Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday August 30, 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 — 8.30.21
Good Monday morning.
ICYMI (but how could you) — After nearly three years of serving the Governor — first as a Deputy Chief of Staff and then Chief of Staff — Adrian Lukis is leaving the administration, likely in mid-September with an announcement about the move to come sometime after Labor Day.
The Ron DeSantis administration confirmed Lukis’ plans after Florida Politics first reported his anticipated departure.
When he was asked to fill the shoes of Shane Strum, the Chief of Staff to DeSantis who had served for more than two years, Lukis made clear that his time in the most powerful staff position in state government would not be as long as his predecessor’s.
The father of two young kids, the first of whom was born days after DeSantis was elected Governor in 2018, Lukis made a promise to his wife that he would not be one of those political husbands who missed the formative years of his children’s upbringing.
Six months ago, that promise seemed reasonable. But that was before the state ran headlong into the buzz saw that is the Delta variant.
Lukis had intended to announce his plans for departing sometime in early August. But that was delayed by the realities of the pandemic.
Because Lukis’ personnel move is still freshly decided, there hasn’t been time for him to decide on his next move. Clearly, a former Chief of Staff, even one who served a shorter stint than others, will be in high demand by law firms and lobbying shops.
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The Department of Education and Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran are making recent staffing changes permanent, headlined by Bethany Swonson remaining as full-time Chief of Staff.
Swonson had been serving as Interim Chief of Staff since April — when Corcoran’s previous Chief of Staff, Alex Kelly, left to become a Deputy Chief Staff in DeSantis’ office. Corcoran made Swonson and others’ staffing positions permanent during a meeting Thursday.
“The Department of Education is very fortunate to have such an amazing leadership team,” DOE Communications Director Jared Ochs said in a statement to Florida Politics.
Florida Politics was the first to report the staffing realignment Friday.
“For the last few months, we’ve been working as an interim leadership team. This week, we made the interim status permanent,” Ochs said. “Bethany Swonson will be Chief of Staff instead of Interim Chief of Staff. Eric Hall will continue to be a Senior Chancellor, as he was during the interim, and Jacob Oliva will be Senior Chancellor and remain over all K-12 education as well as Early Learning.”
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Brittany Morgan Clark is joining Red Hills Strategies. As a professional graphic designer, photographer and videographer, she expands the creative capabilities and offerings of the Tallahassee-based communications firm.
Clark joins Red Hills from the Florida Department of Education, where she served as the Creative Media Director on the Communications team. Aside from directing all photo and video production, she led a variety of creative projects in the agency, managed multiple social media channels, and partnered with many other state agencies to develop their creative content.
During the Rick Scott administration, Clark was often seen snapping photos of the Governor and First Lady while traveling across the Sunshine State.
Clark is also known as a sought-after wedding and family photographer. For nearly a decade, folks inside The Process and across the Southeast have trusted her with their happiest moments and greatest memories.
“With the addition of Brittany Morgan Clark, we’ve significantly expanded what we’re able to offer our clients in print, in broadcast and online,” said Amanda Bevis. “She‘s got the strategic mindset, can-do attitude, and enthusiasm that makes her a great value-add to our clients and a perfect addition to this team.”
Clark makes four on the Red Hills Strategies team. Bevis started the firm in 2018, and the team also includes Julie Fazekas and Madison Dorval. The firm counts among its clients Kathleen Passidomo, Ben Albritton, Tampa General Hospital, TECO Energy, and the Florida Retail Federation.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
Tweet, tweet:
—@oldenoughtosay: I’m gonna preemptively remind those of y’all who have never lived in a hurricane zone that the reason people don’t evacuate isn’t because they think they’ll be fine; it’s because they don’t have money to evacuate. Gas costs money. Somewhere to stay out of town costs money. Harder+ pricier with pets and kids. The lower your income, the less likely your employer is gonna cancel your shifts in advance. People aren’t staying in the path of danger just for fun. They can’t leave.
—@MarcoRubio: Get vaccinated today
—@DeForestNews6: .@GovRonDeSantis spox: “It’s not surprising that Judge (John) Cooper would rule against parent’s rights … but instead rule in favor of elected politicians.” NOTE: The judge *literally* ruled in favor of the plaintiffs (parents) and against the defendants (inc. the elected Governor).
—@SheriffChitwood: Losing too many good people to COVID-19. Judge (Steven) Henderson is another shocking loss. RIP to a true public servant, beloved husband & father. My condolences & prayers to his family. I’m also praying for all the good people battling this awful disease.
—@BubbaProg: Florida didn’t make a strong push to “vaccinate people,” it made a strong push to vaccinate rich white people. When the federal government opened up mass vaccination centers to serve everyone else, DeSantis derisively called them “FEMA camps.”
—@JebBush: (re: Rick Flagg‘s retirement): I always enjoyed our give and take. Congrats on a great career.
— DAYS UNTIL —
Boise vs. UCF — 3; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 4; Notre Dame at FSU — 6; NFL regular season begins — 10; Bucs home opener — 10; California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 15; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 15; Alabama at UF — 19; Dolphins home opener — 20; Jaguars home opener — 20; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 21; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 32; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 32; MLB regular season ends — 33; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 34; World Series Game 1 — 47; ‘Dune’ premieres — 51; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 58; Florida TaxWatch’s annual meeting begins — 58; Georgia at UF — 61; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 64; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 64; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 67; ‘Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 69; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 70; Miami at FSU — 75; ExcelinEd’s National Summit on Education begins — 80; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 81; FSU vs. UF — 89; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 93; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 102; ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 109; ‘The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 114; NFL season ends — 132; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 134; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 134; NFL playoffs begin — 138; Super Bowl LVI — 167; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 207; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 251; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 276; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 312; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 324; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 403; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 438.
“What went wrong with the pandemic in Florida” via Patricia Mazzei, Benjamin Mueller and Robert Gebeloff of The New York Times — The Florida story is a cautionary tale for dealing with the current incarnation of the coronavirus. The United States has used the vaccines as its primary pandemic weapon. But Florida shows that even a state that made a major push for vaccinations, Florida ranks 21st among states and Washington, D.C., in giving people of all ages at least one shot, can be crushed by the delta variant, reaching frightening levels of hospitalizations and deaths. More scant since the state ended its declared COVID-19 state of emergency in June, Florida’s pandemic data reveals only limited information about who is dying.
“Florida starts turning on Ron DeSantis” via Matt Dixon of POLITICO — COVID-19 infection rates continue to climb as [Florida] faces shortages of health care staff, morgue space and even oxygen for patients. About 16,000 people are hospitalized. Child infection rates have shot up. School districts — even in Republican strongholds — have rebelled against DeSantis’ anti-mask mandates. And cruise lines are resisting DeSantis’ vaccine passport ban. Even his recent poll numbers are slipping. … “There’s no question it’s impacting him politically,” said a Republican consultant who has previously worked with DeSantis and requested anonymity to speak freely. “You can tout all the freedom and anti-lockdown that you want. There’s no political strategy for sick kids and tired parents.”
“Political pressure mounts on DeSantis, who cannot, and will not cave” via Brian Burgess of The Capitolist — Democrats would absolutely love it if DeSantis reversed course — and not just because it would their own political position, but it would also weaken DeSantis far more than his stubbornness ever could. Anyone with an ounce of political experience knows that DeSantis simply cannot back down at this point, or he’s toast with the rank-and-file GOP base who love the unshakable confidence he seems to have in himself. Republicans love a winner, and will not tolerate a wishy-washy elected official, no matter how right or wrong he may be. And that’s why Florida isn’t ever closing for business as long as DeSantis is Governor.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida reports 151,749 new COVID-19 cases for the week. Largest number of cases occurring in children 12 and under” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — With the start of a new school year underway in most of Florida, state health officials reported more than 48,000 new COVID-19 cases in children 19 or younger in the last seven days and more than 85,000 in the last two weeks. For the second week in a row, teenagers represent the highest positivity rate of any age group in the state (23.1%), and for the first time, children younger than 12 represent the age group with the most new cases. Overall, new COVID-19 cases continue to climb in the state.
“DeSantis’ statements about Florida’s COVID-19 death rate get renewed scrutiny” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Multiple times during the COVID-19 pandemic, DeSantis has pointed to a positive, but still tragic, metric: Florida’s death rate, which was long better than the national average. It was part of a message that the state under his leadership was faring better than most. Now, the delta-fueled surge in COVID-19 cases has significantly increased Florida’s death rate. And the Governor’s past comments are drawing new attention. Florida is the first U.S. state where daily deaths in the current wave have exceeded deaths in previous waves. Since the beginning of the pandemic, 43,979 people have died from COVID-19.
“Ray Rodrigues, parents’ rights advocates maintain courts ruled wrong on masks” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A judge has ruled a ban on mask mandates violates the Parents’ Bill of Rights. But the Senator behind the state law says that reading goes against legislative intent. “We put all health care decisions in the hands of the parent,” said Sen. Rodrigues, who sponsored the Parents’ Bill of Rights and carried it to passage this year. DeSantis signed the bill into law in June. A month later, he cited it when he announced an executive order forbidding school districts from requiring students to wear masks. Rodrigues was at DeSantis’ side at both of those events. He said then the legislation ought to provide a solid foundation for the Governor’s direction.
“Doctor who promoted ivermectin as a COVID-19 treatment has advised DeSantis” via Steve Contorno and Kirby Wilson of the Miami Herald — A California psychiatrist who has advised DeSantis on the coronavirus pandemic recently promoted a drug for COVID-19 patients that federal disease experts have strongly warned against after a spike in calls to poison control centers. The surge of interest in the parasite drug, ivermectin, prompted the CDC on Thursday to issue a national alert advising against its use to treat coronavirus. The maker of the drug, Merck, has also said there is “no scientific basis” to claim that ivermectin is effective against COVID-19. Dr. Mark McDonald of Los Angeles is among a fringe group of outspoken medical professionals who have pushed ivermectin as an alternative to widespread vaccination against coronavirus.
Tweet, tweet:
“Florida nursing homes protest COVID-19 vaccine mandate as deaths climb” via Kate Santich of the Orlando Sentinel — COVID-19 cases in Florida nursing homes have surged more than twentyfold since June as vaccination rates among staff continue to lag far below the national average. Still, the industry is pushing back against a new Joe Biden administration vaccine mandate for its workers over concerns that many will quit rather than comply. “By the federal government singling out nursing homes with a vaccination requirement that does not apply to health care personnel at other locations and in other health care sectors, we fear that our already critical workforce shortages will worsen,” said Emmett Reed, CEO of the Florida Health Care Association, which represents 310 of the state’s 700 nursing homes.
— CORONA LOCAL —
“Tallahassee hospital staff share heartbreaking stories of ‘talking dead’ COVID-19 patients: Awake, but lungs too damaged to survive without machines” via Sarah Rumpf of Mediaite — There’s a heartbreaking new term emerging from the COVID-19 ward of Tallahassee Memorial Hospital: the “talking dead,” referring to patients whose lungs are so damaged they cannot survive without machines, but who are still awake and aware of their fate. TMH Chief Clinical Officer Ryan Smith, a registered nurse, said he had recently picked up a nursing shift in one of the hospital’s COVID-19 units to see firsthand what TMH’s medical staff were experiencing. “The first part of my shift, I had my first few patients look at me and say, ‘Don’t let me die,’” said Smith.
“Hospital filled with COVID-19 patients was forced to turn away someone needing emergency cancer treatment, doctor says” via Travis Caldwell of CNN — Dr. Nitesh Paryani, a third-generation radiation oncologist in Tampa recently was forced to make a decision that he says he and his family have never had to make in 60 years of treating patients. A nearby hospital was working on transferring a cancer patient to a location that had adequate treatment options. Paryani said he regularly accepts such patients, but for the first time, could not do so due to the number of those sick from COVID-19. “We just didn’t have a bed. There was simply no room in the hospital to treat the patient,” he said.
“Brevard County COVID-19 death counts ‘elevated’ since the start of summer” via Rick Neale and Dave Berman of Florida Today — The nonstop urgency means there’s no time for even simple things like grabbing blankets, fetching a meal or dumping trash. Now, colleagues from departments, typically far from the front lines like finance and communications, are stepping up to help. Have there’s the exhaustion that comes from changing personal protective equipment up to 100 times a day. And dealing with patients who are alone, really alone because visitors aren’t allowed, except under extreme circumstances. And then there’s the worry that comes when colleagues get sick, and their symptoms are worse and linger longer, even as much as six weeks, putting more strain on an already exhausted staff. “I’ve never seen anything like this,” nurse practitioner Christine Zonka said.
—“Brevard School Board to discuss face mask policy at emergency meeting Monday” via Emily Walker of Florida Today
“Sarasota Memorial Hospital seeing more pregnant patients with COVID-19 complications” via Elizabeth Djinis of The Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Sarasota Memorial Hospital is seeing a significant uptick in pregnant patients coming to the emergency room with severe effects from COVID-19, doctors say. “We have seen really in the past several weeks an increase in the number of pregnant women that are coming to the emergency room with COVID-19, high fevers, pneumonia, respiratory distress and babies not moving that much,” said Dr. Felice Baron, the hospital’s director of maternal-fetal medicine. Those who are pregnant are considered at substantial risk for developing severe COVID-19 complications.
“COVID schmovid? No, not necessarily, but Daytona visitors didn’t pack hesitations” via Ken Willis of The Daytona News-Journal — Yes, it’s a big gathering of Americans, in relatively tight quarters compared to the neighborhoods many of them call home. And yes, all are aware of the news regarding a relentless COVID-19 and its delta variant. All seem to have feelings and opinions about it, some stronger than others. But this weekend’s NASCAR visit to Daytona International Speedway was no combustible opportunity awaiting ignition. No, if you want rancor and discord, go to a school board meeting. On Saturday, the ongoing coronavirus pandemic seemed to be somewhere in everyone’s consciousness, just not front and center.
“After three-week COVID-19 battle, Daytona Beach talk radio host Marc Bernier dies” via Mark Harper of The Daytona Beach News-Journal — Bernier, a talk radio host in Daytona Beach for 30 years, died after a three-week battle with COVID-19, WNDB and Southern Stone Communications announced on Twitter Saturday night. Bernier, 65, of Ormond Beach, has been remembered in recent days as a conservative who sought out and aired others’ points of view while airing a morning comment, three-hour afternoon show, weekend shows and specials, such as remote town halls and political debates. He interviewed countless Governors, Senators, Mayors, sheriffs, journalists, historians and authors. He also was an outspoken opponent of vaccinations.
“Lake City high schooler dies from COVID-19 as state’s pediatric hospitalizations hit record high” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — A Lake City high schooler has died as a result of COVID-19. She was only days away from starting her senior year. The teen, 17-year-old Jo’Keria Graham, was in quarantine at home after testing positive for the virus only days before schools started. She seemed to be getting better when she collapsed in the bathroom earlier this month. As she collapsed, the teen told her grandmother that she couldn’t breathe, the report said. Graham was a high schooler in Columbia County, which now leads Florida in COVID-19 cases per capita. The teenager’s death comes as Florida hospital officials report more serious COVID-19 cases among young, healthy adults.
“Duval parents are worried about slow COVID-19 contact tracing. They’re spreading word themselves.” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — Across Florida, school districts are releasing data about hundreds if not thousands of students being told to quarantine because of COVID-19 exposure on campus. But in Duval, those numbers were at least initially much lower. Last week when Duval County Public Schools had nearly 500 positive COVID-19 cases reported, officials said there were “only 189 student and adult quarantines.” The exact number of students and staff with quarantine orders districtwide hasn’t been disclosed. Duval Schools doesn’t post those numbers daily like it publishes positive case numbers.
—“Colleagues grieve after two Florida Highway Patrol members die from COVID-19” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics
—“Duval property appraiser back at work after ‘vicious’ bout with COVID-19, regrets being unvaccinated” via Beth Reese Cravey of The Florida Times-Union
—”James Taylor, Jonas Brothers to require proof of vaccination at Jacksonville shows” via Tom Szaroleta of The Florida Times-Union
“Despite warnings, many Polk County residents still seek livestock drug ivermectin to treat COVID-19” via Sara-Megan Walsh of The Lakeland Ledger — A federal warning against using the drug ivermectin to treat COVID-19 hasn’t stopped Polk County residents from rallying for it as an alternative low-cost treatment for the virus. The FDA issued a warning against ivermectin, an anti-parasite treatment approved for humans and deworming animals such as horses and cattle, against COVID-19. The FDA stated the drug could “be dangerous and even lethal.” That hasn’t stopped Florida residents from seeking it out as protection against the virus.
“Osceola, other Central Florida school districts to consider mask mandates after judge rules against DeSantis ban” via Cristóbal Reyes of the Orlando Sentinel — An Osceola County school board member called for an emergency meeting to discuss putting in place a mask mandate in public schools, joining at least two other counties after a judge ruled that DeSantis’ ban on such mandates was unconstitutional. Board member Clarence Thacker called for the meeting scheduled for Monday following the ruling out of the Second Judicial Circuit in Leon County on a lawsuit brought by families arguing that DeSantis’ mandate bans unfairly put children at risk of contracting COVID-19.
“Private schools and COVID-19: Maskless choices for parents limited in Palm Beach County” via Sonja Isger of The Palm Beach Post — The parents of more than 12,000 students sought to evade requirements that the children wear a mask in Palm Beach County public schools last week, but where will they turn now that the school board has pulled the plug on opting out? The Governor has suggested they take the state’s money and find a private school more to their liking. But few have tried, only 68 in all of Florida so far. And most well-known private options in this county have also taken measures and adopted mask mandates as the school year begins. And, as happened in public school, a certain faction has pushed back there as well.
“Are mask-only classrooms a COVID-19 solution or segregation? Parents, attorneys react” via Giuseppe Sabella of the Bradenton Herald — “You hear so many different stories about COVID,” said Lindsie Walker, the mother of a local second grader. “I don’t want my child to be sick, whether it’s COVID, the flu, whatever.” According to a survey, Walker was among 2,406 people who preferred their child be in a mask-only classroom. They account for about 52% of the people who responded. Another 1,249 people — or approximately 27% — said they preferred their child be in a classroom without masks. The survey offered insight into how strongly parents feel about mask use in schools. But as a legal battle continues at the state level, the fate of mask-only classrooms was uncertain in Manatee County.
“Need a late-night COVID-19 test? Tropical Park has you covered with new 24/7 schedule” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — As Florida’s COVID-19 third wave surges, more and more residents are taking themselves to testing sites. To meet the demand, Tropical Park is extending its testing hours to 24 hours a day, effective immediately. The move comes amid a growing number of COVID-19 cases in Florida, fueled by the very contagious delta variant. Florida on Friday reported to the CDC that 27,584 COVID-19 cases were added on Thursday, a single-day case record. As Miami-Dade County averages more than 24,000 COVID-19 tests per day, the Tropical Park COVID-19 testing site will be offering PCR testing nonstop, every day, the county said in a statement. The previous hours were 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
“Vinyl dividers to separate guests and scare actors inside Universal’s Halloween Horror Nights houses” via Katie Rice of the Orlando Sentinel — Haunted houses at Universal’s Halloween Horror Nights will use clear vinyl to separate guests and scare actors this year as a precaution against the transmission of COVID-19, a resort spokeswoman said Friday. The vinyl will be installed “in key locations” of the houses to allow safe interactions between scare actors and guests, said Alyson Solo, senior public relations director. She said that team members and performers will also be required to wear face coverings indoors during the event, according to the resort’s employee mask guidelines.
“‘We’re all in denial.’ With eye on COVID-19, Key West looks at Fantasy Fest on calendar” via Gwen Filosa of the Miami Herald — Key West’s annual Fantasy Fest, a 10-day spectacle that brings parades, parties, and crowds of body-painted tourists to the small island, is still on the calendar. The events start on Oct. 22 and run through Halloween. But can the city safely pull off its largest attraction while COVID-19 cases are surging in Florida and the Keys? The Key West City Commission meets Wednesday, Sept. 1, with plans to listen to the people before making any decisions. Some fear it will be canceled, leading to losses of income. Others fear the impact of tens of thousands of visitors during a surge of new COVID-19 cases.
— STATEWIDE —
First on #FlaPol — FDOT chief of staff hits the road — Chief of Staff Torey Alston is leaving the Department of Transportation according to a Thursday announcement by Secretary Kevin Thibault. Thibault commented on the staffing change late last week during a virtual meeting of the Florida Transportation Commission. “He has done an outstanding job as our chief of staff, and he will truly be sorely missed,” Thibault said of Alston. Alston joined FDOT in Jan. 2019. He’ll continue helping the department with its transition to a new chief of staff. Thibault said Alston will depart the agency “in the next several weeks.”
Happening today — Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Walker will hold a hearing on an injunction to block Florida’s “anti-riot” law, 9 a.m. Call: 1-888-684-8852; code: 385313.
What Jason Pizzo is reading — “Designed to fail,” Clayton Park of the Daytona Beach News-Journal — An examination of the way high-rise condos are regulated and maintained in Florida shows why some experts believe the system was designed to fail. And human nature plays a part: Many condo boards defer repairs because of the costs. Too much economizing could be deadly. “Buildings in Florida, in general, are only designed to have a shelf life of 40 to 50 years,” said Ariel Neris, a structural engineer in Seminole County. “It doesn’t mean you have to demolish it or that it’s unsafe after that period of time, but it might require significant structural, mechanical and/or electrical and plumbing upgrades. Buildings closer to the coast are more exposed to salt air that increases the rate of corrosion.”
Assignment editors — Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried will release the findings of a report produced by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) Division of Marketing and Development on the impacts of Mexican imports on Florida’s seasonal producers, followed by a COVID-19 update, 10:30 a.m., Office of the Agriculture Commissioner, Plaza Level. RSVP to comms@fdacs.gov; also livestreamed at Facebook.com/FDACS.
Farmers earn support from current, former officials in legal battle against Army Corps of Engineers — The lawsuit argues the Corps is ignoring federal law in its planning process for the Comprehensive Everglades Planning Project (CEPP). At issue is the A-2 section of CEPP, which includes a stormwater treatment area and a reservoir. The complaints argue the Army Corps plan keeps water levels in that area too low, which violates a provision of WRDA 2000 known as the “savings clause.” Former DEP Secretary Herschel Vinyard says he supports the lawsuits. “I am thrilled that the plaintiffs took care to file a narrowly tailored lawsuit which does not interfere with the ongoing construction of any Everglades projects or disrupt the state’s tremendous progress in the Everglades that has been made over the last decade,” Vinyard said.
— DATELINE TALLY —
Happening today — The Orange County legislative delegation will host a virtual meeting: Sens. Randolph Bracy, Linda Stewart, Victor Torres; Reps. Kamia Brown, Anna Eskamani, Joy Goff-Marcil, Travaris McCurdy, Daisy Morales, Rene Plasencia, Geraldine Thompson, Keith Truenow, and Carlos Guillermo Smith, 9:30 a.m. Information and link here.
Happening today — Rep. Kelly Skidmore will host a meeting on ocean-related issues, 6 p.m. Zoom link here.
— 2022 —
“DeSantis raises money in New Jersey on Sunday” via David Wildstein of the New Jersey Globe — DeSantis arrived in New Jersey on Sunday morning for a high dollar event in Deal hosted by real estate developer Joe Cayre. Unlike 2014, when no GOP candidate would dare raise money in New Jersey without the permission of Gov. Chris Christie, potential 2024 presidential candidates no longer hesitate to cultivate donors in the Garden State. He has already raised $626,254 from New Jersey-based donors, according to the Florida Department of State. Four months ago, DeSantis raised money at the Moorestown home of Vernon Hill, the founder of Commerce Bank.
Tweet, tweet:
“On campaign money, DeSantis doth protest too much” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — What’s with DeSantis and his spokeswoman, Christina Pushaw? Their high-volume squawking over an Associated Press story about his biggest campaign contributor has been so over the top and out of proportion to the article itself that it calls to mind Shakespeare’s phrase, “The lady doth protest too much, methinks.” That has been a metaphor for suspicious insincerity ever since “Hamlet.” Team DeSantis’ outrage may be mostly about discouraging more questions about all the money it’s raising. To recap, the AP story noted that “a top donor” to DeSantis also has a $15.9 million corporate investment in Regeneron Pharmaceutical, the company makes the monoclonal antibody treatment that the governor is promoting heavily in Florida to reduce hospitalizations and deaths from COVID-19.
Assignment editors — Charlie Crist will join Broward County School Board Members, Broward Teachers Union President Anna Fusco, and elected officials for a news conference following the Circuit Court decision to strike down DeSantis’ Executive Order on mask requirements in school, 1:30 p.m., RSVP to press@charliecrist.com for location.
“A Shalala-Mucarsel-Powell primary is possible in Florida’s most competitive House seat” via Alex Daugherty of the Miami Herald — The upcoming redrawing of congressional districts and the undefined ambitions of two former incumbents has put the pursuit of Florida’s two most competitive U.S. House seats in a holding pattern as Democrats jostle behind the scenes to potentially take on Republican U.S. Reps. María Elvira Salazar and Carlos Giménez. Former U.S. Reps. Donna Shalala and Debbie Mucarsel-Powell haven’t decided their 2022 plans, though Shalala is leaning toward a third straight run against Salazar next year. A Mucarsel-Powell rematch with Gimenez could also be in the works.
Spotted at Sen. Ed Hooper‘s reelection campaign kickoff at Island Way Grill in Clearwater: Senate President Wilton Simpson, Sen. Passidomo, Rep. Nick DiCeglie, former Rep. Kim Berfield, Neil Brickfield, Frank Hibbard, Jim Holton, Jeff Johnston, Sandy Murman, Amanda Stewart, Alan Suskey, and J.D. White.
— CORONA NATION —
“U.S. COVID-19 hospitalizations approach a peak as delta variant spreads” via Melanie Evans, Andrew Mollica, Anthony DeBarros and Jon Kamp of The Wall Street Journal — COVID-19 hospitalizations nationwide crossed above 100,000 this week for the second time in the pandemic, overwhelming caregiver capacity in several states. According to doctors, nurses, and hospital executives, keeping ahead of demand is harder now than during earlier surges. Patients with other illnesses returned to hospitals this year, leaving fewer open beds as COVID-19 cases soared. The demand is most acute in ICUs, which care for the most-critical patients and need highly trained medical staff. Hospitals are short-staffed and unable to recruit enough nurses and respiratory therapists, who are exhausted as the pandemic wears on.
“100,000 more COVID-19 deaths seen unless US changes its ways” via Carla K. Johnson and Nicky Forster of The Associated Press — The U.S. is projected to see nearly 100,000 more COVID-19 deaths between now and Dec. 1, according to the nation’s most closely watched forecasting model. But health experts say that toll could be cut in half if nearly everyone wore a mask in public spaces. In other words, what the coronavirus has in store this fall depends on human behavior. “Behavior is really going to determine if, when, and how sustainably the current wave subsides,” said Lauren Ancel Meyers, director of the University of Texas COVID-19 Modeling Consortium.
—“COVID-19 surge pummels Hawaii and its native population” via Jennifer Sinco Kelleher of The Associated Press
“FDA vaccine approval, mandates persuade New York City holdouts” via Amy Yee of Bloomberg — Sharray Gray has been vigilant about wearing masks, using hand sanitizer and social distancing, even from her grandchildren. Several of her friends and family members have died of COVID-19. Yet, for months, she declined to get a vaccine. “If it doesn’t get FDA approval, I’m not putting it in my body or my child’s body,” said Gray. On Tuesday, Gray and her 12-year-old daughter got their first shots. Gray’s turnabout underscores how the FDA’s approval of one of the COVID-19 vaccines could prove to be an important step in boosting vaccination rates, particularly in communities where uptake has been low.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Millions of Americans face financial cliff as eviction ban, unemployment aid lapse amid Washington inaction” via Tony Romm and Rachel Siegel of The Washington Post — The clock is now ticking for millions of Americans who are set to face a series of stinging financial hardships in a matter of days, with the loss of federal protections against eviction and looming cuts to their weekly unemployment checks. The two developments arrive at a moment of great tension in Washington, where the White House and Congress have grappled over the state of the country’s pandemic aid even as the economy shows potential signs of strain in the face of a resurgent coronavirus.
“Democrats rush to avert eviction calamity after ban is blocked” via Katy O’Donnell of POLITICO — Democratic lawmakers and the White House scrambled Friday to shore up safeguards for millions of tenants facing a housing crisis after the Supreme Court blocked an eviction ban imposed by the Biden administration. Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the House was considering “possible legislative remedies” as more than 60 House Democrats demanded that she and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer work to revive the national eviction moratorium. Top Biden officials also mobilized to contain the fallout, with three Cabinet secretaries urging state and local officials to enact their own bans and pause eviction proceedings in court.
“It’s time to let the U.S. economy stand on its own two feet” via The Washington Post editorial board — The U.S. economy continues to recover, despite the growing uncertainty caused by the resurgence of the coronavirus delta variant. Payrolls grew by an average of more than 800,000 jobs in the three-month period ending July 31. The unemployment rate stands at 5.4%, a drop of more than three-fifths since the 14.8% peak hit in April 2020. To be sure, the data reflects the fact that many people have dropped out of the labor force, but even that negative phenomenon seems to be diminishing in recent weeks. Much of the progress reflects extraordinary interventions by the Federal Reserve at the beginning of the crisis, yet that very fact implies it’s getting safer for the Fed to curtail some support.
— MORE CORONA —
“U.S. spy agencies rule out possibility the coronavirus was created as a bioweapon, say origin will stay unknown without China’s help” via Ellen Nakashima and Joel Achenbach of The Washington Post — The U.S. intelligence community has ruled out the possibility that the novel coronavirus that has killed more than 4 million people globally was developed as a bioweapon by China, but the agencies failed to reach consensus on the virus origin, according to key takeaways from a classified report delivered to Biden. The report, the result of a 90-day sprint ordered by Biden, also found that the agencies are unlikely to conclude the virus’s origins without cooperation from the Chinese government, which is unlikely.
“New COVID-19 variant detected in South Africa, most mutated variant so far” via Tzvi Joffre of The Jerusalem Post — A new coronavirus variant, C.1.2, has been detected in South Africa and several other countries, with concerns that it could be more infectious and evade vaccines, according to a new preprint study by South Africa’s National Institute for Communicable Diseases and the KwaZulu-Natal Research Innovation and Sequencing Platform. The study is awaiting peer review. Scientists first detected C.1.2 in May 2021, finding it was descended from C.1, which scientists found surprising as C.1 had last been detected in January. The new variant has “mutated substantially” compared to C.1 and is more mutations away from the original virus detected in Wuhan than any other Variant of Concern (VOC) or Variant of Interest (VOI) detected so far worldwide.
“A California elementary school teacher took off her mask for a read-aloud. Within days, half her class was positive for delta.” via Ariana Eunjung Cha of The Washington Post — The Marin County, California, elementary school had been conscientious about following COVID-19 protocols. Masks were required indoors, desks were spaced 6 feet apart, and the students kept socially distant. But the delta variant found an opening anyway. On May 19, one teacher, who was not vaccinated against the coronavirus, began feeling fatigued and had some nasal congestion. She dismissed it as allergies and powered through. While she was usually masked, she made an exception for story time so she could read to the class.
“How much impact could Sturgis rally have on COVID-19 caseload?” via Stephen Groves of The Associated Press — Rumbles from the motorcycles and rock shows of the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally have hardly cleared from the Black Hills of South Dakota, and the reports of COVID-19 infections among rallygoers are already streaming in, 178 cases across five states, according to contact tracers. In the three weeks since the rally kicked off, coronavirus cases in South Dakota have shot up at a startling pace, sixfold from the early days of August. While it is not clear how much rallygoers spread the virus through secondary infections, state health officials have so far reported 63 cases among South Dakota residents who attended the event.
“‘It’s stupid to protest’: Children reveal what it’s like to wear a mask all day” via Lois K. Solomon of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Thrilled to return to school after last year’s quarantine, South Florida’s kids are putting on their masks each morning and forgetting about them for most of the day. Meanwhile, the adults quarrel: the Governor with school boards, anti-mask parents with school officials, pro-mask parents with state officials they have taken to court for saying masks must be optional. The kids say they don’t understand the commotion. “I forget it’s on my face,” said Joel Bender, an eighth grader at Indian Ridge Middle School in Davie. “Everyone’s wearing it. If it slides off, they put it back on. It’s stupid to protest.”
— CRISIS —
“Jan. 6 investigators demand records from social media companies” via Nicholas Wu of POLITICO — The select committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection is seeking a massive tranche of records from social media companies, on whose platforms many defendants charged in the Capitol attack planned and coordinated their actions. In a series of letters dated Aug. 26, the Democratic-controlled panel asked the companies, which include Facebook, Google, Twitter, Parler, 4chan, Twitch and TikTok, for all records and documents since April 1, 2020, relating to misinformation around the 2020 election, efforts to overturn the 2020 election, domestic violent extremists associated with efforts to overturn the election and foreign influence in the 2020 election.
“Orlando man pushed barriers into police during Capitol riot, feds say” via Monivette Cordeiro of the Orlando Sentinel — An Orlando man was arrested Friday after federal prosecutors say he was part of a crowd that pushed security gate barriers into a line of police officers defending the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6 riot. Robert Flynt Fairchild Jr., 40, is the latest Central Florida resident involved in the ordeal that left five dead. He is facing nine charges, including assaulting, resisting or impeding certain officers. Fairchild was released from custody by a federal judge Friday in the Middle District of Florida. Investigators say Fairchild was captured on multiple police body cameras wearing a “green jacket, green neck gaiter, green knit hat, green backpack and green gloves.”
“Former Windermere cop’s YouTube ‘battlefield’ rant could hurt Capitol riot defense, experts say” via Grace Toohey of Orlando Florida — After his recent arrest in the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol, former Windermere police officer Kevin Tuck has begun posting incendiary videos on YouTube, spouting contempt for the Republican Party and the federal agencies investigating the pro-Donald Trump rioters and calling for others to “rise up.” Under the account “Patriot Pastor,” Tuck in one five-minute video defended the rioters as “patriots” and downplayed the trespassing offense faced by many of those accused of illegally entering Capitol to interfere with the formal certification of Biden’s victory.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Scott Franklin’s phone-in events are open to all on his list” via Gary White of The Ledger — Franklin differs from Polk County’s other two representatives on his approach to town halls as well as social media. … Franklin has exclusively held telephone town halls, hiring a vendor to manage the events. Franklin’s office does not advertise the sessions in advance or post a number for constituents to call. Instead, the vendor makes automated calls to constituents shortly before the events, usually held at 7 p.m., said Russ Read, Franklin’s communications director.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“FDLE investigation leads to racketeering charges for Tamarac City Manager Michael Cernech” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Cernech is facing racketeering charges after being accused of participating in a scheme to threaten a landowner into paying millions of dollars. Attorney General Ashley Moody’s office announced the charges Friday after the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) investigation. “The defendant conspired with convicted felons, using his position of authority to relay false information to the highest levels of city government to further this multimillion-dollar extortion scheme — disgraceful,” Moody said of Cernech. Prosecutors say Cernech worked with real estate developers Bruce and Shawn Chait, along with several other individuals. The Chaits are already facing charges of attempting to extort rival developer Arnaud Karsenti.
“More money, more projects. Miami-Dade governments bouncing back with help from the feds” via Samantha J. Gross, Doug Hanks and Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — Heading into 2021, as a COVID-19-cratered economy undercut government income and forced politicians to slash spending, the possibility of a protracted pandemic looked as if it might also prolong the pain for public institutions. But even as Florida sets records for COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations this month, local officials are putting the final touches on 2022 spending plans that offer a departure from last year’s cuts. Thanks to a healthy injection of federal stimulus dollars aimed at COVID-19 relief, rising property values and a Florida economy that reopened before many other states across the U.S., few Miami-Dade cities are hiking tax rates at all.
“Miami-Dade Commissioners to weigh creating first new city since 2005” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — There hasn’t been a new municipality established in Miami-Dade County in more than 16 years. That could soon change with Biscayne Gardens. County Commissioners are to decide on Sept. 1, after a public forum, whether to let voters decide on incorporating five square miles abutting four existing cities in the northeast. If OK’d by area voters in a special election on Nov. 2, the new town would be Miami-Dade’s 35th municipality and the first since the Town of Cutler Bay was incorporated in January 2005. Biscayne Gardens would keep the neighborhood name locals have used for decades.
“Military veteran hospitalized following violent outburst at Miami airport” via Saira Anwer of Local 10 News — Authorities took a man into custody at Miami International Airport after a violent attack on several airport employees. Police later said that man was a military veteran who was going into some form of crisis. After being taken into custody, Miami-Dade police said the man was brought to a treatment center for evaluation. The incident was captured by several people on their cellphones. It happened Friday night at Miami International Airport. The man could be seen in the video trying to enter an American Airlines gate in Terminal D. In one video, the man is seen picking up a security post and swinging it at bystanders, including airport staff.
“Jacksonville evictions displace many as renters, landlords face problems during pandemic” via Steve Patterson of The Florida Times-Union — As COVID-19 cases have surged across Northeast Florida, thousands of people have continued being evicted from local homes despite federal rules written to prevent that during the pandemic. Duval County judges issued 1,991 orders for police to evict tenants during the first seven months of this year, when landlords filed 4,716 lawsuits to take back rental homes, the Duval County clerk of courts office reported. Eviction moratoriums put in place last year were meant to help curb the pandemic’s spread, and a new moratorium the CDC issued this month aimed to do that in places with high transmission of the disease, like Florida.
“Escambia polices logos while pillaging taxpayers?” via Andy Marlette of the Pensacola News Journal — On Friday, July 30, I got a surprise email from Escambia County Attorney Alison Rogers prefaced with a subject line that said, “friendly note.” The “friendly note’s” arrival came after a column had published taking aim at Escambia County Commissioners and the county attorney for their various roles in pursuing massive, taxpayer-funded “settlements” that could have potentially enriched Commissioners Steven Barry, Lumon May and a few other top county attorneys and officials. In the column, I satirized the sheriff’s famous “Wheel of Fugitives” by suggesting that the cash-grabbing politicians could end up on the billboards due to their attempted taxpayer robbery.
— TOP OPINION —
“As Florida suffers with another dreadful COVID-19 surge, DeSantis focuses on reelection” via Reed Galen for the Miami Herald — In the last few weeks, DeSantis has demonstrated his willingness and ability to utilize the organs of power he controls (including a supine GOP-led Legislature) to promote himself, his chaos agenda and his donors’ interests. Infections by the delta variant of COVID-19 are overrunning the state. Hospital beds are filling up and will soon be unavailable to anyone not already in them. In his attempt to ensure that he faces no significant challenger next year, DeSantis is writing the obituary for his own governorship and future aspirations.
— OPINIONS —
“DeSantis, how many COVID-19 deaths are enough?” via Charles M. Blow of POLITICO — Perhaps no politician has taken the reins from Trump with more vigor than DeSantis, a man who thinks he could be the next Republican President. But to supplant the last leader of his party, he has to out-Trump Trump. He needed to become the darling of the Trump freedom fighters, fighting for the right to get sick and die. As long as he is fighting Washington and Democrats and experts, it doesn’t matter to entrenched Republicans that he’s not fighting the plague. Some bodies must be sacrificed to appease the gods of partisan resistance.
“Florida’s missing-in-action Surgeon General surfaces, to say he’s quitting” via Frank Cerabino of the Palm Beach Post — His resignation announcement was more of a confirmation that Scott Rivkees was still alive. Before the announcement of his departure, he had been missing for so long, he was running the risk of being the subject of a Silver Alert to Florida motorists or getting his face put on the side of milk cartons. … Rivkees … disappeared April 13, 2020, moments after addressing the public about the then-new COVID-19 pandemic. … Florida’s chief medical officer talking about virus-mitigation measures lasting for a year or more practically led to kidnappers throwing a pillowcase over his head and tossing him into the back seat of a waiting car.
“Undocumented immigrants aren’t Florida’s COVID-19 problem” via The Palm Beach Post editorial board — If the bit about the 2020 presidential election being stolen is the “Big Lie,” then misinformation about the hordes of COVID-19-infected undocumented immigrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border impacting the Sunshine State amounts to the “Florida Fib.” Truth is, Florida has enough problems with its own residents who have avoided taking the shot, not to mention unvaccinated tourists flocking to the state, to be blaming people far from our state. There’s no data to support the fib, but that hasn’t stopped some politicians from repeating it as if it were documented fact.
“Rebuttal: Many top athletes raised on clean Glades air” via Eric Green of The Palm Beach Post — As someone who was born and raised in Clewiston, played high school football in the Glades, and eventually made it into the NFL, I am surprised by the recent news articles suggesting our environment and our air quality is anything but good. Interestingly enough, it seems like most of the complaints are coming from either the same paid advocates who regularly attack the Glades over water and other issues as well as “experts” who live many miles away. Anyone who lives here knows farmers help, not hurt, our communities, and take all necessary steps to protect our resources.
“Skanska again proves an untrustworthy community partner” via the Pensacola News Journal editorial board — U.S. District Court Northern District of Florida Judge Hope T. Cannon has ruled against Skanska on charges that the company deliberately destroyed evidence by wiping company cellphones in the aftermath of Hurricane Sally and the trail of destruction left by Skanska’s unsecured barges in Pensacola Bay. This is just further confirmation for the citizens of Escambia and Santa Rosa counties that the construction company is not a trustworthy community partner, despite the hundreds of millions of dollars taxpayers are paying them.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Tomorrow is Flagg’s final episode before retiring; Sunrise 2.0 with Trimmel Gomes will premiere next Monday.
Also on today’s Sunrise:
— About that mask mandate; the one the Governor tried to ban. Circuit Judge Cooper decided that DeSantis’ order is unconstitutional. Local school boards are free to adopt mask mandates WITHOUT a parental opt-out if they think that’s the best way to contain the COVID-19 outbreak.
— The newly approved “Parents Bill of Rights” that the Department of Education tried using to force school districts to do their bidding. In effect, the state has been hoisted on its own petard.
— For the third week in a row, the Department of Health reports 150,000 cases and an average of more than 200 deaths per day. Or, as the Governor describes it, a seasonal fluctuation.
— What did DeSantis have to say about those deaths during an appearance on FOX? He was never asked. But he did blame Biden for letting COVID-19 cross the border.
— One of the Governor’s medical advisers is recommending a horse deworming medicine to treat COVID-19. The company that makes the drug says that’s pretty stupid.
— A woman who signed up to be a state corrections officer is killed while training to use firearms.
— A Quincy man who worked as a federal correctional officer will spend two years in jail after admitting he raped female inmates in Marianna and Tallahassee.
— And finally, two Florida person stories: A Florida Man and Woman are wounded during a shootout between a boat and jet skiers, and a Florida Woman goes to jail for taking a whiz outside her car.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“SpaceX breaks Florida’s two-month drought with launch to International Space Station” via Emre Kelly of Florida Today — SpaceX officially broke Florida’s two-month launch drought early Sunday, vaulting a Dragon spacecraft from Kennedy Space Center with thousands of pounds of cargo for astronauts stationed in low-Earth orbit. Falcon 9 slowly ascended from pad 39A exactly 47 seconds after 3:14 a.m., relying on its nine Merlin main engines to propel Dragon on a trajectory to catch up with the International Space Station some 250 miles overhead. It marked the 23rd run for SpaceX under contract with NASA to deliver supplies, cargo, and science experiments to the International Space Station. The uncrewed capsule should dock with the Harmony module’s forward-facing port around 11 a.m. Eastern time Monday. NASA astronauts Shane Kimbrough and Megan McArthur will oversee the procedure.
“Keep on Tech’n: How local logistics companies are growing through tech” via Will Brown of the Jacksonville Business Journal — As the pandemic shaped and reshaped the movement of goods, many First Coast trucking companies responded by leaning into technology. “The supply chain and logistics technologies the trucking industry has employed for years was put to good use during the pandemic and showed how nimble the trucking industry can be in responding to ever-changing needs from consumers,” said Florida Trucking Association President Alix Miller. The last 18 months have illustrated the merits of investing in technology, be it through the launch of an app for drivers, creating a web-based platform for end-users, making the tools currently in place more effective or developing new ones that provide better integration of various management systems.
“The race to rescue Florida’s diseased corals” via Teresa Tomassoni of The Washington Post — Since 2014, a mysterious illness known as stony coral tissue loss disease has plagued Florida’s reef tract, killing off nearly half the state’s hard corals, whose rigid limestone skeletons provide the architectural backbone of the largest bank reef in the continental United States. By 2018, it became clear that without drastic intervention, these corals would face imminent localized extinction. To save them, scientists devised a plan to remove the most vulnerable species from their natural habitat and create a land-based gene bank that would serve as a modern-day ark for the animals. They knew that to succeed, time was of the essence, and collaboration was key. What followed was an unprecedented effort.
“St. Pete native & Afghanistan veteran takes gold in Paralympics triathlon” via WFLA — St. Pete native Brad Snyder took gold in the men’s triathlon Saturday morning, finishing nearly a minute ahead of the runner-up. This is the first year the event has been included in the Paralympics, making him the first man to take gold in it ever. Snyder is a navy veteran who was blinded by an IED blast while serving in Afghanistan. He’s also a swimmer and won seven medals in London and Rio.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Best wishes to Rep. Lauren Melo. Belated birthday wishes to John Holley of Florida Power & Light.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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6.) THE FACTUAL
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Hello, Monday. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,196 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
🇪🇺 Breaking: The EU is expected to remove the U.S. today from the bloc’s COVID “safe list,” recommending travel restrictions. (N.Y. Times)
A section of roof was blown off of a building in the French Quarter. Photo: Eric Gay/AP
Ida, one of the strongest hurricanes ever to hit the U.S., left 1 million+ people — including all of New Orleans — sweltering without power as the storm ravaged Louisiana on the 16th anniversary of Katrina’s landfall.
- The Mississippi River is flowing in reverse in southeastern Louisiana after Ida forced vast volumes of sea water ashore, Bloomberg reports.
What to watch: Numerous oil and gas facilities and chemical plants were in the path of some of the strongest winds and storm surge — including the strategic Port Fourchon, which is integral to the Gulf of Mexico’s oil and gas production, Axios’ Andrew Freedman writes.
- Damage there and upriver could lead to environmental hazards, as well as delays in oil and gas production in the Gulf.
Lightning swirls around the eye as Hurricane Ida approaches Louisiana.
If you’ve spent time in the French Quarter, you know this is a great photo: Ann Colette Boudreaux comforts her grandson, Abel.
A boy sells Taliban flags in Kabul. Photo: Hoshang Hashimi/AFP via Getty
The Taliban insist they’ve become more humane. But their actions as they’ve taken control of Afghanistan are harsh reminders of the dreaded early Taliban era, Axios World editor Dave Lawler writes.
- With tomorrow as President Biden’s departure deadline, the U.S. has to decide how it’ll work with the new government.
What’s happening: The militants are offering vague assurances that they have changed with the times.
- The U.S. will have no influence on the formation of the next government, a senior U.S. official tells Axios.
- But the Taliban’s clear desire to avoid sanctions and cultivate normal relations does provide leverage.
Taliban leaders have promised amnesty for people who supported the ousted government or foreign forces, but there are already reprisals.
- They have said girls can go to school, women can go to work (once the current unrest subsides) and journalists can hold them to account — all within still-to-be-defined limitations.
- They’ve said they’ll establish an Islamic system — but not how it will be governed or who will lead it.
- It’s also unclear to what extent any moves toward moderation by the group’s leaders — many of whom spent years in exile after their overthrow in 2001 — will filter down to the rank and file.
Obaidullah Baheer — a lecturer in transitional justice at the American University of Afghanistan, who stayed in Kabul as friends fled — told Axios his interactions with Taliban fighters have been civil, despite his Western clothing.
- But he knows of multiple instances of arbitrary beatings.
- “These people who are now in control of Kabul are people who have not experienced governance, but have only fought, for a good 20 years,” he said. “And that obviously has a huge impact on the psyche and the group behavior.”
What we’re watching: Under the ousted government, foreign aid had accounted for 75% of the government’s budget and some 40% of GDP.
- That sets the U.S. and other foreign powers up for this balancing act: Withhold funding to press the Taliban to respect the rights of women and minorities, without contributing to economic collapse.
🚨 Breaking overnight: As many as five rockets were fired at Kabul’s airport today. The White House says “operations continue uninterrupted.”
- The rockets didn’t stop a steady stream of U.S. C-17 cargo jets taking off and landing.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Antitrust scrutiny of tech giants will intensify this fall as critics Lina Khan, Tim Wu and Jonathan Kanter take the Biden administration lead on competition policy, Axios’ Margaret Harding McGill writes.
- Facebook, Google, Amazon and Apple face threats from federal regulators, Congress, state attorneys general and the European Union.
- That’s four companies, each being challenged from four directions.
Go deeper: Read a company-by-company précis.
Photo: Tom Brenner/Reuters
President Biden and Dr. Jill Biden were at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware for the dignified transfer of the remains of service members killed by the suicide bombing in Kabul.
Biden handed souvenir “challenge coins” to members of the Marine Corps Honor Guard before departing Dover on Air Force One.
Ironwood Cafe — a sports bar in Westlake, Ohio — posted this photo, and said: “Today we reserved a table for our 13 Americans not coming home.”
- Several other bars around the country paid similar tributes, USA Today reports: First Line Brewery, outside Buffalo, arrayed 13 pints on a table — and refreshed them throughout the night so they’d stay cold.
In Boston, Cameran Martin (above), a 13-year-old member of the Girlz of Imani dance troupe from the OrigiNation Cultural Arts Center, helped dedicate a Middle Passage Port Marker on Long Wharf yesterday.
- The marker salutes the “hundreds of thousands of enslaved Africans brought to North America as part of the Middle Passage — including those bought and sold on Boston’s waterfront — and more than a million who did not survive the voyage,” The Boston Globe reports.
Go deeper: Learn about the marker.
The TV drama “Lou Grant” — modeled on the L.A. Times, which was in our driveway every morning when I was growing up — was one of the early influences that left me addicted to newsrooms.
- I loved the excitement, pace and camaraderie — and newsrooms have given me a life I wouldn’t trade for anything.
The bald, burly, blustery star of “Lou Grant” was Ed Asner, who died in L.A. yesterday at 91.
- Asner became a star in middle age as the gruff but lovable newsman Lou Grant, first in the hit comedy “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” and later “Lou Grant,” AP reports:
Asner was a journeyman character actor in films and TV when he was hired in 1970 to play Lou Grant on “The Mary Tyler Moore Show.”
- For seven seasons he was the rumpled boss to Moore’s ebullient Mary Richards in a Minneapolis TV newsroom.
- He called her “Mary.” She called him “Mr. Grant.”
Asner then starred for five years on “Lou Grant,” set at “The Trib.”
- As Screen Actors Guild president, the liberal Asner was caught up in a controversy in 1982, during the Reagan years, when he spoke out against U.S. involvement with repressive governments in Latin America.
- “Lou Grant” was canceled during the furor. CBS blamed ratings.
P.S. Betty White, 99, who played home-show hostess Sue Ann Nivens, is the lone surviving major cast member of “Mary Tyler Moore.”
- Go deeper: Ed Asner obit.
Photo: NBC News
NBC weather icon Al Roker, 67, clapped back at “folks on Twitter” who questioned why he was getting battered in the surf ahead of Ida:
- “I volunteered to come out here,” he told MSNBC’s Jonathan Capehart. “This is what I do. I’ve done this for 40 years. … ‘Well, he’s too old to be doin’ this.’ Well, hey, guess what: Screw you! OK? And try to keep up! Keep up, OK?”
“These young punks!” Roker added. “I will come after them. I will drop them like a bag of dirt.”
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CPS starts unpredictable year with bus issues, COVID-19 concerns
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The Morning Briefing: The Odds on Biden Ever Getting Anything Right Are Horrible
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. My cat and Alexa are talking about me behind my back. Mostly in English.
A week ago I decided that it was time for a health and fitness “re-calibration” that would involve some time away from my beloved beer and whiskey. I’m going in for a checkup soon and I don’t want my new doctor to have to lead with, “Well, you’re fat and your liver is suing for emancipation.” So I am working diligently on unfattening myself and going to couples therapy with my liver.
But, given the way things are going, the timing of it was atrocious. I may come out of this dry spell by going to Ireland and trying to sleep in a cask of Jameson.
I prefer to take the long view of things, which helps to keep my mood from being buffeted about by the news of the day, week, or even month. My capacity for doing so is obviously being tested right now. My faith in the Constitution and the Americans who aren’t commie idiots remains strong, however.
Still, Biden is quite the optimism damper.
During our VIP Gold Live Chat last Thursday, Bryan, VodkaPundit, and I were running over the myriad ways in which Joe Biden and his handlers screwed up the decision-making process regarding the withdrawal from Afghanistan. It’s truly stunning in scope. It’s so bad, they were all probably wearing mismatched socks while “planning” this debacle.
My firm belief is that, even though these are dark days, we’re going to be just fine. Just not anytime soon. There is nothing on the horizon to suggest that this administration is ever going to get anything right.
In his latest “C’mon Now!” video, Bryan dissects the decision to abandon Bagram Air Base and hope for the best with the embassy in Kabul. That was the second domino to fall, following Biden’s initial brain-dead idea about getting out, which Matt recapped in a post yesterday:
Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.) blasted Joe Biden on Fox News Radio’s Fox Across America on Friday, blaming the botched withdrawal and terror attack on Joe Biden wanting a “photo op for September 11.”
Joe Biden announced in mid-April that all military forces would be withdrawn from Afghanistan by September 11, 2021—the twentieth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. At the time, Senator Chuck Schumer praised the revised timetable. “It’s refreshing to have a thought-out plan with a set timetable,” Schumer said.
The agreement reached between the Trump administration and the Taliban in February 2020 required the Taliban to end all attacks on our troops, refuse safe harbor for terrorists, and negotiate with Afghan leaders on creating a new government. As long as the Taliban lived up to these conditions, the United States would gradually withdraw. The plan was unanimously endorsed by the United Nations Security Council and resulted in tremendous stability, and the United States hadn’t suffered a single combat casualty in the country in eighteen months, even with a small presence of only 2,500 U.S. troops, the smallest military presence since military operations began in 2001. This was possible, former Vice President Pence explained earlier this month, because the Taliban understood “that the consequences of violating the deal would be swift and severe.”
The photo-op slam is more than valid — Democrats are addicted to grandstanding for the media — but there’s more at play. Team Biden is driven by a twisted, pathological compulsion to undo virtually everything Donald Trump did while he was president. There is never any assessment of whether the Trump policy in question was good for the country. If Trump did it, it needs to be undone. As we’ve seen more than once, these idiots don’t stick to any international agreements that Trump had in place.
What this administration has really succeeded in undoing is America’s credibility on the world stage. In seven months.
Joe Biden is too absent to care about his legacy. As I wrote last Friday, Doctor Mama Jill and some special interests are pulling the alleged president’s strings. They’re all motivated by spite. The good of the people hasn’t crossed one mind in this administration. Throw in the fact that none of them seem to be particularly adept at what they do and we’re staring down the maw of a beast that could swallow up all of our freedom.
I don’t think it will though. Sadly, we’re going to be staring for a while longer.
That’s going to be dark and difficult.
Kinda smelly too.
My New Thing
I’ve decided to do a weekly column called “The Worst of Times.” I’m going to mercilessly rip on a handful of hot takes from the Opinion section of The New York Times, hence the title. I’ll also do one a week from the challenged brain trust at The Washington Post. As I mention in this first installment, it’s a bit like a written version of my old Kruiser Control show on PJTV, but I’ll be mocking print media rather than the television hacks. Enjoy.
Everything Isn’t Awful
So very 21st century. Weird but nice.
PJ Media
[WATCH] Gen. Mark Milley’s Bagram Blunder Should End His Military Cosplay Act
He gets worse every day. VIDEO: Guess What Joe Biden Does When He Gets a Question About Afghanistan
Me: U.S. Used a Nasty New Hellfire Missile In Retaliatory Drone Strike on ISIS-K
Capitol Police Officer Who Shot Ashli Babbitt Speaks (but Shouldn’t Have)
#TrueStory. Joe Biden’s Afghanistan Bugout Will Become a Terrorism Superspreader
Get Ready: Biden’s Approval Rating on COVID-19 Will Wane Faster Than Vaccine Immunity
Senator Sasse: ‘There Was Clearly No Plan’ to Evacuate Americans From Kabul
Congressman: We Have Dead Servicemen in Kabul Because Biden ‘Wanted A Photo Op September 11’
Rock Legend Eric Clapton Says ‘This Has Gotta Stop’ In Anti-COVID Restrictions Anthem
Dan Crenshaw, Lara Logan Bring the Most Disturbing Reports Out of the Kabul Airport Yet
Natural Immunity for the WIN! Israeli Study Suggests COVID-19 Vaccine Policies Should Change Now
Taliban Demands Afghans Give Up Their Guns
Bad Words and Desperation: Democrats Flail to Keep January 6 Relevant
A Deserved ‘Moment of Truth’ for Public Schools as a Record Number of Parents Opt Out
IL Governor Pritzker Renegs on Promise to Give School Districts Control Over COVID Policy
Former SecDef/CIA Head Panetta: We ‘Have to Go Back’ to Afghanistan to Get ISIS-K
Cori Bush Is Enraged That SCOTUS Agrees With Biden on Eviction Moratorium
Military Brass Finally Fire Someone for Afghanistan Debacle … the Marine Who Called Them Out
Did Joe Biden Check His Watch During the Dignified Transfer Ceremony at Dover Air Force Base?
Harvard Has a New Chief Chaplain. There’s Just One Problem.
Biden’s Bagram Blunder Surpasses Custer at Little Big Horn, Lee at Gettysburg
Townhall Mothership
Hurricane Ida Knocks Out All of Power for New Orleans
Shut it, fascist. Fauci: Mandating COVID-19 Vaccines for School Children Is a ‘Good Idea’
Biden Diverted Military Jet Away for Outrageous Reason in Middle of Kabul Evacuation
Orlando PD’s New Body Cameras May Impact Race Relations
Why Glenn Youngkin Needs To Take On McAuliffe’s Gun Control Agenda
Former Gang Member Says He Knows How To Reduce Violence
Why ALL Section 230 Reform Measures May Hurt Gun Rights
Over the line, Smokey: Sunday reflection
Gen. McMaster puts blame for Afghanistan disaster squarely on Biden – “self-defeat”
NY Dems: Cuomo needs to refund his campaign donations
BINGO. Welcoming Afghan helpers and concerns over terror threats are not mutually exclusive
Girl ain’t right in the head. Alyssa Milano takes Biden sycophancy to a delusional new level
WATCH: A guy doing a cartwheel video-bombed Jim Cantore’s live report from New Orleans
VIP
[VIDEO] Kruiser’s ‘Beyond the Briefing’—No Unity in a Time of Crisis in Biden’s America
The Kruiser Kabana Episode 146: Joe Biden Is Just the Tip of the Existential Threat Iceberg
Mother of Marine Killed in Kabul Unloads on ‘Piece of Crap’ Joe Biden
Donald Trump Warned Us What a Rushed Pullout of Afghanistan Would Like Back in 2017
Who’s Really Driving the Afghanistan Disaster? Here’s a Clue.
Is State Department Spokesman Ned Price Gaslighting All of Us?
Does He Mean It? Biden Tells Israeli Prime Minister Iran Will ‘Never’ Get Nukes
The Biden White House Covered Up a ‘Major’ Scandal Earlier This Year
VodkaPundit, Part Quatre: Trump and the Chicago Way: How We Used to Strike Back at Terrorists
Progressives Could Still Blow Up the Biden-Pelosi Agenda
The Relevance of the Reagan Doctrine in the Wake of Afghanistan’s Fall
GOLD I Don’t Feel Particularly Funny Today
GOLD As Everyone Knows, Biden’s Disastrous Afghan Exit Is Entirely Trump’s Fault
Around the Interwebz
#RIP. Ed Asner Dies: TV Icon Who Played Lou Grant Was 91
Joe Biden’s America. A bad solar storm could cause an “Internet apocalypse”
Al Roker has a message for people worried about him covering Hurricane Ida
Expert’s latest investigation dispels myths about Pius XII and Rome’s Jews
The Most Popular Hulu Show in Each State, Mapped
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Tunes
One day we’re all gonna look back on this and say, “I shoulda joined more than one wine club.”
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Hurricane Ida Devastates Louisiana
Plus: Should the Federal Reserve change course on quantitative easing?
The Dispatch Staff | 3 |
Happy Monday! As journalists, we are wont to obsess over the tiniest details, rewriting passages over and over again until we feel they are perfect—or an editor forces us to hit publish.
All that’s to say, thank you to Universal Music Group for allegedly just going ahead and releasing Kanye West’s latest album yesterday without his approval. Somebody needed to intervene and end the months of tinkering.
We wish our “rough drafts” were as good as Kanye’s.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- American forces conducted at least two drone strikes in Afghanistan over the weekend, hitting a pair of ISIS-K planners in Nangarhar province on Friday and on Sunday taking out an explosive-filled vehicle in Kabul believed to be an “imminent” ISIS-K threat to Hamid Karzai International Airport. President Joe Biden had said on Saturday that a terrorist attack was “highly likely in the next 24-36 hours,” leading the U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan to warn Americans to leave the airport immediately.
- The Pentagon on Saturday confirmed the identities of the 13 U.S. servicemembers killed in Kabul last week. The casualties range in age from 20 to 31. President Biden traveled to Dover, Delaware, yesterday to attend the dignified transfer of the soldiers’ remains and meet with the service members’ families.
- In an interview with the New York Times, 83-year-old Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer acknowledged that he is weighing retirement at some point in the near future. “I don’t think I’m going to stay there till I die,” he said. “Hope not.”
- The United Nations’ International Atomic Energy Agency reported over the weekend that North Korea appears to have resumed operation of its Yongbyon nuclear reactor, which was believed to be inactive from December 2018 through July 2021.
- The Office of the Director of National Intelligence released an unclassified summary of the intelligence community’s investigation into the origins of COVID-19 on Friday. Although the various agencies were able to “reach broad agreement” that SARS-CoV-2 “probably” emerged no later than November 2019 and that Chinese officials did not have foreknowledge of the virus before the outbreak, they could not come to firm conclusions on where the outbreak originated. “China’s cooperation most likely would be needed to reach a conclusive assessment of the origins of COVID-19,” the summary concludes. “Beijing, however, continues to hinder the global investigation, resist sharing information and blame other countries.”
- A state judge ruled on Friday that local school districts in Florida can impose mask requirements on students and teachers, finding that the DeSantis administration’s efforts to punish districts that do so violated the Florida Constitution. A spokesperson for Gov. DeSantis said the state plans to appeal the ruling.
- Actor Ed Asner—known for his Emmy-winning performance as Lou Grant on “The Mary Tyler Moore Show”—died on Sunday at the age of 91. Legendary reggae singer and producer Lee “Scratch” Perry died on Sunday in Jamaica at the age of 85.
Ida Hits
Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said at a news briefing on Saturday that Hurricane Ida “will be one of the strongest hurricanes to hit anywhere in Louisiana since at least the 1850s.” He was right.
Hurricane Ida was downgraded to a tropical storm over night, but it made landfall in Louisiana as a Category 4 storm twice on Sunday afternoon, first in Port Fourchon and then again a few hours later in Lafourche Parish. Its 150 mph winds tied it with last year’s Hurricane Laura and 1856’s Last Island Hurricane for the strongest hurricane to ever hit Louisiana.
Residents were quick to feel the effects: As of early Monday morning, more than 1 million Louisianans—and 43,000 Mississippians—were without power, and one of the state’s energy providers, Entergy Corp., said in a statement Sunday that customers in the hardest hit areas of the state could be blacked out for a while.
“Based on historical restoration times, customers in the direct path of a Category 4 hurricane can experience outages up to three weeks,” the statement read. “Significant damage, flooding and accessibility challenges due to the storm will affect our ability to reach some areas of our territory right away and could delay restoration in those communities.”
The storm will have plenty of other downstream effects—or upstream effects, as the U.S. Geological Survey found that Ida temporarily reversed the course of the Mississippi River, causing it to flow south to north. According to the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, approximately 95 percent of oil and gas production in the Gulf of Mexico has been shut off.
Is It Time for the Fed to Stop Buying Bonds?
Every year, the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City hosts an economic policy symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, with the goal of “bring[ing] together economists, financial market participants, academics, U.S. government representatives and news media to discuss long-term policy issues of mutual concern.” It’s a pretty swanky event, as far as economic policy symposia go.
But this year’s summit was virtual, and the reason why was a repeat topic of conversation. “At the [Federal Open Market Committee’s] recent July meeting, I was of the view, as were most participants, that if the economy evolved broadly as anticipated, it could be appropriate to start reducing the pace of asset purchases this year,” Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said in his keynote speech on Friday. “The intervening month has brought more progress in the form of a strong employment report for July, but also the further spread of the Delta variant.”
Brokers on Wall Street—and power brokers in Washington—were focused on Powell’s remarks last week as investors waited to see if he would join the growing chorus of central bankers calling for a tapering of the Federal Reserve’s $120 billion in monthly U.S. Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities.
“It is a question of when, not a question of if,” Minneapolis Federal Reserve President Neel Kashkari said earlier this month regarding the Fed’s bond-buying. “There’s a lot of public discussion about, will it be at the end of this year, will it be the beginning of next year: Those seem like reasonable ranges of deliberation, but ultimately it will be driven by the data.”
Worth Your Time
- A group of Washington Post reporters put together a remembrance of the 13 U.S. servicemembers who lost their lives in last Thursday’s terrorist attack. The mother of 20-year-old David Espinoza from Rio Bravo, Texas, now has a “David-sized hole” in her heart that “nobody can fill.” Nicole Gee of Roseville, California, had just texted her dad from Afghanistan a few days before her death. “She said she was having the experience of her life,” her father said. “And I told her I was proud of her.” Wyoming’s Rylee McCollum, 20, had just gotten married in February and was expecting his first child. “Roice McCollum said that her family and McCollum’s wife, Jiennah, who lives in San Diego, are devastated, but that ‘we knew he was where he wanted to be: serving his country.’”
- For ABC News, James Gordon Meek tells the harrowing story of a volunteer group of American veterans of the Afghanistan war who conducted a clandestine mission—dubbed “Pineapple Express”—to get hundreds of at-risk Afghans to safety. “With the uniformed U.S. military unable to venture outside the airport’s perimeter to collect Americans and Afghans who’ve sought U.S. protection for their past joint service, they instead provided overwatch and awaited coordinated movements by an informal Pineapple Express ground team that included ‘conductors’ led by former Green Beret Capt. Zac Lois, known as the underground railroad’s ‘engineer,’” Meek writes.
- “The massacre at Hamid Karzai airport was the consequence of President Biden’s decision to rely on the Taliban for security,” Matthew Continetti argues in a column for the Washington Free Beacon. “Despite the lunacy of taking the Taliban at its word, the Biden administration sounded in recent days as if Haqqani, Mujahid, and the rest of their deranged crew were U.S. partners. Not only did Biden’s botched withdrawal result in America’s departure from Central Asia, Taliban rule in Afghanistan, a catastrophe for democracy and human rights, and a propaganda boon for the global jihadist-Salafist movement.”
Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- We’ve heard a lot about ISIS-K in recent days. In Friday’s Vital Interests (🔒), Tom Joscelyn explains what the group is and what we know about how they operate. “Al-Muhajir’s men are prolific terrorists,” he writes. The U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan documented 77 attacks that were either claimed by ISIS-K or attributed to it in the first four months of 2021 alone. Some of these were carried out in Kabul, where al-Muhajir’s network has regularly targeted civilians, as well as the now deposed Afghan government.”
- In his Sunday French Press, David argues that it’s time to stop rationalizing and enabling Evangelical vaccine rejection. “America is chipping away at vaccine reluctance,” he writes. “[But] the remaining vaccine holdouts are growing more extreme, and significant parts of the Christian Right are enabling, excusing, and validating Evangelical behavior that is gravely wrong and dangerous to the lives and health of their fellow citizens.”
- Rep. Mike Gallagher of Wisconsin dropped by Friday’s Dispatch Podcast with Steve and Sarah to discuss the Biden administration’s withdrawal from Afghanistan. The Marine Corps veteran explains what he’d like to see from the White House going forward and the national security platform he’d push for the GOP to adopt.
- On the site over the weekend, Alec reviewed Marvel’s new multiverse-centric TV show, What If. “Disney has long been the leading purveyor of nostalgia in film, churning out remake after sequel after reboot with no end in sight,” he writes. “…But what if instead of relying on old properties, Disney produced original content? That’s a ‘what if’ worth exploring.”
- Chris Stirewalt asks an important question in a piece on the site today: Who, if anyone, would have handled the Afghan withdrawal better than Biden? It’s a tough question with no reassuring answer
- Khuzestan province is home to 80 percent of Iran’s oil fields and 60 percent of its natural gas reserves, yet its residents are poverty stricken and thirsty. On the site day, Charlotte looks at what was behind protests that broke out in the region in July and finds that it’s more than water shortages.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
36.) AMERICAN THINKER
37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
USMC Take Troubling Step Against Marine Commander Who Demanded Accountability on Afghanistan
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
August 30, 2021 THE LATEST Louisiana was abandoned during Katrina. It’s happening again. by Jarvis DeBerry As Hurricane Ida tears through the gulf coast 16 years after Katrina — all in the middle of a surging pandemic — it’s important to remember the many ways that the federal government allowed a bad situation to get even worse. Today, there’s an even greater need for aggressive governmental intervention than there was in 2005, Jarvis DeBerry writes.
“Without aggressive intervention — such as mask and vaccine mandates — people will continue to die,” DeBerry writes. “Yet Republican leaders across the country are dogmatic that it’s not the government’s job to save people; it’s the job of the people themselves.”
Read Jarvis DeBerry’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Monday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES The GOP’s new definition of freedom would puzzle older generations of conservatives. Read More To the GOP, a terrorist attack is just another opportunity to take cheap shots. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC
On Wednesday, Sept. 8, MSNBC Films and Peacock will present “Memory Box: Echoes of 9/11,” a Yard 44 and NBC News Studios production. The new feature documentary tells the story of Sept. 11 through personal recollections recorded from a video booth in the wake of 9/11 that have never been shown on film. The same eyewitnesses return to the booth to reflect on the past two decades.
Follow MSNBC
Check out the MSNBC channel on Apple News
Download the NBC News Mobile App and watch MSNBC
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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47.) ABC
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News MONDAY, AUGUST 30, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Ida delivered a “catastrophic” punch to Louisiana, knocking out power for hundreds of thousands in the state — including the entire city of New Orleans.
Here’s the latest on Ida, Afghanistan and everything else we’re watching this Monday morning. Officials warned of “life-threatening” floods early Monday after Ida crashed into Louisiana and knocked out power to more than 1 million homes and businesses, including all of the city of New Orleans.
Ida made landfall Sunday, the 16th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, as a Category 4 hurricane bringing drenching rain, destructive winds and devastating sea surges.
Gov. John Bel Edwards described it as “one of the strongest storms to make landfall here in modern times.”
Ida was downgraded to a tropical storm early Monday, but the National Hurricane Center warned of “dangerous” storm surges. Authorities said a 60-year-old man was found dead after a tree fell on his home.
Here’s the latest:
Monday’s Top Stories
The drone strike came less than a day after President Joe Biden promised more retaliatory strikes against the affiliate of the Islamic State terrorist group. Asner, the seven-time Emmy Award-winning actor best known for portraying a gruff newsman on two iconic 1970s TV shows, also endeared himself to a new generation of fans with the movies “Elf” and “Up.” The makeup of the Democratic caucus has changed: Centrist Democrats used to steer the ship in the Obama era, now progressives are taking the wheel, writes NBC News’ Sahil Kapur. OPINION The diamond necklace’s 82 facets reflect an ugly truth — and an unfinished story of white supremacy and colonialism, Susanne Ramírez de Arellano writes in an opinion piece. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
PODCAST Southlake, Texas, seems to have it all: stately homes, intense civic pride, and above all, terrific schools. So when a video surfaced in 2018 showing Southlake high school students chanting the N-word— the school board vowed to make changes. But the ensuing backlash has consumed Southlake, fueled by a growing national crusade against critical race theory. Shopping
It’s back-to-school time for grown-ups, too. Here are some of the best planners to help you concentrate on your life priorities and how to accomplish them. One Calm Thing
Let’s admit it, the last few months have been tough. Especially as many people have been hit with another wave of anxiety over the Covid-19 delta variant and are facing the grim news from Afghanistan. If you’ve been feeling particularly stressed recently, don’t worry, you are not alone.
TODAY asked happiness experts, psychologists and our readers to share small tips on how to boost your mood, and feel happier and less anxious.
Check out their tips 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: Newsom holds ad-spending edge in California recall’s final days
With two weeks to go until the Sept. 14 California recall election, Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom and his allies maintain a significant advertising advantage over recall supporters.
Over the past month (Aug. 1 to Aug. 30), Newsom & Co. have outspent Republicans over the airwaves and digitally, $12.8 million to $5.0 million, according to ad-spending numbers from AdImpact.
And in future spending (Aug. 30 to Sept. 14), Team Newsom has $7.0 million booked, versus $2.3 million for Republicans.
Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Now Republicans have made up ground in the ad spending since the beginning of the month, when they were getting outspent by more than a 200-to-1 margin from July 1 to Aug. 2.
Much of the new GOP spending has come from Republican replacement frontrunner Larry Elder, who has dropped $2.6 million in ads over the past month.
Still, Newsom’s spending edge is striking – especially in such an expensive state like California.
And especially when his chief weakness in this race is waking up a relatively sleepy Democratic electorate.
Biggest recall advertisers from Aug. 1 to Aug. 30
Stop the Republican Recall of Gavin Newsom (D): $12.6 million
Larry Elder (R): $2.6 million
John Cox (R): $1.3 million
Kevin Faulconer (R): $640,000
Rescue California (R): $185,000
SOURCE: AdImpact
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Report: Pentagon warned on “mass casualty event” before attack
Turning to the situation in Afghanistan, Politico is reporting this morning that Pentagon officials had warned of a mass casualty event 24 hours before Thursday’s deadly attack outside of the Kabul airport.
“Speaking from a secure video conference room on the third floor of the Pentagon at 8 a.m. Wednesday — or 4:30 p.m. in Kabul — Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin instructed more than a dozen of the department’s top leaders around the world to make preparations for an imminent ‘mass casualty event’ according to classified detailed notes of the gathering shared with POLITICO.”
More: “During the meeting, Gen. Mark Milley, the chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, warned of ‘significant’ intelligence indicating that the Islamic State’s Afghanistan affiliate, ISIS-K, was planning a ‘complex attack,’ the notes quoted him as saying.”
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Drone strike in Kabul
Meanwhile, NBC News reports that U.S. forces “conducted a drone strike against an ISIS-K target in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Sunday, U.S. Central Command said.”
But the Washington Post writes that the drone strike killed 10 civilians, including children, family members said.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: Honoring the 13 U.S. servicemembers who lost their lives
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
1,200: The approximate number of people evacuated from Kabul on Sunday.
1 million: The number of people in Louisiana who lost power during the devastating Hurricane Ida.
8: The number of electricity transmission lines in New Orleans that went down during the storm as the entire city lost power.
150 mph: The estimated wind speed of the hurricane when it made landfall Sunday afternoon near Port Fourchon, Louisiana.
38,884,830: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 305,345 more since Friday morning.)
641,002: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 2,598 more since Friday morning).
368,863,734: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 3,096,060 more since Friday morning.)
52.3 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
63.3 percent: The share of all American adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
98,000: The estimated number of additional deaths from Covid between now and December in America, according to a model from the University of Washington, a number that would drop with a more widespread adoption of masking.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The International Atomic Energy Agency believes North Korea has restarted its nuclear reactor in what it called a “deeply troubling” development.
Top Israeli and Palestinian officials held high-level talks this past weekend, days after the new Israeli prime minister met with President Biden.
NBC’s Alex Seitz-Wald profiles Republican Larry Elder, who’s running to replace Gov. Gavin Newsom in the recall.
And NBC’s Sahil Kapur looks at the shifting progressive-versus-centrist power dynamics within the Democrats’ congressional ranks.
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50.) CBS
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51.) REASON
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Disclaimer right from the beginning. I don’t speak Kabulese or whatever funny language they are speaking in this video. There is a chance this was shot in a sound studio in Astoria, Queens, to troll p … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
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57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
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58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Monday, Aug. 30, and the city of New Orleans is in the dark after Hurricane Ida pummelled Louisiana yesterday and overnight. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWHurricane IdaHurricane Ida made landfall along the Louisiana coast yesterday as a Category 4 storm, arriving with sustained wind speeds of 150 mph and dumping almost 13 inches of rain in some locations. As of this early this morning, at least one person had been reported dead—a number expected to rise as rescue crews assess the storm’s aftermath. More than 1 million people were without power this morning, including the entire city of New Orleans, where all eight transmission lines into the city were knocked down. Officials say it could take days or weeks to entirely restore power. Ida arrived on the 16th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, which caused more than 1,800 deaths and an estimated $125B in damage. Meteorologists say Ida is stronger but smaller than Katrina, and lacks the extensive storm surge that resulted from the 2005 storm. The storm is expected to pass through the Mid-South tomorrow morning (see trajectory), eventually bringing heavy rains to the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast through the end of the week. See photos of the damage here, and watch the storm peel the roof off a hospital. ISIS-K Strike The US military killed two leaders of an ISIS splinter group in Afghanistan and injured a third, officials said. The targeted strike follows a deadly bombing at the Kabul airport Thursday that killed 13 US troops and injured at least a dozen others, while killing at least 170 Afghans. Yesterday, officials said a second strike destroyed an explosives-laden truck headed toward the airport. Defense officials released the names of the 13 service members killed in the airport attack (see bios). Victims included 20-year-old Lance Cpl. Rylee McCollum, who was expecting a child in three weeks, and Sgt. Nicole Gee, whose earlier photo holding an Afghan baby set to be evacuated went viral. ISIS-K, short for ISIS-Khorasan Province, is an offshoot of the broader ISIS jihadi organization (see overview). While the Taliban and fellow extremist group al-Qaida have close ties, ISIS-K and the Taliban have clashed over which group is the preeminent Islamist authority in the region. Analysts say ISIS-K may pose a threat to the Taliban government after the US withdrawal; the group was linked to at least 77 attacks across the country, including the targeting of civilians, in the first four months of 2021 (paywall, The Dispatch). US officials have warned Americans who are not through the checkpoints to avoid heading to the airport. It is unclear how those remaining Americans will be evacuated by tomorrow’s deadline. Caldor FireCalifornia firefighters began setting up camp over the weekend at Echo Summit in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, anticipating the approach of the Caldor Fire as it moves toward Lake Tahoe. As of yesterday, the fire’s eastern edge had advanced to under 8 miles from the resort town of South Lake Tahoe, where most of the residents have reportedly already evacuated (see map). The fire was at 13% containment as of this morning. The fire has burned through more than 168,000 acres, making it the second-largest wildfire currently burning in the state, ahead of the Monument Fire (163,000 acres) and behind the Dixie Fire (765,000), but is closer to highly populated areas. The Dixie Fire, which has burned since mid-July in Northern California, is the largest single-source fire in the state’s history. The cause of the Caldor Fire is under investigation. We’re celebrating our fourth birthday this week! Thanks to all of you who have helped us grow to nearly 1 million readers. 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IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & Culture> Actor Ed Asner, whose seven Emmy awards are a record for male performers, dies at 91 (More) | Influential reggae artist and dub music pioneer Lee “Scratch” Perry dies at 85 (More) > Soccer superstar Cristiano Ronaldo transfers to former club Manchester United from Juventus in blockbuster move (More) | Michigan tops Ohio 5-2 to win its first Little League World Series since 1959 (More) > Kanye West releases “Donda” album after monthlong wait and multiple large public listening sessions (More) Science & Technology> Delta variant doubles risk of hospitalization in COVID-19 patients compared to earlier strains, UK study finds (More) > Paleontologists reveal the most complete fossil of a Pterosaur species ever discovered; analysis suggests it may have foraged like a chicken and flown short distances to evade predators (More) > SpaceX makes delivery to the International Space Station with a payload including avocados, ants, and robotic components; marks the company’s 23rd delivery for NASA in under a decade (More) Business & Markets> US stock markets up Friday (S&P 500 +0.8%, Dow +0.6%, Nasdaq +1.2%) after Fed Chairman Jerome Powell’s remarks prepare markets for tapering bond purchases (More) > Apple CEO Tim Cook receives $750M of stock as final installment of compensation package awarded when he assumed CEO role in 2011 (More) | Shares of buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) provider Affirm jump 30% in after-hours trading after announcing partnership with Amazon (More) > Electric vehicle maker Rivian files for initial public offering; analysts believe the company could be valued as high as $80B (More) Politics & World AffairsBrought to you by Ground News > Average US COVID-19 deaths near 1,290 per day, almost a 30% increase over the past week; total hospitalizations at 95,600, with numbers appearing to have plateaued in recent days (More) > International atomic watchdog says North Korea appears to have restarted its primary reactor used to produce nuclear weapon fuel (More) > Thousands march in Washington, DC, voting rights demonstration; event came on the 58th anniversary of the March on Washington, which included Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech (More) From our partners: How many news apps does it take to see the whole political spectrum? Just one. Ground News makes it easy to compare how a single story is being framed across the media landscape. They put a spotlight on stories that are underreported by both the left and the right. And they don’t use your browsing history to show you content you already agree with. Download Ground News for free—it’s the last politics news app you’ll ever need. TRUE DIVERSIFICATIONIn partnership with Yieldstreet The 1% doesn’t put 99% of their money into the stock market, so why should you? Diversify your portfolio with the widest range of alternative investments: now available to everyone, not just the top 1%. Access deals with short durations, low minimums, and target annual yields of up to 15%. Yieldstreet has returned over $1B in principal and interest to investors to date; see how they can help with your portfolio. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAKey facts about Afghanistan in map form. Miami Beach is getting a 7-mile underwater sculpture garden. Scientists discover the world’s northernmost island. Google Maps is now available—on original Nintendo. Massive floating wind farm design has 117 turbines. Cow hitches a ride through a McDonald’s drive-thru. Spectacular photos of dogs in midair. Introducing the world’s first space sweeper. Clickbait: Is pizza better for breakfast than cereal? Historybook: Baseball great Ted Williams born (1918); HBD Warren Buffett (1930); Thurgood Marshall becomes first Black Supreme Court justice (1967); HBD Cameron Diaz (1972); Guion Bluford becomes first Black person in space (1983). “Be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful.” – Warren Buffett 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. 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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
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66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
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69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
But then there was this photo op after she arrived where she posed in front of
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TOP STORIES:
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Kamala Poses In The Worst Picture Possible — She’s Done
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Israeli Prime Minister Holds Back as Biden Passes Out In Front Of Him
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Biden’s Entire Plan Just Got WRECKED
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Tampa Bay Buccaneers Owner Unloads on Biden in Scathing Full-Page WSJ Ad
- Mother Of Slain Marine Exposes What Biden Did To Their Family
- PHOTO: Special Message Written on Bombs That Were Just Dropped
- Taliban Makes BIG Offer To Biden Now That They’re In Charge…
- State Department Throws Biden Under The Bus
- Power Crazed Dems Now Want Access to Your Most Private Information
- The Biden’s Had No Plans To Visit Fallen Marines At Dover…
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IN DEPTH:
- Tampa Bay Buccaneers Owner Unloads on Biden in Scathing Full-Page WSJ Ad 54 mins
- Taliban Makes BIG Offer To Biden Now That They’re In Charge… 1 hour
- US handed out blank copies of visas in Afghanistan, setting terrorists up: Ex-FBI agent 4 hours
- BREAKING: Turkey expected to recognize Taliban following US withdrawal 4 hours
- After Afghanistan: The Legacy of Two Decades of War 4 hours
- Joe Biden’s Afghanistan Collapse Tanked Transatlantic Relations 4 hours
- The Brits somehow seem to be getting their people out of Afghanistan 4 hours
- The Real China Threat: A Massive Nuclear Weapons Arsenal? 4 hours
- Afghan activist blames Biden, Ghani for the fall of Kabul 5 hours
- Granholm Chartered Military Jet to Ukraine As U.S. Struggled to Evacuate Americans From Afghanistan 5 hours
- Andrew Cuomo Still Has $18 Million in Campaign Donations 5 hours
- ‘Rules for Thee But Not for Me’ Now Catches Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler 5 hours
- German State Proposes Coronavirus Lockdown for the Unvaccinated 5 hours
- Biden Says There Will Be Additional Strikes Against ISIS‑K 5 hours
- Taliban prepare to form new cabinet as U.S. evacuation nears end 5 hours
- UK, Germany Look to a Common Approach on Taliban 5 hours
- Police, protesters clash as thousands march against COVID curbs in Berlin 5 hours
- Christian Schools Vastly Outperforming Public Schools During COVID-19, According To New Survey Of Parents 5 hours
- The Truth About Inequality 5 hours
- Pentagon Says Taliban and Haqqani Network Are commingling While State Department Calls Them Separate Entities 5 hours
- Joe Biden just ruined America’s ‘special relationship’ with Great Britain 5 hours
- Afghanistan, Southern US Border Show Biden Uninterested in Defending America 5 hours
- Mayorkas called border crisis ‘unsustainable,’ but swift action to fix it is lacking 5 hours
- Joe Biden Appears to Fall Asleep While Meeting With Israeli PM 5 hours
- Finally! Sanity From SCOTUS Ends Illegal CDC Eviction Moratorium 5 hours
- Chicago mother separated from her son by judge until she gets COVID-19 vaccine 5 hours
- New Walt Disney World COVID-19 Vaccine Mandate Requires All Employees Present Proof Of Vaccination By October 5 hours
- Questions over federal renters’ assistance linger after eviction moratorium tossed 5 hours
- A Record Social Security Increase Is Coming (But It Might Not Matter) 5 hours
- Did Stephen Colbert Just Have His Worst Week … Ever? 5 hours
- Long shots and old favorites: Top storylines to watch for during the 2021 US Open 5 hours
- Philip Rivers wins first HS game as head coach 5 hours
- Brad Snyder becomes first U.S. man at Paralympics or Olympics to win triathlon gold 5 hours
- Report: Ole Miss Softball Asst. Coach And Head Coach Under Investigation For Sexual Misconduct 5 hours
- Dolphins Emerge As Frontrunners for Deshaun Watson 5 hours
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- Gulf of Mexico Oil Output Cut 91% Ahead of Hurricane Ida 5 hours
- ESPN explores sports-betting deal worth at least $3 billion 5 hours
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TOP STORIES:
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Biden Could Soon Be On Trial For Treason
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Sec. Of State Blinken Strangely Went MIA Hours Before Kabul Takeover
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Biden Impeachment Just Came Into Question…
- Barack Obama Sent Major Warning About Biden
- Mike Lindell Fights Back In BIG Way
- Israeli Prime Minister Holds Back as Biden Passes Out In Front Of Him
- Biden’s Entire Plan Just Got WRECKED
- Kamala Poses In The Worst Picture Possible — She’s Done
- Tampa Bay Buccaneers Owner Unloads on Biden in Scathing Full-Page WSJ Ad
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IN DEPTH:
- Tampa Bay Buccaneers Owner Unloads on Biden in Scathing Full-Page WSJ Ad 54 mins
- Taliban Makes BIG Offer To Biden Now That They’re In Charge… 1 hour
- US handed out blank copies of visas in Afghanistan, setting terrorists up: Ex-FBI agent 4 hours
- BREAKING: Turkey expected to recognize Taliban following US withdrawal 4 hours
- After Afghanistan: The Legacy of Two Decades of War 4 hours
- Joe Biden’s Afghanistan Collapse Tanked Transatlantic Relations 4 hours
- The Brits somehow seem to be getting their people out of Afghanistan 4 hours
- The Real China Threat: A Massive Nuclear Weapons Arsenal? 4 hours
- Afghan activist blames Biden, Ghani for the fall of Kabul 5 hours
- Granholm Chartered Military Jet to Ukraine As U.S. Struggled to Evacuate Americans From Afghanistan 5 hours
- Andrew Cuomo Still Has $18 Million in Campaign Donations 5 hours
- ‘Rules for Thee But Not for Me’ Now Catches Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler 5 hours
- German State Proposes Coronavirus Lockdown for the Unvaccinated 5 hours
- Biden Says There Will Be Additional Strikes Against ISIS‑K 5 hours
- Taliban prepare to form new cabinet as U.S. evacuation nears end 5 hours
- UK, Germany Look to a Common Approach on Taliban 5 hours
- Police, protesters clash as thousands march against COVID curbs in Berlin 5 hours
- Christian Schools Vastly Outperforming Public Schools During COVID-19, According To New Survey Of Parents 5 hours
- The Truth About Inequality 5 hours
- Pentagon Says Taliban and Haqqani Network Are commingling While State Department Calls Them Separate Entities 5 hours
- Joe Biden just ruined America’s ‘special relationship’ with Great Britain 5 hours
- Afghanistan, Southern US Border Show Biden Uninterested in Defending America 5 hours
- Mayorkas called border crisis ‘unsustainable,’ but swift action to fix it is lacking 5 hours
- Joe Biden Appears to Fall Asleep While Meeting With Israeli PM 5 hours
- Finally! Sanity From SCOTUS Ends Illegal CDC Eviction Moratorium 5 hours
- Chicago mother separated from her son by judge until she gets COVID-19 vaccine 5 hours
- New Walt Disney World COVID-19 Vaccine Mandate Requires All Employees Present Proof Of Vaccination By October 5 hours
- Questions over federal renters’ assistance linger after eviction moratorium tossed 5 hours
- A Record Social Security Increase Is Coming (But It Might Not Matter) 5 hours
- Did Stephen Colbert Just Have His Worst Week … Ever? 5 hours
- Long shots and old favorites: Top storylines to watch for during the 2021 US Open 5 hours
- Philip Rivers wins first HS game as head coach 5 hours
- Brad Snyder becomes first U.S. man at Paralympics or Olympics to win triathlon gold 5 hours
- Report: Ole Miss Softball Asst. Coach And Head Coach Under Investigation For Sexual Misconduct 5 hours
- Dolphins Emerge As Frontrunners for Deshaun Watson 5 hours
- Bills’ Isaiah McKenzie gets vaccinated days after NFL fines him almost $15K for violating mask policy 5 hours
- Infrastructure Bill Creates New Tax Reporting Requirements on Cryptocurrency Industry 5 hours
- Bitcoin Has No Value: People Bank’s Of China Official Announces Further Crackdown 5 hours
- Decline of SPAC Market Has Digital Media Companies Debating the Best Path Forward 5 hours
- Gulf of Mexico Oil Output Cut 91% Ahead of Hurricane Ida 5 hours
- ESPN explores sports-betting deal worth at least $3 billion 5 hours
- Biden unveils 2.7 percent pay raise plan for federal employees 6 hours
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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Welcome to the Monday edition of Internet Insider, where we unspool threads of online misinformation—one dumb conspiracy at a time…
ONE DUMB CONSPIRACY Anti-vax conspiracy theorists are taking an animal dewormer that gives them diarrhea Some conspiracy theorists opposed to the COVID-19 vaccine appear to be giving themselves diarrhea due to an animal deworming drug that they believe defeats the virus.
A private Facebook group dedicated to Ivermectin, an anti-parasite drug often used for livestock such as cows and horses but also has legitimate medical uses for humans, has been filled with accounts from users who say it caused them significant intestinal problems.
As noted by researcher Aric Toler, one user who had been taking Ivermectin on-and-off stated that he had experienced diarrhea after every dose.
“I get strong diarrhea for about a day, each time I take my 15 mg dose,” the man wrote. “This has happened with each two-week dose, now, since January.”
Another user claimed that he was prescribed Ivermectin by a doctor online, which left him running back-and-forth to the toilet. “Today I am running to the bathroom, and it’s not to pee,” the user wrote.
To make matters worse, the online doctor reportedly stopped responding to his messages regarding the side-effects.
Users appear to either be buying the drug from their local stores or relying on the version of the drug designed for humans—used to combat parasitic diseases—from a telemedicine website run by pro-Trump doctors. Due to the drug’s bad taste, some users have even questioned whether the drug can be ingested through other orifices.
“Can I squeeze the paste into my anus instead of my mouth?” another user asked. “It tastes terrible.”
Other screenshots from the group also show users responding to questions about whether a pregnant woman can take the drug by suggesting that she immediately visit Walmart or an animal feed store to buy “the cattle version.”
Ivermectin has become the latest go-to drug for those opposed to the vaccine after one study suggested that it could quickly kill the virus. But the study, which was only carried out in a laboratory setting, did not involve human patients.
Doctors have warned that much more research is needed to determine the drug’s effectiveness for COVID-19.
The column continues below.
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The Ivermectin craze is similar to what was seen during the early days of the pandemic with hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malaria drug touted by former President Donald Trump.
Despite scant evidence supporting its use for COVID-19, the drug was highly sought by anti-vaxxers as a miracle cure. The concern over Ivermectin has grown so much that the FDA recently released a statement warning people to stop buying the drug from farm supply stores. “You are not a horse. You are not a cow,” the FDA tweeted. “Seriously, y’all. Stop it.” (The FDA also notes that diarrhea is a side effect of using the drug). Although Ivermectin is available in pill form to treat parasitic worms in humans, the animal version being used by some people is highly concentrated and can be toxic. States such as Mississippi have since reported a spike in calls to poison control centers due to Ivermectin, noting that 70% of all calls are related to the drug. The University of Oxford is currently attempting to learn whether Ivermectin can be beneficial in combating COVID-19 by conducting actual trials for the drug.
While it may seem shocking that someone would be willing to take an animal dewormer but not a vaccine that has been administered to billions of people, many conspiracy theorists believe that miracle drugs are being kept secret from the public.
That belief explains in part why so many conspiracy theorists are willing to drink bleach or rely on other unproven drugs to combat COVID-19. Staff Writer
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Monday 08.30.21 Pandemic unemployment benefits expire this coming weekend in the 26 states still offering them. But that probably won’t make a huge difference in the job market. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. A man passes a section of roof blown off a building in New Orleans’ French Quarter by Hurricane Ida’s winds. Hurricane Ida
Hurricane Ida slammed into Louisiana yesterday as a Category 4 storm, leaving at least one person dead and more than 1 million facing power outages and widespread destruction. Some people had to scramble to their roofs as storm surge and flash flooding overtook levees in areas south of New Orleans. The storm was so strong it actually temporarily stopped the flow of the Mississippi River near the city and caused it to reverse flow — something the US Geological Survey says is “extremely uncommon.” The hurricane arrived on the 16th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, serving as a grim reminder of the scars of past storms. Ida has now weakened to a tropical storm but is still churning up deadly storm surge as it lingers inland. The National Weather Service in New Orleans says areas affected by surge could be uninhabitable for weeks or months. Tornados — a common companion of hurricanes — will also be a threat today.
Afghanistan
The US carried out a defensive airstrike yesterday in Kabul, targeting a car that contained a suspected ISIS-K suicide bomber who posed what US Central Command called an “imminent” threat to the airport. The violence continued this morning, when as many as five rockets were fired at Kabul airport. The US says the attack has not hampered ongoing evacuation efforts, but more threats — including potentially to the US homeland — may remain. The clock is ticking on tomorrow’s deadline to get US troops and Americans out of Afghanistan. It follows the terrorist attack on the Kabul airport last week that left at least 170 dead. The US and about 100 other countries have pledged to hold the Taliban to their promises to let people leave the country after tomorrow. The Biden administration has said the deadline is “not a cliff,” and it is committed to “safe passage” for all Americans and Afghan allies.
Coronavirus
Another 100,000 people could die of Covid-19 in the US by December if vaccination efforts and other safety measures aren’t fulfilled, Dr. Anthony Fauci says. However, if some of the 80 million or so eligible unvaccinated Americans choose to get the shot, things could be less dire. The current daily average of 155,000 newly reported infections has left many hospitals deeply shorthanded. Available beds, ventilators and staff have been hard to come by in some hospitals, and now that scarcity has spread to oxygen supplies. One doctor in Florida, which has the highest hospitalization rate in the country, says he’s seeing younger and younger patients die of the disease. They are all unvaccinated, he added.
North Korea
North Korea appears to have restarted operations at a power plant capable of producing plutonium for nuclear weapons. The International Atomic Energy Agency, which serves as the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog, says the development is “deeply troubling” and “a cause for serious concern.” Such activity violates UN Security Council resolutions, says the IAEA, which monitors nuclear facilities remotely since its inspectors were kicked out of the country in 2009. Relations between the US and North Korea have been frosty for years, and the Biden administration has reportedly reached out to the regime to restart discussion with Washington.
California recall
Tension is building ahead of an election in California that could end with the ousting of Gov. Gavin Newsom. Californians will vote in a recall election on September 14, and if a majority of voters want to replace Newsom, whichever challenger gets the most votes could do just that. Right now, polls show most Californians aren’t in favor of a recall, but the fact that Newsom’s possible exit could pave the way for a political unknown to take the reins is making Democrats nervous. Efforts to recall Newsom began last year among conservatives who took issue with the governor’s record on immigration, taxes, the death penalty and the state’s homelessness crisis. They ramped up as California faced more challenges from Covid-19.
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People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Kanye West releases a new album, ‘Donda,’ after a delay
Southern fast food chain Bojangles will close for two Mondays to give staff a ‘well-deserved break’
Coffee may reduce risk of death from stroke and heart disease
Greenland expedition discovers ‘world’s northernmost island’
Top toymakers say their products will be harder to find and more expensive this holiday season
in memoriam
Ed Asner, the Emmy Award-winning actor best known for playing the crusty but lovable newsman Lou Grant on “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” has died. He was 91. $1.3 million That’s how much the school board in Gloucester County, Virginia, has agreed to pay the American Civil Liberties Union in legal fees. The organization represented Gavin Grimm during a six-year legal battle over transgender bathroom rights at school. I have not survived until something has changed.
Jacob Blake, looking back on the year that has passed since he was shot seven times by a Kenosha, Wisconsin, police officer. Blake’s ordeal and the deaths of several other Black men at the hands of police were at the center of a difficult summer of racial justice activism in 2020. Brought to you by CNN Underscored Looking for a new Citi credit card? This one should be at the top of your list If you’re interested in travel rewards, this should be the first Citi card you apply for before considering any others. These sea slugs can shed their bodies and grow new ones Pretty jealous of these sea slugs right now. (Click here to view.) 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 |
- University of Pittsburgh Hits Rock Bottom, Keeps Digging
- Still Crazy About Trump
- More Terror In Kabul
- Under the horizon
- Sunday morning coming down
University of Pittsburgh Hits Rock Bottom, Keeps Digging
Posted: 29 Aug 2021 01:18 PM PDT (Steven Hayward)A little more than a year ago I wrote at length here about the mandatory freshman course on racism adopted at the University of Pittsburgh that, judging from the detailed syllabus posted online, was being taught from a very narrow, far-leftist perspective. (No readings, for example, from Frederick Douglass, W.E.B. DuBois, Martin Luther King Jr, James Baldwin, Richard Wright—not even Malcolm X, and not even Ta Nehesi Coates! Forget the idea that any student would get exposure to John McWhorter, Glenn Loury, Thomas Sowell, etc. ) Now Pitt is doubling down with this job ad: Meanwhile, the New York Times reported yesterday on how the wokerati are destroying elite secondary education in New York City. The whole story makes for revealing but predictable reading, but this passage stands out for special notice:
I’m not surprised that Mr. Mahabir wouldn’t talk to the New York Times because his position is indefensible. (A surprising number of faculty and administrators at these fancy private schools refused to talk to the Times.) And prohibiting students from hearing from Glenn Loury (or similar people) stems from a certain knowledge that their woke positions will be demolished. Let them debate the proposition. They won’t. |
Still Crazy About Trump
Posted: 29 Aug 2021 11:16 AM PDT (John Hinderaker)As Paul and Steve have noted, the ultra-left New York Times has struggled to defend Joe Biden’s Afghan catastrophe. What to do when your man can’t be defended? Change the subject. To what? Donald Trump, of course. Thus, we find one columnist in today’s Times trying to blame the Afghan debacle on Trump. Good luck with that: More notably, the Times Editorial Board–perhaps the most far-left assemblage outside the Politburo–but wait, the Politburo no longer exists, while sadly, the Times still does–authored a group editorial today on the subject of dictators who assassinate dissident exiles from their countries. This is a practice that no American condones, and in which the U.S. has never engaged. Yet the Times’ editorialists can’t escape their reflexive prejudices:
One might think that even the Times could grasp the difference between killing terrorists who are plotting against American and killing political opponents. Or, for that matter, killing people in general. But the Times is not big on nuance.
All true. But of course, Obama is not the Times’s target:
So you might expect the editorialists to cite at least one thing Trump did that was arguably illegal. But you would be disappointed.
Fortunately, criticizing reporters is not yet illegal. And no one in public life since Abraham Lincoln has been demonized like Donald Trump.
Notice that none of this has anything to do with the subject of the Times editorial.
Does the Times seriously not understand that this was a joke? Liberals are so crazed with hatred these days that they can’t think straight.
That is to say, he went to court. One thing he didn’t do was fabricate a conspiracy theory to the effect that Joe Biden won the election because he colluded with Russians.
When the Times says “embrace authoritarianism,” they mean things like opposing mask mandates and vaccine requirements for people who have had covid, along with wanting fewer regulations and lower taxes. In other words, anti-authoritarianism. I am not sure it is still worth while to kick the carcass of a rag like the Times, but there is entertainment value in observing that paper’s apparently incurable obsessions. |
More Terror In Kabul
Posted: 29 Aug 2021 08:31 AM PDT (John Hinderaker)There was a rocket attack in Kabul earlier today that reportedly killed a child. Meanwhile, a U.S. strike took out a vehicle that was en route to the Kabul airport with “miltiple suicide bombers.” So apparently a more serious terrorist threat was averted for now. Further, the U.S. Embassy has ordered all Americans to “leave the airport area immediately.” Given the short time available to complete the evacuation, it is not clear how the final stage will be carried out, since we have been told to expect further efforts to launch terrorist attacks against the airport. Meanwhile, the Biden administration continues to threaten our enemies:
The idea of Jake Sullivan “thundering” is laughable in itself.
Let’s hope so. Nothing about the events of the last few weeks creates any confidence that the Biden administration is capable of doing any such thing. |
Under the horizon
Posted: 29 Aug 2021 06:38 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)President Biden has vowed to mitigate threats to the United States emanating from Afghanistan through our so-called over the horizon counterterrorism capability. In the context of our retreat and surrender, this vow comes off with a Monty Python quality lacking the humor of the original. What’s going on under the horizon as we depart? This week Politico’s Lara Seligman et al. reported that “U.S. officials provided Taliban with names of Americans, Afghan allies to evacuate.” Subhead: “The White House contends that limited information sharing with the Taliban is saving lives; critics argue it’s putting Afghan allies in harm’s way.” Zenger News has just posted Siddharthya Roy and Richard Miniter’s story “First-Ever Interview With Terror Leader Who’s Hunting Americans and Allies in Afghanistan.” Subhead: “In a rare interview, a Taliban commander confirms the existence of a special unit called Al Isha using U.S. data to hunt enemies.” They report:
Maybe their attention is turned elsewhere. However, this is not encouraging:
I guess we shall see, but one would have to be optimistic to think there isn’t more to come, and worse. |
Sunday morning coming down
Posted: 29 Aug 2021 05:21 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)With the passing of Don Everly in Nashville on August 21, we mark the end of an era. Younger brother Phil predeceased him in 2014. In the Cosmic American Music the Everly Brothers have a constellation all to themselves. They brought the close harmony singing of traditional country music into the mainstream of American popular music. I want to look back this morning in a post that draws attention to a few tracks and briefly contemplates their career. I ask you in advance to forgive errors and oversights. More than a few great musicians learned harmony singing by listening to their records. In his multimedia “memory show,” Peter Asher recalls how he and Gordon Waller taught themselves harmony singing by imitating the Everly Brothers. Paul McCartney acknowledged his debt to the Everlys in “Let ‘Em In” and wrote “On the Wings of a Nightingale” for their first post-reunion recording in 1984.
The brothers started performing professionally as kids but entered the scene on the Cadence label with a succession of memorable pop songs written for them by Felice and Boudleaux Bryant at the end of the 1950’s. “Wake Up Little Susie,” for example, was a number 1 hit in 1957.
“All I Have To Do Is Dream,” written by Boudleaux Bryant without the missus, was a number 1 hit for them the following year.
In 1958 the Everlys also released the lesser known Songs Our Daddy Taught Us — not a hit in sight, but a key document to understand where they came from. It was only their second album. Below is the traditional “Barbara Allen.”
“Kentucky” is also from Songs Our Daddy Taught Us.
“Let It Be Me” was a hit for the Everly Brothers in 1959. This one wasn’t written by the Bryants. It was adapted from a French pop song. The Everly Brothers put their stamp on it in a big way.
The Everly Brothers moved from Cadence to Warner Bros. in 1960. Some of their most brilliant work followed, including their 1960 Warner Brothers hit “Cathy’s Clown.” Don wrote “Cathy’s Clown” himself.
“Love Hurts” was also written by Boudleaux Bryant without the missus. The Everly Brothers’ version was never released as a single, though it has had a big impact over the years.
“Walk Right Back” was written by Sonny Curtis of the Crickets. The Everly Brothers worked out the harmony and recorded it before Curtis wrote the second verse.
Even as their audience in the United States deserted them in the wake of the British Invasion, they sought to deepen and update their work on albums such as The Everly Brothers Sing (1967) and Roots (1968). (The links are to Richie Unterberger’s perceptive liner notes on the reissues.) Roots in particular is another lesser known album that is key to understanding the Everlys. “Bowling Green” is from The Everly Brothers Sing and was their last top 10 hit.
This version of “I Wonder If I Care As Much” is from Roots. Don had written it and the brothers had originally recorded it on 1958’s The Everly Brothers. Ten years later they had lived it.
Although it has been credited to Venetia Stevenson and Terry Slater, I think Don Everly wrote “I’m On My Way Home Again.” It was released as a single on Warner Bros. in 1969. and is included in the two-CD collection Walk Right Back: The Everly Brothers On Warner Bros. I first heard it on the fantastic Warner Bros. loss leader The Big Ball in 1970. By the way, Don Everly was married to Venetia Stevenson from 1962-1970. You can be pretty sure she didn’t write the song.
“Stories We Could Tell” was written by John Sebastian and produced by Paul Rothchild for the album of that title in 1972.
Their American fans had mostly moved on, but their British fans never really left them. After performing together with their faces a few inches apart from each other for 20 years, the brothers famously broke up in public onstage at Knott’s Berry Farm in Buena Park, California, in 1973. When they reunited ten years later, they repaid their debt to their British fans by debuting the reunion in a concert at the Royal Albert Hall.
The video above captures Don and Phil in a beautiful performance of “Take a Message To Mary/Maybe Tomorrow” at the Christmas 1983 BBC concert following their reunion concert that fall. It’s a medley that went back to their Cadence recordings of the 1950’s. “Take a Message to Mary” was written by the Bryants, “Maybe Tomorrow” by Don Everly. Ten years later, the Everly Brothers sounded better than ever. We saw the Everly Brothers at the University of Minnesota when their reunion tour took them through Minneapolis in June 1984 and again in the fall of 2003 when Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel — two of their most diligent students — brought them to St. Paul as part of their own version of a reunion tour. Seeing them all together prompted me to meditate on the emotional pull of the brothers’ close harmony singing. Simon and Garfunkel explicitly acknowledged the Everly Brothers as their heroes; they literally began singing together as teenagers trying to imitate the harmonies of the Everlys. In 2003 they invited the Everly Brothers to tour with them. Simon, Garfunkel, and the brothers all joined in the song that might be deemed the proximate cause of the festivities, “Bye Bye Love.” Who could ask for anything more?
It was an emotional occasion. The emotion triggered by the show could be written off to the self-indulgent nostalgia of the baby boomers like me who constituted virtually the entire audience for the show. But I wonder if it didn’t touch a deeper and more authentic feeling represented by the presence of the Everly Brothers. The Everly Brothers brought the close harmony singing of the recorded country tradition into popular music. That style of singing originates in the music of the Carter Family and runs preeminently from the Carter Family through the succeeding “Brothers” acts that deepened and perfected it — the Monroe Brothers, the Louvin Brothers, the Delmore Brothers, the Stanley Brothers. As Richie Unterberger writes in his outstanding essay on country duos, “The Everlys could…be seen as the link in the chain that finally brought the magic of country harmony singing to a wide international pop audience. In the process they weren’t playing country music anymore, although you could hardly say they sold out, given that they made some of the finest rock and pop records of the late ’50s and early ’60s. Their influence was immense on the Beatles, the Hollies, Simon & Garfunkel, and many other rock and pop acts of the last several decades that built their sound around close harmonies.” The demands of the form place a premium on conformity of timing, pronunciation, intonation and pitch that contribute to the difficulty of the style and the tradition of blood relationships among its practitioners. The inherent stress of show business combined with the addition of the family element to the equation must make the form extraordinarily intense. The Everly Brothers’ 1973 on-stage breakup was followed by a ten-year estrangement. When the Everlys reunited for love or money, we understood at some level how their show replayed the family romance of love and death that holds us all in its grip. Like our own family reunions, we seized the moment to cherish the harmony for its beauty and evanescence. Simon says it so nakedly in “Homeward Bound” — “Like emptiness in harmony I need someone to comfort me.” |
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Aug 30, 2021 |
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The Taliban did not take over Kabul on August 15 — we gave it to them. I really wish I were exaggerating. Read this.Sure, we may have turned over to our enemy control of a city that completely surrounds our only means of escape, but at least that ensures the American military presence will end on August 31.
The furious mother of one of the Marines killed in Kabul called into a radio show right after she found out … I have no wordsI can’t imagine the anguish this woman is going through right now.
University tells students not to use the term “African-American” because it’s now offensiveMerely existing on a college campus these days can feel like you’re walking through a minefield while blindfolded and juggling nine sticks of unstable dynamite. You just never know if you’re going to offend someone by blinking in a culturally appropriative fashion. Thankfully, one school has done the hard work of identifying many things that students simply must avoid saying at all costs:
Naval Intelligence members were sternly told they can not “disrespect” glorious leader Biden over Afghanistan … even if they are retiredImagine that you have an opinion as a naval officer on the disgusting mess unfolding in Afghanistan.
Someone found this 1976 interview with futurist Arthur C. Clarke and his predictions about the future were so accurate it’ll blow your mind
Chicago mother reportedly stripped of custody of her child for not getting the Covid vaccine!The standoff between those who don’t wish to be vaccinated against COVID-19 and those who believe it should be mandatory apparently just got a lot more serious:
This teacher took her classroom’s American flag down and now her kids pledge allegiance to the pride flagOkay people, I’m going to make this as brief as possible:
Apparently Biden’s dog was just biting the crap out of people left and right and the White House kinda covered it upPresident Joe Biden’s dog Major has had a few well-known and well-publicized biting incidents since moving into the White House, but apparently he’s taken more chomps than anyone thought, and the White House sort of—let’s just go ahead and say it—buried the news:
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US Airstrike Hits Car Carrying ISIS Suicide Bombers
Special: #1 Item to Hoard in 2021 McConnell: Biden Withdrawal Among ‘Worst Decisions’ in US History US Struck ISIS-K Targets With Special Hellfire Missile China: U.S. Should Align with Taliban Special: Outrage Over Survival Food Fmr. New York Times Writer Banned from Twitter Actor Ed Asner, TV’s Blustery Lou Grant, Dies at 91 Biden Blasted for Looking at Watch During Ceremony for Fallen Soldiers Special: US Living Standards About to Be Squeezed as Never Before EU Set to Recommend Reinstating Restrictions on US Travelers Chicago Attack on 2 Men Shocks Twitter More Links: Doctors Witness Amazing Joint Pain Changes
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99.) MARK LEVIN
August 27, 2021
On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, It’s a mistake to say we should never have gone into Afghanistan. They were harboring Osama Bin Laden and the terrorists that attacked the United States in 2001. Critics say that we should engage in nation-building but that’s exactly what the US did after World War II, it was called the Marshall Plan. What Biden did in Afghanistan is atrocious. The Afghan airbase commander said he showed up and the Americans were gone because they’d left in the middle of the night. Now the Taliban, ISIS-K, Al-Qaeda are running wild in Afghanistan. The moment the U.S abandoned the Bagram airbase and relinquished their air support, every one of those 13 soldiers became a sitting duck. Then, Victor Davis Hanson calls in to explain how contrary agendas at play in Afghanistan are playing out. Hanson predicts that there will be many more ‘Bowe Bergdahl” situations because the Army has shifted its focus from military science to the social science of wokeness. Later, when a society begins to hate itself, hate its founding, and what their country once stood for it rots away at the core of a nation. Forget climate change, the biggest problem facing us is ‘ideological change.’ Afterward, the media and the Biden Administration continually fail to recognize that the Taliban and the Afghan government had to meet conditions in order to earn withdrawal. The conditions set forth by the Trump agreement, for a government of peace were never upheld by the other parties. Therefore, there was no need for a precipitous, reckless withdrawal that killed hundreds, injured more, and gave away billions in military assets. In breaking news, the murder of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Sirhan Sirhan, has earned a shot at parole after two sons of Robert F. Kennedy advocated for Sirhan, ultimately the Governor of California will make the decision. Sirhan maintains that he has no recollection of the RFK assassination, and the Soros-backed prosecutor has declined to participate in the parole hearing.
THIS IS FROM:
NY Post
White House ditched talks with anti-Taliban resistance: report
Right Scoop
Associated Press exposes Biden’s LIES about the deal Trump made with the Taliban
AP
RFK assassin moves closer to freedom with help of 2 Kennedys
NY Post
These are the US service members killed in the Kabul airport attack
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Marcus Yam
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112.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES
In addition, the CDC said words like ‘inmate’ could be ‘stigmatizing.’
Newly sworn-in New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is wasting no time taking sides in the school mask wars. Even before taking the top job, she told NBC’s “Today”…
Her young son was taken in the deadly Kabul airport bombing.
It’s hard to believe anything could be worse than Hurricane Katrina. But with Ida, anything’s possible.
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