MORNING NEWS BRIEFING – SEPTEMBER 23, 2021

Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday September 23, 2021

1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL

September 23 2021
Good morning from Washington, where Democrats testifying at a Senate hearing hedge their bets on the “racism” of voter ID. Fred Lucas reports on their responses to Sen. Ted Cruz. You know President Biden is in hot water politically when he harps on tax fairness, Ben Shapiro writes. On the podcast, find out why even knitting isn’t safe from cancel culture. Plus: what’s wrong with drug price controls; China cracks down on pop culture; and “Problematic Women” examines the fascination with the Gabby Petito case. On this date in 1949, President Harry Truman informs the American people that the Soviets have exploded a nuclear bomb years earlier than expected.
NEWS
What Democrats Say When Ted Cruz Asks Whether Voter ID Is Racist
By Fred Lucas
Voter ID laws are racist in Texas and could be in other states as well, depending on intent, three Democrat witnesses say at a Senate hearing.
COMMENTARY
‘Pay Your Fair Share’ Taxation Isn’t About Actual Fairness
By Ben Shapiro
President Biden attempts to inject life into his ailing presidency by dragging out of the closet the hoariest of political cliches: “fairness” in taxation.
COMMENTARY
China’s ‘Revolution’ Profound but Not Unprecedented
By Michael Cunningham
For the most part, China’s top leaders through the years have held firm to the party’s Marxist ambitions, even while they enabled capitalism to flourish as a means to this end.
COMMENTARY
Democrats’ Drug Price Controls Threaten Biotech Research Patients
By Grace-Marie Turner
Many dreadful provisions are in Democrats’ $3.5 trillion spending bill, but a scheme to impose price controls on prescription drugs is especially destructive.
ANALYSIS
Why Are Americans Fixated on Gabby Petito Case?
By Virginia Allen
On today’s edition of the “Problematic Women” podcast, we break down why America has become consumed with Gabby Petito’s story.
ANALYSIS
Long Arm of Cancel Culture Comes for Knitting
By Douglas Blair
You would think the knitting community would be a “safe place” for those of all political views, including conservatives. You’d be wrong.
COMMENTARY
ICYMI: Democrats’ War on Blacks Keeps Growing in Pandemic
By Roger Simon
Democrats’ calling Republicans “racist,” as they do on a ritual basis, is one of the more nauseating examples of projection in human history.
LOGO-CHARCOAL_75percent.jpg

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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES

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3.) DAYBREAK

Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2021
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1.
Gallup: Biden Job Approval Falls to New Low

Gallup has him underwater by ten points now, the first time he’s been there. The big drop is among Independent voters, who have approval at only 37 percent. Democrats are nearly unchanged (Gallup). Biden supporters are slipping under the table (Fox News).

2.
Hewitt: GOP Must Say No to Democrat Tax and Spend

From the story: The GOP does not believe in tax hikes. They don’t believe in the wild-eyed spending plans of Sanders and “the Squad.” They don’t want to help the Democrats get their act together and figure out which taxes to raise and by how much and how many trillions to print and spend on crazy projects. They want no part of it. When Pelosi closes the government, the Washington Monument and Mount Rushmore — the Republicans should point out that the Democrats, by themselves, can fix it and then just say no to demands that they help. When legacy news media hammers the GOP from all sides, complicit in the Democratic messaging, when Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellin predicts catastrophic consequences, the GOP must simply say, “The Democrats can fix all of that. They run everything. They broke it, they bought it. We aren’t helping them tax and spend us into the fiscal abyss.” Message discipline: Just. Say. No.

Washington Post

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3.
Oregon Sees Spike in Covid Cases After Manding Masks Outdoors

Up 73 percent. Covid seems to be ignoring the precautions in Oregon (National Review). From Bethany Mandel: Nobody wants to wear a mask outside where it’s uncomfortable and unnecessary so they all go inside. Great work everyone (Twitter).

4.
Biden Sees Approval Among Blacks Drop 5 Points Since Vaccine Mandate

It’s still at a hefty 71 percent, but it’s been on a steady decline since the beginning of August.

Morning Consult

5.
DHS Puts Border Agents on Desk Duty for Effort to Stop Illegal Border Crossing

After the media reported they used whips, confusing the horse reins (RedState). The media is still misreporting it (Twitter). Maxine Waters had the audacity to call the treatment of Haitians “worse than what we witnessed in slavery” (Mediaite).

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6.
ACLU Honors and Edits RGB to Make Her Sentence Woke

From the story: The American Civil Liberties Union shared an abortion quote from the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg earlier this week, but replaced the word “woman’s” with “person’s” (Daily Wire). From Erielle Davidson: The ACLU erasing the word “woman” to appease the rabid left is something to behold. “Woman” isn’t a dirty word, and the left should be ashamed of themselves (Twitter). From Eli Lake: This is both hilarious and chilling (Twitter).

7.
Haitian Migrants Hijack More Busses

Overpowering drivers.  We reported on one incident in yesterday’s Daybreak, but there have been more. Gives one a feel for the type of people who are crossing into the United States.

Washington Examiner

8.
Black Lives Matter Calls New York Vaccine Mandate Racist

Surprising it took them this long to jump on this opportunity (The Federalist). From another story: Black Americans are the least likely of all racial and ethnic demographics to have received a COVID-19 vaccine. According to Morning Consult, 53 percent of black adults have received the shots — a lower share than that of any other race or ethnicity (National Review).

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9.
John Kerry on Being Friendly to China Despite Uyghur Camps: “Life is Always Full of Tough Choices”

Murder and torture is forgiven if they agree to go along with the climate demands. And they don’t have to actually do it.  Just agree to do it.

Twitter

10.
Woman Tosses Injured Puppy Into Ocean, Faces Felony Cruelty Charge

She did so because she didn’t have the money to pay for a vet. The dog, which survived, was euthanized anyway.

NY Post

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4.) THE SUNBURN

Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 9.23.21

All the news that fits, and more: Your first look at Sunshine State politics and policy news.

Good Thursday morning.

#RaysUp

 

___

Breaking overnight — “FDA approves Pfizer boosters for high-risk individuals, people 65 and up” via Axios — The approval comes just days after an FDA advisory panel recommended boosters for the two groups but overwhelmingly voted against the third shots for younger Americans. The approval also applies to people ages 18 to 64 “whose frequent institutional or occupational exposure” puts them at high risk for serious complications from the virus. The White House had hoped to begin administering boosters to many Pfizer recipients, including young Americans, this week. Several experts on the FDA advisory committee said last week that they hadn’t seen enough data to justify boosters for the general population. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will likely issue guidance on boosters after a key advisory panel votes Thursday on third doses.

___

We wanted to hold this story back for our FP Plus partners and subscribers, but we can’t help but spill it.

The Senate’s health care policy lead plans to put vaccine mandates in the crosshairs in the 2022 Legislative Session.

No, not that vaccine. All of them.

Hialeah Republican Sen. Manny Diaz, who chairs the Senate Health Policy Committee, told Christine Sexton of Florida Politics he plans to “review” existing vaccine requirements that have long been in place in Florida schools — the ones that require students to get shots for measles, mumps and more.

Manny Diaz wants to review the need for vaccine mandates. All of them.

Said review comes as GOP electeds are facing heat for their anti-mandate rhetoric on the COVID-19 vaccine and none of the others.

Under current law, only parents who cite religious or health reasons can exempt their children from vaccination requirements. Otherwise, parents need to show proof of vaccination — or a vaccine passport, if you will — showing they’ve received a long list of vaccinations.

Diaz, who hasn’t been vaccinated for COVID-19, did offer a moderate defense of the more ubiquitous and “proven” vaccines required of schoolchildren, such as the Truman-era combo shot for diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis.

“I think there’s a distinction when you have something that is proven to work and doesn’t have any side effects,” he said.

___

Welcome to the world — Joshua Karp, a Democratic communications strategist and founding partner at Hone Strategies, and Dorian Karp, director of policy and advocacy at Jewish Women International, on Tuesday morning welcomed Rory Shoshana Karp, who came in at 7 lbs., 2 oz., and joins her big sister Ellie.

— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —

Tweettweet:

 

@JonahDispatch: It’s like the apologists who were determined to parrot the line that COVID was “just the flu” or “not as bad as the flu” couldn’t let go of the fact they were embarrassingly wrong, so they still want to claim 675K dead are no big deal.

@mkrajuStephanie Murphy, moderate House Dem, tells @AnnieGrayerCNN of Pelosi: “I would be deeply disappointed if she didn’t put the infrastructure bill on the floor as the resolution requires her to.”

@AshleyMoodyFL: “Defund” is the new radical buzzword in D.C. Dems are gung-ho on wasteful spending, but when it comes to funding for peace and safety there always seems to be an issue. To defund the Iron Dome would endanger the lives of the people of Israel, one of our most important allies.

@LMower3: That’s one of the main themes of the @GovRonDeSantis administration during the pandemic: Major policy changes, made cryptically and quietly with no clarifications or opportunities for questions to be answered.

@NateMonroeTU: it’s like we’re doing reverse contact tracing now, after, of course, never having really tried contact tracing in the first place

@BenDiamondFL: Many school districts have followed the advice of public health professionals and taken appropriate steps to protect the health and safety of our children and teachers. This new rule from the (RonDeSantis administration will interfere with those efforts. It’s misguided and dangerous.

@FowlerThanEver: I’d encourage everyone who wants to talk trash about redistricting to draw a map and see how “easy” it is.

Tweet, tweet:

 

— DAYS UNTIL —

The Problem with Jon Stewart premieres on Apple TV+ — 7; Disability Employment Awareness Month begins — 8; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres — 8; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 8; MLB regular season ends — 10; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres — 15; ‘Succession’ returns — 24; ‘Dune’ premieres — 29; World Series Game 1 — 33; Florida Chamber Future of Florida Forum begins — 34; Florida TaxWatch’s annual meeting begins — 34; Georgia at UF — 37; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 40; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Primary — 40; The Blue Angels 75th anniversary show — 43; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 43; ‘Yellowstone’ Season 4 begins — 45; ‘Disney Very Merriest After Hours’ will debut — 46; Miami at FSU — 51; ExcelinEd National Summit on Education begins — 56; FSU vs. UF — 65; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 69; Jacksonville special election to fill seat vacated by Tommy Hazouri‘s death — 75; Steven Spielberg‘s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 78; ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 85; ‘The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 90; ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 93; NFL season ends — 108; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 110; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 110; Joel Coen’s ‘The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 113; NFL playoffs begin — 114; Super Bowl LVI — 143; Daytona 500 — 150; St. Pete Grand Prix — 157; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 183; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 227; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 246; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 252; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 288; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 300; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 379; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 414.

— TOP STORY —

Florida lawmaker files Texas-style fetal heartbeat abortion bill enforced by lawsuits” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — The bill, filed by Rep. Webster Barnaby, would create civil penalties of at least $10,000, echoing the controversial Texas law that passed muster by the U.S. Supreme Court by a vote of 6-3. The bill also would ban abortion after a fetal heartbeat is detected, generally at about six weeks, although the science is disputed whether a fetal heartbeat actually exists before seven weeks of gestation. Anyone other than a government employee can file a lawsuit against someone who not only performs an abortion when a fetal heartbeat can be detected, but anyone who “aids or abets” such an abortion, including “paying for or reimbursing the costs of an abortion through insurance or otherwise … regardless of whether the person knew or should have known that the abortion would be performed or induced,” the bill reads. The proposed legislation specifies that the state or any state agency or local government would not be responsible for enforcement, only civil lawsuits.

Webster Barnaby is taking his cue from Texas. Image via Colin Hackley.

Nikki Fried blasts abortion bill — Agriculture Commissioner Fried called Barnaby’s Texas-style abortion bill “dangerous, radical, and unconstitutional” in a statement released shortly after it was filed. “The hypocrisy of this attempt by Gov. DeSantis and Republicans in the state Legislature to take away our rights while at the same time preaching ‘my body, my choice” when it comes to wearing masks is absolutely disgusting,” she said. “They have made it abundantly clear by banning masks in schools and refusing to apply for money to help hungry kids that they don’t actually care about children’s lives.” The sole statewide Democrat closed with a promise to Florida women: “I will do everything in my power to stop this bill from becoming law. “

Lauren Book says abortion bill all rhetoric, no science — Senate Democratic Leader Book noted the filing of the “extreme” anti-abortion bill means “women’s fears have been realized.” The Plantation lawmaker continued, “Rooted in rhetoric instead of science, the bill cruelly strips women of their right to choose what happens to their own bodies. No exemption for rape and incest. Vigilante cause of action included. The House bill will be fiercely opposed by our Caucus because this outright attack on women will never be tolerated.” The statement reiterates the stance she expressed in a recent digital ad produced by the Florida Democratic Party, in which she said any attempt to import a Texas-style abortion law to the Sunshine State will be met with “fierce, fierce, fierce opposition.”

Lauren Book bristles at the newly filed ‘heartbeat bill.’ Image via Colin Hackley.

But … Chris Sprowls asks Erin Grall, Colleen Burton to explore options for abortion bill — House Speaker Sprowls said while he has been consistently anti-abortion, any state bill limiting abortion rights would need clear hurdles set in Article I, Section 23 of the Florida Constitution, which guarantees Floridians a right to privacy. “Our laws have to be strong enough to jump through multiple levels of judicial scrutiny. We look forward to bringing to the floor a bill that saves every unborn life possible,” he said. “I have asked House Judiciary Committee Chairwoman Grall and House Health & Human Services Chairwoman Burton to review the various proposals, look at other ideas, and take point on this issue this Session.”

—”‘Unconscionable but not unexpected’: House Dems react to Texas-style abortion bill filed in Florida” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics

Ron DeSantis bobbles question about the bill” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Asked to compare and contrast “The Florida Heartbeat Act” (HB 167), called “freedom of choice during the pandemic,” DeSantis fumbled and ultimately offered an inconclusive answer. “Well, I think the difference is between, uh, the right to life is that another life is at stake. Whereas whether you’re doing stuff is really … if you’ve put something in your body or not, it doesn’t affect other people. So that’s in terms of protecting another life,” he asserted, choosing generalities over policy specifics. DeSantis demurred that he had not “seen what was there … I have a 100% pro-life record and very much have supported when I was in Congress and signed as Governor.”

— DATELINE TALLY —

Legislature launches redistricting website — The Legislature on Wednesday debuted a joint redistricting webpage that features an interactive map drawing function that allows the public to draw and submit redistricting plans. A news release announcing the website says the website’s GIS backbone includes the “data necessary to build districts down to the census block level.” Senate President Wilton Simpson said, “staff have been working tirelessly to integrate recently received census data with the new map-drawing application so legislators and the public can appropriately and actively participate in this once-in-a-decade process in a tangible and meaningful way.” House Speaker Sprowls added that the website launch “marks an exciting milestone for this redistricting cycle.”

Check out the website here.

OK Florida, have at it.

Manny Diaz wants to ‘review’ existing non-COVID-19 vaccine mandates” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics+ — Florida’s ongoing response to the COVID-19 pandemic will continue to be a major focus during the 2022 Legislative Session for Sen. Diaz, the top Republican shaping health care policy in the upper chamber. His work could include revisiting existing vaccine requirements long in place in schools, a response to the debate about whether COVID-19 vaccines should also be required. Diaz, who came down with COVID-19 last winter, said he wants to review the state’s vaccination efforts as well as DeSantis’ work on getting monoclonal antibody treatments to those who test positive for COVID-19. The Senator, who acknowledges he hasn’t gotten a COVID-19 vaccine, says he’s firmly against vaccine mandates.

Christine Hunchofsky miffed by lack of nursing home personal care attendant data” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — AHCA could not say on Wednesday how many people who have worked as personal care attendants in the last 17 months went on to become certified nurse assistants, a stated goal of the personal care attendant program. “At this point, we do not have that information,” AHCA Deputy Secretary for Quality Assurance Kim Smoak said when House Finance & Facilities Subcommittee member Rep. Christine Hunschofsky asked the question. Hunchofsky, though, was less than pleased. “It’s a little concerning that you don’t have that data since the pandemic began in March 2020,” she said. The goal of the temporary personal care attendant program was to provide nursing homes with additional staff to care for their residents and to eventually grow the size of the state’s long-term care workforce.

Republican lawmaker files take two of ‘Victims of Communism Day‘” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Floridians could soon observe ‘Victims of Communism Day’ under a new bill filed in the Florida Senate, similar to a failed bill last Session. Sponsored by Republican Sen. Manny Diaz, the bill (SB 268) would designate Nov. 7 as ‘Victims of Communism Day’ and require public school students to receive instruction on communist dictators. “Communism has proved incompatible with the ideals of liberty, prosperity, and dignity of human life and has given rise to such infamous totalitarian dictators as Josef StalinVladimir LeninMao Zedong and Pol Pot,” the measure reads. Students must also learn of the experience of communism victims. The bill would require at least 45 minutes of instruction for students enrolled in a high school government course.

Oenophiles rejoice: Chip LaMarca again seeking to repeal bottle size limits” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — Rep. LaMarca once again wants bigger bottles of wine — for retailers to sell, that is. The bill (HB 6031) the Lighthouse Republican filed Tuesday is identical to the one he filed last Session and the Session before. It seeks to repeal state law banning wine sales in containers larger than 1 gallon. The measure has sailed through the House of Representatives only to die in the Senate three years in a row. The standard size of a wine bottle is 750 milliliters, which is about five servings. One gallon would be 3,785 milliliters, with about 25 servings. A wine bottle called the Nebuchadnezzar is equivalent to 20 standard wine bottles, and the Solomon is equal to 24 standard wine bottles.

Florida law requires landlords to provide heat, not air conditioning. Michael Grieco wants to fix that” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — In Florida, one of the hottest states in America year-round, landlords are required by law to provide tenants with “functioning facilities for heat during winter.” They don’t have to do the same for air conditioning. It’s an absurd oversight, said Grieco, a state Representative from Miami Beach who aims to correct the issue through legislation this Session. “I almost fell over when I found out about it,” he told Florida Politics. “I’ll be filing a bill to address that specific issue, and we’ll see if it gets any traction.” Grieco said he hopes his forthcoming bill receives bipartisan support. He’s not sure it will, considering the current political climate.

Agriculture Department wants raises for first responders, funding for water and climate change” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics+ — The Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services is asking for $150 million in the upcoming budget, including nearly $6 million to fund pay raises for the department’s first responders. The agency released its funding request Monday as the first week of legislative committee hearings began. Fried, who is also mounting a campaign for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, leads the department. “Despite the challenges of operating through a continuing pandemic, our core mission remains the same: to safeguard the public and support Florida agriculture,” Fried said. “Our budget priorities are solutions-oriented and critical not only to our department’s success, but also to our state.”

“‘EVs are coming’: Lawmakers hear findings from electric vehicle study” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Florida transportation officials say infrastructure efforts the Legislature launched have given the state a head start on the road to electric vehicles. Officials from the state Department of Transportation and Florida Power and Light briefed House and Senate panels on the recent history and future of electric vehicles in Florida. FDOT has worked with the Department of Environmental Protection and the Public Service Commission to develop a master plan for building charging station infrastructure to expand Florida’s electric vehicle network. Expanding the grid would help address the problem of “range anxiety,” fears that electric vehicle drivers won’t find the power stations necessary to make their trips, kind of like running out of gas.

Universities tout high rankings, low tuition in push for additional funding” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Florida schools are decreasing tuition while increasing their national rankings, education officials tout to lawmakers as they ask for increased funding. State University System Chancellor Marshall Criser and the Board of Governors are requesting budget increases, including an additional $15 million in performance-based funding for the coming fiscal year. Criser outlined a $5.5 billion total budget request. Department of Education Deputy Commissioner Suzanne Pridgeon posed a $3.3 billion operating budget. The Sunshine State’s public universities have been excelling, Criser said, accentuated by the University of Florida’s recent ranking as a top-five public school nationally by U.S. News and World Report this month.

Marshall Criser is hoping Florida can float some more cash to its top-ranked universities.

State University System working with FSU politics institute to develop ‘intellectual diversity’ survey” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — State University System Chancellor Criser told the House Post-Secondary Education & Lifelong Learning Subcommittee the system is working with the Institute of Politics at Florida State University to develop the survey. With DeSantis’ blessing, the Republican-led Legislature mandated creating that survey earlier this year in a bill to protect “intellectual freedom and viewpoint diversity” on college campuses. The Legislature established the Institute of Politics last year as part of a broader higher education package. “We saw it as a potential resource for us to work in the development of the survey mechanism,” Criser said.

New lobby registrations:

New and renewed lobbying registrations:

Brian BallardJose Diaz, Ballard Partners: MC Advisors

Ellyn BogdanoffNicholas Matthews, Becker & Poliakoff: Pigeonly

Melanie Brown-WoofterShane Messer: Florida Council for Behavioral Healthcare

Scott Dick, SKD Consulting Group: Association of Support Coordination Agencies

Leslie Dughi, Metz Husband & Daughton: American Lung Association, Florida Physical Therapy Association, Florida Psychiatric Society, Mayo Clinic

George FeijooGary Guzzo, Floridian Partners: Allstate Insurance Company

Meghan HoddeKen PruittMark Pruitt, The P5 Group: ITI Holdings

Jonathan KilmanMario Bailey, Converge Public Strategies: Florida Independent Liquor Store Owners Association, WANRack

Allison Sackett: State Courts System

Corey Staniscia, CS Consulting Group: OceanTherm

Monte Stevens, The Southern Group: Next Insurance

— STATEWIDE —

“‘Writing on the wall’ at prominent appeals court supports DeSantis’s pandemic agenda” via Noreen Marcus of FloridaBulldog.org — Judges are expected to set aside their biases when they rule. But Judge Adam Tanenbaum of the 1st District Court of Appeal in Tallahassee has written or signed onto pandemic rulings that appear to rely on partisan spin and not on scientific facts. Most recently, on Sept. 10, Tanenbaum was one of three judges who lifted, for now, Leon Circuit Judge John Cooper‘s order rejecting the state ban on school mask mandates. Tanenbaum wrote an opinion that attacks an Alachua County masking order directed at businesses. Also, a three-judge panel including Tanenbaum threatened the career of Daniel Uhlfelder, a Panhandle lawyer who suggested in court papers that DeSantis is risking lives for political gain.

Ron DeSantis gets some backup from a prominent court of appeals.

State prison official sounds alarm: ‘We don’t have another Session to get this right‘” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The Florida prison system remains under duress, and the time to act is now, a Florida Department of Corrections official told lawmakers Wednesday. Speaking to the House Criminal Justice & Public Safety Subcommittee, Deputy Secretary Ricky Dixon said staffing issues and overcrowding remain the agency’s chief concern. An immediate intervention, he warned, is necessary. “We just don’t have another Session to get this right from all the statistics we’re looking at,” Dixon said. The agency will seek to raise starting pay to over $41,000 in the upcoming Legislative Session. The move, he added, may slow the migration of state prison employees to other higher-paying agencies.

CIO says Florida’s cybersecurity isn’t in a ‘great place,’ but it’s getting better — Florida Chief Information Officer Jamie Grant told a House panel Wednesday that the state is spending a lot of time on cybersecurity yet remains behind the curve. Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida reported that the Republican former lawmaker said that while the state has lagged in maintaining its cybersecurity capabilities, it’s getting better. “Anyone who tells you we are in great posture, or in a great place is giving false hope,” he said. “At the same time, if anyone tells you the state is not heading in the right direction, they do not know what they are talking about.” Grant said also described recent reports on the severity of staffing problems at FDS as “clickbait.” He said nearly 90% of FDS hires made during his tenure are still at the agency.

Environmental inspections fell in Florida during COVID-19 pandemic” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics+ — State environmental investigators inspected fewer potential violations in 2020 than in 2019, but the number of enforcement actions reached their highest level in nearly a decade, according to a new study from Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility. Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) investigators did find more violations in 2020 than in 2019 as industry compliance rates fell. The agency initiated 742 enforcement cases in 2020. That’s the highest yearly total since 2011, when more than 1,100 cases were opened. But DEP conducted fewer inspections “in every major program” except one, according to a news release about the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility study.

Florida approves preservation of 20,000 acres” via Ben Montgomery and Selene San Felice of Axios — Gov. DeSantis and the Cabinet approved $50 million on land preservation deals for seven parcels covering almost 20,000 acres. The money comes from the Florida Forever program, and the deals either preserve wilderness lands by limiting public access or allow ranching operations to continue with rules against development. The move protects important water supplies and preserves linkages through the Florida Wildlife Corridor, which runs the length of the state to provide safe migration routes for the Florida Panther and other animals. Six of the seven parcels are in the Corridor. This is the first time the Governor and Cabinet have met since the Florida Wildlife Corridor Act was signed into law, showing a bipartisan commitment to the environment.

David Altmaier paints bleak picture of property insurance market” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Florida insurers are reporting heavier losses in 2021 than last year, and Insurance Commissioner Altmaier told state legislators that his office was currently monitoring several insurance companies to ensure they remain solvent and asked as many as 12 companies to submit monthly financial statements just to make sure they are still functioning. “The results are dire, and this is cause for concern,” Altmaier said. He also told legislators that even with a recently enacted bill designed to cut down on legal costs burdening insurers, he could not guarantee a time when rate hikes won’t continue to be needed. Florida has the third-highest property insurance rates in the nation. “There’s no quick fix to this,” Altmaier said.

David Altmaier does not give encouraging news. Image via Colin Hackley.

Altmaier says meeting on workers comp catastrophe fund assessment not likely” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Florida Insurance Commissioner Altmaier said Wednesday he has no plans to hold a public hearing on the National Council on Compensation Insurance’s request to levy an assessment against employers to establish a catastrophic fund for workers’ compensation. Altmaier would not say whether he was inclined to approve or reject the NCCI filing. Altmaier told Senate Banking and Insurance Committee members the agency would schedule a public meeting on the proposed 4.9% reduction in workers’ compensation rates. If approved, employers’ workers’ compensation rates would be reduced by nearly 70% since 2003, the Commissioner said. The OIR had not published a meeting date or time for the proposed rate filing at press time.

State delays start of ‘negotiated rule-making’ for neonatal intensive care beds” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — A top health care official told members of a House panel the state wants to “aggressively” move forward with new rules governing the establishment and operation of neonatal intensive care units in Florida. AHCA Deputy Secretary for Health Quality Assurance Kim Smoak did not tell members of the House Finance & Facilities Subcommittee the agency delayed the meeting Sept. 30-Oct. 1 to Oct. 25-26. Following the meeting, an AHCA official attributed the delay, in part, to the need for the agency to hire a mediator to help negotiate rules that competing hospitals can agree upon. Moreover, the agency also needs time to review applications that have been submitted by people who want to be part of the negotiated rule-making panel.

Meanwhile … “Magic City Casino owners sue federal government to block sports betting in Florida” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — Two Florida pari-mutuels filed a new motion in U.S. District Court in Washington, asking a judge to block implementation of online sports betting under the Florida tribal gaming compact which is scheduled to begin later this year. The motion asks a court to enjoin the sports-betting portion of the state’s compact with the Seminole Tribe of Florida. The compact gives the Tribe a monopoly over sports betting in the state by allowing wagers to go through an internet server on tribal land. The plaintiffs allege that although the Department of the Interior allowed the compact to take effect, the court should reverse that decision and block implementation until a legal sports-betting compact is established for Florida.

— CORONA FLORIDA —

Florida COVID-19 update: 10,073 cases added, daily death average stays at its highest” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Florida on Wednesday reported to the CDC 10,073 more COVID-19 cases and three deaths. In all, Florida has recorded at least 3,527,250 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 51,892 deaths since the pandemic began. In the past seven days, on average, the state has added 376 deaths and 9,020 cases per day, according to Herald calculations of CDC data. The state’s seven-day death average has held at 376 deaths per day over the last three days, Florida’s highest seven-day death average. There were 8,187 people hospitalized for COVID-19 in Florida. That is 251 fewer patients than Tuesday’s report.

In Florida, COVID-19 marches on. Image via AP.

—”A big drop! Okaloosa County’s COVID-19 cases fall 40.4%; Florida cases plummet 24.2%” via Mike Stucka of the Northwest Florida Daily News

COVID-19 quarantines no longer required in schools; parents will decide whether their kids stay home” via Scott Travis and Leslie Postal of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Children who have been exposed to someone who tested positive for COVID-19 will no longer have to quarantine unless the parents want them to, under a new emergency rule signed by the state’s new Surgeon General. Children can now be sent back to school without quarantining even if they’ve been exposed to the coronavirus — as long as they have no symptoms. The new rule is likely to intensify the debate over parents’ rights vs. the need for public health precautions in schools. Previously, state rules required students to quarantine off campus at least four days after exposure to someone with the virus.

Court tosses school masking rule challenge — A challenge to the state rule banning school mask mandates was thrown out on Wednesday after a revised Department of Health rule made the challenge moot, Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida reports. “The Division of Administrative Hearings lacks jurisdiction to determine the validity of a rule after it has been repealed,” reads a Wednesday order from Judge Brian A. Newman. The new rule, put in place by new Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo, allows parents to decide whether their child must stay home if exposed to someone who tested positive for COVID-19. The change comes as student infections are on the decline. There were 12,202 cases in children under 12 for the week ending Sept. 16 — a drop of more than half from the 26,475 cases for the week ending Aug. 26.

New Florida Surgeon General often takes contrary positions on COVID-19 policy, treatment” via Kirby Wilson of the Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times — For the first year and a half of the coronavirus pandemic in Florida, it was difficult to heed the advice of Florida’s top health official — Dr. Scott Rivkees — because he rarely publicly shared his views. That won’t be a problem for Rivkees’ successor, Dr. Ladapo. In more than a dozen published columns in major newspapers, Ladapo has frequently deviated from the medical establishment consensus. In the USA Today piece at the start of the pandemic, for instance, Ladapo warned that American economic shutdowns would not stop the spread of the virus. That piece was published four days after DeSantis issued a series of restrictions via executive order curtailing activities at bars, restaurants and gyms.

Florida’s new Surgeon General to make $462,000 a year in dual roles” via Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — Ladapo will make $462,000 a year in his dual role as chief of the Department of Health and a member of the faculty at the University of Florida. Ladapo will be a professor at the UF College of Medicine, a tenure-track position subject to approval by the UF Board of Trustees. He will receive $262,000 in that job, in addition to his $200,000 salary as surgeon general and secretary of the Department of Health. UF anticipates the health agency “will contribute a significant portion of this salary based on the percentage of time he dedicates to the surgeon general role,” UF spokesman Ken Garcia wrote in an email.

Nikki Fried celebrates vaccination milestone, casts doubt on new Surgeon General” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Fried celebrated a milestone — 12 million Floridians having been vaccinated against COVID-19. But she also expressed concern about the state’s new chief health officer. “The people of the state of Florida need to be congratulated for finally listening to the calls and listening to all of our recommendations of the last eight weeks, asking people to getting vaccinated,” Fried said, castigating DeSantis for inoculation “disinformation.” This was Fried’s first news conference since DeSantis brought on a controversial new Surgeon General who, like DeSantis, sees vaccines as optional. “It seems like the Governor went out of his way to find him and bring him to Florida,” Fried said.

Nikki Fried is touting success in getting Floridians vaccinated. Image via Colin Hackley.

PBC schools seek to add COVID-19 testing, contact tracing staff for every campus” via Sonja Isger of The Palm Beach Post — Palm Beach County education leaders are laying the groundwork to expand school-based COVID-19 testing and contact tracing, with a long-term goal of a speedier return to campus for healthy students and staff. The efforts would be coordinated with local health agencies and paid for with grant money flowing from the CDC. The steps proposed Wednesday are only a start, said Keith Oswald, the district’s chief of Equity and Wellness. The first step district officials are proposing is to offer more testing at each school. Each week, hundreds, sometimes thousands of unvaccinated teachers and students are told they’ve been exposed to COVID-19 and must seek out testing on their own to speed their return to the classroom.

Sarasota store suing Florida over lack of vaccine requirement” via Bailey LeFever of WUSF — In some states, vaccination cards have become the golden ticket to restaurants, bars and stores. But in Florida, businesses are legally not allowed to require proof of vaccination for entry. The owners of Bead Abode, a Sarasota craft store, are suing the Florida surgeon general over the law. The store has been closed since March 2020 but wants to reopen its new location in October with safety protocols, such as a proof-of-vaccination requirement to protect customers, said Andrew Boyer, co-owner and legal counsel. Bead Abode has still been making online sales throughout the pandemic. But most regulars are eager to return in person, Boyer said. He added that safety measures like proof of vaccination, also known as “vaccine passports,” will make customers feel more protected.

— 2022 —

Democrats commit $30M to Senate battles in Florida, other battleground states” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Democrats in Florida and eight other battleground states will split $30 million in a new Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee initiative to establish early grassroots campaigns for U.S. Senate contests. The DSCC’s “Defend the Majority Program” represents the committee’s largest-ever ground field organizing investment at this point in campaign cycles. The money will go toward helping provide field staff, field offices, and field training programs. That means the Florida Democratic Party, which already has staff assigned to the 2022 U.S. Senate election effort, could get early field organizing help.

Florida Democrats are seeing some organizational cash for 2022. Image via Colin Hackley.

Republicans pull nearly even with Democrats in number of registered voters in Florida” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Miami Herald — The gap between Florida’s registered Democrats and Republicans, which has been steadily closing nearly every year since 2012, is a few thousand voters away from the GOP pulling ahead for the first time in state history. Despite two decades of Republican dominance on a statewide level, Democrats in Florida have maintained their edge in the number of registered voters. But that lead is now down to about 24,000, according to Florida Department of State data — far from the 558,000-voter-advantage Democrats had nearly a decade ago. There are about 5.1 million Republicans and just slightly more Democrats listed in state data showing active voters as of Aug. 31. There are about 3.8 million NPA voters and about 250,000 minor party voters.

Assignment editors — Charlie Crist will join parents and a group of Floridians concerned about the newly named Surgeon General’s emergency rule on COVID-19 protocols, 12:30 p.m., livestreaming on Facebook. RSVP to press@charliecrist.com to ask questions of the attendees.

— CORONA NATION —

CDC panel tackles who needs booster shot of COVID-19 vaccine” via The Associated Press — An influential panel of advisers to the CDC grappled with the question of which Americans should get COVID-19 booster shots, with some members wondering if the decision should be put off for a month in hopes of more evidence. The doubts and uncertainties suggested yet again that the matter of whether to dispense extra doses is more complicated scientifically than the Joe Biden administration may have realized when it outlined plans a month ago for an across-the-board rollout of boosters. The rollout was supposed to have begun this week. Much of the discussion at the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices meeting focused on the possibility of a scaled-back booster program targeted to older people or perhaps health care workers.

Is it time to roll up your sleeves again? Image via AP.

Is the worst over? Modelers predict a steady decline in COVID-19 cases through March” via Rob Stein and Carmel Wroth of NPR — The delta surge appears to be peaking nationally, and cases and deaths will likely decline steadily now through the spring without a significant winter surge. The COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub combined nine different mathematical models to get an outlook for the pandemic for the next six months. The modelers developed four potential scenarios, considering whether or not childhood vaccinations take off and whether a more infectious new variant should emerge. Deaths from COVID-19 would fall from about 1,500 a day now to fewer than 100 a day by March 2022.

“‘Post-vax COVID’ is a new disease” via Katherine Wu of The Atlantic — We’re not yet at the point where we can officially label post-vaccination COVID-19 cases as “modified”; maybe we never will be. Some immunized people are still getting dangerously sick. But the shots are softening COVID-19’s sharp edges: On average, breakthrough infections seem to be briefer, milder, and less contagious. If this virus becomes as inescapable as the culprits behind the colds and flus that trouble us most years, we could all have to grapple with one of these infections and learn that lesson on a personal level. That’s the social tax of a forever virus: Nearly everyone may eventually know what it is to get COVID-19 — but a tamer, more domesticated version.

The struggle to define Long COVID” via Dhruv Khullar of The Atlantic — There is little doubt among researchers that Long COVID exists. But the syndrome is new, and lives for the moment in the realm of theory and anecdote. Amid an always online pandemic, the condition is also the subject of constant conjecture. Doctors, scientists, and patients are sharing their opinions freely, along with everyone else. The needed research is underway. Medical schools around the country have begun studying Long COVID, and hundreds of papers trying to demystify the syndrome have been published. Congress has authorized more than $1 billion for research on the long-term consequences of coronavirus infection; NIH Director Francis Collins has announced an initiative that will include a large-scale, $470 million study of the syndrome, designed in part using input from patients and families.

Children face racial disparities as COVID-19 infections rise” via Margo Snipe of the Tampa Bay Times — COVID-19 is infecting more kids, and the racial disparities of who is falling ill is similar to those among adults. The age group 19 and younger saw nearly 4.9 million COVID-19 infections, over 39,000 hospitalizations, and 725 deaths nationwide through the end of August. While the data for young folks remains limited, it suggests children of color have been disproportionately affected by the coronavirus, which “may widen existing gaps in health and well-being between children of color and white children,” wrote Nambi Ndugga, a policy analyst with the Kaiser Family Foundation who contributed to the report. Children of color are more likely than white children to be infected, hospitalized and die from the coronavirus.

Children are being hit hard with COVID-19 and along similar racial lines. Image via Reuters.

OFFS — “Asthma group warns against social media trend of inhaling hydrogen peroxide to treat coronavirus” via Aaron Gregg of The Washington Post — A leading asthma patient group has issued a warning against a coronavirus treatment circulating on social media that is leading some people to post videos of themselves breathing in hydrogen peroxide through a nebulizer. The Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America called the practice “concerning and dangerous” in a Tuesday blog post, emphasizing that it will neither treat nor prevent the virus and is harmful to the lungs. “DO NOT put hydrogen peroxide into your nebulizer and breathe it in. This is dangerous!” wrote the foundation in a brief blog post. It’s the latest case in which the medical community has grappled with unsubstantiated and potentially dangerous at-home coronavirus treatments.

— PRESIDENTIAL —

Democratic lawmakers urge Joe Biden to help Haitian migrants at southern border” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — With Haiti residents migrating in unprecedented numbers to the U.S. southern border, Democratic lawmakers called on Biden Wednesday to address the crisis and remove a public health order that expedites the deportation of migrants amid the pandemic. Led by Reps. Marie Woodson and Dotie Joseph, roughly a dozen Democratic lawmakers decried the situation and described it as a “humanitarian crisis” that requires immediate action. Among other calls, they urged Biden to undo a Donald Trump-era public health order known as Title 42. The order fast-tracks deportations at the southern border and has remained in effect under the Biden administration. They also urged the Democratic President to meet with members of the National Haitian American Elected Officials Network.

Joe Biden is called on to address the Haitian migrant crisis. Image via AP.

“‘Biden nou fache’: Protesters in Miami demand asylum for Haitian migrants at border” via C. Isaiah Smalls II and Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — Demonstrators protesting the deportation and treatment of Haitian migrants on the outskirts of Texas took to the streets outside the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Miami field office Wednesday, blocking parts of Northwest Seventh Avenue near Little River Drive. More than 100 people turned out to protest the deportations at the U.S.-Mexico border and demand the Biden administration accommodate Haitians seeking refuge in the U.S. after July’s assassination of President Jovenel Moïse and August’s 7.2 magnitude earthquake that killed more than 2,000 people. The 11 a.m. event was organized by the advocacy group Family Action Network Movement. The invitation called Miamians to protest “the illegal expulsions of Haitian refugees and grave human rights abuses in Del Rio, Texas.”

— EPILOGUE TRUMP —

Donald Trump sues New York Times and niece Mary Trump over tax records story” via Katerina Ang of The Washington Post — Trump sued over the publication of a 2018 article detailing allegations he “participated in dubious tax schemes … including instances of outright fraud” that allowed him to receive over $413 million from his father, Fred Trump Sr., while significantly reducing taxes. The suit, filed in a Dutchess County, New York, court, alleges Mary Trump, The New York Times, and at least three of its reporters “engaged in an insidious plot to obtain confidential and highly sensitive records” about the former President’s finances. According to the lawsuit, Donald Trump suffered at least $100 million in damages as a result.

Donald Trump gets litigious, again. Image via Reuters.

Trump’s red, white & blue Air Force One paint job is not final, General says” via Marcus Weisberger of DefenseOne — The red, white, and blue paint scheme selected by former President Donald Trump for the next Air Force One has not been finalized, a top Air Force general said Tuesday. A final decision about the color will be made closer to when the planes enter service, which is now even later than planned due to supply chain issues, according to Lt. Gen. Duke Richardson, the Air Force military deputy for acquisition. For several years, the Air Force has used a concept image of the plane with the red, white, and blue livery chosen by Trump in the service’s official budget request. The Biden administration’s fiscal 2022 budget request also used the picture.

Somehow, we’re still learning the depths of Trump’s dishonesty” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — This week, we learned new details about the conversations that were unfolding in the White House in the days before the counting of electoral votes at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. We’ve learned the extent to which Trump’s insistences about the election having been stolen were predicated on information that his team and his allies knew were unfounded. We’ve learned from the aforementioned memo that Trump seized upon a fringe opinion about constitutionality as a rationale to pressure his Vice President into doing something that he couldn’t do and shouldn’t have done even if he could. We’ve learned more, in other words, about just how shoddy Trump’s claim to a second term was.

— CRISIS —

Why sane Republicans are purging themselves” via Charles Sykes for POLITICO — Last week, Rep. Anthony Gonzalez (Ohio) announced that he wouldn’t stay and fight his Trump-backed primary challenger, walking away from what had once been a safe seat in Congress. The decision was greeted with dismay among anti-Trumpers of both parties who saw Gonzalez’s survival as a test of whether Trump’s grip on the GOP could be shaken. By and large, GOP officeholders have internalized that message; they know that defying or even questioning Trump’s most bizarre claims is political suicide. Trump has already made dozens of endorsements in down-ballot races against Republican officials who refused to back his election fraud claims. By leaving office and ceding the field to the Trumpists, they are also ensuring that the identity of the GOP is now frozen in place and will be for a generation.

Anthony Gonzalez is the latest sane Republican to ditch the madness. Image via AP.

— D.C. MATTERS —

“‘America is back’: Val Demings touts $3.5 trillion budget bill” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics+ — In less than two weeks, Democrats in Congress are expected to push their $3.5 trillion, 10-year budget package putting much of Biden’s social and climate agenda into the federal budget for the next decade. Democratic U.S. Rep. Demings of Orlando is one of Congress’ most outspoken advocates of the plan. She’s also the leading Democratic candidate challenging Marco Rubio for the U.S. Senate election in 2022. She spoke with Florida Politics about why she supports the plan. The package includes much of what Biden had proposed last spring in his $2 trillion climate resilience plan and his $1.8 trillion American Families Plan.

Bipartisan police-overhaul talks end with no deal” via Eliza Collins and Sadie Gurman of The Wall Street Journal — Bipartisan talks aimed at overhauling police tactics and accountability have ended with no agreement, the top Democratic negotiator said, with lawmakers unable to reach a compromise following nationwide protests sparked by the killings of Black Americans by law-enforcement officers. Sen. Cory Booker said Wednesday that he called Sen. Tim Scott to tell him the Democrats were done negotiating after Scott didn’t accept their final offer. The negotiations, which began early this year, were led by Booker, Scott and Rep. Karen Bass. A previous effort to pass policing rules had ended in partisan acrimony before the 2020 election.

Cory Booker and Tim Scott fail to close the deal on police reform. Image via AP.

We hear you, Southwest Florida, new Army Corps leader tells audience at Congressman Byron Donalds’ town hall” via Amy Bennett Williams of the Naples Daily News — U.S. Congressman Donalds put water quality front and center at a Tuesday night virtual town hall that included a top federal regulator. Up for discussion: algae problems, flexibility with water releases from Lake Okeechobee and whether the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is listening to the state’s west coast residents. Col. James Booth took charge of the 61st commander of the Corps Jacksonville District, which includes Southwest Florida, a little more than two weeks ago. He arrived as the district continues wrestling with a tongue-twistingly named, brain-bogglingly complicated process updating the way it runs Lake Okeechobee and its attached waterways.

— LOCAL NOTES —

No signs of Gabby Petito’s boyfriend after days of searching” via Curt Anderson of The Associated Press — Search teams found nothing of note Wednesday at a Florida wilderness park where they have spent days looking for the boyfriend of Petito, the young woman who authorities say was killed while on a cross-country trip with him. The search resumed Wednesday morning at the 24,000-acre (9,700-hectare) Carlton Reserve Park and ended just before dark, North Port police spokesperson Joshua Taylor said. Investigators say Brian Laundrie’s parents told them he had gone there after returning home without Petito on Sept. 1. It marked the fourth day of searching in the Carlton Reserve, with operations suspended Monday while the FBI searched the nearby Laundrie home for evidence. The search of the reserve was set to resume Thursday morning.

The search for Brian Laundrie is coming up empty, so far. Image via AP.

Book latest prominent Democrat to back Ken Welch for St. Pete Mayor” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — “As the Democratic Leader in the Florida Senate, I believe it’s critical for Democrats to win up and down the ballot next November and I am proud to support local city leaders like Ken who have both the background and experience necessary to make a difference for everyday Floridians,” Book said in a statement. “I am confident Ken will be a tremendous partner with local and state government and I look forward to working with him to improve the lives of St. Pete residents when he is Mayor.” Welch, a registered Democrat, faces Republican City Council member Robert Blackmon.

Sarasota City Commission plans legal action to advance ranked choice voting” via Anne Snabes of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — The city of Sarasota is seeking a court judgment on whether it can use ranked choice voting in its elections. Ranked choice voting allows voters to rank all candidates in a race, according to their preferences. This form of voting ensures that the winner of an election has received over 50% of the vote. The city will be seeking a declaration that the Florida Election Code and the state’s Constitution allow municipal elections to be conducted using ranked choice voting. The Sarasota City Commission voted 4-1 to work with outside legal counsel on this effort. Fournier said a declaratory judgment is a way to decide a dispute between two parties about their rights and obligations.

Florida is a hot spot for government homes sold in flood-prone areas” via Lisa Peakes of WUSF — The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is disproportionately selling homes in areas prone to flooding. More than 500 in the past few years were sold in Florida: 112 of them in the greater Tampa Bay region. While HUD isn’t required by law to disclose that houses are in an official flood zone, NPR found the federal agency often doesn’t fully disclose the potential danger to buyers. And in some cases, the homes are being rented out or resold to new buyers who were unaware of the risks.

DEP: Piney Point cleanup could take years to complete” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A breach in a reservoir at Piney Point was repaired last year, Department of Environmental officials confirmed. But there remains the risk of further disaster as long as millions of gallons of polluted war remain above ground on the Manatee County site. DEP Secretary Shawn Hamilton told lawmakers that even if a plan remains on track to remove all water and level the land, it will be years before that work concludes. That’s because state and local officials must still find and build a place to dispose of that water while continuing to monitor the site regularly. Officials remain concerned about whether the 215 million gallons discharged from Piney Point directly into Tampa Bay due to the disaster fed red tide hitting many of Florida’s coastal counties this year.

Red tide resurgence in Florida Panhandle” via Jake Holter of WHNT — It’s been three years since Panhandle beaches dealt with red tide, but it’s back again. The harmful algae bloom, named Karenia brevis, releases a toxin that can irritate respiratory systems. The common side effects include itchy skin, a scratchy throat, coughing and a burning sensation to your eyes, nose, and throat. During major blooms, the water will turn a brownish-red color and will kill marine life. Beachgoers reported red tide to the South Walton Fire District, prompting officials to post warnings on Facebook and raise the purple flags.

SFWMD Governing Board approves $1.15 billion budget” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — This year’s budget total represents a 6% decrease from the district’s budget last fiscal year. The largest chunk of the 2021-22 budget — just under $638 million — will go toward land acquisition, restoration and public works. Nearly $390 million will be used for the operation and maintenance of lands and works, according to the proposal discussed at a Tuesday evening SFWMD Governing Board meeting. Those two areas make up nearly 90% of the overall budget. Nearly $58 million is set aside for water resources planning and monitoring, while close to $42 million will be used for district management and administration. Just over $22 million is earmarked for regulation and another $1.25 million will go toward outreach.

Ducks Unlimited, SFWMD complete restoration of nearly 6,400 acres in Gardner-Cobb Marsh” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — The marsh is located near the Kissimmee Upper Chain of Lakes. The project came as part of a grant proposal under the North American Wetlands Conservation Act (NAWCA). Groups can use NAWCA to apply for grant money for projects that help preserve wetlands and nearby uplands habitats, specifically those used by waterfowl and other migratory birds. DU successfully petitioned for that funding under the act and worked with the SFWMD to fill ditches and increase water flow to assist the prairie wetland system. “The Gardner-Cobb Marsh was acquired by SFWMD to support the Kissimmee River Headwaters Revitalization Project,” said DU Director of Conservation Programs Emily Purcell in an announcement celebrating the project’s completion.

Is time running out for the Cape Sable sparrow? Numbers drop to lowest in five years” via Jenny Staletovich of WLRN — The tiny Cape Sable seaside sparrow, a bird perilously perched on the edge of extinction, is getting closer to vanishing. Helicopter surveys this year, over grassy prairies where the bird lives in Everglades National Park, detected the lowest number in five years. While Everglades restoration is expected to increase the sparrow’s prairie habitat elsewhere, the safer, remote area on the park’s western border has switched chiefly to inhospitable sawgrass, where the birds won’t nest. Repairing it will take a decade or more, said Larry Williams, Florida’s state supervisor for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Will Everglades restoration come in time for the Cape Sable sparrow?

Space Force says demand for Cape Canaveral rocket launches may soon exceed capacity” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — The commercial space business is evolving and growing so rapidly its main U.S. launch center, Cape Canaveral, may soon be facing more rocket launch requests than it can handle, a Florida Senate panel was told Wednesday. Those are mostly commercial launches of private satellites and other orbital commerce, which U.S. Space Force Brig. Gen. Stephen Purdy, Jr. said accounted for 65% of the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station launches in the past year. He expects that share to rise to 81% in the next 12 months. He said they have more companies lining up, interested in launching seven newly developed private rockets.

— TOP OPINION —

There is no choice between vaccinating Americans and vaccinating the world. We must do both.” via Jeffrey Zients and Antony Blinken of The Washington Post — Since Day One, Biden has been clear that the only way to defeat COVID-19 is to defeat the virus both here at home and around the world. Our most powerful weapon in this fight is safe and effective vaccines. Vaccinating Americans and vaccinating people around the world aren’t a choice; they are an imperative. That’s why we’re doing both. So far, the United States has committed to donate more than 630 million coronavirus vaccine doses globally. Nearly 160 million of those doses are already on the ground in more than 100 countries. The United States has now delivered more doses than every other country in the world, combined.

— OPINIONS —

The Texas abortion law is a human rights crisis for American women” via Uma Thurman for The Washington Post — The Texas abortion law was allowed to take effect without argument by the Supreme Court, which, due in no small part to its lack of ideological diversity, is a staging ground for a human rights crisis for American women. This law is yet another discriminatory tool against those who are economically disadvantaged, and often, indeed, against their partners. Women and children of wealthy families retain all the choices in the world, and face little risk. I am grief-stricken, as well, that the law pits citizen against citizen, creating new vigilantes who will prey on these disadvantaged women, denying them the choice not to have children they are not equipped to care for, or extinguishing their hopes for the future family they might choose.

—”Anti-abortion Republicans again remind women who’s in charge” via Joe Henderson of Florida Politics

For Florida’s new surgeon general, DeSantis trades out a ghost for a crackpot” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — Floridians could be forgiven for not knowing who Rivkees is: A pediatrician and former state surgeon general who was airbrushed out of the public record for making an accurate prediction last year, in the presence of DeSantis and the media, that Floridians might need to practice social distancing well into 2021 to combat the spread of COVID-19. For this sin, a DeSantis apparatchik promptly escorted him out of the room. DeSantis is so committed to ensuring Rivkees stays out of the daylight the state has tried to stop him from being deposed in a lawsuit over the governor’s failed attempt to ban mask mandates in public schools.

Florida’s new Surgeon General: A well-educated COVID-19 crank” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — It was bad enough when Florida had a surgeon general who went missing in action during a full-blown pandemic. Now DeSantis has picked a replacement who thinks COVID-19 vaccines are overrated. Ladapo, a Harvard medical-school graduate, was introduced by DeSantis Tuesday as the replacement for outcast Surgeon General Rivkees. Ladapo believes in herd immunity through natural infection. He warns of unknown risks from COVID-19 vaccinations. He’s argued against vaccine mandates. And on Wednesday, to kick off his tenure, Ladapo signed an order that does away with mandatory quarantines for students exposed to COVID-19.

What Bridget Ziegler is reading — “Mask mandate helps to protect Sarasota County’s schoolchildren” via Shirley Brown for the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Parents have rights to make health care choices for their children. But under the Florida Constitution, parents also have rights to a free and safe public education for their children. That’s why we have laws that require proof of childhood vaccinations before children can attend public school. I find the argument akin to the debate over smoking in public places. You are allowed to smoke even though you know it may give you cancer. However, the government stepped in and passed laws that say that your right stops when your cigarette smoke affects others in a public space. That is why I voted for a mask mandate for all students, staff and visitors in our schools.

— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —

Looking beyond Texas, a state lawmaker files the “Florida Heartbeat Act” to ban abortions.

Also, on today’s Sunrise:

— The first move from Florida’s new Surgeon General, Dr. Ladapo, makes quarantine optional for students exposed to COVID-19.

— Florida’s Haitian American lawmakers are calling on the Biden administration to end the mistreatment and to stop the deportation of Haitian migrants.

— A federal judge strikes down parts of Florida’s immigration law, SB 168, ruling it was racially motivated.

— Two Sunrise interviews — Democratic Reps. Woodson and Joseph, both Haitian Americans — call for Biden to swiftly address what they call a “humanitarian crisis” and end the deportation of Haitian migrants.

To listen, click on the image below:

— ALOE —

Apple store workers to get bonuses of up to $1,000 in rare move” via Mark Gurman of Bloomberg — Apple Inc. will give store employees as much as $1,000 in one-time bonuses next month, a rare move that follows a tumultuous effort to get its retail operations back on track after pandemic shutdowns. According to people familiar with the situation, the iPhone maker will give $1,000 to retail staff hired before March 31, while anyone who joined after that date will receive $500. New workers for the holiday shopping season will get $200, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the matter isn’t public. The payouts also will go to AppleCare and online sales workers as well. But the good tidings came with a bit of coal. In a separate memo, Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook criticized leaks to the press.

Veteran Apple Store employees will get a grand as thanks for sticking it out.

Crossroads is officially gone — goodbye to a piece of Disney history” via Gabrielle Russon of Florida Politics+ — It’s officially farewell to the Crossroads. The shopping complex at Walt Disney World’s front door was vacated late last month. The property will be torn down to become a new interchange for the Interstate 4 Beyond the Ultimate expansion project. The state acquired the Crossroads Plaza in a $198 million agreement that’s considered the largest eminent domain settlement in Florida’s history, the lead attorney representing Crossroads’ owner has said. Disney built the Crossroads then changed hands over the years. It was a favorite for some Disney-goers who ate at chain eateries like Red Lobster or Perkins Restaurant, bought groceries at Gooding’s Supermarket, or hit a hole-in-one at a pirate-themed miniature golf course overlooking the interstate near Exit 68.

— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —

Celebrating today are U.S. Rep. Al LawsonNicole Hagerty of HCA, John FoxJeff FrederickLisa Greer, Hillsborough Property Appraiser Bob Henriquez, and Kimberly Diaz Scott.

___

Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter SchorschPhil AmmannRenzo Downey and Drew Wilson.


5.) MORNING BREW

September 23, 2021
Daily Brew

Good morning. Huge news! After a short stay at a podcast yoga retreat, our refreshed Business Casual pod is coming back with new episodes in October. And instead of one host, we now have two: Scott Rogowsky, HQ Trivia Quiz Daddy Emeritus, and Nora Ali, a former Wall Street analyst turned media entrepreneur.

This dynamic duo will interview the biggest names in business and grace your ears with the best biz content ever carried on sound waves.

Subscribe here.

MARKETS

Nasdaq

14,896.85

S&P

4,395.64

Dow

34,258.32

10-Year

1.311%

Bitcoin

$43,152.86

FedEx

$229.08

*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 6:00pm ET. Here’s what these numbers mean.
  • Markets: The S&P and Dow snapped their four-day losing streaks after the Fed made no surprising moves following its two-day meeting. But FedEx had its worst trading day in 18 months after it said a severe labor shortage added $450 million to its costs.
  • Economy: While the Fed didn’t make any policy changes at its meeting this month, it did say it could begin shrinking its stimulus program in November and potentially raise interest rates next year.
  • Covid: As expected, the FDA approved Pfizer booster shots for Americans 65 and older and anyone who may be at a higher risk of contracting severe Covid-19. Now it’s the CDC’s turn to decide the specifics of the rollout.

REAL ESTATE

China’s Grande Real Estate Problems

Apartment building Francis Scialabba

The business world has been captivated by the slow-moving train wreck that is Evergrande, a massive Chinese real estate developer that’s buried up to its penthouse in debt. Investors have feared that because of Evergrande’s size and interconnectedness with other companies, its impending collapse could do its best Covid impression and spread contagion across markets.

The latest: Evergrande was able to make an interest payment on a domestic bond yesterday, but the bigger question is whether it’ll be able to settle a $83.5 million bill due today. If it can’t pay up in 30 days, it could default, which might cascade across the global economy.

Why is it a big deal?

Because in China, real estate is the biggest game in town, and the town is pretty big—China is the world’s second-largest economy. In China, real estate contributes a mind-boggling 29% of GDP (compared to 6.2% in the US in 2018). Building has literally built China into the superpower it is today.

But thanks to super-low borrowing costs, the Chinese property sector has been feasting on empty calories, leading to astronomical debt loads ($300+ billion, in the case of Evergrande) and a chronic oversupply of housing.

  • There is enough empty property in China to house more than 90 million people, according to the Rhodium Group’s Logan Wright. The entire population of France, Germany, Italy, the UK, or Canada could easily fit into those empty apartments.
  • viral video from last month shows 15 unfinished high-rise apartment buildings getting demolished in a matter of seconds.

Like an angry parent whose credit card was abused by their teenager, China’s government has recently taken steps to limit the amount of debt that property developers can take on. Letting Evergrande implode would show that President Xi Jinping is serious about this crackdown.

Bottom line: Some observers have compared Evergrande’s woes to the epic collapse of the investment bank Lehman Brothers during the 2008 financial crisis. But other experts say this isn’t a Lehman Brothers moment—it could be worse, if you view China’s gargantuan real estate sector as rotten to the core.—NF

            

CRYPTO

Crypto Wallets Enter the Mainstream

Phone with card holder wallet on back with crypto symbolFrancis Scialabba

We celebrated the first day of fall with six gallons of chili for dinner; Robinhood celebrated by announcing the rollout of a crypto wallet. The wallet will be available for a small test group in the next few weeks, and then to the rest of its users next year.

What is a crypto wallet? Just like regular wallets store dollars, crypto wallets are where you store your cryptocurrency. They make it possible to spend crypto like other forms of money and buy things like NFTs.

Can’t you buy crypto on Robinhood already? Kinda, in the sense that you can buy some cryptocurrencies, like bitcoin and ethereum, but you don’t own them. When you buy crypto on Robinhood, the company buys it and then stores it in its own wallet—which means users can’t transfer it out of the app to spend on their favorite CryptoPunk. Hardcore crypto people have complained that this defeats the entire purpose of cryptocurrency.

Zoom out: Robinhood’s going full laser eyes. In its latest earnings report, the company said crypto made up over half of its transaction-based Q2 revenue. While there are still some limitations to its wallet, Robinhood is building the bridge for the crypto-curious into the deeper ecosystem.—MM

            

ENTERTAINMENT

Netflix Buying More Content Like

Matilda turning on lightsGiphy

Netflix has acquired the rights to all of Roald Dahl’s works, including MatildaCharlie and the Chocolate Factory, and other tales that kept you up at night as a kid (remember “the Chokey”?). Reportedly ringing in at over $680 million, it’s among the biggest acquisitions Netflix has made over the past decade.

The deal expands on a 2018 partnership Netflix made for 16 Dahl licenses, which allowed it to start working on several animated series, plus a Matilda the Musical adaptation. Now, Netflix’s ambitions for Dahl’s stories are bigger than the Giant Peach and include games, live theater, products, and more.

  • Less than a year ago, the Dahl estate publicly apologized for antisemitic comments the author made. To make amends, part of this sale’s proceeds will create a charitable fund focused on “children’s health, anti-hate, and anti-racism.”

Big picture: The competition to chill with you is fierce. Netflix is still the largest streaming service in the world with 209 million subscribers, but competitors are catching up—especially Disney+, which launched less than two years ago but already has 116 million subscribers. Dahl’s trove of kids content could help Netflix keep its edge over Disney…and all the other streamers beefing up their catalogs.—JW

            

SPONSORED BY FIDELITY

Go Green: Building a Portfolio with Purpose

 

As an investor, you can take your portfolio in a number of different directions—why not choose a path that goes for green in more ways than one?

That’s the goal of the . It enables investors to support companies that either prioritize, remove, reduce, or mitigate the effects of climate change.

It’s a fund that aims to create an environmentally focused and balanced strategy with . A strategy that understands:

  • In the next decade, the US utility industry’s capacity to generate wind and solar energy could grow from 14% to 39%1
  • On average, climate adaption and decarbonization measures would create ten US jobs per million dollars invested2 

Powered by Fidelity’s active management insights and expertise, The Fidelity Climate Action Fund can help you approach opportunities in the green transition with confidence.

.

GRAB BAG

Key Performance Indicators

House boats in California JOSH EDELSON/AFP via Getty Images

Stat: Californians used just 1.8% less water at home in July than a year before, despite extreme (or worse) drought conditions covering almost 90% of the state. Gov. Gavin Newsom had urged residents to cut domestic water use by 15% in early July.

Quote: “I just think it’s time for some of our dearest friends around the world to prenez un grip about this and donnez-moi un break.”

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson engaged in some light mocking of France after the country got snubbed from a nuclear submarine pact among the US, UK, and Australia. Pardon your French, Mr. Johnson.

Read: San Francisco’s bizarre, costly quest for the perfect trash can. (Mission Local)

            

TECH

Investors Raise a Glass to Toast

Toast ad on the NYSEToast

Toast, the restaurant tech startup, jumped about 56% in its IPO yesterday to close at a $36 billion valuation.

Chances are you’ve put your card into one of Toast’s readers to pay for your fried ravioli, because its products are used at 48,000+ restaurants around the country. That’s on the front end…but on the back end, Toast also provides management software so restaurants can digitally track orders and operate delivery networks.

It wasn’t always champagne and stock exchange. The onset of Covid-19 had Toast looking…well…like toast. Within two months of the start of the pandemic, the company laid off or furloughed half of its employees and revenue plummeted 80%.

But when restaurants had to pivot to contactless everything, Toast was there, lurking in the walk-in freezer. And after powering through 2020, it’s currently riding the dining-out wave: Annual recurring revenue climbed 118% last quarter.—MM

            

WHAT ELSE IS BREWING

  • The US housing market cooled slightly in August, with sales of previously owned homes falling 2% over July, per the National Association of Retailers. It suggests potential homebuyers are feeling priced out.
  • United Airlines said more than 97% of its US employees were vaccinated. In early August, the airline became the first US carrier to announce a vaccine mandate.
  • Microsoft announced lots of new hardware, including a new flagship laptop.
  • Facebook promoted Andrew “Boz” Bosworth, who currently leads its hardware division, to the role of Chief Technology Officer.

BREWS BETS

Made for the (literal) long run. makes the highest quality, performance running apparel that works as hard as you do—and dang if it doesn’t make you look great while you do it. .*

The one thing better than pizza? Investing in pizza robots. Piestro makes artisanal pies at a fraction of the cost—and now you can get in on all that dough-making potential. With $580M in commercial pre-orders already, now’s the time to invest—the last day is 9/30.*

Touching obit: This short obituary from a brother to his sister who could never speak more than three words is quite moving.

SNL hosts for the fall: No tech CEOs this time, but we do get a Jason Sudeikis appearance. Check out the rest of the hosts and musical guests.

*This is sponsored advertising content

 

GAMES

The Puzzle Section

Brew Mini: You’ve made it past Hump Day, so solving this mini puzzle should be no problem.

Three Headlines and a Lie

Three of these news headlines are real and one is faker than the excitement for a couple’s costume. Can you guess the odd one out?

  1. “Samuel Adams’ latest potent beer is illegal in 15 states”
  2. “With natural gas prices skyrocketing in Europe, one UK man sees gold in bottled flatulence.”
  3. “Tim Cook says employees who leak memos do not belong at Apple, according to leaked memo”
  4. “Rwandan court finds Hotel Rwanda film hero guilty in terrorism case”

ANSWER

Sorry, we made a fart joke. That one isn’t true.

*A Note From Fidelity Investments

Investing involves risk, including risk of loss.

Fidelity Brokerage Services LLC, Member NYSE, SIPC, 900 Salem Street, Smithfield, RI 02917

✢ A Note From Fidelity

Before investing, consider the funds’ investment objectives, risks, charges, and expenses. Contact Fidelity for a prospectus, offering circular or, if available, a summary prospectus containing this information. Read it carefully.

 

Investing involves risk, including risk of loss.

 

1. Source: Morgan Stanley, Coal capacity to be gone from U.S. power grid by 2033

 

2. McKinsey & Company, America 2021: Renewing the nation’s commitment to climate action

 

Fidelity Brokerage Services LLC, Member NYSE, SIPC. © 2021 FMR LLC. All rights reserved.

 

985338.2.0

        
Written by Neal FreymanJamie Wilde, and Matty Merritt

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6.) THE FACTUAL

23 SEP 2021

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The Factual

Facts, not fear.

TRENDING TOPICS
Raising debt ceiling • Police reform collapse • Europe gas crisis • EU vaccine partnership • China-funded coal plants
FEATURED UNDER-REPORTED STORIES
Peace Corps change • Latin American alliance • Agroecology for world hunger
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#1 in U.S. News • 104 articles

Why is support for the Democrats’ debt ceiling bill split along party lines?

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  1. Top from last 48 hrs
    House passes bill to avoid government shutdown, suspend debt limit — but it faces Senate roadblocks with deadlines near.
    CNBC (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 75% • 3 min read

    The House approved [a bill that would both prevent a government shutdown and suspend the debt limit] in a 220-211 vote. All Democrats voted for it and all Republicans opposed it. Republicans are threatening to block [the bill in the Senate], which could leave Democrats scrambling to find another way to avoid a federal funding lapse — or even a first-ever default on U.S. debt.

    Congress has to pass a funding plan by Sept. 30 to prevent a shutdown. Separately, the U.S. will exhaust all of its options to keep paying its bills sometime in October. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, has said Republicans will vote for a standalone funding bill but not legislation with a debt limit suspension attached.

    Democrats have pointed out that the GOP signed off on huge emergency Covid-19 relief bills since the last debt ceiling suspension. Republicans have said their counterparts should move to prevent default on their own as they prepare to pass a mammoth spending bill without the GOP.
  1. Top from different political viewpoint
    Poll: America will blame Democrats not Republicans for debt default, shutdown.
    Breitbart (Right) • Factual Grade 63% • 2 min read
  1. Top long-read
    What will happen if Congress doesn’t raise the federal debt limit?
    Los Angeles Times (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 87% • 8 min read

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#2 in U.S. News • 19 articles

Why did bipartisan police reform negotiations collapse?

The House passed the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act in March, and Democratic Rep. Karen Bass and Democratic Sen. Cory Booker have since been working with the Republic…
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YESTERDAY’S POLLDo you agree with the mass expulsion of thousands of Haitian migrants?

Yes

  65%

No

  22%

Unsure

  13%

600 votes, 97 comments

Context: Mass expulsion of 10,000+ Haitian migrants as they congregated under a bridge in Del Rio, TX

HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS

 Yes – Biden’s softer rhetoric on immigration made many migrants hopeful but the administration’s enforcement of Trump era policies means that it was an empty promise from the start. Biden is wrong for that, he should’ve made it clear. Still, legal immigration is the process we should abide by b/c these crises will become more frequent in coming years and we cannot extend false promises to immigrants or overburden those US citizens most affected by the border crisis.

 No – Preliminary screening for asylum seekers should be expedited if it means temporarily pulling resources…

 Unsure – We are in desperate need of immigration reform. We have a crisis of poor law and terrible, uneven, en…

#1 in World News • 73 articles

How is Europe being affected by rising gas prices?

Gas prices in Europe have risen more than 250% this year, while Asia has seen about a 175% increase. That is due to a combination of factors:…
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How are world leaders supporting more equitable global vaccine distribution?

“The U.S. is buying another half-billion doses of Pfizer to donate to low and middle-income countries. This […] will all be shipped by this time next year,” [President Biden said]. A New York Tim…
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Why is China ending its financial support for coal plants being built abroad?

Chinese President Xi Jinping didn’t give a timetable for ending the overseas coal financing, and didn’t address China’s plans to keep building coal-fired plants at home. Xi also said China wil…
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Please click Display images in your email app to view this email properly The world has changed. Should the Peace Corps?

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Latin American alliance.

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CNBC • Grade 82%

The Fed will try to soothe markets Wednesday, while preparing investors for end to bond buying.

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7.) LIBERTY NATION

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CONSERVATIVE NEWS
WHERE TRUTH MATTERS
VISIT LibertyNation.com
FROM OUR NEWSROOM

Thursday’s Breaking News and Alerts

Click Here

Sinking at Home, Biden Desperately Seeks Refuge in Globalism
By Tim Donner

Did this president succeed in finding safe harbor among allies shocked by his international behavior?

Click Here

“Weak leadership can wreck the soundest strategy.”

– Sun Tzu

 

 

FDA Approves COVID Booster for Age 65 and Over
By Mark Angelides

The moving target of mandates just got harder to hit.

Click Here

Today’s Political Meme

Sometimes, you just need to laugh!

Click Here

Immigration Roundup: One Win, Lots of Losses
By Kelli Ballard

Dems’ pathway to citizenship was blocked, but the border crisis is still out of control.

Click Here

Ain’t Life Evergrande in China – Swamponomics TV
By Andrew Moran

Is China bracing for a nightmare scenario?

Click Here

From the Liberty Nation Studios

A Matter of Record – The Uprising Videocast – Laughing at Norm MacDonald and trying not to cry at the mess of the republic on this Uprising. by Scott D. Cosenza, Esq. – Watch Now

Biden’s Border Crisis Getting Worse – LNTV – WATCH NOW! – Why does the president get a free pass from the media? by Liberty Nation Staff – Watch Now

Liberty Nation On The Go: Listen to Today’s Top News 9.23.21
By Liberty Nation Staff

Conservative News – Hot Off The Press – Audio Playlist – AD FREE

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LibertyNation.com brings a new generation of writers to the vanguard of conservative political discourse. Our content is entirely original, providing readers and viewers with bold, provocative analysis and commentary on current events.

For more conservative news, LibertyNation.com recommends the news aggregator WHATFINGER.com — the #1 Alternative to Drudge.

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8.) FOX NEWS

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Fox News Thursday, September 23, 2021
Fox News First
()

Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day

Laundrie’s Florida neighbors say family appeared to go ‘camping’ after Brian returned from Wyoming
Some neighbors of the Laundrie family in North Port, Florida – the would-be in-laws of deceased 22-year-old Gabby Petito – told Fox News on Wednesday that about a week after Petito’s then-fiance Brian Laundrie returned from the Western road trip, the family packed up an “attached camper” and left for what appeared to be a long-weekend camping trip.

Charlene and William Guthrie told “The Story” it has been a “nightmare” living across from the Laundries since Petito and later Brian Laundrie went missing.

The Guthries said they moved to the community, about 85 miles south of Tampa, in the early summer. But within months their neighborhood was abuzz with activity.

“We didn’t know it was Gabby’s, we just assumed it was [Brian’s] van,” Charlene said when Brian returned to Florida earlier this month.

“We just thought they had come back from wherever. We didn’t know they were on a trip. We assumed they went back to their house or wherever they got a house. … We didn’t know much about them at all,” she said. CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.

In other developments:
– Gabby Petito: Search for Brian Laundrie continues at Florida reserve: LIVE UPDATES
– Missing Brian Laundrie: John Walsh confident the public will locate Gabby Petito’s on-the-run fianc
– Gabby Petito’s stepfather lays a stone cross at spot where her remains were found
– Gabby Petito case: Friends say couple’s relationship was ‘toxic’ at times, ‘always had some drama:’ report
– Brian Laundrie argued in Wyoming restaurant hours before Gabby Petito vanished: eyewitnesses

Biden approval rating takes a plunge among independents: poll
President Biden’s approval rating among Americans stands in negative territory at 43%, a drop of six points in just one month, according to a new Gallup poll.

The survey, released Wednesday, indicates the deterioration in the president’s numbers is being fueled by a plunge in approval among independents. And Biden’s approval is lower at this point in his presidency than any of his most recent predecessors, except for President Trump.

The president stands at 43% approval and 53% disapproval in the poll, which was conducted Sept. 1-17. That’s down from a 49%-48% approval/disapproval rating in Gallup’s Aug. 2-17 survey. Biden stood at 56%-42% in Gallup’s June poll.

Biden’s flagging numbers come in the wake of his much criticized handling of the turbulent U.S. exit from Afghanistan. And they come amid a surge in COVID cases this summer among mainly unvaccinated people due to the spread of the highly infectious delta variant, as the nation struggles to combat the coronavirus, the worst pandemic to strike the globe in a century. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.

In other developments:
– Tucker Carlson: Joe Biden revealed why he supports illegal immigration in 2015, he wants to change the country
– Four House Republicans file impeachment articles against Biden over border and Afghanistan
– Warren says infrastructure, reconciliation ‘go together,’ says 11 senators back House progressives
– Ted Cruz: Biden admin told Haitians ‘you can stay here,’ and they spread the word to family, friends

FDA authorizes Pfizer booster shots for seniors, high-risk people
The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday authorized Pfizer booster shots for people 65 and older or those at high risk.

The FDA told Fox Business it has approved a single booster shot to be administered to some groups at least six months after their first two doses.

These groups include those 65 years and older, and those 18-64 who are either at “high risk of severe COVID-19” or who work in high-risk places.

“Today’s action demonstrates that science and the currently available data continue to guide the FDA’s decision-making for COVID-19 vaccines during this pandemic,” Acting FDA Commissioner Janet Woodcock said.

“After considering the totality of the available scientific evidence and the deliberations of our advisory committee of independent, external experts, the FDA amended the EUA for the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine to allow for a booster dose in certain populations such as health care workers, teachers and daycare staff, grocery workers and those in homeless shelters or prisons, among others.”

The announcement comes after an advisory group serving the FDA overwhelmingly rejected a sweeping White House plan to dispense third shots to nearly everyone. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.

In other developments:
– What does waning COVID-19 vaccine immunity mean for the vaccinated?
– NYC Mayor de Blasio teacher vaccination mandate allowed by judge to proceed
– State police union sues over governor’s vaccination mandate
– Dr. Marc Siegel: Why COVID is still defeating us

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Congressional bipartisan police reform talks sparked by George Floyd’s death collapse without a deal
– Louisiana convicted killer Kenneth Gleason dead in apparent prison-cell hanging: report
– ACLU ripped for twisting RBG quote: ‘Literally erasing women’
– Two Afghan refugees at Fort McCoy facing charges of sex crimes against a minor and domestic abuse
– Baltimore hits 250 homicides for 2021, with 25 in September

THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Fed predicts when interest rates will rise, moves to ease pandemic support
– Apple denies request by Epic to bring ‘Fortnite’ developer account back
– Evergrande collapse could be ‘worse’ than Lehman for China
– Tech giant’s CEO vows company will do ‘everything in our power’ to find leakers
– Chick-fil-A kicked out of group of restaurants for major new airport

CLICK HERE TO PLAY FOX NEWS’ CROSSWORD PUZZLE OF THE WEEK

SOME PARTING WORDS

Laura Ingraham explained how the financial entanglements between the Biden and Heinz-Kerry families and China help explain why the U.S. continues to defer to its biggest global rival on many fronts: economic, humanitarian and coronavirus-related.

The host of “The Ingraham Angle” compared the Biden administration’s refusal to confront China over its role in disseminating the coronavirus pandemic to how President Biden might by contrast confront a red-state Christian university if its biolab leaked a novel virus that infected the world.

“Do you think the Biden administration would demand answers? Issuing condemnations of these risky practices and citing the rushing loss of life and economic consequences caused by this irresponsible university? Of course it would. Of course the left would assume that the lab leak was purposeful at the university,” she said.

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Fox News First was compiled by Fox News’ Jack Durschlag. Thank you for making us your first choice in the morning! We’ll see you in your inbox first thing Friday.

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9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL

 


10.) THE FEDERALIST PAPERS

Web version
Trump’s Surgeon General Says He Got Shocking Letter from Bank: Did Biden Admin Go This Low?
Posted by Christine Favocci, The Western Journal
A worrying letter he said he received from the bank reveals the administration is seemingly not lifting a finger for him. Read more…
Gabby Petito’s Family’s ‘Cease and Desist’ Letter Just Got Major Results
Posted by Dillon Burroughs, The Western Journal
The picture is no longer listed on the Yelp page. Read more…
Biden Just Embarrassed Himself on Live TV in Front of a Foreign Leader
Posted by Isa Cox, The Western Journal
Imagine having to listen to him while he tells this story. Read more…
Massive National Security Risk Developing as Navy SEALs Get the News
Posted by Samantha Chang, The Western Journal
Biden thinks the COVID vaccine is more important than national security. Read more…
Articles of Impeachment Officially Filed Against Biden
Posted by Kipp Jones, The Western Journal
Three articles of impeachment have been introduced against President Biden. Read more…
Bill Gates Has Telling Response When Pressed About Jeffrey Epstein
Posted by Jack Davis, The Western Journal
Bill Gates was clearly very, very uncomfortable here. Read more…
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11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE

AEI’s daily publication of independent research, insightful analysis, and scholarly debate.
Pension smoothing — the budget gimmick that will not die
Alex Brill and Alan D. Viard | AEIdeas
The bipartisan infrastructure bill includes a pension-smoothing gimmick. Because congressional budget rules look at revenue effects in only the first 10 years, the short-run corporate tax revenue gains are counted while the offsetting long-run revenue losses are ignored.
Full Story
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Controversy and consensus: Perspectives on race, religion, and COVID-19 in public schools
Daniel A. Cox and Nat Malkus | Survey Center on American Life
The August 2021 American Perspectives Survey shows that parents overwhelmingly favor a return to in-person learning for their children, as do a narrower majority of Americans without school-age children.
Full Story
facebook
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From the new issue of National Affairs: Federalism and American power
David McCormick and Jared Cohen | National Affairs
Federalism is one of America’s most powerful domestic features. With some leadership and creativity, it can become a key asset in the international realm as well.
Full Story
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Why France is getting no sympathy for its lost sub deal
Elisabeth Braw | Defense One
If France wants to shore up support against Australia, the UK, and the United States, it may have to rethink how it treats its friends, including in the key area of defense exports.
Full Story
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Economics, Housing, and Poverty
Will tens of millions of new monthly benefit checks be Joe Biden’s legacy?
Matt Weidinger | National Review
Progress and new challenges on the international travel front
Stan Veuger | AEIdeas
Chinese Communists have no choice but to veer away from free enterprise. But we do.
James Pethokoukis | AEIdeas
Foreign Policy and Defense
Investors are reading Evergrande all wrong. China would never allow a Lehman moment.
Derek Scissors and Shehzad Qazi | Barron’s
What the Milley affair says about the state of our politics
Giselle Donnelly | The Dispatch
Erdoğan’s coup hypocrisy on display in Sudan and Somalia
Michael Rubin | 19fortyfive.com
Politics, Society, and Culture
Continental divide
Thomas Chatterton Williams | Harper’s Magazine
Police and public opinion
Karlyn Bowman | AEI video
Searching for Plato with my 7-year-old
Thomas Chatterton Williams | The New York Times
The extremely weird politics of COVID-19
Ross Douthat | The New York Times
Abortion’s Texas twist
Adam J. White | Commentary
Are American families really being torn apart by politics?
Samuel J. Abrams | Institute for Family Studies
Election reform in the states is not all doom and gloom
Kevin R. Kosar | The Hill
Biden is reeling from one self-inflicted crisis to the next
Marc A. Thiessen | The Washington Post
Health Care and Technology
Patent reform at the International Trade Commission tries gaining traction
Michael Rosen | AEIdeas
Education
Does school choice need bipartisan support? An empirical analysis of the legislative record
Jay P. Greene and James D. Paul | American Enterprise Institute
Two-thirds of college students now say it’s OK to shout down a speaker
Frederick M. Hess | AEIdeas
The third pandemic school year is better than it appears
Nat Malkus | RealClearPolicy
The making of a teacher-martyr
Robert Pondiscio and Tracey Schirra | RealClearPolicy
Podcasts
Why is college so expensive, and what can be done about it?
Beth Akers and Jon Meer | “An Economist Goes to College”
Mere evangelism
Jonah Goldberg and Chris Stirewalt | “The Remnant with Jonah Goldberg”

12.) THE FLIP SIDE

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Thursday, September 23, 2021

Debt Ceiling

“The House voted late Tuesday to keep the government funded, suspend the federal debt limit and provide disaster and refugee aid, setting up a high-stakes showdown with Republicans who oppose the package… The federal government faces a shutdown if funding stops on Sept. 30, the end of the fiscal year.” AP News

From the Right

The right supports the GOP’s refusal to raise the debt ceiling, and argues that they should demand spending concessions before cooperating.
“There is a long bipartisan tradition of opposition parties inveighing against the irresponsibility of the party in power for debt-limit increases. ‘America has a debt problem and a failure of leadership,’ said Senator Barack Obama in 2006. ‘Americans deserve better.’ Senator Joe Biden voted with him as Republicans, then in the majority, raised it on their own. When Obama and Biden became president and vice president, their view of which stance on the debt ceiling was responsible changed dramatically…

“The potential political cost of the Republicans’ current stance — you guys raise the debt limit without our help — is that it makes them look irresponsible. But voters have not held debt brinkmanship against the parties that engage in it. Democrats won a landslide victory in the 2006 midterms after Biden and Obama voted to let the government hit the debt ceiling. Republicans brought on a government shutdown and flirted with a debt default in 2013, and were rewarded with their own landslide in the 2014 midterms.”
Ramesh Ponnuru, Bloomberg

“Almost every fiscal-discipline measure in the postwar era has been tied to or forced by actions raising the debt limit. The Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act of 1985 set out binding deficit limits enforced by a sequestration process. The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 contained $500 billion in deficit reduction over five years and created the ‘paygo’ rules that required that any increase in mandatory spending or tax cuts be offset. The Budget Control Act of 2011 contained almost $1 trillion in deficit reduction over 10 years through enforceable caps on discretionary spending…

“It is doubtful any of these deficit-reduction measures would have become law if not for the public debate and necessity of dealing with the debt limit. Simply put, the debt limit continues to provide the platform to address the debt. Debt-limit critics argue that the limit is poorly designed, since it operates only at the end of the budgeting and appropriations process. They are correct. But until Congress reforms the Budget Act of 1974, it will remain the only vehicle by which the U.S. limits debt.”
Jeb Hensarling, Wall Street Journal

“Democrats control the White House, Senate and the House of Representatives. They could have raised the debt limit by themselves without needing a single Republican vote. All the Democrats had to do was include debt limit instructions in either of the two budget resolutions that they passed this year…

“Republicans should return to the tradition [from previous debt-ceiling increases] by demanding spending cuts. This would align with the spirit of the debt limit, which is to hold lawmakers accountable for skyrocketing debt. For instance, Congress could attach Sen. Mitt Romney’s TRUST Act, which would create bipartisan congressional commissions to guarantee the long-term solvency of the Social Security, Medicare, and highway trust funds. More than 70 senators have signaled support for the TRUST Act, and it has been endorsed by a bipartisan coalition of 60 House members…

“Alternatively, Congress could agree to limit the size of the upcoming reconciliation bill. Or lawmakers could ban popular budget gimmicks that allow them to evade budget rules… Both parties understand the debt limit must be raised. But if Democrats are going to refuse to pass it themselves and demand that Republicans provide the final votes instead, they will need to offer the GOP something in return. Even modestly addressing the underlying (and soaring) debt is a commonsense solution.”
Brian Riedl, Daily Beast

From the Left

The left is critical of the GOP’s refusal to raise the debt ceiling, and many argue that the debt ceiling should be permanently removed.
“To be clear, in asking for a boost to the debt limit, the Biden administration isn’t asking Congress to pay for new programs. It’s asking Congress to finance initiatives the government has already authorized and costs it has already incurred — including $7.8 trillion in debt that the Trump administration racked up in just four years…

“It matters little to McConnell that his caucus enabled Donald Trump to grow the deficit in percentage terms [relative to GDP] by more than every other president except George W. Bush and Abraham Lincoln. His calculations are deeply cynical…

“Conceived to help presidents meet the demands of national emergencies and to ensure that the government can pay bills that Congress has already racked up, the debt ceiling has become a blunt instrument in the hands of a radical and destructive minority. As they address the looming emergency, Democrats might consider the possibility that the debt limit no longer meets the purpose for which it was designed.”
Joshua Zeitz, Politico

“If Republicans don’t budge, they would leave the U.S. economy hanging by a thread, potentially forcing Democrats to raise the ceiling by rewriting and passing a massive (and filibuster-immune) budget reconciliation package in a matter of days. It’s the legislative equivalent of passing a camel through the eye of a needle…

“The hypocrisy is stunning. McConnell has voted to increase or suspend the debt limit 32 times, including thrice under Trump… About 97 percent of the current debt existed before Joe Biden’s presidency.”
Dana Milbank, Washington Post

“McConnell keeps saying that Democrats must do this by themselves, but in reality, Republicans are doing something much worse: They are threatening to filibuster. They will block Democrats from doing what Republicans say they want (i.e., to deal with it themselves) in, say, a clean vote, all to force them to do so in reconciliation, to throw wrenches into that process… Democrats should take this moment to end the debt limit once and for all.”
Greg Sargent, Washington Post

“The GOP doesn’t have any actual policy demands in exchange for their votes, as they did in 2011 or 2013. They just want it to be a party-line affair… In a sane world, there would be a simple solution to this problem: Democrats would eliminate the filibuster on debt-ceiling votes (which they can do with a simple majority), suspend the borrowing limit, and move on…

“Both Joe Manchin and Krysten Sinema, the Senate’s most vocal defenders of the 60-vote rule, have said they think it is worth keeping in place because it fosters bipartisanship. But when it comes to the debt limit, McConnell and his conference are now insisting that the votes must be partisan. There will be no across-the-aisle negotiation for anybody to cluck about. By Manchin and Sinema’s own logic, the filibuster is doing absolutely nothing here, except making Democrats’ lives a bit more miserable.”
Jordan Weissmann, Slate

Some argue that “Congress should find the middle ground and set the limit as a proportion of national income. That would make the debt ceiling less arbitrary and maybe even force a more meaningful conversation around fiscal restraint when the ceiling approaches. Enough with the partisan brinksmanship. Let’s pay our bills and start getting serious about a national debt that is rising at level we cannot sustain — and that the next generation cannot afford.”
Michael R. Bloomberg, Bloomberg

A libertarian’s take
“It’s true that a default on the federal debt would fracture the economy and unleash a blood-dimmed tide over humanity — but it’s equally true that such a calamity has never happened, won’t happen this time and will likely never happen because members of Congress who love to play chicken never follow through. They always chicken out. Checking the fossil record, we find that Congress has averted disaster at least 78 times in the past 60 years by passing legislation to forestall the debt-ceiling end times that would otherwise unfurl. We will be writing about the 79th time before the month is out.”
Jack Shafer, Politico
On the bright side…

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13.) AXIOS

Axios AM

Happy Thursday. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,172 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Justin Green.

📈 Please join Axios’ Niala Boodhoo and Dan Primack today at 12:30 p.m. ET for a virtual event on venture-capital investing in climate tech. Guests include Senate Finance Chair Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Tom Steyer. Sign up here.

1 big thing: 60-year murder spike
Featured image

Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios

Upcoming FBI data is expected to show 2020 had the highest single-year spike in U.S. murders in at least 60 years.

  • Experts attribute the surge to job losses, fears and other jolts to society at the start of COVID, Axios’ Russ Contreras reports.

The homicide rate would remain far lower than it was through much of the 1980s and 1990s — about one-third below the rate in the early 1990s, The New York Times reports (subscription).

Data: FBI and The New York Times (2020 estimate). Chart: Axios Visuals

Data: FBI and The New York Times (2020 estimate). Chart: Axios Visuals

The Times reports that early FBI data shows a 29% spike in murders last year.

  • That would be the biggest single-year increase since national record-keeping began, in 1960.
  • Previously, the largest one-year increase was a 12.7% rise in 1968.

Many major U.S. cities, from Atlanta to Albuquerque, reported surges in violent crime in 2020, including jumps in homicides and gun crimes.

  • Homicides in Milwaukee doubled from 2019 to 2020, Wisconsin Public Radio reported.
  • The number of homicides in Houston in 2020 was the highest in 15 years, city records show.
  • California had 5.8 homicides per 100,000 residents in 2020 — the highest rate since 2008, according to preliminary data from the state’s Department of Public Health.

Share this story.

2. N.Y. Times compares Biden to Trump
U.S. Customs and Border Protection mounted officers attempt to contain migrants as they cross the Rio Grande on Sunday. Photo: Felix Marquez/AP

Citing moves on Afghanistan and the border, two N.Y. Times items compare President Biden to the predecessor he defeated:

A news story — “Biden Pushes Deterrent Border Policy After Promising ‘Humane’ Approach” (subscription) — notes this week’s images of the border roundup “could have come straight from former President Donald J. Trump’s immigration playbook”:

  • “[T]he deportations are a stark example of how Mr. Biden … is deploying some of the most aggressive approaches to immigration put in place by Mr. Trump over the past four years.”

Frank Bruni column“The UnTrump Presidency Slams Into Trumpness”:

  • “[H]e pulled out of Afghanistan without the degree of consultation, coordination and competence that allies expected, at least of any American president not named Trump.”
  • “And Biden’s return of hundreds of desperate Haitian migrants to Haiti … also seems Trumpy to many observers.”

Bruni’s bottom line: “Biden is a far cry from Trump. Hallelujah. But that doesn’t mean that he’s untouched by Trump.”

3. Our weekly map: Signs of COVID hope
Data: The N.Y. Times. Chart: Kavya Beheraj/Axios

The U.S. is moving in the right direction again, Axios’ Sam Baker reports.

  • New COVID cases are continuing to decline, and some experts are cautiously optimistic that the virus will continue to wane even into the fall and winter.

The U.S. is now averaging 134,000 new cases per day — a 10% drop over the past two weeks.

  • The pace of new infections, relative to each state’s population, is getting worse in 27 states and improving in 23.
  • Tennessee has seen the biggest drop in new cases over the past two weeks. Montana has seen the biggest spike.

Vaccinations for kids should help. Children ages 5-11 could become eligible for vaccinations in the next several weeks.

4. Mapped: Latino growth hubs
Data: Brookings Institution. Map: Thomas Oide/Axios

The Hispanic and Latino population in the U.S. grew 23% over the past decade — with some areas seeing a boom three or more times that rate, Stef Kight reports from census data in Axios Sneak Peek.

The seven metro areas with Latino or Hispanic populations greater than 2 million, Brookings’ Bill Frey found:

  • L.A.
  • New York
  • Miami
  • Chicago
  • Houston
  • Dallas
  • Riverside, Calif.

Share this map.

5. Airbnb doubles Afghan housing
Amanda Roshan-Rawaan packs donations for Afghan refugees Sunday at Unitarian Universalist Church in Bloomington, Ind. Photo: Jeremy Hogan/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky and co-founder Joe Gebbia told me during a visit to Washington yesterday that they’re offering temporary housing to 40,000 Afghan refugees worldwide, doubling previous commitment.

  • The housing typically lasts several weeks, and Airbnb and Airbnb.org provide subsidies to hosts.
  • Resettlement agencies tell Airbnb the highest-demand areas include Dallas, Northern Virginia, Sacramento, Seattle, Silver Spring, Md.

In an interview for our “Axios Today” podcast, Chesky told me: “We’ve always wanted to figure out how we can use our platform as a force for good, beyond our core business.”

  • “Over the last 10 years, we’ve housed nearly 100,000 people displaced by disasters. A few years ago, we started housing refugees.”

Gebbia said part of giving back is “simply asking the question when things like this happen in the world: How can we help?”

6. Tech nightmare: Green cards wasted

Illustration: Megan Robinson/Axios

Thousands of green cards are about to go to waste, leaving Google, Microsoft and other tech companies fuming, Axios’ Margaret Harding McGill writes.

  • Why it matters: Google and Microsoft say they have thousands of employees and their families awaiting green cards.

What’s happening: An administration official warned this summer that because of pandemic delays, a 100,000-application backlog wouldn’t be filled by the Sept. 30 fiscal year end. Extra green cards that haven’t been granted in one year don’t carry over to the next.

  • Google and Microsoft are among companies that have been urging federal officials to find a way to save the roughly 80,000 remaining employment-based green cards set to expire Sept. 30.
  • Google says only 13% of its candidate applications filed since last October have been approved.

Apple CEO Tim Cook last week wrote to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas to press the issue on behalf of the Business Roundtable. (Read the letter.)

  • Cook, who chairs the Business Roundtable’s immigration committee, said officials should eliminate unnecessary document requests and conduct communications by phone or email to speed up processing.

Share this story.

7. Biden’s beyond-the-Beltway case
Graphic: The White House

In a week of headwinds for President Biden’s biggest plans, White House communications director Kate Bedingfield armed House Democrats with new data for making his “Scranton vs. Park Ave.” case back home.

  • Bedingfield spoke to the House Democratic Policy and Communications Committee (DPCC), where co-chair Rep. Debbie Dingell of Michigan said: “[G]overning is message.”

See the deck.

8. You can now compete with rental-car giants
Featured image

Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios

With rental cars in short supply, enterprising car owners have amassed their own small fleets of automobiles, renting them out to travelers at a premium, Axios transportation correspondent Joann Muller writes.

  • If you need a car in Boston for a weekend in mid-October, you can rent a Ford Fiesta hatchback from Budget for about $500 — or pay the same for a Maserati Quattroporte from Turo.com, a car-sharing site.

Turo and other car-sharing services, including Getaround and Avail, make it easy for anyone with spare vehicles to make some cash.

  • The services are offering bonuses of up to $2,000 per vehicle for car owners to add to their fleets.

Case in point: Lazaro Vento lists 22 vehicles for rent in Miami through Turo, including a Ferrari, a Tesla and multiple BMWs, Audis and Jeeps.

  • In a particularly good month recently, he pocketed a $30,000 profit.
  • Seven years ago, he was broke, living on a friend’s couch. Today, he manages close to 100 Airbnb properties, along with his fleet of Turo cars, sometimes packaging them together.

Share this story.

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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON

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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES


16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Rep. Anthony Gonzalez weighed the pros and cons of running for reelection and concluded he …
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September 23, 2021

   

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Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., speaks with Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Tex., left, and Rep. Mike Thompson, D-Calif., right, on the steps of the Capitol on Monday, Sept. 13, 2021. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite) **FILE**

Biden’s goals close to collapse amid Democratic feuding as deadlines loom

Democrats are feuding with each other over everything from spending to border patrol tactics as time runs short on President … Read More

By Dave Boyer

Top Headlines

 

EXCLUSIVE: U.S. Chamber of Commerce pressing House Republicans to save $1.2T infrastructure bill

By Haris Alic – Read More

Two Afghan evacuees charged with assaults at U.S. military base

By Stephen Dinan – Read More

Biden supporters blast DHS over Haitian deportations

By Stephen Dinan – Read More

Fight or flight: Gonzalez retreat begs question of which anti-Trump Republican is next

By Seth McLaughlin – Read More

Mississippi’s 15-week abortion ban more liberal than limits in France, Germany

By Alex Swoyer – Read More

Small business advocate Alfredo Ortiz warns ‘misery index’ about to get much worse

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Opinion

 

The swamp monsters who run Biden’s White House

By Kelly Sadler – Read More

Inside the Clinton campaign’s far-reaching operation to cyber-stalk Donald Trump

By Rowan Scarborough – Read More

For Democrats, ideology and party control trumps policy success

By Cal Thomas – Read More

Politics

 

Booker declares deal dead for racial-justice overhaul of policing in America

By Kery Murakami – Read More

Youngkin leads McAuliffe for the first time in a Virginia governor’s race poll

By Valerie Richardson – Read More

George W. Bush boosts Liz Cheney’s campaign amid Trump, allies’ assault

By Victor Morton – Read More

Security

 

House Democrats introduce stand-alone bill to fund Iron Dome

By Haris Alic and Joseph Clark – Read More

Biden goes easy on China at U.N.

By Bill Gertz – Read More

DHS chief Mayorkas: Border ‘no less secure’ than it was under Trump

By Stephen Dinan – Read More

Sports

 

‘It’s all fixable’: Washington not panicking over defensive mistakes

By Matthew Paras – Read More

Handling friction at Ryder Cup a European specialty

By Doug Ferguson – Read More

‘That’s a dude’: MMA stars push back on transgender fighter Alana McLaughlin’s win

By Valerie Richardson – Read More

 

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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

 

Subscribe to the Magazine View this as website
BY HUGO GURDON AND DAVID FREDDOSO

HIGHLIGHTS

‘Perfect storm’: Iowa could be bellwether for Democratic problems if Biden fails to recover

'Perfect storm': Iowa could be bellwether for Democratic problems if Biden fails to recover

At a Faith and Freedom event this month in Des Moines, Iowa, veteran Georgia Republican activist Ralph Reed hosted a record-breaking crowd — a sign of Democrats’ looming disadvantage in a slew of midterm races.

Biden administration releases some Haitian migrant families at Del Rio gas station

Biden administration releases some Haitian migrant families at Del Rio gas station

DEL RIO, Texas — Haitian migrant families who illegally crossed the southern border and lived in a makeshift camp beneath an international bridge are being released into the United States, contradicting the Biden administration’s claims that they would be removed from the country.

Biden faces renewed press backlash over access

President Joe Biden pitched the merits of democracy during his inaugural United Nations address, but hours later, White House aides’ treatment of reporters raised questions about whether he is leading by example.

Townsfolk dismayed at the dusty warzone Del Rio has become

Townsfolk dismayed at the dusty warzone Del Rio has become

DEL RIO, Texas — Town residents are fed up with the situation in their small city of 35,000 people that became ground zero for the crisis at the southern border last week.

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Carbon-free fusion power shows new viability but has a long way to go

Carbon-free fusion power shows new viability but has a long way to go

A pair of recent experiments is feeding hopes that nuclear fusion-generated energy could become a dominant and dependable source of clean power over the next decade at a time when countries are moving swiftly to cut down on fossil fuel emissions.

DeBlasio ‘doesn’t care’ about black people, says Black Lives Matter of Greater New York organizer

A Black Lives Matter of Greater New York organizer said New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s citywide COVID-19 vaccine mandate shows he “does not care” for the black community.

Mark Levin says he received another stent after heart disease scare

Mark Levin says he received another stent after heart disease scare

Conservative commentator and author Mark Levin announced Wednesday he is recovering after receiving a stent in his heart.

Arizona Senate previews Maricopa audit report presentation

Arizona Senate previews Maricopa audit report presentation

The contractors tasked to audit the 2020 Maricopa County general election are poised to present their findings to the Arizona Senate on Friday, with an offered preview on Wednesday.

Barr had ‘Oh, s***’ moment when Trump blew up over Durham: Book

Barr had 'Oh, s***' moment when Trump blew up over Durham: Book

Attorney General William Barr braced himself in the face of unprecedented fury displayed by President Donald Trump when he was told special counsel John Durham would likely not finish the criminal inquiry into the Russia investigation until sometime during the incoming Biden administration, according to a new book.

Johnny Depp warns ‘no one is safe’ from ‘cancel culture’

Johnny Depp warns 'no one is safe' from 'cancel culture'

Actor Johnny Depp said on Wednesday that “no one is safe” from “cancel culture.”

Police officer slain in Southeast DC shooting identified as mother of four

Police officer slain in Southeast DC shooting identified as mother of four

A special police officer who was shot and killed in Southeast Washington, D.C., Tuesday night was a mother of four.

THE ROUNDUP

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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Chicago Tribune
VIEW IN BROWSER SEPTEMBER 23, 2021 CHICAGOTRIBUNE.COM

DAYWATCH

Good morning, Chicago.
As the conversation continues over who should get COVID-19 booster shots and when, the FDA yesterday authorized extra doses of the Pfizer vaccine for Americans over 65 and those who are at high risk from the virus. Here’s what we know.
Meanwhile, a surge in respiratory illnesses has left local children’s hospitals flooded with patients and unusually long wait times, my colleague Lisa Schencker reports. Chicago-area doctors are now pleading with parents not to bring their kids to hospital emergency rooms unless necessary.
— Nicole Stock, audience editor
Here are the top stories you need to know to start your day.

1

CPS has tallied nearly 500 COVID-19 cases, still has no safety agreement with teachers union; Arwady calls number ‘very low’

With COVID-19 cases and student quarantines rising in Chicago Public Schools, parents and teachers are continuing calls for faster contact tracing, more testing, improved safety protocols, increased transparency and broader remote learning for children too young to be vaccinated.

The CPS tracker reported 329 student and 142 adult cases as of Wednesday. Chicago’s lead public health doctor, Allison Arwady, on Tuesday called those “really low numbers” and “certainly not unexpected” in the context of a school system that has about 300,000 students and tens of thousands of employees.

2

Two 15-year-old Simeon students fatally shot hours apart — one a few blocks from school. ‘This is really sad and nobody is doing anything about it.’

In less than four hours on Tuesday, two 15-year-old students from Simeon Career Academy High School were fatally wounded in separate gun attacks, leaving friends and mentors to mourn the loss and students reeling as they left school Wednesday — many meeting up with concerned parents.

 

 

3

Former Chicago lawyer sues Texas doctor who violated the state’s abortion law

A former Chicago lawyer Felipe Gomez on Monday sued Dr. Alan Braid of Texas, who in a Washington Post column shared that he had violated the state’s abortion ban. The Texas law states that abortions will be banned at six weeks’ gestation or when a fetal heartbeat is detected. Any person who suspects that a medical professional has defied this law can sue for up to $10,000.

4

Four guns stolen in Wisconsin have been linked to dozens of shootings here. Authorities say it’s an example of how illegal guns end up on Chicago streets.

Chicago police and experts have said gun thefts in neighboring states — along with straw purchases — are a source of the illegal guns that feed the city’s violence problem. The Tribune spent months examining hundreds of documents obtained through open records requests to outline and understand the fallout from just one such break-in.

 

 

5

Cevapi sandwiches are part of Chicago’s latest Balkan food craze, and Kiosk Balkan Street Food makes a great one

Just holding the cevapi sandwich from Kiosk Balkan Street Food is a small marvel, Tribune food critic Nick Kindelsperger writes. Lured in by the aroma of freshly grilled sausages, one can’t help but be thrown by the somun, a traditional Balkan flatbread that proves simultaneously richly browned and potentially crunchy, yet incredibly soft to the touch.


21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES

Plan to keep the Bears in Chicago complicated by limits of Soldier Field

Chicago Sun-Times Morning Edition
Good morning, Chicago —
Here’s the latest news from around the area on a somewhat chilly Thursday morning.
Despite Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s recent comments about a “bigger, better” Soldier Field to keep the Bears from leaving Chicago for the suburbs, our Fran Spielman and David Roeder spoke to local architects who say there’s only so much that could be done to expand the stadium.
And the Simeon High School community continues to mourn following the fatal shootings of two teenage classmates hours apart earlier this week. Our reporters spoke to members of the community about the victims, Jamari Williams and Kentrell McNeal, and the need to address gun violence.
Get all that news and more below. Thanks for reading.
Satchel Price, assistant audience engagement editor
Plan to keep the Bears in Chicago complicated by constraints of Soldier Field

Despite united opposition from police unions, Lightfoot won’t budge from Oct. 15 vaccine mandate for city workers

Simeon Career Academy students cope with the fatal shootings of two classmates hours apart

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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT

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Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Thursday, and autumn is here! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!

Total U.S. coronavirus deaths as of each morning this week: Monday, 673,765; Tuesday, 676,092; Wednesday, 678,502; Thursday, 681,199.
The White House on Wednesday sought to quell tensions between centrist Democrats and progressives in a series of meetings as the party seeks a path forward to implement President Biden’s multi-trillion-dollar spending plan.

 

Biden touted “progress” during three “productive and candid” meetings throughout the day, in a statement from the White House Wednesday night (The Hill). Early in the afternoon, he sat down with Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.). Shortly after, Biden met with a number of centrist members, including Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) and Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.), for more than an hour and a half.

 

The president also met with progressives, headlined by including Senate Budget Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) in the evening (The Hill).

 

The round of discussions came amid a trying week for the party in power. Leaders have looked on in frustration as non-stop friendly fire has raged within both chambers over the status of the $3.5 reconciliation package and the potential vote set for Monday on the $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill. Progressives are threatening to sink the latter bill unless the larger bill is voted on, leaving centrists fuming.

 

“It truly is a shame that they’re using that as a hostage,” Manchin told reporters following the meeting, adding that he believes a reconciliation bill can come together “eventually.” “There’s just too much in the reconciliation to do as quickly as you can” (CNN).

 

The New York Times: Biden huddles with Democrats as divisions threaten his agenda.

 

The Wall Street Journal: Biden pushes Democrats to find consensus on budget package.

 

Mike Lillis, Alexander Bolton and Scott Wong, The Hill: Pelosi signals she won’t move $3.5 trillion bill without Senate-House deal.

 

The Hill: Manchin: Biden told moderates to pitch price tag for reconciliation bill.

 

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) leaves the U.S. Capitol

© Getty Images

 

 

The meetings come during a crazed time for the party, which is attempting to navigate myriad issues in getting the whole of the agenda implemented. Monday’s potential vote, which Pelosi agreed to in order to bring key centrists on board last month and kick off the reconciliation process, remains up in the air. Jayapal, the chairwoman of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, told CNN that there is “no reason” to hold the vote. She also dismissed it as an “arbitrary deadline.”

 

“Progressives will vote for both bills because we proudly support the President’s entire Build Back Better package, but that a majority of our 96-member caucus will only vote for the small infrastructure bill after the Build Back Better Act passes,” Jayapal said in a statement after the meeting with Biden, which also lasted more than an hour and a half. Eleven Senate Democrats echoed that sentiment in a letter to Biden on Wednesday.

 

And therein lies the rub for progressives. House Budget Committee Chairman John Yarmuth (D-Ky.) said on Wednesday that there is “virtually no chance” the reconciliation bill will be finished before the end of the month, with Biden reportedly giving no indication that the Monday vote will be bumped (The Hill). All of this sets up contentious days ahead for the party.

 

“We still have work to do,” Gottheimer said in a statement. “We’ve got a hectic few days ahead.”

 

The Hill: Biden confronts sinking poll numbers.

 

> Where’s the ceiling?: In a sign that Congress just can’t help itself, lawmakers are moving swiftly down a dual track that could lead to a government shutdown and a default on the national debt without any backup plan in the coming weeks.

 

As The Hill’s Jordain Carney writes, Senate Republicans are expected to block a stop-gap government spending bill next week, with leaders in both parties indicating that they have no plan B and that negotiations between the two sides are nonexistent. At present, the government is set to shut down at midnight on Sept. 31, with a debt default potentially coming in mid-October without action.

 

The lack of a deal could also have unintended consequences, as it would threaten to derail the fragile recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic and plunge the U.S. back into economic hardship, according to The Hill’s Sylvan Lane. If a shutdown and debt default take place, economists fear the U.S. could suffer a devastating setback in its grueling recovery from the pandemic.

 

“We always do this f—ing dance,” said Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.). “I don’t know if people are going to put their sane minds on and do what needs to be done, or shut it down. This is just a ridiculous exercise … I can’t even compare it to anything I do on the farm that’s this stupid” (Politico).

 

The Washington Post: Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and two of her predecessors who served Republican presidents, Steven Mnuchin and Hank Paulson, held private discussions this month with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) about the debt ceiling in an effort to avert U.S. default.

 

Bloomberg News: Yarmuth: Democrats probably lack time to raise debt ceiling via reconciliation.

 

Aaron Blake, The Washington Post: Republicans usually lose shutdown fights. So why are they going there again?

 

> Police reform dead: A bipartisan group of lawmakers spearheading police reform negotiations revealed on Wednesday that talks are officially over amid deep divisions that they weren’t able to overcome. Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) said that discussions between him, Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) and Rep. Karen Bass (D-Calif.) (pictured below) ended without a deal to reform police tactics and put new accountability measures in place.

 

“After months of exhausting every possible pathway to a bipartisan deal, it remains out of reach right now,” Booker said in a statement (The Hill).

 

The Hill: Biden says he will review executive actions after police reform talks fail.

 

Rep. Karen Bass (D-CA), Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC), and Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) speak briefly to reporters

© Getty Images

 

 

Syracuse.com: Former Rep. Sherwood Boehlert (R-N.Y.), 84, died on Monday. He served in the House for 24 years, retiring at the end of 2006.

A MESSAGE FROM ALIBABA

 

As the retail industry undergoes seismic shifts, U.S. small businesses use Alibaba’s e-commerce platforms to reach 900 million consumers in China, finding growth for their businesses and communities.

LEADING THE DAY
ADMINISTRATION: It was accion de rapprocher: Biden and President Emmanuel Macron of France on Wednesday spoke by phone in an effort to ease strains following a recent U.S. deal with Australia and the United Kingdom to bolster Canberra’s nuclear-powered submarine fleet. France over the last week reacted angrily to being cut out of the trilateral pact as well as losing defense contracts with Australia that would have been worth billions. The French government dramatically withdrew its ambassador from the U.S. before Macron agreed on Wednesday to meet Biden in Europe at the end of October and to return his country’s ambassador to Washington. Biden concurred with Macron in a carefully worded statement that “the situation would have benefited from open consultations among allies on matters of strategic interest to France and our European partners” (The Associated Press).

 

The Washington Post: French defense contractor Naval Group plans to bill Australia over a $66 billion submarine contract.

 

> Immigration: For the administration, U.S. handling of undocumented migrants and asylum-seekers at the southern border with Mexico is a policy challenge that riles Democrats as well as Republicans. Biden allies and supporters this week questioned the recent federal treatment of Haitian migrants who amassed by the thousands in Del Rio, Texas, even as Republicans assailed a border security and management “crisis.” The Hill’s Rebecca Beitch, Morgan Chalfant and Rafael Bernal report on Democrats’ worries and the administration’s policy options.

 

Members of the Congressional Black Caucus met on Wednesday with administration officials to seek the suspension of federal border agents on horseback photographed using aggressive tactics in Del Rio to chase Haitian migrants near the border (The Hill).

 

Vice President Harris spoke with Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas on Tuesday to raise “her grave concerns about the mistreatment of Haitian migrants by border patrol agents on horses, and the need of all CBP (Customs and Border Patrol) agents to treat people with dignity, humanely and consistent with our laws and our values,” her spokeswoman said in a statement on Wednesday. Mayorkas promised to update Harris about pending findings of an Office of Professional Responsibility investigation into the federal treatment of the Haitians (Reuters/Yahoo).

 

The Washington Post: Conservative Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who is seeking reelection, deployed miles of state-owned Department of Public Safety vehicles along the border with Mexico on Tuesday to create what he called a “steel wall” to deter migrants from entering the United States. He told Fox News that the line of vehicles “regained control of the border.”

 

U.S. Border Patrol agents watch over immigrants near a migrant camp in Del Rio, Texas

© Getty Images

 

 

> Environmental regulations: The Environmental Protection Agency today will announce a final rulemaking to cut the production and consumption of polluting hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) by 85 percent below baseline levels within the next 15 years, action to combat climate change that the administration asserts is “one of the most impactful … in decades” because the common, harmful gases are far more powerful that carbon dioxide. Hydrofluorocarbons ​​are greenhouse gases that contribute to the warming of the planet and are found in a range of appliances and substances, including refrigerators, air conditioners and foams. The agency’s rule establishes an allowance allocation and trading program to reduce hydrofluorocarbons, and creates a compliance and enforcement system. In addition, the agency aims to review more than a dozen petitions to restrict the use of hydrofluorocarbons in other applications (The Washington Post). … The Biden administration as of Wednesday had reversed 42 environmental actions put in place by the Trump administration, targeted another 73 and has not assessed 122, according to The Washington Post. The process to unwind regulations from an earlier administration is lengthy and could take the Biden administration years. The president’s regulatory goals are guided by what he calls “a whole-of-government approach to put climate change at the center of our domestic, national security and foreign policy.”

 

*****

 

CORONAVIRUS: Heeding targeted advice received last week from an advisory panel, the Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday announced emergency use approval of Pfizer-BioNTech booster doses for people 65 and older, younger people with compromised immune systems, and some at-risk front-line workers (The Associated Press and The Hill). Third doses are intended to bolster immune responses against COVID-19 following the initial two doses of the Pfizer vaccine administered to many Americans early this year.

 

Wednesday’s decision scales back the Biden administration’s preparations aimed at a Sept. 20 launch of third doses to nearly all U.S. adults as a way to battle the highly contagious delta variant.

 

However, more regulatory hurdles lie ahead before boosters officially begin to be administered. Advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention opened a two-day meeting Wednesday to make their own, more specific recommendations about who should get the extra shots and when. Some experts were so perplexed by the questions surrounding the rationale for boosters that they suggested putting off a decision for a month in order to gather more evidence, the AP reported.

 

The New York Times: Next up today: A CDC decision on exactly who should get boosters and why.

 

> Vaccine sharing: Biden on Wednesday pledged to double to more than 1 billion this country’s donations of Pfizer doses for global dissemination by 2022. The president says he embraces the goal of vaccinating 70 percent of the world’s population within the next year. About 160 million shots supplied by the United States have already been distributed to more than 100 countries, representing more donations than the rest of the world combined (The Associated Press).

 

> Tests: The administration is under pressure to quickly expand rapid coronavirus testing. At-home tests for COVID-19, which are in hot demand, are scarce in the U.S. and the administration recently purchased $2 billion worth of tests as manufacturers scramble to ramp up operations (The Hill).

 

The Associated Press: Other U.S. shortages exacerbated by the effects of COVID-19: teachers, staff members such as tutors and aides, and school bus drivers. Without enough teachers, some districts have been forced to return to remote instruction for students.

 

A Wellness 4 Humanity COVID-19 at-home test kit vending machine

© Getty Images

 

 

Around the world, scientists continue to track COVID-19’s variants and announced again at the World Health Organization on Wednesday that the delta strain is by far the most transmissible based on studies, accounting for a majority of new infections confirmed globally. Other mutations identified are less infectious and therefore less worrisome, the organization says (The Washington Post).

 

A consortium of disease data experts provide advice to the CDC by closely tracking COVID-19 information to project how the pandemic is proceeding. Creators of the “Scenario Modeling Hub” anticipate a steady decline in infections and deaths in the United States by March, with several caveats (NPR). “Any of us who have been following this closely, given what happened with delta, are going to be really cautious about too much optimism,” says Justin Lessler at the University of North Carolina, who helps run the hub. “But I do think that the trajectory is towards improvement for most of the country.”

IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
POLITICS & COURTS: McConnell’s battles with the White House these days are not limited to the debt ceiling. He signed on to a letter with three Senate colleagues on Wednesday accusing the administration of undercutting the nation’s COVID-19 response.

 

McConnell and Sens. Richard Burr (R-N.C.), Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) and Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) said in the letter that the administration has exacerbated vaccine hesitancy across the country and lacks a strategy to “end” the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

The letter posed questions to the White House while hailing the Trump administration’s Operation Warp Speed vaccine development program. Republicans are eager to seize the offensive on COVID-19 among conservative voters as Biden’s job approval numbers continue to dip. McConnell, a polio survivor, has publicly encouraged people to get vaccinated against COVID-19 and embraces voluntary mask wearing (The Hill).

 

> Jan. 6 defendants: Federal judges are weighing whether to throw out one of the most serious felony charges facing defendants in the Capitol riot prosecutions — the charge of obstruction of an official proceeding, which carries a maximum possible sentence of 20 years in prison. The defendants argue the Electoral College certification of state ballot results on Jan. 6 does not qualify under the law as an “official proceeding.” At least three judges in recent weeks have pressed prosecutors on whether the charge is appropriate in the context of the events that day. If courts rule that the felony count cannot be applied to Jan. 6 Electoral College proceedings, it would likely hinder prosecutors’ efforts to punish those arrested and adjudicated for alleged crimes including breaching the Capitol (The Hill).

 

> Secretaries of state and election oversightA Reuters special report finds that supporters of former President Trump who falsely assert election fraud in 2020 are using political campaigns to try to effect change from within. Reuters examined all 15 Republican candidates for secretary of state in five battlegrounds. Ten continue to question whether Biden won the 2020 election.

 

> Abortion: Republican candidates outside Texas find themselves in the position of having to answer for the Lone Star State’s recently enacted near-total abortion ban. Some GOP candidates worry that Democrats will be able to use the Texas measure to rally base voters during contests in which Republican contenders are working to frame the election around issues of crime, the economy, the border and U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan (The Hill).

OPINION
It’s not really a “$3.5 trillion” bill, by Peter Coy, opinion writer, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/3ALlDdq

 

The U.S. debt limit constrains nothing but honesty, by Ramesh Ponnuru, opinion writer, Bloomberg Opinion. https://bloom.bg/3zsD9C0

A MESSAGE FROM ALIBABA

 

Radha Beauty, a small business from Aurora, Ohio, found a new growth opportunity by using Alibaba’s online platforms to sell to the Chinese market. Now Radha is experiencing record sales.

WHERE AND WHEN
The House convenes at 10 a.m. Pelosi will hold a weekly press conference at 10:45 a.m. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) will take questions from journalists at 11:30 a.m., also in the Capitol. … Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) will take questions from reporters at 8:15 a.m. at the Christian Science Monitor Breakfast. … Rep. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) will be interviewed at 8:30 a.m. by Punchbowl journalists about news of the day and immigration reform (event information is HERE).

 

The Senate convenes at 9:30 a.m. and resumes consideration of the nomination of Florence Pan to be U.S. district judge for the District of Columbia.

 

The president and the vice president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:30 a.m. Biden will receive his weekly economic briefing at noon before having lunch with Harris at 12:30 p.m.

 

The vice president will meet with Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, president of Ghana, at 11:15 a.m. She will also meet with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at 3:15 p.m. in her ceremonial office.

 

The White House daily press briefing is scheduled at noon.

 

National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins participates at 1:45 p.m. ET in a discussion about COVID-19 developments at an event hosted by Bloomberg Philanthropies. Webinar information is HERE.

 

👉 INVITATIONS: The Hill’s Virtually Live TODAY at 1 p.m. hosts a Small Business Summit with policymakers, small-business owners and economic experts as well as lawmakers and officials including Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.), chairman of the Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee; Rep. Young Kim (R-Calif.), member of the Small Business Subcommittee on Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Workforce Development; and the Small Business Administration’s Mark Madrid. Information is HERE.

 

🐶 Washington’s Best Friends Animal Society and Humane Rescue Alliance team up this evening with invited guests to salute “National Dogs in Politics Day,” featuring adoptable puppies during an outdoor event at Bullfeathers on the Hill near the Capitol from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.

 

📺 Hill.TV’s “Rising” program features news and interviews at http://thehill.com/hilltv or on YouTube at 10:30 a.m. ET at Rising on YouTube.

ELSEWHERE
 FEDERAL RESERVE: Chairman Jerome Powell and Fed officials on Wednesday downgraded their outlook, released during the summer, for growth and jobs, anticipating higher unemployment and inflation along with slower U.S. expansion as the year ends. “The progress of the economy continues to depend on the course of the virus, and risks to the economic outlook remain,” Powell told journalists, adding that the COVID-19 surge is causing “significant hardship and loss and slowing the economic recovery” (The Hill). … The central bank’s Federal Open Market Committee indicated the Fed will start pulling back on some of the stimulus the central bank has been providing during the financial crisis (The Associated Press). Powell added that meeting “participants generally viewed that so long as the recovery remains on track, a gradual tapering process that concludes around the middle of next year is likely to be appropriate” (CNBC).

 

A Now Hiring near the entrance to a Ross department store

© Getty Images

 

 

 BIOFUEL: ​​The Environmental Protection Agency is proposing to reduce how much biofuel is required to be blended into other fuels. The EPA would lessen 2020 and 2021 requirements to 17.1 billion gallons and about 18.6 billion gallons, respectively, below than the 20.1 billion gallons set for 2020 before the pandemic. For 2022, the level would reportedly be at 20.8 billion gallons (Reuters).

 

 BIODIVERSITY: At a United Nations General Assembly sideline event on Wednesday, nine foundations pledged $5 billion to protect and conserve 30 percent of the planet by 2030, marking the largest-ever private funding commitment to biodiversity (The Hill).

THE CLOSER
And finally …  It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for this week’s Morning Report Quiz! Inspired by the 30th anniversary of the death of Dr. Seuss, we’re eager for some smart guesses about the famed author of myriad children’s books.

 

Email your responses to asimendinger@thehill.com and/or aweaver@thehill.com, and please add “Quiz” to subject lines. Winners who submit correct answers will enjoy some richly deserved newsletter fame on Friday.

 

Under his famous “Dr. Seuss” pseudonym, how many books did Theodor Geisel publish?

  1. 60
  2. 64
  3. 68
  4. 72

 

Which of the following actors did NOT star in a feature film/movie adaptation of a Dr. Seuss book?

  1. Jim Carrey
  2. Steve Carell
  3. Adam Sandler
  4. Mike Myers

 

Dr. Seuss’s first book, “And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street,” was rejected by how many publishers before being accepted by Vanguard Press?

  1. 10
  2. 16
  3. 21
  4. 27

 

Which of the following author names did Dr. Seuss not publish books under?

  1. LeSieg
  2. Rosetta Stone
  3. Theodor Geisel
  4. All of the above

 

Books by Theodor Seuss Geisel, aka Dr. Seuss, including

© Getty Images

 

The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE! 
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT

 


24.) ROLL CALL

Image

Morning Headlines

ImageLawmakers are scrambling to come up with a Plan B to allow federal highway and transit spending to continue if the Senate bipartisan infrastructure agreement is not passed by the House before the law authorizing that spending expires on Sept. 30. Read more…

ImageAn amendment to the House defense authorization bill that would connect cannabis companies to the banking system has bipartisan support in both chambers, but its chances in the Senate are uncertain. Read more…

Dysfunction in America is no longer just knocking on the door

 

ImageOPINION — It’s human nature not to take crises too seriously until they come knocking at your front door. But we’ve passed that point on a host of issues, with too many American citizens either in denial or using dysfunction as a partisan tool rather than a call to action. Read more…

Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.

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Domestic flight vaccine mandate? Not ‘off the table’

 

ImageThe White House’s recommendation to require all visitors flying into the United States to provide proof of vaccination has sparked speculation over whether the federal government will ultimately require passengers on domestic flights to be vaccinated as well. Read more…

‘My Name Is Pauli Murray’ — portrait of an activist as a major influence

 

ImageThe filmmakers behind “RBG” are out with their latest documentary, “My Name Is Pauli Murray,” about the woman who helped desegregate Washington, D.C., co-founded the National Organization for Women and was the first Black woman ordained as an Episcopal priest. Read more…

FDA authorizes Pfizer COVID-19 booster for people at high risk

 

ImageThe Food and Drug Administration authorized a third shot of the Pfizer vaccine Wednesday night for individuals most vulnerable to COVID-19: people age 65 and older, people age 18 and older at risk of getting severe COVID-19 and people at high risk of exposure through a job or institution. Read more…

Black lawmakers sound alarm on Haitian migrant treatment

 

ImageMembers of the Congressional Black Caucus met with White House officials on Wednesday to urge better treatment of Haitian migrants, adding their voice to a growing number of Democrats condemning the actions of Border Patrol agents depicted in images that have gone viral. Read more…

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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK

POLITICO Playbook: Inside the room of Biden’s talks with Dems

Presented by

DRIVING THE DAY

THE READOUT — Here’s the most important development that came from President JOE BIDEN’s five hours of meetings with 23 legislators in the Oval Office on Wednesday, according to a senior White House official: “Moderates agreed that they need to coalesce around an offer to the liberals.”

It might not sound like much. But given how dug in both sides have been, the White House views the commitment from the Manch-ema wing as “a real breakthrough.”

In a trio of meetings Biden first hosted Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER and Speaker NANCY PELOSI, then he brought in a bicameral group of centrist Democrats, and finally he gathered key progressives from both chambers. They snacked on individually wrapped cookies with the presidential seal. The president was loquacious, according to one senator present: “It’s Biden, so you know Joe does a fair amount of talking.” The last session ended just after 7 p.m.

The second meeting produced the most news. It started with the president pressing his 11 guests — including JOE MANCHIN, KYRSTEN SINEMA, STEPHANIE MURPHY and JOSH GOTTHEIMER — to give him a specific top-line number for the reconciliation bill. They all refused and instead argued Dems should nail down an agreed-upon list of revenue raisers that would determine the top line. Murphy came to the meeting with a 10-plus-page spreadsheet of ways to fund the bill.

Biden fished again for a top line. “Give me a number, and tell me what you can live with and what you can’t,” Manchin later quoted the president saying. But no luck.

“The president really wanted a top line and was clearly getting frustrated,” said a source briefed on the meeting. “He was very frustrated that they couldn’t announce a number today.” The source added that his boss’s “biggest takeaway” was that Biden acknowledged the top-line number would be less than $3.5 trillion.

WHAT THEY TALKED ABOUT: Almost every policy area in the bill was discussed, according to Sen. JON TESTER (D-Mont.), including housing, taxes, child care, health care and climate.

There was no breakthrough on climate. “I have big problems” with the climate provisions, Manchin said afterward. “Probably [the president] and I are in a different place on that.”

On the big health care standoff between Pelosi, who wants to shore up the Affordable Care Act, and BERNIE SANDERS, who wants to expand Medicare benefits, the centrists made it clear they were on team Pelosi. “They stressed to the president, ‘We’re behind the speaker in this instance,’” said the source. “There was enough in that room to kill Bernie Sanders’ idea.”

Finally, they also asked the president not to rush the reconciliation process and to use his influence in the House to pass BIF.

BIDEN’S ASSIGNMENT: The president sent them on their way with what, from the White House’s perspective, was the most important action item: Come up with a set of principles or framework for reconciliation that will persuade progressives to back down from their threat to kill BIF in the House on Monday. “The goal is to try to get a framework before the vote on the bipartisan infrastructure package,” Tester said after he left the White House.

In the final meeting — which included Reps. BARBARA LEE and PRAMILA JAYAPAL as well as Sanders and Sen. RON WYDEN — Biden faced a united front of progressives pleading with him to use his influence to delay the Monday vote.

“It’s weird if you are supposedly for a bill to insist on killing it,” one person in the room told Playbook. “The iron law of legislating is that if you have the votes you take the vote, and if you don’t have the votes you delay the vote. That was done on BIF multiple times at the request of the moderate negotiators. It’s quite standard. It is NOT standard to insist on a vote when you know it will fail. Weird to call yourself a pragmatist and then kill the bill you say you want to pass by not giving negotiators more time.”

How did Biden respond to the requests for delay? “I hear ya,” the president told the progressives, according to Wyden. “I know a lot of you think that’s an arbitrary date. Let me think about it, and I’ll talk to Sen. Schumer and the speaker.”

Several Democratic lawmakers told us that any request to moderates to delay the vote would have to come from the president, not Pelosi.

LOOKING AHEAD: In the near term we see three possible scenarios, based on our conversations with numerous people in the Biden meetings Wednesday:

1) Centrists make a reconciliation counteroffer that’s robust enough to convince progressives to vote for the infrastructure bill early next week.

2) The offer from centrists comes up short, but Biden steps in and convinces the Gottheimer gang to agree to a vote delay until there’s a reconciliation deal.

3) The offer from centrists comes up short, the infrastructure vote goes forward, and progressives follow through on their promise to kill the bill. (Or we find out they were bluffing.)

Good Thursday morning, and thanks for reading Playbook. Second gentleman Doug Emhoff chose Beck’s “E-Pro” over Salt-N-Pepa’s “Whatta Man” and Cali Swag District’s “Teach Me How to Dougie” for his campaign walk-on song. Drop us a line and tell us what you would have picked: Rachael BadeEugene DanielsRyan LizzaTara Palmeri.

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 today 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 THURSDAY:

— 9:30 a.m.: The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief.

— 12 p.m.: Biden will receive his weekly economic briefing.

— 12:30 p.m.: Biden and Harris will have lunch together in the private dining room.

HARRIS’ THURSDAY:

— 11:15 a.m.: Harris will meet with Ghanaian President NANA ADDO DANKWA AKUFO-ADDO in the Vice President’s Ceremonial Office.

— 3:15 p.m.: Harris will meet with Indian PM NARENDRA MODI in the Vice President’s Ceremonial Office.

Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at noon.

THE HOUSE will meet at 10 a.m. Pelosi will hold her weekly press conference at 10:45 a.m. House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY will hold his at 11:30 a.m.

THE SENATE is in.

PLAYBOOK READS

THE WHITE HOUSE

THE LOOMING CLIFF — Biden isn’t panicking about the prospect of defaulting on the nation’s debt, Chris Cadelago reports. The White House is instead letting Hill Democratic leaders take the lead on raising the debt ceiling, setting up calls between Republicans and Treasury, and coordinating outside pressure on the GOP to fold. “Inside the White House and among allies, there’s an overarching belief that there is still time to resolve the matter and that Americans care far less about the process of raising the debt ceiling than whether it gets done.”

PICKING UP WHERE TRUMP LEFT OFF — The deportations of Haitian migrants “are a stark example of how Mr. Biden — who declared on Feb. 2 that his goal was to ‘undo the moral and national shame of the previous administration’ — is deploying some of the most aggressive approaches to immigration put in place by [DONALD] TRUMP over the past four years,” NYT’s Michael Shear, Natalie Kitroeff, Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Eileen Sullivan report.

“Having failed in his attempts to build a more ‘humane’ set of immigration laws, Mr. Biden has reacted in a way that few of his supporters expected. In case after case, he has shown a willingness to use tough measures, even as he struggles to confront a challenge that has vexed presidents for decades: securing the borders while living up to U.S. humanitarian obligations to migrants fleeing economic hardship, political instability and violence.”

ALSO: “Charges of racism swirl as Haitian Americans, allies unite to protest Biden’s border crisis,” by WaPo’s Tim Craig, Sean Sullivan, Silvia Foster-Frau and Abigail Hauslohner

FILLING THE SWAMP

The WSJ recently reported that LANNY DAVIS and former Rep. BOB LIVINGSTON (R-La.), two men famously at odds over the BILL CLINTON impeachment in the 1990s, have teamed up as foreign agents representing KHALIFA HAFTAR, a “Russian-backed warlord vying for power in Libya.” The Journal added that “[h]uman-rights organizations and international prosecutors have accused Mr. Haftar’s forces of war crimes” and that the “lobbying campaign is an effort by Mr. Haftar to regain some of the influence he has lost since the collapse last year of his 14-month long offensive against the country’s internationally-recognized government in Tripoli.”

Davis, who has a long history of representing controversial foreign clients, sent Playbook the following statement about his latest: “Our lobbying mission, as summarized in our FARA filing, is limited to expressing Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar’s support of free and fair, UN-supervised elections on December 24 – to facilitate a peaceful, stable, unified, democratic Libya, under the rule of law.

“We were told by the Field Marshal’s senior advisor that the Field Marshal categorically denies all allegations about him in the unproven Virginia complaint filed in court some time ago and that he is confident he will prove these allegations to be false and without basis in fact.”

The lobbying duo insisted that they would not have taken on the $160,000-per-month account absent that categorical denial. Furthermore, their message to Washington is that the warlord — sorry, field marshal — “has consistently opposed radical Islamic extremists in Libya and elsewhere, including ISIS, Al Qaeda and the Muslim Brotherhood.”

CONGRESS

HEADS EXPLODING — An anti-abortion group is spending six figures on an ad campaign thanking Manchin for opposing changes to the filibuster — “a move sure to make filibuster reform advocates’ heads explode.” So write Daniel Lippman and Anthony Adragna for POLITICO’s Congress Minutes, a cool new platform to keep you up to date throughout the day on key goings-on on the Hill. Check it out here and follow @politicongress on Twitter.

 Sen. SUSAN COLLINS (R-Maine) said she won’t back the Democrats’ abortion rights bill — Congress’ response to the six-week abortion ban in Texas, LAT’s Jennifer Haberkorn reports. The House is likely to pass the bill Friday, but it faces certain defeat in the Senate if it reaches a vote.

CONSIDER IT A WARNING — JOHN PODESTA, former chief of staff for Clinton and longtime political insider, said Democrats need to dial back the price tag of their $3.5 trillion budget proposal, NYT’s Jim Tankersley reports: “If they do not, he warned, they risk failure to pass the legislation — and the loss of their congressional majorities next year.”

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — A group of progressive and grassroots organizations is sending a letter to Congress today urging members of the House to vote no on the BIF without the reconciliation bill. “Passing just that small bill alone wouldn’t be a compromise; it would be a capitulation,” the letter says. “We strongly support the position of the Congressional Progressive Caucus that two bills must pass together, as a critical step on the journey toward tackling the climate crisis and furthering racial and economic justice. We urge progressives to hold strong. We will have your back.” The letter is signed by 90 organizations, including MoveOn, Indivisible, Greenpeace, the Sunrise Movement, the Working Families Party, People’s Action, Center for Popular Democracy and the Green New Deal Network. The letter

ALL POLITICS

‘IT’S TIME … TO PAY ATTENTION’ — As redistricting battles heat up around the country, the AP’s Cacia Coronado and Nick Riccardi zero in on Texas as a case study of the push by Latino advocates to grow their numbers in Congress. The message: “Latinos accounted for slightly more than half of all U.S. population growth in the last decade, and it’s time for the political system to pay attention.”

CAMPAIGNING IN THE TIME OF COVID — In the tightening Virginia governor’s race, Democrat TERRY MCAULIFFE is stepping up his attacks on Republican GLENN YOUNGKIN for not supporting pandemic-related mandates, Zach Montellaro reports this morning. The escalation comes on the heels of California Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM’s victory in the recall election, in which he made vaccine mandates a centerpiece of his campaign.

GETTING HIS HEAD IN THE GAME  Despite facing one of the worst coronavirus outbreaks in the country, West Virginia Gov. JIM JUSTICE has his sights set on coaching the boys’ varsity basketball team at Greenbrier East High School. There’s just one problem: The school board voted not to hire him, NYT’s Campbell Robertson reports. “The issue is not whether Mr. Justice, a Democrat turned Republican in office, would be good at the boys’ coaching job, but whether it is something he should really be focusing on right now.”

PLAYBOOKERS

Bernie Sanders’ famous Inauguration Day outfit “is the inspiration behind a racy Halloween costume sold by Dolls Kill, an online store primarily known for Gen Z’s beloved ‘e-girl fashion,’” according to Page Six.

Ritchie Torres — not AOC — is New York’s “true superstar progressive,” opines conservative NYT columnist Bret Stephens.

Karen Bass, the Democratic congresswoman and short-lister for VP last year, is “seriously considering” running for L.A. mayor.

Mitt Romney loves Jon Tester so much that he’s ready to run his 2024 campaign.

Cindy McCain will serve as a guest host on ABC’s “The View” — as the show searches for a successor to her daughter Meghan.

Jonathan Chait has a problem with Jonathan Franzen.

“Two culinary powerhouses” are teaming up to open “Tawle, an eclectic Middle Eastern restaurant … in Tishman Speyer’s massive new food hall” at 1850 K St. next year, according to Washingtonian.

SPOTTED at the Former Members of Congress’ annual Statesmanship Awards on Wednesday night at D.C.’s Potomac View Terrace: Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.), House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.), Reps. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), Val Demings (D-Fla.), Mary Gay Scanlon (D-Pa.), Billy Long (R-Mo.) and Peter Welch (D-Vt.), Blanche Lincoln, Joe Donnelly, Charlie Dent, Donna Edwards, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, John Faso, Elizabeth Esty, Dennis Ross, Belgian Ambassador Jean-Arthur Régibeau and Jo Ann Jenkins.

SPOTTED at the online premiere of “Not Going Quietly,” a documentary on Ady Barkan’s activism, on Wednesday night: Barkan and Rachael King, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Cory Booker (D-N.J.), Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Reps. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.), Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.), Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.), Katie Porter (D-Calif.) and Cori Bush (D-Mo.), Martin Sheen, Richard Schiff, Marlee Matlin, Mary McCormack, Dulé Hill, Joshua Malina, Bradley Whitford, Amy Landecker, Patton Oswalt, Rosario Dawson, Steve Kerr and Christine Pelosi.

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Samantha Keitt is joining Left Hook as a VP of public affairs. She previously was director of public affairs at SKDK.

MEDIA MOVE — Natalie Allison is joining POLITICO as the new Senate campaigns reporter. She currently covers state politics at the Tennessean.

STAFFING UP — Saule Omarova is expected to be nominated as comptroller of the currency, per Victoria Guida. She’s a Cornell Law professor who’s criticized financial institutions’ power and, if confirmed, would oversee the country’s banks.

— The Biden administration is tapping Kerry Doyle as ICE’s principal legal adviser, per the Washington Free Beacon.

— The White House announced several new nominations: Michael Adler as U.S. ambassador to Belgium, Erik Ramanathan as U.S. ambassador to Sweden, Calvin Smyre as U.S. ambassador to the Dominican Republic, Mary Lu Jordan as commissioner of the Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission, Susan Harthill as commissioner of the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission, Joseph DeCarolis as administrator of the Energy Information Administration, Maria Robinson as assistant Energy secretary in the Office of Electricity, and Christopher Frey as assistant EPA administrator for the Office and Research and Development.

TRANSITIONS — Mary Ellen Callahan is now deputy COS for DHS Deputy Secretary John Tien. She most recently was assistant general counsel for the Walt Disney Company and is an Obama DHS alum. … Valerie Chicola is now senior comms adviser for Rep. Maria Salazar (R-Fla.). She previously was broadcast comms adviser for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. …

… Jesse Poon is now assistant director of government relations at Brown University. He previously was a principal at Lewis-Burke Associates, and is a David Cicilline campaign alum. … Ben Rosner is launching Anabasis Partners, an international marketing and comms consultancy, as partner and head of the U.S. He previously was head of strategy and crisis comms for the Israel Defense Forces.

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Joshua Karp, a Democratic comms strategist and founding partner at Hone Strategies, and Dorian Karp, director of policy and advocacy at Jewish Women International, welcomed Rory Shoshana Karp on Tuesday. She came in at 7 lbs, 2 oz, and joins big sister Ellie. Pic … Another pic

HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Reps. Al Lawson (D-Fla.) and Tom Malinowski (D-N.J.) … Kristen Silverberg … Elise Jordan … Todd Ricketts … Helen Tolar of Mehlman Castagnetti … Nick Everhart of Content Creative Media and Medium Buying … NYT’s Mike Schmidt … Richard Viguerie … POLITICO’s Bernie Becker, Sam Sabin, Emily Martin and Brandon Winrow … Sean Spicer (5-0) … Corey Tellez of Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin’s (D-Ill.) office … PwC’s Todd Metcalf … Tom Martin of the American Forest Foundation … Abbey Watson … Darryl Nirenberg of Steptoe … Ralph Hellmann (6-0) … CNN’s Greg Wallace … David Harris of the American Jewish Committee … Kyle Wiley of CRW Consulting … Saunji Fyffe … Karen Czarnecki of the Mercatus Center at George Mason … Serenety Hanley of 43 Alumni for America … NBC’s Julia Ainsley … former Rep. Jason Lewis (R-Minn.) … Siraj Hashmi … Brooke Brogan … CBS’ Anne Hsu … SoRelle Wyckoff Gaynor … Gabriella Schwarz … Julius Niyonsaba … Ryan Shucard … Loretta Solon Greene … Matt Hirsch … Katrina Mendiola … Dale Leibach … Nicole Mata of Rep. Ro Khanna’s (D-Calif.) office … Ana Marie Cox … Kelly Sackley … Amanda Cox

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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE

 


27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS

 


28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS

 

CDN’s Daily News Blast delivers the day’s news first!
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CDN Daily News Blast

09/23/2021

Excerpts:

President Joe Biden’s Schedule for Thursday, September 23, 2021

by R. Mitchell –

President Joe Biden has a really light schedule on Thursday. The President will receive a briefing and have lunch.

On this same day in his presidency, Donald Trump met with 5 world leaders.

President Joe Biden’s Schedule for Thursday, September 23, 2021 is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Biden Administration to Investigate Texas’ Mask Ban In Schools

by Kendall Tietz –

The Biden administration’s Education Department announced an investigation into the Texas Education Agency Tuesday over its ban on mask mandates for students and staff in schools, according to a letter. The probe out of the department’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) will specifically investigate whether Texas’ ban on mask requirements …

Biden Administration to Investigate Texas’ Mask Ban In Schools is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Florida Court Temporarily Blocks Vaccine Mandate

by Mary Margaret Olohan –

A Florida court has granted a temporary injunction preventing the city of Gainesville, Florida, from forcing employees to comply with a vaccine mandate. The court said that the city of Gainesville “did not put on any evidence, at all, at the injunction hearing” that would allow the court to consider …

Florida Court Temporarily Blocks Vaccine Mandate is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Biden’s Approval Rating So Low That It’s Worse Than Kamala’s

by Ailan Evans –

President Joe Biden’s approval rating sunk to 43%, the lowest of his presidency and six percentage points below Vice President Kamala Harris, according to a poll from Gallup. Biden’s approval dropped six percentage points compared to August, falling from 49% to 43%, according to the results of a Gallup poll …

Biden’s Approval Rating So Low That It’s Worse Than Kamala’s is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Expert Testimony Given at FDA Advisory Committee Raises Questions

by Seth Hancock –

“We, the medical establishment, cannot confidently call out anti-COVID-19 activists who publicly claim the vaccines harm more than they save, especially in the young and healthy. The fact that we do not have the clinical evidence to say these activists are wrong should terrify us all,” said Dr. Joseph Fraiman …

Expert Testimony Given at FDA Advisory Committee Raises Questions is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Feds Purchasing Surveillance Drones From Chinese Company Pentagon Says Is A Security Threat

by Sebastian Hughes –

Federal law enforcement agencies are purchasing surveillance drones from a Chinese company the Pentagon has said could pose a threat to national security, Axios reported. The U.S. Secret Service purchased eight surveillance drones from Da Jiang Innovations (DJI), a company based in Shenzhen, China, in July, according to procurement records …

Feds Purchasing Surveillance Drones From Chinese Company Pentagon Says Is A Security Threat is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Trump Files $100 Million Lawsuit Against New York Times Over Illegally Obtained Tax Records

by Thomas Catenacci –

New_York_Times_logo_variation

Former President Donald Trump filed a $100 million lawsuit against The New York Times and his niece Mary Trump on Tuesday, alleging his confidential tax documents were improperly shared. The lawsuit, which was filed in the New York Supreme Court, alleged that New York Times reporters Susanne Craig, David Barstow …

Trump Files $100 Million Lawsuit Against New York Times Over Illegally Obtained Tax Records is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Amazon Is Awarding Cars And Cash Prizes To Warehouse, Retail Workers That Get Vaccinated

by Ailan Evans –

Amazon is handing out cash prizes and vehicles to its workers that receive the COVID-19 vaccine as part of a push to vaccinate more of its frontline employees. The company announced on one of its Instagram pages Monday that five employees were awarded cars worth up to $40,000 dollars as winners …

Amazon Is Awarding Cars And Cash Prizes To Warehouse, Retail Workers That Get Vaccinated is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

A.F. Branco Cartoon – Life in Amerika

by A.F. Branco –

A vaccine mandate over a virus with over a 99% survival rate means we’re no longer a free country. Political cartoon by A.F. Branco ©2021. Donations/Tips accepted and appreciated – $1.00 –  $5.00 –  $25.00 – $50.00 – $100 –  it all helps to fund this website and keep the cartoons …

A.F. Branco Cartoon – Life in Amerika is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Healthcare in the US is about to implode thanks to the woke left

by JD Washington –

Joe Biden and his radical leftist group of America haters continue to press for mandatory COVID vaccines for anyone across the country. They have successfully mandated vaccines for the military, federal workers, and he is attempting to pressure healthcare workers and American businesses into mandating them as well. Many healthcare …

Healthcare in the US is about to implode thanks to the woke left is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

White House Press Briefing with Jen Psaki – 9/22/21

by R. Mitchell –

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki holds a briefing today. The briefing is scheduled to start at 1:00 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details.

White House Press Briefing with Jen Psaki – 9/22/21 is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Four Lines Do Not Connect for Administration

by Ray Cardello –

Watching and listening to reports of the situation on our Southern Border will make your head spin with confusion. President Joe Biden, DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, Press Secretary Jen Psaki, and Vice President Kamala Harris were in different locations talking from other talking points. It was not a study in …

Four Lines Do Not Connect for Administration is posted on Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

See all breaking news, conservative commentary, political cartoons and more posted to CDN at our Home Page.
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29.) PJ MEDIA

The Morning Briefing: We Might Spared the Burden of Biden’s Infrastructure Boondoggle

AP Photo/Evan Vucci

Top O’ the Briefing

Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Some people linger a little too long in their ramen phase.

There is a dearth of good news these days here in the United States. Every time Joe Biden goes anywhere near a microphone, it feels like the country is getting hit upside the head with a sledgehammer. When he’s not compromising national security, he’s trying to spend trillions of dollars that we don’t have.

I can remember a time when “trillion” didn’t routinely come up in proposed legislation. It really wasn’t even that long ago. Now it often seems like a default starting point. We’re playing with Monopoly money now and the D.C. folk spend like drunken sailors on leave in Thailand.

Toss in a chief executive whose brain no long participates in reality and it can get super ugly in a hurry.

Biden’s infrastructure deal, which doesn’t involve much actual infrastructure, is looking a little shaky at the moment, and it’s not just because the Republicans have found some spine. Our own VodkaPundit wrote yesterday that the far-left fringe of the Democratic Party (yes, there’s a far-left fringe over there) isn’t playing nice with Biden and leadership:

With a ship-destroying iceberg’s worth of new spending on the line in the infrastructure deal, the House Progressive Caucus is threatening to sink the USS Biden all by themselves.

Presidentish Joe Biden (or is that President Ron Klain?) has staked his legacy on a Great Society-size expansion of the federal government, all wrapped up in a $3.5 trillion bill ostensibly aimed at improving the nation’s infrastructure. In actuality, it’s a budget-busting Progressive radical wishlist of giveaways, regulations, and new bureaucracies.

There’s a smaller, bipartisan bill that costs “only” $1.2 trillion and which is slightly more focused on actual infrastructure.

That’s right, boys and girls, the bat you-know-what crazy over there might end up helping those of us over here who get vertigo when trillions are mentioned.

Mr. Green cautions us to not get our hopes up yet, but I’m going to try and remain optimistic. Like I wrote at the top of the post, good news is difficult to come by these days. Merely being hopeful for a day or two is like a beach vacation.

There probably would be some Republican support for this bill if it truly focused on infrastructure. Sadly, it’s just another greedy power grab by the Dems.

Let’s hope the even greedier wing of the party blows this nonsense up.

Everything Isn’t Awful

 

PJ Media

[WATCH] GOP Nevada Lt. Gov Candidate Tackled by Mask Police at Public Meeting

VodkaPundit: Another Russian Attack on America’s Food Supply—Because Nobody Takes Biden Seriously

Joe Biden Hearts Australia, Rubber Bullets and All

John Kerry’s Million-Dollar China Conundrum

VodkaPundit, Part Deux: Abandon Ship! Progressive Caucus Threatens to Bail on Infrastructure Deal

Now That Documentary Filmmakers Have Rehabilitated Fauci’s Image, Here Are Some Other Bad Actors They Might Want to Prop Up

Latest Durham Indictment May Make Russiagate the Most Corrupt Scandal in U.S. History

Worse Than Carter? Meghan McCain Obliterates Biden—AGAIN

Lefty Rag Publishes Self-Serving Op-Ed by American Taliban on 9/11 Anniversary

[WATCH] Fox News Reporter Rips White House for Lies and Misinformation About Border

The Unintended Consequences of Biden’s COVID-19 Vaccine Mandates

The Real Reason for Michigan Gov. Whitmer’s About-Face on Mask and Vaccine Mandates

Hollywood Finally Figures Out How to End COVID. Why Didn’t We Think of This Sooner?

The Problem With Canada

Salman Rushdie: ‘I’m Afraid Cat Stevens Got Off the Peace Train a Long Time Ago’

[WATCH]: Bill Gates Gives a Really Creepy Answer When Asked About Jeffrey Epstein

It’s All Falling Apart for Biden and Democratic Leadership in D.C.

Biden: Hey, What the Middle East Needs Is a Jihad Terror State

Townhall Mothership

Schlichter: Let Them Destroy Each Other

CNN Admits New Poll in Key Battleground State Should ‘Terrify’ Joe Biden

Enthusiasm Issue Haunts Democrats as New VA Poll Shows Youngkin Ahead of McAuliffe with Likely Voters

EXCLUSIVE: Congressional Candidate Launches PAC to Help GOP Win Back Suburbs

Heads Explode Over Florida’s New Surgeon General

FDA Grants Emergency Use Authorization for the Pfizer Booster Shot

HOT TAKES: ACLU Rightfully Ripped to Shreds After Butchering an RBG Quote to Omit Women

Ohio Woman Kills Home Intruder Attacking Her Husband

Cam&Co. Virginia AG Leans In To Gun Control Ahead Of Election

The Daily Beast Thinks NRA Owns ATF

Border encounters this Fiscal Year are higher than the population of 11 states (and Washington, DC)

Hollywood show creator says HBO series won’t be filmed in Texas… but “this is beyond politics”

Sen. Collins says no to Democratic bill designed to codify Roe v Wade (Update)

‘The happiest day of my life’: Here are photos of people really enamored with the COVID vaccine         

IMAGINE if Trump suggested this: Guess where Biden admin’s reportedly considering housing Haitian migrants

VIP

VodkaPundit, Part Trois: Ho-Ho-NO! Supply Chain Disruptions Could Be This Year’s Grinch

The Hypocrisy of Those Complaining About ‘Missing White Woman Syndrome’

Disappearing Act: Where Did All The Haitian Refugees in Texas Go?

Why in the World Is the Media Shocked at Biden’s Lack of Transparency?

It’s Time to Stop Ignoring the Harms of Marijuana

Around the Interwebz

Facebook is starting to share more about what it demotes in News Feed

7 of the Oldest Animals on Earth

Bee Me

 

The Kruiser Kabana

Kabana Gallery

 

Kabana Tunes

30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER

 

Cut to the News
Cut through the clutter to today’s top news
September 23, 2021
Good morning Rick
Welcome to today’s top news.
Leading the News . . . 
Reminder: Independent Thinkers’ Book Club Kick off meeting is tomorrow @ 10:30-11:15 am Eastern . . .  Charles Love, author, radio show host on AM 560 The Answer and co-host of the Cut the Bull Podcast will introduce his book We Want Equality: How the fight for equality gave way to preference and will take Q&A. Zoom link is coming.
If you’d like to participate in the Independent Thinkers’ Book Club, PLEASE SEND ME AN EMAIL, introducing yourself and briefly explaining why you want to participate. I will send you the Zoom link for this Friday.
Joe Biden (D., Socialist) . . . Opinion/Analysis. Last Thursday, Mr. Biden trundled out to give a speech for his mega-trillion Build Back Better plan. The press says the Biden plan is in trouble with moderate Democrats, which could make or break his presidency, with votes starting next week. This spending plan may be the whole Biden presidency, but it’s bigger than that. His seemingly run-of-the-mill afternoon speech was a significant statement. It was a public repudiation by Mr. Biden of the U.S. economic system. Mr. Biden asserted: “I am a capitalist.” During the campaign he said: “I am not a socialist.” Both statements are false. Joe Biden is not a capitalist. He is a socialist.
Democratic progressives don’t like the s-word, which is why they started calling themselves progressives. Bernie Sanders declared himself a socialist so long ago it’s too late to change. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez admits to being a democratic socialist. Fact-check scolds argue the s-word has no meaning in the American political context because no one is suggesting state control of the means of production. Mr. Biden spoke about the system we do have. “Real, sustained economic growth,” Mr. Biden said, is “something we haven’t realized in this country for decades.” He elaborated: “Over the past 40 years, the wealthy have gotten wealthier, and too many corporations have lost their sense of responsibility to their workers, their communities, and the country.” “The past 40 years” means Mr. Biden’s indictment of the U.S. system includes the Democratic presidencies of Bill Clinton and Barack Obama. But “40 years” is the giveaway. That’s 1981, the beginning of Ronald Reagan’s presidency.  Wall Street Journal
In case you’ve missed it, this Op-Ed drew almost 200,000 page views on Fox News website, five times more than an average opinion piece. Rebekah Koffler: Socialism in America – a warning to my adopted homeland about the evils of this system
Politics                       
Image
Biden Vows Executive Action After Republicans Kill Dem Police Reform Bill . . . President Joe Biden vowed to take executive action to enact police reform “in the coming weeks,” after Republicans on Capitol Hill killed a Democratic police reform bill Wednesday. Biden released a statement Wednesday acknowledging that there is no longer a path forward for the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which had already passed through the House. Democratic New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker and Democratic California Rep. Karen Bass introduced the legislation earlier this year, but failed to garner enough Republican support in the Senate. “The murder of George Floyd is a stain on the soul of America. It spurred the nation to collectively demand justice, and we will be remembered for how we responded to the call,” Biden’s Wednesday statement began. Daily Caller
Pelosi signals she won’t move $3.5T bill without Senate-House deal . . . Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) has signaled to colleagues in both chambers that she will not put the $3.5 trillion budget reconciliation package on the House floor for a vote until it’s clear that it can also pass the 50-50 Senate. Some Democrats are calling for the House to move as soon as possible on the package, even if two key centrist votes in the Senate, Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), haven’t yet signed off on it. Both Manchin and Sinema say they won’t support a $3.5 trillion package but haven’t publicly said how much they’re willing to spend. Pelosi has no intention of replaying what happened in 2009, when Democrats last controlled Congress and the White House and moderate House Democrats took an extremely tough vote on sweeping climate change legislation only for the bill to never come to the Senate floor. Centrists Democrats paid the price the following year when Republicans picked up 63 seats in the 2010 midterm elections — and control of the House. The Hill

Administration refuses to say how many migrants have been set free in US . . . Wisconsin GOP Sen. Ron Johnson wants an answer now. Sen. Ron Johnson penned a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas demanding that he reveal by the end of the week how many migrants who were apprehended were released into the United States. “At yesterday’s Senate hearing you failed to answer my questions about basic information on apprehensions at the U.S. border,” the Wisconsin Republican wrote to Mayorkas Wednesday. “Of the approximately 1.3 million apprehensions, how many people have been returned, how many people have been detained, and how many people have been dispersed into the U.S.?” Johnson’s figure is a reference to the approximate number of apprehensions to date this year. White House Dossier

Chuck Schumer Releases Video That Features Him Alongside BDS Supporter . . . Sen. Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) and N.Y. assemblyman Zohran Kwame Mamdani (D.) / Twitter
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) on Tuesday released a pro-union video that features him alongside a New York state assemblyman who supports the anti-Israel Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement. Schumer and Zohran Kwame Mamdani (D.), an assemblyman from Queens, released a two-minute video in support of the 25,000-member New York Taxi Workers Alliance. Schumer and Mamdani spoke out against what they said are predatory loans for taxi medallions in New York City. Washington Free Beacon
House Democrats Hate Israel . . . Dems led by Ilhan Omar strip funding for Israel’s Iron Dome rocket defense system. It’s a mystery why so many Jewish Americans continue to vote Democrat given the fact that elected members of Congress like Jew hater Ilhan Omar and her fellow Squad members continuously express and perpetuate anti-Semitic and anti-Israel views unapologetically. Furthermore, the Squad’s outsized influence within the Democrat Party has undermined U.S. support for its closest and most important ally in the Middle East. As the House rushed to pass a continuing resolution over the past weekend in order to ensure funding to avoid a government shutdown, it was members of the Squad who successfully leveraged their position to get Democrats to strip $1 billion in funding earmarked for Israel’s missile defense system known as Iron Dome. Patriot Post
Yes, Keith and I often talk about it, trying to figure out why Jews are predominantly left-leaning. Makes no sense.
Biden administration allowing thousands of Haitians to stay . . . The Biden administration is making a big show of the planes it supposedly is sending Haitian migrants back to Haiti on. But in fact, only about 500 Haitians have been sent back so far, while thousands more are being permitted to stay and told to show up for hearings down the road. Of course, they’ll keep the appointment! Looks like the Haitians who made the trip here were right. They are going to get to stay. They understand the Biden White House a lot better than many Americans do. White House Dossier
Youngkin leading McAuliffe among likely voters in Virginia gubernatorial race, poll shows . . . Republican businessman Glenn Youngkin is leading among likely voters in the Virginia gubernatorial race over Democratic nominee and former Gov. Terry McAullife, a new poll shows. The poll was conducted by the University of Mary Washington, and it found that 48% of likely voters back Youngkin, while 43% support McAuliffe. However, among total registered voters, 46% back McAuliffe, while 41% favor Youngkin. Just the News
Biden faces renewed press backlash over access . . . President Joe Biden pitched the merits of democracy during his inaugural United Nations address, but hours later, White House aides’ treatment of reporters raised questions about whether he is leading by example. And Biden’s two run-ins with the press this week reflect mounting frustrations with the administration’s shielding of the president at pivotal moments during his term. Washington Times
National Security     
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VanHerck: ‘Russia is the Primary Military Threat to the Homeland Today’ . . . Gen. Glen D. VanHerck, commander of U.S. Northern Command and North American Aerospace Defense Command, said Russia remains the most urgent and immediate threat to the homeland even as China captures the attention of defense policymakers. “Russia is the primary military threat to the homeland today. It is not China—it is Russia,” VanHerck told Air Force Magazine on the sidelines of the Air Force Association’s Air, Space & Cyber Conference in National Harbor, Md. VanHerck explained that while China is the “long-term existential threat” to America, Russia is the stronger warfighting threat todayAir Force Magazine
Sen. Johnson letter demands DHS Sec. Mayorkas reveal how many migrants released into the US . . . Sen. Ron Johnson penned a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas demanding that he reveal by the end of the week how many migrants who were apprehended were released into the United States.  “At yesterday’s Senate hearing you failed to answer my questions about basic information on apprehensions at the U.S. border,” the Wisconsin Republican wrote to Mayorkas Wednesday. “Of the approximately 1.3 million apprehensions, how many people have been returned, how many people have been detained, and how many people have been dispersed into the U.S.?” Johnson’s figure is a reference to the approximate number of apprehensions to date this year. “When asked for the same information at a House hearing today, you still could not provide the data,” Johnson noted. “As the crisis at the border worsens each week, it is unacceptable that you chose to appear before the American people at multiple hearings unprepared to provide such crucial information.” Fox News
2 Fort McCoy Afghan Refugees Indicted on Child Sex, Spousal Assault Charges . . . Two Afghan nationals who fled Kabul following the Taliban takeover last month have been accused of committing crimes during their stay at Fort McCoy, a military base in Wisconsin. A federal grand jury in Wisconsin indicted the pair in unrelated cases. Bahrullah Noori, 20, is charged with one count of attempting to engage in a sexual act with a minor by using force and three counts of engaging in a sex act with a minor, with one count also alleging the use of force.
Both of Noori’s alleged victims were under the age of 16, and were at least four years younger than him, the indictment states. The second Afghan refugee, Mohammad Haroon Imaad, 32, is charged with assaulting his spouse by strangling and suffocating her. Epoch Times
International                
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Iran suspected of damaging watchdog cameras to cover up 90pc weapons grade uranium enrichment . . . The gaps in the nuclear watchdog’s coverage of Iran’s nuclear operations were not assessed by the IAEA director Rafael Grossi when he announced in Tehran ten days ago that he and Iran had agreed to restore the cameras installed at sensitive sites. DEBKAfile’s sources report that the cameras at the Natanz and Fordo uranium enrichment facilities are still not working. The new head of Iran’s nuclear agency Mohammed Eslami admitted later: “A large number of the cameras had been shut off.” No explanation was offered. American and Israeli nuclear experts are convinced that they were deliberately vandalized to conceal the next stage of Iran’s progress towards weaponizing its nuclear program. DEBKAfile
Days Before Germans Vote, Merkel Is Where She Didn’t Want to Be: On the Stump . . . Only days before Germans cast their ballots for a new Parliament and with it a new government and leader, Chancellor Angela Merkel was on the campaign trail this week — further proof that her conservatives are in a perilous position. Ms. Merkel, of course, is no longer a candidate. She is stepping down and had hoped to stay away from the race. But instead she spent Tuesday in her own district stumping for the struggling candidate for her Christian Democratic Union, Armin Laschet. In the final week before Sunday’s vote, the conservatives have narrowed the gap to roughly three percentage points. The Christian Democrats are Germany’s largest political party and for decades have been the country’s most dominant political force. Despite their current second-place situation, they have a reputation for being strong closers, which is giving Mr. Laschet hope after an underwhelming campaign. NYT
Coronavirus
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Wuhan scientists wanted to release coronaviruses into bats . . . Chinese scientists wanted to genetically engineer coronaviruses that were more infectious to humans and then conduct experiments on live bats about 18 months before the first COVID-19 cases emerged — but a US Department of Defence agency rejected the funding proposal, leaked documents reveal. Scientists at the Wuhan Institute of Virology were planning to genetically enhance airborne coronaviruses and release aerosols containing “novel chimeric spike proteins” among cave bats in Yunnan, China, according to the 2018 proposal submitted to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). They also planned to alter coronaviruses to infect humans more easily by introducing “human-specific cleavage sites” to bat coronaviruses. The purpose of the research was to assess the risk of coronaviruses, work on ways to prevent outbreaks and even vaccinate bats against the virus, according to the proposal. New York Post
Money                           
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Growth Forecast for Developing Asia Downgraded as COVID-19 Persists . . . The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has lowered its 2021 economic growth outlook for developing economies in Asia, a region weakened by the rapid spread of new COVID-19 variants. The region’s economy will expand by 7.1 percent this year, down from the 7.3 percent forecast in April, the ADB said in its Asian Development Outlook Update released on Wednesday.  The bank projected that the region’s growth will slow to 5.4 percent in 2022. The ADB report said that a resurgence in COVID-19 “possibly due to new virus variants, waning effectiveness of vaccines, or slow progress on vaccination” is the main risk faced. Epoch Times
You should also know 
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Chick-fil-a booted from group of proposed restaurants operating at Missouri Airport: Not inclusive . . . Chick-fil-A was dropped from a proposed collection of restaurants that will operate at the new Kansas City International Airport in Missouri terminal over claims it is not inclusive. A vendor working to win the contract to offer services in the terminal, Vantage Airport Group, said Wednesday during a Kansas City, Missouri, City Council committee meeting that it removed Chick-fil-A from its list of proposed eateries because the company does not promote an inclusive environment, KSHB reported. The announcement comes after the LGBTQ Commission of Kansas City published a letter on Monday calling for Chick-fil-A to be dropped from consideration. Fox Business
ACLU Edits The Word ‘Woman’ Out Of Ruth Bader Ginsburg Quote . . . The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) altered the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s quote on abortion, substituting the word “woman” with “person” in a Saturday tweet. The ACLU’s tweet dedicated to the anniversary of Ginsburg’s death contained a gender neutral version of a quote from her 1993 confirmation hearing where she weighed in on the issue of abortion. “The decision whether or not to bear a child is central to a [person’s] life, to [their] well-being and dignity. … When government controls that decision for [people], [they are] being treated as less than a fully adult human responsible for [their] own choices,” the altered quote in the ACLU‘s tweet read. Daily Caller
Guilty Pleasures        
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Chicago suburb goes for world record for largest dog wedding ceremony . . . Organizers of a world record attempt in Chicago said they are hoping to gather more than 178 canine couples to break the record for the world’s largest dog wedding ceremony. Leslie Allison-Seei, chair of the Villa Park Community Focus on Unifying Neighbors Commission, or F.U.N., said she previously participated in a November 2008 attempt at the record in Oak Park, Ill. The attempt featured 87 canine couples, falling short of the record-setting number of 178, which was set in Littleton, Colo., in 2007.
Allison-Seei said she wants to see Illinois take the record Saturday at Lions Park in the town of Villa Park. Villa Park Village President Nick Cuzzone is slated to officiate at the dog wedding ceremony, which Allison-Seei said will include canines from across the Chicago metropolitan area. Allison-Seei said pet owners whose dogs don’t have mates to marry can participate in a round of “doggy speed-dating” to find an appropriate spouse right before the ceremony. UPI
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31.) THE DISPATCH

The Morning Dispatch: China vs. Chinese Business

After decades of explosive growth in China, President Xi Jinping is taking steps to ensure the supremacy of the state over the market remains unquestioned.

Happy Thursday! Sometimes the news gets us down, but then we remember the five zebras that escaped from a Maryland farm last month are still on the lam.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • The Federal Open Market Committee indicated after its monthly meeting yesterday that although the Federal Reserve will for now maintain its current pace of asset purchases and hold interest rates near zero, the central bank could very well begin its taper in November and start raising interest rates in 2022 as inflationary concerns persist. “While no decisions were made, participants generally view that, so long as the recovery remains on track, a gradual tapering process that concludes around the middle of next year is likely to be appropriate,” Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said.
  • The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday officially amended the emergency use authorization for Pfizer-BioNTech’s COVID-19 vaccine to allow certain populations—those over 65, at “high risk of severe COVID-19,” or who have “frequent institutional or occupational exposure” to COVID-19—to receive a booster shot six months after their second dose. Regulators are expected to consider authorizing Moderna and Johnson & Johnson booster shots as well in the coming weeks.
  • Days after France recalled its ambassadors to the United States and Australia in retaliation for their nuclear submarine agreement, President Joe Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron had what the White House described as a “friendly” phone call in which the two leaders “agreed that the situation would have benefited from open consultations among allies on matters of strategic interest to France and our European partners.” They plan to meet in-person at the end of October, and France’s ambassador will return to the United States next week.
  • After months of negotiations, Sen. Cory Booker told Sen. Tim Scott on Wednesday that Democrats were walking away from bipartisan police reform talks because the two sides remained too far apart on “transparency, professional standards, and accountability.” Scott expressed disappointment with the decision, saying “crime will continue to increase while safety decreases, and more officers are going to walk away from the force because my negotiating partners walked away from the table.” Efforts to reform qualified immunity were reportedly the biggest sticking point in negotiations.
  • The Associated Press reported Wednesday that despite the Biden administration’s efforts to expel migrants congregating in Del Rio, Texas, many are being released into the United States, with the Department of Homeland Security busing certain migrants to El Paso and Laredo while others are flown back to Haiti.
  • Existing-home sales fell 2 percent from July to August as the median sales price rose 14.9 percent year-over-year, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) said Wednesday. “Clearly the home sales are settling down,” NAR’s chief economist Lawrence Yun noted. “The high home prices are squeezing away the first-time buyers.”

CCP Cracks Down on Chinese Businesses

(Photo by Xie Huanchi/Xinhua/Getty Images.)

Four decades ago, former Chinese Communist Leader Deng Xiaoping famously—though perhaps apocryphally—declared that “to get rich is glorious,” ushering in a period of unprecedented economic growth and permanently altering Mao Zedong’s Marxist vision for China. In the wreckage of Mao and his predecessors’ efforts to institute a command economic system—best encapsulated by the failed Great Leap Forward—Deng’s market-economy reforms transformed China into the economic powerhouse it is today.

But after years of almost unfettered growth, General Secretary Xi Jinping is changing China’s course. Over the last several months, the chairman and his allies have determined that China’s business sector has grown too powerful—and have begun to curb its perceived threat to the Chinese Communist Party’s dominance through a combination of stunting economic reforms and targeted intimidation.

This thinly-veiled consolidation of state power, Xi says, is being undertaken in the name of “common prosperity,” an attempt to allay various societal and income inequalities through government intervention.

“We should consciously and actively solve problems such as regional gap, urban-rural gap, income gap, promote all-round social progress and all-round development of people, promote social fairness and justice,” Xi said in a recent speech, setting aside the fact that his government is currently perpetrating genocide against Uyghurs and other ethnic and religious minorities. Through these efforts, he continued, “the fruits of development can benefit the whole people more and more equitably, constantly enhance the people’s sense of gain, happiness and security, so that the people really feel that common prosperity is not only a slogan, but also a visible, touchable and real fact.”

China’s tech sector has thus far been the main target of the CCP’s crackdown, with a series of reforms reportedly wiping out up to $1 trillion in stock market value in recent months. The CCP fined e-commerce giant Alibaba $2.8 billion in April for antitrust violations and blocked a proposed merger from tech company Tencent that would have combined two of China’s top gaming platforms in July.

Worth Your Time

  • For more on the Xi Jinping story, be sure to check out Lingling Wei’s deeply reported piece for The Wall Street Journal. “Un­der­pin­ning Mr. Xi’s ac­tions is an ide­o­log­i­cal pref­er­ence rooted in Mao’s de­vel­op­ment the­o­ries, which call state cap­i­tal­ism a tem­po­rary phase that can help Chi­na’s econ­omy catch up to the West be­fore be­ing re­placed by so­cial­ism,” the senior China correspondent writes. “An ar­dent fol­lower of Mao, Mr. Xi has preached to party mem­bers that the hy­brid model has passed its use-by date. A 2018 ar­ti­cle in the par­ty’s main the­o­ret­i­cal jour­nal, Qiushi, or Seek­ing Truth, laid bare his be­lief: ’Chi­na’s prac­tice shows that once the so­cial­ist trans­for­ma­tion is com­pleted, the ba­sic so­cial­ist sys­tem with pub­lic own­er­ship as the main body is es­tab­lished…[and] state cap­i­tal­ism, as a tran­si­tional eco­nomic form, will com­plete its his­tor­i­cal mis­sion and with­draw from the his­tor­i­cal stage.’”
  • Back in June, 20-year-old George Mason University pitcher Sang Ho Baek died after undergoing Tommy John surgery to repair a torn ligament in his pitching elbow and experiencing a rare pulmonary embolism in the days afterward. Stephen Nesbitt took the time to learn his story, and the resulting piece in The Athletic is heart-wrenching. Sang’s family left Seoul for the United States in 2014, and one of the first things his father did upon landing a job at a poultry factory in Maryland was bike around looking for Little League baseball teams his son could join. “He spoke little English, but he had a map and purpose. Pedaling from stop sign to stop sign, he rehearsed a line: Can my son play on your team? His name is Sang. He is a pitcher,” Nesbitt writes. “Sang’s dream was to pitch in the major leagues and buy his parents a house. … In a video from his mother’s birthday in 2012, 11-year-old Sang is seen wearing his Little League uniform, singing and dancing in their Seoul kitchen. In his birthday letter, he writes that he’ll work and study hard and become a famous baseball player, then ends it by reminding his mother to wake him early for practice in the morning.”
  • “There are no longer American troops in Afghanistan, but America’s wars go on,” Mark Mazzetti writes for The New York Times. President Biden’s claim earlier this week that the United States is not at war for the first time in 20 years “was just the latest attempt by an American president in the two decades since the Sept. 11 attacks to massage the language of warfare to mask a sometimes inconvenient reality: that America is still engaged in armed conflict throughout the world. In a letter to Congress in June, Mr. Biden listed all the countries where American troops are operating against various militant groups—from Iraq and Syria to Yemen to the Philippines to Niger.”

Presented Without Comment

Twitter avatar for @edsbsBUM CHILLUPS AKA SPENCER HALL @edsbs

Going to spend the day watching a 12 year old roast the Jets on TikTok

Toeing the Company Line

  • On Wednesday’s Dispatch Podcast, Sarah, Steve, Jonah, and David discuss the Pentagon’s botched drone strike in Kabul, the AUKUS agreement and France’s apoplectic reaction, and the Biden administration’s approach to immigration in light of the latest migrant surge in Texas. It all leaves Jonah with one big question: Is Biden just bad at his job?
  • Jonah builds on that question—and the sleight-of-hand many administration-friendly pundits are employing to evade it—in his midweek G-File (🔒). There has been “an enormous amount of chatter about how Biden had ‘a bad week’ or was ‘dealt setbacks’ or got ‘bad news,’” Jonah writes, noting the president’s own agency is typically stripped from the headlines. “It seems that Biden keeps ‘finding’ himself in unfortunate situations. On September 19, the AP reported that ‘over the past several months, Biden has found himself at odds with allies on a number of high-profile issues.’ … Biden hasn’t ‘found himself’ at odds with allies, he antagonized allies. The Brits, the French, and even the Canadians were pissed about how we withdrew from Afghanistan. Our allies are furious that Biden has doubled down on Trump’s protectionism. These are choices, not cold impersonal forces.”
  • “One of the summer’s most widely covered financial phenomena is the global ‘shipping crisis’ and its harms to the U.S. and global economies,” Scott Lincicome writes in yesterday’s Capitolism (🔒). “Less-covered, however, (if at all) are the long-term, systemic problems—and bad U.S. policy—that have almost certainly made the situation far worse than it could or should have been by exacerbating delays at almost every major U.S. port.”
  • On the site today: Oliver Wiseman examines how the AUKUS partnership has speedily healed U.S.-U.K. relations strained by the departure from Afghanistan, and Scott Winship offers a definitive look at how effective U.S. policy was in keeping poverty and hardship to a minimum in the early days of the pandemic.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@lawsonreports), Audrey Fahlberg (@AudreyFahlberg), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).


32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION

New Policy at UMass Medical School Restricts Faculty Support for the Death Penalty

Oregon State University Reportedly Spent $100K on Four Diversity Workshops

Native American Tribe Wants Name of Myles Standish Removed From Boston University Dorm

 

  • William Jacobson: “DO SOMETHING! The Revolution Is Swarming, But Can Be Defeated 
  • Mary Chastain: “If you guys haven’t seen Safe House with Denzel Washington and Ryan Reynolds you should. It’s on Netflix. It is a crime Denzel only has one Best Actor Oscar and one Best Supporting Actor Oscar.”
  • Leslie Eastman: “Mary Chastain wrote that she essentially hit her breaking point with the American press with the fake news that whips were being used on Haitian illegal immigrants.  Actually, it was horse reins being used to guide the horses.  The American press pounced on my last nerve, with its comparisons of the death toll between the Spanish Flu and COVID.  I had written extensively on the Spanish Flu, and the lack of serious analysis was staggering.  American Press Pushes Ridiculous Comparisons Between Spanish Flu and COVID
  • Stacey Matthews: “The New York Post posted a must-read Toldjah So after Politico confirmed at least two of the emails found on Hunter Biden’s laptop were authentic.”
  • Vijeta Uniyal: “Israeli intelligence agency Mossad used a sophisticated remote-controlled machine gun to assassinate the head of the Iranian nuclear weapons program last year, the New York Times claims in an exclusive account published on Saturday. In late November 2020, an apparent roadside ambush near Tehran killed the top Iranian nuke operative. Fakhrizadeh, who headed the rogue Iranian nuclear weapons program, also held the rank of brigadier general in the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), a U.S.-designated terrorist organization.”
Legal Insurrection Foundation is a Rhode Island tax-exempt corporation established exclusively for charitable purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to educate and inform the public on legal, historical, economic, academic, and cultural issues related to the Constitution, liberty, and world events.

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33.) THE DAILY WIRE

 


34.) DESERET NEWS


35.) BRIGHT

 

Share with a friend you think would love this! Share with a friend you think would love this!
Thursday, September 23, 2021

“Irregular Migration”
The Biden administration has new terminology to describe the massive crisis at the border: “Irregular migration.”

In what looks and sounds a lot like a hostage video, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said, “We have not seen before such a rapid migration—irregular migration—of individuals as we have observed and experienced with respect with the Haitians who’ve crossed the border in Del Rio, Texas. That has been an unprecedented speed.”

“Irregular migration poses grave risks to migrants and their families. It is a challenge we are working with our counterparts in the region to address,” added Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

Irregular migration, code for illegal immigration, refers to the surge of Haitians who are being freed on a “very, very large scale,” despite the Biden administration’s public statements that the thousands in the camp faced immediate expulsion to Haiti.

After the strategy of pretending the crisis doesn’t exist largely didn’t work, Democrats shifted their tactic to stirring up outrage over a video showing a Border Patrol agent on horseback using reins to keep illegal migrants at bay.

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki smeared the horse patrol unit, saying they used “brutal tactics” against illegal Haitians, while Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., called the “whipping” incident “worse than what we witnessed in slavery.”

Back in 2017, I had the honor of learning about the Border Patrol horseback unit and how it serves an invaluable asset to agents and illegal migrants. (Watch that video here.) There are many parts of the border that are inaccessible by cars, ATVs and other modern equipment. Horses don’t harm the land, have built-in radars and can help rescue those in need. Agents who ride them treat them as the partners they are. We should thank these agents, not shame them, especially in light of a border surge that even the Biden administration describes as “unprecedented.”

Oh, and if you’re wondering why these “irregular migrants” aren’t subjected to the Biden administration’s new requirement that international travelers arriving in the U.S. be vaccinated against COVID, it’s because according to Psaki, “They’re not intending to stay here for a lengthy period of time.” Doh!

A “Righteous Strike”  
While this story broke nearly a week ago, I fear it hasn’t received the attention it deserves. After the ISIS-K bombing at the Kabul airport killed almost 200 people including 13 U.S. troops, the Biden administration launched a retaliatory drone strike in Afghanistan that left nine dead. According to the U.S. military, it was a “righteous strike” against an ISIS-K facilitator who posed an imminent threat. But a New York Times investigation found the strike instead killed a longtime Afghan employee at a U.S. humanitarian organization, another innocent Afghan, and seven children.

Gen. Frank McKenzie has since acknowledged the mistake, stating, “This particular strike certainly was a terrible mistake and we certainly regret that, and I’ve been very clear that we take full responsibility for it.”

Wars have repercussions, including the loss of innocent lives. However, this U.S. drone strike in Afghanistan is different. Had the president executed a competent withdrawal from the much more secure Bagram Airfield, ISIS-K wouldn’t have had the opportunity to strike U.S. troops, and there would never have been the need to launch a rushed, retaliatory strike with scant evidence. Further, what does this horrifying mistake say about the “over the horizon” counterterrorism capabilities President Biden now touts? Clearly, they don’t exist, at least not to the level that the president claims.

“The Daily” podcast went inside Times’ investigation that forced the U.S. military to acknowledge that the drone attack was a deadly error, and I couldn’t recommend it more. At the end, it left me wondering whether this mistake would have even been acknowledged had these reporters not been in Afghanistan, on the ground.

Booster Decisions
Last night, the FDA authorized booster shots of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine for seniors 65+ and others who are at high risk. The shots can only be administered six months after the qualified groups received their second dose.

The news follows reports of serious conflict within Biden’s FDA, including multiple resignations. Fox Business reports what led to those decisions:

“It’s a combination of things where the messaging is coming out of the White House and not of the FDA, and also out of the NIH with Tony Fauci and Dr. Francis Collins has said, ‘Hey, we might have the vaccines for the 5 to 11 year olds in a couple of months’ … well, FDA hasn’t reviewed the data yet,’ [Dr. Marc Siegel] explained. ‘And with the boosters, the president himself said, ‘We’re going to get boosters in a month,’ and the FDA says, ‘Wait, we haven’t reviewed the data yet.’”

Of course, if this COVID drama were happening under the Trump administration, it would be headline news. But alas, this is happening under the president who campaigned on the promise, “I’m going to shut down the virus—not the U.S.” Gosh, I love looking back at these stories.

Luckily, we have dozens of celebs who just demanded we end “the COVID-19 pandemic now.” That should do it!

Thursday Links
Inside Democrats’ Plan To Indoctrinate Your Toddlers In Preschool (The Federalist)

An inconvenient narrative: Black Lives Matter Is Threatening An ‘Uprising’ Against ‘Racist’ Vaccine Mandates (The Federalist)

And, uh: Chinese Scientists Wanted to Genetically Engineer Coronaviruses That Were More Infectious to Humans and Conduct Experiments on Live Bats 19 Months Before First COVID Case Emerged (NY Post)

BRIGHT is brought to you by The Federalist.
Today’s BRIGHT Editor

Kelsey Bolar is a senior policy analyst at Independent Women’s Forum and a contributor to The Federalist. She is also the Thursday editor of BRIGHT, and the 2017 Tony Blankley Chair at The Steamboat Institute. She lives in Washington, DC, with her husband, daughter, and Australian Shepherd, Utah.
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER

 

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Resist all of it. Read More…


The Empire Strikes Back: China Returns to Afghanistan

Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
A bold strike against China’s NATO competitors, with a lot of boiling history behind it. Read More…


Jews must shake off their prejudice towards the Republican party

Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
For many Jews and other religious minorities in the United States, there are only two political parties: Democrat or Democrat.  Read More…


They Need Our Faces

Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
By returning children to physical schools but requiring both teachers and students to be masked, we traded a bad idea for an even worse one.  Read More…


The Great Reset and COVID

Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
The global elites’ response to the pandemic and climate change is the same: the Great Reset.  Read More…


Recent Blog Posts

Michigan’s Gov. Whitmer bans masks and vax mandates as her polls crash and re-election fight looks grim
Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
Gretchen Whitmer, the governor of Michigan, early on distinguished herself as a pandemic hypocrite, demanding severe lockdowns of her citizens…err…subjects while exempting her family and herself. That bill is cloming due next year.  Read more…


George W. Bush to headline fundraiser for Liz Cheney
Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
Hatred for Donald Trump is reuniting the Bush and Cheney political clans and letting the voters of Wyoming deliver a verdict on the contest between the GOP establishment and the Trump populists.  Read more…


Why people are turning their backs on Hollywood
Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
It is the pretensions that are most revolting.  Read more…


Biden exposes his dementia to the world
Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
Biden made a fool of himself at the United Nations.  Read more…


COVID vaccines are revealing the disrespect some leftists have for Blacks
Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
Project Veritas has a new series of videos about the COVID vaccine and provides a microcosm of the control fantasies leftists have about Blacks.  Read more…


Biden’s war on the American military continues
Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
He’s trying to destroy troops who resist an experimental vaccine even as people who love the military fear that the mandates will destroy the military.  Read more…


Freedom is the right to inequality, or an equal right to be unequal
Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
Attempts to reconcile freedom and equality by brute force destroy both freedom and equality.  Read more…


Witnessing the pandemic
Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
The Sheen Center’s Portraits of Grace: Honoring Heroes of the Coronavirus 19 Pandemic showcases the human and the divine present in the pandemic experience.  Read more…


It’s a bit too late for that
Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
Meghan McCain smells the coffee.  Read more…


Voting for Democrats takes a deadly turn
Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
For Israel, anyway. It’s amazing American Jews still vote for these people.  Read more…


Speaking of misinformation, Nikki Minaj is the problem?
Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
What about the experts and their record of misinformation?  Read more…


The Persian coin flip: What Iran will look like with and without the Iran deal
Sep 23, 2021 01:00 am
Whether Obama’s JCPOA is revived or not, Iran has a rough road ahead of it.  Read more…


‘A sea of misery of biblical proportions’
Sep 22, 2021 01:00 am
The fact that these hundreds of thousands of migrants and refugees are arriving without any COVID restrictions says it all. None of this is about anyone’s health. It’s all about power and control.  Read more…


Joe Biden’s domestic agenda is going down in flames
Sep 22, 2021 01:00 am
Biden’s $1-trillion and $3.5-trillion pork bills are falling apart and quite likely will fail in Congress. Biden can’t even control his own party.  Read more…


Understanding the Haitian refugee crisis on the border
Sep 22, 2021 01:00 am
A wound, mostly self-inflicted, for the Biden administration.  Read more…


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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL

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IN THIS ISSUE:

– Can Democrats Win Back the White Working Class?

– Q&A: What is Redistricting and Why is it Controversial?

Can Democrats Win Back the White Working Class?
By Alan I. Abramowitz
Senior Columnist, Sabato’s Crystal Ball

KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE

— One of the defining features of American politics is the realignment of white, college-educated voters toward Democrats and that of white voters without a degree toward Republicans.

— There are competing views on how or whether Democrats can perform better among white non-college voters.

— Appealing to the economic interests of white non-college voters may not be enough for Democrats to win back their support.

What is driving the realignment among white voters

The past 30 years have witnessed a dramatic inversion of the class foundations of the American party system. White voters without college degrees, once the cornerstone of the Democratic electoral coalition, have swung sharply toward the Republican Party. Meanwhile, college-educated white voters, once a solidly Republican voting bloc, have been shifting toward the Democrats. The result is a party system in which, among white voters at least, education has become one of the main dividing lines.

Growing support among white working class (non-college) voters for the Republican Party has sparked a debate among political analysts and Democratic strategists about the underlying causes of Democratic decline within this shrinking but still very important voting bloc and what, if anything, party leaders can do to regain some of the lost ground.

There appear to be two major explanations for the political realignment of the white working class, and they have different implications for Democrats’ chances of a political comeback with this group. One school of thought, perhaps best represented by progressive scholar Ruy Teixeira, blames Democratic decline largely on the party’s prioritization of cultural and racial justice issues over traditional bread-and-butter economic issues. According to this theory, Democrats have failed to address economic problems such as the decline of manufacturing jobs and unfair trade competition that have led to growing economic insecurity among white working class voters. At the same time, many of these voters have been turned off by the Democrats’ increasingly liberal positions on issues such as gay rights, affirmative action, and immigration.

A second school of thought, represented by scholars such as Michael Tesler of the University of California, Irvine and John Sides of Vanderbilt University, argues that economic discontent has little to do with the flight of white working class voters from the Democrats. In their view, the main factor behind the shifting party allegiance of these voters is the success of Republican leaders like Donald Trump in appealing to the racial resentments and grievances of non-college white voters.

These two schools of thought have different implications for the ability of Democratic candidates to win back support from white working class voters. If economic discontent is the main driver of the shift to the GOP, Democrats could potentially win a larger share of the white working class vote by emphasizing concrete actions and policies to address these concerns while perhaps playing down liberal positions on cultural and racial issues. On the other hand, if racial resentment and grievances are the main drivers of white working class flight from the Democrats, paying more attention to the economic concerns of these voters might not be very effective. Moreover, downplaying or abandoning liberal positions on cultural and racial issues would potentially risk alienating voting blocs that make up key components of the party’s current electoral coalition including Blacks, Latinos, and college-educated whites.

In this article, I use evidence from the 2020 American National Election Study to examine the effects of various political attitudes on the candidate preferences of college and non-college white voters in the 2020 presidential election. In line with the arguments of racial resentment theorists, I find that economic insecurity had very little impact on white voter decision-making in 2020. However, I find that the rejection of the Democratic Party by white working class voters goes beyond racial resentment alone. Instead, I find that support for Donald Trump among white working class voters reflected conservative views across a wide range of policy issues including social welfare issues, cultural issues, racial justice issues, gun control, immigration, and climate change. In other words, the rejection of the Democratic Party by white working class voters is fundamentally ideological. This fact makes it very unlikely that Democrats will be able to win back large numbers of white working class voters by appealing to their economic self-interest.

The class divide in 2020

Table 1 compares various political attitudes of college and non-college white voters in 2020. The differences between the two groups are dramatic. Non-college whites preferred Donald Trump over Joe Biden by close to a 2 to 1 margin while white college graduates favored Biden by close to a 3 to 2 margin. Moreover, these voting patterns reflected differences in the partisan and ideological orientations of college and non-college white voters. White working class voters did not just vote for the Republican presidential candidate, they also identified overwhelmingly with the Republican Party and leaned strongly to the right in their views on policy issues. In contrast, white college graduates were almost evenly divided between Democratic and Republican identifiers and leaned to the left in their views on policy issues.[1]

Table 1: Comparing college and non-college white voters in 2020

Source: 2020 American National Election Study

The data in Table 1 show that non-college whites rated Donald Trump much more positively than Joe Biden on a feeling thermometer scale ranging from 0 to 100 degrees and overwhelmingly approved of Trump’s handling of the presidency. White college graduates did not feel very warmly toward Joe Biden, giving him an average rating just under the neutral point of 50 degrees, but still rated the Democratic challenger much more positively than the incumbent, whom they gave an average rating of under 40 degrees. White college graduates also disapproved of Trump’s job performance by a wide margin. Finally, non-college whites scored considerably higher on both economic insecurity and racial resentment than white college graduates.[2]

One of the most striking differences between white college and non-college voters in 2020 involves their ideological orientations. However, the left-right issues scale includes a wide range of disparate issues including traditional social welfare issues, cultural issues, immigration, racial justice issues, climate change, and gun control. This raises the question of whether the ideological divide between college and non-college white voters is based more on some types of issues than on others. In order to address this question, Table 2 displays the average scores of college and non-college white voters on 6 individual issue scales that are included in the overall left-right issues scale. These scores are measured in standard deviations above (right of center) or below (left of center) the mean score on the scale, which is set at 0.

Table 2: Mean left-right policy orientations of college and non-college white voters by issue area in 2020

Source: 2020 American National Election Study

The results in Table 2 show that non-college whites leaned to the right in every issue area but especially on social welfare, racial justice, and immigration issues. In contrast, white college graduates leaned to the left in 4 of the 6 issue areas, but by much smaller margins than non-college whites leaned to the right. Moreover, on social welfare and racial justice issues, white college graduates were located very close to the center on average.

These findings provide clear evidence that white working class voters tend to support conservative policies in every major issue domain, not just a few. They are just as conservative, if not more conservative, on traditional social welfare issues involving the size and role of government as they are on newer cultural issues such as abortion and gay rights. Most importantly, the across-the-board conservatism of white working class voters goes a long way toward explaining their current support for the Republican Party. This can be seen very clearly in Table 3, which displays the relationship between left-right ideological orientation and 2020 presidential vote while controlling for class and economic insecurity.

Table 3: Percentage of major party vote for Biden among college and non-college white voters in 2020 by economic insecurity and ideological orientation

Source: 2020 American National Election Study

The data in Table 3 show that ideology had a powerful influence on vote choice in the 2020 presidential election. Almost all white voters located to the left of center on the ideology scale, regardless of education, voted for Biden, while almost all white voters located to the right of center, regardless of education, voted for Trump. Those in the center, just over one-fifth of white voters, favored Biden overall by a margin of 57% to 43%. However, there is little evidence that economic insecurity had any impact on the candidate preferences of even this group. Finally, it is worth noting that after controlling for ideology, there is almost no remaining difference between the candidate preferences of college and non-college whites. The class divide in candidate preference among white voters in 2020 is almost entirely explained by the fact that non-college white voters are now far more conservative across the board than are white college graduates.

Explaining the class divide on ideology

One important question raised by these findings is why non-college whites now hold much more conservative views across the board than white college graduates. In order to address this question, I conducted a regression analysis of conservative ideology among white voters. As predictors, in addition to education, I included two variables that I expected to have strong effects on ideology: party identification and racial resentment. I also included a variety of control variables including family income, sex, evangelical identification, and economic insecurity. The results are displayed in Table 4.

Table 4: Regression analysis of conservatism among white voters in 2020

Source: 2020 American National Election StudyThe results in Table 4 show that the regression equation explains over 80% of the variation in conservative ideology. Racial resentment and party identification are by far the strongest predictors of conservative ideology. Evangelical identification has a significant impact as well, but its effect is not nearly as strong as the effects of racial resentment and party ID. Family income has almost no effect on ideology and economic insecurity has a negative effect, which means that greater insecurity is associated with less conservative policy preferences.

These findings indicate that while ideology was by far the most important predictor of candidate preference among white voters in 2020, ideology was itself largely explained by feelings of racial resentment. Conservative policy preferences among white working class voters on a wide range of issues were closely connected to their racial attitudes and specifically to their belief that white people have been losing ground in American society because of unfair advantages enjoyed by Blacks and other nonwhite groups.

Conclusions

The deep political divide between college and non-college white voters in recent elections reflects a deep ideological divide between these two groups. Non-college white voters are now far more conservative than college educated white voters on a wide range of issues including cultural issues but also social welfare issues, immigration, racial justice, gun control, and climate change. This class divide appears to have little or nothing to do with economic self-interest and everything to do with the diverging racial attitudes of these two groups.

These findings indicate that efforts by Democratic leaders to win back the support of white working class voters who have been voting for Republican candidates in recent years by appealing to their economic interests or shifting to the right on issues like immigration and gay rights are unlikely to bear much fruit. Moreover, tacking to the right to win votes from a shrinking population of white working class voters might turn off large numbers of college educated white voters with liberal views on these issues.

Footnotes

[1] Respondents were classified as leaning to the left if their scores on the ideology scale were more than 0.5 standard deviations to the left of center. Likewise, they were classified as leaning to the right if their scores were more than 0.5 standard deviations to the right of center. Those with ideology scores between 0.5 standard deviations to the left of center and 0.5 standard deviations to the right of center were classified as centrists.

[2] Racial resentment is measured by four items that have been used to measure this phenomenon in numerous studies of racial attitudes. Economic insecurity is measured by three questions asking respondents how worried they were about their financial situation, whether they expected to have difficulty paying their housing costs in the coming year, and whether they expected to have difficulty paying health care costs in the coming year.

Alan I. Abramowitz is the Alben W. Barkley Professor of Political Science at Emory University and a senior columnist with Sabato’s Crystal Ball. His latest book, The Great Alignment: Race, Party Transformation, and the Rise of Donald Trump, was released in 2018 by Yale University Press.

Q&A: What is Redistricting and Why is it Controversial?
By Tim Robinson
UVA Today
Dear Readers: Crystal Ball Managing Editor Kyle Kondik recently did a Q&A on decennial redistricting with UVA Today’s Tim Robinson, our former colleague at the UVA Center for Politics. That appeared in UVA Today earlier this week, and it is reprinted below.— The Editors

Graphic by Ziniu Chen, University Communications

After a hectic election year in 2020, the University of Virginia Center for Politics and the staff of Sabato’s Crystal Ball, the center’s political analysis newsletter edited by professor Larry J. Sabato, aren’t slowing down. Instead, they recently chose to take on one of the most fraught topics in American politics: redistricting.

Kyle Kondik, managing editor of the Crystal Ball, along with Crystal Ball Associate Editor J. Miles Coleman recently published a multi-part series on the subject.

Kondik is so interested in the topic that he wrote a book that explores how redistricting and other political trends have resulted in a Republican edge in the House of Representatives. The Long Red Thread, which looks at House elections from 1964 to 2020, will be released in October.

UVA Today caught up with Kondik to learn more about the controversial topic of redistricting.

Q. What is redistricting and why should people care?

A. Congressional redistricting is a vital and politically charged issue. Every 10 years, the U.S. Census Bureau releases a new census, which documents population growth patterns across the country. In order to reflect the new census, states must redraw their district lines. So between years that end in zero and years that end in two, the congressional map is reshaped across nearly the entire country — the only states that are unaffected are the six sparsely populated ones that only have a single, at-large statewide member of the House (Alaska, Delaware, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wyoming).

Kyle Kondik’s new book, “The Long Red Thread,” explores how redistricting and other political trends led to a GOP edge in the House of Representatives.

Districts must have roughly equal populations within states, with the average, “ideal” population size for a district nationally coming in at roughly 750,000 to 800,000 people. Stringent population equality requirements are a relatively new development in American politics — they only truly came about following a series of landmark Supreme Court decisions in the early 1960s, which enshrined the concept of “one person, one vote” into redistricting law. While the U.S. Supreme Court has weighed in on population equality, it has thus far declined to rule against partisan redistricting, better known as gerrymandering, which is the practice of one party drawing a congressional map designed to maximize their share of seats in a given state.

How districts are drawn has a direct impact on which party wins and which party loses a given seat. So if you care about who controls the House, you should care about this process.

Q. Who is in charge of it and when does it happen? 

A. States use a variety of methods to draw district lines. Most states still use a traditional process for redistricting, which involves the state legislature proposing and passing a congressional map as a piece of legislation, subject to veto by the governor. There are variations on this process — just to cite a few examples, North Carolina’s governor cannot veto a congressional map, and Iowa uses a process in which legislative staffers draw a map that the state legislature has the power to overrule — but this is how most states handle redistricting. However, there has been a growing trend in which redistricting power is outsourced to an independent commission, which is designed to make the process less partisan. These commissions are most popular in the west, but they have recently been adopted in other places, too, such as in Virginia for this decade’s redistricting cycle.

Overall, and based on the Crystal Ball’s assessment, Republicans control the drawing of 187 districts and Democrats control the drawing of 75. Commissions will draw 121 districts, while control of government is divided in states that hold another 46 districts. And the final six districts are in the single-district states.

This cycle’s redistricting process has been delayed because of delays in the census — the bureau only recently released the granular data that states need to accurately draw the lines. But draft maps are starting to appear in various states, and all 44 states with more than one district will have lines in place by next year in advance of the 2022 midterm.

Q. Why is it so controversial? 

A. Many consider it unseemly that one party often has the power to draw districts that favor their own party. Republicans used to dislike gerrymandering more because Democrats dominated the process as recently as the 1970s and 1980s. Democrats are likelier to dislike it now because Republicans have had a stronger hand in redistricting more recently. Additionally, different people can have different, legitimate objectives in redistricting. Some may favor maximizing competitive districts. Others may want to protect incumbents, while others don’t want to consider incumbents at all. Some may want to maximize representation for people of color, while others argue that doing so ends up overconcentrating voters of color, who often vote Democratic, thus helping Republicans.

The political cartoon that coined the term “gerrymandering.” Ironically, the redrawn district did not function as anticipated. (Wikimedia Commons)

Reasonable people can disagree on these objectives, which inherently makes this a hot-button issue, and the partisan nature of the process in many states also irks the party on the wrong end of the maps.

Q. Is this where the term “gerrymandering” comes from?

A. Yes. The term gerrymandering arose from what may be the most famous political cartoon in American history, which depicted a legislative district shaped like a salamander. In 1812, the Democratic-Republican-controlled Massachusetts state legislature tried to maximize its number of seats in a new districting plan and minimize those held by the minority Federalists. Elbridge Gerry (pronounced with a hard g, like Gary), the Democratic-Republican governor, signed the remap into law.

A Federalist newspaper cartoonist seized on a long, thin district that snaked from southwest to northeast, making an inverse “L,” and dubbed it the “gerry-mander,” complete with wings, claws and a snarling lizard’s head. Thus emerged the gerrymander (pronounced in modern times with a soft g, like Jerry). Interestingly, the famous salamander gerrymander district did not perform as intended, as the Federalists re-took the district in the following year’s elections. But this was not even the first partisan gerrymander, as there are examples in the colonial period.

Q. How does redistricting fit into a healthy democracy?

A. The concept of “one person, one vote” is an important principle in American government. Redistricting based on the decennial census is required to honor that principle. The question of how we should redistrict is a thorny one, and I think it’s reasonable to argue that a system in which the party in power gets to draw districts that help them maintain that power is not particularly healthy for democracy. But this is also not a new problem in American politics, although I think it is one that may be more meaningful now than in the past because gerrymandering has arguably become easier in recent years because of other trends in American elections, such as a drop in ticket-splitting, the erosion of advantages for incumbents, and other factors.

Q. What can regular citizens and voters do?

A. In states that allow statewide ballot issues, reformers can have success working to get voters to approve less partisan redistricting systems. There also are opportunities for regular citizens to serve on redistricting commissions, and those who are concerned about redistricting should share those concerns with their elected officials. Beyond that, there are great, easily accessible tools in which one can draw their own maps, like Dave’s Redistricting App. Doing this can at least give people the chance to think about how they might like districts to be drawn and to consider the real-life choices that mapmakers face.


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38.) THE BLAZE

 


39.) THE FEDERALIST

 


40.) REUTERS

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Thursday, September 23, 2021

by Linda Noakes

Hello

Here’s what you need to know.

Investors look ahead to rate hikes, Republicans see an opportunity in the U.S. debt-ceiling standoff, and read our guide to Germany’s baffling electoral system

Today’s biggest stories

A screen displays a statement by Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell as a trader works on the trading floor of the New York Stock Exchange, September 22, 2021. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

BUSINESS

World markets rallied after the U.S. Federal Reserve confirmed plans to start reeling in stimulus, Norway became the first rich economy to raise rates since COVID struck and China Evergrande shares leapt ahead of a crucial debt payment.

Investors are grappling with how an unwind of the Federal Reserve’s easy money policies could affect asset prices, after the central bank signaled that a taper of its bond-buying program was closer than ever and suggested it may raise rates at a faster-than-expected pace.

Euro zone business growth was much weaker than expected this month as curbs to limit the Delta variant of coronavirus hit demand and already worsened supply-chain constraints pushed input cost rises to an over two-decade high.

Brazil’s central bank raised interest rates by 100 basis points and flagged a third straight hike of that size in October as it battles surging inflation with the world’s most aggressive monetary tightening.

Is China Evergrande another Lehman Brothers moment? Not at all, according to the $40 trillion global corporate debt market. Breakingviews columnist Neil Unmack says credit markets will withstand Evergrande shocks.

Police officers block a road as lava rises following the eruption of a volcano on the Island of La Palma, in Tacande, Spain, September 22, 2021. REUTERS/Borja Suarez

WORLD

Jets of red hot lava shot high into the sky on the Spanish island of La Palma as toxic ash from the Cumbre Vieja volcano coated the surrounding area and authorities sought shelter for thousands of people forced to flee.

Hundreds of Haitian asylum seekers congregated outside Mexico’s refugee agency in the capital and in shelters in the northern city of Monterrey, as migrants deterred by a crackdown at the U.S. border sought legal status in Mexico.

A shadow is looming over Germany’s election: the specter of the far-left Linke party, heir to the communists who once ruled East Germany, coming in from the political wilderness. Germany’s electoral system is baffling even to Germans – we explain how it works.

Norway’s centre-left election winners are meeting for three-way talks to determine whether they can form a majority coalition government, with oil, taxes and EU relations among the sticking points.

Sudanese authorities have taken control of lucrative assets that for years provided backing for Hamas, shedding light on how the country served as a haven for the Palestinian militant group under former leader Omar al-Bashir.

U.S.

In a high-stakes standoff over the U.S. debt ceiling, congressional Republicans believe they see a chance to scale back President Joe Biden’s sweeping domestic agenda while boosting their odds of retaking Congress in 2022.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration authorized a booster dose of the Pfizer and BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for those 65 and older, all people at high risk of severe disease, and others who are regularly exposed to the virus.

Alaska, which led most U.S. states in coronavirus vaccinations months ago, took the drastic step of imposing crisis-care standards for its entire hospital system, declaring that a crushing surge in COVID-19 patients has forced rationing of strained medical resources.

A Florida Republican lawmaker has filed a bill that would ban abortions after six to eight weeks and allow members of the community to sue doctors for terminating pregnancies in what may be the first effort to mirror a similar new law in Texas.

The exhaustive search for slain travel blogger Gabby Petito’s fiance in a vast Florida wilderness entered a sixth day as the mystery deepened around a case that has engrossed Americans. Activists lament that the crisis of missing and murdered Native American women doesn’t get the attention paid to Petito.

Quote of the day

“I thought that if I made it through three waves without getting infected, I can make it through another one without a vaccine”

Roxana Pascu

COVID patient

Romanian hospitals fill up with COVID patients amid widespread vaccine refusal

Video of the day

Produce-growing robots drawing major green investors

As California dries out amid a crippling drought, a Silicon Valley company believes robots can grow produce more sustainably, and Bill Gates’ Breakthrough Energy ventures is betting on them by leading the latest $50 million funding round.

And finally…

Dodging lorries, lava and war, Congo’s skaters feel reborn

When the Nyiragongo volcano erupted in May, Serge Makolo only had time to grab his roller skates and a fistful of medals before the magma swallowed his house.

More from Reuters

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Mayo-trained doctor warns of COVID-19 ‘mutations’
Posted by WND Staff
‘These boosters are the wrong protection for the wrong virus.’ Read more…
Related
Florida governor appoints health chief who declares ‘we’re done with fear’
Posted by Art Moore
Finally, someone with common sense is in charge, saying vaccination has been ‘treated almost like a religion.’ Read more…
Related
‘This is not North Korea!’ One country just like U.S. revolts over vicious COVID crackdown
Posted by Art Moore
If you think it’s bad in America, it’s nothing compared to what’s happening in this very similar nation, as police open fire at workers protesting the vaccine mandate. Read more…
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Farah: This is what I was taking about! OCCUPY D.C.’s dress rehearsal
A presence of patriots is powerful. Plan to be a part. Read more…
Trump’s surgeon general says he got shocking letter from bank: Did Biden admin go this low?
A worrying letter he said he received from the bank reveals the Biden administration is seemingly not lifting a finger for him. Read more…
How MAGA anti-vaxxers became BLM-backed antiracists
The lefty Twitter trolls thought they had a MAGA diss … whoops. Read more…
The West is repeating mistakes of the Roman Empire, which didn’t end well
When the elites get arrogant it’s the beginning of the end. Read more…
Trump didn’t go rogue, but Milley sure did
Why is he still going to work each day? Read more…
Florida governor appoints health chief who declares ‘we’re done with fear’
Finally, someone with common sense is in charge, saying vaccination has been ‘treated almost like a religion.’ Read more…
Biden’s city under the bridge and the invasion of America
You think illegals are NOT a drain on our nation? Think again. Read more…
Bill Gates has telling response when pressed about Jeffrey Epstein
Bill Gates was clearly very, very uncomfortable here. Read more…
Articles of impeachment officially filed against Biden
Three articles of impeachment have been introduced against President Biden. Read more…
Ben & Jerry’s releases cop-hating ice-cream flavor, backs bill to replace cops with social workers
The left has to make everything political. Not even your dessert is safe from woke evangelism. Read more…
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Jan. 6 Capitol surveillance footage ordered released by judge: Where’s the ‘insurrection?’

Circle Back Jen promises she’ll check if there’s ‘any record’ Biden has ‘visited the border’… EVER.

‘Apologize!’ Gutfeld and Geraldo throw down in monster screaming match: ‘Let me respond to your lie to your face!’

Psaki confirms border officers on horseback placed on leave for ‘horrifying’ actions

Psaki gets fact-checked on claim migrants ‘not intending to stay here for a lengthy period of time’

Psaki spanks Boris Johnson for taking questions

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ACLU alters Ruth Bader Ginsburg direct quote to eliminate ‘women’ and reactions are swift

Tucker plays Biden in 2015 celebrating ‘unrelenting stream’ of migrants to make whites a minority in US

Florida court temporarily blocks vaccine mandate

University threatens to take action against students who use wrong pronouns

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11 Democratic senators back progressives’ vow to tank infrastructure bill if $3.5T budget doesn’t pass first

Poll: Biden’s approval rating has gotten so low that Kamala’s is now 6 points higher

‘You can’t bulls**t me’: Congressman in border district irate after call with Mayorkas

‘Deep sense of urgency’: Six former Treasury secretaries urge Congress to raise debt ceiling

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47.) ABC

September 23, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
FDA authorizes Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine boosters for people 65 and older: Following a recommendation last week by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s independent advisory panel that immunity from COVID-19 vaccines probably wane after six months, the FDA on Wednesday authorized Pfizer booster shots for seniors and other high-risk Americans. “As we learn more about the safety and effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines, including the use of a booster dose, we will continue to elevate the rapidly changing science and keep the public informed,” acting FDA commissioner Janet Woodcock said in a statement. While the panel recommended the extra shot for those 65 and older or at high risk of severe COVID-19 — as well as for health care and other front-line workers, like teachers — it didn’t find enough evidence yet to recommend the third shot to all adults. Third doses of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine can start after Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director Dr. Rochelle Walensky signs off on recommendations by the CDC advisory board. Meanwhile, as discussions continue over booster shots for the general public, 71 million eligible Americans still haven’t received the COVID-19 vaccine, according to White House COVID-19 data director Cyrus Shahpar. According to Shahpar, the number of Americans getting vaccinated is not rising, even though states like Alabama, which have low vaccination rates, are still seeing high death tolls. An ABC News analysis of federal data shows that states with low vaccination numbers are experiencing weekly death rates nearly four times higher than most vaccinated states. “We don’t have to be in these situations,” said Dr. Kierstin Kennedy, chief of hospital medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, who is among many health care workers in Alabama bracing for the worst. “We are choosing illness and death in a way that is just very unnatural.”
Biden announces US to donate another half billion vaccine doses to lower-income nations: President Joe Biden on Wednesday gathered world leaders virtually to discuss a plan for fighting the COVID-19 pandemic, announcing the U.S. would donate another 500 million doses of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine to lower-income nations. Biden, who made the announcement during the U.N. General Assembly, committed American resources to tackle logistical problems around the world, including vaccine production, donations, delivery and vaccine administration, to ramp up vaccinations. Additionally, the U.S. will partner with the European Union in a vaccine partnership that will expand global vaccinations, especially through vaccine donations. The doses are expected to be shipped by next September.
Gabby Petito case example of ‘missing white woman syndrome,’ experts say: As Gabby Petito’s disappearance and death has gained national attention with people everywhere trying to find clues and solve the case themselves, families of other missing people, particularly women of color, say they wish the same attention was turned to their own loved ones’ cases. “There’s frustration. There’s sadness,” Natalie Wilson, co-founder of the Black and Missing Foundation, told “GMA.” “We are meeting families at the worst points in their lives. They are frustrated because they’re not getting help from law enforcement or they’re frustrated because they’re not getting media coverage.” According to the FBI’s National Crime Information Center, of the 89,000 active missing persons cases that the FBI had in 2020, 45% of those were people of color. Plus, only about one-fifth of missing person cases involving minorities are covered by the news, according to a 2016 analysis published in the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology. Now, with the amount of attention Petito’s case has garnered in just two weeks, Wilson is encouraging others to help find those who are still missing, particularly minorities, by talking about them on social media. “If you just have one tip, it can solve a case,” Wilson said.
Boston Marathon bombing survivor reunites with nurse through birth of daughter: A Boston Marathon bombing survivor who spent three weeks at Tufts Medical Center in Boston for injuries in 2013 experienced a full circle moment in August when she gave birth to her daughter in the same hospital. Last month, when Jacqui Webb delivered her daughter, Ella James Webb Norden, Jacqui was reunited with Nichole Casper, one of the nurses who treated her eight years ago for her second- and third-degree burns. “There was such a sigh of relief,” Webb said of Casper. “Having Nichole again and having her understand my past, it was extremely comforting, because that was a really traumatic time [post-bombing].” Casper said she remembers Webb as “always very gracious and very appreciative of all the care.” But they lost touch once Webb was discharged from Tufts. Casper said it was good to see Webb in “a positive light.” “You don’t get to usually see your patients in a better situation, so this was definitely an amazing experience,” she said. “I got to see her now completely enjoying her life.” Webb said she used the moment to thank Casper for the care she provided eight years ago.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” the cast of Broadway’s “Jagged Little Pill” is live in Times Square to perform a medley of “Thank U” and “You Learn.” Plus, Stephanie Ramos shares a unique Hispanic Latinx Heritage Month story about actor Edward James Olmos, who has been working to increase Latino representation in Hollywood. And Tory Johnson joins us with some favorite plant-based deals, including taco ingredients, chips, shampoo and conditioner, hair care and more. All this and more only on “GMA.”
‘GMA’ Deals & Steals on plant-based favorites
Score exclusive savings on Tory Johnson’s latest deals.
Put some good in your morning
PHOTO: Bend Sauce Today from Tory Johnson’s 40 Boxes: Trending deals
PHOTO: Mooncakes made for Mid-Autumn Festival by pastry chef Clarice Lam at Kimika in New York City. Pastry chef stuns with specialty mooncakes for Mid-Autumn Festival
VIDEO: Kate Middleton is embracing her inner outdoorswoman, mountain biking in Lake District Kate Middleton is embracing her inner outdoorswoman, mountain biking in Lake District
VIDEO: Take It from Shaq: Kobe Bryant was the definition of a workaholic Take It from Shaq: Kobe Bryant was the definition of a workaholic
Read more →
Mom dying of ovarian cancer shares health message for women
Dr. Nadia Chaudhri, who has been battling Stage 3 ovarian cancer, hopes her story raises awareness about the disease.

48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN


49.) NBC FIRST READ

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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Ben Kamisar and Benjy Sarlin

FIRST READ: Democrats remain divided ahead of Monday’s infrastructure vote

We told you that President Biden’s meetings yesterday could offer an early answer to how Democrats should proceed in resolving their intraparty standoff over the president’s legislative agenda.

 

As of this morning, we still don’t have an answer.

 

The central conflict is that Democratic progressives oppose a House vote this Monday for the Senate-passed bipartisan infrastructure bill, arguing that the larger $3.5 trillion reconciliation package should be considered first or at least on the same track.

 

But moderates want the House to pass the infrastructure bill on Monday, believing that negotiations over the reconciliation package should come later.

 

Here were the reactions after Biden’s White House meetings with House and Senate moderates (first) and House and Senate progressives (afterwards):

 

“My hope is that [infrastructure] vote will be delayed. If it’s not, it should be defeated, because both bills have got to go forward,” Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., said, per NBC News.

 

Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., who heads the Congressional Progressive Caucus, “reiterated that perhaps half the roughly 100-member bloc could vote against the infrastructure measure Monday if the shape of the $3.5 trillion tax-and-spending bill is not finalized by then,” the Washington Post reports.

 

And as for the moderates, Rep. Stephanie Murphy, D-Fla., “said it would be ‘really disappointing and embarrassing’ if the infrastructure bill failed because of opposition from progressives,” the New York Times adds.

 

So Democrats are still deadlocked.

Getty Images

But there was SOME progress. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., said Biden told centrists to come up with a price tag for reconciliation they could support.

 

“He basically just said find a number you’re comfortable with based on the needs you still have and how we deliver it to the American people,” Manchin said, per NBC’s Capitol Hill team.

 

Still, Manchin said that crafting a reconciliation would take time. “I think a good reconciliation bill could be done whenever. This will take a lot more time, there’s a lot more involved in the tax structures and all the different things. It’s going to take a lot more in depth on that. And to hold up [an infrastructure] bill that every part of this country needs. This just doesn’t make any sense at all,” he added.

Biden’s biggest unanswered question

But here’s the answer we still don’t have from Biden: Should House Democrats vote this Monday for the infrastructure bill that the president celebrated when it passed the Senate in August?

 

“Many senators and House members, as I’ve listened to them over the last few days, have come to feel that just plucking Sept. 27 [for an infrastructure vote is arbitrary],” Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., told reporters after attending his White House meeting.

 

“And the president said, ‘Let me think about it, let me talk to the speaker, the majority leader.’”

 

So our questions to the White House: Should Monday’s infrastructure vote go forward?

And if so, should all Democrats vote for it?

VP Harris dresses down Mayorkas?

Yesterday, at 1:41 pm ET, we received a press readout unlike we’ve ever seen before.

 

It was a readout of the vice president’s call with a member of the president’s own cabinet.

 

“Yesterday, Vice President Harris spoke to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas to receive an update about his trip to Del Rio. During that call, the Vice President raised her grave concerns about the mistreatment of Haitian migrants by border patrol agents on horses, and the need of all CBP agents to treat people with dignity, humanely and consistent with our laws and our values,” it read.

 

More: “Secretary Mayorkas shared the Vice President’s concern and noted that he looks forward to updating her on the investigation by the Office of Professional Responsibility once it concludes.”

 

Ooof.

 

It’s one thing for an administration – within the family – to have criticisms and disagreements.

 

But it’s entirely another to issue a readout like this – to the press – like you would a phone call with a world leader or anyone else outside of the family.

 

Immigration advocates have long portrayed ICE and CBP as rogue agencies that need to be reined in, forcing the White House into contortions as they try to run the agencies themselves and maintain their effectiveness and morale while still reassuring those core supporters.

Data Download: The numbers you need to know today

36 percent: The portion of American adults who support President Biden’s handling of the Afghanistan withdrawal, per a new Marquette Law poll.

 

74 percent: The portion who support withdrawing all U.S. troops from Afghanistan, per that same poll.

 

42,623,436: The number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 167,482 more since yesterday morning.)

 

685,028: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 2,375 more since yesterday morning.)

 

387,493,71: The number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 712,900 more since yesterday morning.)

 

54.9 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.

 

66.1 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?

The FDA has approved a Pfizer Covid booster shot for the elderly and adults at a high risk of serious illness from the disease.

 

Maine GOP Sen. Susan Collins says she doesn’t support the new Democratic legislation aimed at shoring up protections for abortion rights, arguing it chips away exceptions for those who are opposed to the procedure.

 

new report from Amnesty International details the crackdown by the Taliban since it took power in Afghanistan, arguing that “the human rights gains that the Afghan people have built over two decades is at risk of collapse.”

 

The Biden administration is set to unveil a new rule aimed at cutting down on hydrofluorocarbons, chemicals used in refrigerants that are considered to have “very high global warming potential.”

 

The already fragile American economy could be dealt a significant blow if Congress can’t come to an agreement on funding the government or raising the debt ceiling.

 

A progressive non-profit attacks Sununu on abortion ahead of possible Senate bid.

Thanks for reading.

If you’re a fan, please forward this to a friend. They can sign up here.

 

We love hearing from our readers, so shoot us a line here with your comments and suggestions.

 

Thanks,

Chuck, Mark, Ben and Benjy

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50.) CBS

 


51.) REASON

Whoops—No Gun Rights for Adults Under 21 After All, Says Court

Plus: ACLU rewrites Ruth Bader Ginsburg, theaters sue over NYC vaccine passports, and more…

Does the Second Amendment apply to 18–20-year-olds? Back in July, a federal appeals court said yes. But now, the court has taken back its earlier ruling.
The case—Hirschfeld v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosivessaw two young adults challenging a federal law that treats 18–20-year-olds like children, banning federally licensed firearms dealers from selling handguns or handgun ammunition to them.
This decades-old rule is unconstitutional, said judges with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit in July. “Despite the weighty interest in reducing crime and violence, we refuse to relegate either the Second Amendment or 18- to 20-year-olds to a second-class status,” the judges wrote in their 2–1 decision. It was a win for Natalia Marshall and Tanner Hirschfeld, who brought the lawsuit, as well as for gun rights—and treating legal adults like adults, not children—more broadly.
“Our nation’s most cherished constitutional rights vest no later than 18,” the judges pointed out. “And the Second Amendment’s right to keep and bear arms is no different.” (See more on the July ruling here.)
On Wednesday, however, the 4th Circuit vacated its earlier ruling and remanded the case to the district court with instructions to dismiss.
“The Justice Department had asked the full court to reconsider the decision and said the panel got it wrong,” notes The Washington Post. What was done in the past “in no way suggests a recognition of an unfettered right of minors to purchase their own firearms for personal self-defense,” the Department of Justice (DOJ) said—completely conflating young adults with children.
The DOJ’s stance here represents a larger movement to strip adult status from 18–20-year-olds.
Upon reconsideration, a panel of appeals court judges decided that because Marshall turned 21 before the earlier ruling went into effect (and Hirschfeld had turned 21 before the decision was issued), the whole thing is moot.
“Here, Marshall challenged the prohibition on buying a handgun from a federally licensed firearms dealer while she was under 21. Once she turned 21, nothing prohibited her from buying the handgun she desired from a dealer of her choice. So her original claims are now moot,” the judges wrote. They also rejected Marshall and her lawyers’ attempts to revive the case:
To try to breathe new life into her claims after they became moot, Marshall alleged for the first time that she wishes to sell handguns to friends under 21. Those private sales would not typically be affected by the challenged laws and regulations. But Marshall seeks to bring those sales within this court’s purview by alleging that she wishes to use a federally licensed firearm dealer to facilitate the sales (by, for example, running background checks on her friends). This newly alleged injury was raised for the first time on appeal, and only after the case became moot, so we refuse to consider it here.
A second effort to revive this case by adding new parties also fails. Surely recognizing the mootness concern, Plaintiff’s attorney moved in the district court on July 24—the day before Marshall turned 21—to join new parties that might keep the case alive. But the district court lacked jurisdiction to grant the motion.
But none of this should be taken as denouncing the original case, the judges point out:
We cannot assign fault to either party here. Marshall was bound to turn 21 in time. And though the efforts to remedy mootness came at the eleventh hour, they do not reflect any fault in Marshall’s original case. So our decision turns on the public interest.
Alas, the “public interest still favors vacating the opinions,” largely because it’s customary practice, they said. The judges are also “reluctant to leave a preclusive judgment standing against a federal agency responsible for enforcing federal law while cutting off the appellate process.”
The question of whether 18–20-year-olds have a right to legally buy—or even own at all—guns and ammunition is one we’ve hardly seen the last of. “Around the nation, gun control activists have been pushing for laws to prohibit firearms for persons under 21,” noted David Kopel at The Volokh Conspiracy in 2019.
And, earlier this year, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit considered a case (Jones v. Bonta) involving whether California’s prohibition on people ages 18–20 legally purchasing guns is unconstitutional.

FREE MINDS

Linguistic lunacy. The American Civil Liberties Union is now rewriting Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s words so they don’t mention women when talking about pregnancy or abortion rights.

With Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death, we lost a champion for abortion and gender equality. And on the anniversary of her death, the fight to protect abortion access is more urgent than ever. pic.twitter.com/vIKadIHouN

— ACLU (@ACLU) September 18, 2021

FREE MARKETS

Theater and comedy club owners are suing over New York City’s proof-of-vaccination order:
Represented by Pacific Legal Foundation and Mermigis Law Group, the Theater Center, the Players Theater, the Actors Temple Theatre, the Soho Playhouse, and Broadway Comedy Club are challenging de Blasio’s “Key to NYC” proof of vaccination order in federal court.
In effect since September 13, the mandate requires many indoor businesses to allow entry only to employees and customers able to provide proof of COVID-19 vaccination. The order applies to indoor dining, recreation, fitness, and entertainment establishments. Failure to comply can result in fines to the businesses of up to $5,000 and possible criminal charges.
The lawsuit claims that unequal enforcement of the “Key to NYC” mandate amounts to discrimination based on content of speech and type of speaker, citing exemptions provided for religious services and performances at community centers and schools.
“A theatrical production put on by a community center or high school drama department is treated more favorably than a production put on by one of our clients,” the theaters’ lawyer Daniel Ortner said in a September 17 statement. “This violates the First Amendment.”
More here.

QUICK HITS

the post-George Floyd bipartisan police reform efforts in Washington are officially dead https://t.co/JAcv2CG6tP

— Wesley (@WesleyLowery) September 22, 2021

• For the first time since March, average daily deaths from COVID-19 in the U.S. have risen above 2,000.
• “Democrats’ immigration lies are finally catching up to them,” suggests The Daily Beast.
• Florida can’t enforce its ban on sanctuary cities.
• Two dozen state attorneys general are urging the Supreme Court to reject Mississippi’s 15-week abortion ban.
• President Joe Biden’s approval rating among black Americans dropped right after he issued an employee vaccine mandate.
• Is the center-left making a comeback?
• Florida and Texas continue to feed off each other’s bad ideas, with Florida now trying to follow Texas’ abortion-ban lead. The legislation would prohibit abortion when fetal cardiac activity can be detected and “also allows private citizens to sue those who knowingly performs or ‘aids or abets’ in an abortion in violation of the law,” notes The Hill.
• Republicans “can fight for their growing blue collar base” by pushing policies that are good for construction workers, suggests Alan Cole at Full Stack Economics.

Most Popular Stories from Reason.com

 

The DHS Agent Who Tried To Kill Kevin Byrd Can’t Be Sued—Because He Works for the Federal Government
In U.N. Speech, Biden Says America Is Not at War for First Time in 20 Years. That’s Just Not True.
Quarantined L.A. Schoolkids Have Lower COVID Rates Than Vaccinated Teachers
College Campuses Have the Craziest COVID-19 Restrictions of All
The Eastman Memo: Poor Lawyering for a Disreputable Cause (Updated)

 

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.

Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York TimesLos Angeles TimesThe Daily BeastBuzzfeedPlayboyFox NewsPoliticoThe Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.

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53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER


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Press Yawns as White House Shows More Concern Over Tourists Than Illegal Immigrant Wave 
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New Survey of Key Demographic Shows ‘Stark Warning Sign’ for Democrats Ahead of Midterms
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Reparations Could Be Coming to This Virginia School District 
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Madeline Leesman
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An Overlooked Controversy in California
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Analyzing the Election Results in California and Canada, and the Attitude of Faith vs. Fear
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE

09/23/2021

Carl Cannon’s Morning Note

Jake Sullivan; Antifa and Journalists; FDR’s Best Friend 
By Carl M. Cannon on Sep 23, 2021 09:18 am
Good morning, it’s Thursday, Sept. 23, 2021. On this date in 1944, Franklin Delano Roosevelt kicked off his fourth presidential campaign. It was late in the game for that, but FDR was a popular wartime president (if not a healthy one) and he pulled it off with aplomb. His speech was delivered at the Statler Hotel (now the Capital Hilton), just a couple of blocks from the White House. The audience included chieftains of the big labor unions that supported Democratic campaigns, just as they do today.Roosevelt’s speech that day was funny, fiery, and partisan. It’s unlikely hero was Fala, the president’s beloved Scottish terrier. In an odd coincidence, on the same date eight years later, Richard M. Nixon saved his political career with an appeal known as “the Checkers speech.” Checkers, if you don’t know, was a cocker spaniel.I’ve written about these speeches previously, but I’ve been thinking of my own dog — gone six years this week — and, as the song goes, “he still grieves.” But dogs mourn their humans, too, as we’ll see in a moment. First, I’d point you to our front page, which aggregates, as it does each day, columns and stories spanning the political spectrum. We also offer a complement of original material from RCP reporters and contributors, including the following:* * *

Biden Adviser Tied to Alleged Clinton Plan to Co-opt CIA, FBI. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan figures prominently in Special Counsel John Durham’s probe into an alleged 2016 campaign scheme to use U.S. intelligence agencies to tar Donald Trump as a colluder with Russia, Paul Sperry reports for RealClearInvestigations.

Little Outcry as Antifa Attacks Journalists on Left and Right. Mark Hemingway has the story, also at RealClearInvestigations.

Rubio Bill Would Hold Woke Corporations Accountable. Alfredo Ortiz spotlights the Mind Your Own Business Act, which would make it easier for shareholders to sue companies engaging in gratuitous politics for breaching their fiduciary duties.

COVID and CronyCare. At RealClearPolicy, Amy Peikoff and Benjamin Chayes question Big Pharma’s influence on vaccine mandates.

Evan Osnos’ “Wildland.” RealClearMarkets editor John Tamny reviews the new book, subtitled “The Making of America’s Fury.”

Godly Principles and Government. At RealClearReligion, Jeff Hunt considers the church’s role in civic society.

* * *

As President Roosevelt spoke at the Teamster-sponsored event on Sept. 23, 1944, the old “happy warrior” had two goals in mind. First, to allay voters’ concerns about his health, FDR wanted to show he still had the requisite passion for a national campaign. Second, FDR was trying to get under the skin of Republican nominee Thomas Dewey.

The speech, which succeeded on both levels, is today remembered mainly for a telling passage about Fala. A word of background helps explain the context: That summer, while Democrats were nominating Roosevelt for an unprecedented fourth term, the commander-in-chief was at sea, touring the Pacific theater before the final push against the Japanese.

Roosevelt was accompanied on this cruise by Fala. There was nothing unusual about that. Over the previous five years, Americans had become accustomed to reading about the dog or seeing him in newsreels: Fala having to be shooed to the backseat in a presidential limousine; Fala turning 4 years old and refusing to cooperate with White House photographers by eating his birthday cake; Fala fidgeting on a couch in the Oval Office as the president held a D-Day press conference.

But somehow a rumor got started that the president had left Fala behind on the final leg of the trip and that upon discovering this oversight in Seattle, had dispatched a U.S. Navy warship to the Aleutian Islands to retrieve him. This tale was unlikely, but such gossip takes on a life of its own in a campaign, whether the year is 1944 or 2021, and this one was repeated by a Minnesota Republican congressman named Harold Knutson. Instead of being dispatched “a thousand miles” to fetch the president’s dog, Knutson barked, the ship should have been engaging the enemy.

Knutson’s geography was off — it would have been much further than 1,000 nautical miles — but more to the point, the rumor was what today we’d call “fake news.” And although Dewey never went near the bogus story, Roosevelt saw his advantage and took it.

In his speech at the Statler Hotel, Roosevelt hit on themes still being employed by Democrats today. He attacked the conservative wing of the Republican Party, while questioning whether moderates could stand up to it; he claimed that Republicans were trying to make it harder for his supporters who lived overseas to vote; he accused his opponents of lying and making pernicious use of contributions from large donors.

Mostly he defended organized labor and boasted of his own economic policies while disparaging those of the other guy and his political party. Then, in what historian James MacGregor Burns called “the dagger thrust,” Roosevelt turned with a mock seriousness to a sly attack he’d been planning for a while:

“These Republican leaders have not been content with attacks on me, or my wife, or on my sons,” he said. “No, not content with that, they now include my little dog, Fala. I don’t resent attacks, and my family doesn’t resent attacks, but Fala does resent them.

“Being a Scottie, as soon as he learned that the Republican fiction writers in Congress and out had concocted a story that I had left him behind on the Aleutian Islands and had sent a destroyer back to find him — at a cost to the taxpayers of two or three, or eight or 20 million dollars — his Scotch soul was furious,” Roosevelt continued as his audience laughed hard. “He has not been the same dog since.”

The story of Checkers I’ll save for another morning. As for Fala, he outlived his master, passing on in 1952, but according to Eleanor Roosevelt, “he never really adjusted” to life without FDR.

In her autobiography, Eleanor described a touching scene in 1945 when Gen. Eisenhower came to lay a wreath on Franklin’s grave. When Fala heard the sirens of Ike’s police escort, she wrote, “his legs straightened out, his ears pricked up and I knew that he expected to see his master coming down the drive as he had come so many times.”

He lived out his life never giving up hope. “Later, when we were living in the cottage, Fala always always lay near the dining-room door where he could watch both entrances, just as he did when his master was there,” Mrs. Roosevelt wrote. “Franklin would often decide suddenly to go somewhere and Fala had to watch both entrances in order to be ready to spring up and join the party on short notice. Fala accepted me after my husband’s death, but I was just someone to put up with until the master should return.” 

Carl M. Cannon
Washington Bureau chief, RealClearPolitics
@CarlCannon (Twitter)
ccannon@realclearpolitics.com

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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY

 

09/23/2021

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57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY

Hateful anti-Semitic ideology, stemming from Iran, is meant to create enemies for the Yemeni people where there are none, and to divide people by religion—Muslim against Jew, Christian, Baha’i and all others.
From the moment US President Joe Biden entered the White House, foreign crises have left his administration with barely enough time to draw breath.
House Democrats stripped Israel’s Iron Dome budget mere hours after news broke that Angelo Codevilla, the prolific analyst of American politics, had died. In addition to his countless works covering American political and social trends, Codevilla was instrumental in getting the Iron Dome developed for Israel.
Amidst the ongoing devastation caused by Joe Biden’s abandoning of our supporters in Afghanistan, opportunities should be seized to demonstrate America’s reliability in supporting its friends, not just pay lip-service to that proposition.
Listen to Frank Gaffney’s Secure Freedom Radio here.
TWEET OF THE DAY
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58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG

 


59.) SARA A. CARTER

 

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Excerpts:

Schumer calls for an end to deportation, calling it “hateful and xenophobic”

Majority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer (R-NY) got on the Senate floor Tuesday to call an end to migrant deportations. According

The post Schumer calls for an end to deportation, calling it “hateful and xenophobic” appeared first on Sara A. Carter.

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Biden finally admits the border is not in control

President Biden admitted to a reporter Tuesday that the border is out of control following reports from the Texas border.

The post Biden finally admits the border is not in control appeared first on Sara A. Carter.

Read on »

Pelosi says child tax credit payments are stimulus checks

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi put an end to any further stimulus checks, saying the child tax credits are

The post Pelosi says child tax credit payments are stimulus checks appeared first on Sara A. Carter.

Read on »

Nile Gardiner: Biden did ‘immense damage’ to America on the international stage

Nile Gardiner, Director of The Heritage Foundation’s Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom, blasted President Biden for doing “immense damage” to

The post Nile Gardiner: Biden did ‘immense damage’ to America on the international stage appeared first on Sara A. Carter.

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Stephen Miller calls Biden’s U.N. address ‘a real missed opportunity’

After President Biden addressed the United Nations Tuesday, former Trump advisor Stephen Miller critiqued the speech saying the president missed

The post Stephen Miller calls Biden’s U.N. address ‘a real missed opportunity’ appeared first on Sara A. Carter.

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60.) TWITCHY

 


61.) HOT AIR

 


62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST


63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH

 


64.) NATIONAL REVIEW

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WITH JIM GERAGHTYSeptember 23 2021
hero

Joe Biden’s COVID-Booster Bungling

 

On the menu today: The FDA recommends boosters for the elderly, the immunocompromised, and those who are at high risk of exposure to COVID-19, but not to the general public . . . raising the question of how and why President Biden told the country last month, “Just remember, as a simple rule, eight months after your second shot, get a booster shot.” Also, America’s businesses are still waiting for any specifics about the much-touted, much-debated employee vaccine-mandate rule. And a reminder that yes, there are still Americans trapped in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan.

Who Told Joe Biden to Announce the Need for Boosters for All American Adults?

One of the great problems during this pandemic has been the lack of clarity about why certain public-health decisions have been reached.

Experts famously claimed that masks were not necessary for what was initially nicknamed the “Wuhan Flu.” On March 8, 2020, Dr. Anthony Fauci told 60 Minutes, “Right now, in the United States, people should not be walking around wearing a mask. There’s …   READ MORE

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But there’s more to do. Learn more about how we’re working to help you connect safely.

TRENDING ON NATIONAL REVIEW

1. The World Might Soon Wake Up to a Far-Left Government in Germany

2. Democrats Can’t Hide Their Israel Problem

3. The Eastman Memo Is a Tragedy of Errors

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PAUL GESSING

Joe Biden Is Worse Than Jimmy Carter

Carter had significant and lasting accomplishments to show for his four years in office. Given his track record to …

KYLE SMITH

Annoying Teens Who Keep Bursting into Song

The movie’s songs are cliché-stuffed you-can-make-it life-affirming sludge-a-thons of the kind that cause you to …

NEWS

U.S. Special Envoy to Haiti Resigns over ‘Inhumane’ Deportation of Haitians

‘I will not be associated with the United States inhumane, counterproductive decision to deport thousands of …

JOHN YOO AND ROBERT J. DELAHUNTY

Why Biden’s Vaccine Mandate Fails the Constitutional Test

Biden’s vaccine mandate should fail because it undermines the Constitution’s balance between Congress and the …

BRIAN T. ALLEN

Shame on the Met’s Trustees

The Met has succumbed to the sweet songs of the Sirens. It’s selling art to balance its budget. It’s starting with …

NEWS

South Carolina Supreme Court Unanimously Upholds Confederate Monument Protection Law

The law specifically protects monuments from ten wars, from the Revolutionary War to the Persian Gulf War. 

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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

The cards are all being put on the table, everyone will be exposed.

 

IN DEPTH…

  1. Federal Reserve Holds Interest Reads Steady, Says Tapering Could Begin Soon  6 mins ago
  2. Mayorkas grilled on claims DHS was warned of Del Rio crisis in June  31 mins ago
  3. Biden, Macron speak by phone, plan October meeting after diplomatic blow-up  31 mins ago
  4. Haitian migrants bite ICE officers…  1 hour ago
  5. Biden and Macron will meet in Europe in October following submarine snub, White House announces  1 hour ago
  6. Rantz: Students told to wear mask while chewing lunch, district cites nonexistent guidance  1 hour ago
  7. Taliban appoints ambassador, asks to speak at the UN  2 hours ago
  8. Biden’s Deportation Lies Exposed…  2 hours ago
  9. George W. Bush Begins Raising Money For Traitor Liz Cheney  2 hours ago
  10. Texas ‘Steel Wall’ of Cars Blocks Migrants at Border  2 hours ago
  11. Border Patrol agents facing Democratic attacks shifted to desk duty amid investigation  2 hours ago
  12. Biden refuses to answer press questions during meeting with UK prime minister  2 hours ago
  13. Kamala Harris Undercuts Biden On Crisis At Border  3 hours ago
  14. HS football team leads prayer after school board say’s no 15 mins ago
  15. Judge Sentences Democrat Mayor To 6 Years In Prison 20 mins ago
  16. White House Reporters Issue Complaint Over Biden-Johnson Meeting Access 51 mins ago
  17. Cotton Torches Dems Blocking Bill Designating Taliban a Terrorist Org. 1 hour ago
  18. WATCH: Ted Cruz grills Facebook director after reports of increased suicide risk among teens who use Instagram 1 hour ago
  19. Iraq War Veteran erupts at George W. Bush to his face… 2 hours ago
  20. Defund-the-police firebrand Ocasio-Cortez gets protective police escort 2 hours ago
  21. Biden Admin Freeing Haitian Migrants Into U.S. On ‘Very, Very Large Scale,’ Report Says | The Daily Wire 2 hours ago
  22. Measure to Ban Dishonorable Discharges of Unvaccinated Military Members Introduced by GOP Senators 2 hours ago
  23. House Passes Bill to Suspend Debt Limit, Temporarily Fund Government 2 hours ago
  24. Taliban Nominate UN Ambassador 2 hours ago
  25. 45 House Reps Call on National Archives to Remove ‘Harmful Content’ Warnings from Founding Documents 2 hours ago
  26. ‘You Took It Hook, Line And Sinker’: Rand Paul Grills FBI Director Over 2016 Trump-Russia Investigation 3 hours ago
  27. China’s Type 095 Nuclear Attack Submarine: A Threat to the US Navy? 3 hours ago
  28. Biden Admits Border Is Not Under Control, Vows To ‘Get It Under Control’ 3 hours ago
  29. Five New B‑21 Raider Bombers Now in Production 3 hours ago
  30. Global Supply-Chain Woes May Imperil More Than Christmas Shopping 3 hours ago
  31. Can China’s J‑20 Stealth Fighter Really Kill an F‑22 or F‑35? 3 hours ago
  32. Aging US aircraft can’t intimidate or defeat China, new Air Force Secretary says 3 hours ago
  33. Space Force grappling with aging infrastructure used to operate satellites — SpaceNews 3 hours ago
  34. A New DARPA Contract Brings Us One Step Closer to Nuclear Thermal Spaceflight 3 hours ago
  35. Taliban Names U.N. Envoy, Requests Audience With World Leaders 3 hours ago
  36. Clock starts ticking for Canada’s Trudeau after bid for majority fails 3 hours ago
  37. White House Aides Shout Down US Press Corps When British PM Suggests Taking Questions At Biden Meeting 3 hours ago
  38. Big Tech cozying up to China and Russia undermines argument against breaking them up 3 hours ago
  39. Greek Union Holds Health Worker Walk-Out Over Mandatory Vaccines 3 hours ago
  40. Australian state announces ‘friends bubble’ allowing those under 18 to gather with two other friends in person 3 hours ago
  41. As America Has Become More Secular, It Has Become Less Free, by Dennis Prager 3 hours ago
  42. Top Democrat blames US labor shortage on Trump’s ‘cut back on immigrants’ 3 hours ago
  43. The Hunter Biden laptop is confirmed?! Color us shocked! 3 hours ago
  44. The Case of General Milley Is a Test of America’s Constitutional Republic 3 hours ago
  45. Spin and lies won’t hide the extent of Biden’s border fiasco 3 hours ago
  46. House Passes Bill to Prevent Shutdown, Suspend Debt Limit 3 hours ago
  47. Damage Control: Daniel Craig Reverses Course, Now Says A Woman Shouldn’t Be James Bond 3 hours ago
  48. Phil Collins kicks off Genesis farewell tour in Birmingham, sings from chair amid health woes 3 hours ago
  49. “The Wire” Creator David Simon Cancels Texas Filming Of New HBO Project Over Abortion Law 3 hours ago
  50. BREAKING: Maricopa County Supervisor Resigns After Being Exposed By Audit 3 hours ago
  51. White House Reporters Have Launched ‘Formal Objection’ About Biden Refusing To Answer Questions 3 hours ago
  52. Handsome Statue Unveiled To Honor Burt Reynolds 3 hours ago
  53. The Fugees reunite with Lauryn Hill for ‘The Score’ 25th anniversary 3 hours ago
  54. Fauci Funds ANOTHER Coronavirus Study By Disgraced Peter Daszak’s EcoHealth Alliance. 3 hours ago
  55. Peyton and Eli Manning’s ‘Monday Night Football’ show sees massive ratings jump 3 hours ago
  56. Report: MLB to Require Vaccinations to Participate in Arizona Fall League 3 hours ago
  57. Senate Dems Tapped Soros-Funded Operative To Research Trump-Russia Conspiracy — Washington Free Beacon 3 hours 
  58. Rob Gronkowski doesn’t watch film, just asks Tom Brady everything 3 hours ago
  59. Ben Roethlisberger sustained left pec injury in loss to Raiders; injury will impact preparation for Bengals 3 hours ago
  60. Eagles place Zach Ertz on COVID list for second time 3 hours ago
  61. Peyton Manning takes shot at Patriots during ‘Monday Night Football’ simulcast 3 hours ago
  62. Chuck Schumer Blames ‘Hateful & Xenophobic’ Trump Policies for Biden Border Chaos 3 hours ago
  63. House Democrats remove $1 billion to fund Israel’s Iron Dome from spending bill after threats from progressives 3 hours ago

 

IN DEPTH…

  1. Biden faces renewed press backlash over access  42 mins ago
  2. Biden Admin Punishes Border Patrol Agents…  1 hour ago
  3. MSNBC’s Joy Reid Pulls Race Card on Tragic Murder of Gabby Petito  2 hours ago
  4. WATCH: Maxine Waters says border patrol agents controlling Haitian migrants ‘worse than what we witnessed in slavery’  
  5. Alejandro Mayorkas: Border is ‘no less secure’ than before Biden took office  3 hours ago
  6. REVEALED: Daszak Admits Fauci Funded Chinese Coronavirus Research at Conference Featuring Hunter Biden-Linked Pandemic Group.  3 hours ago
  7. CCP Defector Says China Deliberately Spread COVID at Military Event in 2019  4 hours ago
  8. White House peeved Boris Johnson answered questions from reporters in the Oval Office  4 hours ago
  9. BREAKING: Psaki doesn’t know how many Haitian migrants released into the US  4 hours ago
  10. Fed May Start Reversing Pandemic Stimulus Programs in November  4 hours ago
  11. Late Night TV Elite Team Up to Push Cringe ‘Climate Night’ of Propaganda Disguised as Comedy  5 hours ago
  12. BIG APPLE BLUES: Trump Sues New York Times, Mary Trump for ‘Maliciously Conspiring Against Him’  5 hours ago
  13. Federal Reserve Holds Interest Reads Steady, Says Tapering Could Begin Soon  6 mins ago
  14. Mayorkas grilled on claims DHS was warned of Del Rio crisis in June  31 mins ago
  15. Biden, Macron speak by phone, plan October meeting after diplomatic blow-up  31 mins ago
  16. Haitian migrants bite ICE officers…  1 hour ago
  17. Biden and Macron will meet in Europe in October following submarine snub, White House announces  1 hour ago
  18. Rantz: Students told to wear mask while chewing lunch, district cites nonexistent guidance  1 hour ago
  19. Taliban appoints ambassador, asks to speak at the UN  2 hours ago
  20. Biden’s Deportation Lies Exposed…  2 hours ago
  21. George W. Bush Begins Raising Money For Traitor Liz Cheney  2 hours ago
  22. Texas ‘Steel Wall’ of Cars Blocks Migrants at Border  2 hours ago
  23. Border Patrol agents facing Democratic attacks shifted to desk duty amid investigation  2 hours ago
  24. Biden refuses to answer press questions during meeting with UK prime minister  2 hours ago
  25. Kamala Harris Undercuts Biden On Crisis At Border  3 hours ago
  26. HS football team leads prayer after school board say’s no 15 mins ago
  27. Judge Sentences Democrat Mayor To 6 Years In Prison 20 mins ago
  28. White House Reporters Issue Complaint Over Biden-Johnson Meeting Access 51 mins ago
  29. Cotton Torches Dems Blocking Bill Designating Taliban a Terrorist Org. 1 hour ago
  30. WATCH: Ted Cruz grills Facebook director after reports of increased suicide risk among teens who use Instagram 1 hour ago
  31. Iraq War Veteran erupts at George W. Bush to his face… 2 hours ago
  32. Defund-the-police firebrand Ocasio-Cortez gets protective police escort 2 hours ago
  33. Biden Admin Freeing Haitian Migrants Into U.S. On ‘Very, Very Large Scale,’ Report Says | The Daily Wire 2 hours ago
  34. Measure to Ban Dishonorable Discharges of Unvaccinated Military Members Introduced by GOP Senators 2 hours ago
  35. House Passes Bill to Suspend Debt Limit, Temporarily Fund Government 2 hours ago
  36. Taliban Nominate UN Ambassador 2 hours ago
  37. 45 House Reps Call on National Archives to Remove ‘Harmful Content’ Warnings from Founding Documents 2 hours ago
  38. ‘You Took It Hook, Line And Sinker’: Rand Paul Grills FBI Director Over 2016 Trump-Russia Investigation 3 hours ago
  39. China’s Type 095 Nuclear Attack Submarine: A Threat to the US Navy? 3 hours ago
  40. Biden Admits Border Is Not Under Control, Vows To ‘Get It Under Control’ 3 hours ago
  41. Five New B‑21 Raider Bombers Now in Production 3 hours ago
  42. Global Supply-Chain Woes May Imperil More Than Christmas Shopping 3 hours ago
  43. Can China’s J‑20 Stealth Fighter Really Kill an F‑22 or F‑35? 3 hours ago
  44. Aging US aircraft can’t intimidate or defeat China, new Air Force Secretary says 3 hours ago
  45. Space Force grappling with aging infrastructure used to operate satellites — SpaceNews 3 hours ago
  46. A New DARPA Contract Brings Us One Step Closer to Nuclear Thermal Spaceflight 3 hours ago
  47. Taliban Names U.N. Envoy, Requests Audience With World Leaders 3 hours ago
  48. Clock starts ticking for Canada’s Trudeau after bid for majority fails 3 hours ago
  49. White House Aides Shout Down US Press Corps When British PM Suggests Taking Questions At Biden Meeting 3 hours ago
  50. Big Tech cozying up to China and Russia undermines argument against breaking them up 3 hours ago
  51. Greek Union Holds Health Worker Walk-Out Over Mandatory Vaccines 3 hours ago
  52. Australian state announces ‘friends bubble’ allowing those under 18 to gather with two other friends in person 3 hours ago
  53. As America Has Become More Secular, It Has Become Less Free, by Dennis Prager 3 hours ago
  54. Top Democrat blames US labor shortage on Trump’s ‘cut back on immigrants’ 3 hours ago
  55. The Hunter Biden laptop is confirmed?! Color us shocked! 3 hours ago
  56. The Case of General Milley Is a Test of America’s Constitutional Republic 3 hours ago
  57. Spin and lies won’t hide the extent of Biden’s border fiasco 3 hours ago
  58. House Passes Bill to Prevent Shutdown, Suspend Debt Limit 3 hours ago
  59. Damage Control: Daniel Craig Reverses Course, Now Says A Woman Shouldn’t Be James Bond 3 hours ago
  60. Phil Collins kicks off Genesis farewell tour in Birmingham, sings from chair amid health woes 3 hours ago
  61. “The Wire” Creator David Simon Cancels Texas Filming Of New HBO Project Over Abortion Law 3 hours ago
  62. BREAKING: Maricopa County Supervisor Resigns After Being Exposed By Audit 3 hours ago
  63. White House Reporters Have Launched ‘Formal Objection’ About Biden Refusing To Answer Questions 3 hours ago
  64. Handsome Statue Unveiled To Honor Burt Reynolds 3 hours ago
  65. The Fugees reunite with Lauryn Hill for ‘The Score’ 25th anniversary 3 hours ago
  66. Fauci Funds ANOTHER Coronavirus Study By Disgraced Peter Daszak’s EcoHealth Alliance. 3 hours ago
  67. Peyton and Eli Manning’s ‘Monday Night Football’ show sees massive ratings jump 3 hours ago
  68. Report: MLB to Require Vaccinations to Participate in Arizona Fall League 3 hours ago
  69. Senate Dems Tapped Soros-Funded Operative To Research Trump-Russia Conspiracy — Washington Free Beacon 3 hours 
  70. Rob Gronkowski doesn’t watch film, just asks Tom Brady everything 3 hours ago
  71. Ben Roethlisberger sustained left pec injury in loss to Raiders; injury will impact preparation for Bengals 3 hours ago
  72. Eagles place Zach Ertz on COVID list for second time 3 hours ago
  73. Peyton Manning takes shot at Patriots during ‘Monday Night Football’ simulcast 3 hours ago
  74. Chuck Schumer Blames ‘Hateful & Xenophobic’ Trump Policies for Biden Border Chaos 3 hours ago
  75. House Democrats remove $1 billion to fund Israel’s Iron Dome from spending bill after threats from progressives 3 hours ago

 

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74.) THE POST MILLENIAL

 


75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS

 


76.) THE DAILY DOT


77.) HEADLINE USA

America’s Most Trusted News Source…

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Liberty Headlines

Breaking News…

Many Haitian Migrants Being Released in US, Not Deported

Biden Approval Among Blacks Plummets After Vax Mandate

SPECIAL: Bitcoin “hack” spits out an extra $72,637?

Wuhan Scientists Wanted to Release Viruses into Bat Populations

George W. Bush to Fundraise for Liz Cheney in Dallas

Threat of Exodus of Navy SEALs Brings Backlash on Vax Mandate

Rabid Pro-Mask Rep. Celebrates Mask-Free Birthday Party

SPECIAL: Biden to Mandate ALL Americans Get the Covid Vaccine?

Media Finally Gives Credence to Hunter Biden Laptop Story

Russiagate Advanced Because the Conspirators Were All Connected


Dear Reader,

The warning bells are ringing everywhere…

“100% probability of loss,” warns Citigroup…

A “very, very dangerous,” market, says Bridgewater.

“Batsh*t crazy,” says billionaire Paul Tudor Jones.

And Michael J. Burry, the famous “big short” investor warns the “mother of all crashes” is coming our way.

So, what should you do?

Rather than sell all your stocks, this fascinating interview exposes a splintering in the market that could see some stocks explode higher… while others fall to the ground.

To watch this free interview (and discover the most toxic tech stocks) click here.

Sincerely,

Van Bryan
Editorial Director, Brownstone Research


The information presented here is for general educational purposes only. You should always consult with your personal physician regarding any personal health problem, and you should always consult with your financial adviser regarding investment decisions. FDA DISCLOSURE: The statements, articles, and products featured in Headline USA emails and at HeadlineUSA.com have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. No information or products appearing in emails or the website are intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. MATERIAL CONNECTION DISCLOSURE: Headline USA may have an affiliate relationship and/or another material connection to any persons or businesses mentioned in or linked to from emails or the website and may receive commissions from purchases you make on subsequent web sites. You should not rely solely on information published by Headline USA to evaluate the product or service being offered. Always exercise your own due diligence before purchasing any product or service.

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78.) NATURAL NEWS

NaturalNews.com
Evergrande = EverScammed – why the debt bomb contagion will spread globally
Mike Adams The Evergrande (“EverSCAMMED”) fiasco is nothing more than a classic Bernie Madoff Ponzi scheme involving property developers and greed-driven investors who chased high returns while forgetting about the existence of risk.

Buoyed by a flood of incoming investment money, Evergrande churned out entire “ghost cities” of apartment buildings across China, selling the ludicrous idea that these apartments would generate insane returns for those who participated.

Now it’s all imploding in a classic Ponzi collapse. And the contagion will likely spread to other countries, affecting banks, institutions and more. The avalanche has been initiated.

Get full details in today’s article and podcast here.

New Videos from Brighteon.com
Situation Update, Sep 22, 2021 – Evergrande = Everscammed, debt bomb contagion will spread globallyWatch this video
Former Green Beret Mykel Hawke joins Mike Adams to talk survival, preparedness and bugout planningWatch this video
10 Most Powerful Plant-Based Foods For ImmunityWatch this video
Featured Articles
Government whistleblower drops major bombshell about covid vaccines being “full of s***”By Ethan Huff | Read the full story
Sky News Australia drops bomb on Fauci, calls him “incredibly stupid” for funding illegal gain-of-function coronavirus research in WuhanBy Ethan Huff | Read the full story
Sponsor: Is the answer to better blood flow hiding in your kitchen? It’s easy to boost if you know how. Get the list of foods here.
Medical murder: Hospitals are killing health freedom advocates by denying them life-saving treatmentsBy Ethan Huff | Read the full story
Bill Gates and UNICEF aligned with terrorist Taliban involving U.S. taxpayer dollarsBy JD Heyes | Read the full story
Sponsor: Clean Chlorella supports your body’s natural ability to detox.
Fauci says 3 shots needed for “full vaccination,” while the double-vaxxed will lose their vaccine passportsBy Ethan Huff | Read the full story
Sponsor: Boost your daily intake of MCTs with lab-verified MCT oil packed with caprylic acid.
Clean Chlorella can support your body’s natural ability to detoxAs an excellent source of chlorophyll, chlorella is known for its unique ability to support your body’s natural detoxification process. To help you experience the full cleansing properties and nutritional benefits of ultra-clean chlorella, we’re bringing you new, pristine lots of lab-verified Clean Chlorella Powder and Tablets. Our Clean Chlorella Powder and Tablets are vegan, non-China, non-GMO and thoroughly lab tested for glyphosate, heavy metals and microbiology.

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More of Today’s ArticlesPope Francis completes Vatican’s submission to satanism by mandating spike protein injections for all visitors and workers
Beginning on October 1, anyone wishing to work at or visit the Vatican will need to get “vaccinated” for the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19). According to reports, all visitors and …Australian nurse says country on the brink of collapse due to understaffed and overworked healthcare workers
An Australian nurse is warning about a potential national health crisis as understaffed and overworked healthcare workers are struggling to cope with the country’s surge in Wuhan coronavirus …Supply chain issues plaguing U.K., food shortages worsening
Increasing energy costs are driving food costs through the roof in the United Kingdom, where factories are reportedly shutting down as grocery store shelves run bare. Unless the government …Invasion: Biden administration processing thousands of unvaccinated Haitians and letting them loose into America
The administration of President Joe Biden is reportedly processing thousands of Haitian illegal immigrant “family units” and releasing them into the United States. A crisis has …Jen Psaki gives completely unacceptable answer when pressed about why Americans must have vaccine proof but illegal aliens don’t
Not only has the Marxist deep state ruling America used the COVID-19 pandemic to suppress and oppress, they have also based some of the most hypocritical policies on the virus, including policies …Now vaccine-pushing scientists want to turn your groceries into mRNA vaccines
The global agenda to inoculate every man, woman and child is coming straight to your dinner plate. A team of scientists from the University of California, Riverside are researching ways to turn …Biden hands Americans a death sentence by restricting covid-19 medications
Around 85 percent of COVID-19 patients would have been saved if proper treatment protocol had been established, including early intervention. It has been established early during the pandemic …Evidence emerges that Hillary Clinton may have worked with top Google exec to help invent fake Trump-Russia collusion hoax
It has long been known that one element of the fake ‘Trump-Russia collusion’ narrative involved the 2016 campaign of Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton. The financing and …Dr. Ryan Cole talks about how vitamin D, not vaccines, is the key to fighting covid-19 — Brighteon.TV
In the latest episode of The Dr. Ardis Show on Brighteon.TV, Dr. Bryan Ardis speaks with Dr. Ryan Cole about the ongoing treatments for the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) in ICUs in the United …Sarah Palin cites Israeli study showing the power of natural immunity to explain why she didn’t get covid-19 jab
Sarah Palin recently revealed that she has not been vaccinated against COVID-19 because of her belief in science. In an appearance on Fox News’ Gutfeld, the former governor of Alaska explained …

After falsely claiming that covid vaccines are safe for pregnant women, NEJM issues correction admitting “no evidence”
Back in June, the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) published a bogus study claiming that Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19) “vaccines” are perfectly “safe and effective” for …

Thousands storm streets of New York City to protest covid medical fascism
We are finally seeing some pushback here in the United States in response to fake “president” Joe Biden’s unconstitutional Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19) “vaccine” …

Texas hospital on the verge of being shut down due to Biden’s vaccine mandate
President Joe Biden’s vaccine mandate on the healthcare industry is proving to be a disaster so far. Jerry Jasper, CEO of Brownfield Regional Medical Center in Texas, tells local news …

Jeffrey Prather accuses Biden administration of orchestrating one of the largest international weapons transfers in years – Brighteon.TV
Jeffrey Prather has accused the Biden administration of orchestrating one of the largest international weapons transfers in history. In this latest episode of Prather Point on Brighteon.TV, he …

German professor calls for investigation into military geoengineering
A German professor is calling on humanity to look into attempts to weaponize the planet. Sociologist and political scientist Claudia von Werlhof of the University of Innsbruck in Austria urged …

Fact check: NIH doesn’t recommend ivermectin because its panel members have conflicting financial interests
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) does not think that anyone should ever be allowed to use ivermectin to try to treat a Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19) infection. The reason is because its …

Dr. Sherri Tenpenny reveals how to address Covid without relying on vaccines – Brighteon.TV
Physician Dr. Sherri Tenpenny shares ways of addressing Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) infections in a manner that respects the sanctity of the human body in an interview with pastor David Scarlett …

Resistance chicks: Michelle and Leah Svensson discuss the implications of the FDA rejecting Pfizer booster shots — Brighteon.TV
Headline News: The Resistance Chicks talks about the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) denying the use of booster shots, Biden’s Afghanistan strikes and more. Real-life sisters Michelle and …

Beloved Michigan weatherman fired after refusing to get the covid-19 vaccine
A veteran weatherman for a television station in Michigan who was very well-loved by his community has been fired for refusing to be vaccinated against the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19). Karl …

Thousands of La Palma residents forced to evacuate after volcanic eruption
The first volcanic eruption in 50 years on La Palma in the Spanish Canary Islands has forced about 5,500 residents to evacuate. Lava from the Cumbre Vieja volcano has been pouring downhill since …

        
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81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL

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Trump’s Surgeon General Says He Got Shocking Letter from Bank: Did Biden Admin Go This Low?
A worrying letter that Adams said he received reveals the administration is refusing to provide something as simple as employment verification for the former surgeon general. Read more…
Reporters Lodge Formal Complaint After WH Staffers’ Insane Move to Protect Biden
Biden was asked about the chaos at the southern border, but his answer could not be heard over his shrieking aides. Read more…
Articles of Impeachment Officially Filed Against Biden
‘He’s not capable of being commander in chief.’ Read more…
ICE Officers Subjected to Sickening Attack from Angry Migrants
The migrants ‘realized they were going back to Haiti and lost it,’ a law enforcement official said. Read more…
Establishment Media Gets Brutal News About Hunter Biden’s Laptop
Media and Big Tech giants fought for months to silence the Hunter Biden laptop story. Read more…
Senator Reveals Why the World Is Laughing at Us After Biden’s UN Speech
‘It was like he was scared to mention China’s name,’ Cotton said. Read more…
Texas Rep Calls Out Biden’s DHS Chief for His Reaction to the Border Crisis
The Biden administration has left the representatives of border states to deal with a major security crisis. Read more…
Biden Admin Investigating Texas Schools for Ridiculous Reason
The Education Department will investigate whether Texas’ ban on mask mandates discriminates against students with disabilities. Read more…
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84.) POWERLINE

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Mark Millley “on dangerous constitutional terrain”

Posted: 22 Sep 2021 04:18 PM PDT

(Paul Mirengoff)In this post, I argued against a defense of Gen. Mark Milley’s reassurances to China, in the waning days of the Trump administration, that’s based on his apparent collaboration with the Defense Department. If Milley made improper statements to Chinese military officials, it doesn’t matter that high-ranking DOD officials were in the loop.

I also argued that, in all likelihood, Milley did make improper statements to the Chinese. Even before the events of January 6, China apparently wanted assurances that Trump would not lash out against it due to his frustration with the election. Much of official Washington shared this concern or pretended to.

Bob Woodward and Robert Costa report that when Milley spoke to his Chinese counterpart on January 8, he provided assurances, and this aspect of their report seems undisputed. Given the way Milley and China apparently viewed Trump, it stands to reason that, as Woodward and Costa also say, such assurances included a promise, or at least an indication, that Milley would give China a heads-up, if it came to that.

David Ignatius of the Washington Post seems to understand all of this. He acknowledges:

Milley’s efforts [with China]. . .took him into dangerous constitutional terrain that no soldier should have to patrol, edging close to violating the sacrosanct principle ­of civilian control of the military.

Ignatius, an apologist, if not an unofficial spokesman, for the deep state, avoids saying that Milley, in fact, violated this sacrosanct principle. Perhaps that’s the right line, since we don’t know for sure what Milley said to his counterpart. However, if he said, in essence, what Woodward and Costa report, he surely crossed the line.

Indeed, Ignatius continues:

In curbing the unilateral power of a reckless commander in chief, did [Milley and other like-minded] violate the Constitution? None of them were (sic) elected, after all, unlike Trump.

When I asked a member of this. . .group to go on the record five months ago, he refused. “This is an ugly story,” he said. It shouldn’t happen in our democracy.

No, it shouldn’t.

However, Ignatius is unwilling to condemn Milley. Instead, he reverts to what I’ve called the original defense of Milley — that the general’s violation was justified “because Trump.” He writes:

Milley is a target right now. But even as we underline the proper limits on the role of military leaders, we should remember that this problem began with a lawless president who threatened to politicize the military — to the point that the top-ranking general decided to fight back to fulfill what he saw as his paramount duty, to safeguard his country.

There are at least three good objections to this passage. First, if there was a problem, it began with the election of the “lawless” president by the American people. In “our democracy,” the military has no “duty” to “fight back” against the president Americans choose to lead them.

Second, Milley wasn’t fighting back against lawlessness. Trump did nothing unlawful during the period of time in which, it appears, Milley lawlessly assured the Chinese he would help thwart any attack the president ordered. And even if one thinks Trump acted unlawfully by encouraging the January 6 protest, promising to give the Chinese a leg up in a war with the U.S. is not fighting back against the Capitol protest or Trump’s role, whatever it was, in that event.

Third, the concern that Trump would attack China due to frustration with the election was absurd. This is a case of a not-terribly-bright general believing his own BS — or perhaps more accurately, the BS being peddled by establishment figures including Nancy Pelosi and anti-Trump journalists — while convincing himself that he was some kind of savior.

Nothing in Trump’s presidency suggests that he would attack a country with China’s military capability. Throughout his time in office, Trump was less aggressive militarily than any of his four immediate predecessors.

If Trump was going to attack any nation, it likely would have been Iran. But there is no indication that he ever seriously considered doing that.

To be sure, the 2020 election left Trump in a terrible mood. But Trump was also in a terrible mood when he was being impeached for tying (for a short while) U.S. assistance to Ukraine to that government’s willingness to help him discredit Joe and Hunter Biden.

That frustration did not cause Trump to use military force, much less to attack Red China. Contrast this with Bill Clinton who, in a fit of anger over developments in the Lewinski scandal, launched attacks in Sudan and Afghanistan — a rare sign of life from Clinton when it came to trying to countering terrorism.

I have never tried to disguise my view that Trump is seriously flawed. But that didn’t make him a threat to world peace.

Trump’s opponents tried, for cynical purposes, to conflate these two things. In doing so, it seems like they suckered Gen. Milley into what Ignatius diplomatically calls “dangerous constitutional terrain.”

  

Chelsea player breaks ranks, declines to kneel

Posted: 22 Sep 2021 11:57 AM PDT

(Paul Mirengoff)For more than a year now, players in the English Premier League have been “taking a knee” just before kickoff. The gesture, an outgrowth of the George Floyd affair, is supposed to signal opposition to racism. In every EPL match I’ve seen, all 22 players have gone along with it.

It’s not clear why anyone should kneel to protest racism. The gesture strikes me as either meaningless or a nod to Colin Kaepernick, who gained fame for kneeling during the playing of the National Anthem before NFL games some years ago. Kaepernick is a far-leftist who hates America.

To be clear, I have nothing against English soccer players kneeling before kickoff, if that’s what they want to do. However, it seems obvious that not every player has wanted to kneel before every match for more than a year.

The law of averages tells us this. Similar evidence comes from fans who boo the gesture. The booing has diminished considerably, probably due to pressure, but it persists. Obviously, some segment of the English population hates the gesture. Therefore, some segment of the playing population must not be fond of it.

Earlier this month, Marco Alonso, a Spaniard and long-time Chelsea player, broke ranks. He declined to take a knee before Chelsea’s match against Aston Villa. Instead, he pointed to a badge on his jersey that says “no to racism.” The wing-back did the same thing in Chelsea’s next match.

Pointing to the “no to racism” slogan is a more direct way of expressing opposition to the hateful phenomenon. It’s a straightforward statement and cannot be construed to show support for any other agenda. It also avoids any hint of submission.

Nonetheless, Alonso has been criticized for the move. This article by some politically correct writer rakes the Spaniard over the coals for not consulting his black teammates. “How, for example, would Romelu Lukaku — who celebrated his first goal for Inter Milan after the Black Lives Matter protests, in June last year, against Sampdoria, with a lowered knee and raised fist — have reacted?,” the writer asks.

I’m a huge Lukaku fan, and not just because of his feats for Everton. Big Rom is worthy of great respect.

But Alonso is his own man with his own views about combatting racism. He had no obligation to seek permission from Lukaku or anyone else, and should not be criticized for declining to do so.

Deep into the Athletic’s article, we learn that several black players are tired of the kneeling gesture. Among them are Wilfred Zaha, the outrageously talented Crystal Palace man, and Ivan Toney, an emerging star for Brentford.

Players at Quuens Park Rangers in England’s second soccer tier stopped kneeling last season. Les Ferdinand, an EPL legend and currently QPR’s director of football, explained:

Taking the knee was very powerful but we feel that impact has now been diluted. Taking the knee will not bring about change in the game — actions will.

“Sir Les” is Black.

Taking a knee was never going to bring about change. I hope more EPL players, Black and White, will stop feeling compelled to kneel.

  

Climate Funnies!

Posted: 22 Sep 2021 10:32 AM PDT

(Steven Hayward)Did you know that this week is Climate Week? I didn’t either. It gets better—tonight is Climate Night! And late night comics are on the job! So you know we’re saved.

Late-night comedians team up to tackle the climate crisis

Climate change, which is responsible for magnifying this summer’s deadly heat waveshurricaneswildfires and floods, is typically no laughing matter. But for one night, seven popular late-night comedy shows hope they can change that.

On Wednesday, September 22, the hosts are dedicating a portion of each of their shows to giving climate changea very unusual platform. The goal of the unprecedented, coordinated effort is to reach a wide audience and convey the seriousness of the challenge faced by humanity.

CBS’ “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” and “The Late Late Show with James Corden,” ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live!,” NBC’s “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” and “Late Night with Seth Meyers,” Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show with Trevor Noah” and TBS’ “Full Frontal with Samantha Bee” are all participating in Climate Night.

This is actually genius on the part of the late night “comics” who are no longer funny, as it will get millions—or is it only thousands now?—of viewers to turn off their flat-screen TVs, thereby lowering their carbon footprints.

Chaser:

UPDATE: Okay, so this is more likely Tony Soprano’s house. But let’s have Colbert (or any of the others) step up and show us his residence(s), so we can see if he practices what he preaches.

  

Biden’s Aides Won’t Let Him Speak

Posted: 22 Sep 2021 08:26 AM PDT

(John Hinderaker)How far gone is Joe Biden, mentally? I don’t know, but his aides do. And the frenzy they display whenever it appears that Biden might have to talk without a script tells us that they think he is incompetent.

The latest instance occurred yesterday when Biden and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson did a joint appearance at the White House. They chatted for a few minutes and then Johnson took a couple of questions from British reporters. White House aides were so concerned that someone might ask Biden about the Southern border or another unacceptable topic that they interrupted the Prime Minister in mid-sentence and loudly hustled the reporters out of the room. This is the Telegraph’s account:

President Joe Biden refused to take questions from American reporters before his aides chivvied them away from a meeting with Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Tuesday.

Members of the press were said to be “startled” by the “aggressiveness” of the White House communications team during the Oval Office talks.

Mr Johnson was still speaking on the Good Friday Agreement, reaffirming a commitment to the accords with Northern Ireland, when the president’s media team began herding reporters out of the room.

“On that point, Joe, we are completely at one. And I think nobody wants to see anything that interrupts or un-balances the Belfast Good Friday,” Mr Johnson was saying before aides began shouting over him.

They shut down the only query from a US reporter about the current migrant crisis on the US-Mexico border, preventing Mr Biden’s response from being audible.

This video is from the Hill. If you skip to near the end you can see the conference being broken up by White House staffers:

 

The Telegraph’s video is better; it goes longer and gives you a reporters-eye perspective. It is not readily downloadable, but you can watch it at the link above.

Reporters complained to Jen Psaki, who professed to know nothing about the incident. But really, no comment is necessary. The White House thinks it is better to interrupt the British Prime Minister in mid-answer and suffer the humiliation of herding reporters out of the room, rather than allow Joe Biden to answer a question. Enough said.

  

Water, Water Everywhere, But Not a Drop to Drink?

Posted: 22 Sep 2021 07:50 AM PDT

(Steven Hayward)It is long past time to check in with our friends at Kite & Key Media, a new venture founded and helmed by Vanessa Mendoza and Troy Senik. They are producing a series of snappy, short videos on current topics, and their most recent video below explains why there is something seriously stupid about having water shortages, even under drought conditions.

Hint: Remember the old joke about how if the Soviet Union took over Saudi Arabia, after a decade there’d be a shortage of sand? Well, maybe government control of water is a large part of the problem. And then there are some technological answers, as  this video explains.

 

  

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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION

What You Need To Know
Biden Hit With IMPEACHMENT Filing By Republicans Over Border Crisis And AfghanistanBiden deserves to be IMPEACHED!

[…read more]

George W. Bush To Headline Fundraiser For NeverTrumper Liz CheneyBush is going head to head against Trump!

[…read more]

Abbott Announces More Funding For Operation Lone StarTexas is being OVERRUN.

 

[…read more]



Trending Today
Johnny Depp Says ‘No One Is Safe’ From Cancel CultureHe’s seen cancel culture get “out of hand.”

[…read more]

House Democrats Just Undermined Biden – Pelosi Introduces Legislation To Take Away The President’s Power
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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK

 


90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE

 


91.) USA TODAY

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Daily Briefing
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23
Jackson State University student Kendra Daye, right, reacts as Tameiki Lee, a nurse with the Jackson-Hinds Comprehensive Health Center, injects her with the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine, in Jackson, Miss., across the street from the university, Tuesday,
Who gets the vaccine booster? A panel decides 💉
A CDC committee will vote on COVID-19 booster shots, the search for Gabby Petito’s fiancé is still on and more news to start your Thursday.
Good morning, Daily Briefing readers! Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine boosters might soon be available to folks over 65 and others at a higher risk of falling seriously ill from COVID-19: A critical Centers for Disease Control and Prevention committee will meet today to decide. And an ancient artifact from what is now Iraq that ended up in the hands of Hobby Lobby is set to return home.
It’s Steve and Jane with Thursday’s news.
🔵  New this morning: A prominent cheerleading choreographer is under investigation after he livestreamed on Facebook the aftermath of a violent incident in Mexico in which he allegedly pushed his boyfriend off a third-floor walkway.
🔴 Seven Days of 1961: Civil rights activists were imprisoned, beaten, forced to work in chain gangs, attacked with dogs. Despite those challenges, these Black Americans and their allies made significant strides in knocking down the walls of segregation.
⬇️ President Joe Biden’s job approval rating has hit a new low eight months into his term, according to a report released Wednesday by analytics firm Gallup.
🍗 Bought chicken in the last decade? You might get some money back in a class action lawsuit. Here’s how to claim.
😰 Everyone experiences tough days at work, but chronic stress can lead to burnout. These are the telltale signs of workplace burnout and what to do if you spot them.
🎧 On today’s 5 Things podcast, we look at the latest timelines for COVID-19 vaccine booster shots. You can listen to the podcast every day on Apple PodcastsSpotify, or on your smart speaker.

CDC panel to vote on who should receive COVID-19 booster shot

A committee that advises the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is scheduled to vote Thursday on who should be eligible for a booster dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine. The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday authorized a third Pfizer-BioNTech shot six months after the second dose for those 65 and older, younger people at high risk for severe disease, and workers whose jobs put them at extra risk for infection.  CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky is expected to quickly sign off on whatever the panel decides, making boosters available to more people within a few days.

The search continues for Brian Laundrie after Gabby Petito’s death was ruled a homicide

The search for Brian Laundrie, the fiancé of homicide victim Gabby Petito, will continue Thursday across a vast, alligator-infested Florida wetland , after a coroner confirmed that human remains found in a Wyoming national park were those of 22-year-old Petito. Police in North Port, Florida, have been searching the Carlton Reserve since the family of Laundrie said last week that he vanished while camping in the 25,000-acre wilderness area. Relatives said Laundrie left Sept. 14 to go hiking in the reserve. They filed a missing person report three days later saying they had found his car but did not find him. Since then, searchers have used dogs, drones and ATV vehicles to aid the difficult manhunt. He still has not been found.

Newsmakers in their own words: Integrating higher education in Georgia

Tommy Johnson spoke about the environment at the University of Georgia in 1961.
Tommy Johnson spoke about the environment at the University of Georgia in 1961.
USA TODAY graphic
On Jan. 11, 1961, Charlayne Hunter-Gault and Hamilton Holmes became the first Black students at the University of Georgia in Athens, one of the largest to resist integration seven years after the Supreme Court’s Brown v. Board of Education ruling banned segregation in education.
On Jan. 12, 1961, a white mob gathered outside the Myers Hall dormitory. They numbered 2,000 strong, a mix of KKK members, fellow students, community members and bystanders. They threw rocks at the dormitory and set off firecrackers that ignited small fires.
The hostile environment was by design as student reporter Tommy Johnson said that at one point, Georgia state lawmakers were calling students to spread messages of hate.
🔵 The “Seven Days of 1961” series: Americans stood up to racism in 1961 and changed history. This is their fight, in their words.
🔴 This is America: 1961, the year young activists helped change the course of American history.

WNBA playoffs tip off Thursday

The WNBA playoffs tip off Thursday night with two single-elimination games . The No. 6-seeded Chicago Sky will host No. 7 Dallas Wings (8 p.m. ET on ESPN2), and then the fifth-seeded Phoenix Mercury will host No. 8 New York Liberty (10 p.m. ET, ESPN2). The winners advance to the single-elimination second round, which takes place Sunday, when the lowest remaining seed will take on No. 3 Minnesota Lynx and the highest remaining seed plays No. 4 Seattle Storm, the reigning WNBA champions . The top-seeded Connecticut Sun and No. 2 Las Vegas Aces earned playoff byes until the best-of-five semifinals, which start on Sept. 28. The WNBA Finals tip off on Oct. 10.

What else people are reading:

🔴 “I’m tired of being afraid”: The woman at the center of a lawsuit against Nicki Minaj and her husband Kenneth Petty is speaking out about the couple’s alleged intimidation tactics.
😷 “Parallel epidemic”: COVID-19 is driving both physical and mental health crises among kids,  according to the leader of Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt.
⛈ Tropical Depression 18 formed in the Atlantic Ocean on Wednesday, with tracking models showing it could venture toward islands in the Caribbean Sea and potentially veer close to the U.S.
🔵 Only 5% of Americans in their 70s have dementia. There’s no reason to assume Joe Biden is one of them, unless you’re looking for political ammunition, writes USA TODAY Opinion columnist Jill Lawrence.
🎞 “Godfather of modern Black cinema”: Melvin Van Peebles, the icon behind ‘Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song,’ had died. He was 89.
Melvin Van Peebles in 2018
Melvin Van Peebles in 2018
Photo by Getty Images for TCM; USA TODAY graphic

Rare Gilgamesh Dream Tablet scheduled for return to Iraq

rare and ancient tablet which contains one of the world’s oldest works of literature will finally be returned to Iraq. In 2014, U.S. arts and craft store chain Hobby Lobby purchased the Gilgamesh Dream Tablet artifact for over $1.6 million. The tablet originated from now modern-day Iraq and features the poem of mythological hero Gilgamesh. In July, after discovering the auction house that sold the artifact did so under false pretenses, the U.S. Justice Department said it should not be owned by Hobby Lobby and it should be in Iraq instead. Hobby Lobby had planned to display the tablet in its Museum of the Bible. The formal handover ceremony of the tablet is scheduled for Thursday at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C.

Yet another rookie quarterback to start as the Texans turn to Davis Mills

Rookie Davis Mills will start at quarterback for the 1-1 Houston Texans Thursday night against the 2-0 Carolina Panthers (8:20 p.m. ET, NFL Network) with Tyrod Taylor out with a hamstring injury. Taylor left the game in the first half of Houston’s loss to the Cleveland Browns on Sunday. Mills, a third-round pick from Stanford, took over and threw a touchdown and an interception. Star quarterback Deshaun Watson remains on the team, but was not an option to fill in for Taylor, head coach David Culley said. Watson has been listed as inactive/not injury-related following his trade request and after 22 women filed lawsuits alleging sexual assault or harassment. Davis will become the fourth rookie quarterback to start a game in 2021 after Trevor Lawrence (Jacksonville Jaguars), Zach Wilson (New York Jets) and Mac Jones (New England Patriots).
🏈 NFL power rankings after Week 2: Raiders, Ravens rocket into top 10
Members of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers celebrate during their win over the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday, September 19, 2021 at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida.
Members of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers celebrate during their win over the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday, September 19, 2021 at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida.
USA TODAY Sports photo and graphic

ICYMI: Some of our top stories Wednesday

🍂 Autumn leaves, autumn sneeze, fall breeze and fall trees. Is it most accurate to say Sept. 22 is the start of fall or autumn?
🥦 ​​What is the Blue Zones diet? Here’s how you can eat like the people who live the longest.
🔵 Despite threats of repatriation to Haiti, migrant families are surviving in a camp beside the Rio Grande.
🛍 JCPenney is closing more stores after bankruptcy. Will yours shutter? See the list.
🍷 Americans are using alcohol to cope with pandemic stressNearly 1 in 5 report “heavy drinking.”

📸 Photo of the day: Stars wow on the red carpet at Rihanna event 📸

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 22: In this image released on September 22, Vanessa Hudgens attends Rihanna's Savage X Fenty Show Vol. 3 presented by Amazon Prime Video at The Westin Bonaventure Hotel & Suites in Los Angeles, California; and broadcast on September 24, 2021. (Photo by Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for Rihanna's Savage X Fenty Show Vol. 3 Presented by Amazon Prime Video) ORG XMIT: 775700045 ORIG FILE ID: 1341856954
Vanessa Hudgens attends Rihanna’s Savage X Fenty Show Vol. 3 presented by Amazon Prime Video at The Westin Bonaventure Hotel & Suites in Los Angeles on Wednesday, September 22.
Emma McIntyre, Getty Images for Rihanna’s Savag
Rihanna’s Savage X Fenty Show Vol. 3 kicked off in Los Angeles Wednesday night, with celebrities showing up and showing out on the red carpet for the affair. The event returns for a third consecutive year and will highlight her fashion line’s newest assortment of styles featuring an all-star lineup of models, actors and performers. The show will premiere on Amazon Prime Video on Friday.
Head here to see all the stars on the red carpet ahead of the event.
The Daily Briefing is free, but several stories we link to in this edition are subscriber-only. Please support our journalism and become a USA TODAY digital subscriber today.
Contributing: The Associated Press
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST


93.) JUST THE NEWS

Just The News Daily Newsletter

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DAILY NEWSLETTER

‘People are going to die’: Governors, lawmakers rip Biden’s partisan rationing of COVID treatment

Moderate Maryland Republican Gov. Larry Hogan demands answers on “sudden rationing” of “life-saving treatments,” as Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis vows, “We’re going to fight like hell to make sure that our folks get what they need.”

Read More


Congressman warns vaccine mandate for Navy SEALS could be ‘very detrimental’ to national security


West Wing Zinger: Trump blasts Bush for hosting Liz Cheney fundraiser


Democratic elder statesman torches partisan budget tactics: Not ‘how you govern in a democracy’


FDA approves booster shots for high-risk patients and people 65 and over


Biden’s job approval rating falls to 43%, lowest in presidency, Gallup


Youngkin leading McAuliffe among likely voters in Virginia gubernatorial race, poll shows


Florida to appeal federal judge’s ruling declaring ‘sanctuary city’ ban unconstitutional


McConnell says GOP won’t give Democrats votes to raise debt limit given their partisan budget plans


Whistleblower group seeks probe into whether VA announcement leaked to ‘enable insider trading’


House Democrats introduce $1 billion funding bill for Israel’s Iron Dome air defense system


New study shows Remdesivir reduces hospitalization in COVID-19 patients by 87%


French ambassador expected to return to U.S. following presidential phone call


Haitians being released into the US, report


Mississippi bans universities from requiring proof of COVID-19 vaccine


Oberlin College implements extreme mask mandate for students


White House reporters say snubbed on questions after Biden-Johnson presser, file complaint


New COVID-19 variant — R.1 — has some scientists on edge


Fed officials expect higher unemployment rates by year end, signal stimulus easing, interest hike


GOP Senators unveil legislation seeking to block dishonorable discharges for unvaccinated troops


Democrat Rep. Slotkin says within her party ‘desire to attack’ anything related to Israel


Taliban requests speaking slot at United Nations meeting


Four NY House Democrats call for closing of Rikers Island after 11 deaths this year at jail facility


Wisconsin tribes sue to stop wolf hunt, claim it violates treaties


“Those meetings were a mistake,” says a flustered Bill Gates during grilling about Jeffrey Epstein


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94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON

Today.
Untouchable Subjects. Fearless, Nonpartisan Reporting.
STUDY: Changes in women’s periods after Covid-19 vaccine deserve attention
After many public health officials and media outlets dismissed hundreds of thousands of reports of changes in menstrual cycle among women who got Covid-19 vaccine, a study out of the United Kingdom say the phenomenon deserves attention. The study, published in the British Medical Journal says that “a link is plausible and should be investigated.” […]
(FORUM) The many crises under the Biden administration in its first 8 months
“It was a righteous strike.” Only children and other innocent civilians killed. “There’s no border crisis.” This year’s number of illegal border crossers will be the highest in American history. “An extraordinary success.” 13 Americans and 200 innocent civilians murdered, hundreds of Americans stranded, billions in equipment left. “We won’t leave anyone behind.” You’re on […]
(LIST) More than 500 health care workers from several hospitals choose to quit rather than be forced to get Covid-19 vaccinations
Beckers Hospital Review has listed the number of reported resignations and firings from several hospital systems. In those systems alone, more than 500 health care workers have left their jobs either voluntarily or because they were fired. They include: 23 people fired from St. Claire HealthCare; 180 “terminations” from Med Center Health; 125 leaving IU […]
Sharyl Attkisson is a nonpartisan Investigative Journalist who tries to give you information others don’t want you to have.

So glad you could join us today!

— Sharyl Attkisson

Sharyl Attkisson
Investigative Journalist
Best Selling Author
 

 

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95.) RIGHTWING.ORG

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RIGHTWING.org
BONUS NEWS – SEPTEMBER 22, 2021
BREAKING NEWS: Top Biden Official Said It Was DESTROYED By Biden Administration!
Explosive report >>
Top Biden Official Said It Was DESTROYED By Biden Administration!
Read it Here >>
RECENT BONUS BRIEF
FDA Panel Says NO – They’re Cracking Down
An abrupt order >>
Judges STOP Democrat Scheme – Finally Step In
This is HUGE >>
BREAKING: Biggest Democrat LIE Exposed – It’s Finally Revealed!
They’re playing with fire >>
Biggest Democrat LIE Exposed - It's Finally Revealed!
Read it Here >>
Special: Holy Grail Painkiller Goes Viral >>
RECENT
Joe Biden JUST Tried To Pull A Fast One – It Blew Up In His Face!
Utterly DISGRACEFUL >>
Democrats DEALT MAJOR BLOW – SHE Ends Their Scheme
It’s game over! >>
Biden Tries New Negotiation Twist – False Logic
Can’t spin this! >>
RIGHTWING.org
Rightwing.org represents the majority interested in protecting truth, justice, and the American way. We are the mortal enemy of misinformation, extremes, corruption, fake news, racial division, environmental assaults and the disarmament of Americans. Rightwing.org curates, summarizes and fact checks the day’s hottest news and views giving people a source of real American news that’s easier to trust.
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96.) NOT THE BEE

Not the Bee

Not the Bee Daily Newsletter

Sep 23, 2021

Sponsored By: Gundry MD

Constant Fatigue Could Be A Warning Sign– Here’s The Simple “Fix”

ImageThere are 3 so-called “superfoods” you should never eat. They may be toxic to your body and might be draining your energy. These are foods that are being marketed to you as superfoods for your health. The truth is these foods might be draining your energy, making you fatigued, and causing you to gain weight.

Learn More Here

Remember when people warned that cheapening impeachment would make it become a regular thing?

ImageSeveral Republican lawmakers have filed articles of impeachment against President Joe Biden, saying that Biden is “not capable of being Commander-In-Chief.”

Before the pandemic Chinese scientists were trying to infect WILD BATS with genetically enhanced coronaviruses but don’t worry the virus didn’t come from a lab you guys

ImageYou’ve been told, again and again, that the SARS-Cov-2 virus did not emerge from a major coronavirus laboratory in China that just happens to sit a few miles from the first known outbreak.

John Kerry Was Asked About Working With China Despite The Confirmed Genocide Of Uyghur Muslims And Explained “Life Is Always Full Of Tough Choices”

ImageYou just have to love the competence and professionalism the Biden administration exhibits on a daily basis.

1.5 MILLION Students Left Traditional Public Schools Over The Last Year

ImageCovid has had a LOT of downsides for students, between crazy lockdowns, mask mandates, insane teachers unions, and just generally following the ScIeNcE. It’s no surprise that a large number of parents were fed up with the public school system and took this opportunity to make the switch.

Politico just confirmed those Hunter Biden emails from before the election are real … but I was 100% guaranteed it was all a hoax

ImageRemember those emails from Hunter Biden that revealed he was entangled in a corrupt pay-to-play scheme with the Ukrainians, the Chinese, and others (oh, and that Joe Biden AKA “The Big Guy” might have been involved)?

A speech academy in Singapore is attempting to lure kids to sign up using terrifying clowns and someone actually thought this would be a good idea

ImageEvery so often a headline comes along that just completely kills it—the kind of headline you remember 40 years later, the kind that goes something like, oh, I don’t know, “Singapore speech academy apologizes for sending men dressed as clowns to schools and asking kids to follow them:”

Wall Street Journal writer says Apple’s new idea to scan your face and typing behavior to predict mental health has “fascinating implications” and sure, let’s go with that

ImageLots of bad ideas have “fascinating implications” should they actually take root.

Have a peek into the life of the Dominican Americans who turn their automobiles into musical Death Stars

ImageRemember how cool you thought you were in high school driving around with that secondhand subwoofer in the trunk of your brother’s Toyota Camry?

BLM is “putting NYC on notice” over its vax passport mandate that unequally discriminates against black citizens

ImageI love it:

Reporters filed a formal complaint with the White House press secretary that Joe Biden never answers their questions and boy is this deliciously ironic

ImageFormer President Donald Trump had a famously hostile relationship with the press, but the key word there is relationship—the man actually spoke to the media, engaged with them, and dealt with them in an unscripted and off-the-cuff fashion.

Scientists have found evidence that a meteor strike “1,000 times more powerful than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima” obliterated the ancient cities of Sodom and Gomorra 🤯

ImageIt’s funny how this Bible thing keeps being proven true:

Uma Thurman wrote favorably about having an abortion at 15 but she can’t decide if she aborted a “pregnancy” or a baby

ImageThere have been many impassioned pleas on behalf of abortion rights since Texas passed its broad abortion ban (and successfully defended it in the Supreme Court). But one, from famous actress Uma Thurman, inadvertently underscores just how terrible abortion is, and just how important is the fight against it.

Stunning and brave: The British prime minister apparently finally admitted the existence of one of his children he has avoided discussing for years

ImageIn recent years much anguish has been made over the sorry state of the modern family in Western civilization. Yet British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Tuesday gave a shining example to fathers everywhere by finally acknowledging the total number of children he has helped bring into the world:

This high school football team was down 24-7 with 69 seconds left in the game and somehow came back to win. Yes, there’s an ESPN broadcast to prove it.

ImageThere’s no way this was staged, but this seems staged.

One of the nation’s top doctors just admitted that nobody really knows where the whole six-foot social-distancing thing came from

ImageRemember last spring when everyone, everywhere suddenly knew that you had to keep six feet of distance between you and everyone else lest you get sick and die? Yeah, one of the nation’s most prominent physicians is admitting that that whole rule kinda sorta just came out of nowhere:

Tucker on the border crisis: “Biden did this on purpose” 💥

ImageHooooo boy that’s a heater!

You must not “do your own research,” they say. It’s just too dangerous.

ImageThe suggestion that the sovereign citizens of a democratic republic becoming informed on the issues of the day the better to instruct their employees (their elected representatives) as to their wishes has become a dangerous vector in spreading “misinformation.”

Former Detroit Police Chief James Craig is beating Mitten Queen Gov. Whitmer by 6 points in a new poll

ImageHer Royal Majesty must not be pleased:

Watch Bill Gates get extremely uncomfortable when asked about his time spent with Jeffrey Epstein during PBS interview

ImageTimestamped for your convenience:

Please, ask me why

ImageThere’s plenty of pop culture tendencies that manifest in our overly-connected world of social media that are both obnoxious and obtuse. Chief among them perhaps is the habit of pseudo-intellectuals posting a premise or claim, only to exhibit indignation when someone dares to question or challenge it.

Libs are now saying minimum wage should not be just $15, it should be $26. I say it should be $100 MILLION-BILLION AN HOUR.

ImageI guess the plan is to just raise it to infinity…

In case you need another example of how backward the Taliban is, Afghan barbers have seen sales plummet because men are now afraid to get their hair cut

ImageHow would it feel to live someplace where you were afraid of getting your hair cut because you might be hauled away and beheaded for violating Sharia law?

The national bus driver shortage is so bad that a high school had to charter a party bus with stripper poles in it for a field trip 😐

ImageWe know that the ongoing nationwide worker shortage has led to a shortage of school bus drivers so severe that some school authorities have been paying parents to drive kids to school.

Conor McGregor threw out the first pitch at Wrigley Field last night and it was absolutely, historically terrible

ImageOkay, say what you want about Conor McGregor, it’s clear that he DOES NOT KNOW how to throw a baseball:

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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT

 


98.) NEWSMAX

Breaking News from Newsmax.com

 

Murders Increased by 29 Percent in 2020, Biggest Bump Since Record-Keeping Began

Special: Is There an Error in the Bible?

Officials: Many Migrants From Border Camp Staying in US, Not Being Deported as Promised

After Fence-Mending Biden-Macron Call, French Envoy to Return to US

Biden’s Del Rio Fiasco! 6pm ET Sen. Ron Johnson talks Biden’s dangerous border and immigration policy with Sean Spicer and Lyndsay Keith — Find Us Here

Special: Why Christians Get Sick

Gallup Poll: Biden’s Approval Hits Record Low

Biden Meets With Democrats as $3.5T Plan Faces Party Split

Special: Rex MD Has Changed the Men’s Sexual Health Landscape Forever

GOP Not on Board as Govt Shutdown Looms, Debt Limit Showdown Approaches

Sen. Johnson to Newsmax: Mayorkas Lying About Illegal Immigrant Numbers


SPONSOR

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At first, we were quite skeptical, and we even asked the pastor point blank…
“Are you saying that God made a mistake?”
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“God doesn’t make mistakes. But 1800 years ago, we believe a biblical translator DID.”
The pastor then went on to explain his theory…
“It is our belief that ONE, single, mistranslated word in the bible — which occurred about 200 years after the death of Jesus — is responsible for an incredible amount of needless suffering.”
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PS: According to the pastor (and maybe he’s just being paranoid but…)
certain left-leaning departments of our government are actively trying to Suppress.
Watch the secret he exposes in his controversial video

 

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99.) MARK LEVIN

September 22, 2021

September 22, 2021

On Wednesday’s Mark Levin Show, A belief that Republicans will slaughter the Democrats in the 2022 midterm elections is no reason to sit on one’s laurels. Americans must organize now that a movement has been built. After 10 weeks on the New York Times bestsellers list and one million copies of Mark Levin’s American Marxism book now sold, there are one million people that understand how American Marxists work. They are better prepared to get active and counter President Biden’s policies and the American Marxists implementing them. Then, the Biden Administration is sabotaging America. Democrats feed on a divided, and economically weak America because that’s when the American Marxists step in to offer all sorts of free government support. This is the Cloward and Piven strategy of overwhelming the system, crashing it, blaming it, and transforming it. Later, a group of 15,000 Haitians has illegally crossed the border into Del Rio, Texas. The media goes after the border patrol on horseback instead of after Biden’s policies. Anyone challenging this gets labeled a xenophobic racist. This is how the radicals change the voter rolls, by changing the citizenry. Meanwhile, when Cubans that escaped communism were rejected while all other immigrants escaping their countries are welcomed. Afterward, Democrats are attacking the funding of Israel’s Iron Dome yet they never complained about the massive spending bills they’ve advanced. Finally, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy calls in with an update on why Democrats defunded the Iron Dome that protects Israel because the pro-BDS anti-Israel leftwing is running the Party.

 

THIS IS FROM:

Mark Levin Show
RIP, Angelo Codevilla

AP
Officials: Many Haitian migrants are being released in US

Daily Mail
House approves bill to avert government shutdown and suspend debt limit but shoots down Republican attempt to add $1 billion in funding for Israel’s Iron Dome

Washington Post
George W. Bush to hold fundraiser with Rep. Liz Cheney next month

Rumble
Schumer Blames Trump’s ‘Xenophobic’ Policies For The Flood of Haitians At The Border

PJ Media
Mayorkas: Just 3 Percent of Afghan Evacuees in U.S. Are Special Immigrant Visa Holders

Gallup
Biden’s Approval Rating Hits New Low of 43%; Harris’ Is 49%

Fox 5 DC
Loudoun County leaders taking up reparations proposal

The College Fix
UC Berkeley’s latest ‘cluster hire’ fails to add intellectual diversity

The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.

Image used with permission of Getty Images / Kevin Dietsch


100.) WOLF DAILY

 


101.) THE GELLER REPORT

View Online

Breaking news stories the media complex won’t cover. Share widely.

For more information on any post below, click through to read the full article on our website.


GOP Sen. Cotton Blasts Biden’s UN General Assembly Speech ‘Disgrace’

President Biden’s speech at the UN General Assembly was a total disaster. Biden declared that the U.S was entering a ‘new era’ of U.S diplomacy. What Biden should have said is that the U.S was entering a ‘new era’ of appeasement. In his speech, …


President Xi Pivots On Chinese Capitalism, Pivots to Mao’s Socialist Vision

“Two world wars, three monstrous dictatorships-in Soviet Russia, Nazi Germany, Red China-plus every lesser variant of devastating socialist experimentation in a global spread of brutality and despair, have not prompted modern intellectuals to …


Biden, Democrats Freeing Haitian Migrants Into U.S. On ‘Very, Very Large Scale,’ Report Says

The end of your country, as you know it.Biden Admin Freeing Haitian Migrants Into U.S. On ‘Very, Very Large Scale,’ Report Says

By Ryan Saavedra • Daily Wire • Sep 22, 2021 •

The Biden administration is reportedly releasing …


New Nazi Party: Top Democrat Admits Forces In Her Party Have ‘Desire To Attack’ Anything ‘Related To State Of Israel’

Like the Nazis, the Democrats are scapegoating the Jews in their totalitarian march to complete control and absolute power.Top Democrat Admits Forces In Her Party Have ‘Desire To Attack’ Anything ‘Related To State Of Israel’

By …


U.S.-Based Muslim Preacher Defends Slavery, Including Sex Slavery, Under Sharia

At least Daniel Haqiqatjou is honest, unlike so manyother Islamic apologists in the West. And though many do dissemble to lull Westerners into complacency regarding Sharia, others have been forthright about this as well.”Here is what is …


Biden Dems, ABC, CBS Smear Border Patrol Agents With Lies About Horse Reins, Calling Them ‘Whips’ Used on Illegals

Communist propaganda is now reported as news., These are domestic enemies that must be defeated.Schumer, Zuckerberg Lobby Use Horse Videos to Denounce Title 42 Migration Barrier

Top Border Official Blasts Psaki – Says Admin Approved …


Biden’s Migrants Hijack Transport Bus

While Americans protesting election fraud back in January are rotting away in solitary confinement. The new Democrat voters (illegal aliens)  are as lawless as Democrat party leadership. You, on the other hand, are at the mercy of these …


Biden’s Agencies Plan to Resettle Afghans Across Many Swing States

Their plan all along, sheep.Related: Border Patrol Chief Issue Dire Warning About Who Is Sneaking In –

Biden’s Agencies Plan to Resettle Afghans Across Many Swing States President Joe Biden’s federal agencies, with the help of …


Antisemitic Pelosi and House Democrats KILL Funding for Israel’s Iron Dome Defense System

The Democrats continue to follow the path of the worst, totalitarian regimes in history. The Democrats won’t help Jews defend themselves but they’ll gift a nuclear weapon to the brutal Islamic Republic of Iran.House Democrats pull $1 billion …


GOP Reps Introduce Articles Of Impeachment Against Biden: ‘Not Capable Of Being Commander-In-Chief’

Biden’s gross errors of judgment demand impeachment. We’ll see if the Democrats have reduced it to a purely political tool (as we saw with Trump). But it’s not Biden per se, it’s the Democrat party of treason. The whole party should be impeached. …


NY FREEDOM RALLY! Worldwide Rally For Freedom from Vaccine Mandates, Columbus Circle to Times Square

September 18, 2021. 1 pm.  The “Say No to Vaccine Mandates and Vaccine Passports” protest began at Columbus Circle.

Before the march, a few people spoke to the eclectic crowd. VIDEO 1

Once the march started for Times Square, I …


US Troops’ Rage At Their Leaders Grows Unless There’s Deep Reform

Mid-level officers are in a rage — a dangerous phenomenon that in many other nations triggers insurrections and coups.Overdue, I’d say.

US troops’ rage at their leaders will grow unless there’s deep reform

By Glenn H. Reynolds, …


Anti-Forced Conversion Bill Draws Anger From British Islamic Clerics

This is sharia law – of course they are against it.Anti-forced conversion bill draws concern from clerics

Clerics and religious scholars have expressed serious reservations over the draft of the anti-forced conversion bill.

By: …

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We cover the news for you, and as always – you’re our best source!

 


102.) CNS

 


103.) RELIABLE NEWS

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RELIABLE NEWS
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BREAKING: Crisis In CONGRESS – Fight Breaks Out Among Lawmakers!
breaking crisis in congress another government shutdown
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LOOK: Florida Business FORCED to Shut Down
U.S. Gymnasts Step Forward – Expose Top Level Government Officials
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104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL

 


105.) DC CLOTHESLINE

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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS

 


107.) BECKER NEWS

 


108.) SONS OF LIBERTY

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109.) STARS & STRIPES

 

 


110.) RIGHT & FREE

Charity That Changes Lives

Government-run schools fail kids. Teachers unions and education bureaucrats say, “We need more money!” But America already spends a fortune on public…

The Ben & Jerry’s executives must have had a brain freeze when they decided to do this.

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111.) UNITED VOICE

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[HAPPENING NOW] – Democrats Makes WILD Promise
D.C. Officials Scramble Amid The Chaos! >>
[LOOK] – Newt Gingrich Says THIS Will Stop Democrats
Wow. >>
 


JUST IN: Benjamin Netanyahu HUMILIATES Joe Biden In Shocking Act
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Netanyahu Mocks Biden,Bennett Meeting
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[LOOK]: Trump Family Member RESPONDS After Shocking Images Found
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Hello my fellow Patriots.I’m Cade Courtley, former Navy SEAL Platoon Commander, sniper, and author of the SEAL Survival Guide.If 2020 has taught us anything… it’s not IF you need a backup plan… it’s WHEN.A deadly pandemic, blackouts sweeping the nation, wildfires, hurricanes, social unrest and crumbling power grids.Crisis mode has become the new normal.Facts are facts. It’s sad, but true. And you see the need to protect yourself and your family.Let me be clear. One of the best ways to protect your own safety and comfort is to guarantee you’re fully ready, even when the power goes out.Nothing feels more vulnerable than that split second when you realize you’re sitting in a dangerous blackout.All your critical devices are now on borrowed time. Communications, comfort and protection – all of it is suddenly called into question.

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112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO

 


113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES

Bombshell Report: Maricopa Official Resigns After Election Audio Leak - Dead People Voted, 'Bulls***' County Audit

‘I don’t feel comfortable with Dominion,’ Chucri allegedly said on the leaked tape.

Clarence Thomas and the Declaration of Independence

Last week, Supreme Court Associate Justice Clarence Thomas arrived at the University of Notre Dame to speak about the Declaration of Independence. Speaking…

Insurgent Conservatives

PO Box 8161 Greenwood, IN 46142

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114.) WAKING TIMES

 


115.) UNCOVER DC

 

UncoverDC

Actual Journalism™

Excerpts:

VoterGA Lawsuit:Ballot Inspection Expected

The VoterGA Fulton County lawsuit to gain access to inspect and scan approximately 147,000 mail-in and absentee ballots will reconvene on Nov. 15. In a hearing on Sept. 20, Henry County Superior Court Judge, Brian Amero, gave the Fulton County attorney, Don Samuel, 20 days to allow Secretary of State, Brad Raffensberger and the Georgia Bureau […]

The post VoterGA Lawsuit:Ballot Inspection Expected appeared first on UncoverDC.

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Lawsuit: Facebook Overpaid FTC by $5 Billion to Shield Zuckerberg

According to a pair of lawsuits made public on Tuesday, Facebook board members overpaid the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) an extra $5 billion in fines to settle a complaint by the agency and keep CEO Mark Zuckerberg from being held personally liable for the Cambridge Analytic data breach. The lawsuits claim the massive payment was contingent upon the […]

The post Lawsuit: Facebook Overpaid FTC by $5 Billion to Shield Zuckerberg appeared first on UncoverDC.

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WI Special Counsel Video: Possible Forensics Investigation

Former state Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman is featured in a Sept. 20 video on a new Rumble account for the Wisconsin Office of Special Counsel. He describes the investigation he is undertaking, one of multiple ongoing election integrity efforts in Wisconsin. Gableman was appointed to head the investigation by Republican Speaker of the State Assembly Robin Vos in June. As head […]

The post WI Special Counsel Video: Possible Forensics Investigation appeared first on UncoverDC.

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U.S. Farmer Co-op Hit With $5.9 Million Ransomware Attack

In an attack on U.S. agriculture, Iowa-based NEW Cooperative, Inc., a member-owned farmer’s feed and grain cooperative, was hit sometime on or around last Friday by a ransomware attack, forcing the company to take its systems offline. The BlackMatter group behind the attack has set a $5.9 million ransom demand. With over sixty locations throughout […]

The post U.S. Farmer Co-op Hit With $5.9 Million Ransomware Attack appeared first on UncoverDC.

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Congress, Executive, Judicial Branches, USPS Exempt From Vaccine Mandates

Congress is exempt from the COVID-19 vaccine mandate, as are the Judicial branch and the United States Post Office (USPS). These governmental branches are exempt in their own right—but not because of Biden’s EO. The vaccine mandate exemption in Biden’s EO applies only to the Executive Branch. Biden has ordered the Department of Labor—in cooperation with the […]

The post Congress, Executive, Judicial Branches, USPS Exempt From Vaccine Mandates appeared first on UncoverDC.

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HHS Whistleblower Talks COVID, VAERS, Jabs With Project Veritas

The new release from Project Veritas features interviews and an undercover video of two Registered Nurses and an Emergency Room Doctor for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) speaking out about a government coverup of adverse reactions to the COVID-19 jabs. “The government doesn’t want to show that the darn vaccine is […]

The post HHS Whistleblower Talks COVID, VAERS, Jabs With Project Veritas appeared first on UncoverDC.

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Chess Marine Singles Out CENTCOM Chief McKenzie

UncoverDC has previously reported on Marine Lieutenant Colonel Stuart Scheller’s demand for accountability from “American leadership” involved in military activity in Afghanistan.  Scheller singled out Central Command (CENTCOM) Chief General Frank McKenzie accusing him of dereliction of duty resulting in the death of 13 servicemembers during the evacuation at the airport in Kabul. He announced he […]

The post Chess Marine Singles Out CENTCOM Chief McKenzie appeared first on UncoverDC.

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