Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday September 10, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
|
2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
SIGN UP September 10, 2021 READ ONLINE WORDS OF WISDOM “Even if I knew that tomorrow the world would go to pieces, I would still plant my apple tree.” MARTIN LUTHER MORNING BRIEF TOP NEWS This Labor Day weekend, many of us will gather with friends and family to celebrate the men and women who work outside paving our roads, delivering our goods, collecting our garbage, and making America the great country it is. From The Epoch Times staff, we want to say thank you for your hard work. Your sheer grit and determination are what makes this country the place we are proud to call home. And as a way of saying thank you, sign up today and get Epoch TV FREE with a digital subscription, and get your first 4 months for just $1. NOTE: This is our best offer ever, and it expires soon.
POSITIVE NEWS EPOCH OPINION A WORD FROM OUR SPONSOR Jonathan Cahn, author of the New York Times best sellers The Harbinger, The Mystery of the Shemitah, The Book of Mysteries, The Paradigm, and The Oracle, has now written the sequel. The Harbinger II is being hailed as “a prophetic masterpiece” even more powerful and stunning than the first book and will take the mystery to new dimensions and disclose what could not be revealed in The Harbinger or until now. You will never see the world the same way again. Prepare to be blown away. EPOCH TV PUZZLE CENTER If this email has been forwarded to you and you would like to sign up, please click here. Copyright © 2021 The Epoch Times, All rights reserved. The Epoch Times, 229 W 28th St, Fl.5, New York, NY 10001
With social media censorship sidelining many important headlines, our Morning Brief email is how we make sure you get the latest developments that our reporters have curated from around the world. It’s our way of keeping you truly informed so that you can make the decisions that align with your values. We hope you enjoy our coverage. Manage your email preferences here.
|
3.) DAYBREAK
|
4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 9.10.21
Florida Politics broke the news late Tuesday night: The Florida Realtors have abandoned their 2022 ballot initiative to create more affordable housing.
The announcement sent shockwaves through Tallahassee and beyond. After all, the Realtors had already put over $13 million into the political committee backing the effort.
Sources familiar with the Realtors’ decision-making process said the group ultimately did not have the stomach to go head-to-head with Republican legislative leadership who had openly criticized the effort as a “self-serving, special interest agenda.”
But that wasn’t the only factor.
It is no secret that getting citizen-led initiatives on the ballot — let alone getting them passed — has become increasingly more difficult in Florida in recent election cycles. We can thank the Florida Legislature for this cold, hard truth for having passed election laws that, among other things, make it a first-degree misdemeanor to pay petition gatherers by the signature.
Why is that significant?
Because to get on the 2022 ballot in Florida, initiative-backers will have to submit 891,589 valid signatures to the state by Feb. 1 — that’s up from the 766,200 signatures it took to get on the 2020 ballot.
To put in perspective just how critical that 125,000 increase might be, prominent Orlando attorney John Morgan spent millions last election cycle to successfully get his Minimum Wage initiative on the ballot but was only able to do so with a cushion of just over 4,000 signatures.
Which brings me back to the Florida Realtors.
Before pulling the plug on their petition effort they had only collected 222,000 signatures, and of those about 67,000, or 7%, had been verified by supervisors of elections. In a COVID environment where face-to-face contact with strangers is not ideal, it is fair to say they had a tough road to hoe to successfully get on the ballot and ultimately decided to pull the plug and take a different approach.
That should serve as a cautionary sign to the remaining two ballot initiatives being steered by gaming entities such as Las Vegas Sands and Draft Kings and Fan Duel.
There is no question that both are being led by some of the brightest political minds in the business. I’m also rooting for them to get on the ballot.
Each proposal has an angle that could make signing a petition an easy sell — the sports betting amendment is smartly framed as a way to boost education funding, similar to the Florida Lottery; the casino amendment promises a destination resort that could juice a tourism industry that’s been hobbled by the pandemic.
Still, the talented rosters behind those campaigns know making the ballot is not a given.
And the margin for error they did have was made slimmer this week after the Seminole Tribe of Florida announced a multi-million dollar TV blitz touting the benefits of the new Gaming Compact, which has now cleared all regulatory hurdles and is officially the law of the land.
Surely part of the Tribe’s intent was to educate the public but there is little doubt the advertising offensive is also intended to add to the confusion when Floridians are asked to sign their name to a petition outside of a Publix.
So, will we see any citizen-led measures on the 2022 ballot? The collapse of the Realtors’ initiative didn’t help the odds.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@POTUS: I’m instructing the Department of Labor to require all employers with 100+ employees to ensure their workforce is fully vaccinated — or show a negative test at least once a week. Some of the biggest companies have already required this: United, Disney, Tyson, and Fox News.
—@SenRickScott: The Biden admin is filled with career bureaucrats & academic elites – people who have no idea what it means to run a business or create a job. This is what you get electing people who support socialism. They want government controlling, compelling & mandating what people do.
—@JlianZelizer: Today’s speech suggests that @POTUS is coming to terms with the modern GOP, not unlike former @BarackObama in his confrontation with the Tea Party. The new policies are a major shift away from the reliance on persuasion and toward the deployment of federal power to contain Covid.
—@ryban10001: In my message-factory mind I love the combo of anti-establishment populism combined with the takedown of knee-jerk 1970s state-driven solution politics
Tweet, tweet:
—@Kylamb8: No one has the magic formula to get rid of the virus. That’s really the point. The ones that are most successful aren’t successful in that they achieved much better results, it’s that they haven’t achieved worse results while doubling down on pointless, disastrous policies.
Tweet, tweet:
—@ShevrinJones: Watching videos of parents encouraging their children to break the rules and to be disrespectful to adults, defying mask mandates in schools is a clear window into why so many children have no respect for adults and/or authority, because they are learning it at home.
—@JossieBarroso: Two things on Monday: 1) @UF has a big announcement. 2) @usnews reveals their 2022 best colleges rankings.
— DAYS UNTIL —
California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 4; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 4; Apple launch event for new iPhones — 4; Alabama at UF — 8; Dolphins home opener — 9; Jaguars home opener — 9; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 10; The Problem with Jon Stewart premieres on Apple TV+ — 20; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 21; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 21; MLB regular season ends — 22; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 23; World Series Game 1 — 36; ‘Dune’ premieres — 40; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 47; Florida TaxWatch’s annual meeting begins — 47; Georgia at UF — 50; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 53; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 53; The Blue Angels 75th anniversary show — 56; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 56; ‘Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 58; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 59; Miami at FSU — 64; ExcelinEd’s National Summit on Education begins — 69; FSU vs. UF — 78; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 82; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 91; ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 98; ‘The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 103; ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 106; NFL season ends — 121; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 123; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 123; NFL playoffs begin — 127; Super Bowl LVI — 156; Daytona 500 — 163; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 196; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 240; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 259; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 265; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 301; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 313; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 392; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 427.
“Florida schools can mandate masks after judge blocks Ron DeSantis ban” via John Kennedy of USA Today Network — A Florida judge Wednesday blocked DeSantis’ ban on mandatory masks at schools from remaining in effect while he appeals an earlier ruling that struck down his order. Circuit Judge John Cooper approved a request by lawyers for parents suing DeSantis over masks, endorsing their position that keeping the ban in place would create a potential health risk in schools. Throwing out the automatic stay of his earlier order is unusual, Cooper conceded. But he added, “We’re not in normal times. We’re in a pandemic.”
Tweet, tweet:
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida COVID-19 update: 1,296 more deaths. Hospitalizations continue to trend downward” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Florida on Thursday reported 12,386 more COVID-19 cases and 1,296 additional deaths to the CDC. All but 19 of the newly reported deaths, about 99%, occurred since Aug. 11. About 60% of the newly reported died in the past two weeks, the analysis showed. The majority of deaths happened during Florida’s latest surge in COVID-19 cases, fueled by the delta variant. In the past seven days, on average, the state has added 338 deaths and 14,276 cases each day. The jump in the number of reported cases and deaths is due to the newest way deaths and cases are counted.
“Now that COVID-19 cases peaked, the question remains: When will so many Floridians stop dying of the virus?” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Florida’s COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are declining but it could take weeks before a drop-off in deaths from the virus occurs. One public health researcher suggests the state’s death count could reach as high as 56,000 people before the impact of the delta variant subsides. The COVID-19 death toll climbed to nearly 47,000 over the past week. Because of a lag, Florida’s daily death counts this week reflect the aftermath of record hospitalizations seen two to three weeks ago. The daily count has been higher than during any point in the pandemic. Over the last seven days, an average of nearly 345 more people per day have succumbed to the virus.
“State workers scared over COVID, say Florida agencies have no plan to protect them” via James Call of the Tallahassee Democrat — A summer COVID surge that’s produced a record number of infections in Leon County has led Tallahassee’s three state lawmakers to go to DeSantis. They’re asking him to reinstate a telework option for state workers, and to provide clarity to state agency heads about COVID-related work rules, procedures, and protocols. “I’m not sure if there are any real protocols,” one lawmaker said.
“Kelly Skidmore joins doctors in dumping on Gov. DeSantis’ COVID-19 leadership” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — A group of doctors from across the state joined members of the Florida Democratic Party Thursday to rip DeSantis’ COVID-19 policies as the state comes off its worst outbreak since the pandemic began last year. Democratic Rep. Skidmore joined three doctors Thursday for a virtual news conference criticizing DeSantis, as well as Republican U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, for the GOP’s leadership in the state. Both DeSantis and Rubio are up for reelection next year. “This is the kind of crisis that requires strong leadership and an end to the political games we’ve been seeing playing out through the past year-and-a-half,” Skidmore said, before highlighting a list of policy proposals which have been used to contain diseases in the past.
— CORONA LOCAL —
“BayCare will mandate COVID-19 vaccine for its workers, following new federal rules” via Christopher O’Donnell of the Tampa Bay Times — Southwest Florida’s biggest health care provider said Thursday it will follow new federal rules and mandate COVID-19 vaccinations for its employees. BayCare, which runs 14 acute-care hospitals in the Tampa Bay area, has about 28,000 employees. The company recently reported that about 45 percent of its workers are unvaccinated. The announcement comes as President Joe Biden on Thursday instructed the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to mandate COVID-19 vaccines in most health care settings. It would apply to about 17 million health care workers in hospitals and other facilities that receive federal funding for medical care.
“Nearly 300 dead: Delta surge makes August Orange County’s deadliest month of the pandemic” via Ryan Gillespie and Stephen Hudak of the Orlando Sentinel — Nearly 200 Orange County residents have been reported dead with COVID-19 over the past 10 days, making August the deadliest month in the county during the 17-month pandemic. In all, 293 people died with COVID-19 in August, with more likely to be added to the toll in the coming days and weeks due to reporting delays. Already, deaths reported have well surpassed the previous high of 229 in January. “We’re now facing the consequences of the high wave [of infections] we had a couple of weeks ago,” said Dr. Raul Pino, the local state health officer in Orange County.
“AdventHealth moves down to yellow status, further loosening restrictions as COVID-19 infections decline” via Caroline Catherman of the Orlando Sentinel — AdventHealth Central Florida moves from red to yellow status Thursday, but this wave’s strain on the hospital system isn’t over. More surgeries can resume and the hospital is now at 75-80% of normal operational activity, said Dr. Sanjay Pattani, medical director for AdventHealth Mission Control. “We’re seeing our ability to free up resources that we had to mobilize initially, to go back to taking care of patients in other directions,” Pattani said. Yet the hospital system is still struggling to care for its many unvaccinated COVID-19 patients. Hospital staff are drained, said Dr. Eduardo Oliveira, executive medical director for critical care services for AdventHealth’s Central Florida Division.
“Less than 1 percent of student body opts out of masks in first week of Duval Schools’ new policy” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — Duval County Public Schools’ new mask mandate has cut down significantly on the number of students who have opted out of wearing a face covering on campus within the first week of enforcement, new numbers show. 206 medical opt-outs have been filed by families and granted out of the nearly 104,000 brick-and-mortar students. Students attending Duval Virtual Instruction Academy or a charter school within Duval County are not counted in this figure. Separately, six of Duval County’s nearly 21,000 charter school students have returned opt-out paperwork, though charter schools are not required to honor the district’s mask mandate and COVID-19 policies vary by school.
“Masks in class: Hillsborough County School Board votes to extend mask mandate to Oct. 15” via Beth Rousseau of WFLA — Members of the Hillsborough County School Board are expected to discuss extending the district’s mask mandate during their meeting Thursday afternoon. Last month, the board voted 5-2 to mandate masks for all students and staff amid rising COVID-19 cases among students and staff, despite Ron DeSantis’ ban on mask mandates in schools. Leon County Circuit Judge John C. Cooper ruled last month that local school boards can impose mask mandates to curb the spread of COVID-19. On Wednesday, Cooper said schools can keep their mask mandates in place while the state appeals the decision.
“‘Delta variant is no joke.’ Palm Beach County School District unveils COVID-19 mitigation strategies” via Jennifer Sangalang and Holly Baltz of the Palm Beach Post — What are the COVID-19 mitigation strategies for the Palm Beach County School District, the county’s largest workforce of more than 22,000? Claudia Shea, director of communications for the school district, and Dr. Belma Andric, chief medical officer of the county’s health care district, addressed COVID-19 prevention tips Wednesday in a livestream on the school district’s social networks. The event was to be co-hosted by district Chief of Staff Jay Boggess, but Shea was substituted Wednesday afternoon. In the video, Andric and Shea discussed the health district’s drive-through COVID-19 rapid testing sites, with Andric advocating people eligible get the COVID-19 vaccine.
“Parents’ rights groups takes aim at Indian River superintendent, 3 School Board members” via Sommer Brugal of TC Palm — A parents group is organizing to remove the school superintendent and three School Board members for voting in favor of a mask mandate for pre-K-8 students. The effort — which includes a GoFund Me page and a petition — calls on DeSantis to remove Superintendent David Moore, board Chairperson Brian Barefoot and board members Peggy Jones and Mara Schiff. It claims the mask policy violates DeSantis’ ban on mask mandates; the Parents Bill of Rights passed by the Legislature; and the state Department of Health’s emergency ruling that allows mandatory mask policies as long as parents or guardians can opt-out their students.
“Tampa General has put her kidney transplant on hold; she blames the unvaccinated” via Christopher O’Donnell of the Tampa Bay Times — Carol Johnson has battled Type 1 diabetes since she was 12. Three years ago, her kidney function deteriorated to the point where she qualified for Tampa General Hospital’s donor list. In May, she was placed on regular dialysis, a sign of impending kidney failure. So Johnson, 67, was thrilled in early August when her brother was approved as a donor. That should have meant surgery within weeks, she said. But then she learned her operation was indefinitely on hold because the hospital had suspended elective surgeries due to a surge of COVID-19 patients. The longer she is on dialysis, the less the chance of success for her surgery. She is angry about all the people who ignored calls for them to get the vaccine, which is provided for free.
— DATELINE TALLY —
Chris Sprowls commissions study to determine possible pitfalls facing Florida — In April, House Speaker Chris Sprowls greenlit a $2 million risk assessment study to determine what could cause the next financial disaster in Florida. As reported by Gary Fineout of POLITICO Florida, the “profile of the state’s biggest risks” is being prepared by Willis Towers Watson, a global advisory firm, which will survey state agencies and private businesses to suss out potential future challenges. The final report will also include an overview of past financial crises in the state and rate the state’s “vulnerability to shocks.” Sprowls said, “From a government perspective, this is our desire to say ‘let’s get ahead of that problem’ … Even if they aren’t the problems on the nightly news, they are wildly important to the state of Florida.”
“Is PIP repeal headed for a comeback?” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Florida’s oft-criticized no-fault automobile insurance program remains intact after DeSantis this summer vetoed a bill that would have scrapped the requirement that drivers buy what’s called “personal injury protection” insurance. But speculation that legislation targeting auto insurance could be resurrected during the 2022 Session increased this week after Sprowls named Rep. Erin Grall, primary sponsor of the PIP repeal bill in the House, chair of the powerful House Judiciary Committee. Sprowls, however, on Wednesday downplayed any notion that Grall’s appointment as Judiciary Committee Chair shows an increased interest in the issue and added that no decision had been made as of yet.
“Sprowls taps Erin Grall to take the lead on abortion legislation” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Sprowls said this week that Rep. Grall, a Republican lawyer from Vero Beach, will take the lead on anti-abortion legislation for the 2022 Legislative Session. Sprowls has not said whether his chamber will move legislation modeled after a Texas law prohibiting abortions after a fetal heartbeat can be detected, usually at about six weeks of pregnancy, or, instead, advance some other proposal such as banning women from obtaining abortions because their fetuses will have a disability or a potential disability. The House on April 23 passed Grall’s HB 1221, the so-called disability abortion bill. The vote drew praise from the Susan B Anthony List, a national anti-abortion group. Ultimately, though, the bill died after Sen. Lauren Book refused to consider the Senate counterpart.
“Janet Cruz, Fentrice Driskell want voters to choose Education Commissioner” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Cruz and Rep. Driskell are filing legislation that would change the state’s Education Commissioner from an appointed position to one chosen by voters. “Voters currently have no direct influence on state education policy, and this bill seeks to put an end to that,” Cruz said at a press conference announcing the bill Thursday in her Tampa district. “You should remove personal agendas from the selection process.” The proposal comes in response to current Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran’s override on school district masking policies. Corcoran backs Ron DeSantis’ order banning school mask mandates. Democrats like Cruz have pointed to the mandate ban as cause for widespread cases of COVID-19 in schools, especially as the more contagious delta variant continues to surge.
“‘We will replace you’: Republican members of Pinellas County Delegation face pressure for Special Session” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Republican members of the Pinellas County Legislative Delegation faced scrutiny Thursday morning from a slew of conservative commenters calling for a Special Session to ban mask and vaccine mandates. The commenters, many from the county’s Community Patriots group, pointed their criticisms toward conservative members of the delegation during the delegation meeting. The speakers urged lawmakers to call a Special Session in support of a bill (HB 75) filed by Howey-in-the-Hills Rep. Anthony Sabatini that seeks to ban COVID-19-related mandates, like those requiring vaccines or masks.
Happening today — The Hillsborough County legislative delegation will meet online: Sens. Janet Cruz, Darryl Rouson, Danny Burgess, Jim Boyd, Reps. Mike Beltran, Lawrence McClure, Andrew Learned, Jackie Toledo, Dianne Hart, Susan Valdes, Fentrice Driskell, Traci Koster and Michele Rayner, 9:30 a.m. Livestreaming on The Florida Channel.
Tweet, tweet:
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Emily Buckley, Dean Mead: Charter Schools USA
Marty Fiorentino, Davis Bean, Melissa Braude, Joseph Mobley, Mark Pinto, The Fiorentino Group: Flagler College, Mental Health Resource Center
Emily Fisher: Florida Ports Council
Lori Killinger, Kasey Lewis, Chris Lyon, Lewis Longman & Walker: AgLogic Chemical
Dennis Moore: Statewide Guardian ad Litem Office
Will Rodriguez, Corcoran Partners: Merlin Law Group, Women of Tomorrow
— STATEWIDE —
“Federal judge blocks key portion of anti-riot law, targets DeSantis and three sheriffs” via Ana Ceballos of the Miami Herald — A federal judge temporarily blocked the enforcement of a key portion of Florida’s so-called anti-riot law, saying it is too vague and “encourages arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.” The definition of what constitutes a riot under current state law is “vague to the point of unconstitutionality,” U.S. District Judge Mark Walker wrote in his preliminary injunction order. Walker said the court is not “striking the definition of ‘riot’ from Florida Statutes” not is it “enjoining all law enforcement agencies across the state from enforcing this specific law.” Instead, the court is blocking DeSantis and three Florida sheriffs from enforcing the state’s law against “rioting” as defined in current statute.
“DeSantis commends 9/11 responders, rebukes calls to defund police” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — With the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11th attack days away, DeSantis on Thursday highlighted the actions of police and vowed to defend them from calls to defund law enforcement. Speaking in DeFuniak Springs, the Republican Governor lauded the heroics of on-scene responders and described the fateful day among the most “significant” in American history. Emergency workers, he emphasized, put themselves at great risk. “They’re running into the building,” DeSantis said of the 110-story World Trade Center. “They’re taking people out. They’re going higher up to get more people out, knowing, in all likelihood, that they were not going to make it out themselves.”
“DeSantis makes $1.1M job, infrastructure push in Walton County” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Florida is investing $1.1 million in Walton County for infrastructure and economic growth to bring high-paying job opportunities to the Panhandle. DeSantis and the Department of Economic Opportunity on Thursday announced a $500,000 distribution from the Job Growth Grant Fund for roadway, water and sewer infrastructure improvements at an upcoming business park outside DeFuniak Springs. The second, $625,000 portion comes from the Rural Infrastructure Fund to expand broadband access in the country. Both grants are efforts to build and retain businesses in the Panhandle county. “We know Walton County’s a good place to be, anyways,” DeSantis said.
“DeSantis finds a friendly reception during DeFuniak newser but no hard questions” via Michael Moline of Florida Phoenix — If the Governor holds a news conference and doesn’t take questions from the press, is it really a news conference? Not particularly, judging by an appearance DeSantis staged Thursday in DeFuniak Springs. The Governor’s Office definitely invited reporters, having issued a press release announcing the event and specifying when they should arrive to set up. But after the governor concluded his remarks and asked for questions, the ensuing back-and-forth seemed to involve local officials who heaped praise on DeSantis, not news gatherers seeking policy details. “You’ve done something that I’ve tried for 41 years to do, and that’s to turn my daughter from a liberal Democrat to a Republican,” one man told the Governor.
“After state docked pay from board, Broward pushes DeSantis to stop sitting on billions for schools” via Danielle J. Brown of Florida Phoenix — While state education officials withheld the salaries of Broward County School Board members because of strict mask mandates, the school district has called on DeSantis to distribute billions in federal relief funds to help schools recover from the COVID-19 pandemic. In a letter addressed to the governor, Broward Interim Superintendent Vickie Cartwright and Board Chair Rosalind Osgood said that Broward schools are “entering into the second year of the pandemic and continue to have the need for stimulus dollars to help mitigate the impact of the pandemic on our students and staff.”
“Army Corps foresees no construction delays following Everglades restoration lawsuit” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Drew Bartlett, executive director of the South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD), told the SFWMD Governing Board Thursday there are no indications a recent lawsuit against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will delay construction projects related to Everglades restoration. “We are counting on them to build these projects,” Bartlett said. “I have had conversations with the Corps. They assure me they are not delaying any projects associated with (CEPP).” Last month, several farming organizations sued the Corps, alleging the planning process for a portion of the Comprehensive Everglades Planning Project (CEPP) did not comply with federal law.
“Rescuers race to save Florida’s corals while federal government plan more dredging” via Craig Pittman of Florida Phoenix — The corals in the Orlando room have colorful names: Green Star, Yellow Finger, Knobby Brain, and Rough Cactus. The list makes for a cutie-pie passenger manifest for a modern-day Noah’s ark. Each of these corals was transplanted here, to what’s been dubbed the Florida Coral Rescue Center, from North America’s only coral barrier reef, which stretches for about 360 miles along Florida’s southeast coast. The goal: Save their lives so that someday, no one knows when, they or their offspring can be put back where they normally live. They needed a rescue because, since 2014, a disease called Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease has been rampaging through the reef like, and I do not make this comparison lightly, COVID-19 through Florida’s mass of vaccination-averse citizens.
“State delays new five-year EBT contract two months” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — The Department of Children and Families has pushed back its timeline to pick a new vendor for Electronic Benefit Transfer services, which serves 2.2 million people who rely on a number of different food and cash assistance programs operated by the state and federal government. Documents posted to the agency’s website Wednesday indicate the Department of Children and Families wants to complete its negotiations with the qualified vendors and have the new five-year contract awarded by Feb. 7, 2023, about two-months later than the state’s original plan. The invitation to negotiate, or ITN, authorizes the Department of Children and Families to contract with more than one vendor to supply the EBT services. The pushed-back deadline means interested vendors have until Oct. 15 to respond to the ITN.
— 2022 —
DeSantis to headline Nebraska Steak Fry — DeSantis will be among a trio of potential 2024 GOP presidential contenders headlining the annual Nebraska Steak Fry next week. The annual event, held by Ricketts, celebrates the state’s agriculture industry. Former Vice President Mike Pence and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz are also on the guest list. If Donald Trump does not run in 2024, both men — along with DeSantis — are among the top-tier potential candidates in early Republican presidential primary polls. The event will be held Sept. 12 at Arbor Lodge Historical Park in Nebraska City.
“Nikki Fried tries to take on DeSantis’ job as Governor in first months of campaign” via Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — The Agriculture Commissioner is the only Democrat on the Florida Cabinet in charge of an agency with 3,700 employees that not only oversees the agriculture industry but inspects grocery stores and roller coasters and issues gun permits. But in recent weeks she started highlighting COVID-19 statistics, and on Sept. 1 she called for a moment of silence for Florida’s nearly 47,000 dead COVID-19 victims, an act of commemoration typically only made by the Governor. She says she believes it’s needed in the face of DeSantis’ moves to ban mask mandates by local governments, vaccine passports by business and to push treatments more vocally than vaccines. She has suggested DeSantis cares more about a potential 2024 presidential bid than combating the pandemic.
Save the date:
—“4 Pinellas County mayors back Ben Diamond for CD 13” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics
“Reggie Gaffney nears $300K raised for Senate bid” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Gaffney continued in August to consolidate support for his run for state Senate. Gaffney, a Democrat who seeks to succeed term limited Sen. Audrey Gibson in Senate District 6, neared $300,000 raised after just a month and a half in the race. He has $219,250 in his Friends of Reggie Gaffney political committee and another $67,330 in his campaign account. The bulk of Gaffney’s August fundraising went to the political committee for a second straight month, with donors giving $67,500 to that account. Developers and real estate concerns gave heavily to Friends of Reggie Gaffney, with Dream Finder Homes pacing all donors with $25,000 contributed.
“Daniel Sotelo campaign crosses $125K mark for open HD 118 race” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Sotelo added about $15,500 in August toward his bid for the Florida House District 118 seat Republican Rep. Anthony Rodriguez plans to vacate for a Miami-Dade Commission seat next year. Last month’s haul, comprised of 16 individual donations of $1,000 or less, edged Sotelo’s campaign past the $125,000 mark in a race where he so far is unopposed. As has been the case before, contributions to his campaign last month came exclusively from a variety of local small businesses and their proprietors. In August, they included companies offering impact window, liquor, furniture, carpentry, auto mechanic, mortgage and clothing services. Past donors included many from the construction sector or related industries.
“Dems gave $700K to dark-money group that helped Republicans win races in ‘ghost’ candidate scandal” via Jason Garcia and Annei Martin of the Orlando Sentinel — The dark-money nonprofit that worked with Republican strategists last year to promote spoiler independent candidates in important state Senate races also raised more than $700,000 from organizations controlled by Democratic fundraisers. The nonprofit, Grow United Inc., which is based out of a UPS Store in Denver, provided more than half a million dollars last fall that Republican strategists used to advertise little-known independent candidates who did no campaigning of their own in three key Senate elections, one in Central Florida and two in South Florida.
— CORONA NATION —
“Joe Biden plans COVID-19 vaccine mandate for 80 million private sector employees” via Axios — More than 80 million Americans working in the private sector will be required to receive a COVID-19 vaccine or produce a negative test result at least once a week, a senior Biden administration official said. The new rule, to be developed by the Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), underscores the Biden administration’s ramped up efforts to control the virus as cases and hospitalizations largely driven by the Delta variant surge nationwide. OSHA is developing the rule that will require vaccinations or once a week testing for companies with more than 100 employees, set to be implemented in the coming weeks, per the White House official.
“Biden expresses frustration over the unvaccinated, says ‘a distinct minority’ is keeping the U.S. from overcoming the coronavirus” via Annie Linskey, Yasmeen Abutaleb, Seung Min Kim and Lisa Rein of The Washington Post — President Biden announced sweeping new vaccine mandates Thursday that will affect tens of millions of Americans, ordering all businesses with more than 100 employees to require their workers to be inoculated or face weekly testing. Biden also said he was requiring all health facilities that accept Medicare or Medicaid funding to vaccinate their workforces, which the White House believes will impact 50,000 locations. And the president announced he would sign an executive order that would require all federal employees to get vaccinated against the coronavirus in an effort to create a model he hopes state governments and private companies will adopt.
“Biden requiring federal workers to get COVID-19 shot” via Zeke Miller of The Associated Press — President Biden is toughening COVID-19 vaccine requirements for federal workers and contractors as he aims to boost vaccinations and curb the surging delta variant that is killing thousands each week and jeopardizing the nation’s economic recovery. Just weeks after he mandated that federal workers get shots or face rigorous testing and masking protocols, Biden will sign a new executive order to require vaccination for employees of the executive branch and contractors who do business with the federal government, with no option to test out. The word comes ahead of the president’s speech Thursday afternoon outlining a six-pronged plan to address the latest rise in coronavirus cases.
“U.S. states with low vaccination rates see sharp spikes in children with COVID-19.” via The New York Times — The number of children admitted to the hospital in the United States with COVID-19 has risen to the highest levels reported to date. Nearly 30,000 of them entered hospitals in August. Pediatric hospitalizations, driven by a record rise in coronavirus infections among children, have swelled, overwhelming children’s hospitals and intensive care units in states like Louisiana and Texas. During the summer surge, the hospitalization rate was about 10 times as high in unvaccinated adolescents as in those who were vaccinated. Data on hospitalizations among children of different ages is limited.
“Los Angeles school district mandates COVID-19 vaccines for students 12 and older” via Ivana Saric of Axios — The Los Angeles Unified Board of Education approved a measure Thursday mandating eligible students in the nation’s second-biggest school district to be vaccinated against the coronavirus. It’s the first major school district to require vaccines for students, a move that may set a precedent for school districts across the country to follow. The school district, which has seen a number of legal challenges to its other COVID-19 mitigation measures, will likely face more litigation over the mandate. Students 12 years and older have been eligible to receive COVID-19 vaccines in Los Angeles for several months, but many have not.
“GOP West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice is done with all that nonsense on vaccines” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — If the coronavirus could be cured by a mixture of folksiness and exasperation, West Virginia Gov. Justice would be in line for a Nobel Prize. Many of Justice’s GOP colleagues have trodden gently around promoting the vaccines. And then there’s Justice, the governor of the second-Trumpiest state in the country. As the team at the Recount has documented, he has made clear over the past six months-plus that he has no time for all that nonsense. Back in February, he assailed long-term care workers who declined the vaccine. “When you turn your back and say, ‘Nope, I’m not doing that,’ all you’re doing is entering the death drawing,” Justice said.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Weekly jobless claims post sharp drop to 310,000, another new pandemic low” via Jeff Cox of CNBC — First-time filings for unemployment claims in the U.S. dropped to 310,000 last week, easily the lowest of the COVID-19 era and a significant step toward the pre-pandemic normal, the Labor Department reported Thursday. Claims had been expected to total 335,000 for the week ended Sept. 4, according to economists surveyed by Dow Jones. Claims may have been still lower except for a substantial bump in Louisiana, which was hammered by Hurricane Ida and still has nearly 250,000 homes and businesses without power. Initial filings had been trending around 215,000 prior to when the pandemic was declared in March 2020. A year ago at this time, weekly claims averaged 881,000.
“Airlines say rise in COVID-19 cases is hurting ticket sales” via The Associated Press — Several leading U.S. airlines warned Thursday that the rise in COVID-19 cases due to the delta variant is hurting their bookings and further delaying a recovery for the travel industry. American Airlines said a slowdown that started in August has continued into September, and the airline further lowered its outlook for third-quarter revenue. United Airlines said its flying and revenue are both weaker than previously expected, and it is cutting its schedule for later this year to match the lower demand. Delta Air Lines said it still expects to post an adjusted pretax profit for the third quarter, but revenue will be toward the lower end of its previous forecast.
— MORE CORONA —
“Results of NIH studies on mixing vaccines expected to start coming in late September” via Lenny Bernstein and Laurie McGinley of The Washington Post — NIH researchers plan to begin issuing in late September the results of research on the safety and effectiveness of mixing coronavirus vaccines for booster shots, with final results of all nine studies not available until late October. The impact of the Pfizer vaccine as a booster will be the focus of the last three studies underway. That means consumers already inoculated with the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines won’t have information on using Pfizer’s version as a booster until late next month. Pfizer is in line to be the first brand approved as a booster by the FDA. Approval could accelerate the trend of people who originally received the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines seeking Pfizer boosters.
“When was the first U.S. COVID-19 death? CDC investigates 4 early cases” via Benjamin Mueller of The New York Times — Late last year, the federal government’s chief statistician on death received word about a tantalizing discovery: Someone had died from COVID-19 in January 2020, a death certificate said, a revelation that would have sped up the timeline of the virus’s spread in the United States by several weeks. That death was ultimately not what it seemed. The person who certified it had meant June 2020, not January. But that blip on the radar screen of Robert Anderson, the chief of mortality statistics at a branch of the CDC, helped to kick off a quiet, yearlong campaign at the agency to check and recheck the country’s first suspected COVID-19-related deaths in the uncertain days of early 2020.
— 20 YEARS —
“Joe Biden to travel to all three 9/11 sites for 20th anniversary of attacks” via Amy B. Wang of The Washington Post — Biden will travel to New York, Virginia and Pennsylvania on Sept. 11 to mark the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks at all three sites where they occurred. Biden will be accompanied by first lady Jill Biden when he visits Lower Manhattan in New York City; Shanksville, Pa.; and the Pentagon in Arlington, Va., where planes crashed after terrorists hijacked them Sept. 11, 2001, killing nearly 3,000 people. Vice President Harris and second gentleman Douglas Emhoff will travel to Shanksville for a separate event, then join the Bidens at the Pentagon, the White House said.
“A profound memorial in Shanksville” via Bronwen Latimer of The Washington Post — The memorial for those who died on Flight 93 began with one memento pinned to the chain-link fence meant to keep people away from the crash site. Soon the fence was covered in photos and hats and flowers. By the 10th anniversary, the landscape had been transformed with walls of marble and groves of sugar maples and hemlock, long winding pathways and Queen Anne’s lace. A visitor could hear the voice of each passenger or crew member, see a name etched in perpetuity. This week, 40 different wind chimes inside the Tower of Voices, built 93 feet high, will play in the summer breeze.
“They weren’t born yet when their dads died on 9/11. The loss shaped their lives.” via Brittany Shammas and Michael S. Rosenwald of The Wall Street Journal —The first time she remembers having to make a Father’s Day card at school, Robin Ornedo was in first grade. As a teacher explained the assignment — folding construction paper to resemble a man’s shirt and tie — the 6-year-old felt a sadness creeping in. She knew her dad was gone, lost in what she only vaguely understood as some sort of accident. For a moment, Robin sat wondering what to do. Then she remembered something her mom always told her: that it was okay to talk to her dad as if he was still there with them. That in a way, he was still there. “I pretended my dad was alive,” Robin recalled recently, “just so I wouldn’t feel left out.”
“Watching 9/11 taught me, a refugee, the visceral lessons of Americanness” via Roya Hakakian of The Washingtin Post — On Sept. 11, 2001, I watched through tears as ash fell over the city that had so unceremoniously taken me in as a refugee 15 years earlier. Like all Americans, I was mourning the dead, the pierced skyline, the bereft mood of a people whom I had never seen bereft. But I was also mourning a loss of my own, the loss of the impenetrable fortress I thought I had entered when I arrived in the United States. The blare of sirens drowned all other sounds. The sidewalks that had teemed with passersby were deserted. Suddenly New York City began to feel like the Tehran I had fled. But while most Americans feared what evil might follow next, I feared that my adopted city might succumb to the same reign of grief my birth city had.
“The mystery of 9/11 and dementia” via Patrick Hruby of The Washington Post — Twenty years after 9/11, Ground Zero first responders are suffering from abnormally high rates of cognitive impairment, with some individuals in their 50s experiencing deficiencies that typically manifest when people are in their 70s — if at all. “That is the most extraordinary thing with these cognitive issues, and what blows me away,” says Benjamin Luft, director of Stony Brook University’s World Trade Center Health and Wellness Program. “You don’t expect this to occur in your 50s, because it doesn’t occur. And a lot of these people are in their early 50s.” Although not all cases are severe, the number of responders showing memory loss and other signs of impairment has been rising over time. Scientists and doctors are now asking: Is 9/11 to blame?
“9/11 was a test. The books of the last two decades show how America failed.” via Carlos Lozada of the Washington Post — Rather than exemplify the nation’s highest values, the official response to 9/11 unleashed some of its worst qualities: deception, brutality, arrogance, ignorance, delusion, overreach and carelessness. The sprawling literature to emerge over the past two decades revealed the heroism and confusion of the early response, chronicled the battles in and about Afghanistan and Iraq, and uncovered the excesses of the war on terror. Reading a collection of such books today is like watching an old movie that feels more anguishing and frustrating than you remember. Anguish from knowing how the tale will unfold; frustration from realizing that this was hardly the only possible outcome.
“The 9/11 attacks changed the way sports networks broadcast games” via Ben Strauss of The Washington Post — The days and years after 9/11 changed the way sports media broadcast games. Almost immediately, teams and leagues and, by default, the networks that aired their games entered a new era in which those games were infused with a certain type of patriotism: military-jet flyovers, field-sized flags, the singing of “God Bless America.” That sentiment endured even as post-9/11 unity evolved more fully to an effort to market the wars. In addition to daily renditions in baseball stadiums of “God Bless America,” there were international trips from national sports networks to war zones. In 2004, after the invasion of Iraq, “SportsCenter” visited Kuwait and filmed episodes there.
“9/11 ceremonies, events in Broward and Palm Beach to honor victims and heroes” via Brett Shweky and Kari Barnett of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Commemorating the 20th anniversary of 9/11, cities across South Florida are honoring and remembering the victims and heroes in the terrorist attacks. The community is invited by cities, police departments and organizations to come together at ceremonies, exhibits and other activities in Broward and Palm Beach counties. The city of Boynton Beach will commemorate 9/11 at The Amphitheater at Centennial Park in Downtown Boynton, 120 E. Ocean Ave., for its Remembrance Ceremony from 10 to 11 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 11. Continuing its tradition of honoring the victims of 9/11, the city of Coral Springs will have its annual ceremony at the Northwest Regional Library, 3151 N. University Drive, at 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 11.
“‘A very sad, somber time’: Palm Beach couple reflects on 9/11 ahead of 20th anniversary” via Jodie Wagner of Palm Beach Daily News — When terror struck New York City 20 years ago on Saturday, Dana Koch and his future wife, Jessica, were going about their daily routines. Jessica, an attorney, was at work in her Midtown Manhattan law firm on Sept. 11, 2001. Dana, a transplanted Palm Beacher, was at home in his Upper West Side apartment. Like so many others on that tragic day, they watched in horror as the North and South Towers of the World Trade Center collapsed into heaps of rubble not long after planes piloted by terrorists crashed into them.
“Looking back at Sarasota’s chilling, unusual connections to the 9/11 attacks” via Chris Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — The hijackers ate in our restaurants, shopped in our stores and learned to fly planes into buildings here. President George W. Bush read to schoolchildren here as the horror of their actions was relayed to him in a whisper. A mysterious family from Saudi Arabia with ties to the terrorists lived in a gated community here. Aside from New York City and Washington, D.C., perhaps no other place in the nation has more important connections to the events of Sept. 11, 2001 than Sarasota County.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Look who’s backing Joe Biden’s foreign policy: The Kochs” via Eliana Johnson of POLITICO — In the days following the fall of Kabul and the collapse of the Afghan government, the Biden administration found itself locking arms with a group that’s long been radioactive in the Democratic Party: the Kochs. Rewind a decade, and the billionaire Koch brothers were the bête noire of the Obama administration, singled out by the president and his allies — including then-Vice President Biden — as a singularly destructive force in American politics. But as chaos enveloped Afghanistan over the past few weeks, foreign policy experts housed at think tanks and organizations funded by the isolationist-leaning Koch network were among the loudest — and loneliest — voices in Washington who applauded the President’s withdrawal from the country.
“Biden cans Donald Trump military academy holdovers” via Lachlan Markay of Axios — Critics say President Biden’s moves to clean house at America’s military service academies creates a precedent that politicizes a traditionally nonpartisan — if patronage-heavy — system. The White House’s personnel office today sent letters to all six members of each of the three service academy visitors boards — overseeing West Point, Annapolis and the U.S. Air Force Academy — demanding they resign by 6 p.m. or face termination. Some refused and said they’d consider legal action. Appointees to those academies’ visitors boards are generally permitted to serve out their terms regardless of their political affiliations even after a new president takes office.
“White House pulling nomination of ATF chief amid pushback over gun-control advocacy” via Seung Min Kim and Tyler Pager of The Washington Post — The White House is planning to withdraw David Chipman’s nomination to run the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives this week amid bipartisan pushback over his gun control advocacy. Biden nominated Chipman, who worked at ATF for more than two decades before joining the gun control group led by former U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, in April as part of a larger effort to curb gun violence. But his nomination faced unified opposition from Republican senators as well as concerns from a handful of Senate Democrats from states friendly to gun rights. White House officials are trying to find another role in the administration for Chipman, said the people familiar with the matter.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“The looming chaos of Donald Trump 2024” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — There is nothing substantively different about what Trump is now than what he was in 2015. But there have been significant changes that surround Trump, changes that overlap with one another. The first is that his voice has lost volume. The other is that Trump now also has a much larger, much more energetic base of support relative to 2016. But there are valid motivations for him to declare sooner rather than later that may set him on a trajectory from which he doesn’t ultimately swerve.
“Trump and son to call exhibition boxing match at Hard Rock Casino” via Jason Dill of the Miami Herald — After the world saw the boxing return of Mike Tyson in an exhibition match with Roy Jones Jr. last year, Tyson’s former rival and heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield, 58, is following suit at Miami’s Hard Rock Casino on Saturday. And there’s a twist. Former President Trump is scheduled to be a ringside commentator of the exhibition boxing card alongside his son, Donald Trump Jr., according to The Associated Press. ESPN reported the commentary will be an alternate, “gamecast,” feed of the event with longtime HBO boxing play-by-play commentator Jim Lampley calling the main telecast. The event takes place Saturday at 7 p.m., which is the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
“The most dangerous Trump exposé” via Jonathan Swan and Mike Allen of Axios — Former White House Press Secretary Stephanie Grisham has quietly written a top-secret memoir of her four years in Trump’s White House, and a publishing source says she’ll reveal “surprising new scandals.” The book — “I’ll Take Your Questions Now: What I Saw in The Trump White House” — will be published Oct. 5 by Harper Collins. A former West Wing colleague of Grisham’s tells Axios: “When I heard this, all I could think about was Stephanie surrounded by a lake of gasoline, striking a match with a grin on her face.”
Tweet, tweet:
— CRISIS —
“Nancy Pelosi says participants in Sept. 18 Capitol rally are ‘coming back to praise the people who were out to kill’ on Jan. 6” via Felicia Sonmez and Ellie Silverman of The Washington Post — Pelosi sharply condemned those who are planning to take part in a Sept. 18 rally outside the U.S. Capitol, accusing them of “coming back to praise the people who were out to kill” during the Jan. 6 attack by a pro-Trump mob. In response to a question at her weekly news conference, Pelosi said the House Administration Committee is holding briefings related to the upcoming rally and that she will make an announcement on the topic soon. Supporters of former president Trump are planning to rally outside the Capitol to argue that the hundreds of people charged in the Jan. 6 insurrection are political prisoners, an assertion that has exploded beyond far-right rallying cries and into mainstream conservatism.
“The Capitol Police said Jan. 6 unrest on Capitol grounds would be ‘highly improbable’” via Jason Leopold of Buzzfeed — The chief of the Capitol Police and its top intelligence officer personally approved permits for six demonstrations to be held on Jan. 6, 2021. Capitol Police documented concerns that organizers had attempted to conceal their affiliation with Ali Alexander, the right-wing activist behind the group Stop the Steal. Despite concerns, and COVID-19 policies that capped demonstrations at 50 people each, the Capitol Police force’s intelligence assessment said there were “no plans for participants to enter the buildings” and noted “no adverse intelligence related to the upcoming event.” It assessed “the Level of Probability of acts of civil disobedience/arrests to occur” during the demonstration “as Highly Improbable.”
“Second U.S. judge questions constitutionality of lead felony charge against Oath Keepers in Capitol riot” via Spencer S. Hsu of The Washington Post — A second federal judge in Washington questioned whether the lead felony charge leveled by the government against Capitol riot defendants is unconstitutionally vague, as 18 Oath Keepers accused in a conspiracy case urged the court on Wednesday to toss out a count carrying one of the heaviest penalties against them. U.S. District Judge Amit P. Mehta asked how federal prosecutors distinguish felony conduct qualifying as “obstructing an official proceeding” of Congress, punishable by up to 20 years in prison, from misdemeanor offenses the government has charged others with, such as shouting to interrupt a congressional hearing.
“Man accused of bringing molotov cocktails, five loaded firearms to Capitol on Jan. 6 set to plead guilty” via Spencer S. Hsu of The Washington Post — An Alabama man is set to plead guilty after authorities say he brought five loaded firearms and 11 molotov cocktails with napalm-like properties to the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, prosecutors and his defense told a judge Wednesday. Lonnie Leroy Coffman of Falkville, Ala., was charged in a 17-count indictment with possessing some of the deadliest unregistered weapons and explosives found on the day of the pro-Trump riot that led to assaults on nearly 140 police officers, breached the Capitol and forced the evacuation of Congress.
“U.S. election workers get little help from law enforcement as terror threats mount” via Linda So and Jason Szep of Reuters — In an investigation that identified hundreds of incidents of intimidation and harassment of election workers and officials nationwide, Reuters found only a handful of arrests. Local police agencies said they have struggled to identify suspects who conceal their identities and to determine which threats are credible enough to prosecute. The U.S. Justice Department has acknowledged that law enforcement has not responded well to the surge in threats to election officials. “The response has been inadequate,” John Keller, a senior attorney in the DOJ’s Public Integrity Section, said. Keller heads a task force created in July to investigate threats of violence to election workers and to coordinate with local and state authorities that receive most initial reports of intimidation.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“House Dems begin moving parts of Biden $3.5T domestic plans” via Alan Fram of The Associated Press — House Democrats began pushing plans for providing paid family and medical leave, easing climate change and bolstering education through House committees Thursday as they battled Republicans and among themselves over President Biden’s $3.5 trillion vision for reshaping federal priorities. Five committees worked on their slices of the 10-year proposal, early steps in what looms as a fraught autumn for Democrats hoping to enact a remarkable range of major policy changes. They face not only solid GOP opposition but internal divisions among progressives and moderates in a Congress they control so narrowly that they can afford only three House defections, none in the Senate.
“Justice Department is suing Texas over new abortion ban” via Oriana Gonzalez of Axios — The Justice Department has sued Texas over its new law banning abortions after six weeks, Attorney General Merrick Garland said in an announcement Thursday, calling the law “clearly unconstitutional.” The lawsuit comes after Garland vowed to “protect those seeking to obtain or provide reproductive health services,” adding that “[w]e will not tolerate violence against those seeking to obtain or provide reproductive health services.” The DOJ argues that Texas “adopted an unprecedented scheme ‘to insulate the State from responsibility’” by allowing private citizens to enforce the law because state officials allegedly know that the law “violates the Constitution.”
“‘War on women’: Democratic lawmakers vow to stop Florida from adopting Texas-style abortion law” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — Federal and state Democratic leaders Thursday promised a multi-pronged effort to stop Florida from going the way of Texas when it comes to abortion access. U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz outlined the ways Democrats intend to fight efforts to outlaw abortion like Texas has done. The U.S. Department of Justice will be suing to stop the law, filing suit a soon as Thursday. The U.S. House of Representatives will hold a vote on the Women’s Health Protection Act that would codify protections established under the nation’s landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision in Roe v. Wade. That action would supersede restrictive state laws.
“Kevin McCarthy asks Supreme Court to reverse House proxy voting rules” via Rebecca Shabad of NBC News — McCarthy is asking the Supreme Court to overturn the proxy voting rules that the House implemented because of the pandemic, a tool that Republican lawmakers have taken advantage of themselves. McCarthy said in a statement that he wants the court to reversePelosi’s “perpetual proxy voting power grab.” Proxy voting, which took effect in May 2020, allows lawmakers to cast votes remotely through another colleague so that they don’t have to physically be inside the House chamber. In August, Pelosi extended proxy voting through at least Oct. 1.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Day of reckoning: Scott Maddox sentenced to 5 years in prison in federal corruption case” via Jeff Burlew of the Tallahassee Democrat — Maddox, Tallahassee’s one-time “boy mayor” and city commissioner who turned local politics into his own illegal cottage industry, was sentenced to five years in federal prison for masterminding a bribery ring at City Hall that involved prominent vendors and clients of his shady lobbying firm, Governance. His business partner, Paige Carter-Smith, who reeled in clients for Governance by delivering Maddox’s support, was sentenced to two years in prison for her role in the scheme. A third defendant, businessman John “J.T.” Burnette, who was convicted last month for arranging bribes for Maddox, will be sentenced in October.
Tweet, tweet:
“Contractor for fallen Surfside condo later lost license amid fraud, negligence claims” via Sarah Blaskey, Aaron Leibowitz and Ben Conarck of the Miami Herald — The construction of the doomed Champlain Towers South building in Surfside was helmed by a developer charged with tax evasion in Canada, an engineer who oversaw a bungled municipal garage in Coral Gables, and an architect who temporarily lost his license for poor designs. And for three critical months during construction, the team was joined by Alfred Weisbrod, a general contractor whose 20-year career in South Florida was pockmarked with complaints of “negligence,” “incompetency or misconduct,” and who had a propensity for abandoning projects midway through, according to court records and newly released documents from the state licensing agency.
“Miami police chief apologizes for ‘Cuban Mafia’ comment” via Amanda Batchelor of WPLG Local 10 News — Miami Police Chief Art Acevedo took to Twitter Thursday to apologize for recently stating that “It’s like the Cuban Mafia runs Miami PD.” According to a news release from the Miami Fraternal Order of Police, the comment was made on Aug. 4 during a roll call. FOP President Tommy Reyes blasted the police chief for his comment, saying it was derogatory and people of all races and ethnicities reached out to him after the comment was made. “One member even asked me, ‘Imagine if he said Black Mafia instead of Cuban Mafia,’” Reyes wrote in the news release. But Acevedo, who is a Cuban-American from Los Angeles, claimed his comment was made in jest.
“5 Miami Beach police officers arraigned on battery charges for rough arrests” via Saira Anwer of WPLG Local 10 News — Five Miami Beach police officers were arraigned Thursday morning and charged with misdemeanor battery for the rough arrests of two men back in July. The arraignment was virtual and the officers’ attorneys spoke on their behalf. Those now-relieved-of-duty officers who are facing charges are Jose Perez, Kevin Perez, Robert Sabater, David Rivas and Steven Serrano. According to authorities, officers were trying to stop a scooter rider for illegally parking and striking an officer before the incident occurred. Surveillance video from inside the Royal Palm Hotel shows that man, Dalonte Crudup, running into the hotel when a lieutenant confronted him in the elevator with a gun.
“11th hour demand: City manager told to find money for more firefighters” via Susannah Bryan of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A heated debate over higher water rates and just how many firefighters Fort Lauderdale really needs lit up what might have been a dry-as-dust budget hearing Wednesday night. The city has 380 boots on the ground, including 24 cadets in the academy, city officials say. Hiring an extra 16 firefighters would cut down on overtime but come at a cost $2 million a year. That expense did not make it into Fort Lauderdale’s $401 million operating budget for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1. An irate Commissioner Robert McKinzie told City Manager Chris Lagerbloom to find the money.
“Showdown vote coming for the Urban Development Boundary in South Miami-Dade County” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — The politics of development and the environment in Miami-Dade County could be reset Thursday as a new County Commission decides whether to let developers build warehouses on 800 acres of farmland off the Florida Turnpike. Developers pushing what would be one of the county’s largest industrial centers, with 9 million square feet of commercial space near Homestead, first need commissioners to expand Miami-Dade’s Urban Development Boundary to include the 800-acre site. That’s usually an uphill task, and commissioners last altered the “UDB” in 2013, when it was expanded to include about 500 acres in the Doral area already encircled by development.
“Special treatment or overzealous policing? City official’s release after arrest roils Riviera Beach” via Wayne Washington of The Palm Beach Post — Riviera Beach Police Chief Nathan Osgood ordered that City Council Member Douglas Lawson be “unarrested” after he was detained last month for simple battery in a domestic dispute, according to a whistle-blower complaint filed by a former police captain. That former captain, Rochelet Commond, was fired by the city on Sept. 2, a day after his whistle-blower complaint was filed and two days after Commond alleged that Osgood told him to edit a probable cause affidavit describing Lawson’s arrest and the chief’s order to release him. The case has agitated the city, pitting some police officers against the department administration.
“Indian River Shores files lawsuit against Vero Beach, claims federal antitrust violations” via Colleen Wixon of Treasure Coast Newspapers — Indian River Shores wants a federal judge to throw out a water-service boundary line between Vero Beach and Indian River County, arguing the agreement violates federal antitrust laws. Indian River Shores filed the lawsuit Aug. 26 in U.S. District Court, claiming its residents could get better water rates and service from the Indian River County but the territory agreement prohibits the town from shopping around. The 1989 agreement between Vero Beach and the county outlines who would provide water service to what areas of the county. In addition to serving its residents, Vero Beach provides water service to Indian River Shores and the unincorporated south barrier island.
“Special treatment or overzealous policing? City official’s release after arrest roils Riviera Beach” via Wayne Washington of the Palm Beach Post — Riviera Beach Police Chief Nathan Osgood ordered that City Council Member Douglas Lawson be “unarrested” after he was detained last month for simple battery in a domestic dispute, according to a whistle-blower complaint filed by a former police captain. That former captain, Rochelet Commond, was fired by the city on Sept. 2, a day after his whistle-blower complaint was filed and two days after Commond alleged that Osgood told him to edit a probable cause affidavit describing Lawson’s arrest and the chief’s order to release him. The case has agitated the city, pitting some police officers against the department administration.
“Candidates for Port St. Lucie City Council District 3 bring varied backgrounds, experience” via Olivia McKelvey of Treasure Coast Newspapers — Voters here will not only elect their next Mayor on Sept. 21, they will choose one of six candidates as their District 3 City Council Representative. Shannon Martin, District 3 Councilwoman since 2010 and the Vice Mayor, resigned in July to run for Mayor after Greg Oravec left the position to take a job in Islamorada. That triggered both special elections. The race for District 3, which covers the southwest quadrant of the city, has drawn political newcomers, candidates who have run unsuccessfully for the office and one candidate who already has held public office.
“Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ co-owner lists Palm Beach house for $55 million” via Darrell Hofheinz of Palm Beach Daily News — As the Tampa Bay Buccaneers ready for Thursday’s first game of the regular NFL season, team co-owner Darcie Glazer Kassewitz is kicking off a new $55 million listing for the 2-acre lakefront estate she shares with her husband in Palm Beach. The Glazer family — then led by its late patriarch, Malcolm Glazer — bought the Buccaneers for $192 million in 1995. Kassewitz is a co-owner of the defending Super Bowl champion team and heads its charitable foundation and the Glazer Vision Foundation. Kassewitz and husband Joel, a private banker, have owned the house they are selling at 854 S. County Road since 2010, when they paid $20.5 million for it, property records show.
“Orange County tourist tax tops 2019 level in July, but they’re not out of the woods yet” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Happy days returned for Orlando hoteliers in July as the county posted a record haul of tourist taxes for the month of July. The county collected $24.7 million in taxes on hotel rooms in July, $2.1 million more than had been received in July 2019, in the days before the coronavirus pandemic, and more than in any previous July, Orange County Comptroller Phil Diamond reported Thursday. July continued a tourism comeback that first started in the spring and became evident by June, when Orange County nearly matched pre-pandemic levels. However, Diamond offered caution.
“Citrus County shifts stormwater revenue on the backs of taxpayers” via Mike Wright of Florida Politics — Citrus County commissioners saw it as the best way to pay for needed stormwater projects. Citizens who braved another day of heavy rain to attend Thursday’s public hearing, had another view. Commissioners voted 4-1 for a Municipal Services Benefit Unit, or MSBU, that will raise $4.8 million for stormwater improvements. In return, the county eliminated a special stormwater millage rate that raised about $1 million a year. But the swap was hardly even. Many homeowners who paid $2 or $3 a year under the tax are being hit with a $58.84 annual MSBU, which is based on the square footage of “impervious” surface, rooftops, driveways, parking lots, patios.
“In fight between City Hall and pension fund, billions are at stake” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — The Jacksonville Police and Fire Pension Fund, an obscure but powerful local agency that manages billions of dollars in assets, defied city attorneys last month by hiring an outside lawyer to handle its legal affairs, resurrecting long-running grudges and triggering a showdown with city officials that could have major ramifications for taxpayers. The pension fund’s decision “should scare the pants off you guys,” Jason Teal, the city’s interim general counsel, told members of the City Council finance committee late last month.
— TOP OPINION —
“After 9/11, the U.S. got almost everything wrong” via Garrett M. Graff of The Atlantic — As we approach the 20th anniversary of 9/11, I cannot escape this sad conclusion: The U.S. — as both a government and a nation — got nearly everything about our response wrong. The GWOT yielded two crucial triumphs: The core al-Qaeda group never again attacked the American homeland, and Osama bin Laden was hunted down and killed in a stunningly successful secret mission a decade after the attacks. But the U.S. defined its goals far more expansively, and by almost any other measure, the GWOT has weakened the nation — leaving Americans more afraid, less free, more morally compromised, and more alone in the world. A day that initially created an unparalleled sense of unity among Americans has become the backdrop for ever-widening political polarization.
— OPINIONS —
“We best remember 9/11 by moving beyond it” via E.J. Dionne Jr. of The Washington Post — The primary lesson we should take from the events of Sept. 11, 2001, is to be wary of lessons we think we have learned from traumatic events. Trauma can undermine the clear thinking and calm deliberation big decisions require. What we don’t need and shouldn’t want are bombastic declarations of American purpose on Sept. 11, 2021. Far better would be sober remembrances of the heroes and the fallen; realistic assessments of what it will take to protect our people; and a pledge not to remain mired in the feelings, impulses and mistakes that followed a tragic moment.
“Ending secrecy over the Saudis and 9/11? It’s about time.” via George Will for The Washington Post — After 9/11, lawyers for the families filed suits against Saudi charities and individuals but could not sue Saudi Arabia until Congress in 2016 amended (over President Barack Obama’s veto) the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act. A federal court granted the lawyers limited discovery, and they subpoenaed FBI material concerning the role of Saudi officials who supported some 9/11 hijackers. When the court ordered more FBI cooperation, the material the lawyers received was covered, at FBI insistence, by a protective order preventing them from telling their clients what they know about Saudi involvement, and requiring the lawyers to file almost all court submissions under seal. “We,” says one lawyer, “have never seen this level of secrecy placed on any lawsuit.”
“A deluge of desperate ‘Team Donald Trump’ emails: ‘There is no end to them’” via Lucy Morgan of Florida Phoenix — Former President Trump must be getting desperate. Over the past few weeks he has deluged me with emails begging for money and trying to sell me various sorts of stuff that I would mostly describe as “junk.’’ He is clearly deranged. Contribute any amount, the emails repeatedly say, promising that someone will increase that by 400 or 500 percent. They don’t say who will do this. He also wants me to claim my “Official Trump Card,’’ the one with an Eagle on the front and the infamous Trump signature in the corner. They must really be desperate to think any contribution might come from me.
“Our best shot at controlling COVID-19: Data-driven mask mandates amplify protection of vaccines” via Julia Raifman, Anne Sosin, Gregg Gonsalves, Brandon D.L. Marshall, Elizabeth Samuels, Tania D. Strout of USA Today — The six New England states lead the country in achieving high vaccine coverage that reduce the severity of COVID-19. Unfortunately, rapidly growing cases and hospitalizations in New England show high levels of vaccination alone will not control the spread of delta, a COVID-19 variant that is more transmissible among both vaccinated and unvaccinated people. As schools reopen and many workers return to offices, New England has seen a 700% rise in COVID-19 hospital admissions and a 1900% rise in cases since early July. The surge threatens economic recovery and has already started to close schools in the region.
“Dr. Ron DeSantis, man of science, gets the science wrong about COVID-19 vaccines” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — For a guy who claims to follow the science, DeSantis has a shaky grasp of how vaccines work. Consider his recent boneheaded statement about vaccines at a news conference last week: “It’s about your health and whether you want that protection or not. It really doesn’t impact me or anyone else.” Tell that to Florida’s exhausted doctors and nurses, who have struggled to keep unvaccinated Floridians alive during this summer’s record-setting COVID-19 surge. Tell that to the thousands of spouses and children of unvaccinated Floridians who died needlessly from COVID-19.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Gov. DeSantis rounds out the week with yet another legal defeat. A federal judge temporarily blocks the controversial ‘anti-riot’ bill.
Also on today’s Sunrise:
— Biden announces strict new vaccine rules on federal workers, large employers and health care staff.
— Tallahassee City Commissioner and Mayor Pro-Tem Jeremy Matlow weighs in during the Sunrise interview on the sweeping corruption case which landed Former Tallahassee Mayor and City Commissioner Scott Maddox five years in prison.
— DeSantis delivers big checks to Walton County for infrastructure projects, broadband, Northwest Florida Commerce Park.
— In a bonus, Sunrise Interview Margy Grant, CEO of Florida Realtors, discusses their decision to pursue a legislative solution instead of the affordable housing ballot initiative.
To listen, click on the image below:
— WEEKEND TV —
Facing South Florida with Jim DeFede on CBS 4 in Miami: The Sunday show provides viewers with an in-depth look at politics in South Florida, along with other issues affecting the region.
Florida This Week on Tampa Bay’s WEDU: Moderator Rob Lorei hosts a roundtable focusing on the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. Panelists include Dan Christensen of FloridaBulldog.org and Kristin Breitweiser, the cofounder of September 11th Advocates
In Focus with Allison Walker on Bay News 9/CF 13: A discussion on property insurance and infrastructure oversight in Florida after the Surfside condo collapse, and what state lawmakers are considering when it comes to the safety of Florida’s aging high-rises with Citizens Property Insurance CEO Barry Gilway and Florida Insurance Commissioner David Altmaier.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete: A one-on-one conversation with St. Petersburg mayoral candidate Robert Blackmon about the upcoming November election. The episode will also profile a USF graduate running for Florida’s 13th Congressional District.
Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: Sen. Linda Stewart will discuss the Texas abortion ban, and how the framework of that legislation could be adapted by the Florida Legislature in the 2022 Legislative Session.
This Week in Jacksonville with Kent Justice on Channel 4 WJXT: Retired U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Mike Linnington of the Wounded Warrior Project, retired U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Michael Fleming of The Steven A. Cohen Military Family Clinic at Centerstone Jacksonville, TheFireWatch Executive Director Nick Howland and Gold Star spouse and former U.S. Army Supply Sgt. Maggie Beckerman.
— ALOE —
“Disney Cruise Line announces date for Disney Magic return to Florida” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel — Disney Cruise Line will have all four of its ships sailing from the U.S. by the end of October as it announced the date for the return of Disney Magic to Florida while also planning the resumption of longer sailings on Disney Fantasy. Disney Magic will have its first sailing from PortMiami on Oct. 28 as it begins four- and five-night itineraries with stops in the Bahamas and Mexico. The line had to cancel two listed sailings on its website, and is offering those who have already paid in full the option of a refund or to book a future sailing with a cruise credit. The same approach has been made on its other ships during recent resumption of service announcements.
“UWF’s historic first on-campus football game is Saturday. Here’s what you need to know.” via Jake Newby of the Pensacola News Journal — When the lights flip on and the teams run out for Saturday’s Division II college football game, history will be made at the University of West Florida. The No. 1 ranked UWF Argonauts are just days away from playing a regular season game on campus for the first time in the team’s already illustrious five-year history. UWF and the Southwest Baptist University Bearcats of Missouri will collide Saturday on Pen Air Field, a setting usually reserved for Argos practices. UWF plays its home games at Blue Wahoos Stadium, but when the Wahoos’ 2021 schedule was released last spring, there was a conflict on Sept. 11 as both the Argos and Wahoos were set to play on that date.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Best wishes, as always, to the incredibly talented Katie Ballard.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
5.) MORNING BREW
|
BECOME SMARTER IN JUST 5 MINUTES
Get the daily email that makes reading the news actually enjoyable. Stay informed and entertained, for free.
6.) THE FACTUAL
|
7.) LIBERTY NATION
|
|
|
8.) FOX NEWS
|
|||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
|
9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
10.) THE FEDERALIST PAPERS
|
11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE
|
12.) THE FLIP SIDE
- Subscribe
- Past Issues
- RSS
- Translate
|
13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
It’s Friday, Sept. 10 — beginning a solemn 24 hours as America remembers.
- Smart Brevity™ count: 1,446 words … 5½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
Top Republicans are calling for a public uprising to protest President Biden’s broad vaccine mandates, eight months after more than 500 people stormed the U.S. Capitol to try to overturn the election.
- Why it matters: It has been decades since America has witnessed such blatant and sustained calls for mass civil disobedience against the U.S. government.
J.D. Vance — author of “Hillbilly Elegy” and a candidate for the GOP U.S. Senate nomination in Ohio — urged “mass civil disobedience” to Biden’s plan to use federal authority to mandate vaccination for roughly two-third of America workers.
- “I have a simple message for America’s business community,” Vance wrote. “DO NOT COMPLY.”
Biden said in his remarks: “Today, in total, the vaccine requirements in my plan will affect about 100 million Americans — two thirds of all workers.”
- Several Republican governors say they’ll go to court to try to stop the mandate for federal employees, contractors and private employers with 100+ workers (enforced by OSHA).
- South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem told Sean Hannity on Fox News: “In South Dakota, we’re going to be free. … We will take action. My legal team is already working.”
A top House Republican aide tells me: “Every Republican in the country — especially those running to the right in primaries — is salivating over Joe Biden [igniting] the vax debate.”
- “Republicans think that he’s made even pro-vax conservatives into ‘anti-vax mandate’ Americans.”
An official close to Biden tells me the West Wing “knew there would be strong backlash. But unless someone took this on, we’d be in a pandemic forever.”
- “Biden beat Trump by promising strong action based on science. He can’t let Abbott/DeSantis block tough action.”
Invoking a civil-rights parallel, the official added: “Basically Biden is staring down Southern governors (and some Northern allies). … Is America divided? Yes. But Biden is uniting the 75% vs. the 25% that is in opposition.”
- The official’s bottom line: “That is unity politics in a divided nation — unifying the overwhelming majority threatened by an unruly minority.”
🐦 Twitter’s top U.S. trends last night had “#IwillNOTComply” at No. 6 — with the NFL’s season kickoff in the top four slots, followed by “Big Brother” on CBS at No. 5.
- #VaccineMandate was No. 8, with #DoNotComply as a trend.
What’s next: Fencing will be reinstalled around the Capitol before a Sept. 18 rally, “Justice for J6,” supporting those charged in the Jan. 6 riot. Far-right extremist groups plan to attend.
- Go deeper: Read Biden’s plan.
Xi during a mass gala marking the 100th anniversary of the Communist Party on June 28. Photo: Kevin Frayer/Getty Images
President Biden sat in the Treaty Room for 90 minutes late last night speaking on the phone with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, Axios’ Jonathan Swan reports.
- Why it matters: The call, which came at the request of Biden and was the first time the leaders have spoken in seven months, was a test of whether Biden’s brand of personal diplomacy could make more progress than tense meetings among subordinates.
Top Chinese officials have snubbed and lectured top Biden aides, and Beijing has used Biden’s botched withdrawal from Afghanistan as a propaganda coup.
- When climate envoy John Kerry visited China last week, senior Chinese officials emphatically rejected Biden’s proposal to deal with climate cooperation as a freestanding issue.
- They would also only speak with Kerry by video call, sending a junior official to meet the former secretary of state. (These officials had no problem meeting a Taliban delegation in person just weeks earlier).
A senior administration official described the tone of last night’s call as “familiar,” “respectful” and “candid.”
- The two leaders discussed the Biden administration’s complaint that Chinese officials have been “playing for the press” rather than engaging seriously in negotiations, the official said.
- Biden sought to explain U.S. actions towards China “in a way that [is] not misinterpreted as … somehow trying to sort of undermine Beijing in particular ways.”
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
A possible scenario for airport security in the next decade: Shoes stay on, electronics stay in the bag and pockets don’t have to be emptied, Axios transportation correspondent Joann Muller writes.
- What’s happening: New shoe-scanning technology and enhanced, high-definition body scanners will begin deployment at airports starting in late 2022, making it easier for TSA to identify threats while cutting down on false alarms.
- Other technologies in development can differentiate powders from liquids in baggage or replace bomb-sniffing dogs at security checkpoints.
The hands of Big Ben, which has been covered in scaffolding (and largely silenced) since 2017, have been restored to their original Victorian-era color of Prussian blue.
- During the restoration, set to be completed next year, conservators discovered the hands were blue, not black, when the iconic London clock began striking the hour for Westminster 162 years ago. (Reuters)
Dr. Delkhah Shahin checks on a 34-year-old, unvaccinated COVID patient at Providence Cedars-Sinai Tarzana Medical Center in Tarzana, Calif., on Sep. 2. Photo: Apu Gomes/AFP via Getty Images
Tomorrow, we commemorate the 20th anniversary of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, which killed nearly 3,000 people.
- At least that many are now dying of COVID in the U.S. every two days, Axios’ Tina Reed points out.
Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), at the center of the Hill’s fall fights, near the Senate subway on Aug. 5. Photo: Kent Nishimura/L.A. Times via Getty Images
The White House plans to lean into attacks on proposed taxes to pay for President Biden’s “Build Back Better” agenda as “an inflection point where leaders need to choose which side they’re on.”
- Why it matters: Both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue are heading into an epic fall debate over the size and funding of transformational social and climate programs. The 2022 midterms are the backdrop, with Democrats running partly on jobs created by infrastructure spending.
White House deputy press secretary Andrew Bates tells me: “If Republicans in Congress favor … preserving exorbitant tax giveaways for the wealthiest Americans over historic tax cuts for middle class families, … then they’ve obviously made their choice.”
Chris Christie talks to Sunny Hostin on “The View” in 2019. Photo: Heidi Gutman/Disney via Getty Images
Chris Christie, returning to the same stage where he was begged to run for president 10 years ago, said in remarks at the Reagan Library:
You already know what some professional political operatives are telling Republican politicians, don’t you? Pander to the lies and the liars, they say. … Whatever you do, don’t upset the truth deniers, the conspiracy propagandists, the QAnoners, the white supremacists and the wild extremists who are making so much noise these days. … If not, they could easily come for you next.
If timid acceptance is the price of admission, we’re not the party we have always been.
Covers: The Economist, Pascal Campion/The New Yorker
As we mark 20 years since the world changed, here are a few of the commemorations Axios editors found especially worthy:
- Reportage: “After 9/11, the U.S. Got Almost Everything Wrong,” Garrett Graff writes in The Atlantic. “[B]y almost any other measure, the War on Terror has weakened the nation — leaving Americans more afraid, less free, more morally compromised, and more alone in the world.”
- Voices: The Guardian compiled perspectives from Muslim Americans, including Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, actress Zainab Johnson, and pediatrician Sabiha Hussain. MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan writes: “Muslims do not have thicker skins than everyone else. We’re not born with a natural ability to just withstand non-stop criticism and accusations and smears.” Keep reading.
- 📚 The books: Carlos Lozada, nonfiction book critic of The Washington Post, writes in a survey of the literature of 9/11 that America, still “reeling from an attack that dropped out of a blue sky,” is now “suffering from a sort of post-traumatic stress democracy. It remains in recovery, still a good country, even if a broken good country.”
- 🎧 Podcast: Axios executive editor Sara Kehaulani Goo recommends “Sacred Ground: A 9/11 Story,” from “The NPR Politics Podcast.” Journalist Tim Lambert’s family owned land in Shanksville, Pa., where United Flight 93 crashed. He went back, 20 years later, with NPR’s Scott Detrow. They spent time with families who lost someone in Shanksville. Grieving has been a painful journey: The plane’s impact left virtually nothing behind. It was these families that pushed for the release of cockpit voice recordings where you hear the struggle between passengers and terrorists for control of the plane. Episode website.
- Magazine covers: See eleven 9/11-related covers of The New Yorker from the past 20 years. The latest is shown at the top of this item. As narrated by art editor Françoise Mouly:
Pascal Campion depicts two people, likely too young to have experienced the day firsthand, sharing a moment of comfort and consolation on the rebuilt site of the World Trade Center. …
Life has gone on. And yet, almost two decades later, the surroundings remain imbued with the memory of the events that took place on that day and by the absence of what was.
📱 Invite your friends, family and colleagues to sign up here for Axios AM and Axios PM.
14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
|
|
|
17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
|
Copyright © 2021 MEDIADC, All rights reserved.Washington Examiner | A MediaDC Publication 1152 15th Street NW Suite 200 | Washington, DC 20005 |
You received this email because you are subscribed to Examiner Today from The Washington Examiner. Update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive.We respect your right to privacy – View our Policy Unsubscribe |
18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
|
21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
Chicago firefighters, cops reflect on going to NYC after 9/11
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
|
23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
President Joe Biden is requiring most federal workers to get COVID-19 shots, without an option to instead get tested weekly, and will propose that workers at large companies get vaccinated or undergo testing. Read more…
The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks led to the creation of the Department of Homeland Security, and Stewart Verdery was the first assistant secretary for border and transportation security. He talked to CQ Roll Call about being on Capitol Hill on 9/11 and how the attacks would dominate his work for years. Read more…
Air Force takes hard look at racial disparities
Blacks and other minorities in the Air Force and Space Force are treated differently from their white peers, according to two disparity reviews released Thursday. “We have made some progress, but we still have a lot of work to do,” Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall told reporters. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Stephanie Murphy to oppose her party’s ‘rushed’ budget package in committee
Florida Democratic Rep. Stephanie Murphy is voting against the spending and tax measures the Ways and Means Committee is marking up this week and next, citing concerns that the process for crafting the $3.5 trillion reconciliation package is being driven by politics over policy. Read more…
Listen: Reconciliation, infrastructure and the social safety net
Equal Time host Mary C. Curtis speaks to Norman Ornstein of the American Enterprise Institute about the reconciliation process Democrats are using to pass their “human” infrastructure bill. She also talks to DNC Chair Jaime Harrison about intraparty friction over the measure and more. Listen here…
At the Races: Debt limit hold ’em
Catch up with all the latest election news and analysis from CQ Roll Call political reporters Kate Ackley, Bridget Bowman and Stephanie Akin in the At the Races newsletter. This week’s “Shop Talk” features Democratic campaign veteran Jessica Mackler, now with EMILY’s List. Read more…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2021 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
1201 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Suite 600
Washington, DC 20004
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Joe Biden’s Covid 180
DRIVING THE DAY
The only group of people that has disappointed JOE BIDEN more than the Afghan national army is unvaccinated Americans.
“Our patience is wearing thin,” Biden said last night of the 80 million Americans who haven’t received a shot, “and your refusal has cost all of us.”
We don’t mean to make light of the Taliban takeover or the Covid pandemic, but in both cases Biden has responded to policy failures by placing most of the blame outside the White House.
On Thursday, Biden was unsparing about the burdens that the unvaccinated have thrust onto the rest of us: thousands more dead, overflowing hospitals, a rebounding economy showing signs of retreat.
Pandemic politics, as Biden called it, are not simple. But eight months into the crisis, any new set of rules offered by the president raises an obvious question: Why didn’t he do this already?
The White House calls it a 6-point plan, but there were two big new things that Biden announced:
— Vaccinations: Biden is finally leveraging the unilateral power of the federal government to expand vax mandates to some 100 million Americans: all workers at companies with over 100 employees, all federal employees and contractors, anyone who works for a health care provider that receives Medicare or Medicaid reimbursements, any employee at a school that receives federal money from Head Start and a few other programs.
— Testing: Biden is using federal authorities to surge the production and distribution of rapid Covid tests, including at-home tests.
These are not new ideas, but the White House resisted them for months. Earlier this summer, KAY IVEY, the Republican governor of Alabama, said “it’s time to start blaming the unvaccinated folks” because they “are letting us down.”
When press secretary JEN PSAKI was asked about Ivey’s comment on July 23, she responded, “Well, I don’t think our role is to place blame.” A reporter followed up wondering if it was time for vaccine mandates. “That’s not the role of the federal government,” Psaki said.
How many lives could have been saved if it hadn’t taken two more months for Biden to reverse those stubborn views?
Some more Covid speech takeaways, courtesy of POLITICO health care editor-at-large Joanne Kenen:
1) IT’S NOT ABOUT YOUR LIBERTY — Biden called out the vaccine resistant — those who oppose the jab on principle, not because they’re still hesitant about the “new” shot — for declaring that it’s a matter of personal choice, or freedom. This is an infectious disease; it doesn’t just affect one person. People who don’t get vaccinated get sick, Biden said, and they get others sick. Even their own families.
2) “A DISTINCT MINORITY OF ELECTED OFFICIALS” — The president attacked officials who are “actively working to undermine the fight against Covid-19,” who would rather be “ordering mobile morgues” than encouraging vaccination and masks. He didn’t name names, but it wasn’t hard to guess whom he had in mind (Texas Gov. GREG ABBOTT, Florida Gov. RON DESANTIS).
3) THE BOOSTER MESS — “There’s been some confusion” around booster shots, the president acknowledged. But he didn’t fully ‘fess up to the fact that he, and his White House, caused much of that confusion by getting ahead of the FDA and CDC. The back and forth about boosters — who needs them, how soon and when they can get them — may have been Biden’s worst pandemic moment. He promised Thursday to let the scientists at FDA and CDC call the shots, so to speak. But the confusion clouds the White House message about how well vaccines work, and creates some unrealistic — and, in the short term, unfulfillable — public expectations.
4) “WE’RE IN A TOUGH STRETCH, AND IT COULD LAST FOR A WHILE” — Biden was talking about the pandemic. But given Delta, Afghanistan, the slog his agenda faces in Congress — not to mention the floods and fires — he could’ve just as easily been talking about himself.
More: The WSJ zeroes in on the business mandate, the most far-reaching, controversial, and difficult-to-implement part of Biden’s plan … The NYT rounds up the praise, skepticism and outrage in reaction to the speech … And Fox News captures the immediate backlash on the right with this headline: “Republicans explode with fury over Biden vaccine mandate: ‘Absolutely unconstitutional’”
Happy Friday, and thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
BIDEN’S ABORTION CLASH WITH THE CATHOLIC CHURCH — What does it mean to be the nation’s second Catholic president? Ryan talks with senior staff writer Ruby Cramer about how JOE BIDEN balances a very public role with the “private matter” of his faith at a time of deep division over abortion, and among the bishops in his own church. Listen and subscribe to Playbook Deep Dive
BIDEN’S FRIDAY:
— 9 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 9:30 a.m.: Biden, first lady JILL BIDEN and Education Secretary MIGUEL CARDONA will visit a local D.C.-area school.
— 10:20 a.m.: The president and first lady will deliver remarks on the administration’s efforts to keep children safe in school.
— 7:55 p.m.: The Bidens will depart the White House en route to Queens, N.Y.,, where they are scheduled to arrive at 9:10 p.m.
VP KAMALA HARRIS’ FRIDAY:
— 10 a.m.: The vice president will travel to Hampton, Va.
— 11:30 a.m.: Harris will tour the Center for Atmospheric Sciences at Hampton University.
— 12:05 p.m.: Harris will hold a roundtable discussion with STEM students at Hampton University.
— 2:20 p.m.: The vice president will return to D.C.
The White House Covid-19 Response Team and public health officials will brief at 11:30 a.m. Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 1 p.m.
The HOUSE is out. The House Agriculture and Ways and Means committees will have markups on reconciliation.
The SENATE is out.
PLAYBOOK READS
20 YEARS SINCE 9/11
— Bryan Bender and Daniel Lippman are up with a deep dive for POLITICO Magazine on the post-9/11 world. “This summer, as the United States began to wind down its military operations in Afghanistan, POLITICO approached nearly two dozen of the most consequential architects of the post-9/11 world to ask them to reflect on the decades of war they helped wage and the domestic defenses they helped erect. We asked them what they think they got right and pressed them to speak candidly about what they would have done differently,” Bryan and Daniel write. “Together, their testimony offers a unique collection of unfiltered perspectives never before gathered in one place.
“‘Overreach’ is a word they use often to describe a nation-building effort that notched tactical and even historic successes — like empowering women in Afghanistan — but also came to be seen as occupations that fueled more violence. Many of these former officials regret the nearly limitless scope of the ‘Global War on Terror’ that lumped together often competing Islamic terrorist groups and outlaw nations that played no direct role in 9/11. And they rue the long-term damage to American standing in the Muslim world from seemingly unending military occupations and a morally and legally compromised terrorist detention system.”
— AP’s Alexandra Jaffe delves into how the 9/11 terrorist attack changed then-Sen. Biden, and how it altered his policy priorities as president 20 years down the line.
— WaPo’s Abigail Hauslohner provides perspective from Afghan and Iraqi refugees who fled after the United States’ invasion about the hurdles they’ve overcome and how they’ve made America home since.
TALIBAN TAKEOVER
A SIGN OF HOPE — Thursday’s flight out of Kabul with 200 passengers was seen by some “as a sign that Taliban-ruled Afghanistan might be poised to re-engage with the world,” NYT’s Victor J. Blue, Sami Sahak, Lara Jakes and Eric Nagourney report.
— NSC spokesperson EMILY HORNE said in a statement Thursday that the Taliban has been “cooperative in facilitating the departure of American citizens and lawful permanent residents on charter flights from HKIA. They have shown flexibility, and they have been businesslike and professional in our dealings with them in this effort. This is a positive first step.” The full statement
But adversaries like Iran, Russia and China see America’s exit both as a signal that its influence in the region could be dwindling and as a potential opportunity to work with Afghanistan under its new leadership, according to NBC News’ Saphora Smith and Amin Hossein Khodadadi.
WAIT AND SEE — Defense secretary LLOYD AUSTIN said Thursday that the administration is “watching” to see if the extremist group, al-Qaeda, reemerges as a result of the troop withdrawal and the Taliban takeover, AP News’ Robert Burns reports.
THE WHITE HOUSE
SHOWING UP FOR NEWSOM — The president is heading to Long Beach, Calif. to campaign for Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM on Monday, one day before the recall election, LA Times’ Eli Stokols reports.
ATF NOMINATION OFFICIALLY PULLED — The Biden administration announced its reversal of the nomination of DAVID CHIPMAN to lead the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Thursday following opposition from all Senate Republicans and a handful of centrist Democrats, Marianne LeVine scooped.
“He would have been an exemplary Director of the ATF and would have redoubled its efforts to crack down on illegal firearms traffickers and help keep our communities safe from gun violence,” Biden said. “Unfortunately, Republicans in Congress have made clear that they intend to use gun crime as a political talking point instead of taking serious steps to address it.”
— And Anita Kumar and Sam Stein report that despite pulling Chipman’s nomination, Biden is looking to fill the role, though it remains unclear when a new nominee will be announced.
ABORTION LATEST — The DOJ sued Texas over its six-week abortion law. NYT’s Katie Benner has the details.
CONGRESS
SINKING STAFF MORALE ON THE HILL — Katharine Tully-McManus, who writes POLITICO’s congressional newsletter Huddle, shines a light today on the toll that the double whammy of the pandemic and the Jan. 6 riot has taken on Hill staffers in both parties. “Lawmakers have attempted to reverse the brain drain caused by top aides leaving, raising an existing salary cap on staff, proposing increases to office budgets and examining benefits. But it’s not clear whether the promise of future pay bumps can counteract the strain of working long hours in an environment where they’ve experienced an insurrection, a five-hour standoff over a bomb threat and a vehicle attack in less than a year,” Tully-McManus writes. One aide she quotes says: “I have friends doing really valuable work, doing good for the world, and they have pretty regular hours. And they don’t think about dying at work.”
WHAT THEY KNEW — Betsy Woodruff Swan scoops new details on the days leading up to the Jan. 6 Capitol attack: Two days before, about 300 law enforcement officials were prepped on a conference call for the planned demonstrations. The call specifically covered the possibility that things would turn violent and result in a mass-casualty event. Plans were made on how best to communicate if things took a turn for the worse. The officials were so prepared that they created a hashtag — #CERTUNREST2021 — to share information on the FBI’s private communication service.
MURPHY’S LAW — One prominent Democratic lawmaker, Rep. STEPHANIE MURPHY of Florida, said she doesn’t support the spending and tax measures coming out of the House Ways and Means Committee, saying that the “deadline was too rushed, driven by politics rather than policy,” Roll Call’s Lindsey McPherson writes. AP News’ Alan Fram, meanwhile, has a broader piece on the state of play.
NEW TAX MESSAGING — Playbook has obtained a memo the White House is circulating to Democratic Hill offices designed to help them rebut claims that their reconciliation plan would mean a massive tax hike for Americans. Its advice: Argue that their plan would cut taxes for 50 million families, including 4 million small businesses. The memo
GOING AFTER PROXY VOTING — House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY is asking the Supreme Court to reverse the chamber’s rule on proxy voting, which was implemented in May 2020 in response to the pandemic. More from NBC News’ Rebecca Shabad.
POLITICS ROUNDUP
J.D.’S NATIONAL SECURITY BLANKET — As Republican J.D. VANCE aims to prove his Trump cred in the Ohio Senate primary, he was feted on Thursday by members of the former president’s national security team. The event was a dinner fundraiser in D.C. hosted by former National Security Advisor ROBERT O’BRIEN. Former NSC staffers like ALEXANDER GRAY and MATTHEW POTTINGER mingled with MAGA-lites like HALEY BARBOUR, BRYAN LANZA, BRIAN BALLARD and JOHN F. LEHMAN. In a new internal poll conducted by frontrunner JOSH MANDEL, Vance is polling second at 16 percent to Mandel’s 34 percent. But Vance has gained ground since earlier this summer, per NBC News reporter and Ohioan Henry Gomez.
TRUMP’S INFLUENCE — Candidates in the race to replace Republican Wyoming Rep. LIZ CHENEY are quietly exiting now that Trump has endorsed HARRIET HAGEMAN in the primary, Marc Caputo and Meridith Mcgraw report.
BREYER SPEAKS — Supreme Court Justice STEPHEN BREYER isn’t retiring just yet, despite calls from progressives for him to step down from the high court.
He told NPR’s legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg that “I’m not going to go beyond what I previously said on the subject, and that is that I do not believe I should stay on the Supreme Court, or want to stay on the Supreme Court, until I die.”
“And when exactly I should retire, or will retire, has many complex parts to it. I think I’m aware of most of them, and I am, and will consider them,” he added.
MEDIAWATCH
LAWSUIT MOVES FORWARD — Fox News and its former anchor Ed Henry “must face a lawsuit accusing Henry of promising career advancement to coerce an employee into a sometimes violent sexual relationship including rape, and accusing the network of allowing a hostile work environment, a U.S. judge ruled on Thursday,” Reuters’ Jonathan Stempel reports. Both Fox News and Henry’s lawyer called the claims “baseless.”
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week”: Peter Baker, Asma Khalid, Martha Raddatz, Vivian Salama and Pierre Thomas.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
-
FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer. Panel: Karl Rove, Susan Page and Charles Lane.
-
ABC
“This Week”: Panel: Chris Christie, Yvette Simpson, Sarah Isgur and Roland Martin.
-
NBC
“Meet the Press”: Panel: Doris Kearns Goodwin, Hallie Jackson, Kimberly Atkins Stohr and George Will.
-
CNN
“Inside Politics”: Panel: Asma Khalid, Jeff Zeleny, Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Melanie Zanona.
-
MSNBC
“The Sunday Show”: Rep. John Yarmuth (D-Ky.) … Bishop William Barber … Stephen Smith … Alphonso David.
-
Gray TV
“Full Court Press”: Leon Panetta … Krish Vignarajah.
PLAYBOOKERS
David Axelrod said Biden has “stalled out a little.”
Andrew Yang is excited — apparently about his plans to start a third party, as Alex Thompson scooped.
But staffers from the rival NYC mayoral campaigns are … unimpressed.
Mike Pence is releasing his first podcast today.
Pete Buttigieg shared his thoughts on Afghanistan and parenthood with his staff at DOT, per Insider.
Barbara Boxer strongly suggested to Dianne Feinstein that she should retire.
MEDIA MOVE — Kyle Cheney will be a senior legal affairs reporter for POLITICO. He is currently a Congress reporter. Announcement
HUD ARRIVAL LOUNGE — Daniela Perez is now assistant press secretary at HUD. She most recently was a comms associate for Supermajority.
TRANSITIONS — Jon Klein, former president of CNN, has launched a new media platform called HANG, where sports fans can watch games with Hall of Famers, MVPs and other retired athletes. … Pete Spiro is now COS for Rep. Jimmy Panetta (D-Calif.). He most recently was COS for Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.). … Stephanie Hamilton is now government relations specialist and senior program officer at the American Association of University Professors. She previously was government relations and advocacy manager at the National Society of Professional Engineers. …
… Phyllis Dickerson will be CEO of the African AmericanMayors Association. She currently is president and CEO of Red Ink and is a Bloomberg 2020 alum. … Anna Kain is now manager for federal affairs at Verizon. She most recently was assistant VP for government affairs at Synchrony. … John Branscome is joining Facebook’s federal policy team focusing on executive branch engagement. He previously was the leading Democratic tech staffer on the Senate Commerce Committee. More from Emily Birnbaum
ENGAGED — Austin Gage, legislative director and counsel for Rep. Hal Rogers (R-Ky.), and Morgan Routt, associate at Booz Allen Hamilton, got engaged on Saturday in Morocco. Gage popped the question on a sunrise camel ride in the Sahara Desert. The two met on Bumble in July 2018. Pic … Another pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.) … Neera Tanden … Emily Berret of Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office … Renee Hudson of Rep. Victoria Spartz’s (R-Ind.) office … Jess McIntosh … Andrew Shapiro of Beacon Global Strategies … DOJ’s Brian Farnkoff … POLITICO’s Nahal “Halley” Toosi and Tiffany Cheung … USA Today’s Richard Wolf … Hunter Walker … Fox News’ Trey Yingst … NYT’s Mara Gay … Bill Hamilton … MSNBC’s Chuck Rosenberg … Aurelien Portuese of the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation … James Killen … FleishmanHillard’s Michael Moroney … Sara Bonjean … Alex Bell of the Council for a Livable World … Deirdre Hackleman … former Rep. Ted Poe (R-Texas) … former Sen. John E. Sununu (R-N.H.) … Alyssa Bernstein … Christopher Stio … Meshal DeSantis … Kimberly Marie Abbott … Oliver Kim … Justin Wiley … Justin Cooper … Joe Kabourek
Did someone forward this email to you? Sign up here.
Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
Follow us on Twitter
26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
|
29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Biden Takes His COVID Tyranny to a Disturbing New Level
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Friday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I’m in the mood for an expensive robe and an antechamber.
Our long COVID nightmare isn’t going to go away, is it? I don’t mean the virus itself — those things never really go away. I am, of course, referring to all of the tyrannical politicians who have made COVID panic-porn their raison d’être.
One Joseph Robinette Biden comes to mind.
Biden would never have gotten to play Occupy Oval Office had the Wuhan Chinese Bat Flu not arrived in America during a presidential election year. He knows that and has been conducting himself as if he owes the virus a debt of gratitude and is determined to keep fear of it alive. It’s his Precious. It’s also the perfect vehicle to help the big-government fetishists glom onto all the power they can, even if they don’t deserve it.
It is also a convenient thing to blame for Biden’s myriad failures.
Yesterday, Biden walked all over the United States Constitution on his way to the podium to make the big play you just know his handlers have been waiting to have him do. Stacey covered it for us:
Democrats believe that experts whom you have no confidence in should rule you, and that the government is responsible for you from the cradle to the grave. Because of this decidedly paternalistic view, President Joe Biden made good on his promise to unveil a new plan to get COVID-19 under control–a plan that includes a vaccine mandate for companies with more than 100 employees.
He opened his speech today by expressing confidence that we could “turn the tide” on COVID-19. According to CDC data, we already have. Cases and deaths are declining:
Ol’ Gropes is using every kind of federal threat and coercion at his disposal to harass the American public into bending to his will. OK, he hasn’t threatened to send troops into the homes of private citizens to forcefully vaccinate them, but it’s a safe bet he and his handlers have at least joked about it.
Not that Biden has the mental capacity to remember that far back, but Matt reminds us that the president wasn’t a fan of these onerous mandates not so very long ago:
In the wake of the news that Joe Biden plans to mandate COVID vaccinations for federal workers and for private businesses with 100 or more employees unless they do weekly testing, it’s worth reminding you that it was less than a year ago—eight months, in fact—that Joe Biden opposed both vaccine and mask mandates.
“No, I don’t think it should be mandatory. I wouldn’t demand it be mandatory,” Biden said of vaccines. “But I would do everything in my power — just like I don’t think masks have to be made mandatory nationwide — I will do everything in my power as president of the United States to encourage people to do the right thing. And when they do it, demonstrate that it matters.”
My, what a difference an ongoing international blunder with a body count will make.
Biden obviously wants to play the benevolent dictator, but the Republican National Committee and several GOP governors quickly vowed to fight this latest overreach.
Let’s hope that they’re all serious about that because this parade of power-grabbing needs to come to an abrupt halt.
I will keep repeating this: none of this is about public health. In fact, the messaging on that is — and has been — rather nonsensical:
Joe Biden’s speech on COVID was bizarrely incoherent.
He told the American people without qualification that fully vaccinated people are at incredibly low risk: “Only 1 out of every 160,000 fully vaccinated Americans was hospitalized for COVID per day.”
Then he promised to shield them against the evil people who are threatening their very lives: “We’re going to protect the vaccinated from unvaccinated coworkers.”
But Joe, you just said the vaccinated were already protected!
Keep your laws off my body, Democrats.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
Biden Unveils Authoritarian Vaccine Mandate
Wright-Patterson AFB on Lockdown After Reports of Active Shooter
FLASHBACK: Biden Opposed Vaccine and Mask Mandates Eight Months Ago
Will Biden Continue Down the Path of the Democratic Party’s Lunatic Wing?
Did the National Archives Add a ‘Harmful Language’ Warning to the Constitution?
Not as ‘Inclusive’ as Biden’s Handlers Would Like: Last Jew Leaves Afghanistan
BOMBSHELL: Afghans Selling Their Kids to Buy Food
Amazon’s ‘Wheel of Time’ Saga Trailer is Here. How Does It Look?
Biden Purges Apolitical Military Advisory Panels, Demands ‘Values Align’ With His Administration
Hell on Earth. A New Low: Australia Limits Booze for Locked-Down Residents
Amid Disasters at Home and Abroad, Biden White House Staffers Busy Choosing ‘Magic Spirit Animals’
Biden Withdraws ATF Nominee Who Doesn’t Believe Right to Own a Gun Is Guaranteed by the Constitution
Townhall Mothership
‘See You In Court’: Kristi Noem, Others Blast Biden’s Workplace Vaccine Mandate
House Democrat Comes Out Against Reconciliation Bill
McCarthy Asks SCOTUS to Overturn Pelosi’s ‘Unconstitutional’ Proxy Voting Policy
Sarah Palin Scores Direct Hit on AOC With ‘Fake Feminist’ Jab, AOC’s Response Proved the Point
Bronx DA Wants ‘Gun Violence’ Strategy. SCOTUS May Give Her One
Cam&Co. After Chipman Disaster, What’s Left For Biden’s Anti-Gun Agenda?
Your Moment of “Duh”…Portland Mayor Admits Hands-Off Approach To Riots Was Wrong
Justice Breyer: I plan to retire before I die and that’s all I’m saying about it
Taliban to former gov’t officials: All is forgiven. Come back. Trust us!
Another story about ivermectin that was spread by the left goes bust
US Postal Service workers are NOT included in President Biden’s federal vaccine requirement
VIP
The Dirty Little Secret About Biden’s Vaccine Mandate That No One Wants to Talk About
Why Does the U.S. Ignore Data on Kids and COVID-19 From Other Nations?
Medicare Is Running Out of Money. Guess What Democrats Want to Do?
How Orwellian Changes to Language in the COVID Era Have Manipulated the Public
GOLD ‘Five O’Clock Somewhere’ with Kruiser, Preston, VodkaPundit – Replay Available
GOLD DC Outsider Ep. 14: Don’t Let Democrats Take Your Eye Off the Ball
Around the Interwebz
ESPN Veteran Reporter Allison Williams Steps Down Over Vaccination Mandate
Twitter is beginning to test labels for bot accounts
The Lasting Allure—and Bruising Challenge—of Courting Florida’s Silver King
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Comedy
Tradition may be important but embarrassing yourself in front of people you’ll never see again is kinda fun.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
|
Cut to the News
8409 Lee Hwy #3984
Merrifield VA 22116-9998
USA
Unsubscribe | Change Subscriber Options
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Biden’s Kind Of, Sort of Vaccine Mandate
Plus: The White House’s hopes of renewing 2015’s Iran Deal grow dimmer.
The Dispatch Staff | 12 | 17 |
Happy Friday! Apologies for the lateness of this newsletter; somebody seems to have tripped over a cable down at Substack HQ this morning.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- President Joe Biden on Thursday announced a significant expansion of the scope of federal vaccine mandates, signing an executive order requiring COVID-19 vaccination for all federal employees—removing the previous alternative of regular testing—and instructing the Department of Labor to develop a rule obligating businesses with 100 or more employees to make full vaccination or weekly testing compulsory. Biden also said his administration plans to mandate vaccines for all those who work in hospitals or other medical facilities that treat Medicare and Medicaid patients.
- The Taliban allowed a Qatari flight carrying about 115 Americans and U.S. permanent residents to depart Kabul on Thursday, the first such flight since U.S. forces completed their withdrawal last month. Another plane is expected to depart on Friday for those who weren’t able to reach the airport in time. The Taliban did not permit any Afghans without permanent residence abroad or a second nationality to leave the country.
- The White House formally withdrew its nomination of David Chipman to lead the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives on Thursday. President Biden blamed Senate Republicans for blocking someone he argued would have been an “exemplary” ATF director, but a handful of Senate Democrats opposed Chipman—a staunch gun control advocate—as well.
- Attorney General Merrick Garland announced Thursday that the Department of Justice filed a lawsuit against Texas arguing its recently enacted Senate Bill 8 (which bans most abortions after six weeks) is unconstitutional. The lawsuit asks a federal court to issue a permanent and preliminary injunction “prohibiting enforcement of the statute against the State of Texas—including against the State’s officers, employees and agents, and private parties it has effectively deputized who would bring suit under SB8.”
- The Food and Drug Administration said Thursday it was denying the application of more than 946,000 flavored “electronic nicotine delivery systems” to remain on the market, claiming the applications “lacked sufficient evidence” that the products’ benefits to adult smokers outweigh the public health threat they pose to children. The agency punted, however, on deciding whether larger vaping companies like Juul Labs can continue to sell their products in the United States.
- Los Angeles’ Board of Education voted yesterday to approve a resolution requiring all students age 12 and over to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 in order to access in-person education. As of September 2, 63 percent of 12- to 17-year-olds in Los Angeles County had received at least one vaccine dose, according to the Department of Public Health.
Biden’s Mandate for Large Employers: Vaccines or Tests
Here’s what we had to say yesterday morning about the pandemic speech President Biden was set to deliver later in the day: “Barring something truly striking such as the administration trying to mandate vaccines itself—something Biden himself has previously and correctly said he does not have the power to do—it’s likely this latest effort will simply amount to more cajoling of other private and public entities to ramp up the vaccine pressure in their own spheres of influence.”
We forgot to knock on wood, so we can’t help but feel this is partially our fault.
In his remarks yesterday, Biden announced a set of new policies that, while not quite amounting to a national vaccine mandate, easily come within spitting distance of one. Previously, the president had not gone beyond the bully pulpit in urging private employers to require their workers to get vaccinated. Now, however, the administration has instructed the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to craft a new emergency rule mandating that businesses with 100 or more employees require their workers to either get vaccinated or submit to weekly COVID tests—or face a $14,000 fine per violation. The government will also begin requiring healthcare workers in hospitals and home healthcare facilities that treat Medicare or Medicaid patients to receive the vaccines and remove the weekly testing option for most federal employees.
The coronavirus’ resurgence this summer—coupled with the Afghanistan debacle—has put a dent in Biden’s popularity, and the president’s frustration with the unvaccinated was evident on Thursday. “We have the tools to combat COVID-19, and a distinct minority of Americans, supported by a distinct minority of elected officials, are keeping us from turning the corner,” he said. “My message to unvaccinated Americans is this: What more is there to wait for? What more do you need to see?”
“We’ve been patient, but our patience is wearing thin,” Biden added. “Your refusal has cost all of us. So, please, do the right thing.”
These are—by the administration’s own acknowledgment—massive, sweeping changes. The White House estimates 80 million Americans are covered by the large-business portion of the order, with another 17 million affected by the requirement for healthcare facilities. Many large corporations—Google, Disney, Tyson Foods, Delta Airlines—have already implemented some form of mandate, but plenty have thus far abstained.
Still, although there will be outliers, it doesn’t seem like corporate America is gearing up to go to war over the move. Business Roundtable, a D.C. advocacy group whose membership includes the CEOs of hundreds of America’s largest companies, said yesterday it “welcomes the Biden Administration’s continued vigilance in the fight against COVID.” If nothing else, the White House’s announcement provides individual companies political cover to implement stricter requirements.
But elected Republicans are outraged, even if top business leaders aren’t. Sen. Mike Lee accused the president of “wanton disregard for the U.S. Constitution,” calling him “a would-be autocrat” who “endangers the very fibers of this great nation.” Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey said in a statement that the COVID-19 vaccines are safe and effective, but argued that Biden’s “dictatorial approach is wrong, un-American and will do far more harm than good.”
“How many workers will be displaced?” he asked. “How many kids kept out of classrooms? How many businesses fined?”
Based on the reaction to yesterday’s announcement, a shift in the news cycle is certainly a byproduct of the move. And if it baits Republicans into loudly defending the rights of the unvaccinated minority prolonging the pandemic, Biden might eke a narrow political win out of it. A recent Washington Post-ABC News poll found businesses requiring employees who come into work to be vaccinated had a net approval of +7 percentage points, up from -6 in April. A July Kaiser Family Foundation survey found almost the exact same split when asking whether the federal government should recommend that employers mandate vaccines.
But Biden’s decision is not without political risk. Just 16 percent of the unvaccinated people surveyed in that Washington Post-ABC News poll said they would get the shots if required by their employer, compared to 35 percent who said they’d ask for an exemption and 42 percent who claimed they would quit. If those numbers are anything close to accurate—all issue polling caveats aside—the president could be exacerbating a labor shortage that is already hindering the country’s economic recovery.
Republicans are champing at the bit to fight the Biden administration on this in court. But will a legal challenge be successful? Some might think it a no-brainer that a move so sweeping would be quickly overturned by the judiciary, particularly as the administration itself has until now said it could not and would not make vaccines mandatory. “That’s not the role of the federal government,” press secretary Jen Psaki said on July 23. “That’s the role that institutions, private-sector entities and others, may take.”
But the outcomes of the plethora of cases that are sure to arise are anything but a sure thing, considering just how much power Congress delegated to the executive branch on pretty much all matters pertaining to workplace safety when it created OSHA in 1971. Legal scholar and former adviser to Barack Obama Cass Sunstein laid out the situation well in a 2008 paper titled “Is OSHA Constitutional?”
Imagine that Congress creates a federal agency to deal with a large problem, one that involves a significant part of the national economy. Suppose that Congress instructs the agency: Do what you believe is best. Act reasonably and appropriately. Adopt the legal standard that you prefer, all things considered. Suppose, finally, that these instructions lack clear contextual referents, such as previous enactments or judicial understandings, on which the agency might build. … The core provision of one of the nation’s most important regulatory statutes—the Occupational Safety and Health Act—is not easy to distinguish from the hypothesized statute.
“I think its odds in court are pretty good,” Gabriel Malor, an appellate litigator based in Virginia, told The Dispatch. “Not only have we given OSHA a great deal of power, there aren’t a lot of good ways to claw that back without an act of Congress.”
Biden’s Iran Deal Hopes on the Ropes
While the events on the ground in Afghanistan have occupied the attention of the U.S. media and public over the last several weeks, a series of developments in Iran are threatening the administration’s diplomatic objectives with the terrorist-sponsoring state to Afghanistan’s west.
In June, another hardliner president was inaugurated in Tehran when Ebrahim Raisi was sworn in. This week, further confirmation from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) that the Islamic Republic is undermining the United Nations agency’s monitoring mechanisms and stockpiling highly enriched uranium means hope is dwindling for proponents of reviving the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).
According to two IAEA reports leaked to the Associated Press, Tehran has “severely undermined” the UN atomic watchdog’s ability to monitor its nuclear facilities since it suspended access to inspectors earlier this year. The report cited damaged, destroyed, and missing cameras and recording devices, which since February have been the IAEA’s primary means of keeping tabs on Iran’s enrichment activities.
With its limited access, the organization surmised that Iran has stockpiled 10 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60 percent, up 7.6 kilograms since May, and 84.3 kilograms of uranium enriched to 20 percent, up 62.8 kilograms since June. In its original form, the JCPOA allows Iran to enrich uranium to a maximum of 3.67 percent. According to the Wall Street Journal, Tehran is ignoring requests by the IAEA’s director-general, Rafael Grossi, to visit the country.
Still, in a call with the European Council President Charles Michel, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi insisted Wednesday the Islamic Republic has been transparent with the IAEA.
“The serious cooperation of the Islamic Republic of Iran with the IAEA is a clear example of Iran’s will for transparency in its nuclear activities,” Raisi is quoted as saying on his website. “The important point in this regard is that although the Trump administration has left the White House and the Biden administration came to power, but in practice there has been no change in U.S. policy on Iran and the same approach and measures, namely sanctions and pressure against Iran remains.”
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei adopted a similar position late last month, equating the Biden team’s foreign policy to a “predatory wolf” and that of former President Donald Trump. Efforts by the regime to ramp up enrichment and limit IAEA access appear to be aimed at pushing the administration into formalized sanctions relief through a restored nuclear deal.
“Too often, when engaging rogue regimes, the U.S. loses sight of the forest for the trees,” Michael Rubin, a former Pentagon official and resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, told The Dispatch. “For Biden’s diplomatic team, simply continuing talks has trumped a meaningful solution as their primary goal.”
“Tehran sees a U.S. administration negotiating from a position of weakness—unwilling to enforce sanctions, unwilling to use military force to respond to attacks against U.S. forces and allies, and now distracted by the disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan,” Richard Goldberg, senior adviser at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and former National Security Council staffer under Trump, told The Dispatch.
“So the mullahs have every incentive to keep pushing the envelope,” he continued, “stonewalling investigations into undeclared nuclear material and sites, curtailing access for UN inspectors, and expanding its enrichment activities—while holding on to the strategic benefits of the nuclear deal, i.e. the sunset provisions that are enshrined in a Security Council resolution.”
When the Obama administration struck the Iran deal in 2015, it included a number of sunset clauses, many of which have already expired and others of which have fast-approaching deadlines. Even if the White House did manage to revive the original deal, in other words, its relative value diminishes with each passing day. By 2030, most of the deal’s limits on its uranium enrichment program will be fully lifted.
“I’m not going to put a date on it, but we are getting closer to the point at which a strict return to compliance with the JCPOA does not reproduce the benefits that that agreement achieved,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken—who once promised to deliver a “longer and stronger” deal with Iran—told reporters in Germany on Wednesday. “We’re not at that point yet, but it’s getting closer.”
The new Israeli government—amid the back-and-forth between the U.S., Iran, Russia, and European nations—has reiterated its commitment to the Middle East’s security, particularly given a perceived regional retreat by the Biden administration. “Unilateralism in self-defense will become the new normal,” Rubin said.
“The world needs to stop Iran from getting a nuclear capability, no matter the price. If the world doesn’t do it, Israel reserves the right to act. The Iranians have never hidden the fact that they want to destroy Israel. That is an existential threat for us,” Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid said during a press conference with his Russian counterpart yesterday. “Israel will not allow Iran to become a nuclear state. Or even a nuclear threshold state.”
Worth Your Time
- There is “surprisingly strong” Supreme Court precedent supporting vaccine mandates, Peter Canellos and Joel Lau note in this deeply researched essay, pointing to the body’s 7-2 decision in 1904’s Jacobson v. Massachusetts. “The question of whether [Americans’] freedoms include refusing a legally mandated COVID-19 vaccine, should any government implement such a requirement today, has yet to come before the Supreme Court — or any court,” they write. “But in the event that it does, the 116-year-old case brought by Henning Jacobson would be the standing legal precedent. In deciding whether the rules that the Jacobson decision rendered for smallpox would apply to Covid-19, today’s court would need to reckon with a different medical landscape, as well as the freighted politics of the moment.”
- We’ve been sprinkling 9/11 remembrances into Worth Your Time throughout the week, and today is no exception. With the 20th anniversary of the attacks coming up tomorrow, take some time to read Tom Junod’s 2003 Esquire essay on the photograph of the World Trade Center’s falling man and the quest to determine its subject’s identity. “In the picture, he departs from this earth like an arrow,” Junod writes. “Although he has not chosen his fate, he appears to have, in his last instants of life, embraced it. If he were not falling, he might very well be flying. He appears relaxed, hurtling through the air. He appears comfortable in the grip of unimaginable motion. He does not appear intimidated by gravity’s divine suction or by what awaits him.”
- With tens of thousands of Afghan allies seeking resettlement in the United States, the State Department last week released a list of places deemed suitable for Special Immigrant Visa recipients. None of California’s biggest cities made the cut due to housing costs. “The state’s median home price is now $800,000,” Darrell Owens and Muhammad Alameldin write in The Atlantic. “Those REFUGEES WELCOME signs you see on the lawns of homes in California’s famously ‘progressive’ cities, such as Los Angeles and San Francisco? Only the wealthiest people can afford to live in many, if not most, of those neighborhoods, thanks to the lack of affordable and available rental housing.”
Presented Without Comment
One was Bill Clinton’s WH counsel; the other stepped down as House Speaker designate during the Clinton impeachment bc of his own past sexual improprieties. Flash forward +20 years: the two men have teamed up to lobby Biden…on behalf of a Libyan warlord.
Also Presented Without Comment
Kim Jong Un looked thinner and more energetic in a North Korean parade that showcased military animals and workers in hazmat suits. Experts say Kim’s weight loss is likely the result of an effort to improve his shape rather than health problems.
Toeing the Company Line
- In yesterday’s French Press(🔒), David commemorates the 20th anniversary of the September 11 attacks and explains why they did not unite the country for long. “We faced a challenge dangerous enough to command our attention, not dangerous enough to unite us, and complicated enough to defy easy, obvious answers,” he writes.
- Thursday’s Advisory Opinions features Sarah and David discussing the latest developments out of Texas, an indictment related to the murder of Ahmaud Arbery, a death penalty case with religious liberty implications, and much more.
- Slate’s Will Saletan returned to The Remnant yesterday to discuss ongoing pandemic challenges, the miraculous COVID-19 vaccines, and whether any one “side” truly got the past year and a half right. Plus, the 20th anniversary of 9/11.
Let Us Know
Which of these best describes your view of the Biden administration’s vaccine moves yesterday?
- Constitutional, and worth it to get more people vaccinated
- Unconstitutional, but worth it to get more people vaccinated
- Constitutional, but likely to lead the vaccine-hesitant to dig in further
- Unconstitutional, and likely to lead the vaccine-hesitant to dig in further
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
|
33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
|
36.) AMERICAN THINKER
|
|
37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
|
41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Ted Cruz Nails Ron Klain for Accidentally Revealing Intent to Skirt Constitution on Vaccine Mandate
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the RedState.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions |
44.) WORLD NET DAILY
|
45.) MSNBC
September 10, 2021 THE LATEST West Virginia started off so well. When most of the country was stumbling through the early days of the vaccine rollout, the Mountain State was getting needles into arms with ease. Now, though, Gov. Jim Justice is having a harder time getting the state’s holdouts to join the club, Hayes Brown writes. One of the few GOP governors actually leading on Covid, Justice “has cajoled, nudged and begged the people of West Virginia to get vaccinated, to protect themselves and everyone around them,” Brown writes. “But the message just isn’t getting through — at least not anymore.”
Read Hayes Brown’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Friday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES West Point deserves better than Trump crony Kellyanne Conway. Read More There’s a horrible, lizard-brained logic to how Trump is spending 9/11. Read More Texas abortion law highlights a painful truth about our constitutional rights. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC Watch the premiere of “Fireside History with Michael Beschloss,” a new series that provides present-day perspectives on historical events. The first episode explores the path to the war in Afghanistan, told through archival footage including George W. Bush’s response hours after the 9/11 attacks, people on the ground in New York, the lone congressional speech in opposition to the war and more.
Watch the premiere of “Fireside History with Michael Beschloss,” tonight at 7 p.m. ET on The Choice, streaming exclusively on Peacock.
Follow MSNBC
Check out the MSNBC channel on Apple News
Download the NBC News Mobile App and watch MSNBC
Privacy | Unsubscribe |
46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
|
|
47.) ABC
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
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 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
This morning we are looking at the legacy of the Sept. 11 attacks and how events that day 20 years ago changed American domestic, foreign, military and security policy forever.
On a brighter note, we have a Cinderella story for two teens who face-off in the Women’s U.S. Open Finals tomorrow.
Here’s what we’re watching this Friday morning. In the 20 years since terrorist hijackers crashed commercial jets into the Twin Towers and the Pentagon and heroic passengers downed a fourth plane in a field in western Pennsylvania, America has been engaged in a boundless battle on that score — a fight President George W. Bush termed the “Global War on Terror.”
It led the U.S. to deploy hundreds of thousands of troops in Afghanistan, Iraq and other countries; build juggernaut foreign and domestic surveillance operations; re-imagine how war is waged; militarize domestic law enforcement, especially along the southern border with Mexico; flout international humanitarian norms and impinge on civil liberties at home; and spend trillions of taxpayer dollars in service of the idea that such an assault will never happen again.
It appears that there is no going back, writes NBC News senior national politics reporter Jonathan Allen.
Despite the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan and President Joe Biden’s attempt to pivot, the most important structural changes to emerge from 9/11 remain firmly in place, beginning with the enlarged role of the White House.
But one thing that’s sadly gone is all the patriotic unity Americans felt in the days, weeks and months following the attacks. NBC News’ senior writer Corky Siemaszko looks at how 20 years later, the nation stands more divided than ever.
“What do you write about 9/11 20 years later?” asked John Feal, a construction worker who lost part of a foot while toiling at ground zero and became activist for the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund.
“Write that we’re deteriorating, write that more and more people who were down there are sick and dying, write that a delayed bomb filled with hate has exploded and it’s ruining our country,” he said. “All the unity on that day, after all that amazing unity on Sept. 12, 2001, when we were all Americans united together, all that unity is gone.”
See our complete coverage remembering 9/11 here. Friday’s Top Stories
President Biden announced sweeping vaccine mandates Thursday that could impact millions of federal and private workers. “We’ve been patient, but our patience is wearing thin,” Biden said, making a direct appeal to the 80 million people who he said were still unvaccinated. The Republican National Committee announced that it would sue the Biden administration, calling the mandate “unconstitutional.” The unusually outspoken comments by a Supreme Court justice were released by NPR on Thursday after the Justice Department announced that it had sued Texas over the law, which the department said is “in open defiance of the Constitution.” “I don’t learn the same way from when I was healthy,” one incoming freshman said. “I feel like I’m a totally different person now.” Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
NBC News collected and analyzed school files from dark web pages and found they’re littered with personal information of children. Shopping
From tall shelves to bed risers, here are expert recommended dorm storage solutions. One Fun Thing
They’re both teenagers. They were both long shots at this year’s U.S. Open. And now, remarkably, they’re both Grand Slam finalists.
Emma Raducanu, an 18-year-old from Britain who is ranked 150th and Leylah Fernandez, a 19-year-old from Canada who is ranked 73rd, took wildly different paths to the championship court.
But they will meet in Arthur Ashe Stadium on Saturday for the first major final between two teens since the 1999 U.S. Open, when Serena Williams, 17, defeated Martina Hingis, 18.
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
This will be a tough weekend of remembrances for many. NBC News will have full coverage of the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks tomorrow. This evening Lester Holt will anchor a special Dateline at 10pm ET “Heroes: The Story of Flight 93,” The one-hour broadcast will feature interviews with the family members of Flight 93’s passengers and crew members.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com
Thanks, Petra Cahill Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
|
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: National unity has taken a hard hit since 9/11
Sept. 11 brought this country together 20 years ago.
But Covid – as well as everything that’s transpired AFTER the 9/11 terrorist attacks – has only torn the nation further apart.
Just look at these numbers from the NBC News poll and other surveys:
In June 2001 – not too long after the controversial Bush v. Gore decision that put George W. Bush into the White House – 43 percent of all Americans said the country was on the right track, versus 39 percent who said it was on the wrong track, according to that month’s national NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll.
Then in the same poll after the 9/11 attacks, a whopping 72 percent said the nation was headed in the right direction, compared with just 11 percent who disagreed.
Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images File
Today, those numbers are almost exactly reversed, with only 29 percent who think the country is on the right track, and with 63 percent who believe it’s on the wrong track, per the Aug. 2021 NBC News poll. (The Wall Street Journal is no longer a partner on the poll.)
Similarly, 34 percent of Americans said the nation was united and in agreement about the most important values, versus 62 percent who said it was greatly divided on those values, according to a Dec. 1998 Washington Post poll conducted during Bill Clinton’s impeachment.
The numbers flipped after 9/11 when a Gallup/CNN/USA Today survey asked that same question in Nov. 2001: 74 percent said the nation was in agreement, compared with 24 percent who said it was greatly divided.
Yet today, when an Associated Press poll asked that very same question this year, only 11 percent said Americans are united and in agreement about the most important values, while 88 percent said Americans said they were greatly divided.
|
Take this jab and shove it
Adding to this great divide, yesterday we saw President Biden taking STRONG action on the coronavirus – by mandating vaccines for federal workers and contractors, as well as for large employers.
And we saw a STRONG reaction from the right opposing Biden’s move.
Yet as with many other issues, the GOP/right’s strong reaction was on behalf of a shrinking minority.
As of today, 75 percent of American adults have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, and nearly 65 percent are fully vaccinated.
Yes, there’s legitimate criticism that Biden’s strong action should have come much earlier than yesterday.
But the other political angle here is that the GOP is defending 20 to 30 percent of the adult-age public that hasn’t gotten the vaccine.
|
TWEET OF THE DAY: Who has the intensity advantage (and who doesn’t)
|
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
279: The number of Covid deaths per 100,000 people in Louisiana, as the state eclipses the deaths-per-capita of New York.
40,763,28: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 152,212 more since yesterday morning.)
660,147: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 3,242 more since yesterday morning.)
377,622,065: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 666,933 more since yesterday morning.)
53.4 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
64.5 percent: The share of all U.S. adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
52 percent: President Biden’s approval rating in a new CNN/SSRS poll.
One-third: The approximate share of female service members in the Air and Space Forces who say they’ve experienced sexual harassment, according to a new inspector general report.
$2.14 million: The amount Democrats have booked in ad spending in the California governor recall from today through Tuesday’s election, per AdImpact.
$2.05 million: The amount of ad spending Republicans have booked over that time period, after being outspent by a 2:1 margin to this point.
|
20 years later, 9/11’s significance declines, poll finds
After 9/11 20 years ago, the NBC/WSJ poll found 75 percent of Americans calling those terrorist attacks the MOST significant event of their lifetimes, with a total of 96 percent of the public saying it was a significant event.
But according to a new Public Opinions Strategy poll (the GOP half of our NBC News poll), the share of voters calling 9/11 the MOST significant event of their lifetimes was down to 39 percent, with a total of 86 percent saying it was a significant event.
That’s comparable to the 38 percent of Americans who said that COVID-19 was the MOST significant event of their lifetimes, with a total of 85 percent saying it was a significant event, per the April 2020 NBC/WSJ poll.
|
Shameless plug
NBC’s Lester Holt tonight is anchoring a special Dateline at 10:00 pm ET on Flight 93. The one-hour broadcast, “Heroes: The Story of Flight 93,” will feature interviews with the family members of Flight 93’s passengers and crew members.
For the first time, some of the children come together as they honor the lives of their parents and the courage that inspired the world.
|
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Los Angeles is the first major school district mandating Covid vaccinations for eligible students.
Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer criticized the court’s decision to uphold the Texas abortion restrictions in a new interview where he discussed calls for him to retire.
The Justice Department is suing Texas over its abortion law.
Top Trump allies are wading into the Wyoming House race as Trump’s pick hopes to defeat GOP Rep. Liz Cheney.
|
|
|
Download the NBC News Mobile App
|
50.) CBS
51.) REASON
|
|
|
|
|
52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
For those of you who wanted to be a fly on Rand Paul’s wall yesterday, wonder no more. After Tuesday’s explosive report from The Intercept, … MORE
8275 S. Eastern Ave, Ste 200-245 Las Vegas, Nevada 89123 USA
Privacy Policy | Unsubscribe | View in browser |
54.) TOWNHALL
|
||
FACEBOOK TWITTER |
ADVERTISEMENT |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions You can unsubscribe by clicking here. Or Send postal mail to: * Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers. |
55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
|
|||||||||||||||
|
56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
|
60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Friday, Sept. 10, and the US is preparing to commemorate the 20th anniversary of 9/11. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWEditor’s note: While we typically carry three top stories, we’ve reserved the section to mark the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. America RemembersThe US will recognize the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks tomorrow, with a number of memorials being held around the country. In New York City, families will gather at the 9/11 Memorial plaza to read aloud the names of the thousands of victims killed in the attacks, followed by the annual Tribute in Light (see video). The day remains the deadliest terrorist attack in modern history (see day-of photos). In total, 2,977 people were directly killed—2,606 in the World Trade Center, 246 across four hijacked planes, and 125 at the Pentagon in Washington, DC. Forty of the victims were aboard United Flight 93, which crashed near Shanksville, Pennsylvania, as passengers attempted to overtake the hijackers, whose intended target was the US Capitol. Read a detailed account here (paywall, Philadelphia Inquirer). More than 25,000 people were injured in the aftermath, with many suffering long-term health consequences. The remains of two victims from the twin towers were positively identified Wednesday using DNA analysis; remains from more than 1,000 victims were never recovered. The attacks were the catalyst for protracted wars in Afghanistan and Iraq (see timelines here and here). While the latter war ended in 2011, tomorrow’s anniversary comes as the Taliban—booted from power in 2001—have retaken control of Afghanistan amid a US withdrawal that has drawn bipartisan criticism. Almost 11,000 US troops and contractors were killed across both missions, with estimates projecting a total combined cost exceeding $2T, with interest on the debt used to finance operations reaching $6.5T by 2020. President Joe Biden is scheduled to visit all three memorial sites tomorrow. The trips follow an executive order declassifying documents detailing the lead-up to the attacks, including Saudi Arabia’s potential role. Almost a quarter of the current US population was born after 9/11. Read some of the stories from the roughly 13,000 people who celebrate their 20th birthday tomorrow. Finally, see newspaper headlines from the day after the attacks here. In partnership with GryphonINVESTING IN CYBERSECURITYWorried about the security of your home’s Wi-Fi network? Interested in additional safeguards to help your digital life feel less exposed? You aren’t alone—and it’s because cyber hacks have been on the rise, especially with the growth of work-from-home. Thousands of people have purchased Gryphon’s powerful mesh Wi-Fi router thanks to its speed and focus on cybersecurity. And these devices don’t mess around—with over 9 million threats blocked, Gryphon Wi-Fi users can rest easy knowing they’ve been spared from the 330% increase in cyber hacks during the pandemic. Their team is also committed to continued innovation in the cybersecurity industry: Gryphon’s CEO, John Wu, currently holds 25 patents and was a key inventor in mobile hotspot technology. Check out Gryphon today for a cutting-edge home security solution. It’s no coincidence that cybersecurity is a hot topic this year; learn more about Gryphon’s massive addressable market before their funding round closes tonight.
Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & CultureBrought to you by ButcherBox > Musician Phil Collins reveals declining health problems preventing him from continuing as drummer, says he can “barely hold” a drumstick (More) > Reigning Super Bowl champs Tampa Bay Buccaneers top Dallas Cowboys, 31-29, in first game of NFL’s regular season (More) | See full Week 1 schedule (More) > Nineteen-year-old Leylah Fernandez to take on 18-year-old Emma Raducanu in US Open final (More) | No. 1 seed Novak Djokovic faces Alexander Zverev today in quest to win all four majors in single season (More) From our partners: Quite a meaty offer. Sign up for ButcherBox today for 2 lbs of ground beef, free in every order for the lifetime of your membership. Make dinner easier and better with 100% grass-fed, grass-finished beef, or any of the other high-quality meat options ButcherBox offers, all delivered straight to your door. It’s the high-quality meat you and your family deserve: join ButcherBox today and receive free ground beef for life. Science & Technology> 2022 Breakthrough Prizes, the world’s largest science and math awards by amount ($15.75M in total), announced; winners include researchers who developed mRNA vaccines, super-precise atomic clocks, and more (More) > Facebook and Ray-Ban partner to release video-taking smart glasses; Ray-Ban Stories, which can also receive phone calls, go on sale today at a $299 price point (More) > Researchers demonstrate small robot that recreates the powerful snap of a mantis shrimp (More) Business & Markets> US stock markets slide (S&P 500 -0.5%, Dow -0.4%, Nasdaq -0.3%) as slowing US economic growth and pandemic worry investors (More) > Weekly US initial jobless claims drop to new pandemic-era low of 310,000; figure averaged approximately 215,000 before pandemic (More) > Amazon will pay 100% of college costs for its 750,000 US hourly employees starting in January (More) Politics & World Affairs> President Joe Biden announces updated strategy to combat COVID-19 spread, including requiring businesses over 100 employees to mandate vaccines or weekly testing (More) | Los Angeles school district becomes first to mandate vaccines for students over 12 (More, paywall, LAT) | See current US COVID-19 stats (More) > First large-scale passenger flight leaves Kabul since the US withdrawal; an unspecified number of Americans said to be on the flight (More) | Justice Department sues Texas over law banning abortions once a fetal heartbeat is detected, roughly around six weeks after conception (More) > Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) announces Stage 1 breast cancer diagnosis, says she has successfully completed a round of radiation treatments and a lumpectomy (More) | Former President Donald Trump backs primary challenger running against Rep. Liz Cheney (R, WY-At large) (More) IN-DEPTHWho Was the Falling Man?The Ringer | Bryan Curtis. Behind the search for the identity of a man, whose final seconds—captured in a photograph—encapsulate the visceral horror of 9/11. (Read) Editor’s note: The original Esquire piece, found here, has been placed behind a paywall. ‘Get Out Now’The Conversation | Anita McBride. Eyewitness accounts from inside the former President George W. Bush’s White House as the events of Sept. 11 unfolded. (Read) The Home RunESPN | Ryan Hockensmith. In the first sporting event held in post-9/11 New York City, a home run by slugger Mike Piazza provided a cathartic moment for a grieving city. (Read) A CONCERNING TRENDIn partnership with Gryphon Over the past 18 months, an unprecedented number of professionals have migrated to remote work. With that trend, cyber hacks since the beginning of the pandemic have increased in frequency by 330%—including big names like SolarWinds, Microsoft, and Colonial Pipeline. The need for more secure networks is proving urgent. Even so, the global number of connected devices is expected to grow to 74 billion by 2025 and today, roughly 70% of internet-connected devices in homes are vulnerable to hacks. Gryphon gives consumers much-needed security in a changing world: With 25,000 Gryphon cybersecurity routers already sold, they’ve blocked over 9 million threats using their patented technology. The global cybersecurity industry could grow as high as $270B in the coming years—don’t miss out, today is your last day to invest in Gryphon’s powerful solution.
Please support our sponsors! ETCETERASmithsonian artifacts that tell the story of 9/11. Ranking the NFL’s highest-valued franchises. Hoard of rare gold coins discovered in the wall of a French mansion. The original “Blue’s Clues” host addresses the nation. Archaeologists find traces of 9,000-year-old beer. Four-year-old piano prodigy to perform at Carnegie Hall. The Madrid Zoo welcomes twin panda cubs. When you’re late for a plane, so you call in a bomb threat. Clickbait: There’s a pack of zebras on the loose in Maryland. Historybook: Golfing legend Arnold Palmer born (1929); RIP Jane Wyman, actress and first wife of President Ronald Reagan (2007); Large Hadron Collider is tested for first time (2008); Hurricane Irma makes landfall in Florida, is responsible for 134 deaths and $77B in damage (2017). “Concentration comes out of a combination of confidence and hunger.” – Arnold Palmer Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com. Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here! |
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
Leading Democratic senator announced Thursday that she has been treated for…
|
TOP STORIES:
-
BREAKING: Prominent Democrat Announces Cancer Diagnosis
-
Fox News Star CONFESSES To Trump On Live TV…
-
100 Million Forced Vax… Healthcare, Government & American Workers…
- Arenas, concert halls, and others to mandate vaccine passports…
- Pelosi Just Photographed Meeting Secretly With The Enemy
- Republican Found DEAD… Police Are Calling It ‘Suicide’
- Los Angeles requires vax for students 12 and up
- Tyrant Biden Threatens GOP Governors, Vows To Harass Them
- Hunter Biden Now Under Federal Investigation
|
IN DEPTH…
- MICROSOFT delays return to work indefinitely… 9 mins ago
- Biden in December 2020: ‘I Don’t Think’ COVID Vaccinations ‘Should Be Mandatory’ 11 mins ago
- Another Example of NSW Health Official Referring to Post-COVID Era as “New World Order” Emerges 2 hours ago
- We don’t campaign where we’re not wanted, White House says of Biden California trip 4 hours ago
- WATCH: Psaki defends Fauci after new revelations about coronavirus research at Wuhan lab 4 hours ago
- EXCLUSIVE: White House to go on offense against GOP on debt ceiling and Trump-era deficits 5 hours ago
- Pelosi pictured with liberal megadonor George Soros and his son 5 hours ago
- Trump Slams Removal Of Robert E. Lee Statue: ‘Our Culture Is Being Destroyed’ 5 hours ago
-
White House hails ‘businesslike’ and ‘professional’ Taliban for aid in flight out of Afghanistan 6 hours
-
CHECK THIS CHART — BLM Riots vs January 6 Capitol Protest…23 mins ago
- Don’t blame Never Trumpers for Biden’s failures34 mins ago
- Rand Paul Calls for Dr. Fauci to Be Fired and Jailed for Lying to Congress1 hour ago
- Nebraska economy could slow this winter, study says2 hours ago
- Biden airlifted tens of thousands of unknowns after promising to evacuate Americans and allies2 hours ago
- Biden White House stonewalls two key senators in inquiry into president’s use of private email2 hours ago
- Biden’s DOJ Will Sue Texas Over Anti-Abortion Law: Report2 hours ago
- Americans aboard first commercial flight out of Kabul since Taliban takeover2 hours ago
- New Orleans Residents Rely on Each Other After Hurricane Ida3 hours ago
- (Watch) COVID Data, Masks and the Way the Vaccine Works3 hours ago
- Report: College Textbook Says People Who Oppose Lockdowns Caused COVID Deaths 5 mins ago
-
Biden Admin Preparing to Announce New COVID Restrictions For the Unvaccinated 12 mins ago
-
“You Have Been Warned!”: Unvaccinated Australians Told They’ll Remain Under Lockdown 13 mins ago
-
Aussie Public Health Chief Says COVID Contact Tracing is Part of “New World Order” 14 mins ago
- Larry Elder attacked by protester throwing eggs in Los Angeles neighborhood 21 mins ago
- Sean Spicer Rejects Biden’s Threat… He Will NOT Resign 24 mins ago
- Roughly 60,000 Afghan evacuees have arrived in US since mid-August 49 mins ago
- “Public Health” Propaganda 1 hour ago
- Pelosi Warns Us That ‘Mother Nature’ Is Angry With Us, but She Knows How to Cure That 1 hour ago
- Biden to announce that all federal workers must be vaccinated, with no option for testing — Local News 8 1 hour ago
- Rare earth war: can the U.S. even compete with China? 2 hours ago
- China Considering Occupying Bagram Air Base 2 hours ago
- Does Joe Biden Have a Plan to Complete the ‘Pivot to Asia’? 2 hours ago
- Former Afghan President Apologizes For Abrupt Fall Of His Govt, Denies Taking Millions Of Dollars With Him 2 hours ago
- UN watchdog: Iran has quadrupled its stocks of 60%-enriched uranium since May 2 hours ago
- Report: Biden Team to Provide Health Insurance to Afghan Evacuees 2 hours ago
- Why South Korea’s Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missile Is a Big Deal 2 hours ago
- The 9/11 Problem That Was Not Fixed, by Terence P. Jeffrey 2 hours ago
- CDC tightened masking guidelines after threats from teachers union, emails show 2 hours ago
- FBI releases new footage of Jan. 6 eve pipe bomb suspect eight months into search 2 hours ago
- China threatens to send warships inside US territorial waters 2 hours ago
- The Media Coaches Democrats, Trashes Republicans, by Tim Graham 2 hours ago
- Protester Wearing Gorilla Mask Throws Egg At Recall Candidate Larry Elder; Venice Tour Cut Short 2 hours ago
- Military Removes Crosses After Soldiers Allegedly Complain 2 hours ago
- Washington Football Team Set To Pick A New Team Name From This List 3 hours ago
- Top 1% evading $163 billion year in taxes, Treasury finds… 6 hours ago
- 10.9 million: Another record for job openings… 6 hours ago
- BUST: Most expensive home in America defaults on $165 million in debt… 6 hours ago
- Naked woman drives golf cart through scene of armed standoff… 6 hours ago
- Inmates riot across prisons in Israel as manhunt for escaped prisoners continues… 6 hours ago
- Pro-China Online Network Used Fake Accounts to Urge Asian-Americans to Attend Protests… 6 hours ago
- Could BOSTON DYNAMICS Robots Beat in Fight? 6 hours ago
- Strong Acapulco quake aftershocks unnerve Mexican resort’s residents… 7 hours ago
- Terrifying Video Shows People Trapped in Swinging Cable Car… 7 hours ago
- Rare lightning adds to awe… 7 hours ago
- New Mercedes ‘reads driver’s mind’; Merging man with machine… 7 hours ago
- AMAZON to open 2 cashier-less WHOLE FOODS stores… 7 hours ago
- Parents Chaotic Parking Lot Brawl After School Board Votes for Masks… 7 hours ago
- YELLEN: USA on track to default on debt in October… 7 hours ago
- MORAL HAZARD? Fed President Active Trader of Stocks… 7 hours ago
- Boston Official Who Warned on Real Estate Was Active REIT Trader… 7 hours ago
- FLASHBACK: Agency buying bonds of companies that don’t seem to need central bank’s help… 7 hours ago
- Australia Top Court Finds Media Companies Liable for Other People’s FACEBOOK Comments… 7 hours ago
- FL ‘cyber grave robbers’ charged with condo collapse ID theft… 7 hours ago
- Age-defying Brady eyes encore as season kicks off… 7 hours ago
- Howard Stern ROASTS Anti-Vax Radio Hosts Who Died… 7 hours ago
- Hawaii Starting ‘Pass’ Program… 7 hours ago
- FL judge allows mask mandates in schools after ruling 7 hours ago
- EU lists rare nerve disorder as possible side-effect of ASTRAZENECA… 7 hours ago
- Coughs Say Lot About Health — If Smartphone Listening… 7 hours ago
- Derek Jeter finally inducted into Baseball Hall of Fame: ‘Heartbeat of a Yankees dynasty’ 3 hours ago
- LeBron James’ success based on era he’s playing in, Rasheed Wallace says 3 hours ago
- Tennis Champ Conflicted Over Forced Vaccination, Fears Cancelation 3 hours ago
- Alonso homers twice, including 100th, as Mets top Marlins 3 hours ago
- ‘Woke’ Students Sue UT-Austin To Force School To Stop Playing ‘The Eyes Of Texas’ Song 3 hours ago
- ‘Blue’s Clues’ star Steve Burns returned with heartfelt message to now-adult fans: ‘I never forgot you’ 3 hours ago
- Job openings hit 10.9M, fifth straight record high 3 hours ago
- SEC threatens to sue Coinbase over its Lend product 3 hours ago
- Yellen warns Treasury could exhaust extraordinary debt limit measures in October 3 hours ago
- The Mandalorian Actress Emily Swallow Discusses Disney’s Firing Of Gina Carano 3 hours ago
- Pat Sajak and Vanna White sign new deal to host ‘Wheel of Fortune’ through 2024 3 hours ago
- Video: Rand Paul Calls For “Five Years In Jail” For Fauci Lying To Congress 3 hours ago
- Locked Down Aussies Now Having Their Alcohol Consumption Controlled by the Government 3 hours ago
- Biden Admin Seeks to Waive Sanctions on Assad 3 hours ago
- Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan made million-dollar stock trades in Tesla, Amazon, and Facebook last year 3 hours ago
- Nolte: CNNLOL Ignores Bombshell Report About Lab Funding in Interview with Anthony Fauci 3 hours ago
- Conservative Republicans request private data on top Democrats in retaliation for Jan. 6 investigation 3 hours ago
- Report: House Democrats Masking Cost of $3.5 Trillion Plus Infrastructure Bill 3 hours ago
- Report: Locked Down Australians’ Alcohol Intake Monitored And Restricted By The State 4 hours ago
- Americans don’t need trillions in spending to get back to work 10 hours ago
- Top Republican senator in talks with Democrats on anti-Big Tech antitrust bill 13 hours ago
- Biden’s Total Financial Surveillance… 16 hours ago
- Harris stumps for Gavin Newsom as she rails against recall effort 17 hours ago
- Biden economic adviser: rising food prices normal if you don’t count beef, pork, and poultry 17 hours ago
- WATCH: White House press sec admits Bidinflation is real 18 hours ago
|
TOP STORIES:
-
Officials Demand Election Be Decertified- 96k ghost votes found
-
Pelosi Just Photographed Meeting Secretly With The Enemy
-
Fox News Star CONFESSES To Trump On Live TV…
- Hunter Biden Now Under Federal Investigation
-
Republican Found DEAD… Police Are Calling It ‘Suicide’
- Biden Just Brutally Stuck It To Americans Trapped In Afghanistan
- BIDEN’S HELLISH COVID PLAN LEAKED…
- Romney Admits He Joined Liberals to Target Republicans With Sick Move
- Taliban Announce Huge Surprise For 9/11… Seems Like This Was All Planned
- China May Take Over US Air Force Base
- Biden Administration Prepares To Sue Texas
-
Taliban Announce Huge Surprise For 9/11… Seems Like This Was All Planned
|
IN DEPTH…
-
CHECK THIS CHART — BLM Riots vs January 6 Capitol Protest…23 mins ago
- Don’t blame Never Trumpers for Biden’s failures34 mins ago
- Rand Paul Calls for Dr. Fauci to Be Fired and Jailed for Lying to Congress1 hour ago
- Nebraska economy could slow this winter, study says2 hours ago
- Biden airlifted tens of thousands of unknowns after promising to evacuate Americans and allies2 hours ago
- Biden White House stonewalls two key senators in inquiry into president’s use of private email2 hours ago
- Biden’s DOJ Will Sue Texas Over Anti-Abortion Law: Report2 hours ago
- Americans aboard first commercial flight out of Kabul since Taliban takeover2 hours ago
- New Orleans Residents Rely on Each Other After Hurricane Ida3 hours ago
- (Watch) COVID Data, Masks and the Way the Vaccine Works3 hours ago
- Report: College Textbook Says People Who Oppose Lockdowns Caused COVID Deaths 5 mins ago
-
Biden Admin Preparing to Announce New COVID Restrictions For the Unvaccinated 12 mins ago
-
“You Have Been Warned!”: Unvaccinated Australians Told They’ll Remain Under Lockdown 13 mins ago
-
Aussie Public Health Chief Says COVID Contact Tracing is Part of “New World Order” 14 mins ago
- Larry Elder attacked by protester throwing eggs in Los Angeles neighborhood 21 mins ago
- Sean Spicer Rejects Biden’s Threat… He Will NOT Resign 24 mins ago
- Roughly 60,000 Afghan evacuees have arrived in US since mid-August 49 mins ago
- “Public Health” Propaganda 1 hour ago
- Pelosi Warns Us That ‘Mother Nature’ Is Angry With Us, but She Knows How to Cure That 1 hour ago
- Biden to announce that all federal workers must be vaccinated, with no option for testing — Local News 8 1 hour ago
- Rare earth war: can the U.S. even compete with China? 2 hours ago
- China Considering Occupying Bagram Air Base 2 hours ago
- Does Joe Biden Have a Plan to Complete the ‘Pivot to Asia’? 2 hours ago
- Former Afghan President Apologizes For Abrupt Fall Of His Govt, Denies Taking Millions Of Dollars With Him 2 hours ago
- UN watchdog: Iran has quadrupled its stocks of 60%-enriched uranium since May 2 hours ago
- Report: Biden Team to Provide Health Insurance to Afghan Evacuees 2 hours ago
- Why South Korea’s Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missile Is a Big Deal 2 hours ago
- The 9/11 Problem That Was Not Fixed, by Terence P. Jeffrey 2 hours ago
- CDC tightened masking guidelines after threats from teachers union, emails show 2 hours ago
- FBI releases new footage of Jan. 6 eve pipe bomb suspect eight months into search 2 hours ago
- China threatens to send warships inside US territorial waters 2 hours ago
- The Media Coaches Democrats, Trashes Republicans, by Tim Graham 2 hours ago
- Protester Wearing Gorilla Mask Throws Egg At Recall Candidate Larry Elder; Venice Tour Cut Short 2 hours ago
- Military Removes Crosses After Soldiers Allegedly Complain 2 hours ago
- Washington Football Team Set To Pick A New Team Name From This List 3 hours ago
- Top 1% evading $163 billion year in taxes, Treasury finds… 6 hours ago
- 10.9 million: Another record for job openings… 6 hours ago
- BUST: Most expensive home in America defaults on $165 million in debt… 6 hours ago
- Naked woman drives golf cart through scene of armed standoff… 6 hours ago
- Inmates riot across prisons in Israel as manhunt for escaped prisoners continues… 6 hours ago
- Pro-China Online Network Used Fake Accounts to Urge Asian-Americans to Attend Protests… 6 hours ago
- Could BOSTON DYNAMICS Robots Beat in Fight? 6 hours ago
- Strong Acapulco quake aftershocks unnerve Mexican resort’s residents… 7 hours ago
- Terrifying Video Shows People Trapped in Swinging Cable Car… 7 hours ago
- Rare lightning adds to awe… 7 hours ago
- New Mercedes ‘reads driver’s mind’; Merging man with machine… 7 hours ago
- AMAZON to open 2 cashier-less WHOLE FOODS stores… 7 hours ago
- Parents Chaotic Parking Lot Brawl After School Board Votes for Masks… 7 hours ago
- YELLEN: USA on track to default on debt in October… 7 hours ago
- MORAL HAZARD? Fed President Active Trader of Stocks… 7 hours ago
- Boston Official Who Warned on Real Estate Was Active REIT Trader… 7 hours ago
- FLASHBACK: Agency buying bonds of companies that don’t seem to need central bank’s help… 7 hours ago
- Australia Top Court Finds Media Companies Liable for Other People’s FACEBOOK Comments… 7 hours ago
- FL ‘cyber grave robbers’ charged with condo collapse ID theft… 7 hours ago
- Age-defying Brady eyes encore as season kicks off… 7 hours ago
- Howard Stern ROASTS Anti-Vax Radio Hosts Who Died… 7 hours ago
- Hawaii Starting ‘Pass’ Program… 7 hours ago
- FL judge allows mask mandates in schools after ruling 7 hours ago
- EU lists rare nerve disorder as possible side-effect of ASTRAZENECA… 7 hours ago
- Coughs Say Lot About Health — If Smartphone Listening… 7 hours ago
- Derek Jeter finally inducted into Baseball Hall of Fame: ‘Heartbeat of a Yankees dynasty’ 3 hours ago
- LeBron James’ success based on era he’s playing in, Rasheed Wallace says 3 hours ago
- Tennis Champ Conflicted Over Forced Vaccination, Fears Cancelation 3 hours ago
- Alonso homers twice, including 100th, as Mets top Marlins 3 hours ago
- ‘Woke’ Students Sue UT-Austin To Force School To Stop Playing ‘The Eyes Of Texas’ Song 3 hours ago
- ‘Blue’s Clues’ star Steve Burns returned with heartfelt message to now-adult fans: ‘I never forgot you’ 3 hours ago
- Job openings hit 10.9M, fifth straight record high 3 hours ago
- SEC threatens to sue Coinbase over its Lend product 3 hours ago
- Yellen warns Treasury could exhaust extraordinary debt limit measures in October 3 hours ago
- The Mandalorian Actress Emily Swallow Discusses Disney’s Firing Of Gina Carano 3 hours ago
- Pat Sajak and Vanna White sign new deal to host ‘Wheel of Fortune’ through 2024 3 hours ago
- Video: Rand Paul Calls For “Five Years In Jail” For Fauci Lying To Congress 3 hours ago
- Locked Down Aussies Now Having Their Alcohol Consumption Controlled by the Government 3 hours ago
- Biden Admin Seeks to Waive Sanctions on Assad 3 hours ago
- Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan made million-dollar stock trades in Tesla, Amazon, and Facebook last year 3 hours ago
- Nolte: CNNLOL Ignores Bombshell Report About Lab Funding in Interview with Anthony Fauci 3 hours ago
- Conservative Republicans request private data on top Democrats in retaliation for Jan. 6 investigation 3 hours ago
- Report: House Democrats Masking Cost of $3.5 Trillion Plus Infrastructure Bill 3 hours ago
- Report: Locked Down Australians’ Alcohol Intake Monitored And Restricted By The State 4 hours ago
- Americans don’t need trillions in spending to get back to work 10 hours ago
- Top Republican senator in talks with Democrats on anti-Big Tech antitrust bill 13 hours ago
- Biden’s Total Financial Surveillance… 16 hours ago
- Harris stumps for Gavin Newsom as she rails against recall effort 17 hours ago
- Biden economic adviser: rising food prices normal if you don’t count beef, pork, and poultry 17 hours ago
- WATCH: White House press sec admits Bidinflation is real 18 hours ago
|
|
|
You signed up for the Populist Press newsletter at www.Populist.Press We are the #1 Drudge Alternative. Visit our homepage for incredible news!
|
Click here to unsubscribe
Populist Press
7940 Front Beach Rd.
Panama City Beach, FL. 32407
74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
September 10, 2021 Welcome to the Friday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect the week online. Today:
The ninth Spider-Man film in two decades, Spider-Man: No Way Home, arrives in theaters this December. The trailer for it received a record number of views and sparked plenty of discussion about who will make an appearance.
But the people of the internet have been focused lately on a scene from the first modern film to feature the superhero: 2002’s Spider-Man starring Tobey Maguire and Kirsten Dunst. In the scene, which has turned into a meme, Dunst’s MJ is speaking to her restaurant boss who’s off-camera while Maguire’s Peter Parker/Spider-Man looks defeated in the background. “Yes, Enrique! OK? I get you,” she says before turning back to Peter.
Without the context of the clip, the screenshot of the scene makes it look like MJ is fiercely defending Peter. From who? That’s where people on the internet got creative, imagining what MJ was saying. “He’s not white he’s ITALIAN,” captions one meme. Once the meme began to spread, people began Photoshopping either MJ or Peter to reference a character from pop culture. “He SAID what’s your favorite scary movie!” reads one meme in which Peter is wearing the mask from the Scream movies. Another meme references a Ciara song. Why is a meme from a 2002 movie going viral now—especially when Maguire hasn’t played the web-slinging hero in years? The correct answer is that the Sam Raimi-directed Spider-Man is a classic. The film arrived at a time before every comic book film was carefully dissected on social media. But, as people discovered it on streaming services years later, it has found a new audience online. “Tell Me The Truth I’m Ready To Hear It,” another meme from Spider-Man that involves MJ, also became popular in 2021.
No matter how many times Spider-Man is rebooted, people still keep coming back to the original. Culture Editor
CHECK OUT THE LATEST FROM THE BAZAAR Upsie is the smarter alternative to AppleCare AppleCare is great, but it doesn’t offer users flexibility. From its limited window of time to sign up for service to charging users a deductible for every repair, AppleCare has a lot of strings. That’s why we adore Upsie, the flexible, independent smartphone insurance plan.
CELEBRITIES The John Mulaney Twitter discourse won’t die Last week, the internet once again became unmoored regarding comedian John Mulaney. A recent photo of Olivia Munn, who he is dating, quickly led to pregnancy rumors—which Mulaney confirmed on Tuesday night on Late Night With Seth Meyers. Then the Mulaney discourse reached peak levels of unhinged.
“I got into this relationship that’s been really beautiful with someone incredible,” Mulaney told Meyers, adding that Munn “held his hand” through his recovery after going to rehab in late 2020. “And we’re having a baby.”
We reached out to a few Mulaney Twitter stan accounts for some insight on why fans reacted so strongly to the news. One, @michthemood, says that the recent news is “a lot to hear, but it’s his personal choices and it’s his life, which we cannot do anything about.”
“I think people have developed a parasocial relationship with him because he is such a comfort human being for a lot of people, including myself,” adds @chaoticmulaney.
—Audra Schroeder, senior writer
NOSTALGIA The original ‘Blues Clues’ host is making millennials emotional The original Blue’s Clues—the Nick Jr. preschool program that made us feel like we were part of a mystery-solving team—turns 25 this year, and its original host has a touching message that’s making some of the show’s original viewers emotional.
From 1996 until 2002, Steve Burns played Steve, the human who worked alongside the animated blue dog (fittingly named Blue) to solve a number of mysteries in and around his house. A new video featuring Steve in his iconic green-striped shirt is a nostalgic gut punch even before he starts speaking.
“Look at all you have done and all you have accomplished in all that time,” Steve said. “I guess I just wanted to say that after all these years I never forgot you… ever. And I’m super glad we’re still friends.”
—Michelle Jaworski, staff writer
MEME OF THE WEEK This roach that was apparently painted into a wall inspired endless meme edits.
Now Playing: 🎶 “Brando” by Lucy Dacus 🎶
How did you like this newsletter? Click an icon below to give us a rating!
Questions? Feedback? Contact us at info@dailydot.com.
Copyright © 2021 The Daily Dot, All rights reserved.
Don’t want to hear from us anymore? We understand, but it won’t be the same without you! To view this newsletter in your browser, click here. |
77.) HEADLINE USA
|
|
|
78.) NATURAL NEWS
|
WebSeed 3820 Central Avenue Unit #109 Cheyenne, WY 82001
Unsubscribe | Privacy Policy If you experience any difficulty unsubscribing, forward this newsletter to reply@naturalnews.com To contact Natural News, please use our online feedback form. |
79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
|
82.) CNN
Friday 09.10.21 The US Open women’s final will be a battle of the teens as Britain’s Emma Raducanu advanced to her first major final. The 18-year-old will face 19-year-old Canadian Leylah Fernandez tomorrow. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. A soldier gets a vaccine shot in Fort Knox, Kentucky. Coronavirus
President Biden has imposed stringent new vaccine rules on federal workers, large employers and health care staff in a sweeping attempt to contain the latest surge of Covid-19. “We’ve been patient, but our patience is wearing thin, and your refusal has cost all of us,” Biden said, his tone hardening toward Americans who still refuse to get a vaccine. The new requirements could apply to as many as 100 million Americans. At the center of Biden’s new plan is directing the Labor Department to require all businesses with 100 or more employees ensure their workers are either vaccinated or tested once a week. Companies could face thousands of dollars in fines per employee if they don’t comply. Dr. Anthony Fauci said suppressing the virus is the “endgame” to the pandemic, with a reasonable goal to get cases below 10,000 a day, he said. And as child Covid-19 hospitalizations reach a new high in the US, Cuba has begun vaccinating kids as young as 2 years old.
Afghanistan
The first international passenger flight to take off from Afghanistan since the chaotic US military airlift last month has landed in Qatar with more than 100 foreign nationals, including Americans, a source said. Passengers on the chartered Qatar Airways flight from Kabul airport — including Canadian, Ukrainian, German, British and US citizens — were among some 200 foreigners the Taliban have cleared to leave the country. The plane’s departure is the first signal after weeks of uncertainty that at least some foreign nationals who want to leave Afghanistan will be able to. Additionally, the last known member of Afghanistan’s Jewish community has left the country, taking with him 30 others — including 28 women and children — on a five-day mission to safety. The White House approved a plan to coordinate with outside groups to evacuate US citizens and allies as life under Taliban rule continues to look bleak, particularly for women. Women have been whipped in protests, and the nation is now one of very few with no women in top government ranks.
9/11 As the nation marks 20 years since the September 11 terror attacks, New York officials say the remains of two more victims have been identified through DNA testing. Dorothy Morgan and a man whose name is being withheld at his family’s request were the 1,646th person and 1,647th person to be identified as victims of the attacks on the World Trade Center, the city’s chief medical examiner’s office said. These were the first identifications of World Trade Center victims since October 2019. The remains of more than 1,100 victims — about 40% of those who died there — are yet to be identified. Ahead of tomorrow’s anniversary, police are investigating why some American flags at a 9/11 memorial in Boston were knocked over or damaged this week. And a pastor who felt called by God to pray on the US Capitol grounds on the 20th anniversary of the attacks won’t be able to, a federal judge decided, because security concerns around the building are still too great.
Texas Biden’s Justice Department has sued Texas over its new six-week abortion ban, saying the state law is unconstitutional. Attorney General Merrick Garland said the Texas law’s “unprecedented” design seeks “to prevent women from exercising their constitutional rights by thwarting judicial review for as long as possible.” Under the law, abortion is prohibited when a fetal heartbeat is detected, and there is no exception for rape or incest — though there is an exemption for “medical emergency.” Since the law took effect, clinics across Texas have stopped offering abortions after six weeks or have shuttered. “The act is clearly unconstitutional under longstanding Supreme Court precedent,” Garland said. US Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer called the high court’s recent refusal to block the controversial law “very, very, very wrong.”
China
Biden spoke with China’s President Xi Jinping, as relations between the two countries remain tense, particularly in cyberspace, with the US accusing China of widespread malfeasance, including a massive hack of Microsoft’s email system and other ransomware attacks. “The two leaders had a broad, strategic discussion in which they discussed areas where our interests converge, and areas where our interests, values, and perspectives diverge,” said a White House readout of the call. An official described the tone of the call, which Biden took from the Treaty Room of the White House residence, as “respectful” and “familiar and candid.” According to Chinese state media, Xi told Biden that America’s policy towards China has caused “serious difficulties” for the countries’ relations. The call marked the leaders’ second time speaking since Biden became President.
Sponsor Content by Pawp Meet Penny: A lovely 2 year old golden retriever Penny threw up twice in a row last night. Her mom was worried and wasn’t sure what to do. Thankfully, she had a Pawp membership, so within seconds she videocalled a vet who helped identify the issue. Penny feels amazing now!
People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Pumpkin season is upon us
Beyoncé and Jay-Z team with Tiffany & Co. for HBCU scholarships
‘Dog bone’ asteroid spied by astronomers in new photos
Facebook and Ray-Ban are rolling out smart glasses
Lorde rerecorded five ‘Solar Power’ songs in Māori language
$600,000,000 That’s the eye-popping value of an art collection coming to market following the high-profile divorce proceedings of New York real estate developer Harry Macklowe and his wife, Linda. It’s “the highest estimate ever placed on any collection to come to auction,” said Sotheby’s. The 65 artworks include those from Pablo Picasso, Andy Warhol, Alberto Giacometti, Jeff Koons, Mark Rothko and Cy Twombly. I have an ego, but my ego is not big enough to think that people should die to hear my stupid comedy.
Comedian Patton Oswalt has canceled shows in Florida and Utah after venues refused to require proof of vaccination or a negative Covid-19 test for entry. Brought to you by CNN Underscored 21 expert-approved tailgate essentials you’ll want to buy ASAP From tents and chairs to grills and coolers, a good tailgate needs lots of supplies. We asked experts about their all-time favorite tools for tailgating. While we’re on the topic of experts, it looks like our link to the top expert-approved desk organizers went awry yesterday. Here’s the correct link. Teenage star Emma Raducanu advances to US Open final
5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
No longer want to receive this newsletter? Unsubscribe. Interested in more? See all of our newsletters.
Like what you see? Don’t like what you see? Let us know. We’re all about self improvement. Did a friend forward you this newsletter? Sign up here.
Create CNN Account | Listen to CNN Audio | Download the CNN App
® © 2021 Cable News Network, Inc. A WarnerMedia Company. All Rights Reserved. One CNN Center Atlanta, GA 30303 |
83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- Tonight’s Cancellation
- The NFL doubles down on woke, BLM style
- Biden Moves to Mandate Vaccines [Updated]
- After Last Night
- Arson for the hell of it
Tonight’s Cancellation
Posted: 09 Sep 2021 04:06 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)The NFL season starts tonight, as Paul noted a little while ago. So whoever sings the National Anthem at tonight’s game between the Super Bowl champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Dallas Cowboys will have a wonderful stage. I don’t know who will sing the Anthem, but unfortunately it won’t be Victory Boyd. I had never heard of Miss Boyd until an hour or so ago, but she is a young woman of tremendous vocal talent and had been chosen to sing the Anthem tonight. One problem: she hasn’t been vaccinated. So the NFL pulled the plug and, I take it, got someone else. Since you won’t be seeing it on television, here it is, via InstaPundit. Mark Tapscott writes:
Victory herself writes on YouTube:
I have no idea what Miss Boyd’s political views are, except that, in every way that matters as our country’s future hangs in the balance, she is one of us.
|
The NFL doubles down on woke, BLM style
Posted: 09 Sep 2021 03:31 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)The National Football League kicks off its season tonight. For a great many Americans, today must feel like Christmas. I’m not among that group. However, I do look forward to the start of the NFL season, at least in years like this one when the team formerly known as the Washington Redskins doesn’t appear to be awful. But there’s a fly in the ointment. The NFL has decided to preach to us during games, and its preaching will be BLM themed. Until recently, the NFL was probably our least woke major sports league. Unfortunately, that’s no longer the case. The NBA, typically the most woke league, used its “bubble” end-of-season last year to promote BLM themes relentlessly. This ensured that I wouldn’t watch any pro-basketball, and I think many conservatives also boycotted televised games. However, this year the NBA decided largely to avoid politics during its telecasts. Major League Baseball was also chockfull of BLM propaganda in its shortened 2020 season. This year, most venues were devoid of such rubbish. However, MLB pulled its all-star game out of Atlanta in protest of that state’s voting regulations. By taking the Democrats’ side in a political dispute, it ensured that I would not attend a major league game this season for the first time since baseball returned to Washington, D.C. in 2005. The NFL, unlike the NBA and MLB, apparently has decided to go all-in on BLM this season. At Newsweek, Mark Davis reports:
If the NFL’s in-game sloganeering is as widespread as Davis suggests it will be, viewership may plummet. I’ll watch the Washington team’s opener on Sunday to see for myself. I fear, however, that this season might be the first since the early 1960s in which I tune the team, and with it the league, out.
|
Biden Moves to Mandate Vaccines [Updated]
Posted: 09 Sep 2021 01:46 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)Today Joe Biden is rolling out a series of measures designed to force covid vaccinations on those Americans who remain reluctant to get them. Federal employees, government contractors and health care workers will have to be vaccinated:
But that’s not all! Biden wants to force employers to require their employees to be vaccinated:
I cannot imagine what the constitutional basis for such an order would be. But then, I am old-fashioned. I assume that we still have a Constitution. In part, Biden likely is trying to distract attention from Afghanistan and the border. (Notably absent from the list of those who will be forced to be vaccinated are the hundreds of thousands of illegal aliens streaming across the southern border. And how about those tens of thousands of Afghan refugees? Are they getting a double shot of the vaccine before being settled in various places around the U.S.?) Will that work as a political strategy? To some degree, it may. Americans seem appallingly willing to sign away their rights–and worse, other people’s rights–for the sake of “public health.” Anti-covid measures that I think are ridiculous, and in many cases more damaging than the disease, have often proved popular. What is still not clear to me is why I, having been vaccinated long ago, should care whether others choose to do the same. If the vaccine works, I have nothing to fear from them. If it doesn’t work, they shouldn’t be forced to submit to it. Increasingly, it appears that the rationale for vaccination is that you still may catch covid, but your infection won’t be as severe as it might otherwise be. Fine: but for people under 60, covid infections are rarely severe in the first place. Young people who think they have little to fear from covid whether they are vaccinated or not are, in general, right. So the government should not try to dictate their health care decisions. Their bodies, their choice. UPDATE: The lawsuits will begin to fly as soon as the starting gun goes off. Not surprisingly, South Dakota enlists in the cause of freedom:
On our family chat line, some of my daughters discussed the employer vaccine mandate. Daughter 1:
Daughter 2:
|
After Last Night
Posted: 09 Sep 2021 10:14 AM PDT (John Hinderaker)Last night I was a guest on Rita Panahi’s Sky News Australia program. Rita is one of several excellent Sky News hosts whose shows are always fun to do. It was a relatively lengthy interview, and the main subject was the controversy over Dr. Fauci, gain of function research and the Wuhan lab. But we also covered several other topics from current U.S. news, and the short clip that Sky News put on YouTube this morning covers Joe Biden’s plummeting poll numbers and the racist attack on Larry Elder by a Democrat:
|
Arson for the hell of it
Posted: 09 Sep 2021 07:11 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)“A Rochester woman,” as they say, pleaded guilty last week to being an accessory after the fact to arson of multiple St. Paul businesses during the George Floyd riots. According to court documents summarized in a local United States Attorney press release, on May 28 last year Mena Dhaya Yousif and husband Jose Angel Felan Jr. went to several businesses located on University Avenue in St. Paul:
Arson charges remain pending against Felan. Checking with ICE, I understand that Yousif and Felan were apprehended as fugitives in Mexico and that both are citizens of the United States. The damage done in the aftermath of Floyd’s death on Memorial Day 2030 extended to 1,500 businesses and buildings in Minneapolis and St. Paul. Estimates place the damage at $500 million. This crime wave was largely inspired by the abandonment of the Minneapolis Police Department’s Third Precinct headquarters and its subsequent burning on the evening of May 28. It is absolutely astounding how quickly thugs from all over the state descended on the Twin Cities and devastated civic order.
|
You are subscribed to email updates from Power LinePower Line. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. |
Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
|
92.) THE DAILY BEAST
Manage newsletters View in browser
Advertisement
When all hell breaks loose, we keep a grip on reality.
Support our newsroom by becoming a member.
Advertisement
Fever Dreams A podcast covering twisted tales of the new American right.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
© Copyright 2021 The Daily Beast Company LLC If you are on a mobile device or cannot view the images in this message, click here to view this email in your browser. To ensure delivery of these emails, please add emails@thedailybeast.com to your address book. If you no longer wish to receive these emails, or think you have received this message in error, you can safely unsubscribe. |
93.) JUST THE NEWS
|
94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
|
96.) NOT THE BEE
97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
Breaking News from Newsmax.com |
Congress Republicans Quick to Assail Biden’s Vaccination Mandates
Special: Dems Threaten to Ban Site Selling Innocent ‘Joe You Know I Won’ Mugs Justice Dept. Sues Texas Over State’s New Abortion Law
|
|
|||
|
This email is never sent unsolicited. You have received this Newsmax email because you subscribed to it or someone forwarded it to you. To opt out, see the links below.
Remove your email address from our list or modify your profile. We respect your right to privacy. View our policy. This email was sent by: |
99.) MARK LEVIN
September 9, 2021
On Thursday’s Mark Levin Show, When it comes to vaccines, this program urges you to speak with your doctor about your health and follow the appropriate guidance. Yet, in a frightening speech, President Biden is calling for vaccine mandates on private companies with more than 100 employees. Something Biden didn’t say was how he was going to prevent the virus from coming in on unvetted migrants at the border. He also didn’t mention how many of the unvaccinated have natural immunity. Why is that? Then, the Supreme Court’s 1904 Jacobson v. Massachusetts decision called for fines to be levied on the unvaccinated. Jacobson was a pastor that was vaccinated in Sweden as a child and refused the vaccination so he was fined and fought back. Jacobson argued that the government was forcing himself to accept illness into his otherwise healthy body was a violation of his 14th amendment rights and limited his liberty and the Supreme Court struck it down creating the “reasonableness test” for the government taking away one’s liberty. In 1922 the Court heard the Zuck case and rejected that case as well. In 1927 the Supreme Court used these precedents in the Bell case that upheld forced sterilization on people deemed less viable.
THIS IS FROM:
History
When the Supreme Court Ruled a Vaccine Could Be Mandatory
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Kevin Dietsch
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
|
102.) CNS
103.) DAN BONGINO
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
Fox’s Peter Doocy slams Psaki over our new business partners, the TalibanPeter Doocy slammed the White House over the fact that the White House described the Taliban in a statement as having acted “businesslike and professional.” He made note of the… | |
Beige Book warning: stagflation and widespread shortages of everythingZerohedge described the latest revelations from the September 8th edition of the Federal Reserve Beige Book and predicted an ominous shortage of everything combined with stagflation. Inflation is no longer the biggest risk,… | |
State disconnects phone line but Taliban allegedly letting some people goThe Taliban have agreed to allow 200 Americans and third-country nationals to leave the country. The civilians will reportedly leave from the Kabul airport. The Taliban, who directs the Biden… | |
Don’t be evil Zuckerberg & take your X-Ray bans with youFacebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg unveiled his new X-Ray Ban glasses because people aren’t addicted to the devices enough yet. Think of all the indoctrination possibilities and all the butting into… | |
Biden is weaponizing the DoJ against Red StatesDespite his promises not to weaponize the DoJ, Joe Biden is doing exactly that. Biden’s DoJ is suing Georgia over its perfectly appropriate voter integrity law. He doesn’t like voter… | |
Tyrant Joe’s sweeping new COV mandatesBiden is a tyrant who is destroying this country. In the scheme of things, this next little act of totalitarianism he is inflicting on private companies isn’t that bad. Biden… | |
Joe Biden to help building of a terrorist pipeline while destroying US energyJoe Biden ended construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline on his first day in office. He also ended the construction of the Trump border wall, leaving the material to rot.… | |
Biden bill includes lifetime welfare, rapid citizenship, no requirements for all AfghansIn a series of tweets that went up yesterday, Stephen Miller sounded the alarm on a policy rider to the spending bill that Biden just sent to Congress. It includes… | |
When a top official references the ‘New World Order’ while building campsDr. Kerry Chant, New South Wales public health chief, said this week what none of us want to hear during a press conference — the new world order. Imagine a… | |
Biden’s 6-prong plan to defeat COV is his last plan with more mandatesWe won’t know exactly what Joe Biden will mandate to defeat COV today until we hear his speech. It appears to be more of the same that hasn’t worked. The… | |
Report: Taliban pulled people off planes at Maz, killing them on the tarmacA report within the past 24 hours claims Taliban are pulling people off planes at Mazar-e-Sharif airport and killing them right on the tarmac. According to war reporter Michael Yon,… | |
Howard Stern to anti-vax radio hosts who died: ‘F–k their freedom’Howard Stern insulted anti-vax radio hosts who died, ranting, ‘F**k their freedom.” Then he laughed at them, as he advocated for mandatory vaccinations. “When are we going to stop putting… | |
Aussies’ top court finds media companies liable for other’s FB commentsThe WSJ reports Australia’s highest court found that newspapers and television stations that post articles on Facebook’s platform are liable for other Facebook users’ comments on those posts. Yes, that’s insane.… | |
HHS opens office of climate change & health equity, furthering US MarxismAs if HHS isn’t powerful enough and out-of-control enough, Secretary Xavier Becerra, who continually pumps money out to people here illegally, established a huge, new office. The new Office of… | |
Biden to rush unvetted Afghans towards citizenshipThe White House is asking the Democrat-controlled Congress to pass a law providing green cards for the soon-to-be 95,000 Afghans the Biden administration evacuated from Kabul. These are people who… | |
‘Menstruating person’ AOC responds to mocking over an idiotic commentAlexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) denigrated women as “menstruating people” or “people who give birth” during an interview on Tuesday. The New York ‘congress-menstruating person’ was mocked mercilessly and hit back stupidly.… | |
Biden will get us to ‘zero emission’ electricity by ‘2020,’ no jokePresident Joe Biden promised to make all electricity zero-emissions by the year 2020 during a speech about storm damage from hurricane Ida. By the way, Ida had nothing to do… | |
FBI releases new footage of J5 pipe bomber, needs help from the publicThe FBI is asking for help from the public in finding the J5 attempted pipe bomber. They have obtained a new video from a tip and released it yesterday. The… | |
Video of cold blooded murder in deBlasio’s NYA man was shot in cold blood in an early morning ambush on a Queens street this week. The footage shows a lone suspect pump a bullet into the head… | |
Racist Dems attack Larry Elder with eggs, one wears a gorilla maskCalifornia recall candidate Larry Elder had eggs thrown at him and his campaign team Wednesday at a campaign stop in Los Angeles. At least one egg was thrown by a woman in a gorilla mask. It just… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
|
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||
|
|||||
106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS
107.) BECKER NEWS
108.) SONS OF LIBERTY
|
|
||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||
|
||||||||||||||
|
|||||
109.) STARS & STRIPES
|
110.) RIGHT & FREE
|
China is reportedly looking into occupying Bagram Air Base, which was abandoned by the US and taken over by the Taliban.
I told you it was coming. Back in May, on my show, “Sovereign Nation,” I chronicled significant signs of pro-life progress that were driving death-lobby…
|
|
‘President Biden, I’m not resigning, but you should,’ Kellyanne Conway said.
111.) UNITED VOICE
|
112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO
September 10, 2021
Governors Immediately Push Back On ‘Unconstitutional’ Biden Plan: ‘Will Fight Them To The Gates Of Hell’
‘I’m Not Resigning, But You Should’: Kellyanne Conway Fires At Biden Over Military Academy Board Removal
‘I Will Not Comply’: Social Media Erupts Over Biden Vaccine Mandate Speech
‘We Will Fight’: Ron DeSantis Promises To Battle Biden’s Sweeping COVID-19 Mandates
Biden, Defeated, Will Withdraw Gun-Grabber’s ATF Nomination: Report
Was this newsletter forwarded to you? Request the next issue of The Daily Shapiro here.
Privacy Policy | Terms of use
You are subscribed as newmedia@rickbulow.com.
Unsubscribe from The Daily Shapiro Newsletter | Unsubscribe from all email
113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES
Soros is a major financial backer of the ‘defund the police’ cause, pouring $1 million into an organization associated with the movement.
On Thursday, Aug. 26, at 6:00 p.m. in Kabul, a suicide bomber detonated his explosive vest as American troops at Abbey Gate were processing entrants to…
There have been multiple instances of the Biden administration adopting teachers union suggestions ‘nearly verbatim.’
Insurgent Conservatives
PO Box 8161 Greenwood, IN 46142
If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe here.
114.) WAKING TIMES
115.) UNCOVER DC
4 min ago
I’m probably a 2 (unconstitutional but worth it) in general, although there seem to be enough different individual initiatives here that I’m not sure they’re all unconstitutional. The OHSA question is interesting. When I first read it I thought “yea, that makes sense” and then TMD raised the non-delegation issue (which is what Sunstein was talking about and what Gabriel Malor appears to be unaware of). We now have a SCOTUS that would like to rein in some of the absurdly broad delegations of congressional power, so I could imagine the OSHA rule falling on non-delegation grounds (creating a jurisprudential earthquake that most people won’t understand by the way). At the end of the day though, I doubt that will happen. Even if the Court would like to strike down OSHA, this just doesn’t feel like the case to do it. Pandemic law and all that. Who really wants to side with the anti-vaxxers? I doubt there’s 1 of the 9 with any sympathy for them.
7 min ago
QoD – I have no idea. But it will make those who are opposed to the vaccine even more opposed. Quite frankly, there’s nothing Biden could do that would convince those people. Those who are vaccinated should take their masks off and live their life. Those who refuse the vaccine, good luck but I’m not altering my life to accommodate you.