silence,” by The Daily Beast’s Diana Falzone and Lloyd Grove: “‘This is as good as it gets!’ New York litigator DAVID RATNER shouted at his client, ANDREA MACKRIS, slapping both hands on the highly polished conference table. ‘Take the money,’ Ratner yelled, ‘and move on with your life!’ That was almost 17 years ago …
“Mackris, then a 33-year-old Fox News producer on the cusp of a promising career, didn’t want to accept her boss BILL O’REILLY’S offer to settle her sexual harassment lawsuit against him for $9 million — $3 million of which would be pocketed by her legal team, Ratner and BENEDICT MORELLI. … Today, Mackris recalls to The Daily Beast for the first time intimate and graphic details of O’Reilly’s alleged harassment, including lewd, menacing telephone calls and conversations in which she says he forced her to listen to his sexual fantasies about her.”
PLAYBOOKERS
IN MEMORIAM — “Margaret Richardson, IRS commissioner during Clinton’s first term, dies at 78,” by WaPo’s Adam Bernstein: “Margaret ‘Peggy’ Richardson, a Washington tax lawyer who became commissioner of internal revenue during President Bill Clinton’s first term and was the second woman to serve as the nation’s chief tax collector, died July 13 at her home in Delaplane, Va. She was 78.”
SPOTTED having dinner together Tuesday night at Cafe Milano: Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), Fatih Birol, Jake Levine, Varun Sivaram, Paula Stern and Dick Morningstar.
STAFFING UP — The White House announced a suite of new nominees, including some high-profile names: Jeff Flake for ambassador to Turkey, Atul Gawande for assistant administrator of the Bureau for Global Health at USAID, Gabe Camarillo for undersecretary of the Army, Alan Estevez for undersecretary of Commerce for industry and security, Kent Logsdon for ambassador to Moldova, Lisa Wang for assistant secretary of Commerce for enforcement and compliance and Rich Trumka Jr. for commissioner of the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
MEDIA MOVES — Wendy Benjaminson has moved up to be deputy managing editor at Bloomberg’s D.C. bureau. She most recently was political editor during the 2020 campaign, and is a McClatchy, USA Today and AP alum. … Jackson Richman is now a writer for Mediaite. He most recently has been a freelance writer and opinion contributor to the Washington Examiner. … Gabriel Snyder is launching Off the Record, a daily email newsletter about New York media. He’s a former editor of The New Republic, The Atlantic Wire and Gawker.
FUNDRAISING FILES — Democratic digital fundraising firm Anne Lewis Strategies is rebranding today as MissionWired, with a new logo and website.
TRANSITIONS — Broderick Johnson will be EVP of public policy and EVP of digital equity at Comcast. He most recently was senior of counsel at Covington & Burling, and is an Obama and Clinton White House alum. … Joanna Belanger is now SVP at New Blue Interactive. She previously was political director at Giffords. … Yasmin Cader will lead the ACLU’s Trone Center for Justice and Equality. She’s been a longtime public defender and civil rights attorney. …
… Tiffany Derentz is now senior counsel on Berry Appleman & Leiden’s government strategies team. She most recently was an attorney in the State Department’s Office of the Legal Adviser. … Dayne Cutrell is now a shareholder and director of federal affairs in the government and regulatory affairs practice at Maynard Cooper and Gale. He previously was chief of staff to Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.). … Joe Scantlebury will be CEO of Living Cities. He most recently was VP for program strategy at the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.
WEEKEND WEDDING — Lindsay McDonough, scheduler for Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.), and William Dargusch, a former Treasury and Rob Portman staffer, got married Saturday at the Brittland Manor in Chestertown, Md. They met working in the Senate in 2015. Pic … Another pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: National Retail Federation’s Matthew Shay … Media Research Center’s Brent Bozell … Washington Free Beacon’s Eliana Johnson … ABC’s Devin Dwyer … The Guardian’s Daniel Strauss … Raytheon’s Mary Lee … James Davis … Rhonda Foxx … Ammon Simon … Mike Panetta of the Beekeeper Group (5-0) … Facebook’s Nkechi Nneji … Axios’ Caitlin Owens … Tigercomm’s Mike Casey … Edda Collins Coleman of Cogent Strategies … POLITICO’s Tina Sfondeles and Mark Cavanagh … Tony Hanagan of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s office … Jordan Sekulow … Corey Solow … former Reps. Patrick Kennedy (D-R.I.) and Tom Latham (R-Iowa) … David Goodman … Kip Talley … Sarah Ruane … LinkedIn’s Dan Horowitz … Margie Graves … Gail Ross … CNN’s David Shortell … WSJ’s Nicole Friedman … former New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez … Martha Coakley … Caroline Kelly … Ted Goodman, Michigan GOP comms director (3-0) … POLITICO Europe’s Matthew Karnitschnig
Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
Follow us on Twitter
26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
|
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
|
29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Joe Biden Is the Greatest Threat to Our Democracy Since the Civil War
Top O’ the Briefing
Biden Drools His Way Through Another Speech Full of Lies
Happy Wednesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I can probably get rid of this pastel blue bell-bottom leisure suit now.
I just want to say that I love the bleakness of the Welsh crime dramas on BritBox and Acorn but there’s no way that’s a real language.
Whew, feels better getting that off of my chest.
Speaking of language, remember last year when we had a president who could speak English? GOOD TIMES. I bet even people who weren’t fans of Trump’s speaking style miss him at this point. I thought that his extemporaneous, no-filter style was endlessly entertaining. We could use some entertainment right about now.
Do you know what else we could use?
A president who didn’t lie all of the time and wasn’t flushing the country down the toilet.
Sadly, we are saddled with a pretender who isn’t really there and is being used as a front for a cabal that’s attempting to advance the worst of all that American commie progressivism has to offer. Of course, everything that American progressivism has to offer is the worst, so that’s a problem.
I also do life coaching and motivational speaking.
The handlers let Biden off-leash again yesterday and these events are never pretty. For Biden. For his family. For America.
This is a bit of a carryover from yesterday’s Briefing but when the Democrats decide to go big on a false narrative, they go really big.
Tyler watched the speech so you wouldn’t have to:
On Tuesday, President Joe Biden demonized Republican election integrity efforts yet again in a speech in Philadelphia. He flew to speak in Philadelphia just after a forensic audit of the 2020 election began there. In his remarks, Biden again repeated the deceptive and destructive claim that Republican election integrity laws represented “21st Century Jim Crow.” Yet he went even further, accusing Republicans of trying to prevent anyone from voting against their preferred candidates.
Biden mentioned the Texas election bills, which would regulate the rights of poll watchers, crack down on “ballot harvesting,” and restrict local officials’ ability to send out mail-in ballot applications to people who do not request them, among other things. The president suggested that the protections for poll watchers amount to a systematic voter intimidation scheme.
“They want to make it so hard and inconvenient that they hope people don’t vote at all,” the president alleged. “Seventeen states have enacted 28 new laws to make it harder for Americans to vote.” He also mentioned “nearly 400 additional bills” pending in state legislatures.
“The 21st Century Jim Crow assault is real. It’s unrelenting. We’re going to challenge it vigorously,” Biden declared. “This is election subversion. It’s the most dangerous threat to voting and the integrity of elections in our nation’s history.”
He’s been practicing that “Jim Crow” line for a couple of months now and he still couldn’t get it out without slurring, stumbling, and mangling the two syllables.
I’m really looking forward to this clown being woken up in the middle of the night to speak to a world leader during a crisis.
Tyler examines Biden’s mumblefest of lies in depth. To Joe’s credit, he did stay awake long enough to hit every lie that Democrats and their flying monkeys in the mainstream media have been serving up to the American public since the beginning of the year. He seems to run out of gas faster with each one of these public appearances though. Next year’s State of the Union speech — if it happens — should be a real barn burner.
By the way, when Gropey McWhisper isn’t out spreading lies, he and his handlers are presiding over a variety of political train wrecks.
Tyler again, with news on the most recent:
Prices for consumer goods and services, excluding food and energy, shot up 0.9 percent in June, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported on Tuesday. This increase in the Core Consumer Price Index (CPI) far outpaced what economists expected. This ominous inflation warning sign suggests that President Joe Biden’s profligate government spending may usher in a new 1970s-style stagflation.
Not to be a complete downer, but this might be a good time to remind everyone that we aren’t even six months into this, um, presidency. Forget 2024, America will be lucky to make it to next year’s midterms at this rate.
Regarding today’s headline: yeah, yeah, I know this is a representative republic and not a democracy. I’m mocking what Biden and the Democrats have been saying. They have decided that everything every Republican does is the worst thing since the American Civil War.
In case you’re wondering, no, none of them have ever read a history book that wasn’t written by Howard Zinn.
Seriously though, this guy is a problem. He will parrot whatever it is that that day’s programmer has coached him to say, and it would appear that everyone who gets a chance to serve as Joe’s brain is somewhere to the left of the ghost of Fidel Castro.
Good luck to us, we’re gonna need it.
This Was Fun and Exactly What America Needs Right Now
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
Me bashing Flake, which I do well. Biden ‘Rewards’ Lapdog Jeff Flake With Crappy Ambassadorship
VodkaPundit: You Won’t Believe Who Bought a Ticket on Branson’s SpaceShipTwo
FBI Calls for People to Rat Out Friends and Family, Gets Clown-Slapped on Twitter
Remember God’s Miracles for Gideon? Archaeologists Just Found Evidence Backing Up This Bible Story
#Popcorn. Texas House Votes to Send the Long Arm of the Law to Nab the Runaway Dems
This is fun. ‘Hail Satin!’—Foo Fighters Drop Vid From Bee Gees Cover Album
Hands in the Commie Jar: Yet Another Democrat Caught With Chinese Money
Taliban Executes 22 Afghan Commandos in Cold Blood
Dems’ Union Bill Would Tax Workers and Cost Jobs, New Study Finds
EXCLUSIVE: Secret DA Order That’s Putting Felons Back on Texas Streets Blasted As ‘Misuse of Office’
Hold the Champagne on the Appeals Court Second Amendment Ruling
Biden Admin Allies Pressure Cell Phone Carriers to ‘Dispel’ Political Messages They Don’t Like
The ‘COVID Collaborative’: More Proof Our Smug Ruling Class Is Real
He couldn’t even say it right. Biden Dials Up His ‘New Jim Crow’ Rhetoric to an Absurd New Level
Looting, Rubber Bullets, and Food Shortages in South Africa: Democrats Should Take Note
[VIDEO] The Latest Stunt by the Texas ‘Champagne Socialists’ May Be the Dumbest Yet
Daily Dose of Downey: Kmart and Sears Discontinue Ashli Babbitt T-Shirt, Keep Selling Commie Swag
WATCH: Teachers Disprove the Legacy Media Narrative on Critical Race Theory
World Health Organization Buys 550 Million Doses of Chinese Vaccines That Don’t Work
Woke NY Assemblyman Trying to Stop Chick-fil-A From Getting State Contract
Townhall Mothership
Texas State Senate Passes GOP Election Reform Bill
Second Amendment Advocates Secure Major Handgun Victory in Court
Rand Paul Wants Answers from the NSA on Unmasking of Tucker Carlson
Reaction to Tragic Race Car Death Is Latest Example Showing That Liberals Want You Dead
Cam&Co. Red State Dems Feeling Heat Over Chipman Nomination
CA Home Invader Killed By Homeowner Was On Probation… For Home Invasion
NYC’s Adams And His Gun Control Hypocrisy
ATF Wants To Create 40 Million New Felons Overnight
Ron DeSantis Providing Leadership on Cuba While Joe Biden Is Missing in Action
A lawyer was forced out of her Legal Aid Society job after criticizing CRT
Iranian agents planned to kidnap a dissident journalist living in Brooklyn
Science UNFOLLOWED. De Blasio ignores CDC. All NYC students to wear masks this fall
VIP
Kruiser’s (Almost) Daily Distraction: Thinking About Becoming a Cult Leader
Trump: Brett Kavanaugh ‘Hasn’t Had the Courage You Need to Be a Great Justice’
GOP Support for Bipartisan Infrastructure Deal Crumbling
Trump Taunts Joe Biden Over Pennsylvania Visit to Address ‘Right to Vote’
GOLD Kamala Harris’ Epic Face Plan
Around the Interwebz
By the numbers: Supreme court ideologies
7 Ways to Prevent Birds From Crashing Into Your Windows
How to Watch the Perseid Meteor Shower Rain Over Us This Summer
Which Websites Do People Spend the Most Time On?
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Tunes
I shower more than Henry VIII ever did.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
|
Editor
Cut to the News
8409 Lee Hwy #3984
Merrifield VA 22116-9998
USA
Unsubscribe | Change Subscriber Options
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Is a COVID Booster in Your Future?
Plus: Consumer prices continue to climb.
The Dispatch Staff | 1 hr ago | 17 | 35 |
Happy Wednesday! The mainstream media may have declared the Brookings Institution the winner of last night’s softball game, but we’re going to hold off on jumping to any conclusions until any and all legal challenges play out in court.
(We lost by one run after a discrepancy emerged in the two teams’ scorebooks. Can’t wait for the rematch in the playoffs.)
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- Mass unrest has swept through South Africa in recent days in response to the jailing of the nation’s former president, Jacob Zuma. Police in the country say the rioting and looting has led to more than 70 deaths and 1,200 arrests. South Africa’s Constitutional Court sentenced Zuma to 15 months in prison last month for contempt of court after he refused to appear before a government-appointed commission looking into corruption that allegedly took place during his presidency.
- The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported yesterday that the Consumer Price Index (CPI) jumped 0.9 percent in June, the largest month-over-month increase in the inflationary measure in 13 years. On an annual basis, CPI is up 5.4 percent.
- U.S. Central Command announced Tuesday that it estimates the American withdrawal from Afghanistan to be more than 95 percent complete.
- The Department of Justice announced Tuesday that four Iranian intelligence officials had been indicted on federal charges for conspiring to kidnap a U.S. citizen—a Brooklyn journalist originally from Iran who has been critical of the regime—“and to forcibly take their intended victim to Iran, where the victim’s fate would have been uncertain at best.”
- In a supply chain business advisory issued yesterday by the State Department, Treasury Department, and four other federal agencies, the government warned that businesses operating in Xinjiang “could run a high risk of violating U.S. law” due to the extent of human rights abuses in the region. The advisory urged businesses involved in assisting or developing Chinese surveillance tools, sourcing labor or goods from Xinjiang, supplying U.S. products to entities using forced labor or surveillance, or constructing internment facilities to exercise heightened due diligence to ensure they are not violating U.S. or international law.
- The websites associated with Russian hacking group REvil—the organization behind the July 2 ransomware attack on Kaseya—went offline Tuesday, putting an abrupt halt to ransom payment negotiations. Neither the Biden administration nor Russian President Vladimir Putin have taken credit for the development, but the disappearance came just days after President Biden called Putin and, according to a White House readout, threatened to “take any necessary action” to stop the attacks.
- Democrats on the Senate Budget Committee announced last night that they had come to an agreement on a $3.5 trillion “human infrastructure” package that they plan to try to pass through the budget reconciliation process, which requires only 50 votes. It’s unclear, however, if all 50 Senate Democrats are on board with that large a figure.
Will Two Vaccine Doses Be Enough?
Israel is now offering a third dose of the COVID-19 vaccine to immunocompromised adults, and the United Kingdom is preparing for a similar move later this year. In the United States, Pfizer is seeking an emergency use authorization (EUA) for a third dose of its vaccine, and top public health officials held a closed-door meeting with representatives from the company on Monday. As the Delta variant continues to spread, will booster shots become necessary?
For now, the answer is no. Just hours after Pfizer announced it was seeking an expanded EUA, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a rare joint statement. “Americans who have been fully vaccinated do not need a booster shot at this time,” it read. “We continue to review any new data as it becomes available and will keep the public informed. We are prepared for booster doses if and when the science demonstrates that they are needed.”
Scientists and physicians have generally echoed this sentiment. “When do you cross a line where you can say that you need to boost immunity?” said Dr. Paul Offit, director of the vaccine education program at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. “I think that line gets crossed when a critical percentage of people who, despite being fully vaccinated, are either hospitalized or killed by this virus. Right now, that percentage is less than 1 percent, so you don’t need a booster.”
“I think it’s very unlikely that the ACIP, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, will issue any recommendations in the near term concerning the need for boosters for the general population,” added Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center who is currently a non-voting liaison to the ACIP. “Now, that said, there might be some consideration for people whose immune systems are impaired.”
While Pfizer would obviously benefit financially from selling additional vaccine doses—to Americans, or, more likely, the federal government—the pharmaceutical company’s movements in recent weeks have almost assuredly been backed by data.
“[Pfizer] already must know that antibodies are waning, or else they wouldn’t have been making these bold statements right now,” Howard Forman, a public health policy expert at Yale University, told The Dispatch. But that on its own likely won’t be enough to convince FDA and CDC regulators a third dose is necessary; the immune system’s response to COVID-19 is based on more than antibodies alone.
“Even if we saw waning antibodies, it is still possible that you would have very strong protection from T-cell immunity,” Forman said. “We just don’t know; people haven’t done the next steps of the studies to evaluate that.”
Discussing public health officials and the pharmaceutical companies, Schaffner referenced Winston Churchill’s quip about the United States and the United Kingdom being “separated by a common language.”
While some studies undoubtedly show that post-vaccination antibody levels decrease a bit over time, the result of that decrease isn’t yet showing up in the epidemiological data. “[The CDC and FDA] are saying, ‘Look, we’re measuring in the real world how long the protection is, and so far we’re to about nine months to a year’s worth of protection, and furthermore, the protection seems to be really pretty good against all the variants that are circulating at the present time,’” Schaffner said. “Their criteria for needing the booster would be if actual protection begins to wane, then we begin to see people who are vaccinated now exposed and having to be hospitalized again, or that they can determine that there are variants circulating in the United States to which the vaccines are not providing protection. Neither of those criteria has been met.”
New COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are surging again in Los Angeles, for example, but Dr. Christina Ghaly—the county’s medical services director—said yesterday that not a single fully vaccinated person has been admitted to a county-operated hospital. Maryland public health officials presented similar data last week: Every person in the state who died from COVID-19 in June was unvaccinated.
Pfizer has yet to publicly release its three-dose clinical trial data, but that will likely change soon. The ACIP is scheduled to meet next Thursday, and Schaffner expects Pfizer to present its data then. Forman added that he hopes to see new Israeli seroprevalence data—the concentration of antibodies in blood serum—soon as well.
More pressing than conversations about an eventual third dose, however, is getting first and second doses into the arms of the 30-plus percent of American adults who have thus far held off. From that perspective, any discussion of boosters is likely unhelpful. “I think [public health officials] are worried that if you start a conversation around boosters now, it could discourage people who haven’t been vaccinated from going out and seeking vaccination,” former FDA commissioner (and Pfizer board member) Scott Gottlieb said on Face the Nation Sunday.
One move that could encourage more people to get the jab? The FDA issuing full approval for the COVID-19 vaccines—not just EUAs. Schaffner is impatient. “This is more information than the public has—and the FDA has—for any other vaccine ever licensed in FDA history,” he said. Moving from EUAs to full approval would not only allow vaccine manufacturers to market their products directly to consumers, but it could prompt institutions that currently do not mandate the vaccine—including the military and many medical centers, schools, universities, and businesses—to add it to their list of required immunizations.
Dr. Anthony Fauci told CNBC yesterday that he would be “astounded” if Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson’s vaccines did not receive full approval.
Not So Transitory?
It’s starting to get a little repetitive. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) releases its latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) report about halfway through each month, and a day later we send you a TMD with headlines like “Prices On the Rise” and “Inflation Pains.” Today, it’s “Not So Transitory?”
The CPI increased 0.9 percent from May to June according to this month’s BLS report, and 5.4 percent year-over-year. Both data points exceeded economists’ expectations yet again (0.5 percent and 4.9 percent, respectively), and both represent the fastest price growth in 13 years—June 2008 for the former, August 2008 for the latter.
As we’ve noted before, there are some caveats worth keeping in mind when looking at these eye-popping figures. Although the influence of the year-over-year base effect is beginning to wane—most states had eased the harshest of lockdown restrictions by June 2020—current prices are still being measured against a fairly low starting point. Remove that, and things don’t look quite as dire. The CPI has risen 5.4 percent over the past year, but a much more manageable—though still higher than normal—3 percent averaged over the past two years.
The topline number is also less alarming if you remove a few key sectors that make up a disproportionate share of the growth. Semiconductor shortages and other pandemic-related supply chain hiccups are still affecting automobile manufacturing, and the resulting shortage is playing a significant role in the cost of used cars and trucks surging 45 percent year-over-year, and car and truck rentals nearly 88 percent. Used cars and trucks alone, per the BLS report, accounted for more than a third of June’s overall increase.
Biden administration officials were quick to point this out Tuesday. Brian Deese, director of the White House National Economic Council (NEC), tweeted “eye on the ball” alongside a chart that excluded “pandemic-affected” and “vehicle-related” items from core CPI inflation. “For most goods, inflation is 0.2%,” added senior adviser Neera Tanden.
Norbert Michel, director of the Heritage Foundation’s Center for Data Analysis, argued it’s fair to slice and dice inflation data to a degree—but at some point doing so just becomes political spin. “There are valid reasons to pull out those items and focus on the core,” he told The Dispatch. “If we say, ‘Well, we’ll pull out car prices, if we pull out food, we pull out energy, those are all things that have been very severely impacted throughout the pandemic,’ it’s kind of like, ‘Well, yeah. Okay, that makes sense.’”
“But if those problems don’t get taken care of and get addressed, then it’s not going to matter,” Michel continued. “And if it’s the case that some of the policies that we have in place to deal with the pandemic that have caused those things aren’t addressed and don’t change, then you’re just going to keep seeing things going up.”
Despite its public posturing, the Biden administration seems to be coming around to that realization. The New York Times reported yesterday that White House aides “have in recent weeks concluded that strong increases could linger for a year or more.” Moreover, Obama administration NEC director Larry Summers—who in March lambasted Biden’s American Rescue Plan as “the least responsible fiscal macroeconomic policy we’ve have had for the last 40 years”—was at the White House yesterday meeting with Deese and Council of Economic Advisers Chair Cecilia Rouse.
“These figures and labor market tightness and the behavior of housing markets and asset prices are all rising in a more concerning way than I worried about a few months ago,” Summers told Politico on Tuesday. “This raises my degree of concern about an economic overheating scenario. There are huge uncertainties in the outlook, but I do believe the focus of concern right now should be on overheating.”
Summers isn’t alone. An Echelon Insights survey conducted in mid-June found 71 percent of U.S. voters believe inflation is currently a “very big” or “moderately big” problem, and that number jumps to 79 percent if you replace “inflation” in the question prompt with “rising prices.” Sixty-five percent of respondents think increased government spending has contributed “a great deal” or “a lot” to the phenomenon.
Senate Democrats last night unveiled a $3.5 trillion “human infrastructure” package—on top of the bipartisan $1.2 trillion “infrastructure infrastructure” package—that they will try to pass through the budget reconciliation process. Sen. Joe Manchin did warn against additional deficit spending, however, saying Democrats “need to pay for” the proposal to avoid accruing additional debt.
The institution with the most say over where inflation goes from here—the Federal Reserve—will hold its monthly Federal Open Market Committee meeting in two weeks. In June, Chairman Jerome Powell said that it seemed like a few “very specific things” were driving up inflation, and that the situation would be “temporary.”
Mary Daly, president of the San Francisco Federal Reserve, somewhat echoed this sentiment yesterday. “We expected a pop in inflation like this. … Demand came back faster than supply, and there are these temporary bottlenecks,” she told CNBC. “Don’t read too much signal out of any month of data and let’s get through this volatile period so we can really see where the economy is.”
But Daly seemed to hint at future moves as well. “It is appropriate to start talking about tapering asset purchases, taking some of the accommodation that we have been providing to the economy down,” she added. “My own view is we’ll probably be in a good position to taper at the end of this year or early next.”
Worth Your Time
- There is some justice in this world, because Apple TV+’s hit series Ted Lasso secured 20 Emmy nominations yesterday. Not unrelatedly, GQ has published a delightful cover story profiling the show’s star, Jason Sudeikis. Turns out, he’s a lot like the character he plays on TV. “There’s a great Michael J. Fox quote,” Sudeikis told staff writer Zach Baron, trying to explain the particular brand of wary optimism that he carries around with him and that he ended up making a show about: “‘Don’t assume the worst thing’s going to happen, because on the off chance it does, you’ll have lived through it twice.’ So … why not do the inverse?”
- Ramesh Ponnuru has a great piece in Bloomberg on President Biden’s speech Tuesday on voting rights in Philadelphia. “Biden said that the voting system is threatened as it has not been since the Civil War. His recommended solution is to pass legislation that has been known for months to be dead in Congress and that wouldn’t address the chief problem even if successful,” he writes. “Biden said that 17 states had passed 28 laws making it harder to vote. The same source behind those numbers also reports that 14 states have passed 28 laws making it easier to vote. Four states appear on both lists, which suggests that the legislation is more complicated than Biden’s talk of a ‘21st-century Jim Crow assault’ on voters would allow.”
Toeing the Company Line
- Sarah and the gang continued their 2024 GOP primary preview Tuesday in The Sweep, digging into Ron DeSantis, Greg Abbott, and Kristi Noem’s prospects. Plus, Chris Stirewalt drops by with some thoughts on corporate political donations and how transparency should work in an incredibly polarized time.
- George Mason University economist Alex Tabarrok joined Jonah on The Remnant to discuss inflation, inoculations, and illiberalism. How can we revitalize democracy? Would open borders work? And should we abandon advanced civilization now before the machines destroy us all?
Let Us Know
If the COVID-19 vaccines do receive full FDA approval and public health officials begin recommending booster doses, would you have any problem getting a semi-regular COVID shot like you do with the flu, measles, tetanus, etc.?
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), Tripp Grebe (@tripper_grebe), Emma Rogers (@emw_96), Price St. Clair (@PriceStClair1), Jonathan Chew (@JonathanChew19), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
17 | 35 |
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
|
36.) AMERICAN THINKER
|
|
37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
|
41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
44.) WORLD NET DAILY
45.) CONSERVATIVE BRIEF
46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
47.) ABC
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Wednesday, July 14, 2021
Good morning, NBC News readers.
We’re not out of the Covid-19 woods yet. This morning we take a look at how human behavior continues to hamper pandemic recovery. Plus, Senate Democrats revealed a $3.5 trillion plan to expand the economic safety net. And could you be related to the Renaissance genius Leonardo DaVinci?
Here’s what we’re watching this Wednesday morning.
Superspreader events that first seeded the coronavirus in the United States are keeping the pandemic smoldering, with experts pointing to human behavior and social circles as the main drivers.
With the more-contagious delta variant of the virus circulating in the United States and around the world, experts warn that without adequate mitigation measures, superspreader events are a major threat to vulnerable communities and risk jeopardizing hard-fought gains to drive down the number of cases.
As the pandemic evolves and new variants emerge that are more transmissible or can cause more severe disease, human behavior remains one of the biggest pieces of the equation.
“It’s not just about the variants. It’s also about how people are interacting,” said David Dowdy, an associate professor of infectious disease epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “Right now, people are definitely distancing less, masking less, going to larger gatherings, and meanwhile, vaccination rates are not going up all that fast.”
All of these things combined can create a perfect storm, increasing the odds that new transmissions spiral out of control. Read our full story here.
Wednesday’s top stories By Sahil Kapur and Frank Thorp V | Read more The proposed spending plan to finance a major expansion of the economic safety net would be in addition to the $579 billion in new spending in the bipartisan infrastructure agreement still being hashed out. By Pete Williams and Jonathan Dienst | Read more Federal prosecutors say the Iranian government directed four intelligence operatives to kidnap a female journalist and human rights activist who has been critical of the regime and bring her back to Iran. By Doha Madani | Read more A hearing Wednesday in Britney Spears’ conservatorship case is expected to deal with the sudden departure of her court-appointed attorney. Meanwhile a series of filings since her explosive testimony have revealed discord among the ranks of her conservators. OPINION By Max Burns | Read more The former president is using a new tactic to further propaganda and distortion that courts — rather than denounces — the most dangerous elements of American society. By Phil McCausland | Read more As searchers slowly dig through the remaining rubble of the former condo and find everything from jewelry to children’s toys and religious objects, questions loom over how they will return those objects to their rightful owners and what legal challenges that could create. BETTER By Katie Jackson | Read more If you really want to get it right, cooking experts say to keep your meat thermometer handy.
Want to receive the Morning Rundown in your inbox? Sign up here.
Also in the news …
The best bean bag chairs to jazz up your child’s bedroom, playroom or family den.
One fun thing Talk about bragging rights.
Fourteen people alive today in Italy can claim that they are descendants of Renaissance genius Leonardo da Vinci, according to a new study of his family tree.
The findings, published in the journal Human Evolution, could enable historians to reconstruct da Vinci’s genome, helping them “scientifically explore the roots of his genius.”
Read the story here.
View in browser |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
|
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: Biden elevates voting rights as 2022 Dem rallying cry
When it comes to passing voting-rights legislation, President Joe Biden can’t wave a magic wand and change the mathematical reality of a 50-50 Senate.
Nor can he eliminate the filibuster and the unified GOP opposition.
AP Photo/Evan Vucci
But he can make voting rights – as well as Donald Trump’s actions – a central issue in the 2022 midterm elections, especially with key races next year in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
That’s maybe our biggest takeaway from Biden’s voting-rights speech on Tuesday.
“We’re going to face another test in 2022: a new wave of unprecedented voter suppression, and raw and sustained election subversion. We have to prepare now,” Biden said in Philadelphia yesterday.
“We’ll engage in an all-out effort to educate voters about the changing laws, register them to vote, and then get the vote out,” he continued, adding: “We will be asking my Republican friends — in Congress, in states, in cities, in counties — to stand up, for God’s sake, and help prevent this concerted effort to undermine our elections and the sacred right to vote.”
And he put Trump’s lies about the 2020 election, as well as the memories of Jan. 6, front and center.
“In America, if you lose, you accept the results. You follow the Constitution. You try again. You don’t call facts ‘fake’ and then try to bring down the American experiment just because you’re unhappy,” Biden said.
“That’s not statesmanship; that’s selfishness.”
Yes, Biden in his speech called for Congress to pass legislation protecting voting rights.
But the real thrust of his remarks was elevating the issue for the upcoming midterms.
|
TWEET OF THE DAY: Keeping it simple
|
Moving on to infrastructure and reconciliation
If yesterday was about voting rights, today is about infrastructure and reconciliation.
After Senate Democrats announced an agreement to move a $3.5 trillion reconciliation package (that includes expanding Medicare to cover dental, vision and hearing costs, and as 22 bipartisan senators work on their $579 billion infrastructure bill, Biden turns his attention to those issues.
The president heads to Capitol Hill to have lunch with the Senate Democratic caucus to discuss those dual legislative tracks.
And then at 3:00 pm ET, he meets at the White House with Democratic and GOP governors and mayors to promote the bipartisan infrastructure framework.
|
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
$3.5 trillion: The price tag on a new Senate Democratic plan, announced last night, to significantly expand the economic safety net, including funding for a Medicare expansion and green energy.
$579 billion: The cost of the bipartisan infrastructure plan, which a group of 22 senators continued work on last night as well.
18: The number of states that have legalized pot for recreational use, as Democratic senators unveil a new bill to end federal prohibitions on marijuana.
34,041,013: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 28,144 more than yesterday morning.)
611,102: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 573 more since yesterday morning.)
334,942,236: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC.
48.1 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
58.9 percent: The share of all American adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
|
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
What’s behind the new outburst of protests in Cuba?
Don’t miss Jane Timm on a wild story of another time Texas Democrats broke quorum back in 1979.
The Washington Post offers a behind-the-scenes look at how the Texas lawmakers skipped town earlier this week.
The Biden administration is weakening some proposed safety rules for public housing.
Don’t miss this spat between Bill Barr and a Pennsylvania GOP gubernatorial hopeful.
Joe Biden has nominated Jeff Flake to be ambassador to Turkey.
The White House is unveiling a new strategy to combat domestic extremism.
|
|
|
Download the NBC News Mobile App
|
50.) CBS
51.) REASON
52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
54.) TOWNHALL
|
||
FACEBOOK TWITTER |
ADVERTISEMENT | ||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions You can unsubscribe by clicking here. Or Send postal mail to: * Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers. |
55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Wednesday, July 14, and we’re covering one of the world’s most notorious hacker groups, violence in South Africa, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWREvil Goes OfflineWebsites and operations associated with REvil, one of the most high-profile hacker collectives, went dark yesterday without notice. The ransomware group has also reportedly ceased the dark web portals through which it negotiated payments from its victims. The disappearance comes days after President Joe Biden pressed Russian President Vladimir Putin to intervene (the group is believed to be based in Russia). The group pioneered the emerging ransomware-as-a-service approach, selling software capable of paralyzing organizations’ IT systems until payment is made. Responsible for recent attacks against IT services provider Kaseya and meat processor JBS, REvil also licensed its software and managed the extortion process for malicious third parties. Observers say three possibilities are likely—US or Russian security officials accessed and shut down the group’s servers, the group wants to avoid the scrutiny of being in the middle of US-Russian relations, or an unknown technical problem occurred. South Africa RiotsAt least 72 people have died and more than 1,200 others arrested amid ongoing violence in South Africa following the imprisonment of former President Jacob Zuma. A number of the victims are believed to have been killed in stampedes amid chaotic looting as crowds broke into local stores. The unrest has thus far been confined to impoverished areas in the country’s Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal provinces. Zuma, who led the country from 2009 to 2018, has faced a long list of accusations during his political career, ranging from fraud to the rape of a family friend. He was sentenced to 15 months in prison last month after refusing to participate in a corruption probe. Separately, he’ll reappear in court next week on charges relating to a 1999 arms deal in which he is alleged to have taken bribes as deputy president. Analysts say Zuma’s jailing was a catalyst for the airing of broader grievances. The country’s unemployment rate sits near 33%, and the nation is grappling with a third coronavirus wave while having fully vaccinated individuals less than 4% of its population. COVID-19 Cases Spike New COVID-19 cases in the US have risen by more than 110% over the past week and a half, with the rolling average currently near 24,000 per day. Hot spots are distributed across the country—California accounted for more than 10% of new cases last week, though Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Florida saw the biggest case rates relative to population. See a state-by-state breakdown here. Reported COVID-19 deaths, which typically lag a rise in new cases, have ticked upward by about 10% over the same timeframe. The current average of around 250 deaths per day remains the lowest since the onset of the pandemic last March. Health officials say the emergence of the more transmissible Delta variant, combined with loosened restrictions and a boom in summer travel, is fueling the rise. The variant accounted for more than 50% of new cases as of the week ending July 3, the most recent data available. Almost 65% of Americans over the age of 12 have received at least one vaccination dose, while nearly 80% of seniors—the demographic most vulnerable to severe illness and death—are fully vaccinated. In partnership with Public.com PUBLIC MARKETS FOR ALLIt isn’t easy to invest confidently in the stock market if you don’t have hundreds of hours of experience. But Public.com is on a mission to make the public markets work for all people. The Public.com investing platform lets you choose from thousands of stocks and ETFs, and invest in them with any amount of money (no stock should be unaffordable because of share price). But Public.com’s offering doesn’t stop there. You can see what others are investing in, share insights through a feed filled with notable investors and business leaders, ask business executives questions through Town Halls for live Q&As, watch real time analysis of the market through Public Live, and so much more. Public.com gives you access to a world class investing platform and the sharpest minds in the space. Open an account on Public.com today and get up to $50 in free stock when you deposit as little as $1. This is not advice. Valid for U.S. residents 18+ and subject to account approval. See Public.com/disclosures. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & Culture> “The Crown” and “The Mandalorian” lead all series with 24 nominations each for 2021 Primetime Emmy Awards; HBO and HBO Max combine for network leading 130 nominations (More) | See full list of Emmy nominations (More) > Team USA to send 613 athletes to Tokyo Olympics, its second-largest contingent ever; team includes a record 329 female athletes (More) > American League tops National League 5-2 to win MLB All-Star Game; Toronto Blue Jays slugger Vladimir Guerrero Jr. named game MVP (More) Science & Technology> Electrify America says it will double the number of its electric vehicle charging stations across the country by 2025, adding 1,800 fast-charging stations (More) > Sediment analysis reveals the asteroid that ended the Cretaceous period 66 million years ago created a mile-high tsunami wave that swept across the Gulf of Mexico (More) > The brain processes inanimate objects with face-like qualities in the same manner as real faces, including ascribing emotions to the images, new study suggests (More) Business & MarketsBrought to you by The Ascent > June US consumer prices increase 5.4% over last year, the largest gain since 2008; US stock markets slide (S&P 500 -0.4%, Dow -0.3%, Nasdaq -0.4%) (More) > JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs kick off earnings season, both report significant earnings increases in Q2 (More) | Apple and Goldman Sachs will launch a buy now, pay later (BNPL) service; shares of BNPL provider Affirm slide 15% (More) > Melinda French Gates among backers of Female Founders Fund’s $57M venture fund focused on investing in female-led startups (More) From our partners: Say hello to a one-card wallet. The Ascent’s credit card expert personally signed up for this credit card, thanks to its impressive mix of benefits. Up to 5% cash back, a big bonus, no annual fee, the list goes on. Politics & World Affairs> Senate Democrats reach internal agreement on a $3.5T budget framework covering Biden administration’s “human infrastructure” policy proposals; Democrats likely to try and pass the package via budget reconciliation, avoiding a filibuster (More) > At least 92 people dead after a fire burns through a COVID-19 ward in Nasiriyah, Iraq; a similar fire killed more than 80 people at a Baghdad hospital in April (More) > Justice Department indicts four Iranian nationals in alleged plot to kidnap New York journalist and activist Masih Alinejad, who has been a vocal critic of the Iranian government (More) UP TO $50 IN FREE STOCKIn partnership with Public.com Public.com is on a mission to make the public markets work for all people. They’ve built an investing platform with a community that fosters thoughtful and constructive conversations. See what others are investing in, tune in for real-time analysis of the market, and invest in top stocks with any amount of money. Open an account on Public.com today and get up to $50 in free stock when you deposit as little as $1. This is not advice. Valid for U.S. residents 18+ and subject to account approval. See Public.com/disclosures. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERARanking the best US cities to live in 2021. Why coffee prices are soaring. Inside Los Angeles’ iconic Stahl House. Italy bus driver saves 25 children from bus fire. Hawaii holds a goat lottery. Americans begin snapping up engagement rings. “Jackass” star gets shark bite during Shark Week. Paratrooper survives after parachute fails to open. Clickbait: It’s raining fish in Utah. Historybook: Revolutionaries in France storm the Bastille (1789); Archaeologist and spy Gertrude Bell born (1868); President Gerald Ford born (1913); Howard Hughes crew breaks record with 91-hour flight around the world (1938); NASA’s New Horizon probe completes flyby of Pluto (2015). “There is nothing more difficult to measure than the value of visible emotion.” – Gertrude Bell Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com. Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here! |
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
The SCOTUS Needs to stand up and grow a backbone.
|
TOP STORIES:
-
Trump Says Kavanaugh “Failed Him” With This Major Act Of Betrayal
- Military Assisting With Surveillance On Americans
- Democrats Who Fled Texas Being Arrested!
-
VoterGA Releases Explosive New Report On Discovery
-
Democrats Are Terrified After Cyber Ninjas Announcement
- Newsom Just Sealed His Fate With Massive Blunder…
- Secret Service Validates Authenticity Of Hunter’s Emails
- Dems Panic After Republican Announces His Committee Has The Votes…
- Twitter Launches Mass Attack On New Social Platform GETTR
- FDA Makes Horrifying Announcement About Covid Vax
|
IN DEPTH:
- CNN Medical “Expert” Says Life “Needs to be Hard” For The Unvaccinated 13 seconds
- It may not be the stagflation of the 70s yet, but we’re back to the inflation highs of 2008 1 hour
- Creepy: Biden Allies Want to Monitor Text Messages to Control What’s Said About COVID Vaccine 1 hour
- Rashida Tlaib just had a meltdown for the ages 1 hour
- Texas Republicans Say Enough and Officially Vote to Arrest Fleeing Democrats 1 hour
- CRINGE: Democrats who fled Texas to oppose election integrity law sing ‘We shall overcome’ 1 hour
- Cuba Cracking Down On Demonstrations; Dissidents Say Police ‘Arresting, Beating, And Killing’ Protesters 3 hours
- Fed’s Bullard: Time is right to pull back on central bank stimulus 3 hours
- New York Democrats urge ban of Chick-fil‑A from state rest stops 3 hours
- California K‑12 students who refuse to wear masks will be barred from school grounds, state says
- First lady Jill Biden to fly to Tokyo for virus-plagued Olympic Games 46 mins
- Inflation Continues Rapid Surge in June — Rises at Fastest Pace in 13 Years 1 hour
- Economically and morally, more immigration is right 2 hours
- JPMorgan profit more than doubles, but revenue falls 2 hours
- Atlanta businesses become casualties of MLB All-Star Game as Denver reaps rewards 3 hours
- Larry Elder announces candidacy in California recall election, Newsom denied party affiliation on ballot 3 hours
- Cristina Greeven Cuomo, who is married to Chris Cuomo, is in Jeffrey Epstein’s 1997 address book 3 hours
- World Health Org To Distribute Chinese Vaccines Over U.S. Objections 3 hours
- Exclusive: Cuban Activist Explains What’s Really Motivating the Cuban People’s Uprising | Brad Polumbo 3 hours
- Wuhan Lab Director Ordered Staff to Hush Up on COVID-19, Per State Department Cable | Human Events 3 hours
- Two families are suing Universal Orlando after actor made an OK sign for a photo with their kids 3 hours
- Mask Theater: Kid outfielders in Home Run Derby wear masks while players and fans attend maskless 3 hours
- WATCH: Rashida Tlaib goes on bizarre rant about ‘voting rights’ at vaccination event 3 hours
- GOP slams Democrats in new MLB All-Star Game ad 3 hours
- The White House Has an Interesting Description of Cuba’s Communist Government 3 hours
- Democrat Infighting Ensues over $2.4 Trillion Tax Increases 3 hours
- Rand Paul demands investigation into Tucker Carlson’s NSA ‘spying’ accusations 4 hours
- Rep. Buck says U.S. should have border wall to keep migrants out if it is truly a racist country 4 hours
- Trump Lawyer Jenna Ellis Demands RNC Chair Resign — Claims They Abandoned Trump Then Lied About It 4 hours
- ‘Cut their funding in half’: Tom Fitton urges GOP to tame ‘out of control’ DOJ, FBI 4 hours
- Gayle King Boasts To Fauci That She’s Banned Unvaccinated Family Members From Thanksgiving Because Of Him
- Trump releases letter from ex-US attorney criticizing Barr handling of election fraud claims 4 hours
- Why the Fed’s balance sheet is expected to top $9 trillion after it starts reducing its monthly asset purchases 4 hours
- Tucker Carlson teases ‘new evidence’ of voter fraud in Georgia’s Fulton County 4 hours
- Lumber Wipes Out 2021 Gain With Demand Ebbing After Record Boom 4 hours
- Virgin Galactic to Sell $500 Million in Stock Following Successful Flight 4 hours
- Global Start-up Funding Frenzy Fuels Fears of a Bubble 4 hours
- Elon Musk Testifies to Defend Tesla’s $2.6 Billion Acquisition of SolarCity 4 hours
- New Listing Rise and Mortgage Rates Drop 4 hours
- Biden has now canceled $3B in student loans, broad debt forgiveness still waits 4 hours
- Joy Behar Warns, U.S. on ‘Slippery Slope’ to Cuba Because of Election Security Laws! 4 hours
- Toyota Ends Donations to Targeted Republican Lawmakers After Lincoln Project Ad 4 hours
- FBI Receives Backlash After Encouraging People to Report Suspicious Behavior of ‘Family Members and Peers’
- Ron DeSantis: Anti-Police Rhetoric Causing ‘Disastrous Consequences’ 4 hours
- BJP MPs To Push Population Control Bills In Parliament This Session 4 hours
- Mexico president calls for end to Cuba trade embargo after protests 4 hours
- U.N. warns 10% of world undernourished as hunger “shot up” amid COVID pandemic 4 hours
- Newt Gingrich | Afghanistan: Overcoming Defeat and Denial 4 hours
- Britney Spears closing in on veteran Hollywood lawyer to take over conservatorship case: report 4 hours
- Drake Bell sentenced to 2 years’ probation for child endangerment 4 hours
- Golf Ball Gets Struck By Lightning In Awesome Viral Video 4 hours
- NBA Finals Ratings Tank Again – OutKick 4 hours
- Biden White House stumbles as Cubans stand 10 hours
- Cuba blames USA… 12 hours
- FREEDOM PUSH FOILED: Police patrol Havana in large numbers after rare protests… 12 hours
- Russia warns against ‘outside interference’… 12 hours
- TV Station Reports “TODAY IS THE FIRST FULL DAY OF THE NEW WORLD ORDER” 20 hours
- WATCH: White House suggests Cuban protests for freedom may be about vaccine access 20 hours
|
You signed up for the Populist Press newsletter at www.Populist.Press We are the #1 Drudge Alternative. Visit our homepage for incredible news!
|
Click here to unsubscribe
Populist Press
7940 Front Beach Rd.
Panama City Beach, FL. 32407
74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
|
75.) JUST THE NEWS
|
76.) THE DAILY DOT
July 14, 2021 Hello! Every Wednesday, our internet culture staff discusses the world of streaming entertainment. In today’s Insider:
AWARDS SHOWS The Emmys feel out of step with how we watch TV The 2021 Emmy nominations were announced Tuesday, and once again there were confounding nods (Emily in Paris, The Kominsky Method) alongside crowd favorites (Ted Lasso, Bridgerton). Quibi, a streaming platform that debuted last year and only lasted six months, somehow got eight nominations. Don Cheadle, who briefly appeared in The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, picked up a guest actor nom, to which he responded, “I don’t really get it either.”
That kind of sums up award show logic. In 2020, as they went virtual, there was a growing sense that these bloated events maybe don’t need to come back, at least not in their current form. In May, NBC canceled the 2022 Golden Globes so that the Hollywood Foreign Press Association could work on reforming and diversifying its membership.
The Emmys have to account for a year-plus of television, and there was a lot. But scrolling through the award categories, you wouldn’t know it. As critic Judy Berman writes: “For once, the main problem is not a pool of nominees who are #SoWhite or #SoMale. It’s that the very categories the Television Academy divides them into, and particularly the ones it chooses to highlight in the nominations announcement and subsequent Emmy telecast, are increasingly ill-equipped to showcase the best of TV as we watch it now.”
I won’t go through a whole list of shows that should have been nominated because honestly I don’t remember most of 2020. But the Emmys absolutely got it right by nominating Pen15 and I May Destroy You.
Senior Writer
CHECK OUT THE LATEST FROM THE BAZAAR 22 web hosting services that will support your site’s needs
After everything is said and done, how do you know what services don’t just talk the talk but walk the walk?
For starters, you’ll need to know what you’re looking for. Do you need email support? Want something that’s WordPress compatible? How about developer-friendly? Or are you pinching pennies for a package that’s as cheap as it gets?
REVIEWS ‘Pig’ is a strange, sensitive response to ‘John Wick’-style revenge thrillers Never one to turn down an unusual project, Nicolas Cage is an attention-grabbing choice of star for Michael Sarnoski’s debut feature, Pig. Once Cage’s name has gotten people in the door, they’re in for a treat. Riffing on the structure of John Wick-style revenge movies, this indie thriller is disarmingly sensitive, eschewing violence (well, mostly) in favor of lovingly filmed depictions of food and cooking.
Robin (Cage) is an aging hermit who lives in a rundown cabin in the Oregon woods. His only companion is his beloved pig who accompanies him on truffle-hunting expeditions. This provides Robin’s only source of income, via weekly visits from the smarmy young truffle-dealer Amir (Alex Wolff), the sort of person who probably takes business advice from finance bros on YouTube. These two men couldn’t be more different.
This uncomfortable arrangement might have continued indefinitely if not for a violent attack on Robin’s home. In the dead of night, someone attacks Robin and steals his pig, leaving him to wake up the next morning with a head wound. With Amir as his only viable contact, he sets off to hunt down the kidnappers. Who, exactly, would kidnap a truffle pig?
The field of potential suspects sends Amir and Robin on a quest through Portland’s fine-dining community, an increasingly surreal journey marked by chapter cards listing pivotal meals: “Rustic mushroom tart,” “Deconstructed scallops.”
Pig debuts in theaters July 16. Staff Writer
CULTURAL OBSESSIONS We got a look at the first Sex and the City revival photo, which was immediately photoshopped. Andrew McCarthy got in on the memes, reposting one that added in his Mannequin character.
Questions? Feedback? Contact us at info@dailydot.com.
Copyright © 2021 The Daily Dot, All rights reserved.
Don’t want to hear from us anymore? We understand, but it won’t be the same without you! Click here to unsubscribe To view in your browser, click here. |
77.) HEADLINE USA
|
|
|
78.) NATURAL NEWS
|
79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
|
82.) CNN
Wednesday 07.14.21 Over the past 18 months, your spending habits have likely changed. Make sure you know how to prepare so you don’t get caught shorthanded when life returns to normal — costs included. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings is suing Florida’s surgeon general over Covid-19 rules. Coronavirus
Children could pay the price when vaccination rates lag, a US vaccine expert says. Young children are not yet eligible for Covid-19 vaccinations, Dr. Peter Hotez explained, so they rely on older vaccinated people for protection from the virus. As the return to school approaches, some states are prohibiting public schools from requiring Covid-19 vaccinations or proof of vaccination for students. These efforts have public health officials worried about the limitations they could place on efforts to control the coronavirus and emerging variants. Meanwhile, Norwegian Cruise Line is suing Florida’s surgeon general over a state law barring companies from requiring customers and employees to provide documentation of Covid-19 vaccination status. The cruise line says such a ban will keep it from safely resuming operations.
Gun rights
President Biden’s nominee to lead the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives is underscoring deep congressional divides when it comes to gun control. David Chipman has been a career official at ATF for 25 years but also an adviser to a group that advocates for stricter gun laws. That has turned off some moderate Republicans and centrist Democrats and put Chipman’s Senate nomination in peril. Meanwhile, Democratic lawmakers are still trying to broker a deal for a slimmed-down bill to expand background checks for gun sales — another divisive issue. A federal appeals court also ruled against federal regulations that would ban handgun sales from licensed dealers to anyone under 21, saying they violate the Second Amendment.
Infrastructure
Senate Democrats have struck an agreement on a $3.5 trillion budget resolution that includes spending for Biden’s sweeping social agenda. This is different from the bipartisan bill that focuses on traditional roads and bridges. Instead, the resolution could lead to Democrats passing reforms to expand the child tax credit, offer paid medical and family leave, change the tax code and potentially even overhaul the immigration system. It’s also part of a larger push by Democrats to eventually create and pass their own infrastructure bill that covers more than the bipartisan version. However, the $3.5 trillion price tag could scare away some supporters, so the resolution has a ways to go.
South Africa
At least 72 people have been killed in South Africa in violent protests following the imprisonment last week of former President Jacob Zuma. He turned himself in to authorities to serve a 15-month jail term for contempt of court while denying other high-profile allegations of corruption stemming from his nine years in power. Political unrest among South Africans has been exacerbated by a worsening Covid-19 crisis and an overtaxed health care system. Military and police forces have been deployed to control the violence, which is among the worst South Africa has seen in years.
Canada
More than 160 “undocumented and unmarked” graves have been found in British Columbia’s Southern Gulf Islands, once home to the Kuper Island Residential School. This marks the latest in a string of grim discoveries made recently at similar sites across Canada. The hundreds of unmarked graves and unclaimed remains have forced Canada to contend with its violent history of residential schools, where countless indigenous people were once forced to attend. In a 1997 documentary, produced with funding from the federal government, survivors of the Kuper Industrial School describe it as “Canada’s Alcatraz.” In response to the recent discoveries, US Interior Secretary Deb Haaland announced an initiative to investigate the policies and practices behind a similar Native boarding school system in the US.
Paid Partner Content Straighter Teeth at Home
7 Retirement Mistakes to Avoid Working with a financial advisor is a crucial component of any healthy retirement plan, but most people make these common mistakes when hiring one. Learn more.
Is Your Business Making $200k+ Revenue? Check out this best-in-class calculator that will help you identify the business loan amount that you qualify for. People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Emmy nominations 2021: See what shows made the cut
A moon wobble will bring surge in coastal flooding in 2030s
Utah is dropping thousands of fish from planes again
Subway is revamping stores and staying true to its tuna salad recipe after reports suggested it didn’t contain real tuna We don’t care what the stuff is made of, Subway tuna is delicious.
Naomi Osaka Barbie doll sells out shortly after launch
Have you no shame?
Biden, addressing Republicans who have endorsed former President Trump’s false claims of election fraud. Biden gave a fiery speech yesterday on voting rights, calling out recent state-led voter restriction efforts as an assault on democracy. $38,255 That was the average price of a new car in May, according to JD Power, up 12% from the same period a year ago. It’s not your imagination — everything, including cars, homes, trips and entertainment, really is getting more expensive. Brought to you by CNN Underscored Interested in upgrading your home security? Start with a video doorbell For the last few weeks we’ve been testing an assortment of video doorbells, assessing features, subscription plans and capabilities. We found three that should fit all your security needs. Is this the worst liquor in the world? 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
No longer want to receive this newsletter? Unsubscribe. Interested in more? See all of our newsletters.
Like what you see? Don’t like what you see? Let us know. We’re all about self improvement. Did a friend forward you this newsletter? Sign up here.
Create CNN Account | Listen to CNN Audio | Download the CNN App
® © 2021 Cable News Network, Inc. A WarnerMedia Company. All Rights Reserved. One CNN Center Atlanta, GA 30303 |
83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- The Thompson bodycam
- This day in baseball history: An all-star game to remember
- Trump denounces another of his key appointees
- Everything Old Is New Again
- John Thompson speaks, sort of
The Thompson bodycam
Posted: 13 Jul 2021 03:21 PM PDT (Scott Johnson)St. Paul police have released the bodycam footage of the July 4 traffic stop of state representative John Thompson. I have embedded it below. The first minute and the last minute capture the interaction. He was driving with a Wisconsin driver’s license at a time when his driving privileges had been revoked as a result of an unmet child support obligation. The officer asks him: “Why in such a hurry?” Thompson responds: “I don’t think I took off like a bat out of hell. I just drove off.” Thompson tells him he’s “a state representative in this district right here, man.” The officer responds: “With a Wisconsin license?” Good question! Thompson puts his racial hustle into overdrive when the officer returns with a ticket for driving with a suspended license. Tom Hauser adds that he has Minnesota addresses outside his legislative district (tweet at bottom). R-a-a-a-cism!
Tom Hauser is a careful reporter who raises the issue of Thompson’s current address below. Regardless, this guy is unfit for public office. Like Keith Ellison and Ilhan Omar, however, he is shielded by DFL privilege, as Jon Justice and Drew Lee call it. There should nevertheless be more to come.
|
This day in baseball history: An all-star game to remember
Posted: 13 Jul 2021 03:14 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)The 1971 all-star game, played in Detroit 50 years ago today, is memorable for at least three reasons. The first is all those home runs — six of them, the most memorable of which by were Reggie Jackson and Roberto Clemente. The second is that the American League won — its first all-star victory since 1962. The third is all of the top-tier Hall of Famers who participated. 1971 was the year of Vida Blue, and it was only natural that he started for the American League. His National League counterpart, Dock Ellis, was considerably less formidable. Ellis and Blue are both Black. A few days before the game, Ellis had said, “Ain’t no way they’re gonna start two brothers against each other in the All-Star Game.” Since Blue was obviously going to start for the AL, Ellis was saying that NL manager Sparky Anderson wouldn’t select him. He reportedly believed that Anderson had it in for him. Yet Anderson did select Ellis, bypassing superior pitchers like Tom Seaver, Juan Marichal, and Steve Carlton. It turned out not to be a great call, although Blue wasn’t that much more effective than Ellis. (Ellis would later claim he was “high” when he took the mound.) Blue was fine in the first inning. Willie Mays, Blue’s boyhood idol, led off by grounding out. Hank Aaron also grounded out and Joe Torre popped out. Ellis also sailed through the first inning, retiring three future Hall of Famers — Rod Carew, Carl Yastrzemski, and Frank Robinson. Blue began the second inning by hitting Willie Stargell with a pitch. He then struck out the NL’s third Willie (McCovey). However Johnny Bench followed with a two-run homer, a prodigious opposite field shot that might still be remembered had not Jackson topped it a few innings later. Blue gave up another homer in the third inning, this one to Aaron. It was the first all-star game home run, and indeed first extra base hit, for Hammering Hank. It came in his 17th game and (if I counted correctly) his 59th at-bat. Ellis took a 3-0 lead into the bottom of the third. However, the NL countered with four runs in that frame. The first two came from Reggie Jackson’s home run — a monstrous shot that hit a light tower 540 feet away. This is probably the longest all-star game home run ever, or would have been but for the tower. A professor later estimated that Jackson’s blast would have traveled 650 feet had it not been interrupted. Jackson says he hit the shot after choking up on the bat. Jackson never choked up, but he did this time, he says, because teammate Sal Bando had admonished him not to strike out at the all-star game, as Jackson did so often during the regular season. (In the video of the home run below, Jackson does appear to have choked up slightly.) Jackson also says, “That might be the longest one I ever hit. I couldn’t have hit it any farther if I stood at second base with a fungo bat.” The next two runs came from a Frank Robinson home run. With it, Robinson became the first player ever to hit all-star game home runs for both leagues. He had homered for the NL in 1959. In the fourth inning, a pair of future Hall of Famers — Jim Palmer and Juan Marichal — replaced Blue and Ellis. Both pitched two scoreless innings. The only hit in these two frames was a Willie Davis singled off of Palmer. Palmer was aided, though, by a fielding gem from his teammate Brooks Robinson. The great third baseman had robbed Bench and his Cincinnati teammates on multiple occasions during the previous World Series. Bench responded to this latest fielding gem by throwing up his hands and wondering why he kept hitting the ball at Robinson. Another Oriole ace, Mike Cuellar, took over for Palmer in the top of the sixth. He would pitch two more scoreless innings. Ferguson Jenkins, another Future Hall of Famer, came on for the NL in the bottom of sixth. Home town hero Al Kaline greeted him with a single. Harmon Killebrew was the next batter. He smashed a home run, the fifth of the contest. Killebrew’s blast put the AL up 6-3. The NL cut the lead to 6-4 in the top of the eighth, when Clemente homered off of another home town hero, Mickey Lolich. This would be Clemente’s last all-star game at-bat. Clemente’s home run is memorable because he was standing on only one leg when he hit it. Don’t believe me? Watch for yourself below. (You can also watch Jackson’s shot just below Clemente’s.) Lolich was able to retire the next five National League batters to close out the game. The AL had broken its eight game losing streak. In all, 21 future Hall of Famers played in the 1971 all-star game. Five others participated as managers, coaches, or (in the case of Doug Harvey) as an umpire. All six home runs were by Future Hall of Famers. Was this the most memorable all-star game ever? It is for Detroiters of a certain age. And for many others, too. |
Trump denounces another of his key appointees
Posted: 13 Jul 2021 01:02 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Donald Trump unloaded on Brett Kavanaugh during an interview with Michael Wolff, an anti-Trump author who has published a book about the final days of Trump’s presidency. Wolff isn’t the most trustworthy reporter around, but Trump’s criticism of Kavanaugh is in keeping with his attacks on other of his nominees and selections. In addition, some of Trump’s criticism of his nominee is valid. According to Wolff, Trump said this about Kavanaugh:
This quotation is so Trumpian, it’s hard to imagine that the ex-president didn’t say it. Here’s the answer to Trump’s question: Without him, Kavanaugh would be a judge on the second most important court in America. And had Trump not nominated Kavanaugh, the age-old, dubious rape allegation never would have surfaced. Thus, Kavanaugh could have become a partner at almost any law firm, had he tired of being an appeals court judge. The idea that what Trump did for Kavanaugh should influence the Justice’s rulings is also seriously misguided. Kavanaugh’s only obligation is to judge cases on their merit, to the best of his ability. Trump also said (again according to Wolff):
This is certainly true. But Kavanaugh has never had that courage. He’s always been a careerist. There are people in Washington who could have told Trump that. Some people may have told him. Kavanaugh didn’t make the list of jurists from whom Trump said during the campaign he would pick his Supreme Court nominees. Kavanaugh joins a long line of key Trump selections, including both of the men he nominated for Attorney General, whom he has denounced (some with ample justification, some not). One of the qualities of a good president is the ability to select top-notch people for Cabinet slots, key advisor positions, and judgeships. By his own admissions, Trump failed that test. If you believed that under a Trump presidency America, in particular conservative America, would win non-stop, then you probably believed that Mexico would pay for Trump’s wall. Neither was going to happen in the real world. But it was reasonable to expect that, with very few exceptions, Trump would select the brightest and the best conservatives for key positions. It was reasonable to expect that his Supreme Court nominations would come from the list he provided during the campaign or that, if he departed from the list, the non-listed nominee would be stellar. This didn’t happen, either. Kavanaugh isn’t exactly a dud, though if he keeps “growing in office” he will become one. But he’s a suboptimal Justice from a conservative perspective. And he was always going to be. It was unrealistic to have expected him to join the Alito-Thomas wing of the Court. The best one could hope for was that he would locate himself somewhere between those two and Justice Kennedy on the spectrum. That’s where he is. He sits about where Chief Justice Roberts does, but without the years of strong conservative rulings Roberts made before he moved towards the center. Let’s not forget that candidate Trump blasted George W. Bush for nominating Roberts. By the same token, it’s fair to blast Trump for nominating Kavanaugh — and a host of others. |
Everything Old Is New Again
Posted: 13 Jul 2021 10:35 AM PDT (Steven Hayward)As everyone knows, socialism is back big (except in nations that have had it already, like Cuba, Venezuela, California, Seattle, etc). So it is not surprising to see headlines like this:
Great: enlightened central planners, assembled only after “careful consideration” (and a swampland purchase in Florida). So where does this appear? The Nation or The New Republic? Jacobin magazine perhaps, or The American Prospect? The answer is . . . (checks notes) . . . the Financial Times. Once upon a time you could count on the FT to be economically literate. Chaser—this news item yesterday:
Gee, I wonder what she’ll find? The suspense is killing me. |
John Thompson speaks, sort of
Posted: 13 Jul 2021 05:56 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)DFL state representative John Thompson is a bully, thug, liar, and race hustler supreme. He made a name for himself threatening to burn down Hugo, Minnesota, in a threatening diatribe outside the home of then Minneapolis police union president Bob Kroll last summer. As a result of his good works, he was elected to the legislature in November 2020 from St. Paul’s East Side. Thompson has held a Wisconsin driver’s license ever since he moved to Minnesota, assuming he moved to Minnesota. He has held a Wisconsin driver’s license since 2000. Indeed, he renewed it in November 2020, around the same time he was elected to the legislature. To obtain his Wisconsin license he swore he was a Wisconsin resident. Further, he was obligated to secure a Minnesota driver’s license within 60 days of moving to Minnesota. In the early morning hours of July 4 Thompson was stopped by a St. Paul police sergeant because his car lacked a license plate on the front. He displayed his Wisconsin driver’s license while the officer found that Thompson’s driving privileges in Minnesota were under revocation as a result of a failed child support obligation (subsequently remedied). I take it that Thompson was ineligible to drive with a Minnesota driver’s license and may have been ineligible to drive in the state, period. Assuming he is a Minnesota resident, Thompson had obtained his Wisconsin driver’s license under false pretenses. Performing his race hustle last week outside the governor’s mansion in St. Paul, Thompson alleged that he had been a victim of driving while black. Having reviewed the bodycam footage of Thompson’s encounter with the officer himself, St. Paul police chief Todd Axtell reported that the stop was by the book and called for Thompson to authorize the release of the bodycam footage. See my post “What Rep. John Thompson represents.” Thompson has refused all requests for interviews. Rather, he has enlisted the necessary assistance to craft an evasive and question-begging statement that purports to address the issues raised by these events. In the statement Thompson makes no mention of the revocation of his driving privileges under Minnesota law. He notes, however, that he was ticketed for driving under suspension of what must have been his Wisconsin driver’s license. Thompson asserts over and over again in the statement that the stop was pretextual. I believe this to be misleading, although this depends on what is meant by “pretextual.” However the word is defined, we can infer to a certainty Thompson’s race had nothing to do with the stop. Thus Thompson’s statement represents more shtick. Thompson acknowledges that his interaction with the officer was by the book. The gist of Thompson’s statement — that he was the subject of some racially motivated wrongdoing — is a lie. Referring to his “emotions,” Thompson implies that the bodycam footage will not show him in a favorable light. It will show him performing his hustle with the officer. That is how I read what he is saying. Thompson’s statement is posted here. I have posted it in its entirety below the break. This crock compounds his misconduct. There should be more to come. * * * * * Five years ago last week, we marked the killing of my friend Philando Castile, who was shot by a police officer during a traffic stop. Since being pulled over myself on July 4, my greatest regret is how the recent events have allowed us to overlook this time that should have been spent reflecting on the life of my friend and the changes that are needed to create a Minnesota where he would not have lost his life. I was pulled over in what is referred to as a pretextual traffic stop. The same type of stop that led to the killing of Philando, as well as Daunte Wright this April. Pretextual stops have been shown to not only do little to stop serious crimes, but they also disproportionately target nonwhites. This was the racial profiling I spoke to, and I’ve been working to get rid of these types of stops long before this summer. There have been calls to release the bodycam footage from my stop, which I want to make clear I fully support. It is within the power of the St. Paul Police to release that footage, and I am not a barrier to that. In the video, you won’t see the officer do anything that isn’t by the book, but the issue is we need to rewrite the book. I do not know the officer who pulled me over, and I have no reason to believe they have any hate towards me specifically. Officers do, however, work in a system that has allowed these too often pretextual traffic stops to continue despite tragic consequences. As much as I hate how recent coverage of this issue has been about me, I recognize I have an obligation to my constituents, and owe them an explanation. I have an obligation for Black men who don’t have the platform that I do. I’m pushing legislation for more police accountability, and this situation is a great example of why that work matters. During my stop, it was brought up that my vehicle did not have a front license plate, I did not have a Minnesota driver’s license, and there was a record of me having missed a child support payment. While all of these have relatively simple explanations, I take responsibility for my fault in not addressing these issues and allowing them to eclipse the hard-fought work done in the name of police reform. My family bought a new car, and as with any new vehicle, we had to wait for our plates and get the proper tools to attach them. Not long after purchasing this car, it was rear-ended, and we did not drive the vehicle for some time. When I did drive the car on July 4, it should have had a front license plate, but I didn’t have the right part for the front bracket. After I was stopped, they ran my license, which is a Wisconsin driver’s license. I previously lived in Wisconsin, and my family and I considered moving back there to care for a family member, who will now be coming to live here. I live and work in St. Paul, and have for many years. My Wisconsin license hadn’t previously posed an issue for me, but I will now be changing it to a Minnesota license, as I should have before. During my stop, I was also informed that my license had been suspended for a minor child support issue, one which was resolved long ago. I owe $0 in child support. After all of this, I was only given a ticket for driving with a suspended license. I do not know why I wasn’t cited for driving without the front license plate – the reason for my stop. I was able to drive away from this interaction while other Black Minnesotans, in very similar situations, have not. The desire to be treated with respect and be able to drive away from this interaction safely was why I informed the officer I was a State Representative during our conversation. Too many Minnesotans are dealing with barriers like this without a respectable title in front of their name. Philando was notably pulled over 49 times, largely for minor violations. I believe these pretextual stops are part of structures that operate to restrict access to jobs and housing, lock us up, and publicly humiliate Black, Indigenous, and communities of color. Interactions like this block us from our families, block us from our kids, and create new barriers to a quality of life. We need better, and that’s what I’m working towards. I understand that my emotions can sometimes make it hard for some people to hear the real message. These are difficult issues, and I’ve lost loved ones, but I ask you to work with me. We need a broad coalition, including law enforcement, to come together to understand that Minnesotans that look like me – my family, friends, and community – are living with these issues every day. I hope we can focus on conversations that center around making that change possible. |
You are subscribed to email updates from Power LinePower Line. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. |
Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
|
91.) USA TODAY
|
92.) THE DAILY BEAST
93.) MSNBC
July 14, 2021 THE LATEST The RNC knows Trump is lying. It just doesn’t care.
by Hayes Brown Former President Donald Trump’s claims are now, and have always been, fabricated. Those lies have spread through the Republican Party despite the lack of evidence. But figures at the top of the GOP have known this whole time that none of it was true — but have been more than happy to exploit those lies for their own benefit, Hayes Brown writes. “Those figures have either kept quiet about their concerns or been excommunicated from their roles,” Brown writes. “Instead, the loudest voices in the GOP are the ones who are actively promoting Trump’s lies. But even those who are remaining quiet are content to use those lies to further their own agendas.”
Read Hayes Brown’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Wednesday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES It wasn’t a surprise that they used her deadname, but it still hurts. Read More The future doesn’t bode well for this corner of the U.S. faith community. Read More Cubans are demanding something more than functioning public utilities and basic social welfare. Read More TOP VIDEOS LISTEN NOW Into America
Trymaine Lee takes a look at the movement to preserve Black historic landmarks. He talks to Brent Leggs, the executive director of the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund, about why it’s important to create a permanent record of the Black experience in America. Listen now THE NEXT 25 Help us celebrate MSNBC’s first 25 years by joining us every day for 25 days as our anchors, hosts, and correspondents share their thoughts on where we’ve been — and where we’re going.
Today, by Lawrence O’Donnell: The GOP’s ride back to reality will speed up with every presidential election they lose
Privacy | Unsubscribe |
94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
95.) UNCOVER DC
|
96.) NOT THE BEE
97.) BREITBART
View in browser
|
Schweizer: Hunter Laptop Confirms ‘Joe Biden Was a Direct Beneficiary’ of His Son’s Deals Huh? Joe Lifts Sanctions on Venezuela, Giving Cuba a Lifeline advertisement Bidenflation: Consumer Prices Surged Nearly 2x Higher Than Expected in June… …WSJ Survey: Higher Inflation Will Be Around for Years… …Small Biz Inflation Metrics Highest Since 1981 Fleebaggers: TX Dems on Defense After Delaying Election Integrity Vote… …Abbott: Will Be ‘Arrested’ on Return Cornel West Resigns from Harvard Citing ‘New Glittering Form’ of ‘Jim Crow’ Via ‘Superficial Diversity’ Emmys Nominate First Transgender ‘Lead Actress’ Debra Messing Condemns America as Racist Based on ‘Karen’ Parody Video Photos: Looting and Rioting Spread Through S. Africa, 32 Dead FDA Adds Warning Label to J&J Vaccine of Rare Neurological Condition Nolte: No One Undermined Vaccine Confidence More than Biden and Harris Twitter Admits It Verified Fake Accounts – While Banning Conservatives advertisement |
98.) NEWSMAX
|
99.) MARK LEVIN
July 13, 2021
On Tuesday’s Mark Levin Show, President Biden and the Democrats are doing everything possible to take control of voting and block Republican efforts to strengthen voter integrity. Democrats have proposed legislation that would turn America into one dark blue state where they would never lose power because that is the only thing that matters to them. Biden gave a Castro-like speech today in Philadelphia pushing a false narrative about standing up to the greatest threat to our Democracy, calling for no voter ID and no signature verification. Democrats want to ram through their voting agenda with a 50-50 senate a four-seat majority in the House of Representatives. The chaos at the border is all part of the plan, as they push to remove citizenship as a requirement to vote. They want to destroy our voting system and neutralize our vote by putting the Democrat party first and the country last. Also, we can no longer allow the government to control our schools. Community committees, parents groups, and activists must take a stand against their local school boards and the corruption of public education. Students should be taught civics and history as written by real historians, not 1619 project propaganda. Later, a new report came out that shows the U.S. Navy is not prepared for fighting a war but are well trained in diversity. This is what is happening to our military while the Chinese are building a naval fleet second to none. Finally, Marco Rubio calls in to discuss the ongoing crisis in Cuba. 100 activists are missing, people are being brutalized and murdered, and now some have had their internet connection cut to stop the spread of their uprising against their fascist government, all in the name of Marxism.
THIS IS FROM:
Premiere Collectibles
Signed Copies of American Marxism
Right Scoop
There are damn lies, and then there are the despicable ones Biden just told about GOP election laws
Cotton.Senate
A Report On The Fighting Culture of the U.S Navy Surface Fleet
Bongino
Report: US Navy Unprepared for Military Confrontation Due to Focus on Wokeism
UPI
MLB commits up to $150M to improve Black diversity throughout baseball
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Drew Angerer
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
|
102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
No good news today.
Clyburn fears a 2022 loss if the filibuster holds – Manchin looks shakyIn remarks to Politico, the House Majority Whip said he wants Biden to authorize a “carve-out” to the filibuster that would allow Democrats to basically do anything they want. They… | |
Americans react to report that Biden has a plan for an enemy listEarlier we noted that Biden’s admin, under the leadership of FBI Director Chris Wray, is accused of planning to go after all social media and influencers who helped radicalize the… | |
An unhinged Joe Biden prefers Confederates to Trump supportersOn Wednesday in Philadelphia, a screaming Joe suggested Confederate soldiers were superior to the Trump supporters at the January 6th riot/rally. He actually said that not even the “confederates” during… | |
Biden’s yelling again about the Civil War and questioning the electionMaybe Joe Biden is afraid that he’ll be found out as a pretend president since he’s starting to rail against anyone questioning the 2020 election. He’s very upset about states… | |
Biden nominates RINO Jeff Flake as ambassador to TurkeyPresident Joe Biden nominated former Sen. Jeff Flake to be U.S. ambassador to Turkey, the Arizona RINO announced on Tuesday. Erdogan and Flake should get along just fine although we… | |
NY LGBT lawmakers protest Chik-fil-A on the thruwayDemocratic legislators in New York are opposing plans to open Chick-fil-A restaurants at rest stops on the state thruway. “Chick-fil-A, through the charitable wing of its business, has a history… | |
Subpoenas are coming over 2020 election corruptionArizona and Georgia appear to have evidence of election corruption coming. There will be subpoenas. Peter Navarro said it is not just about Donald Trump. He said it was also… | |
Admin to go after conservs and influencers on social media for radicalizing 1-6 riotersJack Posobiec, a senior reporter for Human Events, reported that the Biden administration is expanding the assault on Trump supporters. Biden’s handlers are keeping a database, a list, of so-called… | |
Full presser with VoteGA on 2020 election fraudHere’s the update from GeorgiaVote that we reported earlier today. It includes the entire press conference with Garland Favorito discussing the errors in the 2020 Georgia election. There is strong… | |
Small gunmaker is outraged over Cuomo law aimed at putting them out of businessA Greece, NY gun manufacturer is outraged by a new law signed this week by Gov. Andrew Cuomo. The law repeals liability protection from gun manufacturers and says it could easily… | |
Howard Dean says unvaccinated will die over ignorance, oh, and HitlerYou’re all going to die rebels! Former Vermont governor Howard Dean said Trump supporters aren’t getting vaxxed and they’re going to die. It began with the biased host: “They are… | |
VoterGA presents evidence of duplicate scanned ballots, 60% reporting errors in 2020 electionOn Monday night Garland Favorito, the founder of the election integrity group VoterGA, announced a Tuesday morning presser. VoterGA reviewed highlights of its amended ballot inspection complaint and provide proof… | |
CNN’s medical tyrant argues for banning the unvaccinatedDr. Leana Wen, CNN medical contributor and former head of Planned Parenthood, continues to push her tyrannical views. She argues that life needs to be made difficult for those who… | |
White fashion is stolen from blacks, uh, sureChi Ossé, the newly elected progressive member for the New York City Council attending a prestigious fashion show in the city, said that fashion had the power to change perspectives.… | |
A federal judge excoriated Sidney Powell and Lin WoodA federal judge on Monday excoriated a group of Republican-aligned lawyers including Sidney Powell and L. Lin Wood over their legal efforts to review the 2020 election results. The Michigan… | |
Eric Swalwell’s Qatar Camel AdventureJust when you thought Democrats couldn’t possibly get any weirder, Eric Swalwell posts shirtless pictures of himself in Qatar while sitting on a camel. And the trip was paid for… | |
Bare butt-dildo-monkey man reads to kids in LondonThe Redbridge Libraries Summer Reading Challenge in London left parents confused and outraged after the rainbow monkey man in a buttless suit read to kids, the dildo swinging freely from… | |
Kamala says fleeing TX lawmakers are like those who died for the right to voteUpdate: The Democrat lawmakers will be arrested when they return. Kamala Harris compared the fleeing Texas Dem legislators to those who died fighting for our right to vote. The escapees… | |
Newsom can’t be a Dem in the recall election, talk show host enters Cali raceA Sacramento County Superior Court judge on Monday denied Gov. Gavin Newsom’s request to be listed as a Democrat in the state’s upcoming recall election after his office missed a deadline. Newsom… | |
Even Alabama can’t get rid of CCP-Confucius InstitutesAlabama lawmakers introduced legislation to ban Confucius Institutes from the state’s public university campuses. It didn’t become law because of the Confucius Institutes’ political and economic interests with the state.… | |
Tucker to look at 2020 election fraud on WednesdayTucker Carlson will reveal new evidence of “voter fraud” in the 2020 election. The news was reported by the Washington Examiner’s Deputy Editor Daniel Chaitin, and noted by Tucker on… | |
An Alarming Warning! They Will Do It AgainIn this clip, Dennis Prager explains that the lockdowns were the greatest error in human history. He says we now know that in the name of health, you can suppress… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
|
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||
|
|||||
106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) THE INTERCEPT
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
109.) STARS & STRIPES
|
Today’s special animal friend is the Shetland pony, Equus ferus caballus (like all domesticated horses/ponies). These small equines are native to the Shetland Islands, which are due north of Scotland and have a really great website, https://www.shetland.org/ which makes want to go there. (You can also see puffins.) The ponies have been in the islands since the Bronze Age, at least two thousand years ago. The native stock has been augmented by interbreeding with horses from Scandinavia and elsewhere, reminding us that people and animals moved around a lot long before modern transportation.
The Shetland pony is 28 inches to 42 inches high at the withers, which is the back at the shoulder. Its build is very stout, with a short back and neck, thick chest, and short legs. It has small ears, a long mane and tail, and a thick, shaggy coat. This conformation reflects centuries of unmanaged breeding in a habitat featuring sparse, tough greenery; rocky, hilly terrain; and almost constant strong, cold winds. The surviving Shetland ponies can walk many miles over rocks to find food, including seaweed on the shore, while maximizing the production and conservation of heat in their bodies. Females convert food to milk for their foals with high efficiency.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yZdsf_uyWnA
Because of their small size, Shetland ponies were not used for riding during much of their history. Their popular use as a children’s pony began in the 19th century. The primary use of the ponies in the islands was as a beast of burden, carrying cut peat, the main fuel source, from the bogs to the crofts (small farm plots) where the people lived. When not carrying loads, the animals ran free on the common lands or scattalds. They were not used for pulling carts or wagons until late in their history, because the Shetlands had no roads or wheeled vehicles. In addition to use for hauling, the hair from the manes and tails was used to make fishing nets and fishing lines, greatly contributing to human survival in the islands.
Beginning in the mid-19th century, thousands of Shetland ponies were “sold South” to England, where they replaced child laborers hauling ore in mines. Long days underground were miserable, but the miners often formed strong bonds with their ponies and gave them the best care possible. The island breed degraded during this period because many of the strongest stallions were sold South as breeding stock or gelded and sold for mine work. In the late 19th century, scientific breeding and stud management practices rebuilt the breed in its native habitat, as well as establishing strong stock and record-keeping in England and the United States.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JffmdDYdvfc
It’s worth watching these videos just for the darling little accents, even if you’re not interested in ponies.
The Shetland pony is now one of the most popular small equine breeds in the world. Breeding, training, and showing them is a flourishing, if cyclical, industry. Child and adult riders, drivers, and handlers compete in shows around the world. This year’s American championship will be in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in September.
https://www.shetlandminiature.com/shows-awards/amhr-nationals#!Silva294_004_MINI18
Of course I would get a recommended Covid booster. I scorned the annual Flu shot for years until it finally caught up with me. Don’t wanna go through that again. I may be thick, but I am teachable.