Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday July 16, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
July 16 2021
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Happy Friday from Washington, where developments in Cuba test President Biden’s inclination to play nice with the communist regime. Our Fred Lucas suggests what to watch as Cubans demand freedom and other essentials. The main Black Lives Matter group, meanwhile, embraces Havana and blames America, Jarrett Stepman writes. On the podcast, Rachel del Guidice discovers how one organization wants to depoliticize school classrooms. Plus: Arizona’s election audit focuses on 74,000 ballots and a 14-year-old girl spells trouble for the left. On this date in 1945, a secret U.S. government effort called the Manhattan Project results in the explosion of the first atom bomb at Alamogordo, New Mexico. |
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 7.16.20
Today marks 72 years since the start of the Groveland Four nightmare.
Surviving family members still are awaiting full justice.
It took until 2017 before the Florida Legislature officially recognized what had been revealed through several investigations: four young Black men did not commit the rape they were accused of in 1949, for which two were subsequently killed and two imprisoned.
It took until 2019 for a Florida Governor to push posthumous pardons through the Executive Clemency Board for Charles Greenlee, Walter Irvin, Samuel Shepherd, and Ernest Thomas.
Today, family members wait for the FDLE to report on an investigation begun in 2018 into what happened in 1949 on a dark, back road in Lake County and the chain of injustices that followed.
At stake is the prospect of full exonerations for the Groveland Four.
“It shouldn’t be two years, you know, with all the documents and everything that has been written about the case,” said Greenlee’s daughter Carol Greenlee, 72. “All my life, I’ve been waiting for justice. I mean, literally, all my life.”
The agency offered a statement to Florida Politics Monday saying the review is active and there is no time frame for its completion.
Read the complete Florida Politics story here.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@marcorubio: The big picture on #Cuba is that the regime is still alive, but it has been fatally wounded. An irreversible breach now exists between them & the people, as evidenced by a growing list of prominent artists announcing they will no longer participate in government activities
—@GovRonDeSantis: The people of Cuba are engaged in the noble cause of fighting against a communist dictatorship. One of the most effective things we can do as a country to support the Cuban people is to get internet connectivity back on the island. Time is of the essence in Cuba.
—@NikkiFried: As Florida’s only statewide elected Democrat, I want to make this completely clear — @FlaDems stand in solidarity with the Cuban people and against the communist regime that has oppressed them for decades.
—@MarioDB: Proud to serve as a member of @GOPLeader’s Team on #Cuba. We’ll use this platform to advise House Republicans & the American people on the atrocities committed by the Cuban dictatorship & maintain solidarity with the Cuban people. Together, we’ll work for the cause of freedom.
—@jeffzeleny: “Communism is a failed system — a universally failed system. And I don’t see socialism as a very useful substitute,” President [Joe] Biden says, adding that the US is considering trying to help restore internet access to Cuba in the wake of waves of protests.
—@alextdaugherty: On Thursday, @ProgressiveFL released a #Cuba statement that didn’t voice support for protesters or call out violence in Cuba. @Manny_A_Diaz said he had no idea it was coming and said the state party rejects it.
—@GOPLeader: I am creating a Leader’s Advisory Team on Cuba. The world has witnessed powerful images coming out of Communist Cuba over the last five days. The Cuban people are risking everything for freedom. They need our robust support, not weak rhetoric.
—@RepDarrenSoto: Excited about news of 2,000 new high-paying, creative @Disney jobs relocating to Lake Nona in #FL9! This will be key to Central Florida’s long-term prosperity and boost local small businesses.
—@WiltonSimpson: Great news for @WaltDisneyWorld and the State of Florida! Florida is bouncing back stronger and better than ever before as private sector leaders like Disney create the jobs that empower families and ensure thriving communities across our state.
—@LindaStewartFL: The Walt Disney Co. has confirmed it will relocate roughly 2,000 jobs from its California headquarters to Lake Nona throughout the next 18 months, a master-planned community in southeast Orlando.
—@MarkWilsonFL: Breaking news: #Florida is now the 15th largest economy in the world — up from 17th. While this may change as other global economies recover from the pandemic, it’s encouraging to see FL moving the needle to get to a Top 10 global economy by 2030. #FL2030Blueprint #FL2030
Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
Jeff Bezos travels into space on Blue Origin’s first passenger flight — 4; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 7; second season of ‘Ted Lasso’ premieres on Apple+ — 7; the NBA Draft — 12; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 14; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 21; Marvel’s What If …? premieres on Disney+ — 26; Florida Behavioral Health Association’s Annual Conference (BHCon) begins — 33; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 39; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 49; NFL regular season begins — 55; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 60; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 66; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 70; ‘Dune’ premieres — 77; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 77; MLB regular season ends — 79; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 84; World Series Game 1 — 103; Florida TaxWatch’s Annual Meeting begins — 103; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 109; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 109; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 113; Disney Very Merriest After Hours will debut — 115; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 126; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 133; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 147; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 154; NFL season ends — 177; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 179; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 179; NFL playoffs begin — 183; Super Bowl LVI — 212; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 252; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 294; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 321; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 357; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 448; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 483.
“Stop blocking roads, Ron DeSantis tells protesters who’ve rallied in solidarity with Cuban people” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Gov. DeSantis said Thursday that Cuban Americans need to stop blocking roads in Miami to express solidarity with anti-government demonstrators in Cuba. “We can’t have that,” he said at a news conference in Miami. “It’s not something that we’re going to tolerate.” The message didn’t get out — or wasn’t heeded. About 5 p.m. Thursday, WSVN-Ch. 7 video showed demonstrators in an intersection in Hialeah. WFOR-Ch. 4 and WPLG-Ch. 10 reported that city officials said roads would be closed at the demonstration, where participants chanted “Libertad!” and carried Cuban flags and signs. The location was near the Palmetto Expressway/State Road 826.
“Ron, Marco Rubio demand Joe Biden improve internet access in Cuba. Florida progressives call for ‘immediate end’ to embargo.” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — From the conservative right to the progressive left, Florida produced starkly different policy ideas Thursday for helping the Cuban people struggling against their repressive, authoritarian government — fully cognizant of political repercussions from a vocal Cuban American electorate in South Florida. President Biden said at the White House that “Cuba is, unfortunately, a failed state and repressing their citizens. There are several things that we would consider doing to help the people of Cuba. But it would require a different circumstance or a guarantee that they would not be taken advantage of by the government.” Biden said he wouldn’t authorize people to send remittances back to Cuba.
“The U.S. reviewing whether it can help restore internet access in Cuba” via Reuters — The White House said on Thursday it is reviewing whether the United States would be able to help Cubans internet access in the wake of Cuban government actions following the biggest anti-government protests in decades. Cuba’s government has restricted access to social media and messaging platforms amid the protests. DeSantis, a Republican, and U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Robert Menendez, a Democrat, are among those who have called on the Biden administration to try to reconnect Cuba to internet services. White House press secretary Jen Psaki called the lack of internet access “a huge issue in Cuba.”
“‘Band together and stand for freedom’: Elected officials express solidarity with Cuban protesters” via Katherine Kokal of the Palm Beach Post — Palm Beach County elected officials spoke Thursday of their support for the people of Cuba as Cubans in the U.S. and the island nation protest an economic crisis and decades of communist rule. Their messages of solidarity, issued at a news conference called by Latinx leaders, came as activists planned a bus caravan to Washington, D.C., to demand action from the Biden Administration. The day’s loudest applause was not for any of the adults who spoke at the Box Gallery on Belvedere Road in West Palm Beach but for 15-year-old Sofia Ayala.
“SOS Cuba protesters granted bail after held under ‘anti-riot’ law” via Tampa Bay Times — Two men arrested in a protest against the Cuban government were scheduled for release Thursday after they were held without bail for nearly two days under the state’s new anti-riot law. Julian Rodriguez-Rodriguez and Maikel Vasquez–Pico qualify for release on bail because they represented no danger to society and were merely advocating for individual freedoms, their attorney argued during a hearing Thursday in Hillsborough Circuit Court. The men face battery charges on a law enforcement officer, resisting law enforcement, and taking part in an unlawful assembly that blocked streets or sidewalks. Circuit Judge Catherine M. Catlin granted the request for bail pending trial, $13,500 for Rodriguez-Rodriguez and $4,000 for Vasquez-Pico.
“Palmetto Expressway protesters were ‘breaking the law.’ Questions rise on enforcement.” via Ana Ceballos and Charles Rabin in the Miami Herald — A day after protests erupted throughout Miami-Dade County, blocking major thoroughfares from Homestead to Little Havana and leaving thousands of rush-hour motorists stuck in traffic for hours, the Governor’s office and the Florida Highway Patrol are calling some of the actions illegal. Yet not a single person was cited, and there were no arrests. In one case, the Florida Highway Patrol allowed close to 1,000 protesters to block the busy Palmetto Expressway in both directions for about nine hours. City of Miami police also closed down a section of Southwest Eighth Street to accommodate demonstrators.
“Activists, lawyers see ‘double standard’ in Florida’s response to Cuba demonstrations” via Daniel Arkin of NBC News — The “anti-riot law” was introduced during last summer’s protests for racial justice when some law enforcement officers arrested Black Lives Matter protesters or sprayed them with tear gas. But as protesters rallied in Miami, Tampa and Orlando this week, officers generally appeared to exercise restraint, reportedly making only a handful of arrests. In the eyes of David Winker, a defense lawyer who has represented Black Lives Matter demonstrators, the double standard was clear. “I applaud the police for using discretion and not arresting everybody, but I want that same energy carried forward when the protesters have more melanin in their skin,” Winker said, adding that he opposes HB 1 and supports the anti-government movement in Cuba.
“A divided Tampa City Council approves resolution supporting protesters in Cuba” via Spectrum Bay News 9 — The Tampa City Council spent more than an hour on Thursday debating what appeared at first glance to be a noncontroversial resolution sponsored by City Councilman Luis Viera showing support for the Cuban people in their protests against their government. They ultimately approved it on a 5-2 vote. City Councilman Bill Carlson objected even before Viera officially introduced the resolution, saying the language could be used to justify war. Carlson referred to comments made earlier this week by Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, who said that the U.S. government should consider military action to enact regime change in Cuba.
“‘Use our platforms.’ At Gente de Zona Miami concert, artists speak out on Cuba” via Bianca Padró Ocasio of the Miami Herald — Cuban artists in Miami are increasingly using their platforms to raise awareness of the plight of Cubans on the island, as social media images surfaced Wednesday showing police using violence against demonstrators. On Wednesday evening, hundreds of Miami residents waving Cuban flags attended an evening street concert featuring the Cuban reggaeton duo Gente de Zona, near the iconic Versailles restaurant on Calle Ocho. Along with several other artists, the group was featured in the protest anthem “Patria Y Vida” — Homeland and Life — a rap song that has helped place the group of all-Black Cuban artists in the spotlight of the recent uprisings on the island.
— 2022 —
“Florida progressives have growing power, but where are their candidates?” via Steve Contorno and Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — Two decades of Republican dominance in elections have Florida Democrats uncertain how to win statewide. Charlie Crist, the Party’s unsuccessful nominee in 2014, and Nikki Fried, the only victorious Democratic statewide candidate in 2018, have come out of the gates swinging at DeSantis over his handling of the coronavirus pandemic and his fealty to former President Donald Trump. Progressive leaders inside and outside of the state party said they are already concerned Democrats are squandering an opportunity to champion ideas that could energize Floridians. They want nominees to campaign on bold changes and reject donations from corporations that more often side with Republicans.
“Republican Erika Benfield enters CD 7 contest” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Benfield is announcing her candidacy for Florida’s 7th Congressional District, which sets up a crowded Republican primary for a shot at Democratic Rep. Stephanie Murphy in 2022. Benfield, a former DeBary City Commissioner, ran last year for the Florida House of Representatives, losing the House District 27 Republican primary to now-Rep. Webster Barnaby of Deltona. There are already five candidates in the CD 7 Republican primary contest, including state Rep. Anthony Sabatini. Benfield quickly sought to establish her position on the right, declaring in her candidacy announcement, “I am an unapologetic conservative who believes in the America First agenda championed by President Donald Trump.”
“Michele Rayner-Goolsby raises $72K in two weeks for CD13 campaign” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Rayner-Goolsby has raised just over $72,000 in the first two weeks since announcing her entrance into the race for Florida’s 13th Congressional District. The funding accounts for this year’s second quarterly report, which covers April, May and June. However, the $72,000 represents only fourteen days of her campaign since Rayner-Goolsby entered the race with just two weeks left until the end of the quarter. Rayner-Goolsby’s campaign provided the latest finance update. Rayner-Goolsby will have to double-down next quarter to catch up on missed time on such a high-stakes race.
“Reggie Gaffney files for state Senate run” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Gaffney has filed to run for state Senate in 2022. Gaffney, elected in 2015 and reelected in 2019 with over 2/3 of the vote, would be the second filed candidate in the Senate District 6 Democratic primary. Incumbent Sen. Audrey Gibson is termed out. The Councilman offered a statement. “I’ve been dedicated to serving others for as long as I can remember. Whether it is working to help those with mental wellness issues at the nonprofit I founded, serving as District 7 City Council Member in Jacksonville, raising my two children as a single parent, or caring for my Mother diagnosed with dementia, I believe in service to others,” Gaffney said.
“Rick Baker endorses Nick DiCeglie for state Senate, ending speculation about his own bid” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Baker endorsed Rep. DiCeglie for Senate District 24, ending months of speculation that he was mulling a bid himself. “I support Nick for State Senate District 24 because I believe he will carry on the tremendous commitment to our community of my dear friend Sen. Jeff Brandes while fighting for our shared values in Tallahassee,” Baker said. Brandes, the incumbent, is leaving office due to term limits. He also offered his endorsement Thursday. The combined endorsements set DiCeglie up well in the GOP Primary, where he faces Timothy Lewis. It would also have potentially set up a race for top-level endorsements, with DiCeglie capturing the eye of now-Florida man Trump and Baker from his longtime ally, former Gov. Jeb Bush.
— DATELINE TALLY —
First in #FlaPol — “Christine Swiridowsky to succeed Nick Duran as leader of clinics association” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — The Florida Association of Free and Charitable Clinics just named Swiridowsky as the new interim executive director. She takes the reins on Aug. 1, when Rep. Duran steps down from the role. “I’m prepared for and humbled by the opportunity to lead our clinics with the FAFCC Board during this transition,” Swiridowsky said. “We are still on the front lines of this pandemic, so I know how important it is to keep our momentum and give our volunteers and staff the support, funding, and infrastructure they need. And that’s exactly what we are going to do.”
“W. Rebecca Brown named interim chief financial officer at FAMU” via Byron Dobson of the Tallahassee Democrat — Brown, whose career spans 22 years at Florida A&M University, has been named interim chief financial officer and vice president for finance and administration at the university. Brown, who currently serves as assistant vice president for finance and administration in charge of business and auxiliary services, assumes her new role at the end of the month. She replaces Alan Robertson, who resigned earlier this week. Robertson joined FAMU on Jan. 1, 2020. He previously served as senior vice president and CFO of Morehouse College in Atlanta. He was not immediately available Wednesday for comment.
— STATEWIDE —
“Tropics watch: System in Atlantic continues to show low chance for development” via Cheryl McCloud of the St. Augustine Record — The National Hurricane Center continues to monitor a system in the Atlantic that’s showing a small chance for development. According to AccuWeather meteorologists, the 2021 Atlantic Hurricane Season is expected to be active, with a forecast of up to 20 named storms and three to five direct impacts on the U.S. So far, there have been five named storms. The next storm will be Fred. Environmental conditions are marginally conducive for development.
“Four more victims of Champlain Towers condo collapse identified as recovery nears end” via Alex Harris and Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — The recovery effort at Champlain Towers South may be coming to a close, three weeks to the day after the building collapsed. Miami-Dade Police identified four more victims Thursday. The death toll now stands at 97, with 90 bodies identified and 90 families notified, said Alvaro Zabaleta, a spokesperson for Miami-Dade Police. Zabaleta said the department only had 97 open missing person reports, although he cautioned it didn’t mean the recovery effort was over. “The numbers line up, but that doesn’t necessarily mean we’re done. We don’t know. That’s why we can’t claim victory yet. On an incident like this, it is very rare to get 100%,” he said.
“He rushed to Surfside to host his daughter, son-in-law. They were all found in the rubble.” via Ariana Aspuru and Marie-Rose Sheinerman of the Miami Herald — Harry Rosenberg purchased his second-floor condo just last month after a difficult period in his life. He lost his wife, Anna, to cancer last summer and his parents to COVID-19 earlier this year. The asset manager had rented smaller apartments in Florida before settling on the Champlain Towers South apartment in Surfside. The unit was large enough so his family could visit. Hours before the building collapsed early Thursday morning on June 24, the 52-year-old Rosenberg (Hebrew name Chaim ben Sara) returned from a trip to New York.
“Surfside engineer may be shut out because town is part of investigation” via Jeff Weinsier of WPLG — A source says there may be a good reason why Surfside’s forensic engineer has been denied access to the site to investigate. That’s because the town could be part of the investigation into what went wrong at the Champlain Towers South. And “it may be better to keep any investigators associated with the town away,” the source said. Local 10 News reported Wednesday that Allyn Kilsheimer, a renowned engineer of 63 years hired by Surfside, is “pissed off” about a lack of access to the debris from the tragic June 24 collapse. Kilsheimer says he has not been granted access to get concrete samples from the site or from the debris that’s been moved off-site.
“What happened to Surfside’s condo market after the collapse? Here’s how sellers reacted” via Rebecca San Juan of the Miami Herald — In the aftermath of the Champlain Towers South collapse, the number of new condo listings dropped by about half compared to early June. Surfside saw 17 new condo listings added from June 7 through June 23 immediately before the collapse and seven new listings from June 24 — the day part of the building fell — through July 11, according to Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices EWM Realty CEO Ron Shuffield, who pulled data from the Multiple Listing Service. Shuffield said the drop says little about the collapse’s impact on the market. “We are in the summer, which is typically when we don’t have a lot of buyers,” Shuffield said.
“Safe or unsafe? Residents worry at Miami Beach condo facing unsafe structure violation” via Joey Flechas of the Miami Herald — Days after a nearby condo tower collapsed in the middle of the night, Marash Markaj lay in bed with his 9-year-old daughter, holding her close as nerves kept her awake and her mind raced about the implications of the unsafe structure violation Miami Beach inspectors had just placed on their own condo tower. Markaj had seen cracks in the Port Royale Condominium basement garage, where he has owned an eighth-floor unit for five years. But management had recently told residents the building was safe. So, though he wasn’t sure what exactly to make of the July 6 warning that his building could be demolished if repairs weren’t forthcoming, he soothed his little girl.
“Partial roof collapse of Miami-Dade apartment building causes evacuation, firefighters say” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — The roof of a three-story apartment building has partially collapsed in northwest Miami-Dade County, authorities say. Firefighters are conducting evacuations. Around 4 p.m., Miami-Dade police received calls about the collapse at the apartment building at 17500 NW 68th Avenue. Police say no injuries have been reported during or after the collapse. Miami-Dade Fire Rescue said it is evacuating the building. Little information is yet known about the collapse as first responders are actively working the scene. A WSVN Channel 7 News live broadcast shows firefighters on the roof near the collapsed area. The building has been cordoned off with police tape, as a row of more than five firetrucks is parked nearby.
“Colombian President says commandos knew they were on mission to murder Haiti’s Jovenel Moïse” via Kevin G. Hall, Jacqueline Charles, Antonio Maria Delgado and Michael Wilner of the Miami Herald — A small group of Colombian commandos-for-hire knew of the plot to assassinate the President of Haiti, Colombian President Iván Duque said Thursday, while his top police official identified two of the alleged leaders. Eighteen Colombians are among 23 people who have been apprehended in the dragnet that followed the July 7 murder of Haitian President Moïse. Several have said they were hired through a Doral, Florida-based firm, CTU Security, led by a Venezuelan émigré Antonio Intriago, who appears to have gone into hiding. Breaking a relative silence on the events in Haiti, President Duque told La FM radio in Colombia that his administration is providing good leads in the investigation to the middle-of-the-night assassination inside Moïse’s private residence.
“Man facing patient-brokering charges arrested aboard catamaran in the Bahamas” via Julius Whigman II of the Palm Beach Post — A 54-year-old Stuart man wanted on patient-brokering charges is facing extradition to Palm Beach County after being arrested again this month in the Bahamas. Thomas Stanley was taken into custody July 2 after authorities in the Bahamas found him and an acquaintance on board a 45-foot Catamaran vessel anchored off Pig Beach in the Exumas and decorated with the words “Chillin Like A Villain.” The Bahamian government deported Stanley to Atlanta two days later. “Mr. Stanley tried to flee the long arm of justice, but our partnership with local, state, federal, and international law enforcement agencies prevented his escape,” Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg said Thursday in prepared remarks.
“Down under Wakulla County, flirting with disaster with our biggest spring” via Craig Pittman of Florida Phoenix — Not only is Wakulla Springs part of our award-winning state park system, but it’s been proclaimed “the world’s largest and deepest freshwater springs.” Hollywood once came calling to film such cinematic masterworks as “Tarzan’s Secret Treasure” (1941) and “Creature from the Black Lagoon” (1954). Speaking of black lagoons, though, Wakulla Springs has suffered some of the same pollution problems as springs in other parts of the state. Water there used to be so clear you could ride around in a glass-bottom boat and see fish swimming along as clearly as if the water were air. These days, the water is often too dark for the glass bottom boats to bother leaving the dock, and the nitrogen pollution levels have been discouraging.
“After Elsa, dozens of sea turtle nests disappeared in Southwest Florida. What does it mean for nesting season?” via Karl Schneider of the Naples Daily News — Tropical Storm Elsa brushed by Southwest Florida following the July Fourth weekend without doing much more than dropping several inches of rain throughout the area, but it did affect nesting sea turtles. After combing the beaches in the days following the storm, Collier County’s environmental specialist Maura Kraus could determine the damage to nests. Out of the 1,365 nests documented across the county beaches, 144 were completely washed away, and another 394 were washed over by tides, Kraus wrote in an email. “So we will be watching the inundated nests, which may have little impact on the hatching or drowned the nest entirely,” she wrote.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“COVID-19 summer surge: Is the virus seasonal in Florida?” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Researchers believe the novel coronavirus follows a seasonal cycle, spiking in the winter months when people’s immunity is low, and the climate is cold. Why, then, has the number of new COVID-19 cases risen in Florida during the summer months, resulting in more hospitalizations and even more deaths in late June and July? “What’s going on in Florida is all related to behavior,” said Dr. Gustavo Caetano-Anollés, professor of bioinformatics at the University of Chicago, who has published research on the seasonality of COVID-19 after studying global patterns. “You have a range of states that opened early, where people are not wearing masks and where there are lower vaccination rates, making the risk for the spread of a variant high.”
“COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations up while vaccinations stall in Alachua County” via Cindy Swirko of The Gainesville Sun — Alachua County’s COVID-19 vaccination rate is stalling, more cases are occurring, and hospitals are admitting more patients as the virus continues to frustrate health officials. “Patients are younger this time around than the first time, so that’s a little different,” UF Health CEO Ed Jimenez said. “The other thing is we’re seeing a number of people who are not vaccinated getting sick.” North Florida Regional Medical Center is also experiencing a rise in coronavirus cases but not to the level it was earlier this year, said spokeswoman Lauren Lettelier. Alachua County Health Department Administrator Paul Myers said the rise in cases and curtailing of vaccinations reflects the situation in Florida.
“As cases of Delta variant rise in Jacksonville, there are fewer places to get tested” via Jim Piggott of News4Jax — With an increase in hospitalizations due to COVID-19 connected to the rise of the Delta variant, there is also an increase in the number of people who want to be tested. The problem is, there are now fewer government testing sites available. Finding a place to get tested can be tricky. The Legends Center in north Jacksonville used to be where many showed up to get tested and vaccinated, and some showed Thursday only to be greeted by a large sign: No testing, No vaccines. The Florida Department of Health in Duval County does offer testing and vaccinations off and on at its sites like the one in Springfield. The list of times and locations is on its website under events.
“Top Central Florida doctors: Get eligible school kids vaccinated now” via Kate Santich of the Orlando Sentinel — With Florida’s COVID-19 cases climbing over 200% in the past two weeks and hospitalization rates rising, leading health officials said Thursday the time is now to get middle- and high school students vaccinated before classes start. “School starts in early August. If you were to get a Pfizer vaccine [today], you’d have to wait two weeks for your second dose,” said Dr. Michael Keating, chief medical officer for AdventHealth for Children. School starts Aug. 10 in Orange, Lake and Seminole public schools, Aug. 12 in Osceola and Aug. 16 in Volusia. All have made mask-wearing optional for the upcoming school year.
— CORONA NATION —
“Surgeon General urges U.S. fight against COVID-19 misinformation” via David Klepper of The Associated Press — U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy on Thursday called for a national effort to fight misinformation about COVID-19 and vaccines, urging tech companies, health care workers, journalists and everyday Americans to do more to address an “urgent threat” to public health. In a 22-page advisory, his first as Biden’s surgeon general, Murthy wrote that bogus claims had led people to reject vaccines and public health advice on masks and social distancing, undermining efforts to end the coronavirus pandemic and putting lives at risk. The warning comes as the pace of COVID-19 vaccinations has slowed throughout the U.S., in part because of vaccine opposition fueled by unsubstantiated claims about the safety of immunizations and despite the U.S. death toll recently passing 600,000.
“As vaccinations slow in the U.S., the Delta variant is driving a rise in cases.” via Mitch Smith of The New York Times — Reports of new coronavirus cases are rising again across the U.S., a discouraging trend fueled by the spread of the Delta variant and the sputtering vaccination campaign. The country’s outlook remains far better than at previous points in the pandemic: Nearly half all Americans are fully vaccinated, cases and hospitalizations remain at a fraction of their peak, and deaths occur at some of the lowest levels since the early days of the pandemic. Yet infections are rising in almost every state. Daily case numbers have increased at least 15% over the last two weeks in 49 states, including 19 states reporting at least twice as many new cases a day.
“Vaccine hesitancy morphs into hostility, as opposition to shots hardens” via Dan Diamond, Hannah Knowles and Tyler Pager of The Washington Post — On July Fourth, Biden celebrated dramatic progress in the war on the coronavirus, with more than 150 million adults fully vaccinated and infections plunging 93% since Inauguration Day. But at the recent Conservative Political Action Conference, attendees celebrated a different — essentially opposite — milestone: that Biden had missed his goal of vaccinating 70% of adults. The crowd clapped and cheered at that failure. What began as “vaccine hesitancy” has morphed into outright vaccine hostility. The notion that the vaccine drive is pointless or harmful — or perhaps even a government plot — is increasingly an article of faith among Trump supporters, on a par with assertions that the last election was stolen and the assault on the U.S. Capitol was overblown.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Jerome Powell concedes anxiety about higher inflation but resists policy shift” via Nick Timiraos of The Wall Street Journal — Fed Chair Powell said recent inflation was uncomfortably above the levels the central bank seeks, concluding two days of testimony in which he sounded somewhat less confident about the economic outlook — and the Fed’s policy path — than earlier this year. More broad-based price pressures or a weak rebound in the workforce could lead the Fed to conclude it needs to reverse the easy money policies it deployed during the pandemic more rapidly than officials expected a few months ago. “This is a shock going through the system associated with reopening of the economy, and it has driven inflation well above 2%. And of course, we’re not comfortable with that,” Powell told the Senate Banking Committee.
“Many jobs lost during the coronavirus pandemic just aren’t coming back” via Lauren Weber of The Wall Street Journal — As with past economic shocks, the pandemic-induced recession was a catalyst for employers to invest in automation and implement other changes designed to curb hiring. Economic data show that companies have learned to do more with less over the last 16 months or so. Output nearly recovered to pre-pandemic levels in the first quarter of 2021, even though U.S. workers put in 4.3% fewer hours than they did before the health crisis. Though the job market is strong right now for highly paid professionals and low-wage service workers alike, not everyone can find a match for their skills, experience or location, creating a paradox of relatively high unemployment combined with record job openings.
“As travel rebounds, airlines are figuring it out on the fly” via Aarian Marshall of WIRED — Business destinations are out, tourist spots are in. The old rules governing fares and flight schedules have been thrown out the window. More than 2.1 million people traveled through U.S. airport security checkpoints on July 5, nearly twice as many as last year, but that was still 20% fewer than in 2019. That doesn’t mean that the pictures created by airlines’ algorithms have gotten any clearer. Airlines are operating with less data, and more uncertainty, than usual, creating a complicated math problem. It’s not just figuring out where people want to go, and how much they’ll pay. It’s also ensuring that the right-sized aircraft and full, rested crew are in the right place for takeoff.
“Inflation? Not in Japan. and that could hold a warning for the U.S.” via Ben Dooley of The New York Times — In the U.S., everyone is talking about inflation. Japan, however, is having the opposite problem. While in the U.S., average prices have jumped 5.4% in the past year, prices dipped 0.1% in Japan. To some extent, the situation in Japan can be explained by its continued struggles with the coronavirus, which have kept shoppers at home. But deeper forces are also at play. Before the pandemic, prices outside the volatile energy and food sectors had barely budged for years, as Japan never came close to meeting its longtime goal of 2% inflation. As Japan has learned the hard way, low inflation can be an economic quagmire. That experience carries a warning for the U.S. if its current bout of inflation eases.
— MORE CORONA —
“COVID-19 takes toll on Catholic clergy in hard-hit countries” via Luis Andres Henao and Jessie Wardarski of The Associated Press — The coronavirus has taken a heavy toll among Roman Catholic priests and nuns around the world, killing hundreds of them in a handful of the hardest-hit countries. In some countries, most of those lost were older and lived in nursing or retirement homes where they didn’t regularly engage in person-to-person pastoral work. Other places saw a bigger hit to active clergy, accelerating a decades-old decline in the ranks that Pope Francis has called a “hemorrhage.” Coronavirus deaths among clergy are not just a Catholic problem. But the impact is particularly acute for a church experiencing a “perennial priest shortage” in most countries, according to Andrew Chesnut, chair of Catholic studies at Virginia Commonwealth University.
“We’re not virus police, French cafes say of new COVID-19 pass” via Constantin Gouvy of The Associated Press — Starting next month, all diners in France must show a pass proving they’re fully vaccinated or recently tested negative or recovered from the virus. For restaurants — seen as the lifeblood of France — the new rule presents yet another headache after a punishing pandemic. “Our job used to be to make sure that our guests had a great time while they were with us. Now, we spend our time reprimanding them. We weren’t trained for this,” said the manager of Parisian restaurant Les Bancs Publics. Like other restaurants in the bustling area, Le Bancs Publics is already struggling to respect France’s oft-changing virus rules. Cafe and bar owners worry they’ll face more such trouble when the COVID-19 pass becomes obligatory.
“Vaccine deliveries rising as delta virus variant slams Asia” via David Rising and Victoria Milko of The Associated Press — Some 1.5 million doses of the Moderna vaccine arrived Thursday afternoon in Indonesia, which has become a dominant hot spot with record-high infections and deaths. The U.S. shipment follows 3 million other American doses that arrived Sunday, and 11.7 million doses of AstraZeneca that have come in batches since March through the U.N.-backed COVAX mechanism, the last earlier this week. “It’s quite encouraging,” said Sowmya Kadandale, health chief in Indonesia of UNICEF, which is in charge of the distribution of vaccines provided through COVAX. “It seems now to be, and not just in Indonesia, a race between the vaccines and the variants, and I hope we win that race.”
“In boost for Jair Bolsonaro, most Brazilians say pandemic is under control, poll shows” via Reuters — For the first time, a clear majority of Brazilians think the country’s coronavirus pandemic is no longer “out of control,” a Datafolha poll published on Thursday showed, in what could be a boost for President Bolsonaro, who is almost certain to seek reelection next year. Bolsonaro has seen his polls numbers sag due to his handling of the world’s second-deadliest outbreak, in which over half a million Brazilians have died from the virus. According to the poll, 53% of Brazilians now think the pandemic is “partly under control,” while an additional 5% think it is “totally under control.” Meanwhile, 41% of Brazilians polled think the pandemic is still “out of control,” down from a high of 79% in mid-March.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden hosts Angela Merkel at White House to renew U.S.-German ties frayed under Donald Trump” via Andrea Shalal and Jeff Mason of Reuters — Biden and Merkel have known and worked with each other for years. But their two governments are at odds over a host of tough issues, including the Nord Stream 2 pipeline being built from Russia to Germany under the Baltic Sea, which Washington fears will hurt Ukraine and increase European reliance on Russian gas. They also disagree over the wisdom of partnering with China on business projects, temporary patent waivers aimed at speeding global COVID-19 vaccine production, and ongoing restrictions on Europeans traveling to the U.S. Biden and Merkel see eye to eye on a string of broader matters, and both want to strengthen the trans-Atlantic relationship that suffered from Trump’s frequent criticism of U.S. allies.
“Biden celebrates ‘life-changing’ monthly Child Tax Credit payments as first checks go out” via Sarah Ewall-Wice of CBS News — Biden hailed the moment as historic as the families of nearly 60 million children are receiving roughly $15 billion in the first monthly payments of the advanced Child Tax Credit. Biden and Democratic lawmakers hope the money, part of the latest round of COVID-19 pandemic relief passed earlier this year, is just the beginning. “This can be life-changing for so many families,” Biden said. He argued the expanded monthly Child Tax Credit has the ability to cut poverty in the way Social Security reduced poverty among the elderly. He claimed the expanded Child Tax Credit will be one of the things he and Vice President Kamala Harris will be most proud of when their time in office is up.
“Biden administration proposes sweeping protections for Alaska’s Tongass National Forest” via Juliet Eilperin of The Washington Post — The Biden administration announced sweeping protections for Alaska’s Tongass National Forest on Thursday, including an end to large-scale old-growth logging and a proposal to bar road development on more than 9 million acres. The 16.7 million-acre forest has been a political flashpoint for two decades. While Democrats have sought to scale back logging in the forest over time, the administration’s moves go further than any previous President’s efforts. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said the proposal would provide $25 million for community development and allow Alaska Natives and small-scale operators to continue harvesting some old-growth trees. But Vilsack said it’s time to focus on other economic activities, such as fishing, recreation and tourism.
— EPILOGUE: TRUMP —
“Kremlin papers appear to show Vladimir Putin’s plot to put Trump in White House” via Luke Harding, Julian Borger and Dan Sabbagh of The Guardian — Putin personally authorized a secret spy agency operation to support a “mentally unstable” Trump in the 2016 U.S. presidential election during a closed session of Russia’s National Security Council, according to what are assessed to be leaked Kremlin documents. On Jan. 22, 2016, the key meeting took place with the Russian President, his spy chiefs and senior ministers all present. They agreed a Trump White House would help secure Moscow’s strategic objectives, among them “social turmoil” in the U.S. and a weakening of the American President’s negotiating position. Western intelligence agencies are understood to have been aware of the documents for months and carefully examined them. They represent a serious and highly unusual leak from within the Kremlin.
“‘Reichstag moment’: Joint Chiefs chairman feared Trump was laying groundwork for coup” via Matthew Brown of USA TODAY — The highest-ranking U.S. officer, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley, and other top military leaders made informal plans to stop a coup by Trump and his allies in the run-up to the 2020 presidential election, according to excerpts from “I Alone Can Fix It,” a new book written by Washington Post reporters Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker. The top brass was so disturbed by Trump’s rhetoric casting doubt on the legitimacy of the election before it was held that the leaders discussed contingency plans for thwarting any illegal power grabs by the President, including how and when to resign in protest over his actions. The alarm only increased after the election.
“Trump rages over post-presidential books he did interviews for” via Meridith McGraw of POLITICO — As the deluge of Trump-related books has hit the shelves, the already tenuous alliances that bind aides and associates of the former President have been strained further. Ex-aides have publicly attacked one-time allies while others have sought distance from a presidency they once dutifully served. Fear is mounting, too, about the tea-spilling to come. In particular, Trump officials anxiously await the books set to be published by actual colleagues, including Kellyanne Conway and Jared Kushner. Privately, former administration officials and top campaign aides have shared concerns about Conway’s upcoming tell-all in particular. The ex-President’s loyal former counselor is expected to give a hold-no-punches account of her time in the White House and those she worked alongside.
— CRISIS —
“U.S. seeks prison term for first felony defendant to be sentenced in Capitol breach, citing domestic terror threat” via Spencer S. Hsu of The Washington Post — U.S. prosecutors on Wednesday urged a federal judge to impose an 18-month prison term on Tampa crane operator Paul Allard Hodgkins, 38, who carried a Trump flag into the well of the Senate. “The need to deter others is especially strong in cases involving domestic terrorism, which the breach of the Capitol certainly was,” Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Mona Sedky said in a government sentencing request for The court filing marked one of the Justice Department’s bluntest statements to date of its view of the Capitol breach. Hodgkins’s sentencing, scheduled for Monday, could set the bar for what punishment 100 or more defendants might expect to face as they weigh whether to accept plea offers or take their chances in a trial.
“Windermere police officer arrested in Capitol riot along with ex-Apopka cop son” via Jeff Weiner and Monivette Cordeiro of the Orlando Sentinel — After federal prosecutors announced the arrests of Officer Kevin Tuck and his son Nathaniel Tuck, a former Apopka police officer, they both appeared before a judge at the federal courthouse in downtown Orlando. Prosecutors said the younger Tuck was inside the Capitol when an officer tried to stop him. He used his open palm to strike the officer and, when the officer grabbed him again, used his elbow to strike the officer’s hand before walking further into the building. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jennifer Harrington said both men sent messages to family in a group chat during the riot. “We stormed the Capitol, fought the police,” Kevin Tuck allegedly wrote to his family. “ … We took the flag. It’s our flag.”
“Pensacola, Milton White supremacist gang members indicted on racketeering charges” via Colin Warren-Hicks of the Pensacola News Journal — Three local men, two from Pensacola and one from Milton, have been accused of participating in a White supremacist gang called “Unforgiven” that allegedly spread Aryan philosophies and engaged in acts and threats involving murder, kidnapping, robbery and drug dealing. A federal indictment that was unsealed this week by U.S. Attorney Karin Hoppmann for the Middle District of Florida lists the three local men among 16 alleged members of Unforgiven who have been charged with violating federal law. Maverick “Saxon” Maher; George “Shrek” Andrews II, and Brandon “Scumbag” Welch are each charged with committing crimes in association with the criminal enterprise.
“FBI raids home of Netflix actor seen inside Capitol on Jan. 6 with far-right activists” via Cammy Pedroja of Newsweek — The home of Siaka Massaquoi, 35, who has appeared in the Netflix series Ratched, was raided by FBI agents in the early hours of the morning last Thursday, although no arrests were made, authorities say. Monday, it was not yet clear why the raid was conducted, but the FBI declined to comment further, stating that the warrant and its affidavit remain sealed. Massaquoi described “twenty-some FBI agents with assault rifles” in a video posted to Instagram shortly after the raid on his North Hollywood home. Massaquoi can be seen participating in the Jan. 6 riots in videos posted to social media by Tim Gionet, the alt-right activist known online as “Baked Alaska,” who livestreamed much of the riots.
“Artist repaints Miami George Floyd mural that was vandalized” via Annaliese Garcia of WPLG — Kyle Holbrook said he was working on a mural about the Surfside tragedy Wednesday when a reporter told him his Floyd mural in Overtown had been vandalized. The artist was out Thursday morning to restore his painting at Northwest 1st Avenue and 16th Street. “We live in America, and the great thing about it is, you can have different views,” Holbrook said. “But if your view is hate, you never win.” Holbrook first painted the mural in memory of Floyd shortly after he was killed by a Minneapolis police officer in May 2020, which set off a powerful movement against systemic racism. He touched up his work this May on the anniversary of Floyd’s death.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Top Intel Senators urge Biden to move faster on Afghans in peril” via Alexander Ward of POLITICO — Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Sen. Mark Warner and Vice-Chair Sen. Rubio sent a letter to Biden on Thursday urging him to more swiftly help Afghans who assisted the U.S. government during the 20-year war — before it’s too late. A source familiar with the letter said committee members recently received a classified briefing on the deteriorating state of the war, deepening Warner and Rubio’s concerns about the Afghans and their families waiting to leave Afghanistan. As the Taliban is now in control of over 50% of the territory in Afghanistan, by some estimates, the panel’s top senators feel time is running out to ensure the safety of those who helped the U.S.
“Merrick Garland strikes down Trump-era immigration court rule, empowering judges to pause cases” via Rebecca Beitsch of The Hill — Attorney General Garland on Thursday overturned an immigration court decision from predecessor Jeff Sessions that barred judges from essentially pausing low priority cases and removing them from a docket amid a crushing backlog of cases. The immigration court system, housed within the DOJ, saw its backlog more than double under the Trump administration to 1.3 million as immigration officials forwarded a deluge of cases seeking deportation. Garland wrote that other court cases found “that administrative closure is plainly within an immigration judge’s authority under Department of Justice regulations” and said Sessions’ ruling “departed from long-standing practice.” Garland’s post gives him the power to review decisions made in the immigration court system, a power attorneys general frequently used under Trump.
“Biden urged to focus on long-neglected Latin America as chaos erupts” via Lara Seligman of POLITICO — The Pentagon has made clear it has no appetite for a new military entanglement in Latin America, following dual crises in Haiti and Cuba this week. Yet lawmakers, former officials and experts are calling on Biden to devote more resources to a region they say has been long neglected by the U.S. Top military officials at U.S. Southern Command have warned for years that Russia, China and others are rushing to fill the power vacuum left by Washington’s deprioritization of Central and South America. The assassination of the Haitian President and Cuban protests are a stark reminder of how quickly tumult can erupt in America’s own backyard — and the potential security ramifications for the entire region.
“Matt Gaetz hired legal firm used by Jeffrey Epstein and El Chapo, campaign report shows” via Tampa Bay Times — With his legal troubles still looming over him, Gaetz’s campaign paid $25,000 last month to a law firm that represented convicted sex offender Epstein, Mexican drug lord El Chapo and former mobsters, according to his most recent campaign finance report. In all, Gaetz’s campaign paid $50,000 in legal expenses in June, pushing the Florida Republican’s total campaign legal costs in the past year to over $135,000. The mounting bills coincide with the reported timeline of an ongoing federal investigation into sex trafficking that involves Gaetz and former Seminole County Tax Collector Joel Greenberg.
“Jason Pirozzolo touted access to Gaetz before Bahamas trip that became part of corruption probe” via Jason Garcia of the Orlando Sentinel — In 2018, about a week before Pirozzolo took a weekend trip to The Bahamas with U.S. Rep. Gaetz and then-state Rep. Halsey Beshears, Pirozzolo offered another marijuana investor the chance to join them. “ … [W]hat if I could get you on a private trip to the Bahamas next week with congressman Gaetz and rep Halsey beshears [sic],” Pirozzolo wrote in a message. Pirozzolo went on to underscore the influence the two men wielded, noting Beshears was expected to soon become the chairperson of the state House committee in charge of health care spending and would have a “direct connect” to the Florida Department of Health.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Broward Sheriff’s costs and services under fire, as cities discuss pulling out” via Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Several Broward cities are unhappy with the law enforcement service from the Sheriff’s Office that’s costing them huge chunks of their budgets. The cities with a contract with the Sheriff’s Office met Wednesday, hoping to discuss their concerns with Sheriff Gregory Tony. But a few hours before the meeting, the Sheriff backed out, Cooper City Mayor Greg Ross said. A sheriff’s spokeswoman said the Sheriff never agreed personally to attend and never backed out. The city did send an email invitation, which was accepted, but an assistant later emailed that Tony wouldn’t be there. No one attended in his place.
“Miami-Dade Mayor’s first budget includes flat tax rates, $3M more for her staff” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — In her first budget proposal, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava keeps the county’s main property-tax rates flat, boosts spending on parks, police and environmental regulation, and wants about $3 million more for her staff of aides and deputies than her predecessor received. The $9 billion budget holds spending flat across all departments, as cuts at PortMiami and Miami International Airport from the COVID-19 travel downturn balanced out some increases funded with growing tax revenue and federal COVID-19 relief. Made public Wednesday during the third week of the response to the fatal Surfside condominium collapse, the budget beefs up staffing at the county agency that performs building inspections and oversees 40-year recertifications for structures outside of city limits.
“Alberto Carvalho once again refutes Miami-Dade teaching critical race theory, requiring masks” via David Goodhue of the Miami Herald — For the second time this summer, about 20 people used the public comment period during Wednesday’s Miami-Dade County School Board meeting to lambaste the district for teaching critical race theory and requiring students and teachers to be vaccinated against COVID-19 when they return to class next month and to wear a mask while on campus. And, for the second time, Superintendent Carvalho told the speakers that none of this is happening nor is in the works. The School District on May 18 announced that masks would be optional for students, teachers and other staff when schools reopen for the fall semester.
“J.T. Burnette trial: Scott Maddox co-conspirator Paige Carter-Smith takes witness stand” via Jeff Burlew of the Tallahassee Democrat — Carter-Smith, one of three people charged in the FBI’s public corruption probe in Tallahassee, told jurors Thursday that in 2013, KaiserKane, a construction management business controlled by Burnette, sent her consulting firm $100,000 after Maddox instructed her to invoice the company for that amount. She said Maddox told her the money involved his abstaining on a vote involving the McKibbon Hotel Group, whose proposal for a downtown hotel that would have competed with Burnette’s interests died as a result. Carter-Smith and Maddox pleaded guilty to corruption charges in 2019. She testified as part of a cooperation agreement with federal prosecutors to allow for a lesser sentence for her crimes. Maddox is expected to testify under a similar arrangement.
“Jacksonville homicide rate is well-below last year; ‘fed-up’ residents have helped” via Dan Scanlan of The Florida Times-Union — Violence struck with deadly force in Jacksonville’s Arlington community in recent days, leaving three people dead in two separate shootings only 4 miles and just under 46 hours apart, police said. The shootings ratcheted the city’s homicide total so far this year to 71. That is still 34 less than the 105 homicides reported as of this time last year when the city reached the century mark on July 9 and ended with 178 total, by far the most documented in two decades. Last year broke 2019’s mark of 160. Though still on pace for well over a hundred killings, there are several reasons for the drop, Sheriff’s Office Chief T.K. Waters said.
“Chinese CEO gets prison in Jacksonville export ploy to ‘reverse engineer’ U.S. military gear” via Steve Patterson of The Florida Times-Union — A Chinese business executive who wanted to copy American-made boat engines to sell to China’s Navy was sentenced Wednesday evening to 42 months in prison by a federal judge in Jacksonville. Ge Songtao, who was indicted in 2019 along with a Jacksonville-based U.S. Navy officer and two people working for his company, pleaded guilty in November to two export reporting crimes authorities turned up during a three-year investigation that used foreign-intelligence surveillance warrants. The sentence was more than federal guidelines prescribe but well short of the seven years prosecutors requested from Senior U.S. District Judge Harvey Schlesinger. The maximum possible sentence was 15 years.
“Officials plan to expand Bay County Courthouse, house all court services under one roof” via Tony Mixon of the Panama City News-Herald — The Bay County Courthouse Committee recently voted unanimously to consolidate area court services in the Bay County Courthouse by building a new facility on campus. After the long-planned project to turn the Juvenile Justice Courthouse into a federal courthouse fell through, there were talks of using the facility to conduct court proceedings. Now, the committee has decided to keep everyone under one roof and build another facility by the county courthouse. The plans to build additional facilities at the Bay County Courthouse predates Hurricane Michael. The storm slowed the process, and there were some funding issues.
“Tiny homebuilder wants to be annexed into Pensacola after Escambia County takes too long” via Jim Little of the Pensacola News Journal — After the Escambia County Commission in May rejected the language of an ordinance that would have allowed “tiny homes” to be built in the county, AMR at Pensacola is asking for its property to be annexed into the city of Pensacola where tiny homes are allowed. Pensacola attorney Jim Reeves, founder of AMR at Pensacola Inc., said he requested that the city annex the 0.44-acre property because it is taking the county too long to adopt an ordinance that would allow AMR’s project to move forward. Reeves said AMR plans to build eight tiny homes at 2000 W. Blount St. that will serve the Lakeview Center’s FamiliesFirst Network and provide affordable homes for former foster children who have turned 18 and “aged out” of the foster care system.
“Seminole moves to protect natural lands from development after Chris Dorworth tried for swap” via Martin E. Comas of the Orlando Sentinel — When Dorworth pitched a plan in early 2020 to swap hundreds of acres of the River Cross development property for Seminole County’s Econ Wilderness Area, Commissioners rejected the idea, saying the natural preserve was purchased with tax dollars for conservation and was not for trade. But county leaders and residents realized that any part of Seminole’s 6,630 acres of natural lands could easily be swapped away with the approval of a majority of commissioners, even though the lands were purchased with money raised from two voter-approved property tax increases.
“New Disney regional hub at Lake Nona in Orlando will house 2,000+ jobs relocating from California” via Austin Fuller of the Orlando Sentinel — A new Disney regional hub in Orlando’s Lake Nona community will be home to more than 2,000 professional jobs relocating from California, the company revealed Thursday afternoon. The average wage for the positions is $120,000 annually, according to Tim Giuliani, Orlando Economic Partnership president and CEO. “It’s a big day for Disney,” Giuliani said. “It’s a big day for Lake Nona. It’s a big day for Orlando.” Most of the Disney Parks, Experiences and Products professional roles based in southern California that are not fully dedicated to Disneyland Resort, or in some cases the international parks business, will be asked to relocate to Orlando, said Josh D’Amaro, chairman of Disney Parks, Experiences and Products.
“Head-on collision: Universal moves to derail Brightline’s high-speed rail route to Disney, Tampa” via Kevin Spear of the Orlando Sentinel — Universal’s opposition to proposed service by Brightline Trains from Orlando’s airport to Walt Disney World and Tampa echoes the region’s history of missteps and failures in launching passenger rail. Universal wants Brightline to construct what looks to be a vastly more costly route from the airport to the tourist strip that spans International Drive, Universal’s attractions and Orange County’s convention center before continuing to Disney and Tampa. Brightline’s plan to make Orlando the Florida hub of upscale, higher-speed passenger rail is widely regarded with enthusiasm to boost the region. But Universal’s intervention could break Brightline’s budget, its officials say, and bring upheaval to other transportation, including the SunRail commuter system.
“Illuminate Coral Gables show is off after city criticizes artists’ communist sympathies” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — After a fiery debate in which Coral Gables Mayor Vince Lago claimed that two artists from one of the city’s premier public art exhibits are communist sympathizers, the popular “Illuminate Coral Gables” art show has canceled its 2022 display and its top curator has resigned. The decision came after the Coral Gables Commission Tuesday voted at around midnight to fund part of the show, but only if the exhibit dropped Cuban-born artist Sandra Ramos and world-renowned Chinese artist Cai Guo-Qiang from its list of 20 participants. “I will continue to support the arts, but not at the expense of democracy and liberty,” Lago said.
— TOP OPINION —
“Afro-Cuban lives don’t matter to the shameful leaders of Black Lives Matter” via Fabiola Santiago of the Miami Herald — Now I have the answer to the question I’ve been asking for months. Why doesn’t the Black Lives Matter movement care that Afro-Cubans are being beaten, arrested, jailed and also killed for the “crime” of demanding the basic human right to free expression? The regrettable, shameful answer came Wednesday night on the organization’s official Instagram page: Because the organization’s leadership stands solidly behind Cuba’s oppressive, White-led Communist regime. Simply put, Black Cuban lives don’t matter to BLM. Using the same tactic and the same words as the Cuban regime, BLM blames all the regime’s failures on the U.S. Instead of condemning the treatment of Afro-Cubans, they condemn the U.S. embargo as the cause of what’s happening in Cuba.
— OPINIONS —
“Cuba’s counterrevolution will be televised if Biden makes it so” via Hugh Hewitt of The Washington Post — When the phrase “the revolution will not be televised” was first heard widely, it was used by poet and jazzman Gil Scott-Heron in his 1970 album, “Small Talk at 125th and Lenox.” Scott-Heron’s notion was, in part, you can’t trust mass media to convey what’s really going on in the country. That remains the case about the counterrevolution that broke out in Cuba over the weekend. I am amazed, alarmed and not a little disgusted by the lack of attention to the uprising of an oppressed people in the communist dictatorship. Biden must act. Go to Miami and have your [Ronald] Reagan-at-the-Berlin-Wall moment. Push the corrupt Cuban regime, and it will fall. Use the bully pulpit and build a genuine legacy.
“Scandal-ridden NRA should make itself useful: Butt out of Florida age limit on rifles” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — The NRA is appealing a court ruling upholding the Florida law that prevents people under 21 from buying long guns, including assault-style weapons. The NRA almost immediately challenged the ban, claiming it’s “a categorical burden on the fundamental right [of young adults] to keep and bear arms.” What nonsense. After Parkland, Florida lawmakers used their heads by passing sensible laws. Polls show clear public support for such measures and clear opposition to less strict gun laws, like open carry. At the same time, anti-gun activists need to recognize that gun ownership is and will remain a reality in the U.S. Without compromise and cooperation, the NRA might get its wish of arming everyone. What an America that would be.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Florida’s COVID-19 spike continues. The latest report from the CDC says we’ve got one of the highest transmission rates in the country; it’s so bad that folks in Los Angeles are being advised not to vacation in Florida.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— DeSantis is calling on Floridians who are protesting on behalf of the people of Cuba to get out of the street.
— The Governor is also facing some tough questions about selective enforcement of the state’s new anti-protest law. Sen. Shevrin Jones tells Sunrise that DeSantis doesn’t seem to mind a protest as long as he agrees.
— Speaking of Cuba, the Governor is calling on the President to find some way to get the internet restored in Cuba so the protesters there can get their stories and pictures out to the rest of the world. FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr says we have a way — all it takes is the will.
— Two central Florida cops, a father and son, are now facing federal charges for their alleged involvement in the coup at The Capitol.
— And finally, a Florida Man triple feature: One hired a hit man to kill his ex and blame it on Black Lives Matter, another is a former deputy going to prison for planting drugs on innocent drivers. The third left his kid in the car while he went drinking in a strip club.
To listen, click on the image below:
— WEEKEND TV —
Facing South Florida with Jim DeFede on CBS 4 in Miami: The Sunday show provides viewers with an in-depth look at politics in South Florida, along with other issues affecting the region.
Florida This Week on Tampa Bay’s WEDU: Moderator Rob Lorei hosts a roundtable featuring St. Peterburg Mayor Rick Kriseman; Alliance for Responsible Cuba Policy Foundation Founder Al Fox; Gemini Industries Business Development Manager E.J. Otero, Jr. Colonel (ret) U. S. Air Force; USF-Tampa Assistant Professor of International Relations & Political Science Arturo Jimenez-Bacardi Ph.D.
In Focus with Allison Walker on Bay News 9/CF 13: Hurricane Elsa and the resurgence of red tide in the state with Pinellas County Commission Chair Dave Eggers, Heather Post of the Volusia County Council District 4, and Amber Boulding from St. Petersburg’s Office of Emergency Management.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete: A closer look at the political unrest in Cuba with reaction from Florida’s Lt. Gov. Jeanette Núñez and Florida Democratic Party Chair Manny Diaz.
Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: Ybeth Bruzual speaks to Reps. Sabatini and Joy Goff-Marcil about House Bill 233, “Postsecondary Education,” which calls for annual evaluations of university viewpoints inclusion.
The Usual Suspects on WCTV-Tallahassee/Thomasville (CBS) and WJHG-Panama City (NBC): Host Gary Yordon talks with attorney Sean Pittman and Leon County Schools Superintendent Rocky Hanna.
This Week in Jacksonville with Kent Justice on Channel 4 WJXT: U.S. Sen. Rick Scott and Rep. Al Lawson on the Cuba crisis, federal spending, and child tax credit; Dr. Sunil Joshi of the Family Allergy & Asthma Consultants to talk about the delta variant and spread of COVID-19.
This Week in South Florida on WPLG-Local10 News (ABC): Allyn Kilsheimer, the engineer investigating the Surfside collapse. Also, while protesters are calling for a change in Cuba, a discussion about the difference between the treatment of BLM and Cuba protesters.
— ALOE —
“‘Oh boy, oh dear’: Jacksonville newlyweds’ doorbell camera footage goes viral” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — Brandon and Stephanie Jacobs got married in Green Cove Springs a year ago. They danced the night away before being driven back to their Westside home. That’s when Brandon, 37, decided to get traditional. Despite multiple back surgeries, he was determined to carry his bride across the threshold. Stephanie, 31, was skeptical. “You good?” she asked, bracing herself before saying, “oh boy, oh dear.” The whole episode was captured by the couple’s Ring doorbell camera. He shared it with the doorbell surveillance. A re-share from Ring’s social media accounts has resulted in a windfall of new views and fans. Earthquake, the popular comedian, shared the video on his social media platforms, too. “Some wedding traditions are still alive,” he wrote.
“Coca-Cola Is changing the flavor of a soda. Again” via New York Times —Coca-Cola changed the flavor of its soda in 1985 and enraged a nation. Now, the company is doing it again, risking another outcry. This time, it is changing the taste and look of one of its most popular soft drinks: Coca-Cola Zero Sugar, better known as Coke Zero, the diet spinoff that is supposed to closely resemble the sugary version of “classic” Coke. On Tuesday, company officials said that the plan was to change the drink so that it would “deliver an even more iconic Coke taste.” Anxious Americans, or at least the ones who regularly quaff Coke Zero, will be the judge.
“Subway has launched a website laying out the ‘truth’ about its tuna” via Business Insider — Subway has once again hit back at claims that its tuna isn’t real tuna by launching a website called subwaytunafacts.com. Subway CEO John Chidsey referred to the website during an interview with CNN Tuesday where he defended the chain’s tuna and said he “absolutely” eats Subway’s tuna sandwiches. A January class-action lawsuit claimed that Subway made false claims about its tuna meat. The class-action complaint said that the company made its tuna products using “a mixture of various concoctions” rather than actual tuna — though the plaintiffs amended their claims in June to focus on the type of tuna that Subway serves.
“Manatee mama, calf released near Blue Spring after successful rehab at SeaWorld Orlando” via Mary Helen Moore of the Daytona Beach News-Journal — During a heartbreaking year for the manatee, a small crowd near Blue Springs State Park got a glimpse of hope Wednesday when a pair of manatees was released after months of successful rehabilitation. A Sea World employee comfort an adult manatee named Mandy as teams from FWC, Sea World, Save the Manatee Club and the Volusia County mammal stranding team prepare to release Mandy and her calf Manilow back into the wild, Wednesday, July 14, 2021, at the French Landing boat ramp near Blue Springs State Park. The mother and baby disappeared into the St. John’s River with a few great ripples after spending four months at SeaWorld Orlando, gaining weight under the careful watch of staff.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Celebrating today are former U.S. Rep. Ross Spano, former state Sen. J.D. Alexander, Bob Gabordi, Alexis Lambert, former Hillsborough Commission candidate Todd Marks, Alix Miller of the Florida Trucking Association, the still handsome Ben Stuart, and Victoria Zepp.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Happy Friday! I’m off to Norfolk, then Chicago — will send pics.
- Smart Brevity™ count: 1,387 words … 5 minutes. Edited by Justin Green.
🛰️ FCC acting chair Jessica Rosenworcel joins Axios’ Ina Fried and Kim Hart today at 12:30 p.m. ET for a virtual event on digital connectivity. Register here.
Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios
America’s demographic revolution — increasing diversity, fast-growing cities and extreme partisan sorting — is changing how the parties fight for advantage as they draw district lines, Axios’ Stef Kight reports.
- Why it matters: Democrats have the demographics, but Republicans have the political power — putting Dems at a disadvantage on their new home turf.
What’s happening: The growth of big, diverse cities in the Sun Belt should benefit Democrats. But because they’re so far out of power in important states, gerrymandering New York and Illinois may be Democrats’ only shot at preserving a House majority.
- And the sunbelt is diversifying. Texas, Florida, Georgia and North Carolina saw the biggest increase in Black population over the past 10 years, while Texas, Florida and Arizona gained the most Hispanics, Brookings demographer William Frey said.
Cities are booming. Of the 20 fastest-growing major metro areas over the past decade, 16 voted for President Biden in 2020, according to Frey.
- But nine of those metro areas are blue cities in red states, including several in Texas. Republicans could use their control over the redistricting process in those places to pack Democrats into a small number of districts.
On the other hand, GOP-controlled legislatures are considering “cracking” cities like Louisville and Omaha — diluting Democratic votes by spreading them out, as Politico reported.
Cash is getting a bad rep. It was already on the ropes, and the pandemic accelerated the decline, Axios business editor Kate Marino writes.
- We used less cash in 2020. That, along with the trend toward digital, suggests that most cash in circulation is being used under the table.
Why it matters: That strengthens the case for governments to develop their own digital currencies, which would be trackable and taxable.
With more of us going digital, the demand for $100 bills illustrates the increasingly underground use of cash, says Harvard’s Kenneth Rogoff, who in 2016 authored the definitive tome on paper money’s dark side.
- The $100 bill accounts for more than 80% of U.S. bills in circulation.
- C-notes, of course, are rarely used in legit transactions.
To combat tax evasion and criminal activity, countries around the world are studying the development of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), as Axios’ Hope King has reported.
- Cashless policies by businesses exclude the underbanked. But in rural areas and in emerging economies, digital banking can be a solution.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Businesses face a growing risk of becoming a disinformation campaign’s direct target or collateral damage, Ina Fried writes from San Francisco in her weekly “Signal Boost” column.
- Why it matters: Disinformation attacks are often cheaper to launch than a ransomware hit, and harder to protect against.
Disinformation is becoming a business unto itself, spawning agencies that specialize in creating and spreading false messages.
- “There are organizations that are playing a disinformation-as-a-service function,” former U.S. cybersecurity head Chris Krebs told executives and clients of PR firm Weber Shandwick.
Many types of disinformation attacks aren’t illegal so the consequences can be minimal — getting banned from a platform.
Photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images
Fed Chair Jerome Powell testifies for Senate Banking yesterday.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
The top Republican on the House Judiciary antitrust subcommittee is launching a caucus on Big Tech to build support for antitrust changes, despite a divide in the GOP, Axios’ Margaret Harding McGill writes.
- Why it matters: Republicans eager to take on Big Tech are at a crossroads between working with Democrats to enact changes now, or going it alone and playing a longer game.
The new “Freedom from Big Tech Caucus” is co-chaired by Rep. Ken Buck (R-Colo.) and Rep. Lance Gooden (R-Texas), and counts Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-N.C.) as a vice chair, and Reps. Burgess Owens (R-Utah) and Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) as founding members.
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) said in June he’s working with fellow GOP leaders Jim Jordan (Ohio) and Cathy McMorris Rodgers (Wash.) to craft an approach to regulating Big Tech.
- Both McCarthy and Jordan, the top Republican on the House Judiciary Committee, criticize the House’s bipartisan antitrust bills as handing too much power to Biden-appointed antitrust enforcers.
The Santa Monica Pier in May. Photo: Damian Dovarganes/AP
That’s Drudge’s headline for the announcement that L.A. County, America’s most populous county, tomorrow night will reinstate a mask requirement indoors in public spaces, “regardless of vaccination status,” because of a rapid rise COVID cases.
- The order is at odds with the CDC and the California Department of Public Health, “both of which continue to maintain that vaccinated people need not cover their faces indoors,” the L.A. Times notes.
- It also puts officials “in the precarious position of asking the inoculated to forfeit one of the benefits recently enjoyed.”
Above, residents of Liège, Belgium, desperately try to escape flooding after heavy rain yesterday.
- 100+ people have lost their lives in Germany’s worst mass loss of life in years.
- 1,300 people were missing south of Cologne.
Mobile phone networks collapsed in some regions. Entire towns and villages lay in ruins after swollen rivers swept through. (Reuters)
Tucker Carlson, arguably America’s most powerful conservative, tells TIME’s Charlotte Alter that Republicans lost the House, Senate and White House because “they’re inept and bad at governing.”
- “The party is much more effective as an oppositional force than it is as a governing party,” said Carlson, whose Fox News show draws 3 million viewers a night — by far the most of any hour in cable news.
“Tuckerism,” Alter writes, “is about resisting a shadowy group of elites conspiring against hardworking Americans, the corrupt establishment colluding to brainwash the masses, the plot to control what people think and say.”
- In the phone interview from his home in Maine, Carlson, 52, said: “The truer something is, the more penalized you are for articulating it.”
- “I wound up working at the last mass medium where you can say pretty much whatever you want, and that’s true, and I think my show is evidence that that’s true.”
Keep reading. … Go deeper: WashPost’s Michael Kranish, “How Tucker Carlson became the voice of White grievance.”
Cover: Penguin Random House
WeWork founder and former CEO Adam Neumann threatened to walk away from a multi-billion dollar investment because of a request that he viewed as antisemitic, according to “The Cult of We,” out Tuesday, by Wall Street Journal reporters Eliot Brown and Maureen Farrell.
Axios’ Dan Primack sets the scene: Neumann, who was born in Israel and is Jewish, was in Tokyo in early 2017 to finalize a giant investment from SoftBank, which planned to mostly use money from a $100 billion fund whose largest investor was the government of Saudi Arabia.
- On the private flight back to America, Neumann told colleagues that SoftBank asked if he’d pledge not to give any of his own proceeds to the Israeli military, because it could be problematic for SoftBank’s Middle Eastern investors. SoftBank denies that it made the request.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Autonomous trucking is a hot commodity as investors once dazzled by self-driving cars are now pouring truckloads of money into automated logistics, Joann Muller writes in Axios What’s Next.
- It’s still not clear when robotaxis might be ready for large-scale deployment. But the explosion of e-commerce since the pandemic has created an increased demand for shipping.
In the first half of 2021, investors pumped a record $5.6 billion into autonomous trucking companies such as TuSimple, Plus and Embark.
- Valuations for the top four companies in the truck sector soared 544% from Q2 2020 to Q2 2021, compared to a 12% rise for the four largest robotaxi companies, according to PitchBook research.
Aurora Innovation is the latest self-driving tech company to go public, announcing plans yesterday to merge with a special purpose acquisition company, Reinvent Technology Partners Y.
- Aurora will net about $2 billion from the deal and boost its valuation to an estimated $11 billion, more than any other publicly traded AV company.
- The company turned its focus from robotaxis to trucks about a year ago.
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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Catholic religious order falls short on revealing true extent of sexual abuse
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
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24.) ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
Congressional Republicans are attempting to tie the Biden administration to the argument, made by many progressives in the Democratic Party, that the United States is “systemically racist,” and the GOP is focusing its attention on the Pentagon. Read more…
Capitol Police arrested Congressional Black Caucus Chair Joyce Beatty on Thursday for participating in a voting rights demonstration in the Hart Building. The Ohio Democrat was part of a group protesting for action in the Senate on the elections overhaul known as the For the People Act. Read more…
Menendez drug pricing concerns highlight budget obstacles for Democrats
New Jersey Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez isn’t ready to commit to voting for a budget blueprint that will count on hundreds of billions of dollars extracted from the prescription drug industry to help offset $3.5 trillion in new spending over a decade. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Gillibrand confident her military justice bill will pass this year
President Joe Biden recently told Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand that he would sign her bill revising how the military decides to prosecute most major crimes, the New York Democrat told reporters Thursday. Biden said he would “love to sign that into law,” Gillibrand said. Read more…
House to take up seven-bill fiscal 2022 spending package
House floor action on appropriations will begin the week of July 26 with a $617 billion package combining seven fiscal 2022 spending bills, bringing debates about federal funding for abortion, environmental policy and infrastructure to the forefront in that chamber. Read more…
Judiciary panel plans hearing on FBI failure to investigate abuse of Olympic gymnasts
A week before the Summer Olympics get underway, the leaders of the Senate Judiciary Committee are announcing plans for another hearing on the failure to respond to allegations of sexual abuse against gymnasts. Read more…
Santos pledges apolitical role heading Census Bureau
Robert Santos, the president’s pick to lead the Census Bureau, pledged at his confirmation hearing Thursday to keep the agency free from political interference. “Although this is a political appointment, I am no politician,” he told the Senate Homeland Security panel. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Caitlyn Jenner’s reality TV campaign
DRIVING THE DAY
PARLIAMENTARY GAMES — A pair of stories up from CNN and POLITICO spotlight Democrats’ upcoming gambit to back-door immigration reform through the reconciliation process — Senate parliamentarian be damned. “Top Democrats, with the support of the White House, are planning to tuck a handful of immigration measures into their forthcoming $3.5 trillion spending bill. The tactic — which just months ago seemed like a long shot even to liberals — is now widely seen as President JOE BIDEN’S best shot at confronting one of Washington’s policy leviathans and delivering on a decades-long party promise,” our Sarah Ferris, Burgess Everett and Laura Barrón-López report.
The most glaring obstacle here is the Senate rulebook. To pass muster, the immigration reforms would have to significantly impact the federal budget — by generating revenue or deepening the deficit — rather than merely being a side effect. Even raising the minimum wage failed to make the cut under that criterion earlier this year. CNN quotes former Senate parliamentarian ALAN FRUMIN, who isn’t buying it: “I understand arguments are made that there are budgetary effects when you change immigration law. But I think there’s probably a strong argument that those effects are secondary … (Democrats’) purpose is immigration policy.”
Democrats seem to think they win either way. Worst (most likely) case, the parliamentarian rebuffs them — but at least they can tell the base they tried. (The stuff they’re planning to include polls well.) But Republicans are prepared to pounce if they do. Sen. JOHN CORNYN (R-Texas), who’s been involved in bipartisan immigration talks in the past, warned that Democrats will have to “own it” if they go down this road on a hot-button issue — presumably meaning in the 2022 midterms.
JENNER’S REALITY CAMPAIGN — It’s fair to wonder whether CAITLYN JENNER is running for governor of California or filming another reality show. Well, it turns out she’s doing a little bit of both. Jenner is showing up at campaign events and rallies with a film crew like famous candidates often do — but she’s also brought the crew to an interview with SEAN HANNITY and to an appearance at CPAC.
Looking ahead to life after the trail, Jenner has been paying them to collect footage of her time running for office. And after the campaign she can do whatever she wants with it — sell it to Netflix for a documentary, perhaps, or to E! for another Kardashian reality series. (Nothing like that is in the works yet; we’re just throwing out a few scenarios.) “We’re documenting history,” a senior campaign adviser explained.
MITT ROMNEY and HILLARY ClNTON released documentaries after their campaigns, but both had a stronger shot at winning and, unlike Jenner, didn’t have prior careers in reality TV. To avoid tangling campaign finances and the project, Jenner, not the campaign, is paying for the crew — and it can get expensive. Which leads us to the question — is the content for the campaign, or is the campaign just for the content? “If she goes through the motions and it’s a legit campaign, we can’t legally differentiate between people where it’s a long shot and she’s just doing it to make a movie,” said campaign ethics lawyer RICHARD PAINTER.
Jenner’s advisers said they haven’t figured out what they’re going to do with the footage: “Right now, we’re focused on winning and I haven’t thought about what to do with it, but [the campaign is] something that needs to be documented.” A spokesperson added that, like with other prominent candidates in the past, “there are cameras filming Caitlyn at certain big political events like CPAC. There is no deal for any television show or documentary.”
— Related: “Trump associate Richard Grenell will not run in California recall,” by Jeremy White
QATAR FLEXES WITH LANDMARK EMBASSY: In an off-market deal, the Qatari government has purchased a national historic landmark for its next embassy: the Carnegie Institution for Science building at 16th and P in Dupont Circle. It’s one of just 74 national historic landmarks in D.C. — and the type of flex that will surely ignite the envy of Qatar’s rival United Arab Emirates, as each tries to out-influence the other in D.C. through soft-power diplomacy.
The Beaux-Arts-style building, erected in 1902, is a massive upgrade for the tiny Middle Eastern country, which until 2005 had just a small handful of staffers in an office building at 4200 Wisconsin Ave. Most recently the Qatari diplomatic mission took over five stories of a postmodern office building on M Street for its embassy, which they plan to continue to use for back-office work. The Carnegie building boasts 10 full ionic columns on the exterior and marble interior columns as well as an auditorium that can seat up to 450, where they are expected to entertain.
The acquisition was not without controversy at the 120-year-old institution. Carnegie Institution for Science emeritus director DONALD D. BROWN wrote a letter to Science Magazine calling the sale of the building a “bad” decision and referred to Qatar as “a country whose social policies are repugnant to us.”
Happy Friday, and thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
BIDEN’S STUDENT DEBT PROMISE COMES DUE: $1.6 trillion — that’s how much student loan debt there is in the United States. Progressives want to cancel student loan debt. Republicans say that’s wildly unfair. And Biden is … waiting. In today’s Playbook Deep Dive, Tara and education reporter Michael Stratford discuss the fight on Capitol Hill over student loans and whether Biden could tackle the problem through executive action. Listen and subscribe here
BIDEN’S FRIDAY:
— 7:30 a.m.: The president will take part in the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation leaders’ virtual retreat.
— 10 a.m.: Biden and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 12:20 p.m.: Biden and Harris will have lunch together.
— 1 p.m.: Biden will get a pandemic/vaccination briefing.
— 2:30 p.m.: Biden will leave the White House for Camp David, where he’ll receive the weekly economic briefing at 3:45 p.m.
The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 11 a.m. Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m.
THE HOUSE will meet at 9 a.m. in a pro forma session. THE SENATE is out.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE WHITE HOUSE
LAGGING ON A PROMISE — “Normal is not good enough’: After Trump, pressure’s on Biden to create new ethics rules,” by Anita Kumar: “When it comes to ethics in the White House, Biden is no [DONALD] TRUMP. But for a growing number of Democratic lawmakers and government watchdog groups, that’s too meager. Six months into office, they’re pushing the president to follow through on his campaign promise to press for an aggressive 25-point plan for ethics reform, fearful that the window to do so may be closing and, with it, an opportunity to prevent the lapses of the Trump years from happening again.”
ABOUT LAST NIGHT — “Biden and Merkel present united front — but still don’t see eye to eye on Nord Stream 2,” by Maeve Sheehy: “Biden and Merkel weren’t expecting to come out of Thursday’s meeting with a deal on Nord Stream 2, though the White House has been clear on wanting concrete steps laid out to ensure that Russia can’t leverage the pipeline against other countries’ interests.”
ALL POLITICS
2022 WATCH — “Why Democrats plan to wait on endorsements in 2022 Senate primaries,” by McClatchy’s Francesca Chambers: “After facing criticism for hand-picking candidates at the outset of intraparty battles in recent years, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee has yet to endorse a non-incumbent running for Senate in 2022, though it hasn’t ruled out that possibility. Officials with the committee hope holding back at the start of the campaigns will ultimately produce the strongest possible general election candidates as Democrats seek to expand their narrow Senate majority.
“‘[W]e will be evaluating things on a case by case basis and allowing things to develop a little more, because that also gives us more of an opportunity to see what people are like as candidates,’ said CHRISTIE ROBERTS, the DSCC’s executive director.”
LOOK WHO’S BACKING MANCHIN — “Rupert Murdoch-funded Fox Corp. PAC contributes to Democrat Joe Manchin’s campaign,” by CNBC’s Brian Schwartz: “A political action committee for Fox News’ parent company donated money to moderate Democratic Sen. JOE MANCHIN’S reelection campaign, a new filing shows.
“The Fox Corp. PAC, which is funded in part by conservative media mogul RUPERT MURDOCH, gave $1,500 to Manchin’s 2024 reelection campaign in June, according to a disclosure to the Federal Election Commission. The campaign raised just over $1.4 million in the second quarter. It would mark the first time Manchin has received a donation from the Fox Corp. PAC, according to a CNBC review of FEC records and data from the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics.”
THE SCANDAL THAT’S NOT GOING AWAY — “Cuomo to Be Questioned in Sexual Harassment Inquiry,” by NYT’s Luis Ferré-Sadurní and William Rashbaum
PRE-ANNOUNCEMENT OPPO — “Likely Michigan GOP Gubernatorial Candidate James Craig Filed For Bankruptcy Twice,” by Deadline Detroit’s Tom Perkins and Violet Ikonomova
CONGRESS
WHAT FLA. REPUBLICANS ARE LOVE-READING — “AOC’s Cuba tweet draws fiery response from Florida Dem,” by Jonathan Custodio: “Rep. ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ on Thursday ran into opposition from a prominent Florida Democrat after she called for the U.S. to end its embargo on Cuba, underlining divisions within the party on how to respond to the communist country’s recent upheaval. ‘We also must name the U.S contribution to Cuban suffering: our sixty-year-old embargo,’ Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) tweeted. ‘I outright reject the Biden administration’s defense of the embargo. It is never acceptable for us to use cruelty as a point of leverage against every day people.’
“Former Florida congresswoman DEBBIE MUCARSEL-POWELL publicly chastised the New York congresswoman’s position on Twitter, pointing to ‘failed policies of a communist regime that has violated human rights, imprisoned & killed dissidents.’”
HOW MANY TIMES MUST I REPEAT MYSELF? — “Manchin Says No Filibuster Exception for Voting Rights Bill,” Bloomberg: “Manchin said he wouldn’t carve out an exemption to the chamber’s filibuster rule for voting rights legislation, effectively dashing chances that Democrats could maneuver around Republican opposition to overhauling the nation’s elections laws.
“The West Virginia Democrat made the remarks after meeting with a group of Texas House Democrats who left the state to stall a vote on Republican-backed legislation that they say would restrict voting. ‘Forget the filibuster,’ Manchin told reporters after the meeting.”
MAN IN THE NEWS — “Mark Warner, a ‘Business Guy’ Democrat, Lands Back in the Fray,” by NYT’s Jonathan Weisman
DEM. CONGRESSMAN ON DEFENSE— “Rep. Brad Schneider’s office sued for hostile work environment, retaliation against Black employee,” Roll Call: “PATRICE CAMPBELL, a Black staffer for Democratic Rep. BRAD SCHNEIDER of Illinois, is suing Schneider’s office, alleging that her supervisor, KARYN DAVIDMAN, made lynching references directed at her … An emailed statement attributed only to Schneider’s office said the complaint is not a complete or accurate accounting of the facts.”
BEATTY ARRESTED — “CBC Chair Rep. Joyce Beatty, Black women protesters arrested by Capitol Police,” by TheGrio’s April Ryan: “Activist TAMIKA MALLORY is calling Thursday’s arrest of Congressional Black Caucus Chair JOYCE BEATTY and others ‘a true act of solidarity’ as Black women convened on Capitol Hill to press U.S. senators to pass voting rights legislation.
“Police officers on the Hill arrested 10 Black women in the Senate Hart Building including Democratic Rep. Beatty of Ohio and MELANIE CAMPBELL of the Black Women’s Roundtable. The women were transported to Capitol police holding in vans. Their jail conditions included a community toilet in the cell resembling those of county lockups across the country.”
PANDEMIC
ONE STEP BACK — “L.A. County will require masks indoors amid alarming rise in coronavirus cases,” L.A. Times
DEADLY DISINFORMATION — “Surgeon general issues warning over vaccine misinformation as White House turns up the heat on Facebook,” by CNN’s Kaitlan Collins and Donie O’Sullivan: “Meetings between the Biden administration and Facebook in recent weeks have been ‘tense,’ a source familiar with the conversations told CNN. … The source said Biden officials who had taken concerns about vaccine misinformation to Facebook had concluded that the company were either not ‘taking this very seriously, or they are hiding something,’ due to what they view as Facebook’s unwillingness to tackle vaccine misinformation.
“A Facebook spokesperson did not directly respond to the source’s characterization of the company’s efforts but told CNN that Facebook is working to tackle Covid-19 misinformation and has launched initiatives like a vaccine appointment tool.”
IT’S PERSONAL FOR MURTHY — “Surgeon General Reveals He’s Lost 10 Relatives To Covid As He Campaigns Against Vaccine Misinformation,” by Forbes’ Jessica McEvoy
TRUMP CARDS
WAG THE DOG — The New Yorker’s Susan Glasser is out with yet another revelation about Gen. MARK MILLEY’S efforts to rein Trump in after the election, taken from the research she’s done for her and Peter Baker’s book next year: “It was not public at the time, but Milley believed that the nation had come close — ‘very close’ — to conflict with the Islamic Republic. … To prevent such an outcome, Milley had, since late in 2020, been having morning phone meetings, at 8 a.m. on most days, with the White House chief of staff, MARK MEADOWS, and Secretary of State MIKE POMPEO, in the hopes of getting the country safely through to Joe Biden’s Inauguration. …
“Milley repeatedly met in private with the Joint Chiefs. He told them to make sure there were no unlawful orders from Trump and not to carry out any such orders without calling him first … To concerned members of Congress — including Speaker NANCY PELOSI and Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL — and also emissaries from the incoming Biden Administration, Milley also put out the word: Trump might attempt a coup, but he would fail because he would never succeed in co-opting the American military.”
SCAMMER SAGA — “Porsches, Gucci rings and billions of robocalls: Inside the PAC operation that raised millions by impersonating Donald Trump,” by CNN’s Andrew Kaczynski and Em Steck
SIGN O’ THE TIMES? — “Ticket sales are moving slowly for the coming Trump-O’Reilly stadium tour,” by Daniel Lippman
EX-FILES — “Explosive Interview Directly Implicates Trump in Tax Scheme,” by Daily Beast’s Jose Pagliery
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week”: Jasmine Wright, Sahil Kapur, Peter Baker and Abby Livingston. Washington Week Extra only: Ed Augustin.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
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FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.). Panel: Karl Rove, Susan Page and Harold Ford Jr. Power Player: Masih Alinejad.
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Gray TV
“Full Court Press”: NASA Administrator Bill Nelson … Mae Jemison.
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MSNBC
“The Sunday Show”: Texas state Rep. James Talarico … House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) … Michael Wolff … Robin DiAngelo … Joe Walsh.
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CBS
“Face the Nation”: Chris Krebs … Scott Gottlieb … new polling with Anthony Salvanto.
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CNN
“Inside Politics”: Panel: Rachael Bade, Toluse Olorunnipa, Jackie Kucinich and Tamara Keith.
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ABC
“This Week”: Panel: Rick Klein, Julie Pace and Michel Martin.
PLAYBOOKERS
KATHY’S BACK: Kathy Griffin wants to know … where is Yashar Ali? The HuffPost blogger and New York Mag contributor is suffering from a mild, self-imposed cancellation. He’s been silent on Twitter since a bombshell Los Angeles Magazine profile last month detailed a life of grift that included living with Griffin. “I’m so obsessed with this story because I lived it. Where is he living? Does he have any money?” Griffin asked rhetorically when we caught up with her at a party at Molly Jong-Fast’s house Thursday night. “What happened with Chrissy Teigen? They were super tight.”
Griffin has suffered through her own cancellation. But after a hellacious four years that included a two-month federal investigation for a bad Trump joke, she is returning to the screen — this time, scripted. Griffin has always just been herself, a comedian, but she’s found herself now cast in acting roles, which she called “a new surprise.” She told Playbook the directors in the projects sought her out. “They said, ‘If I can have a hand in the Kathy Griffin renaissance, that’s what I want to be a part of.’” ALSO SPOTTED: Noah Shachtman celebrating his new editor-in-chief role at Rolling Stone, Joan Walsh, George Conway, Stephanie and Jon Allen, Kristen Hawn, Tom Nichols, Gardiner Hasty, Matt Greenfield and Jesse Cannon.
RUM DIARIES: Dominican Ambassador Sonia Guzman opened up the terrace at her residence to guests Thursday night, serving Barcelo Rum and La Aurora and Capa Natural cigars. SPOTTED: Sen. Gary Peters (D-Mich.), Guatemalan Ambassador Alfonso Quiñónez, Maryland Secretary of State John C. Wobensmith, Jon Kott, Jon Stahler, Jeff Sanchez and Rohan Patel.
AOC VS. HER DOG … @AnnieGrayerCNN: “@AOC tells me she views the $3.5 trillion budget resolution as ‘absolutely a progressive victory.’” @AnnieGrayerCNN, a few hours earlier: “AOC is holding a virtual town hall and her dog, Deco, started barking in the background as she was talking about the bipartisan infrastructure bill. ‘Deco’s upset about the bipartisan bill’ AOC said.”
MEDIAWATCH — NBC’s Kasie Hunt announced that today was her last show as host of “Way Too Early” in MSNBC’s 5 a.m. hour.
TRUMP ALUMNI — Former acting A.G. Jeffrey Rosen is now a nonresident fellow in social, cultural and constitutional studies at the American Enterprise Institute, as part of a new Center for American Constitutional Governance. … James Schindler is now legislative counsel for Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas). He most recently was senior adviser at the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management in the Trump Interior Department. … Wayne Palmer is now senior adviser for federal affairs at the Industrial Minerals Association – North America. He most recently was deputy assistant secretary of the Mine Safety & Health Administration at the Department of Labor.
TRANSITIONS — Rep. Victoria Spartz’s (R-Ind.) office has added Phillip Pinegar as legislative director (previously in then-VP Mike Pence’s office), replacing Erica Barker, who has moved up to be deputy chief of staff and counsel. … Sydney Thomas is now on Sen. Mike Lee’s (R-Utah) team as comms director for the Joint Economic Committee. She previously was comms director for Rep. Mark Green (R-Tenn.). …
… Aaron Kleiner is now director for government affairs and public policy at Unity Technologies. He previously was senior director and chief of staff in Microsoft’s privacy and regulatory affairs group. … Campbell O’Connor will be an account director for media relations and health care at Weber Shandwick. He currently is an account supervisor for media at GCI Health. … Marion Smith has been appointed president and CEO of the Common Sense Society. He previously was executive director of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Aurora Matthews, VP of New Heights Communications, and Justin Stolz, an estimator at rand* construction, welcomed Sawyer Edward Stolz on July 7. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Reps. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio), Jim Banks (R-Ind.), Barbara Lee (D-Calif.) and Mike Rogers (R-Ala.) … FERC Commissioner Neil Chatterjee … NYT’s Shane Goldmacher … CBS’ Ben Tracy … Maddie Conway … Randy DeCleene of kglobal … Stami Williams … Julie Tagen of Rep. Jamie Raskin’s (D-Md.) office … Chad Carlough … Anita McBride … Scott Melville of the Consumer Healthcare Products Association … Sarah Hasse of the House Small Business GOP (24) … Marisol Samayoa of Sen. Mark Kelly’s (D-Ariz.) office … Karin Johanson … Amanda Henneberg of Cavalry … Riley Roberts … Kathy Calvin … Betty Hudson … AMA’s Justin DeJong … Jennifer Cummings … Advanced Advocacy’s Zach Sentementes … Molly Ritner … Amanda Hallberg Greenwell … Manuel Bonilla … Doug Feith … Don Willett, judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit … former Reps. Ross Spano (R-Fla.) and Michael Bilirakis (R-Fla.) (91) … Chad Griffin … POLITICO’s Kalon Makle and Luc Traugott … former Labor Secretary Alexis Herman … Marcus Towns II … ABC’s Teri Whitcraft
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.
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
The Space Race: Manned Space Flight & Faith of Astronauts – “Jesus walking on the earth is more important than man walking on the moon”-James Irwin, Apollo 15 – American Minute with Bill Federer
Apollo 15 – American Minute with Bill Federer The Space Race: Manned Space Flight & Faith of Astronauts – “Jesus walking on the earth is more important than man walking on the moon”-James Irwin
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Britney Spears Is the Only Thing Americans Can Agree On
Top O’ the Briefing
Britney Spears Unites Us All
Happy Friday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. People who can touch their toes are a little too full of themselves.
After giving it quite a lot of thought, I have decided that I would really like to spend a lot more quality time working with chocolate. I feel that I have untapped talents in the world of chocolate and I might be looking at a new legacy here.
Mmmm…chocolate.
Anyway, let us finish this fine week with a discussion about the state of interpersonal relations here in our beloved country. I will see what I can do to help facilitate some sort of healing that everyone can enjoy.
Tens of thousands of words are written seemingly every hour of every day right now bemoaning the schism that has befallen the United States of America. We don’t get along, at least when it comes to politics. For some of us, that’s not a full-time problem. There are some people, however, who have to make everything political, so schism it is.
There are days when it seems as if it will be this way forever. We’re headed toward permanent emotional, ideological, and geographic Balkanization. It can be a bit much at times.
It appears, however, that common ground can still be found in the strangest places, among the most disparate groups of people:
Note to lefty trolls: I am not now, nor have I ever been, a QAnon fan. I still don’t really know who they are.
Seriously, I have had conversations about this Britney Spears thing with people from all walks of life and political persuasions in the past few weeks and everyone is in agreement: It’s a tragic situation and Britney deserves to get control of her life back.
Megan has more on this budding American kumbaya moment:
Matt Gaetz is fired up and he has every reason to be. Recently, Britney Spears took the stand and told the world that she’s been suffering under a forced conservatorship. The conservatorship has taken her freedom, enforced her sterility, denied her a marriage, and even restricted her freedom to see her own children. The country is waking up to the reality of guardianship and how terrifying it is that a judge can just strip all of your human rights away.
A crowd had gathered to celebrate Spears’ legal victory in being allowed to hire her own lawyer instead of having one apointed by the court. Gaetz stood up to the microphone and told the crowd that America has a big problem and it’s festering in probate courts. He called it a “black eye” on our justice system that Spears is still under conservatorship.
“Britney has been abused by the media, she’s been abused by a grifter father, and she’s been abused by the American justice system,” he said. “We need to come together and create a federal cause of action…that will free Britney and the millions of Americans who are impacted by a corrupt guardianship system that empowers people to take advantage of the weak.”
Just how unifying is this cause, you ask?
It’s got Ted Cruz and Elizabeth Warren on the same side.
This could be a turning point at this dark time in American history. Who better to bring about the healing than a former member of The Mickey Mouse Club? This is the kind of scenario the Founding Fathers envisioned when they created a country where we were free to worship a God who would eventually give us Walt Disney.
All kidding aside, what’s being done to Britney Spears right now does rattle one’s faith in the American court system. Megan writes a lot about this kind of disturbing family court stuff and I encourage you to read it all. Remember, a family court gave O.J. Simpson custody of his kids after everyone in the world knew that he had decapitated their mother. It’s not a pretty set-up.
Let’s all rally behind Britney and not waste this bonding moment, America.
Who Held His Beer?
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
Me: Masks Are Back In L.A. County Because Libs Are Really Anti-Vaxxers Too
VodkaPundit: The Reverse Cuban Boatlift, Real Americans Doing What Biden Won’t
As a Survivor of Castro’s Totalitarian Regime, Freedom for Me Is Personal
Black Lives Matter? Tell That to the Democrats Who Are Getting Black People Killed
Matt Gaetz Shows Up at #FreeBritney Rally and Calls for the End of Guardianship Corruption
Marco Rubio Has the Perfect Response to Black Lives Matter’s Horrific Statement on Cuba
How ‘Google Translate’ Deceives You
Loudoun County Churches Obeying God Rather Than Virginia
So. Many. Megans. Megan Fox Calls Trump ‘Legendary’ at UFC Appearance
Trump EVISCERATES Biden’s Weak-Kneed Response to Communist Oppression in Cuba
FBI Arrests Capitol ‘Insurrectionist’ Who Dressed as a Roman Gladiator
Booksellers Association Says It’s ‘Inexcusable’ and ‘Violent’ to Promote This Book…
Woke 2.0: NFL to Sing Black National Anthem During 2021 Season
Major League Baseball’s Response to Cuban Revolution Not Very Woke
BREAKING: Trump Responds to Military Coup Accusation
Here We Go: Major Texas Democrat Stripped of Leadership Post for Fleeing the State
Supreme Court Justice Breyer Breaks His Silence on Retirement Plans
Oregon Research Firm Concludes: Gov. Kate Brown Can’t Be Trusted on Vaccines
‘Moderate’ Texas Democrat James Talarico Flat-Out Opposes Voter ID. Period.
Video Shows DoorDash Driver Deliberately Contaminating Cop’s Meal
A ‘Spiritual Catastrophe’ Is Exactly What the Left Wants
Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Milley Compared Trump to Hitler, MAGA to Nazi ‘Brownshirts’
Townhall Mothership
Too Little Too Late? Biden Finally Admits the Truth About the ‘C’ Word
Lindsey Graham Will ‘Go to War’ for Chick-Fil-A
Facebook Oversight Board Member Gives a Chilling Insight to How They View Free Speech
Democrats Were Lying About Jobless Numbers the Whole Time
Dems Can’t Help Themselves; Embed the PRO Act into the Infrastructure Bill Reconciliation
Teen Rappers Busted For Using Real Guns In Video
Cam&Co. New Arguments In SCOTUS Carry Case
Teen Shoots Man In Self-Defense Outside Florida Home
The problem with Robin DiAngelo’s ‘Nice Racism’
This story about a woman kidnapped in Pennsylvania makes no sense
WHO Director: It was ‘premature’ to rule out lab leak because ‘lab accidents happen’
VIP
The Antidote to Cancel Culture and Screaming Karens Is More Jesus, Less Critical Race Theory
U.S. House Dems Launch Partisan Investigation Into Arizona Election Audit
Vaccine Mandates Are Coming Before Summer’s End
If Trump Runs and Wins in 2024, Who Would Serve in His Administration?
Kamala Harris Unwittingly Explains Why Inflation Is So Devastating
GOLD LIVE: ‘Five O’Clock Somewhere’ with Kruiser, Preston, VodkaPundit
Around the Interwebz
‘Manifest’ Viewing On Netflix Surges After Cancellation To Dominate U.S. Streaming Ratings
Valve’s gaming handheld is called the Steam Deck and it’s shipping in December
New side hustle? McCormick Is Hiring a Director of Taco Relations
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Tunes
It’s not a sappy, appropriate song, but it was on the radio when we pulled into the hospital parking lot 23 years ago tomorrow on the day my daughter was born.
Pork rinds and cryptocurrency, just like the aliens want.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: The Infrastructure Tightrope
Plus: Biden condemns communism as protests in Cuba continue.
The Dispatch Staff | 14 min ago | 3 |
Happy Friday! On this date in 1790, President George Washington signed the Residence Act into law, establishing the nation’s capital along the Potomac River.
Alexander Hamilton never should’ve made that compromise with Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. It gets way too muggy here in the summer.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The Senate voted unanimously on Wednesday to pass a bill banning the import of products from China’s Xinjiang region due to the ongoing genocide taking place there against Uyghur Muslims. “Once this bill passes the House and is signed by the President, the United States will have more tools to prevent products made with forced labor from entering our nation’s supply chains,” said Sen. Marco Rubio.
- The Internal Revenue Service and Treasury Department on Thursday began disbursing the new advance Child Tax Credit payments established by the American Rescue Plan, sending money—mostly through direct deposit—to tens of millions of families with children under 17 years old.
- Justice Stephen Breyer—the oldest member of the Supreme Court—told CNN Wednesday that he has not yet decided when he will retire. Some progressive activists have been pushing him to step aside as early as this year to ensure a Democratic Senate could confirm his replacement.
- Days after Haitian officials requested the White House send troops to the country in the wake of its president’s assassination, President Biden told reporters not to expect a large deployment. “We’re only sending American Marines to our embassy,” he said. “The idea of sending American forces to Haiti is not on the agenda.”
- Facebook announced Thursday it had taken action against “Tortoiseshell,” a hacking group based in Iran that had been using the social media platform to “distribute malware and conduct espionage operations across the internet,” targeting U.S. and European military, defense, and aerospace personnel.
- Due to rising COVID-19 transmission rates in the area, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health announced Thursday it is again imposing an indoor mask mandate for both vaccinated and unvaccinated individuals, effective this Saturday.
- At least 60 people are dead—and up to 1,500 more missing—after severe flooding swept through parts of Germany and Belgium on Thursday.
Reconciliation Bill Complicates Infrastructure Efforts
We last wrote to you about Senate Democrats’ parallel tracks with bipartisan infrastructure and reconciliation a few weeks ago, when President Biden complicated things by publicly linking the two. That threw the negotiations into chaos, but we’re starting to get a little bit of clarity regarding what comes next. On Tuesday, Democrats on the Senate Budget Committee came to an agreement on a $3.5 trillion proposal that they plan to include in an upcoming budget resolution.
That total—while much less than the $6 trillion plan initially proposed by progressive Democrats—still covers a large part of Biden’s $4 trillion economic agenda. The legislation is still a work in progress, but Democrats plan to include as many of their priorities as possible in the finished product—universal prekindergarten, two years of free community college, an extension of the child tax credit, clean energy requirements for utilities, and a paid family and medical leave program, to name a few.
While Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has said he’s “very proud” of the plan, many questions remain. For one, passage of the bill depends on a handful of moderate Democrats who have not firmly committed to supporting the $3.5 trillion package. Sen. Joe Manchin, for example, has said he wants any new spending programs to be fully financed. He also voiced specific concern yesterday about the proposed climate change provisions. “I’m not a hard ‘no’ on anything,” Manchin told reporters. “I’m just saying that I like to find ways to pay for things.”
Democrats have no room for disagreement in the evenly split Senate if they are to pass the behemoth legislation without Republican support. And the needle to thread gets even narrower when you consider the House, where Democrats also have a slim majority and can only afford to lose a handful of members while advancing partisan legislation.
Schumer claimed on Tuesday that fully financing the proposals was only “one of the options on the table,” but argued it was “doable, absolutely.” Democrats have already hinted at using dynamic scoring for the legislation, building in assumptions about resulting economic growth to paint a rosier picture of the final price tag. Some analysts, however, are more skeptical: Many of the short-term spending items in the current plan may become permanent in the future. Congressional Democrats, for example, may only extend Biden’s expanded Child Tax Credit for a year or two this time, but they are already planning to fight to renew it in future budget battles.
Democratic leaders plan to pass the bill using reconciliation, a budget approval process that allows legislation to be passed by simple majority rather than with 60 votes. Vice President Kamala Harris’ tie-breaking vote gives Democrats that simple majority.
But reconciliation has its drawbacks. One component of the maneuver is the Byrd rule, which allows senators to object to provisions that don’t affect spending or revenue levels and prevents changes to Social Security benefits or Social Security payroll taxes from being included. In late February, for example, the Senate Parliamentarian blocked a reconciliation provision to increase the minimum wage to $15 an hour.
Now, as Democrats continue to debate what should and should not be included in the upcoming budget resolution, certain proposals will inevitably be excluded from the reconciliation process. Sen. Sherrod Brown accepted this as reality earlier this week. “We’re gonna get yeses and nos. We know that,” he told Politico. “The most important thing is we go big. The public wants us to go big. We make a difference for a generation on some of these issues.”
Another problem, however, is that Democrats’ go-it-alone approach on the $3.5 trillion budget threatens to derail a delicate bipartisan consensus on the smaller, $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill, which includes funding for transportation projects like roads, bridges, and rail systems, as well as water systems, broadband, and power grids.
Senate Republican Whip John Thune told reporters Tuesday that the ambitious Democratic plan could endanger GOP support for the separate bipartisan infrastructure package that is expected to receive a vote soon.
“The issue of linkage with reconciliation, I think, is still a big one too, and whether or not voting for an infrastructure bill enables the subsequent reconciliation bill, which is going to have the massive spending … and the tax increases that our members are going to be very opposed to,” Thune said.
In a bid to force quick movement on the issue, Schumer announced yesterday that the Senate will take a procedural vote to consider the bipartisan infrastructure bill next Wednesday. But Senate Republicans—even those working with Democrats on the legislation—voiced concern about such an imminent deadline. Sen. Rob Portman, the Republican leader on the infrastructure proposal, told reporters he would not vote to advance the measure unless he believes it is ready. Other Senate Republicans have expressed similar sentiment.
“[The infrastructure bill] doesn’t exist yet; that’s what’s so weird about where we are,” Cornyn said. “Sen. Schumer [is trying] to get us to proceed to a bill that hasn’t been written yet, and there’s no CBO score so we know what the pay-fors are and whether they’re credible or not. I would not agree to proceed to an unwritten, unscored bill.”
Still, some Democrats are optimistic they’ll get Republican support on the infrastructure bill regardless. Asked whether Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell will ultimately oppose the legislation, Sen. Jon Tester told reporters he didn’t think that would be in Republicans’ best interests. “It’s better for them to pass the bipartisan bill and let the Democrats fight it out on the $3.5 trillion bill.”
Former GOP Senate aide Liam Donovan told The Dispatch that Schumer’s decision to force a vote on the bill is a political one. “This gambit is designed to be a win-win,” he said. “Either they lock in Republican support for the bill, which helps moderate Democrats get on board, or Republicans shoot it down, and they can blame Republicans and use that as the reason to swiftly move on to reconciliation. Schumer’s trying to set up a situation where heads they win, tails Republicans lose.”
But Donovan is skeptical the infrastructure bill will pass with the necessary 60 votes. “Right now I’m very pessimistic on the odds, not least because Schumer is calling for a vote knowing that they’re not ready,” he said. “So that tells me that it’s not set up for success—it’s set up for failure.”
Democrats Struggle to Navigate Cuba Protests
As a striking wave of anti-government protests across Cuba persists into a sixth day, divisions between American lawmakers regarding how (if at all) to respond to the plight of Cuban demonstrators continues to dominate the domestic political discourse.
Disagreement over the unrest’s root causes is driving these debates, which up until yesterday the Biden administration had been reluctant to identify as Cuba’s communist leadership, opting to use the word “authoritarian” instead. The White House noticeably changed course yesterday.
“Communism is a failed system. A universally failed system,” President Biden told reporters Thursday. “And I don’t see socialism as a very useful substitute, but that’s another story.”
His comments echoed those of his press secretary, Jen Psaki, earlier that day. “Communism is a failed ideology, and we certainly believe that it has failed the people of Cuba,” she told reporters in the daily press briefing. “They deserve freedom.”
The administration’s explicit condemnation followed backlash from the Cuban-American community, Democrats and Republicans alike, who called for Biden to take tangible steps on top of his Monday statement in support of protesters. On Tuesday, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas—himself Cuban born—issued a warning to would-be Cuban and Haitian refugees, telling them not to come to the United States.
“The time is never right to attempt migration by sea,” he said. “Allow me to be clear: If you take to the sea, you will not come to the United States.”
“A stirring, two-paragraph statement on the second day of protests isn’t nearly enough from the leader of the free world when the suffering is 90 miles from U.S. shores,” Cuban-American columnist Fabiola Santiago wrote in the Miami Herald Wednesday. “‘Where is Biden? Where is Biden,’ shouted Cuban-American demonstrators Tuesday in Tampa, showing their support for the #SOSCuba movement.”
As of Thursday, at least one person had been killed in demonstrations and more than 100 had been detained or kidnapped by police working on behalf of Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel. Government-imposed internet blackouts, police brutality, and intimidation by regime-loyalists were also deployed to stifle the spread of dissent.
Díaz-Canel has shifted blame onto the United States in his several public statements since the outset of demonstrations, accusing protesters of being “opportunists, counterrevolutionaries, and mercenaries paid by the U.S. government.” The Cuban president has also pointed to American policies of “economic asphyxiation”—i.e. the economic blockade and sanctions—as driving forces behind the unrest.
Some American activist groups have expressed similar sentiments.
“The people of Cuba are being punished by the U.S. government because the country has maintained its commitment to sovereignty and self-determination. United States leaders have tried to crush this Revolution for decades,” Black Lives Matter said in a statement Wednesday, referring to Cuba’s 1950s Marxist uprising that installed the sitting government. “Instead of amity, respect, and goodwill, the U.S. government has only instigated suffering for the country’s 11 million people—of which 4 million are Black and Brown.”
“DSA stands with the Cuban people and their Revolution in this moment of unrest,” the International Committee of the Democratic Socialists of America tweeted earlier this week, also in defense of the Communist regime. “End the blockade.”
Sen. Bernie Sanders—who has a history of defending aspects of the Castro regime in Cuba—ventured an ever-so-slight criticism of the current regime on Tuesday. “All people have the right to protest and to live in a democratic society. I call on the Cuban government to respect opposition rights and refrain from violence,” he said. “It’s also long past time to end the unilateral U.S. embargo on Cuba, which has only hurt, not helped, the Cuban people.”
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez released a similar statement late Thursday night. “We are seeing Cubans rise up and protest for their rights like never before. We stand in solidarity with them, and we condemn the anti-democratic actions led by President Díaz-Canel. The suppression of the media, speech and protest are all gross violations of civil rights,” she said. “We also must name the U.S. contribution to Cuban suffering: Our sixty-year-old embargo. … The embargo is absurdly cruel and, like too many other U.S. policies targeting Latin Americans, the cruelty is the point.”
Republicans in Florida are putting forth proposals of their own—some more extreme than others. “What should be contemplated right now is a coalition of potential military action in Cuba,” Miami Mayor Francis Suarez said on Fox News Tuesday, drawing comparisons to the U.S. killing of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan during the Obama administration. “What I’m suggesting is that [the air strikes] option is one that has to be explored and cannot be just simply discarded as an option that is not on the table.”
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, meanwhile, wrote a letter to President Biden asking the administration to work toward restoring internet access for the Cuban people. “Similar to the American efforts to broadcast radio into the Soviet Union during the Cold War in Europe, the federal government has a history of supporting the dissemination of information into Cuba for the Cuban people through Radio & Televisión Martí, located in Miami,” DeSantis said.
“We have the technical capability to do this & doing so would show strong support for their fight for freedom,” Federal Communications Commissioner Brendan Carr, a Republican, added in a tweet.
Biden conveyed caution in remarks to reporters yesterday: “We’re considering whether we have the technological ability to reinstate that access.”
Worth Your Time
- Recent developments in Cuba and Haiti “may lead more people to seek freedom in the United States,” Ilya Somin notes in Reason. “One might expect an administration led by a President who makes a point of praising immigrants and America’s historic role as a haven for refugees to welcome such people with open arms. But, sadly, one would be wrong to do so,” he writes. “The Biden administration here is continuing a pre-Trump policy, not one initiated by the previous administration, with its special hostility to migration. It was, in fact, Barack Obama—during his last days in office—who cruelly ended the previous ‘wetfoot/dryfoot’ policy under which Cubans who landed in the United States were allowed to stay. But the fact that the policy predates Trump doesn’t make it right. It still denies migrants fleeing brutal oppression even the chance to be considered for asylum in the United States. And it does so for no better reason than that they arrived by sea—which for most is the only feasible way [to] come at all.”
- Over at Arc Digital, Nicholas Grossman makes the case that, when it comes to voting rights and electoral reform, Democrats’ eyes are not on the ball. “Voter suppression is not the main danger of Republicans’ anti-democracy strategy. That’s the last war,” he argues. “Still ongoing, still worth fighting, but sometimes overstated, and not what makes this moment uniquely concerning. The big danger is what happens after the election. We know how to counter disproportionate burdens on voting. Educate people and get out the vote, including with door-to-door volunteers. ‘They’re trying to take away your rights, don’t let them’ is a good motivator. But election officials throwing out enough votes to swing their state, legislatures overruling their voters and supporting a different presidential candidate at the Electoral College, and Congress refusing to recognize the results would be uncharted territory. In 2020, Trump and his allies tried all three.”
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- In the G-File (🔓), Jonah wades into the ongoing debate over which “side” is more responsible for our current culture wars. “We live in a moment where much of the right is determined to live down to the expectations of the left. And the left sees this behavior as proof that they shouldn’t respect the objections of those they want to change,” he writes. “It’s an old story that has gotten more extreme, with plenty of blame to go around. But pointing out how some on the right have gone crazy doesn’t absolve the left for helping us get here.”
- Jonah continues this conversation with Yuval Levin on The Remnant, asking the National Affairs founding editor and American Enterprise Institute fellow a host of questions about negative polarization, self-destructive politics, and American exceptionalism.
- The second Advisory Opinions this week features David and Sarah discussing a 4th Circuit ruling on young adults and firearm purchases, the latest on the Michael Avenatti saga, and a new Tennessee law about transgender bathroom policies.
Let Us Know
What is the United States’ responsibility toward Cuba during their protests?
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).
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32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
A.U.D.I.T. of Elections: The Pot Is Boiling out of Control!
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
45.) CONSERVATIVE BRIEF
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
47.) ABC
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Friday, July 16, 2021
Good morning, NBC News readers.
A massive search and rescue effort is under way in Germany with at least 1,500 people missing and more than 100 dead after extreme flooding, while wildfires are raging across 12 Western U.S. states. Plus, one teenager’s space dreams are coming true.
Here’s what we’re watching this Friday morning.
More than 1,000 people were still unaccounted for early Friday after raging floods in western Europe left at least 100 people dead and communities devastated as frantic rescue efforts entered a second day.
So far, Germany has taken the biggest brunt from the flooding with more than 90 deaths and as many as 1,500 people assumed to be missing.
The torrential rain and storms stranded people on rooftops, with authorities using inflatable boats and helicopters to identify and rescue residents.
One resident of a town in the southwest German state of Rhineland- Palatinate described the devastation as “simply catastrophic.”
“The bakery, the butcher — it’s all gone,” Edgar Gillessen, 65, told Reuters. “It’s scary. Unimaginable.”
See video of the scenes of destruction.
Friday’s top stories By Erik Ortiz and Conor Murray | Read more The Bootleg Fire, the largest wildfire burning in the U.S., has torched an area bigger than New York City. Meanwhile, a wildfire near Paradise, California, the site of the most destructive fire in the state’s history three years ago, is rapidly growing. By Sahil Kapur and Julia Ainsley | Read more While Democrats are making an ambitious attempt to muscle through changes in the immigration system as part of the sprawling economic package, it’s unclear how they will manage to succeed without Republican support. By Alicia Victoria Lozano | Read more Fueled by the quickening spread of the delta variant, the mask ordinance will go into effect late Saturday and will apply to everyone regardless of vaccination status. “We’re not where we need to be for the millions at risk of infection here,” the Los Angeles County Health Officer Dr. Muntu Davis said Thursday. OPINION By Michael Dolce | Read more Doing away with conservatorships or substantially watering them down in the cry to “free Britney” could make matters significantly worse for many, Dolce, a lawyer who advocates for developmentally disabled and mentally ill clients argues in an opinion piece. By Olivia Solon | Read more “It’s a myth that millions of people are moving away and that overall demand is plummeting,” says Jeff Tucker, chief economist at the property marketplace Zillow. BETTER By Maura Hohman | Read more Yvonne Gloston’s family was not vaccinated when they all contracted Covid-19. She was hospitalized, and now her whole family plans to receive vaccinations.
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Also in the news …
These cooling pillows offer cooling material and technology to avoid sweaty, sleepless nights throughout the summer.
One fun thing Talk about having an amazing reply to the age-old question: “What did you do this summer?”
Oliver Daemen, 18, is going to be the youngest person ever to travel to space.
Jeff Bezos’ rocket company Blue Origin announced that the Dutch teenager will be their first paying customer when they launch into space aboard the New Shepard rocket July 20.
Daemen will join the Amazon founder, his brother, Mark Bezos, and pilot Wally Funk, who at 82 will be the oldest astronaut ever when they lift off.
The company did not disclose the price of the ticket, but Daemen got the opportunity when the original anonymous $28 million winner of Blue Origin’s auction for the spot bowed out “due to scheduling conflicts.”
“I am super excited to be going to space,” the teenager said in a video posted to Twitter. “I’ve been dreaming about this all my life.”
Read the full story here.
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49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: Since Jan. 6 attack, Trump’s grip on the GOP has only grown stronger
More than six months after Jan. 6 – and after all of the reporting on that day – Donald Trump’s hold over the Republican Party hasn’t gotten weaker.
It’s only grown stronger.
Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images
In Oklahoma, the state GOP chair is backing a primary challenge to the reliably conservative sitting Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla. Lankford’s sin: refusing to reject the Electoral College count on Jan. 6.
In Alaska, the state party has endorsed challenger Kelly Tshibaka over Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska. Murkowski voted to convict Trump in his impeachment trial.
In Ohio, the candidates vying to fill the open Senate seat being vacated by retiring Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, has turned into a contest over who can hug Trump the hardest, with newly minted candidate J.D. Vance even deleting his 2016 tweet saying he was voting against Trump.
And yesterday, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy – who is eyeing becoming speaker – traveled to New Jersey to meet with Trump, as McCarthy considers which GOP members to appoint to the congressional committee investigating Jan. 6.
“Much to discuss!” Trump said in a statement yesterday first revealing the news of his meeting with McCarthy.
(McCarthy released a statement last night, per NBC’s Garrett Haake: “I enjoyed meeting with President Trump today. We discussed House Republicans’ record fundraising, upcoming congressional special elections and vulnerable Democrats.” McCarthy made no mention of the Jan. 6 committee.)
Six months later, we’ve come a long way since sitting GOP senators were saying that Trump “bears responsibility” for the Jan. 6 attack; since Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said “count me out, enough is enough”; and since McCarthy was saying Trump’s actions on Jan. 6 deserved congressional investigation and even a censure resolution.
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
$120 billion: The amount allocated for sweeping immigration changes in Democrats’ $3.5 trillion budget measure, per new reporting from NBC’s Sahil Kapur and Julia Ainsley.
9: The number of people, including Rep. Joyce Beatty, who were arrested at a voting rights protest on Capitol Hill yesterday
10: The number of family members Surgeon General Vivek Murthy says he has lost to Covid-19
At least 95: The number of people dead as floods sweep across Western Europe
34,132,692: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 39,452 more than yesterday morning.)
611,583: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 238 more since yesterday morning.)
388,738,495: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC.
48.3 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
59.2 percent: The share of all American adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: Good Hunt-ing
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Something to watch: Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s term expires in 2022.
Los Angeles County is reinstating its mask mandate indoors, even for vaccinated people.
Biden gave a sendoff last night to departing German Chancellor Angela Merkel
Texas Democrats are running into a problem on Capitol Hill: Democrats are distracted by other agenda items.
The “Free Britney” push is gaining bipartisan allies on Capitol Hill.
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo will be questioned in a probe of sexual harassment allegations.
Richard Grenell won’t run in the California recall election after all.
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53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
An adult dressed as Gru from Despicable Me flashed a racist, white power hand gesture while taking a photo with two bi-racial children at Universal Studios. One of the girls brought the picture of her … MORE
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60.) TWITCHY
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Friday, July 16, and we’re covering deadly floods in Europe, a verdict in America’s deadliest newsroom shooting, and more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWGerman Floods At least 93 people were killed yesterday, with hundreds unaccounted for, as record rainfall caused severe flooding in Germany. The worst flooding in decades caused major rivers to flood in Germany, Belgium, and other parts of western Europe. People were left trapped in their homes, waiting on rooftops to be rescued, as floodwaters washed away buildings and cars. Two firefighters also died after evacuation attempts. At least 12 others have been killed in neighboring Belgium. Power and water supplies have been cut off for hundreds of thousands of residents across the area. Major rail and road transport routes were also disrupted. The rainfall in the region was subsiding Thursday, but forecasts suggest more heavy rain is due in much of western Europe throughout today. Child Tax CreditsThe bank accounts of millions of Americans received a boost yesterday, as the IRS issued the first round of payments under an expanded Child Tax Credit program. Up to $300 per child was issued, with administration officials saying the payments covered 35 million households with roughly 60 million children. The tax credit, originally established in 1997, previously provided a $2K credit per child under age 17 for the majority of US households. The economic stimulus bill passed this March granted a one-year expansion during the 2021 tax year (see deep dive), allowing for up to $3K per child under 18 ($3,600 for children under six) for many households. Notably, the law allowed for monthly payments through December, instead of a one-time refund upon filing taxes. There’s at least one catch—the deposits are actually prepayments based on estimated 2021 taxes, meaning families may face smaller returns or unexpected tax bills next April (for those interested, here’s how to opt out). Verdict in AnnapolisA gunman who killed five people and injured two others in a mass shooting at the Annapolis Capital Gazette in 2018 was found criminally responsible by a jury yesterday, rejecting the defense team’s claim of mental illness. The verdict means 41-year-old Jarrod Ramos will likely spend life in prison instead of a maximum-security mental health facility. The deadliest attack on a newsroom in US history, Ramos had a long-standing history with the paper leading up to the attack. He began a harassment campaign following a 2011 article by the Gazette covering a guilty plea Ramos made in a stalking case, and filed and lost a subsequent defamation case. Prosecutors argued that Ramos’ meticulous planning—including barricading an exit route before the attack—contradicted his insanity defense. He is expected to be sentenced to five life terms without parole. See the victims’ profiles here. In partnership with Haven Life LIFE INSURANCE MADE EASYGot married? Bought a house? Had a baby? (Congrats, BTW). That means you’re probably pretty busy. And you probably need life insurance. When “me” becomes “we,” it’s time to start thinking about life insurance. Haven Life Insurance Agency offers an easy way to buy dependable term life insurance coverage online—no phone calls, no pressure, no hassle. Term life insurance is a great way to help financially protect the people you love. And, with Haven Life, it’s probably a lot more affordable than you think. A 35-year-old woman in excellent health can purchase a $500K, 20-year Haven Term policy for around $18/mo. That’s peace of mind for the price of a large cheese pizza. Discover life insurance that’s actually simple and get your free quote now. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & CultureBrought to you by The Ascent > Tom Brady had a completely torn MCL during 2020 season while leading Tampa Bay Buccaneers to a Super Bowl victory (More) | COVID outbreak sidelines six New York Yankees including Aaron Judge, postponing game against Boston Red Sox (More) > Hollywood film producer Dillon Jordan arrested by federal agents for allegedly running prostitute ring (More) | Netflix to expand service to include video games next year at no extra cost (More) > “Tiger King” Joe Exotic likely to receive shorter prison sentence in murder-for-hire case after court determines original sentence was miscalculated (More) From our partners: Paying off credit card debt? This card could save you up to $1,863 in interest charges on $10K of debt. Thanks to one of the longest 0% APR periods on the market, you won’t be paying credit card interest until 2023 on purchases and qualifying balance transfers. Learn more now and apply for a decision in under two minutes. Science & Technology> Eighteen-year-old Oliver Daemen to join Amazon founder Jeff Bezos aboard his space company Blue Origin’s inaugural crewed flight; Daemen, flying in place of an anonymous $28M auction winner, will become the youngest person to fly in space (More) > New AI platform computes complex protein structures in 10 minutes; the freely available model developed by the University of Washington surpasses Google’s breakthrough AlphaFold2 in capability, researchers say (More) > Dual studies report control over a nanosphere close to the uncertainty limit, a step toward quantum control of large-scale objects (More) | The Heisenberg Principle in simple terms (Watch) Business & Markets> An estimated 360,000 Americans filed initial jobless claims last week, in line with estimates and a new pandemic-era low (More) > Shares of Moderna—mRNA Biotech company known for its COVID-19 vaccine—rise after announcement the company will be added to the S&P 500 index (More) > Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell testifies before Senate Banking Committee, answering a number of questions on inflation, the economy, and other items (More) Politics & World Affairs> New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) to be questioned tomorrow as part of the state attorney general probe into a raft of sexual harassment allegations (More) > Haitian officials detain the current head of security for assassinated President Jovenel Moïse (More) | Cuban government lifts tax on food and medicine imports in temporary attempt to quell anti-government protests (More) > California approves the nation’s first state-funded guaranteed basic income program; pilot sets aside $35M for qualifying residents, with up to $1,000 per month going to primarily low-income pregnant women and young adults recently out of foster care (More) IN-DEPTHA Forbidden GlanceBBC | George Wright. The story of Raed Ahmed, an Iraqi weightlifter who made a daring defection to the US amid the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta. (Read) Octopuses and UsThe Ezra Klein Show | Ezra Klein. (Podcast) What the octopus can teach us about the nature of consciousness and our relationship with the natural world. (Listen) The Cursed CabinetInput | Charles Moss. A Holocaust-era furniture piece that inspired multiple horror films, the truth behind the Dybbuk Box is finally revealed. (Read) PRICE IS RIGHTIn partnership with Haven Life Whatever you think term life insurance costs … it’s probably less. Haven Life makes it easy to buy term life insurance online at a price that makes sense. A 35-year-old woman in excellent health could purchase a $1M, 20-year Haven Term policy for around $29/mo. All from the comfort of her couch, without making a single phone call. Get ready to experience life insurance that’s actually simple and start by getting your free quote today. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAA fascinating map of medieval Europe. One man’s face averaged over 7,777 days. Dictionary.com adds 300 new words. James Bond’s new car is a (powerful) plug-in hybrid. Female trainee qualifies for Naval Special Warfare Command crew for the first time. Watch robots make pizzas from start to finish. Looking for a new gig? How about eating tacos. Millions in cocaine charcoal recovered by police. Fortuitous Florida man finds two separate megalodon teeth. Clickbait: What’s a better-sounding name for “shark attack?” Historybook: District of Columbia established as capital of US (1790); RIP former US first lady Mary Todd Lincoln (1882); First successful atom bomb test (1945); Apollo 11 launches with first astronauts who will walk on the moon (1969); John F. Kennedy Jr. dies in plane crash (1999). “Mystery creates wonder and wonder is the basis of man’s desire to understand.” – Neil Armstrong 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
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73.) POPULIST PRESS
The news just keeps getting better!
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TOP STORIES:
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AZ Auditors Confirmed Everything To Senate… Applause Breaks Out
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Maricopa County Judge Delivers Huge Ruling on AZ Audit Records
- GA Audit & Tally Sheets Were Falsified — 60% Error Rate
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Arizona Senate Audit Team CAUGHT THEM!
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AZ Auditors Release Massive Discovery — Enough To Decertify Election
- Letitia James Caught Trying To Manufacture Crimes Against Stephen Bannon
- Bill Clinton’s Ghislaine Maxwell “secret” just got busted wide open
- Joe Biden gets hit with brutal news…
- ‘Traumatized’ Kamala Harris staffers sound alarm over her becoming president
- Senator Goes Public — ‘Eye Opening’ Discovery Has Dems Terrified
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IN DEPTH:
- GA Audit & Tally Sheets Were Falsified — 60% Error Rate 13 mins
- Texas Speaker of the House strips Democrat of top leadership position 1 hour
- ‘I fought for Cuba, they didn’t’: Trump nails Biden in a fiery statement about uprising against communist regime
- Black Lives Matter glorified Cuban dictator Fidel Castro: ‘Fidel Vive!’ 2 hours
- Treasury Wants Large Holders of 2020 Note to Identify Themselves 2 hours
- Bill Clinton flew with Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell at least TWO additional times 2 hours
- CNN Continues Its Hindenburg-Like Burn in Losing Viewers With Release of New Ratings 2 hours
- Squad member unveils ‘Green New Deal’ for education with support from NYC’s de Blasio 2 hours
- Wounded warrior files run for US Senate, proclaims ‘Duty First’ in moving ad 2 hours
- Biden’s Supreme Court Commission Appointee Justified Looting in CNN Op-Ed. 2 hours
- Sen. Graham says he’d ‘go to war’ for Chick-fil‑A after outrage at chain on Catholic campus 2 hours
- NPR Blames the Right for Cancel Culture 2 hours
- WATCH: Psaki finally admits that Cuban protests are the result of the ‘failed ideology’ of COMMUNISM 2 hours
- Child tax credit payments start going out July 15. Here’s what to know 3 hours
- Big Tech is Trying to Disarm the FTC by Seeking Recusal of Chair Lina Khan 3 hours
- Fall in energy demand was ‘far bigger’ than predictions: BP 3 hours
- Kudlow: ‘Woke economics’ leads to economic decline 3 hours
- China’s 2nd Quarter GDP Growth Misses Expectations 3 hours
- Dissent: Harvard Medical School Professor Exposes Fauci’s ‘Triple Stumble’ 3 hours
- Could North Korea Really Build a Hypersonic Missile? 3 hours
- WHO admits errors in report of COVID origins, says will correct mistakes 3 hours
- Is The Biden Administration About To Make The Border Crisis Worse? 3 hours
- Randi Weingarten backpedals after claiming DeSantis would cause ‘millions’ to die in Florida 3 hours
- 1st female completes US Navy special warfare training 3 hours
- Alabama Army base is first to make troops show COVID vaccine proof 3 hours
- A dozen of Biden’s national security nominees are on hold in the Senate 3 hours
- Here’s what we already know about Russia’s new stealth fighter 3 hours
- EU court rules headscarves can be banned at work ‘under certain conditions’ 3 hours
- Germany calls on China to allow further investigations into COVID origins 3 hours
- UK drug companies fined £260m for inflating prices for NHS 3 hours
- LA County reimposes indoor mask mandate without regard for vaccines 3 hours
- Sen. Rand Paul Leads Republican Effort To End Mandatory Mask-Wearing On Public Transportation 3 hours
- Nicolas Cage Dishes On Disney: “There’s A Lot Of Fear There” 3 hours
- Famous GOP Pollster Frank Luntz Assisted Biden Admin COVID Task Force 3 hours
- Democrat says voter ID rules in election bill up for negotiation: ‘Can’t always get what you want’ 3 hours
- Shark advocates call for rebranding violent attacks as ‘interactions’ 3 hours
- Michigan Senate approves petition to revoke Whitmer’s pandemic powers 3 hours
- California pays $1.35 million settlement over COVID-19 restrictions on churches 3 hours
- Longtime FBI signature expert says Hunter Biden signed receipt for abandoned laptop 3 hours
- Arizona state senator calls for new presidential election, says Biden electors should be recalled 3 hours
- Durham report may not be ‘broad’ as hoped but prosecutions in play, Nunes says 3 hours
- Mark Levin’s Call to Rebut ‘American Marxism’, by Tim Graham 3 hours
- The Cuban Freedom Protest Is Awkward for Our Garbage Elite 3 hours
- Chrissy Teigen Complains of ‘Cancel Club’ 3 hours
- The Federal Government Spent $19,762 Per Capita in FY2020 3 hours
- Sliders Co-Creator Tracy Tormé Says A Reboot Is “Actively” In The Works, Promises Series “Will Never Be Woke”
- NFL plans to include ‘Black National Anthem’ and social justice agenda in 2021 season: report 4 hours
- Yankees-Red Sox postponed due to Yankees COVID scare 4 hours
- Richard Sherman ‘drunk and belligerent,’ threatened to kill himself before arrest, 911 caller says 4 hours
- The hidden costs of Biden’s ‘Made in America’ policy
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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) MSNBC
July 16, 2021 THE LATEST Trump Book Summer is upon us, with three new books on the former president’s final days in office publishing in the coming weeks. In advance of their releases, news outlets have been dropping some of the choicest bombshells from each. The detailed accounts of the post-election chaos are fascinating but should have been public knowledge much sooner, Hayes Brown writes.
“I’m guilty of consuming every one of the stories that are drip-dripping out,” Brown writes. “But the fact that we seem to always learn about these things far after their metaphorical ‘use by’ date fills me with a latent rage.”
Read Hayes Brown’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Friday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES The Trump Organization just might be the Titanic. Read More The veneration of Babbitt is more than just an effort to change the narrative around Jan. 6. Read More Arizona’s election ‘audit’ is nearly done, but a larger controversy is just getting started. Read More TOP VIDEOS LISTEN NOW Into America
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 Nicolle Wallace: I served the GOP for 20 years. The demise of democracy doesn’t have ‘both sides.’
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76.) THE DAILY DOT
July 16, 2021 Welcome to the Friday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect the week online. Today:
BREAK THE INTERNET Who is looking out for Millie Bobby Brown? We’ve just begun to reconcile with our past treatment of pop stars and celebrities. This year, media outlets who were hypercritical of Britney Spears in the ‘90s and early ‘00s released apologies following the Framing Britney Spears documentary. That documentary showed how the media criticized Spears’ choices from a young age, including what she wore and who she dated. Today, the 39-year-old singer is fighting to be freed from her 13-year conservatorship, which she has said is abusive. But as people reflect on Spears’ treatment in the spotlight, many fear that something similar could happen to the current generation of teen stars, like Stranger Things’ Millie Bobby Brown. Millie, who is 17, made headlines this week after a 20-year-old influencer claimed in an Instagram Live that he dated and lived with the star when she was 16.
Now, Millie’s representatives are apparently “taking action” against Hunter Ecimovic, who admitted to “grooming” Millie. Ecimovic’s Instagram account has been removed, but he’s still active on TikTok, where he has 1.6 million followers.
Fans believe that what happened to Spears is now happening to Millie and that she needs adults who are looking out for her. The actress has already been sexualized in the media: USA Today reports that at age 13, she “was put on W magazine’s list of ‘Why TV Is Sexier Than Ever.'” A 2016 GQ profile called Millie a “very grown-up child” and commented on her legs. Culture Editor
CHECK OUT THE LATEST FROM THE BAZAAR Delta-8 THC is popping up everywhere. Here’s what to know The popularity of Delta-8 THC has exploded in recent months. But unless you’re ahead of the curve, you’re likely wondering what the heck this stuff is. In actuality, when it first hit the market, we didn’t know what Delta-8 was, either. But after speaking to countless experts within the canna-science field, we’ve gained more insight into this particular cannabinoid than we ever thought was possible. Now we’re sharing what we’ve learned with you.
NOSTALGIA The darker side of Y2K fashion What’s old is eventually new again, so it’s not much of a surprise that the fashion of the early 2000s is finally having its moment in the limelight. But amid the highs of Y2K fashion are, as one TikToker highlighted, the era’s many, many questionable lows.
“When I think about Y2K, I don’t think crop tops and halter tops and low-rise jeans only,” Carly Aquilino said. “I think about how we really wore every accessory at the same time. I think about how we wore jeans underneath skirts and dresses.” In a follow-up video, Aquilino rails on more bad but memorable Y2K trends including layering, mesh tops, and our continuing obsession with belts. —Michelle Jaworksi, staff writer
TIKTOK TikTok’s Photo Animation filter has its eye on you TikTok’s Photo Animation filter is drawing out some emotional—and unsettling—responses. The filter is relatively new and allows people to animate eyes and mouths in photos, producing something akin to when the eyes move in a painting in Scooby-Doo. It also lets you uncannily animate your own face.
Last summer, TikTok claimed it was “adding a policy which prohibits synthetic or manipulated content that misleads users by distorting the truth of events in a way that could cause harm.” The Photo Animation filter seems fairly harmless; quite a few people have used it to animate deceased family members. But is it deepfake tech? It’s close, though it doesn’t allow speech to be automated. —Audra Schroeder, senior writer
MEME OF THE WEEK Wes Anderson’s new movie—well, a red carpet photo of the cast—is already a meme.
Now playing: 🎶 “Corps” by Yseult 🎶
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
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82.) CNN
Friday 07.16.21 The US government is offering up to $10 million to anyone with information on who is behind the recent rash of cyberattacks on the country’s critical infrastructure. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. The Ahr River floats past destroyed houses yesterday in Insul, Germany. Extreme weather
Dozens are dead and more than 1,000 people are assumed missing after flash floods ripped through parts of Western Europe. Rescue and recovery efforts are underway in Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands, where rivers swelled and swept through towns, dragging entire structures away in the flow. These photos show the stunning scale of destruction. The floods were caused by the heaviest rainfall there in more than a century. Across the Atlantic, an opposite threat looms: About 71 large wildfires are now scorching 1 million acres across the US, and their smoke can be seen from California all the way to New York. Also in the New York City area, millions are under a heat advisory as the heat index (the “feels like” temp) could hit 103 degrees today.
Coronavirus
Covid-19 cases are surging in almost every state, and CNN medical analyst Dr. Leana Wen says it’s time to “do something dramatic” to protect the country from a tragic fall season. Hospitals are filling up in places like Arkansas, where only 35% of the population is fully vaccinated. Los Angeles County, the nation’s most populous county, will reinstate its mask mandate this weekend, requiring masking indoors regardless of vaccination status. The Delta variant is also fueling huge surges in the Middle East and North Africa. Tunisia has been hit especially hard and is reimposing lockdowns. The North African nation now has the highest Covid-19 mortality rate in the Eastern Mediterranean region and on the African continent. And in Iraq, less than 1% of the population has received a coronavirus vaccine dose.
Infrastructure
The bipartisan infrastructure bill and the Democratic-backed $3.5 trillion budget resolution germinating in the Senate could provide Democrats with a last chance to tackle immigration reform in this Congress. Lawmakers are looking to set aside $120 billion for a pathway to citizenship for DACA recipients, farm workers, essential workers and people with Temporary Protected Status. But it’s not clear yet how they will decide who qualifies for these protections. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer set a deadline for next week to force his caucus to agree on both the budget package and the infrastructure bill. It’s essentially an attempt to strong-arm negotiations and is further frustrating Republicans already put off by the rapid pace and high price tags of these measures.
Cuba
Cuba is temporarily lifting restrictions on travelers bringing food, medicine and hygiene products into the country in an apparent response to rare anti-government protests that have rattled the island nation since last weekend. Thousands have gathered to protest chronic shortages of basic goods, curbs on civil liberties and the government’s handling of the pandemic. These desperate conditions have led to rising migration and economic toil. President Biden expressed support for Cuban citizens and railed against the Cuban government, calling it a “failed state.” He also said the US is looking into ways to reinstate internet access in Cuba. Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel says US trade sanctions are to blame for his country’s economic conditions.
Lebanon
Lebanon’s Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri has stepped down just nine months after he was tasked with forming the country’s next government. Hariri says he removed himself because President Michel Aoun didn’t accept his latest Cabinet lineup. Lebanon hasn’t had a government since its caretaker Prime Minister stepped down after the deadly Beirut port explosion in August 2020. The power vacuum has exacerbated a financial tailspin and a rapid decay of the country’s infrastructure, with power outages that sometimes exceed 22 hours a day. Really, problems have been brewing since an uprising against Lebanon’s ruling elite in October 2019. Protests erupted after Hariri’s announcement this week as people expressed their despair and frustration with the political infighting.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- Biden Turns to the United Nations
- Soccer, South American style
- With Justice & Drew
- The strange career of Jim Crow, Joe Biden edition
- What the Hell Happened to Bill Kristol?
Biden Turns to the United Nations
Posted: 15 Jul 2021 01:58 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)I somehow missed this story when it came out on Tuesday: U.S. State Department invites U.N. racism investigators to visit U.S.
It isn’t hard to see where this is going. The U.N.’s “experts” will write a report detailing the alleged horrors of “racism” in America, which will be hailed by the Democrats and used as an excuse for ever more extreme “remedies.” To be sure, the U.N. has zero credibility, is hopelessly corrupt, and is viciously hostile to the United States. But those are virtues in the eyes of the Biden administration.
I suppose if racism were actually a “scourge” in the U.S., whites would rank higher than 17th in the Census Bureau’s rankings of median incomes. But the Biden administration won’t let the facts get in its way. As for the scourge of xenophobia, it refers to the fact that people aren’t happy about stories like this one: a man I spoke with this morning told me that he checked into a motel in a small town in Minnesota and found that it was almost full of Guatemalans–illegal immigrants who had been shipped to Minnesota and were being put up in the motel by the federal government. They enjoyed the pool and hot tub and lined up for free breakfast in the morning, in blatant violation of immigration laws but, nevertheless, at taxpayer expense. Such scenes are being enacted across America, as the Biden administration resettles large numbers of illegal immigrants apprehended at the border, arming them with coupon books that function as cash. Your cash. If you question whether that is a good idea, you are xenophobic, as a forthcoming U.N. report no doubt will explain. |
Soccer, South American style
Posted: 15 Jul 2021 01:14 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Normally, South America’s big soccer tournament, Copa America, isn’t played the same year as the European Championship. But because Euro 2020 was pushed backed to 2021 due to the Wuhan coronavirus, this year the two tournaments took place during the same period. There are only so many hours in the day and slightly fewer that can be devoted to watching sports. Therefore, I saw very little of Copa American — only the semi-final between Argentina and Colombia and the final between Argentina and Brazil. Argentina defeated Colombia on penalty kicks and went on to defeat Brazil, 1-0. This is Argentina’s first Copa America triumph since 1993, eleven tournaments ago, which is mind-blowing considering the caliber of players who have worn the pale blue shirt since that time. I’ll have more to say about Argentina’s past failures and its superstar Lionel Messi in another post. Right now, I want to focus on the differences between what I observed in the two tournaments — the Euros and Copa America. The Euros were pretty clean by soccer standards. Sure, there was some “professional fouling” — fouls committed to prevent the opposition from breaking away on attack. And, as always, there was a fair amount of diving and rolling around on the ground. However, the fouling was neither persistent nor overly physical. In the England-Italy final, the referee issued only four yellow cards in the regulation 90 minutes (all to Italy, by the way). In the two semi-finals, both of which went 120 minutes, there were only five yellow cards in total. By contrast, the referee issued 10 yellow cards in the 90-minute Chile-Argentina clash. In the Brazil-Argentina final, I counted nine. And what fouls many of them were! When Italy’s Giorgio Chiellini wanted to stop an England break, he pulled on the breakaway player’s shirt. When a Brazilian or an Argentine wanted to accomplish the same end, the method of choice was the cross-body check. The South American tournament also featured more flair. In the two Copa America matches I saw, Diaz of Colombia, Neymar of Brazil, and Di Maria and (above all) Messi all displayed moments of magic, dribbling past multiple defenders (often only to be chopped down in the end). Such moments were rare at the Euros, where the attacking buildups were slower and more reliant on passing. There was also a marked difference in the ways players went about their business at the two tournaments. With the exception of Chiellini, the Euro players eschewed over-the-top displays of passion except after scoring or mistakes. The South Americans seemed constantly to be barking or otherwise emoting. Yeri Mina of Colombia is a good example. As an Everton center back, and a good one, Mina rarely seems fired up in EPL matches. But wearing the Colombian shirt against Argentina, he seemed manic — constantly in someone’s face. The contrast between the Europeans and the South Americans was particularly noticeable during penalty shootouts. At the Euros, these seemed like solemn affairs. As far as I could tell, there was little talking, probably because everyone was trying so hard to concentrate. Some goalkeepers employed a little gamesmanship, but it consisted of mild delaying tactics and jumping around before the opponent took his kick. By contrast, the Colombia-Argentina shootout featured blatant trash talking and lots of it. In fact, Mina and the Argentine goalkeeper, Emiliano Martinez of Aston Villa, were still yapping back and forth as the big Colombian approached the ball. (Martinez save the kick.) South American soccer has always differed from its European counterpart. But with so many South American players plying their trade in Europe these days, you might expect the differences to be shrinking. Certainly, differences in European play from country to country have diminished as leagues like the EPL have taken on a strong international flavor. But the two Copa America matches I watched, juxtaposed with the Euros, have convinced me that significant differences persist when it comes to the two major footballing continents. In Europe, they play football. In South America, they play football with hot sauce. |
With Justice & Drew
Posted: 15 Jul 2021 09:03 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)I am scheduled to join Jon Justice and Drew Lee for the weekly Justice & Drew round table tomorrow morning from 7:00-9:00 a.m. (I am not sure producer Samantha Sansevere will be on hand this time.) The show runs from 6:00 to 9:00 a.m. weekdays on Twin Cities News Talk AM 1130. It is available via live stream here and in podcast form here. The show covers local and national news with a sense of humor and an upbeat twist. Entertaining while they educate, Jon and Drew provide a crucial counterpoint to the editorial cowardice and stupidity of the Star Tribune. I think that it is safe to say that state representative John Thompson will be a subject of discussion, as he has been all week. The show has been extraordinarily hospitable to John Hinderaker and me as well as John’s colleagues at the Center of the American Experiment. Along with Alpha News, Justice & Drew is the most important source of local news in the Twin Cities. Please check it out tomorrow if you might find it of interest. |
The strange career of Jim Crow, Joe Biden edition
Posted: 15 Jul 2021 06:08 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)The prominent historian C. Vann Woodward saw The Strange Career of Jim Crow through three editions. Originally published in 1955, the book was last updated in a third revised edition published in 1974. I believe it remains a useful book for anyone seeking to understand the phenomenon and its legacy. Indeed, as Woodward sought to keep the book current, I think that each of the three editions of the book is useful for this purpose (and that all of his books are worth reading). In the preface to the first edition Woodward explained that the lectures were delivered at the University of Virginia in 1954. “They were given before unsegregated audiences,” he added, “and they were received in that spirit of tolerance and open-mindedness that one has a right to expect at a university with such a tradition and such a founder.” That was then. Woodward retired from Yale in 1977 and died in 1999 at the age of 91. Woodward’s obituary in the Times recalled that Martin Luther King called Woodward’s account the “historical bible of the civil rights movement.” By the time of his preface to the third edition, Woodward was noting “a certain ambivalence that black people have felt all along toward integration in white America[.]” He called it “an old ambivalence that had been buried and put aside during the long struggle against segregation and discrimination.” I wish Woodward were around to comment on the resurrection of Jim Crow — of the charge of “Jim Crow” — for such dishonest uses as those to which Joe Biden put it in his July 13 remarks on “Protecting the Sacred, Constitutional Right to Vote” at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia. (The link is to the White House transcript.) The regime of legal segregation in the South was of course a mainstay and preserve of the Democratic Party. Although he may have forgotten them by now, Joe Biden himself had warm friendships with several of his Senate colleagues who signed off on the 1956 Southern Manifesto (all Democrats, opposing Brown v. Board of Education). The Democrats’ imputation of r-a-a-a-cism to Republicans is historically illiterate and otherwise in bad faith. It has its political uses, however, and has therefore become a staple of Democratic rhetoric — a tired, stale, and and self-discrediting, if not discredited, cliché. Although Biden has manifested his own racist attitudes over the years, Biden has made his own contributions to this staple of Democratic discourse. In August 2012, to take just one memorable example, Biden spoke before a racially mixed audience in Danville, Virginia. Referring to then Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney — Mitt Romney! — and Republicans in general, Biden warned: “They’re going to put y’all back in chains!” And this was at a time when he was in possession of his faculties. Biden’s use of the “Jim Crow” charge in his Philadelphia speech represents a variation of this theme, but here it was also turned to the promotion of H.R. 1 to work a federal takeover of election law. One party today, one party tomorrow, one party forever! This is demoralizing but we can take heart from Biden’s assignment of the leadership role to Kamala Harris:
If the audience were sapient, the parenthetical would read: “(Laughter).” Biden should have been staring vacantly into the mirror when he said this: “[M]ake no mistake, bullies and merchants of fear and peddlers of lies are threatening the very foundation of our country.” Biden invoked the Civil War. The January 6 riot was worse:
I love “that’s not hyperbole.” It’s a dead giveaway, like the politician’s standard preface to a lie: “To be perfectly frank.” He should have added “that’s not hyperbole” to his riff the 2012 Danville speech. And then we come to Jim Crow:
Biden then widens the racial component:
Michael Barone calls this line of attack “unhinged nonsense.” It has become a hustle. Biden seems to have fallen in love with the “Jim Crow” charge. Putting an evaluation of its truthfulness — i.e., its falsity — to one side, I wonder how effective it is beyond Biden’s core audience. I would love to see one of those Jesse Watters or Ami Horowitz interview segments asking passersby on the street if they know Jim Crow. If they know who Jim Crow is. If they know what Jim Crow was. I think the results would be illuminating. In the original introduction to his book on the subject, by the way, Woodward noted: “The origin of the term ‘Jim Crow’ applied to Negroes is lost in obscurity.” |
What the Hell Happened to Bill Kristol?
Posted: 15 Jul 2021 12:59 AM PDT (Steven Hayward)Greetings from Budapest, where I’ll be hanging out a lot at Cafe Roger Scruton at 10 Zoltan Street over the next several days, and giving a lecture for the Danube Institute next Monday evening on the topic, “What Is Going on in America?” If there are any Power Line readers in Budapest, you may still be able to grab a limited seat for the event here. Otherwise you may run into me at the Cafe. Lo and behold, when I arrived over here I caught up with the monster hit piece on our friends at the Claremont Institute in The Bulwark: “What the Hell Happened to the Claremont Institute?“, by Laura Field, who hangs her shingle at the Niskanen Institute, which is one clue right there. It is a long, lugubrious piece: settle in with a pot of coffee if you want to try it. Basically the piece is one long attempted syllogism: Claremont people liked and defended Trump; Trump is evil, ergo. . . Claremont can defend themselves just fine, and I look forward to their counter-salvo. But I think the reverse question can and should be asked, though I take no pleasure in doing so: What the hell happened to Bill Kristol? (He is the founder and impresario of The Bulwark, where the Field essay appears.) As it happens, I gave a long explanation of why the “Claremonsters” were sympathetic to Trump just before the election in 2016, in a feature article that appeared in . . . Bill Kristol’s magazine (!), the late lamented Weekly Standard. Editors told me that Bill didn’t agree with much of the piece, but he did print it as written. The main point of that piece, in one sentence, is that Trump, for all his evident flaws, represented the most significant challenge to the administrative state and the establishment culture that protects it since Nixon and Reagan. (The Fields piece, despite its length, doesn’t address this central point.) And on many particulars, Trump delivered. Even Kristol grudgingly acknowledged this early in Trump’s term. The view that Trump’s character trumped whatever good deeds he did in office is coherent and plausible (and by the way, I know of at least one leading Claremonster who never wavered in this opinion—the circle was far from unanimous about the question), and hence it was reasonable to credit honorable opposition to him. But Trump is gone now, and his opponents can claim a large measure of vindication in the ignominious end of his term. Yet the Never Trumpers seem by degrees to have become Never Republicans. Bill and several of his colleagues at The Bulwark seem to have decided that throwing Trump over the side, and Trump-friendly Republicans with him, isn’t enough: they now seem to be throwing aside conservatism itself, suddenly attacking conservative views on climate change, health care, and many other issues. Is it now Never Conservative? Bill has long liked to troll people in sophisticated ways, especially with wry tweets that you have to process for a moment or two. And beyond that, he’s been lately telling people he now associates himself with Hayek’s famous essay, “Why I Am Not a Conservative,” and I wonder if this is a clever troll, too, because he seems to be making the same mistake simple-minded libertarians do who cite this title (and Bill is not simple-minded). If you read the actual essay, Hayek essentially says “If I was an American, I’d be a conservative, because American conservatism—as opposed to European conservatism that was the real target of the essay—seeks to conserve a tradition of liberty.” So here is a mystery. Is Bill still a conservative? Republicans may be pathetic in many ways, but does he really think today’s Democratic Party is a better guardian of the American tradition of liberty? It boggles the mind to suppose so. I’d gladly settle for Bill to offer serious new version of where Hayek settled, namely, a Whig account of our political order, though that seems unpromising. Meanwhile, I doubt he’s gaining many new friends on the left while losing so many old friends on the right. Chaser—once upon a time:
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
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86.) THE PATRIOT POST
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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
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90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
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94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
96.) NOT THE BEE
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Not the Bee Daily Newsletter |
Jul 16, 2021 |
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Sponsored By: Alliance Defending Freedom The “Equality Act”: Designed to DiscriminatePresident Biden has promised to sign the “Equality Act” into law if given the chance. Now, with its recent passage in the House, the chances of the “Equality Act” being signed into law are higher than ever before. The “Equality Act” would add “sexual orientation” and “gender identity” as protected classes to many existing federal nondiscrimination laws. And though “nondiscrimination” sounds good in theory, that is not what this bill is truly about. The “Equality Act” is a deliberate and dangerous attempt to force people of faith to abandon their sincerely held beliefs or face punishment. This dangerous proposed legislation threatens people of faith like you—act now!
L.A. County Is Bringing Back the Indoor Mask Mandate Regardless of Vaccination StatusStarting Saturday night, you have to wear a mask indoors in Los Angeles County whether you are vaccinated or not:
Jen Psaki just said the federal government has “increased disinformation tracking” and is now “flagging problematic posts for Facebook”!
Australia renames shark attacks “interactions” or “negative encounters” because apparently “shark attacks” is too meanWhat, are they afraid the Great Whites are gonna get their feelings hurt?
ABA calls the inclusion of the book “Irreversible Damage” in their July mailing a “serious, violent incident” and I really wish this were The Babylon Bee instead.I should warn you, you are about to be the victim of a “violent incident.” If you go beyond this point, it’s on you.
Are you ready for pregnant man emojis?Hello ladies and gentlemen, Jesse James here reporting to you from Clown World.
Someone found a Picasso painting in their great aunt’s closet that had been there for 50 yearsIt’s fitting: a bizarre story to match the bizarre art style of Picasso.
CNN gets roasted for saying high gas prices aren’t Biden’s faultDoes the C in CNN stand for “Clown”?
Woke Joint Chiefs Chairman General Milley is even more of a hysterical partisan hack than originally thought, according to a forthcoming book.Imagine Rachel Maddow in charge of the US military and you get some idea of what we’re dealing with here.
A hospital in Ohio gave the wrong person a kidney transplant!I don’t think this is the kind of “Free Healthcare” the Libs had in mind.
Black Lives Matter is a bunch of straight up commiesBLM just released this statement about the protests in Cuba:
Gen-Z may not be worshiping God, but they’re still worshipingThe graphic looks shocking, there’s no doubt about it. Of course, the graphic was made to look shocking to generate clicks, comments, controversy, conversation, and ultimately cash. But nevertheless, the infographic originating from academic research conducted by Ryan Burge sent shockwaves around various corners of social media:
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
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99.) MARK LEVIN
July 15, 2021
On Thursday’s Mark Levin Show, What senior Biden White House officials said was a game-changer for Donald Trump’s Big Tech lawsuit. The best witness for his lawsuit is Jen Psaki who admitted today that the federal government is telling Facebook and other social media platforms which posts to censor on social media. The Big Tech companies can no longer say that they are independent when they are doing the work of the government. The first amendment does not speak of misinformation, it speaks of free speech. This assault on free speech by individuals wrapped in pseudo-righteousness will kill the competition of ideas including those of scientists. Then, “Patriotic Commerce” is the way to address the woke radicalization of corporations. For that, we look to a thought from Ayn Rand, which is expanded upon in “American Marxism.” Indeed President Biden has hired numerous corporatists from social media oligopolies to further blur the lines and increase the virtue-signaling as they enrich themselves and China. Later, social movement theory, collective identity, and other collectivist ideas diminish the individual, and the Marxist needs censorship in order to promote this ideology. Teaching students to be combat-ready activists is done by teaching oppositional protest theory. All of which is rooted in disdain for America and its founding.
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The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Chip Somodevilla
Rough transcript of Hour 1
Hour 1 Segment 1
You don’t think this government under Biden in this party, is it repressive? You don’t think they borrow from Marxist party throughout the world? I’m going to play you this. I’m sure many people have, but I’m going to give you a fresh new take on this. As a constitutional lawyer. And as you listen to this, pretend you’re a constitutional lawyer. And say what in this? What is it that Jen Psaki said or Vivek Murthy, the general, the surgeon general, what is it that they said? That now has changed the legal ballgame. Let’s start cutting Jen Psaki at the White House press briefing today, go first, we are in regular touch with these social media platforms and those engagements typically happen through members of our senior staff, but also members of our covid-19 team given, as Dr. Murthy conveyed, this is a big issue of misinformation, specifically on the pandemic in terms of actions, Alex, that we have taken or we’re working to take, I should say, from the federal government. We’ve increased disinformation, research and tracking within the surgeon general’s office. We’re flagging problematic posts for Facebook that spread disinformation. We’re working with doctors and medical professionals to connect to connected medical experts with popular with people who are popular with their audiences, with accurate information and boost trusted content. So we’re helping get trusted content out there. All right. Let’s stop there. What did she and what are they what did they just do? They just. They just. May the Trump lawsuit. Against the social media platforms, to me, a slam dunk. I can’t predict what out of control rogue judges and justices will do. But she just stated, and I hope the Trump lawyers are listening to me and they get a transcript of this. That they are working with Facebook and other social media platforms. And telling them what they want them to do. They can call it disinformation, they can call it whatever they want. That’s quite beside the point. Jen Psaki just made the case for the Trump lawsuit that these are not independent private platforms, these are not independent businesses, these are not independent actors, the Biden administration. At multiple levels, senior staff. Among others are working with Facebook. In other social media platforms to identify misinformation. And thereby to sanction the misinformation, to censor the social media posts and to spread information. It can no longer be said. That it is an independent business conducting its own business. Without any taint. Of government activity. It is doing the work of the government, it is doing the work specifically of the Biden administration and the Democrat Party. So the First Amendment, in fact, does apply and there are Supreme Court cases that have said it applies in cases that are weaker than this one. Jen Psaki. Is the best witness. For the Trump lawsuit. I hope they’re listening to me. Write down what she said, transcribe what she said. Amend your lawsuit and include it. Because, again, she just openly stated to the entire world, let’s repeat it again, caudate, Mr. Producer, go first. We are in regular touch with these social media platforms, and those engagements typically happen through members of our senior staff, but also members of our covid-19 team, given, as Dr. Murthy conveyed, this is a big issue of misinformation, specifically on the pandemic in terms of actions, Alex, that we have taken or we’re working to take, I should say, from the federal government. We’ve increased disinformation, research and tracking within the surgeon general’s office. So they’re tracking you. If they don’t agree with you, they collecting information. If they don’t agree with you, they have adapted and they are out front now that they are using police state tactics against freedom of speech and speech generally. And that should cause everybody in the media concerned, but they don’t give a damn. They only believe they should speak go ahead post for Facebook that spreads this information. We’re working with doctors and medical professionals to connect to connected medical experts with popular with popular, who are popular with their audiences with accurate information and boost trusted content. So we’re helping get trusted content out there. Now, that’s called propaganda. We do not need the Biden administration. To take on the responsibility of providing trusted medical information, you have your own doctors, you have doctors groups, you have scientists, you have professors, we’re very vibrant country with a lot of really, really smart people. Government interference here, government control of the debate, government control of speech, government censorship. That is what she just attested to. She just attested to it. Facebook is not an independent actor. Facebook is doing what they were asked to do. Censor. Now, I bet I haven’t heard a single talk show host today, I bet not a single one of them is connected that because this is what I do. Now, there’s even more evidence, I don’t know how the gentleman pronounces his first name, Vivek Murthy, the new surgeon general. Cotinine go today, I issued a surgeon general’s advisory on the dangers of health misinformation. Now, this is amazing. So we have a top government official issuing an advisory on misinformation. Rather than just talking about misinformation and talking about what he believes, he’s now issuing a government. Advisory. On misinformation. Now, keep in mind, Biden and Harris and their ilk oppose the vaccines early on, they dismiss them. They said they were politicized. Remember? I remember. Remember how many people in the media and big tech rejected the idea that the virus may have been leaked from the lab in Wuhan, and so we did the interview of a former New York Times editor of their science page since retired, who wrote a long piece after a year of investigation and suggested, well, the evidence is more likely that it did and it didn’t, which changed the entire nature of this debate. You saw him on Life, Liberty and Levin. Can you imagine? You don’t have to imagine. We’ve had great minds, great scientists in the past. Who challenged flat earth? Who challenged many of the so-called given scientific realities and evidence out there, which were nothing of the kind. The whole point of free speech is to allow for competition of ideas and to try and figure things out. And now we have censorship. By the Biden administration, working with big tech, specifically Facebook. To censor, quote, unquote, disinformation. Politicians and government. Working with liberal Democrats who control these massive platforms, censoring misinformation. Isn’t that amazing? The same ones that promoted Russia collusion, the same ones that silence The New York Post when it came to Hunter Biden. Now they’re the font of all knowledge and all truth, the federal government, federal medical people know they’re not. Go ahead. Surgeon general advisories are reserved for urgent public health threats, and while those threats have often been so free speech and the competition of ideas is an urgent public health threat. The First Amendment talks about freedom of speech. It doesn’t say a word about disinformation or misinformation. We get that from Biden and his cronies all the time. It’s freedom of speech. Go ahead, drink and smoke. Today, we live in a world where misinformation poses an imminent and insidious threat to our nation’s health, health misinformation is false, inaccurate or misleading. Information about this is unbelievable, these very vague, platitudinous terms and sentence. And this is unbelievable and friggin believable. I don’t know of another time, certainly in my lifetime that this has occurred. And they wrapped themselves in self-righteousness. Unbelievable, the assault on free speech and the First Amendment in this country is shocking from our elementary schools with critical race theory to this crap. Go ahead, bring to the best evidence at the time, and while it often appears the best evidence at the time, the reason he has to say at the time is because the best evidence isn’t always the best evidence, even if people say it’s the best evidence. This is this is stunning to me. Stunning, this is an effort. To kill. The competition of ideas, even the competition of scientists who come up with different ideas and potentially different solutions and have different arguments. There’s no official position when it comes to science. The government may have a position, but it’s not an official position that everybody has to digest and regurgitate. So many of the great inventions we have today, so many of the great discoveries we have today would not have occurred. If the Biden administration in this quack quack. And a surgeon general’s uniform. What is that all about? Well, they dress up like they’re in the Air Force or something, but in any event. Can you imagine? But I want to repeat what I said at the opening. The Trump lawsuit now is stronger than ever before the idea. That Facebook and these other social media. Oligarchs aren’t using their platform. Aren’t intertwining their activities with official government positions under a Democrat administration is no longer a supposition. It’s no longer a long bridge. It’s right here. She said it. He said it, they said it. And now I pointed it out. I’ll be right back.
Hour 1 Segment 2
As an American Marxism on my hero, we just want to get the truth out here in shape people’s lives, there won’t be a single Democrat in Congress objecting to this that I can think of. There won’t be a single host for reporter at CNN or MSNBC. There won’t be a single news person, let alone editorial board, New York Times, Washington Post and the like, nothing. And yet we haven’t seen anything like this since Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Roosevelt. Who are great opponents of the First Amendment. I want you to listen to this Surgeon General Murthy again, he made another comment. Cut and go now. Help misinformation didn’t start with covid-19. What’s different now, though, is the speed and scale at which health misinformation is spreading. I see in the lab was that health misinformation and the mask on the mask off the mask on the mask off. Was that health misinformation? Children should wear a mask when they go to elementary. Is that a health misinformation? And the only misinformation that I can think of is coming from them. Go ahead. Modern technology companies have enabled the misinformation to poison our information environment with little accountability to their users. They’ve allowed people to intentionally spread misinformation, what we call disinformation, to have extraordinary reach. They’ve designed product features, folks, folks, maybe they don’t comprehend what the First Amendment is about. You counter if you believe disinformation with information, you counter lies with facts you counter, hate with love, your counterviolence with peace. When it comes to free speech, you don’t get to as a government to say this is misinformation and actually it’s disinformation. And because the information can spread so quickly on social media, you know, we have to step in here and social media, this is what we want you to do. And social media says, yes, yes, whatever you need us to do. Besides, we support you. Now they’ve screwed up. Hello. Hello. Now they have screwed up. Now, the connection. Between government, in this case, the demands of the Biden administration and Facebook and other social media. That’s not speculation. That’s not in France, that is a fact. It’s not even disinformation, that is a fact. What next? Ladies and gentlemen, they’re going to take the broadcast license away from radio companies. They’re going to take the broadcast license away from network television. What are they going to do next to stop the spread of misinformation in this technologically advanced society? Because we want to save lives? Except when it comes to abortion, except when it comes to the board, except when it comes to the inner city. But yet here we want to save lives. This is not a slippery slope, we are on it, baby. Here it is, staring us in the face. I’ll be right back.
Hour 1 Segment 3
I want to read something to you, by the way, you can see the sprouting up and the circle tightening, that’s just a fact, not disinformation. And can you imagine if this radio program were treated as as if we were part of Facebook? How many times this program would be shut down telling you the truth and giving you the facts? You do understand, right, that radio stations are licensed. And you do understand that. Television stations are licensed. What’s the top stop this kind of thinking? And activity in those areas, and so the Trump lawsuit is a seminal lawsuit and now they have much more ammunition, thanks to Psaki, thanks to the surgeon general and thanks to the facts of which we’re learning. This evening. But I want to read something else to you to show you how. How these people operate. How they use freedom of the press to destroy freedom of the press and how they use freedom of the press to lie to you. Somebody sent me this link, Forbes.com, somebody by the name of Allison Durkee. The Darkstar Fox News dominates book best sellers list as Jesse Waters helped by bulk buyers and Mark Levin top charts. That’s some title, isn’t it, Mr. Producer? Now, I don’t know what Fox News host has to do with this, it’s another trick the Media Matters place. I’m also a radio host. I’m also a a host of living TV. I hosted a lot of stuff. But in this case, I’m an author. It’s nothing to do with my being a host anywhere. Fox News host Jesse Waters and Mark Levin topped this week’s book Best Seller Lists as Levin’s book American Marxism spent its 11th consecutive week on Amazon’s bestseller chart even before its official release date, which is two days ago. While Waters became the latest in a string of conservative authors to be buoyed by the New York Times list by bulk orders. Now, I want to talk about this vocoders stuff. Every time I have a number one bestseller, they put a little cross on there and then you look at the bottom and it says. Bulk orders of indications of bulk orders, I have never been involved in bulk orders ever. When I sign at the Reagan Library, that’s not a bulk order. Those are individual sales, individual books. And when I signed books for you to make them available to you, and it is a minuscule percentage of the books I sell. I am not involved in the bulk box business. I’m not attached to the RNC or the this or the that or whatever. And so we will be watching next week to see if The New York Times pulls this. And you almost never see these little crosses next to liberal bucks, but this is also when I want to bring to your attention. She says American Marxism, a book that likens left leaning concepts like progressivism to social activism, to Marxist ideology, she hasn’t read the book. She has no idea what I’ve written. It’s become a mainstay on Amazon’s best seller charts, despite only being officially released on Tuesday and its number one spot on the list is based on sales from before the book was publicly released. Now, wouldn’t you think, America, that she would comment on that? That this book has had several hundreds of thousands of preorders. Isn’t that the the story, Mr. Producer? But she doesn’t say a word about the story. Not a word about you. American Marxism earning a spot on the Amazon chart before its official release appears to be rare. The book is one of only two on the Amazon notification charts whose sales are based on preorders alone, along with Michael Pollan. This is your mind on plants. I don’t know what the hell that books about. Levin’s book won’t appear on The New York Times list or other book lists until next week, since, with the exception of Amazon preorders are typically reported as part of a book’s first week. Sales and books do not appear on the bestseller list until their official release. Fine. Here we go. But Waters and Levine’s books and their critical takes on the left. May soon be overtaken by books that instead look at the right with a critical eye. Michael Wolff’s landslide, the final days of the Trump presidency, and Carol Linnik and Phil Rucker’s, I alone can fix it. Donald Trump’s catastrophic final year, which featured politically damaging looks at the end of the Trump presidency, are now ranked by Watters Book and Amazon’s top 100 books ranking, which is updated hourly. As of Thursday afternoon, Lenegan Rucker’s book was ranked number one on Amazon’s list ahead of its official release on January 20, and Wolff’s book, which was released on Tuesday, was ranked number three. Levin’s book was now number two on the list, while Watters had dropped the number five. So I’m thinking to myself, well, they’re number one on Amazon for today or for a few hours, and I said, how did that happen? It’s being pushed on CNN, it’s being pushed by The Washington Post, these are two Washington Post lawyers. We know Philly, don’t we, Mr. Producer? We know a little filly. Is it Philip Rucker or Philip Bump? Everybody’s called Philip. Or Jeremy, it’s amazing thing. Where is our friend Jeremy Jeremy Bar, where are you? How come you’re not doing a follow up article on all my friends at Fox or are having me on TV? Jeremy. Jeremy. Pimple faced, pervert looking buffoon. I didn’t say he’s a parent, in fact, I would argue he’s not appropriate, Mr. Peters, and I don’t even know. I said, looking. Just mark my opinion, one man’s opinion. Put a raincoat on him, you never know. And so now, ladies and gentlemen, here’s what’s going on. First, the bulk buys. So whatever we do, you see. They will try and put a scarlet letter on it. We don’t care, but that’s a fact. Number two, they desperately one of these hate Trump books that trashier with all the gossip and the leaks, hey, you know that the military’s chief of staff compared Trump to Hitler and you’re supposed to chase down these anonymous quotes. And so these are reporters, of course, this is what they do. I hope those of you who are still on the sidelines will jump in now. We cannot allow them to steal the narrative of the moment. I just spent the first. Several segments of this program tell you what Biden’s doing, what Facebook’s doing. These are very, very serious issues and we are in very, very serious times, these comic books that are dressed up as real books by these phony reporters. They’re desperately trying to keep them number one on Amazon, number one on the New York Times list. Number one, it’s a psychological battle. That’s what it is. So those of you who have not jumped in yet, Amazon.com, 40 percent off, they’re available, Costco and Target and Wal-Mart and Books-A-Million everywhere. Now’s the time to jump in. Now’s the time to become part become part of this movement at the ground level. It is a fact, a spontaneous movement. And the the American Marxists, the either know about it and don’t know what to do about it or they don’t know about it, and we’ll have to figure out what to do about it. But I want to strongly encourage you, if you haven’t yet to jump in. You know, the other day I told you I went to Costco, I go there every couple of weeks because I love the hotdogs there. And apparently they’re never, ever going to increase the price of a hotdog on a fine by me, but it does draw me in their. And to their credit, they do have many books there, Barnes and Noble has many books, all the bookstores have many books, small and large, all the warehouse stores. BJ’s and. Samms. Wal-Mart has them, Target has up, you can’t miss it. But if you want to have it tomorrow morning at your doorstep, you can jump in right now. There’s no black book buying here, period. These are hundreds and thousands of you red blooded Americans of every color, every background, every corner of this country. Who have had enough. Every day that goes by, you’re losing a little bit of your liberty as one great senator from Nevada, Paul Laxalt, once told me. And we are. Late, this phony human infrastructure bill, how they changed the words in order to push their Marxist agenda, human infrastructure. Ladies and gentlemen, you believe in. Human infrastructure, don’t you? You don’t think anybody should starve her, people should be able to work because they have children or everybody should get health care. What’s wrong with you? What are you, a white racist? Well, I’m not white. Well, that doesn’t matter. Your mind is if your body’s not. So let’s do this. Folks, there are many very thoughtful and kind reviews of the books now. The book now on Mark Levin Show dot com. You can go to Mark Levin Show dot com. Just fantastic, our body spirit on this road, a beautiful one, David Limbaugh, literally an hour ago, beautiful Craig Shirley. Joel Pollak, Jeffrey Lord. We have so many wonderful people in this radio business who have been. Talking with who invited me on their programs, so many wonderful friends on Fox have invited me on their programs will be on the 700 Club next week. We’re doing everything we can to get the word out there. Now we need you. And look at the comments on Amazon, and if you’ve read the book and you like the book, put your own comments on Amazon, share it. So far at least, that they’re not censoring. We’re five stars now. The liberals will jump in, they don’t know anything, this is what they do. All they know is how to burn down, not the build up. Forget about them. Look at the real comments you can tell the real from the fraud’s. And and read the reviews. And you’ve listen to this program. We’re going to talk about corporations next. You know, we talked about public schools, government schools, elementary middle high schools the other day. Yesterday, we talked about colleges and universities. And later in the second hour, we’re going to talk about, well, what about corporations? Just to give you a flavor of this, and it’s the last chapter. I’ve had friends who don’t read books, who’ve read this book and said, oh my God, my eyes are wide open. That’s important. As I’ve told you many times, these are not adversaries. These are not opponents now, they are enemies. That’s how they view you. And in order to understand how to claw our way out of the abyss and to deal with this, we need to use the right words, the right terms and understand exactly what we’re dealing with. That’s the nature of politics, that’s the nature of business, that’s the nature of military operations, whatever the operation, and that’s exactly what we need to do. And so that’s why I’ve written this book. And I pray and I hope. This has an enormous impact. For liberty. Public safety for the police, for our for our sovereignty. For our unity, even though we have diversity. I really hope it does. I hope it has the impact. Thomas Paine’s American Crisis and I know Thomas Paine, and this is no American crisis, but we’re in an American crisis. And I’m doing what I can, so please jump in, I’ll be right back.
Hour 1 Segment 4
It is the 21st largest podcast in the country, and what’s interesting about that is we take our radio program and we tighten it up and we put it on the podcast. So folks that can’t listen to terrestrial radio or in the occasions when we’re preempted or or delayed, pushed into the night, people are free to listen to the podcast. All the other podcasters that I’m aware of, two unique programs, an hour or two and so forth and so on, so it is quite a statement from you people. That we are the 21st biggest podcast in the nation. The 21st biggest in the nation, as I say, it’s not like I’m doing a new our new two hours, we’re taking this program, we’re tightening up, we’re streamlining it to make it available to people who cannot hear it in their cities. Because if I say sports preemptions or are foolishness about running the show late at night or whatever is done. And so you yourself can be your program director. And this is only growing our podcast, it’s actually quite remarkable. What’s taking place here, quite remarkable, and that, of course, is thanks to you, everything is thanks to you. There are none of this would be happening, would it? All right, Mr. Producer, by the way, we’ve made great strides, haven’t we, Rich, to get our systems up and running, to get the laptop up and running, to really fix all of this, haven’t we? And we’ve worked all day on it. We’re going to work on it again tomorrow and we’re going to get this right. So we can move from like a North Korean tech technology to, you know, like a Venezuelan technology maybe. And just kidding, we’re doing everything we can. All right, what can we do about these sporting leagues and these corporations that have obviously thrown in with the American Marxist? That is, they think they’re buying peace. They think they’re buying opportunity. You’ve seen this. Throughout much of the last century. When the corporate is through and with the fascists and they thrown with the communists, they’re not that bright in that regard because they’re not really capitalists. They don’t really believe in the free market. And so they try to suck up to this group or suck up to that group, and you can see big tech working very, very closely with big government. I wanted to tell you folks that no sooner did I explain that what Psaki said just empowered the Trump lawsuit and expose them. It was just regurgitated on our favorite cable show excuse me, favorite cable network, wasn’t it, Mr. Producer? I can’t help, but that’s what happens. I’ll be right back..
100.) WOLF DAILY
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101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
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103.) DAN BONGINO
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104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
Sentinel
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105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) THE INTERCEPT
108.) UNCOVER DC
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109.) STARS & STRIPES
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