Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday July 27, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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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 — 7.27.21
Good Tuesday morning.
Blaise Ingoglia’s WPT run ends with $17K payout — Part-time lawmaker and full-time card shark Ingoglia spent the weekend competing in the World Poker Tour’s main event at the Choctaw Casino Resort in Oklahoma. Nearly 1,000 hopefuls entered the tourney, and the Spring Hill Republican outlasted most of them and peppered out mini-updates on his success to his social media followers on Saturday and Sunday. He was one of 35 contestants to make the third day, but he busted on Monday, finishing 27th. “It was a great run,” Ingoglia said on Facebook. “Thank you to everyone following the updates and for the words of encouragement.” He won’t be walking away with the $559K grand prize, but he isn’t going home empty-handed. The No. 27 payout is a cool $16,950.
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Outstanding — A top-of-Sunburn congratulations also to Peyton Johnson — daughter of our good friends Robert and Alia Faraj Johnson — whose golf skills (with a crazy good score of 131, too) helped her advance in the Drive, Chip and Putt 12-13-year-old girls’ division. Founded in 2013 by a partnership of the Masters Tournament, United States Golf Association and The PGA of America, Drive, Chip and Putt is a nationwide junior development competition that focuses on the three fundamental golf skills. Next up for Peyton, the subregional qualifier at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra on Aug. 14. Keep swinging!
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Michael Rubin is the new president and CEO at the Florida Ports Council.
Rubin has spent the past 20 years working as FPC’s vice president and has served as interim president and CEO since earlier this year.
“Throughout the years, Mike Rubin has demonstrated the leadership needed in today’s commercial environment to enhance prosperity of Florida’s seaports,” said Manuel Almira, FPC board chair and Port of Palm Beach Executive Director.
In the new role, Rubin will draw on his two decades of experience creating and developing economic development and international trade policy, including the creation of Enterprise Florida, international export promotion programs and seaport development financing legislation.
“Florida’s 15 public seaports have a long and rich history as a leading economic driver. Despite the economic challenges our seaports experienced during COVID-19, Florida continues to be a top maritime trade state and continues to be the cruising capital of the world. I look forward to leading the Florida Ports Council as we seize upon opportunities that ensure Florida’s ports are the global leaders of tomorrow,” Rubin said.
Before joining the Florida Ports Council in 1998, Rubin was a Florida House Commerce and Economic Development Committees staffer.
He earned his bachelor’s degree in international affairs from Rollins College and his law degree with honors from Florida State University.
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One of Jacksonville’s best young lobbyists is moving on to his next challenge.
Matt Brockelman, formerly of The Southern Group, is taking his talents to the banking and financial sector. Monday is his first day with VyStar Credit Union, which serves Northeast Florida and is expanding throughout the state.
Brockelman will enter VyStar already familiar with how to navigate the C-suite.
“Every new beginning comes from some other beginning’s end,” the new executive posted to Facebook. “Along those lines, I have an exciting life update to share: today, I start a new chapter in my professional career as I join VyStar Credit Union as its VP of Government Affairs.”
“I’ll be responsible for developing and implementing local, state, and federal lobbying efforts for the major credit union, which is already a household name regionally and soon will be nationally. I’m grateful to Brian Wolfburg and the leadership team for entrusting me to establish this new department for VyStar and its members, and I can’t wait to meet all my new co-workers and build an effective, top tier advocacy team for the financial institution,” Brockelman noted, before acknowledging the transition.
The Southern Group founder Paul Bradshaw extolled Brockelman in a statement.
“Matt’s been a great partner and friend, and he will be sorely missed. VyStar is lucky to get him, and I’m sure he’ll succeed there as he continues a career arc that is promising and almost limitless,” Bradshaw told Florida Politics.
This latest move continues a sterling career trajectory for the former University of North Florida student body president. He served in the Jacksonville Mayor’s Office as a staffer, then as a lobbyist for UNF, before beginning a strong run at The Southern Group.
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Jake Farmer is leaving the Florida Retail Federation to become Walgreens’ new regional director of state and local government relations for the Southeast.
Farmer has spent the past four years at FRF, first as the trade group’s legislative and communications director and then as their director of government affairs.
“If you know me, you know that I love my job, the people I work with, and the members I’ve represented at the Florida Retail Federation … it has been an honor to be a part of the FRF team for the past four years,” he wrote in a Facebook post.
“I look forward to continuing to be a part of #TeamRetail in Florida as well as in Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina & North Carolina. Onward & Upward!”
Before joining the Florida Retail Federation in 2017, Farmer worked as a legislative aide to then-Rep. Jay Fant, a Jacksonville area Republican. He has also served as an executive assistant to the director of the Republican Party of Florida.
Farmer is a graduate of Florida State University, where he earned a degree in political science. During his senior year at FSU, he interned in the office of U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio.
Outside of work, Farmer volunteers at Young Life, a Christian ministry that reaches out to middle school, high school, and college students across the country and world.
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Correction — In yesterday’s Sunburn, we said Steve Bousquet worked at the Tallahassee Democrat. That was incorrect. We regret the error.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@WHCOS: Vaccinations picking back up — about 790k in past 24 hours per @CDCgov report. Might be the biggest 24-hour period since early July. Thanks to everyone involved.
—@FrankLuntz: The most common reason people don’t get vaccinated is “we don’t know the long-term side effects.” All doctors should repeat @BrianCCastrucci‘s answer: Severe vaccine reactions happen within days, they don’t take years We’ve been vaccinating people for several months. It’s safe.
—@rwesthead: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in early May blocked cities and counties from requiring people to wear masks to prevent the spread of COVID. The state accounts for 1 in 5 new infections in the U.S.
—@AnnaForFlorida: We are now living through a pandemic of the unvaccinated, but no one is safe. More people will die if we don’t take this seriously. GET VACCINATED.
—@ShevrinJones: With #COVID numbers spiraling out of control in Florida, today would be a good day for @GovRonDeSantis to issue a Public Health Emergency so we can get the necessary resources needed to hospitals and communities who are being gravely affected.
—@ALorenzoTV: .@AdventHealth: has 946 COVID-19 patients in their hospitals across Central Florida. This exceeds the peak of about 900 they recorded in January.
—@MajEbola: We’re up to 174 COVID patients admitted this AM. ~20% increase from Friday. City says we’d help if we could, but lack manpower and no public health emergency declared. So, Jax hospitals are bursting at the seams with COVID pts, short-staffed, and State says: you’re on your own.
—@JamesPindell: In personal news: I am now in quarantine because my six-year-old came in direct contact with another either 5 or 6-year-old at camp who tested positive for COVID over the weekend. Yes, that young.
—@Emilylgoodin: House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy told me “we’ll see” when asked if (Liz) Cheney and (Adam) Kinzinger will be punished for serving on Jan 6 committee. I asked him the last time he talked to either of them: “Couldn’t tell you.” He called them “(Nancy) Pelosi Republicans.”
Tweet, tweet:
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Tweet, tweet:
— DAYS UNTIL —
The NBA Draft — 1; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 3; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 10; Canada will open its border to fully vaccinated Americans — 13; ‘Marvel’s What If …?’ premieres on Disney+ — 15; Florida Behavioral Health Association’s Annual Conference (BHCon) begins — 22; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 28; Boise vs. UCF — 37; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 38; Notre Dame at FSU — 40; NFL regular season begins — 44; Bucs home opener — 44; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 49; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 49; Alabama at UF — 53; Dolphins home opener — 54; Jaguars home opener — 54; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 55; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 59; ‘Dune’ premieres — 66; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 66; MLB regular season ends — 68; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 73; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 91; World Series Game 1 — 92; Florida TaxWatch’s Annual Meeting begins — 92; Georgia at UF — 95; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 98; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 98; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 102; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 104; Miami at FSU — 109; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 115; FSU vs. UF — 123; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 136; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 143; NFL season ends — 166; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 168; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 168; NFL playoffs begin — 172; Super Bowl LVI — 201; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 241; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 283; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 310; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 346; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 358; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 437; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 472.
“Cuba protesters in Washington want Joe Biden to do more to pressure the regime” via Alex Daugherty of the Miami Herald — Thousands of Cuban American protesters took over downtown Washington and Lafayette Park outside the White House on Sunday evening and Monday. After a midday rally with Republicans in Congress, the crowd marched to the Cuban Embassy. Many of the protesters were born in Cuba and still have family there. And while there was disagreement on what the U.S. can or should do to bring democracy to Cuba, there was widespread agreement among the demonstrators that the U.S. embargo should remain in place and that food and vaccines are not spurring demonstrations in Cuba. Instead, they said the July 11 protests were a call for freedom that can’t be ignored.
“GOP lawmakers request Cuba meeting with Biden” via Mychael Schnell of The Hill — A group of 19 Republican lawmakers penned a letter to Biden requesting a meeting to discuss the ongoing situation in Cuba, which has escalated in recent weeks following protests against the government. The coalition of GOP lawmakers, including House Minority Leader McCarthy and Sen. Rubio, specifically requested the meeting to discuss how Congress and the administration “can work together to bring an end to the oppressive communist regime in Havana and liberate the Cuban people.” “Now is the time to act,” the lawmakers wrote in the letter.
“Calls for freedom in Cuba grow, as demonstrations in Tampa go into third week” via Niko Clemmons of WFLA — In Tampa, demonstrations continued, as thousands of people marched to the Cuban Embassy in Washington, D.C. Zoila Lahera and several other women planned a protest on Bayshore Boulevard after learning that Cuban Americans were marching in D.C. “It’s very important the world come together to say this isn’t enough, this isn’t right and can’t happen in our own backyard,” Lahera said. “We’re not stopping until Cuban people are free.” Monday’s march falls on National Rebellion Day in Cuba, July 26. In 1953, the Fidel Castro-led group attacked an army barracks in Santiago De Cuba, marking the beginning of the Cuban revolutionary movement. “This is our day to pronounce we’re taking the day back,” Lahera said.
— CORONA NATION —
“Dr. Anthony Fauci says U.S. headed in ‘wrong direction’ on coronavirus” via The Associated Press — The United States is in an “unnecessary predicament” of soaring COVID-19 cases fueled by unvaccinated Americans, and the virulent delta variant, the nation’s top infectious diseases expert said Sunday. “We’re going in the wrong direction,” said Dr. Fauci, describing himself as “very frustrated.” He said recommending that the vaccinated wear masks is “under active consideration” by the government’s leading public health officials. Also, booster shots may be suggested for people with suppressed immune systems who have been vaccinated, Fauci said.
“U.S. will not lift travel restrictions, citing delta variant -official” via David Shepardson of Reuters — The United States will not lift any existing travel restrictions “at this point” due to concerns over the highly transmissible COVID-19 delta variant and the rising number of U.S. coronavirus cases, a White House official said. The decision, which comes after a senior-level White House meeting, means the long-running travel restrictions that have barred much of the world’s population from the United States since 2020 will not be lifted in the short term. “Given where we are today with the delta variant, the United States will maintain existing travel restrictions at this point,” the official said, citing the spread of the delta variant in the United States and abroad.
“At the FDA’s urging, Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna are expanding their studies of children 5 to 11.” via Sheryl Gay Stolberg, Sharon LaFraniere and Noah Weiland of The New York Times — At the urging of federal regulators, two coronavirus vaccine makers are expanding the size of their studies in children ages five to 11, a precautionary measure designed to detect rare side effects including heart inflammation problems that turned up in vaccinated people younger than 30. Appearing at a televised town-hall-style meeting in Ohio last week, Biden said that emergency clearance for pediatric vaccines would come “soon.” The White House has declined to be more specific on the timeline, and it was unclear whether expanding the studies will have any impact on when vaccines could be authorized for children.
“Biden admin says ‘long COVID-19’ could qualify as a disability” via Morgan Chalfant of The Hill — The Biden administration on Monday released new guidance on how to support those experiencing long-term symptoms of COVID-19 as part of a broader effort to recognize the 31st anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act. The departments of Health and Human Services (HHS) and Justice rolled out guidance making clear that symptoms of “long COVID-19” could qualify as a disability under the federal civil rights law. The guidance makes clear that long COVID-19 is not automatically a disability and that an “individualized assessment” is necessary to determine whether a person’s long-term symptoms or condition “substantially limits a major life activity.”
“Dept. of Veterans Affairs mandates vaccine” via Cindy Smith of ABC News — Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Denis McDonough announced Monday that COVID-19 vaccines will be mandatory for the department’s health care personnel. Four VA employees, all of whom were unvaccinated, died in recent weeks, the department said. At least three of those cases were linked to the delta variant. VA employees will have eight weeks to be fully vaccinated. McDonough said this mandate is “the best way to keep Veterans safe, especially as the delta variant spreads across the country.”
“Medical groups call for mandatory vaccination of U.S. health care workers.” via Emily Anthes of The New York Times — “Health care organizations rarely agree on anything, but this is one thing where they are speaking with one voice and unanimity,” said Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, an oncologist and bioethicist at the University of Pennsylvania, who organized the joint statement. “I think that attests to the wide recognition that this is the right thing to do for this country.” Although many health care workers have been eligible for vaccination since December, when the first shots were authorized, a significant number remain unvaccinated. Nationwide, just 58.7% of nursing home employees have been fully vaccinated, according to the CDC.
“Mayo Clinic calls for mandatory COVID-19 vaccination for staff: ‘Our patients expect to be safe’” via Beth Reese Cravey of The Florida Times-Union — The Rochester, Minnesota-based Mayo Clinic is requiring all of its employees, including those at its Jacksonville campus, to be fully vaccinated for COVID-19 by Sept. 17. Staff who decline must complete “education modules,” which are training videos, and will be required to wear masks and socially distance when on campus.” Staff who do not comply — by getting a vaccination or completing the training videos, wearing masks and maintaining social distancing when on campus “can be placed on unpaid leave,” Kevin Punsky, communications manager at the Jacksonville campus, said.
“Chris Christie gets the Republican vaccine-hesitancy story almost right” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — Christie offered words of advice for increasing vaccination rates among hesitant Republicans. “What they don’t want is to be indoctrinated. They’re willing to be vaccinated. They don’t want to be indoctrinated,” Christie said. “So let’s be smart about this. I think that one of the places where our leaders have fallen down is they’re not explaining it. They’re just saying, get vaccinated. And these, these folks do not respond to being ordered to do those things.” There’s an element of truth to what Christie is saying; to wit, much of the hesitation among Republicans stems from a lack of confidence in government. In other words, if Christie’s hypothesis that Republican objections are a function of overbearing government actors, one would assume that those objections increased after Jan. 20 of this year. But they didn’t.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Jerry Demings: ‘We are now in crisis mode’ with 4th COVID-19 surge” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Orange County is now seeing COVID-19 infection numbers rivaling the county’s worst ever, and at least one major hospital system has gone into alarm mode, leading Mayor Demings to plead again for people to get vaccinated. “We are now in crisis mode,” Deming said at his weekly news conference Monday morning. Demings and Central Florida health officials gathered to point out that the latest surge in new COVID-19 cases being seen now is filling hospitals, almost entirely with unvaccinated people. And they projected it will get worse. Caseloads of new COVID-19 cases are increasing rapidly, with more than 1,000 new cases confirmed just on Friday in Orange County.
“Orange County COVID-19 cases reach 1,000 a day; AdventHealth says ICU is full” via Caroline Catherman and Stephen Hudak of the Orlando Sentinel — COVID-19 cases skyrocketed in Orange County this weekend, overwhelmed the county’s testing site, filled AdventHealth’s ICU, and raised the hospital system’s inpatient totals to near January’s record. As cases rise in Orange County, officials tout vaccinations to combat the spread of the COVID-19 delta variant. AdventHealth had 862 COVID-19 patients hospitalized on Monday across the Central Florida division, near the peak of about 900 patients the health system saw in January. Over 90% of AdventHealth’s hospitalized COVID-19 patients are unvaccinated, said Dr. Victor Herrera, chief medical officer of AdventHealth Orlando.
“Orange County Tax Collector orders staff to get vaccinated; other governments consider measures to rein in COVID-19 infections” via Stephen Hudak of the Orlando Sentinel — Orange County Tax Collector Scott Randolph directed his employees Monday to get vaccinated by the end of August or find a new job. He said he had been pondering the policy change for weeks but was pushed into action by spiking COVID-19 infections, which health officials blame on a highly contagious strain known as the delta variant. Randolph’s 316 employees help about 800,000 customers a year at its six county locations. The Orange County Tax Collector’s Office is the second in the state to require vaccination as a condition of employment. The tax collector in Palm Beach County was the first, imposing a rule in April. “We’ve run it through the lawyers,” Randolph said. “We’re very much on solid ground.”
—“‘You’re on your own’: UF Health says state isn’t helping with COVID-19 surge” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics
—“COVID-19 hospitalizations near-record high at Lakeland Regional Health, AdventHealth” via Sara-Megan Walsh of The Lakeland Ledger
“No mask, no service: Broward County city jumps back to face mask requirement” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — Coral Springs is going to require all people entering city buildings to wear masks. The new policy, spurred on by the emergence of the delta variant, starts Tuesday — just 75 days since the CDC decreed masks were optional for vaccinated people indoors or outdoors. Most businesses have adopted the CDC’s guidance that allows the vaccinated to enter without face coverings, without a protocol for proving one’s vaccination status. The city doesn’t have the right to fine people who don’t comply with wearing a face covering. DeSantis issued an order on May 3 lifting all mask ordinances that were in effect. But that order does not preclude the city from denying people entry into city buildings without a face mask, city spokesperson Lynne Martzall said.
—“As COVID-19 cases surge, Palm Beach imposes new mask mandate and social distancing measures” via Jodie Wagner of The Palm Beach Post
“Cruises set sail in Palm Beach County for first time in 16 months with enhanced COVID-19 requirements.” via Wells Dusenbury of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — After a lengthy hiatus, cruise lines are finally setting sail once again in South Florida. But with COVID-19 still on everyone’s mind, passengers are facing a much more rigorous set of safety precautions. Bahamas Paradise Cruise Lines has resumed operations at Riviera Beach’s Port of Palm Beach, making it the first cruise line to launch out of Palm Beach County since the pandemic restrictions began.
— STATEWIDE —
“Judge seeks answers in domestic violence agency cases” via Dara Kam of News Service of Florida — Attorney General Ashley Moody and DCF in March 2020 began litigation against the nonprofit Florida Coalition Against Domestic Violence. The coalition’s compensation of former CEO Tiffany Carr and other directors focuses on at least a half-dozen lawsuits. Last fall, Leon County Circuit Judge Angela Dempsey ordered mediation and set a Feb. 28 deadline for negotiations to conclude. Receiver Mark Healy’s attorney, James Timko, three months ago asked Dempsey to extend other deadlines in the lawsuits. Dempsey, in early April, agreed to extend the deadlines, but on Thursday gave Moody’s office, DCF, FCADV, and Healy until Aug. 19 to “file a written case status report updating the court on the status of the mediation and the cases generally.”
Happening today — The Florida Children and Youth Cabinet meets, 9 a.m., Cabinet meeting room.
—“South Florida Mayors join nationwide call to pass immigration reform” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics
“Florida is buying $300 million in land. It’s for the environment — and developers.” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — One of the rare bipartisan highlights of Florida’s legislative session this year was the decision to spend $300 million buying up land for conservation. Republicans, Democrats, and environmentalists called it a boon for the environment, helping save thousands of acres of land in Florida’s delicate wildlife corridors from development. The result could be a boon to landowners and developers as well. The fine print in this year’s budget includes a stipulation that some environmentalists fear could spur development in the state’s wetlands.
Boys & Girls Clubs release 2021 Impact Report — The Florida Alliance of Boys & Girls Clubs released a report this week showing the positive impact the clubs have on Florida youth. The report states that club members have fewer days absent from school are more likely to be promoted to the next grade level, are less likely to drop out of school, and are more likely to graduate, among other things. “Florida’s Boys & Girls Clubs are dedicated to enabling all young people to reach their full potential as responsible and caring citizens, especially those who need us most,” executive director Joe Davis said. The alliance also touted the economic benefits it brings to Florida, including millions in cost avoidance from lower grade retention, lower juvenile detention intake rates and higher graduation rates.
— 2022 —
“First look: Donald Trump Jr., Ron DeSantis dominate poll of GOP front-runners” via Mike Allen of Axios — Trump Jr. is the Donald Trump child with the strongest connection to the base, and the most political promise should he ever decide to run. And the results reaffirm DeSantis’ rise as an early 2024 front-runner should Trump decide not to run.
Personnel note: Kevin Cabrera joins Erika Benfield campaign — Republican Benfield announced a slate of hires for her campaign in Florida’s 7th Congressional District, including Cabrera as Senior Adviser. Cabrera is a veteran campaign staffer, most recently serving as the Florida State Director for Trump’s reelection campaign. In January, he took a job as a senior vice president in the Florida office of Mercury, a bipartisan public strategy firm. Previously, the Florida native represented local governments and corporate clients before the legislative, executive, and local branches of government. Benfield also announced that the Ascent Strategic team will serve as general consultants, Brabender Cox will lead the campaign’s TV media team, WPAi will handle data and polling, and Arena will take the lead on mail fundraising.
“Congressional candidate chronically late with required reports. He says ADHD, diagnosed as adult, is the reason.” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Omari Hardy, one of the leading candidates running to fill a vacant South Florida congressional seat, has been repeatedly cited by Florida election officials for missing filing deadlines for the campaign committees connected to his current job, state representative. Hardy said he takes responsibility for the late reports during the past 16 months. The reason, he said, is that he has ADHD, diagnosed about 10 years ago. He said, however, it wouldn’t interfere with his ability to run for Congress or serve if elected.
“Police unions turn on Clay Yarborough as Senate bid heats up” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Did Yarborough take a “defund the police” position while on the Jacksonville City Council? During budget tightening in the wake of the economic crash of 2008, one that saw property values plummet in a way that took ad valorem taxes years to recover, the City passed budgets that reduced the number of police positions. Thirty were cut in FY 10-11, 41 in FY 11-12, and 76 the following year. The head of the local Fraternal Order of Police, Steve Zona, said the concerns about Yarborough have bubbled up from the rank and file, specifically including worries that Yarborough has a history of “defunding” and not defending the police.
“Democrat Joseph Saportas files to run for Chris Latvala House seat” via The News Service of Florida — The race to replace Latvala has drawn its first Democrat. Joseph Saportas opened a campaign account last week in what is now Pinellas County’s House District 67, according to the state Division of Elections website. Latvala cannot run again in 2022 because of term limits. The race also has drawn former Rep. Kim Berfield and Jason Holloway, both Clearwater Republicans. The district’s boundaries and potentially its number could change before the 2022 elections because of the once-a-decade reapportionment process.
“‘We’re f—ed’: Dems fear turnout catastrophe from GOP voting laws” via Maya King, David Siders, and Daniel Lippman of POLITICO — After Georgia Republicans passed a restrictive voting law in March, Democrats here began doing the math. The state’s new voter I.D. requirement for mail-in ballots could affect the more than 270,000 Georgians lacking identification. The provision cutting the number of ballot drop boxes could affect hundreds of thousands of voters who cast absentee ballots that way in 2020 — and that’s just in the populous Atlanta suburbs alone. It didn’t take long before the implications became clear to party officials and voting rights activists. In a state that Biden carried by fewer than 12,000 votes last year, the new law stood to wipe out many of the party’s hard-fought gains — and put them at a decisive disadvantage.
— MORE CORONA —
“Biden officials closely monitor delta variant in U.K. as their anxieties mount over impact to U.S. economy” via Jeff Stein of The Washington Post — Senior Biden officials are carefully monitoring the impact of the delta variant on Britain, as concerns intensify within the administration about the potential economic damage of the virus to the United States, according to three people familiar with the discussions. With close to 70% of the United Kingdom at least partially vaccinated, Prime Minister Boris Johnson has pushed toward a full economic reopening even as new cases rose above 50,000-per-day for the first time since mid-January. Johnson’s government has ended most COVID-19-related restrictions in England, despite objections from many public health officials.
“New York City and California will require workers to be vaccinated or face testing.” via Emma Fitzsimmons, Sharon Otterman, Luis Ferré-Sadurní, Shawn Hubler, Daniel E. Slotnik and Dan Levin of The New York Times — The drive to get Americans vaccinated accelerated on Monday when the most populous state and largest city in the United States announced that they would require their employees to get vaccinated against the coronavirus, or face frequent tests. All municipal employees in New York City, including police officers and teachers, and all state employees and on-site public and private health care workers in California will have to be vaccinated or face at least weekly testing.
“U.S. issues ‘Do Not Travel’ advisories for Spain, Portugal over COVID-19 cases” via David Shepardson of Reuters — The CDC and State Department on Monday both warned against travel to Spain, Portugal, Cyprus and Kyrgyzstan because of a rising number of COVID-19 cases in those countries. The CDC raised its travel advisory to “Level Four: Very High” for those countries telling Americans they should avoid travel there, while the State Department issued “Do Not Travel” advisories. Spain reopened its borders to U.S. tourists in June and has been a popular destination for Americans since then. The CDC on Monday also raised its rating to “Level Four” for Cuba, while the State Department already had Cuba at the highest “Do Not Travel” rating. The CDC also raised concerns about the rising number of COVID-19 cases in Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, lifting its travel health notice by two levels to “Level 3: High.”
“Europe’s summer tourism outlook dimmed by variants, rules” via Kelvin Chan of The Associated Press — Chaos and confusion over travel rules and measures to contain new virus outbreaks are contributing to another cruel summer for Europe’s battered tourism industry. Popular destination countries are grappling with surging COVID-19 variants, but the patchwork and last-minute nature of the efforts as the peak season gets underway threatens to derail another summer. In France, the world’s most visited country, visitors to cultural and tourist sites were confronted this week with a new requirement for a special COVID-19 pass. To get the pass, which comes in paper or digital form, people must prove they’re either fully vaccinated or recently recovered from an infection, or produce a negative virus test. Use of the pass could extend next month to restaurants and cafes.
“COVID-19 immunity wanes, but third shot still rarely needed, BioNTech CEO says” via Bojan Pancevski of The Wall Street Journal — Immunity against the coronavirus is waning in people who were fully vaccinated with the shot made by BioNTech and Pfizer in January because of the rapidly spreading delta variant, BioNTech’s chief executive said, confirming data that emerged from Israel last week. But even as antibody levels are dropping seven months after immunization among some vaccine recipients, most of them will remain protected against severe disease and might not yet need a third dose, according to Ugur Sahin, CEO of the German company that invented the vaccine. “The antibody titers are going down,” Dr. Sahin said, referring to the unit of measurement for antibodies against the virus. “The vaccine protection against the new variant is considerably lower.”
“Some adolescents aren’t getting vaccinated, as wary parents weigh risks” via Felicia Schwartz of The Wall Street Journal — The vaccination drive among adolescents, a critical part of the wider effort to build society-wide immunity to COVID-19, has slowed, as many parents harbor safety concerns. Many parents rushed to get their children inoculated in May after regulators widened the use of Pfizer’s COVID-19 shot to children as young as age 12. Yet vaccinations have lagged since. Other parents have held off because of concerns about the shot’s speedy development and a rare side effect, an inflammatory heart condition called myocarditis. They are struggling with weighing these risks against research indicating that COVID-19 isn’t a significant risk for children. Some reluctant parents are vaccinated themselves, a new challenge for public-health officials trying to overcome more general hesitancy about vaccines.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“The feds earmarked $15B for Florida schools to help kids in the pandemic, but it’s largely an unused stockpile” via Danielle Brown of Florida Phoenix — On May 18, 2020, the U.S. Department of Education under the Trump administration released $770 million to Florida schools. More than a year later, the amount has spiked to some $15 billion — a largely unused stockpile of federal relief funds designated to pull Florida schools out of the COVID-19 pandemic and mitigate its effects for this school year as well as the next few school years. Most of the dollars have yet to be disbursed to school districts. “Every minute these funds sit in Tallahassee is time that the funds are not being used to help Florida’s students,” wrote Andrew Spar, president of the Florida Education Association, in a letter to DeSantis on July 21.
“‘Avalanche’: Miami renters brace for mass evictions as moratorium ends” via Rene Rodriguez of the Miami Herald — As the clock ticks down on the end of the national eviction moratorium, housing advocates are gearing up for evictions throughout Miami-Dade, especially low-income renters without the means to pay the back rent they owe. The moratorium, which went into effect on Sept. 4 and has been extended several times since but expires on Saturday, was intended to protect renters earning $99,000 or less per year from being evicted due to loss of income or other COVID-19-related hardships. But when the CDC program dies, barring a last-minute extension due to the new surge in COVID-19 cases around the U.S., 188,000 “severely distressed” renters in Miami-Dade already paying more than half their income on rent will be particularly vulnerable to eviction.
“U.S. population growth, an economic driver, grinds to a halt” via Janet Adamy and Anthony DeBarros of The Wall Street Journal — America’s weak population growth, already held back by a decadelong fertility slump, is dropping closer to zero because of the COVID-19 pandemic. In half all states last year, more people died than were born, up from five states in 2019. Early estimates show the total U.S. population grew 0.35% for the year ended July 1, 2020, the lowest ever documented, and growth is expected to remain near flat this year. Some demographers cite an outside chance the population could shrink for the first time on record. Population growth is an important influence on the size of the labor market and a country’s fiscal and economic strength.
— CORONA MISC. —
“Your vaccinated immune system is ready for breakthroughs” Katherine J. Wu of The Atlantic — To understand the anatomy of a breakthrough case, it’s helpful to think of the human body as a castle. Without vaccination, the castle’s defenders have no idea an attack is coming. They might have stationed a few aggressive guard dogs outside, but these mutts aren’t terribly discerning: They’re the system’s innate defenders, fast-acting and brutal, but short-lived and woefully imprecise. Other fighters, who operate with more precision and punch — the body’s adaptive cells — will eventually be roused. Without prior warning, though, they’ll come out in full force only after a weekslong delay. Vaccination completely rewrites the beginning, middle, and end of this story. COVID-19 shots act as confidential informants, who pass around intel on the pathogen within the castle walls.
“What history tells us about the delta variant — and the variants that will follow” via John M. Barry of The Washington Post — As a general rule, viruses do eventually become less dangerous as they adapt to new hosts and as immune systems respond better. That should happen here eventually. But whether or not delta has increased in virulence, another still more dangerous variant may surface. That makes the next question even more important: Will COVID-19, in some form, escape immune protection? The answer is: probably. Unless its opportunity to mutate is cut off by stopping its spread — an impossibility with billions worldwide unprotected by the vaccine — eventually, a variant will likely emerge that evades current vaccines and natural infection. Studies of coronaviruses that cause the common cold demonstrate that mutations over time cause the ability of antibodies to neutralize those viruses to decline.
—“Unvaccinated snow leopard tests positive for coronavirus as San Diego Zoo vaccinates animals” via The Associated Press
“Requests for U.S. college aid are down, with experts blaming the pandemic.” via Stephanie Saul of The New York Times — U.S. high school seniors completed fewer federal financial aid applications for college this year, as compared with last year, which saw an even steeper drop, signals that the number of low-income students attending college is falling again. The National College Attainment Network, a nonprofit organization that promotes college attendance and completion by low-income students, links the drop to the economic uncertainty caused by the pandemic. “Students have had to go out into the workforce to support their families,” said Bill DeBaun, the organization’s director of data and evaluation.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden celebrates anniversary of Americans with Disabilities Act” via Alex Gangitano of The Hill — Biden on Monday celebrated the 31st anniversary of the ADA, a sweeping civil rights law, and announced a new program to help Americans experiencing long-term COVID-19 symptoms and conditions. “For our nation, the ADA is more than a law as well; it’s a testament to our character as a people, our character as Americans,” Biden said in the Rose Garden. He announced on Monday a new effort for Americans with long-term COVID-19 impacts, so symptoms of “long COVID-19” could qualify as a disability under the ADA. The guidance does not automatically qualify long COVID-19 as a disability, but people experiencing long-term symptoms or conditions can get an “individualized assessment” to determine the condition “substantially limits a major life activity.”
“Biden administration to curb toxic wastewater from coal plants with new rule” via Dino Grandoni of The Washington Post — The EPA announced it will set stricter requirements for how coal-fired power plants dispose of wastewater full of arsenic, lead and mercury, a major source of toxic water pollution for rivers, lakes and streams near electric generators across the country, from Wyoming to Pennsylvania. Biden’s team aims to undo one of the Trump administration’s major regulatory rollbacks in a new rule-making process. Last year, the Trump EPA weakened rules forcing many coal plants to treat wastewater with modern filtration methods and other technology before it reached waterways that provide drinking water for thousands of Americans.
— EPILOGUE: TRUMP —
“Donald Trump ally Thomas Barrack pleads not guilty in UAE lobbying case” via Jody Godoy of Reuters — Former President Trump‘s billionaire ally Barrack pleaded not guilty on Monday to charges of illegal lobbying for the United Arab Emirates, putting the case on course for a possible trial. Barrack entered his plea to seven criminal counts before U.S. Magistrate Judge Sanket Bulsara in Brooklyn. The charges against Barrack, 74, included secretly lobbying the Trump administration for the UAE between 2016 and 2018 and lying to investigators about dealings with the Middle Eastern country. Barrack, who chaired Trump’s 2017 inaugural fund and was a frequent guest at the White House, was released last week on a $250 million bond, secured by $5 million in cash as well as several properties and stock valued at $150 million.
“A key Trump witness is being muzzled over her custody battle” via Jose Pagliery of The Daily Beast — Jennifer Weisselberg, the ex-wife of Trump employee Barry Weisselberg — and former daughter-in-law of one of Trump’s closest business confidants, Allen Weisselberg — has told investigators that executives at the Trump Organization were rewarded with untaxed perks. Her documents and grand jury testimony were crucial to last month’s indictment of her former father-in-law, the corporation’s chief financial officer. And she has repeatedly explained to journalists how the tuition for her children’s private school was an untaxed corporate gift paid in place of salary. But all the while, she’s said these things at great personal risk; since March 19, Jennifer Weisselberg has been under a judge’s gag order to shut her up.
— CRISIS —
“Matt Gaetz among House members rushing to aid alleged insurrectionists” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Complaints about poor prison conditions. Demands for police to release bodycam footage. Anger suspected terrorists have yet to receive due process. U.S. Rep. Gaetz and three other GOP House members outlined these concerns in a letter to the Justice Department demanding better treatment of suspected insurrectionists who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6. Gaetz on Tuesday will participate in a news conference with U.S. Reps. Louie Gohmert, Paul Gosar and Marjorie Taylor Greene. Call them the original 4 Gs. The members of Congress demanded an in-person meeting with Attorney General Merrick Garland explaining the alleged mistreatment of the Trump supporters arrested in the wake of the riot.
“Sarasota chiropractor stormed Capitol, and there was no turning back” via Chris Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — There’s no question, a hard day of rioting can do quite the number on even the strongest insurrectionist’s back. But Joseph Hackett, a Sarasota chiropractor, was not at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 to perform lumbar adjustments. He was there to “stop, delay and hinder the certification of the Electoral College vote,” according to charges filed by the U.S. government, and his wife still does not understand why he remains in jail. Deena Hackett appeared on Steve Bannon’s War Room podcast to complain of the injustices thrust upon her husband, such as being in jail with “murderers and gang members.”
“Facebook and tech giants to target attacker manifestos, far-right militias in database” via Elizabeth Culliford of Reuters — A counterterrorism organization formed by some of the biggest U.S. tech companies including Facebook and Microsoft is significantly expanding the types of extremist content shared between firms in a key database, aiming to crack down on material from White supremacists and far-right militias. Until now, the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism’s (GIFCT) database has focused on videos and images from terrorist groups on a United Nations list and so has largely consisted of content from Islamist extremist organizations such as Islamic State, al-Qaida and the Taliban.
“I’m a Parkland shooting survivor. QAnon convinced my dad it was all a hoax.” via David Gilbert of Vice — Bill was part of the final graduating class of survivors of the 2018 shooting. But Bill also had to deal with his father’s daily accusations that the shooting was a hoax and that the shooter, Bill, and all his classmates were paid pawns in a grand conspiracy orchestrated by some shadowy force. Bill had worked hard to get over his survivor’s guilt after the shooting, but for the past five months, his own father has been triggering it all over again. “He’ll say stuff like this straight to my face whenever he’s drinking: ‘You’re a real piece of work to be able to sit here and act like nothing ever happened if it wasn’t a hoax,” Bill said in an anonymous post on Reddit last week.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Senate infrastructure talks in political jeopardy as infighting spills out into the open” via Tony Romm, Seung Min Kim and Ian Duncan of The Washington Post — Negotiations between Senate Democrats and Republicans over a roughly $1 trillion infrastructure package appeared to be in political jeopardy. The impasse arrives after lawmakers toiled away into the weekend over their proposal to improve the nation’s roads, bridges, pipes, ports and Internet connections. Republicans initially hoped to finalize a more robust blueprint so that the long-stalled debate could finally start, but the prospect now seems unlikely given the sheer scope of policy obstacles that negotiators must resolve. Lawmakers must still sort through lingering disputes over how to spend billions of dollars on upgrading the country’s railways along with thorny policy issues around broadband spending.
“‘Where is Biden?’: Mario Díaz-Balart, Rick Scott, other Florida GOP pols slam President on Cuba” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Cuban expatriates, their children and those supporting a free Cuba continue to take to United States streets in solidarity against human rights violations on the island. “We are not here to ask for crumbs. We are not here to ask for aspirin for the Cuban people. We’re not here to ask for remittances. We’re here to ask for one thing: Freedom,” U.S. Rep. Díaz-Balart told the fervid crowd. Sen. Scott called to remove the Cuban embassy in Washington and the delivery of internet access to Cuba. The President announced new sanctions targeting “elements of the Cuban regime responsible” for suppressing protesters.
“Scott says all options must remain on table in latest Cuba-focused ad” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Scott launched a new digital ad promising eternal support for pro-democracy protesters in Cuba. Wearing his signature Navy cap and a button-up shirt with no jacket, the Senator in Spanish and English promised to back the drive for “Libertad.” Scott’s words are interspliced with images of protesters in the streets of Havana and other Cuban cities since July 11. “I will not rest until that day of freedom arrives for Cuba,” Scott says. The video appears on the YouTube page for Scott’s Senate campaign, and a disclosure statement clarifies it was paid for by Scott’s official campaign account. It will begin broadcasting Monday in the Miami, Orlando, Tampa, Fort Myers, and Washington media markets.
To watch the ad, click on the image below:
“As Jan. 6 probe begins, Dem vows: ‘We have to get it right’” via Mary Clare Jalonick of The Associated Press — As the longtime chairman of the Homeland Security Committee, Bennie Thompson is accustomed to dealing with grave matters of national security. But his stewardship of the Jan. 6 panel will be a test unlike any other, as he tries to untangle the events of a violent insurrection that many House Republicans increasingly play down and deny. “We have to get it right,” Thompson said. Thompson is a liberal fixture in Congress and longtime champion of civil rights, the only Democrat in the Mississippi delegation, hailing from a majority-black district in the state’s western half.
“Democrats move to elevate Liz Cheney’s role on Jan. 6 commission, giving her prime speaking slot Tuesday” via Marianna Sotomayor of The Washington Post — Democrats are seeking to elevate the role of Rep. Cheney on the committee examining the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, scheduling her to deliver one of the two opening statements at the panel’s first public hearing Tuesday. The move is intended to present the committee as a bipartisan effort following Republican leadership’s decision not to participate in the panel after SpeakerPelosi last week rejected two of Minority Leader McCarthy’s picks for the panel. Rep. Adam Schiff proposed to Pelosi and Cheney that having the Wyoming congresswoman speak after Chairman Thompson would present a “strong visual” for the committee’s goals and intentions as it embarks on a months-long process to investigate the insurrection.
“Growing group of GOP members wants Kevin McCarthy to punish Adam Kinzinger and Cheney for joining Jan. 6 committee” via Ryan Nobles and Melanie Zanona of CNN — A growing group of rank-and-file House Republicans wants McCarthy and GOP leadership to punish Reps. Cheney and Kinzinger for accepting a position from House Speaker Pelosi to serve on the select committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection. The push to seek punishment rose to a new level on Sunday, after Pelosi announced that Kinzinger had accepted her invitation to join the committee. Initially, most rank-and-file Republicans were content to let Cheney serve without much of a fight, but Kinzinger’s addition has changed the conversation and has put a new level of pressure on McCarthy.
“$22 million added to federal spending bill for Surfside condo collapse investigation” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz said she’d secured $22 million in federal funding for an investigation into the cause of the June 24 Surfside condominium collapse in which 98 people were killed. Wasserman Schultz, a Broward/Miami-Dade County Democrat whose district includes 15 miles of communities along the coast, including Surfside, said the money would go to pay for the National Institute of Standards and Technology probe into the collapse of the Champlain Towers South. Her office said the money would allow the agency to investigate the sources of failure, suggest fixes to existing building standards, and make recommendations for future building codes for similar structures.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Final Surfside condo collapse victim identified” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — All 242 people reported missing after the Champlain Towers South building fell in the early hours of June 24 are now accounted for, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said Monday. Neither she nor any other officials who spoke at the 5 p.m. news conference said the name of the last victim, 54-year-old Estelle Hedaya. Her brother confirmed her identity to The Associated Press earlier Monday. Recovery crews, many of them volunteers, continue to sift through millions of pounds of rubble for personal belongings in the area, which includes a secondary site where a state-hired demolition team razed a still-standing portion of the tower early this month.
“Darden Rice apologizes for imagery on Ken Welch mailers, responds to criticism” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Rice is responding to recent scrutiny over mailers sent by her affiliated political committee that link Welch to Trump supporters. After distributing the mailers, Rice was quickly criticized by Welch supporters for hypocrisy, as well for the use of stock images of Black individuals, an aspect that Rice apologized for in her statement. However, Rice still stands strong by the claims, saying in her statement that Welch touted an endorsement from conservative Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri, who, she says, “has stood with Trump and DeSantis and has carried out regressive policies that hurt our community.”
“Bill Moore files to challenge Jim Gray in Orlando city election” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Gray has filed to seek reelection, and retired Orlando police officer Moore has filed to challenge him. Both candidacy declarations were filed last week for the District 1 seat on Orlando City Council, representing the fast-growing region of Orlando’s southeast side, an area of varied communities including the booming, health tech-powered Lake Nona. Gray, Orlando managing director for CBRE, the largest commercial real estate services and investment firm globally, seeks a third term as City Commissioner. He easily won a second term, strongly defeating challenger Tom Keen in District 1, 53% to 40%. Last week, Gray became the third of three Orlando City Council members to file for reelection in the Nov. 2 election.
“Ybor City development plan unveiled: Park, condo towers lead 50-acre proposal” via Jay Cridlin and Emily L. Mahoney of the Tampa Bay Times — Apartment complexes and condo towers with as many as 5,000 homes. A community park in place of a roundabout off Channelside Drive. A 70-year-old warehouse that could house an industrial-chic food hall. Welcome to Gas Worx, the future of Ybor City as envisioned by Darryl Shaw. More than 30 years after buying his first Ybor property, Shaw and his development partners on Monday said they filed with the city their long-awaited initial master plan for the historic district. Gas Worx — a “working name,” Shaw said, that nods to the site’s history as an old Peoples Gas storage facility — could include 500,000 square feet of office space and 150,000 square feet of retail to go with that cluster of condos and apartments.
— TOP OPINION —
“The rise of DeSantis” via The Economist — The political annals are replete with moments when a significant new talent announced itself. Could it be that in February, DeSantis produced another? The scene was a news conference in Tallahassee. The subject under discussion was the Republican Governor’s view that conservatives are discriminated against by social and mainstream media companies. “You can whiz on my leg, but don’t tell me it’s raining.” DeSantis’s phrase expressed the dominant Republican view of big tech and the media: both knowing and dismissive. And he was able to utter it with rare authority. DeSantis owes his rise not only to his record of sticking it to the liberal media but also to his knack of being vindicated almost whenever he has done so.
— OPINIONS —
“Florida’s voters should give themselves the power to protect our water” via Joseph Bonasia of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — When I moved to Florida from New York in 2016, I quickly recognized two things. First, Floridians believe deeply in the virtue that is most characteristically American: self-reliance. Like our pioneer forefathers, like Gary Cooper in “High Noon,” we look to and rely on ourselves, not primarily government, to get things done. It is evident in the robust spirit of entrepreneurship here, and in the faith in charitable individuals and community organizations, more than in government programs, to help neighbors in need. Second, the lack of environmental stewardship and the systemic abuse of Florida’s greatest asset, its natural treasures, is shocking.
“The future of Orlando is not paved in asphalt” via Austin Valle for the Orlando Sentinel — The awkward truth is that the only thing in Orlando that may have a lower favorability rating than Congress is Interstate 4. As if it wasn’t tragic enough that so much of our valuable urban space is already being ceded to monstrous highways, it is supposed to be a reassurance that even more lanes are coming our way. Our development sprawls outward, which some use as justification to build new lanes and new highways. The way that we build now is unsustainable. The growth cannot keep sprawling outward, especially as we continue to butt up against precious conservation lands and rural areas. The environmental damage caused by cars is immense.
— OLYMPICS —
“Joy and pain at the Olympic pool, measured in hundredths of seconds” via Barry Svrluga of The Washington Post — On the pool deck just 10 minutes after noon Monday, the four men hugged, then bent at the waist, dripping and heaving as they blew kisses into the camera. This is the ecstasy and exhaustion that the Olympics can produce, when four years of unrelenting work pay off in gold and somehow seem worth it. That’s what it was for Caeleb Dressel, Blake Pieroni, Bowen Becker and Zach Apple, worth it. That quartet produced a powerful, disciplined swim that won the men’s 4×100-meter relay at Tokyo Aquatics Centre, an expected result. Their time of 3 minutes 8.97 seconds left no room for over-analysis. They led after 100 meters, after 200, after 300, and at the finish, when Apple touched the wall. “I wasn’t ever scared,” Dressel said.
“The Black women who forged new paths and set records at the Olympics” via Bria Felicien of FiveThirtyEight — Black women athletes often achieve despite their lack of resources. Globally, there remains a lack of investment for women and girls who want to participate in sports from the youth to the professional level. Still, Aída dos Santos, Formiga, Alice Coachman, and many other Black women have helped make the Olympics what they are today. And whether their achievements were downplayed or ignored, their names remain in the record books. These are just some of the Black women who have broken down sports barriers in front of them and some who’ve followed in their footsteps.
“First openly transgender Olympians are competing in Tokyo” via Anne M. Peterson of The Associated Press — For Quinn, a midfielder for the Canadian women’s soccer team, the opening match of the Tokyo Games carried more emotional weight than their previous Olympic appearances. Quinn became the first openly transgender athlete to participate in the Olympics when they started on Wednesday night in Canada’s 1-1 draw with Japan in Sapporo. Quinn, who is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns, posted their feelings on Instagram. “I feel proud seeing `Quinn’ up on the lineup and on my accreditation. I feel sad knowing there were Olympians before me unable to live their truth because of this world,” they wrote. “I feel optimistic for change. Change in legislature, Changes in rules, structures, and mindsets.”
— ALOE —
“‘Howard the Duck’ turns 35: Stars revisit notorious bomb amid new fervor for Marvel character” via Ryan Parker of The Hollywood Reporter — Howard the Duck found a second life as a beloved cult classic (it just got reissued in 4K), and the wisecracking duck even made several appearances in the Marvel Cinematic Universe voiced by Seth Green. But, for years, the Universal Pictures bomb was a sharp pebble in the career shoe of most — if not all — who were involved. “It doesn’t work at all,” sneered the late Gene Siskel when he and Roger Ebert labeled Howard among the worst films of 1986. The movie holds a dismal 14% rating on the review aggregation site Rotten Tomatoes. But that was then. Lea Thompson and Broadway star Chip Zien now say the onetime dumpster fire has become a career highlight.
“Disney: D23 event to include 50th-anniversary sessions, exhibit from archives” via Dewayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — D23, Disney’s official fan club, has released details about the Destination D23 event coming to Disney’s Contemporary Resort in November. It will include a special exhibition from the Walt Disney Archives called “50 Years of Bringing Home the Magic.” Also on the D23 program will be Orlando’s Michael James Scott, who played Genie in the Broadway version of “Aladdin” and a cappella group DCappella. The three-day event will include a “What’s New and What’s Next” session with Josh D’Amaro, chairman of Disney Parks, Experiences and Products, looking at worldwide developments, and a welcome presentation with CEO Bob Chapek. Destination D23 is Nov. 19-21. Tickets go on sale July 29 at 1 p.m.
“Florida man washes ashore in bubble he intended to ride to New York” via Alex Galbraith of Orlando Weekly — A Florida man washed ashore in a homemade bubble float in Flagler County, bringing an end to his quest to walk on water to New York. According to the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office, Reza Baluchi began his trip in St. Augustine on Friday and washed ashore in The Hammock area near Palm Coast, well south of his launch point. Authorities reported that Baluchi had come across “some complications that brought him back to shore.” They noted that they’d turned over the case to the Coast Guard, who will investigate whether the vessel is USCG compliant. Baluchi told Fox 35 that the trip was a fundraising effort, though he was notably broad about who the money would be for.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Happy birthday to Jose Ceballos and Ryan Reiter.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Happy Tuesday! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,296 words … 5 minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
⚡ Retired Sen. Mike Enzi, a Wyoming Republican known as a consensus-builder in an increasingly polarized Washington, died three days after a bike accident in Wyoming that broke his neck and ribs. He was 77. Latest.
🎾 Major Olympics tennis news: Some AM readers are recording events and asked me to warn about spoilers. Click here for details.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
State governments, private businesses and even part of the federal government are suddenly embracing mandatory coronavirus vaccinations for their employees, Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes.
- Why it matters: America has run out of carrots to incentivize more people to get the shot. So now, sticks are in.
Monday was a turning point:
- The VA became the first federal agency to require its employees to be vaccinated.
- California announced that state employees and health care workers must show proof of vaccination or get tested regularly.
- New York City brought all municipal workers — including teachers and police officers — under a vaccine requirement that had previously only applied to health workers.
- The San Francisco Bar Owner Alliance hopped onboard: The 500 San Francisco bars it represents will require indoor customers to show proof of vaccination or a negative test.
- Banner headline of today’s Chicago Tribune (subscription): “Lightfoot warns of masks, restrictions.”
Vaccine requirements are also gaining steam internationally:
- France’s parliament voted yesterday to require a “health pass” — full vaccination or a recent negative test — to enter restaurants, trains and planes. The measure sparked huge weekend protests.
- Italy’s “green” passes will be needed beginning Aug. 6 to access gyms, museums, cinemas and indoor dining.
What we’re watching: Many Republican-led states are preemptively prohibiting vaccine requirements.
Context: For the U.S., 69% of adults (18+) have had at least one COVID shot, and 60% are fully vaccinated. (CDC tracker)
Barbara Boxer in L.A. in 2018. Photo: Presley Ann/Getty Images
Former U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), 80, was assaulted and robbed of her iPhone yesterday while walking near her apartment in Oakland.
Boxer — a senator for 24 years, and now a co-chair at Mercury Public Affairs — told the L.A. Times that she purposefully walked on a quiet street so she could concentrate on a work call.
- “[T]he driver of the car jumped out and started to come at me and come behind me,” she told The Times. “When I saw the guy coming out of the car, coming at me, I started to run away across the street. And he shoved me really, really hard on the shoulder with one hand, and with the other, he put it around my waist and grabbed my phone.”
- “He ran toward the car. I was standing and shaking and I just said to them, ‘Why would you do that to a grandmother? I need to call my grandkids.’ He jumped in the car and sped away.”
Boxer, calling herself “a 5-foot-tall grandma with gray hair,” told The Times that she was so close that she ran back to her apartment, where she and her husband, Stewart, called police.
- At a nearby Verizon store, employees wiped her iPhone and made sure pictures of her grandchildren had been saved to the cloud.
- She emphasized that she wasn’t hurt: “I want to make that clear — he pushed me hard, I did not fall down.”
Boxer noted that she has founded community policing efforts and after-school programs. She told The Times that the narrative that Democratic politicians want to defund police is “a false flag. It’s just untrue.”
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Demographers cite an outside chance the U.S. population could shrink for the first time ever, The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
- COVID death rates, immigration restrictions and persistently low birth rates pushed the weak U.S. population growth rate close to zero.
Why it matters: Demography is destiny for nations. Low population growth will bring major economic and political problems for the U.S., Axios Future editor Bryan Walsh writes.
By the numbers: In half of U.S. states, more people died than were born in 2020, up from just five states in 2019.
- Every type of U.S. county — from very rural to very urban — saw a decrease in births per death in the second half of the 2010s.
Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios
Tech industry giants are floating on a cushion of record profits in lakes of reserve cash — and all that money makes them just about unsinkable, Axios managing editor Scott Rosenberg writes from the Bay Area.
“Silicon Valley … has never seen so much loot,” David Streitfeld writes in a N.Y. Times article (subscription), “How Tech Won the Pandemic and Now May Never Lose.”
- Flashback: The industry’s boom during the ’90s dotcom era was dubbed “the largest legal creation of wealth in the history of the planet” by one of its leading investors, John Doerr.
The bottom line: The sheer magnitude of tech’s financial power also makes the companies a target for outrage and regulation — but little has made an impact.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo / Axios
Facebook announced a Metaverse product group to build a 3D social space using virtual and augmented reality, Axios’ Scott Rosenberg writes.
- Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in an interview with Casey Newton last week that he sees the metaverse — widely used in tech and science fiction to describe broadly shared, open virtual environments — as “the successor to the mobile internet.”
- Zuckerberg said it’s not “something that any one company is going to build.”
Facebook’s new Metaverse product group will report to Andrew Bosworth, Facebook’s vice president of virtual and augmented reality, who announced the new organization in a Facebook post.
- Bosworth’s announcement linked to a Facebook hiring page for AR/VR jobs that lists more than 700 openings.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Axios Pro Rata author Dan Primack writes from Boston: Several weeks ago, I bought a Ford Mustang Mach-E, the automaker’s first all-electric crossover vehicle. It’s worked great for my daily commute to the coffee shop, errands and social engagements.
- Drive around, charge it overnight in my suburban Boston garage, and wake up to an estimated range of around 215 miles.
- My only worry was driving to New York City, which I do around once a month in non-pandemic times. It’s about 200 miles door-to-door.
- But I was assured that this might be one of the country’s easiest EV routes, as the Acela corridor was an early electrification adopter.
My plan was to recharge at one of the three I-95 rest stops just south of New Haven. This was my plan because the website for those rest stops said they had “electric vehicle charging stations.”
- At the first one, I spotted some Tesla chargers but none for other EVs. My charge level: 30%.
- At the second one, I went to the truck refueling spot. Charge level: 26%.
- Third rest stop. More Tesla chargers. None for me. Charge level: 23%.
USA’s Cat Osterman, pitching against Japan yesterday, came out of retirement to play in the Tokyo Olympics. Photo: Ina Fried/Axios
Axios’ Ina Fried writes from Tokyo: When the U.S. and Japan take the softball field in Yokohama today, they will be playing for more than gold. They want to show that their sport deserves a permanent place in the Olympics.
- Why it matters: Softball is returning to the Olympics after a 12-year absence. But its long-term Olympic future is uncertain. The sport isn’t part of the 2024 Games in Paris, and plans are up in the air after that.
Ina’s thought bubble: Fans (and I am a huge one) are right to note just how competitive the sport has been here in Tokyo.
- But detractors aren’t wrong that softball doesn’t have the global appeal of many other Olympic sports.
Keep reading … In photos: Softball at the Olympics … Axios’ Olympics dashboard … Events to watch today.
📬 Please invite your friends, family, colleagues to sign up here for Axios AM and Axios PM.
14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Chicago casino too risky for some industry players. Here’s why.
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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
At the first public meeting of the House Jan. 6 select committee, members on Tuesday will look to show the pain and suffering law enforcement officers endured while they fought to protect the Capitol from violent insurrectionists. Read more…
Bipartisan negotiators worked to regroup after a brief breakdown in their efforts to craft an infrastructure bill Monday, with senators involved in the talks saying they’re still confident they’ll get a deal. “This is heading in the right direction,” insisted Ohio Sen. Rob Portman, the lead GOP negotiator. Read more…
Democrats are poised for big wins in Congress. So why the doom and gloom?
OPINION — It’s far too soon to predict the 2022 elections, let alone the direction of the country in 2024. But as Democrats rail against the deadlock of democracy, Joe Biden is on his way to achieving a legislative record beyond the wildest dreams of both Barack Obama and Bill Clinton. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Rep. Peter Meijer was one of just 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Donald Trump for encouraging his supporters on Jan. 6. In an interview, Meijer talked about that vote, his raw hatred of breakfast foods and Capitol Hill’s lack of culture (in the anthropological sense). Read more…
Senate’s semiconductor aid may be opening bid in global race
With microchip production emerging as yet another manifestation of the U.S.-China rivalry in technology, American lawmakers, trying to reverse the 30-year decline in the country’s share of global semiconductor manufacturing, are considering legislation to boost domestic chip production. Read more…
Senate bill leaves military sexual assault debate unsettled
The Senate Armed Services Committee approved a defense authorization bill last week with seemingly contradictory instructions to the Pentagon on how to overhaul the military justice system in order to combat sexual assault and other crimes in the ranks. Read more…
Democrats step up calls to add immigration to budget plan
House Democrats and activist groups are getting more strident in their push to legalize certain undocumented immigrants as part of an upcoming $3.5 trillion budget reconciliation package, putting immense pressure on the Senate parliamentarian when the matter is adjudicated later this year. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Is McCarthy prepared for Trump’s wrath about the Jan. 6 committee?
DRIVING THE DAY
IN MEMORIAM — @SenatorEnzi: “Former Wyoming U.S. Senator MIKE ENZI passed away peacefully today surrounded by his family. His family expresses their deep appreciation for all of the prayers, support and concern. They now ask for privacy and continued prayers during this difficult time. The family is planning to hold a celebration of a life well-lived, with details to be shared later.” More from the Casper Star-Tribune
THIS IS GOING TO BE AN ALL-AROUND TOUGH DAY for House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY — and to a large degree, it’s a self-inflicted predicament.
The House’s Jan. 6 committee makes its debut this morning.
For the first time across dozens of high-profile Trump-related oversight hearings, Republican leadership and allies will have no voice on the panel. (It’s going to be weird for us Hill watchers who are used to Rep. JIM JORDAN (R-Ohio) lobbing procedural grenades into proceedings to start fights. More on that from Olivia Beavers …)
McCarthy’s rather abrupt decision last week to pull his members from the Jan. 6 committee means that Democrats — and their two GOP allies on this issue, LIZ CHENEY (Wyo.) and ADAM KINZINGER (Ill.) — will have free rein to set the narrative. (This is why several folks on McCarthy’s own leadership team thought that pulling out was a bad idea.)
Here’s how that narrative is shaping up:
— Uniformed police officers who put their lives on the line to defend Congress on Jan. 6 will testify about the horrors they endured that day. Rep. BENNIE THOMPSON (D-Miss.), the chair of the panel, previews their stories in a WaPo op-ed: “[Metropolitan Police officer MICHAEL] FANONE voluntarily rushed to the Capitol … [then] suffered a traumatic brain injury and a heart attack … [MPD officer DANIEL] HODGES can be seen being crushed by the mob as he and his fellow officers sought to defend a narrow hallway leading to a Capitol entrance … [U.S. Capitol Police officer HARRY] DUNN was one of the first officers to speak publicly about … the racial epithets he and others faced. [USCP officer AQUILINO] GONELL, a veteran who had been deployed to Iraq … was beaten with a pole carrying an American flag.”
— Their testimony alone is a public relations disaster for Republicans. The GOP likes to boast that they “back the blue” and are the party of “law and order.” But in snuffing out the possibility of a nonpartisan commission to probe the Jan. 6 attacks, McCarthy effectively brushed aside pleas from law enforcement to authorize the investigation. Now, after pulling out from the select committee, Republicans (save for Cheney and Kinzinger) will be absent as the officers speak.
— Meanwhile, where will some of the most vocal pro-Trump House Republicans be instead? Reps. MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE (R-Ga.), MATT GAETZ (R-Fla.), PAUL GOSAR (R-Ariz.) and LOUIE GOHMERT (R-Texas) will head to the Justice Department to protest the “treatment of Jan. 6th prisoners.” (Note the language: not “rioters” charged with violent acts; “Jan. 6th prisoners,” as if locked up for their political views.) This comes as some of the most hardcore Trumpies in the House have sought to cast the siege as a peaceful protest — a rewriting of history that McCarthy, frankly, has done little to push back on publicly.
— Meanwhile, McCarthy wants to focus attention on Speaker NANCY PELOSI’s unprecedented power move last week to block two Republican lawmakers from the Jan. 6 committee. House GOP leaders will have a press conference this morning before the hearing, no doubt looking to try and frame the day’s proceedings.
— But ask yourself this: Do you think McCarthy’s complaints about Pelosi will mollify DONALD TRUMP when he turns on his TV and sees no Republicans on the dais defending him?
What’s next for the probe? Kicking off with nonpartisan cops is a politically smart move for Democrats — who can argue against police in uniform? — but there’s already plenty of chatter about where they go from here. We’ve heard conflicting things from folks close to the committee about whether they’ll subpoena people like then-White House chief of staff MARK MEADOWS or congressional Republicans who spoke with Trump that day. But it’s hard to imagine this probe could be considered complete until they have.
— “Democrats prep a somber yet TV-ready first hearing in Jan. 6 probe,” by Nicholas Wu, Heather Caygle and Olivia Beavers: “Democrats want Americans glued to their TVs Tuesday for the first hearing of the Jan. 6 select committee. They also don’t want a circus. … The four officers will be dressed in their uniforms to testify, despite appearing in a personal capacity. Questions to them will be limited and interwoven with video footage. And members are restricted to one round of back-and-forth, ensuring the hearing lasts only a few hours.”
NEW POLLING ON JAN. 6 — Beyond all of the political jousting is a public that wants more information about what happened on Jan. 6. According to a new POLITICO/Morning Consult poll, 58% of American voters support a congressional commission to investigate the events of Jan. 6. But that support breaks down along party lines: It’s supported by 83% of Democratic voters but just 34% of Republicans (52% outright oppose it).
Good Tuesday morning, and thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
IN LIGHTER NEWS — “Michigan lawmaker reports $221 campaign spending at strip club,” by the Detroit News’ Beth LeBlanc and Craig Mauger: “A Michigan lawmaker reported spending $221 of his campaign money at a strip club in Dearborn for a March 8 ‘constituent meeting’ to discuss ‘potential economic projects,’ according to a disclosure filed Sunday.”
— Line of the day: “‘We have (to) meet people where they’re at some times … #HOLLA,’ [state Rep. JEWELL] JONES said in a text message after the interview. He added that the club had ‘great lamb chops.’”
JOE BIDEN’S TUESDAY:
— 10:15 a.m.: The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 2:20 p.m.: Biden will speak to the Intelligence Community workforce and leadership at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence in McLean, Va.
HARRIS’ TUESDAY:
— Noon: The VP will speak virtually to the National Bar Association.
— 4:15 p.m.: The VP will host a conversation along with Interior Secretary DEB HAALAND focused on voting rights, meeting with tribal and other Alaska Native and American Indian leaders.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m.
THE HOUSE will meet at 10 a.m. The Jan. 6 select committee will hold its first hearing at 9:30 a.m.
THE SENATE will meet at 10:30 a.m. to take up TODD KIM’s nomination as an assistant A.G., with a vote at 11:30 a.m. The chamber will recess from 12:30 p.m. to 2:15 p.m. Haaland will testify before the Energy and Natural Resources Committee at 10 a.m. Secretary of Homeland Security ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS will testify before the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee at 10 a.m. American Federation of Teachers President RANDI WEINGARTEN and New York A.G. TISH JAMES will testify before a Banking subcommittee hearing on student loan borrowers at 3 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
NEVER-ENDING INFRASTRUCTURE YEAR
STATE OF PLAY — “High-stakes infrastructure talks stall out as deadline passes,” by Marianne LeVine and Burgess Everett: “Senators capped off a day of trading blame and stalled efforts on their bipartisan infrastructure proposal with a Monday meeting that quickly broke up, signaling a tough path forward as negotiators missed yet another self-imposed deadline.
“The core 10 senators huddled in the office of Sen. ROB PORTMAN (R-Ohio), the lead Republican negotiator, hoping to get past a rough weekend of fruitless talks. … Portman said he was still optimistic about a deal despite rejected offers, finger pointing and impasses. He and White House counselor STEVE RICCHETTI will help finish the deal, negotiators said, with input from the rest of the group. … Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER … warned that more foot-dragging could require the Senate to stay in over the weekend or cuts to some of the upcoming August recess.”
THE WHITE HOUSE
MUCK READ — “Brother of top Biden advisor lobbied Executive Office of the President on behalf of GM,” by CNBC’s Brian Schwartz: “The report shows that JEFF RICCHETTI, brother of White House counselor Steve Ricchetti, engaged with the NSC for the car-making giant on ‘issues related to China.’ The company paid Ricchetti $60,000 last quarter for his lobbying services.
“Jeff Ricchetti’s work to lobby the NSC, which is part of the Executive Office of the President, comes as he tries to publicly distance his work from his brother … Jeff Ricchetti said in an email to CNBC that he no longer lobbies the White House Office … He did not answer several other questions, including whom he spoke with at the National Security Council on behalf of GM, and specifically what he was lobbying about with regard to China.”
HERE WE GO AGAIN — “Biden team weighs return to mask mandates in some states,” by Erin Banco, Adam Cancryn and Anita Kumar
CONGRESS
IS IMMIGRATION INFRASTRUCTURE? — On Monday, calls grew for comprehensive immigration reform to be added to the reconciliation package, with both Reps. LUCILLE ROYBAL-ALLARD (D-Calif.) and JAMAAL BOWMAN (D-N.Y.) signing on via Twitter — though stopping short of saying they’d otherwise block the legislation. More on that from Roll Call … Bloomberg’s Laura Litvan has the readout on what the policy could look like
ALL IN THE FAMILY — “Matt Gaetz’s Future Sister-in-Law Says He’s a Gaslighting ‘Creep,’” by The Daily Beast’s Roger Sollenberger
THE PANDEMIC CONGRESS — “Pelosi’s new COVID plans,” by Axios’ Hans Nichols: “House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) is expected to extend proxy voting through the fall — and potentially until the end of the year.”
POLICY CORNER
CLEAR EYES, EMPTY SHELVES — “From ports to rail yards, global supply lines struggle amid virus outbreaks in the developing world,” by WaPo’s David Lynch: “Fresh coronavirus outbreaks are forcing factory shutdowns in countries such as Vietnam and Bangladesh, aggravating supply chain disruptions that could leave some U.S. retailers with empty shelves as consumers begin their back-to-school shopping.”
DEEP DIVE — “How Unemployment Insurance Fraud Exploded During the Pandemic,” by ProPublica’s Cezary Podkul: “Bots filing bogus applications in bulk, teams of fraudsters in foreign countries making phony claims, online forums peddling how-to advice on identity theft: Inside the infrastructure of perhaps the largest fraud wave in history.”
PANDEMIC
IN THE DANGER ZONE — “‘What’s Covid?’ Why People at America’s Hardest-Partying Lake Are Not About to Get Vaccinated,” by Natasha Korecki in Osage Beach, Mo.: “A year ago, Backwater Jack’s made national news after photos went viral of partiers packed inside the pool area, ignoring guidelines to avoid crowds and keep a distance from others. Today, as revelers laugh and toss back drinks in shallow pool water, some 600,000 deaths later, they aren’t just forgoing masks, they are forgoing the vaccine. …
“Interviews with dozens of the clientele frequenting dockside bars, restaurants and resorts in this area … revealed an opposition to the vaccine campaign and a disbelief in news around the Delta variant so intense it bordered on belligerence. No promise, they say, would entice them to voluntarily get vaccinated, not a $1 million check, or a plea from a loved one, or the encouragement of Donald Trump himself.”
THE NEW WAVE — As it becomes ever clearer that a lackluster vaccination rate is imperiling the whole country’s ability to extricate itself from the Covid-19 pandemic, a flurry of activity Monday showed governments getting impatient with cajoling vaccinations and starting to require them — marking “an abrupt shift in policy for some of the nation’s largest public employers,” as Victoria Colliver writes in her 10,000-foot view from Oakland.
— “V.A. Issues Vaccine Mandate for Health Care Workers, a First for a Federal Agency,” by NYT’s Jennifer Steinhauser
— “California government, health workers must show proof of vaccination or be tested regularly,” by L.A. Times’ Luke Money, Emily Alpert Reyes and Taryn Luna
— “NYC to require vaccines or weekly testing for city workers,” AP
— The legal underpinning: “Federal law doesn’t prohibit Covid-19 vaccine requirements, Justice Department says,” CNN
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
MOMMY, WHY DOES EVERYBODY HAVE A BOMB? — “A 2nd New Nuclear Missile Base for China, and Many Questions About Strategy,” by NYT’s William Broad and David Sanger: “In the barren desert 1,200 miles west of Beijing, the Chinese government is digging a new field of what appears to be 110 silos for launching nuclear missiles. It is the second such field discovered by analysts studying commercial satellite images in recent weeks.
“It may signify a vast expansion of China’s nuclear arsenal — the cravings of an economic and technological superpower to show that, after decades of restraint, it is ready to wield an arsenal the size of Washington’s, or Moscow’s. Or, it may simply be a creative, if costly, negotiating ploy. The new silos are clearly being built to be discovered.”
POLITICS ROUNDUP
TODAY’S SPECIAL ELECTION — “Susan Wright, Jake Ellzey make final pitches to voters in runoff to replace Ron Wright in Congress,” by Dallas Morning News’ Gromer Jeffers Jr.
AND THE NEXT ONE — “Left goes all-in for Nina Turner in tightening Ohio race,” by Ally Mutnick in Cleveland: “Desperate for a victory after centrist candidates prevailed in Virginia, New York City and Louisiana, [Rep. ALEXANDRIA] OCASIO-CORTEZ and other stars of the left are barnstorming the district to help [NINA] TURNER in next week’s special Democratic primary — as polls show her once-yawning lead dwindling. …
“While knocking doors last weekend, Turner’s fame was clearly on display. A few voters were visibly starstruck by her appearance on her doorstep, and two told her the stop had made their day. … But the same outspokenness that made her a breakout star at [BERNIE] SANDERS rallies has also handed detractors some ammunition.”
WHAT THE LEFT IS READING — “What the Congressional Black Caucus Lost When It Won Power,” by N.Y. Mag’s Zak Cheney-Rice
QUITE A READ — “Kathy Barnette’s futile hunt for voter fraud outside Philadelphia — and what it says about the GOP,” by Philly Inquirer’s Andrew Seidman: “[As KATHY] BARNETTE energized the denial movement with her futile hunt for voter fraud on Philadelphia’s Main Line, which hasn’t been previously reported, the movement elevated her. She’s now running in Pennsylvania’s critical 2022 Senate race, raising more money than better-known opponents.”
BEG, BORROW AND THIEL — “A political bogeyman of Silicon Valley,” by Axios’ Lachlan Markay: “Tech billionaire PETER THIEL is injecting huge sums into some crucial 2022 midterm contests — and drawing fire from Republicans eager to tie their rivals to the GOP’s Silicon Valley bogeymen. … JOSH MANDEL hit [J.D.] VANCE for positioning himself against Big Tech while he has ‘a guy who is on the board of Facebook as his biggest political funder.’ … Text messages reviewed by Axios show Mandel flagged his candidacy announcement for Thiel and followed up to request meetings with him in February and March. Thiel does not appear to have responded.”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
THE SHADOW 2024 FRONT-RUNNER — “‘Sellout’: Anti-vax conservatives come for DeSantis,” by Matt Dixon in Tallahassee: “Florida’s Covid crisis has wedged Gov. RON DESANTIS between two competing forces: public health experts who urge him to do more and anti-vaxxers who want him to do less. … [A]s Covid infections swell across the state, DeSantis’ major achievement has the potential to backfire on him ahead of his 2022 reelection campaign and potential 2024 presidential bid.”
THE NEW VOTING RESTRICTIONS — “The Texas Election Bill Contains a New Obstacle to Voting That Almost No One Is Talking About,” by Votebeat’s Jessica Huseman in Texas Monthly: “[M]ost lawmakers have apparently overlooked a provision that would force counties to automatically reject some mail-in ballot applications. … 1.9 million voters — about 11 percent of the total — have only one of the two [required] numbers on file with the state.”
THE MOST VALUABLE GET IN POLITICS — “Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton gets all-important endorsement from Donald Trump over fellow Republican George P. Bush,” by Texas Tribune’s Patrick Svitek
SCARY NEWS — “Former California Sen. Barbara Boxer robbed, assaulted in Oakland,” by the San Francisco Chronicle’s Emma Talley
TRUMP CARDS
BARRACK’S ROW — “Tom Barrack Pleads Not Guilty to Foreign Agent Charges,” Variety
CLASSY — “Michael Flynn Totes Rifle And Jokes ‘Maybe I’ll Find Somebody in Washington, D.C.,’” Newsweek
VALLEY TALK
THE THREAT WITHIN — “Facebook and tech giants to target attacker manifestos, far-right militias in database,” by Reuters’ Elizabeth Culliford: “A counterterrorism organization formed by some of the biggest U.S. tech companies including Facebook and Microsoft is significantly expanding the types of extremist content shared between firms in a key database, aiming to crack down on material from white supremacists and far-right militias …
“Until now, the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism’s (GIFCT) database has focused on videos and images from terrorist groups on a United Nations list and so has largely consisted of content from Islamist extremist organizations such as Islamic State, al Qaeda and the Taliban.”
PLAYBOOKERS
LADIES’ NIGHT FOR GOP WOMEN — It’s been eight months since Election Day, but House Republican Conference Chair Elise Stefanik (N.Y.) and Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) are hosting a little party tonight at the Capitol Hill Club to celebrate the historic number of Republican women elected to Congress last fall. (We at Playbook fully endorse parties of all sorts, even a quarter-year late!) We hear RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel will attend, too. For context, read Rachael’s story from last fall about the very diverse — and FEMALE! — freshman class
DCCC COVID SCARE — Two fully vaccinated DCCC staffers have tested positive for the coronavirus following a happy hour last week, we’re told by two sources familiar. The DCCC confirmed the cases to Playbook, and said “staff and event attendees were … notified.” “The office is optionally open to fully vaccinated individuals and fully in compliance with CDC guidelines,” the committee said. It’s a reminder that while life returns to something like normal, we’re still in the throes of a historic pandemic. Be safe.
SPOTTED at the 20th anniversary of the First Tee “Politics and Pros” charity golf event Monday at TPC Avenel, where Rep. John Yarmuth (D-Ky.), Lyndon Boozer and Baker Elmore got “spirit awards”: Reps. Rick Allen (R-Ga.), Blake Moore (R-Utah), Troy Balderson (R-Ohio) and Carlos Gimenez (R-Fla.), Matt Kuchar, Doug Ghim, Billy Hurley III, Gary Hallberg, Shasta Averyhardt, Jan Stephenson, Ken Harvey, Marty Russo, Bryan Anderson, Mike Johnson, Jesse McCollum, Steve Ubl, Kathryn Kennedy, Robert Fisher, Tony Kavanagh, Michael Hutton, P.C. Koch, Gerry Harrington, Jake Perry, Josh Brown, Tony Russo, Dontai Smalls, Yong Choe, Robbie Aiken, Bryan Jacobs, Rick Lombardo, David Culver, Clint Sanchez, Katie Casper and Will Lowery.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The America First Policy Institute is announcing Ken Blackwell and Hogan Gidley as the chair and director of their center for election integrity. Blackwell is a former Ohio secretary of state, and Gidley was deputy press secretary in the Trump White House.
— Nicole Lewis is joining Slate as senior editor for the jurisprudence section. She most recently has been a staff writer at The Marshall Project, and is a WaPo alum.
MEDIA MOVES — The NYT is shuffling David Halbfinger to be politics editor (most recently Jerusalem bureau chief) and Manny Fernandez to be deputy politics editor (currently Los Angeles bureau chief). Announcement
TRANSITIONS — Keaghan Ames is now director of government affairs at the Institute of International Bankers. He most recently was head of regulatory policy at Credit Suisse. … Bethany Torstenson is joining Harris Media LLC as a senior account executive. She previously was deputy campaign manager for Amanda Makki’s Florida congressional bid.
ENGAGED — Mike Carroll proposed to Mallory Quigley, VP of comms at Susan B. Anthony List, on Friday evening at the National Basilica in the Our Lady of Guadalupe chapel. They both grew up in Gaithersburg and had many friends in common, but never met until they matched on Hinge in the early days of the pandemic. Pic
— Tim Churchill, federal legislative affairs manager at the NRA, and Victoria Snitsar, Virginia field coordinator at American Majority and American Majority Action and an Iowa Trump Victory alum, got engaged Saturday outside the U.S. Capitol building following dinner at Fogo de Chão. They originally met when she was in D.C. for a conference in 2017 and he led her group on a Capitol tour. Pic
WEEKEND WEDDING — Zeke Miller, an AP White House reporter, and Jessie Crystal, a second grade teacher at the Sheridan School, got married Sunday at her family home in Westhampton Beach, N.Y. They were introduced in 2017 by Jessie’s sister and brother-in-law, Lara Crystal and Rob Saliterman. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Rep. Glenn “G.T.” Thompson (R-Pa.) … Sean Savett … former Rep. Lacy Clay (D-Mo.) … Priscilla Painton of Simon & Schuster … Katie Wheelbarger … Alex Wirth of Quorum … Andy Spahn … BuzzFeed’s Paul McLeod … Cecilia Muñoz of New America … Berin Szóka … U.S. Southern Command’s Adm. Craig Faller … RNC’s Johanna Persing … Jeremy Adler of Rep. Liz Cheney’s (R-Wyo.) office … Prime Policy Group’s Stefan Bailey (45) … John Connell of Sen. Todd Young’s (R-Ind.) office (38) … Linda Feldmann … Gaurav Parikh of Smart Policy Group and Significant Consulting … Jason Lindsay … Bobby Cunningham of VH Strategies … Live Action’s Lila Rose … Bobby Saparow … Jeremy Deutsch of Capitol Venture … Anna McCormack of Rep. David Rouzer’s (R-N.C.) office … MSNBC’s Denis Horgan … Juan Mejia … Ashley Howard of Sen. Rob Portman’s (R-Ohio) office … Paul Dranginis … Andrew Grossman … former Rep. Dave Brat (R-Va.) … Lauren Aratani … former Commerce Secretary Don Evans … Susan Durrwachter … former CIA Director John M. Deutch … PJ Wenzel
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
“Cast Down Your Bucket Where You Are” – Booker T. Washington’s famous Racial Reconciliation Speech, & his warning against that era’s Critical Race Theory – American Minute with Bill Federer
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: It’s Time to Purge the ‘Pelosi Republicans’
Top O’ the Briefing
The Republican Party Needs a Good Scrubbing
Happy Tuesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Yeah, that’s probably garlic you’re smelling.
During last week’s “Five O’Clock Somewhere” VIP Gold Live chat with my friends Stephen Green and Bryan Preston, I went on a mini-diatribe about the tendency of some of my conservative friends to not give second chances to politicians. That may have sounded weird coming from me since I can be a bit rigid regarding Washington types. One lawmaker I did give a second chance is House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.). I was a fan of McCarthy’s when he first got into office but then he lost me — and a lot of other conservatives — during the post-Boehner era that led to Paul Ryan being Speaker of the House.
I don’t expect politicians to be perfect, so I like the ones who can learn from their mistakes. McCarthy is one of those, or at least he seems to be at the moment. I never discount the possibility that any politician might disappoint me before I finish a sentence praising him or her. For the moment, McCarthy is back on my good list.
Yesterday, McCarthy served up a zinger that should keep him there a while longer.
Prior to an event in the White House Rose Garden, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy was asked by a reporter about the Republican House members who have decided to participate in the January 6 Inquisition.
“Some Republicans have been saying that—”
“Some Republicans?” McCarthy said with a chuckle.
“—that the GOP should play ball on this Select Committee—”
“Really?” McCarthy replied. “Who was that? Adam and Liz? Aren’t they, like, Pelosi Republicans?”
That’s the perfect description of Adam Kinzinger and Liz Cheney, who have been busy wagging their tails like trained dogs for Nancy Pelosi and her sham Jan. 6 kabuki theater. The Democrats and their flying monkeys in the media have been talking a lot this year about the Big Lie. The real big lie is the nonsense about Jan. 6, 2021, being an insurrection that was caused by President Trump, neither of which is true. Republicans feeding that lie deserve to be marginalized, weakened, and eventually replaced. These guys don’t deserve a second chance. They’re too far on the dark side for a shot at redemption.
Kinzinger and Cheney have become odious backstabbers who are aiding and abetting Pelosi’s unhinged corruption, all for a little attention. They’re being hailed as “principled” by a press corps that would have a fatal allergic reaction if it came within a mile of the real definition of the word. It’s like having a Mexican drug cartel as the only group that praises your business model.
Kudos to McCarthy for being dismissive of the sellouts and for not playing along with Granny Boxwine’s lunacy. That’s leadership.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
[WATCH] Is Joe Biden Really Attacking Our Constitutional Rights?!?
The CDC’s Withdrawal of EUA for the RT-PCR Tests Does Not Mean the Test Failed Review
Prager: The Media Produces Derangement: Proof From New York Times Readers
‘I Just Left the ER’ COVID Fearmongering Goes Viral on Twitter
Koozie Fail: Trump Announces His Endorsement in the Texas Attorney General Primary
BURN! McCarthy Slams Cheney and Kinzinger as ‘Pelosi Republicans’
Critical Race Theory Backers Get Predatory
Zito: There’s More Than Meets the Eye at a Demolition Derby
ICE Snags 302 Illegal Immigrant Sex Offenders
Ni hao alert. Hunter Biden’s ‘Art’ Dealer Has Ties to China. Because Of Course He Does.
DOJ Drops Charges Against 5 Possible Chinese Spies as FBI Focuses on January 6
Wokeness Hits Home: BLM Group Wants Parents to Urge Their Kids Not to Apply to Top Colleges
Ilhan Omar and Other Democrat Representatives Call for Special Envoy to Combat ‘Islamophobia’
Biden Spending Mad Stacks to Not Build the Wall, Senate Report
Wokeness Hits Home: BLM Group Wants Parents to Urge Their Kids Not to Apply to Top Colleges
Townhall Mothership
Three-Time Olympian Says People Want Sports, Not Political Activism
#TeamBritney. Britney Spears’ Attorney Files Motion to Strip Her Dad from Conservatorship
GOP Rep. Makes a Prediction About Biden’s Presidency
Former Sen. Barbara Boxer Assaulted, Robbed in Oakland
Texas Governor Greg Abbott Accurately Nails Biden on Why His Poll Numbers are Dropping
Three St. Louis County Municipalities Will Not Enforce Reimposed Mask Mandate
Much Ado About PCR Testing and CDC “Changes”
An Interesting Idea Surfaces In Story Of Gun Violence Protest
ABC News Accidentally Gets It Right In Defining “Gun Problem”
Cam&Co. Public Defenders Side With Second Amendment In Challenge To NY Carry Laws
ACLU Blasted For Claiming Racism At Heart Of Second Amendment
Los Angeles voting on guaranteed basic income… for a few people
Bezos’ Blue Origin to NASA: We’ll pay to build you a lunar lander
LA Times: Maybe we shouldn’t follow California’s example on electric cars
UH OH! Has the Cleveland Indians’ move to rename team the ‘Guardians’ already hit a snag?
What’s shown in this short video from L.A. is the end result of progressive policies in a nutshell
VIP
‘Unwoke’ With Kevin and Kruiser #4: ‘Grandpa, What Was Comedy Like in the 1980s?’
Scientific Study Points to Liberal White Women Being the Craziest
Las Vegas Is Back: Covid Tales From ‘Sin City’
Democrats Know Election Integrity Dooms Their Chances in 2022
Media Ghouls Celebrate COVID-19 Illness and Death Among the Unvaccinated
Sorry Fauci, I Didn’t Get Vaccinated to Keep Wearing a Mask
A Gross Miscarriage of Justice
GOLD TODAY AT 1PM: VIP Gold Live Chat with Paula Bolyard, Victoria Taft, and Megan Fox
GOLD ‘Unredacted with Kurt Schlichter’: Stop Wearing Masks
Around the Interwebz
Universal & Peacock Close $400M Deal For ‘Exorcist’ Trilogy; Ellen Burstyn To Reprise Classic Role
Spotify adds What’s New feed for all the music and podcasts you follow
Watch Simone Biles Hit a Physics-Defying Triple-Double in Super Slo-Mo
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Tunes
Avoid the crab yogurt.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: More Tense U.S.-China Talks
Plus: A constitutional crisis in Tunisia.
The Dispatch Staff | 4 min ago | 1 |
Happy Tuesday! May you one day experience joy as pure and righteous as that of Dean Boxall, coach of gold-medal winning Australian swimmer Ariarne Titmus. Steve did yesterday, when ESPN reported that Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers will very likely come back for one more season with the team.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- Civilian casualties in Afghanistan have reached record highs after accelerating over the past several months, according to a new report from the United Nations. Nearly half of the recorded casualties this year have been women and children. The Wall Street Journal adds that thousands of Afghans are fleeing to Turkey, which already holds 3.6 million Syrian refugees.
- The Department of Veterans Affairs on Monday became the first federal agency to require COVID-19 vaccinations for most of its employees. Title 38 VA health care personnel—physicians, dentists, registered nurses, optometrists, etc.—will have eight weeks to be fully vaccinated.
- President Biden and Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi finalized an agreement on Monday that would formally end the United States’ combat mission in Iraq by the end of 2021. “The security relationship will fully transition to a training, advising, assisting, and intelligence-sharing role,” a joint statement from the U.S. and Iraqi governments read. “There will be no U.S. forces with a combat role in Iraq by December 31, 2021.”
- The White House announced on Monday that those experiencing long-term COVID-19 symptoms could qualify for disability protections under various federal civil rights laws. Guidelines released by the Department of Health and Human Services and other agencies make clear, however, that individualized assessments are “necessary to determine whether a person’s long COVID condition or any of its symptoms substantially limits a major life activity.”
- The Russian government has blocked dozens of websites linked to jailed opposition figure Alexei Navalny ahead of September’s parliamentary elections. The agency responsible said the websites were blocked due to “propaganda and banned extremist activity.”
- The Texas Longhorns and Oklahoma Sooners informed the Big 12 on Monday that they intend to leave the athletic conference when their media rights deal expires in 2025, setting the stage for the two schools to join the Southeastern Conference and shake up the college sports landscape.
- Former U.S. Senator Mike Enzi, a Republican from Wyoming, died yesterday after sustaining injuries in a bike accident over the weekend outside of Gillette, Wyoming, his hometown.
- The U.S. Olympic team continues to pace the field in total medals earned with 22—a single bronze medal ahead of second-place China. Both countries are tied with Japan for gold medals with 9.
U.S.-China Relations Remain Frosty
U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman met with China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Vice Foreign Minister Xie Fen on Monday in Tianjin, China. This is the two countries’ highest-level meeting on Chinese soil since Joe Biden became president and their most high-profile summit since Secretary of State Antony Blinken and National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan’s consultation with their Chinese counterparts in Alaska four months ago.
The group discussed “ways to set terms for responsible management of the U.S-China relationship,” per a readout from State Department spokesman Ned Price. “The Deputy Secretary underscored that the United States welcomes the stiff competition between our countries—and that we intend to continue to strengthen our own competitive hand—but that we do not seek conflict with the PRC.”
Given the strained nature of U.S.-China relations, even such a clinical statement—“we do not seek conflict with the PRC”—could almost be seen as an attempt at deescalation. But there was still plenty of hostility to go around on Monday.
In a phone interview with the Associated Press on Monday, Sherman—who has served in every Democratic president’s State Department since the Clinton administration—said she had frank conversations with her Chinese counterparts about what the United States sees as China’s transgressions both domestically and on the world stage. These include the PRC’s “crimes against humanity” against Uyghur Muslims, its crackdown on democratic activists in Hong Kong, its economic blackmailing of other countries and corporations, and its “aggressive actions” in both Taiwan and the South and East China Seas.
Although Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian described the talks as “profound, candid, and helpful for the two sides to gain a better understanding of each other’s position,” he said Wang and Xie came prepared to express their “unequivocal opposition to the U.S. side’s practice of interfering in China’s internal affairs and harming China’s interests,” adding that the United States “must change course and correct its mistakes.”
Those “mistakes”? Visa restrictions on Chinese students and members of the Communist Party, sanctions on Chinese leaders and government agencies, “attacks” on the Confucius Institute, the registration of Chinese media as foreign agents, and attempts to extradite Huawei official Meng Wanzhou after she was arrested in Canada.
According to Chinese state media, Vice Foreign Minister Xie was even more aggressive in his remarks, painting the United States as an international bully and indulging in a healthy dose of whataboutism.
“The U.S. side’s so-called ‘rules-based international order’ is an effort by the United States and a few other Western countries to frame their own rules as international rules and impose them on other countries,” he said. “How can the United States portray itself as the world’s spokesperson for democracy and human rights? … Historically, the United States engaged in genocide against Native Americans. Presently, the United States has lost 620,000 lives because of its halting response to COVID-19. Internationally, the frequent U.S. military action and the wars caused by the United States lying about the facts have brought undue catastrophe to the world.”
“The China-U.S. relationship is now in a stalemate and faces serious difficulties. Fundamentally, it is because some Americans portray China as an ‘imagined enemy,’” Xie continued. “It seems as if by making China an ‘imagined enemy,’ a national sense of purpose would be reignited in the U.S. The hope may be that by demonizing China, the U.S. could somehow shift domestic public discontent over political, economic and social issues and blame China for its own structural problems.”
Xie’s comments, according to Nanjing University professor Zhu Feng, are “aimed at giving the Chinese public confidence that the government will not succumb in the face of heightened pressure from the U.S. side.” But this “imagined enemy” line is not new.
China has long sought to convince the international community of its “peaceful rise,” arguing it would remain inwardly focused as it grew economically and militarily and not threaten the existing global order. With tensions growing in recent years, Chinese officials have maintained “threats that other countries feel [by China’s rise] are just wrong,” Oriana Skylar Mastro, fellow at Stanford University’s Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, told The Dispatch. “There’s no truth to that.”
If anything, Mastro added, the United States had—before its recent turn on Beijing—long “tried to wishfully fake its way to a peaceful U.S.-China relationship.”
Regular TMD readers are well aware of China’s myriad transgressions on the world stage. From the unconscionable persecution of Uyghur Muslims, to obfuscation and defiance over the coronavirus’ origins, to extensive cyberattacks, to incursions into Taiwanese airspace, China has not been acting like a country set on a “peaceful rise.”
Americans are taking notice. In 2018, the Pew Research Center found Americans’ perception of China was slightly below—but close to—their perception of India: 42 on a 0 to 100 “feeling thermometer.” Three years later, China’s figure there has plunged to 28, while India’s—as well as Japan’s and North Korea’s—remained essentially unchanged.
There remain fundamental disagreements within the United States—and the West at large—over how to address the threat posed by China’s rise, Mastro said. But she argued leaders have “credibly communicated” to China in recent years that the United States will not simply accede to Beijing’s ascendancy toward global dominance.
Tunisia in Turmoil
After months of churning political instability in Tunisia, President Kais Saied moved in one fell swoop on Sunday to dismiss Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi, suspend parliament for 30 days, and revoke its members’ legal immunity. The takeover—which has been both condemned as a coup and praised as a culmination of the people’s will—came amid mass anti-government protests in response to the coronavirus pandemic and economic insecurity.
“We have taken these decisions … until social peace returns to Tunisia and until we save the state,” the president said in a televised address, citing Article 80 of Tunisia’s 2014 constitution. The emergency provision lays the groundwork for the president to take “any measures necessitated” in the event of “imminent danger threatening the nation’s institutions or the security or independence of the country,” but many legal scholars have dismissed Saied’s interpretation as pretext for a power grab.
Nevertheless, proponents of the decree rushed the streets to celebrate Sunday, singing Tunisia’s national anthem and waving its flag.
On Monday, Tunisia’s military forced the closure of the parliament building and surrounded it with armed vehicles. Fighting broke out on the street outside between Saied’s supporters and opponents as members of parliament were barred from entering.
“It’s a coup against the constitution, against the revolution, against public and private freedoms. We consider the elected democratic institutions still upheld,” Rached Ghannouchi, Parliament Speaker and co-founder of the Islamist Ennahda party, said Monday. “This is what the Tunisian people rose up against. This is why I’m calling on the Tunisian people to stand with their revolution, with their constitution, and to lead a peaceful struggle to restore the democracy that was canceled by this statement.”
The government established after Tunisia’s 2011 Revolution—the genesis of the broader Arab Spring—has been hailed by the international community and human rights watchdogs as one of the most democratic in the region. But seeds of volatility have been present since its inception.
The Ennahda party, which currently holds the most seats in parliament, has faced significant internal opposition over its religious leanings, Tunisia’s astronomical unemployment rate (nearly 17 percent in 2020 per the World Bank), and its supposed mismanagement of the COVID-19 pandemic. (Though per Statista, Tunisia has experienced far fewer COVID deaths per million residents than its neighbors, Libya and Algeria.)
Many Tunisians have taken to the streets to voice their support for Saied’s move. But “you also see a lot of people—supporters of the Islamists, but also not—who are out there saying this is anti-democratic, this is unconstitutional,” Carnegie Endowment for International Peace senior Middle East fellow Sarah Yerkes told The Dispatch. “[They] are just really worried about the future of Tunisia’s democratic transition.”
As Saied begins the process of replacing key administrative positions, including that of prime minister, his picks for the posts could indicate his commitment—or lack thereof—to restoring democratic government.
The Biden administration, for its part, has voiced its broad support for Tunisia’s democracy, but has yet to denounce Saied’s takeover directly. In a call with Tunisia’s president Monday, a State Department spokesman said Secretary Antony Blinken “encouraged President Saied to adhere to the principles of democracy and human rights that are the basis of governance in Tunisia” and “urged President Saied to maintain open dialogue with all political actors and the Tunisian people.”
White House press secretary Jen Psaki was similarly reluctant to assign blame in Monday’s press briefing. “We’re concerned about the developments in Tunisia, which come as Tunisian authorities are seeking to stabilize their economy, confront a resurgence in the COVID-19 pandemic, and improve living standards for all Tunisians,” she said. “A determination about a coup is a legal determination, and we would look to the State Department to conduct a legal analysis before making a determination. So there hasn’t been a conclusion on that front.”
But failing to move quickly to hold Saied accountable runs the risk of emboldening him, Yerkes explained. “He’s testing the waters,” she said. “He’s going to keep going and do more if he doesn’t feel like there are consequences to his actions.”
Worth Your Time
- As the more transmissible Delta variant spreads, we’ve begun to hear about an increased number of “breakthrough” infections affecting the fully vaccinated. If you’ve gotten your two shots (or one J&J one), should you be worried? Not really, science reporter Katherine Wu argues for The Atlantic, comparing breakthrough infections to an assault on a castle. “Without vaccination, the castle’s defenders have no idea an attack is coming,” she writes. “COVID-19 shots act as confidential informants, who pass around intel on the pathogen within the castle walls. With that info, defensive cells can patrol the building’s borders, keeping an eye out for a now-familiar foe. … Prepped by a vaccine, immune reinforcements will be marshaled to the fore much faster—within days of an invasion, sometimes much less. Adaptive cells called B cells, which produce antibodies, and T cells, which kill virus-infected cells, will have had time to study the pathogen’s features, and sharpen their weapons against it. While the guard dogs are pouncing, archers trained to recognize the virus will be shooting it down; the few microbes that make their way deeper inside will be gutted by sword-wielding assassins lurking in the shadows.”
- In a recent piece for National Review, Yuval Levin brings his experience in public policy to bear on the ongoing infrastructure negotiations. “I’ve learned over the years that when it comes to a contentious legislative process like this, success and failure feel exactly the same while they are happening. They feel like a chaotic series of near-death experiences,” he writes. “The fact that the Democrats’ legislative strategy now has that feel to it doesn’t mean it won’t work. But I do think that both as a matter of substance and as a matter of strategy, the bipartisan infrastructure process makes sense for Republicans.”
- In a terrific reported piece for The Philadelphia Inquirer, Andrew Seidman takes a look at how election conspiracies have metastasized within the Pennsylvania GOP—and launched One America News and Newsmax favorite Kathy Barnette to contender status in the race for retiring Sen. Pat Toomey’s seat. “As Barnette energized the denial movement with her futile hunt for voter fraud on Philadelphia’s Main Line, which hasn’t been previously reported, the movement elevated her,” he writes. “Meanwhile, two Barnette advisers are now working with a group that’s pushing Pennsylvania lawmakers for an Arizona-style partisan election review. Another parlayed his work into a job for Lindell. And Piton worked on the Arizona probe, collaborated with a prominent QAnon figure, and is now running for Senate in Illinois.”
Something Olympic
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
Also Also Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- David and Sarah took a deep dive into abortion jurisprudence on Monday’s Advisory Opinions, focusing on Mississippi’s challenge to Roe v. Wade, which directly asks the Supreme Court to overturn the almost 50-year-old precedent. How did the Mississippi attorney general frame the argument? How likely is it that the argument will succeed? And what would American governance look like in a post-Roe world?
- On the site today, Emma Rogers has a profile of Chloé Valdary, an anti-racism activist whose “Theory of Enchantment” work is a counterpunch to the likes of Robin DiAngelo and Ibram X. Kendi, teaching people how to “choose to comport ourselves in such a way that we approach one another with love and compassion, even in the midst of profound disagreement.”
Let Us Know
Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Xie Fen is full of it on a whole host of issues. But does he have a point that an existential battle with China would reignite the United States’ “national sense of purpose?”
Are we more polarized right now because we don’t have a common enemy—Germany and Japan in World War II, the Soviet Union for much of the 20th century—to unite us?
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
Tuesday, July 27, 2021
Second Judo Competitor Sent Home From Tokyo After Refusing To Spar With Israeli Athlete
Singer Pink Offers To Pay Norwegian Handball Players’ Fines For Wearing Shorts Instead Of Bikini Bottoms
Megan Rapinoe Reacts To Backlash, Says Media Needs To ‘Get Better’ With Criticism Of Women’s Sports
‘Woke’ U.S. Men’s Olympic Basketball Team Embarrassed By France In Tokyo Games Opener, First Loss Since 2004
Teacher Told Students To Hide ‘Equity Survey’ From Parents, Fourth Grader Says. Mom Fires Back: ‘Equity’ Is The Mask That Critical Race Theory Hides Behind’
Megan Rapinoe Reacts To Backlash, Says Media Needs To ‘Get Better’ With Criticism Of Women’s Sports
Teacher Told Students To Hide ‘Equity Survey’ From Parents, Fourth Grader Says. Mom Fires Back: ‘Equity’ Is The Mask That Critical Race Theory Hides Behind’
Biden Snaps At Female Reporter Over Question: ‘You Are Such A Pain In The Neck’
SHOCK: Simone Biles Out Of Gymnastics Team Final In Tokyo
Florida Residents, Angry State Cut Off Unemployment, Sue Ron DeSantis To Keep Federal Checks Coming
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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
Congressman Reveals What He Said and Did to Officer Who Shot Ashli Babbitt
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43.) REDSTATE
44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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46.) MSNBC
July 27, 2021 THE LATEST Why the Jan. 6 committee is already off to a great start
by Hayes Brown After months of delays and GOP obstruction, the House’s January 6 committee is finally gaveling into session on Tuesday. And for its first hearing, the committee is set to hear the testimony of four police officers who were at the Capitol during the attack. It’s a perfect layup for the committee, giving them a strong nonpartisan start to counter Republican attempts to trash the process, Hayes Brown writes.
“This committee is a chance for Congress to show that it can find actual solutions to domestic threats,” Brown writes. “I’m hoping a smooth day of questioning, free from the theatrics that certain Republican members would have injected had they participated, will prove that this committee can actually handle its weighty task.”
Read Hayes Brown’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Tuesday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES We should be a lot more concerned about this whole thing. Read More The arc of justice in America is bending toward progress — however slowly. Read More The law doesn’t say what they think it says. Read More TOP VIDEOS LISTEN NOW Into America
Trymaine Lee dives into the history of Detroit’s Eight Mile Wall, a structure built in 1941 to separate Black and white residents in what is now the Wyoming neighborhood. He sits down with Detroit reporters and residents to discuss the lasting impact and legacy it left on families in the city. Listen now COMING UP ON MSNBC Join Andrea Mitchell and Hallie Jackson for special coverage as the select committee to investigate the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol holds its first hearing. Special coverage begins today at 9 a.m. ET.
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 Willie Geist: America must learn to fight for its veterans as hard as they do for us
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47.) ABC
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Tuesday, July, 2021
Good morning, NBC News readers.
The events surrounding the deadly attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 will take center stage in Washington today with the first House hearings investigating the riot. Plus, American women are in the spotlight at the Tokyo Olympics from the soccer pitch to the surfboard.
Here’s what we’re watching this Tuesday morning.
The House select committee formed to investigate the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol will hold their first hearing today, listening to a panel of four police officers who defended the building against a mob of supporters of former President Donald Trump.
The testimony, which will include new video footage from the day, is expected to be emotionally-charged as the officers detail being overwhelmed by rioters who were better equipped for the battle that unfolded.
Follow our live blog for all the latest updates and developments during the hearing. And watch special coverage on NBC News, MSNBC and NBC News Now.
Tuesday’s top stories By Patrick Smith | Read more On the fourth day of the Tokyo Olympics, U.S. women are in the spotlight this morning. The soccer team’s dream of taking home the Olympic gold is still alive, after a tie with Australia that sees them advance to the knockouts. The gymnastics team is going right now in the all-around final. Alaska teen Lydia Jacoby stunned her own teammates to win gold in the 100-meter breaststroke race. Carissa Moore made history by winning surfing gold. And the volleyball team beat China in straight sets. But the day didn’t go as well for Japan’s tennis star Naomi Osaka whose Olympic dreams were dashed after she was knocked out in the third round. By Daniella Silva | Read more With a ban on mask mandates in Texas, teachers are coming up with their own plans to manage the risks when classes start in a few weeks amid an alarming surge in coronavirus cases driven by the highly contagious delta variant. By Elisha Fieldstadt | Read more The identification of a 98th victim in the condo collapse in Surfside, Florida, brought the painstaking process of searching for missing people to a close. OPINION By Ani Bundel | Read more Almost 20 years later, the couple are reigniting their relationship — and teaching a master class in how to control your narrative, writes cultural critic Bundel. By Denise Chow | Read more Water levels in the southern part of Utah’s Great Salt Lake have dropped to their lowest levels ever recorded, and experts say conditions are expected to decline further as extreme drought chokes nearly the entire state. BETTER By Erica Chayes Wida | Read more Follow these four tips to make countless salad recipes all summer long.
Want to receive the Morning Rundown in your inbox? Sign up here.
Also in the news …
Looking to wear summer-friendly sandals that are still good for your feet? Here are some sandals with arch support to consider.
One surfing thing As surfing made its Olympic debut at the Tokyo Games on Sunday, some Native Hawaiians activists want U.S. Olympians to surf for a different homeland: Team Hawaiian Kingdom.
Surfing for Hawaii at the Olympics “is much more than just repping where you live,” said Isaiah Walker, a Native Hawaiian historian and professor at the Brigham Young University–Hawaii. “It goes deep into the history of, ‘We were never overthrown in the ocean. This is where we have independence.'”
Read the story here.
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49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: As Jan. 6 hearings begin, GOP still can’t quit Trump
Political parties traditionally kick their defeated presidential nominees to the curb as they look ahead to the next election cycle.
Especially a defeated one-term president.
Think about it: George H.W. Bush, John Kerry, Mitt Romney, Hillary Clinton – they all became afterthoughts after their election loss.
But what stands out about this current moment in our politics is that so much of the Republican Party continues to embrace, defend and idolize Donald Trump.
Even after he won less than 47 percent of the popular vote, after he helped cost the GOP control of the U.S. Senate, and particularly after the events of Jan. 6.
The Associated Press
So you have House GOP leaders, including Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, holding a press conference protesting today’s House committee hearing investigating what happened on Jan. 6.
You have Reps. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., and Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., holding another presser to demand answers about “the status of January 6 prisoners.” (You read that right – “prisoners.”)
You have George P. Bush losing out for Trump’s endorsement, possibly derailing the chances of winning his bid to Texas attorney general. (More on that below.)
And you have today’s congressional runoff in TX-6, which features another GOP candidate Trump has endorsed (Susan Wright) versus one he didn’t endorse (Jake Ellzey).
Usually, the party out of power jettisons its failed presidential candidates so it can retool, reinvent and rebrand itself for voters.
But what remains remarkable – if not unprecedented in modern times for a one-term president – is that the GOP can’t quit Trump (and vice versa).
Which means that, going into 2022 and 2024, we continue refighting the last election and the events around it.
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What to expect at today’s Jan. 6 committee hearing
“Democrats are launching their investigation into the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection Tuesday with a focus on the law enforcement officers who were attacked and beaten as the rioters broke into the building — an effort to put a human face on the violence of the day,” per the AP.
“Testifying will be Capitol Police officers Harry Dunn and Aquilino Gonell and Metropolitan Police officers Michael Fanone and Daniel Hodges.”
“In previous interviews, Dunn has said that attackers yelled racial slurs and fought him in what resembled hand to hand combat as he held them back. Gonell, an Iraq veteran, detailed surgery on his foot and injuries from which he struggled to recover. Fanone has described being dragged down the Capitol steps by rioters who shocked him with a stun gun and beat him. Hodges was beaten and crushed between two doors, and his bloody face and anguished screams were caught on video.”
Also: “Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, one of two Republicans on the panel, will give opening remarks after [Dem Chair Bennie] Thompson.”
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
2,848: The number of new, daily Covid infections on Tuesday in Tokyo, a record for the city.
0.35 percent: The estimated U.S. total population growth for the year ending July 1, 2020, the lowest-ever, per the Wall Street Journal.
47 percent: The portion of likely California voters who support recalling Gov. Gavin Newson, per a new poll, which also found 50 percent saying they don’t support the recall.
34,652,416: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 82,662 more since yesterday morning.)
614,186: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 590 more since yesterday morning.)
342,212,051: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 393,083 since yesterday morning.)
49.1 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
60 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: Am-Bushed
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TX-6 and the power of Trump’s endorsement
But is getting Trump’s endorsement still an automatic guarantee for victory in a GOP race? Or close to it?
That once again will be put to the test in today’s TX-6 special runoff between Republicans Susan Wright (whom Trump has endorsed) and state Rep. Jake Ellzey (a former fighter pilot who’s endorsed by Rick Perry and Rep. Dan Crenshaw). No Democrat made it to the Top 2 runoff after the free-for all jungle primary on May 1.
Wright is the widow of the late Rep. Ron Wright, who passed away from Covid complications, creating this vacancy.
“A Wright victory – especially a decisive one – could be a poor omen for conservative (but not Trump-endorsed) candidates in upcoming special elections and 2022 primaries,” the Cook Political Report writes.
“On the other hand, an Ellzey upset would suggest some GOP voters are still open to decoupling their admiration for Trump and his stated preferences in order to support someone with an appealing biography and resume.”
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Former Wyoming Sen. Mike Enzi has died after suffering injuries in a bike accident.
Follow the latest from today’s Jan. 6 committee hearing with the NBC News Live Blog.
The Veterans Administration is mandating Covid vaccinations for employees, as is New York City and California (or those city and state employees have to be tested regularly).
The debate over mask mandates in schools is raging ahead of the fall, creating serious tension between parents and schools.
The bipartisan infrastructure negotiations are stalling as transportation spending emerges as the latest hurdle.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi may extend proxy voting in the House through the end of the year, Axios reports.
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50.) CBS
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51.) REASON
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Anthony Fauci has been a whiney little biyatch as of late. More so than usual. It started after the most re … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Tuesday, July 27, and we’re covering vaccine mandates, the shifting landscape of college athletics, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWMandates in NYCNew York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced yesterday an expansion of the mandatory vaccine requirement for city workers, saying all employees must receive weekly COVID-19 testing and wear masks while working if not vaccinated by mid-September. The order affects about 340,000 employees, while roughly 25% of the city’s population remains unvaccinated. California followed, saying all healthcare workers and state employees must be vaccinated or face similar protocols. In related news, the Department of Veterans Affairs said it would require its medical employees to be vaccinated within the next two months. The department, which oversees 115,000 frontline health workers, is the first federal agency to issue such a mandate. The decision comes as the more transmissible Delta variant continues to spread, with the strain now accounting for four in five new US cases. Officials say current vaccines remain effective against the mutation, with the vast majority of hospitalizations occurring in unvaccinated or partially vaccinated patients. Driven by the variant, COVID-19 cases in the US continue to rise, averaging 57,000 per day as of this morning. Deaths, a lagging indicator, remain around 250 per day. Almost 90% of Americans aged 65 and older—the most vulnerable demographic—have received at least one shot (see data). Seismic Shift in College AthleticsThe University of Texas and the University of Oklahoma notified Big 12 officials yesterday their schools would not be renewing media rights with the conference when their contracts are up for renewal in 2025. The move effectively sets the stage for two of the most prominent institutions in college athletics to move conferences. Sources say the schools’ official statements leave wiggle room to depart earlier, though they would have to pay up to $80M in penalties. Rumors suggest the pair are targeting the Southeastern Conference, which dominates the lucrative college football landscape. As of 2018-19, Texas was the top-grossing athletic department, bringing in $224M, while Oklahoma was eighth, bringing in $163M (see list). The departure of the conference heavyweights may signal the end of the Big 12, one of the so-called Power Five conferences. Should the schools migrate, it may set off a domino effect among the remaining conferences. Monsoons in India At least 164 people have died, and another 100 are unaccounted for, as heavy monsoon rains triggered floods in western India. The downpours have continued since Thursday, primarily affecting the country’s Arabian coast, near the city of Mumbai. The death toll is expected to rise, with rescue workers struggling to reach remote areas cut off by the waters. At least 300,000 residents have been evacuated, with thousands relocated to temporary camps. Nine of the victims perished after a rockslide pummeled their vehicle (footage here). India has endured a number of weather-related disasters in recent months, including devasting flooding in the Himalayan mountains, two cyclones, and an intense heat wave in its northern states. The current flooding also follows record rainfall in Western Europe and Central China. See how monsoons work here. 56% of Americans can’t name an objective news source—share 1440 with a friend. In partnership with LMNTARE YOU HYDRATED?Know what happens when you sweat? Yes, your body releases water, but also salt. A lot of it, at that. And too often, we drink water after working out, but forget to replenish critical electrolytes. Trust us, LMNT Co-founder Robb Wolf knows what he’s talking about. He’s a former research biochemist, two-time New York Times bestselling author, and has worked on the Navy SEAL resiliency committee for a decade. After years of mixing his own homemade electrolytes blends and frustration with the lack of healthy options on the market, LMNT Recharge was born. Ready to hydrate your body with no sugar, no artificial ingredients, or any other junk found in conventional sports drinks? Try LMNT for FREE (just pay S&H) with a sample pack of seven packets of their bestselling flavors. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & Culture> Olympics: Lydia Jacoby, 17, becomes first Alaskan to win swimming gold medal (More) | Triathlete Flora Duffy brings Bermuda its first-ever gold medal (More) | Check out today’s full schedule of events including women’s gymnastics team final at 6:45 am ET (More) | See latest medal count (More) > Britney Spears makes second attempt to remove father as her conservator after new attorney files motion yesterday in Los Angeles court (More) > Venice Film Festival’s anticipated line-up highlighted by “Dune” and “The Last Duel” (More) | Olympics opening weekend TV ratings see sharp decline from 2016, while streaming numbers are up (More) Science & Technology> Hubble Telescope finds first evidence of water vapor on Jupiter’s moon Ganymede (More) > Amazon and Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos publishes an open letter to NASA offering to pay $2B to gain a contract to build a reusable lunar lander; the agency awarded a similar contract to competitor SpaceX in April (More) > Brain study finds image memories are stored in the visual cortex, but the recollection of a series of images relies on assistance from the hippocampus; findings raise new questions around how different regions of the brain interact to support memory recall (More) Business & MarketsBrought to you by The Ascent > Insurance giants Aon and Willis Towers Watson call off a more than $30B proposed merger amid antitrust pushback from the Justice Department (More) > Tesla outpaces expectations on top and bottom lines; sees first billion-dollar net income quarter, shares up in after-hours trading (More) | Shares of fellow electric vehicle maker Lucid Motors end up 6% on first day trading as public company following SPAC (More) > Luxury giant LVMH—whose brands include Louis Vuitton, Tiffany, and Moët & Chandon, among others—sees second quarter revenues surge to level higher than same pre-pandemic period two years ago (More) From our partners: Paying off credit card debt? This card could save you up to $1,863 in interest charges on $10,000 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. Politics & World Affairs> Anticipated procedural vote on bipartisan infrastructure package fails to materialize in the Senate as negotiators gridlock over final details (More) | Former Sen. Mike Enzi (R-WY) dies in bicycle accident (More) > President Joe Biden says the US will end its mission in Iraq by the end of the year as the country pivots to focus on China and Russia (More) > Tunisian President Kais Saied fires prime minister, suspends parliament for one month amid anti-government protests; the political crisis is one of the country’s worst since transitioning to democracy during the 2011 Arab Spring (More) IN-DEPTH‘I Only Have Months to Live’Boston Globe | Jack Thomas. A heartfelt reflection by the veteran journalist after learning he has inoperable cancer. (Read) Making the FutureInvest Like the Best | Patrick O’Shaughnessy. (Podcast) The host of one of the most popular investing podcasts interviews Marc Andreessen, the head of one of the country’s most successful venture capital firms. (Listen) NO SUGAR ELECTROLYTESIn partnership with LMNT One single-serve packet of LMNT delivers 1,000 mg sodium, 200 mg potassium, and 60 mg magnesium, the ideal electrolyte ratio for optimal hydration, with no sugar, no coloring, or any other junk. And today you can try their Sample Pack for free (just cover shipping). The US Olympic Weightlifting team and dozens of professional sports teams across the NFL, NBA, and NHL trust LMNT to hydrate their athletes, and it’s also a perfect electrolyte mix for everyday athletes, health-conscious families, and anyone on a keto or low-carb diet. Try a FREE sample pack today, just for being a 1440 reader. You’ll just pay $5 S&H and get to try all of LMNT’s flavors. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERATransylvanian lamb shepherds top this year’s best iPhone photos. The tattoos of the Olympics, in photos. … and this Olympian literally left it all out on the track. How to draw yourself as a “Peanuts” character. (via YouTube) Visiting Big Bend National Park? Step over the acid-shooting scorpions. Scientists observe a beetle walking upside-down on a pond’s surface. (paywall, NYT) Escape the city life into a giant potato. Clickbait: The ugly baby challenge. Historybook: US Department of State is established (1789); HBD figure skating legend Peggy Fleming (1948); House brings impeachment charges against President Richard Nixon (1974); NBA player Reggie Lewis collapses and dies at practice (1993); RIP Bob Hope (2003). “If you haven’t got any charity in your heart, you have the worst kind of heart trouble.” – Bob Hope 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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72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
This is way worse than we thought. He’s ‘barely holding on’
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TOP STORIES:
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Biden Just Got Dire Diagnosis
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FINAL WARNING Issued In Arizona Election Audit
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Senator Says They Have What They Need To Overturn Election
- Schumer Viciously Mocks Trump Supporters…
- ‘We’re Fu**ed’ — Democrats Freak Out Over New Election Law
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GOP Demands Answers — Announces Urgent Press Conference
- GOVERNMENT MAKES COVID VAX MANDATORY… THIS IS A FIRST!
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BIDEN LOSES IT LIVE! “Where’s Mom? Mom?”
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IN DEPTH:
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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
July 27, 2021 Welcome to the Tuesday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect tech and politics unfolding online. Today:
BREAK THE INTERNET Comcast, AT&T spent tens of millions to stop a bill reinstating net neutrality Big telecom companies and internet service providers (ISPs) spent millions of dollars during the last session of Congress and aggressively lobbied against a bill that would have restored net neutrality rules, according to a new study.
Common Cause and the Communications Workers of America (CWA) released their “Broadband Gatekeepers” study, which details how 15 of the largest broadband providers spent $234 million on lobbying during the 116th Congress, or between 2019 and 2020.
But it also drills down on just how much those large providers were lobbying against a major net neutrality bill.
In 2019, the House of Representatives passed the Save the Internet Act. That bill would have essentially codified the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) 2015 net neutrality order and classified broadband providers under Title II of the Communications Act.
While the bill passed in the House, which was controlled by Democrats, it languished in the Republican-led Senate, where it was never brought up for a vote. In fact, Republicans blocked several attempts by Democrats to force a vote on the bill.
The “Broadband Gatekeepers” report notes that eight of the 15 major ISPs and interest groups reported that they lobbied against the Save the Internet Act. During the eight quarters of the 116th Congress, Comcast paid lobbyists more than $27 million, AT&T spent more than $22 million, and NCTA, a trade group, paid $29 million, according to the report. During that time, those ISPs were actively lobbying against the bill.
Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), who sponsored the Senate version of the Save the Internet Act, has repeatedly said that once President Joe Biden finally fills out the FCC to give it a Democratic majority, he will push for the agency to restore net neutrality and introduce a bill in Congress that would do the same.
It remains to be seen how much that bill will be lobbied against. Deputy Tech Editor
CHECK OUT THE LATEST FROM THE BAZAAR Tried and true favorites from a girl who is obsessed with CBD
So in the interest of transparency (and because I love a good self-drag), I too thought CBD was the millennial snake oil…until I tried it, then I literally ate my words. Despite the lack of evidence from the FDA, many people still swear by CBD products. If you couldn’t already guess, I’m one of those people.
POLICE Buffalo police purchased high-tech lassos with mental health grant The City of Buffalo Police Department purchased ten high-tech lassos, known as BolaWraps, using federal mental health grant money, according to a public records request filed by the Daily Dot.
The Bureau of Justice Administration (BJA) and the Office of Justice Programs awarded the department the grant to help the city respond to mental health disturbance calls, according to an email reviewed by the Daily Dot.
When an officer deploys a BolaWrap, the weapon uses a gunpowder charge to launch a kevlar cord which can wrap around a non-compliant individual. Several police departments around the country currently use it.
Some have praised the BolaWrap as a tool to make policing safer, while others have criticized it for being marketed as a tool to subdue individuals with mental health issues.
The original description of the grant (which has given the city of Buffalo $746,317 to date), outlines a plan to embed mental health clinicians in the police department.
The program funded by the grant sets out “to improve public safety responses and outcomes for individuals with mental illnesses” and/or substance abuse issues “who come into contact with the justice system,” according to the description. The program also requires collaboration between criminal justice and mental health agencies.
WRAP, the company that makes the BolaWrap, recently offered some departments free BolaWraps after they submitted body camera footage of successful deployments. It was not clear if Buffalo was among those departments. Editorial Fellow
BIG TECH FTC gets more time to amend its antitrust complaint against Facebook A request by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to get more time to file an amended complaint in its antitrust lawsuit against Facebook was approved by a judge late last week.
Reuters reports Judge James Boasberg of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia granted the request, giving the FTC until Aug. 19 to file an amended complaint. The request wasn’t opposed by Facebook.
The FTC sued Facebook late in 2020 alleging that the social media giant maintained a monopoly over personal social networking. However, in June a U.S. district court judge dismissed the suit, arguing that the agency’s complaint was “legally insufficient.”
The suit was dismissed without prejudice, leaving the door open for the FTC to amend its complaint.
Meanwhile, Facebook has called for FTC Chairwoman Lina Khan, who was recently named chair by President Joe Biden, to recuse herself from the antitrust case against it. Khan has drawn support from progressives and activist groups because she’s been an outspoken critic of big tech companies.
—A.W.
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
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81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Tuesday 07.27.21 Another heat wave is rolling in this weekend, and it will affect the Pacific Northwest — again. About 35 million people from there to the Louisiana Gulf Coast will be under heat alerts. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. A patient is attended to in the emergency area at AdventHealth hospital in Orlando. Coronavirus
A growing number of places and groups are considering vaccine or mask mandates as Covid-19 cases continue to rise. California will require all state employees and health care workers to provide proof of vaccination status or get regular testing. New York City has a similar plan for its entire municipal workforce, including police officers and teachers. More than 50 major medical and health groups have issued a joint statement calling for all health care employers to mandate employees be vaccinated. Is it legal for places to impose such requirements? In short, yes. Justice Department lawyers have determined federal law doesn’t prohibit public agencies and private businesses from requiring Covid-19 vaccines. Experts say if vaccination rates remain stagnant, the US could see as many as 200,000 cases a day in the coming weeks.
Capitol riot
The House select committee charged with investigating the January 6 insurrection will hold its first public hearing today. The committee will hear testimony from four police officers who were on the front lines the day of the attack. This is the first big public step for the committee’s investigation, which has seen strong GOP pushback. Currently, Republican leaders are hoping to zero in on security failures from the day of the attack to take attention away from former President Donald Trump’s role. Only two Republicans, Reps. Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, are on the committee. Their fellow party members are trying to chip away at their credibility to zing them for participating and undermine the committee’s mission in general. Iraq
President Joe Biden announced plans to formally conclude the US combat mission in Iraq by the end of the year, winding down another prolonged US military engagement. Unlike the troop withdrawal in Afghanistan, this decision was made with Iraq’s urging, and Biden made the announcement alongside Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi. This agreement will also not result in a troop withdrawal. Rather, the US and Iraq are expected to announce the US mission will fully shift to an advisory role. Meanwhile, White House officials have told lawmakers they will need $1 billion in emergency funds as the US works to evacuate and accommodate Afghan translators and other personnel who worked for the US in Afghanistan, and are now trying to leave the country amid the last phases of troop withdrawal there. Hong Kong
The first person to be tried under Hong Kong’s controversial national security law faces life in prison after being found guilty of inciting secession and terrorism. This trial was seen as a litmus test for how the law will be implemented and interpreted in court, and the landmark ruling will likely have profound implications for the city’s legal system. The 24-year-old was found guilty of terrorism for crashing his motorcycle into a group of police officers last year. He was also found guilty of a second charge, incitement to commit secession, for carrying a large black banner emblazoned with the popular anti-government protest slogan “Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times.” Haiti
A cache of Internal Justice Ministry documents obtained exclusively by CNN reveal death threats and other roadblocks faced by those investigating the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moise earlier this month. Multiple Haitian officials have received death threats since their investigation began, documents show. Some of these officials have gone into hiding. Sources close to the investigation also describe unusual restrictions and difficulty accessing crime scenes. Potential key witnesses, like presidential guards who were present at the time of the assassination, were allowed to leave the scene without being interviewed. The inconsistencies raise several questions: Is there a motive behind these obstacles, or are they consequences of Haiti’s underfunded justice system? So far, there has been no public announcement of formal charges against any suspects in the case. Paid Partner Content A Credit Card With All the Right Perks Like a $200 bonus after spending $500 within three months. Don’t forget unlimited 1.5% cash back on literally every purchase, all with no annual fee.
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Unlock Your Exclusive Refinance Rates Now Lenders are competing for your business, which means you get the most competitive offers. Choose the loan that works best for you. People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Issa Rae is married Vera Wang? South of France? True love? That’s a dream wedding right there!
Largest known comet has been traveling for millions of years
The “Dexter” revival trailer is here
An Argentinian fencer lost her match but did score a proposal of marriage
Still don’t know what cryptocurrency is? Here’s an explainer
CNN Business presents “Foreseeable Future: A Conversation About The Workplace Revolution” It’s no secret the pandemic has changed the way we work. But … what happens next? Join CNN Business for a free, exclusive event where you’ll hear insights from Satya Nadella (Microsoft CEO), Dan Springer (DocuSign CEO), Anjali Sud (Vimeo CEO) and Alexi Robichaux (BetterUp co-founder & CEO) about the future of work and how companies and employees are adjusting to the new normal.
The conversation streams live on Thursday, July 29 at 11 a.m. ET. Reserve your spot here!
Olympics update
Weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz won the Philippines’ first Olympic gold medal ever. She also set an Olympic record, lifting a combined weight of 224 kilograms, to clinch the top spot in the women’s 55-kg class.
To put it clearly and unequivocally, our values as employees are not accurately reflected in the words and actions of our leadership.
An excerpt from a petition signed by more than 2,000 current and former employees at video game company Activision Blizzard. In the petition, employees slam the company’s response to a lawsuit alleging gender discrimination and harassment within the workplace. Brought to you by CNN Underscored 11 blankets that will actually keep you cool this summer We went on a search for cooling blankets that can keep you cozy — but not sweaty. After weeks of testing top-rated options across various temperatures, we found some fantastic options for every type of sleeper. Less “Aaaah!” More “Ahhhh.” 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- My day with Delta
- Jackie Mason, RIP
- Biden’s approval rating slips significantly
- Animatronic short circuit (4)
- A calling out of hypocrites or a reductio ad absurdum?
My day with Delta
Posted: 26 Jul 2021 03:38 PM PDT (Scott Johnson)I feel about Delta Air Lines approximately the way I feel about the Delta variant. It’s far from the worst thing on earth, but life would be better without it. Over the weekend I received my monthly credit card bill with double charges from Delta for two tickets to Washington, D.C. next month. Delta canceled our original flight from Minneapolis to D.C. and put us on a later flight. We accepted Delta’s emailed invitation to modify the reservation for the Minneapolis leg using their application. We chose an earlier flight the same day and, to my chagrin, got billed for the round-trip tickets a second time. Incidentally, this is the second time in the past two months that we have had a double billing issue with Delta. We disputed a double charge with American Express the first time around. Delta denied our claim and maintained that the charge was proper. American Express has a profitable partnership with Delta through the Delta Sky Miles program, but American Express rejected Delta’s position and found in our favor. I called my credit card issuer to dispute this double charge as well on Saturday, but I wanted to resolve it with Delta myself. It is not possible to reach Delta through its so-called “customer service” number. I tried on Saturday and again on Sunday. On Sunday I was advised by Delta’s automated system that there would be a 7-and-a-half hour wait. Now that’s what I call customer service. I couldn’t tell if Delta had sold us four tickets or if they had simply billed us twice for the same tickets. I guessed it was the former rather than the latter. If so, there was still time to cancel two reservations and argue about fees later. (It proved to be the latter.) I didn’t want to wait to resolve the issue via the credit card company when it might be too late to fix it, so I went out to the airport to connect with a Delta agent on Sunday. The sun was shining. It was a beautiful day. This was not the way I wanted to kill the afternoon. Parking at the airport is time-consuming all by itself and it turned out that Sunday was a big day at the airport. The place was packed. Delta’s special “agent help” line was also packed — lengthy and slow. Most travelers were there to check oversize bags or make arrangements for their animals. Delta had three agents providing the help, but the service to each customer took an inordinate amount of time. The line was moving incredibly slowly. I couldn’t help overhearing the woman directly behind me in line talking on her cell phone. Delta refused to check her bag for a reason that she didn’t understand. She had been told that her ticket didn’t allow it. She was anxiously explaining that she needed immediate help. It looked like she was going to miss her flight. I had no flight to catch or deadline to meet. When she got off the call I invited her to move ahead of me in line. Waiting for the line to move, I complained to her about Delta’s “customer service,” referring to the seven-hour wait that had prompted my visit to the airport. She told me she had been on the phone with Delta “customer service” via an 800-number for passengers at the airport. She gave me the number and told me I would get through after a five-minute hold. If I had done her a good deed by giving her my spot in line, she returned it in spades. I called the secret 800-number while standing in line. I got through to Lisa before I reached the front of the special “agent help” line at the airport. Lisa sounded like she was having a bad day. She didn’t have a kind word or palatable explanation for my plight. It can’t be pleasant to work in “customer service” for Delta. She saw the problem, however, and set to work to fix it. Over half an hour later, she told me she had resolved the issue and voided the duplicate charges. This morning I received a customer service survey from Delta. The first question asked how likely I was to recommend Delta to friends. Is this some kind of a joke? Not bloody likely. Rather, I am highly likely to recommend against it if you have a reasonable alternative. In the explanation for my rating I asked if any Delta executive had ever availed himself of Delta’s “customer service.” If so, I wonder how they can offer a customer service number with a seven-hour wait time. In addition to recommending against flying Delta, I would like the whole wide world to know how pitiful Delta’s “customer service” is.
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Jackie Mason, RIP
Posted: 26 Jul 2021 12:59 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Jackie Mason, the great Jewish comedian, died this weekend. He was 93. Tevi Troy has written an excellent appreciation of Mason for The City Journal. He includes some of Mason’s political lines, most of which were directed at Democrats. Mason was a Republican, a conservative, and a Trump supporter. Tevi omitted one of my favorite Mason lines:
Tevi recounts Mason’s career trajectory from rabbi, to star comedian who appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show, to has-been comedian after Sullivan thought Mason had given him the finger on national television, to comeback star when he brought his comedy to Broadway in the one-man show “The World According to Me.” This was Mason’s take on his Broadway success:
Mason may not have been an artist, but neither was he just another nightclub comedian. He was a one-of-a-kind comedian, and as funny as they come.
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Biden’s approval rating slips significantly
Posted: 26 Jul 2021 11:49 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Byron York points out that Joe Biden’s approval rating shows the first sign of meaningful decline. In the latest Gallup poll, Biden is at 50 percent approval and 45 percent disapproval — down from 57 percent approval and 37 percent disapproval at the start of his term. What’s the explanation for this decline? Gallup attributes it at least in part to “the law of political gravity” — the end of the “honeymoon” most new presidents get from the public that has just elected them. However, Biden’s favorable rating among independents has dropped from 61 percent at the start of his presidency to 48 percent now. More than political gravity is required to explain that fall. Several plausible explanations come to mind. They include growing awareness that Biden might not be “all there,” the border crisis, the surge in violent crime, and Biden’s unwillingness to stand up to the far-left wing of his party on a variety of matters. In my view, though, the biggest factor is concern about the economy and, relatedly, concern about the coronavirus. Byron points to a new ABC News/Ipsos poll in which Biden’s approval for handling the economy has fallen below 50 percent among independents. This corresponds roughly to his overall rating with this group. Byron highlights another finding from the same poll. ABC News asked: “Thinking about the next 12 months, would you say you feel optimistic or pessimistic about the ways things are going in this country?” At the end of April, 64 percent said they felt optimistic, versus 36 percent who felt pessimistic. Now, less than three months later, just 45 percent feel optimistic, while 55 percent feel pessimistic. Why the surge in pessimism? It’s due partly, I think, to the fact that recent economic performance hasn’t matched expectations. Perhaps more importantly, there’s a sense that, because coronavirus cases are increasing, the next 12 months are likely to be bumpier all around than had been hoped. This means that Biden’s approval rating might move upwards if fears about the next 12 months aren’t realized. But even if it does, Biden for now must govern without the popularity he enjoyed a few months ago. For Byron, this means “less clout on Capitol Hill.”
(Emphasis added)
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Animatronic short circuit (4)
Posted: 26 Jul 2021 09:28 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)I won’t hazard a guess regarding what President Biden had to say as he approached the reporters in the video below. ABC White House reporter Molly Nagle didn’t take a stab at it either, or even note that there was anything “funny” about it. Whatever he said, he seems to have thought it was funny, and maybe it was!
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A calling out of hypocrites or a reductio ad absurdum?
Posted: 26 Jul 2021 08:12 AM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)The following passage is from a letter that reportedly was circulated by an outfit called Dallas Justice Now (DJN), a “racial equity group.” The letter reads like a parody, but apparently it is not:
This is the pledge “the whitest and wealthiest” are asked by Dallas Justice Now to take:
On the DJN website, the Whites are then asked to check one of two boxes:
I suppose that people who truly believe they earned their money by oppressing “communities of color” might, if they feel guilty about it, want to make some sort of restitution. Whether they would (or should) want the restitution to consist of denying educational opportunities to their children is another matter. In any case, the notion that the average wealthy white earned his or her money by oppressing communities of color is too absurd for even your average White leftist to believe. There’s also the question of how much an Ivy League education would be worth in terms of “economic and social advancement” if top White high school students stopped applying. The biggest advantage of an Ivy League education, in my view, is being surrounded by top-notch students, a few of whom will be influential in one’s life during college and thereafter (as John Hinderaker was and still is in mine). That advantage will be watered down considerably if colleges and universities lack the opportunity to select top-notch students because parents sign and adhere to the DJN pledge. Therefore, it’s not hypocritical for average White leftists to have their children apply to elite colleges and universities. Give DJN credit, though. At least they see through the “diversity” rationale for race-based admissions. They favor largely, if not entirely, Black and Latino student bodies throughout the Ivy League. I suppose we can also give DJN back-handed credit for something else. The group has given Dallas-area liberals a feel for the absurdity of the BLM movement. That movement is not just about defunding the police (thereby making people of all races less safe). Nor is it about mildly redistributionist programs of the type that liberals comfortably can get behind. BLM thinks all successful Whites owe their success to racism. And BLM wants its pound of flesh not just from all successful Whites, but also from their children. DJN’s founder says with derision that that numerous wealthy white Dallas residents think they’re “allies” because Black Lives Matter signs sit on their property. Its letter puts them on notice that much more is required. Let’s hope that DJN’s letter causes left-liberals to reconsider whether they really want to be allies with this extremist and racist movement. NOTE: Steve’s take on the DJN letter appears just below mine. I hadn’t seen his post when I wrote mine. There are similarities and differences between our takes. I hope readers find both useful.
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
86.) THE PATRIOT POST
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87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
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90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST
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93.) JUST THE NEWS
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94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
96.) NOT THE BEE
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com |
Sen. Marco Rubio to Newsmax: Biden’s Cuba Actions ‘Meaningless’
More Links: Your Incredibly Shrinking Dollar — Joe Biden’s Policies: Massive Debt. Hyperinflation, Read More Special: Heart Surgeon’s Secret to Healthy Blood Pressure Dems Reject the House Minority Leader’s Latest Call for 1/6 Panel Seats Special: Mike Huckabee’s Shocking Confession Trump Endorses Texas AG Paxton for Reelection Dems Fear States’ Election Reform Laws Spell 2022 Doom Trump Rejects ‘Fake’ Jan. 6 Panel: ‘Will Nancy Investigate Herself?’ Special: 9 Felonies for Exposing Planned Parenthood Arizona Senate Subpoenas Maricopa County Routers Dem Ex-Sen. Boxer, 80, Assaulted, Robbed in Oakland Trump: Dems Have Made Once-Great Cities ‘Paradise for Criminals’ Special: Sneaky Tax Trap Set by Congress Could Cost You 50% in Retirement CDC Set to Reverse, Recommend Masks Indoors for Vaccinated People Eric Bolling’s New Show ‘The Balance’ Debuts on Newsmax More Links: |
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99.) MARK LEVIN
July 26, 2021
On Monday’s Mark Levin Show, Tribute is paid to the life and legacy of comedic legend Jackie Mason. Mason was a patriot, a well-read constitutionalist, and a friend of this program. Then, it’s circumstances that cause people to be passionate about causes. Whether it’s liberty or the Olympics people take a principled stand on the issues that matter most to them. This is why red-blooded Americans are upset with the Democrats’ failure at the border. Their uncertainty on whether the science says mask-mandates must be renewed or not. Whether the million people coming across the border are being vaccinated upon arrival or not- what is America to do? Later, Donald Trump gave a speech this weekend mentioning how disenchanted Americans have become with woke athletes in the Olympics and in particular the US women’s soccer team. Trump shredded President Biden and reminded America that we must win the culture wars that it’s faced with. The radical left attacks everything, including our words. To communists, language is an army of tools to resolve conflicts over their Marxist policies, hence why they incessantly hijack our language. Afterward, Sen. Chuck Schumer says that Trump is a despicable human being. He joins the ranks of Reps. Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger and nobody’s falling for it. People see that so many areas of society are crumbling. All one needs to do is look at big cities with Democrat control to forecast what Democrats offer, crime, and massive government spending.
THIS IS FROM:
NY Post
Iconic Borscht Belt comic Jackie Mason dead at 93
Amazon
Jackie Mason: One Angry Man
ABC News
Americans’ optimism about country’s direction over next year drops nearly 20 points since May: POLL
Washington Examiner
Sorry, Joe: Voters like Obama and Trump more
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Alarm in Jerusalem as Iran races to the bomb amid lull in nuclear talks
Newsmax
USA Today Poll: 90 Percent of Detroit Residents Want More Police
The Post Millenial
WATCH: McCarthy rips Cheney and Kinzinger as ‘Pelosi Republicans’
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
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100.) WOLF DAILY
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101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
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103.) DAN BONGINO
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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106.) NEWSBUSTERS
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107.) SONS OF LIBERTY
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108.) RIGHT & FREE
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Last June, the Trump-hating reporters who always wanted to underline that then-President Donald Trump was almost traitorously soft on Russia banged a can…
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It seems like the government would strip away all our rights if it could.
109.) STARS & STRIPES
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110.) DENNIS PRAGER
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