Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday September 13, 2021
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 9.13.21
Good Monday morning.
The Seminoles had arguably the worst weekend in program history. On Saturday, fans watched Jasonville State University QB Zerrick Cooper lob a walk-off touchdown pass to hand FSU its first-ever loss to an FCS team.
FSU could rationalize game one’s narrow defeat as a “quality loss” — if there is such a thing. There’s no way to spin losing to JSU, though. Worse yet, Seminole fans can’t even make fun of the Gators for losing to Georgia Southern anymore.
Speaking of the Gators, they had a good weekend besting the USF bulls 42-20. They moved up a couple of spots to No. 11 in the AP Poll and are still a top-10 team in the USA Today Sports AFCA Coaches Poll.
Hopefully, fans enjoy it while it lasts because it’s unlikely they’ll improve to 3-0 when the Crimson Tide rolls through Gainesville next week. The reigning champs did show a couple of cracks Saturday, but opening odds still have them as the 14-point favorite.
The Hurricanes weren’t exactly impressive in their game against Appalachian State on Saturday. They managed a two-point win in game two after losing to Alabama by 31 points in their opener. Keyshawn Smith was technically the leading receiver, catching four passes for 70 yards.
But UM facilities manager Craig Cromer and his wife, Kimberly Cromer, had the best catch of the day.
For seven years, the couple have had season tix, and they’ve hanged an American flag over the railing at every game. It came in handy when a stray cat slipped from the upper deck. Here’s the amazing moment, complete with play-by-play from the broadcast suite.
Of course, Buccaneers fans had a good weekend, too. Tom Brady threw for 371 yards and four scores in the season opener, leading the team to a 31-29 win over the Cowboys. And the biggest data nerds in the business say they’ve got the best chance (13%) to win it all this season, followed by the Chiefs (12%)
We couldn’t be happier that football season is back. It’s a minor, but welcome, distraction from the reality that this weekend marked the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
Americans chose to mark the anniversary in many ways — name readings, days of service, moments of silence. It was a defining moment in American history. Over the years, it has both united and divided, saddened and angered us.
There have been many weekends since then, but we’ll never forget.
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LSN Partners announced another major expansion this week.
The bipartisan, full-service consulting firm announced nine additions to the team, including a trio of hires at its Washington D.C. office and several others who will bolster its presence in South Florida.
“We don’t just advise our clients; we become a part of their team and work to achieve objectives together. Our 2021 expansion exemplifies LSN’s commitment to offering more expertise as we seek to continuously improve,” LSN Founder and Managing Partner Alex Heckler.
The hires include new Senior Adviser of Transportation and Infrastructure Elliot “Lee” Sander, who has served as a chief executive at several transportation companies.
Jose Fuentes is being promoted to Partner at the Washington office, and the firm is welcoming Tom Quinn as a new one. Neil Ohlhausen is also joining the firm’s Washington office as a Senior Associate.
In South Florida, LSN named Adele Valencia as a new partner in its Miami-Dade practice. Meanwhile, the Broward practice is bringing on Pratima Raju and Joshua Freeman as associates and Lisa Castillo as Chief of Staff.
Finally, the firm touted the recent addition of communications vet Mike Hernández, a messaging and PR guru who specializes in corporate and political messaging, crisis message management and company communications.
“This addition of stellar individuals to our current extraordinary team will enable LSN to continue to provide clients a global reach with a local perspective and optimistically successful results,” said Marcelo Llorente, Managing Partner at LSN.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@RepJoseOliva: I would respectfully advise my pro-life former colleagues of the House (of whom I count myself among) to defend the unborn but not through legal contraptions as seen in the current Texas law. We do not strengthen public interest by weakening its institutions. Similarly, I respectfully advise my democrat friends (whom I proudly call friends) to seek public safety (vaccines) but not through sweeping mandates that set precedents for future abuse. Both sides must preserve the institutions that curtail anxious acts. A momentary win, at any cost, will lead to a cost no defender of the long-term public interest should advocate. Break-downs beget break-downs. Our form of representative gov’t is cumbersome, but it is the only form that guarantees freedom.
Tweet, tweet:
— @MikeStucka: Florida reported 1 of 26 COVID-19 deaths reported in the world on Friday, @JohnsHopkins data shows. It’s more than 1 of every 5 deaths in the United States, and is at a level similar to all of Africa.
Florida 2,448
United States 11,413 (21.4%)
World 62,559 (3.9%)
—@DrTomFrieden: If you live in Florida or Mississippi, you’re 10x more likely to be killed by COVID today than if you live in a state with sensible protection policies. Political interference with public health action kills.
—@allison__news: Former President (George W.) Bush, “So much of our politics has become a naked appeal to anger, fear and resentment … On America’s day of trial and grief, I saw millions of people instinctively grab for a neighbor’s hand and rally to the cause of one another. That is the America I know.”
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@svdate: NEW — Florida kids have to get 16 — count ’em — 16 separate shots to go school. Dress codes tell them what they can and can’t wear, down to the width of tank top straps. But COVID shot mandates? Masks? Absolutely not, says Ron DeSantis.
— DAYS UNTIL —
California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recall election — 1; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 1; Apple launch event for new iPhones — 1; Alabama at UF — 5; Dolphins home opener — 6; Jaguars home opener — 6; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 7; The Problem with Jon Stewart premieres on Apple TV+ — 17; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 18; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 18; MLB regular season ends — 19; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 20; World Series Game 1 — 33; ‘Dune’ premieres — 37; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 44; Florida TaxWatch’s annual meeting begins — 44; Georgia at UF — 47; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 50; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 50; The Blue Angels 75th anniversary show — 53; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 53; ‘Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 55; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 56; Miami at FSU — 61; ExcelinEd’s National Summit on Education begins — 66; FSU vs. UF — 75; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 79; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 88; ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 95; ‘The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 100; ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 103; NFL season ends — 118; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 120; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 120; NFL playoffs begin — 124; Super Bowl LVI — 153; Daytona 500 — 160; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 193; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 237; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 256; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 262; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 298; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 310; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 389; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 424.
“Joe Biden administration opens investigation into Florida’s school masking policies” via Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida — The U.S. Department of Education’s civil rights office is claiming that it could violate the rights of students with disabilities. “[The U.S. Department of Education Civil Rights office] is concerned that Florida’s policy requiring public schools and school districts to allow parents to opt their children out of mask mandates may be preventing schools in Florida from meeting their legal obligations not to discriminate based on disability and from providing an equal educational opportunity to students with disabilities who are at heightened risk of severe illness from COVID-19,” Suzanne Goldberg, acting assistant secretary for civil rights, U.S. Department of Education, wrote in a letter to Florida Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran. The Education Department launched similar investigations into five other states.
“Court sides with Ron DeSantis, reinstates school mask mandate ban pending outcome of appeal” via Ana Ceballos of the Miami Herald — DeSantis and his administration won approval to reinstate a hold on a Leon County judge’s ruling that said the state could not enforce a ban on strict mask mandates in schools, as the court battle continues. A three-judge panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal pointed to “serious doubts” about a parent-led lawsuit that contends the Governor overstepped his authority when issuing an executive order that aimed to bar strict mask mandates in schools. “Upon our review of the trial court’s final judgment and the operative pleadings, we have serious doubts about standing, jurisdiction and other threshold matters,” the order states. “These doubts significantly militate against the likelihood of the appellees’ [parents’] ultimate success in this appeal.”
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida adds 100,012 coronavirus cases, 2,443 deaths in past week” via Ian Hodgson of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida officials on Friday reported 100,012 coronavirus cases over the seven days from Sept. 3 to Sept. 9, an average of nearly 14,300 infections per day. It’s a 20% drop in cases from the week before and the lowest weekly infection rate since late July. New cases fell for all age groups for the second week in a row. But new infections remained concentrated among Florida’s youngest residents. Nearly one-third of infections were among those under the age of 20. The latest tally brings the total number of cases to 3,409,165 since the pandemic’s first two cases in Florida were reported 18 months ago.
“4 kids among Florida’s COVID-19 death toll as state sets another record for fatalities” via Ian Hodgson and Christopher O’Donnell of the Tampa Bay Times — The death toll from Florida’s COVID-19 surge is continuing to rise, as is the number of children succumbing to the virus. The state verified 2,448 deaths from the coronavirus this week, including four children under 16 years old. It’s the third straight week that Florida has set a record number of deaths, and it’s the largest jump in child fatalities since the state switched to weekly reporting on June 4. However, despite the rise in deaths, the number of new infections is continuing to wane. Daily deaths may continue to rise even as cases fall. It typically takes weeks for an infected person to succumb to COVID-19 and weeks more for their death to be recorded and vetted by state and federal agencies.
“Florida hospitals continue to report fewer COVID-19 hospitalizations and ICU patients” via David J. Neal of the Miami Herald — In a continuing downward swing, 11,701 people are hospitalized for COVID-19 in Florida, according to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services report on Sunday from 259 Florida hospitals. That’s 521 fewer patients than Saturday’s report from 260 hospitals and 950 fewer patients than Friday’s from 261 hospitals. In Sunday’s report, COVID-19 patients take up 20.06% of all inpatient hospital beds compared to 20.75% in the previous day’s reporting hospitals. Of the people hospitalized in Florida, 2,828 people were in intensive care unit beds, a decrease of 57 for the second consecutive day. That represents 43.22% of the ICU hospital beds at the 259 hospitals reporting data, compared to 43.58% the previous day.
“Florida leads nation in monoclonal antibody treatments” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics+ in the Ormond Beach Observer — For a month, DeSantis has responded to Florida’s COVID-19 crisis by barnstorming the state, urging people who catch the virus to get monoclonal antibody treatments right away. The message appears to be taking hold. It also might be calling enough attention to Florida’s COVID-19 summer surge that Floridians also are flocking to vaccination sites. As a result, Florida is moving out of the summer with momentum on two fronts — significantly rising vaccination rates and what appears to be the nation’s most aggressive effort to promote monoclonal antibody treatments for people sick with COVID-19.
“Bus driver shortage leaves some students waiting for hours” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — School districts say they are desperately trying to fill hundreds of vacancies, attributed to COVID-19 and a labor market short on job seekers. They’re doing heavy marketing online and on TV and considering higher pay. Experts say that the labor market is bad for districts trying to hire drivers, competing with companies like Amazon and FedEx. Right now, school bus driver pay is about $3 an hour less than other jobs requiring a commercial driver’s license, said Siri Terjesen, a professor and associate dean in the College of Business at Florida Atlantic University. The jobs are seasonal when school is in session, which may not be attractive to people who want to work all year.
— CORONA LOCAL —
“Masks still mandatory in Sarasota schools despite new court ruling” via Ryan McKinnon of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — A judge siding with DeSantis in the ongoing battle over mask mandates will have no impact on whether children in Sarasota County Schools have to wear a mask to school. On Friday, the 1st District Court of Appeal granted a stay to a prior ruling that prevented the governor from enforcing a ban on mask mandates. The stay means that the state could punish School Boards that attempt to make masks mandatory. Sarasota County School Board attorney Dan DeLeo said the most recent ruling would not impact Sarasota’s current mask-mandatory policy. He said to expect future rulings on the issue, but the big question will be whether districts like Sarasota will get in trouble for requiring masks.
“Pinellas School Board member Caprice Edmond to try again for school mask mandate” via Jeffrey S. Solochek of the Tampa Bay Times — Edmond is not giving up on the issue of school masks. The Pinellas County School Board member failed to get majority support for her Aug. 24 call to hold a special meeting to implement a districtwide student mask mandate. With the board’s next regular session just days away, Edmond announced on Friday she would try again. “Tuesday, Sept. 14, at the School Board meeting, I intend on proposing a mask policy with a medical opt-out,” she wrote on her Facebook page.
—”Polk County’s COVID-19 cases decline for second straight week” via Gary White of The Lakeland Ledger
“Leadership or medical privacy? Schools go-to guy for COVID-19 was evasive on being vaccinated” via Sonja Isger of The Palm Beach Post — For nearly a week, the man who has led the Palm Beach County School District’s nearly two-year response to COVID-19, helping craft policies and coordinate with county health leaders, was unwilling to say he’s vaccinated against the illness and answered in a way that would have led most to conclude he wasn’t. “I’m a private person. I could tell you I was or that I was not, but that would have no bearing on the work I’ve done or continue to do,” district Chief of Staff Jay Boggess last week. Friday, as this story prepared to go to press after everyone from the superintendent to the school board had weighed in, Boggess issued a statement, saying he had been vaccinated.
“Coronavirus-sniffing dogs unleashed at Miami airport to detect virus in employees” via Kim Bellware and Adela Suliman of The Washington Post — Employees at Miami International Airport who go through the standard security check for weapons and other prohibited items now have another layer of screening before they start work: a sniff test from Cobra and One Betta. Cobra, a female Belgian Malinois, and One Betta, a Dutch shepherd, are 7-year-old dogs trained to detect the presence of the coronavirus. The keen-nosed canines are part of a pilot program at Miami International. Cobra and One Betta will spend their shifts sniffing the face coverings of employees passing through a checkpoint to detect the presence of the virus in sweat, breath and scents due to metabolic changes that the virus causes in the human body.
“Pediatric COVID-19 vaccine trial underway in Orlando” via Cheryn Stone of Spectrum News 13 — Pfizer is the only FDA-authorized vaccine for ages 12 and up, but many families want to know when a COVID-19 vaccine will be available for younger children. The FDA released information Friday confirming necessary clinical trials are underway. Andrew Roy was able to get his two sons into a clinical trial in Orlando through Pfizer. He says his 7-year-old and 5-year-old both received their first shot Tuesday and go back in three weeks for a second. “I’m really proud of them for how brave they were, not only getting the shot, but they had to have blood taken, and they were both so excited to tell me about how brave they were,” Roy explained.
“Broward, Arsht and Kravis centers set the stage for a COVID-19-era theater experience this fall” via Arlene Borenstein-Zuluaga of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — South Florida’s premier performing arts centers will all require masks and negative COVID-19 test results to attend any ticketed performance. On Friday, the Kravis Center in West Palm Beach announced rules similar to what the Broward Center for the Performing Arts in Fort Lauderdale and the Adrienne Arsht Center in Miami had announced earlier this week in advance of the fall season. “We are united with other major performing arts centers in the state and across the country to ensure that we create a safe environment for our artists, staff, volunteers, guests and audiences,” said Georgiana Young, Senior Director of Programming for the Kravis Center.
— STATEWIDE —
“Florida Medicaid enrollment inches closer to 5 million” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Florida’s Medicaid enrollment continues to inch closer to the 5 million mark. The information posted to the Agency for Healthcare Administration website shows that 4,917,093 people enrolled in the Medicaid program at the end of August. That’s about a 1% increase from the previous month. Data show Medicaid Region 11 leads the state in terms of numbers of people enrolled in the program, with (819,971) beneficiaries being served either by a managed care plan or through traditional Medicaid, referred to as fee-for-service. Medicaid Region 11 comprises Miami-Dade and Monroe counties.
“Florida buys armored weather stations as climate changes makes hurricanes stronger” via Kimberly Miller of the Palm Beach Post — Florida is investing millions of dollars in hurricane-hardened weather stations as climate change stokes worsening catastrophes and the nation’s primary weather gauges surrender to high winds and power outages. Since 2019, nearly $3 million has been dedicated by state lawmakers for the Florida Severe Weather Network — a series of armored instruments that are solar-powered, cellular, provide real-time information, and can withstand wind gusts up to 185 mph. The move follows severe storms such as 2017’s Hurricane Irma, where complete failure or loss of multiple functions occurred at eight weather sites monitored by the National Weather Service in Miami.
“Homeowners looking at $168 million tab to spot failed insurance companies” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics+ — Florida homeowners could be forced to pick up the tab on two failed insurance companies. Insurance regulators could soon stake $168 million in assessments on Floridians’ property and casualty insurance bills to help pay for the loss of two insurance companies that collapsed this year. The Florida Insurance Guaranty Association (FIGA), which picks up property and casualty insurance claims when insurance companies go insolvent, has asked the Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR) to levy a 0.7% assessment on insurance companies in 2022, which would give FIGA an additional $168 million. That would help offset a deficit that could grow to $226.4 million by the end of the year.
— DATELINE TALLY —
“DeSantis reappoints four to Ethics Commission” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis reappointed four members of the state Commission on Ethics, including members he appointed last year. The Governor appointed former Reps. Travis Cummings and Jim Waldman in December, but they earned another nod Friday. Other reappointments made Friday include former lawmaker John Grant and former state attorney Willie Meggs, both of whom the Governor previously appointed in 2019. The Florida Commission on Ethics is an independent commission responsible for investigating and issuing public complaints of breach of public trust by public officers and employees. Commissioners generally serve two-year terms.
Happening today — The Triumph Gulf Coast Board, which administers the Deepwater Horizon disaster settlement funds, meets to examine a $15.88 million proposal for the Milton Interchange Park in Santa Rosa County and a $15 million dredging project for Port of Port St. Joe, 1:30 p.m. Central time, Northwest Florida State College Center for Aviation Excellence, Bob Sikes Airport, 3152 Airport Road, Crestview.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Jorge Chamizo, Charles Dudley, Melissa Ramba, Floridian Partners: Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden
Brian Logan: SAP Public Services
Julie Madden, Kimberly Smoak, Thomas Wallace: Agency for Health Care Administration
Will Rodriguez, Corcoran Partners: LiFT Academy/LiFT University
Milan Thompson: Florida A&M University
— 2022 —
“DeSantis delights record crowd at Pasco GOP dinner with Biden barbs” via Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times — DeSantis has sparred with Biden in news conferences, on Fox News and, on Friday, he brought the fight to the Saddlebrook Resort where he rallied Pasco County Republicans at the party’s annual Reagan Day fundraiser. In front of the friendly audience, DeSantis said Biden was “obsessed with attacking the state of Florida,” and he foreshadowed more clashes to come. DeSantis didn’t say the word “vaccine” during his 20-minute remarks, which this latest spat is about. Biden proposed a rule change to mandate that workers at businesses with more than 100 employees be inoculated against COVID-19 or submit to weekly tests. Biden offered his response to Republican threats earlier in the day. “Have at it.”
“Fundraising committee for DeSantis posts $5.5 million haul for August” via Jeffrey Schweers of The Tallahassee — DeSantis has raised a lot of money for someone who hasn’t officially filed for office yet. His political committee, Friends of Ron DeSantis, raked in $5.5 million from every state in the union in August during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic, bringing the total to $96 million. The largest amount DeSantis received in August was $500,000 from the Republican Governors Association. Billionaire business owners Richard and Elizabeth Uihlein of Lake Forest, Illinois, founders of Uline and Donald Trump super donors, contributed $250,000 each.
“DeSantis’ biggest backer Ken Griffin spends big on politics” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics+ — Griffin, a Chicago-based hedge fund billionaire, has long been a huge contributor to Republicans, and he stands this year as the biggest donor to Florida’s 2022 gubernatorial election. In April, Griffin contributed $5 million to the Friends of Ron DeSantis committee, fueling DeSantis’ reelection effort thus far. Griffin’s gubernatorial race donation stands as Gov. DeSantis‘ largest donation from an individual, political action committee, or business. It also appears to stand tied as the largest check an individual has ever cut to support any statewide candidate in Florida, not counting candidates who wrote seven- or eight-figure checks from their own wealth to support their own campaigns.
“Charlie Crist taps former Biden-Kamala Harris campaign lead to top senior voter push” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Crist announced Friday that Lou Grossman of Sarasota, who served as seniors vote director for the 2020 Biden-Harris ticket, will serve as a top adviser for his campaign’s senior outreach efforts. “I am thrilled to welcome Lou Grossman to our team in our fight to build a Florida for all,” Crist said in a statement. Floridians 65 and older are a vital voting bloc, comprising more than a fifth of the state population, or about 4.51 million residents. A veteran of local and state campaigns, Grossman’s résumé on senior interests is broad and deep. He is the founder and president of the Sarasota County Seniors Democratic Caucus and a board member of the State Seniors Caucus and State Seniors Organizing Council.
Happening tonight — A fundraiser to the Florida Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee; guests include Sens. Ben Albritton, Jim Boyd, Joe Gruters, and Ed Hooper, Dolphin Aviation, 8191 North Tamiami Trail, Sarasota.
“Tina Polsky adds $13K in August, now holds more than $133K for SD 29 reelection” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Polsky pulled in $13,000 in August as she now faces a challenger for her Senate District 29 seat. Brian Norton filed to run for the seat in late August. A first-time candidate in 2020, Norton served as the GOP nominee in the SD 29 contest last fall. However, Polsky topped him in the General Election, earning 56% of the vote to Norton’s 44%. But with the redistricting process ahead, Norton has refiled with the hopes SD 29’s new shape may be a bit more favorable to Republicans. Polsky starts with a significant head start in terms of fundraising. She currently holds more than $133,000 between her campaign account and political committee, Americans for Progress.
“Shevrin Jones raises more than $180K in August for SD 35 reelection” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Jones collected more than $180,000 in August, his strongest fundraising month since he won the Senate District 35 seat last November. Jones is seeking reelection next year, just two years into his first term, because of the state’s reapportionment process after the 2020 Census. The Senator, who served eight years in the House before running for the SD 35 seat, is unopposed thus far. Last year, Jones emerged from a six-person field to secure the Democratic nomination in SD 35. He followed that up with an easy win in November, facing only a write-in candidate in the heavily Democratic district. It’s unclear how redistricting will affect the precise boundaries of Jones’ district, but he’ll likely remain a favorite come November.
“Ileana Garcia raises $75K+ in August, best fundraising yet for SD 37 defense” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Garcia had her best fundraising month ever in August, raking in more than $75,000 between her campaign and political committee to defend her District 37 seat next year. With more than a year before the 2020 General Election, Garcia now sits on more than $256,000. How much of that she’ll have to spend to stay in office remains to be seen. So far, no one has announced plans to run against her. But considering she unseated incumbent José Javier Rodriguez last year by just 34 votes in a race rife with election meddling (not by her), some may perceive her hold on the district at least somewhat tenuous.
“Robyn Hattaway starts HD 50 campaign with $20,000 raised” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Hattaway has laid a strong claim to succeed fellow Rene Plasencia in House District 50 by raising more than $20,000 in her first month. Much of that came in a late-August fundraiser that featured Republican Sens. Tom Wright and Debbie Mayfield, former Senate President Mike Haridopolos, and former Rep. Jason Steele on the host committee. Hattaway, of Merritt Island, is one of three Republicans vying for the open seat now representing eastern Orange County and northwestern Brevard County. Neither of the others, Chris Wright nor Angel Perry, both of Orlando, have shown much fundraising prowess yet in several months on the trail.
“Hillary Cassel edges Jeremy Katzman in HD 99 August fundraising” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Cassel raised nearly $12,000 in August, just barely edging out Katzman in fundraising for the month. Katzman added a little over $11,800 during August, putting him less than $200 shy of Cassel’s total. Cassel has largely dominated the fundraising game in the House District 99 contest. But last month, Katzman posted his best fundraising totals since January, helping him close the gap between him and Cassel. In August, Barry Faske, the third and final candidate competing in the HD 99 Democratic Primary, added just $2,000. Though Katzman was nearly even with Cassel in August fundraising, Cassel maintains a hefty cash-on-hand advantage.
“Michael Góngora drops reelection bid, total of 14 candidates qualify for Miami Beach election” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — The ballot is now set for Miami Beach’s Nov. 2 election, with a total of 14 candidates qualifying Friday to campaign for three commission seats and the Mayor’s job. The biggest wild card leading up to the qualifying deadline, incumbent Commissioner Góngora, dropped his bid to seek reelection in Group 3 following a judge’s order barring him from running due to city term limits. Góngora instead filed Thursday to run for Mayor in 2023, which he said was initially his plan before his supporters told him to run for reelection. He also threw his support behind the newest Group 3 candidate, Planning Board Member Alex Fernandez.
“Naples City Council candidate to start rehab after surviving stroke” via Omar Rodríguez Ortiz of the Naples Daily News — Naples City Council candidate Bill Oppenheimer will start a four-week rehab procedure after surviving a stroke last weekend, according to Kim Collins, an acquaintance of Oppenheimer. Oppenheimer was admitted to NCH hospital in Naples, but he is gaining back some of his strength and doctors are pleased with his initial recovery, Collins wrote Tuesday in a Facebook post. Collins also wrote Oppenheimer is optimistic about his recovery. “He needs our prayers and encouraging words right now. He will need time to recover and heal,” Collins wrote Monday. Oppenheimer declined to comment, Teddy Collins, an acquaintance of Oppenheimer, wrote to the Naples Daily News via text message.
— CORONA NATION —
“How at-home coronavirus testing is becoming part of Biden’s plan for managing the pandemic” via Derek Hawkins and Fenit Nirappil of The Washington Post — The COVID-19 response plan Biden unveiled envisions a sweeping expansion of coronavirus testing, aiming to make quick-turnaround test kits cheaper and more accessible than ever as the country tries to quell the wave of infections driven by the delta variant. Leaning on test manufacturers to ramp up production, the administration wants to send hundreds of millions of rapid and at-home tests to local clinics, schools and other establishments nationwide in hopes of making it easier for people to catch infections and contain outbreaks early.
“Biden’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate further stresses supply of rapid tests” via Sharon Terlep and Brianna Abbott of The Wall Street Journal — America’s COVID-19-testing infrastructure, from drugstores to diagnostics manufacturers, is bracing for a surge in demand following the Biden administration’s order that most large U.S. companies mandate their workers get vaccinated or be screened weekly for the virus. Makers of over-the-counter COVID-19 tests continue to boost production, while laboratories and companies are ramping up operations that some had scaled back after the virus largely retreated earlier this year. Meanwhile, according to consulting group Mercer, employers are already having a more challenging time securing bulk tests to screen employees as retail pharmacies and other testing providers ration supplies.
“New CDC studies show waning vaccine effectiveness against hospitalization in elderly” via Erin Banco of POLITICO — COVID-19 vaccines continue to work well at preventing severe disease for the vast majority of Americans, but they are becoming less effective at blocking infection. Two analyses suggest that as the delta variant spread this summer, the shots became less effective at keeping people 75 and older out of the hospital. Breakthrough infections are still rare, and unvaccinated people still face significantly higher risks of illness and death from the virus. They were about 4.5 times more likely to become infected, and more than 10 times more likely to need hospitalization or die from COVID-19 than were fully vaccinated people.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“Vaccine mandate spawns new fear: finding and keeping workers” via Tom Krischer and Barbara Ortutay of The Associated Press — The new federal vaccine requirement announced by Biden has created another worry for large businesses: With help wanted signs up almost everywhere, some could lose valuable employees or won’t be able to find new ones. Biden announced sweeping new orders Thursday that will require employers with more than 100 workers to mandate vaccinations against COVID-19 or offer weekly testing. The new rules could affect as many as 100 million Americans, although it’s not clear how many of those people are currently unvaccinated. Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, says the vaccine mandate could go a long way to boost the economy.
“U.S. stock market faces risk of bumpy autumn, Wall Street analysts warn” via Caitlin McCabe of The Wall Street Journal — Analysts at firms including Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, Deutsche Bank AG, and Bank of America published notes this month cautioning about current risks in the U.S. equity market. With the S&P 500 already hitting 54 records this year through Thursday — the most during that period since 1995 — several analysts said that they believe there is a growing possibility of a pullback or, at the least, flatter returns. Behind that cautious outlook, the researchers said, is a combination of things, including euphoric investment sentiment, extended valuations, and anticipation that inflation and supply-chain disruptions will weigh on corporate margins. BofA Securities said they saw little to be excited about, asking, “What good news is left? … A lot of optimism is already priced in.”
“‘Black capitalism’ promised a better city for everyone. What happened?” via Michael Corkery of The New York Times — Corporate investments in Black businesses were seen as an antidote to racial unrest in the 1960s, a way to ease the tensions that threatened the reputations of burgeoning corporate hubs like Rochester. Some of those efforts in Rochester were quite bold and innovative at the time. Looking back now, though, the long-term challenges of achieving those ambitions shows the limits of social activists partnering with big business and how such efforts may not make a substantial dent in the systemic issues of poverty and racism affecting the broader Black community. It is a disheartening case study for the many companies that have made public commitments to promote equity and inclusion this year.
“U.S. producer prices rose in August as supply chains remained under pressure” via Reuters — U.S. producer prices increased solidly in August, leading to the biggest annual gain in nearly 11 years, suggesting that high inflation is likely to persist for a while as the unrelenting coronavirus pandemic continues to pressure supply chains. There are, however, signs that inflation could be nearing its peak, with the report from the Labor Department on Friday showing underlying producer prices rising at their slowest pace in nine months in August. High inflation is eroding households’ purchasing power, contributing to downgrading economic growth estimates for the third quarter. The producer price index (PPI) for final demand rose 0.7% last month after two straight monthly increases of 1%. The gain was led by a 0.7% advance in services following a 1.1% jump in July.
“Restaurants close dining rooms again as delta-driven infections spread” via Heather Haddon of The Wall Street Journal — Restaurants’ plans to return diners to indoor tables are unraveling. Given the delta-driven surge, chains such as McDonald’s and Chick-fil-A are slowing their dining rooms’ reopenings. Other restaurants are again losing customers and trying to squeeze more diners into outdoor patios while the weather allows. COVID-19’s resurgence is creating whiplash for restaurants, which have slogged through a year and a half of pandemic-related disruptions. Sales that had steadily grown earlier in the summer have fallen in the past five weeks, data from restaurant analytics firm Black Box Intelligence showed. According to Labor Department figures released earlier this month, bars and restaurants lost 41,500 jobs in August, the largest monthly decline of any single sector. It was the food service industry’s first monthly decline since December.
“Disappointed consumers temper U.S. economy’s main growth engine” via Olivia Rockeman and Reade Pickert of Bloomberg — American consumers’ hopes of completely and quickly escaping the clutches of COVID-19 have been dashed by a more contagious variant, renewed mask mandates and uncertainty surrounding in-person returns to schools. A pickup in inflation, including higher food service, fuel and household energy costs, has also dimmed prospects for more robust spending and economic growth. By one measure, consumer sentiment slumped in August by the most since the darkest days of the pandemic. Another fell to its lowest since February. Economists at Goldman Sachs Group cut their estimated spending to a 0.5% annualized decline in the current quarter. They also reduced their fourth quarter consumption growth projection to 3.5% from 6%.
— MORE CORONA —
“Be prepared for winter COVID-19 wave, Boris Johnson to warn” via Heather Stewart, Rowena Mason, Peter Walker and Aubrey Allegretti of The Guardian — England must head into an “uncertain” winter fully prepared for a new wave of the pandemic, Johnson will warn next week as he unveils a blueprint for to avoid shutting schools and pubs again. The Prime Minister’s COVID-19 winter plan for England will set out “contingency” measures — which could involve the reintroduction of some nationwide restrictions such as social distancing or masks — that would come into force if case numbers and hospitalizations begin to overwhelm the NHS again. On Tuesday, Johnson is expected to announce his plan for avoiding a total lockdown, including the introduction of COVID-19 boosters and the biggest ever flu jab campaign, to be administered at the same time.
“Vaccine skeptics hobble Germany’s fight against COVID-19” via Deutsche Welle — It’s nearly mid-September, and many people in Germany seem to have almost forgotten about the COVID-19 pandemic as they go about their lives. Beer gardens and restaurants are packed; people are talking about the upcoming elections or their vacations. German lawmakers, however, have been sounding the alarm: the percentage of people who have been fully vaccinated against the coronavirus has been hovering around 62% for days. The rate is too low to be truly prepared for the winter, when the risk of infection is likely to rise again, especially from the highly contagious delta variant of the virus. Experts believe that the country needs a vaccination rate of over 85% to weather the risk.
“France’s former health minister charged over COVID-19 response” via Axios — France’s former health minister Agnès Buzyn has been indicted and accused of “endangering the lives of others” during her response to the pandemic. Buzyn was health minister when the pandemic exploded in France last year. Buzyn, who was accused Friday of “failing to fight a disaster,” is the first French official charged over the coronavirus crisis. The indictment was handed out by prosecutors of the Court of Justice of the Republic as part of their investigations into the handling of the health crisis by the French government. It came hours after prosecutors interviewed her. Before her interview, she had told reporters that it was “an excellent opportunity for me to explain myself and to set the record straight.”
— 20 YEARS —
“George W. Bush compares ‘violent extremists at home’ to 9/11 terrorists in 20th-anniversary speech” via Amy B Wang and Caroline Anders of The Washington Post — On the 20th anniversary of the terrorist attacks that changed his presidency, Bush warned there is growing evidence that domestic terrorism could pose as much of a threat to the United States as terrorism originating from abroad, and he urged Americans to confront “violence that gathers within.” Without naming it, Bush seemed to condemn the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol when a pro-Trump mob overran the complex in a violent siege that resulted in the deaths of five people. Bush compared those “violent extremists at home” to the terrorists who had hijacked planes on Sept. 11, 2001, and crashed them in New York City, Arlington, and Shanksville, Pennsylvania, killing nearly 3,000 people.
“‘Our generation’s Pearl Harbor’: First responders, officials remember 9/11 at Wellington commemoration” via Chris Persaud of the Palm Beach Post — Stanley Kriegman had stepped out of Penn Station in New York City on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, on his way to work as a parking garages security director when the deadliest terrorist attack on U.S. soil happened a few miles south of him. Two hijacked airplanes had crashed into the twin towers at the World Trade Center. The next day, Kriegman, a retired New York City police sergeant, headed down to ground zero to help civilians recover their vehicles and clear them out of the garages. Twenty years later, Kriegman spoke Saturday morning to an audience of more than 100 people gathered at Wellington’s Patriot Memorial next to City Hall.
“South Florida 9/11 events touch on range of emotions as participants honor, remember 20th anniversary” via Chris Perkins of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Tony and Nancy Yallo were among thousands of South Florida residents who gathered to mark the 20th anniversary of 9/11 on Saturday, and they were among dozens who gathered at Centennial Park and Amphitheater in Boynton Beach. Their flagpole at home flew the American flag at half-staff. Before going to the ceremony, they played taps and Amazing Grace at home. The Yallos weren’t alone in their solemn acknowledgment. James Caster, a retired New York City firefighter, said he remembers 9/11 “like yesterday.” Caster, a 10-year Boynton Beach resident who also lived 12 years in Plantation, got choked up explaining the significance of 9/11.
“Remembering 9/11: Retired NYPD officers give back to first responders in South Florida” via Jeff Weinsier of WPLG Local 10 News — Twenty years later and the pain and memories of Sept. 11, 2001, are still very vivid to a husband and wife team in Coral Springs. Both were New York Police Department officers at the time, and since retiring to South Florida, they have dedicated their lives to helping others. “When someone said, ‘20 years is coming,’ I’m like, ‘Oh my God.’ You relive everything,” Irving Rodriguez said. “It seems like it was yesterday. So I get emotional when we talk about it,” Maria Rodriguez added. “I was assigned to ground zero for two years straight, and we had no days off.”
“After surviving 9/11-related illnesses, they face another great risk: COVID-19” via Jorge Milian of the Palm Beach Post — Richard Yodice, a 66-year-old New York native who lives in Boynton Beach, hasn’t been infected by COVID-19. But he’s certainly been affected by it. Like many others who developed life-threatening health conditions after participating in post-Sept. 11 2001 terrorist attack recovery efforts, Yodice has lived as a hermit for much of the past 18 months. He had little choice. A Consolidated Edison electric utility employee in New York City for most of four decades, Yodice spent three straight weeks working 12-hour shifts within view of ground zero, helping restore power to lower Manhattan. His first shift came hours after planes struck the World Trade Center’s twin towers.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Agencies that required vaccines before Biden’s push see early success” via Jennifer Steinhauer of The New York Times — Biden’s new coronavirus vaccination mandates have prompted some backlash, but the two federal departments that already require vaccinations say their actions are doing what they intended: getting more shots in arms. Since the Pentagon announced last month that active-duty military personnel would be required to be vaccinated, the percentage of service members with at least one shot has risen to 83% from 76%. At the Department of Veterans Affairs, which issued a vaccine mandate for its 115,000 front-line health care workers seven weeks ago, 82% of those employees are now fully vaccinated, up from 77%, and the number of shots it has given to all of its workers has more than doubled since early July.
“Republican threats to Biden’s vaccine mandates unlikely to succeed, experts say” via Adam Edelman of NBC News — Nearly two dozen Republican governors, as well as the GOP itself, have vowed to file lawsuits or take other actions to block Biden’s newly announced vaccination mandates; but legal experts say they’ll have a hard time successfully making their case in court. Biden issued two executive orders mandating vaccines for federal workers and contractors and announced new requirements for large employers and health care providers that he said would affect around 100 million workers, more than two-thirds of the U.S. workforce. Following the announcement, Republicans across the country slammed the moves.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Donald Trump makes surprise visit to New York police and firefighters on 9/11” via Jon Levine, Joe Marino, Larry Celona and Tina Moore the New York Post — Trump made a surprise visit with New York City police and firefighters Saturday to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11th terrorist attacks. In remarks to assembled guests, the former President sharply rebuked Biden and the U.S. pullout from Afghanistan. “It was gross incompetence, and I hate to talk about it on this day,” Trump said. Trump praised New York’s Finest, telling the crowd, “if they let you do your job, you wouldn’t have crime in New York!” As some in the crowd nodded their heads, The Donald jokingly warned them to “just stand and just be perfect.”
“Trump and son get in booth for alternative broadcast of Belfort-Holyfield bout” via Patrick Reilly of The New York Times — Trump provided ringside commentary for a pay-per-view boxing event Saturday night that saw former heavyweight world champion Evander Holyfield lose in a first-round technical knockout to MMA star Vitor Belfort. Trump received a warm welcome from the crowd at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Florida, which erupted into cheers when his name was announced as the evening’s special guest. He and son Donald Trump Jr. called the entire four-fight card for the Triller “gamecast,” giving live analysis and discussing his experiences in the boxing business. Earlier on Saturday, Trump visited New York City police officers and firefighters to commemorate the anniversary.
— CRISIS —
“Capitol Police inquiry into Jan. 6 riot recommends disciplining six officers” via Emily Cochrane of The New York Times — Three officers were singled out for unbecoming conduct, one officer for failure to comply with directives, one officer for improper remarks, and one officer for improper dissemination of information, the Capitol Police said in a statement on Saturday. None of the officers, or details about the recommended penalties, were identified. No criminal charges will be filed after the U.S. attorney’s office did not find sufficient evidence to do so. The internal inquiry, conducted by the agency’s Office of Professional Responsibility, covered 38 investigations, although investigators failed to identify 12 officers involved in the cases. According to the statement, one investigation into an unidentified official who was “accused of unsatisfactory performance and conduct unbecoming” remains open.
“Capitol riot defendant files request for removal of ankle monitor, citing loud beeping” via Celine Castronuovo of The Hill — A Capitol riot defendant who prosecutors believe is a member of the Proud Boys has asked a judge to remove the GPS ankle monitor he was ordered to wear as part of his conditional release, noting that the device has “started beeping loudly” around potential business clients. Lawyers for Gabriel Augustin Garcia argued in a motion filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia earlier this month that their client, who owns a roofing business, has had his work interrupted by the ankle monitor since he was released on bond earlier this year.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Democrats make immigration case to Senate parliamentarian” via Caroline Simon and Suzanne Monyak of Roll Call — The Senate parliamentarian heard arguments on a plan by Democrats to include immigration provisions in a budget reconciliation bill, bringing Congress one step closer to passing a path to legal status for millions of undocumented immigrants for the first time in decades. Democratic lawmakers are pushing for the inclusion of provisions that would provide a pathway to citizenship to undocumented immigrants brought to the U.S. as children, undocumented farmworkers, temporary protected status holders and essential workers. Following years of failed negotiations, partisan battles and outside advocacy, Democrats aim to pass the bill through a budgetary maneuver allowing only partisan votes.
“House Democrats eye 26.5% corporate tax rate” via Richard Rubin of The Wall Street Journal — The tax increases would be part of the House Ways and Means Committee’s plans to pay for the party’s priorities in a fast-moving budget bill. Those items include an expanded child tax credit, a national paid-leave program, and renewable-energy tax breaks. House Democrats also are considering raising the minimum tax on U.S. companies’ foreign income to 16.5% from 10.5% and increasing the top capital-gains tax rate to 28.8% from 23.8%. Lawmakers are also expected to raise money by expanding IRS enforcement. Until now, House Democrats have been coy about their tax increase plans as they try to navigate between moderates worried about the economic impact of raising taxes and progressives eager to tax the rich and expand the social safety net.
“Joe Manchin, Bernie Sanders at odds over $3.5 trillion budget resolution” via Julia Cherner of ABC News — Sen. Manchin reiterated his call on Sunday for a strategic pause on the $3.5 trillion budget resolution, while Sen. Sanders doubled down on the need to pass both the bipartisan infrastructure and budget reconciliation bills. “The urgency — I can’t understand why we can’t take time to deliberate on this and work,” Manchin said. Sanders, the Senate Budget Committee chairman, said he believes both bills will be passed. “I think we’re gonna work it out, but it would really be a terrible, terrible shame for the American people if both bills went down,” Sanders said in an interview that followed Manchin. The budget resolution calls for investments in climate change policy, child care, and other social programs, and is broader in scope than the bipartisan infrastructure bill.
“Inside the preparations to grill Anthony Blinken on Afghanistan” via Jonathan Swann and Zachary Basu of Axios — Secretary of State Blinken can expect the most aggressive questioning of his career when he testifies Monday before the House Foreign Affairs Committee and on Tuesday before Senate Foreign Relations. Republicans see the hearings as their first chance to directly confront a top-ranking Biden official about the chaotic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. Democrats see it as a moment in which they must reject GOP efforts to blame Biden for 20 years of bipartisan mistakes. If and how the U.S. recognizes the Taliban government is a key question now that an acting Cabinet in Afghanistan has been formed — one with the leader of the al-Qaeda-linked Haqqani network and an FBI-wanted terrorist as interior minister.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Former Cuban political prisoner given eviction notice. Mayor Daniella Levine Cava steps in” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Ana Lazara Rodriguez, the former Cuban political prisoner who has been waging a legal battle since February to remain in her home, received an eviction notice on the door of her Miami home Saturday morning. According to the notice, she had until Monday to vacate the premises, but that was until Levine Cava stepped in and ordered the Miami-Dade Police Department to postpone the eviction until Tuesday. “It’s important to make sure Ms. Rodriguez has every opportunity to seek remedy in the legal system,” Levine Cava said.
“Surfside Mayor terminates leases at his Miami Beach building, citing ‘intensive’ fixes” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — Facing criticism over his stewardship of an apartment building with a few crumbling balconies and a balky elevator, the Mayor of the town where the Champlain Towers South fell has ordered tenants of his Miami Beach complex to leave the premises to make way for repairs, and declared their leases “terminated.” In a Thursday night email to tenants of the Lois Apartments on Normandy Isle, Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett ordered residents to leave in the next 45 days to do “a tremendous amount of work” on the structure, which was battered by Hurricane Irma in 2017. “We regret that this work will create potentially dangerous conditions for residents,” Burkett wrote in the email, titled “Lease Termination.”
“New materials can make Florida condos more durable. Almost no one uses them” via Krishna Sharma of the Miami Herald — Unlike many diseases that afflict aging humans, there are already cures for the most common, serious, and expensive threat to thousands of aging buildings along Florida’s coast, a malady that structural engineers have dubbed “concrete cancer.” The symptoms show up first as rust-stained columns or cracked balconies — telltale signs the steel reinforcement inside them is corroding. It’s a slow but relentless process that can be super-fueled by salty sea air and tidal flooding. Today’s high-rises are constructed with tougher codes and better waterproofing than decades-old condominiums like the collapsed Champlain Towers South in Surfside. But some research engineers believe there are even better ways to build along the beach with improved materials that can resist or even eliminate corrosion.
“As some push for ‘zero tolerance’ in South Beach, county police chief says it won’t work” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — With Miami Beach politicians and commission candidates calling for zero-tolerance enforcement of minor crime in South Beach, the director of the Miami-Dade Police Department told city leaders Thursday that approach would not work to reduce crime in the entertainment district. Alfredo “Freddy” Ramirez, who was invited to meet with the commission as Miami Beach City Hall once again grapples with public safety concerns from residents in South Beach, said police would “not get anything done” and breed mistrust from the community if officers were to enforce every crime, like minor drug possession. “Policing in today’s world, it’s not zero tolerance,” he said.
“PortMiami fiscal cliff now more than a year off as cruises return and revenues grow” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics+ — PortMiami, which had been facing the possibility of tapping into savings to maintain operations if cruise travel doesn’t return to full capacity, appears to have escaped that fate. The harbor’s top money man says several developments in the past few months — including a $67 million infusion from the federal government — have made that contingency unlikely. “We see a pretty confident path that if cruises come back to a reasonable version of normal even by fiscal 2023, in part because of the state itself and certainly because of the county’s support, we won’t have to dip into reserves,” PortMiami Chief Financial Officer Andy Hecker told Florida Politics.
“Pompano Beach church treasurer accused of embezzling almost $400,000, officials say” via Chris Perkins, Eileen Kelley and Yvonne H. Valdez of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — He had been a faithful member and treasurer of the church for years, but when husband-and-wife pastors started questioning Abraham Velazquez-Velazquez why they were getting notices that their rent hadn’t been paid, he stopped attending. The Velazquez-Velazquez family remained regular congregants at Centro Cristiano Restauracion Divina until recently when Velazquez-Velazquez was arrested on allegations that he embezzled close to $400,000 from the church over a five-year period. Court records say Velazquez-Velazquez used some of the money to buy a dog while putting the church on the brink of closing down.
“‘Wiped away:’ Historically Black community in Boca fears redevelopment will drive them out” via Austen Erblat of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Generations of families have lived in Dixie Manor for 80 years. They’ve raised children and grandchildren, seen families come and go. But now, they say history — and their homes — are in danger of being destroyed. The Dixie Manor public housing community, home to 350 people, is facing the possibility of demolition and rebuilding from developers. Residents of the mostly Black neighborhood at 1350 North Dixie Highway fear that they’ll be forced to relocate permanently if it changes from public housing to affordable housing. “It’s being wiped away,” said John Martin, 65, who lived in the neighborhood for 30 years.
“Palm Beach private island returning to market for at least $120 million” via Darrell Hofheinz of the Palm Beach Daily News — A private island in Palm Beach is headed back to the market with a price tag of at least $120 million, according to the developer whose investment group paid a recorded $85 million for it in July with plans to renovate a 1930s-era house there. Todd Michael Glaser is expected to list the 2.27-acre property this fall. But the price would soar, perhaps to $200 million — or possibly more — if the sale includes the town-approved renovation-and-expansion project. No property in Palm Beach has ever carried a publicly marketed price tag approaching $200 million, according to records in the Palm Beach Board of Realtors Multiple Listing Service.
“A charmer or a bully? Marlon Bolton carves his path with charisma and confrontation” via Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Whatever you say about Bolton, there’s no denying he’s determined. Whether sparring with political opponents or facing criticism of his church, or navigating his rocky personal life, the Tamarac City Commissioner — so far — has always come out on top. Young and confident, he was the first Black person ever elected to the Tamarac City Commission, and voters returned him to office overwhelmingly despite a bruising campaign rife with falsehoods and racial allegations. But now Bolton, 36, might face his biggest challenge yet. He is under state investigation after allegations that his evangelical church improperly obtained federal loans meant for COVID-19 relief.
“Justice Department to review new Pasco intelligence effort” via Natalie Weber of the Tampa Bay Times — The U.S. Department of Justice is conducting an “intensive review” of the Pasco Sheriff’s Office’s latest intelligence program, federal officials said this week. The Justice Department sent a letter to the Sheriff’s Office on Aug. 6, two weeks after the Tampa Bay Times reported that the Sheriff’s Office had promised increased police scrutiny for people whose criminal histories included violent crimes and drug offenses. The Justice Department, which gave the Sheriff’s Office a $700,000 grant to help fund the program in 2018, directed the agency to “immediately pause its activities under this award” so it could review the program. It said it would work with the Sheriff’s Office to convene a group of community leaders, federal law enforcement agencies, and social service organizations to ensure best practices are followed.
“Plea deal to let rock star Rod Stewart, son avoid trial in 2019 New Year’s Eve row at Palm Beach hotel” via Julius Whigham II of the Palm Beach Post — Stewart and his son Sean have reached a plea agreement that would allow them to avoid a trial on battery charges stemming from a New Year’s Eve 2019 incident at a Palm Beach hotel, court records show. County Judge August Bonavita canceled a trial scheduled to begin next week and set a plea-in-absentia hearing for Oct. 22. The move allows Rod and Sean Stewart to enter a plea without having to appear in court. Messages left Friday for their attorney, Guy Fronstin, were not immediately returned. Rod Stewart, 76, and Sean Stewart, 41, each was charged with simple battery after an altercation involving a security guard at The Breakers on Dec. 31, 2019.
“WSVN’s Diana Diaz is leaving TV news for a $32.6 billion health care company” via Rod Stafford Hagwood of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — After 23 years, Diaz is exiting WSVN-Ch. 7. The news anchor of the FOX affiliate’s morning and noon broadcasts says her final day on-air will be Thursday, Oct. 7. The station has not named her replacement. “I’m so overwhelmed with emotion,” Diaz tells the South Florida Sun-Sentinel. “This is not a job; this is a family. I feel like I’m going off to college. I have spoken to just about every single anchor, employee, the management, the ownership and have had very teary-eyed conversations with almost all of them.” The news stunned her colleagues, especially since she had recently returned to the broadcasts after a bout with COVID-19.
“This group wants to save a Florida Keys lighthouse. The feds gave them the job” via Gwen Filosa of the Miami Herald — Fittingly, Rob Dixon was dockside on the waters of the Florida Keys when he learned that he and others had a shot at restoring a piece of maritime history. The Alligator Reef Lighthouse was first lit in 1873 and sits 4 miles off Islamorada in the Upper Keys. Dixon, a longtime charter boat captain in Islamorada who still runs boats, checked his email to find a message from the U.S. Department of the Interior. It said the federal government was handing over ownership of the lighthouse to the nonprofit he helps run. “Goosebumps, just goosebumps,” said Dixon, 60, president of the Friends of the Pool, Inc., which announced the acquisition this week. “I couldn’t believe it.”
— TOP OPINION —
“Vaccine mandates are hard. So is COVID-19” via The Washington Post — Biden was skeptical about vaccine mandates last December, but his attempt to persuade people to get vaccinated fell short as the delta variant sent infections skyrocketing. Now, he wants all large businesses in the United States to impose a vaccine mandate on their employees or have them show a negative test once a week. This significant extension of executive authority over the private sector will almost certainly run into logistical and legal hurdles and meet political resistance, but the effort is justifiable at a time of national emergency. The death toll from this pandemic now exceeds all the U.S. military combat deaths in all wars in the 20th century. It just makes no sense to go on being savaged by a virus when an effective tool to fight it is widely available and free.
— OPINIONS —
“The Trump coup is still raging” via Kevin D. Williamson of The New York Times — What happened at the Capitol on Jan. 6 was not a coup attempt. It was half a coup attempt, the less important half. The more important part of the coup attempt, like legal wrangling in states and the attempts to sabotage the House commission’s investigation of Jan. 6, is still going strong. These are not separate and discrete episodes but parts of a unitary phenomenon that, in just about any other country, would be characterized as a failed coup d’état. As the Republican Party tries to make up its mind between wishing away the events of Jan. 6 or celebrating them, one thing should be clear to conservatives estranged from the party: We can’t go home again.
“DeSantis’ presidential plans aren’t ‘nonsense’ to Florida voters” via Joe Henderson of Florida Politics+ — Gov. DeSantis said it’s “nonsense” to think he will run for President in 2024. But while his mouth says no, his actions have long said something else. He also allowed the speculation about his presidential ambitions to go unchecked for months until asked about it at a recent news conference. “All the speculation about me is purely manufactured. I just do my job,” DeSantis said. “I hear all of this stuff, and honestly, it’s nonsense. So you know, I don’t know what to say to those rumors.” Well, he could say, “I’m absolutely not running for President in 2024,” but he won’t do that. Gotta keep those options open, along with all of that free media from Fox News.
“Memo to House Ethics Chair Ted Deutch: Punish this Congressman” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — When first heard from, Madison Cawthorn, the new congressman from the North Carolina mountains, was firing up the mob that stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, intending to overturn Biden’s election. He spoke provocatively. But he did not explicitly suggest the ensuing violence in the halls of Congress, and he claimed to deplore it. That baptism of irresponsibility in the national spotlight seems to have taught the 26-year-old only how much more he might get away with. The House must discipline Cawthorn because his own party won’t. The spineless minority leader, Rep. Kevin McCarthy, has brushed off Nancy Pelosi’s appeal to his undetectable sense of responsibility.
“A chance to end the digital divide in Florida” via Siottis Jackson of The Florida Times-Union — Days into the new school year, spiking COVID-19 cases have parents and educators across Duval County wondering and worrying about a possible return to virtual learning. It’s a harsh reminder of the urgent need to close Florida’s digital divide and ensure that every family — urban and rural, rich and poor; Black, White, and Hispanic — are connected to broadband. That’s why the pandemic’s resurgence in Florida and across the country makes passing the bipartisan infrastructure bill even more urgent. After months of negotiation, a bipartisan majority in the U.S. Senate approved a plan that includes $65 billion to help connect every American.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Gov. DeSantis kicks off the week with a win — his ban on mask mandates is back in force. Now he’s ready to spar with Biden’s vaccine mandate.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Brevard County School Board member Jennifer Jenkins says she simply can’t forget the lives lost, and credits mask mandates for keeping a tough situation from getting worse.
— Overcoming a breakthrough case of COVID-19, Congressman Darren Soto visits Sunrise to dive into his legislative priorities and what’s on the horizon for Florida from Washington.
— The Orlando Democrat is officially out of quarantine and is able to go back on the Hill in Washington to continue his work. On the Sunrise interview, Soto shares his experience dealing with COVID-19, his treatments and tips for those working in Florida’s Capitol.
— During DeSantis’ tour to promote monoclonal antibody treatments, Republican Congressman Gus Bilirakis praised the treatment for helping him recover faster, as well as Florida Senate President Wilton Simpson.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“SeaWorld’s first Howl-O-Scream: What we saw” via Dewayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — The very first SeaWorld Orlando’s Howl-O-Scream debuted Friday night, sporting a sea-sirens theme and other haunting elements we expect from a fright fest. Because it’s the first year for Orlando’s Howl-O-Scream, we didn’t have an established routine or expectations for scare zones. We found ourselves relaxed and thus vulnerable to the kind of scare actor who appears out of nowhere and is staring at you. There’s a pay to scare option after the Arctic house. Go beyond the bar, and you can press the scare button to frighten folks in the house remotely. You watch from afar. It’s the spooky equivalent of spraying water-ride passengers. (It’s four scares for $5 or 10 scares for $8.)
“‘This is my first catch.’ Meet the Miami fans who used American flag to save falling cat” via David Wilson of the Miami Herald — Craig Cromer is a facilities manager at the University of Miami and has had Miami Hurricanes season tickets with his wife, Kimberly Cromer, for about seven years. At every game, they hang an American flag over the railing right in front of their seats. Their rescue mission to catch a stray cat as it fell from the upper deck, Kimberly said, is “probably the strangest thing that’s happened.” You would hope so. Early in the second quarter of No. 22 Miami’s home-opener against the Appalachian State Mountaineers, a murmur rose from the student section at Hard Rock Stadium. The students, many attending their first-ever home game, noticed a cat dangling from the upper deck.
“Kevin Costner books concert in St. Augustine” via Tom Szaroleta of The Florida Times-Union — Costner is taking a little time away from the camera to go on tour with his Americana band, Modern West. The band’s tour includes a stop at the St. Augustine Amphitheatre on Oct. 25. Costner formed the band in 2007 and has released four albums. The latest, “Tales from Yellowstone,” features songs written from the perspective of the character Costner plays on the Paramount Network show, “Yellowstone.” The band will be at the St. Augustine Amphitheatre at 7 p.m. Monday, Oct. 25.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Belated best wishes to Allison Watson Bubriski, top lobbyist Jeff Hartley of Smith Bryan & Myers, and Elizabeth Wester. Celebrating today are Rosemary Goudreau O’Hara, Will McKinley, and Melissa Joiner Ramba.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Good Monday morning. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,121 words … 4 minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
💻 Please join Axios’ Courtenay Brown and Hope King tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET for a virtual event on the economic recovery of Black-owned businesses. Guests include Congressional Black Caucus Chair Joyce Beatty, and president and CEO of the U.S. Black Chambers Ron Busby. Sign up here.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
The U.S. and its drug companies likely won’t get the poor, unvaccinated parts of the world out of the pandemic — but China might, Axios’ Bob Herman reports.
- China has ramped up exports of its Sinopharm, Sinovac and CanSino vaccines, which can be stored at normal refrigerator temperatures, leading some to believe China will be the global savior.
Incredible stat: Nine months after the global COVID vaccination campaign began, 58% of the world’s population has yet to receive even one dose.
State of play: Wealthier nations have more vaccines than citizens who want them, while poorer countries are facing bleaker timelines for when they can administer first doses.
- The U.S. and other Western countries could vaccinate teenagers and provide boosters to everyone, and still have 1.2 billion doses to send elsewhere this year, according to a report from analytics firm Airfinity.
- The global COVAX consortium now anticipates receiving 25% fewer doses than expected due to production problems with the vaccines made by Johnson & Johnson, AstraZeneca and Novavax, as well as export restrictions from a major supplier in India.
Between the lines: Vaccines by Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech have proven to be life-saving and reliably produced. But the companies choose to sell mostly to high-income countries, where they make more money.
- Moderna expects to make up to 1 billion doses by year’s end. But hardly any of the doses are going to Africa, Asia and the Middle East.
Pfizer told Axios the company could deliver as many as 3 billion doses by the end of 2021, with 1 billion going to low- and middle-income countries.
Reality check: Scaling up vaccine production was understandably slow at first.
- Creating the mRNA vaccines is complex, with several steps that require materials like small plastic tubes, lipids and molecules called “caps” that were in limited supply and had very few vendors.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
House Democrats are considering $2.9 trillion in tax hikes for the next 10 years — mostly on the extremely wealthy and corporate America — as they scramble to pay for President Biden’s $3.5 trillion infrastructure and social-spending plan, Axios’ Hans Nichols and Jonathan Swan report.
- Why it matters: A draft proposal from the Ways and Means Committee previews epic fall fights between Democrats and some of the best-armed lobbies in America.
The summary, first reported by The Washington Post, includes a top personal rate of 39.6%, up from 37%, which would raise $170 billion over 10 years.
- The top capital gains rate would increase to 25% from 20% — raising some $123 billion.
- Changes to what qualifies as investment income, some of which is already subject to 3.8% Obamacare tax, would make the effective capital gains rate 28.3%, raising $252 billion.
- Accelerating the end of the $24 million estate tax exemption would bring in another $50 billion.
- Imposing an additional 3% tax on Americans who make more than $5 million would raise $127 billion.
- Expanded restrictions on “carried interest,” impacting how private equity firms compensate employees, could bring in another $14 billion.
- The pharmaceutical industry could be forced to foot $700 billion of new spending by negotiating rates directly with Medicare.
Some restaurants are re-closing their dining rooms because of Delta fears, The Wall Street Journal’s Heather Haddon reports (subscription):
- “Sales that had steadily grown earlier in the summer have fallen in the past five weeks.”
- McDonald’s and Chick-fil-A are slowing dining-room re-openings, and stocks of casual-dining chains are sagging.
📉 It’s a close-to-home aspect of wider fears about the economy. A front-page Financial Times story today is headlined, “Business sentiment darkens as Delta surge tilts forecasts lower” (subscription):
- “Revenues have fallen at a quarter of US small businesses in each of the past three weeks while just 8 per cent saw revenue growth, according to an Economic Innovation Group study.”
In Paris, workers wrap the Arc De Triomphe in 25,000 square meters of silver-blue fabric — an art project that will be on view until Oct. 3
- “L’ Arc de Triomphe, Wrapped” posthumously fulfills a 60-year dream by the artist Christo, who died last year. (The Guardian)
Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios
Social media companies didn’t cause America’s massive political divide, but they’ve widened it and pushed it towards violence, Axios’ Margaret Harding McGill writes from an NYU report out today.
- Why it matters: Congress, the Biden administration and governments around the world are moving on from blame-apportioning to choosing penalties and remedies for online platforms.
Paul Barrett, deputy director of NYU’s Stern Center for Business and Human Rights, said: “Social media is the mechanism for spreading the kind of mis- and disinformation that fuels … political polarization.”
- The report recommends that platforms hide “like” and share counts to stop rewarding polarizing content.
New York Times media columnist Ben Smith takes on Michael Wolff, who thinks beat reporters miss the bigger story with their “bill of particulars” approach.
- Ben writes that Wolff, 68, who styles himself a writer rather than a reporter, specializes in “big, bad men … louche power players.”
- “The litany is astounding,” Ben writes, adding his own bill of particulars: Roger Ailes, Harvey Weinstein, Boris Johnson, Steve Bannon, Donald Trump.
- All appear in a Wolff book out Oct. 19, “Too Famous: The Rich, the Powerful, the Wishful, the Notorious, the Damned.”
The column, “Why Our Monsters Talk to Michael Wolff,” opens with Steve Bannon media-training Jeffrey Epstein. (You read that right.)
- “[Y]ou don’t look at all creepy,” the Trump alumnus assures the pedophile.
- Ben says the transcripts show Epstein appears to believe he’s doing practice interviews. Bannon tells Ben they were actually for a “previously unannounced eight- to 10-hour documentary.”
Keep reading (subscription).
From my push alerts this morning:
Fans during Buffalo Bills vs. Pittsburgh Steelers in Orchard Park, N.Y., yesterday. Photo: Adrian Kraus/AP
Tailgating, face-painted fans returned around the country as the NFL opened at full capacity for the first time since the pandemic, AP reports.
- The Seattle Seahawks, Las Vegas Raiders and New Orleans Saints are the only teams requiring fans to provide proof of vaccination to enter.
- 15 teams were set to host a total of more than 1 million in Week 1.
In Buffalo, the private lots around the stadium were already filling up by 8 a.m. for a 1 p.m. kickoff.
- Patriots linebackers coach Steve Belichick, the head coach’s son, said: “Last year, it felt like a Massachusetts high school football game.”
📬 Invite your friends to sign up for Axios AM and Axios PM.
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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Tributes pour in for former WGN anchor Allison Payne, dead at age 57
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
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24.) ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
If Congress runs on deadlines, lawmakers face a series of simultaneous sprints this fall that could reshape the U.S. economy and reverberate into next year’s campaigns to determine which party controls the House and Senate. Read more…
ANALYSIS — Joe Biden looked like a sly, white-haired fox after the Senate passed the bipartisan infrastructure bill, but his approval rating steadily dropped in August amid his administration’s poorly planned and deadly withdrawal from Afghanistan. He and his team have no one to blame for this lost leverage but themselves. Read more…
Democrats make immigration case to Senate parliamentarian
The Senate parliamentarian heard arguments Friday on a plan by Democrats to include immigration provisions in a budget reconciliation bill, bringing Congress one step closer to passing a path to legal status for millions of undocumented immigrants for the first time in decades. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
House committee demands answers on Afghanistan
The House Armed Services Committee is worried about “catastrophic” consequences if the Taliban has obtained biometric data such as fingerprints, iris scans and biographical information about Afghans who helped the U.S. war effort. Read more…
Congressional Black Caucus: 50 years as the conscience of Congress and the country
OPINION — As the Congressional Black Caucus celebrates its 50th anniversary, its work continues to be a sermon of action, and it continues to speak for all of us, writes Democratic political strategist Antjuan Seawright, founder and CEO of Blueprint Strategy LLC. Read more…
Centrist Democrats push stronger child tax credit expansion
A group of centrist Democrats is pressing senators to keep the expected four-year expansion of the child tax credit in the $3.5 trillion budget reconciliation package, along with a permanent provision that the benefit be fully available to the lowest-income individuals. Read more…
New York lawmakers press for more 9/11 health aid
NEW YORK — One day ahead of the 20th anniversary of 9/11, Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer on Friday said he would work to include more funding in the sweeping budget reconciliation bill for the health care needs of those who survived and responded to the attacks. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Grisham dishes on Melania
DRIVING THE DAY
THE WEEK AHEAD: JOE BIDEN campaigns with GAVIN NEWSOM in Long Beach, Calif., tonight before voters there decide Tuesday whether Newsom should be recalled (polls show him up by double digits) … Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN testifies before the House Foreign Affairs Committee today and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Tuesday (expect some fireworks) … Congressional committees were instructed to finish their pieces of the reconciliation bill by Wednesday, an ambitious deadline Dem Chairs are struggling to meet … The Labor Department releases the August numbers on state employment and unemployment on Friday, offering fresh ammunition in the UI benefits debate … We expect Senate Parliamentarian ELIZABETH MACDONOUGH to make a ruling sometime this week on whether immigration reform survives its Byrd bath (Marianne Levine and Sabrina Rodríguez have a new story up for POLITICO Pro about this here).
#BEBEST — Sometimes it seems that everything has already been said about the Trump years though not everyone has said it.
In the latter camp is STEPHANIE GRISHAM, the former Trump White House press secretary best known for never holding a press briefing.
Now Grisham is breaking her silence, and POLITICO’s Daniel Lippman emails us with a scoopy preview of her forthcoming tell-all:
At 1:25 p.m. on Jan. 6, soon after rioters had broken through barricades outside of the Capitol, MELANIA TRUMP received a text message from her then-chief of staff, STEPHANIE GRISHAM.
“Do you want to tweet that peaceful protests are the right of every American, but there is no place for lawlessness and violence?” Grisham asked the first lady.
A minute later, Melania replied with a one-word answer: “No.” At that moment, she was at the White House preparing for a photo shoot of a rug she had selected, according to exclusive excerpts of Grisham’s forthcoming book, “I’ll Take Your Questions Now: What I Saw in The Trump White House,” obtained by POLITICO.
Grisham, a years-long Trump loyalist who resigned within hours of that text exchange, also writes that she asked Melania a couple times whether she should reach out to JILL BIDEN during the transition to set up the traditional inauguration tea. But instead of setting up the meeting, Melania told her that they should “see what the West Wing does.” The reason, according to Grisham: Melania, like her husband, believed the election was illegitimate.
A statement provided by the office of Melania Trump said: “The intent behind this book is obvious. It is an attempt to redeem herself after a poor performance as press secretary, failed personal relationships, and unprofessional behavior in the White House. Through mistruth and betrayal, she seeks to gain relevance and money at the expense of Mrs. Trump.” (Her mention of “failed personal relationships” appears likely to be a reference to Grisham’s past relationship with former Trump aide MAX MILLER. Citing three people familiar with the incident, POLITICO Magazine reported in July that the relationship “ended when he pushed her against a wall and slapped her in the face in his Washington apartment after she accused him of cheating on her.” He denied the allegation.)
On Jan. 11, Melania did issue a statement saying she was “disappointed and disheartened with what happened last week.” But she added that she found it “shameful that surrounding these tragic events there has been salacious gossip, unwarranted personal attacks, and false misleading accusations on me — from people who are looking to be relevant and have an agenda.” She seemed to be referring to her former close friend STEPHANIE WINSTON WOLKOFF, who penned an op-ed in the Daily Beast a few days earlier arguing that Melania “was complicit in the destruction of America.”
Grisham joined the Trump campaign in 2015 and, despite her misgivings, remained with the White House until close to the end. She writes that Melania’s response to her text on Jan. 6 “broke” her since she had long defended the first lady against accusations that she was a Marie Antoinette-type dilettante.
Now, Grisham writes, she sees Melania like “the doomed French queen. Dismissive. Defeated. Detached.”
Though it shouldn’t be a huge surprise that Melania stood by her husband on important questions like the election, Grisham writes in the book that she was “shocked” to learn that Melania seemed to share DONALD TRUMP’s view that the election was rigged.
Melania told Grisham that “something bad happened” and that the election results weren’t legitimate. She didn’t listen to Grisham when she tried to explain to her that there are small irregularities in all elections but there was no grand conspiracy to unfairly remove Trump from office, according to the book.
Grisham’s book is scheduled to be released on Oct. 5.
A publishing source said that “Stephanie knows she’s stirred up a hornet’s nest with this book.” It includes potentially unflattering nuggets about other officials with whom Grisham tangled during her time in the White House, according to the source. Among them are JARED KUSHNER and MARK MEADOWS, who removed her as White House press secretary, the person said.
“Stephanie has secrets about Trump that even the first lady doesn’t know,” the source said. “Secrets that he doesn’t want her to know. They will be in this book.”
Since news of the book broke late last week, numerous Trump-world figures have contacted Grisham to see how they are depicted in the book or to offer private messages of support, according to the source. Grisham, who is very familiar with how the Trumps operate, is also bracing for a potential smear campaign and legal fight if anyone sues to try to prevent publication. She knows, the source said, that there’s a hunt on to try to get a copy of the book to the Trumps; she’s received calls from people she barely knows asking for an early copy.
Good Monday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Over the weekend Ryan watched National Geographic’s 6-part documentary, “9/11: One Day in America,” and he highly recommends it. What are you reading, watching, and listening to? Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
HOT DOC THIS MORNING: As the Senate returns this week to its ongoing clash over the debt ceiling, expect Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER (D-N.Y.) and crew to tout a new memo from the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service showing just how much the Trump administration racked up the national debt. Per the document, shared with Playbook this morning, the former president incurred nearly $5.5 trillion in new debt since Democrats helped the GOP suspended the debt limit in August 2019, a stat Dems will use to argue that the GOP needs to help them raise the debt ceiling again on a bipartisan basis, regardless of their own spending plans.
They’ll also be showcasing new Treasury Department data confirming that Republicans under Trump incurred $7.8 trillion in new debt over four years, data the White House has been sending members.
JOIN US — The killing of 20-year-old Army soldier Vanessa Guillen, who had told family she was being sexually harassed by several soldiers prior to her disappearance at Fort Hood last year, has galvanized calls to change how the military deals with sexual assault and harassment. Sens. KIRSTEN GILLIBRAND (D-N.Y.) and JONI ERNST (R-Iowa), a veteran and a sexual assault survivor, have long pushed Congress to act on the issue. Their efforts are gaining steam but still face opposition. Join Rachael on Thursday, Sept. 23 at 1 p.m. for a Women Rule virtual joint interview with Ernst and Gillibrand to discuss the state of their proposed legislation and what it will take to curb sexual assault and sexual harassment in the military. Register here
BIDEN’S MONDAY:
— 8:10 a.m.: The president will depart Wilmington, Del., en route to Boise, Idaho, where he is scheduled to arrive at 11:50 MDT.
— 12:15 p.m. MDT: Biden will receive a briefing from federal and state fire agency officials.
— 12:55 p.m. MDT: Biden will tour the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise.
— 1:55 p.m. MDT: The president will depart Boise for Mather, Calif., where he is scheduled to arrive at 2:15 p.m. PDT.
— 2:40 p.m. PDT: Biden will receive a briefing on wildfires from local, state, and federal emergency response personnel.
— 3:25 p.m. PDT: The president will survey damage from the Caldor Fire in an aerial tour of El Dorado County.
— 4:25 p.m. PDT: Biden will deliver remarks on the wildfires, climate change and infrastructure.
— 4:55 p.m. PDT: Biden will depart Mather, Calif., en route to Long Beach, where he will arrive at 6:15 p.m. PDT.
— 7 p.m. PDT: Biden will participate in a campaign rally with California Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM.
Deputy press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE will gaggle aboard Air Force One on the way to Boise.
First lady JILL BIDEN will travel to Milwaukee, Wis., and Des Moines, Iowa, on Wednesday to visit an elementary school and community college.
The SENATE is back in town this week and will meet at 3 p.m. to consider nominations and the motion to proceed to H.R.1, the For the People Act.
The HOUSE is out. The Energy and Commerce, Financial Services, Judiciary and Veterans’ Affairs committees will hold markups on reconciliation. Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN will testify on Afghanistan before the Foreign Affairs Committee at 2 p.m.
ALSO HAPPENING TODAY: At noon, at the East Front of the Capitol, Hill leaders will hold a congressional remembrance ceremony marking 20 years since the Sept. 11 attacks. Speaker NANCY PELOSI has also invited fellow leaders for a security briefing about a Sept. 18 rally planned at the Capitol to support rioters from Jan. 6.
PLAYBOOK READS
CONGRESS
‘THE BIGGEST TAX INCREASE IN DECADES’ — Late last night, lawmakers, Hill aides and tax lobbyists were sending around a five-page memo outlining House Ways and Means Democrats’ proposed $2.9 trillion in tax increases. The hikes would “amount to the biggest tax increase in decades, and enough to cover most of what even progressive Democrats hope to spend on their coming ‘reconciliation’ package,” our tax team colleague Brian Faler writes.
WSJ’s tax reporting veteran Richard Rubin notes that the proposal “includes $1 trillion in tax increases on individuals, $900 billion on corporations, $700 billion from drug-pricing policy changes, and $120 billion from tougher tax enforcement. Adding miscellaneous other changes and an assumption that the economy will grow reaches $3.5 trillion.”
The draft by Chair RICHARD NEAL (D-Mass.), which will be marked up this week, includes:
— An increase in the corporate rate to 26.5% from 21% (which is less than Biden’s proposed 28% but still higher than the 25% Sen. JOE MANCHIN has said he’s comfortable with).
— A hike in the top capital gains rate to 28.8% from 23.8%, which is already causing heartburn among moderate Dems.
— A newly proposed 3% surtax on people making more than $5 million, expected to raise $127 billion.
— An increase in the minimum tax on U.S. companies’ foreign income, up to 16.5% from 10.5%. (That’s lower than Biden’s proposed 21% and what Senate Finance Chairman RON WYDEN is believed to be considering, about 18 percent or 19 percent.)
— A boost in IRS tax enforcement. Though it’s unclear how much this will raise, Democrats predict the sum is about $120 billion.
— $96 billion in new tobacco or nicotine taxes.
— What’s not included, per Rubin: “The document doesn’t mention any changes to the state and local tax deduction. Raising or repealing the $10,000 cap on the deduction is a priority for many Democrats. It also doesn’t mention the Biden administration’s proposal to have banks and other financial institutions report annual account flows to the IRS.”
Also left out — at least, for now: An estate tax increase on holdings passed on after someone dies, a Biden proposal that has faced intense pushback from Democrats in rural states concerned about family farms.
THIS WON’T BE THE FINAL WORD: Wyden and the White House have their own tax proposals they want to pursue. And as Faler points out regarding the difference between the two chambers, “it’s clear the two sides are on a collision course on several fronts.”
Moderate Democrats wary of tax increases are certain to balk at some of these provisions — despite their colleagues’ attempts to frame the tax hikes as hitting the rich who can afford to pay more. And Republicans are about to have a field day decrying what they plan to label the biggest tax hike ever. (More from WaPo on the politics here.)
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: CUE THE CONSERVATIVES — One of the reasons Neal’s tax plan has been so tightly held is because Democrats fear opponents’ messaging campaign against these increases. And with good reason: The famous outside group, GROVER NORQUIST’s Americans for Tax Reform, told us last night that they’re launching a seven-figure campaign opposing Democrats’ “tax-and-spend blowout.” And there’s going to be plenty more where that came from.
The campaign will include television and digital ads in 30 House districts, most represented by vulnerable Democrats, including: Angie Craig (Minn.), Cindy Axne (Iowa), Susie Lee (Nevada), Elaine Luria (Va.), Jared Golden (Maine), Lizzie Fletcher (Texas), Susan Wild (Pa.), Tom Malinowski (N.J.), and Mart Cartwright (Pa.).
“CONGRESSMAN CARTWRIGHT,” one ad reads, “say NO to Biden’s Socialist Tax Plan.”
Related: Be careful what you wish for, the saying goes, because you just might get it. That’s the dilemma corporate America is facing as Democrats craft their sweeping social policy bill, NYT’s Jonathan Weisman writes. There’s plenty for businesses to get behind — like family leave and child care tax credits — but many are wary of the proposed tax increases.
POLITICS ROUNDUP
WHERE DEMOCRATS CAN’T GET ENOUGH OF DONALD — Democrats are bringing Trump back. With a handful of high-profile elections on deck — the first of which comes Tuesday in California — Democratic candidates are deploying Trumpism as the boogeyman to drive voters to the polls. Whether this tactic works could go a long way in determining Dems’ strategy, WaPo’s David Weigel, Colby Itkowitz and Gregory Schneider write in Los Angeles.
LATEST ON NEWSOM’S FATE — Some Republicans are already expecting California Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM to be declared the winner this week. Why? Their unfounded claims that the election is already rigged. “Soon after the recall race was announced in early July, the embers of 2020 election denialism ignited into new false claims on right-wing news sites and social media channels,” NYT’s Nick Corasaniti writes of a “growing instinct on the right” to cast doubt on election results. “As a wave of recent polling indicated that Mr. Newsom was likely to brush off his Republican challengers, the baseless allegations accelerated.”
— WSJ’s Christine Mai-Duc writes that Newsom’s handling of the pandemic is what may actually be on the ballot in voters’ minds as they go to the polls on Tuesday — the first governor to face such a test.
— CNN’s Harry Enten says Newsom is in a historically good position, though. “While there are a few gubernatorial elections featuring a polling error as large as Newsom’s advantage, it would take one of the largest polling misses in the last 23 years for him to be recalled on Tuesday.”
MEANWHILE, ON THE REPUBLICAN SIDE — The GOP’s 2024 presidential hopefuls were out railing against Biden on Sunday. Florida Gov. RON DESANTIS, Sen. TED CRUZ (R-Texas) and former Vice President MIKE PENCE attended Nebraska Gov. PETE RICKETTS’ annual steak-fry fundraiser and took the opportunity to criticize the administration’s handling of the Afghanistan pullout, AP’s Thomas Beaumont writes from Nebraska City. Marc Caputo has more from the scene: “GOP 2024 hopefuls tread carefully around Trump”
SPEAKING OF … “DeSantis milks out-of-state travel to lay possible 2024 foundation,”: Marc Caputo and Gary Fineout report on DeSantis’s “ongoing split-screen effort as he prepares for his reelection back home while laying the groundwork for a White House bid if former President Donald Trump sits out the 2024 contest.”
“His visit to the Midwest is one of at least a dozen out of state trips he’s taken since May. He has gone everywhere from Southern California to Kentucky to the outskirts of Milwaukee and to New Jersey. Since most are campaign visits, they are not included on his public schedule and the governor rarely informs the public of his out-of-state travel. He also visited the Texas-Mexico border in July with Texas Gov. GREG ABBOTT, where they ripped President Joe Biden’s immigration policies.”
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
ACCORD IN IRAN — Iran and the U.N. atomic agency reached an agreement “that will grant international inspectors access to some of the country’s nuclear-related sites, a step likely to avert a crisis in the negotiations on restoring the 2015 nuclear deal,” per WSJ’s Laurence Norman.
SLIM JONG UN — “North Korea says it successfully test fired what it described as newly developed long-range cruise missiles over the weekend, its first known testing activity in months that underscored how it continues to expand its military capabilities amid a stalemate in nuclear negotiations with the United States,” according to the AP.
BEYOND THE BELTWAY
LONE STAR BLUES? — Texas wanted to be the new hotbed for tech in the U.S. with big gets like Oracle, Hewlett-Packard, Tesla, Facebook, Amazon and Apple. But the “recent swerve to the right on abortion, voting restrictions as well as a ban on coronavirus vaccine mandates has many workers and industry leaders … worried about retaining workers and recruiting top tech talent to the state,” WaPo’s Danielle Abril and Gerrit De Vynck write.
TALIBAN TAKEOVER
— “A group of Afghan Air Force pilots and their relatives who had fled the Taliban flew out of Uzbekistan this weekend after the U.S. and Uzbek governments reached an agreement on their transfer, people familiar with the matter said,” WSJ’s Jessica Donati and Siobhan Hughes report.
— The Afghan Embassy in D.C. is struggling to keep up like everyone else. The diplomats “have spent much of the past few weeks working to address the humanitarian crisis. They have had no official contact with the new government in Kabul,” writes WSJ’s Vivian Salama.
PLAYBOOKERS
Ella Emhoff hit New York Fashion Week accessorized with a $2,900 shearling rabbit bag from Thom Browne.
Liam Donovan is seriously annoyed with DoorDash.
Larry Elder hung out with Rose McGowan on Sunday.
Amy Coney Barrett, after being introduced by Mitch McConnell at the University of Louisville’s McConnell Center, said she worries about the Supreme Court being seen as a partisan institution.
Joe Biden has a sandwich named after him at Wilmington’s high-end Janssen’s Market. “The Joe Biden” comes with Maple turkey, Havarti, fresh arugula, and Champagne mustard. (h/t Seung Min Kim)
Laphonza Butler is taking over EMILY’s List as president — the first woman of color and mother to hold the position.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — McLaurine Pinover is now press secretary for the House Foreign Affairs Committee Republicans. She previously was comms director for Rep. Joe Wilson (R-S.C.).
TRANSITIONS — Reilly Knecht is now digital content manager at the NRSC. She previously was a press assistant for Rep. Jodey Arrington (R-Texas) and is a Steve Scalise and Will Hurd alum. … Martha Sanchez is now a legislative assistant for Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.). She previously was a legislative assistant for Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.). … Grace White is now comms director for Rep. Bryan Steil (R-Wis.). She previously was comms director for Rep. David Schweikert (R-Ariz.). …
… Andrew Ginsburg is now deputy director of legislative affairs for the Consumer Product Safety Commission. He previously was deputy COS and legislative director for Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.). … Lizet Ocampo is joining Voto Latino as executive director. She previously was political director for People For the American Way. … Tiffiany Vaughn Jones is joining American Bridge 21st Century as national press secretary. She previously was press secretary for the Biden campaign’s Pennsylvania operation and is a Tom Steyer and Hillary Clinton alum.
ENGAGED — Emily Schlicting, a senior associate at McKinsey and an Obama HHS alum, and David Demres, who works as senior leader in private equity-backed companies, got engaged on Tuesday. The couple met at the Harvard Kennedy School, where they were both enrolled in policy degree programs while simultaneously completing their MBAs. David proposed on the cliffs of the Amalfi coast after enlisting Emily’s friends to lead her on a multi-part, Amazing Race-style scavenger hunt all over the town of Ravello. Pic
WEEKEND WEDDINGS — Joanna McIntosh, SVP of government relations at NCTA, and Brian Swain, of the U.S. Secret Service, got married on Sunday at River Farm in Mount Vernon overlooking the Potomac River. SPOTTED: Sarah Akram, Loran and Robbie Aiken, Chris LeRoy, Pam Stevens and Eric Schulz, Nydia Bonnin and Neil Fried, Fran Folgner, Wendy Hamilton, Josephine Hayden and Charles Ludoff, Elizabeth Hyman and David Nelsen, Greta Neimanas and Clark Rachfal, Julie Riccio, Shelley Robinette, Julia Rogers and Alex Feldman, Laurie Sherman, Hollyn and Vance Schuemann, Lisa and Arnie Schoenthaler, Vanessa and Chip Sinders and Marie Sylla-Dixon.
— Storm Horncastle, social secretary for VP Kamala Harris, and Jonathan Walters, head of the film & TV sector for the Welsh government, got married on Sept. 2 in an intimate ceremony on Inchcolm Island in Fife, Scotland, in the ruins of a historic abbey dating back to 1200 A.D. Storm and Jonathan met at a bar in Bethesda, Md., in 2016 and started dating after a British Embassy New Year’s Eve party. Jonathan proposed at the Jefferson Memorial and the two were forced to postpone the wedding three times due to the pandemic. Pic … Another pic
— Kelly Ilagan, a Trump Commerce and White House alum, and Marc Coldiron, a Trump State Department and White House alum, got married at Old St. Mary’s Catholic Church, followed by a reception at the Westin Book Cadillac in Detroit, Mich. The couple met while working at the Trump White House during the first year of the administration. Pic … SPOTTED: Seth and Bridget Unger, John and Caroline Roscoe, Buckley Carlson and Kelsey Kilgore, Ninio Fetalvo, Lauren Weber Holley, Justin Bis and Lauren Bowman, Alex Redle, Alex and Madison Meyer, Ian Steff, Christian and Minyet Palich.
BIRTHWEEK (was Saturday): Vedant Patel of the White House
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Cedric Richmond … Reps. Ann Wagner (R-Mo.), Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) and Roger Williams (R-Texas) … Katie Connolly of Benenson Strategy Group … Danielle Burr … Tina Pelkey … North Carolina A.G. Josh Stein … Mark Mellman … José Morales of Fair Fight Action … Potomac Strategy Group’s Matt Mackowiak … Robin Meszoly … Vivian Schiller of Aspen Digital … Ryan Hambleton … Walter Suskind … CNN’s Alli Gordon … Asya Evelyn of Rep. Ro Khanna’s (D-Calif.) office … Suzanne Beall of the International Franchise Association … POLITICO’s Andrew Benzer, Ben Leonard, Jeremy Dillon, Kate Ling, Lindsay Knight and Robyn Brigham … Bloomberg’s Laura Davison … Kelsey Smith … NBC’s Ginger Gibson and Casey Dolan … former Reps. Peter Roskam (R-Ill.) (6-0) and Lincoln Davis (D-Tenn.) … Sanette Tanaka Sloan … Jerry Johnson of Brodeur Partners … NBC News PR’s Emma Martin … Jennifer Pflieger … Edelman’s Thomas Dudley
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: America-Hating Dems Hit All the Wrong Notes on 9/11 Anniversary
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. The kimchi smell is here all week.
It was an interesting weekend here in Kruiserland. I went to my first college football game in a year and a half, and even though my team is awful, it was glorious to be back in the stadium. The University of Arizona Athletic Dept. sent out an email last week telling us that we would be required to show that we had a mask along with our ticket to get into the game. We were also informed that we would have to wear them when going to buy something to eat or going to the restroom. I was very curious to see how many people were would go along with the nonsense.
The number was somewhere around zero. I’m sure that some people did, but I didn’t see any of them. America seems to be over the COVID panic-porn game. Heck, I even shook hands with a few strangers. Talk about living on the edge.
The mask did come in handy for hiding my barely legal knife as I emptied my pockets to go through the metal detector. That is probably the most useful that thing has ever been to me.
There was a respectful 9/11 memorial ceremony before the game featuring a lot of military personnel and first responders, who were honored throughout the game.
Good American stuff.
Then I got back to work on Sunday and read some of the hot takes from leftist America.
The Democrats and their media mouthpieces are completely incapable of being patriotic without throwing in some national, self-loathing twisting of history and shameless pimping of a political agenda.
Our Drooling Idiot in Chief got the ball rolling early with a taped message where he babbled about unity because he’s apparently never visited America. He then went where every idiot Dem goes when discussing 9/11 and terrorism, which Matt covered:
“Yet we also witnessed the darker forces of human nature,” Biden lamented. “Fear and anger, resentment and violence against Muslim Americans, true and faithful followers of a peaceful religion.”
As Robert Spencer wrote yesterday, that’s not a thing.
The wearisome rampant Islamophobia fairy tale the Dems have been telling for the last 20 years is not only insulting but — whenever the Dems are in charge of anything — dangerous. As I wrote last week, they’re in perpetual denial about who the real bad guys are. That blind spot is a real detriment when crafting policy upon which the nation’s safety depends.
Paula let us know that the Department of Homeland Security is more worried about the weather than the Taliban or ISIS. As she points out, their priorities are very screwed up:
Increasingly, the U.S. military, the FBI, the DHS, and other agencies tasked with protecting the American people are more focused on getting woke, fighting imaginary monsters under the bed, and forcing vaccines into the veins of its employees than on detecting real threats. It’s the definition of the complacency Johnson warned of, but he seems oblivious to that fact.
Foreign terrorists—Islamic jihadis—continue to wage war on Americans and other infidel nations. As we saw with the 9/11 attacks, they are patient, willing to bide their time in order to attack when we have our guard down, when we’re “complacent.” Johnson’s reassurances that we’re safer today than we were on Sept. 11, 2001, show willful blindness to the real threats facing our country.
No mini-retrospective of leftist clueless hot takes is complete without mentioning CNN, which was also covered by Robert:
As I noted last Tuesday, the establishment media spent the days leading up to the twentieth anniversary of the 9/11 jihad attacks publishing stories about how Muslims had been victimized by “Islamophobia” in the attacks’ aftermath. They didn’t put away the whitewash on the fateful day’s anniversary, either, and why should they have? Even Old Joe Biden, or whoever writes his material for him, felt it necessary to go out of his way on September 11 to decry “resentment and violence against Muslim-Americans — true and faithful followers of a peaceful religion.” But CNN went even farther Saturday: as the 9/11 memorial commemorations were going on, the “news network” published a lengthy piece entitled “9 tropes about Muslims that are a product of Islamophobia,” designed to ensure that all your thoughts about Islam are warmly positive.
Can you remember any CNN pieces attacking anti-Jewish, anti-Christian, anti-Hindu or anti-Buddhist “tropes”? Neither can I. But when it comes to Islam, the establishment media feels a particular solicitude. “There are nearly 2 billion Muslims in the world,” CNN tells us, “and the religious group continues to grow rapidly. Yet Islam continues to be largely misunderstood by many, which has given way to Islamophobia and even violence against Muslims.”
So remember, kids: the next time we’re trying to honor the lives of the Americans who died in the 9/11 attacks, do try to avoid noticing that the Islamic terrorists were all, you know, Islamic.
Because then you’re the real problem.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
VodkaPundit: Biden’s Vaccine Mandate Is an Attack on the Working Poor
EXCLUSIVE: NFL Whistleblower Details How the League Discriminates Against Unvaccinated Players
This Finding About COVID-19 Vaccines in Teens Would Rule Out Use In Any Illness but COVID-19
Why Justin Trudeau Does Not Deserve to Lead Canada
Medical Mandates: A Hideous Strength
I’m Glad George W. Bush Was President on 9/11. Just Imagine the Alternatives.
Flight 93 And ‘Accidents of History’
‘Teen Vogue’ Columnist Takes the Prize for Dumbest 9/11 Take of the Year
Arizona Elementary School District Hit by Same Covid Vaccine Madness Afflicting the NFL
Democrat Strategist Has an Ominous Warning for His Party in 2022
You Want Baby Killers Locked Up? Better Stay Out of Seattle.
Man Gunned Down by Antifa Assassin During ‘Summer of Love’ Sues Portland for Millions
Townhall Mothership
Schlichter: With Blue Senate Seats in Play in 2022, Bet on GOP Winners
Democrats Are Really Not Going to Like Joe Manchin’s Sunday Show Appearances
College Student Plays Victim After Getting Caught Vandalizing 9/11 Memorial
BREAKING: AP Reports North Korea Has Now Tested Cruise Missiles
CNN Sees a Racist Future Full of Nonwhite White Supremacists
Meet The Gun Grab Lobby’s Nemesis: 11.6 million New Gun Owners
Why Biden’s Vaccine Mandates Have 2A Groups Concerned
TX Armed Citizen Shoots Robber Just Days After Constitutional Carry Goes Into Effect
19 governors vow to fight Biden’s vaccine mandate “to the gates of hell”
The robot revolution already happened and nobody noticed
Confirmed: Biden consulted union presidents before announcing vax mandate
WATCH: There was some sort of altercation between Conor McGregor and Machine Gun Kelly at the VMAs
Metaphor alert: Fans at FedEx field soaked by apparent sewage pipe break
VIP
‘Unwoke’ With Kevin and Kruiser #11: Our Review of Angry Joe and the Vax Pimp Mandate Madness
The Fringe with Megan Fox, Episode 69: Farewell to Bryan Preston!
Is Joe Biden Campaigning For Ron DeSantis?
Joe Biden Makes Me Wish I Hadn’t Taken the Vaccine
In Interview With the New King of Late Night, Trump Rips Biden’s ‘Gross Incompetence’
‘Unity’ in Our Post-9/11 World Is Now Just an Empty Talking Point
Joe Biden’s 9/11 Legacy: Treating Terrorists Better Than the American People
GOLD I’m Excited About Joe Biden’s Vaccine Mandate
Around the Interwebz
‘WandaVision’ Wins First Emmys For Marvel Studios
Red flags for Biden’s “over-the-horizon” strategy
Honda and Toyota criticize Democrats’ proposed tax credit for union-made electric vehicles
Watch This Amazing Timelapse Video of a Spider Building a Web
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Tunes
Even I think a bedroom skycam is overkill.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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Editor
Cut to the News
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USA
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: A Ruling in Epic Games v. Apple
Plus: The stories of those who left family behind in Afghanistan.
The Dispatch Staff | 1 |
Happy Monday! The Chicago Bears are tied for first place in their division, Patrick Mahomes scored four touchdowns, and the Green Bay Packers lost by 35 points. The NFL is back.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- After a multi-week standoff, the Iranian government agreed over the weekend to permit officials from the United Nations’ International Atomic Energy Agency to install new memory cards in surveillance equipment meant to monitor the progression of Iran’s nuclear capabilities.
- The Russian energy company Gazprom announced Friday that construction of its Nord Stream 2 pipeline had been formally completed that morning. The pipeline—which will allow Russia to bypass Ukraine and Poland and ship gas directly to Europe—now awaits approval from Germany’s energy regulator.
- A new CDC study published Friday found that, even after Delta became the dominant COVID-19 strain, fully vaccinated people were five times less likely than unvaccinated people to be infected with COVID-19, 10 times less likely to be hospitalized with the virus, and 11 times less likely to die from it. An additional CDC study found that post-Delta, full vaccination’s effectiveness against hospitalization was about 95 percent for those 18 to 64, and 76 percent for those 65 and over.
- President Biden spoke with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, late last week for the first time in seven months, the White House said. A senior administration official told Axios that the purpose of the call was to advance U.S.-China relations beyond CCP subordinates and “have a broad and strategic discussion about how to manage the competition between the United States and China.”
- Taliban higher education minister Abdul Baqi Haqqani said Sunday that women will be allowed to continue studying at universities under the new regime, but all classrooms will be segregated by gender and traditional Islamic dress—including hijabs—will be required.
- Following President Biden’s executive order last week, the FBI declassified a document Saturday related to the federal government’s investigation into Saudi Arabia’s alleged role in the 9/11 attacks. Based on a 2015 interview, the document shows that two Saudi hijackers contacted Saudi individuals in the United States in the lead up to the attacks, but does not prove senior Saudi officials were involved in the plot.
- U.S. Capitol Police announced Saturday that the force recommended six officers face disciplinary action following an investigation into the January 6 Capitol riot: Three for “conduct unbecoming,” and one each for “improper remarks,” “improper dissemination of information,” and “failure to comply with directives.” The U.S. Attorney’s office reviewed each case and “did not find sufficient evidence” that any of the officers committed a crime.
A Battle Royale Decided
Back in May, we wrote to you about a David v. Goliath legal battle between Epic Games and Apple. The issue? Payment processing and in-app purchases:
Apple removed Fortnite from its App Store last August when Epic Games implemented an update allowing users to access discounts on in-app purchases if they made said purchases through Epic’s direct payment feature rather than the App Store itself. Why? Because Apple charges developers a 30 percent fee on every app and in-app purchase—except for small businesses generating less than $1 million in annual revenue, which pay a 15 percent commission—and Epic was looking for a way to circumvent it.
Epic, which knew Fortnite would get the boot if it went through with the update, used Apple’s action as a pretext to file a civil antitrust lawsuit against the tech behemoth, arguing it was time to “end Apple’s unfair and anti-competitive actions that Apple undertakes to unlawfully maintain its monopoly in two distinct, multibillion dollar markets: (i) the iOS App Distribution Market, and (ii) the iOS In-App Payment Processing Market.” Nearly four months later, U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers reached her verdict.
Ultimately, the lawsuit was going to hinge on how Rogers defined the relevant market. Does it matter, as Epic argues, that Apple maintains a 100 percent market share for iOS applications? Or is Apple right to point out that users can play Fortnite on many different platforms: PlayStation, Xbox, Nintendo, Windows, and so on?
Friday’s ruling tried to split the difference. “The Court disagrees with both parties’ definition of the relevant market,” Rogers wrote. “The relevant market here is digital mobile gaming transactions, not gaming generally and not Apple’s own internal operating systems related to the App Store.” Using that definition—mobile gaming—Rogers found Apple to have carved out a roughly 55 percent market share and “extraordinarily high” profit margins.
But that wasn’t enough for the judge. “Given the trial record, the Court cannot ultimately conclude that Apple is a monopolist under either federal or state antitrust laws,” she wrote. “These factors alone do not show antitrust conduct. Success is not illegal.”
Evacuated Afghans Worry About Those They Left Behind
Speaking after the United States completed its withdrawal from Afghanistan last month, President Biden said that his administration “completed one of the biggest airlifts in history,” adding that “no nation has ever done anything like it in all of history.” Setting aside the reason such a mass evacuation was necessary, it’s true: Airlifting more than 120,000 people out of a country conquered by a jihadist movement in just a couple of weeks is quite a feat.
But as Charlotte details in a piece for the site today, we didn’t get everyone. Thousands of vulnerable Afghans remain behind Taliban lines, and those who made it out are racked with worry for their countrymen and women who did not.
When Shinwari took a position with the U.S. Special Forces in 2008, he saw the work as an opportunity to reconstruct Afghanistan for the better in the aftermath of Taliban rule. Short of that, he thought his service might afford his family security in exchange for much needed Afghan assistance.
“They needed help,” said Shinwari, who requested to be identified by his surname. “Because they were new to this country and they didn’t know the culture or the language.”
“I’ve seen a lot of bad situations. I’ve been blown up two times—one of our trucks that was going out on a mission was hit by an IED, so I have a back injury,” he added. “And one time in our base, seven suicide bombers came to our camp and just blew themselves up. In my mind, I have still that explosion.”
In total, Shinwari was deployed with U.S. forces for more than six years. He and his two sons qualified for U.S. citizenship in 2019 and his wife, also Afghan-born, is a green card holder. But when the Taliban swept Afghanistan earlier this year, swallowing provincial capitals in rapid succession, Shinwari’s connections up the ranks of the U.S. military lent his family little favor as thousands scrambled to evacuate at once.
Two Decades Later, W. Remembers September 11
Former President George W. Bush delivered remarks at the 9/11 memorial in Shanksville, Pennsylvania on Saturday to commemorate 20 years since that fateful day.
The whole nine-minute speech is worth your time, but in case you’re in a rush, here are some highlights:
- “In those fateful hours, we learned other lessons as well. We saw that Americans were vulnerable, but not fragile. That they possessed a core of strength that survives the worst that life can bring. We learned that bravery is more common than we imagined, emerging with sudden splendor in the face of death. We vividly felt how every hour with our loved ones was a temporary and holy gift. And we found that even the longest days end.”
- “Many Americans struggled to understand why an enemy would hate us with such zeal. The security measures incorporated into our lives are both sources of comfort and reminders of our vulnerability. And we have seen growing evidence that the dangers to our country can come not only across borders but from violence that gathers within. There’s little cultural overlap between violent extremists abroad and violent extremists at home. But in their disdain for pluralism, in their disregard of human life, in their determination to defile national symbols, they are children of the same foul spirit, and it is our continuing duty to confront them.”
- “On America’s day of trial and grief I saw millions of people instinctively grab for a neighbor’s hand and rally to the cause of one another. That is the America I know. At a time when religious bigotry might have flowed freely, I saw Americans reject prejudice and embrace people of Muslim faith. That is the nation I know. At a time when nativism could have stirred hatred and violence against people perceived as outsiders, I saw Americans reaffirm their welcome to immigrants and refugees. That is the nation I know. At a time when some viewed the rising generation as individualistic and decadent, I saw young people embrace an ethic of service and rise to selfless action. That is the nation I know. This is not mere nostalgia, it is the truest version of ourselves. It is what we have been, and what we can be again.”
Worth Your Time
- Trying to fully comprehend a massive two-decade event like the War in Afghanistan is a nearly impossible task. You can get a sense of what things were like at the beginning—why we went in, what our goals were—and a sense of what’s come to pass, but the conflict itself is endlessly more complex. Which makes pieces like this one from Politico so useful. The magazine spoke at length to five veterans of the war, each of whom served at different times and in different branches of the conflict. The snapshots it provides are fascinating.
- Writing at Reason, Walter Olson digs into President Biden’s newly proposed order mandating that large companies require their employees either to get vaccinated against COVID-19 or to submit to weekly tests for the virus. “Some backers of Biden’s action seem to think waving in OSHA’s general direction, together with citing COVID-19’s high death toll, is all the answer needed to questions about legality,” he writes. “But it isn’t. Courts have frequently struck down OSHA actions, especially when the agency has tried to issue the type of peremptory decree it calls an emergency temporary standard (ETS).”
Presented Without Comment
Justice Breyer on calls for his retirement: ‘They are entitled to their opinion’ politi.co/3k27pz9via @politico
Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- In his latest Vital Interests (🔒), Thomas Joscelyn explores a recent Taliban propaganda video that argues the U.S. deserved the 9/11 attacks and excoriates the U.S. policymakers who, over the last decade, adopted “apologetic and revisionist views” of the terror group. “It is clear that America’s leaders not only lost the war, they’ve lost their bearings completely,” he writes. “It is absurd that any American official could look the other way as the Taliban gloats over al-Qaeda’s deadliest day. That is exactly what they are doing.”
- In Friday’s G-File, Jonah turned a cynical eye toward the Biden administration’s recent announcement of a (again, kind-of sort-of) vaccine mandate after months of insisting there would be no such thing. “Hard-hearted cynics might say that Biden reversed course to change the subject from the debacle in Afghanistan and his sagging poll numbers,” he writes. “Well, the hard-hearted cynics are right.”
- Sunday’s French Press concerns the virtue of empathy: When it’s good, when it’s bad, and how it’s all too often deployed selectively based on our prior understanding of who’s on whose political team. “America is experiencing an empathy crisis,” David writes. “But it’s not quite the crisis you might think. Our empathy can overflow for the people we love, for the people within our tribe—even when they make grave errors. But what about our empathy for ‘them,’ the people we distrust? Then empathy is in short supply.”
- In Friday’s episode of The Dispatch Podcast, Sarah and Steve talk with Sen. Ben Sasse about the United States’ Afghanistan withdrawal and what comes next. Stick around for Steve’s conversation with Peter Wehner—former speechwriter for President George W. Bush—about the 9/11 attacks themselves and the two decades since.
- For the weekend culture section, Declan reviewed the latest offering from another son of Chicago: Kanye West. “Kanye is likely too far down the path of celebrity to ever truly embrace modesty,” Declan writes. “He’s built himself an ego-driven prison over the years from which it’s difficult to escape. But with Donda, he’s at least trying, and it’s heartbreaking.”
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Audrey Fahlberg (@AudreyFahlberg), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
On the Defense and Criticism of George W. Bush Over His 9/11 Comments
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
September 13, 2021 THE LATEST Why Joe Manchin is an unsolvable problem for Biden’s America by Michael A. Cohen West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin is up to his usual shenanigans again, bedeviling his fellow Democrats and President Joe Biden’s White House with a call to “pause” Biden’s plans to pass a vital $3.5 trillion budget reconciliation package. So how do you solve a problem like Manchin? The answer, according to Michael A. Cohen, is you can’t. At least not cleanly or easily.
“There is little Democrats can do to persuade, pressure or punish Manchin. But that doesn’t mean Manchin holds all the cards,” writes Cohen. “At the end of the day, both he and his fellow Democrats will benefit more from Democrats’ being successful than from the party’s being in disarray.”
Read Michael Cohen’s full analysis here and don’t forget to check out the rest of your Saturday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES Biden’s line in the sand has the GOP angry — but saving lives is worth it. Read More Biden was right to disrupt what has long been broken. Read More The parallels are plain. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC The latest episode of Southlake, a six-part original podcast series from NBC News, is now available. The new series, hosted by NBC News National Investigative Reporter Mike Hixenbaugh and NBC News Correspondent Antonia Hylton, takes listeners inside a wealthy Texas suburb’s war over race and education. Listen for free wherever you get your podcasts.
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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47.) ABC
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
This morning we take a deeper look into what’s behind the critical race theory battles being waged in school boards across the country. Perhaps not surprisingly, the communities facing the greatest rancor over equity initiatives are diversifying faster than the national average.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Monday morning. Downingtown, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia, has been changing. And the school district has tried to change with it.
In 1994, students of color made up just 5 percent of the enrollment in the Downingtown Area School District. By 2020, that figure had grown to almost 24 percent, largely because of an increase in Asian and Latino residents.
In the last few years, the district hired a diversity coordinator, launched a cultural equity task force and began to study racial disparities in how students are placed in advanced classes.
But all of these measures suddenly came under attack this summer, when dozens of parents signed a petition calling for the end of Downingtown’s diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.
An NBC News analysis of 33 cities and counties where school districts have faced rancor over equity initiatives this year finds that each has become less white over the last 25 years, reflecting a national trend, according to new census figures.
“In virtually any community, when there is rapid demographic change you see a backlash,” said Tomás Jiménez, a Stanford University professor who has studied population changes in cities. “When demographic change happens quickly, the backlash tends to be stronger.” Monday’s Top Stories
A new report by the prominent moderate Democratic group Third Way into the numbers and concludes: “Contrary to the media narrative, overall crime decreased in 2020 compared to 2019.” “They saved our butts,” said former Rep. Scott Taylor, R-Va., a former Navy SEAL who has been helping to organize Afghan evacuee flights. In Ray DeMonia’s obituary, his family urged people who have not been vaccinated to get their shots — “in an effort to free up resources for non Covid related emergencies.” OPINION The opposition to vaccination and mask mandates comes straight from the anti-elite, anti-establishment conservative talk radio playbook, politics and media historian Brian Rosenwald writes in an opinion piece. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
SOUTHLAKE PODCAST A new fixation on critical race theory muddies the debate in Southlake, drowning out the voices of students who’d come forward with stories about racism. Shopping
Check out these highly-rated small kitchen storage solutions ranging from reusable containers to pull-out cabinet organizers. One Fun Thing
The biggest play at the University of Miami-Appalachian State University football game Saturday night happened in the stands, where spectators banded together to save a feline fan.
Video from Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens showed the cat dangling from an upper deck, where it apparently clung by its claws to some type of fabric on the railing. At least one person reached down to help, but the cat plummeted to the seats below.
Thankfully, the careening kitty was caught by fans who held a U.S. flag as a makeshift rescue tarp.
Watch this video of the dramatic rescue. Want to receive NBC Breaking News and Special Alerts in your inbox? Get the NBC News Mobile App |
49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: Explaining Tuesday’s California recall by the numbers
It’s the day before the California recall election against Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, with President Biden campaigning for Newsom in Long Beach, Calif., at 10:00 pm ET (after touring wildfire destruction on the West Coast).
And just in case you haven’t been tuning into everything that’s happened in this recall – including how we got here in the first place – here’s a description by the numbers:
6: The total number of recall attempts against Newsom since he took office in 2019.
1: The number of recall attempts against Newsom that successfully made the ballot.
1,495,709: The number of valid signatures that recall organizers needed – and ultimately exceeded – to place this recall on the ballot (representing 12 percent of the vote total from the 2018 CA-GOV election).
4: The number of months by which a California judge extended this recall’s signature drive, citing the Covid pandemic (and eventually aiding the recall effort).
2: The number of questions on the recall ballot: 1) Should Newsom be recalled, yes or no? 2) If a majority say yes, who should replace him?
46: The total number of replacement candidates on the ballot, including GOP replacement frontrunner Larry Elder.
AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu
4,900: Reported Covid deaths in California when this recall petition drive first started in June 2020.
67,100: Reported Covid deaths in California as of today.
$276 million: The amount of money this recall election has cost the state of California.
$33.9 million: The amount of money in ads that Newsom and allies have spent on ads in this recall, per ad-spending data from AdImpact.
$17.4 million: The amount of money recall supporters and Republicans have spent on ads in this race.
60 percent to 39 percent: The margin by which recall opponents were ahead of recall supporters, per the recent LA Times/Berkeley IGS poll of likely voters.
38 percent: The percentage of likely voters picking Elder in the replacement election in the same poll, topping all other replacement candidates.
54 percent: The share of likely voters in California approving of Newsom’s job in the LA Times/Berkeley poll.
Around 20 to 30 percent: The approval ratings for former Gov. Gray Davis before he was successfully recalled in 2003.
63 percent to 34 percent: The margin by which Joe Biden defeated Donald Trump in California in the 2020 presidential election.
62 percent to 38 percent: The margin by which Newsom defeated his Republican opponent in his 2018 gubernatorial victory.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: If you can’t beat em…
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Decoding Manchin, part 39
Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., wants a lower number than $3.5 trillion for the reconciliation package.
But what ELSE he wants isn’t exactly clear.
That’s our takeaway from Manchin’s appearance on “Meet the Press” yesterday.
CHUCK TODD: So you’re not against this? You could support this $3.5 trillion —
SEN. JOE MANCHIN: No —
CHUCK TODD: — plan?
SEN. JOE MANCHIN: — I cannot support $3.5 trillion, okay? No, okay.
[snip]
CHUCK TODD: But this still is a one-way negotiation. Look, you’re in the catbird seat. You’re the 50th vote, but don’t you need to give, say, what you’re for —
MANCHIN: I have been giving. I could say that I’m against this and that and everything. I’m for an awful lot of the things. I’m for also putting guardrails on. I think that if you’re going to make sure that we’re helping our children, let’s make sure the children are getting the best benefit of that. Let’s make sure that a guardian or a parent is doing everything they can to nurture that child and give them the resources to do it. But if you don’t have any work requirements, there’s no means testing on so much of this.”
But this also caught our eye: Manchin said what’s in the reconciliation package might help West Virginians, but that he might not be able to explain it to them back home.
MANCHIN: I’ve said this. If I can’t go home and explain it, I can’t vote for it, okay —
CHUCK TODD: And right now, you don’t think you can explain it?
MANCHIN: I can’t explain what we’re doing now.
|
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
$2.9 trillion: How much House Democrats believe they can raise in new revenue for the reconciliation deal with tax increases and other policies.
930 miles: The distance North Korea’s new long-range cruise missile flew during a weekend test.
11: How many times more likely it is for an unvaccinated person to die from Covid when compared to a vaccinated person.
6th: America’s ranking out of the Group of Seven countries in rate of people fully vaccinated for Covid.
41,060,236: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 296,952 more since Friday morning.)
663,758: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 3,611 more since Friday morning.)
380,241,903: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 2,619,838 more since Friday morning.)
53.8 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
64.9 percent: The share of all U.S. adults at least 18 years of age who are fully vaccinated, per CDC.
|
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
EMILY’s List has selected Laphonza Butler, a former labor leader and an ally of Vice President Harris, to be its next president. She is the first woman of color to helm the group.
Qatar’s outsized role in assisting with the Afghanistan withdrawal is a reversal of fortune for the Middle-Eastern nation.
A New York hospital will “pause” delivering babies after staffers quit rather than get vaccinated.
Some public health experts are tangling with the Biden administration over its Covid vaccine booster plan.
Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett said Sunday that justices have to be “hyper vigilant to make sure they’re not letting personal biases creep into their decisions.”
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50.) CBS
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51.) REASON
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Here’s something you don’t see every day. College football fans taking a break from telling Joe Biden to … MORE
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59.) SARA A. CARTER
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60.) TWITCHY
61.) HOT AIR
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Monday, Sept. 13, and we’re covering a historic underdog story at the US Open, a ruling in the Apple versus Epic feud, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. Win $10,000 from 1440. We’re approaching a big milestone—1 million readers. In appreciation, we’re giving away $10,000 in cold hard cash, no strings attached (Want it in crypto? We can make that happen). To enter the giveaway, all you have to do is refer a friend. Each referral equals another chance to win. Just make sure you copy and paste using your unique referral code below: https://www.join1440.com/?rh_ref=97cc5da9 From the entire 1440 team, thanks for being a reader! NEED TO KNOWHistoric US OpenEighteen-year-old Emma Raducanu capped a historic run in one of the biggest women’s tennis tournaments over the weekend, beating Leylah Fernandez in straight sets to win the US Open. The British teenager entered the tournament ranked 150th in the world, having only appeared in one previous major event. Her ranking required she win three preliminary matches to even qualify for the main tournament. Raducanu became the first qualifier to ever reach, much less win, a Grand Slam final—which includes Wimbledon and the US, French, and Australian Opens. History on the men’s side was just missed, as No. 2 seed Daniil Medvedev beat superstar Novak Djokovic in the finals in three sets, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4. The loss ended Djokovic’s bid to win his 21st Grand Slam title, which would have separated him from a three-way tie with Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal for most of all time. Apple VerdictA federal judge issued a mixed verdict in a closely watched antitrust case against Apple Friday, ruling it must allow developers to directly collect payments from users within their apps, but stopped short of modifying the role of its powerful App Store. Apple’s iPhone makes up more than half of the US smartphone market and reaches more than 1 billion worldwide users. Previously, the company required all financial transactions made by user-downloaded apps to be processed by Apple which would take a 30% cut. Additionally, apps may only be downloaded via the App Store—part of a concept the company refers to as its “walled garden.” Video game company Epic, maker of the widely popular Fortnite, filed suit against Apple, claiming the company used its dominance in one market (phones) to take unfair advantage in a second market (apps). Aside from the ruling, the case exposed a number of financial details of Apple’s App Store—see the most interesting points here. Manchin Hits Pause A $3.5T spending plan proposed by the White House and congressional Democrats hit a snag yesterday, as Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) said he would not vote for the package in its current form. Manchin also pushed back on the party’s attempt to pass both the budget plan and a $1T bipartisan infrastructure package by the end of September. Democrats hold a slim 50-50 majority in the evenly divided chamber (Vice President Kamala Harris casts a deciding vote in the event of a tie). Under the budget reconciliation process (see 101), the party can avoid the typical 60-vote requirement, but must ensure all 50 Democratic senators support the package. The situation has given outsized leverage to moderate members like Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ). It is unclear whether Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) will bring a vote on the package despite Manchin’s comments. Separately, Treasury officials said the US would default on its obligations if the debt ceiling is not raised by mid-October. Refer a Friend for a Chance To Win $10,000! https://www.join1440.com/?rh_ref=97cc5da9 In partnership with The Motley Fool5G IS HEREWe’re not sure if you’ve heard: The latest iPhone (the iPhone 12) is 5G-enabled. Not only does this represent a massive technological leap, but it also suggests we’re approaching an inflection point in 5G’s popularity throughout the market. Now, our friends at The Motley Fool love Apple and recognize what a remarkable business they’ve built. But Apple’s current market cap reflects the incredible extent to which they’ve grown in mobile dominance. It’s hard to triple in size when you’re already a $2T (yes, trillion) company. There’s another company though, one that’s just a fraction of a percent of Apple’s size, which they think stands to grow massively with Apple’s iPhone 12 sales. In fact, they make a component so crucial, it’s included in every single iPhone 12 produced. Motley Fool members can get the down-low on this company for free; sign up now to read the report. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & CultureBrought to you by The Ascent > Lil Nas X wins top prize at MTV Video Music Awards for Video of the Year with Justin Bieber winning Artist of the Year (More) > US Soccer asks women’s and men’s national teams to equally split World Cup prize money (More) | Paul Pierce, Chris Bosh headline 2021 class of 16 inducted into Basketball Hall of Fame (More) | Pro Football Hall of Fame center Mick Tingelhoff dies at 81 (More) > “The Queen’s Gambit” is big winner at 2021 Creative Arts Emmys with nine awards; Primetime Emmys take place Sunday, Sept. 19 (8 pm ET, CBS) (More) From our partners: 0% intro APR is 100% insane. This card offers 0% APR for 18 months on balance transfers. And it also gives you the chance to rake in crazy cash back deals—with no annual fee. Science & Technology> One in five nursing home patients is on antipsychotic medication, analysis finds; study alleges understaffed nursing homes may overuse prescriptions to help manage residents (More) > Rocks collected by NASA’s Mars Perseverance rover show signs of being in contact with water over long periods of time (More) > New CRISPR-based technique makes male mosquitoes sterile, renders females flightless; method may prevent the spread of disease without the use of insecticide (More) | Check 1440’s expert-curated overview on CRISPR (More) Business & Markets> US stock markets drop Friday (S&P 500 -0.8%, Dow -0.8%, Nasdaq -0.9%) for fifth consecutive day (More) > Walmart raises $2B green bond–corporate bonds used to invest in projects delivering environmental benefits; is the largest ever green bond raised in the US (More) | Harvard University to cease investing in companies that develop or explore fossil fuels (More) > JPMorgan acquires restaurant discovery app The Infatuation, which acquired Zagat’s brand and assets in 2018 (More) Politics & World Affairs> CDC study suggests unvaccinated patients account for roughly 92% of reported COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations, 91% of deaths between April and early July (More) | Average US COVID-19 cases fall to around 145,000 per day, down 13% since Sept. 1; see data here (More) > North Korea says it has tested newly developed long-range cruise missiles with a range of more than 930 miles (More) > Al-Qaida chief Ayman al-Zawahri, who was believed to be dead, appears in video disseminated on 9/11 anniversary; unclear whether its recording was recent (More) | FBI releases new 16-page document detailing intelligence on the planning of the 9/11 attacks (More) 5G SUPERCYCLEIn partnership with The Motley Fool The experts at The Motley Fool are predicting the incredible power of 5G in new iPhones to create an inflection point in 5G technology. They believe 5G is well positioned to become “mainstream” technology—and that Apple is forging the path. And there’s an American company 1/500th the size of Apple, which could stand to gain every time someone buys a 5G-enabled iPhone. It makes a critical component which is now involved in the production of every single iPhone. Find out more about this relatively unknown company—sign up for Motley Fool to read the report. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAThis interactive map reveals when the leaves will begin changing colors. Fans catch falling cat using the American flag. See the winners of the 2021 Ig Nobel Prizes. Artist recreates the scent of ancient flowers. Scientists reveal what’s in a room by shooting a laser through a keyhole. Check out the new trailer for “Matrix: Resurrections.” Ohio porch gargoyle raises $330K for charity. The sounds of a tortoise eating fruit are oddly relaxing. Clickbait: Someone hit the off button on the NYC subway. Historybook: Francis Scott Key writes America’s national anthem, “The Star-Spangled Banner” (1814); HBD actor and producer Tyler Perry (1969); Israel and Palestine sign peace accord (1993); RIP rapper Tupac Shakur (1996); RIP Ann Richards, educator and former governor of Texas (2006). “I’ve always said that in politics, your enemies can’t hurt you, but your friends will kill you.” – Ann Richards 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
TODAY’S MORNING JOLT WITH JIM GERAGHTY |
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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
special counsel in the investigation, sent the letter to the commission making the request on Thursday
|
TOP STORIES:
-
SPECIAL COUNSEL JUST LOWERED THE BOOM ON JOE BIDEN!
-
Biden Blindsided By New York Mets Fans…Dems Are In Deep Trouble!
-
BREAKING: SCOTUS JUSTICE MAKES SHOCKING ANNOUNCEMENT
- Biden’s Presidency Is In BIG Trouble…
- BUSTED: “We need to be more scary to the public, we need to inflate the real COVID numbers”…
- Biden Wants To Monitor Every American’s Bank Account
- Joe Biden Throws Bizarre Fit On 9/11 When Asked One Question
-
Trump Just Told NY Firefighters What Biden Was Hiding At Ground Zero
-
Gavin Newson Bombshell…He’s Done!
-
Biden Got a Brutal Surprise at Ground Zero Today
|
IN DEPTH…
- Zuckerberg — Facebook will help everyone except white males… 16 mins ago
- Grocery prices headed higher: Kroger 1 hour ago
- Time to Hold Our Leaders Accountable for Afghanistan Fiasco 2 hours ago
-
Vax mandate resignations force Lewis County General Hospital to ‘pause’ baby deliveries 2 hours ago
- Jacksonian America: The Sleeping Giant Awakened by 9/11 2 hours ago
- How Equipment Left In Afghanistan Will Expose US Secrets 2 hours ago
-
Picture This: No 9/11 If Iran Had Invaded Afghanistan 2 hours ago
- Why Japan’s Next Prime Minister Matters | National Review 2 hours ago
- The 9/11 Terror Attacks Are Losing Recruiting Power with Today’s Troops 2 hours ago
- Thousands protest new Turkish vaccine and test rules 2 hours ago
- Afghan Reporters Face Growing Threat from Taliban: ‘Everything Changed’ 2 hours ago
- Protesters in Greece Clash With Police Against Mandatory COVID Vaccinations 2 hours ago
-
U.S. Gives Visas to 283K Immigrants from Hijacker Countries Since 9/11 2 hours ago
- Newt Gingrich | Biden Declares War on Americans 2 hours ago
- Many of America’s children will likely grow up ignorant of 9/11 2 hours ago
- We Will Never Forget 2 hours ago
- Why Trump signs are mushrooming across the US a year after 2020 election 2 hours ago
- From ‘trust the science’ to ‘trust the tyrants’ 3 hours ago
- Iowa fans tell Ashton Kutcher to ‘take a shower’ in chant during ESPN College GameDay 3 hours ago
- DeSantis Fires Back At Biden: He Promised To End Pandemic And Now Cases 300% Higher, Policies Failing 3 hours ago
- First Trailer For Aquaman: King Of Atlantis Is As Atrocious As You Thought 3 hours ago
- Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan manager dies in freak accident 3 hours ago
- Shang-Chi Unlikely To Get Chinese Release After Simu Liu’s Comments About Communist China Resurface 3 hours ago
-
Bill Maher says ‘the left’ is embarrassing him, blasts NFL over black national anthem 3 hours ago
- Kyle Larson’s No. 5 fails pre-race inspection twice at Richmond | NASCAR 3 hours ago
- Missouri conservative group confronts student senator as he takes down and throws away flags from 9/11 display 3 hours
- Emma Raducanu wins improbable US Open championship 3 hours ago
- Vikings Mourn Passing of Mick Tingelhoff 3 hours ago
- Eagles sign Jordan Mailata to four-year extension reportedly worth $64 million 3 hours ago
- California lawmakers move to cut down on time required for the terminally ill to obtain lethal drugs 3 hours ago
- Miami fans rescue dangling cat in heart-wrenching moment 3 hours ago
- TV Anchors ‘Were the Closest Thing That America Had to National Leaders on 9/11,’ Claims Former Politico Editor 3 hours ago
- Elizabeth Holmes trial delayed again as juror gets tested for COVID 3 hours ago
- The World’s Shippers Are Earning The Most Money Since 2008 3 hours ago
- Dems Propose Major Expansion of Electric Vehicle Tax Credits 3 hours ago
- Nearly 1 in 3 small businesses using technology to compensate for worker shortage: survey 3 hours ago
- Yarmuth: ‘We Have Power to Create As Much Money as We Need’ 3 hours ago
- AOC and Bernie Sanders Could End Up Sinking Multi-Trillion-Dollar Spending Plans 3 hours ago
- Social Security Administration disbursed $125.2 million in benefits to deceased beneficiaries 3 hours ago
- Bush’s 9/11 remarks on domestic extremism ‘not exclusive to January 6’ riot, spokesperson says 3 hours ago
- Department of Education opens civil rights investigation into Florida ban on mask mandates 3 hours ago
- BREAKING: Video of Biden apparently getting booed in New York on anniversary of 9/11 surfaces 4 hours ago
- Biden vaccine mandate leaves companies scrambling to figure out how to comply 5 hours ago
- Biden says al Qaeda could ‘come back’ but defends Afghanistan withdrawal on 9/11 anniversary 18 hours ago
- Twenty years later — and still no trial for 9/11 masterminds? 21 hours ago
- ‘Why should Americans get Vaccinated if they have immunity from a prior infection?’ 24 hours ago
- Novak Djokovic earns chance at tennis history with gutsy five-set US Open semi-final win over Alexander Zverev 1 day ago
- Biden Marks 20th Anniversary of 9/11 Slamming the USA and Siding with Islam 1 day ago
- Three Years ago, a 9/11 Fireman’s Kids Brought “Shark Tank” Stars to Tears 1 day ago
- Cryptocurrency Surges in Afghanistan, May Help Taliban Evade Sanctions 1 day ago
|
TOP STORIES:
-
Trump Just Told NY Firefighters What Biden Was Hiding At Ground Zero
-
Gavin Newson Bombshell…He’s Done!
- Crowd goes wild for Trump at Holyfield fight…
-
Biden Got a Brutal Surprise at Ground Zero Today
- Pelosi Caught On Video Admitting Vicious Lie
- Trump Delivers Incredible Surprise To NYPD and FDNY on 9/11 Anniversary
- George Bush Trashes Trump Supporters In 9/11 Speech
- Former CIA Director Sends Ominous Warning On 9/11
- Biden Just Suffered Massive Defeat In Court
-
Kamala Harris Sends Sick Message in 9/11 Speech On Hallowed Ground
-
George Bush Trashes Trump Supporters In 9/11 Speech
- TRUMP SHARES MAJOR 9/11 MESSAGE, SHREDS JOE BIDEN
|
IN DEPTH…
- Zuckerberg — Facebook will help everyone except white males… 16 mins ago
- Grocery prices headed higher: Kroger 1 hour ago
- Time to Hold Our Leaders Accountable for Afghanistan Fiasco 2 hours ago
-
Vax mandate resignations force Lewis County General Hospital to ‘pause’ baby deliveries 2 hours ago
- Jacksonian America: The Sleeping Giant Awakened by 9/11 2 hours ago
- How Equipment Left In Afghanistan Will Expose US Secrets 2 hours ago
-
Picture This: No 9/11 If Iran Had Invaded Afghanistan 2 hours ago
- Why Japan’s Next Prime Minister Matters | National Review 2 hours ago
- The 9/11 Terror Attacks Are Losing Recruiting Power with Today’s Troops 2 hours ago
- Thousands protest new Turkish vaccine and test rules 2 hours ago
- Afghan Reporters Face Growing Threat from Taliban: ‘Everything Changed’ 2 hours ago
- Protesters in Greece Clash With Police Against Mandatory COVID Vaccinations 2 hours ago
-
U.S. Gives Visas to 283K Immigrants from Hijacker Countries Since 9/11 2 hours ago
- Newt Gingrich | Biden Declares War on Americans 2 hours ago
- Many of America’s children will likely grow up ignorant of 9/11 2 hours ago
- We Will Never Forget 2 hours ago
- Why Trump signs are mushrooming across the US a year after 2020 election 2 hours ago
- From ‘trust the science’ to ‘trust the tyrants’ 3 hours ago
- Iowa fans tell Ashton Kutcher to ‘take a shower’ in chant during ESPN College GameDay 3 hours ago
- DeSantis Fires Back At Biden: He Promised To End Pandemic And Now Cases 300% Higher, Policies Failing 3 hours ago
- First Trailer For Aquaman: King Of Atlantis Is As Atrocious As You Thought 3 hours ago
- Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan manager dies in freak accident 3 hours ago
- Shang-Chi Unlikely To Get Chinese Release After Simu Liu’s Comments About Communist China Resurface 3 hours ago
-
Bill Maher says ‘the left’ is embarrassing him, blasts NFL over black national anthem 3 hours ago
- Kyle Larson’s No. 5 fails pre-race inspection twice at Richmond | NASCAR 3 hours ago
- Missouri conservative group confronts student senator as he takes down and throws away flags from 9/11 display 3 hours
- Emma Raducanu wins improbable US Open championship 3 hours ago
- Vikings Mourn Passing of Mick Tingelhoff 3 hours ago
- Eagles sign Jordan Mailata to four-year extension reportedly worth $64 million 3 hours ago
- California lawmakers move to cut down on time required for the terminally ill to obtain lethal drugs 3 hours ago
- Miami fans rescue dangling cat in heart-wrenching moment 3 hours ago
- TV Anchors ‘Were the Closest Thing That America Had to National Leaders on 9/11,’ Claims Former Politico Editor 3 hours ago
- Elizabeth Holmes trial delayed again as juror gets tested for COVID 3 hours ago
- The World’s Shippers Are Earning The Most Money Since 2008 3 hours ago
- Dems Propose Major Expansion of Electric Vehicle Tax Credits 3 hours ago
- Nearly 1 in 3 small businesses using technology to compensate for worker shortage: survey 3 hours ago
- Yarmuth: ‘We Have Power to Create As Much Money as We Need’ 3 hours ago
- AOC and Bernie Sanders Could End Up Sinking Multi-Trillion-Dollar Spending Plans 3 hours ago
- Social Security Administration disbursed $125.2 million in benefits to deceased beneficiaries 3 hours ago
- Bush’s 9/11 remarks on domestic extremism ‘not exclusive to January 6’ riot, spokesperson says 3 hours ago
- Department of Education opens civil rights investigation into Florida ban on mask mandates 3 hours ago
- BREAKING: Video of Biden apparently getting booed in New York on anniversary of 9/11 surfaces 4 hours ago
- Biden vaccine mandate leaves companies scrambling to figure out how to comply 5 hours ago
- Biden says al Qaeda could ‘come back’ but defends Afghanistan withdrawal on 9/11 anniversary 18 hours ago
- Twenty years later — and still no trial for 9/11 masterminds? 21 hours ago
- ‘Why should Americans get Vaccinated if they have immunity from a prior infection?’ 24 hours ago
- Novak Djokovic earns chance at tennis history with gutsy five-set US Open semi-final win over Alexander Zverev 1 day ago
- Biden Marks 20th Anniversary of 9/11 Slamming the USA and Siding with Islam 1 day ago
- Three Years ago, a 9/11 Fireman’s Kids Brought “Shark Tank” Stars to Tears 1 day ago
- Cryptocurrency Surges in Afghanistan, May Help Taliban Evade Sanctions 1 day ago
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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
September 13, 2021 Welcome to the Monday edition of Internet Insider, where we unspool threads of online misinformation—one dumb conspiracy at a time…
ONE DUMB CONSPIRACY Conspiracy theorists blame FBI for planting pipe bombs Conspiracy theorists are accusing the FBI of planting pipe bombs in Washington, D.C. after the agency released new footage of its primary suspect last week.
The suspect, who is accused of leaving two explosive devices on Capitol Hill the night before the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, has thus far eluded authorities.
In an update to the case, the FBI released new surveillance footage as well as a virtual map detailing the route taken by the suspect before pipe bombs were placed near both the Republican and Democratic national committee headquarters.
The footage at one point shows the suspect, whose face is covered by a mask, pulling out what appears to be a cellphone after briefly sitting on a bench. The appearance of the alleged cellphone has convinced conspiracy theorists that the pipe bombs were part of an elaborate “false flag” attack.
The claim appears to have been sparked in part by a tweet from Jack Posobiec, a right-wing pundit who has shared conspiracy theories in the past. Posobiec suggested that the apparent presence of a cell phone should have guaranteed a positive ID of the suspect by the FBI.
“The pipe bomber was on a cell phone the night of and the FBI has timestamped video and still can’t ID?” Posobiec tweeted.
Posobiec’s followers immediately took Posobiec’s insinuation and ran with it.
“They can’t release the identity because it’s clearly an operative working for the FBI,” one response with nearly 600 likes said.
But soon the conspiracy theory grew further.
The column continues below.
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It wasn’t long before the notoriously inaccurate blog the Gateway Pundit picked up the story as well.
Commenters on the article similarly made wild accusations despite no evidence to support any conclusion on the suspect.
“That might not even be the ‘so called’ pipe bomber,” one user wrote. “It could be an innocent bystander whom they will try to pin the whole incident on. It is the FIB!”
The allegations are part of a larger narrative from supporters of former President Donald Trump, who have attempted to shift the blame for the Jan. 6 riot by claiming that the FBI somehow orchestrated the entire event.
Ironically, Posobiec’s tweet isn’t even his first regarding pipe bombs to spark widespread speculation online.
The far-right figure just last year claimed on Twitter that “2 crates filled with pipe bombs” had been discovered near the Korean War Memorial in D.C.
Like clockwork, that claim was picked up and spread by the Gateway Pundit as well. The allegation turned out to be entirely false.
It remains unclear whether Posobiec fabricated the claim or was given the false information by one of many alleged “sources.” In reality, little is still known about the pipe bomb suspect or the alleged cellphone. Countless scenarios could explain why the presence of a cell phone might not be the silver bullet for identifying the suspect. For example: It could be a prepaid phone, purchased in cash, that was tossed after.
Yet conspiracy theorists thrive the most when information is scarce, allowing them to fill in the blanks to fit their world view. In a statement to the Daily Dot, the FBI confirmed that it was aware of the alleged cell phone in the video but was unable to provide details into its ongoing investigation.
The FBI says it has “conducted more than 800 interviews, collected more than 23,000 video files, and assessed more than 300 tips related to this investigation” thus far. Staff Writer
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
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79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Monday 09.13.21 Tropical Storm Nicholas takes aim this week at Texas and Louisiana. Not only will it dump a lot of rain, it could also strengthen significantly in the coming days. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. Nurses work in the Covid-19 unit of Salinas Valley Memorial Hospital in California. Coronavirus
Reactions are continuing to roll in after President Biden announced new Covid-19 vaccine mandates last week for federal workers, large employers and health care staff. Consumer Brands Association, a trade group that represents big brands like Coca-Cola, Kellogg and Campbell Soup issued a letter today with questions about the plan, like how to ensure proof of vaccination. Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson says he’s worried the new mandates will harden resistance rather than convince people to get the shot. In New York, one hospital has had to “pause” delivery of babies because of the number maternity unit employees who resigned over the state’s vaccine requirements. Dr. Anthony Fauci says more mandates could be required to get vaccination rates up. So far, 63% of eligible Americans are fully vaccinated.
Spending bill
House Democrats are expected to release a draft proposal of their $3.5 trillion budget package today. And Dems are looking to raise taxes for the country’s richest and corporations to pay for it, according to the latest details, which could change before the draft is released. These new tax thresholds would only affect people making more than $400,000 a year and businesses with income in excess of $5 million. The budget plan probably won’t have any Republican support, but Democrats hope to approve it through reconciliation, which under Senate rules means it can pass without any GOP votes.
California recall
The gubernatorial recall election in California is entering its final stretch as voters prepare to head to the polls tomorrow to decide the fate of Gov. Gavin Newsom. All registered voters in the state got a mail-in ballot, and of the millions of votes already cast, Democrats are outpacing their advantage in the blue state. The effort to oust Newsom, who was elected in 2018, was launched last year by conservative Californians critical of the Democratic governor’s record on immigration, taxes, the death penalty and the state’s homelessness crisis, among other issues. The effort gained steam amid criticism of Newsom’s handling of the pandemic. However, ousting Newsom also means replacing him, and Newsom and his Democratic allies have painted a dire picture of the pandemic’s future under the potential GOP candidates in the event the recall fight succeeds.
North Korea
North Korea claims it successfully test-fired new long-range cruise missiles over the weekend, according to state-run media. The country’s announcement comes as South Korea’s top nuclear envoy heads to Japan today to discuss North Korea with US and Japanese officials. China’s foreign minister is set to visit South Korea this week as well. While the international community has long expressed concern over North Korea’s ballistic missile program, cruise missiles are a little different. They are propelled by jet engines and aren’t typically designed to carry nuclear warheads. Still, such systems are a threat to North Korea’s neighbors. The secretive nation has launched several missile tests this year to try to show off its advances and assert its importance.
India
The deadly rape of a woman last week in India has sent shock waves through the country and cast new light on India’s rape crisis. Activists have pointed out the case is similar to a notorious 2012 incident in which a woman died after being violently gang-raped. That tragedy led to a widened call for stricter laws on sexual assault. The number of reported rapes has risen since the 2012 incident, potentially because of a greater awareness of the issue. More than 32,000 cases of alleged rape against women were reported in 2019 — one roughly every 17 minutes — India’s National Crime Records Bureau said. A man has been arrested and is in custody in this latest attack.
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2nd murder hornet nest of the year eradicated and a 3rd nest located 960,335 That’s how many acres California’s Dixie Fire has burned as of last evening. If it keeps spreading as expected, it will become a “gigafire,” a rare designation given to wildfires that consume more than a million acres. My first impulse is to say, yes, it was worth it, but I no longer am certain of that. Before I go to my grave, I hope to have that question answered.
Retired four-star Gen. Dan McNeill, who led coalition forces in Afghanistan from 2002 to 2003 and then US troops from 2007 to 2008. McNeill is among top US commanders in Afghanistan who reflects on the legacy and impact of the US presence in Afghanistan in the CNN documentary, “America’s Longest War: What Went Wrong in Afghanistan.” Brought to you by CNN Underscored 7 ways to travel for free with a Chase credit card Our favorite travel credit card for beginners is currently offering new card holders 100,000 bonus points, which you can use to score fantastic travel redemptions. Here are some of our favorites. When math and art meet 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- Meanwhile, In Afghanistan
- Biden at Dover
- F*** Rambling Joe?
- Inflation, Biden style
- The war on terror, not bad for government work
Meanwhile, In Afghanistan
Posted: 12 Sep 2021 04:40 PM PDT (John Hinderaker)I am not sure how much U.S. newspapers have been covering Afghanistan lately. I see that there is no reference to events there on the front page of today’s New York Times or my home town newspaper, the Star Tribune. The Times is back to waging its non-stop war against Republicans: “G.O.P. Seethes at Biden Mandate, Even in States Requiring Other Vaccines;” “False Election Claims in California Reveal a New Normal for G.O.P.;” “The Texas Abortion Law Creates a Kind of Bounty Hunter. Here’s How It Works.” And so on. But the European press is a little more forthcoming and perhaps less inclined to defer to Joe Biden’s desire to change the subject. This is from the London Times: “Taliban death squads hunt anti-terror units.”
We are supposed to believe that this is the kinder, gentler Taliban, our partner in organizing Biden’s skedaddle and the beneficiary of $90 billion or more in military largesse. That is almost twice as much as total foreign aid, mostly civilian in addition to military, that we dole out in an average year to all countries combined.
I think there are a lot of people like this, who helped the U.S. and our allies at considerable risk to themselves and should have been prioritized in the evacuation of Afghanistan, but who were left behind in the chaos of Joe Biden’s disastrous withdrawal. More than 100,000 Afghans were airlifted out, but my sense is that they were often random beneficiaries of chance, and that many of those most deserving of evacuation were stranded along with an unknown number of American citizens.
No doubt most Americans would rather not know the gory details of the consequences of Joe Biden’s incompetence, but it is perhaps our duty to remind them now and again. We get complacent because a hard day, for us, involves being attacked on social media. Our fingernails are pretty much all intact. |
Biden at Dover
Posted: 12 Sep 2021 01:30 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)A reader responded to my post about the shunning of Joe Biden by family members of troops who died at Kabul airport with this trenchant message: The heartbreaking ritual at Dover AFB, too often repeated, is inherently theatrical. It fixes our national attention, ignites the glare of media coverage. Every word and gesture is pregnant with emotion and meaning. We know this very well. And our leaders know it, or should. Their minions and keepers certainly do. And yet…Biden? He was at his considerable worst. Bad enough that these people died, and would not have died but for his impulsive self-pleasing idiocy; but for him to lecture their families about *his* loss, and to show impatience if they wanted instead to talk of *their* loss, as their own flesh and blood was borne out of the aircraft by an honor guard? To keep peeking at his watch, as if he were late for some more pressing or pleasing matter? It’s such a terrible script. Nobody in theater would ever write it or produce it. Yet it’s the best that Biden can give us, and it’s not theater at all, it’s entirely real. We’re watching a shell of a man; and he’s coming apart. His senility reinforces his lifelong stupidity. Both feed his angry defensiveness — typical of dementia patients. And in turn the anger feeds more stupidity. I expect this process will continue and accelerate. Frightening. Yes it is. |
F*** Rambling Joe?
Posted: 12 Sep 2021 07:39 AM PDT (John Hinderaker)Yesterday Joe Biden attended the 9/11 memorial ceremony in Shanksville, Pennsylvania. He didn’t speak, but he talked to reporters (vaccinated, outdoors, with mask on) after it was over. This clip, which I created from C-Span’s video, offers a window into Biden’s current preoccupations. Biden talks about the need for unity–Democrats are always in favor of unity when they are in power–but he can’t do it without taking a graceless swipe at Donald Trump. He refers disgustedly to someone wanting to box him (“I should be so lucky”). I don’t get the reference, but I do recall Biden saying on the campaign trail that he would like to take Donald Trump behind the barn and beat him up. That was in the pre-unity days, apparently. Biden rambles on, talking about Robert E. Lee in Afghanistan, things “coming out of Florida,” and someone holding a “F so and so” sign. I guess that means Biden’s motorcade passed a group of protesters holding “F*** Joe Biden” signs. More on that in a moment. First the clip:
Meanwhile, a movement of sorts has developed at college football games, where thousands of students chant “F*** Joe Biden” in unison. InstaPundit collected some of the videos. Here is another one:
The movement seems to be spreading, and the college football season is just getting under way. Why do so many of America’s young people hold Joe Biden in contempt? I don’t know–there are many possible reasons–but it is good to see. Actually, I have mixed feelings about this one. In principle, I disapprove of crude language, especially when directed at an individual, and especially when joined in by crowds of people. On the other hand, given how the Democrats have treated every Republican president after Dwight Eisenhower, my capacity for outrage is exhausted. As far as I am concerned, the college kids can chant away. STEVE adds: This short Tik-Tok video is really strange and disturbing. Never mind the people yelling insults at Biden. Take special note, about halfway through, at the moment a minder points him in the direction of a young child, and the unsteady gait of Biden as he quickly shuffles his way over. He really does look 92 years old and out of it.
I’m thinking there’s a reason he didn’t make any live remarks at any of the remembrance sites yesterday. He simply isn’t up to it. I’m guessing most days at the White House now require considerable staff prep—and lots of vitamin or stimulant shots—to get him through maybe two hours of “work” or a very limited speaking appearance. This can’t go on much longer. |
Inflation, Biden style
Posted: 12 Sep 2021 05:40 AM PDT (Scott Johnson)Biden NEC guru Brian Deese explained from the lectern in the White House press room last week that “[i]f you take out” beef, pork and poultry from the calculations of recent retail grocery prices, the “price increases are more in line with a historical norms” (video below). I thought the methodology invited mockery. If you throw out dietary staples, it’s not so bad! However, Deese cited a report that he had conducted with his colleagues supporting the proposition. This appears to be it: “Addressing Concentration in the Meat-Processing Industry to Lower Food Prices for American Families.” I don’t have the professional competence to assess it. I should leave it to others who do. I will limit myself to a few observations. The report attributes the price increases to four large conglomerates that “overwhelmingly control meat supply chains, driving down earnings for farmers while driving up prices for consumers.” The industry is alleged to be “highly consolidated” and to serve “as a key choke point in the supply chain[.]” I would prefer a metaphor other than “choke point” when discussing food supply chains, but the authors want to make it sound dire. According to the report, this consolidation has taken place over the past 50 years and the extent of consolidation varies widely as to each of the three products — the four firms “control approximately 55-85% of the market for these three products[.]” Here is the precise breakdown:
For some reason, however, the four food conglomerate have only woken up to their dominance and ratcheted up prices since the election of Joe Biden — the report dates the price increases to December 2020. In his comments last week Deese referred to the double digit price increases of “the last couple of months.” It’s almost funny. In the Stalin era, they used to call economic saboteurs “wreckers.” The four food conglomerates have been assigned the role of “wreckers” in the Biden regime. For some reason, however, the alleged miscreants go unnamed in Deese’s report. I believe they are Minnesota’s own Cargill, Tyson Foods, Brazil-based JBS, and National Beef Packing. Rest assured that the Biden-Harris administration is on the case. Reuters reports “Biden administration plans tougher action to rein in meat prices” — “tougher action” being antitrust enforcement. In other words, assuming the report is on the money, relief is not in sight any time soon. But that’s not all! The report itemizes other remedies in addition to antitrust enforcement. Each of us will have his own favorite. This is mine (emphasis in original, link omitted):
As the man says in Monty Python’s Life of Brian: “Silence! What is all this insolence?” David Goldman takes up the big picture in the Asia Times column “It’s the inflation, stupid.” Monty Python to the contrary notwithstanding, it’s not funny after all.
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The war on terror, not bad for government work
Posted: 11 Sep 2021 09:50 PM PDT (Paul Mirengoff)Based on what I’ve read and seen, the prevailing narrative on the 20th anniversary of 9/11 is that the war on terror went pear-shaped. 9/11 presented a test, and we failed it. On September 12, 2001, America was unified as it hadn’t been for decades. Our allies were fully behind us. But we blew it, or rather the Bush administration did by plunging us into war in Iraq. So I keep reading and hearing. I disagree. My view is that we won the first 20 years of the long war on terror. Sure, we made many mistakes, as always happens in difficult wars. But there hasn’t been an attack on our homeland of anything remotely like 9/11’s scale in 20 years. Few predicted this on 9/12, and the fact that the grim predictions of that time didn’t come true isn’t down to luck. It’s due largely to the war on terror. This alone represents victory to me. I would view things differently if the price of preventing major attacks had been a forfeiture of our freedom and core principles. But it hasn’t been. Claims that America has become a surveillance state are wildly exaggerated. Indeed, we don’t hear them much anymore. When we do, they seem paranoid, at least to me. This is not to deny that America is less free than it was 20 years ago. But our lack of freedom stems from speech codes, the cancel culture, and the pandemic, not from any overreaction to 9/11. What about our obvious lack of national unity? This phenomenon too has nothing to do with 9/11. It’s true that the Iraq war was extremely divisive, although not nearly as divisive as the Vietnam war. However, we largely overcame the divisions over the Iraq war, as we did with Vietnam. America reached a consensus (valid or not) that invading Iraq was a major mistake for which “neo-cons” were to blame. The lack of nationality unity we experience today has next to nothing to do with Iraq or the war on terror. We’re bitterly divided because the left wants to transform America radically (it’s very open about this desire) and at least half the country — significantly more than half, I believe — doesn’t want major national transformation. What about our relations with allies? Donald Trump alienated some of our allies through actions and words having nothing to do with that war. Joe Biden lost the trust and respect of many allies through his unilateral decision to pull troops out Afghanistan the way he did. So yes, the way Biden is prosecuting the war on terror has harmed relations with our allies. But this isn’t what most commentators have in mind when they complain about what they consider the deleterious effect of the war on terror on our foreign relations. Finally, let’s consider the state of play around the world when it comes to the threat of terrorism. In 2001, Iraq posed a threat. Saddam Hussein harbored terrorists. He plotted to assassinate George H.W. Bush. As far as I can tell, Iraq no longer exports terrorism. Afghanistan didn’t either for 20 years. With the Taliban back in power, Afghanistan might once again become a source of international terrorism. We can hope, however, that after 20 years of war the Taliban will be at least somewhat more inclined to deter al Qaeda and other such groups from attacking the U.S. In 2001, the Saudis were key supporters of terrorism against the West. That’s no longer the case. The U.S. had something to do with this turnaround, although terrorist attacks within the Kingdom in 2003 and 2004 were a more important factor. In 2001, the United Arab Emirates was one of only three governments in the world that recognized the Taliban — the others were Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. Now, the UAE has not recognized the Taliban, at least not yet. By contrast, as Fareed Zakaria observes, it has recognized Israel. Zakaria also points out that the UAE no longer panders to Islamist fundamentalists. Instead, it openly embraces most aspects of modernism. What about the infamous “Arab street?” It too has been transformed. Zakaria cites polls about support for terrorism among Muslim populations. In 2005, 57 percent of the Jordanian public thought suicide attacks are sometimes or always justified. By 2009, that number was down to 29 percent. Zakaria cites similar results from “the Muslim” street in Indonesia and Pakistan. The overall picture of the Islamic world that Zakaria paints is too rosy. He ignores instability in places like Libya, Sudan, and the Congo. Zakaria also ignores Iran, a major exporter of terrorism in the Middle East and a potential exporter to the U.S. Of course, Iran’s biggest potential threat to world order isn’t its penchant for terrorism, but rather the likelihood that it will develop nuclear weapons. The war on terrorism didn’t produce this potential threat, but neither have we truly dealt with it. In sum, I view the war on terrorism as a success because (1) for 20 years, we haven’t been attacked in anything like the way we were on 9/11, (2) we’re considerably less vulnerable to such an attack than we were in the months following 9/11 because of measures taken in response (coordination of intelligence gathering and heightened airport security, for example), (3) key state actors have turned against terrorism or, in some cases, been replaced by more benign regimes, (4) Islamic populations view terrorism far less favorably than they used to, and (5) we have accrued these benefits without forfeiting our freedoms and our principles. Americans are considerably safer now than we were 20 years ago, though we aren’t fully safe. Not great, but not bad for government work. |
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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
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96.) NOT THE BEE
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Not the Bee Daily Newsletter |
Sep 13, 2021 |
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Trans fighter who served in the Army Special Forces pulverizes first female opponent in MMA debutWelcome to 2021, where we’ve “progressed” to the point where we allow biological males to punch the crud out of women on stage:
This is the face of medical fascism.Those who would do you the most harm rarely appear as the cartoonish characters we often associate with evildoers. Take, for example, the current authoritarian premier of China, Xi Jinping. Does this look like the face of a man who would condone genocide of the Uyghur population?
PELOSI IN APRIL: “We cannot require someone to be vaccinated”
Bombshell NASA discovery indicates possible early “habitable sustained environment” on surface of MarsNASA this week revealed stunning findings from one of its Martian rovers that suggest the possibility of the presence of significant surface water in the planet’s history:
America’s Doctor: Watch as Fauci can’t explain why people with natural COVID immunity should still get vaccinatedDid you contract a case of COVID-19, recover from it, and now possess natural immunity that some research suggests might be superior to vaccinated immunity—and yet you’re still being mercilessly hounded to take the COVID vaccine? What’s up with that?
An American flag and some Canes fans saved a cat from certain doom and the video is amazingA stray cat was saved by a few awesome fans and an American flag at the Miami Hurricanes football game tonight, and you’ve just gotta watch the video to believe it.
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
99.) MARK LEVIN
September 10, 2021
On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, September 11th was a time where America saw great heroes and great leaders emerge during a tragedy resulting from an enemy strike. Regrettably, that very same enemy is back. Leaders like Mayor Giuliani are now being destroyed by the left, the police that were lauded as heroes are now met with calls to defund them. This program will always honor their dedication and sacrifice. President Biden is a president to be despised and should hide his face. Young soldiers and experienced officers have sacrificed for 20 years only for Biden to come and reverse their efforts. Later, the time has come to reclaim what is ours. If we close our eyes and ears we will lose this struggle and will define us as they wish. The American Marxist live off of the sweat and toil of others and hate America and its founding. Afterward, Debra Burlingame, the sister of American Airlines pilot Chip Burlingame, calls the show to express her sentiments on 9/11 and recent developments. Burlingame reiterated how ruthless the Taliban was and is and how their radicalism stems from Islamist extremism dating back to the 7th Century. In their view, this is a holy war. Finally, Anthony Fauci fails to make the case for how natural immunity stacks up against the vaccines. While Jen Psaki similarly can’t articulate why American citizens working for companies with 100 employees or more are required to be vaccinated but employees of smaller companies are not. Why is OSHA now involved in medical decisions? And if it is an emergency, why aren’t migrants crossing the border into the US is mandated to take the vaccine?
THIS IS FROM:
Just The News
National Archives flags America’s founding documents for ‘harmful language’
NY Post
Biden droned the wrong guy, innocent aid worker killed in Kabul strike: NYT
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Porter Gifford
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More Kids Shot in Chicago Than Have Died In US From COVID-“Cavalier” Biden Remains MumMore Kids Shot in Chicago Than Have Died In US From COVID-“Cavalier” Biden Remains Mum Last Friday Joe Biden, unhappy with pushback against his authoritarian COVID mandates, accused GOP governors… | |
Good news! Biden’s bringing us together & showing democracies can workJoe Biden rambled on somewhat incoherently during his visit to Shanksville, Pennsylvania yesterday. That was nothing new, but it was interesting in that he was completely lacking in self-awareness. Less… | |
Cartels are destroying border wall along popular drug trafficking routesA popular drug trafficking route was blocked by former President Trump’s wall but now that Biden’s in charge, the criminals were able to cut massive holes in it. The wall… | |
Obnoxious Chris Wallace suggests Justice Breyer retire, not be a ‘fool’Fox News’s resident leftist Chris Wallace interviewed Justice Breyer today and asked non-stop why he wouldn’t retire. He played a clip of the late Justice Scalia saying only a fool… | |
CNN can’t bring in the viewers of an average blogThroughout the summer, breaking news brought up every network’s viewership except CNN’s. As Fox News reported, there is the migrant crisis, the pandemic, growing inflation, the tragic Surfside condo building… | |
Ethics Professor provides a most important lesson on courage and integrityCanadian professor Dr. Julie Ponesse is an expert in ethics and gives a lesson on the ethics of forcing people to take a vaccine on this clip. It’s ethically wrong… | |
‘Professional’ Taliban make boys disappear, bring back the Virtue ministryInvestigative reporter Lara Logan says that the Taliban are taking all young boys from their homes in the Pansjir Valley at gunpoint and making them disappear. It’s hard to believe… | |
Freedom or slavery? It’s time to choose!Biden will announce more vaccine measures ahead of the UN general assembly, according to the U.S. Surgeon General. Yesterday, BioNTech, which collaborates with Pfizer, will request approval to use its… | |
Sen Manchin will not vote ‘yes’ on human infrastructureSen. Joe Manchin said on CNN that he will not vote to tackle the climate crisis, expand education, health care, and childcare support, or make more investments in our infrastructure.… | |
UN expects $600 million from the US and others for the TalibanThe BidenBama administration appears anxious to provide aid to the Taliban and many believe it is part of the deal he made with these terrorists. It would be hard to… | |
Wait until you hear why a popular British comedian might get canceledWhen you think the cancel culture has gone as far as it can go, it gets worse. A case in point concerns a popular UK comedian Rufus Hound. He is… | |
How to Steal a Georgia ElectionAbrams’ fundraiser exposes how she plans to steal the election HOW TO STEAL AN ELECTION Stacey Abrams sent around the email below warning Democrats if they don’t send money, they… | |
COV pandemic is global & The Great Reset comes to mindThe plandemic, as Psaki called it, has been used to inflict a hardcore leftist agenda on Americans. Democrats said they would use it to put their agenda through and they… | |
LA Sheriff will investigate hate crime against Larry ElderLarry Elder is running for governor in the Gavin Newsom recall election and was recently the victim of a hate crime, now being investigated. The popular radio host and the… | |
Joe Biden, America’s figurehead, TRIGGEREDJoe Biden, America’s Figurehead Joe Biden is likely shielded from much of the animus out there towards him. Heck, he’s probably shielded from what he’s doing. Does he know he’s… | |
‘We love Trump’ chants filled the Hard Rock Hotel last nightDonald Trump received a tremendous welcome at the Holyfield vs. Belfort fight in Florida last night. Chants of ‘We Love Trump with some Trump 2024 signs filled the arena. Watch… | |
Reporter’s deeply troubling warning: destruction of the USA is deliberateJake Bequette and Lara Logan joined Judge Jeanine on her Saturday night show. Ms. Logan gave a deeply troubling report. Lara Logan doesn’t know how we stand by while Afghan… | |
Biden uses his 9/11 speech in Shanksville to lie about the withdrawalBiden was in Shanksville today where passengers stormed the cockpit, trying to stop the hijackers, forcing it to crash, and preventing it from reaching DC. The hijackers were either going… | |
Bill Maher rips NFL ‘segregation’ with 2 national anthems“Real Time” host Bill Maher blasted the NFL for playing two national anthems at Thursday night’s season kickoff game between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Dallas Cowboys. Maher began… | |
General Keane responds to being fired by BidenGeneral Keane was one of 18 Trump appointees fired by Joe Biden from service academy boards. They were acting as non-partisans and were to serve for three years. It’s defined… |
105.) DC CLOTHESLINE
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