Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday November 19, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 11.19.21
Good Friday morning.
As Thanksgiving approaches, we ask our loyal Sunburn fans — particularly those in The Process — to let us know what you’re grateful for this year. We will publish the comments in our Tuesday edition — the last one for the holiday week. Please send your emails to Peter@FloridaPolitics.com.
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Spotted — At a fundraiser for Attorney General Ashley Moody in Palmetto: Bill and Julie Galvano, Fiona McFarland, Will Robinson, Jack Brill, Ed Brodsky, George Cruz, Mark Flanagan, Jayne Kocher, and Gary Kompothecras.
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
Tweet, tweet:
—@USCBO: CBO estimates that the funding for tax enforcement activities provided by H.R. 5376, the Build Back Better Act, would increase outlays by $80 billion and revenues by $207 billion, thus decreasing the deficit by $127 billion, through 2031.
Tweet, tweet:
—@Debbie_Mayfield: Thank you, @GovRonDeSantis, for signing the most pro-freedom, anti-mandate action taken by any state in the nation. Florida will NOT back down in fighting against an administration that has made clear they do not care about individual or parents’ rights. We have #keptFloridafree
—@Annette_Taddeo: At his news conference today, @GovRonDeSantis did nothing but spread dangerous misinformation about the pandemic — choosing once again to ignore science and appease primary voters in Iowa for his future political ambitions.
—@AndrewLearned: If the Governor really cared about #Brandon‘s families he wouldn’t be imposing a COVID TAX on our small businesses and health care heroes … I’d remind the Governor that divisive childish politics is what lost him and former President (Donald) Trump Brandon last November for the first time in more than 25 years.
—@cyndibrillhart: I really am dumbfounded by the people who post laughing emojis in response to someone being sick with Covid and seem to attack anyone who suggests avoiding the virus. So they think human suffering is humorous and they want people to get sick? We truly are doomed.
—@AlexTDaugherty: Excited to say I’m joining @politico to helm the Morning Transportation newsletter and report on infrastructure, supply chains and all sorts of transportation issues. I begin my new beat after the Thanksgiving holiday.
—@Photoriphy: ✨An announcement✨ Tuesday, December 7th will be my last day at @TDOnline. It has been an honor and a privilege to have a front-row seat to all things Tallahassee for the past three years.
—@MorningMoneyBen: if you are selling me a 30 lobster roll, I better watch you extract the lobster from the sea, make the roll in front of me, bib me up, hand feed it to me and then give me a nice neck and back rub.
— DAYS UNTIL —
‘Hawkeye’ premieres — 5; FSU vs. UF — 8; Florida Chamber 2021 Annual Insurance Summit begins — 12; Jacksonville special election to fill seat vacated by Tommy Hazouri’s death — 18; ‘Sex and the City’ revival premieres — 20; Steven Spielberg’s ’West Side Story’ premieres — 21; ’Spider-Man: No Way Home’ premieres — 21; ’The Matrix: Resurrections’ released — 35; ’The Book of Boba Fett’ premieres on Disney+ — 40; Private sector employees must be fully vaccinated or tested weekly — 46; final season of ‘This Is Us’ begins — 46; CES 2022 begins — 47; NFL season ends — 51; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 53; Florida’s 20th Congressional District Election — 53; Special Elections in Senate District 33, House District 88 & 94 — 53; Florida Chamber’s 2022 Legislative Fly-In and Reception — 53; Florida TaxWatch’s 2022 State of the Taxpayer Day — 54; Joel Coen’s ’The Tragedy of Macbeth’ on Apple TV+ — 56; NFL playoffs begin — 57; XXIV Olympic Winter Games begins — 77; Super Bowl LVI — 86; Daytona 500 — 93; CPAC begins — 97; St. Pete Grand Prix — 98; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 104; ’Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 171; ’Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 192; ’Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 196; ’Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 232; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 243; ’Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 322; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 357; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 360; ‘Avatar 2’ premieres — 392; ‘Captain Marvel 2’ premieres — 455; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 616. ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 700; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 980.
“Ron DeSantis signs anti-vax mandates bills into law even as some supporters grumble” via Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — Workers in Florida have new protections against being fired for refusing to get a COVID-19 vaccine after DeSantis signed a quartet of bills Thursday that put new restrictions on vaccine mandates by employers. The new laws are deemed a political victory by DeSantis, but they fall short of what he originally pushed lawmakers to pass and what supporters who testified in committee hearings wanted. Democrats criticized the Special Session DeSantis called to pass the bills, calling it “political theater” designed to help DeSantis’ re-election next year and set him up for a run for the presidency in 2024.
—”Florida lawmakers wrap up Special Session called by DeSantis to blunt Joe Biden on vaccines” via John Kennedy of USA Today Network
— SPECIAL SESSION —
“DeSantis questioned if bill signing in Brandon, Florida was troll on Biden administration” via WFLA — DeSantis’ decision to sign four anti-COVID-19 vaccine mandate bills in Brandon, Florida drew questions from reporters Thursday afternoon. The Governor was asked whether his choice to hold Thursday’s news conference at Brandon Honda was a troll on the Biden administration, referring to the meme phrase popularized on social media criticizing President Joe Biden. With a smirk on his face, DeSantis replied, “I think that Brandon, Florida is a great American city. I think the people here are fantastic.” Cheers of “let’s go Brandon” erupted from the crowd of attendees. DeSantis drew similar cheers at an event earlier this month when he referred to Biden’s administration as “the Brandon administration.”
“Linda Stewart defends making vaccine mandate probes secret, citing input from Disney, Tampa Bay Bucs” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — Stewart said Thursday she spoke with representatives of The Walt Disney Co., Florida Power & Light, and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers before casting a controversial vote to exempt from public disclosure the names of businesses being investigated for imposing vaccine mandates. Stewart’s vote is drawing fire from her own Party for not siding with most Democrats on the one bill they had leverage over Republicans in this week’s Special Session. But Stewart said she wanted to protect businesses from being publicly named over investigations that might be based on frivolous complaints from “anti-vaxxers.”
“Where were all the missing Senate Dems during the caucus meeting earlier this week?” via Issac Morgan of Florida Politics — Senate Democratic Leader Lauren Book was not in attendance Wednesday at a caucus meeting with colleagues. She also was gone when Senators debated and voted on Special Session legislation in the Florida Senate chamber that evening. It’s still not entirely clear why so many Senate Democrats failed to attend a caucus meeting earlier in the day. But Book was marked as “excused” during the Special Session in the Senate chamber Wednesday evening, according to legislative records, when members voted on key initiatives that Republicans approved related to COVID-19 vaccine and mask mandates.
—”How did Tampa Bay lawmakers vote on vaccine mandate bills?” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times
— DATELINE TALLY —
“Wilton Simpson to Army Corps: Make sure state has a say in Lake O water allocation” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Senate President Simpson is asking the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to adopt clear language allowing Florida to maintain some control of the Lake Okeechobee water supply as the Corps works to finalize language for the lake’s new regulation schedule. Simpson, who is running in 2022 to become the state’s next Agriculture Commissioner, wrote a letter Wednesday to Col. James Booth, commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Jacksonville District. That letter was sent one day after the Corps released its optimal model run Tuesday. That model lays out the Corps’ main priorities in the new Lake Okeechobee System Operating Manual (LOSOM). The Corps is set to spell out the manual’s language by December, and Simpson wants to make sure the state still has a say.
“Anthony Rodriguez bill would require American iron and steel in public works projects” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Taking cues from an almost 89-year-old federal procurement law and a prominent Florida county, Rep. Rodriguez has filed a bill calling for iron and steel used in future state infrastructure contracts to be American-made. Rodriguez this week filed HB 619, which would require Florida at large and government entities throughout the state to use iron and steel products produced in the United States. The new rule, if enacted, would become effective on July 1, 2022. It would apply to most types of projects, including construction, maintenance, repair, renovation and remodeling of buildings, roads, streets, sewers, storm drains, water systems and utilities, among other things.
“Hospital executive says COVID-19 liability protections need to be extended” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — A top executive at one of the state’s largest hospitals says extending COVID-19 liability protections for health care providers is a top priority for the 2022 Legislative Session that begins in January. “We need to be protected just like we protected the citizens of this great state,” said Tampa General Hospital President and CEO John Couris. The COVID-19 liability protections for nursing homes, hospitals, and physicians that lawmakers passed earlier this year expire in March 2022. That means to remain in effect, lawmakers need to pass additional legislation. The COVID-19 liability protections for general businesses, though, remain in effect.
“Lobbying compensation: Johnston & Stewart nets $730K in Q3” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Named partners Jeff Johnston and Amanda Stewart launched the firm two years ago, and alongside lobbyist Anita Berry they have since built a portfolio of nearly 50 clients. Reports for the quarter ending Sept. 30 show those principals shipped the firm at least $500,000 for help in the Legislature and another $230,000 for executive branch lobbying. Johnston & Stewart’s most lucrative Q3 contract was with the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office, which paid $60,000 overall — $45,000 on the legislative report and another $15,000 in the executive. Two other Tampa Bay-area interests, Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital and TECO Energy, occupied the firm’s report’s No. 2 and No. 3 spots.
“Lobbying compensation: Rubin Turnbull & Associates banked $1.6M in Q3” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Founder Bill Rubin, managing partner Heather Turnbull and lobbyists Melissa Akeson, Erica Chanti, Jacqui Carmona, Jodi Davidson, Christopher Finkbeiner, Zach Hubbard and Matthew Sacco handled the needs of 87 clients, pulling down $791,000 in the Legislature and $871,000 in the executive branch. HCA Healthcare was the anchor client, cutting a $56,000 check for legislative lobbying and matching it in the executive branch. The health care industry is one of the top moneymakers for Rubin Turnbull. In addition to HCA, the firm reps two massive health insurers: Aetna and Molina Healthcare. The second-largest contracts in Rubin Turnbull’s portfolio are with sugar company Florida Crystals and The Richman Group of Florida, a top-10 apartment rental company. Both showed up with $35,000 on each report, or $70,000 total.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Brian Ballard, Ballard Partners: Fresh-Med
Louis Betz, Louis Betz & Associates: Triad Drones
Amy Bisceglia, AB Governmental Affairs: Claude Pepper Foundation
Barney Bishop, Barney Bishop Consulting: Project LIFT
Laura Boehmer, David Browning, Rachel Cone, Mercer Fearington, Clark Smith, The Southern Group: City of Palm Coast, Emerald Coast Striping
Nicholas Matthews, Becker & Poliakoff: Captiva Erosion Prevention District
Gerard O’Rourke, Converge Government Affairs of Florida: Village of Key Biscayne
William Wilson, Wilson Group Consulting: Airbnb
Sharonda Wright-Placide, Rubin Turnbull & Associates: City of Fort Lauderdale
—STATEWIDE—
“Florida lawsuit over DeSantis cutting off $300 federal unemployment benefits is still alive” via Caroline Glenn of the Orlando Sentinel — A lawsuit challenging DeSantis’ decision to cut off federal unemployment payments early is still alive, although it’s unclear how likely it is to recoup any money for out-of-work Floridians who lost out on benefits. A group of attorneys filed the lawsuit in July in hopes of forcing DeSantis to reinstate the program, and months ago, a Leon County circuit court judge denied their request for an emergency injunction and said the Governor had the legal right to halt the $300 payments. But a judge has yet to rule on the lawsuit itself. At stake are thousands of dollars in federal jobless benefits from the weeks in between when DeSantis pulled the plug on the program on June 26 to the Sept. 6 expiration date Congress set.
“Florida files legal challenge to Medicare, Medicaid vaccine rule” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Florida is asking a judge to block a vaccine mandate from the Biden administration that calls on health care providers reliant on millions in federal aid to impose mandates for their employees. The state filed its legal challenge late Wednesday in a federal court in Pensacola, the same day the Florida Legislature passed a quartet of bills designed to blunt vaccine mandates placed on private companies. “For a myriad of reasons, many health care workers in Florida will refuse the vaccine and be forced into unemployment, triggering a cascade of harmful effects across the state,” Moody wrote in her filing. If the court does not issue a preliminary injunction banning the mandate by Dec. 6, Moody’s office asked the court to issue a temporary restraining order.
“Congressional subcommittee launches investigation into free speech violations at UF” via Jimena Tavel of the Miami Herald — A House subcommittee launched an investigation Thursday into whether the University of Florida is violating professors’ First Amendment rights and their academic freedom, sending a letter demanding records related to the university’s conflict-of-interest policy. In the 10-page letter dated Nov. 18 and addressed to UF President Kent Fuchs, two Democrats expressed “deep concern” that UF is “censoring its faculty based on viewpoint.” Rep. Jamie Raskin is chair of the U.S. House Subcommittee on Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, which will direct the inquiry.
“The Florida DOT’s latest ‘Billionaire Boulevard’ plan has rural Florida outraged” via Craig Pittman of Florida Phoenix — I am talking about the Northern Turnpike Extension, which is supposed to branch off from the Florida Turnpike in Wildwood and head north toward some as-yet-unnamed terminus. At least two of the potential routes show it cutting through Levy County. The Levy County routes steamroll right through the longleaf pine flatwoods and swamps of the 58,000-acre Goethe State Forest, as well as smashing a hole in the Marjorie Harris Carr Cross-Florida Greenway, a currently unbroken 110-mile linear park that stretches from the Gulf of Mexico to the Atlantic Ocean. “They’re trying to sneak this in through the back door!” said Robbie Blake, a 75-year-old Levy County activist.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“Florida COVID-19 update: 2,053 new cases added to toll, hospitalizations on the decline” via Devoun Cetoute of the Miami Herald — Florida reported 2,053 COVID-19 cases and no new deaths on Wednesday. The Florida Department of Health will most likely add more deaths to Wednesday’s total, increasing it from zero. The state has done this in the past when it has added cases and deaths to previous days during the pandemic. In all, Florida has recorded at least 3,676,634 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 60,846 deaths. On average, the state has added 61 deaths and 1,397 cases per day in the past seven days. There were 1,388 people hospitalized for COVID-19 in Florida. Hospitalized COVID-19 patients decreased by 27 from Wednesday’s report.
“Scott Rivkees, former Florida Surgeon General, leaving the University of Florida” via Jeffrey Schweers and Danielle Ivanov of USA Today Network — Dr. Rivkees, the embattled former Florida surgeon general who was kept out of the public eye for more than a year of the COVID-19 pandemic for recommending people wear masks until a vaccine was developed, is leaving the University of Florida. Rivkees, who also has been a professor of pediatrics at the UF College of Medicine, told the school on Oct. 15 that he was resigning his post effective Jan. 31, 2022, UF Health spokesman Ken Garcia confirmed. The development comes a little over four months after he stepped down as Surgeon General and head of the Florida Department of Health on Sept. 20.
“Incentives boosted hospital staff vaccination rates in South Florida. Mandates did more” via Daniel Chang of the Miami Herald — With a Jan. 4 deadline looming for medical providers to abide by new federal rules and fully vaccinate their workers against COVID-19, many of South Florida’s largest hospitals are reporting that they have achieved staff vaccination rates of 80% or higher using policies that strongly encourage the shots but do not make them a condition of employment. Still, the few South Florida hospitals that did announce a vaccine mandate have achieved even higher coverage rates of 90% or more of their employees while losing a small fraction of workers. Jackson Health System, Miami-Dade’s public hospital network, adopted a carrot-and-stick approach to raising the vaccination rate among its more than 13,000 employees.
“Most Baptist Health, Ascension St. Vincent’s staff comply with COVID-19 vaccine mandate” via Beth Reese Cravey of The Florida Times-Union — About 95% of Baptist Health’s Jacksonville-area staff either received the COVID-19 vaccine or a medical or religious exemption by the health system’s Monday deadline, hospital officials said. According to a Baptist statement, employees who did not meet the deadline “have a window of 30 days” to be vaccinated or obtain an exemption, and “will not be scheduled to work” during that time. “Their employment status will remain unchanged to give team members a final opportunity to meet the requirement,” according to the statement. When the mandate was announced, Baptist said staff who were not vaccinated or had an approved exemption would ultimately “face the prospect of having privileges suspended or being placed on unpaid leave.”
“Universal drops face mask requirement for vaccinated employees” via Katie Rice of the Orlando Sentinel — Universal Orlando will no longer require fully vaccinated employees to wear face coverings at its parks starting Wednesday. Previously, Universal required all employees to wear masks indoors in public areas regardless of their vaccination status. Previously, Universal required all employees to wear masks indoors in public areas regardless of their vaccination status. A post on Universal Orlando’s employee website said the change was due to the lower community positivity rate of COVID-19. Employees can still choose to wear face coverings if they want.
“Bucs’ Antonio Brown accused of obtaining fake vaccine card” via Rick Stroud of the Tampa Bay Times — Bucs receiver Brown obtained a fake COVID-19 vaccination card so he could avoid NFL protocols, according to his former live-in chef. Brown’s girlfriend, model Cydney Moreau, told Los Angeles chef Steven Ruiz in a text message on July 2 that Brown was willing to pay $500 if he could get a Johnson & Johnson vaccination card. “Can you get the COVID cards?” Moreau texted Ruiz on July 2, according to a screengrab he provided to the Tampa Bay Times. “I can try,” Ruiz responded. “JNJ shot. Ab said he would give you $500,” Moreau texted. Brown wanted the Johnson & Johnson vaccine card, Ruiz alleged, because it’s the only one that consists of a single shot and would require less paperwork.
— 2022 —
“First redistricting round tilts Democrat-held Leon County Senate seat more to the right” via Jeffrey Schweers of the Tallahassee Democrat — Democratic state Sen. Loranne Ausley is going to have to campaign a little harder when she runs for re-election next year, providing that newly redrawn state senate districts stay that way. As expected, the eastern boundary of Senate District 3, which includes Leon and 10 other Big Bend counties, was nudged eastward to pick up the 50,000-plus votes needed to meet the new standard size for state senate districts. All four preliminary drafts show District 3 losing a part of Calhoun County, made up largely of Black Democrats, to District 2 to the west and gaining several Republican-rich sections of rural Suwannee, Gilchrist and Dixie counties.
“Big business-linked group gave more than $1 million to dark-money entity promoting ‘ghost’ candidates” via Jason Garcia and Annie Martin of the Orlando Sentinel — An organization closely linked to one of Florida’s biggest business-lobbying groups gave more than $1 million last year to the dark-money nonprofit at the center of Florida’s “ghost” candidate scandal. In a tax return filed this week with the Internal Revenue Service, the Tallahassee-based nonprofit called “Let’s Preserve the American Dream Inc.” reported that it gave $1.15 million in 2020 to “Grow United Inc.,” another nonprofit that in turn provided more than half a million dollars used by Republican strategists to promote obscure independent candidates in three key Senate races. Both groups are dark-money nonprofits that do not reveal their donors.
— CORONA NATION —
“Nearly one-third of health care workers in U.S. hospitals are still not vaccinated against COVID-19, CDC study finds, as vaccine mandate looms” via Robert Hart of Forbes — As of September 15, 70% of health care workers were fully vaccinated against COVID-19, according to the CDC study of more than 3 million personnel across more than 2,000 U.S. hospitals published in the American Journal of Infection Control. The researchers found rates varied based on the type of hospital, with the highest vaccination rates found in children’s hospitals, where 77% of workers have both doses. Critical access hospitals had the lowest vaccination rate, with 64% of workers fully vaccinated. Vaccination rates also differed by location, with health care staff in metropolitan counties (71%) having higher vaccination rates than those in rural counties (65%).
“‘Functionally paralyzed.’ COVID-19 ICU patients and their long, painful road to recovery” via Rick Neale of Florida Today — At least 70% of all critically ill patients who leave an ICU, particularly those who were mechanically ventilated, develop post-intensive care syndrome, said Dr. Samuel Hammerman, executive vice president and chief medical officer for Select Medical, which operates 14 Florida hospitals. PICS is a condition characterized by long-term muscle weakness, psychological effects like anxiety and depression, and cognitive disorganization that can linger for a year or more. COVID-19 compounds this syndrome, Hammerman said. Patients can spend weeks ventilated in the ICU under extra sedation because of severe lung damage. Moreover, he said the coronavirus can harm their autonomic nervous system, brain, heart, kidneys and other organs, at the same time they’re suffering from chronic low blood-oxygen levels.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“U.S. jobless claims drop seventh straight week to 268,000” via Paul Wiseman of The Associated Press — The number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits fell for the seventh straight week to a pandemic low of 268,000. U.S. jobless claims dipped by 1,000 last week from the week before, the Labor Department reported Thursday. The applications for unemployment aid are a proxy for layoffs, and their steady decline this year reflects the labor market’s strong recovery from last year’s brief but intense coronavirus recession. The four-week average of claims, which smooths week-to-week volatility, also fell to a pandemic low just below 273,000. Jobless claims have been edging lower, toward their pre-pandemic level of around 220,000 a week. Overall, 2.1 million Americans were collecting traditional unemployment checks the week that ended Nov. 6, down by 129,000 from the week before.
”Inflation’s wrath hits home: Families struggle to cope amid surging child care costs” via Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy of USA Today — The rising U.S. inflation rate, which hit a three-decade high in October, up by 6.2% from a year ago, has consumers paying more for everything from rent, energy, and food. While the pandemic-fueled worker shortage has affected all industries, the child care sector lost 36% of its workforce as centers closed due to low enrollment, getting workers back has been challenging. About 80% of the child care providers reported experiencing staffing shortages in a June survey conducted by the National Association for the Education of Young Children. In Idaho, 91% of the centers reported worker shortages.
Tweet, tweet:
— MORE CORONA —
“First known COVID-19 case was vendor at Wuhan market, scientist claims” via Carl Zimmer, Benjamin Mueller and Chris Buckley of The New York Times — A scientist who has pored over public accounts of early COVID-19 cases in China reported on Thursday that an influential World Health Organization inquiry had most likely gotten the early chronology of the pandemic wrong. The new analysis suggests that the first known patient sickened with the coronavirus was a vendor in a large Wuhan animal market, not an accountant who lived many miles from it. The scientist, Michael Worobey, a leading expert in tracing the evolution of viruses at the University of Arizona, came upon timeline discrepancies by combing through what had already been made public in medical journals, as well as video interviews in a Chinese news outlet with people believed to have the first two documented infections.
“Jamaica to drop quarantine requirement for vaccinated travelers staying outside the ‘resilient corridor’” via Bailey Schulz of USA Today — Jamaica is broadening the areas fully-vaccinated travelers can visit without quarantine. Starting Thursday, the island country is dropping its quarantine requirement for fully-vaccinated travelers staying outside the country’s “resilient corridor” who meet specific pre-arrival testing requirements. According to the Jamaica Tourist Board, the changes do not affect visitors staying in Jamaica’s “resilient corridor” areas, which follow “a rigorous set of COVID-19 protocols,” according to the Jamaica Tourist Board. The corridor was developed for tourism and segments along the northern and southern coasts. Under the current entry rules, travelers to the island face up to 14 days of quarantine if they stay outside the resilient corridor.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Biden meets with Canadian and Mexican leaders, attempting a reset” via Ashley Parker, Kevin Sieff and Amanda Coletta of The Washington Post — Biden met Thursday with the leaders of America’s neighbors to the north and south amid much praise on all sides, part of the President’s ongoing effort to rebuild relations with allies after a Trump administration that was often at odds with the nation’s longtime partners. But the pleasantries belied the more complicated reality that while Canada and Mexico welcome Biden’s friendlier tone, major points of contention remain, including over U.S. immigration policies and the country’s approach to trade, both flashpoints under Trump, as well as disputes over climate change.
“U.S. is ‘considering’ diplomatic boycott of Beijing Olympics, Biden says” via Zolan Kanno-Youngs of The New York Times — Biden said on Thursday that the United States was considering a diplomatic boycott of the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, as pressure grows to hold China accountable for human rights abuses. A boycott would mean that government officials would not attend the Games, which are slated to begin in February, though it would not prevent U.S. athletes from competing. As he met with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada at the White House, Biden responded to a reporter’s question about the potential for a diplomatic boycott by saying it was “something we are considering.” The comment came days after a virtual meeting between Biden and China’s leader, Xi Jinping, that was meant to prevent increasing tensions from turning into a broader conflict.
“Biden’s Supreme Court Commission shows interest in term limits for justices” via Charlie Savage of The New York Times — The most complete look yet at the ongoing work of Biden’s Supreme Court commission showed its continuing interest in imposing terms limits on justices, while also noting “profound disagreement among commissioners” over whether court expansion would be wise. Ahead of a public meeting on Friday, the bipartisan panel of legal experts released on Thursday a set of “discussion materials” that amount to draft chapters for its final report to Biden next month. Their release is the latest development in the complex and politically sensitive debate over whether to seek fundamental changes to the Supreme Court.
“Biden officials to propose road ban on much of Alaska’s Tongass National Forest” via Juliet Eilperin of The Washington Post — For two decades, Republicans and Democrats have fought over whether to ban roads on more than 9 million acres of Alaska’s Tongass National Forest. Now, the Biden administration aims to settle the question once and for all. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack will propose reinstating a Bill Clinton-era rule to ban logging and road-building in more than half of North America’s largest temperate rainforest, the department confirmed. The restrictions had managed to stay in place for years because of a series of court battles, but the Trump administration wiped them out last fall. “Restoring the Tongass’ roadless protections supports the advancement of economic, ecologic, and cultural sustainability in Southeast Alaska in a manner that is guided by local voices,” Vilsack said.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Dems race to pass social spending plan with major hurdles cleared” via Heather Caygle, Nicholas Wu, and Sarah Ferris of POLITICO — The House is charging ahead with a vote on Biden’s expansive social spending bill, set to vote Thursday evening after months of false starts on Democrats’ biggest agenda item. The vote timing is seen by some as a bit of a Thanksgiving miracle, given many Democrats started the day doubting that the legislation would be finished in time for a vote Thursday. But two signoffs came late in the day, with key moderate holdouts privately sounding optimistic, allowing Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her team to plow ahead earlier than some in the caucus expected.
“Nurse staffing agencies are overcharging hospitals, pocketing profits, U.S. lawmakers say as they call for White House probe” via Liz Freeman of the Naples Daily News — Nurse staffing agencies are charging three or more times their pre-pandemic rates and taking 40% or more for their profit, say U.S. lawmakers who are calling on the White House to investigate. No Florida lawmakers have yet to sign on to a Nov. 15 letter that four elected officials from California, Arizona, West Virginia and Louisiana sent to the COVID-19 response team coordinator at the White House seeking a probe. According to the Florida Hospital Association, nearly every hospital in Florida has used staffing agencies that provide temporary and travel nurses to help with the surge of COVID-19 patients and spell exhausted hospital staff.
— CRISIS —
“Pentagon Inspector General raises questions about former D.C. Guard commander’s Jan. 6 account” via Dan Lamothe and Paul Sonne of The Washington Post — D.C. National Guard’s commanding general was directed twice by Pentagon leadership to send in troops as violence engulfed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy first notified Maj. Gen. William Walker by phone at 4:35 p.m. that Walker was authorized to send troops to Capitol Hill, and then called the general again “to reissue the deployment order” about 30 minutes after McCarthy “originally conveyed it,” an unidentified Army witness told investigators with the independent Defense Department Inspector General. The investigation’s findings bring new scrutiny to Walker, who earlier this year was lauded for his candor in publicly recounting how dysfunction at the Pentagon stalled the National Guard’s response.
“Insurrectionists are finally receiving justice. But the GOP is more unhinged than ever.” via Jennifer Rubin of The Washington Post — Penalties for the crimes committed that day are needed to send a message to purveyors of the Jan. 6 whitewash. District Judge Royce Lamberth handed out a punishment at the low end of the sentencing guidelines. But his message was clear: “What you did was terrible. You made yourself the epitome of the riot.” The prosecutor’s sentencing memo should also compel prosecution to the full extent of the law of those who set the wheels of the insurrection in motion. Given that Trump and most of the Party he still leads around by the nose deny the violent nature of the insurrection, criminal investigation and prosecution must ensue for everyone involved to the extent that facts and the law allow.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Rupert Murdoch says Donald Trump should move on: ‘The past is the past’” via Adela Suliman of The Washington Post — Murdoch is publicly rebuking Trump, telling him to get over the past and to focus on the future. Trump should move on, billionaire Murdoch, 90, said Wednesday during News Corp’s annual shareholder meeting. The two powerful men, who each command large audiences, have had a tumultuous professional relationship. It’s unclear whether Murdoch’s comments about the past are a tacit nudge for Trump to look to his own future or the Republican Party’s more broadly. Trump has not yet ruled out running for President in 2024. He may also be more reliant on traditional media as he remains locked out of most social media platforms.
—”Poll: If Trump doesn’t run in 2024, Arizona Republicans want DeSantis” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Bryan Ávila adds nearly $114K in October for Miami-Dade County Commission bid” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Rep. Ávila continues to pull in plenty of cash in his Miami-Dade County Commission bid, adding nearly $114,000 in October alone. Ávila’s opponent in the District 6 contest, Ibis Valdés, has raised just over $63,000 in her five full months as a candidate. She added less than $3,500 in October. Fighting for Florida’s Families, Ávila’s political committee, netted nearly $89,000 last month. That includes three separate $10,000 donations from the health care company Wellpath, the real estate company Bayfront 2011 Development, and A Stronger Florida, a political committee tied to the consulting firm Rubin, Turnbull & Associates. The health care industry contributed plenty of other cash to Ávila as well.
—“Marleine Bastien adds $14K in 6-way District 2 Miami-Dade Commission race” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics
—”Juan Carlos Bermudez rakes in $52K for unopposed Miami-Dade County Commission bid” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics
—”Anthony Rodriguez raises whopping $151K in October for Miami-Dade County Commission bid” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics
“Miami Commissioners order motorized scooters taken off city streets immediately” via Joey Flechas of the Miami Herald — Miami has ordered motorized scooter operators to take their machines off the city’s streets by midnight. Commissioners on Thursday voted to end a multiyear pilot program that allowed several companies to place dockless electric scooters in the city’s urban core. Since 2018, riders have been able to use mobile phone apps to rent scooters. Vendors were ordered to pick up their scooters immediately Thursday. Transit advocates have touted the scooters as an effective solution for people to travel the last mile between transit stops and their destinations. Critics consider the scooters a dangerous nuisance that litters sidewalks.
“Naples City Council moves to include ‘gender-inclusive language’ in city charter” via Omar Rodríguez Ortiz of the Naples Daily News — The charter of the city of Naples uses gender-specific pronouns such as “he,” “his,” and “his or her” to refer to the mayor and the city manager, but it might soon be a thing of the past. On Wednesday, City Council voted 6-0 to direct staff to revise and bring for a vote on an unspecified date an ordinance that would remove “gender-specific language” from the charter and replace it with “gender-inclusive language.” Mayor Teresa Heitmann was absent during the discussion of the agenda item. City Council turned down the option of putting the proposed ordinance on the municipal ballot on Feb. 1, as originally proposed by city staff, in place of an exception to state law that mandates charter amendments be approved via referendum.
“Tallahassee Police Department pauses new crime alert policy after backlash” via the Tallahassee Democrat and WCTV — Tallahassee Police Chief Lawrence Revell is putting the department’s new “incident alert” guidelines on pause as the agency plans more discussions with local media outlets. The guidelines were released Tuesday, Nov. 9, and immediately led to questions about what crime information is shared with the public, how it’s shared and when it’s shared. During a meeting with members of the media at TPD headquarters, the chief said the crafting and release of the guidelines, which were said to be “effective immediately,” did not follow department processes and protocols.
— TOP OPINION —
“Sean Patrick Maloney’s midterm messaging mistake” via Karl Rove for The Wall Street Journal — Maloney represents an upstate New York district and chairs the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. Between a strong GOP showing in New Jersey and election losses in Virginia, he had a rough November and things will get a lot worse next year, as Republicans will almost certainly take the House. Democrats counting on the infrastructure bill to save them should realize that about $650 billion of its spending is for existing programs like the Interstate Highway Trust Fund, which has been reauthorized every five years since 1956. Doing what everyone already counts on won’t earn Democrats Brownie points.
— OPINIONS —
“Three days in Tallahassee we could easily have lived without” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — It was brief, three days. The plot was predictable. It played to a near-empty house with as little dissent and disagreement as possible, just the way DeSantis likes it. At this week’s Special Session of the Florida Legislature, every Republican, and too many Democrats, became handmaidens of the Governor’s escalation of public health risks by restricting vaccine and mask mandates in a state where nearly 61,000 people have died of COVID-19. This rush job by DeSantis and fellow Republicans had two missions: to demonize Biden’s federal vaccine mandate and promote DeSantis as the nation’s No. 1 vaccine critic. The result pushes Florida further to the extreme edge of anti-vaccine hysteria.
“What good are Florida Democrats if they won’t even support the Sunshine Law? Not much.” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — The exemption applies to employees who file complaints alleging that their employers violated a law Florida legislators passed Wednesday. The law restricts how companies impose vaccine mandates and force them to grant exemptions to people who don’t want to take a vaccine. Florida’s Constitution requires a two-thirds affirmative vote to create such an exemption to the state’s public records requirements. Democrats might be outnumbered in both the House and the Senate, but they still have the strength of numbers to protect Floridians’ right to know. But once again, Florida’s elected Democrats, who rarely fail to disappoint, didn’t have the backbone to pull one of the few levers of power they still have left.
“Lecherous professors are a bad look for Florida State University” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — No one needs a Ph.D. to appreciate that professors shouldn’t sleep with undergraduate students. They shouldn’t make romantic passes at their current students, and they shouldn’t send anyone unwanted sexually explicit notes. Unfortunately, those lessons obviously need relearning, given three recently unearthed investigations out of Florida State University. The university fired one professor, suspended another who later resigned, and allowed a third to remain on the job after determining they committed sexual misconduct in separate incidents with students. FSU permits such relationships as long as the professor has no supervision or authority over the student, including awarding grades. The university would be wise to tighten those rules.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
On today’s Sunrise:
— DeSantis signs bills limiting vaccine mandates, but his war with the Biden administration isn’t over yet, as Attorney General Moody launches yet another lawsuit.
To listen, click on the image below:
— WEEKEND TV —
Battleground Florida with Evan Donovan on News Channel 8 WFLA (NBC): Florida Politics publisher Peter Schorsch, Republican consultant Anthony Pedicini and Democratic consultant Reggie Cardozo.
Facing South Florida with Jim DeFede on CBS 4 in Miami: The Sunday show provides viewers with an in-depth look at South Florida politics, along with other local issues.
Florida This Week on Tampa Bay’s WEDU: Moderator Rob Lorei hosts a roundtable featuring Tampa Bay Times Clearwater reporter Tracey McManus, South Florida Sun-Sentinel columnist/reporter Steve Bousquet, 2021 Report Card for Florida’s Infrastructure Chair Kathi Ruvarac, and Dr. Omar Rashid, an incoming member of ACS CAN Board of Directors.
In Focus with Allison Walker on Bay News 9/CF 13: An examination of the state of food security in Florida and what can be done to ensure families have access to nutritional food and are not going hungry. Joining Walker are Gina Driscoll, St. Petersburg City Council District 6; Thomas Mantz, president and CEO of Feeding Tampa; and Tim Marks, president and CEO of Metropolitan Ministries in Tampa.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete and Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: A special hourlong edition on Florida’s three-day Special Session on COVID-19 vaccine mandates. Spectrum Bay News 9 anchor Holly Gregory will speak one-on-one with Senate President Simpson; House Speaker Chris Sprowls; Sens. Jeff Brandes, Janet Cruz and Darryl Rouson; Reps. Fentrice Driskell and Michele Rayner.
The Usual Suspects on WCTV-Tallahassee/Thomasville (CBS) and WJHG-Panama City (NBC): Host Steve Vancore will talk with News Service of Florida political reporter Dara Kam.
This Week in Jacksonville with Kent Justice on Channel 4 WJXT: Sens. Aaron Bean and Audrey Gibson; Jacksonville City Council candidates Tracye Polson and Nick Howland.
This Week in South Florida on WPLG-Local10 News (ABC): New Broward Mayor Michael Udine.
— ALOE —
“Officials expect U.S. travel for Thanksgiving to approach pre-pandemic levels” via Eduardo Medina of The New York Times — The Transportation Security Administration is preparing to handle about 20 million air passengers this Thanksgiving season. “We are staffed and prepared for the holiday travelers,” David Pekoske, the TSA administrator, said in a statement. The large volume of travelers expected comes as inoculation rates across the U.S. had risen, allowing many families to gather safely for the first time since 2019 when TSA screened 26 million people. The uptick also signals a willingness by people to resume customary holiday travel. While the travel volume is not expected to reach 2019 levels this year, the agency said it could be higher in the time leading up to Thanksgiving.
“Madonna’s former Miami home is being sold for $32 million — by a dog” via Dan Avery of Agricultural Digest — You might think you spoil your pet, but when German countess Karlotta Liebenstein died in 1992, she left a staggering $80 million-plus inheritance to her German Shepard, Gunther III. Since then, Gunther and his progeny have enjoyed the high life — and a diverse portfolio of luxury real estate holdings, including a Miami mansion once owned by Madonna. The Material Girl sold the nine-bedroom, 8,400-square-foot Tuscan-style villa at 3029 Brickell Avenue to Gunther IV for $7.5 million in 2000. And now his grandson has put the luxury waterfront property on the market for $31.75 million. Gunther’s primary residence is in Tuscany (of course), but, when he’s in town, he sleeps in Madonna’s former master bedroom, nestled in a custom Italian red-velvet round bed overlooking Biscayne Bay.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Celebrating today are Pedicini, Laila Aziz, Jon Coley of Capitol Resources, Karen Moore, and one of St. Pete’s best, Sara Stonecipher.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Happy Friday. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,182 words … 4½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
🇦🇹 Bulletin: Austria will impose Europe’s first nationwide lockdown since the spring, with a universal vaccine mandate starting Feb. 1. Go deeper.
💰Join Axios executive editor Aja Whitaker-Moore and me Monday at 12:30 p.m. ET for a virtual event on financial inclusion. Guests include Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) and Women’s World Banking president and CEO Mary Ellen Iskenderian. Register here.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
A fight is emerging over whether you need a booster to be called “fully vaccinated,” Axios’ Caitlin Owens writes.
- Why it matters: Booster shots provide strong protection when the effectiveness of an original COVID shot wanes. But getting the majority of Americans to stick out their arms again would be tough.
Two governors — in Connecticut and New Mexico — said this week that they don’t consider people who haven’t received a booster shot to be fully vaccinated.
- The U.K. will adjust its definition to include booster shots, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said.
Reality check: Only 17% of U.S. adults have received a booster shot, according to the CDC.
Between the lines: Anthony Fauci told Axios earlier this week that changing the definition federally “hasn’t been on the table yet,” but didn’t rule it out in the future.
- That means a patchwork set of definitions could emerge across the country, at least in the short term.
The tension: Changing the definition “would have major implications across many aspects of the pandemic, in some cases making it more difficult to control,” said Walid Gellad, a professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh.
State of play: The FDA is expected to OK booster shots for all adults at least six months out from their first round of Pfizer or Moderna. The CDC will also begin considering the change today.
- J&J recipients are already eligible for a booster.
Thanksgiving inflation, according to new estimates by the American Farm Bureau, is even greater than the overall increase in the cost of food, Axios’ Sam Baker, Sarah Grillo and Will Chase write.
- Why it matters: Inflation, supply-chain problems and “high global demand for food, particularly meat,” have all contributed to the rising costs, Farm Bureau senior economist Veronica Nigh said.
- A 16-pound turkey will set you back about $24 — almost $5 more than the average cost a year ago, according to the Bureau’s informal survey of grocery stores across the country.
McCarthy at Nite. Photo: House TV via AP
House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy broke the record for longest floor speech in at least 112 years, talking for 8½ hours and ending at 5:10 a.m. today by saying: “With that, Madame Speaker, I yield back.”
- At 5 a.m., after speaking since 8:38 p.m., McCarthy said: “Am I there? I want to be way over.”
- McCarthy’s talk-a-thon delayed House Dems’ plans to vote on President Biden’s social spending bill. The House returns at 8 a.m.
It was the longest continuous floor speech since at least 1909, Axios’ Andrew Solender reports.
- The previous 21st century record, set by Speaker Pelosi in 2018, was 8 hours, 7 mins.
House Republicans stayed in the chamber all night, and gave McCarthy a standing ovation when he ended.
ABC News chief justice correspondent Pierre Thomas will take viewers inside the National Security Agency’s Integrated Cyber Center, including the Battle Bridge (above), where no network cameras have ever been.
- Thomas interviews Gen. Paul Nakasone, NSA director and head of the U.S. Cyber Command, at NSA’s campus in Fort Meade, Md.
The report — beginning today on “Good Morning America,” and continuing all weekend across all ABC News programs and platforms — shows how the country’s electronic spy agency is fighting rising cyber and ransomware attacks.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Big Tech and its foes are both trying to enlist small business — a powerful constituency — in the looming battle over antitrust legislation, Axios’ Margaret Harding McGill writes.
- Why it matters: Small businesses have outsize sway with Washington lawmakers, and will shape the fate of Congress’ crusade to limit tech.
Amazon warned third-party sellers that the legislation could jeopardize its ability to host them on its platform completely.
- Google notified small-business customers that the legislation could make it harder for users to find business listings in Google Search or Maps results, and hurt the effectiveness of digital marketing.
During a virtual roundtable with small businesses, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), leading the Senate’s antitrust push, said: “I love the scare tactics.”
- Keep reading for a tale of 2 small businesses.
From “Our Journey Together,” by former President Donald J. Trump.
Former President Trump plans his first post-presidency book — “Our Journey Together,” featuring 300+ official White House photographs.
- Don Jr. tells Axios: “My father picked every single photo in this book, wrote all the captions, including some by hand.”
The book is from Winning Team Publishing — a venture formed by Don Jr. and Sergio Gor, with plans to publish more MAGA authors.
D. L. Hughley presents trophy to Sara Kehaulani Goo. Photo: Axios
Axios editor in chief Sara Kehaulani Goo — accepting the News Publication Honoree award last night from the Multicultural Media & Correspondents Association — told two stories about how the Hawaiian middle name in her byline signals representation:
- As an intern in The Wall Street Journal’s Detroit bureau, she heard the old-school bureau chief answer the phone with just his last name. She tried picking up with a gruff “Goo!” and realized that wasn’t her.
- For her first byline, she omitted Kehaulani. The bureau chief said: “Put that in. The folks in New York will love that.” He was right.
The bottom line: Sara Kehaulani Goo said at the National Press Club that representation in journalism matters because of the “stories we know exist that others don’t,” and because of the bad stories that are stopped.
- “We bring our whole selves to our work,” she said, to give “the full picture of America — as best we can.”
A Zipline drone takes off with Walmart products from a Neighborhood Market in Pea Ridge, Arkansas. Video: Worth Sparkman/Axios
Self-driven drones are now delivering Walmart packages to customers’ yards in Pea Ridge, Ark. — just outside Bentonville, Worth Sparkman writes for Axios Northwest Arkansas.
- Officials told Axios that packages consistently land in an area the size of two parking spots.
What’s happening: A pilot (!) project officially started this week behind a Neighborhood Market about 20 minutes from the retailer’s HQ.
- Walmart and drone-maker Zipline will then decide whether to launch the service in other markets.
- The Zipline method, which can drop a 4-pound package within 30 minutes of being ordered, helps fill the “last mile” of the supply chain.
How it works: Customers in the service area schedule an online order. A Walmart employee packs the product and hands it off to a Zipline staffer.
- Zipline preps and launches the aircraft, which drops the package with a biodegradable parachute.
- The drone circles a target to determine wind direction, then approaches the drop zone.
What we’re watching: Under a waiver from normal FAA rules, Zipline drones have no cameras or remote human pilot. Walmart is working with the FAA to expand delivery to more areas of Northwest Arkansas.
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Studio head who helped bring down Teamsters boss tied to illegal gambling ring
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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24.) ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
The House delayed a planned vote on Democrats’ roughly $2.2 trillion package of spending and tax breaks Thursday night when the Republican leader Kevin McCarthy delivered an hourslong speech in opposition that ran into Friday. Read more…
Republicans held up the Senate’s version of the annual Pentagon policy bill late Thursday night to protest Democratic leaders’ decision to exclude from consideration some of their amendments. Read more…
They’re back: Costumed attention seekers return in force to Capitol
A man dressed like Schoolhouse Rock’s famous bill danced around the House steps Thursday as a Christian singer-songwriter led staffers in hymns and prayers and a man on a semi-recumbent bicycle campaigned for dictator. In other words, things on Capitol Hill are finally returning to normal. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
DeLauro pushing for short stopgap funding bill, no ‘anomalies’
House Appropriations Chair Rosa DeLauro said Thursday she wants a short-term continuing resolution that doesn’t go beyond December to make as much progress as possible toward an omnibus package in the few weeks Congress has left in session. Read more…
House, Senate will go to conference on R&D proposals
House and Senate negotiators will soon go to conference in an effort to send bipartisan legislation aimed at advancing U.S. competitiveness in science and technology to President Joe Biden’s desk, Democratic leaders have announced. Read more…
Butterfield retirement video blasts ‘racially gerrymandered’ NC map
North Carolina Democratic Rep. G.K. Butterfield officially announced his retirement Thursday, blasting his state’s Republican lawmakers for approving a “partisan” and “racially gerrymandered” map of congressional districts that dramatically altered his majority-Black district. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
McCarthy filibusters, Biden dithers and Fauci unmasks
DRIVING THE DAY
If a “New York minute” is a few passing seconds, then the opposite is a “McCarthy minute” — something that drags on and on for hours.
On Thursday night, at 8:38 p.m., House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY took to the House floor with a speech designed to delay Democrats’ passage of the Build Back Better package.
This morning, at 5:10 a.m., some 8 hours and 32 minutes later, he finally stopped talking.
It was a de facto filibuster made possible by the “magic minute” rule in the House — which gives the body’s top leaders unlimited amounts of time to speak. In 2018, then-Minority Leader NANCY PELOSI used that privilege during a debate on the Affordable Care Act to deliver the longest speech in House history: 8 hours and 7 minutes. Now, McCarthy broke Pelosi’s record.
His whole spectacle peeved Democrats. From what he said — “ABIGAIL SPANBERGER said nobody elected Biden to be FDR,” he proclaimed early in the night, prompting a shout of “I did!” from Rep. ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ (h/t NBC) — to the sheer inconvenience of having to push back the BBB vote yet again. But then again, after months of wrangling, what’s another few hours?
The House will resume its normal functions at 8 a.m. this morning, and vote on BBB shortly after.
Here’s the thing …
- Mask on, mask off. That as the name of the game for ANTHONY FAUCI at JONATHAN KARL’s book party Tuesday night at Café Milano. As gawkers tried to snap pictures of him indoors not wearing a mask, America’s doc would put it on and take it off depending on whom he was around. SALLY QUINN — who’s known Fauci since his days as a young NIH doctor, when he inspired a love interest in one of her erotic novels — asked him why he was at a party with a mask in hand, not on face. “I said, ‘You seem pretty ambivalent about your mask’ because no one else was wearing one,” Quinn told Playbook. “He said, ‘I just decided that if anyone came up that I didn’t know, I would put my mask on.’”Quinn added that “paparazzi” were surrounding Fauci trying to get that “gotcha moment” of the Covid czar without a mask on. Guests had to show proof of vaccination to enter the party. “He was being safe,” Quinn said in his defense. “He knew everyone was vaccinated. If it was someone we knew, he would trust them, and if it was somebody else, he didn’t.” Another guest observed Fauci’s mask on/mask off dance, but said that the mask was firmly on when he came to the rescue of a guest who had collapsed. We reached out to Fauci via NIH but didn’t hear back Thursday night.
- Speaker Pelosi has hinted strongly this will be her last term in the House. And back in her district, buzz is building over her potential successor — and the possibility that her daughter, CHRISTINE PELOSI, could make a play for the seat. San Francisco insiders say there’s no doubt that Christine wants it if her mother retires. But the competition will be fierce for a seat that hasn’t been truly up since 1987. One potential candidate, state Sen. SCOTT WIENER, has strong LGBTQ backing and has been laying the groundwork at the grassroots and local levels.Christine — who heads the California Democratic Women’s caucus and is a DNC executive committeewoman — would start with enormous advantages, like universal name ID and access to her mother’s fundraising list. But according to people close to Christine, there are concerns about the perception of nepotism if and when her mother endorses her. It’s also unclear how San Francisco, with its hyper-engaged electorate, would react to the prospect of a dynastic House seat.We’re told that Christine is making sure to avoid looking like she’s overtly jockeying for the seat, which wouldn’t serve her or her mother well. Democrats are relying on Nancy Pelosi to raise gobs of cash for the midterms; lame-duck status would hurt that cause. As for the speaker’s office, Pelosi’s spokesperson gave us the same line he’s offered others who ask: “The speaker is not on a shift, the speaker is on a mission.”
- In a sign that Dr. MEHMET OZ seems serious about running for Senate in Pennsylvania, veteran Republican strategist JON LERNER has been calling around on his behalf to gauge support for the political neophyte. DONALD TRUMP insiders say that this might become an issue for Oz because Lerner is associated with candidates whom Trump dislikes, including the man Oz would try to succeed, retiring Republican Sen. PAT TOOMEY, and NIKKI HALEY. Trump reportedly blocked Lerner from joining then-VP MIKE PENCE’s national security team because he was convinced that Lerner was a “Never Trumper.”From the outside, Oz is the type of candidate Trump might embrace because, first and foremost, he’s famous. Also, a Trump insider said he appreciated that Oz came to his defense for using hydroxychloroquine to fight Covid. While Trump endorsed candidate SEAN PARNELL in the Pennsylvania race early on, his campaign appears to be stunted while he waits for the verdict of his custody battle with his estranged wife. If Parnell drops out of the race, Oz could have had a shot at a Trump endorsement or at least protection from a spicy Trump press release. Now, a source close to Trump said it’s less certain. Oz is expected to also bring on LARRY WEITZNER and CHRIS HANSEN. (Be sure to check out Holly Otterbein and Natalie Allison’s story this morning about Oz’s moves in Pennsylvania.)
- Former Trump staffer MAX MILLER was sitting pretty in his bid for a House seat in Ohio after Rep. ANTHONY GONZALEZ (R-Ohio) announced his retirement and the former president endorsed him. But that dream has been dashed by redistricting: The seat that the 32-year-old is registered to run in no longer exists. So instead, Miller will likely have to challenge an incumbent in a safe seat or run in a swing district. Two sources close to the campaign said they are eyeing Ohio’s 13th District, which would be competitive. Another option would be to challenge a Republican incumbent, Rep. BOB GIBBS, but that wouldn’t be easy, either.
- Former staffers for NYC Mayor BILL DE BLASIO are looking at ERIC ADAMS with envy because he has one thing going for him that they definitely did not: a governor’s mansion that isn’t a permanent antagonist. ”The biggest thing going for him is that he doesn’t have to deal with ANDREW CUOMO,” said one de Blasio former staffer. De Blasio and Cuomo had a notoriously rancorous relationship. De Blasio aides said that they felt like Cuomo was trying to sabotage them every day because he saw him as a potential primary challenger.“Adams is the most fortunate man in the world,” said Democratic strategist HANK SHEINKOPF, who has worked both for and against the disgraced ex-gov. Cuomo “would exert the power over the mayor to prove who was boss.” It helps too that New York Gov. KATHY HOCHUL is up for election and could use the support of a mayor who won by a landslide. “I don’t think we ever viewed [de Blasio] as a threat,” said Cuomo’s spokesperson RICH AZZOPARDI, laughing.
Happy Friday. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
INDECISION TIME — POLITICO’s new White House bureau chief Jonathan Lemire makes his debut with a piece about President JOE BIDEN’s long delay in choosing a Fed chair: “The decision would be soon. Then, it was ‘imminent.’ At one point, it was slated to come in four days. Now, it’ll be by Thanksgiving. Maybe. President Joe Biden has been wrestling for weeks with whether to reappoint the current chairman of the Federal Reserve, JEROME POWELL, or replace him with LAEL BRAINARD, a Democrat and economist who has served on the Fed board since 2014. The process has resembled a tortured morass of indecision. … The deliberativeness around naming the next Fed chair has been a feature, not a bug, of Biden’s presidency.”
KISS YOUR SWING DISTRICTS GOODBYE — Depending on where you stand, gerrymandering is either the cause of, or solution to, many of America’s political problems. Here’s what that fight looks like — from the outside looking in, and from the inside looking out. Ryan dives into the subject with GOP strategist (and former gerrymanderer) JEFF TIMMER, Common Cause North Carolina Executive Director BOB PHILLIPS and our colleague Ally Mutnick. Listen and subscribe here
BIDEN’S FRIDAY:
— Morning: The president will get his annual physical at Walter Reed.
— 3:15 p.m.: Biden will pardon the national Thanksgiving turkeys, PEANUT BUTTER and JELLY, in the Rose Garden.
— 6:20 p.m.: Biden will depart the White House en route to Wilmington, Del., where he is scheduled to arrive at 7:15 p.m.
VP KAMALA HARRIS’ FRIDAY:
— 12:50 p.m.: The VP will depart D.C. en route to Columbus, Ohio.
— 2:50 p.m.: Harris will tour Plumbers and Pipefitters Local 189 and meet apprentices with Labor Secretary MARTY WALSH.
— 3:20 p.m.: Harris and Walsh will deliver remarks on the administration’s agenda.
— 5:30 p.m.: The VP will depart Ohio to return to D.C.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 1 p.m.
THE HOUSE will meet at 8 a.m. to continue debate and vote on the BBB.
THE SENATE is in.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE WHITE HOUSE
TOP HARRIS AIDE IS OUT — From Vanity Fair’s Abigail Tracy: “Harris’s communications chief ASHLEY ETIENNE is leaving the White House. … When Etienne joined the vice president’s office she told me she would stay for the first year, but still her departure comes after a raft of stories on infighting and low morale in the vice president’s office. It is not unusual for White House staffers to leave at the one-year mark. Etienne made the decision to leave at this time upon taking the job. Harris’s office has been beset by unflattering stories, centered largely on how public a role the vice president should have.”
ALL POLITICS
STATE OF DEMOCRACY WATCH, via CNN’s Gabby Orr: “Republican National Committee Chairwoman RONNA MCDANIEL said Thursday she recognizes Biden as the 46th president of the U.S., even as she claimed there were ‘lots of problems’ with the 2020 election that Republican candidates should address.” The statement “marked the first time the party chairwoman has clearly stated that Biden ‘won’ the 2020 election.”
— SIREN: Wisconsin Republicans “are engaged in an all-out assault on the state’s election infrastructure,” reports NYT’s Reid Epstein, as they try to unwind the bipartisan election commission to assume partisan control of elections. There are potential felony charges in the works for most of the commission’s members, and Republican politicians are trying to usurp their power on the back of baseless election fraud claims. Sen. RON JOHNSON (R-Wis.) is now trying to persuade state legislators to completely take over federal elections.
BELLE OF THE BALL — Virginia Gov.-elect GLENN YOUNGKIN was the rock star this week at the Republican Governors Association’s annual conference, where his victory was widely seen as a blueprint for the GOP to walk the Trump tightrope and return to power in Congress, reports Marc Caputo from Phoenix. Meanwhile, “Trump largely occupied a he-who-shall-not-be-named role in the conference,” as governors spoke more of the “Trump administration” than the man himself; most treaded with caution when referencing him.
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week”: Philip Rucker, Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Ryan Reilly.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
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CBS
“Face the Nation”: Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) … Scott Gottlieb.
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MSNBC
“The Sunday Show”: Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) … Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) … Nii-Quartelai Quartey … Soledad O’Brien … Wilson Cruz … Perry Bacon Jr. … Michael Harriot.
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FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Chris Christie. Panel: Jason Riley, Susan Page and Harold Ford Jr. Power Player: Virginia Ali.
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ABC
“This Week”: Anthony Fauci. Panel: Jonathan Karl, Averi Harper, Laura Barrón-López and Jonathan Swan.
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Gray TV
“Full Court Press”: Jerome Adams … Jeanne Marrazzo.
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NBC
“Meet the Press”: Panel: Kristen Soltis Anderson, Kelly O’Donnell, Al Sharpton and Betsy Woodruff Swan.
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CNN
“Inside Politics”: Panel: Zolan Kanno-Youngs, Heather Caygle, Toluse Olorunnipa and Seung Min Kim.
PLAYBOOKERS
Gina Carano, former star of Disney+’s “The Mandalorian,” announced she will play a Secret Service agent in a biopic about Hunter Biden, directed by Robert Davi.
Donald Trump endorsed Paul Gosar, naturally.
AOC (and her French bulldog Deco), Jamaal Bowman, Ayanna Pressley and Ilhan Omar wished the world a “Happy Squadsgiving.”
John Kennedy, the current senator, engaged in his own version of a red scare.
Matt Gaetz said he might offer Kyle Rittenhouse an internship.
FRENCH GET THE LAST LAUGH: Some of the most powerful players in Washington arrived at the French Embassy on Thursday night outfitted for a black-tie “Améthyste” gala in the spirit of celebrating “the U.S.-France relationship and America’s engagement with the world,” according to the invite from host Steve Clemons. But little did they realize the true meaning: “Améthyste” is the name of the French nuclear submarines that the U.K. and Australia reneged on a deal to buy with the backing of the U.S. But that little detail didn’t detract from the levity of the occasion at the home of Ambassador Philippe Etienne, where Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) held court, even arriving with his own body man/body blocker, an unnamed woman who did not work in his office but claimed to be his “best friend.” Before he arrived, Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.) cracked that Manchin’s “chariots are coming through” and that they should “blare the horns” for the senator’s arrival. Coons wasn’t wrong. Wherever Manchin went, there was a procession.
Other guests included: Sens. Mark Warner (D-Va.) and John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.), retired Gen. David Petraeus, Reps. Sean Patrick Maloney (D-N.Y.) and Neal Dunn (R-Fla.), Wolfgang Puck, Symone Sanders, Heather Podesta, Matt Kaminski and Alexandra Geneste, Isiah Thomas, Jonathan Kott, Jonathan Stahler, David Frum, David Sanger, Jesse Rodriguez, Michael LaRosa, Joyce Cummings, Liz Landers, Jim Acosta, Rashida Jones, Kevin Cirilli, Ali Rogin, Jeff Zeleny, Phil Rucker, Ashley Parker, Daniel Lippman, Bob Costa, Tyler Pager, Olivia Nuzzi, Ryan Williams, Tammy Haddad and Kim Dozier.
WHAT’S FOR BREAKFAST: VP Kamala Harris has advice for anyone trying to make it in a man’s world: “You have to eat ‘No’ for breakfast.” That’s what she told Colada Shop owner Daniella Senior when the VP visited the D.C. hot spot last month. Senior shared Harris’ advice to a crowd of women at a charity shop night Wednesday at the Logan Circle Shinola store to benefit Vital Voices, a nonprofit that supports female leaders in economics, politics and human rights. She was among six other women who hosted the event, including artist Maggie O’Neill, Angie Gates, Dr. Kelly Bolden, Deloitte’s Kim Myers and me. Other guests included: Shannon Washburn, Ali Dukakis, Bob Crowe, Stephanie Allen, Courtney Flantzer, Ryan Williams, Alex Katz, Katherine Schneider, Vinoda Basnayake, Adrian Fenty, Dannia and Maha Hakki, Faida Fuller and Jillian Harding.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Swing Left has named its first board of directors: Paulette Aniskoff, partner at Bully Pulpit Interactive; Andrew McLaughlin, founder and CEO at Higher Ground Labs and an Obama alum; Justin Myers, executive director at Blue Leadership Collaborative; Maria Salamanca, partner at Unshackled Ventures and former COO of Swing Left; Ethan Todras-Whitehill, president and co-founder of Swing Left; and Catherine Vaughan, founder of Flippable and former co-executive director of Swing Left.
TRANSITIONS — Christian Ford is joining DLA Piper as a partner in the litigation practice. He most recently was deputy assistant A.G. in DOJ’s Office of Legal Policy. … Jacqueline Cohen is now a VP in Waxman Strategies’ environmental policy practice. She previously was chief environmental counsel for the House Energy and Commerce Committee.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Roshan Patel, executive director of the Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association and partner at 50 State, and Meredith Patel of Barre3 Old Town and Old Town Media on Nov. 9 welcomed Pippa Louise Patel, who joins big brother Rhodes. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Twitter’s Jack Dorsey … Annie Tomasini of the White House … WaPo’s Matt Viser and Dana Hedgpeth … David O’Boyle … Time’s Sam Jacobs and Vera Bergengruen … Emerson Sprick … Matt Lloyd of Sen. Rob Portman’s (R-Ohio) office … Eric Finkbeiner … Meghan Burris of MKB Strategies … Mike Deutsch … Robert Marcus of the House Foreign Affairs Dems … Neil Bjorkman … Brad Bauman of Fireside Campaigns … Barb Leach … Katie Peake of J.A. Green & Co. … Michael Reynold … Foreign Policy’s Andrew Sollinger … Ricky Wilson … Louis Susman … Michael Dale-Stein … Justin Hamilton … Breelyn Pete … Maya Hixson … Cait Graf … Nicole Isaac … NBC’s Lauren McCulloch … Dena Iverson … former Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) … Ann Curry … former HHS Secretary and Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson (8-0) … Ted Turner … former Reps. Lamar Smith (R-Texas), Jo Bonner (R-Ala.) and Gary Ackerman (D-N.Y.) … Josh Print … former Alaska Gov. Sean Parnell … Linda Bowman … American Conservation Coalition’s Kaleigh Cunningham … Alli Papa
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Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
Follow us on Twitter
26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address: “Government OF the PEOPLE, BY the PEOPLE, FOR the PEOPLE” … Will it “perish from the earth”? – American Minute with Bill Federer
BY the PEOPLE FOR the PEOPLE” … Will it “perish from the earth”? – American Minute with Bill Federer Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address: “Government OF the PEOPLE
- “ballot” 3 times;
- “vote,” “votes,” “voted,” 15 times; and
- “elect,” “elected,” “election,” “electors,” 18 times.
- “vote,” “votes,” “voted,” “voter,” 60 times;
- “elect,” “elects,” “elected,” “election,” “electors,” 226 times.
- political campaigns,
- registering voters,
- getting to polls,
- voting,
- swearing in,
- introducing bills,
- debating bills,
- voting on bills,
- overriding vetoes.
- The people of Arizona voted English as their official language, but Federal Judges overruled. (9th Circuit, Prop. 106, March 3, 1997)
- The people of Arkansas passed term limits for politicians, but Federal Judges overruled. (Sup. Ct., Term Limits v Thornton, May 22, 1995)
- The people of California voted to stop state-funded taxpayer services to illegal aliens, but Federal Judges overruled. (Prop. 187, Nov. 20, 1995)
- The people of Colorado voted not to give special rights to homosexuals, but Federal Judges overruled. (Sup. Ct. Romer v Evans, 1992)
- The people of Missouri defeated a tax increase, but Federal Judges overruled. (8th Circuit, Missouri v Jenkins, Apr. 18, 1990)
- The people of Missouri limited contributions to State candidates, but a Federal Judge overruled. (8th Circuit, Shrink Pac v Nixon, Jan. 24, 2000)
- The people of Missouri passed “A Woman’s Right to Know.” Governor Bob Holden vetoed it. Legislators overrode his veto, but a Federal Judge overruled. (U.S. District Judge Scott O. Wright, Sep. 11, 2000)
- The people of Nebraska passed a Marriage Amendment with 70% of the vote, but a Federal Judge overruled. (U.S. District Judge Joseph Batallion, May 12, 2005)
- The people of New York voted against physician-assisted suicide, but Federal Judges overruled. (2nd Circuit, Apr. 2, 1996)
- The people of Washington voted against physician-assisted suicide, but Federal Judges overruled. (9th Circuit, Mar. 6, 1996)
- The people of Washington passed term limits for politicians, but Federal Judges overruled. (Sup. Ct., Term Limits v Thornton, May 22, 1995)
- The people of Montana voted by an overwhelming 74 percent to define a marriage as between one man and one woman, but Federal Judge Brian Morris overruled (Nov. 19, 2014). Rep. Steve Daines explained that an “unelected federal judge” ignored Montanans’ wishes. (Associated Press, Nov. 19, 2014)
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: DeSantis Is Just Mercilessly Toying With Democrats Now
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Friday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Never ask for the “Crème Brûlée Special” at a Tijuana donkey show.
Ever since we relocated through the looking glass here in the United States, I find myself working overtime to find upbeat things to write about. It’s no fun being a preacher of doom and gloom, after all, especially when one is as naturally cheery as I am.
I am particularly fond of finding a happier note on which to finish the week.
That’s why it’s always fun to find America’s Official Breath of Fresh Air, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in the news.
The Democrats have been putting a lot of effort into ruining DeSantis’s life and career, all to no avail. I wrote back during the summer that he wasn’t going to self-destruct for their pleasure. Last month, I marveled at how badly their attacks keep missing. It really never stops being fun to watch.
DeSantis has been giving back as good as he’s getting from the Democrats but he’s really upping his game now.
On Thursday, DeSantis signed a bill into law that protects Florida workers from onerous vaccine mandates and, in a brilliant PR move, his team held the signing in Brandon, Florida.. Kevin wrote about it for us and referred to the choice of the locale as an “epic clown-slap.” Here’s a statement from DeSantis’s press secretary:
Employers in Florida are not allowed to mandate vax, and also aren’t required or encouraged to have formal vax policies. If an employer has a vax policy, they will use the FL DOH exemption forms and make their employees aware of those. No convoluted or invasive requirements
— Christina Pushaw 🐊 (@ChristinaPushaw) November 18, 2021
This should set off another round of libs caterwauling about DeSantis having “BLOOD ON HIS HANDZZZZZZZ!” That’s their boilerplate tantrum every time DeSantis opts for protecting the freedom of the citizens of his state. It matters not that they’ve been wrong each time. They’re not much for memory on that side of the aisle.
As to the governor’s subtle dig by choosing to sign the bill in Brandon, Pushaw had to say this: “The significance of signing this legislation in Brandon, Florida, is not lost on the governor.”
There’s a whole lotta triggering going on in LibLand over that, no doubt.
I have no idea if DeSantis is paving his way for a run at the White House in 2024. Whenever he does something like this it certainly boosts him in the right direction.
He might even win over some detractors with this new law.
Everything Isn’t Awful
Granddaughter captures grandma getting her 1st tattoo at 82 years old! https://t.co/zojsMq1WKx pic.twitter.com/PfArSFXg93
— Good Morning America (@GMA) November 19, 2021
PJ Media
Cancel leftist bigots. Gay Couple Force Christian Florist to Retire
BREAKING: NBC/MSNBC News BANNED From Kenosha Courthouse
Ten Years of Muslim Persecution of Christians
ASAP. Parental Rights Activists Call for Merrick Garland To Resign
Support for Gun Control Cratering as Violent Crime Soars
#WINNING. Epic Clown-Slap: DeSantis Signs Anti-Vaccine Mandate Package in Brandon, Fla.
Will Swing Districts Disappear, or Will the Courts and Commissions Save Them?
More Dishonesty in the L.A. Times About the LAPD
Fearful of GOP, Washington Post Columnist Has Advice for Democrats
Federal Judge Fast-Tracks Lawsuit Against Vaccine Mandate for Healthcare Employees
This Foreign Country Ran A Misinformation Campaign in 2020 to Elect Biden
OUTRAGE: Rich Guy Rapes Four Teenage Girls and Only Gets Eight Years Probation
Biden Nominee for Comptroller of the Currency Arrested for Stealing in 1995
Biden Moves to Destroy Religious-Based Childcare
Rebutting Nikole Hannah-Jones’ Latest Anti-American Revisionism
Democrats Playing the Race Card to Defend Harris Shows How Desperate They Are
Townhall Mothership
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy is Really Taking Advantage of That ‘Magic Minute’
U.S. Buys 10 Million Treatment Courses of Pfizer’s COVID-19 Antiviral Pill
BREAKING: Judge Demands Answers From New York Times Over Publishing Project Veritas’ Privileged Docs
NFL Stars Speak out Against Former Running Back Zac Stacy After Horrific Abuse Video Surfaces
When Teachers Fail To See Beyond Their Own Anti-Gun Bias
Cam&Co. Did Surging Gun Sales Lead To An Increase In Suicides?
Democrats’ Dilemma – Trader Joe’s vs. Tractor Supply Voters
There’s a simple reason the attempt to cancel Dave Chappelle didn’t work
Tom Cotton: A diplomatic boycott of the Beijing Olympics isn’t enough. We need a total boycott.
Afghan women soccer players land in the U.K. thanks to an assist from Kim Kardashian West
VIP
‘Unwoke’ With Kevin and Kruiser #21—QAnon, Rittenhouse, and Let’s Share Spam Recipes!
VodkaPundit: Dear Joe Biden: Do Yourself a Favor and Quit
The Bidens Spend Millions on Weekends at the Shore While American Families Suffer
Remember Swine Flu? That Was More Deadly to Kids Than COVID
Mr. President: CALL OFF YOUR MOB
Teacher Told Conservative Students to ‘Jump Off a Bridge’ For Waving ‘F**k Joe Biden’ Flag
MSNBC’s Response to Their Lousy Ratings Is Pathetic
GOLD ‘Five O’Clock Somewhere’ with Kruiser, VodkaPundit, Kevin Downey Jr. – Replay Available
Around the Interwebz
You Can Finally Get Real-Time Lyrics on Spotify
Leading pro-life bishops: Catholic Church must be prepared if Roe overturned
Flying Cars: What, How, When, and Why?
The 12 Best Thanksgiving TV Episodes You Can Stream Right Now
Bee Me
Biden Unsure Why Winnie The Pooh Keeps Speaking Chinese https://t.co/uUGnZLxmhy
— The Babylon Bee (@TheBabylonBee) November 18, 2021
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Triumphal Entry of Henry IV into Paris, 1630 #flemishart #baroque pic.twitter.com/lftK2h97uw
— THE MONTMARTE (@themontmarte) November 19, 2021
Kabana Comedy
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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Cut to the News
8409 Lee Hwy #3984
Merrifield VA 22116-9998
USA
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Where Is Peng Shuai?
And what does her disappearance mean for the upcoming Olympics?
The Dispatch Staff | 2 |
Happy Friday! President Joe Biden may be pardoning Peanut Butter and Jelly later today, but those turkeys know what they did—and they will answer to their creator.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released its score of Democrats’ Build Back Better Act on Thursday, estimating that—before taking the effects of stricter tax enforcement into account—it would add $367 billion to the deficit between 2022 and 2031. In a separate analysis, the CBO estimated that BBB’s additional IRS funding would generate an additional $207 billion in revenue over the same time period, meaning if the CBO projections are accurate, the legislation would ultimately add about $160 billion to the deficit over 10 years.
- The Justice Department announced Thursday that two Iranian men were charged for their role in a “cyber-enabled campaign to intimidate and influence American voters” ahead of the 2020 election. The indictment alleges the men—who worked for a company known to provide services to the Iranian government—attempted to compromise 11 state voter websites and impersonated the Proud Boys while sending messages to registered Democratic voters threatening physical harm if they did not change their party affiliation and vote for Donald Trump.
- Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt commuted the death sentence of Julius Jones on Thursday just hours before Jones—who was convicted of first-degree murder in 2002 but maintains his innocence—was set to die by lethal injection. Jones will now serve life in prison without the possibility for parole.
- President Biden on Thursday signed into law three bipartisan bills aimed at supporting law enforcement and first responders. Shortly after, the Justice Department announced $139 million in grant funding that will allow 183 police departments nationwide to hire more than 1,000 full-time law enforcement officials.
- Rep. G.K. Butterfield of North Carolina announced Thursday he will not run for reelection next year, expressing frustration with his state’s Republican-led redistricting process.He is now the 16th incumbent House Democrat planning to retire or run for another office.
- The number of daily new COVID-19 cases in the U.S. has increased 23 percent over the past two weeks while hospitalizations and deaths attributed to the virus have decreased 1 and 13 percent over the same timeframe, respectively.
- Initial jobless claims decreased by 1,000 week-over-week to 268,000 last week, the Labor Department reported Thursday.
International Concern Grows Over Missing Chinese Tennis Star
On November 2, Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai posted a lengthy statement on social media platform Weibo alleging that former People’s Republic of China Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli—who served on the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) Politburo Standing Committee ruling council from 2013 to 2018—forced her to have sex with him about three years ago. She hasn’t been seen in public since.
“I was very scared that afternoon,” Peng—the world’s No. 1-ranked doubles player in 2014—wrote in describing the assault, according to a widely circulated translation of the post. Peng, now 35 years old, said she and the 75-year-old Zhang had a relationship nearly a decade earlier, but that she hadn’t heard from him in years—until he reached out asking to play tennis. “After playing in the morning, you and your wife Kang Jie took me to your house. Then you took me into your room,” she claimed. “I didn’t expect it to be like this, with someone standing outside the door guarding. … Why did you come back to me, take me to your house, and force me to have sex with you?”
China’s Great Firewall quickly got to work. Peng’s allegations—for which she admitted she had no corroborating evidence, only her story—were scrubbed from the Chinese internet within minutes. Searches of the tennis player’s name—and even the word “tennis”—were temporarily blocked. Censors reportedly went so far as to suspend Weibo accounts that referenced the story in private direct messages.
Some Chinese dissidents have theorized that—because the post was allowed to stay up for about 20 minutes rather than being squashed immediately—the allegation is being weaponized for President Xi Jinping’s own internal political purposes ahead of a vote that’s expected to reinstall him for a third term. But most view the scandal for what it is: The highest-profile #MeToo accusation ever leveled against a CCP official.
The Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) has taken notice, with CEO Steve Simon over the weekend calling for a fair and transparent investigation into Peng’s allegation. “If at the end of the day, we don’t see the appropriate results from this, we would be prepared to take that step and not operate our business in China if that’s what it came to,” he told the New York Times. “We’re not going to back off this position. It’s the right place to be.”
In a world where the NBA apologized for “deeply offending” its Chinese fans after a team executive expressed support for Hong Kong and Nike’s CEO refused to weigh in on China’s human rights abuses in a discussion of the company’s “values,” the WTA’s willingness to stand up to the CCP—and risk losing access to one of the world’s most lucrative markets, where it currently holds about 10 tournaments that generate hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue—has been a pleasant surprise to critics of Beijing.
“Standing up to Chairman Xi’s lies isn’t easy, but the Women’s Tennis Association has shown more backbone than most American Fortune 500 companies,” GOP Sen. Ben Sasse told The Dispatch Thursday. “Chairman Xi fears the truth and the truth is exactly what Americans and the entire freedom loving world needs to hammer home.”
Will Peng’s Disappearance Affect the Olympics?
The allegations—and ensuing international pressure—come at a particularly precarious time for Xi and the CCP, as opening ceremonies for the 2022 Olympics are set to kick off in Beijing in just 77 days. On Thursday, President Biden appeared to confirm Josh Rogin’s reporting from earlier this week that the administration plans to diplomatically boycott the games in response to China’s human rights abuses.
“It’s something we’re considering,” he told a reporter before a bilateral meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. If such a diplomatic boycott occurs, neither Biden nor any other government officials will attend the proceedings—but American athletes who have trained their entire lives for this moment will still compete.
The position lines up with what Sen. Mitt Romney—who played a significant role in salvaging the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City—told The Dispatch back in March. “The United States should demonstrate our repudiation of China’s abuses in a way that will hurt the Chinese Communist Party—not American athletes who have trained their entire lives for this competition,” he said. “We can do that by boycotting the Beijing Olympics economically and diplomatically, while letting the games proceed.”
But with the games drawing nearer, pressure is mounting for the United States to skip them altogether—and Peng’s disappearance is adding fuel to the fire. “If the Chinese Communists disappear their own athletes, just think how much less they’ll care for the safety of ours,” Sen. Tom Cotton told The Dispatch Thursday.
Presented Without Comment
Enes Kanter @EnesKanter
Money over Morals for the “King” 👑 Sad & disgusting how these athletes pretend they care about social justice They really do “shut up & dribble” when Big Boss 🇨🇳 says so Did you educate yourself about the slave labor that made your shoes or is that not part of your research? https://t.co/YUA8rGYeoZ
Also Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- Fan favorite Will Saletan is back on The Remnant, joining Jonah for a conversation about nationalism, universal principles, and what makes America great. Plus: Is the pandemic over? What does the Virginia result mean for both parties? And can Biden’s presidency recover after a disastrous few months?
- On Thursday’s Advisory Opinions, David and Sarah talk with Neil Weare of Equally American about the Insular Cases and the unique legal history of American territories.
- On the site today, Danielle Pletka looks into the complex ways that China disguises purchases of artificial intelligence, military technology, energy supplies and other sensitive goods from the West.
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).
Subscribe to The Morning Dispatch
An essential daily news roundup, TMD includes a brief look at important stories of the day and original reporting and analysis from The Dispatch team, along with recommendations for deeper reading and some much-needed humor in these often fraught times.
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
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41.) NOQ REPORT
42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
43.) REDSTATE
Ron DeSantis Delivers a Must-See, Fiery Speech While Nuking COVID-19 Tyranny
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY
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45.) MSNBC
November 19, 2021 THE LATEST America has a cruel habit of condemning teenagers to death in prison by Reginald Dwayne Betts Henry Montgomery, 75, who committed a murder when he was 17, was released from a Louisiana prison Wednesday, years after the Supreme Court made him eligible for parole. Montgomery won a case that made people who had been sentenced to life as juveniles eligible for release. But many plaintiffs who win such cases don’t get to go home, Reginald Dwayne Betts writes. “Montgomery’s release is worthy of note,” Betts writes, “because while there has been plenty of discussion about mass incarceration in academic and nonacademic settings over the past decade, there remains a group of incarcerated men who are still struggling to be free and even struggling to have their right to freedom taken seriously by the public.”
Read Reginald Dwayne Betts’ full analysis and more on your Friday MSNBC Daily. TOP STORIES You don’t need a crystal ball to see doom for Democrats in 2022 — just a map. Read More Al Sharpton’s presence in the courtroom where Ahmaud Arbery’s killers are being tried was nothing out of the ordinary Read More According to the DOJ, there are recordings against indicted Rep. Jeff Fortenberry that could be used in a trial. Read More Muhammad Aziz and Khalil Islam served a combined 42 years behind bars for the 1965 assassination. Read More TOP VIDEOS MORE FROM MSNBC
How do we make sense of this unprecedented moment in world history? Why is this all happening? Chris Hayes asks the big questions that keep him up at night every week on his podcast, aptly titled, “Why Is This Happening?”
In the newest episode, Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., joins Chris to discuss her new book, ‘This Is What America Looks Like: My Journey from Refugee to Congresswoman.’ They cover how she got into politics, her response to accusations of anti-Semitism and what’s needed to ensure more productivity and less combativeness among members of Congress. Listen now.
This week on Into America, Trymaine Lee speaks with former Army Specialist Shoshana Johnson, America’s first Black female prisoner of war, whose story hasn’t made it into the spotlight. They discuss Shoshana’s traumatic capture and rescue in Iraq, life after war and her hopes for the military to honor the sacrifices by women of color who wear the uniform. Listen now.
Follow MSNBC
Check out the MSNBC channel on Apple News
Download the NBC News Mobile App and watch MSNBC
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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
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47.) ABC
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
To ensure delivery to your inbox add email@mail.nbcnews.com to your contacts Today’s Top Stories from NBC News FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2021 Good morning, NBC News readers.
Today we have dramatic overnight session in the House, where a key vote on President Joe Biden’s agenda was delayed by a record-breaking speech. Also, we look at how Black victims of police violence live with the long-term effects, and how stores are looking to make their Santas more diverse.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Friday morning. House Democrats postponed a much-anticipated vote on President Joe Biden’s social safety net and climate package early Friday after Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy delayed a final vote with a record-breaking, wide-ranging and often angry speech.
The House is now slated to meet at 8 a.m. ET on Friday to finish consideration of the Build Back Better bill.
McCarthy, who began speaking at 8:38 p.m., brought his marathon speech to an end at about 5:04 a.m. to cheers and applause from House Republicans.
He discussed unrelated matters like the Southern border, Afghanistan policy, recruitment of police officers, poll numbers and the problem with “one-party rule.”
A senior Democratic aide told NBC News that McCarthy was “welcome to continue his raving as late into the night as he wants. The House will return and vote first thing Friday morning so the American people know heading into Thanksgiving week that House Democrats are fighting with President Biden to Build Back Better.”
Some Democrats live-tweeted their criticisms of the speech. McCarthy at times was heckled on the floor but insisted he would continue.
Read the full story and check for the latest updates here. Friday’s Top Stories
Protesters filled streets around the world after George Floyd’s killing. For some, the scars of that summer run deep. The dominant strain at the moment, H3N2, often leads to particularly bad flu seasons. Old Navy is trying to make it less of a white Christmas. OPINION The gas industry’s persecution complex runs deep and the satire just writes itself, says Michael E. Mann, professor of atmospheric science at Pennsylvania State University. Also in the News
Editor’s Pick
“When I speak with my friends and family in Kabul, they say that music is very rare,” a pianist who escaped the Afghan capital said. “Without music, the city almost feels dead.” Select
From pie birds to pie pans, baking experts explain what tools you may want to keep on hand while making dough and filling. One Fun Thing
After a year spent learning, conducting business and purchasing goods online, shoppers are putting down their phones, tablets and laptops and picking up that stalwart of a bygone, pre-Amazon era: the catalog.
Many say that the online shopping experience is too hectic or that it isn’t conducive to leisurely browsing or discovering new gift ideas.
“I feel like I’m always on my phone or the computer, so it’s kind of soothing sitting down with a cup of coffee and a tactile catalog and just flipping through it,” said Kristi Krass, a mother of three boys who lives near Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Read more here.
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: patrick.smith@nbcuni.com.
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49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Ben Kamisar
FIRST READ: Lost in the Washington shuffle: Covid cases are rising once again before Thanksgiving
It’s been a busy week on Capitol Hill and at the White House – the censure of Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s marathon speech, House Democrats on the cusp of passing their social spending bill and President Biden signing the bipartisan infrastructure bill into law.
But as we approach next week’s Thanksgiving holiday, we begin with a story that’s surprisingly gotten lost in all of those political developments: U.S. Covid cases are once again on the rise.
It comes as the United States continues to average approximately 1,000 Covid deaths a day, as Dr. Anthony Fauci warns that hospitalizations are rising among the fully vaccinated and as European countries – which have been precursors to spikes in U.S. Covid cases – are reimposing lockdowns or considering them.
Back on another holiday, July 4, President Biden declared the country’s independence from the coronavirus. Or close to it.
“Two hundred and forty-five years ago, we declared our independence from a distant king. Today, we’re closer than ever to declaring our independence from a deadly virus. That’s not to say the battle against COVID-19 is over. We’ve got a lot more work to do.”
When he said that, the U.S. reported about 600,000 fatalities from the coronavirus. Today, it’s more than 771,000.
Samuel Corum/Getty Images
Now there’s been good news for Biden to tout in the fight against Covid: More than 70 percent of U.S. adults are fully vaccinated; children ages 5-11 can get the vaccine; deaths are down considerably from their peak when he took office in January (3,000 a day); and the FDA is expected to approve booster shots for all adults.
But the bad news for the president is that the United States still hasn’t achieved that independence from Covid.
Far from it.
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America’s pandemic political divide
Look at these numbers, per MSNBC’s Kailey Wasserman and Ed Demaria, looking at NBC’s 2020 election numbers and the NYT/CDC Covid stats.
20 COUNTIES WITH THE MOST DAILY DEATHS (AVG.) PER CAPITA
20 COUNTIES WITH THE MOST CURRENT HOSPITALIZATIONS (AVG.) PER CAPITA
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House Dems on the cusp on passing their social spending bill
“House Democrats postponed a much-anticipated vote on President Joe Biden’s social safety net and climate package early Friday morning after Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy delayed a final vote with a record-long, wide-ranging and often angry speech,” NBC’s Sahil Kapur, Teaganne Finn and Haley Talbot report.
“The House is now slated to meet at 8 a.m. on Friday to finish consideration of the Build Back Better bill.”
“McCarthy, who began speaking at 8:38 p.m., brought his marathon speech to an end at around 5:04 a.m. to cheers and applause from House Republicans. He had long since crossed the eight-hour mark and broken a record set by Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., for the longest speech on the House floor.”
Our take on all of the activity: There’s been lots of theater – whether it was McCarthy’s filibuster-like speech or this entire House bill (which is going to get changed/revised/pared down in the Senate).
Tweet of the Day: Open hostility
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
8 hours and 32 minutes: How long House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy spoke on the House floor last night, breaking the House record as he criticized the Democrats’ social spending package.
$160 billion: How much the Congressional Budget Office projects the Build Back Better plan will add to the deficit in the next 10 years (the White House believes its tax enforcement will bring in more revenue and make the bill pay for itself).
2: The number of Iranians charged with interfering in the 2020 American presidential election.
47,539,839: 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 99,908 more since yesterday morning.)
771,568: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,189 more since yesterday morning.)
446,250,342: The number of total vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 1,461,156 more since yesterday morning.)
32,469,881: The number of booster vaccine doses administered in the U.S., per the CDC. (That’s 1,005,212 since yesterday morning.)
58.9 percent: The share of all Americans who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC.
70.7 percent: The share of all Americans 18-years and older who are fully vaccinated, per the CDC
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Wisconsin Republicans are floating supporting criminal charges against the state’s election commission, with Sen. Ron Johnson calling for the GOP-controlled state legislature ignore the bipartisan commission and set its own guidance for federal elections.
The New York Times profiles Maria Butina, the Russian convicted for spying in America (a charge she denies) who is now a member of Parliament back home.
In an interview with The Washington Post, Arizona Democratic Sen. Kyrsten Sinema said that the House’s Build Back Better plan is “not the agreement the president put out in his framework several weeks ago.”
RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel told reporters Thursday that “Joe Biden won the election.”
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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
It’s a big deal when your three-year-old can do one thing. “Little Timmy, pick up your shoes.” It’s a bigger deal when your three-year-old can do two things. “Little Timmy, pick up your shoes and put … MORE |
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73.) POPULIST PRESS
The Democrats are doing something when President Joe Biden speaks that has many people questioning the reason.
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TOP STORIES:
-
MSNBC Reporter Arrested After What He Did To Rittenhouse Jurors
-
…MSNBC BANNED FROM RITTENHOUSE TRIAL
-
Strange Change Made to Biden’s Table as He Signs Bill
- Senate Republicans Plan To Win Big Revealed…
- Nick Sandmann Has a Powerful Message for Kyle Rittenhouse
- Democrat Senator Sinema Says She Won’t Switch to Republican Party
- HERE WE GO: Suspicious Pile of Bricks in Kenosha Back Alley
- Pelosi Put On Notice…Punishments Coming…
- Democrats Calling For Kamala To Be Replaced….
- Fox News Owner Throws Trump Under The Bus…
- Paul Gosar censured in remarkable scene on House floor…
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IN DEPTH:
|
- Rep. Matt Gaetz Has a Special Job For Rittenhouse 45 mins ago
- Manchin undecided Still… 3 hours ago
- Ted Cruz introduces bill to reverse crypto regs… 3 hours ago
- Belarus clears migrant camps at border with EU… 3 hours ago
- Ford enters partnership to develop computer chips 3 hours ago
- Monetary Stimulus Totals $3.8 Trillion, Fiscal Stimulus Totals $4.8 Trillion 3 hours ago
- Yellen Says Biden’s $1.2 Trillion Infrastructure Bill Demands Raising Of The Debt Limit ‘ 3 hours ago
- CNN’s Most Well-Known Names at Concert—Without Masks 3 hours ago
- Pelosi Maskless At Swingers Bar With Other Dems… 3 hours ago
- Rand Paul SLAMS Fauci’s for taking away ‘individual rights’ 3 hours ago
- Rittenhouse Defense Moves for Mistrial ‘Without Prejudice’ Over Drone Video 3 hours ago
- 911 Call: Lodi School Officials’ Intimidation Game Exposed 3 hours ago
- Top General in US Military Warns of Possible Surprise Attack 3 hours ago
- Growing Evidence of Right-Trending Shift Among Hispanics 4 hours ago
- Can the FBI Be Salvaged? 4 hours ago
- Omarova, Biden’s OCC pick, faces Senate 2 hours ago
- Border Crisis Becoming Constitutional Crisis 2 hours ago
- Michigan Leads Nation in COVID, Governor Missing 2 hours ago
- Will Republicans have an advantage after redistricting? 2 hours ago
- Mahomes AFC Offensive Player of the Week 2 hours ago
- Analyst: LeBron won’t win another championship 2 hours ago
- NFL: New COVID Protocols For Thanksgiving 2 hours ago
- Saints will honor Drew Brees 2 hours ago
- Enes Kanter Blasts Beijing 2 hours ago
- Miramax Sues Tarantino 3 hours ago
- Britney Spears Wants Another Baby’ 3 hours ago
- Napolitano: What If Leviathan Destroys Our Freedom? 3 hours ago
- 23 Previously Convicted Charged With Illegal Reentry 3 hours ago
- When News Feels Like the Weather 3 hours ago
- Build Back Better – Wasting Trillions 3 hours ago
- One Million Afghan Children Malnourished 3 hours ago
- B‑21 Raider: $200 Billion Stealth Bomber? 3 hours ago
- Rising Inflation Beginning to Worry Pentagon 3 hours ago
- Russia To Deploy New Regiment In Crimea 3 hours ago
- New details on China’s hypersonic weapons test 3 hours ago
- U.S.: Iran-Backed Hackers Conducting Cyberattacks 3 hours ago
- DHS IG won’t investigate Border Patrol agents 3 hours ago
- Researchers Who Linked Trump To Alfa Bank Were Anti-Trump 3 hours ago
- Fentanyl: Cartels Taking Advantage of Open Border 3 hours ago
- CBS Whistleblower: Stations Instructed to be Biased 3 hours ago
- Even WaPo Wonders if Veritas Raid Too Much 3 hours ago
- U.S. household net worth soars 3 hours ago
- Copper Settles Down at Last, a Month After Big Squeeze 3 hours ago
- After 2025, Child Tax Credit May Drop to $1,000 From $3,600 Per Kid 3 hours ago
- Even as Inflation Pushes Prices Higher, Retail Sales Rise Faster Than Expected in October 3 hours ago
- This element of Biden’s agenda ‘has led to higher inflation’: Congress’s Budget Chief 3 hours ago
- Bidenomics: MSNBC Forced to Admit This Thanksgiving Could Be the Most Expensive Ever 3 hours ago
- Fewer Americans plan to drive this Thanksgiving as gas prices near record highs 3 hours ago
- NY Ethics Committee Rescinds Approval For Cuomo’s $5.1 Million Book Deal 3 hours ago
- Parental rights activists call for Garland’s resignation over leaked FBI email 3 hours ago
TOP STORIES:
-
It’s Official: GOP Stunner In Florida… First Time Ever
-
Kamala Harris Fights Back… Drops 2024 News
-
DOJ Watchdog Drops Hammer With Explosive Accusations
- John Kennedy Rips Biden’s Communist Comptroller Nominee…
-
MSNBC Reporter Arrested After What He Did To Rittenhouse Jurors
-
…MSNBC BANNED FROM RITTENHOUSE TRIAL
- Strange Change Made to Biden’s Table as He Signs Bill
- Senate Republicans Plan To Win Big Revealed…
- Nick Sandmann Has a Powerful Message for Kyle Rittenhouse
- Democrat Senator Sinema Says She Won’t Switch to Republican Party
- HERE WE GO: Suspicious Pile of Bricks in Kenosha Back Alley
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IN DEPTH:
|
- Paul Gosar’s Censure Reflective of Democratic Hypocrisy 1 hour ago
- NBC producer who reportedly instructed man to follow Rittenhouse jury bus nukes social media accounts 1 hour ago
- Liberty Lantern Continues its Journey from Sea to Shining Sea 4 hours ago
- Kamala Just Blamed Trump For Everything… 5 hours ago
- Rep. Matt Gaetz Has a Special Job For Rittenhouse 45 mins ago
- Manchin undecided Still… 3 hours ago
- Ted Cruz introduces bill to reverse crypto regs… 3 hours ago
- Belarus clears migrant camps at border with EU… 3 hours ago
- Ford enters partnership to develop computer chips 3 hours ago
- Monetary Stimulus Totals $3.8 Trillion, Fiscal Stimulus Totals $4.8 Trillion 3 hours ago
- Yellen Says Biden’s $1.2 Trillion Infrastructure Bill Demands Raising Of The Debt Limit ‘ 3 hours ago
- CNN’s Most Well-Known Names at Concert—Without Masks 3 hours ago
- Pelosi Maskless At Swingers Bar With Other Dems… 3 hours ago
- Rand Paul SLAMS Fauci’s for taking away ‘individual rights’ 3 hours ago
- Rittenhouse Defense Moves for Mistrial ‘Without Prejudice’ Over Drone Video 3 hours ago
- 911 Call: Lodi School Officials’ Intimidation Game Exposed 3 hours ago
- Top General in US Military Warns of Possible Surprise Attack 3 hours ago
- Growing Evidence of Right-Trending Shift Among Hispanics 4 hours ago
- Can the FBI Be Salvaged? 4 hours ago
- Omarova, Biden’s OCC pick, faces Senate 2 hours ago
- Border Crisis Becoming Constitutional Crisis 2 hours ago
- Michigan Leads Nation in COVID, Governor Missing 2 hours ago
- Will Republicans have an advantage after redistricting? 2 hours ago
- Mahomes AFC Offensive Player of the Week 2 hours ago
- Analyst: LeBron won’t win another championship 2 hours ago
- NFL: New COVID Protocols For Thanksgiving 2 hours ago
- Saints will honor Drew Brees 2 hours ago
- Enes Kanter Blasts Beijing 2 hours ago
- Miramax Sues Tarantino 3 hours ago
- Britney Spears Wants Another Baby’ 3 hours ago
- Napolitano: What If Leviathan Destroys Our Freedom? 3 hours ago
- 23 Previously Convicted Charged With Illegal Reentry 3 hours ago
- When News Feels Like the Weather 3 hours ago
- Build Back Better – Wasting Trillions 3 hours ago
- One Million Afghan Children Malnourished 3 hours ago
- B‑21 Raider: $200 Billion Stealth Bomber? 3 hours ago
- Rising Inflation Beginning to Worry Pentagon 3 hours ago
- Russia To Deploy New Regiment In Crimea 3 hours ago
- New details on China’s hypersonic weapons test 3 hours ago
- U.S.: Iran-Backed Hackers Conducting Cyberattacks 3 hours ago
- DHS IG won’t investigate Border Patrol agents 3 hours ago
- Researchers Who Linked Trump To Alfa Bank Were Anti-Trump 3 hours ago
- Fentanyl: Cartels Taking Advantage of Open Border 3 hours ago
- CBS Whistleblower: Stations Instructed to be Biased 3 hours ago
- Even WaPo Wonders if Veritas Raid Too Much 3 hours ago
- U.S. household net worth soars 3 hours ago
- Copper Settles Down at Last, a Month After Big Squeeze 3 hours ago
- After 2025, Child Tax Credit May Drop to $1,000 From $3,600 Per Kid 3 hours ago
- Even as Inflation Pushes Prices Higher, Retail Sales Rise Faster Than Expected in October 3 hours ago
- This element of Biden’s agenda ‘has led to higher inflation’: Congress’s Budget Chief 3 hours ago
- Bidenomics: MSNBC Forced to Admit This Thanksgiving Could Be the Most Expensive Ever 3 hours ago
- Fewer Americans plan to drive this Thanksgiving as gas prices near record highs 3 hours ago
- NY Ethics Committee Rescinds Approval For Cuomo’s $5.1 Million Book Deal 3 hours ago
- Parental rights activists call for Garland’s resignation over leaked FBI email 3 hours ago
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74.) THE POST MILLENNIAL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
76.) THE DAILY DOT
Did a friend forward this? Subscribe here. Welcome to the Friday edition of Internet Insider. Tiffany Kelly is on vacation, but here are 3 key/new reports from the Internet Culture team. Please enjoy them! TODAY:
BREAK THE INTERNET Disney+‘s new TikTok tie-in is pretty cool, allowing people to use Disney character voices in their posts. Of course, many of the resulting TikToks were predictably chaotic—and not especially Disney-friendly. In the words of one TikToker: “I give it about three hours tops before someone makes Stitch say a slur.”
While Disney blocked curse words from the app, TikTokers soon found ways to circumvent the ban. So yes, you can make Disney characters use NSFW language if you spell it a different way. However, some TikTokers were surprised by which other words were blocked by Disney’s text-to-speech filter. It made sense for Disney to prevent its characters from cursing, but the feature also censored words like “gay” and “lesbian.”
“Did you guys know that Disney won’t allow the voice to say Gay?” posted TikToker @kbwild_ to her 181,000 followers, using text-to-speech for Rocket Raccoon’s voice. Rocket read most of the message aloud, but the word “gay” was left silent. The TikToker went on to test words like “queer” and “lesbian,” with similar results.
Read the whole story here. By Gavia Baker-Whitelaw Staff Writer SPONSORED Don’t let your food scraps go to waste. With roughly 40% of food going to landfills every year, composting is an easy and effective way to fight against the environmental impacts of food waste.
Thanksgiving is just around the corner, so to help, we’ve compiled a list of the best food composters on the planet. ‘THAT’S GOING TO BE A PROBLEM’ Earlier this month, Nintendo released Happy Home Paradise, a new Animal Crossing: New Horizons DLC, an add-on (coming in at $24.99) that allows players to design vacation homes for various clientele. But for some players, the game also came with a sequence that could potentially trigger seizures and migraines.
To “beat” Happy Home Paradise, you need to design 30 vacation homes for the characters. Afterward, there is an virtual concert hosted on the beach, and the main act, K.K. Slider (embracing his DJ persona), starts to flash before the screen turns to white. When we return to the scene, the characters are dancing as the game highlights the various buildings you created over the course of the DLC.
“I was initially enjoying all the glowing lights and mist coming up from the ground,” gamer Liz Moore, who raised awareness about this issue, told the Daily Dot via Twitter DM. “Then some of the lights started flashing in sequence, and I had this moment of thinking, ‘Oh no, that’s going to be a problem’ and then K.K. came on screen on a very cool floating stage which was unfortunately covered in strobe lights. That’s about when I turned my switch over so I wouldn’t get a migraine.”
For some people who have epilepsy, videos or GIFs with flashing lights or images can be triggering. According to the Epilepsy Foundation, flashing lights can trigger seizures in about 3% of people who have epilepsy, which is known as photosensitive epilepsy. The World Wide Web Consortium’s guidelines on flashing images suggest that images shouldn’t contain more than three flashes in one second; if it does break that rule, it should come with a warning.
Read the whole story here.
—Michelle Jaworski
DAILY DOT PICKS
IS SHE REAL? TikTok is currently obsessed with videos of a seemingly impossibly skinny woman side-stepping through not-at-all-tight spaces.
The trend has come to be known as “skinny girl walking sideways,” and the origin appears to be the TikTok account mnmnooxx00, which posted a video in early October showing a woman walking past a person on the street sideways, thus displaying how thin she is.
There are similar side-stepping videos on the account. In a TikTok from Nov. 1, the caption reads: “When ur skinny and can fit through gaps like me.”
Cringe caption aside, the majority of TikToks on the account show this same woman walking places and being thin and attractive, almost uncannily so. The account appeared to address claims that there are filters or editing at work in late October. Other TikTokers have suggested it’s not even a real person: In mid-October, one user showed that the account had deleted most of its videos. The earliest TikTok is now from Oct. 22.
That didn’t stop the sideways walk from catching on as a copycat trend, as well as a source of critique and parody.
Read the whole story here. —Audra Schroeder
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77.) HEADLINE USA
78.) NATURAL NEWS
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79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
82.) CNN
Friday 11.19.21 Thanksgiving holiday travel could get messy due to a smorgasbord of extreme weather events. Check this day-by-day forecast, and if you want more in-depth coverage, sign up for email alerts from CNN’s weather team. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. House Democrats are on the verge of passing the extensive social spending bill. Congress
House Democrats are on the verge of passing President Biden’s sweeping social spending and climate change bill after months of feuding. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had hoped to vote on the measure late yesterday, but House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy stalled floor action with a marathon speech that stretched into the early hours of this morning. The $1.9 trillion economic legislation stands as a key pillar of Biden’s domestic agenda, and Democrats are still confident they have the votes to pass it later today. The measure would deliver on long-standing Democratic priorities by dramatically expanding social services for Americans, working to mitigate the climate crisis, increasing access to health care and delivering aid to families and children. Whether it can survive in the Senate remains an open question.
Coronavirus
A new look at the origins of the Covid-19 pandemic points straight back to a seafood market in the Chinese city of Wuhan, says a scientist who’s been studying the pandemic since the beginning. That was the original suspected source of the pandemic, but as more entities investigated and the Chinese government sought to deflect blame, the picture has become muddied. His research also reveals the possible first documented case of Covid-19: a seafood vendor who worked at the market and got sick on December 11, 2019. Nearly two years later, the world is still struggling with how to handle the virus. Austria is due to go into a national lockdown Monday, and in the US, more than a million people are estimated to still be missing their sense of smell after a Covid-19 infection.
Social media
A bipartisan group of 10 state attorneys general has launched an investigation into Meta — formerly known as Facebook — focused on the potential harms of its Instagram platform on children and teens. The announcement follows extensive reporting on a trove of internal documents leaked by a former Facebook employee-turned-whistleblower. Some of the documents show that the company’s own researchers have found that Instagram can damage young users’ mental health and body image and can exacerbate dangerous behaviors such as eating disorders. The attorneys general say they will look into whether, by continuing to provide and promote Instagram despite knowing of the potential harms, Meta violated consumer protection laws and “put the public at risk.”
Ahmaud Arbery
Attorneys are due to begin closing arguments Monday in the trial of three White men involved in the killing of Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery after more than 20 witnesses and investigators took the stand over 10 days. Arbery was shot in a Georgia neighborhood in February 2020 after being pursued by the defendants in their vehicles. Travis McMichael, who shot and killed Arbery; his father Gregory McMichael; and their neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan Jr. are charged with malice and felony murder. They have also been indicted on federal hate crime and attempted kidnapping charges. Defense attorneys argued their clients were trying to conduct a lawful citizen’s arrest of Arbery, whom they suspected of burglary. Prosecutors have noted, by the men’s own account, Arbery did not appear armed, threatening or interested in confrontation. One Black and 11 White jurors will decide their fate.
Peng Shuai
International concern is growing over the whereabouts of Peng Shuai, a Chinese tennis star who made explosive allegations of sexual assault against a former top Communist Party leader. Peng has not been seen in public since she posted the allegations to social media this month. The post triggered swift and widespread censorship, with even the barest reference of her scrubbed from online conversations. China has even blocked CNN’s broadcast signal to prevent further reporting about Peng. In response, the tennis world has come together in a broad outcry. The head of the Women’s Tennis Association says he’s willing to pull business out of China altogether if reliable information about her whereabouts isn’t provided. The German Olympic Sport Federation is the latest body to call for clarity around the situation.
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People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Here’s who won big at the Latin Grammy Awards
Biden will hand down the annual Thanksgiving turkey pardon today
Nearly half of Victoria’s Secret’s holiday products have been stuck at ports or in transit
Sensational 2-way baseball star Shohei Ohtani named the unanimous choice for MVP of the American League
How to find lower prices and avoid empty shelves during the holiday shopping rush Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said today that he would repeal three contentious agricultural laws that sparked more than a year of protests. In India, farming is a central political issue, and Modi’s decision comes ahead of pivotal state elections. The White House tapped Mitch Landrieu to lead the implementation of the roughly $1 trillion infrastructure bill. Where did Landrieu formerly serve as mayor?
A. Los Angeles, California
900 That’s how many stores CVS will close over the next three years in response to changing “consumer buying patterns.” The closures — amounting to nearly 10% of the drug store chain’s footprint — are part of broader realignment of its retail strategy of its roughly 10,000 locations. He’s the President. We know that.
Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel, who said she recognizes Biden as the 46th president of the United States, even as she claimed there were “lots of problems” with the 2020 election that Republican candidates should address. Brought to you by CNN Underscored 46 little items on Amazon that make a big difference We’ve pulled together some of our staff’s favorite useful things on Amazon, many of which are small but provide big results. Bonus: They’re all under $50. What a relief! 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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83.) THE DAILY CALLER
84.) POWERLINE
Daily Digest |
- They Are After Our Children
- Pelosi drives spending spree bill towards vote
- It Doesn’t Pay For Itself
- Why do they dislike Harris and what happens to her?
- Biden expected to opt for “diplomatic boycott” of 2022 Winter Olympics
They Are After Our Children
Posted: 18 Nov 2021 04:55 PM PST (John Hinderaker)The precepts of Critical Race Theory are only taught to law school students, right? Sure. And also to pre-schoolers. Check out this new program from the University of Texas called GoKAR!. KAR stands for Kids Against Racism. UT is looking for Click to enlarge, via Minding the Campus:
One stated objective of the GoKAR! program is to “increase awareness of racism.” I have no doubt that this goal will be achieved. These four and five year olds probably have little or no awareness of racism, but when the University of Texas is done with them, race will be front and center in their lives. Liberals think that is a good thing. God knows why. That’s race. Now on to gender. In California, public school teachers’ union members are stalking middle-school kids on the internet, identifying potential 12- to 14-year-old kids whom they can groom into the LGBTQ life through school organizations. Seriously. Abigail Shrier has the story, obtained through audio recordings from a conference of California’s largest teachers’ union. Here, as is generally the case, the teachers’ union is a source of great evil.
You really should read Ms. Shrier’s post in its entirety. It includes lengthy quotes from union members that support that summary. For example:
It turns out that very few middle school kids are actually interested in being gay, trans or whatever. So radical teachers “stalk what they [are] doing on Google”–their words, not mine–and “use [their] observations of kids in the classroom” to identify children who might be vulnerable to the gay message, and entice them into the queer–their word–“movement.” All of this is at taxpayers’ expense, and, as one of the teachers caught on audio tape exults, they can’t be fired for stalking and grooming children. However concerned you may be about the Left coming after your children, you can’t be paranoid enough. |
Pelosi drives spending spree bill towards vote
Posted: 18 Nov 2021 03:49 PM PST (Paul Mirengoff)Today, the House started debating the more than $2 trillion spending package that Democrats hope ultimately to push through the Senate in some form via reconciliation. By agreement, a vote in the House couldn’t take place until the Congressional Budget Office completed its analysis of whether the bill is fully paid for. Now, the CBO has spoken, paving the way for a vote. It estimates that enacting the legislation “would result in a net increase in the deficit totaling $367 billion over the 2022-2031 period, not counting any additional revenue that may be generated by additional funding for tax enforcement.” Proponents of the spending spree bill argue that the shortfall will, in fact, be made up by empowering the IRS to pursue unpaid taxes. However, as the Washington Post noted, “federal estimates historically have calculated the government would raise less revenue from these proposals than its chief backers insist.” (That language has been scrubbed from the current version of the story in which it appeared.) I expect the House to pass something like the bill now under consideration, if for no other reason than the reality that so-called moderates feel doomed and want to pass something big on their way out, while also showing enough party loyalty to help them in their post-congressional careers. But the Senate is another matter. Will Joe Manchin buy the Dems’ dubious math? Will raging inflation give him serious pause, as he has suggested it would? Will he accept the fact that the spending bill’s price tag has ballooned to around $2.4 trillion from the $1.75 trillion price tag he seemed to insist upon? Charles Cooke points out that the recently-enacted infrastructure-plus bill has very broad support in West Virginia, according to polling. By contrast, nearly 74 percent of West Virginia voters say Manchin should oppose the spending bill Democrats want to pass through reconciliation. There’s not much incentive for Manchin to back legislation anything like what the House is likely to pass. There’s also the matter of the Hyde amendment. Manchin has demanded that it apply to the spending bill and called this a “red line.” However, Nancy Pelosi says the House legislation excludes it. Maybe the Hyde amendment will be added to the final legislation. But that move might be opposed by hard leftists whose votes are needed. Thus, it seems highly unlikely that the Senate will pass what Pelosi ends up sending it. But maybe the game plan is for the House to pass something within shouting distance of what Manchin will accept, and then to compromise down the road. I have never felt confident that I know how this lengthy drama will end. I still don’t. |
It Doesn’t Pay For Itself
Posted: 18 Nov 2021 03:15 PM PST (John Hinderaker)Democrats have promoted the “Build Back Better” Act with the absurd claim that it will pay for itself–it costs nothing! So Nancy Pelosi and Joe Biden have been nervously awaiting the Congressional Budget Office’s evaluation of the current version of the bill. The CBO may lean to the left, but it has employees who can add. Sure enough, earlier today the CBO released an estimate that, as I read it, indicates the bill will increase the federal deficit by over $791 billion between 2022 and 2026, and $367 billion between 2022 and 2031. So much for paying for itself. Joe Manchin, for one, has been pointing to the forthcoming CBO estimate as an important factor in evaluating the Democrats’ spending spree. We can imagine what he will make of $791 billion. And, given the inflation that has taken off over the past year and that already is being fueled by out of control federal spending, it is hard to imagine who would be so irresponsible as to advocate increasing the national debt by the amounts that the CBO suggests. |
Why do they dislike Harris and what happens to her?
Posted: 18 Nov 2021 02:02 PM PST (Paul Mirengoff)Jen Psaki attributes criticism of Kamala Harris to “sexism” and “racism.” However, Charles Cooke at NRO reminds us that neither women nor Blacks had any use for Harris when she sought the Democratic presidential nomination:
It’s also worth noting that, according to reports from various media sources, the Biden White House itself is highly critical of Harris. A lengthy CNN article based on nearly three dozen interviews with political aides, operatives and insiders, reported that Harris’ team believes the vice president is being sidelined by the West Wing and set up to fail as the Democratic Party’s future standard-bearer. According to CNN, “the list of complaints between the West Wing and the vice president’s office keep growing.” Is the dissatisfaction with Harris inside Biden’s inner circle due to sexism and racism? Possibly, but I doubt it. Indeed, as Cooke says, Team Biden selected Harris as Joe’s running mating precisely because she’s a black female. This doesn’t entirely preclude the possibility that some White House resentment of Harris is down to gender or race. However, it tends to undermine the notion. So does the existence of multiple non-sexist, non-racist reasons to criticize the vice president. Indeed, these reasons undermine the claim that anyone’s criticism of Harris is based on gender or race. Harris is an opportunist of few fixed principles. She has been mostly missing in action as vice president, including with regard to the crisis at our border with Mexico, which Biden graciously assigned to her to mitigate but which she hasn’t visited. Her interviews by friendly media figures have been embarrassing. Cooke summarizes the case against Harris this way:
That’s harsh, but mostly fair in my opinion. What does the future hold for Harris? There’s talk about her being removed as VP during Biden’s first term. I don’t think that’s going to happen. What would be the point? To clear the way for someone else to be the Democrats’ nominee in 2024, assuming Biden doesn’t run, I suppose. But if Harris’ standing remains low, she will almost certainly be defeated in the Democratic primaries (if she even runs). That should be preferred way of removing her because it immunizes Biden and other party bigwigs from accusations of sexism and racism — like the ones Psaki disingenuously leveled. And if Harris’ standing recovers, as it eventually might if Biden’s does, then there’s little need for party bosses to worry if she’s the Democratic presidential candidate in 2024. |
Biden expected to opt for “diplomatic boycott” of 2022 Winter Olympics
Posted: 18 Nov 2021 10:21 AM PST (Paul Mirengoff)In a few months, Beijing will stage the 2022 Winter Olympics. U.S. athletes are set to participate. Nothing like the boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in the Soviet Union is likely to occur. Neither participation nor a boycott is an attractive option. Red China is an oppressive, totalitarian state. Participation by our athletes implies that the regime deserves the honor of hosting Olympic games, which it does not. Our participation could be viewed as accepting genocide. However, a government instituted boycott by our athletes would punish them for China’s sins. It would also be a huge insult to China. And it wouldn’t change China’s oppressive policies. The insult would be well deserved. However, our relationship with the regime is complicated by the interdependence of the two nations — something that wasn’t a problem in 1980 when we insulted the Soviets. To avoid choosing between these two highly unpleasant options, the Biden administration reportedly will adopt a third course — a “diplomatic boycott.” Our athletes would participate, but as a protest against China’s human rights abuses, neither Joe Biden nor any other U.S. government officials would attend the Games. Biden’s favored middle course avoids the main objections to the alternatives. Our athletes aren’t punished for Red China’s human rights violations. And because we aren’t really punishing the Chinese, we don’t risk incurring significant consequences. However, because it neither punishes China nor sacrifices anything at our end, a “diplomatic boycott” is a largely meaningless gesture. It would tend to reinforce the well-founded perception that Joe Biden isn’t serious. If it were my decision, I would opt for either regular participation or a full boycott — probably the latter, but I’m still not sure. The half-measure (to be generous) Biden seems to favor, and which Nancy Pelosi and Mitt Romney have recommended, ranks third on my preference list. |
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
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89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
91.) USA TODAY
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST
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93.) JUST THE NEWS
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94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON
95.) RIGHTWING.ORG
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96.) NOT THE BEE
97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
99.) MARK LEVIN
November 18, 2021
On Thursday’s Mark Levin Show, it’s amazing how our government doesn’t work. They impeached Trump twice with no high crimes or misdemeanors, and with the help of collaborators within the establishment tried to eliminate Trump from Washington. These same bureaucrats, and the Biden family, have played nice with China while mortgaging the future of American Citizens and they’ve never been investigated for it. Then, there’s no reason for the price of fuel to be going up. But, President Biden is now saying that fuel companies need to be investigated for price gouging. This kind of demagoguery works because Americans have been conditioned to hate the oil companies. Even though Biden canceled the Keystone pipeline and stopped drilling in Anwar. Biden is blaming private companies for the ports and trucking delays as well. These problems are caused by regulations that strangle the industry. The left believes that all problems are the responsibility of the individual and never the fault of the government or the American Marxists that comprise it. These bureaucrats expect you to give up your rights in exchange for the “free” stuff. This is how a police state is made. Afterward, in 2020, Kenosha, WI was attacked and looked like a warzone, but one brave volunteer came to offer aid and to help secure the property in town. He was attacked by the media for being legally armed with an AR-15 rifle. Every propagandist in the left-wing media wants to destroy Kyle Rittenhouse because they don’t want an armed citizenry that can defend themselves.
THIS IS FROM:
Breitbart
Joe Biden Blames Record High Energy Prices on Oil Companies, Calls for Investigation
Breitbart
Joe Biden Blames Private Companies for Port Delays
Just The News
Pentagon didn’t delay sending Guardsmen to Capitol on Jan. 6, report conflicts with Pelosi narrative
Rumble
Rittenhouse Judge BANS MSNBC From Courtroom
Right Scoop
WATCH: Local CBS whistleblower exposes how affiliate is being trained NOT to be objective anymore
Americans For Tax Reform
Reconciliation Bill Gives Special Tax Handout to Big Media
Axios
Scoop: GOP donors “furious” with McConnell
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Michael Zarrilli
100.) WOLF DAILY
101.) THE GELLER REPORT
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102.) CNS
103.) RELIABLE NEWS
104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
As your gas prices go up, just know that Biden is helping out Asia by sending them our reserves. He’s depleting our emergency reserves for Asia.
An MSNBC reporter was tracking Rittenhouse jurors and MSNBC is now banned from the courthouse.
OSHA rule could cause a Catastrophic collapse of the trucking industry.
Let the radicals beat you up because you can’t use your big gun.
New Insane Possibility! Defense Believes Rittenhouse Jury Split 6-6There is a rumor that the Rittenhouse jury is split 6-6. Do you believe that six people want to send this young man to jail for life in an obvious… | |
Putin’s Shooting Space Junk at Western Astronauts NowPutin is now endangering astronauts in space. He destroyed an old satellite that appeared to send 1500 pieces of debris into space. Astronauts had to take refuge in space pods,… | |
Biden Is Exporting Our Emergency Oil Reserves to AsiaJoe Biden is in the process of destroying our fossil fuel sector and the gas prices are surging. In his wisdom, or lack of it, he plans to tap the… | |
The ruling against Biden’s private-sector vax mandate shows it’s indefensibleOpinion The ruling against Biden’s private-sector vax mandate shows it’s indefensible Employers and working Americans got good news on Friday: They likely won’t have to deal with President Biden’s cockamamie workplace… | |
Psaki Tells Businesses to Ignore the Courts & Move Ahead With OSHA’s Lawless MandateAfter two Appeals Court said the OSHA mandate is “staggeringly overboard” presenting “grave statutory and constitutional issues,” Moscow U graduate Jen Psaki said businesses should ignore the courts. OSHA even… | |
FDA Wants 55 years to Fully Release Docs Approving Pfizer COV VaxThe Food and Drug Administration (FDA) asked a federal judge on Nov. 15 to give it until the year 2076 to fully release the documents in its possession tied to… | |
New Poll Has Biden’s Job Approval at 36% – Who Are These 36%?American voters say that if the 2022 midterm elections were held today, they would want to see the Republican Party win control of both the House of Representatives and the… | |
Man Killed with a SkateboardRemember how Prosecutor Kraus said Kyle Rittenhouse should have let the violent radicals just “beat him up a little” since he had a big gun? Well, what’s in a skateboard… | |
Surprise! Biden Will Put a Huge Energy Tax on a Lot of Ordinary AmericansDem Reconciliation Bill Contains $8 Billion Home Heating Tax by John Kartch, Americans for Tax Reform The Democrat multi-trillion-dollar tax and spend bill includes an $8 billion energy tax on… | |
Biden Clown Show Stars a Communist Lying During Her HearingAll of Biden’s appointees to the Democrat clown show are similar. Biden is the biggest clown. He is destroying the US, destroying fossil fuels, pushing inflation, opening our borders, and… | |
Now That Fauci Noticed Vaccines, Mandates Sure to FollowLate to the party Tony, Hillary’s friend, finally noticed what we have all noticed for months thanks to data from the UK and Israel. Vaccinated people are in the hospitals… | |
NBC Reporter Following Rittenhouse Jurors-Possibly TO OUT THEM-Was ARRESTED!We already reported that evil MNBC is banned for allegedly planning to put Rittenhouse jurors in danger and place the outcome of the trial in jeopardy by terrorizing these people…. | |
Not White Supremacist Attacks Asian in Urban HellholeWhy can’t we have law enforcement in these urban hellholes? Since when does the communist Black Lives Matter get to decide? Funny how I don’t remember voting for any of… | |
MSNBC Booted! Sinister Ploy to OUT Rittenhouse JURORS-UpdatedWTH! I just going to put up Twitter posts for the most part because I just got out of surgery and have no help today. I researched this earlier and… | |
President Trump Destroys Broken Old Crow, Mitch McConnellPresident Trump Destroys “Broken Old Crow, Mitch McConnell” President Trump shared a statement on “Broken Old Crow, Mitch McConnell” today. McConnell keeps throwing lifelines to Democrats. He might as well… | |
Biden to Sign Up for UN’s Limits of RefrigerantsPresident Biden submitted the Kigali Amendment to the Senate for ratification last night, CEI’s Ben Lieberman reported. Formally known as the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol on Substances That… | |
Reconciliation Bill Gives Special Tax Handout to Big MediaReconciliation Bill Gives Special Tax Handout to Big Media by John Kartch, Americans for Tax Freedom On page 1,957 of the reconciliation bill, Democrats have included a $1.67 billion special… | |
PA County Lawsuit Exposes Serious 2020 Election IrregularitiesA whistleblower provided information that prompted a lawsuit citing serious election irregularities from Delaware County in Pennsylvania. The documentation he provided comes from a right-to-know request filed in May. The… | |
WOKE NPR Is in Turmoil After the Wrong Minority Candidate WonWOKE NPR, taxpayer-funded and biased, is very distressed. They supported the wrong WOKE candidate for mayor of Boston. In a now-deleted that you can view here, NPR wrote that “While… | |
A True Equality-Driven Democratic California School Choice InitiativeA True Equality-Driven Democratic California School Choice Initiative Doesn’t Require Income Divisions or Means Testing by Marc Eng With nonstop news stories about divisions around class, income, race and anything… | |
Schumer Sneaks Critical Race Theory Into the Defense BillA few U.S. House conservatives read the overly-long National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). That was fortunate because they caught Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s (D-NY) add-ons. He covertly slipped slews of… | |
37% of Truckers Won’t Get Vaxxed — We Face a “Catastrophic Collapse”While we are in the middle of a serious shortage of truckers causing a dangerous supply chain problem, 37% of truckers will not get vaccinated. That is according to the… | |
Rittenhouse Prosecutor Wanted Kyle to Let Them Beat Him UpAs we told you, this trial in Kenosha is about guns and self-defense. The Left wants both obliterated. In this clip at the Rittenhouse’s trial, the prosecutor said the crazy… | |
Marxist Currency Nominee Was Once Arrested for TheftThe White House continues to stand by their radical communist Moscow U graduate Saule Omarova. She is the nominee to take over as comptroller of the currency. We now find… |
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
111.) UNITED VOICE
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112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO
November 19, 2021
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113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES
These are abridged remarks I gave Tuesday morning in Baltimore at the “Enough is Enough” protest across from the annual gathering of the U.S. Conference of…
A young child sat by helplessly as his mother was attacked and thrown into furniture.
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114.) WAKING TIMES
115.) UNCOVER DC