MORNING NEWS BRIEFING – FEBRUARY 9, 2022

Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday February 9, 2022

1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL

February 9 2022
Good morning from Washington, where public health officials are backpedaling on the effectiveness of masks against COVID-19 even as school systems cling to them. Doug Badger has the facts. Students are bullying a Georgetown Law prof over his choice of words, Jarrett Stepman writes. On the podcast, the director of a new documentary details Communist China’s bloody suppression of a religious movement. Plus: a former reporter sues over House Democrats’ investigative tactics; mental health and “transitioning” teens; and the disquieting nuclear threat. On this date in 1825, with no candidate claiming a majority in the Electoral College, the House of Representatives votes to elect John Quincy Adams president, although he trails Andrew Jackson in the popular vote.
COMMENTARY
Unmasking CDC’s Latest Mask Study: How Government Gets It Wrong Again
By Doug Badger
The study reports that wearing a cloth mask may make you 17% more likely to test positive for COVID-19 than wearing no mask at all.
COMMENTARY
Student Activists Trying to Cancel Georgetown Law Professor Aren’t Snowflakes, They’re Bullies
By Jarrett Stepman
A cancel culture incident at Georgetown Law School perfectly illustrates the corruption of elite American institutions and the folly of wishing the “culture war” simply would go away.
NEWS
Lawsuit Alleges Illegal Tactics in House Democrats’ Climate Probe of Oil Companies
By Fred Lucas
House Democrats are using privately funded staff to investigate oil companies for spreading “disinformation” on climate change, a lawsuit alleges.
COMMENTARY
Trans Health Association Recommends Mental Health Assessment Before Teens Transition. The New York Times Isn’t Convinced.
By Nicole Russell
In an incredible twist, The New York Times appears to at least kind of acknowledge the idea that transgender teens may “need therapy before hormones.”
COMMENTARY
Threat Assessment Grim on Weapons of Mass Destruction
By Peter Brookes
There are good reasons to be nervous about threats from weapons of mass destruction arising from Iran, North Korea, Syria, China, and Russia.
ANALYSIS
'Unsilenced': New Film Lifts Curtain on Horrors Committed by Chinese Communist Party
By Virginia Allen
In the documentary film “Unsilenced,” director Leon Lee tells the story of those who were persecuted and killed by China’s government because they practiced Falun Gong.
COMMENTARY
ICYMI: By Design, Biden’s Border Crisis Actually His Biggest Success
By Deroy Murdock
Why would President Biden willfully obliterate the U.S.-Mexico boundary and vacuum millions of illegal immigrants north?
LOGO-CHARCOAL_75percent.jpg

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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES

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3.) DAYBREAK

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1.
NBC On Track for Lowest-Rated Winter Games in History

From the story: The numbers are stark but not a surprise. Strained relations between the United States and China due to economic and human rights issues, another Olympics held during the COVID-19 pandemic, and a lack of buzz coming into the Games have been significant factors (WGN). From Jim Geraghty: It isn’t the athletes’ fault that the IOC selected Beijing — not even a particularly cold or snowy city! — to host an Olympics for the second time in 14 years. It is not even NBC’s fault, although apparently the network’s billion-dollar investment in broadcasting the games makes it a hostage–partner to whatever propaganda the Chinese government chooses to present (National Review). A quick look at the China abuses of late (Washington Examiner).

2.
221 House Democrats Vote to Block “Unmask Our Kids Act”

The story notes “Despite the growing nationwide Democrat interest in ditching the mask mandates, House Democrats voted against ending school mask mandates nationwide” (Breitbart). From Kevin McCarthy: Every single House Democrat just voted against rescinding universal mask mandates in K-12 schools. They voted against students, against parental choice, and against science (Twitter). The head of the American Federation of Teachers, a long-time admirer of masking children, indicated she might lighten her obsession with masks if the CDC tells her to (Hot Air).

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3.
Truckers Get a Win: Alberta Abolishes Vaccine Passports

It ended at the close of Tuesday. Jason Kenney, the premier of Alberta, admitted “these restrictions have led to terrible division.”

Washington Times

4.
New York Governor Extends Statewide Mask Mandate for School Children

Even though she appears to be letting go of the requirement that businesses demand customers show proof of vaccination and use masks (New York Times). New York Governor Kathy Hochul wants to see more young children vaccinated before she ends the mask mandate (NY Post).

5.
Anti-Semitic Crimes Jump Nearly 300 Percent in New York City

And the hate crimes continue (Daily Wire). Anti-Semitic vandals spray painted swastikas on the side of a bus and a home (NY Post).

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6.
Democrat Cori Bush Still Pushing Slogan “Defund the Police”

She’s doing so even as the phrase is part of the mess that is killing the Democratic brand (Axios). From Senator Ted Cruz: Democrats need to stop the anti-police rhetoric. We need to have the backs of the men and women in blue! (Twitter).

7.
Police Association: “Left-Wing Policies” are Increasing Crime and Anti-Police Sentiment

National Police Association spokeswoman Betsy Brantner Smith (pictured) said “We’ve had this war on cops and, quite frankly, a war on the justice system really since 2014, since the justified police shooting of Michael Brown. But for the last 19 months, since the death of George Floyd, we have had this vilification of law enforcement.”

Daily Wire

8.
Abrams Now Admits Maskless Photos Was Wrong

A day earlier, she accused those who questioned it “racist” (Twitter). Turns out, she posed for a number of photos without her mask while making all others put them on (Hot Air).  And she wants children to remain behind a mask (Twitter).

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9.
Baby Boomers Retire Just as Baby Busters Enter Labor Force

Tim Carney points out “Births fell every year for five years after 2007 and have never gotten back above 4 million. They have now fallen for six straight years. So while our retiree class swells to unprecedented size, our working-age population will shrink at a record pace. This will allow for statistical oddities, such as a shrinking labor force paired with an increased labor-force participation rate.”

Washington Examiner

10.
Biden Calls Parental Rights Bill “Hateful Attack”

The bill is designed to stop schools from pushing gender identity and homosexuality on young children. From the story: President Biden criticized a controversial bill making its way through the Florida legislature that addresses conversations teachers have with their students about gender and sexual orientation. “I want every member of the LGBTQI+ community — especially the kids who will be impacted by this hateful bill — to know that you are loved and accepted just as you are,” the president tweeted Tuesday. “I have your back, and my Administration will continue to fight for the protections and safety you deserve.”

Fox News

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4.) THE SUNBURN

Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 2.9.22

Who’s up, down, in and out — your morning tipsheet on Florida politics.

Good Wednesday morning.

Sen. Danny Burgess is joining Tampa Bay’s largest law firm.

Shumaker announced Wednesday that it was adding the lawmaker and former head of the Florida Department of Veteran’s Affairs to its legal team “to help expand Shumaker’s reach in Tampa Bay and beyond.”

In addition to Burgess, the firm is bringing on Zephyrhills City Attorney Matthew Maggard.

“Danny and Matthew are respected leaders with strong ties in Pasco County. Adding them to the firm will allow Shumaker to serve new clients and continue its exciting growth,” said Ron Christaldi, Shumaker’s Tampa Managing Partner and the President and CEO of Shumaker Advisors Florida.

Danny Burgess brings his extensive Pasco County experience to Tampa Bay’s largest legal firm.

Burgess earned his law degree from Barry University and his bachelor’s degree in political science from the University of South Florida. He is also a Major in the U.S. Army Reserve.

Shumaker said his law and community experience will be an invaluable resource for Shumaker clients.

“Shumaker handles some of the most cutting-edge cases, with a prestigious team of attorneys who stand out as difference makers in Tampa Bay,” Burgess said. “I am thrilled to join this elite group of innovative leaders and look forward to helping clients solve complex problems.”

Burgess, a Zephyrhills Republican, will work out of Shumaker’s Dade City Office, which provides a full range of services to businesses, individuals, and estates throughout the United States and internationally, emphasizing representation of publicly held companies and other growth enterprises.

___

The First Amendment Foundation has selected Florida Supreme Court communications director Craig Waters for its 2022 Pete Weitzel/Friend of the First Amendment Award.

FAF said Waters’ pick was in recognition of his “groundbreaking use of the internet and video technology to open the workings of the Florida Supreme Court — and the state court system — to the public.”

Speak freely: Craig Waters is recognized for bringing innovations to the Florida Supreme Court.

The award comes as Waters prepares to retire after 35 years working for the court. During his tenure, he established the Supreme Court’s initial website, organized the statewide broadcast and worldwide livestreams of Supreme Court oral arguments — most notably those related to the 2000 presidential election recount — and helped bring the court into the social media age.

“No one in this state has done more to open up justice in Florida to the public than Craig Waters,” said Pamela Marsh, executive director of the First Amendment Foundation. “He has dedicated his entire career to the public’s free access to the judicial system and its records. Craig has been an advocate for everything we stand for at the First Amendment Foundation.”

First Amendment Foundation Board of Trustees chair Amy Hollyfield added, “It is an honor to recognize Craig Waters for his relentless work for transparency in Florida’s court system.”

Waters will receive the award during the Florida Supreme Court’s retirement reception at 2:30 p.m. The reception will be held at the Florida Supreme Court’s library and is open to the public.

The Pete Weitzel/Friend of the First Amendment Award was created in 1995 to recognize the significant contribution to open government by Pete Weitzel, the former senior editor of the Miami Herald and the founder and Director Emeritus of the First Amendment Foundation.

Past recipients include former Gov. Charlie Crist, former Attorney General Bob Butterworth, former FSU President Sandy D’Alemberte, former House Speaker Peter Rudy Wallace and former Senate Presidents Jim ScottToni Jennings and Joe Negron.

— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —

@ashishjka: Quick update on the state of the pandemic in the U.S. Nationally, Infections are down 60%. Hospitalizations down about 30%. Deaths have largely plateaued at a very high 2500+ per day. Beneath the headlines, we see dropping infections in every part of the country.

@ChristinaPushaw: Gov. (RonDeSantis 2020: Opens Schools Dems 2022: Schools are open because of us. Say thank you. Gov DeSantis 2021: Protects parents’ right to decide whether or not their own kids wear masks in schools. Dems 2022: School masks are optional because of us. Say thank you.

@SenRickScott: No one has done more to grow and expand the Republican Party than @GOPChairwoman. The @GOP is making historic investments in the @NRSC and because of their support, we have been able to grow our grassroots fundraising to unprecedented levels.

Tweet, tweet:

 

@JosephBHarding: Things that matter to Americans and @POTUS is silent on: — Rising gas prices — empty shelves — affordable housing — not starting another war What is our President worried about? He is worried about my bill that empowers parents. He is worried about @GovRonDeSantis. Red wave.

@Name_u_Know: I hope it’s not lost on folks that while supporters of HB1239 are saying that the bill won’t reduce direct care, the amended bill literally will reduce the minimum standard of direct care by CNAs from 2.5 to 2.0. That’s clear, harmful math.

@ByJasonDelgadoCFO @JimmyPatronis on PIP insurance & Floridians: “My phone doesn’t ring off the hook with people complaining about PIP …” “Now I’ll tell you what … If their insurance rates go up, they will burn down the Capitol.”

@RenzoDowneyTime for bills to start dying? Senate Community Affairs doesn’t have time to extend its meeting this afternoon. Ethics & Elex is using the room next to continue considering @FLSurgeonGen. Before public input, Sen. (TravisHutson warns, “Bills will die if we don’t get this going.”

Tweettweet:

 

@DKThomp: One of the most popular modes of commentary is what you could call DGAF Populist. DGAF Populists — RoganChappelleMaher — are anti-PC, anti-GOP, anti-left, anti-neurotic, anti-“woke,” pro-“do your thing,” economically left, culturally libertarian, and linguistically rude

— DAYS UNTIL —

Super Bowl LVI — 4; Will Smith‘s ‘Fresh Prince of Bel-Air’ reboot premieres — 4; Discover Boating Miami International Boat Show begins — 7; season four of “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ begins — 7; Spring Training report dates begin — 8; Synapse Florida tech summit begins — 8; ‘The Walking Dead’ final season part two begins — 11; Daytona 500 — 11; Special Election for Jacksonville City Council At-Large Group 3 — 13; Suits For Session — 14; CPAC begins — 15; St. Pete Grand Prix — 16; Joe Biden to give the State of the Union address — 20; ‘The Batman’ premieres — 23; Miami Film Festival begins — 23; the 2022 Players begins — 27; Sarasota County votes to renew the special 1-mill property tax for the school district — 27; House GOP retreat in Ponte Vedra Beach — 42; the third season of ‘Atlanta’ begins — 42; season two of ‘Bridgerton’ begins — 44; The Oscars — 43; Macbeth with Daniel Craig and Ruth Negga begin performances on Broadway — 48; Grammys rescheduled in Las Vegas — 53; Magic Johnson’s Apple TV+ docuseries ‘They Call Me Magic’ begins — 72; ‘The Godfather’ TV series ‘The Offer’ premieres — 78; federal student loan payments will resume — 81; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 86; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 107; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 113; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 150; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 163; Michael Mann and Meg Gardiner novel ‘Heat 2’ publishes — 181; ‘The Lord of the Rings’ premieres on Amazon Prime — 205; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 240; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 275; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 278; ‘Avatar 2′ premieres — 310; ‘Captain Marvel 2′ premieres — 373; ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ premieres — 408; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 534; ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 618; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 898.

— TOP STORY —

Senate, House budget bills would create new DCA, change gaming commission, account for inflation” via Gray Rohrer of Florida Politics — The House and Senate Appropriations committees are poised to vote on their budget plans Wednesday, setting the stage for a floor vote later in Session. Along with the main budget bill, they’ll also approve a slew of budget conforming bills required to pass in tandem with the budget. Included in those bills are measures to create a $2 billion fund to help state agencies cope with rising costs of goods due to inflation, create a 6th District Court of Appeal, and change the qualifications for serving on the new Gaming Control Commission. The inflation trust fund is a bill proposed by the House (APC 22-06), setting aside $2 billion in general revenue.

Spending spree: The House and Senate budgets offer a slew of major projects.

— DATELINE TALLY —

Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo declines to say if he got the COVID-19 shot, moves toward final confirmation vote” via Skyler Swisher of the Orlando Sentinel — Ladapo is one vote away from being confirmed by the Senate, despite strong opposition from Democrats who say he has failed to promote COVID-19 vaccines, masks and other measures to slow the spread of the virus. The Senate’s Ethics and Elections Committee voted 5-4 on party lines in favor of Ladapo’s confirmation. The full Senate will vote next on his confirmation. Grilled by Democrats over his stance on COVID-19 shots, Ladapo wouldn’t say whether he had gotten the vaccine and a booster dose, saying it is his private medical information. “Our approach at the Department of Health has been to provide education and access,” Ladapo said. “What we have seen during this pandemic has been not so much that but rather coercion and sometimes unfortunately propaganda.”

‘This is fear-mongering’: Parents, teachers slam Senate bill limiting primary school talk about LGBTQ community” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — A slew of teachers, parents and students spoke Tuesday morning against legislation that would more closely regulate LGBTQ instruction in the classroom and conversations with younger students. Despite the wave of public testimony opposing the bill, the measure (SB 1834) was passed in a 6-3 vote along party lines by the Senate Education Committee. The legislation, sponsored by Sen. Dennis Baxley, would ban school districts from “encouraging classroom discussion about sexual orientation or gender identity in primary grade levels or in a manner that is not age-appropriate.” It would also allow parents to sue a school district if such a violation occurred.

Don’t say gay: Dennis Baxley’s bill tries to curb ‘social engineering’ in the classroom.

Senate begins advancing proposal to block many citizen ballot initiatives” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — A measure to limit what the public can propose to amend the Florida Constitution is now moving in the Senate after emerging from the House committee process. Republican lawmakers are offering a change to the constitution that would limit citizen initiatives to procedural matters, the structure of government or the constitution. The House is ready to consider its version of the measure (HJR 1127), and the Senate version (SJR 1412) is catching up after passing from its first panel on Tuesday. The Senate Ethics and Elections Committee voted 5-4, along party lines, to advance the resolution from Sen. Jason Brodeur.

Senate bill banning protests outside people’s homes advances” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — SB 1664, filed by Sen. Keith Perry, amends the unlawful assembly statute to ban a person from “picketing or protesting before or about another person’s home in order to harass or disturb the person in his or her home.” “This bill recognizes the right to privacy, safety, and peace that we all deserve in our home,” Perry said. Violations of the law would constitute a second-degree misdemeanor, but a warning would be issued first, Perry said. As the bill is currently contemplated, the ban would also include public right of way spaces, Perry said, including sidewalks and streets in front of condo complexes.

—“House committee clears bill outlawing residential protests” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics

Bill to require Florida colleges, universities to change accreditors clears Senate Education Committee” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — A committee proposal that would prevent state colleges and universities from being accredited by the same agency for consecutive accreditation cycles advanced Tuesday morning. The committee approved the bill (SPB 7044) in a 6-3 vote along party lines. The measure would also require additional information about textbooks and instructional materials from state universities and colleges, mandating such information be posted at least 45 days before the start of class and kept public for five years. The bill’s goal is to increase transparency and make materials more accessible for students, said Sen. Manny Diaz, who presented the bill.

Bill to tighten union regulations heads to final House committee” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Legislation asking public employee union members to reaffirm annually that they want to remain members has advanced to its final House panel. Critics argue the bill (HB 1197), carried by Rep. Scott Plakon and Rep. Cord Byrd, is a “union-busting” measure pushed Session after Session for the last decade. On Tuesday, the House State Administration and Technology Appropriations Subcommittee voted 9-6, along party lines, to give the measure its second preliminary OK. Public employees would have to sign a member authorization form every year to maintain union membership. Members also couldn’t opt to have union dues automatically deducted from their salaries.

Police recruitment package ready for House floor” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Florida’s proposal to enshrine itself as the most “law enforcement friendly” state in the nation is ready for the House’s full consideration. A priority of DeSantis, the bill would provide recruits a bundle of perks if signed into law. Among them, a one-time $5,000 bonus for newcomers and a $1,000 reimbursement program for out-of-state officers who relocate to Florida. The House Judiciary Committee approved the bill (HB 3) unanimously without debate. Rep. Tom Leek is the bill sponsor.

ICYMI — “Erin Grall accuses Office of Insurance Regulation of ‘agency malpractice’ before PIP vote” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — Over the objections of Florida insurance companies, the House Civil Justice & Property Rights Subcommittee voted 15-3 to pass a bill that would eliminate Florida’s long-standing no-fault insurance program and the requirement to carry $10,000 in personal injury protection. Before the vote, HB 1525 bill sponsor Rep. Grall called out the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation for its decision to commission a report on the fiscal impact of a near-identical bill from the 2021 bill that eliminated PIP. The OIR released the Pinnacle report before Gov. DeSantis vetoed the bill.

Malpractice: Erin Grall blasts the OIR for a report that killed the effort to scrap PIP.

A bill in Tallahassee could save Amazon more than $1 million a year” via Jason Garcia of Seeking Rents — Amazon.com flies nearly two dozen flights a day in and out of a small airport in Lakeland, about halfway between Orlando and Tampa. The flights are part of a $100 million air-cargo hub that Amazon has built at the publicly-owned airport, which has become a key cog in a global package-delivery network that has helped make Amazon one of the world’s largest retailers. Amazon paid $941,252.76 in taxes last year on that property — about the cost of a dozen public-school teachers. But Amazon’s annual tax bill could disappear thanks to bills (HB 1387/SB 1840) moving through the Florida Legislature. The legislation, which gets its first hearing tomorrow in the House Ways & Means Committee, seeks to help many businesses avoid paying property taxes on land they lease at airports, seaports and spaceports.

— TALLY 2 —

Controversial Medicaid managed care bill inches closer to House consideration” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — A contentious plan to overhaul the state’s mammoth health care safety net took its second step forward Monday. The House Health Care Appropriations Subcommittee approved HB 7047 by a 10-5 vote along party lines. If the bill is ultimately approved, it will require the state to enact a long line of changes ahead of Florida’s plans in 2025 to rebid major contracts with managed care companies that now work with the bulk of those enrolled in the program. There are more than 5 million people in Medicaid, but not all are required to be enrolled in managed care. But 4 million are. Democrats warned about some of the proposed changes included in the legislation that could affect dental services provided to Medicaid and affect some of the large public hospitals that treat Medicaid patients.

House committee advances bill addressing nursing home staff shortage” via Florida Politics — The House Finance & Facilities Subcommittee on Tuesday voted to advance a bill aimed at alleviating the staffing shortage at nursing homes after hearing from numerous groups who warned nursing homes closures were on the horizon if lawmakers don’t act. Sponsored by Rep. Lauren Melo, HB 1239 would allow nursing homes to meet current and future needs by allowing staff without nursing degrees to fulfill a portion of direct care hour requirements. Proponents of the bill describe it as a necessary modernization of current regulations and assert that it would provide nursing home residents with more personalized care, including physical rehabilitation, mental health services, spiritual services, counseling and other treatments.

Help wanted: Lauren Melo wants to help the nursing home staffing shortage by loosening some outdated regs.

Bill allowing tourist taxes to fund law enforcement in seven counties clears House panel” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Law enforcement could be considered a tourist development necessity, supplemented with tourist tax dollars in seven northern Gulf Coast counties under a bill approved by a House panel Tuesday. The House Tourism, Infrastructure and Energy Subcommittee voted 15-2 to advance a committee substitute bill for Rep. Jason Shoaf’s tourist development tax measure (HB 573). The approval came after a lengthy revisiting of long-standing battles over tourist tax uses in Florida. Shoaf and other proponents argued high standards of law enforcement and emergency medical services should be considered essential to promoting tourism, while images of increased crime or beach chaos are turnoffs for potential tourists.

Legislation giving first responders with PTSD more time for workers’ comp claims advances” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Legislation to give first responders more time to begin claims for work-related post-traumatic stress is approaching its final committee hearings. The measure, sponsored in the House by Rep. Mike Giallombardo, builds off a 2018 law that modified the state’s workers’ compensation laws to allow first responders who have job-induced PTSD to tap into indemnity benefits, which compensate injured workers for a portion of their lost wages while out of work with an injury. Under current law, first responders must file notices within 90 days of the qualifying event or manifestation of the disorder. Likewise, first responders must file their claim within 52 weeks of the traumatic event in question.

House moves ahead with bill allowing paid work to meet Bright Futures service requirement” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — College-bound students seeking a Bright Futures scholarship could soon meet volunteer hour requirements through a regular job. The House Higher Education Appropriations Subcommittee unanimously approved a bill (HB 461) to allow work, whether paid or not, to count. Rep. Melo filed the bill to ensure the scholarship would be available to those students facing financial challenges. She said when the Legislature in 1997 tagged a volunteer work requirement to the Bright Futures Program, it created an unintended consequence of discouraging many working students from seeking the scholarship.

Bill protecting tax benefits of farmers engaged in agritourism now ready for House floor” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Legislation looking to protect farmers’ ability to engage in agritourism moves to the House floor after earning unanimous approval in its third and final committee stop. Rep. Josie Tomkow is sponsoring the bill (HB 717). The legislation codifies that farmland can still be taxed at a lower rate even when using parts of the property for agritourism. The House State Affairs Committee OK’d the measure by a 23-0 vote on Tuesday. “House Bill 717 is a bill that clarifies the intent of Florida’s agritourism property tax structure,” Tomkow explained Tuesday.

House committee advances bill tackling organized retail theft” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Lawmakers took another step Tuesday toward cracking down on organized crime in Florida. Under a proposal (HB 1511) by Rep. Chuck Clemons, the state would levy stiffer penalties against thieves who steal from multiple stores within a short period. The House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Subcommittee OK’d the bill with a 15-3 vote. It will appear next before the House Judiciary Committee, marking the bill’s final committee stop. The proposal comes as lawmakers nationwide wrestle with a wave of organized shoplifting rings. The crime, coined “boosting,” involves multiple thieves coordinating to steal multiple items across different retailers.

Net metering bill gets compromise amendment, heads to final Senate panel” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Legislation backed by Florida Power & Light (FPL) that would raise energy rates on rooftop solar panel customers passed its penultimate Senate committee on Tuesday. Under current law, solar panel owners who have excess energy generated by the panels can sell it back to utilities at the retail rate the utilities charge other customers. That practice is known as net metering. The bill (SB 1024), carried by Sen. Jennifer Bradley, would require charging a lower wholesale price to the utilities. Before a 6-3 party-line vote in the Senate Community Affairs Committee, Bradley told the committee Florida knows where it’s headed because other states are already grappling with problems with the existing net metering system.

Cyberterror legislation moves closer to floor vote” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Legislation that would beef up Florida’s criminal penalties for stealing an individual’s sexually explicit pictures moved one step closer to passage in both chambers of the Legislature Tuesday. The Senate Children, Families, and Elder Affairs Committee OK’d a measure (SB 1798) from Senate Democratic Leader Lauren Book Tuesday morning. The House companion bill (HB 1453) also earned approval Tuesday from the House Justice Appropriations Subcommittee. Rep. Joe Harding is sponsoring that measure. The Tuesday hearings mark the second of three committee stops for the Senate and House bills. Book said she was victimized last year when intimate images were stolen from her and other sexually explicit “deepfake” images of Book were created.

Deepfakes: Lauren Book’s cyberterrorism bill, based on personal experience, advances through the Senate.

Bill creating standard procedures before paying hackers gets House committee nod” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — A bill advanced Tuesday to require local governments to go through a checklist, including reports to law enforcement, before paying hackers for hijacked data. The Committee on Military and Veterans Affairs, Space and Domestic Security approved Hutson’s proposal (SB 1670). The bill is not so strict as other legislation (PCB Sat 22-02) forbidding paying hackers’ demands altogether. Instead, it outlines training certain government employees should have and requires local governments to have a cybersecurity plan.

A bill with some bite: Dangerous dogs rule moves forward in second House committee stop” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — Dogs will be judged by behavior and not breed, according to a bill that won unanimous subcommittee approval Tuesday at its second hearing stop. Rep. James Buchanan’s bill (HB 721) got the nod from the House Regulatory Reform Subcommittee Tuesday. It allows housing authorities to put restrictions on owners of dogs “that have bitten or attacked persons or domestic animals … provided that no such regulation is specific to breed.” The bill has already won approval from the House Local Administration & Veterans Affairs Subcommittee. The bill strips out statutory language that has grandfathered in Miami’s ban on pit bulls.

Jacksonville spaceport authority gets committee nod” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — A new regional government authority would be given state backing to promote space business around the spaceport being developed in Jacksonville, under a bill approved by a House committee Tuesday. On Tuesday, Rep. Wyman Duggan’s Northeast Florida Regional Spaceport Authority bill (HB 1303) shot through the House Tourism, Infrastructure and Energy Subcommittee. The only concern raised was about whether a new state-chartered authority specific to space flight around Jacksonville might somehow conflict or compete with Florida’s big statewide space agency, Space Florida. Duggan assured the committee it wouldn’t, winning a 17-0 vote for his bill.

— MORE TALLY —

‘A form of welfare’: Bill eliminating permanent alimony advances to House floor after heated debate” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Legislation to end lifelong alimony has returned to the Legislature, and is now on to the floor after clearing its final House committee Tuesday evening. This year’s House version (HB 1395), carried by Rep. Jenna Persons-Mulicka, was approved in a 15-6 vote in the House Judiciary Committee, but only after some heated debate. The legislation would prohibit the award of permanent alimony in future divorces and would also repeal court-ordered permanent alimony. That leaves bridge-the-gap, rehabilitative and durational alimony as options. Former couples could still agree to permanent alimony in a marital settlement.

Controversial transfer title bill amended, passes first committee hearing” via Shannon Behnken of WFLA — A proposed state bill that would give car dealers two months to fork over the title to the car you just bought, instead of the current 30 days under state law, inched forward Tuesday. Some consumer advocates argue the proposed 60 days could further hurt consumers, some who have already been waiting six months or longer for a car title. Even so, the recently amended House Bill 1517 is a shell of its first version, which would have taken away any deadline for dealers and would have also taken away the penalties the state could impose on dealers who didn’t transfer titles on time. The committee unanimously approved the amendment.

Senate panel advances a bill … and a legacy” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — Dan Markel did not get to see one small piece of his legacy take root today, as the Florida Senate Children, Families, and Elder Affairs Committee voted unanimously in support of SB 1408, a multiyear effort inspired in part by Markel’s 2014 murder-for-hire. But his two children and parents very well might. SB 1408 would allow grandparents to access courts to petition for visitation with grandchildren in cases where one parent died, and the living parent was found responsible for their death by a civil or criminal court. Florida families report a variety of reasons for experiencing separation from grandchildren, but the stories often share a common thread: a surviving parent cuts ties following alleged wrongdoing, and children who once enjoyed the love and support of grandparents are left suddenly without.

Legacy: Dan Markel will never see the effects of the visitation bill, but his children and parents will.

Fentrice Driskell gets bipartisan praise as abandoned cemeteries bill clears House committee” via Daniel Figueroa of Florida Politics — While there was no debate, the was plenty of discussion Tuesday as Rep. Driskell‘s Abandoned African American Cemeteries bill unanimously passed the House Government Operations Subcommittee. The bill (HB 1215) would create a Historic Cemeteries Program within the Division of Historical Resources to coordinate research, repair, restoration, and maintenance efforts at abandoned African American cemeteries. It also creates a Historic Cemeteries Advisory Council and makes it easier for the state to preserve rediscovered cemeteries.

Jackie Toledo’s human trafficking crackdown bill heads to House floor” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — A Senate bill aimed at cracking down on prostitution and human trafficking in Florida cleared its final committee Tuesday afternoon, sending it to the House floor. The legislation (HB 1439), sponsored by Rep. Toledo, garnered unanimous support in the House Judiciary Committee. The bill bans hourly rates at hotels, motels, and vacation rentals and raises the first-time penalty for those paying for sex from a first-degree misdemeanor to a third-degree felony. Toledo said the changes were meant to decrease the market for human trafficking by lessening the number of people looking to purchase that type of sex work.

Senate panel moves to kill ‘hourly rate’ hotels, crackdown on ‘first-time johns’” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — A bill outlawing the long-standing practice of certain hotels offering “hourly rates” has cleared the Regulated Industries Committee, its first committee of reference in the Senate. And an amendment that would impose felony penalties on those soliciting prostitution was added to the bill. SB 1852, sponsored by Sen. Jennifer Bradley, adds one line to existing law. “An operator of a public lodging establishment or a vacation rental may not offer an hourly rate for an accommodation.” However, this one line could have a major impact. Presenting the bill on behalf of Bradley, Sen. Lauren Book notes that hourly rental lodging facilitates human trafficking.

Senate panel OK’s crackdown on ‘aggressive careless driving’” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — A Senate bill that adds texting-while-driving to a class of violations constituting “aggressive careless driving” in the case of injury or property damage cleared its first committee Thursday, with an amendment added to provide penalties for the same. SB 476 would add texting while driving and operating a vehicle in ways not allowed by driver’s licenses as potential factors determining an aggressive driving charge. Aggressive careless driving charges would be proscribed in this law after an amendment approved in committee.

‘Local voices’ convene, descend on Capitol to advocate for local choices — Nearly 300 municipal officials traveled to Tallahassee for the Florida League of Cities’ annual Legislative Action Days this week. Their mission was to discuss priority issues and advocate for local self-government. Municipal officials met with legislators and testified in committees to share real-world examples of local impacts from the proposed legislation. “For 100 years, the League has advocated for local self-government,” said FLC President Phillip Walker. “I can think of no better way to honor our centennial anniversary than to be here, together, bringing our united voices to the state Capitol to advocate for our communities.”

Florida NOW slams Chuck Brannan for letting ‘rape loophole’ bill languish — Victims’ rights group Florida NOW called out Rep. Brannan, who chairs the House Criminal Justice & Public Safety Subcommittee, for not scheduling a bill that would close Florida’s “rape loophole” despite the Senate fast-tracking similar legislation. Under current Florida law, the sexual assault of a person who is incapacitated because of alcohol or drug use is charged as a sexual battery if the perpetrator provided the incapacitating substance, but it is treated differently if the victim became intoxicated by choice. HB 525 would delete that caveat. “At this point, we can’t help but wonder what the Representative has against rape victims,” said Florida NOW Vice President Sandra Weeks. “By holding out on HB 525 and other rape law reform bills, he’s holding victim’s rights hostage.”

Loose ends: Victim rights group blasts Chuck Brannan for foot-dragging a ‘rape loophole’ bill.

Orlando students behind bill to make online voter registration part of Florida high schools” via Scott Maxwell of the Orlando Sentinel — Two years ago, a couple of teenage friends in Orlando were debating how they might make a difference in the world. They zeroed in on voting. Too many young people were sitting on the sidelines of democracy. So John Bedell and Fred Asare-Konadu started programs at their high schools to help kids register to vote. They then developed a plan to promote online voter registration at every high school in Florida and then found legislators willing to turn their idea into reality. So far, the Republican majority that controls the Florida Legislature seems to have no interest in making it easier for young people to register to vote. Not a single GOP lawmaker has signed onto their bill.

Assignment editors — Equal Ground Action Fund hosts “Woke” Place Policy: A discussion about Florida’s censorship of Black history. Community leaders from different backgrounds will speak on a panel, condemning Republicans for aggressively pushing HB 7, the “Stop Woke” bill, 6:30 p.m. RSVP to team@feldmanstrategies.com for livestream link.


— SKED —

Assignment editors — Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis, Sen. Ed Hooper and Florida Realtors President Christina Pappas will hold a news conference on a bill (SB 788) to create a program to help first responders, law enforcement, educators, and health care workers purchase homes, 9 a.m., 4th Floor.

— The Senate Appropriations Committee meets to consider the $108.6 billion budget for the Fiscal Year 2022-2023 fiscal year, 9 a.m., 412 of the Knott Building.

— The House Appropriations Committee meets to consider the proposed $105.3 billion budget for the Fiscal Year 2022-2023, 9 a.m., Room 212 of the Knott Building.

— The House convenes for a floor Session to consider HB 7021, from Health and Human Services Chair Colleen Burton, to extend COVID-19 legal protections for hospitals, nursing homes, and other health care providers, 2:30 p.m., House Chamber.

Also:

— House Ways and Means Committee, 9 a.m., Room 404 of the House Office Building.

— GOV CLUB MENU —

Winter minestrone with ditalini; vegan Cobb salad with dressings; pasta salad; tropical fruit salad; BLT wraps; roasted eggplant lasagna; grilled sirloin of beef with Madagascar sauce and onion straws; buttermilk mashed potatoes; Brussels sprouts with applewood bacon and assorted cookies for dessert.


— STATEWIDE —

Ron DeSantis insists narrative of Donald Trump rivalry is ‘total bunk’: He’s ‘a friend of mine’” via Kelly Laco of Fox News — According to DeSantis, Republicans, including himself, have the support of Trump, and any notion to the contrary can be attributed to media spin. DeSantis stated that he’s on good terms with Trump. “Donald Trump’s a friend of mine. He is proud when people do well, and it’s not just me, but obviously, he’s a Florida resident, and he appreciates the job that we’ve done. He’s told me that many times, not only with helping with the election but just how we govern the state.” DeSantis wouldn’t say whether he would potentially take on Trump in 2024 and said anonymous sources close to Trump who said he has a “dull personality” could be attributed to Democrats and the media.

Besties: Ron DeSantis insists there is no bad blood with Donald Trump.

Progressive stops renewing some home policies in Florida as lawmakers target roof claims” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — Progressive Insurance is shedding roughly 56,000 policies covering Florida homes with roofs older than 15 years, putting the squeeze on homeowners who already find it difficult and expensive to insure their houses. It’s the latest sign of trouble in Florida’s turbulent property insurance market. “This is an all-hands-on-deck situation,” Sen. Jeff Brandes warned fellow Senators last week. Last week, Farm Bureau Insurance said it would no longer write homeowners’ policies in the state. A handful of property insurers have already gone out of business. The ones that haven’t are requesting double-digit rate increases.

Only 50% of Florida kindergartners ready for class” via Sam Sachs of WFLA — Only half of Florida’s kindergartners were ready for school when it comes to reading and math. That’s not a judgment; that’s based on scoring by the Florida Department of Education. Using the Star Early Literacy assessment, Florida kindergartners were required to complete a 15- to 20-minute assessment to see how ready for public school they were. The assessment was developed by Renaissance, the company that started the Accelerated Reader program in 1986. 40% of the U.S. uses its programs to test student preparedness.

Florida to set goals for 100% renewable energy by 2050. But will it actually happen?” via Alex Harris of the Miami Herald — Florida is taking the first step toward requiring more renewable energy statewide after Nikki Fried announced her office planned to start the process of setting goals for the state to get 100% of its power from renewable energy by 2050. But goals are likely all they’ll remain, at least for the foreseeable future. Under state law, the ability to actually force utilities to meet them falls to the Public Service Commission, an appointed statewide board in charge of regulating Florida’s utilities that has historically been less than aggressive about upping standards for renewable energy or energy efficiency.

Lake Okeechobee water level still high, but releases within healthy threshold” via Chad Gillis of the Fort Myers News-Press — The Caloosahatchee River is in pretty good shape going into the heart of the dry season, although more Lake Okeechobee discharges may be needed in the spring to get water levels down to a healthy level. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers releases around 2,000 cubic feet per day as measured at the W.P. Franklin Lock and Dam in Alva. That’s well below the 2,800 cubic feet per second harmful threshold. That’s the point at which too much water is entering the Caloosahatchee River’s estuary. Lake Okeechobee levels are nearly 15 feet above sea level, and the Army Corps will try to get those levels down to at least 12.5 feet by the start of the rainy season in mid-May.

— CORONA FLORIDA —

Florida Surgeon General defends support of fringe group that touted false COVID-19 ‘cure’” via Skyler Swisher of the Orlando Sentinel — Ladapo defended his involvement Tuesday with a group of doctors that touted a false and unproven COVID-19 “cure” favored by Trump. Ladapo faced scrutiny from Democrats during his second confirmation hearing over his support of America’s Frontline Doctors, which held a controversial news conference in July 2020 in front of the U.S. Supreme Court building. Questioning by the Senate’s Ethics and Elections Committee will resume Tuesday night. If it approves him, the full Senate will take up Ladapo’s nomination next. Ladapo stood with other doctors in white coats at the event, which promoted zinc and the anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine as a COVID-19 cure and blasted lockdowns and other COVID-19 restrictions.

Playing defense: Joseph Ladapo is standing tall for a group that touts a COVID-19 ‘cure.’

COVID-19 update: Florida reports 19,306 new cases; positivity rates lowest in nearly two months” via David Schutz of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Florida reported 19,306 new coronavirus cases on Tuesday as parts of South Florida have seen positivity rates drop below 15% for the first time since mid-December. The number of patients in the hospital with COVID-19 rose slightly since Monday but is still down nearly 18% over the previous Monday. There were 1,128 COVID-19-infected patients in intensive care units on Monday, the smallest number since Jan. 6. The hospital data combines patients admitted for COVID-19 with those infected while hospitalized. The number of cases in the omicron surge has fallen by more than 73% from its peak on Jan. 11.

Omicron causes record-high cases in Florida nursing homes, but deaths remain low” via Daniel Chang of the Miami Herald — Florida’s omicron winter hit nursing homes hard, with the number of weekly infections reported among residents and staff reaching record highs in mid-January. But despite reporting more cases for a single week in mid-January than at any other point in the pandemic, Florida nursing homes are not seeing a corresponding spike in deaths, the cumulative effect, experts say, of immunity from vaccines and prior illness with COVID-19. “The fact that there were not more deaths is probably due to vaccination and the fact that many people had it before, and the nursing homes knowing what to do, having procedures they didn’t have when this started concerning PPE and who to isolate and when and how,” said Lindsay Peterson, a researcher with the University of South Florida’s School of Aging Studies.

Military can’t discipline officers for refusing vaccine, Florida judge rules” via Military Times — In a stinging rebuke of the military’s handling of the mandatory COVID-19 vaccine enforcement policy, a federal-district court judge in Florida has issued a temporary order preventing disciplinary action against two officers who refused the vaccine on religious grounds. The order, which is in place until Friday, is the latest ruling temporarily barring the military from punishing troops over their refusal to get the COVID-19 vaccine. In a separate case, a Texas judge in January ordered a temporary injunction against the punishment of a group of Navy SEALs.

— 2022 —

What to make of polls that show Americans are trending toward the GOP” via Geoffrey Skelley and Mary Radcliffe of FiveThirtyEight — Are there really more Americans identifying as Republicans than Democrats now? For decades, more Americans have tended to identify as Democrats than Republicans, even if the gap has sometimes been small. But in January, Gallup found that Republicans had taken the lead in party ID during the last three months of 2021: On average, 47% identified as a Republican or said they leaned toward the GOP, while 42% identified as a Democrat or leaned toward the Democratic Party. But it’s still too soon to know whether more Americans are actually identifying as Republicans. After all, political science research has found that an individual’s party identification can fluctuate.

Loyalties: Are more people identifying as Republicans?

Casino petition drive fraud claims, investigations multiply” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Increasing reports of alleged petition frauds, and a massive petition failure rate are leading county supervisors of elections around the state to say they have never seen a petition drive as bad as the one that just concluded involving proposed North Florida casinos. At least two law enforcement investigations have been opened, in the 1st and 5th Judicial Circuits. Others are being requested in other parts of Florida. Several supervisors told Florida Politics their alarm over the drive conducted by Florida Voters In Charge is not just because of the many allegations of individual petition fraud but because of the drive’s unprecedented petition failure rate of perhaps 60-70% or higher.

—“‘Not just one or two’ fake signatures: FDLE leading statewide investigation of voter petition fraud” via Tom McLaughlin of the Northwest Florida Daily News

Assignment editors — Crist will hold a news conference in Miami to unveil his “Solar for All” initiative and outline a plan for a million solar roofs across Florida, 9:30 a.m., followed by a solar business tour, 11 a.m. RSVP to press@charliecrist.com for locations. It will also be livestreamed via Crist’s Facebook page (@CharlieCristFL).

Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry supports DeSantis’s bid for redistricting opinion” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — Curry stepped into the heated redistricting battle by joining DeSantis in asking the Florida Supreme Court for an advisory opinion on keeping a congressional district that stretches from Jacksonville to west of Tallahassee. Curry submitted a brief Monday that said voters and political candidates deserve to know whether the district lines can withstand constitutional scrutiny. Curry’s filing Monday with the Supreme Court puts him at odds with U.S. Rep. Al Lawson, who lashed out at DeSantis last week. Lawson renewed his criticism Monday in response to briefs filed with the Supreme Court.

Assignment editors — Agriculture Commissioner Fried will meet with Black business owners and entrepreneurs, 9:30 a.m., Pots and Pans Cafe, 952 NE 62nd Street, Oakland Park. RSVP at press@nikkifried.com.

Democrat Rebekah Jones says she can win in Northwest Florida” via Jim Little of the Pensacola News-Journal — Jones built her name on being a data expert and is now looking to defy the odds to win as a Democrat in Northwest Florida. Jones is seeking to challenge Republican Congressman Matt Gaetz for Florida’s 1st Congressional District, but first, she must convince Northwest Florida Democrats she is the right candidate. Jones told the News Journal she isn’t worried about the primary. “I’m the only one who can win this against a Republican, Gaetz or otherwise, and I’m certainly the only one who’s taken on the GOP in the state and beat them,” Jones said. Jones pointed to a poll released in October from The Listener Group that showed her only 8 points down to Gaetz and noted that redistricting will help her as the district will lose most of conservative Walton County.

Exclusive — “Poll: Vern Buchanan annihilating Martin Hyde in CD 16 GOP primary” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A new survey by St. Pete Polls shows U.S. Rep. Buchanan crushing Republican primary opponent Martin Hyde. If a primary vote were held today in Florida, the eight-term incumbent would win more than 76% of the vote, with Hyde taking around 12% and the remainder of voters undecided. The poll comes as Hyde has brought on some high-profile supporters from Trump’s orbit but Buchanan secured the support of Trump himself. Hyde intends to cut into Buchanan’s base over his votes in favor of certifying Biden’s presidential victory over Trump and in favor of background checks on firearm purchases.

A new map will drive decisions for Southwest Florida lawmakers” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — With House boundaries all but set, a number of lawmakers representing Southwest Florida now have to decide if and where to run under the new cartography. Rep. Spencer Roach hasn’t decided yet if he’s going to run but said it wouldn’t be maps that make his choice. “I am still evaluating whether to seek a third term in the Florida House and anticipate making that decision before the end of the Legislative Session,” Roach said. “The redistricting process will not factor in my decision; if I run, I will run in the district where I live, which is House District 76 under the proposed maps.” Still, whatever triggers a final decision for Roach, it’s likely the map just passed by the Legislature (H 8013) will give him pause.

Never mind: Tommy Gregory to seek re-election in HD 72” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Rep. Gregory has changed plans and announced a run for the proposed House District 72. For the Sarasota Republican, that will require a move to Manatee County. “It has been an honor to represent Manatee County, and I look forward to continue representing them and this region,” Gregory said. Gregory had previously made clear he intended to run for a third term but in House District 74, where he currently lives under the redistricted House map just approved by the Florida Legislature. That map puts him in the same district as Rep. James Buchanan. Gregory said after consulting with supporters and colleagues in the district and Tallahassee, he concluded it made more sense to run in Manatee.

On second thought: Tommy Gregory decides to try for another term.

Boca Raton City Council member files for Emily Slosberg-King’s HD 91 seat” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — The day after Rep. Slosberg-King announced she would not be seeking a fourth term representing House District 91, a Boca Raton City Council Member announced he’s filed to run for the seat. A business litigation lawyer, Andy Thomson won his first campaign in a 2018 Special Election and was subsequently re-elected without opposition to the Boca Raton City Council in 2020. “We need legislators focused on solving problems,” Thomson said, according to a news release from his campaign. “I’m a collaborator and have a record of bringing people together to make a difference.” The entire city of Boca Raton elects Council members on a nonpartisan basis. Tuesday, however, Thomson announced he’s a Democrat and has the endorsement of the outgoing Representative.

Ballot referendum to put poker room on old jai-alai property dealt blow by Seminole Commissioners” via Martin E. Comas of the Orlando Sentinel — Seminole County Commissioners on Tuesday unanimously rejected a request by the owner of the old Orlando Jai-Alai Fronton property in Fern Park to place a referendum on the Nov. 8 General Election ballot asking county voters if his new development can offer casino gambling in the form of a poker room. Commissioners, instead, urged attorneys for Richard Birdoff, president of the New York City-based RD Management, which owns the fronton building and most of the land surrounding it, and the developer Cordish Companies, to place the issue on the ballot themselves by gathering the required 24,800 or so signatures in a petition drive by this summer.

— CORONA NATION —

America learns to live with COVID-19” via Margaret Talev of Axios — One in three Americans expects to catch COVID-19 within the next month and only one in 10 thinks it will be eradicated by this time next year. The new data shows Americans are coming to terms with living with COVID-19. But it also reveals an utter lack of consensus on how to live with it. People are divided about evenly into four camps on how to proceed: drop all mandates and requirements, keep some, keep most, or add even more. Half support stores or restaurants requiring customers to show proof of vaccination to enter. “There’s nothing approaching a consensus on what we should be doing to move forward, which underlines the difficulty for policymakers,” said Ipsos pollster and Senior Vice President Chris Jackson.

Two years into pandemic, politicians still getting tripped up over coronavirus restrictions” via Amy Wang of The Washington Post — Georgia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams is at the center of the latest coronavirus-related firestorm, after she posted a photo of herself sitting with a group of elementary school students who were all masked; Abrams was not. The photos became a target for her Republican opponents and right-wing critics, who have called her a hypocrite (and worse), despite the fact GOP politicians have similarly flouted mask mandates or actively sought to prevent protective measures from being implemented.

A bad look: Stacey Abrams falls into a COVID-19 restriction trap.

Joe Biden officials trying to recalculate U.S. COVID-19 hospitalizations” via Erin Banco of POLITICO — The Biden administration is working on recalculating the number of COVID-19 hospitalizations in the U.S., according to two senior officials familiar with the matter. A task force comprised of scientists and data specialists works with hospitals nationwide to improve COVID-19 reporting. The group asks hospitals to report numbers of patients who go to the facility because they have COVID-19 and separate those from individuals who go in for other reasons and test positive after being admitted, the two officials said. The administration aims to get a more accurate sense of COVID-19’s impact across the country and whether the virus is causing severe disease.

The Biden administration will pay community groups to boost trust in COVID-19 vaccines” via Selena Simmons-Duffin of NPR — White House health officials have acknowledged that they are not always the best messengers when it comes to promoting COVID-19 vaccines. So, the Biden administration has worked to equip community groups to do their own local outreach. On Tuesday, the Health Resources and Services Administration is distributing $66.5 million to community groups working in 38 states and Washington, D.C. This is the fourth round of the $250 million in funding allocated in the American Rescue Plan. One group receiving more than $11 million Tuesday is Communities RISE Together, an initiative supported by the Public Health Institute. Dr. Somava Saha, who co-leads the effort, says the administration’s decision to fund local community groups is smart and “flips it from ‘trust us’ to ‘we trust you.’ ”

The booster problem” via David Leonhardt of The New York Times — The United States has a vaccination problem. And it is not just about the relatively large share of Americans who have refused to get a shot. The U.S. also trails many other countries in the share of vaccinated people who have received a booster shot. This is a different problem from outright skepticism of the vaccine. This booster shortfall is one reason the U.S. has suffered more deaths over the past two months than many other countries. First, medical care in the U.S. is notoriously fragmented. Preventive care, like a booster shot, often falls through the cracks. Government health officials and some experts struggle to communicate effectively with the hundreds of millions of us who are not experts.

Mask mandates, contact tracing are going away, as states shift to new phase” via Megan Messerly of POLITICO — Blue state governors and state health officials who most vigorously embraced pandemic restrictions are pivoting toward a new era, using omicron’s decline to dial back precautions that have become a hallmark of the last two years. Over the past few weeks, health departments from Oregon to Maine have ended almost all of their government-run COVID-19 contact tracing operations and shifted the responsibility to the public. “We’re not going to manage COVID to zero,” said New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat who has taken a strict approach to pandemic protocols but who on Monday said he would lift the state’s school mask mandate.

— CORONA ECONOMICS —

COVID-19 protests threaten border trade between Canada, U.S.” via Rob Gillies and Tracey Lindeman of The Associated Press — Canadian lawmakers expressed increasing worry Tuesday about the economic effects of disruptive demonstrations after the busiest border crossing between the U.S. and Canada became partially blocked by truckers protesting vaccine mandates and other COVID-19 restrictions. The blockade at the Ambassador Bridge between Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, prevented traffic from entering Canada while some U.S.-bound traffic was still moving. Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino called the bridge “one of the most important border crossings in the world.” It carries 25% of all trade between Canada and the United States.

Traders: Demonstrations threaten movement at one of the world’s busiest international border crossings.

COVID-19 migration: Who’s moving to Florida and why there’s a New York exodus” via Kimberly Miller of The Palm Beach Post — Extraordinary events have forever pushed and pulled and pressured U.S. population shifts from gold lust to the citrus rush to the restless return of World War II soldiers to revolutions in foreign lands and Civil War on Southern soil. Now there is COVID-19, which has turned a yearslong trickle to Florida from the northeast into a deluge. More than 547,000 people exchanged out-of-state driver’s licenses last year for ones with Sunshine State addresses. That’s a 40% increase from 2020 and nearly 20% greater than the five-year average between 2017 and 2021.

Hundreds of thousands quit jobs in Florida as ‘great resignation’ continues” via Phil Prazan of NBC Miami — The “Great Resignation” impacts regions and industries differently. Hundreds of thousands of Floridians quit their jobs each month. The Bureau of Labor Statistics shows around 3% of Florida workers leave their jobs every month. South Florida as a region is impacted more than others because of the type of industries in the area. Many employers say they’re having a hard time hiring enough workers, particularly in South Florida’s service economy. More jobs are available than workers wanting to work them, driving up wages and prices at times. Experts say companies should not expect a return to the way it was before the pandemic for some time. Looking at the latest quit rate data, the industries keeping their workforce steady are those with dependable hours, decent pay, and better benefits, such as work in education or local governments.

Why Realtors have embraced brutal honesty. ‘Smells like a farm town.’” via Jennifer Levitz of The Wall Street Journal — The COVID-19 pandemic sparked a surge of Americans moving to new regions, sometimes sight unseen, lured by lower costs or the ability to work remotely. But house hunters or those who uproot can be surprised by what they find, from the pea-soup fog on coasts to relentless snowstorms in the mountains. In response, a new genre of videos is populating YouTube, in which real estate agents get brutally upfront about the potential downsides of moving to their area. They say the blunt talk helps them stand out, sets realistic expectations, and reduces buyer’s remorse. The agents say it also prevents them from assisting needy homeowners who may be out of their depth when they move to a new locale.

— MORE CORONA —

COVID-19 pandemic led to smaller-than-expected baby bust, new data suggest” via Janet Adamy and Anthony DeBarros of The Wall Street Journal — New data on U.S. births suggest that the COVID-19 pandemic has led to a smaller-than-expected baby bust. The U.S. saw about 7,000 fewer births through the first nine months of 2021 compared with the same period the year prior. The numbers reflect conceptions that occurred roughly from April through December 2020, a period that includes the first part of last winter’s COVID-19 case surge, which started in October 2020 and waned by February 2021. Beginning in June 2021, monthly births started to show consistent gains over their year-earlier levels, which reflect pre-pandemic conceptions, and that mostly offset declines in the first two months of 2021.

Busted: Are Americans having fewer babies?

J&J pauses COVID-19 vaccine manufacturing in crucial plant” via Reuters — Johnson & Johnson quietly shut down the only plant making usable batches of its COVID-19 vaccine late last year. The halt is temporary, with the plant in the Dutch city of Leiden expected to start making the vaccine again after a few months. Instead, the plant has been making an experimental but potentially more profitable vaccine to protect against an unrelated virus. J&J currently has millions of doses of its COVID-19 vaccine in inventory, the company said in an email, adding that it continues to provide all its fill-and-finish sites with drug substances required to produce its shot. “We continue to fulfill our contractual obligations in relation to the COVAX Facility and the African Union,” J&J said.

Italy is dropping its outdoor mask mandate as new cases decline.” via Emma Bubola of The New York Times — Italy will no longer require masks to be worn everywhere outdoors, the government said on Tuesday, adding to a growing list of coronavirus restrictions that European countries have relaxed recently as they wrestle with what the next stage of the pandemic could look like. “A new phase is opening up,” Italy’s health minister, Roberto Speranza, said on Italian television. Italy will continue to require mask-wearing in public indoor settings, and Speranza said that masks remained an important tool to fight against the virus. Italians will still be required to carry a mask with them and to put it on outdoors if a crowd forms. The new policy will go into effect on Friday.

—“Norwegian Cruise Line to drop face mask requirements” via Robert Pandolfino of WFLA

— PRESIDENTIAL —

Doug Emhoff, husband of Vice President, evacuated from D.C. school after bomb threat” via Eugene Scott of The Washington Post — Emhoff, the husband of Vice President Kamala Harris, was evacuated from a D.C. public school on Tuesday afternoon after a bomb threat, officials said. A Secret Service agent told Emhoff, “we have to go,” as he participated in an event at Dunbar High School marking Black History Month. A schoolwide announcement followed, saying teachers should evacuate everyone from the facility. The building was evacuated, and police began searching the school in the Truxton Circle neighborhood of Northwest Washington. Students were sent home. In a 4:40 p.m. tweet, D.C. police said that the investigation at the school had concluded and that all streets were reopened. No hazardous materials were found.

Gotta go: A bomb threat scuttles a visit by Doug Emhoff. Image via AP.

White House denounces Florida GOP over ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill” via The Associated Press — The White House on Tuesday slammed Florida Republicans over a proposal to ban discussions of sexual orientation or gender identity in the state’s schools. A White House spokesperson weighed in on the legislation, dubbed by activists as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill, shortly after a GOP-controlled committee approved the measure. “Every parent hopes that our leaders will ensure their children’s safety, protection, and freedom. Today, conservative politicians in Florida rejected those basic values by advancing legislation that is designed to target and attack the kids who need support the most — LGBTQI+ students, who are already vulnerable to bullying and violence just for being themselves,” the White House statement read.

— D.C. MATTERS —

Money on the table: Child credit $ available via tax returns” via Josh Boak of The Associated Press — The Biden administration wants families with children to know that there is roughly $193 billion waiting for them; all they need to do is file their taxes to claim it. That estimated total remains of the expanded child tax credit, and the administration is concerned that some of those most in need of the assistance may be the least likely to get what is due to them. Biden increased the payments and expanded who was eligible as part of his coronavirus relief package. While most families already received half the credit as monthly payments last year, they’ll lose out on the remaining balance unless they file their taxes.

Money on the table: Kamala Harris wants Americans to take advantage of expanded tax credits. Image via AP.

House passes bill to ease Postal Service financial woes” via Nicholas Wu and Hailey Fuchs of POLITICO — Long-awaited legislation overhauling the Postal Service’s finances and operations sailed through the House Tuesday. The bipartisan legislation passed the chamber in a 342-92 vote, despite controversy over the head of the Postal Service that had threatened to tank Republican support for the legislation. Among its provisions, the bill would require Postal Service retirees to enroll in Medicare and eliminate the requirement that the agency pre-fund its retiree health benefits for 75 years in the future, saving the beleaguered agency tens of billions of dollars over the next decade. It would also mandate that the Postal Service create a dashboard with performance data and deliver at least six days each week.

Maria Salazar’s immigration bill offers path to legal residency, requires E-Verify use” via Bryan Lowery of the Miami Herald — Rep. Salazar introduced legislation Tuesday that would set up a new legal residency program for millions of undocumented immigrants and create a potential path to citizenship for those who complete a pair of programs over 15 years. Salazar’s 483-page bill, titled “The Dignity Act,” would set up numerous changes to the immigration system, including measures to increase border security, an expedited process for asylum-seekers, and a new program to provide a path to legal residency for undocumented immigrants already in the country. She said the bill was intended to simultaneously halt new illegal immigration and provide dignity to undocumented people already residing in the U.S.

Personnel note: Neal Dunn announces staff promotions — U.S. Rep. Dunn has promoted Matt Blackwell from Legislative Director to Deputy Chief of Staff and elevated Senior Legislative Assistant Sarah Gilbert to replace Blackwell in that position. “Matt and Sarah are two of the most knowledgeable staffers I’ve had the privilege of working with on Capitol Hill,” Dunn said. “Both have played critical roles in helping my office navigate the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as several issues that heavily impact Florida’s 2nd Congressional District. I’m grateful for their commitment to my priorities and my district. I firmly believe these changes better position my team to focus on priorities as we prep for Republicans to take back the House.” A news release said Blackwell’s “policy expertise has been essential to the office’s response to Hurricane Michael in 2018, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the ongoing economic crisis.” It also touted Gilbert’s “expansive knowledge of health care and other key policy issues.”

— CRISIS —

Mitch McConnell rebukes RNC for saying Jan. 6 attack was ‘legitimate political discourse’” via Jennifer Shutt of Florida Phoenix — McConnell said Tuesday the RNC erred in censuring two House GOP lawmakers for joining the select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. McConnell rebuked the RNC for referring to the riot as “legitimate political discourse” in the censure resolution. McConnell said the events of Jan. 6 were “a violent insurrection for the purpose of trying to prevent the peaceful transfer of power.” McConnell said Tuesday that he doesn’t believe it’s the role of the national political committees to decide which Republicans the party will support and which it will cast aside. McConnell said he does have confidence in RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel, but added it’s “not the job of the RNC” to single out Republicans.

Meanwhile …

 

Government reveals trove of evidence in first Jan. 6 trial” via Alan Feuer of The New York Times — Prosecutors have provided a revealing glimpse of their strategy for the first trial stemming from the attack on the Capitol, unveiling an inventory of the extensive evidence they intend to introduce, including surveillance videos, police communications, text messages, geolocation data and testimony from a Secret Service agent and the defendant’s own children. The defendant in the trial, set to begin on Feb. 28, is Guy Wesley Reffitt, an oil industry worker who prosecutors say was a member of the Texas Three Percenters, a far-right group connected to the gun rights movement. Reffitt stands accused of storming the Capitol with a pistol at his waist.

The GOP’s ‘legitimate political discourse’ Jan. 6 revisionism is off to a rough start” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — Republicans intent upon accusing the Jan. 6 committee of targeting “ordinary” citizens engaged in “legitimate political discourse” have focused on a supposed case-in-point: an older woman the committee subpoenaed after she signed up to be an alternate elector for Trump. The reality is far less simple. The woman appears to be a top GOP official from Michigan — according to comments from Sen. Marco Rubio — who led an effort to submit fake electors. It could rise to the level of criminal activity, and at the very least, would seem relevant to a probe of the effort to overturn the 2020 election.

— EPILOGUE TRUMP —

Trump is obsessed with being a loser” via Peter Wehner of The Atlantic — Trump has made clear time and time again that, in his view, the worst thing that can happen to a person is to be judged “a loser.” In the 2020 Presidential Election he was, in fact, a loser, but his narcissism and the incredibly fragile self-esteem that undergirds it won’t allow him to accept that reality. Trump seems unable to incorporate anything critical about himself, hence his need to create an imaginary world where he really won the 2020 election but was the victim of a conspiracy that borders on intergalactic.

Loser: Donald Trump has built a fantasyland where he won in 2020. Image via AP.

— LOCAL NOTES —

Cruise ship docking at Key West encroaches on Navy waters” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — On the same weekend residents rallied against three so-called mega-cruise ships entering Key West waters against voters’ wishes, one of the vessels mooring there Sunday was so big it encroached on waters reserved for Navy activity. The Key West Committee for Safer, Cleaner Ships — which organized the weekend protest — posted photos to Twitter showing the 1,004-foot Celebrity Apex docking at Pier B, a privately owned cruise ship dock. The ship’s rear extended well beyond a boundary line, designated by white-capped bollards, between Pier B’s space and Naval Air Station Key West’s Truman Harbor entrance.

Land ho: Big boats are encroaching on Navy waters in Key West. Image via Safer Cleaner Ships.

A pipe bursts, and hundreds of people are still under a boil-water order two weeks later. Welcome to Fort Lauderdale.” via Susannah Bryan of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A three-block section from Federal Highway west to Southeast Third Avenue and Las Olas Boulevard south to the New River has been under a boil-water order since Jan. 27, the day after the underground pipe broke. Fort Lauderdale plans to spend $600 million over the next few years fixing and replacing the city’s underground network of aging water and sewer pipes. Experts predict that the total tally will come to at least $1.4 billion over the next 20 years.

City officials who bankrupted Jacksonville trash fund to investigate why trash problems persist” via Nate Monroe of The Florida Times-Union — Jacksonville city officials publicly and deliberately bankrupted the fund that pays for trash pickup over several years, auditors estimate it will be nearly $30 million in the red by September, so it’s no great mystery who is responsible for the much-maligned state of city trash and recycling pickup. When times were good, and now, when times are not so good, city officials have been unwilling to do the one necessary thing: Raise the fee residents pay for trash pickup that hasn’t been touched in more than a decade. Facing a mountain of complaints about poor service, the city suspended curbside recycling in the fall to better focus on at least getting the trash picked up.

Ken Welch increases St. Petersburg housing assistance payments” via Colleen Wright of the Tampa Bay Times — Welch on Tuesday announced increases to a down payment and home rehabilitation assistance available to homebuyers in the city, particularly for households earning below the average median income. Welch also announced new incentives for developers to construct affordable single-family homes in southern St. Petersburg. The city is increasing the maximum amount of down payment assistance for first-time homebuyers in the city from $40,000 to $60,000. The amount available, which starts at $5,000, depends on household income and whether the home is purchased within the South St. Petersburg Community Redevelopment Area.

Is Tampa Bay’s VA nearly perfect or is a federal wait time law being ignored?” via Walt Buteau of WFLA — During a recent two-year span, Veterans Affairs facilities in the Tampa Bay area seemed nearly perfect in scheduling primary care appointments within the required 20-day wait time window. But skeptics believe the data indicates the agency is not following federal law. From Jan. 1, 2020, through last August, only nine out of 106,000 Community Care patients in the Bay Pines and James Haley VA networks were given primary care appointments with civilian doctors. Darin Selnick, a senior adviser for Concerned Veterans for America, helped write the Mission Act. He does not believe it is possible that only nine out of 106,000 Tampa Bay area primary care patients qualified to go outside the VA.

Florida’s new parental rights law tests limits, and patience, in Pasco” via Jeffrey S. Solocheck of the Tampa Bay Times — For months, DeSantis and many Republican lawmakers have told parents their rights are paramount in Florida’s schools. In October, DeSantis said the state must find even more ways to “empower parents’ rights to decide what is best for their children.” And ever since, the concept has played out in often-heated debates over coronavirus masking and vaccination, library book availability, race lessons in history classes, and restroom rules involving transgender students. Citing these rights, growing numbers of parents have started to make demands of their schools based on what they think is best for their own children.

Citrus County looks to create economic development council” via Mike Wright of Florida Politics — Citrus County Commissioners are hoping to give their sputtering economic development efforts a boost by utilizing a model they hope will be more successful. During a workshop Tuesday, Commissioners agreed with Chair Ron Kitchen Jr.’s idea to create an economic development council to provide marketing direction for the county. The idea would match the county’s economic development program with its tourism efforts. The county is guided by a tourism development council appointed by the County Commission. Citrus County has been without an economic director since David Pieklik resigned in January. He was on the job only a year following the retirement of his predecessor, Bruce Register.

After more than 89 years, Gilchrist County Journal to close at end of February” via Alan Festo of The Gainesville Sun — After more than 89 years serving Gilchrist County and the surrounding area, the Gilchrist County Journal announced in its Feb. 3 edition that it plans to close at the end of the month. “A whole lot of things played into it,” co-owner and food editor Cindy Jo Ayers said. “It’s just time, and we’ve made the decision.” The notice announcing the closing also says that the weekly newspaper is for sale. “Everything I’ve heard so far is kind of really iffy,” Ayers said of a possible sale.

FSU testing confirms elevated radon levels, mold in Sandels Building” via Tristan Wood of Florida Politics — Preliminary testing by a team contracted by Florida State University confirmed the university’s Sandels Building contains mold and has floors with higher than recommended radon levels. The testing comes after a report compiled by faculty and obtained by Florida Politics which tied radon levels and mold to eight cancer cases within 10 years for individuals on the building’s fourth floor. The university has closed the Sandels Building until further notice. Testing conducted by Radon Professional Services from Jan. 26-28 found radon levels ranging from 2.5 to 7 PicoCuries (pCi) per liter in the building’s basement and second floor. The EPA recommends taking mitigation actions for radon levels above 4 pCi/L in residential settings.

Moldy: FSU’s Sandels Building has some serious problems.

FSU Board of Trustees OK’s $44 million loan for research building” via Tristan Wood of Florida Politics — The Florida State University Board of Trustees approved a resolution to authorize the FSU Research Foundation to take a $44 million loan to help finance the construction of its $88 million Interdisciplinary Research and Commercialization Building. The university broke ground on the building in August. It will serve as a collaborative space for researchers from various fields to create and advance new materials. University officials believe financing the construction instead of paying it now could save the university money.

— TOP OPINION —

The tweeting, deleting operative who does DeSantis’ distorting” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — True to her flawed form, Christina Pushaw implied on Twitter that neo-Nazi demonstrators in Orlando might be Democrats in disguise. They were not, of course, and she soon deleted the tweet. The deletion only called more attention to how her boss wouldn’t say anything about the repugnant outburst of racism in one of the world’s most popular tourist destinations. When he finally did, it was to wallow in pretentious self-pity, complaining that Democrats were “trying to smear me as if I had something to do with that.” No one suggested anything of the sort. DeSantis’ silence was the issue, and Pushaw’s knee-jerk response highlighted it.

— OPINIONS —

There’s a name for someone who calls violence ‘legitimate.’ It isn’t ‘Republican.’” via Dana Milbank of The Washington Post — God bless those crafty wordsmiths of the Republican Party! The people who gave us “alternative facts,” “enhanced interrogation techniques,” “tender age shelters,” and “hiking the Appalachian Trail” have outdone themselves. Euphemisms have been with us since even before the Reagan-era MX missile was dubbed the “Peacekeeper,” and the estate tax became the death tax. But calling violence “legitimate discourse” is a particularly illegitimate twisting of the English language. Now, the insurrectionists have become peaceful tourists or “political prisoners,” the Capitol Police murderers, the would-be assassins martyrs. Poll after poll shows about 10% of the American public believes violence against the government is justified at this moment.

You know what’s ‘disgusting,’ DeSantis? Your heartless policy toward immigrant children” via Fabiola Santiago of the Miami Herald — You have to be devoid of a soul to attack, in a quest for political glory, immigrant children looking for safety in this troubled world and to do so in a city like Miami, Florida’s Ellis Island. Shame is too benign a word for this new racist low. As if not enough dishonor and division has been sown by today’s unrecognizable Republican Party in Miami’s Cuban American community, here comes DeSantis to open another chapter. In Miami to participate in a so-called immigration forum that was nothing but an opportunity for DeSantis to fear-monger and bash Biden, the Governor decided that the best way to pound his anti-immigrant stances was to obsequiously pander to Cuban Americans.

Speed cameras in Florida school zones make a lot of sense” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — Anyone who speeds through a school zone deserves a ticket. Even the folks in Tallahassee seem to agree. That’s why SB 410, which would allow cities and counties to install speed cameras in school zones, is so far sailing through committees without a single nay vote. We already know the dangers that pedestrians face in Florida and Tampa Bay. Florida is the most dangerous place to walk in the United States, with seven of the 10 most pedestrian-hostile metro areas. Tampa Bay ranks eighth deadliest. And yet, too many drivers don’t slow down even for school children. In just one week in 2019, Florida law enforcement ticketed 2,819 drivers and gave warnings to 4,040 more during the “Operation School Zone Safety” campaign.
— TODAY’S SUNRISE —

Surgeon General Ladapo’s confirmation is heading to the full Senate. He made it through a two-part committee hearing that even included questions about his fashion choice in lab coats.

Also on today’s Sunrise:

— Bills to make picketing and demonstrating outside residences are moving through the legislature, but not without questions about the First Amendment.

— A civics lesson of sorts in the debate over making it harder to put citizen’s initiatives on the ballot.

— The Governor talks about gender ideology in the classroom.

— And talk about the high cost of housing; a two-bedroom in Melbourne is going for $2.5 million. Guess who lived there for a while?

To listen, click on the image below:

— OLYMPICS —

Ocala’s Joey Mantia takes sixth place in 1,500-meter speedskating event at Beijing Olympics” via Paul Newberry of the Ocala Star-Banner — World Cup leader Mantia, from Ocala, got off to a strong start but couldn’t hold his pace through a race that requires both speed and endurance. He wound up sixth in 1:45.26. “The reality is, even if I skated a perfect race, I don’t know if I would’ve beat Kjeld (Nuis) today,” Mantia said. “It’s pretty incredible what he did. It’s nice to know that the gold medal went to somebody who really showed up today.”

Off pace: Joey Mantia starts strong but couldn’t keep up.

Olympic athletes compete against the pandemic, climate change — and politics, of course” via the Miami Herald editorial board — The controversial two-week 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing officially began Friday morning with the Opening Ceremony airing on NBC. China put on its traditional, spectacular light and fireworks shows; snowflakes were the theme. Still, something is missing at these Olympics: public interest. This year, due to the pandemic, the host country and its politics, which kept some delegations away, and climate change, which is expected to hamper some snow events, the usual magnitude of the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat feels smallish. The Games of the Olympiad are muted and more about everything else than the best athletes in the world coming together and competing.

Winter Olympics medal ceremonies will allow athletes to temporarily remove masks for photos” via Mike Snider of USA Today — When medal winners at the 2022 Winter Beijing Olympics make their way to the awards podium, they will have gotten marching orders regarding face masks. Athletes can remove their masks for photos capturing the gold, silver and bronze medal recipients on their respective podiums. Then, they are required to put their masks back on and depart the platform. Later they can take quick maskless photos with their own teams. Whether all Olympians will follow those rules, set by the International Olympic Committee as part of its COVID-19 prevention protocols, remains to be seen. There’s precedent for rule-breaking. During last year’s Tokyo Summer Olympics, the first wave of athletes to make it to the awards podium were told to follow the IOC’s rule to keep their masks on during the entire ceremony.

All alone at luge, where closed doors offer a view of the Games’ best-kept secret.” via Jonathan Abrams of The New York Times — Some Olympic sports impress with their athleticism, or their physical prowess, or their grace and fluidity in movement. The National Sliding Center in Yanqing, the host of the Games’ bobsled, luge and skeleton events, offers something else, something unexpected: a disorienting and exhilarating view of sport. It starts with the track. One could roam along the nearly mile-long track and stand close enough to hear the low hum of the approaching sled, feel the wind’s hiss from a luger’s wake and see the imprint their sleds sliced into the ice.

NBC says Leslie Jones can keep offering her commentary on the Olympics.” via Remy Tumin of The New York Times — One day after Jones suggested that NBC was pressuring her to give up her colorful Olympics commentary, the network said on Monday night that the situation “has been resolved.” Jones, the former “Saturday Night Live” star who has become an unofficial Olympics armchair expert, has tweeted her way through the past three Olympics, much to the adoration of die-hard sports fans and novices alike. But on Monday, she said that some of her videos had been blocked and that she was considering giving up on the Olympics altogether. “Leslie Jones does not stay anywhere I’m not welcomed,” Jones posted on social media Sunday night at the end of the free skate event.

How to watch the Winter Olympics online on a budget” via Tatum Hunter and Geoffrey A. Fowler of The Washington Post — The 2022 Winter Olympics are here, and finding coverage online has gotten easier since the Summer Games in Tokyo last year. For instance, the Winter Games in Beijing mark the first time NBC, which owns broadcast rights to the Olympics, makes all of its live coverage available to people who pay for its streaming service, Peacock. That means you won’t find yourself wondering why you can’t find NBC content on an NBC-owned streaming platform. And at $4.99 a month, it’s a small price to pay for a few weeks of Olympics access. But finding the Olympic content, you want when you want it still isn’t a no-brainer. Peacock only allows three people to share the same account, so borrowing a friend’s login can get tricky.

— ALOE —

“Publix working with Audubon Society to restore portion of Everglades. First phase complete” via Paul Nutcher of The Lakeland Ledger — Deer captured on video cameras are evidence of Publix’s yearlong commitment of $1.2 million is working to help restore the Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary in the western Everglades. The restoration effort so far has eliminated invasive willows and other species across 200 acres of the sanctuary, Publix Super Markets Inc. said in a news release last week. Invasive trees and plants disrupt Florida’s natural water cycle by using standing water from rainfall before it can seep into the underground aquifers. According to a third-party evaluation arranged by Publix, the phase one removal will allow more than 44 million gallons of water per year to be returned to the wetland’s ecosystem, the equivalent of nearly 67 Olympic-size swimming pools.

This luxury resort near Miami was just named one of the best hotels in America” via Connie Ogle of the Miami Herald — This is getting to be a habit: The most famous luxury oceanfront resort in Sunny Isles Beach was just named one of the best hotels in the country. Again. U.S. News & World Report has just released its 2022 rankings of the best hotels in the United States, and in what was a surprise to precisely no one, Acqualina Resort was ranked No. 3 in the country, behind The Peninsula Chicago (No. 1) and Montage Kapalua Bay in Maui (No. 2). For Acqualina, which also ranked in the top three in 2021, that includes a spectacular beachfront, several pools, the award-winning Espa spa and restaurants including Ke-uH.

Best of show: To the surprise of no one, the Acqualina Resort is again named one of the best hotels in the country.

— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —

Happy birthday to former U.S. Rep. Patrick Rooney, former state Rep. Fred Costello, and our friend, Todd Jennings, chair of the Pinellas County Republican Executive Committee. Belated birthday wishes to Rhett Bullard.

___

Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter SchorschPhil Ammann, Daniel Dean, Renzo Downey, Jacob Ogles, and Drew Wilson.


5.) MORNING BREW

February 09, 2022
Morning Brew
The Ascent

Good morning. You might have a Valentine, but do you have a crypto-laundering partner who will support your YouTube rap channel? Read on for a little more context…

Max Knoblauch, Neal Freyman, Jamie Wilde

MARKETS

Nasdaq

14,194.46

S&P

4,521.54

Dow

35,462.78

10-Year

1.964%

Bitcoin

$44,117.48

Pfizer

$51.70

*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 5:00pm ET. Here’s what these numbers mean.
  • Markets: Solid corporate earnings boosted Wall Street yesterday, and all the major indexes are now higher for the week. While Pfizer dipped after posting lower-than-expected Q4 revenue, it did make history: Its Covid-19 vaccine is officially the bestselling pharma product in a single year, bringing in $36.8 billion in sales in 2021.
  • Economy: The US trade deficit rose to a record $859 billion in 2021 (up 27% from the year prior) due to a surge in imports and higher prices for those imports.

CRYPTO

Bitcoin Bonnie and Crypto Clyde

Heather Morgan dances in front of a plane.Razzlekhan/YouTube

It’s only February and we already have 2022’s “story most likely to be made into competing original films on Apple TV and Hulu.” On Tuesday, authorities arrested a husband and wife (that’s her above) accused of attempting to launder 119,754 stolen bitcoin—valued at $4.5 billion.

Along with the arrest of the couple, Ilya Lichtenstein and Heather Morgan, the Justice Department announced that it had seized more than 94,000 of the allegedly stolen bitcoin, valued at $3.6 billion—the largest financial seizure in the agency’s history.

The bitcoin in question is connected to a 2016 hack of the crypto exchange Bitfinex, in which hackers exploited a security flaw and made over 2,000 unauthorized transactions—allegedly funneling stolen crypto into a wallet controlled by Lichtenstein. At the time of the hack, the stolen crypto was valued at $71 million—showing just how much the cryptocurrency has ballooned in price.

According to the DOJ, over the ensuing five years Lichtenstein and Morgan conspired to launder that stolen bitcoin through a complex process that involved depositing the funds into various currency exchanges and darknet markets using fictitious identities, and then withdrawing some as cash from Bitcoin ATMs, and spending some on NFTs, gold, and Walmart gift cards. The DOJ says the couple deposited some of the funds into their own accounts.

But this isn’t just a story about money laundering. This is a story about millennial money laundering.

Crime is just the side hustle

Lichtenstein, 34, and Morgan, 31, aren’t your typical married couple accused of laundering stolen crypto. Both are incredibly, almost unbelievably, online. A Twitter account with Lichtenstein’s name posts frequently about Web3 and crypto.

And like so many born in the late ’80s, Morgan has a YouTube channel featuring some of the worst rapping of all time—under the pseudonym “Razzlekhan”—where she refers to herself as the “crocodile of Wall Street.” She’s also a former Forbes contributor: She penned a June 2020 article about how businesses can protect themselves from cybercriminals.

The pair faces up to 20 years in prison for the money laundering charges.—MK

            

BUSINESS

Tour de headlines

Peloton bikeEzra Shaw/Getty Images

 Peloton made big changes. As takeover rumors swirl, Peloton’s co-founder and CEO John Foley is stepping “down” to the position of executive chairman, while Netflix and Spotify vet Barry McCarthy will take his place. It’s also pulling the plug on its Ohio factory and axing 2,800 jobs to cut costs. As a parting gift, those laid-off employees will get severance payments, benefits, and, most generously, a free Peloton membership for a year.

 The Oscar noms are out. The Power of the Dog, a Western, led the pack with 12 nominations, followed by Dune, a movie about worms, with 10. What else you should know: Beyoncé scored her first Oscar nod, Lin-Manuel Miranda could join the exclusive EGOT club, actor Troy Kotsur was the first deaf man nominated for an acting Oscar, and Steven Spielberg became the first filmmaker to be nominated for Best Director in six different decades.

 Apple announces Tap to Pay. In a bid to encourage more smartphone intimacy, the company is releasing a feature that allows customers to spend money by simply tapping an iPhone against a merchant’s iPhone—effectively turning the device into a checkout register. Apple’s Tap to Pay is expected to rival the point-of-sale system sold by Block (formerly known as Square).—NF

            

COVID

Vital trade routes pressured by Canadian protesters

Supporters of the Truckers Convoy against the Covid-19 vaccine mandate block traffic in the Canada bound lanes of the Ambassador Bridge border crossingGEOFF ROBINS/AFP via Getty Images

The Ambassador Bridge that links Detroit, Michigan, and Windsor, Ontario, carries more than 40,000 people and $323 million worth of goods each day. Accounting for roughly 25% of all US—Canada trade, it is “one of the most important border crossings in the world,” according to Canada’s public safety minister.

But from Monday night into Tuesday, traffic on the bridge was disrupted by Canadian truckers protesting Covid restrictions. And it’s raising alarms that the demonstrations that have paralyzed downtown Ottawa over the past two weeks could escalate to threaten trade and the broader economy.

  • Even before Monday, protesters had blocked trade routes at various points along the US–Canada border.
  • “Canadians have the right to protest, to disagree with their government. … But let’s be clear: They don’t have the right to blockade our economy or our democracy,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted Tuesday.

Up to 500 trucks remained parked in downtown Ottawa, obstructing daily life and forcing city officials to declare a state of emergency. The protesters have said they won’t leave until Trudeau lifts Covid restrictions.

Now their cause is spreading, inspiring copycat protests in Canadian cities such as Toronto and Vancouver as well as in Australia and New Zealand, where demonstrators blocked streets in the capital city of Wellington on Tuesday.—NF

            

TOGETHER WITH THE ASCENT

Your CC balance deserves a better home

The Ascent

A home in the form of a card that’s already won two awards in 2022 (dang, isn’t it only like, February?).

Just look at this display case of trophies emblazoned with titles like “Best 0% Intro APR Credit Card” and “Best Balance Transfer Credit Card.”

If you wanna avoid credit card interest, this card is the way to go. Its perks include:

  • A 0% intro APR offer for up to 21 months
  • No annual fee
  • Special offers on shopping, dining, and experiences
  • Cell phone protection—the underrated perk you didn’t know you needed until now

If the awards and perks aren’t enough to convince you to get this card, just think about that big purchase ($900 mattress, anyone?) you have lined up.

Avoid those high interest rates that have been going around. Apply for this award-winning card here.

REAL ESTATE

For sale: 5-bed, 3.5 bath, on a great block…chain

Picture of NFT home on a signPhoto Illustration: Francis Scialabba; Source: Heckler Realty

It’s not just JPEGs of apes being sold as digital tokens. A house in Gulfport, FL, will be auctioned off as an NFT tomorrow in what is claimed to be the first US real estate NFT transaction. Bidding starts at $650,000 in ether.

Real estate tech company Propy is handling the sale, which would be its second NFT real estate transaction. Last year, Propy sold an apartment owned by TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington in Kiev, Ukraine, as an NFT.

How it works: The NFT will effectively replace the house’s deed by representing a limited liability corporation that owns the property rights. So, (stay with us) the winning bidder will receive an NFT of a company that owns the house.

What’s the point?

The home’s current owner Leslie Alessandra—who’s the founder of a decentralized finance company—said selling real estate NFTs could make the process of property buying as speedy as sending a Venmo by replacing the drawn out, Hogwarts letter-level of paperwork it currently is.

Regarding NFTs, she said, “Is this just hype or is there a real world application? [The auction] is really to stimulate conversation.”

But a conversation has two sides: Critics say crypto’s infamous volatility and traditional real estate law could prove to be insurmountable hurdles for NFT-linked real estate to overcome.—JW

            

GRAB BAG

Key performance indicators

Tesla CEO Elon Musk talks to media as he arrives to visit the constructi...Odd Andersen/Getty Images

Stat: For the first time since taking office, President Biden said the word “Tesla” in public yesterday. Elon Musk has ribbed Biden on social media for touting other companies like Ford and GM while snubbing his; Biden’s team has said there’s nothing personal about it—the president reportedly prefers to highlight the other two companies because, unlike Tesla, they use unionized labor.

Quote: “Twenty years ago a colleague told me the key to your day is to hydrate as much as you can, so the first thing I do is drink 40 sips of water from my hand at the upstairs bathroom sink. It’s efficient. I drink until I feel like I’m going to throw up water. Every day.”

Whenever outgoing Peloton CEO John Foley is in the news, it is our solemn duty to resurface this legendary quote from an NYT interview in 2020.

Read: Why Netflix will falter. (The Honest Broker)

            

TOGETHER WITH DROPLETTE

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WHAT ELSE IS BREWING

  • 31.5 million Americans are expected to bet more than $7.6 billion on the Super Bowl this year, a huge jump over last year’s record-setting numbers, per the American Gaming Association.
  • US household debt increased by $1 trillion in 2021—its biggest yearly gain since 2007.
  • Starbucks has fired several workers who were leading unionization efforts for violating company rules.
  • Chinese social media chatter on two US-born athletes competing for China could not be more different.

 

RECS

Brew’s bets

Tech trick: If you struggle with formatting when copying text from PDFs, this little hack might help.

Inflation 101: This informative video explains exactly what inflation means, how it’s measured, what can be done about it, and why you should care. Watch here.

Be kind to yourself: This practice guide is super helpful before starting your daily routine.

GAMES

The puzzle section

Word Search: Super Bowl week rolls on in the Brew’s Games section. Today we’re quizzing you on NFL home turfs: Can you identify the team logos?

Top 10

Soccer legend Cristiano Ronaldo is the most followed person on Instagram, crossing 400 million followers recently. Can you name the rest of the top 10?

ANSWER

2. Kylie Jenner
3. Lionel Messi
4. The Rock
5. Selena Gomez
6. Ariana Grande
7. Kim Kardashian
8. Beyoncé
9. Justin Bieber
10. Khloe Kardashian
          
Written by Neal FreymanJamie Wilde, and Max Knoblauch

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6.) THE FACTUAL

9 FEB 2022

The Factual

Facts, not fear.

TRENDING TOPICS
Mask mandates lifted • Stolen cryptocurrency seized • Taiwan arms sale • US-Japan steel tariffs • Drug harm reduction
FEATURED UNDER-REPORTED STORIES
Big Oil’s EV response • Sand harvesting consequences • Chromosome tectonics
TRENDING TOPICS, MOST CREDIBLE STORIES
#1 in U.S. News • 83 articles

How are some states changing their school masking rules?

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  1. Highly-rated – last 48 hrs
    New Jersey, Connecticut, others to lift statewide school mask mandates.
    NBC News (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 79% • 4 min read

    New Jersey’s governor, a proponent of strict Covid measures, announced Monday that masks will soon no longer be required in schools and daycares. Officials in Connecticut, Oregon and Delaware also made public their plans to drop mask requirements for schools after a decline in Covid-19 cases and the growing availability of vaccines for children.

    [In New Jersey] districts and childcare providers will still be able to decide whether they want to impose a mask mandate “should community conditions require it,” Governor Murphy said. And anyone who wants to continue masking up in schools may do so.

    Connecticut’s plan to drop its statewide school mandate by the end of the month would require the state’s legislature to renew pandemic emergency powers, scheduled to expire Feb. 15. California’s governor on Monday said that the state will allow its indoor mask mandate to expire next week but that masks will continue to be the rule in schools.
  1. Different political viewpoint
    White House pressed on mask mandates as Democratic governors switch stance.
    Washington Examiner (Moderate Right) • Factual Grade 79% • 2 min read
  1. Selected long-read
    Is it time to phase out mask requirements in schools? Why more states, doctors say yes. [Free read link]
    USA Today (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 82% • 8 min read

View all articles

TODAY’S POLL

Have school mask mandates been effective in reducing Covid-19’s toll?

All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PDT

YESTERDAY’S POLLWould you join a union if given the option?

504 votes, 81 comments

Context: White House report lays out steps for increasing union membership.

HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTS

 No – I was unionized a couple of jobs ago. I didn’t find them very effective. My pay went up 150% after leaving a government union job and has since tripled. The only thing I liked about being unionized was that it was a lot of work to fire someone. Around the time of the Janus decision, I looked at AFSCME’s own internal survey. Their satisfaction rate was around 30%. I’m not surprised that unionization fell since then.

 Yes – I am a member of two unions, one for teachers and one for performers. Without my unions there are many basic benefits that I would not be offered, including healthcare and job protections. My unions are far from perfect and I wish they would do better but without them I would absolutely be much worse off.

 Unsure – I would have to weigh the options of the companies benefits packages vs the value of the union’s bargaining power. It also depends on the industry that a person works in. Certain industries allow employees better bargaining power and better benefits, where other industries are harder to gain wage increases and better benefits.

#2 in U.S. News • 25 articles

How did the Justice Department seize $4.5 billion in stolen Bitcoin?

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  1. Highly-rated – last 48 hrs
    U.S. accuses couple of laundering $4.5 bln in Bitcoin tied to big 2016 hack.
    Reuters (Center) • Factual Grade 76% • 3 min read

    The pair is accused of conspiring to launder 119,754 bitcoin stolen after a hacker broke into Bitfinex and initiated more than 2,000 unauthorized transactions. Justice Department officials said the transactions at the time were valued at $71 million in Bitcoin, but with the rise in the currency’s value, it is now valued at over $4.5 billion.

    It was the Justice Department’s biggest financial seizure, Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said. Tuesday’s criminal complaint came more than four months after Monaco announced the department was launching a new National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team, which comprises a mix of anti-money laundering and cybersecurity experts.

    U.S. officials said some of the money was transferred to AlphaBay, an anything-goes version of eBay hosted on the dark web. When the site was [busted], it likely allowed authorities to access AlphaBay’s internal transaction logs and connect them to a cryptocurrency account in [the accused’s] name.
  1. Different political viewpoint
    Justice Department says it seized $3.6 billion worth of Bitcoin stolen in 2016 hack. [Free read link]
    Wall Street Journal (Moderate Right) • Factual Grade 72% • 4 min read
  1. Selected long-read
    Feds are seizing cryptocurrency from criminals. Now they have to figure out what to do with it. (2021)
    Vox (Left) • Factual Grade 78% • 5 min read

View all articles

#1 in World News • 15 articles

Why is the U.S. selling arms to Taiwan?

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  1. Highly-rated – last 48 hrs
    U.S. approves deal to boost Taiwan defense systems.
    Deutsche Welle (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 73% • 2 min read

    President Biden’s administration has approved a $100 million sale of equipment and services to Taiwan. “This proposed sale serves [U.S. interests] by supporting the recipient’s continuing efforts to modernize its armed forces and maintain a credible defensive capability,” the U.S. Defense Security Cooperation Agency said.

    Taiwan has complained of missions by China’s air force in its air defense zone. “In the face of China’s continued military expansion and provocative actions, our country will maintain its national security with a solid defense, and continue to deepen the close security partnership between Taiwan and the United States,” Taiwan’s Foreign Ministry said.

    The U.S. officially follows the “One China” policy and recognizes Taiwan as part of China. However, the U.S. is also committed to ensuring Taiwan can defend itself. Last month, China’s ambassador to the U.S. said that the two powers could end up in a military conflict if Washington encourages Taiwan’s independence.
  1. Selected local viewpoint
    China vows to take powerful measures against US’ latest arms sale to Taiwan island.
    Global Times (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 59% • 3 min read
  1. Selected long-read
    China and Taiwan know how to coexist, but the American defense establishment wants an enemy. (2021)
    American Conservative (Moderate Right) • Factual Grade 74% • 7 min read
  1. Recent poll
    Should the US continue arm sales to Taiwan?
    337 votes • 24 comments

View all articles

#1 in Business News • 9 articles

What agreement did the U.S. and Japan reach on U.S. metal imports?

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  1. Highly-rated – last 48 hrs
    U.S. to lift Trump-era tariff on Japanese steel.
    CBS News (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 73% • 2 min read

    In 2018, the Trump administration imposed a 25% tariff on steel imports and a 10% tariff on aluminum imports from dozens of countries. Under the new agreement, the U.S. will permit 1.25 million metric tons of steel to enter the U.S. from Japan each year duty-free. [The agreement] does not address the tariff on aluminum imports from Japan.

    This announcement marks the second agreement between the Biden administration and allies to ease Section 232 tariffs imposed by the Trump administration. Last fall, the Biden administration announced it reached a deal with the European Union to roll back tariffs on European steel and aluminum.

    “This agreement, combined with last year’s resolution with the European Union, will help us combat China’s anti-competitive, non-market trade actions in the steel sector, while helping us reach President Biden’s ambitious global climate agenda,” said U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai.
  1. Selected local viewpoint
    U.S. and Japan reach an agreement to remove Trump-era steel tariffs.
    Japan Times (Center) • Factual Grade 60% • 4 min read
  1. Selected long-read
    Trump-Biden tariffs hurt domestic manufacturing. (2021)
    Tax Foundation (Moderate Right) • Factual Grade 93% • 5 min read
  1. Recent poll
    Are tariffs useful for protecting the domestic economy?
    311 votes • 31 comments

View all articles

#1 in Health News • 10 articles

How is the Biden administration aiming to reduce harms from drug use?

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  1. Highly-rated – last 48 hrs
    GOP outraged at $30m Biden plan to fund ‘crack pipe distribution’ in effort to reduce drug harm.
    The Independent (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 78% • 4 min read

    The controversy stems from a recently disclosed request for proposals under the Harm Reduction Grant Program. The initiative also intends to fund facilities offering safe syringe exchanges, opioid reversal drugs, fentanyl test kits, and other methods meant to stem the U.S. overdose crisis. The American Medical Association has endorsed harm-reduction measures like safe syringe exchanges and drug testing kits.

    The Washington Free Beacon said that an HHS spokesperson explained these kits could include pipes that could be used for drugs like crack cocaine. “[…] These grants must adhere to relevant federal, state and local laws or regulations,” [an HHS spokesperson said].

    Late last year, the Biden administration unveiled a four-part plan to tackle drug addiction, including slowing the over-prescription of opioids and supporting harm reduction strategies. The Justice Department said Monday that it is currently “evaluating” whether it would be legal to operate safe drug use sites and other harm-reduction measures.
  1. Selected long-read
    Sobriety is just one pathway to recovery. Harm reduction is another. (2019)
    STAT News (Center) • Factual Grade 70% • 5 min read
  1. Recent poll
    Should more cities open safe injection sites?
    427 votes • 47 comments

View all articles

UPDATES & BREAKING NEWS

View more credible stories

HIGHLY CREDIBLE, UNDER-REPORTED STORIES

Please click Display images in your email app to view this email properly Big oil isn’t losing any sleep over the EV revolution.

Oil Price (Moderate Right) • Grade 83% • 6 min read

Please click Display images in your email app to view this email properly Modern civilizations are forged with sand, but soaring extraction has come at a price.

Foreign Policy (Center) • Grade 81% • 4 min read

Please click Display images in your email app to view this email properly Secrets of early animal evolution revealed by chromosome ‘tectonics.’

Quanta Magazine (Center) • Grade 93% • 8 min read

EDITOR’S PICKS

Highly-rated article from right-leaning source

National Interest • Grade 81%

Which Asia-Pacific nation purchased a secret batch of Kalashnikovs?

9,329 Articles Analyzed Visit The Factual

7.) LIBERTY NATION

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FROM OUR NEWSROOM

Wednesday’s Breaking News

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Media Pushes Back at Blue State COVID Redirect
By Mark Angelides

Is the dream of permanent chaos over for the Fourth Estate?

Click Here

“Don’t judge each day by the harvest you reap but by the seeds that you plant.”

– Robert Louis Stevenson

President Biden Repays Black Loyalty With Crack Pipes
By Jeff Charles

What could go wrong?

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Today’s Political Meme

Sometimes, you just need to laugh!

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Biden’s Gaffe-Prone Foreign Policy Will Not Be Easily Remedied
By Dave Patterson

The Afghanistan withdrawal debacle has tainted U.S. credibility on the world stage.

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SCOTUS Lets Alabama Voting Districts Stand – For Now
By Scott D. Cosenza, Esq.

Supreme Court hands Republicans a win on congressional voting districts.

Click Here

What’s New In Liberty Nation MemberZone

From the Liberty Nation Studios

Is Biden Leading America to War? – LN Radio Videocast – Are domestic issues pushing Biden’s foreign policy response? by Liberty Nation Staff – Watch Now

Wagging the Dog – Full Episode – C5 TV – Never-Trumpers, Biden’s mental health, and the threat of war looming over Ukraine. by Liberty Nation Staff – Watch Now

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By Liberty Nation Staff

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

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8.) FOX NEWS

 


9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL

 


10.) THE FEDERALIST PAPERS

Web version
Outraged Parents Reveal ‘Crazy’ Policy Allowing Wild Violence in Schools
Posted by Jack Davis, The Western Journal
‘It was very disturbing. It was really violent.’ Read more…
Trump Makes Massive Revelation
Posted by Randy DeSoto, The Western Journal
Trump already knows what his day-one move will be. Read more…
Photos of School Kids with Guns Light Up Internet, Spread Like Wildfire
Posted by Grant Atkinson, The Western Journal
These are the kind of lessons kids really need to learn. Read more…
Trucker ‘Freedom Convoy’ Hits US
Posted by Abby Liebing, The Western Journal
It’s not just Canada anymore. Read more…
LeBron James Nominated for Humiliating ‘Award’
Posted by Jack Davis, The Western Journal
This can’t be how LeBron James imagined his big screen career starting. Read more…
Hunter Biden Laptop Reveals New Global Money Plot: Report
Posted by Michael Austin, The Western Journal
The Hunter Biden laptop plot just thickened.
Read more…
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11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE

AEI’s daily publication of independent research, insightful analysis, and scholarly debate.
The folly of ‘modern supply-side’ economics
Phil Gramm and Mike Solon | The Wall Street Journal
Janet Yellen tries to sell even more spending as a growth and anti-inflation policy. It’s the opposite of what’s needed now.
Full Story
facebook
twitter
Emerging trends and enduring patterns in American family life
Daniel A. Cox | Survey Center on American Life
Few Americans say the institution of marriage is outdated, and marriage remains a goal for most single Americans, who express interest in getting married one day.
Full Story
facebook
twitter
The unbearable bleakness of American schooling
Robert Pondiscio | Commentary
When education becomes activism, it dwells exclusively in the bad and the broken; at least tacitly it encourages children to see their community and country as nothing more than a collection of problems to be solved, with none of the virtues and blessings of citizenship.
Full Story
facebook
twitter
Rebalancing: Children first
Michael R. Strain et al. | American Enterprise Institute and Brookings Institution
The future of America rests in part on how the country prepares the next generation to live and lead. Childhood is a consequential and cost-effective time to make investments that last a lifetime. Yet, many children in the United States do not have the resources or relationships they need to build a strong foundation for their future.
Full Story
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Economics, Housing, and Poverty
Yes, the US can have a 3 percent growth economy again
James Pethokoukis | Faster, Please!
Winds of change set to hit emerging markets as US and China hit brakes
Desmond Lachman | Business Day
‘Ozark’ is another example of Hollywood distorting the state of America’s middle class
James Pethokoukis | AEIdeas
R. Glenn Hubbard: Moving past the ‘walls’ of protection to ‘bridges’ of participation
R. Glenn Hubbard and Roger W. Ferguson Jr. | Council on Foreign Relations
The poor side of town: Highlights from my conversation with Howard Husock
Brent Orrell and Howard Husock | AEIdeas
Housing finance: Insights on the new normal (week 5, 2022)
Edward J. Pinto and Tobias Peter | American Enterprise Institute
Foreign Policy and Defense
India has a lot to lose in Ukraine
Sadanand Dhume | The Wall Street Journal
Assessing the military strength of Russia and Ukraine
Giselle Donnelly | The Dispatch
How inflation makes the US military poorer overnight
Mackenzie Eaglen | 19fortyfive.com
The Beijing Winter Olympics: A collective-action failure
Michael Mazza | National Review
Politics, Society, and Culture
How to end the voting wars once and for all
Kevin R. Kosar | The Hill
To increase US competitiveness, invest in human capital
John P. Bailey | AEIdeas
The satisfaction trap
Arthur C. Brooks | The Atlantic
Health Care and Technology
It’s time for federal budgeting rules to match the new reality
James C. Capretta | The Bulwark
Education
Preschool can be great. Universal pre-K schemes are something else.
Frederick M. Hess and Hayley Sanon | The Dispatch
Podcasts
The history of college earnings data
Jason D. Delisle and Amy Laitinen | “An Economist Goes to College”

12.) THE FLIP SIDE

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Wednesday, February 9, 2022

RNC Censure

“Top U.S. Senate Republican Mitch McConnell on Tuesday criticized his party’s censure of two prominent Republican critics of Donald Trump… Last week, the Republican National Committee censured Representatives Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, the only two Republicans serving on the House of Representatives select committee investigating the events of Jan. 6, 2021… ‘The issue is whether or not the RNC should be sort of singling out members of our party who may have different views from the majority. That’s not the job of the RNC,’ McConnell told a news conference.” Reuters

Here’s our recent coverage of the Jan. 6 commissionThe Flip Side

From the Right

The right is divided about the censure, and urges Republicans to focus on the future.
This kind of ritual purification is bad politics. Republicans should be talking about President Biden’s $5 trillion spending plan, 7% inflation, and the Americans who are still trying to flee Afghanistan. Now the media is crowing because the RNC says Ms. Cheney and Mr. Kinzinger’s role in investigating Jan. 6 amounts to ‘persecution of ordinary citizens engaged in legitimate political discourse.’…

“Republicans don’t have to agree with everything—or anything—that the House Jan. 6 committee is doing, and we think it was a mistake for Speaker Nancy Pelosi to reject the appointees offered by GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy. But Republicans should not get within 10 miles of defending the Capitol riot. What is to be gained by the RNC’s indulgence of President Trump’s vendettas?”
Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal

Others argue, “The Jan. 6 Select Committee is investigating an event that has already been investigated by federal law enforcement. The FBI – which seized banking, phone, social media, and geolocation records from the more than 700 people they arrested and charged – found no evidence of any central coordination or organization. Moreover, investigations demanded by Democratic House members into Republican House members, conducted by both the inspector general of the Capitol Police and the Government Accountability Office, have turned up nothing…

“Despite this, the Select Committee insists there was some sort of central planning. In an attempt to harass as many people as possible to prove law enforcement wrong, they have issued huge dragnets for the personal emails, text messages, location records, and social media posts of a secret list of people that includes private American citizens who had nothing to do with entering the Capitol…

“They have likewise breached centuries of protocol by demanding the private phone records and testimony of their own House colleagues… Cheney and Kinzinger have been willing participants in every part of this exercise.”
Rachel Bovard, The Federalist

“Yes, there was reason for the Republican Party to be annoyed by Cheney and Kinzinger. But Cheney and Kinzinger appear to be obsessed with the events of November 2020 through January 2021. The Republican Party, and the voters, do not share that obsession. By taking time to debate Cheney’s and Kinzinger’s actions, and then by voting to censure them, the RNC got sucked into the Democratic-Trump effort to focus on 2020. The RNC’s goal is to win Republican control of Congress in 2022 and the White House in 2024. That requires a relentless focus on 2022 and 2024

“[Voters] are deeply concerned about inflation, about crime, about border security, about what their children are taught in school, about spending, about national security — in short, about opposing everything President Joe Biden and his Democratic allies are doing. They are not as intensely interested in relitigating the 2020 election… Republicans have to avoid the traps being set by Pelosi and the Democrats.”
Byron York, Washington Examiner

From the Left

The left condemns the censure and the Republican party in general.
“The RNC resolution condemned [Cheney and Kinzinger] for participating in a ‘Democrat-led persecution’ of ordinary citizens engaged in ‘legitimate political discourse’… The RNC’s declaration coincided with the release of new video by the Department of Justice showing the horrific truth of the insurrection — a Trump mob, high on his election lies, beating up police officers and vowing to drag lawmakers through the streets…

“After the passage of the measure, RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel insisted to CNN that the committee drew a distinction between those who did not commit violence on January 6 and rioters who stormed the US Capitol. But the resolution, watered down from a previous version that demanded the stripping of party backing from Cheney and Kinzinger, contained no such caveat.”
Stephen Collinson, CNN

“Trump regularly sanctioned violence, whether encouraging his fans to pummel protesters or police officers to rough up suspects (‘When you see these thugs being thrown into the back of a paddy wagon, you just see them thrown in, rough, I said, please don’t be too nice.’). These statements were often shrugged off as Trumpian excesses, but they were part of a broader blurring of political discourse and political violence… The RNC’s appeal to ’legitimate political discourse’ is an effort to engage in the same water-muddying exercise

“The end result of these efforts to minimize, excuse, and erase right-wing violence is an environment that invites even more of it. Because if a mob can ransack the Capitol while hunting for members of Congress in an effort to overthrow an election… only to emerge as something between political protesters and persecuted heroes, then why would they swear off violence in the future?”
Nicole Hemmer, CNN

“The censure is wishy-washy not only in its wording but in its aim as well. It scolds Cheney and Kinzinger, but it doesn’t go any further… The RNC could have called for Cheney and Kinzinger to be expelled from the House Republican Caucus, but it didn’t do that, because the point is to satisfy Trump—a man who’s always been more concerned with appearances than actions…

“The censure appears to have been written so that everyone could read into it what they wanted… Even if it stops short of declaring the violence ‘legitimate political discourse,’ the resolution is nevertheless an attack on basic democratic principles. It is part of a push to legitimize the ‘paperwork coup,’
David A. Graham, The Atlantic

“What doesn’t seem to bother the self-proclaimed ‘party of the Constitution’ is the mounting evidence of how far Trump was willing to go to subvert the clear will of the American people as they expressed it at the ballot box in November 2020. How he entertained a proposal to have the Department of Homeland Security seize voting machines in swing states that he lost. How he continues to foment the lie that the election was tainted by massive voter fraud. How he claims that then-Vice President Mike Pence could and should have rejected the electoral college vote tally.”
Karen Tumulty, Washington Post

On the bright side…

Swedish firm deploys crows to pick up cigarette butts.
The Guardian

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13.) AXIOS

Axios AM

🐪 Good Wednesday morning. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,295 words … 5 minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.

🏂 Snowboarder Lindsey Jacobellis, 36, won Team USA’s first gold medal at the Winter Games. The snowboard cross win was 16 years in the making. NBC

1 big thing — Next culture war: Toddler vaccines
Featured image

Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios

Pfizer and federal officials are scrambling to speed up COVID vaccines for kids under 5. But polls indicate plenty of parents may be on the fence about getting their child vaccinated right away, Axios’ Tina Reed writes.

  • Why it matters: Officials are trying to get first shots into the littlest arms to protect against severe disease and hospitalization — which, while rare for young kids, is still a real threat. But many parents of younger children are leery.

In a Harris poll of 306 parents of kids under 5 provided exclusively to Axios, 73% of vaccinated parents said they’re likely to vaccinate their kids under 5, while only 35% of unvaccinated parents would.

  • “When I looked at these numbers, I thought: ‘Buckle up, PTAs. Toddler vaccines are the next culture war,'” John Gerzema, CEO of The Harris Poll, told Axios.
  • Context: The push to vaccinate young children comes as even Democratic governors have announced plans to stop masking kids in schools.

The bottom line: If and when Pfizer’s vaccines become available for the youngest kids, officials will have a job ahead of them convincing many parents to take advantage, even after two years of waiting.

2. How inflation ends
Featured image

Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios

Want to bring down inflation? The great dilemma is this: The only real options are to be patient, or cause a recession, Axios chief economic correspondent Neil Irwin writes.

  • Why it matters: It’s a pick-your-poison environment for the Biden administration and the Fed, which face public discontent over economic conditions — and the risk that discontent would only get worse if the alternative was a new recession.

What’s happening: The inflationary pressures from strained supply chains and labor shortages look likely to persist through 2022 and maybe beyond.

  • But the measures that would be needed to bring inflation down more rapidly would risk sending the economy into a tailspin.

The big picture: In the decades after World War II, episodes of inflation ended when the Fed took steps to tighten the money supply, causing recessions.

  • In other words, companies can’t hike prices and workers can’t demand higher pay if the economy is contracting and more people are out of work.
  • In the most extreme example, Fed Chair Paul Volcker engineered a steep downturn in the early 1980s that ended the double-digit inflation of that era — but at the cost of double-digit unemployment that pummeled President Reagan’s popularity.

This time around, the goal is a soft landing. The Fed is looking to move toward higher interest rates gradually, not with the kind of shock Volcker engineered.

  • And the Biden administration is decidedly not talking about spending cuts or tax increases that might act as fiscal anti-stimulus.

Reality check: Patience is a virtue, but not necessarily in politics. High inflation is hammering President Biden’s approval ratings, and could cost Democrats big in November’s midterms.

3. Biden’s climate window is closing

Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios

President Biden isn’t just about to lose the window for Democrats to pass legislation to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. He could also lose a president’s best backup leverage — the ability to cut them through executive and regulatory actions, Axios’ Andrew Freedman reports.

  • Why it matters: Biden may soon find himself hamstrung by unfavorable court rulings, including West Virginia v. EPA — a Supreme Court case scheduled for oral arguments on Feb. 28.

Environmentalists are watching the case closely: They fear the court’s new conservative majority may be willing to go far toward dismantling the EPA’s regulatory authority under the Clean Air Act.

  • That’s on top of the collapse of Build Back Better, the best vehicle Democrats had for cutting emissions.

Between the lines: The White House might not have the option of turning to the executive and regulatory approach that President Obama used on climate after running into his own congressional roadblocks.

4. 🇨🇦 Pic du jour
Photo: Geoff Robins/AFP via Getty Images

Canadian anti-vaccine mandate protesters blockade the road leaving the Ambassador Bridge border crossing from Detroit to Windsor, Ontario.

  • The busiest land crossing from the U.S. to Canada was shut as part of a protest that began with hundreds of trucks paralyzing downtown streets in Canada’s capital, Ottawa.

Go deeper.

5. McConnell calls Jan. 6 a “violent insurrection”
Leader Mitch McConnell speaks yesterday after Senate Republicans’ weekly policy luncheon in Russell Senate Office Building. Photo: Rod Lamkey/CNP/Sipa USA via Reuters

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell broke with the RNC over last week’s censure of Reps. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) and Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.), saying it’s not the party’s job to single out members for their views.

  • “Traditionally, the view of the national party committee is that we support all members of our party, regardless of their positions on some issues,” he said during a news conference.

McConnell called the Jan. 6 Capitol riot a “violent insurrection for the purpose of trying to prevent the peaceful transfer of power after a legitimately certified election from one administration to the next.”

6. “Tap to pay” turns iPhone into credit-card reader

Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios

Apple is set to transform iPhones into contactless credit-card readers and payment processors later this year, report Ryan Lawler of Axios Pro Fintech Deals and Axios Closer co-author Hope King.

  • Why it matters: The “Tap to Pay” feature — announced yesterday — will make it easier for merchants to conduct their business and accept contactless payments without any extra equipment.

How it works: Tap to Pay is powered by near-field communications, or NFC, which is used today by contactless credit cards and in payments made from phones to point-of-sale terminals.

  • The technology has been present in the iPhone since 2014, though use has been limited until recently to using the phone to make payments via Apple Pay.

The actual payment processing will be handled by Apple partners, the first of which will be fintech startup Stripe.

The intrigue: It’s a shot across the bow at Square, which pioneered an iPhone accessory for accepting payments.

💵 For efficient tracking of fintech and mobile payments, sign up for the Axios Pro Fintech Deals newsletter.

7. New books tout right-wing heroes

Photo: Courtesy of Heroes of Liberty

A new way America is separating … A conservative children’s book startup has begun publishing a series focused on conservative icons, including Ronald Reagan, John Wayne and economist Thomas Sowell.

Heroes of Liberty recently released a book on Wayne targeted to children aged 7 to 12. That followed one about Justice Amy Coney Barrett.

  • The subscription service plans monthly releases. Coming up: Douglas MacArthur, and former British Prime Ministers Margaret Thatcher and Winston Churchill.
  • The Delaware-based startup is funded by private investors.

Keep reading.

8. 🥊 Parting shots: Big Air Shougang
Composite photo of USA’s Nicholas Goepper in men’s freestyle skiing Big Air qualifying. Photo: Rob Schumacher/USA Today Sports

The Winter Games’ most unique venue  The Freestyle Skiing Big Air competition is being held on the site of a former Beijing steel mill, set against the backdrop of four industrial cooling towers.

  • Freeskiing is taking on Big Air for the first time as a Winter Games discipline. The Big Air snowboarders will be there next week.
Team USA’s Nicholas Goepper performs a trick. Photo: David Ramos/Getty Images

The 200-foot Big Air Shougang structure was built at the former Shougang Group steel mill — China’s first state-owned plant, which helped the country become a world leader in steel production, AP reports.

  • Its billowing smokestacks provided work for thousands — but also darkened the sky over Beijing’s Shijingshan District, contributing to the city’s air pollution problem.
Photo: David Ramos/Getty Images

Above: USA silver medalist Colby Stevenson (left), Norway gold medalist Birk Ruud (center) and Sweden bronze medalist Henrik Harlaut.

Editor’s note: The top story in yesterday’s newsletter was corrected to reflect that BLS data from January cannot be compared to the prior month. See corrected story.

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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON

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15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES


16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Congress has approved about $6 trillion for the fight against COVID-19, or more than it …
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February 9, 2022

   

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A Ukrainian border guard patrols the border with Russia not far from Hoptivka village, Kharkiv region, Ukraine, Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2022. Russian President Vladimir Putin is accusing the U.S. and its allies of ignoring Russia&#39;s top security demands but says Moscow is willing to talk more to ease tensions over Ukraine. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)

With element of surprise lost, Russian invasion of Ukraine seems less likely

It may be the least surprising invasion in recent history, should it ever take place. Having spent months moving troops, … Read More

By Ben Wolfgang

Top Headlines

 

In costliest U.S. fight, little cash goes to actually fight COVID-19

By Joseph Clark and Stephen Dinan – Read More

Senate GOP sees path to majority, treads carefully for fear of stumble with suburban voters

By Susan Ferrechio – Read More

IG to probe claim Capitol Police took photos in lawmaker’s office

By Kerry Picket – Read More

Florists warn of higher prices, Super Bowl conflict for Valentine’s Day

By Sean Salai – Read More

Transgender swimmer Lia Thomas fuels nationwide wave of Republican bills on women’s sports

By Valerie Richardson – Read More

Alberta caves to Canada trucker protests, ends vaccine passports

By Victor Morton – Read More

Opinion

 

You’re paying the coyotes … and they work at the United Nations

By Kelly Sadler – Read More

The age of vindictive and bitter millennials

By Mark Bauerlein – Read More

A GOP platform for the midterms

By Peter Morici – Read More

Politics

 

McConnell calls Jan. 6 a ‘violent insurrection,’ pushes back on RNC censure

By Joseph Clark – Read More

House passes short-term funding bill to keep government afloat past Feb. 18

By Haris Alic – Read More

Congressional Black Caucus urges DOJ to overturn voting laws in GOP-led states

By Haris Alic – Read More

Security

 

CENTCOM nominee says Iran, Middle East remain central U.S. concern

By Mike Glenn – Read More

Naval chaplaincy appointee under fire for alleged Islamophobia, Christian nationalism

By Mark A. Kellner – Read More

Arizona AG rules states can deploy forces to fight border ‘invasion’

By Stephen Dinan – Read More

Sports

 

Jenner’s last-minute goal lifts Blue Jackets past Caps 5-4

By Ian Nicholas Quillen – Read More

Mikaela Shiffrin’s 2nd Olympic race also ends early

By Howard Fendrich – Read More

Beal to undergo season-ending wrist surgery ahead of trade deadline

By Matthew Paras – Read More

 

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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

 

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BY HUGO GURDON AND DAVID FREDDOSO
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HIGHLIGHTS

Still dead: Biden keeps pushing Build Back Better despite lack of bill

Still dead: Biden keeps pushing Build Back Better despite lack of bill

No matter how many times Sen. Joe Manchin kills it, President Joe Biden refuses to give up on Build Back Better.

Dust-up over ex-science adviser shows Biden’s promise-keeping problem

President Joe Biden’s problems keeping his so-called Build Back Better agenda promises have been well documented. But he is simultaneously struggling with the lofty good governance pledges he made as his stated ideals crash into the realities of his second year in office.

Missouri Supreme Court places Mark and Patricia McCloskey on probation as lawyers

St. Louis couple Mark and Patricia McCloskey, who gained national attention in 2020 for standing outside their home toting guns as protesters walked by, were placed on probation as lawyers Tuesday.

Stacey Abrams apologizes after being photographed maskless at school event

Stacey Abrams apologizes after being photographed maskless at school event

Stacey Abrams apologized after receiving criticism for being photographed maskless while surrounded by school children wearing masks.

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Fauci says ‘full-blown pandemic phase’ of COVID-19 coming to end

Fauci says 'full-blown pandemic phase' of COVID-19 coming to end

Dr. Anthony Fauci has some good news: The United States is on its way to exiting the “full-blown” pandemic phase of COVID-19.

McConnell dismisses Trump criticism, saying it’s no threat to his leadership role

McConnell dismisses Trump criticism, saying it's no threat to his leadership role

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is shrugging off Donald Trump’s campaign to oust him as the top Senate Republican, chuckling that he views “Old Crow,” the former president’s derisive nickname for him, as a compliment.

White House defends Afghanistan exit after Army report says it was slow to act

White House defends Afghanistan exit after Army report says it was slow to act

The White House pushed back on charges that it was slow to evacuate Americans and allies from Afghanistan last summer, repeating the claim that the country fell unexpectedly to the Taliban as U.S. forces ended the two-decade mission.

RNC boss accuses media of ‘distorting’ censure of Cheney and Kinzinger

RNC boss accuses media of 'distorting' censure of Cheney and Kinzinger

Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel slammed the “corporate news media” Tuesday for their coverage of the censure of Reps. Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger.

Joe Rogan takedown bid seen as coordinated attack

Joe Rogan takedown bid seen as coordinated attack

The effort to take down podcast king Joe Rogan is increasingly being seen as a coordinated campaign to silence an influential figure with a massive audience and an independent streak.

Cancel culture pressure ramps up on tech platforms Spotify, Airbnb, and GoFundMe

Cancel culture pressure ramps up on tech platforms Spotify, Airbnb, and GoFundMe

Large tech platforms such as Spotify, Airbnb, and GoFundMe have ratcheted up bans and censorship of users and organizations due to intense pressure placed on them by cancel culture, conservatives say.

Biden praises Tesla after giving company cold shoulder last year

Biden praises Tesla after giving company cold shoulder last year

President Joe Biden praised Tesla on Tuesday after CEO Elon Musk criticized him for being “unable to say” the company’s name while pushing his administration’s green energy policies.

THE ROUNDUP

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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE

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VIEW IN BROWSER FEBRUARY 9, 2022 CHICAGOTRIBUNE.COM

DAYWATCH

Good morning, Chicago.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker is set to unveil his planned off-ramp from pandemic restrictions Wednesday as the omicron-driven COVID-19 surge continues to subside, sources told the Tribune. Pritzker’s move, which would follow announcements from other Democratic governors to roll back mask mandates in the coming weeks, would also come at a pivotal time for the first-term governor in a reelection year.
Meanwhile, schools across Illinois continue to deal with the fallout of a judge’s decision upending Pritzker’s school mask mandate, including the departure of a beloved Catholic school principal in Evergreen Park. Despite the steep declines in COVID-19 cases in recent weeks, some medical experts warn that any lifting of mandates should be rooted in science, not legal decisions. “It’s a little bit premature,” Dr. Tina Tan, professor of pediatrics at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine said in a statement.
Finally, amid the recent confusion about school mask and quarantine requirements, here’s what parents need to know.
Here are the top stories you need to know to start your day.

1

Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson falsely claimed bank funds as mortgage loan, feds say; defense counters he was simply ‘frazzled’

Patrick Daley Thompson’s federal tax trial kicked off in earnest at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse, where the alderman is charged with filing false tax returns and repeatedly lying about the lines of credit he received from Washington Federal before it collapsed in December 2017.

In his opening statement to jurors, Thompson’s lawyer, Chris Gair, portrayed the alderman as sloppy and disorganized, but not a criminal. Prosecutors painted a far different picture, saying Thompson must have known that he wasn’t making payments on his debt with Washington Federal, and that he was not supposed to be claiming mortgage interest on his taxes because the loans weren’t mortgages at all.

2

With Chicago Bears eyeing move to suburbs, Mayor Lightfoot announces group to examine future of Soldier Field and lakefront Museum Campus

With Soldier Field’s future up in the air as the Chicago Bears eye potentially greener suburban pastures, Mayor Lori Lightfoot has empaneled a group to recommend ways to improve the lakefront Museum Campus.

The 18-member working group will set out “to reimagine the Museum Campus experience targeting year-round tourism and activation on the Campus,” according to Lightfoot’s office.

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3

Suspected ‘ringleader’ of smash-and-grab crew charged in multiple burglaries downtown and Northwest Side, top cop says

A Maywood man was arrested Monday after Chicago police identified him as the “ringleader” of a group involved in a series of retail burglaries on the Northwest Side and downtown from the end of last year into the new year, according to Superintendent David Brown.

Brown and Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx held a news conference at the police headquarters Tuesday afternoon to announce the charges.

4

Column: 2022 Oscar nominations are in — what the Academy got right, and what it got wrong

The Netflix film “The Power of the Dog,” a Western drama starring Benedict Cumberbatch and directed by Jane Campion, leads this year’s Oscar nominations with 12.

“For worse or better, or at least better for next quarter’s earnings, Hollywood has made its peace with streaming,” Tribune critic Michael Phillips writes.

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5

South Loop home that former Mayor Richard M. Daley once owned sells for nearly $1.2M

The four-level, 3,405-square-foot town house in the South Loop that former Mayor Richard M. Daley and his late wife, Maggie, owned from 1993 until 2012 was sold on Friday by the couple’s daughter, Nora, and her husband, Sean Conroy, for $1.17 million.


21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES

Pritzker to reveal plan to phase out Illinois indoor mask mandate

Chicago Sun-Times Morning Edition
Good morning, Chicago —
Here’s the latest news from around the area.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker will lay out a plan today to phase out his mask mandate for Illinois residents in most indoor settings, sources told our Mitchell Armentrout. While the mandate will wind down for the public at large, state officials will continue waging a battle to keep masks on in schools, which the governor said yesterday provide a different challenge in limiting the spread of COVID-19.
Last week, former Chicago cop Jason Van Dyke, who spent more than three years in prison after being convicted for the murder of Laquan McDonald, became one of roughly 25,000 people in Illinois currently serving mandatory supervised release, also known in the past as parole. Andy Grimm reports on what life is like for those on parole, including Van Dyke, who likely had his first meeting with a parole officer last weekend.
And anyone in Chicago who used a random object to claim “dibs” on a parking spot after the recent snowstorm will need to remove their stuff in the next couple days if they want to keep it. The city’s trash crews will begin picking up items used to claim “dibs” on Friday.
Get even more news below, and thanks for reading.
Satchel Price, assistant audience engagement editor
Masker aid? Pritzker expected to reveal plan Wednesday to allow Illinoisans to go barefaced indoors again

Here’s what Jason Van Dyke’s life will be like on parole in Illinois, which has some of the strictest rules in the nation

‘Dibs’ to be removed in Chicago starting Friday

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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT

The Hill's Morning Report
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, right, gestures towards French President Emmanuel Macron during a joint press conference

© Associated Press/Thibault Camus, Pool

 

 

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

Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday 902,624; Tuesday, 905,544; Wednesday, 909,016.
War in Eastern Europe is not off the table, the U.S. government is on the verge of being funded for just three weeks and the vice president’s husband got a security scare during a Black History Month event at a Washington, D.C., high school on Tuesday.

 

Unsettled described the day.

 

Russian President Vladimir Putin and French President Emmanuel Macron may have spent six hours together over sturgeon and reindeer on Monday, but by morning they parted ways over what they had said about Ukraine and what Russia needs to avert a potential military attack the Kremlin insists the government is not contemplating.

 

Macron met Tuesday in Kyiv with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (pictured above) as headlines pronounced the French president’s shuttle diplomacy to Moscow unsuccessful (The New York Times).

 

Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin spokesman, rejected reports that the two presidents had reached any agreement to de-escalate, suggesting that it was the United States, not France, that had standing to negotiate such a deal“In the current situation, Moscow and Paris could not make a deal. France is an E.U. and NATO member,” he said, adding, “France is not leading NATO.” 

 

Peskov denied Macron departed Moscow with commitments that Russian troops would not stay in neighboring Belarus after the completion of military exercises this month and that Russia would not conduct any new military maneuvers near Ukraine in the near future.

 

Macron’s version of events was that Putin told him Moscow would not further escalate the Ukraine crisis, adding with evident accuracy that time is needed to find a diplomatic solution to the rising tensions (The Associated Press). (Putin speaks English and German but is not a French speaker. Macron is fluent in English, and translators do the work during such meetings).

 

Ukraine’s foreign minister believes that the Russian government was seeking to force a settlement on Ukraine to destabilize the country’s internal politics in ways that might benefit Russia without having to resort to military action despite having deployed around 130,000 troops near the border, according to U.S. and Ukrainian officials. He said that Ukraine could not be forced into agreeing to Russia’s terms on the settlement deal, known as the Minsk accords.

 

We see that Russia’s current baseline scenario is to try to destabilize the internal situation in Ukraine by using the threat of force, but not of the armed forces themselves,” Dmytro Kuleba said (The New York Times).

 

Russia’s navy on Tuesday dispatched ships off the Ukrainian coast in the Black Sea for what it called military exercises.

 

Ukrainians thus far evidence a sense of calm about the Russian troops amassed across the border. Zelensky calls it “great dignity” (The Associated Press).

 

Doug Emhoff, the husband of Vice President Kamala Harris, is whisked out of an event at a high school by a Secret Service agent

© Associated Press/Manuel Balce Ceneta

 

 

In the U.S. capital on Tuesday, Doug Emhoff, husband of Vice President Harris (above), was hustled out of a local high school along with students and the principal because of a bomb scare during a Black History Month event. The White House said Emhoff and his Secret Service detail were not harmed (The Associated Press).

 

Over in the Capitol, the House on Tuesday scrambled to keep government departments and agencies operating for a few more weeks as lawmakers continue to battle over a longer-term spending bill, as yet unresolved for the current fiscal year. Members voted 272-162 to approve funds that will expire on March 11. House members are scheduled to be out of Washington until Feb. 28, prolonging the funding limbo. Fifty-one House Republicans joined with the majority Tuesday to approve a short-term measure. There was one Democratic holdout: Rep. Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey. Noteworthy: House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) voted aye, while Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) voted no.

 

The temporary funding bill now moves to the Senate where Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) said the chamber will “take it up quickly and in time” before a Feb. 18 deadline that lawmakers vow will not result in a government shutdown. The Senate is in session next week (The Hill).

 

More administration: A Defense Department after-action report obtained by The Washington Post under the Freedom of Information Act details the military’s frustrations with the White House National Security Council and the U.S. Embassy staff in Kabul last year leading up to the August personnel evacuation that left 13 service members dead and 45 wounded, many Afghan civilians killed during the chaos and panic, and President Biden received blistering criticism that is lingering long after the mission.

 

The Hill: Tech advocates criticize nomination delays for Federal Communications Commission.

 

The Hill: Democrats press postmaster to go with electric vehicles.

A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
Why Facebook supports updated internet regulations, including Section 230

Aaron is one of 40,000 people working on safety and security issues at Facebook.

 

Hear more from Aaron on why Facebook supports updating regulations on the internet’s most pressing challenges, including reforming Section 230 to set clear guidelines for all large tech companies.

LEADING THE DAY
POLITICS: Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) criticized the Republican National Committee (RNC) for its decision to censure Reps. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) and Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) over their involvement in the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

 

McConnell (pictured below) told reporters that he still has confidence in RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel but took issue with the party’s “singling out” of members.

 

“This issue is whether or not the RNC should be sort of singling out members of our party who may have different views from the majority. That’s not the job of the RNC,” McConnell said of the censure resolution.

 

The GOP leader also broke with the party’s language, labeling the fatal riot as a “violent insurrection” rather than as “legitimate political discourse” (The Hill).

 

The Hill: RNC’s McDaniel blamed the news media for what she described as “patently false coverage” of the party’s censure action.

 

The Washington Post: “Legitimate political discourse”: Three words about Jan. 6 spark rift among Republicans.

 

Jordain Carney, The Hill: GOP tensions flare over Jan. 6 attack.

 

The New York Times: Where’s Liz Cheney? The Wyoming Republican’s exile from Wyoming Republicans.

 

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell

© Associated Press/Mariam Zuhaib

 

 

Elsewhere on the security front, the House’s inspector general (IG) is considering calling on the House sergeant-at-arms to create a new program tasked with dealing with internal threats and doing so via “behavioral monitoring.” The possible action is part of a draft document the House IG has drawn up as part of the Capitol complex’s response to security in the aftermath of the Jan. 6 attack.

 

According to Politico, which first reported the draft, House Sergeant-at-Arms William Walker said in a statement that no program is being considered at this time and that he does not plan to roll out any measure that involves increased surveillance and monitoring.

 

The Associated Press: FBI: Online sleuths’ posts led to two arrests in Capitol riot.

 

The first federal prosecution of a Jan. 6 rioter begins Feb. 28 with Guy Reffitt, a Texas man who was charged with storming onto Capitol grounds, attacking multiple Capitol Police officers and carrying a firearm. Reffitt is charged with civil disorder, obstructing Congress’s proceedings, carrying a semiautomatic handgun to the Capitol and later, after returning home, attempting to obstruct justice. Politico reported on the prosecution’s witness list, which offered clues about the government’s strategy. Reffitt’s trial will include testimony from the U.S. Secret Service, Capitol Police, a Senate aide and two of the defendant’s children.

 

> 2022 watch: Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan (R) made it official on Tuesday: He will not be running for the Senate this fall, depriving McConnell of a top-tier candidate and another competitive seat on the 2022 map.

 

Hogan told reporters that he had considered a bid but decided against it in favor of finishing out his second term in Annapolis. Hogan is term-limited and cannot run for reelection.

 

“I will not be a candidate for the United States Senate. I sincerely appreciate all the people who have been encouraging me to consider it. A number of people have said they thought I could make a difference in the Senate,” Hogan said. “I don’t aspire to be a United States senator, and that fact has not changed.”

 

Hogan added that he revealed the news ahead of time to Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), who is seeking reelection in November.

 

“I also just spoke with Sen. Van Hollen to let him know that he can rest easy and get a good night’s sleep tonight,” Hogan said with a laugh (The Hill).

 

The Hill: Trump tightens grip on RNC.

 

Amie Parnes and Hanna Trudo, The Hill: How Republicans came to revel in hating Biden.

 

The HillStacey Abrams apologized for not wearing a mask while standing among school children during a recent photo.

IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CORONAVIRUS: Controversy and confusion have not let up as COVID-19 infection rates and hospitalizations continue to plunge and more states plan for or contemplate lifting indoor requirements for masks, including in classrooms. ​​Although the daily average of hospitalizations has steadily declined since its peak on Jan. 20, the daily average of deaths linked to the virus has hovered at more than 2,500 since Jan. 27.

 

A bipartisan majority in the Virginia Senate (pictured below inside plexiglass partitions) voted Tuesday to advance legislation that would ban public school systems from imposing mask requirements on students. The move comes as Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s efforts to end mask mandates by executive order are bogged down in legal challenges (The Associated Press).

 

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) is still weighing her state’s improved infection and hospitalization statistics to decide what happens next with mandates. Hochul highlighted the state’s coronavirus progress in a series of tweets on Tuesday.

 

Virginia State Sen. Siobhan Dunnavant, R-Henrico, left, gestures from behind the Covid-19 shield on the floor of the Senate

© Associated Press/Steve Helber

 

 

The Hill’s Niall Stanage in his latest Memo explores whether the White House risks getting left behind some states’ decisions to soon make mask wearing voluntary. Strict mask guidelines continue to be the approach of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

 

> Hospitals are beginning to catch a break amid the latest COVID-19 crush of patients in many parts of the country. That progress is considered a benchmark for getting back to everyday medicine, which is easier said than done. Across the U.S., the number of people in the hospital with COVID-19 has tumbled more than 28 percent over the past three weeks to about 105,000 on average, according to the CDC. But the ebbing of the omicron surge has left in its wake postponed surgeries, exhausted staff members and uncertainty over whether this is the last big wave or whether another one lies ahead (The Associated Press).

 

> VaccinesJohnson & Johnson temporarily halted production of its COVID-19 vaccine in the Netherlands, the only manufacturing hub making usable doses for the pharmaceutical company, according to a New York Times report on Tuesday. … Novavax Inc. has delivered just a small fraction of the 2 billion COVID-19 shots it plans to send around the world in 2022 and has delayed first-quarter shipments in Europe and lower income countries such as the Philippines, public officials involved in their government’s vaccine rollouts told Reuters. The company’s stock took a hit on Tuesday (MarketWatch). … Marylanders can get cash prizes for getting booster doses of COVID-19 vaccinations as part of a lottery incentive that begins next week. The prizes offered will total $2 million (The Hill).

 

> International: Another day of anti-vaccine protests in Canada shut down a bridge that connects Detroit to its northern neighbor, posing new risks to the automobile supply chain. In Ottawa on Tuesday, several hundred trucks continued to paralyze the city center (The New York Times). … In Sweden, the government ended publicly provided COVID-19 testing because of the high costs and lifted pandemic restrictions. Starting today, access to free PCR testing is limited even for those who are symptomatic, while most of the population will simply be asked to stay home with symptoms of infection. Also Wednesday, the country scrapped limits on how many people may gather at events and in restaurants, barred demands for vaccine certificates and lifted restrictions on operating hours for bars and eateries (The Associated Press).

OPINION
What can anti-Trump Republicans actually do? by Jonathan Bernstein, columnist, Bloomberg Opinion. https://bloom.bg/3JcFjuS

 

How China captured Hollywood, by Erich Schwartzel, excerpted by That Atlantic from his book “Red Carpet: Hollywood, China, and the Global Battle for Cultural Supremacy.” https://bit.ly/3sr5uXP

A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
Why Facebook supports updated internet regulations, including Section 230

Aaron is one of 40,000 people working on safety and security issues at Facebook.

 

Hear more from Aaron on why Facebook supports updating regulations on the internet’s most pressing challenges, including reforming Section 230 to set clear guidelines for all large tech companies.

WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 9 a.m. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) will hold her weekly press conference at 10:45 a.m.

 

The Senate convenes at 10 a.m. and will resume consideration of the nomination of Scott Nathan to be CEO of the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation.

 

The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:30 a.m. Biden will convene a roundtable of utility company CEOs at 2:30 p.m. to discuss his pending policy agenda related to energy production, supplies, consumer costs, climate change and jobs.

 

Secretary of State Antony Blinken is in Australia for a gathering of foreign ministers representing Australia, the United States, Japan and India.

 

First lady Jill Biden will travel to Minneapolis with Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra to visit the University of Minnesota at 1 p.m. local time to highlight the American Rescue Plan’s investments in child care.

 

The White House daily press briefing is scheduled at 12:30 p.m. The White House COVID-19 response team will brief reporters at 11 a.m.

 

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

ELSEWHERE
 🏅OLYMPICS: It took 16 years, but Lindsey Jacobellis is finally a gold medalist. Perhaps the best female competitor over the past decade in snowboard cross (a snowboard event where up to six entrants race down a narrow course), Jacobellis bounced back from repeated heartbreak — including one of the most cringe-inducing losses in the event at the 2006 Turin games — to snag the gold today for the U.S. Jacobellis, 36, became the oldest snowboarder to win a gold medal in history in the process (NBC News and The Wall Street Journal).

 

  INTERNATIONAL: Retired Pope Benedict XVI expressed “profound shame” and asked in writing for forgiveness on Tuesday, but denied any wrongdoing, for his oversight more than four decades ago of sexual abuse committed by Catholic priests against children. Benedict, 94, sought mercy for any “grievous faults” after an independent report accused him of failing to take action against accused priests while he was archbishop of Munich from 1977 to 1981. His letter was in response to a Jan. 20 report from a German law firm that probed abuses in the archdiocese between 1945 and 2019 (The Associated Press).

 

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI

© Associated Press/Gregorio Borgia

 

 

 STATE WATCH: The online sports wagering industry is booming and delivering hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenues to states. A record number of Americans will make legal bets ahead of Sunday’s Super Bowl (The Hill). … The U.S. economy has regained most of the jobs lost during the COVID-19-related contraction, although one sector lags notably behind — employment in state and local governments (The Hill).

 

 TECH: Industry groups and powerful corporations are jockeying over bipartisan measures to crack down on the sale of counterfeit products online. Platforms such as eBay and Etsy are lobbying lawmakers to strip the Shop Safe Act out of the final China competitiveness bill, arguing that it would further disadvantage small online sellers against Amazon and other e-commerce giants (The Hill).

THE CLOSER
And finally … 🎥🏆 It’s all about “The Power of the Dog” (and streaming) this year (Axios). The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science announced Oscar nominations on Tuesday with some surprises for its 94th awards program on March 27. A host has not yet been named for the ceremony, which will air live at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT on ABC. Check out the list of nominees in all 23 categories (The Hollywood Reporter), and find all things Oscar at Oscars.org.

 

Oscar statuettes appear backstage at the Oscars in Los Angeles

© Matt Sayles/Invision/Associated Press

 

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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT

 


24.) ROLL CALL

Image

Morning Headlines

ImageInspired by an anonymous Instagram account and disgusted by bad pay and worse bosses, congressional staffers have begun the uncertain journey toward unionizing.  Just what their struggles will produce remains to be seen — much will depend on how lawmakers, fellow staffers and an obscure legislative branch office respond. Read more…

ImageThe House passed a stopgap appropriations bill Tuesday evening to extend current federal agency funding rates through March 11 as Democrats and Republicans continue to trade offers on topline spending levels for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1. Read more…

Grievance is no substitute for ideas

 

ImageOPINION — Grievance, anchored in revenge and loyalty tests, won’t produce candidates who can connect with voters and put together winning majority coalitions. Qualifications, vision and winnability should matter more than elections that are now in the rearview mirror. Read more…

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

Learn more about RevenueStripe...

‘Harsh’ exchanges: Dismissive Biden press strategy undermines lofty campaign vows

 

ImageANALYSIS — The net effect of the Biden administration’s “just trust us” media strategy is an often-paltry discourse on important issues and, ironically, more rather than less false info flying around on social media and cable news, CQ Roll Call’s John T. Bennett writes. Read more…

Child tax credit talks quietly percolate amid advocates’ push

 

ImageSen. Mitt Romney on Tuesday suggested a bipartisan group of senators who’ve struck other deals to move legislation through the evenly divided chamber could next turn their focus to reviving an expanded child tax credit after a more generous version lapsed last month. Read more…

Proposed insurance rule ignites debate over transgender health care

 

ImagePrivate insurance companies, patient advocacy groups and conservative organizations are at odds over a proposal to limit discrimination by health plans for medical care for transgender people and other LGBTQ consumers. Read more…

Capitol Police chief pushes back against Rep. Nehls’ allegations of improper investigation

 

ImageCapitol Police Chief J. Thomas Manger on Tuesday defended his department against allegations it inappropriately investigated a member of Congress’ office, saying an officer acted with vigilance. Manger’s statement came shortly after Rep. Troy Nehls, R-Texas, tweeted that the Capitol Police investigated his office “illegally.” Read more…

CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2022 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.

 

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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK

POLITICO Playbook: Censures inflame GOP tensions

Presented by

DRIVING THE DAY

HOT JOB: STACEY ABRAMS is advertising for a social media platforms director.

CENSUREY OVERLOAD — The fallout from the RNC’s weekend censure of Reps. LIZ CHENEY (R-Wyo.) and ADAM KINZINGER (R-Ill.) spread to Capitol Hill on Monday: Hill Republicans returned to town and lit into Chair RONNA MCDANIEL. Senate Republicans went on the record to say that looking back to 2020 is a losing strategy that won’t help the party flip both chambers of Congress.

And they’re furious that the RNC would dub the activities of Jan. 6 “legitimate political discourse.”

We’re not just talking here about an expected MITT ROMNEY rebuke — though the Utah Republican certainly called his niece’s decision “very unfortunate,” even “stupid.” The pushback extended from rank-and-file lawmakers all the way up to GOP leadership, as our Burgess Everett, Marianne LeVine and Olivia Beavers write:

— Senate Minority Whip JOHN THUNE (R-S.D.), the No. 2 Senate Republican who might replace MITCH MCCONNELL as GOP leader some day: “The focus right now needs to be forward, not backward. If we want to get our majorities in the fall, it’s better to turn our fire on Democrats, not each other.”

— Sen. JOHN CORNYN (R-Texas), another potential McConnell successor: “They did say in their resolution that the job was to win elections. I agree with that, but then they go on to engage in actions that make that more challenging.”

Even Trump ally Sen. LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-S.C.) was mad enough to call McDaniel and personally express his disappointment that the RNC was moving “in the wrong direction” as the chamber’s fate hangs in the balance. “All of us up here want to talk about forward not backward,” he said.

And NRSC Chair RICK SCOTT (R-Fla.), who has aligned himself closely with DONALD TRUMP, distanced himself from the “legitimate political discourse” language. “That’s a decision that members of the RNC get to make,” he told CNN’s Manu Raju. “I think what happened on Jan. 6 was wrong.” (Late Monday night, Scott defended McDaniel more generally on Twitter.)

SO WHAT NOW? Privately, many Hill Republicans hope the RNC will learn a lesson from the episode. The controversy is why House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY didn’t want to kick Cheney and Kinzinger out of the House GOP Conference: He worried it would become a major distraction from issues Republicans want to focus on, such as inflation and the border. Indeed, the RNC’s discussions about midterm strategy last weekend were drowned out by the censure drama.

Defenders of the RNC say the Senate GOP should stop clutching their pearls. Obviously this is Trump’s party, they argue. And if the RNC members want to go this way, McDaniel had no choice but to do what her members wanted.

McConnell plans to publicly address the censure today. The GOP leader has been something of a broken record in trying to tell his party to focus on the future, not the past — so you can imagine what he’ll say.

Don’t expect similar public rebukes from House GOP members. McCarthy has long instructed his caucus to deflect or not answer reporters’ questions about the latest Trump outrage and internal party divisions — and keep the blunt words for private discussions.

Good Tuesday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael BadeEugene DanielsRyan Lizza.

LANDER RESIGNS — Well, that was fast. Less than 24 hours after our colleague Alex Thompson reported that an internal White House investigation found that top White House science adviser ERIC LANDER bullied and mistreated his subordinates, Lander resigned.

“I am devastated that I caused hurt to past and present colleagues by the way in which I have spoken to them,” he wrote in his resignation letter.

Lander, whose position is Cabinet-level, is the highest-level official to resign from the Biden administration. The White House investigation of his conduct ended in December. Yet despite President JOE BIDEN’s own stated zero-tolerance policy for workplace bullying, the White House initially signaled Lander was going to stick around after the story was published.

But the situation was quickly becoming untenable. The American Association for the Advancement of Science disinvited Lander from its annual meeting. He canceled a previously scheduled appearance to testify before a congressional committee today.

And press secretary JEN PSAKI was grilled at her briefing about why Lander was allowed to keep his job.

Behind the scenes, senior staff at OSTP were struggling with how to move forward after the news of the internal White House investigation and litany of complaints from fellow staffers became public.

Alex got his hands on a recording of a Monday morning meeting with senior OSTP officials and the office’s chief of staff, MARC AIDINOFF, who kicked off the meeting by addressing the POLITICO article. “I really struggle with what to say here. … There were some things in the article that were surprises to me, and some that, you know, weren’t.”

“I think one of the many, many troubling pieces is, is the way in which … the current work culture at OSTP prevents the work from happening,” he added. “I don’t want there to be any sense that that the behavior of the staff talking to reporters when things [come] to a boiling point is the problem or that, you know, there’s anger from me in any way towards those who sort of felt this got to the point that talking to the press was the appropriate next step.”

Said another official on the call: “I think it’s also going to be an issue … with regard to how does this reconcile with President Biden’s commitment to like, not tolerate bad behavior or demeaning behavior?”

BIDEN’S TUESDAY:

— 10:15 a.m.: The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief.

— Noon: Biden and Harris will have lunch together.

— 1:45 p.m.: Biden will deliver remarks on manufacturing, union jobs and energy costs with Transportation Secretary PETE BUTTIGIEG and Energy Secretary JENNIFER GRANHOLM.

— 2:45 p.m.: Biden and Harris will receive the weekly economic briefing.

Psaki will brief at 2 p.m.

THE SENATE will meet at 10 a.m. to take up DOUGLAS BUSH’s nomination to be an assistant Army secretary. At 11:45 a.m., the Senate will vote on JOHN HOWARD’s and LOREN ALIKHAN’s judicial nominations. The chamber will recess from 12:30 p.m. to 2:15 p.m., and at 2:30 p.m. vote on the nominations of AMY GUTMANN to be U.S. ambassador to Germany and LISA CARTY to be U.S. representative on the U.N. Economic and Social Council. Surgeon General VIVEK MURTHY will testify before the Finance Committee on youth mental health at 10 a.m. The Foreign Relations Committee will hold a hearing on several nominations, including DEBORAH LIPSTADT as special envoy to monitor and combat antisemitism, at 10 a.m.

THE HOUSE will meet at 10 a.m.

PHOTO OF THE DAY

PLAYBOOK READS

CONGRESS

WHAT SUNRISE IS READING — E&E News’ Scott Waldman has a thorough look at how Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) has used his political power for decades to protect the interests of his family’s waste coal company — from killing Build Back Better on back. “There is no indication that Manchin has broken any laws,” Scott writes, and Manchin has indicated support for the $500 billion the administration wants to spend on climate. But “he has pushed measures to promote the coal that Enersystems removes from abandoned mines, nominated officials who helped ensure that the power plant that buys most of that company’s coal did not close, and waged political battles against environmental regulations that threatened the same plant.”

THE THREAT WITHIN — The House inspector general in a December draft report recommended that the chamber roll out a “program aimed at identifying and deterring internal threats, including through ‘behavioral monitoring,’” Betsy Woodruff Swan reports. Such an “insider threat” program could prove controversial: “Everything you told me about that report, I will stand at the top of my lungs and fight against,” Rep. KELLY ARMSTRONG (R-N.D.) said. But the House sergeant-at-arms said he doesn’t plan to start any new surveillance and monitoring.

KICKING DOWN THE ROAD … AGAIN — House Appropriations Chair ROSA DELAURO (D-Conn.) “unveiled compromise legislation Monday that would keep the government functioning through March 11 and give lawmakers more time to finish overdue spending bills for this year,” AP’s Alan Fram reports. “Congressional approval in the coming days, which was expected, would avert a federal shutdown when temporary funding expires the night of Feb. 18. A House vote was planned for Tuesday, while the Senate’s schedule was unclear.”

JUDICIARY SQUARE

REDISTRICTING LATEST — The Supreme Court on Monday voted 5-4 to keep the “congressional map drawn by Alabama Republicans in place, freezing a lower court ruling that said the map likely violates the Voting Rights Act,” CNN’s Ariane de Vogue reports. “The lower court had ordered a new map to be drawn, which could have led to Democrats gaining another seat in the House in the fall. Chief Justice JOHN ROBERTS joined the three liberal justices in dissent. … The court’s order, the first dealing with the 2022 elections, means that the map will be used for the state’s upcoming primary, and likely be in place for the entire election cycle, while the legal challenge plays out.”

ALL POLITICS

VANCE IN TROUBLE — A super PAC supporting Ohio GOP Senate candidate J.D. VANCE said his campaign “needs a course correction ASAP,” our Alex Isenstadt reports. “A 98-page PowerPoint presentation produced by TONY FABRIZIO, who has been polling for the pro-Vance Protect Ohio Values super PAC since last year, paints a dire picture of the candidate’s prospects. According to the slide deck, Vance has seen a ‘precipitous decline’ in Ohio’s GOP Senate primary since last fall, when a pair of outside groups backing a rival began a multimillion-dollar TV advertising blitz using five-year-old footage of Vance attacking former President Donald Trump.”

PULLING BACK THE CURTAIN — ERIK PRINCE helped raise money in 2018 for RICHARD SEDDON’s effort to place undercover spies among progressives and anti-Trump Republicans, NYT’s Mark Mazzetti and Adam Goldman reveal this morning. The involvement of the military contractor (and BETSY DEVOS’ brother) is among their new details about Seddon’s operation, including its focus on Wyoming Gov. MARK GORDON and the prospect that it broke federal campaign finance laws by making “straw man donations” to Democrats.

THE PANDEMIC

A COVID CHANGE-UP — Sources tell our Erin Banco that the Biden administration is looking at changing the country’s hospitalization figures so it can get a better sense of the actual impact of the virus. “A task force comprised of scientists and data specialists at HHS and CDC are working with hospitals nationwide to improve Covid-19 reporting. The group is asking hospitals to report numbers of patients who go to the facility because they have Covid-19 and separate those from individuals who go in for other reasons and test positive after being admitted.”

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

RUSSIA LATEST — Russian President VLADIMIR PUTIN said “he was prepared to keep negotiating over Russia’s security demands in Eastern Europe but offered a stark warning over the possibility of a full-scale war between Russia and the West — using a five-hour meeting with French President EMMANUEL MACRON to keep the world guessing about his intentions,” NYT’s Anton Troianovski, Roger Cohen and Katie Rogers write. “Mr. Putin said that proposals made by Macron of France in their one-on-one meeting at the Kremlin were ‘too early to speak about’ but could create ‘a foundation for our further steps.’

“Mr. Macron, in a joint news conference with Mr. Putin after their hastily scheduled meeting, described the coming days as potentially decisive in heading off what the West fears could be a Russian invasion of Ukraine.”

PIPELINE POLITICS — Following talks with German Chancellor OLAF SCHOLZ on Monday, Biden said the U.S. would “‘bring an end’ to the Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline if Russia invades Ukraine,” NBC’s Lauren Egan writes. “When pressed for details on how he would keep that promise given that the pipeline is not under U.S. control, Biden did not elaborate. Scholz, meanwhile, declined to take a firm stance on the fate of Nord Stream 2, telling reporters that Germany was ‘acting together’ with its allies and promising ‘very, very harsh’ steps against Russia if it invades Ukraine.”

PULLOUT FALLOUT — WaPo’s Dan Lamothe and Alex Horton obtained a 2,000-page Army investigation into the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, including the most thorough accounting yet of the evacuation effort. The top takeaways: “Senior White House and State Department officials failed to grasp the Taliban’s steady advance on Afghanistan’s capital and resisted efforts by U.S. military leaders to prepare the evacuation of embassy personnel and Afghan allies weeks before Kabul’s fall, placing American troops ordered to carry out the withdrawal in greater danger.”

PLAYBOOKERS

Emmanuel Macron and Vladimir Putin met Monday at … a humongous white table.

Eric Adams called those who question why he eats fish, after saying he eats a plant-based diet, “the food police.” Perhaps one police force the mayor might be willing to defund.

Fox News host Brian Kilmeade knocked Donald Trump’s lies about the 2020 election, asking the former president to “stop wasting our time with that.”

Peter Thiel, the Silicon Valley billionaire, is stepping down from the board of Facebook parent company Meta in order to focus on electing Trump-supporting candidates in the midterms.

Andrew Yang apologized after getting blowback for “wrong-headed” tweets saying Joe Rogan isn’t racist because he “works with Black people literally all of the time.”

Rumble, the Canadian-based video platform, has offered Rogan a four-year, $100 million contract to leave Spotify.

Donald Trump is making tens of millions of dollars from his coffee table book, according to CNN.

SPOTTED: Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and former Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao celebrating their anniversary on Sunday night at Capital Grille.

MEDIA MOVE — Alex Wagner is returning to MSNBC as a senior political analyst and guest anchor.

STAFFING UP — William Pratt is now a policy adviser for the Treasury Department. He previously was a legislative aide for Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.).

TRANSITIONS — Suzi Emmerling has joined Boundary Stone as an SVP, where she will lead a team focused on climate, clean energy, commercial space and transportation sectors. She previously was COO for Eli Broad, and is a CAP, DOT and Eric Garcetti alum. … Michael Mosier is now a senior adviser to Oliver Wyman’s anti-financial crime and digital assets practices. He most recently was acting director and permanent deputy director/digital innovation officer) of Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. …

… Darci Vetter is joining the Nature Conservancy as global lead for policy and government relations. She previously was a diplomat in residence at the University of Nebraska Lincoln, and is a USTR and USDA alum. … Jess Meeth is now national comms director for Democrats for Life of America. She previously worked for Let Them Live. … Michael Pedroni is joining the Investment Company Institute as chief global affairs officer. He previously was head of global markets and research at a trade association and is a Treasury alum.

WEEKEND WEDDING — Caroline Kitchens, government affairs director for the R Street Institute, and Dion Mitchell, national sales manager at Upper Quadrant, got married Saturday at Raspberry Plain Manor in Leesburg, Va. The couple met on a dating app in 2017 and had their first date at Meridian Pint in Columbia Heights. Pic … Another pic

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Julie Devine, legislative director for Rep. Sam Graves (R-Mo.), and Jack Devine, owner of Tally Ho Productions, welcomed Nancy Violet Devine on Friday.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Reps. Gus Bilirakis (R-Fla.) and John Joyce (R-Pa.) … Amos Snead … Vox’s Zack Beauchamp … Will Levi … Caitlin Webber … Hudson Institute’s John Walters, Michael Pillsbury and Sarah May Stern … Mark Corallo … Heather Zichal … Scott Bennett … Amazon Web Services’ Matthew Haskins … Brian Katulis … Stephanie Cherry … Elliott Schwartz … Sarah Anne Voyles … USAID’s Adam Kaplan (4-0) … John Kartch … Tony Baker … Hilary Badger … Nicole Dicocco … Marlene Cooper Vasilic … Billy Flanagan … Joe Briggs … Ben Stevens of Summit Strategies … Dy Brown … Julie Gunlock … Mansie Hough … Jenny Thalheimer Rosenberg … Denise Diminuco … Bill Ruch … former EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson (6-0) … Ted Koppel … POLITICO Europe’s Arnau Busquets Guàrdia

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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE

Frederick Douglass, Abolitionist Leader & Advisor to Lincoln, “I love the pure, peaceable, and impartial Christianity of Christ” – American Minute with Bill Federer

  Abolitionist Leader & Advisor to President Abraham Lincoln – American Minute with Bill Federer  Frederick Douglass

Frederick Douglass was born Frederick “Bailey” on a Maryland plantation around February 7, 1817, though no accurate records exist, as he was a slave.
He later chose the birth date of February 14 as he remembered his mother calling him her “little valentine.”

He never saw his mother in the daylight, as he was separated from her as an infant. He did not know who his father was.

Around the age of seven, Frederick witnessed a terribly mean overseer, Mr. Gore, shoot a slave in the face.

Frederick was sent to Baltimore where, around the age of 12, his master’s sister-in-law, Sophia Auld, began teaching him the alphabet, despite this being against the law.

Many Southern Democrat states had racists laws, such as The Revised Code of the Laws of Virginia (1819):
“Whereas it is common in many places for slaves to meet at religious meeting-houses in the night, or at schools for teaching them reading or writing, which if not stopped may cause considerable evil to the community;
Be it passed: That all meetings of slaves, or free negroes or mulattoes mixing with such slaves, at any meeting-house or school for teaching them reading or writing, either in the day or night, for any reason, shall be deemed an unlawful assembly.
And any officer of the law may have permission to enter the house to arrest or send off such slaves, and to punish them with up to twenty lashes.”

In 1854, a Virginia woman, Mrs. Margaret Douglass (no relation to Frederick), was imprisoned in the common jail of Norfolk for a month for teaching colored children to read.

When Sophia Auld’s husband discovered that she was teaching Frederick to read, he immediately forbade it, saying that if slaves could read, they would grow discontent and desire freedom.
Frederick considered this the “first decidedly anti-slavery lecture”‘ he had ever heard, causing him to be determined to learn how to read all-the-more.

Frederick wrote in his autobiography of learning to read from neighborhood white children.
He would carefully observe the writings of men he worked with.

He remembered reading a newspaper only to have it snatched away from him with a scolding.

Frederick Douglass described in My Bondage and My Freedom (New York and Auburn: Miller, Orton & Mulligan, 1855), when he was around 10 to 13 years old, in the years 1828-1831:
“Nothing appeared to make my poor mistress more angry than seeing me, seated in some nook or corner, quietly reading a book or a newspaper.
I have had her rush at me with fury, and snatch it from my hand. Her anger was something like what a traitor might feel on being discovered in a plot by some dangerous spy.
I was most carefully watched in all my movements. If I remained in a separate room from the family for awhile, I was sure to be suspected of having a book. Then I was at once called upon to explain what I had been doing.
All this, however, was entirely too late. Determined to learn to read at any cost, I hit upon many ways to accomplish this goal. The main way, and most successful one, was to use my young white playmates in the streets as teachers …”

He continued:
“I used to carry almost constantly a copy of Webster’s spelling book in my pocket. When I was sent on errands or allowed to have play time, I would step aside with my young friends and take a less on in spelling.
I usually paid the boys with bread, which I also carried in my pocket. For a single biscuit, any of my hungry little playmates would give me a lesson more valuable to me than bread.
Not everyone, however, demanded payment. There were some who enjoyed teaching me, whenever I had a chance to be taught by them.”

Frederick voraciously read newspapers, books, and a publication titled The Columbian Orator.
He is noted as saying “knowledge is the pathway from slavery to freedom.”
Frederick was hired out to the William Freeland plantation. There he taught other slaves to read the New Testament at a weekly Sunday school.

Slaves would use dirt as a chalk board.
Enthusiasm in learning to read drew more than 40 slaves to attend.
Douglass wrote:
“I held my Sabbath school at the house of a free colored man, whose name I deem it imprudent to mention; for should it be known, it might embarrass him greatly, though the crime of holding the school was committed ten years ago.
I had at one time over forty scholars, and those of the right sort, ardently desiring to learn. They were of all ages, though mostly men and women.
I look back to those Sundays with an amount of pleasure not to be expressed. They were great days to my soul. The work of instructing my dear fellow-slaves was the sweetest engagement with which I was ever blessed.
We loved each other, and to leave them at the close of the Sabbath was a severe cross indeed.
When I think that these precious souls are to-day shut up in the prison-house of slavery, my feelings overcome me, and I am almost ready to ask, ‘Does a righteous God govern the universe? and for what does he hold the thunders in his right hand, if not to smite the oppressor, and deliver the spoiled out of the hand of the spoiler?'”

Neighboring Democrat plantation owners were incensed that their slaves were learning to read, as this made it harder to control them.
One Sunday, slave owners from the surrounding Democrat plantations burst in with clubs and dispersed Frederick’s small congregation.

Frederick’s owner sent him a “slave-breaker” who whipped him regularly, nearly breaking him psychologically.
After an abrupt confrontation, the slave-breaker never tried beating Frederick again.

Frederick’s owner rented him out to caulk ships in a shipyard.
In 1837, Frederick fell in love with Anna Murray, a free black in Baltimore.
Anna helped provide Frederick with a sailor’s uniform and some identification papers from a free black seaman.

On September 3, 1838, Frederick escaped by boarding a train to Havre de Grace, Maryland, and from there he fled to New York.

Frederick and Anna were married eleven days later by a black Presbyterian minister.

The newlyweds Frederick and Anna moved on north to New Bedford, Massachusetts, and joined a black church.
They changed their last name to “Douglass” to hide Frederick’s former identity from Democrat fugitive slave catchers.

In New Bedford, Frederick Douglass became a licensed preacher in the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church.
At the age of only 23, he was an accomplished public speaker.

Frederick and Anna Douglass regularly attended white abolitionist meetings, where, in 1841 they heard William Lloyd Garrison speak.

Garrison was a founder of the Liberty Party, 1840, which was replaced by the Free-Soil Party, 1848, which was replaced by the Republican Party, 1854.

When Frederick Douglass was unexpectedly asked to speak, William Lloyd Garrison was so impressed that he eventually hired Douglass to sell subscriptions to the anti-slavery newspaper, The Liberator.

In 1843, Douglass went on a 6-month speaking tour through Eastern and Midwestern States with the American Anti-Slavery Society.
He met Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin and sister of the famous abolitionist preacher Henry Ward Beecher.

Frederick Douglass wrote of speaking at a convention in Buffalo, New York:
“For nearly a week I spoke every day in this old post office to audiences increasing in numbers and respectability til the Michigan Avenue Baptist church was thrown open to me. When this became too small I went on Sunday into the open park and addressed an assembly of 4,000 persons.”

Frederick Douglass was frequently accosted by racist Democrat mobs, even having his hand broken, which never healed properly.

In 1845, Frederick Douglass published his autobiography, which became an instant best-seller, being translated into French and Dutch.
In it, Douglass condemned hypocritical “religious” slave owners. He clarified that he supported true Christianity, but the Democrat South did not live up to it:
“I find, since reading over the foregoing Narrative, that I have, in several instances, spoken in such a tone and manner, respecting religion, as may possibly lead those unacquainted with my religious views to suppose me an opponent of all religion.
To remove the liability of such misapprehension, I deem it proper to append the following brief explanation.
What I have said respecting and against religion, I mean strictly to apply to the slave-holding religion of this land, and with no possible reference to Christianity proper;
for, between the Christianity of this land, and the Christianity of Christ, I recognize the widest possible difference — so wide, that to receive the one as good, pure, and holy, is of necessity to reject the other as bad, corrupt, and wicked. To be the friend of the one, is of necessity to be the enemy of the other.
I love the pure, peaceable, and impartial Christianity of Christ: I therefore hate the corrupt, slave-holding, women-whipping, cradle-plundering, partial and hypocritical Christianity of this land.”

Skeptics could not believe a former slave could have written such an eloquent book so they began to question Douglass’ real identity.
Realizing that if his true identity was discovered, fugitive slave-catchers would try to capture him and return him to his owner, Frederick Douglass decided to flee to Ireland.

The Irish were supportive of Douglass, as during the 17th century, more Irish Catholics were sold into slavery than Africans, either by British to the Caribbean or by Muslim Corsair pirates to Africa’s Barbary Coast.

Douglass met with Irish reformer Daniel O’Connell.
O’Connell was referred to as The Liberator or The Emancipator for his emancipation efforts to remove discriminating Acts against Irish Catholics.
Frederick Douglass then traveled to England where his white English abolitionist friends raised over $700 to buy his freedom.

Finally free, Douglass wrote:
“I may be deemed superstitious, and even egotistical, in regarding this event as a special interposition of divine Providence in my favor.
But I should be false to the earliest sentiments of my soul, if I suppressed the opinion.
I prefer to be true to myself, even at the hazard of incurring the ridicule of others, rather than to be false, and incur my own abhorrence.
From my earliest recollection, I date the entertainment of a deep conviction that slavery would not always be able to hold me within its foul embrace; and in the darkest hours of my career in slavery, this living word of faith and spirit of hope departed not from me, but remained like ministering angels to cheer me through the gloom.
This good spirit was from God, and to Him I offer thanksgiving and praise.”

Douglass returned to New York where he founded The North Star newspaper and wrote in support of abolition and women’s suffrage.
His motto was: “Right is of no sex–Truth is of no color–God is the Father of us all, and we are all Brethren.”

Douglass stated in an 1850 lecture:
“I have shown that slavery is wicked—wicked, in that it violates the great law of liberty, written on every human heart — wicked, in that it violates the first command of the Decalogue — wicked, in that it fosters the most disgusting licentiousness — wicked, in that it mars and defaces the image of God by cruel and barbarous inflictions — wicked, in that it contravenes the laws of eternal justice, and tramples in the dust all the humane and heavenly precepts of the New Testament.”

In 1868, Douglass wrote to Harriet Tubman, who helped lead slaves to freedom through the Underground Railroad:
“Most that I have done and suffered in the service of our cause has been in public, and I have received much encouragement at every step of the way.
You, on the other hand, have labored in a private way. I have wrought in the day — you in the night.
I have had the applause of the crowd and the satisfaction that comes of being approved by the multitude,
while the most that you have done has been witnessed by a few trembling, scarred, and foot-sore bondmen and women, whom you have led out of the house of bondage, and whose heartfelt “God bless you” has been your only reward.
The midnight sky and the silent stars have been the witnesses of your devotion to freedom and of your heroism.”

After Abraham Lincoln, the first Republican President, issued the Emancipation Proclamation, January 1, 1863, Frederick Douglass wrote:
“Can any colored man, or any white man friendly to the freedom of all men, ever forget the night which followed the first day of January 1863, when the world was to see if Abraham Lincoln would prove to be as good as his word?”

Frederick Douglass became an adviser to Lincoln.

Theodore Brantner Wilson described in The Black Codes of the South (University of Alabama Press, 1965, p. 56) a law passed by Mississippi’s Democrat Legislature:
“Mississippi quickly passed one law … outlawing possession of weapons by Negroes. The militia proceeded to disarm the Negroes in such a brutal fashion as to cause much criticism. Alabama Negroes were disarmed by similar methods with like results.”
Frederick Douglass stated:
“A man’s rights rest in three boxes: The ballot box, the jury box and the cartridge box.”

Douglass even raised the one of the the first all Black Regiments, the “54th Massachusetts.”

This as portrayed in the film Glory (1989), which starred Matthew Broderick, Morgan Freeman, Cary Elwes, and Denzel Washington, who won an Academy Award.

Other early all Black regiments were the 1st Rhode Island Regiment, which fought for America during the Revolutionary War;
and the First Kansas Colored Volunteers, which fought for the Union during the Civil War, notably in the Battles of Island Mound, Cabin Creek, Honey Spring, Poison Springs.

Racial discrimination was not a Black-White issue, but rather a Democrat-Republican issue:
  • Democrats supported slavery; and
  • Republicans opposed slavery.
Frederick Douglass stated:
“I am a Republican, a black, dyed in the wool Republican, and I never intend to belong to any other party than the party of freedom and progress.”

Black Republicans of the 19th century included:
CALIFORNIA

FLORIDA
  • Jonathan Clarkson Gibbs (1821–1874), Presbyterian minister, Republican, Secretary of State of Florida and Florida Superintendent of Public Instruction;
  • James Weldon Johnson (1871–1944), Republican, appointed by President Theodore Roosevelt as U.S. Consul in Venezuela and Nicaragua, first black manager of the NAACP, president of the Colored Republican Club;
  • Josiah T. Walls (1842–1905), Republican, first African American to be elected a U.S. Representative from Florida;
GEORGIA
ILLINOIS

IOWA
KENTUCKY
LOUISIANA
  • Caesar Antoine (1836–1921), Republican, 13th Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana;
  • Antoine Dubuclet (1810–1887), Republican, State Treasurer of Louisiana;
  • Oscar Dunn (1826–1871), Republican, 11th Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana;
  • Charles Edmund Nash (1844–1913), Republican, U.S Representative;
  • P.B.S. Pinchback (1837–1921), Republican, 24th governor of Louisiana; first African-American governor of a U.S. state;

MARYLAND
MASSACHUSETTS
  • Julius Caesar Chappelle (1852–1904), Republican, legislator (1883–1886), Massachusetts House of Representatives;
  • Lewis Hayden (1811–1889), Republican, elected to the Massachusetts State Legislature;
  • William Henry Lewis (1868–1949), Republican, one of the first African Americans admitted to the bar, and the first African American to be appointed U.S. Assistant Attorney General, “the highest office in an executive branch of the government ever held by a member of his race”;
  • Clement G. Morgan (1859–1929), Republican, Boston attorney, civil rights activist, and city official;
  • George Lewis Ruffin (1834–1886), Republican, attorney, judge, Massachusetts state legislator, and Boston city councilman;
  • John J. Smith (1820–1906), Republican, abolitionist and Massachusetts state representative;
  • Butler R. Wilson (1861–1939), Republican, Boston civil rights activist;

MICHIGAN
MINNESOTA
MISSISSIPPI
  • Blanche Bruce (1841–1898), Republican, first African American to serve a full term in U.S. Senate;
  • Perry Wilbon Howard (1877–1961), attorney and delegate to Republican National Convention, 1912–1960;
  • John Roy Lynch (1847–1939), Republican, U.S. Representative;
  • Hiram Rhodes Revels (1827–1901), Republican, first African American to serve in U.S. Senate;
  • Roscoe Conkling Simmons (1881–1951), Republican, nephew of Booker T. Washington, journalist, first African-American columnist hired by the Chicago Tribune, Republican Party leader;
  • Ida B. Wells (1862–1931), Republican, civil rights advocate and co-founder of the NAACP;

 

MISSOURI
  • Walthall M. Moore (1886–1960), Republican, first African American to serve in the Missouri state legislature;

NEBRASKA
NEW JERSEY
NEW YORK
NORTH CAROLINA

OHIO
OKLAHOMA
PENNSYLVANIA

SOUTH CAROLINA

TENNESSEE

VIRGINIA
WASHINGTON

In the contentious 1876 Presidential race, Democrat Samuel J. Tilden won the popular vote, but Rutherford B. Hayes won the most electoral votes, resulting in the infamous Compromise of 1877.

Roger D. Bridges wrote in “Betrayal of the Freedman: Rutherford B. Hayes and the End of Reconstruction” that the reason Samuel J. Tilden won the popular vote was because Democrats in the South suppressed Black Republican voters:
“‘Hideous things happened in the decades after the Civil War. Freed slaves who tried to vote were beaten, jailed, lynched. Jim Crow laws and the Ku Klux Klan stopped thousands from registering.’ That is how Associated Press reporter Katherine Rizzo opened a recent column …”

Bridges added that Democrat politicians agreed to not contest Hayes’ electoral victory if he would cave to their demands:
“Hayes, a Republican, lost the popular vote in 1876 but … the Electoral College gave him a one-vote edge over his Democratic opponent …
Democrats in Congress … agreed not to dispute the Hayes victory in exchange for a promise to end Reconstruction and withdraw federal troops from the South.”

Like modern establishment politicians who surrender human life values for personal political gain, Dan T. Carter, a history professor at Emory University in Atlanta, explained:
“Hayes did not have the support of the American people and did not have support even in his own political party … He basically was knuckling under … with this mealy-mouthed political bargain.”

Once Hayes yielded to Democrat demands, Federal troops were removed from the South
This was followed with Southern Democrats pushing most Black Republicans out of office and resuming their tactics of fear and racial discrimination.
Individual Democrats formed the Klu Klux Klan or KKK, a violent vigilante group which advocated violence, similar to modern-day ANTFA rioters,

Hayes ranks as one of the least respected Presidents.
His birthplace is now a gas station marked with a plaque.

President Lyndon Johnson, 1963-1969, changed the Democrat method of manipulating minority Black votes by switching from intimidation to entitlement.
Instead of suppressing African American voters through fear, his Great Society Welfare State increased the Democrat voter base with a dependency on government welfare programs.

Many notable black authors and speakers have criticized growing dependency on government entitlements as being similar to the dependency that existed on Southern Democrat plantations, where slaves waited for handouts from their masters.

  • Star Parker, founder of CURE (Center for Urban Renewal) wrote Uncle Sam’s Plantation: How Big Government Enslaves America’s Poor and What We Can Do About It.

  • Rev. C.L. Bryant produced a documentary Runaway Slave Movie, stating: “I am a ‘Runaway Slave’ from the Democrats’ plantation.”

  • C. Mason Weaver wrote It’s OK to Leave the Plantation: The New Underground Railroad.

  • Wayne Perryman wrote Unfounded Loyalty: An In-Depth Look Into The Love Affair Between Blacks and Democrats.

  • Jesse Lee Peterson wrote From Rage to Responsibility: Black Conservative Jesse Lee Peterson and America Today.

Frederick Douglass wrote in 1859:
“Self-made men … are the men who owe little or nothing to birth, relationship, friendly surroundings; to wealth inherited or to early approved means of education; who are what they are, without the aid of any of the favoring conditions by which other men usually rise in the world and achieve great results …
There is nothing good, great or desirable … that does not come by some kind of labor …

… The man who will get up will be helped up; and the man who will not get up will be allowed to stay down … Give the Negro fair play and let him alone …
As a general rule, where circumstances do most for men there man will do least for himself … His doing makes or unmakes him …
My theory of self-made men is, then, simply this; that they are men of work.
Whether or not such men have acquired material, moral or intellectual excellence, honest labor faithfully, steadily and persistently pursued, is the best, if not the only, explanation of their success.”

This attitude was was expressed by internationally renowned scientist George Washington Carver, who wrote in A Brief Sketch of My Life, 1922:
“I would never allow anyone to give me money, no difference how badly I needed it. I wanted literally to earn my living.”

Frederick Douglass told the story of his conversion:
“I was not more than thirteen years old, when I felt the need of God, as a father and protector.
My religious nature was awakened by the preaching of a white Methodist minister, named Hanson.
He thought that all men, great and small, bond and free, were sinners in the sight of God; that they were, by nature, rebels against His government; and that they must repent of their sins, and be reconciled to God, through Christ …
I was, for weeks, a poor, broken-hearted mourner, traveling through the darkness and misery of doubts and fears …”

Douglass continued:
“I finally found that change of heart which comes by ‘casting all one’s care’ upon God, and by having faith in Jesus Christ, as the Redeemer, Friend, and Savior of those who diligently seek him.
After this, I saw the world in a new light …
I loved all mankind — slaveholders not excepted; though I abhorred slavery more than ever …
I gathered scattered pages of the Bible from the filthy street gutters, and washed and dried them, that … I might get a word or two of wisdom from them.”
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27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS

 


28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS

 


29.) PJ MEDIA

The Morning Briefing: Dems, MSM Busy Tossing Their COVID Failures Into the Memory Hole

AP Photo/Susan Walsh

Top O’ the Briefing

Happy Wednesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. It’s time that science got to work on meat-based vegetables. I’ll have the bacon kale, Chauncey.

While I am not the most avid moviegoer, I am usually aware of all of the movies getting buzz before the Academy Award nominations. I was a little lost and confused this year, especially with some of the streaming service flicks getting nominations. I feel like we’re in a world without any rules and Flo from Progressive will one day soon be winning all of the awards.

She kinda bugs me.

The Democrats have been pivoting so forcefully on various COVID-related things this past week that I’m surprised they aren’t all dizzy and nauseated, the poor dears. Ivermectin, natural immunity, the efficacy of cloth masks, you name it, they’ve been Team 180. And being the party of the Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, they’ve been trying to erase the memory of their previous, horribly wrong policies.

Of course, their dutiful flying monkeys in the mainstream media have been working overtime to help.

Stacey wrote a great deep-dive about this yesterday:

The memo has gone out: It is time for every cultural institution, politician, and corporate media outlet to pivot on COVID-19. They must reverse their Covidstan policies, advocate a return to normal, and make excuses for the missteps of the health bureaucracy. The speed and shamelessness with which the narrative shift happened are breathtaking, and it can only mean one thing. The internal polling for Democrats in the midterms is beyond dismal, and areas assumed to be safely in the “D” column are at risk. We mustn’t let them get away with the rewrite of history they are attempting.

It’s not just that they’ve been so wrong about so many things, it’s that they were such jackbooted thugs when implementing and enforcing their errant policies. Heck, the Joe Rogan acrimony at Spotify began when he was touting Ivermectin as a treatment. The unhinged left immediately put the wheels in motion to cancel him, as they did with anyone else who went against the now-debunked leftist COVID orthodoxy.

The American left has gotten away with these types of politically-induced memory lapses for far too long, which is precisely the reason they think that they can pull it off again.

The thing is — and I’ve written about this a lot — they’ve been overreaching since they installed the puppet president in the Oval Office, and it’s about to come back to haunt them.

Democrats used COVID to blow up any semblance of election integrity in 2020 and the country has been reeling ever since. That’s on them. Sure, they keep trying to blame Republicans, and they’ll have some success with that in the coastal media bubbles. The misery that they’ve heaped upon the United States in the name of COVID won’t easily be forgotten, especially by the independent voters they were able to con in 2020.

More from Stacey:

Democrats, the health bureaucracy, and the corporate media cannot be allowed to retcon the COVID response over the last two years. We are only beginning to understand the damage to our children and society. The wreckage must be laid directly at their feet.

Again, they will be working overtime to sweep their myriad failures under the rug.

So maybe we buy up all of the brooms.

Everything Isn’t Awful

 

PJ Media

Kruiser’s ‘The Worst of Times’ for the Week of Jan. 31—Feb. 6, 2022

VodkaPundit. Insanity Wrap: Facebook’s Faceplant, Zuck Threatens to Cut Off Europe After HUGE Losses

Wisconsin: Mediagenic Afghan Arrested for Sexual Assault, Mayor Says ‘This Doesn’t Define All Afghan Refugees’

Vaccine Pusher Gov. Kathy Hochul’s Daughter-In-Law Is Top Lobbyist for Big Pharma

There ya go. Evidence Suggests ISIS Behind the Texas Synagogue Hostage Crisis

Louisiana’s Secretary of State Faces Lawsuit Over Election Integrity

Jury Trial Ordered for CNN’s Don Lemon Over Sexual Assault Allegations

This Is Why We Have the Second Amendment

Welcome to the Hunger Games: Olympic Athletes Complain of Horrible Conditions in China’s COVID Gulag

Democrats and the Corporate Media Are Trying to Rewrite the History on Their COVID-19 Response

Colorado Man Sets Fire to His Own House Because ‘Allah Told Him To’

Inspector General Investigating Capitol Police for Improper Surveillance of Lawmakers, Staff and Visitors

Prominent Americans Give Joe Rogan Tough Advice on Surviving Leftist Attacks

‘Tinder Swindler’ Simon Leviev Conned Women Out of Millions in the Craziest Way You’ve Ever Heard

Misogynists and racists, the Democrats. Biden’s Economic ‘Recovery’ Leaves Women Behind

George Washington University President Faces Backlash After Siding With Chinese Communist Party

Iranian Man Decapitates Teen Wife, Smiles as He Strolls Neighborhood With Her Head

Bombshell Email Reveals Plan to Arrest Maskless Students in Loudoun County

Townhall Mothership

Sen. Cotton Demands AG Garland Answer for Lenient Sentence of BLM Rioter

Cops Who Killed Minnesota Man During No-Knock Raid Could Face Criminal Charges

Did You Catch What Was Laughable About MSNBC’s Segment About Canada’s Freedom Convoy?

Shucks. Chris Wallace’s CNN Gig Is Not Going Well

EXCLUSIVE: Teachers Pulled Mask Over 4th Grader’s Nose, Called Him Rude and Disrespectful Over Mask Refusal – Then Charged Dad With Trespassing for Picking Him Up

Cori Bush Prepares to Make Life Harder for Democrats Ahead of 2022 Midterms

After Chaos, Drama, and a Circular Firing Squad, Kansas Republicans Override Democrat Governor’s Veto of Redistricting Map

CT governor says you can’t be tough on crime “if you’re weak on guns”

Cam&Co. No-knock warrants and the Second Amendment

Bill introduced to side step budgets, fund CDC to conduct anti-gun research

Army investigation: White House, State ignored Pentagon — and botched Afghanistan retreat

Christie: “Inexperienced” Ron DeSantis should give straight answers about boosters and January 6

The estimated cost of California’s high speed rail system is now up to $105 billion

Columnist Damon Linker seems upset that the Right is pouncing on Democrats whether they lift COVID restrictions or not

The Sun-Sentinel editorial board is just mad because it can’t date Christina Pushaw

‘Are you out of your MINDS’?! Ron Coleman puts DHS on BLAST for including shady AF tidbit in summary of ‘terrorism threat to U.S. homeland’

VIP

#MeToo: Republican Fundraising Pitches Need to Move Into the 21st Century

Well, I Won’t Defend Mitch McConnell Anymore

Joe Rogan Has One Important Quality That All of the Wannabe Gatekeepers Don’t

It’s Starting to Feel Like the Hunter Biden Administration, Isn’t It?

CDC Posts Blank Vaccine Card on Website, Making Widespread Fraud a Certainty

Joe Biden Keeps Violating His Zero-Tolerance Misconduct Policy

GOLD I Am Very Confused About the Stacey Abrams Photo

Around the Interwebz

Byron Allen To Bid For NFL’s Denver Broncos

What on Earth is going on with Peloton? 

Is This the End of the Cannonball Run?

Bee Me

 

The Kruiser Kabana

Kabana Gallery

 

Kabana Comedy

30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER

Image
Cut to the News
Cut through the clutter to today’s top news
February 9, 2022
Good morning Rick
Welcome to today’s top news.
Leading the News . . . 
The age of vindictive and bitter millennials . . .  Gen Y has grown bitter, happy to cancel anyone who crosses liberal dogma . . . Fourteen years ago, as teens dove into games and texts and social media, I wrote a book that said this digital age was turning them into addled, ignorant people, their eyes locked on little screens and their minds skipping books, history, newspapers, literature, religion, fine art and civics. I didn’t realize back then that “The Dumbest Generation” would turn into illiberal, vindictive adults.

That’s what I say in my new book, “The Dumbest Generation Grows Up: From Stupefied Youth and Dangerous Adults.” Millennials are now in their mid-20s and 30s, and they’ve grown bitter and unforgiving, happy to cancel anyone who crosses liberal dogmas and pieties.  When asked if Google was right to fire James Damore, the man who raised the prospect that under-representation of women in Silicon Valley might be due to biological differences between men and women, fully two-thirds of 18-24-year-olds said, “Yes, fire him,” and 50% of 26- to 35-year-olds said so.

Mr. Damore’s “manifesto” was issued on a Google discussion platform and solicited by management, who wanted to hear what workers thought of its diversity policies, but no matter. What he said offended colleagues, so he had to go — and young people today cheer the decision. Where is the independent spirit, the dissident voice that liberalism has traditionally appreciated? It is drowned in a wave of “woke” righteousness and coercion, which is led by the young. Washington Times
As the parents of a 16- and 18- year olds, Keith and I are deeply concerned about the damage that’s done to our kids by the societal malaise that is spreading like wildfire, fueled by technology. We are stunned how different from us our son and daughter are growing up to become, despite our vigorous efforts to keep them away from the rotten influences of our society. We are at a loss what to do about it.
Truckers ‘Freedom Convoy’ Protests Disrupt Ambassador Bridge on U.S.-Canada Border . . . Protesters fighting Covid-19 vaccine mandates temporarily stopped two-way traffic on the busiest international land-border crossing in North America, as a nearly two-week demonstration in Ottawa threatened to expand and disrupt U.S.-Canada trade. Authorities in Canada and the U.S. said the Ambassador Bridge, a 1.6-mile corridor that connects Detroit with Windsor, Ontario, was temporarily closed late Monday night because of a demonstration by truckers and their supporters. The protesters are calling for governments to rescind Covid-19 policies requiring individuals to be fully vaccinated to enter restaurants and gyms or to board planes and trains. About 600 people in heavy-duty trucks, sport-utility vehicles and pickup trucks assembled on a major north-south corridor leading to the bridge, according to a witness. Wall Street Journal
American ruling class might want to take notice. At some point, us, regular folks just get tired of all the nonsense dictated by the elites who don’t follow their own script.
Great news: I’ve made the Sean Hannity Book Club! See the relevant section at the bottom of this issue.
Politics                       
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Republicans urge Biden to take cognitive test, say his ‘mental decline’ has ‘become more apparent’ . . .  Nearly 40 Republican lawmakers are calling on President Biden, 79, to take a cognitive test, following the example set by his predecessor, former President Donald Trump. The Republican push for Biden to undergo cognitive testing comes as recent polls have shown Americans are unsure of the president’s mental fitness for office.
Former physician to the president Rep. Ronny Jackson, R-Texas, led a letter with 37 of his GOP colleagues to Biden on Tuesday expressing their “concern” with Biden’s “current cognitive state.”
“My colleagues and I are again asking President Biden to immediately undergo a formal cognitive screening exam, such as the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MOCA),” Jackson told Fox News Digital in an email. Fox News
Violent crime to labor shortages: Mayors say Covid’s toll on cities is far-reaching . . . Forget about grand plans for education or the details of zoning reform — the Covid-19 pandemic ruined just about everything for America’s mayors. They’re frustrated by crime, labor shortages, housing and how to maintain basic city services two years into a marathon public health crisis. And the partisan rancor that has gripped national politics can make their jobs even more difficult. Those are some of the key findings of The Fifty survey of America’s mayors, local leaders who told POLITICO what their cities want and need, and what it’s like doing their jobs in these unprecedented and unpredictable times. “Covid-19 [had] the effect of pouring a 55-gallon barrel on a roaring fire,” said Dan Pope, the Republican mayor of Lubbock, Texas. “All initiatives took a back seat.” Politico
Don’t buy the hype, ‘rogue’ prosecutors driving violent crime surge, not guns . . . Soft-on-crime district attorneys across the country are to blame for a spike in violent crime – not firearms, a former federal prosecutor told Fox News Digital. “Guns don’t commit crimes, neither do knives and hammers, people do,” said Charles Stimson, now a senior legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank. “It’s a red herring to focus on guns rather than the harder issue of how to enforce the law fairly and hold criminals accountable.” During a visit to New York City last week, President Biden said he would help Mayor Eric Adams get illegal guns off the streets to combat cresting violent crime. Fox Business
McConnell dismisses Trump criticism, saying it’s no threat to his leadership role . . . Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is shrugging off Donald Trump’s campaign to oust him as the top Senate Republican, chuckling that he views “Old Crow,” the former president’s derisive nickname for him, as a compliment. “It’s my favorite bourbon,” McConnell said Tuesday evening in an interview with the Washington Examiner, referring to a Kentucky spirit of the same name distilled by Beam Suntory. Turning to a member of his staff, the minority leader asked, “Aren’t we using Old Crow as my moniker now? It was Henry Clay’s favorite bourbon.” Clay represented Kentucky in the House and Senate in the early to mid-1800s. Trump’s feud with McConnell dates to mid-December 2020, when the Kentucky Republican recognized President Joe Biden’s victory over him in that year’s presidential election following the state-certified votes tallied by the Electoral College. The former president’s anger only intensified after McConnell moved to block his attempts to overturn the results during their congressional certification. Washington Examiner
Liz Cheney’s Hunter Biden problem: Husband’s firm reps China companies, dictatorial regimes . . . Philip Perry is a partner at Latham & Watkins, which works on behalf of foreign entities, including some flagged as threats to U.S. national security. Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) called on the U.S. to stand up to the “generational threat” posed by China while unveiling a major report on Beijing’s “malign behavior” at the same time her husband’s law firm was working on behalf of companies linked to China’s military, intelligence, and security services. As Cheney stood at the podium, her husband Philip Perry’s law firm was cashing in on legal and lobbying work that his employer — Latham & Watkins (LW), one of the largest law firms in the world — was doing for a host of Chinese companies, some of which were involved in the kind of activity that Cheney was warning had to be stopped. Perry’s firm’s work for Chinese entities and countries whose human rights abuses and authoritarian rule have troubled the U.S. for years seems to conflict with his wife’s frequent calls for America to stand up to autocratic regimes like China. The dynamic is one familiar to longtime observers of Washington, D.C.: a power couple calling out the very behavior from which they benefit. Just the News
National Security     
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US Warns American Citizens in UAE of ‘Possible Strike’ After Overnight Explosion . . . The U.S. Embassy in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on Feb. 9 warned U.S. citizens of “reports of a possible missile or drone strike” over Abu Dhabi as the UAE blamed an overnight blast on a gas cylinder explosion. Earlier on Wednesday, UAE’s state news agency had reported that Abu Dhabi civil defense teams put out a fire caused by a gas container explosion in a building on Hamdan Street and there were no injuries. The UAE’s U.S. Embassy didn’t elaborate on details about the overnight explosion but asked American citizens to remain vigilant. “There are reports of a possible missile or drone strike having occurred over Abu Dhabi,” the message issued to U.S. citizens in the UAE said. “The Embassy advises U.S. citizens to immediately follow the safety actions listed below and stay alert in case of additional future attacks.” Epoch Times
Classified Iran Nuclear Deal Brief Leaves ‘More Questions Than Answers,’ GOP Lawmaker Says . . . At least one Republican lawmaker was left with “more questions than answers” on Tuesday after Biden’s Iran envoy Robert Malley provided his first classified briefing on Capitol Hill. Malley, who until Tuesday had avoided testifying before the House Foreign Affairs Committee for more than a year as talks with Tehran took place, faced a flurry of questions from Republican lawmakers who are outraged by the White House’s decision late last week to grant Iran sanctions waivers so that countries like Russia and China can build out its civilian nuclear program. Rep. Claudia Tenney (R., N.Y.), a committee member, has been leading the charge to pressure Malley into testifying. She told the Free Beacon Tuesday afternoon that the classified briefing left her with “more questions than answers”—and that Malley must immediately testify in an open setting so that the American public can learn exactly what the United States has promised Iran in exchange for a new deal. Washington Free Beacon
Army finds Biden White House, State Dept. acted too late in Afghanistan . . . The political people were warned that the Taliban wa crushing the Afghan government, that there were too few U.S. forces in the country, and that action was needed to speed up the withdrawal. They didn’t listen, and tragedy resulted. According to the Washington Post: Senior White House and State Department officials failed to grasp the Taliban’s steady advance on Afghanistan’s capital and resisted efforts by U.S. military leaders to prepare the evacuation of embassy personnel and Afghan allies weeks before Kabul’s fall, placing American troops ordered to carry out the withdrawal in greater danger, according to sworn testimony from multiple commanders involved in the operation. An Army investigative report, numbering 2,000 pages and released to The Washington Post through a Freedom of Information Act request, details the life-or-death decisions made daily by U.S. soldiers and Marines sent to secure Hamid Karzai International Airport as thousands converged on the airfield in a frantic bid to escape. White House Dossier
Russia, Russia, Russia . . . and China                
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Russia and China Unveil a Pact Against America and the West . . .  In a sweeping long-term agreement, Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping, the two most powerful autocrats, challenge the current political and military order. In their matching mauve ties, Russia’s Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping last week declared a “new era” in the global order and, at least in the short term, endorsed their respective territorial ambitions in Ukraine and Taiwan. The world’s two most powerful autocrats unveiled a sweeping long-term agreement that also challenges the United States as a global power, NATO as a cornerstone of international security, and liberal democracy as a model for the world. “Friendship between the two States has no limits,” they vowed in the communiqué, released after the two leaders met on the eve of the Beijing Winter Olympics. “There are no ‘forbidden’ areas of cooperation.” New Yorker
Fears of Ukraine invasion rise as top Russian commanders fly to Belarus for massive joint military drill . . . Top Russian military commanders flew into neighboring Belarus on Wednesday for a massive military exercise amid Western alarm that it could provide cover for a multipronged invasion of Ukraine.
Russia’s chief of the armed forces’ General Staff, Gen. Valery Gerasimov, arrived in Belarus ahead of a 10-day Russian-Belarusian drill beginning Thursday, as senior Russian Foreign Ministry officials accused the West of “blackmail and pressure” and of stoking tensions by arming Ukraine. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia was conducting the joint exercise with Belarus to confront “unprecedented security threats.” “Russia and Belarus have encountered unprecedented threats, the nature and, perhaps, concentration of which are, unfortunately, much larger and much more dangerous than before,” he told reporters.
Tucker Carlson: What happens to our troops in Ukraine if Russia invades? . . . Joe Biden, you may recall, spent a lot of his time as vice president meddling in the internal affairs of Ukraine. And you may wonder, why Ukraine as opposed to say, Denmark or Senegal or any of the world’s other 195 countries. Simple. Because the Ukrainians were paying Joe Biden’s family a million dollars a year in exchange for the work that he did. And as president, you may have noticed, Biden has continued to represent Ukrainian interests. Most recently in their dispute with Russia.  Biden talks constantly about all the scary things he’ll do if embattled Vladimir Putin dares to offend the territorial sovereignty of Biden’s close friends, the Ukrainians. But one thing Joe Biden will not do, he has assured us repeatedly, is send American troops to Ukraine. Polls show Americans do not want that at all and Biden claims he’s heard the message.
So here’s the question. There are American troops in Ukraine. What’s going to happen to these troops if and when the Russians invade? The Pentagon says there are no plans to pull these troops out. And so that means that very soon, American soldiers could be fighting Russian soldiers, which sounds to our civilian ears very much like the definition of war with Russia. Are you ready for war with Russia? Has anyone asked for your consent or even your opinion on war with Russia? No. That’s democracy. Biden style. Fox News
As I described in my book, the Kremlin has concluded that war between Russia  and the US is inevitable, because the two countries’ national interests, as defined by Moscow and Washington,  are on a geopolitical collision course. Because of that analysis, Russia has spent 20 years doing its homework on US war fighting style and vulnerabilities and invested billions of dollars in military modernization to develop a sophisticated strategy to win that war. This strategy includes employment of nuclear weapons, even in a conventional conflict.
US is woefully unprepared for such a war. In every single war-game I participated in, Blue lost to Red. Here’s US Army’s assessment admitting the Pentagon’s total lack of preparedness to win a war with Russia:
DIA and CIA tried to censor by book to conceal the fact how badly the Washington establishment has bungled up the Russia threat and how incompetent the gov. “experts” are when it comes to Putin and Russian strategy.
Here’s a link to my book and a couple of Op-Eds, to give you all a sense of how big of the problem we have on our hands.
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COVID-Schmovid
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US Air Force Grants 9 Religious Exemptions to COVID-19 Vaccine Mandate While Over 3,000 Requests Rejected . . . The Air Force on Tuesday said it has approved nine religious exemptions from taking the COVID-19 vaccine, while more than 3,000 requests have been rejected so far. According to data from the Air Force, eight of the exemptions to the military’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate were granted after being submitted, and a further religious exemption was approved after an appeal.
A total of 3,222 religious accommodation requests have been rejected, and the Air Force is processing 2,556 pending requests for exemptions and 732 pending appeals. The Air Force is the second U.S. military branch to approve religious exemptions to the mandatory COVID-19 vaccine, although the nine approved so far represent just a tiny fraction of the more than 6,400 requested by Air Force troops. “The Department of the Air Force determined the service members’ accommodations could be supported with no impact to mission readiness,” a statement Tuesday said. Epoch Times
In costliest U.S. fight, little cash goes to actually fight COVID-19 . . .  Congress has approved about $6 trillion for the fight against COVID-19, or more than it spent to defeat Nazi Germany and imperial Japan in World War II. Yet Uncle Sam has spent only a small fraction of that money — 15% or less, depending on who’s counting — on beating the coronavirus itself.
The $50 billion or so aimed at vaccines and therapeutics is less than Congress allocated for an Obamacare expansion, tucked into the same pandemic spending bills. Another $53 billion allocated to coronavirus testing and monitoring is dwarfed by an $81 billion bailout for private pension funds that Democrats stuck inside their massive American Rescue Plan bill last year. “On overall levels of spending, we missed badly,” said Andrew Lautz, director of federal policy at the National Taxpayers Union. “I don’t want to suggest the federal government should have spent nothing. This was a multitrillion-dollar public health and economic problem that very likely over the course of several years required a multitrillion-dollar response. I think $5 trillion was an overshoot.” Washington Times
Money                           
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Biden seeks to raise federal pay 4.6% while private sector pay estimated to rise just 3.4% . . .  The pay raise for federal employees is reportedly part of Biden’s forthcoming FY2023 budget. President Joe Biden is seeking to raise federal employee pay by 4.6%, with private sector pay estimated to rise just 3.4% this year. The pay raise for federal employees is reportedly part of Biden’s forthcoming FY2023 budget, which the White House plans to send to Congress after the president’s State of the Union address on March 1. The White House requested a 2.7% increase for federal employees in FY2021. Pay raises for the federal workforce in FY2022 range from 2.42% to 3.21%. Federal News Radio reported that the 4.6% request for the federal workforce in the FY2023 budget is the “largest in decades.” Just the News
You should also know 
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Alleged sex traffickers, rapists, antisemites remain on Spotify without issue while Rogan faces boycott call . . . A social media mob continues to encircle podcast host Joe Rogan as business leaders, lawmakers and even the White House have made public calls for Spotify to censor Rogan.  But while Rogan is targeted by left-wing activists, Spotify currently hosts a slew of convicted criminals, alleged sex traffickers and otherwise disgraced artists who haven’t faced the same calls for de-platforming.  Rogan, who hosts the mega-popular “The Joe Rogan Experience” exclusively on Spotify, came under fire recently for repeated use of the n-word on past podcast episodes and for hosting guests who questioned the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines and masks.
The compilation of old clips only compounded calls to deplatform the comedian over accusations of “misinformation” related to COVID-19. Spotify’s chief executive said Sunday that the company won’t be “silencing” Rogan, though dozens of podcast episodes have disappeared from the platform.  Fox Business
Where’s the beef? Video shows man stealing 10 steaks from NYC Trader Joe’s . . . Holy cow! A man was caught on Post video allegedly brazenly swiping about a dozen steaks from a Manhattan Trader Joe’s on Tuesday morning. The suspect — now wanted by cops — was at the grocery store’s East 14th Street location around 8:30 a.m. when he was caught on footage strolling out the door with 10 packages of meat piled up in his arms. Two helpless Trader Joe’s staffers had followed the man up an escalator leading to the store’s exit but only stopped him from taking a shopping basket outside – not the meat, the video shows. “They basically just tell us not to do anything, just let them go,” a Trader Joe’s worker, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, later explained to The Post. “We get in trouble if we do anything… It don’t bother me, I’ve been working here for two years, I see it happen everyday. After a while, you just don’t care.” New York Post
Hannity Book Club      
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HANNITY BOOK CLUB: Putin’s Playbook: Russia’s Secret Plan to Defeat America by Rebekah Koffler . . . The “Russian collusion” hoax not only poisoned American politics but also sowed confusion about the real Russian threat to the United States. President Vladimir Putin wasn’t colluding with the Trump campaign, but as a former U.S. intelligence specialist makes clear in this eye-opening book, the judo-loving ex–KGB agent most certainly has a plan to defeat the United States. Born and raised in the Soviet Union, Rebekah Koffler came to America as a young woman. After 9/11, she joined the Defense Intelligence Agency, devoting her career to protecting her new country. Now she reveals in chilling detail Putin’s long-range plan— his “playbook”—to weaken and subdue the United States, preparing for the war that he believes is inevitable. Hannity.com
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31.) THE DISPATCH

The Dispatch


32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION

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‘Sex Week’ Event at Ohio State University Encourages Students to Thank Abortion Providers

Professor Apologizes After Being Recorded Calling Glenn Youngkin a ‘Trumpist Retard’

Student Govt. at U. Washington Demands 24% American Indian Enrollment

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  • William Jacobson: “THERE’S MORE TO THE STORY of our Salsa Labs deplatforming — We lived in peace at Salsa Labs until they were bought by Every Action, a far-left political operation. Only then did we get a notice to take our business elsewhere. How did we find out that Every Action was the likely culprit? Well … after we received the Salsa Labs notice, we looked for another platform. Not knowing at the time that Every Action had bought Salsa Labs, we contacted Every Action to move there. They told us no thanks, we don’t like your politics. We didn’t make the connection at that time to our Salsa Labs termination. When I appealed up the line of senior executives at Salsa Labs for an explanation and reversal of the termination, I got an auto-responder email from a senior Salsa Labs executive, and it was from an Every Action email address. Wait a second, I thought, why does a Salsa Labs executive have an Every Action address? I then researched it, and learned of the Every Action purchase of Salsa Labs, and the light bulb went on.”
  • Mary Chastain: “Italy won its first medal in curling! GOLD! The mixed doubles team went undefeated. I am so happy.”
  • Leslie Eastman: “Is Hunter Biden going to be the new crack pipe czar?”
  • Stacey Matthews: “It’s just amazing how many Democrat governors are having a change of heart on mask mandates right now. I’m sure it has nothing to do with the midterm elections coming up. Nothing at all.”
  • Vijeta Uniyal: “The U.S. Commerce Department has “red-flagged” 33 Chinese hi-tech companies amid growing concerns about the technology theft by Beijing-controlled entities. Adding these companies to the “unverified list” will restrict their ability to access products and technologies developed by U.S. private sector players.”
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE


34.) DESERET NEWS


35.) BRIGHT

 

Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Pedagogy of the Depressed
I’ve brought up many times, both here in BRIGHT and in other writings, my critiques of the global technocratic elites I observed growing up in Palo Alto. Less often discussed, though, is the fact that that town’s “citizens of the world,” without loyalty to country, and floating on an everchanging sea of prestige and achievement sans all the more ancient attachments to organized religion and traditional family structure, have created an epicenter of youth depression and suicide.

Well, the whole country is now Palo Alto.

In a devastating and wide-ranging essay in Commentary, Robert Pondiscio notes all the ways in which our modern world – and not least our education system – creates fragile children unprepared to face much of anything.

“It can no longer be questioned—or avoided—that America’s children are in the middle of a serious and alarming mental-health crisis. In October 2021, the American Academy of Pediatrics declared the state of child and adolescent mental health “a national emergency.” Visits to hospital emergency rooms for suspected suicide attempts among adolescents grew by 31 percent in 2020 over the year before. In February and March of 2021, visits for suspected suicide attempts for girls ages 12–17 jumped 51 percent compared with the same time period in 2019 prior to Covid.

The crisis, however, predates the pandemic. Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt, in their book The Coddling of the American Mind, point to 2011 as the start of a measurable national rise in anxiety and depression among teenagers and young adults, citing the rapid spread of smartphones and social media a few years earlier as the likely culprit behind a sharp rise in mental illness and suicide. More screen time is also associated with fewer hours spent on sports and exercise, attending religious services, reading books, doing homework, and in-person social interactions, all of which correlate with lower rates of depression…

This frame, the struggle between oppressors and the oppressed (reliably framed as a binary), has been a constant theme in American education for decades, but it burst into public consciousness only recently with debates over the prevalence (or putative absence) of critical race theory in K–12 education. It has been observed, not inaccurately, that if your child is being taught critical race theory, they’re in law school, not elementary school. But this obfuscation belies the degree to which critical theory—the belief that teaching should challenge students to “read the world” by examining power structures and inequality—deeply informs contemporary education thought and practice. Mike Gonzales and Lindsey Burke of the Heritage Foundation state the tension succinctly. “Simply put, Critical Theory amounts to an unremitting attack on all of America’s norms and traditions,” they write in National Review. It is “the main philosophical school in the identity politics of today.”…

This is the world now on offer to our children. It doesn’t matter if our intentions are good, if we see virtue in being honest with children, or seek only to “empower” students to take on and change the world. We have broken childhood. We have succeeded only in creating a generation of children who feel overwhelmed and powerless, lacking in agency, and who are saying to themselves, in effect, “Why bother?”

The Gendered Landscape of Cancel Culture and Our Public Square
Richard Hanania has a fascinating piece up on his Substack about the gendered dynamic of campus (and broader) cancel culture. He rightly notes that a natural double standard arises in the way men and women deal with aggressive public confrontation in the marketplace of ideas, one that shapes our discourse for the worse.

I’m not sure yet whether or not I agree with some of the conclusions of the piece, but there’s no doubt that parts of it ring very true, and the rest is worth your consideration.

“Things that we talk about as involving “young people,” “college students,” and “liberals” are often gendered issues…

To simplify, you have the left, which leans towards the blank slate and opposes gender stereotypes but demands women in public life be treated as too delicate for criticism, and conservatives, who believe in sex differences but say to treat people as individuals. But if men and women are the same, or are only different because of socialization that we should overcome, there’s no good reason to treat them differently. And if they are different and everyone should accept that, then we are justified in having different rules and norms for men and women in practically all areas of life, including political debate…

For all our talk of equality, our culture treats violence, incivility, and aggression towards women much more seriously than the same towards men. This creates a difficult dynamic, in which if a man disagrees strongly with a woman, he has to tread very carefully if he is not to be judged harshly by observers…

A man can’t just yell in another man’s face for 5 or 10 minutes about how he’s hurting his feelings. If a man does behave this way, bystanders are more likely to feel disgusted than join in or play the role of white knight. The man at the receiving end of the abuse is at some point going to have to escalate towards violence, or back down and say something about how this is beneath him. Depending on the situation, observers may assume violence is a distinct possibility, and get between the two sides.

None of these options are available when getting yelled at by a woman…One can think of antifa, which punches people it disagrees with, as a more masculine form of cancel culture, and it’s generally less effective than the more feminine HR class in shaping our politics.”

Podcast Update
This week on High Noon, I had the pleasure of interviewing my own “mentor,” David Azerrad, who is an Assistant Professor and Research Fellow at Hillsdale College’s Van Andel Graduate School of Government.

Among the topics we discussed were how to deal realistically with human nature’s inherent tribalism, how to balance the increasingly oligarchic power of our credentialed ruling class, and whether we need more democracy or better elites.

We also dived into the role manly spiritedness plays in building civilization, and how to revive the American masculine ideal that captured the heart of the world through art forms like the Hollywood Western.

Weekly reminder: pleeeeease rate and review the pod over at Apple podcasts or other podcast services, it helps so much!

Fashion Moment of the Week
About this time of year, I get really sick of the leggings-and-puffer routine I’ve been doing since December. This Marie Claire piece has some great suggestions as to how to shake up your winter attire without sacrificing warmth.

Wednesday Links
Inspector General investigates Capitol police for spying on Americans petitioning their representatives. (The Federalist)

Revenge of the Covid Moms (Bari Weiss’ Common Sense)

Abigail Shrier: gender ideology takes over custody battles. (City Journal)

Emily Jashinsky: it won’t stop with Joe Rogan. (The Federalist)

SCOTUS upholds Alabama’s election maps. (The Federalist)

George Washington University cravenly caves to CCP Olympic Propaganda. (The Federalist)

John Daniel Davidson: Canadian elites created the trucker crisis, and now they don’t know how to end it. (The Federalist)

Mom jailed(!?!) for letting 14 year old daughter babysit her siblings. (Reason)

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

Inez Feltscher Stepman is a senior policy analyst at the Independent Women’s Forum and a senior contributor to The Federalist. She is a San Francisco Bay Area native with a BA in Philosophy from UCSD and a JD from the University of Virginia. She lives in Washington, D.C. with her husband, Jarrett Stepman, her puggle Thor, and her cat Thaddeus Kosciuszko. You can follow her on Twitter at @inezfeltscher and on Instagram (for #ootd, obvi) under the same handle. Opinions expressed on this website are her own and not those of her employers. Or her husband.
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER

 

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Recent Articles

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The Democrats’ anti-family, anti-law enforcement antics are turning off a voting bloc Democrats took for granted.  Read more…


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Feb 08, 2022 01:00 am
Most kids sing “ring around the rosie” at age 5. Then there are the far-left elitist private schools…  Read more…


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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL

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IN THIS ISSUE:

– Democrats’ Position Improves in Redistricting Tally

Democrats’ Position Improves in Redistricting Tally
Breaking down new maps in New York, Tennessee
By J. Miles Coleman and Kyle Kondik
Sabato’s Crystal Ball

Dear Readers: Join us tomorrow, Wednesday, Feb. 9, as Center for Politics Director Larry J. Sabato interviews Rep. Ro Khanna (D, CA-17) about Khanna’s new book, Dignity in a Digital Age: Making Tech Work for All of Us. The program will run from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. eastern time. You can watch at this link.See here for more information about the event.

— The Editors

KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE

— Thanks in large part to state courts ruling against Republican gerrymanders in North Carolina and Ohio and Democrats drawing an aggressive gerrymander of New York, the Democratic position has improved in our running assessment of House redistricting so far. Republicans remain favored to flip the House in 2022.

— The new Democratic gerrymander in New York gives the party a great chance to win 22 of the state’s 26 seats, although they may not realize those ambitions fully in 2022.

— The newly-enacted Republican gerrymander in Tennessee gives the GOP what should be a very easy pickup in November.

Our running redistricting tally

Amidst an almost-daily flurry of redistricting news, the Democrats’ position has improved from our last update about a month ago.

The primary reason for this is that aggressive gerrymanders by Republicans in North Carolina and Ohio were struck down by state courts, and for the time being, those states do not have maps. Meanwhile, Democrats enacted an aggressive gerrymander of their own in New York, which we will analyze in some depth below. There have been other important developments — such as the U.S. Supreme Court allowing the Republicans’ 6-1 gerrymander of Alabama to stand for 2022 after a lower court had struck it down on racial grounds and the Republicans enacting an 8-1 gerrymander of Tennessee — but the action in those 3 aforementioned big states is what is driving the changes in our overall accounting of redistricting.

A few days after New Year’s Day, we listed 283 districts (out of 435) as having completed redistricting. Based on our ratings of the new districts, we had 135 seats rated Safe, Likely, or Leans Republican, and an identical number, 135, rated at least Safe, Likely, or Leans Democratic. We also had 13 Toss-ups. Compared to what the parties already held in these states, we had Republicans up 2 seats and Democrats down 14. The significant Democratic decline included several seats rated as Toss-ups, some of which would have been Toss-ups under both the old and new district lines.

As of Tuesday, Feb. 8, we list 308 districts (or about 71% of all the districts) as having new lines (that excludes North Carolina and Ohio, who moved out of the “completed” group following court action, and includes New York and a handful of other states that have completed redistricting in recent weeks). We now rate 156 of these districts as Safe, Likely, or Leans Democratic, 138 as Safe, Likely, or Leans Republican, and 14 as Toss-ups. Democrats are down 10 seats from what they currently hold in these states, and Republicans are down 4 (the full ratings are here). So the situation is a little better for Democrats and a little worse for Republicans — and, again, those developments in the big states are driving the action. That said, the Democrats still would have to win the lion’s share of the Toss-ups to maintain parity with what they have now in the states that have finished redistricting — something that is likely going to be very difficult given what very well could be a challenging set of political circumstances for Democrats in the fall.

Overall, we continue to see Republicans as favorites to win the House majority in November. That continues to have much more to do with the political environment than redistricting.

With that, let’s take a closer look at the recently-enacted New York map, which is a Democratic gerrymander.

Partisan gerrymanders pass in New York, Tennessee

As the Crystal Ball was anticipating in our update last week, a couple of congressional gerrymanders were signed into law over the past few days, with New York Democrats and Tennessee Republicans both getting their way.

Though New York had a newly-formed independent commission to oversee the line drawing this cycle, the legislature retained the power to draw the lines itself. As expected, Democratic legislators ended up doing just that, and Gov. Kathy Hochul (D-NY) made good on her earlier suggestion that she’d use the redistricting process to boost her party’s prospects.

Hochul’s approach is a departure from that of her predecessor, former Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo. A decade ago, he seemed intent on taking the high road, and publicly decried gerrymandering — Republicans also still controlled the state Senate back then, meaning that neither side could dominate the process. As a result, New York ended up going with a court-drawn map for the decade. But this round, New York supplanted Illinois as the largest state where Democrats had a free hand in drawing a map, although some Republicans may complain that California’s independent commission made consistently pro-Democratic choices.

While New York lost a district — had it counted just 89 more residents in the last census, it would have retained all its seats — Democrats seem likely to come out ahead. If the Democratic plan pans out as intended, the number of Republicans in the New York delegation will shrink from 8 of 27 to 4 of 26.

In surveying the Empire State, we don’t have to look far to see the handiwork of Democratic map-drawers. On Long Island, NY-1 and NY-2 began as light-red Republican-held seats — both gave Trump 51% of the vote 2020. But redistricting pushed them in politically divergent directions.

The last Democratic midterm, 2014, turned out to be an especially rough cycle for New York Democrats. In NY-1, which is the eastern half of Suffolk County, then-Rep. Tim Bishop (D, NY-1) lost by a wide 9-point margin to then-state Sen. Lee Zeldin. In the cycles since then, the district has been an on-and-off target for national Democrats, though Zeldin has usually won by similar margins. But last spring, as scandals were beginning to engulf then-Gov. Cuomo’s tenure, Zeldin entered the gubernatorial contest, opening up NY-1.

Meanwhile, for much of the last decade, Republicans held down NY-2, which was drawn to be the bluer of the 2 seats, with Peter King, a bombastic moderate whose attention to local issues paid off at home. When King retired in 2020, Republican Andrew Garbarino won the seat over Democrat Jackie Gordon, who had support from the moderate Blue Dog Coalition.

In their remap, Democrats made NY-1 several notches bluer — adding precincts around the city of Islip bumped Joe Biden’s share in the district from 47% to 55% — while they conceded NY-2, where Biden’s share drops from 47% to 42%. Garbarino is safe in the new 2nd while the 1st looks likely to see competitive primaries on both sides (the Democratic field includes Gordon). We are starting NY-1, which covers some traditionally swingy areas, as a Toss-up, although this is a district Democrats should be able to win in most years (it’s just that 2022 might be a bad Democratic year, which has bearing on all of our ratings).

Moving west — and closer to New York City — Rep. Kathleen Rice’s (D, NY-4) district sees few substantial changes. NY-4 is contained entirely within Nassau County, and, in the old district, Rice’s 56% was close to the 55% Biden took. The Crystal Ball rates NY-4 as Likely Democratic.

NY-3, which is being vacated by 3-term Rep. Tom Suozzi, who is mounting an uphill primary challenge against Hochul, saw some creative changes. Though it retains its Long Island focus — 2/3 of its population comes from Nassau and Suffolk counties — it reaches across the Long Island Sound to grab about 143,000 Westchester County residents. NY-3 also adds a handful of Bronx precincts. These additions nudge Biden’s share in the district up to 56.4% from 54.5%. We are starting this district as Likely Democratic too.

The Democratic primary for NY-3 already includes at least 6 candidates — state Sen. Alessandra Biaggi was the most recent candidate to enter, though she comes from the part of the district that was most recently added and will likely have to make inroads in Long Island. George Santos, the GOP’s 2020 nominee, is running again, and Curtis Sliwa, Republicans’ 2021 nominee for New York City mayor, is also openly considering the race.

The only district that is located entirely within New York City that should be competitive between the 2 parties is NY-11. While the majority of the district still comes from Staten Island — by far the most conservative of the city’s 5 boroughs — NY-11 expands its holdings in Brooklyn. Importantly, those new precincts are heavily Democratic. On the outgoing map, Biden carried the Brooklyn part of NY-11 by just 50%-49%. By taking the district into the Park Slope neighborhood, the mappers expanded that Brooklyn Biden margin to 79%-20%. Overall, the new district supported Biden by almost 10 points.

While the changes to NY-11 don’t bode well for first-term Republican Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, we are starting the race out as a Toss-up. Former Rep. Max Rose (D, NY-11), who held the seat for a term before losing to Malliotakis, would probably start out as a favorite in the general election, but he may have to work for the Democratic nomination. Rose was known as a moderate Democrat while he was in Congress — while this helped him run ahead of Biden in the old district, primary voters in the newer (and trendier) parts of the district may be less impressed. Former New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, who lives in Park Slope, is also reportedly considering a run in the district. Though he beat Malliotakis, who was then his GOP opponent for mayor in 2017, in a landslide, she would have carried the new NY-11 by 18 points in her mayoral run. Of course, local voting patterns don’t always carry over to federal elections, but the Democratic primary in the district could be crucial.

Moving to Upstate New York, Democrats made several key changes aimed at bolstering their prospects.

Map 1 compares the Upstate districts on the outgoing map to those on the recently-enacted map. Though there has been some debate among geography buffs and locals as to where the region starts, for our purposes, we’re defining the “Upstate” districts as those that are located entirely north of New York City. Additionally, as Hillary Clinton performed a bit worse than Biden throughout the region, we’re using the 2016 presidential numbers, which are less rosy for Democrats than 2020’s, as a baseline for Map 1.

Map 1: Upstate New York Districts, 2020 vs 2022

On the outgoing map, Trump carried 6 districts to Clinton’s 5 — that balance become 7-3 in Clinton’s favor on the new map. The 3 remaining Trump-won seats are also, collectively, considerably safer: There are no marginal Trump seats on the new map, as he carried all 3 by over 20 points.

Rep. Elise Stefanik (R, NY-21) retains a North Country seat that, geographically, sits atop the state. Though this area was competitive a decade ago — if it was in place in 2012, it would have likely been a rare McCain-to-Obama seat — it swung sharply rightward in the Trump era.

NY-27 is the most heavily Republican seat on the current map — speaking of 2012, Gov. Hochul narrowly lost reelection in this district that year. Though NY-27’s designation was eliminated (the state now only has 26 districts), the new NY-24 could be considered its successor. The redrawn 24th is a curious district that begins in the Buffalo area and, aside from a few miles of waterfront in Rochester, runs the length of Lake Ontario. About 60% of the new 24th comes from counties that Rep. Chris Jacobs (R, NY-27) currently represents, so he should be a heavy favorite in the primary and the general election.

The third safely Republican seat on the new map is NY-23, which is an open district encompassing most of the Southern Tier. Republican Rep. Claudia Tenney was clearly the member most adversely impacted by the new plan: her current NY-22 was split 5 ways. Though she only represents less than 10% of the new 23rd, it seemed the most logical option for her, and she has announced a run there. Though Tenney was known for her two close bouts with former Democratic Rep. Anthony Brindisi — she lost 51%-49% in 2018, then beat him by 109 votes in 2020 — she, or basically any Republican nominee in the new 23rd, will not have much to worry about in NY-23 for the general election.

Staying in western New York, Rep. Joe Morelle (D, NY-25) and Brian Higgins (D, NY-26) both see relatively minor changes to their districts — the former represents Rochester while the latter has Buffalo. Democratic mappers could have probably drawn a third blue seat in the area, but perhaps that would risk spreading their voters too thin. As it was, Morelle’s predecessor, the late Democratic Rep. Louise Slaughter — an institution in the region — was nearly upset in 2014. Higgins’ predecessor, Rep. Jack Quinn, was a popular Republican who, at times, could run over 50 points ahead of the national ticket. Though such Republicans are rare now, perhaps those memories informed the more cautious approach Democrats took.

In fact, something that helped Democrats going into the redistricting process was that Republican Rep. John Katko — an overperformer who may be the closest contemporary equivalent to Jack Quinn — announced his retirement. Katko’s district, long based in the college town of Syracuse (where President Biden earned his law degree) gets more Democratic as it adds Ithaca, which includes Cornell University. In 2020, Biden carried Ithaca’s Tompkins County by a nearly 50-point margin, making it the bluest county in the state, aside from 3 counties in New York City.

The new Syracuse-to-Ithaca seat favored Clinton 53%-40%, and Biden took that spread up to 58%-40%. Still, in midterm years, college counties can have some odd turnout dynamics, and, as an open seat, we’re reluctant to move NY-22 completely off the board. We’re starting it as Likely Democratic.

Rep. Paul Tonko (D, NY-20) who was first elected in 2008 to represent the state’s capital city, takes a slight hit — Clinton’s share in his Albany-area seat drops by 3 points — but Republicans have usually not made strong attempts at this seat.

Some of the most substantial changes on the new map are south of Albany, in the Hudson Valley, where Democrats had to shore up some of their swing-district incumbents.

Though 2-term Rep. Antonio Delgado (D, NY-19) was already known for earning significant crossover support, mappers strengthened his hand: his new district would have matched the national vote in 2016, going 48%-46% for Clinton, and it replaces a district that went to Trump by almost 7 points that year. Delgado’s new 19th adds the Democratic-leaning parts of the old 22nd — specifically the cities of Binghamton and Utica — as well as some blue precincts in Albany’s orbit, while it sheds about 95,000 residents in Dutchess County.

That last change was almost certainly not by happenstance: Delgado’s likely general election opponent is Dutchess County Executive Marc Molinaro. As the GOP’s gubernatorial nominee in 2018, Molinaro carried his home county 52%-45% against Cuomo — for context, it favored Clinton by less than 500 votes in 2016 and gave Biden a clearer 54%-44% margin in 2020. Molinaro would’ve actually carried the redrawn NY-19 by 3 points in his 2018 statewide bid, although Cuomo was probably uniquely unpopular Upstate.

Going further south, Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (D, NY-18), who is running for a 6th term while chairing the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, is also helped. NY-18, which supported Trump by 2 points in 2016, was redrawn into a district where Clinton claimed a 48%-47% plurality. Perhaps tellingly, despite now containing almost all of Dutchess County, it would have gone to Cuomo by 272 votes in 2018. A key change in NY-18 was the addition of Peekskill, in upscale Westchester County, while much of Putnam County — the sole county in the current district that Maloney has never carried — is roped into fellow Democrat Jamaal Bowman’s NY-16, where it is easily drowned out by Bronx precincts. The highest-profile Republican prospect here is state Assemblyman Colin Schmitt.

We’re starting NY-18 as Leans Democratic and NY-19 as Likely Democratic.

Ideally for Democrats, the map they gerrymandered for themselves would produce a 22-4 statewide edge, up substantially from the 19-8 advantage they hold now. However, our ratings suggest they will have to work to actually realize this advantage in 2022 if indeed there is a Republican-leaning political environment.

In drawing this gerrymander, aside from ignoring the independent redistricting commission that voters created in 2014, Democrats were also were able to muster 2/3rds supermajorities to enact the gerrymander after voters rejected an effort to ease their path to a gerrymander in last year’s November elections.

However, the 2014 constitutional amendment did add language to the state constitution stating that districts should be “as compact in form as practicable” and “shall not be drawn to discourage competition or for the purpose of favoring or disfavoring incumbents or other particular candidates or political parties.” Republicans certainly can make a credible argument that this map violates those principles. Rep. Jerrold Nadler’s NY-10 — which uses a thin strip of precincts to connect dark blue parts of Manhattan to Republican-leaning Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods of Brooklyn — has emerged as a prime point of contention. Whether the courts ultimately agree is unknown: All 7 members of the state’s highest court, the New York Court of Appeals, were appointed by Democratic governors.

Compared to New York, Tennessee represented gerrymandering on a somewhat smaller scale, but the map has already been consequential.

Going into the round of redistricting, it seemed an open question whether Republicans in red states would target Democratic-held districts that were surrounded by red territory, such as IN-1 in northwestern Indiana and KY-3 in Louisville. While those districts have survived largely intact, veteran Rep. Jim Cooper (D, TN-5) was not as fortunate: the heavily Republican legislature in Tennessee split his Nashville base among 3 double-digit Trump seats. Map 2 considers the 2020 presidential and 2018 Senate (which was closer) results under Tennessee’s new map.

Map 2: 2018 and 2020 results on new Tennessee map

Though former Gov. Phil Bredesen (D-TN) very narrowly carried the redrawn TN-5 against now-Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), in a year like 2022 is shaping up to be (read: pro-Republican), replicating that feat would be hard for any Democrat — with that, Cooper announced his retirement last week. Perhaps with the trends in the Nashville metro, Democrats will recover the district at some point this decade, but for now, the Republican gerrymander seems likely to have its intended impact.

The new TN-7, which actually has the bluest portion of Davidson County (Nashville), may be another longer-term Democratic target, but it will take considerable investment. About a quarter of the new TN-7 comes from Davidson County, and those voters gave Biden 72% — but the rest of the district is nearly as Republican, giving Trump 66%. In 2008, Obama claimed a respectable 47% in the district, but to make up for the slump they’ve seen in the rural counties since then, Democrats will probably be more reliant on any gains in suburban Williamson County.

Aside from those districts, the rest of the map is straightforward. TN-9, in the Memphis area, gains some exurban precincts in Tipton County, but keeps its Black majority. While Districts 2 and 3 each have a blue-trending population center, Knoxville and Chattanooga, respectively, both districts include a sampling of smaller and much redder counties.


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38.) THE BLAZE

 


39.) THE FEDERALIST

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40.) REUTERS

The Reuters Daily Briefing

Wednesday, February 9, 2022

by Linda Noakes

Sponsored by   Rohde&Schwarz

Hello

Here’s what you need to know.

Ukraine sees a chance for diplomacy, Iran unveils a long-range missile, and Israel warns of a crisis with the UAE

Today’s biggest stories

A soldier of the U.S. 2nd Cavalry Regiment stands next to combat vehicles as gear is prepared for deployment to Romania at Rose Barracks in Vilseck, Germany, February 9, 2022. REUTERS/Lukas Barth

WORLD

Ukraine believes there is still a chance of resolving the West’s standoff with Russia through diplomacy but that there are already grounds to impose sanctions on Moscow, Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said. The European Central Bank is preparing banks for a possible Russian-sponsored cyber attack as the region braces for the financial fallout of any conflict.

Iran unveiled a new domestically-made missile with a range of 1,450 kilometers, state TV reported, a day after Tehran and Washington resumed indirect talks to salvage a 2015 nuclear deal.

The next leader of Islamic State is likely to be from a close circle of battle-hardened Iraqi jihadists who emerged in the aftermath of the 2003 U.S. invasion. The group of potential successors to Abu Ibrahim al-Quraishi, who blew himself up during a U.S. operation to capture him in Syria last week, includes one commander whom Washington and Baghdad declared killed last year, Iraqi officials said.

Israel extended a deadline that might have halted its airlines’ flights to the United Arab Emirates over an aviation security dispute, but warned of a potential crisis with the Gulf state unless the issue is resolved.

A Belarusian cross-country skier has fled the country with her family because of fears of reprisals by authorities after she was barred from competition over the family’s political views, she and her father said.

The sun rises behind the U.S. Capitol in Washington, February 8, 2022. REUTERS/Tom Brenner

U.S.

Republican and Democratic lawmakers across the United States are drawing political maps that will likely deepen polarization and encourage more extreme candidates by eliminating competitive congressional seats, a new Reuters analysis shows.

Top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell criticized his party’s censure of two prominent Republican critics of Donald Trump, joining an intra-party battle that could upend his efforts to project an image of party moderation in this year’s midterm elections.

The House of Representatives approved legislation to fund federal government agencies through March 11 and avoid a chaotic shutdown of many of Washington’s operations when existing money expires at midnight on February 18.

The leader of the Congressional Black Caucus, Joyce Beatty of Ohio, demanded an apology from Republican lawmaker Hal Rogers of Kentucky after she accused him of touching and insulting her when she asked him to wear a mask.

The Biden administration will place hundreds of migrants caught at the U.S.-Mexico border on house arrest in the coming weeks as it seeks cheaper alternatives to immigration detention.

BUSINESS

The U.S. Justice Department said it has unraveled its biggest-ever cryptocurrency theft, seizing a record-shattering $3.6 billion in bitcoin tied to the 2016 hack of digital currency exchange Bitfinex and arresting a husband-and-wife team on money laundering charges.

Toyota and Honda were upbeat about their full-year profit prospects as tight vehicle supplies caused by a chip shortage allowed Japan’s two biggest automakers to charge their customers more.

Britain’s GSK forecast growth in 2022 after racking up $1.9 billion in COVID-related sales in 2021, beating quarterly forecasts in its first earnings report since rejecting Unilever’s bid for its consumer arm.

Facebook owner Meta Platforms is struggling to stop counterfeiters from pushing fake luxury goods from Gucci to Chanel across its social media apps, as the company barrels into ecommerce.

SoftBank’s decision to list British chip designer Arm is good news for New York, bad news for London and the best option left for the Japanese group after the collapse of its blockbuster sale to Nvidia.

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WINTER OLYMPICS

See our full coverage of the Beijing Games

Jacobellis redemption gives U.S. first gold after Shiffrin nightmare

Quote of the day

“We don’t want to just sit silently while extinctions happen”

Andrew Rypel

Professor of fish ecology at the University of California Davis

California conservationists and farmers unite to protect salmon

Video of the day

Tunisian produces purple dye from sea snails

After years of trial and error, Mouhamad Ghassen Nouira has revived an ancient technique.

And finally…

‘Queen of the BRITs’ Adele wins big at music awards

Chart-topping superstar Adele won the top three prizes at the BRIT Awards, in the first genderless edition of Britain’s annual pop music honors.

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41.) NOQ REPORT

 


42.) BO SNERDLEY

 

  

My dear friends,

It’s hard to believe it will be shortly coming up on a year since I picked my last stack of stories to submit to Rush. Many of you tell me you miss him every day, and I do too. But I also have a new sense of gratitude for the 33 years he spent doing his syndicated show, and find great comfort in knowing his spirit and our mission lives on. We have no choice but to continue pressuring the left and engaging in “the relentless pursuit of the truth,” with the same unwavering courage we were witness to. That’s why I’m emailing you today, and hope to each day, with the news I would have picked in my stack.

I know you, just like me, are bombarded with emails, text messages and unwanted spam calls every day. I’ll cut through all other B.S. but if you don’t want to get my daily stack, please let me know, here.

 

Today’s best political cartoons: Science is more of an art

Michelle Malkin: Who’ll keep Idaho free, safe and great?

Ben Shapiro: The attack on Joe Rogan is an attack on dissent

‘McConnell is done!’ Mitch draws ire for choosing wrong side, rebuking RNC over ‘violent insurrection’

Stacey Abrams finally apologizes for mask rumpus, vows to ‘set the right example’… by wearing a mask

Biden rails against ‘hateful’ FL bill that leaves gender talks to parents, not teachers in primary grades

29 to 9 ruling of Virginia State Senators just delivered huge win for parents, kids and Youngkin

Learn more about Jeeng

Fauci joins new Democrat narrative that full blown pandemic is nearly over – just in time for midterms

Candace Owens makes sweet announcement; celebs rush to congratulate, haters rush to hate

Nancy Pelosi at center of concerns over deep state ‘abuse of powers’ targeting political opponents

Ron Johnson confronts Biden nominee who accused him of white supremacy and lied about it

Republican leaders demand investigation into Capitol Police ‘surveilling’ lawmakers

BS Email Template: Morning

Students walkout after mask ultimatum from school principal

Learn more about Jeeng
Learn more about Jeeng

Chris Cuomo seeks eye-popping settlement with CNN, ‘he wants Megyn Kelly money,’ reports say

DHS U.S. terrorism threat summary includes spreading ‘disinformation’ about not trusting government: ‘ARE YOU OUT OF YOUR MINDS?’

Kinzinger predicts ‘civil war’ coming, says our ‘basic survival at stake’ after being censured by own party

Psaki on truckers: ‘Sporadic congestion and blockages’ in Canada not related to vaccine mandates

Army lt. col. may have ended career with a tweet: ‘It’s time to resign’ over COVID vaxx mandate

You Might Like
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‘Hell hath no fury like an angry mom’: Outraged women run to replace the Dem politicians who refused to listen to them

Biden’s new plan puts single migrant adults under house arrest as ‘cheaper’ alternative to detention

After months of snubs and snarks, Biden finally acknowledges Tesla

Matthew McConaughey explains controversial Super Bowl ad: ‘No, we’re not against technology … or space travel’

Louie Gohmert accuses DOJ of reading his mail – brings ‘proof’

NY Gov. Hochul suddenly ends indoor mask edict, but decides to EXTEND mandate for schools

  
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44.) WORLD NET DAILY

EXCLUSIVE: Dr. Zelenko blows giant hole in every COVID deception
Posted by Art Moore
He’s one of the most respected physicians in America, and now Dr. Vladimir “Zev” Zelenko has given WND an exclusive video interview in which he reveals the best way to defeat the COVID monster. Read more…
Related
WATCH: Empire strikes back! Cops knock down, arrest man, 78, for honking for truckers
Posted by Bob Unruh
This video is simply enraging, as police in Canada get rough with a 4-foot-10, 78-year-old great-grandfather, all because he honked his horn in support of the anti-mandate truckers. Read more…
Related
Mind-blowing: School district caught advising principals how to get parents and students arrested
Posted by Bob Unruh
Out of all the counties in America, we bet you can guess which one is taking part in this lunacy. Read more…
Related
‘Election fraud and COVID-19’: Biden DHS raises terror threat due to ‘misinformation’
Posted by Art Moore
It’s no more Mr. Nice Guy for Joe Biden (if he ever actually was that).

His Department of Homeland Security is raising the terror threat because millions of Americans dare to challenge his bogus narrative. Read more…

Related
Watch: Hollywood actor takes down Brian Stelter with incredible imitation
The video impression of the CNN media dude is simply priceless. Read more…
Putin threatens nuclear war if Ukraine joints NATO
It looks like Russia is getting to rumble when it comes to Ukraine, as Vladiimir Putin is now threatening nuclear war: ‘You won’t even have time to blink your eye.’ Read more…
The leftists’ last stand: Vax mandates
mandatory vaccination gives officials so much power that they are unwilling to let go of it. Read more…
The Gospel and Israel
“If you are a believer – no matter what your differences with me might be – the Gospel is still the Gospel …” Read more…
The ‘missing link’ in the Whoopi/Holocaust story
Another part of the Holocaust Whoopi left out … Read more…
Sarah Bloom Raskin – Biden’s latest anti-freedom nominee
Corruption and political power are bedfellows. One follows the other.
Read more…
Billboard truck ‘congratulates’ college for censoring students
An in-your-face response to one of the worst colleges for free speech in America. Read more…
WATCH: Empire strikes back! Cops knock down, arrest man, 78, for honking for truckers
This video is simply enraging, as police in Canada get rough with a 4-foot-10, 78-year-old great-grandfather, all because he honked his horn in support of the anti-mandate truckers. Read more…
LeBron James nominated for humiliating ‘award’
This can’t be how LeBron James imagined his big screen career starting. Read more…
Electric wheelchair starts house fire, but family is alive thanks to fast-acting good Samaritan
‘We understand if he doesn’t want to be publicly called a hero, but we wanted to thank him personally. If you are this man or know this man, please have him contact me or stop by the house.’ Read more…
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45.) MSNBC


46.) BIZPAC REVIEW

    
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BPR’s best political cartoons: ‘Insurrection’ – another word stripped of its meaning

Michelle Malkin: Who’ll keep Idaho free, safe and great?

Ben Shapiro: The attack on Joe Rogan is an attack on dissent

Kinzinger predicts ‘civil war’ coming, says our ‘basic survival at stake’ after being censured by own party

Fauci joins new Democrat narrative that full blown pandemic is nearly over – just in time for midterms

Candace Owens makes sweet announcement; celebs rush to congratulate, haters rush to hate

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Chris Cuomo seeks eye-popping settlement with CNN, ‘he wants Megyn Kelly money,’ reports say

‘Hell hath no fury like an angry mom’: Outraged women run to replace the Dem politicians who refused to listen to them

After months of snubs and snarks, Biden finally acknowledges Tesla

Congressman details how Pelosi is ‘weaponizing’ Capitol Police to try to silence and destroy him

Army lt. col. may have ended career with a tweet: ‘It’s time to resign’ over COVID vaxx mandate

Politico explains why 2 years in, Biden admin. will recalculate COVID-19 hospitalization data. This should be good.

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Louie Gohmert accuses DOJ of reading his mail – brings ‘proof’

Biden rails against ‘hateful’ FL bill that leaves gender talks to parents, not teachers in primary grades

Stacey Abrams finally apologizes for mask rumpus, vows to ‘set the right example’… by wearing a mask

DHS U.S. terrorism threat summary includes spreading ‘disinformation’ about not trusting government: ‘ARE YOU OUT OF YOUR MINDS?’

‘McConnell is done!’ Mitch draws ire for choosing wrong side, rebuking RNC over ‘violent insurrection’

Biden’s new plan puts single migrant adults under house arrest as ‘cheaper’ alternative to detention

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Matthew McConaughey explains controversial Super Bowl ad: ‘No, we’re not against technology … or space travel’

Psaki on truckers: ‘Sporadic congestion and blockages’ in Canada not related to vaccine mandates

Activists are trying to normalize pedophilia and corporate media is helping them

NY Gov. Hochul suddenly ends indoor mask edict, but decides to EXTEND mandate for schools

Republican leaders demand investigation into Capitol Police ‘surveilling’ lawmakers

Students walkout after mask ultimatum from school principal

Georgia proposes anti-Critical Race Theory bill to fight an ideology liberals claim isn’t being taught. Here are some blatant examples

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47.) ABC

February 9, 2022 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Second gentleman Doug Emhoff escorted out of DC high school because of ‘security threat’: While attending an event at Dunbar High School in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, second gentleman Doug Emhoff was escorted out by a U.S. Secret Service agent because of a reported “security threat.” Emhoff, who was visiting Dunbar to promote a school history program in honor of Black History Month, was ushered out of the room at 2:18 p.m., according to a press pool report. Dunbar’s principal followed a few minutes later, the report said. His staff informed the press pool there was a security threat reported by the school to the Secret Service. Minutes later, a school announcement over the intercom called on teachers to evacuate the school. Reporters left the building as well. Enrique Gutierrez, the press secretary for DC Public Schools, said, “It was an apparent bomb threat,” but then clarified that “students were out and safe.” Emhoff’s communications director, Katie Peters, said Emhoff is also safe. While D.C. police found the threat unrelated to recent bomb threats against historically Black colleges and universities, Ashan M. Benedict, executive assistant chief of police with the Metropolitan Police Department, said his department “can’t rule it out.”
Omicron found in NYC deer raises questions about COVID transmission from animals to humans: The discovery of deer in New York City infected with the omicron variant is raising questions about whether or not animals could potentially transmit COVID-19 to humans. A new study, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, found that 15% of 131 white-tailed deer sampled in the borough of Staten Island tested positive for antibodies. Although there has not yet been any evidence that the virus can spread from animals to humans, the findings raise concerns that deer could become a reservoir of the virus or lead to new mutations. This isn’t the first time deer have been found to be infected with COVID-19. Researchers found samples positive for the virus in deer dating as far back as September 2020 in Iowa. COVID-19-infected deer have since been discovered in several states, including Illinois, Michigan, New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service. Currently, data suggests deer can spread the virus to other deer, but not to humans. But the experts are concerned about finding older strains of COVID-19 variants in deer.
‘The Power of the Dog’ leads Oscar nominations: The nominations for the 94th Academy Awards are in! Leading the pack of nominees is “The Power of the Dog,” which earned 12 nominations. Close behind was “Dune” with 10. “Belfast” and “West Side Story” tied with seven apiece and “King Richard” scored six nominations. With this year’s nominees, 2022 may be the academy’s most historic year yet. “The Power of the Dog” director Jane Campion, who is nominated for best director, is the first woman to be nominated in that category twice. The first was in 1994 for “The Piano.” Actor Troy Kotsur, who was nominated for his performance in “CODA” for best supporting actor, also made history as the first deaf male actor to be nominated for an Academy Award. Lin-Manuel Miranda may also nab an EGOT thanks to “Encanto.” While there were many surprises in this year’s nominees, moviegoers noticed Lady Gaga was missing from the best actress nominations for her performance in “House of Gucci,” but that didn’t stop the singer from congratulating her team for its nomination for best makeup and hairstyling. See the full list of nominees here.
Woman turns 100 with special birthday party, says ‘age is just a number’: One woman rang in another year on Earth in a golden way. Lettice Graham, of New York City, who celebrated her 100th birthday on Feb. 5, marked the milestone with a big birthday bash. The centenarian dressed up in a golden gown, wore a “100 and Fabulous” sash and a “100” tiara for the party, which was held at the Alhambra Ballroom in Harlem. Family members from as far as California and North Carolina were there to celebrate her. During the celebration, New York City Mayor Eric Adams also honored her with a proclamation that declared Saturday, Feb. 5 as “Lettice Graham Day.” Graham, who was born in 1922, said she never thought about living a long time, but said staying active has kept her going all these years. Graham said that age is just a number, the important thing is living fully. “I like for the younger generation to know that just because you get older, that doesn’t mean that you cannot live a life,” she said.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” we are revealing four magical gowns from the new 2022 Disney Fairy Tale Weddings Collection by Allure Bridals. Plus, we will launch The World’s Most Magical Wedding Dress Contest! And our kid correspondent joins us live and tells us about her time at Disneyland. Plus, Annette Bening, star of “Death on the Nile,” joins us live! All this and more only on “GMA.”
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Oscar nominations 2022: Nicole Kidman, Olivia Colman and more react
The 2022 Oscar nominations are in and some of the biggest stars in the film industry reacted to receiving recognition from The Academy.

48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN


49.) NBC FIRST READ

Image

From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Ben Kamisar, Bridget Bowman and Alexandra Marquez

FIRST READ: The era of big Covid mandates is ending

If it’s Wednesday… President Biden meets with CEOs from electric utilities at 2:30 pm ET to discuss fighting climate change… Mitch McConnell calls Jan. 6 a “violent insurrection”… Stacey Abrams apologizes for mask-less photo in GA-GOV… Mehmet Oz and David McCormick battle over China… Rep. Henry Cuellar has a new TV ad in TX-28… And U.S. captures first gold medal of Winter Olympics.

 

But FIRST… The era of big mandates is over.

 

Or at least it’s heading in that direction.

 

That’s the unmistakable conclusion after New York today becomes the latest blue state to end its indoor mask mandatejoining California, Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey and Oregon in loosening their Covid restrictions.

 

It all comes as Omicron cases are on the decline, as more than 75 percent of Americans have received at least one vaccine dose, and as Democrats find themselves on the defensive on masks and other Covid restrictions.

 

It’s also a case where the nation’s politics and public health aren’t aligned, with the CDC guidance still suggesting that 99 percent of Americans should be wearing masks indoors regardless of their vaccination status

 

And where Democratic governors and the Biden White House aren’t aligned either, with the Biden administration still refusing to loosen its mandates and guidelines.

David Swanson/Reuters

One other thing: These mandates are coming to an end without Democrats taking a victory lap – while Republicans argue that Democratic governance has been wrong this entire time.

 

“We should be pointing to the fact that these successes are because of things that we did,” Dem pollster Brian Stryker tells the New York Times. “Democrats need to take the win on how far we’ve come.”

 

The Biden White House’s Covid response team holds a press briefing today at 11:00 am ET.

Data Download: The number of the day is … 43 percent.

That’s the portion of American adults who say that former President Donald Trump “bears a lot of responsibility for the violence and destruction” on Jan. 6, per a new poll from Pew Research conducted Jan 10-17 of this year.

 

That’s a decline of 9 percentage points since last January, when 52 percent said Trump bore “a lot” of responsibility.

 

Fifty-seven percent of Republicans and those who lean toward the party believe Trump bears no responsibility for the attack on the Capitol, a view shared by 12 percent of Democrats. And majorities of Republicans both say they have little or no confidence the Jan. 6 committee’s investigation will be fair, and believe Trump either definitely or probably won the 2020 election.

Other numbers you need to know today

400 million: Approximately the number of confirmed Covid cases in the world since the start of the pandemic, according to Johns Hopkins University, an increase of about 100 million in the last month.

 

$57 billion: The price tag for the overhaul of the Postal Service, which passed the House with broad bipartisan support on Tuesday.

 

7: The number of medals (including one gold) won so far by the U.S. Olympic team.

Tweet of the Day: For relaxing times, make it Old Crow time

Midterm roundup

Democrat Stacey Abrams, who is running for Georgia governor, apologizedduring a CNN interview for posing mask-less in a photo with masked children.

 

Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo endorsed David McCormick in Pennsylvania’s GOP Senate primary. The former hedge fund manager has praised China in the past, the Philadelphia Inquirer reports, which has already fueled attack ads from celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz (who has his own ties to China, per Politico). McCormick launched a new TV ad responding to the attacks.

 

Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, launched a new TV ad with less than three weeks to go until his March 1 primary race against attorney Jessica Cisneros. In 30-second spot, Cuellar touts his work with Republicans and says he supports “fully funding law enforcement and border security.”

 

Rep. Jason Smith, R-Mo., has decided not to run for Senate, NBC’s Scott Wong reports, instead vying for the Ways and Means Committee chairmanship. Maryland GOP Gov. Larry Hogan also passed on a Senate run.

 

Republicans are relying on a diverse slate of candidates to retake the House, Politico reports. More than 253 women and 228 people of color have filed to run for the House as Republicans, per the National Republican Congressional Committee.

 

Members of the Kansas state Senate overrode Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly‘s veto of the new congressional map, despite initially falling short of the votes to do so, the Kansas City Star reports. The override effort now heads to the state House.

 

An outside group called the Arkansas Patriots Fund launched an ad boosting Republican Jake Bequette, who is challenging Sen. John Boozman in a primary, spending $332,000 on an ad buy on Fox News, per AdImpact. The ad tracking firm reported that neighboring Oklahoma GOP Sen. James Lankford, who is also being challenged in a primary, placed a $140,000 TV ad buy.

Ad watch: Old statements come back to bite

A Republican-leaning PAC supporting Alabama Senate candidate Katie Britt is attacking Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Ala., in a new ad airing in the state.

 

Brooks secured former President Trump’s endorsement in April, but the Alabama Futures PAC is resurfacing his old anti-Trump statements. In the 2016 clips featured in the ad, Brooks says he won’t endorse Trump ahead of the 2016 Republican primary elections and adds, “I don’t think you can trust Donald Trump with anything he says.”

 

The ad later endorses Katie Britt and a narrator claims that she’s “always been 100 percent pro-Trump.” Alabama Futures PAC has so far booked over $1.4 million worth of ad time in the Senate race.

 

Brooks’ anti-Trump comments were also used in ads against him when he ran for Senate in 2017. Brooks came third in a special election primary to replace former Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala.

ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world

Ohio Democratic Rep. Joyce Beatty says Kentucky Republican Hal Rogers told her to “kiss my a—” when she asked him to put on a mask at the Capitol’s underground subway. Rogers later apologized.

 

The Supreme Court’s recent decision to allow Alabama to hold its primary under contested congressional district lines has Democrats arguing it will dilute the power of Black voters.

 

Congressional staffers looking to unionize are unclear where to go next, as the unique setup of the workplace adds roadblocks to the union drive.

 

NBCLX looks at the political giving history of the owners of the teams in Sunday’s Super Bowl.

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50.) CBS

 


51.) REASON

DHS Keeps Crying Wolf About Domestic Extremists

Plus: Psychedelic decriminalization efforts, how cities throttle small businesses, and more…

In a February 7 bulletin, the Department of Homeland Security warned that fake news is fueling domestic extremism. The warning came complete with new jargon to describe the threat: mis-, dis-, and mal-information (the three are collectively referred to as MDM). “The primary terrorism-related threat to the United States continues to stem from lone offenders or small cells of individuals who are motivated by a range of foreign and/or domestic grievances often cultivated through the consumption of certain online content,” says this latest National Terrorism Advisory System Bulletin, which extends through June 7.
“The United States remains in a heightened threat environment fueled by several factors, including an online environment filled with false or misleading narratives and conspiracy theories, and other forms of mis- dis- and mal-information (MDM) introduced and/or amplified by foreign and domestic threat actors,” the bulletin states. “These threat actors seek to exacerbate societal friction to sow discord and undermine public trust in government institutions to encourage unrest, which could potentially inspire acts of violence. Mass casualty attacks and other acts of targeted violence conducted by lone offenders and small groups acting in furtherance of ideological beliefs and/or personal grievances pose an ongoing threat to the nation.”
Scary-sounding stuff! But as media entrepreneur Tom Elliott points out on Twitter, the department doesn’t have the best track record with these things. By Elliott’s count, this is “the 10th time in 22 months [that] the DHS has issued a warning that ‘anti-government’ ‘domestic violent extremists’ may launch a violent attack.”
Last year, advisory alerts about potential domestic terrorists came in JanuaryMayAugust, and November. With each terror alert lasting several months, they basically covered the whole year.
The latest DHS terrorism alert states that “while the conditions underlying the heightened threat landscape have not significantly changed over the last year,” certain factors have “increased the volatility, unpredictability, and complexity of the threat environment.” These factors include “the proliferation of false or misleading narratives, which sow discord or undermine public trust in U.S. government institutions.” Specifically, it mentions narratives about election fraud and COVID-19.
What’s interesting about these warnings—which tend to get widely and uncritically amplified in the press—isn’t just that DHS is falsely forecasting attacks but also that it is sowing narratives. First, that it’s most assuredly “MDM” fueling social unrest and anti-government sentiment…not, you know, actual government policies and legitimate grievances with them. Second, that anti-government criticism should necessarily be viewed as suspicious and potentially dangerous.
Viewed one way, better-safe-than-sorry alerts that don’t pan out do little harm. Viewed another, these broadsides—which may influence local law enforcement action and tend to get widely and uncritically amplified in the press—help to delegitimize protests against government policies by casting them as the product of a misinformed populace that should seen as threat. And just like in the heyday of post-9/11 terror alerts, they also help create an atmosphere of fear that drives support for expanded government surveillance—like the newly created domestic terrorism branch in DHS’ Office of Intelligence and Analysis.
“The Department expanded its evaluation of online activity as part of its efforts to assess and prevent acts of violence,” it says in its latest alert. And, as always, it instructs Americans: “If you see something, say something.”

FREE MINDS

Psychedelic decriminalization bills are spreading: 

Will magic mushrooms follow the path of marijuana legalization? Lawmakers in many states are debating psilocybin, a naturally occurring compound found in certain mushrooms that, when consumed, give the user visual and auditory hallucinations. https://t.co/tq7MpzhJPmpic.twitter.com/av9zo8IMk9

— MultiState (@MultiStateAssoc) February 8, 2022

FREE MARKETS

A new study from the Institute for Justice (IJ) shows how cities make starting a business stupidly expensive. The report—Barriers to Business: How Cities Can Pave a Cheaper, Faster, and Simpler Path to Entrepreneurship—looks at startup costs and processes in 20 cities. It found that opening a physical business in these cities takes an average of 45 regulatory steps and interactions with eight agencies.
“You shouldn’t need a pile of cash and a law degree to start the mom-and-pop shop of your dreams,” said IJ City Policy Associate Alex Montgomery, who co-authored the report. “These high price tags and burdens most harm those with the fewest resources at their disposal.”
“Cities can do more to support entrepreneurs than simply providing them with technical assistance and small business resources. Cities must invest in small businesses by removing barriers that are already on the books,” IJ Activism Associate Andrew Meleta, the report’s other co-author, said.
Find the whole thing here.
Small biz wages rise. In other small business news, the National Federation of Independent Business reports that a record 50 percent of U.S. small business owners raised wages in January, as worker shortages persist. “With some 47% of small businesses reporting job openings last month that they could not fill, employers have been raising wages to attract skilled candidates—a trend that doesn’t appear to be reversing any time soon,” Bloomberg points out.

QUICK HITS

Vladimir Putin is scary because he is modern, not because he’s a throwback. He reflects the 21st century to come, not the world that has gone. My latest👇 https://t.co/8WbKhgFM5F

— Tom McTague (@TomMcTague) February 9, 2022

• The 2022 Oscar nominations list is out.
• “Americans tuning in to the Super Bowl on Sunday will be inundated with ads from cryptocurrency companies, including the trading platform FTX, which plans to give away millions of dollars in bitcoin,” reports The Washington Post. FTX’s founder, Sam Bankman, said it’s about painting “a healthy image of ourselves and the industry” in order to assuage U.S. regulator fears.
• Cities are getting on board with City Coins.
• New York City Mayor Eric Adams wants to go all-in on facial recognition technology.
• Revenge of the COVID Moms: They’re mad about masks, and they’re running for office.
• WikiLeaks has raised massive amounts of money for founder Julian Assange’s defense:

Wikileaks has managed to raise ~$50M seemingly without any notice at all by major media.

Fifty. Million. Dollars.

probably nothing https://t.co/sn1IU5a96R

— Edward Snowden (@Snowden) February 8, 2022

• While a number of states have been seeking constitutional amendments to declare there is no right to an abortion, Vermont is going the other direction.
• Utah’s weird liquor laws mean many hard seltzers may be relegated to liquor stores—including some brands who are allowed to sell some flavors of the same beverages in grocery stores. “If you’re looking at your particular favorite brand, they may have certain flavors that meet the glycol based flavoring standards and stay in a grocery or a convenience store and others that use an ethyl alcohol based flavoring component and that doesn’t meet Utah’s unique flavoring test and they will have to go to a [state liquor] store,” Kate Bradshaw, president of the Utah Beer Wholesalers Association, told FOX 13 News.
• A new book challenges the way people first arrived in America.
• PayPal founders Peter Thiel, Luke Nosek, and David Sacks will be discussing the new book The Founders: The Story of PayPal and the Entrepreneurs Who Shaped Silicon Valley with author Jimmy Soni on writer Antonio Garcia-Martinez’ The Pull Request.

Most Popular Stories from Reason.com

 

Mom Handcuffed, Jailed for Letting 14-Year-Old Babysit Kids During COVID-19
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Lifting the Mask Mandate for Air Travel Would Do a Lot More to Cut Down on Unruly Passengers Than an Expanded No-Fly List
Learning the Lessons of the Horrific Beijing Olympics – And How to Reform Future Games
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.

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

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53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER


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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE

 


56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY

 


57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY

 


58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG

 


59.) SARA A. CARTER

 


60.) TWITCHY

 


61.) HOT AIR

 


62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST

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Good morning. It’s Wednesday, Feb. 9, and we’re covering Oscar nominations, a change at a popular exercise company, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
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NEED TO KNOW

Oscar Nominations Released

Nominations for the 94th annual Academy Awards were announced yesterday, led by Jane Campion’s “The Power of the Dog” with 12 nominations. The Netflix-distributed film, a western based on the 1967 novel by Thomas Savage, received nods for best picture and all best acting categories. “Dune” received 10 nominations, followed by “Belfast” and “West Side Story,” each receiving seven nods apiece (see list). Netflix led with 27 nominations, followed by Disney with 23.

 

Following a record-breaking year for diversity at the Oscars, Campion becomes the first woman nominated twice for best director. Lin-Manuel Miranda’s original song nomination for “Dos Oruguitas” could win his EGOT—Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony. “Drive My Car” becomes the first Japanese nod for best picture. Denzel Washington’s best actor nomination extends his record as the most-nominated Black actor in Oscar history.

 

See the biggest snubs and surprises here. The ceremony takes place March 27 (8 pm ET, ABC), with a host for the first time in three years.

 

See the Muppet version of each best picture nominee here.

Peloton Hires New CEO

Peloton is replacing CEO John Foley, laying off about 2,800 employees, and closing some of the warehouses it owns, the fitness company announced yesterday. The changes are seen as an effort to appease investors and slash costs. Barry McCarthy, former chief financial officer at Spotify and Netflix, will replace Foley starting today. Foley will become the executive chair.

 

The announcement comes after activist investor Blackwells Capital urged Peloton’s board of directors to fire Foley and explore a sale as a result of its poor performance in recent months. Yesterday’s announcement, however, doesn’t address investors’ concerns, Blackwells said. The shake-up also follows reports this week of Nike and Amazon signaling interest in potentially buying Peloton.

 

Separately, the company said it lost $439M in its last quarter and lowered its expectations for its full-year revenue. While shares rose 25% at close yesterday, they are still 78% below an all-time high when Peloton was valued at about $52B.

Macron Meets Putin

French President Emmanuel Macron met with Russian President Vladimir Putin yesterday, as Western leaders seek to defuse rising tensions at the Russia-Ukraine border. Macron hinted at the possibility of a diplomatic compromise with Putin, who has amassed more than 100,000 troops in western Russia and nearby allied countries.

 

Analysts disagree over whether Putin is set on a full or partial invasion of Ukraine, or whether he is seeking leverage to influence Russia’s relationship with NATO, a military alliance of which Ukraine is not a member. US intelligence suggests the military buildup is at 70% of what would be required for a full-scale invasion. Separately, Russia reportedly sent warships to the Black Sea, immediately to the south of Ukraine, for military exercises.

 

See a visualization of Russia’s military buildup and a deep dive on the escalating crisis here.

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> American alpine skier Ryan Cochran-Siegle wins Olympic silver 50 years after his mother Barbara Cochran won gold (More) | See latest medal count (More)

 

> Adele wins top prize of Artist of the Year at 2022 Brit Awards, the UK’s highest profile music awards show (More)

 

> Visual effects pioneer Douglas Trumbull dies at 79 of mesothelioma (More) | George Spiro Dibie, five-time Emmy-winning cinematographer, dies at 90 (More)

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Science & Technology

> Samsung to hold annual product event today; see expected lineup here, including an updated line of Galaxy S22 smartphones (More)

 

> Global methane emissions reached triple preindustrial levels in 2021, according to new analysis; the molecule has 25 times the greenhouse gas effect as carbon dioxide, but exits the atmosphere much quicker (More)

 

> Scientists discover massive sea sponge colonies in the Arctic deep sea; organisms appear to live on inactive underwater volcanos and eat the remains of extinct fauna (More)

Business & Markets

> US stock markets close higher (S&P 500 +0.8%, Dow +1.1%, Nasdaq +1.3%) led by technology sector (More) | US trade deficit increased 27% to record $859B in 2021 (More)

 

> Justice Department seizes $3.6B in allegedly stolen Bitcoin from cryptocurrency exchange hack in 2016 (More)

 

> A $66B sale of UK-based Arm to fellow chipmaker Nvidia collapsed after regulatory scrutiny for what would have been the largest chip deal ever; Arm owner SoftBank plans to pursue initial public offering (More)

Politics & World Affairs

> House of Representatives passes short-term funding bill to keep the federal government open through March 11; bill now heads to the Senate (More)

 

> Second gentleman Doug Emhoff evacuated from Black History Month event at Washington, DC, high school due to bomb threat; incident comes days after historically Black colleges around the US received similar threats (More)

 

> New York to end indoor mask mandate tomorrow (More) | Canadian antivaccine mandate trucker protest shuts down the US-Canada Ambassador Bridge, which connects Detroit and Windsor, Ontario; bridge is the busiest North American border crossing for trade (More) | See US COVID-19 stats here (More)

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ETCETERA

Why we can’t pay attention anymore.

 

Photos of China’s Olympic ski jump go viral.

 

… and Olympic skiers get disqualified for baggy clothes.

 

Viewing the Northern Lights from Ireland.

 

Winners of the ASTRO2021 photo contest.

 

Watch the Earth rise above the moon’s horizon.

 

Capturing the beauty of Madagascar’s ancient Baobab trees.

 

Introducing the apocalypse jacket.

 

Clickbait: You won’t believe what one Idaho man did with his chin.

 

Historybook: President William Henry Harrison born (1773); RIP poet and playwright Paul Laurence Dunbar (1906); “The Color Purple” author Alice Walker born (1944); Record 73 million watch The Beatles on “The Ed Sullivan Show” (1964).

“It is a little dark still, but there are warnings of the day and somewhere out of the darkness, a bird is singing to the Dawn.”

– Excerpt from Representative American Negroes, an essay by Paul Laurence Dunbar

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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH

 


64.) NATIONAL REVIEW

 


65.) POLITICAL WIRE

 


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73.) POPULIST PRESS

In a statement, the judges of the state’s highest court wrote: “we deny petitioners’ motion to amend, and we dismiss the petition

IN DEPTH… 

  1. US & 20 nations condemn China  New
  2. ‘Fight Club’ Ending Restored in China  New
  3. Trudeau: Canada needs more mandates  New
  4. Bill links Ukraine aid to US border  3 hours ago
  5. Only 8% watch CNN ‘every day’  3 hours ago
  6. Psaki: We’re a ‘Clean Energy Superpower’  3 hours ago
  7. Small Business Declining Optimism  4 hours ago
  8. Biden’s 1st Year, Biggest Ever Trade Deficit  4 hours ago
  9. Tucker SLAMS Big Tech for targeting Truckers  4 hours ago
  10. Neil Young tells Spotify workers to quit  4 hours ago
  11. Supreme Court Announcement Rocks DC
  12. Biden Seeks to Raise Federal Pay by 4.6 Percent  1 hour ago
  13. Blackrock director predicts financial doomsday coming… 2 hours ago
  14. AFGHAN REFUGEE, BROUGHT TO U.S. BY BIDEN, CHARGED WITH SEXUAL ASSAULT 
  15. Vernon Jones Withdraws From Georgia Gubernatorial Race  2 hours ago
  16. USS Savannah Commissioned in Georgia  2 hours ago
  17. China’s Expanding Tech Agenda  2 hours ago
  18. Russia’s Hypersonic Strategy  2 hours ago
  19. VA Top Court: Youngkin mask order OK  2 hours ago
  20. Is our Military Ready to Defend Taiwan?  2 hours ago
  21. Pentagon must prioritize hypersonic defense  2 hours ago
  22. Singer Katharine McPhee Blasts Stacey Abrams  2 hours ago
  23. Reps Debate Jan. 6 Comm After Midterms  3 hours ago
  24. American Skier High-Speed Crash  3 hours ago
  25. Beijing Hockey Play with Masks  3 hours ago
  26. Biden’s Gigi Sohn Might Be In Trouble  3 hours ago
  27. John Cleese on Comedian Warnings  3 hours ago
  28. Obama spotted maskless  3 hours ago
  29. Chris Christie Shock J6 Walkback  3 hours ago
  30. Brooklyn Dem latest to go GOP  3 hours ago
  31. Court time for Hunter’s pal, Devine  3 hours ago
  32. Con Politicians Do Beijing’s Bidding  3 hours ago
  33. NATO Future Big Mil Europe  3 hours ago
  34. Ottawa Activist taunts Trudeau  3 hours ago
  35. Fear Rules Ukraine’s Frontiers  3 hours ago
  36. China Media: ‘Pelosi Is Right,’ Shutup  3 hours ago
  37. Ad rips Dems who stole childhoods  3 hours ago
  38. Cuomo regrets quitting  3 hours ago
  39. China Buys Stocks to Stem Rout  3 hours ago
  40. Bad Time to Buy a Home  3 hours ago
  41. Ted Cruz got $50K bitcoin in dip  3 hours ago
  42. Peter Thiel leaving Meta for Trump  3 hours ago
  43. BP Highest Profit in 8 Years  3 hours ago
  44. Soros’ Failed China Deals Reemerge  3 hours ago
  45. Biden DHS new terror threat warning  3 hours ago
  46. Biden Cabinet member resigns  3 hours ago
  47. SCOTUS: AL can use GOP map  3 hours ago
  48. IL fights retail crime theft rings  3 hours ago
  49. Jill Biden: No $109B college program  4 hours ago
  50. IRS Retreats on face recognition  4 hours ago
  51. Biden: No pipeline if Russia invades  4 hours ago
  52. New Implants for Paralyzed — walk?  4 hours ago
  53. USA 24 YEAR gold medal drought  4 hours ago
  54. Injuries mount…  4 hours ago
  55. 14th keeps Trump out of WH? NC Test  4 hours ago
  56. DOJ OKs heroin injection sites?  4 hours ago
  57. Canada warns Repubs on ‘Freedom Convoy’  4 hours ago
  58. Alaska truckers mobillize in support…  4 hours ago
  59. Oz lawmakers fear escalation  4 hours ago
  60. Student Mandates Next Political Crisis?  4 hours ago
  61. Chimps First Aid on Selves, Each Other  4 hours ago
  62. Applies insect to wound…  4 hours ago
  63. UPDATE: Israeli cops wiretapped powerful  4 hours ago
  64. Used on Netanyahu son, aides…  4 hours ago
  65. Spyware Scandal Intensifies…  4 hours ago
  66. META Threatens Europe Exit  4 hours ago
  67. Thiel stepping down from board…  4 hours ago
  68. To Pursue Political Agenda?  4 hours ago
  69. Anchors Still Furious Over Zucker Exit  4 hours ago

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78.) NATURAL NEWS

NaturalNews.com
Govt whistleblower warned in 1995 about global depopulation using engineered bioweapons
Mike Adams Former government geological expert and deep underground military base engineer Phil Schneider was murdered (executed) after going public in 1995 with shocking details of what he knew.

In archived speeches, Schneider describes a biological weapon to reduce global human populations, followed by a one world government authoritarian system to enslave the survivors.

Sound familiar? Sound like what we’ve all witnessed over the last two years?

Get the full, shocking story in today’s feature article and podcast here.

New Videos from Brighteon.com
Embalmer Richard Hirschman reveals novel clotting in 65 percent of casesWatch this video
Steve Bannon’s War Room | Guests: Edward Dowd –Thomas Renz — Robert MaloneWatch this video
60 percent of Seeds not Spreading because Animals / Pollinators are dead.. Real Reason Why Everything is Dying…Watch this video
Featured Articles
Report: Covid vaccines inflicting far more deaths than previously thought: “Could be looking at hundreds of thousands more dead”By JD Heyes | Read the full story
Mysterious white clots found in deceased vaccinated individualsBy Mary Villareal | Read the full story
Sponsor: Red miso powder is packed with highly bioavailable nutrients that support healthy digestive and immune functions.
Switzerland to experience weeks or even months of power grid failures, warns president as nation continues to dismantle its own electrical infrastructureBy Ethan Huff | Read the full story
After aggressively pushing masks and “vaccines” for the past year, fully jabbed and “boosted” Democrat Sen. Ben Luján suffers severe strokeBy Ethan Huff | Read the full story
Sponsor: Discover the incredible health-supporting properties of ultra-clean Organic Goji Berries.
Covid “vaccines” are causing micro blood clots in millions… and there’s no medical solutionBy Ethan Huff | Read the full story
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More of Today’s Articles Fascist Canadian police state attacks trucker Freedom Convoy, supporters say government is “ripping everything apart”
Late Sunday night, Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson declared a fake “local state of emergency” to try to stop the Freedom Convoy truckers and their supporters from protesting Canada’s …Doherty Institute director joins growing number of experts saying no to boosters
The head of the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity (Doherty Institute) advised against repeated booster doses of the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine. The Australian research …Tech treason: U.S. tech giants Intel, Microsoft, GE providing “direct support” to Chinese military, ChiCom state security apparatus
If America loses a future war to China or even a major battle, we will have some of the largest U.S. technology companies to blame for it, according to a just-released report. …GOP attorneys general looking into potential fraudulent activity by GoFundMe over Canadian trucker convoy debacle
A number of GOP attorneys general are looking into recent actions by GoFundMe that they believe may constitute fraud after the platform initially said it would distribute donations for Canadian …

Whistleblowers reveal covid vaccines are causing cancers and AIDS
Ben Armstrong discussed how doctors are saying Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines are causing cancer and vaccine-induced AIDS at an alarming rate during the February 2 episode of “The Ben …

FDA now burying incriminating documents showing Moderna’s covid “vaccine” to be harmful
A document used by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to approve Moderna’s Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19) mRNA (messenger RNA) “vaccine” has been scrubbed from the internet …

Covid vaccine mandate impacting truck drivers at southern border, worsening supply chain disruptions
The Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine mandate implemented by the U.S. has significantly impacted trucking at the southern border. Unvaccinated truckers coming from Mexico have been barred from …

Biden’s plan to flood America with a billion covid-19 tests expected to put even more pressure on collapsing supply chain
The federal government has promised to provide every single household in America with up to four rapid antigen Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) tests, with taxpayers shouldering the cost. Regular …

Doctor who developed HCQ protocol has now successfully treated thousands of covid-19 patients
In the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, many doctors found success treating patients with hydroxychloroquine, or HCQ. The anti-malaria drug was considered one of the most promising treatments …

Virus that causes covid-19 has never been isolated in a lab – Drs Lee Merritt and Tom Cowan explain
Drs. Lee Merritt and Tom Cowan believe that SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19), has never actually been isolated and genetically sequenced despite …

Evidence shows covid vaccines cause serious damage to the immune system
More evidence shows that the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines no longer work, with health officials and world leaders now acknowledging that the shots are unable to end the …

Ottawa police ban bringing supplies to trucker Freedom Convoy – no soup for you
Law enforcement in Canada is reportedly breaking the law, ironically enough, by interfering with the Freedom Convoy of truckers protesting Canada’s new mandatory Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19) …

Jeffrey Prather: Tyranny of leadership hounds US military, compounds problems brought about by covid vaccines – Brighteon.TV
The “tyranny of the leadership” is plaguing the U.S. military, compounding the problems brought about by the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19). Taking a combative stance, “The Prather …

Flashback: GoFundMe allowed support for CHAZ/CHOP zone in Seattle even after murders
The GoFundMe platform came under fire last week for initially denying millions in donations from going to the Freedom Convoy truckers in Canada, allegedly because there was ‘violence’ …

Czech Republic Supreme Court: Vaccination requirements set by government are invalid
The Czech Republic’s Supreme Court has ruled that citizens cannot be forced to receive the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine. Measures that allow only vaccinated people or those who have …

Melissa Red Pill: There was clear corruption during 2020 US elections – Brighteon.TV
Melissa Red Pill told her viewers during the February 2 episode of the “Freedom Force Battalion” on Brighteon.TV that there was clear corruption during the 2020 United States elections. …

Censorship at its finest: Facebook removes page for DC Freedom Convoy
American truckers slammed Facebook for removing their protest and organizing page, called “Convoy to D.C. 2022.”  It serves as a place for truckers to coordinate their trek from …

Doug Billings: America needs to secure its border – Brighteon.TV
“The Right Side” host Doug Billings said the United States needs to secure its borders if it wants to stop child and…

Illegal immigrants are being given perks and deposited across US communities at an alarming rate – Brighteon.TV
Ann Vandersteel went out of the studio, took a trip to the border city of McAllen, Texas, and found how life has changed for those wishing to enter the U.S. via the southern tip of the state. The …

Dr. Carole Lieberman: Biden repeating a doomed history with decision to send US military to Ukraine – Brighteon.TV
Clinical forensic psychiatrist Dr. Carole Lieberman said that United States President Joe Biden is “repeating a doomed history” with his decision to send the U.S. military to Ukraine. …

UK government to criminalize online posts that disagree with “official” covid narratives, even if those narratives keep changing
The new “Online Safety Bill” in the United Kingdom is forcing Big Tech to censor all online content that the government deems “hateful” or containing …

UK cops arrest, raid home of disabled women’s rights activist for being anti-transgender
Police in the United Kingdom have arrested and raided the home of a gender-critical women’s rights activist due to her outspoken criticism of transgender ideology. On January 23, Gwent …

      
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81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL

 


82.) CNN


83.) THE DAILY CALLER

 


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Two borders that have nothing to do with each other

Posted: 08 Feb 2022 08:05 PM PST

(Paul Mirengoff)Some of the rhetoric in the debate over Ukraine policy seems wildly disproportionate to actual disagreement on the subject. I don’t know of any Ukraine “hawk” who advocates sending U.S. forces into battle against Russia, if it invades. I don’t know any who advocates admitting Ukraine to NATO in the near future.

The “hawks” want severe sanctions if Russia invades. In addition, they support moving a relatively small number of U.S. troops to nearby countries and supplying Ukraine with arms. They also reject the idea of agreeing to Russia’s demand that America renounce supporting Ukraine’s admission to NATO which, again, isn’t really on the table now.

Reasonable people can disagree on all of these counts. However, even if the hawks get their way (as I think they will), U.S. forces will not be in harm’s way. The funds used for military aid to Ukraine will be a drop in the bucket. Sanctioning Russia won’t harm our economy the way sanctioning China might.

Thus, I wonder whether those who vehemently attack the Ukraine hawks are more worked up about other matters — George W. Bush’s interventionism, the foreign policy establishment generally, the mass influx of immigrants at our southern border — than they are about Ukraine. This seems like a case of displacement.

Take for example the rant of Rep. Madison Cawthorn, a North Carolina Republican. Last week, calling Joe Biden an “inept, geriatric despot,” he attacked the president on the House floor for sending U.S. troops closer to Ukraine. Cawthorn added that the path to American national security “lies in securing our southern border, not the Russia–Ukraine border.”

Cawthorn can pun all he wants about “borders.” The Ukraine issue has nothing to do with illegal immigration from Mexico.

The troops Biden is sending to Eastern Europe aren’t being diverted from our southern border. Biden has no intention of sending the military to Texas. And even if he did, we have enough forces to cover both assignments.

As Carine Hajjar says at NRO, “last time I checked, one domestic crisis didn’t mean the U.S. had to ditch its foreign policy.” Or that our foreign policy should less (or more) interventionist.

  
Who Is Teaching Our Children?

Posted: 08 Feb 2022 05:52 PM PST

(John Hinderaker)A better question might be, who is teaching the people who teach our children?

But first, this observation–as I have written before, the liberal position on Critical Race Theory is: “It doesn’t exist. And it’s awesome!” The first line of defense is always to claim that CRT is a bogeyman invented by the right; there is no such thing in our schools. But that claim, which usually is easily proved false, soon gives way to the backup position that anyone who questions CRT must be a racist.

If anyone is in doubt about whether liberal teachers are introducing poisonous, racist and anti-American doctrines into our schools, all you have to do is look at New Business Item 39, which was adopted during last Summer’s annual meeting of the National Education Association, the corrupt teachers’ union that dominates public education in the U.S.

Or you could look at the latest job offering at the University of Minnesota:

The University of Minnesota is seeking an assistant professor of elementary literacy education who has “knowledge of and commitment to” Critical Race Theory.

The assistant professor will work in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction in the College of Education and Human Development and will be responsible for teaching and advising graduate students — including teacher candidates and practicing teachers — in elementary literacy education.

So the poison will spread.

Minimum qualifications include:

Knowledge of and commitment to critical perspectives and traditions in education and literacy education, including (but not limited to) eco- and climate literacy, indigenous and decolonizing pedagogies and methodologies, racial literacy, critical race theory, and anti-racist and anti-oppressive approaches.

This is where the left wants to take education. The professional formation of teachers includes embracing a harmful and divisive ideology that explicitly rejects rationality and objectivity. The theory has moved from an obscure academic concept to very troubling practices that focus on race essentialism, collective guilt, and neo-segregation. All of which violate the most basic principles of equality and justice.

It is long past time for the Left to emerge from hiding and publicly defend its commitment to the racist, anti-American doctrines of Critical Race Theory. Let’s hope we can have the debate before it is too late. Our children are being indoctrinated in racist hate, right now.

  
Has COVID Been Good For Women?

Posted: 08 Feb 2022 04:35 PM PST

(John Hinderaker)During the covid epidemic there was a serious labor shortage, in part because of massively increased unemployment compensation that made staying home a desirable option for many. But that boondoggle ended, most of the world reopened, and yet, the labor shortage continued. Why?

For one thing, quite a few women, having been at home with their families through the height of the epidemic, decided not to return to the labor force when the economy reopened. There are several possible reasons for such decisions: some found that they liked being at home with their children; some committed their time to home schooling; some realized that their families could get by well on one income, particularly since their entire income was taxed at their husbands’ marginal rate.

I had a personal experience with this. An excellent member of my staff, who had two young children but had always been career-oriented, had to stay home with her children for a few months due to a government shutdown. Not having done that before, she found that she liked it. We reopened, but one day she came into my office and told me that she loved her job, but she loved her children more, and resigned. I hated to lose her, but could only applaud her decision.

But many on the Left are not so understanding. Liberal dogma holds that the only proper place for a woman is in the paid workforce, so anything that causes women to stay at home is perforce bad. This piece in Fortune is a good example. The title says it all: “Women’s workforce participation has plummeted. Here’s how to reverse the trend.”

[T]he January jobs report found that 275,000 women left the workforce last month, leaving the women’s workplace participation rate at 57%—a rate that pre-pandemic had not been seen since 1988. An entire generation of progress has been erased in two years.

That is the liberal presumption: more women in the paid workforce–trust me, the other women are working too–represents “progress.”

A paper by sociologist Jessica Calarco found that different-sex, dual-earner couples…

“Different-sex couples”: the world in which we are living.

…grappled with the increased parenting duties of the pandemic in mostly unequal ways, even when that was a reversion from formerly more egalitarian relationships and even when those arrangements negatively affected mothers.

“Negatively affected” means those mothers were not in the paid workforce. It is reasonable to assume, however, that those people did not believe they were “negatively affected.”

These traditionally gendered arrangements were justified as a matter of “practicality” if the mother could more easily work remotely but also by the concept that mothers are “more natural” at caregiving in situations where it was less practical.

Shockingly, most people believe that is true.

In other words, “it just made sense” for Mom to do more, and if it actually didn’t make sense, then, well, she’s just better at it.

We conservatives would say that what makes sense for a given family is best determined by the members of that family. If the best course is for a wife to choose to devote her time to caring for her children (and, not incidentally, her husband), it’s fine with us.

Liberals, however, are generally not so tolerant.

  
Conservative clash captures media attention

Posted: 08 Feb 2022 04:20 PM PST

(Paul Mirengoff)I detect an emerging trend in the anti-conservative mainstream media — using conservatives to attack other conservatives. The New York Times is leading the charge.

How else does one explain the Times publishing the op-ed by “common good conservative” Adrian Vermuele attacking originalism? Or an op-ed by three leading common good (or national) conservatives attacking the Republican foreign policy establishment?

The publication of the two pieces can partially be explained by the Times’ contempt for originalism and by its foreign policy dovishness. But the spectacle of conservative-on-conservative clash is surely the main selling point.

I’m not unhappy the op-eds were published. Though both seem flawed (the foreign policy piece is perhaps most noteworthy for its acknowledgement that many conservatives whom the authors view as their followers don’t agree with them on foreign policy, a point Damon Linker makes here), both contribute to the debate.

But does anyone suppose that Vermuele or the team of Sohrab Ahmari, Patrick Deneen, and Gladden Pappin could publish a Times op-ed that simply stated their views on the Constitution or foreign policy and omitted criticism of other conservatives? I hope no one is that naïve.

The Washington Post gets into the act with a “pass the popcorn” article about the Heritage Foundation. The report focuses on conservative discontent with this D.C. institution as it was run by former head, Kay Coles James. She became the target of severe criticism from Donald Trump supporters such as Tucker Carlson.

James has been replaced by Kevin Roberts whom the Post describes as a “Texas firebrand.” Roberts certainly comes from Texas. He was head of the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation.

Is he a “firebrand”? I don’t know, but nothing in the Post’s article shows him to be.

As evidence that Roberts is, the Post reports that he reopened his Foundation two weeks after the Wuhan coronavirus “first hit.” In addition, he believes that shutdowns were “awful” — “worse than the disease itself.”

This view went against the grain in the first half of 2020. However, it is widely held now, especially if one refines it to say the harm inflicted by shutdowns has exceeded their health benefits. A thorough and fair study of the costs and benefits of shutdowns — if there’s anyone around who would conduct one — might well support this position. I think it would.

Questions about the pandemic response are important, obviously. However, I don’t think they will be central to an institution like Heritage. Issues like education, crime, trade, spending, and China seem more important to a full-purpose conservative think tank going forward.

I would love to see Heritage shift on some, though not all, of these matters.

According to the Post, Roberts’ is all about education. Without getting into the details, I think there’s lots of room for improvement at Heritage on this set of issues. It will be interesting to see how effectively Heritage fights against the teaching of what falls under the rubric of Critical Race Theory in K-12 education.

The issue of crime goes unmentioned by the Post. However, this is where I’d love to see a major reversal by Heritage.

Backed by the Kochs, Heritage helped lead the charge for leniency towards criminals, especially the federal felons favored by the First Step Act of 2018. Once a frequent visitor to Heritage, I don’t think I’ve set foot in the place since the enactment of that legislation.

The landscape of the debate over crime has changed dramatically since 2018. Maybe Heritage, under Roberts, will return to a more traditionally conservative approach — the one that was so effective against crime in the 1990s and early part of this century. More likely, it will retreat to the fringe of the debate. That, itself, would be welcome.

The Post notes that “Heritage experts criticized Trump’s attacks on China.” There is room for criticism of Trump on this issue. However, I believe Trump had the right on line China. If Heritage aligns itself more closely with Trump’s position, I will welcome that, too.

I’m happy, however, that Heritage has held fast to its views on government spending and debt. During the Obama years, Power Line was a constant critic of the debt the U.S. was running up. This didn’t cease to be a major concern just because, after Obama, it was Trump’s spending that added to the debt.

Heritage has always supported free trade. This stance, too, created discontent among many Trump supporters. I’d like to see a synthesis of support for free trade and aspects of the Trumpian critique. Maybe Heritage will help develop such a synthesis. Maybe not.

Clearly, there are major tensions in the conservative movement, including but not limited to the ones the Times has been highlighting and the ones I discuss here. Roberts says he’s not that bothered by them because he believes in “creative conflict.”

I believe in it too, up to a point. My hope is that the outcome of creative conflict at Heritage isn’t determined by fundraising concerns.

In any case, we can count of the Times and the Post to enjoy the conflict.

  
Canadian truckers receive the Tea Party treatment

Posted: 08 Feb 2022 01:25 PM PST

(Paul Mirengoff)I haven’t commented on the protest by Canadian truckers in Ottawa. That’s John’s beat, and he’s doing a great job with it.

However, I did come across this passage in a Daily Mail article about the protests:

James Doull, 24, a diesel mechanic who is organizing truckers parked along Wellington Street, where many of the parliamentary and government buildings are located, claimed ‘all the stuff put out by Trudeau and the government’ about the convoy ‘are lies.’

‘There is no racism, the truckers aren’t vandalizing things,’ he told DailyMail.com. ‘Fringe groups coming in may be responsible but it’s not the truckers themselves.

‘We are not right-wing conspiracists, we are hard-working everyday Canadians who just want our freedom back,’ said Doull, who lives in Grand Manan, New Brunswick.

Since DailyMail.com arrived in Ottawa last week we have seen no indication of violence or vandalism or any extremist political agenda. In fact, the demonstrations have shown the opposite.

Apart from the incessant honking of their horns, all has been peaceful. The truckers seem to have united the people of Canada in a common goal, to get rid of government mandates.

(Emphasis added)

False claims of racism and violence by the truckers remind me of similar slurs against the Tea Party. Readers may the allegation of spitting at a black congressman that turned out to be unsupported and almost certainly false.

There are important differences between the truckers’ protest and those of the Tea Party. The truckers’ actions are highly disruptive and maybe illegal. To the best of my recollection, that wasn’t the case with Tea Party protests.

However, both sets of protesters fell victim to the imperative that forces effectively opposing liberal orthodoxy be defamed as racist and violent.

It’s also worth noting, as the Daily Mail does here, that although GoFundMe promoted fundraising efforts for participants in the destructive Capitol Hill Occupied Protest (CHOP) in Seattle where two teens were shot dead, it has cancelled a fundraiser for the Canadian truckers. Being killed is more “disruptive” and unlawful than being deprived of sleep due to honking (although I’m sure I would hate to experience the latter).

GoFundMe defended its decision to cut off the truckers saying it “supports peaceful protests and believe[d] that was the intention of the Freedom Convoy 2022 fundraiser when it was first created.” However, “we now have evidence from law enforcement that the previously peaceful demonstration has become an occupation, with police reports of violence and other unlawful activity.”

But the reports of trucker violence and hate crimes apparently are bogus. In any case, the CHOP protest in Seattle indisputably was violent. Yet this didn’t seem to bother GoFundMe.

Nor does any desire truthfully to report on what’s actually happening with the truckers in Ottawa preoccupy or constrain the liberal media.

  
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION

 


86.) FIRST TRIGHT

 

Restoration PAC

February 9th, 2022

 


02/09/2022 05:16 CDT


BIDEN SAYS THOSE WHO “SOW DISCORD” AND “UNDERMINE PUBLIC TRUST IN GOVERNMENT” ARE NATION’S BIGGEST THREAT


TODAY’S TOP TEN

BIDEN WEAPONIZES LAW ENFORCEMENT AGAINST CONSERVATIVES

BIDEN’S HOMELAND SECURITY DEPARTMENT essentially says conservative free speech is nation’s biggest threat. The Last Refuge.

INSPECTOR GENERAL OPENS INVESTIGATION into Capitol Police over allegations of spying on members of Congress, staff. The Federalist.

DEVIN NUNES AND TRUMP READY TO TAKE ON Silicon Valley with new platform. American Greatness.

INSECURE BORDER SPREADS LETHAL CRIME to America’s heartland, creating powerful election issue. Just the News.

BIDEN ADMINISTRATION FUNDING FREE CRACK PIPES to promote “racial equity.” ZeroHedge.

LATEST EFFORT TO CANCEL JOE ROGAN was a coordinated left-wing hit job. Accuracy in Media.

HOW THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT USED EVANGELICAL leaders to spread COVID propaganda to churches. Daily Wire.

FACEBOOK, OTHER TECH GIANTS CENSOR inconvenient facts about “climate change.” New York Post.

UNEARTHED EMAILS SHOW COZY RELATIONSHIP between New York Times environmental reporter and Biden Interior Department. Daily Wire.

MUSK BLASTS LIBERAL MEDIA for “relentless hatestream” of bad news. Bloomberg.


If you’d like to share First Right with a friend, text FIRSTRIGHT (all caps, no spaces) to 30161


COMMENTARY WORTH READING


VIDEO WORTH WATCHING

  • GOP Rep says Pelosi is weaponizing the U.S. Capitol Police. Fox News.
  • Biden can’t answer how he’ll stop the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. Grabien News.
  • DeSantis on masking children in schools. Rumble.

LATEST FIRST RIGHT PODCAST

  • An interview with conservative commentator Rachel Bovard. Rumble.

OFFBEAT BEAT


TWEETS OF NOTE

  • (@thecoastguy) Electric cars is about not having cars. Green energy is about not having energy. It’s not about going green, it’s about going without. Tweet.
  • (@EWErickson) In Georiga, it is worth nothing the whole state is overwhelmingly maskless except in a few progressive enclaves. If the Governor and legislature banned mask mandates, those parents would still have their kids in masks. Progressives have become COVID Chicken Littles. Tweet.

MOST CLICKED ITEM YESTERDAY

  • ILLINOIS SCHOOL DISTRICT TEACHES GENDER and race propaganda to all lower grades. The Post Millennial.

BONGINO REPORT TOP HEADLINE AT TIME OF EMAIL

  • Republicans Demand Answers From Pelosi on Reports of Capitol Police Spying on Members of Congress and Staff BONGINO REPORT.

87.) DECISION DESK HQ

 


88.) DIGG

 


89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK

 


90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE

 


91.) USA TODAY

usatoday.com
Daily Briefing
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9
Lindsey Jacobellis celebrates winning the gold medal in the women’s snowboard cross.
Finally! Jacobellis wins first gold for Team USA 🥇
Lindsey Jacobellis wins women’s snowboardcross, New York officials decide on mask mandates and more news to start your Wednesday.
Happy Hump Day, Daily Briefing readers! Snowboarder Lindsey Jacobellis broke a five-day drought to win Team USA’s first gold medal of the Beijing Olympics. Will they stay or will they go? New York Gov. Kathy Hochul will make an announcement on mask mandates. And, lunch is served: Scroll down to find out how you can save some dough on National Pizza Day.
It’s Jane, with Wednesday’s news.
⚖️ A day before four students were killed at a Michigan school, the mother of the shooting suspect sent him a text message asking if he had showed teachers a “pic of your new gun,” an investigator testified in court.
🥇 Team USA finally wins gold, Shaun White reaches the halfpipe final, Mikaela Shiffrin skis out of slalom. Tap here for live Olympic updates.
🔴 Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell called the Jan. 6 riot a “violent insurrection” and criticized the Republican National Committee for censuring Reps. Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger.
Spotlighting a widening breach among Republicans, Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell criticized the Republican National Committee.
Spotlighting a widening breach among Republicans, Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell criticized the Republican National Committee.
USA TODAY
🚨 The city of Colorado Springs will pay nearly $3 million to the family of De’Von Bailey, a 19-year-old Black man who was shot and killed by police in 2019.
🚒 Several families whose loved ones died or were critically injured while trying to escape a smoked-filled Bronx apartment building sued the owners, alleging safety violations that led to the wrongful deaths of 17 people.
🏈 Authorities said that security at SoFi Stadium would be ramped up for Super Bowl 56, less than two weeks after a fan was attacked at the NFC championship game.
🎭 Snubbed! Ben Affleck, Jennifer Hudson, Lady Gaga and Leonardo DiCaprio were some of the big names who missed out on Oscar nominations.
🔠 This is the best starting word to use to play Wordle, according to a math expert.
🎧 On today’s 5 Things podcast, Supreme Court correspondent John Fritze talks through the Supreme Court shadow docket. You can listen to the podcast every day on  Apple PodcastsSpotify, or on your smart speaker.
Here’s what’s happening today:

New York could drop COVID-19 mask mandates

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and health officials are deciding whether to end or extend two COVID-19 mask mandates  – one requiring face coverings in schools, the other mandating them in most other public indoor settings. Gov. Hochul, a Democrat, plans to announce Wednesday which rules will stay in place as the state emerges from a deadly wave of cases, fueled by the omicron variant. Hochul’s decision would come days after governors of Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey and Oregon all said they would end mandatory masking in schools by the end of February or March. Some medical experts believe it’s too soon to lift mask mandates, considering coronavirus infections nationwide reached their highest level only weeks ago and most of the country is still experiencing high transmission rates.

Lindsey Jacobellis wins first gold medal for US at Beijing Olympics, Nathan Chen and Chloe Kim aim to triumph

Lindsey Jacobellis sped to Team USA’s first gold medal of the Beijing Olympics on Wednesday, prevailing in the women’s snowboardcross. After a record-setting performance in the men’s short program, figure skater  Nathan Chen will look to continue his success in the long program and earn a gold medal Wednesday night. Although the competition is far from over, Chen is in a strong position to get his first Olympic gold medal after his brilliant showing Monday. Chen earned a score of 113.97 in the men’s short program, the highest score ever in the event. In addition to Chen, Chloe Kim will have the opportunity to win a gold medal in the women’s snowboarding halfpipe final — and make history. With a win, Kim would be the first woman ever to win Olympic gold twice in the halfpipe.
📱 Get exclusive Winter Olympics access: Sign up for USA TODAY’s Olympics texts to get the latest updates and behind-the-scenes coverage from Beijing.
📧  Sign up to the Chasing Gold newsletter for everything you need to follow Team USA’s quest at the Olympics.
🏅 Who are you rooting for? Meet the American athletes competing at the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics in our searchable database.
Lindsey Jacobellis won the gold in the women's snowboardcross, the first gold medal for the U.S. at the 2022 Beijing Games.
Lindsey Jacobellis won the gold in the women’s snowboardcross, the first gold medal for the U.S. at the 2022 Beijing Games.
USA TODAY

Just for subscribers:

🧳 Traveling with disabilities: What does accessible travel mean? It varies family to family.
🏠 New homebuyers beware: Rising mortgage rates and rent prices may dash those starter home dreams.
👑 Duchess Camilla will be crowned “Queen Consort”: Confused about why it’s a big deal that she’ll be called Queen Camilla when Prince Charles becomes king? We explain why.
🔴 Tennis star Peng Shuai resurfaced at the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics this week, as the #MeToo movement flickers in and out of sight in China.
These articles are for USA TODAY subscribers. You can sign up here. Here is all of our subscriber content.

Will gas prices continue upward trajectory?

Gas prices may be on the rise again Wednesday, as the cost of fuel continues to surge with no signs of slowing down, according to the American Automobile Association. The national average for gas was $3.46 per gallon as of Tuesday, slightly up from Monday’s average of $3.44 and nearly a dollar more than last year’s average of $2.47 According to AAA, the reasons behind the higher gas prices are a combination of increased demand for heating oil in the winter months and the tension between Russia and Ukraine. Russia is a member of OPEC+, and any sanctions based on its actions toward Ukraine may cause it to withhold crude oil from the global market. The price of crude oil is a key determiner for prices at the pump. Moscow has massed over 100,000 troops near Ukraine’s borders, but insists it has no plans to attack.

Fact check: No plans for fourth stimulus check

With tax season underway, some experts have warned that a fourth stimulus check will not be dispensed on Wednesday – contrary to a viral YouTube video claiming it will. An array of social media posts and videos claim a fourth round of stimulus checks are on the way, but none have followed through with any proof of an upcoming payment. Over three million people have signed a Change.org petition calling for recurring $2,000 payments for adults and $1,000 payments for children until the pandemic ends. But no such payment has yet been approved, IRS spokesperson Eric Smith told USA TODAY. This isn’t the first time people have posted misinformation about fourth stimulus checks. Similar posts also circulated in May and July of 2021.

ICYMI: Some of our top stories yesterday

🚨 A 17-year-old was arrested in connection to a homicide investigation that led to the death of Amir Locke, who was shot and killed by a Minneapolis police officer last week during a predawn “no-knock” raid.
😷 An unvaccinated father in Canada lost custody of his three children, one of whom is a 10-year-old immunocompromised child, according to reports.
⛷ Opinion: Eileen Gu’s life is getting more complicated after winning gold at the Beijing Olympics for China.
🎭 Oscar nominations 2022: “The Power of the Dog” looked close to a front-runner with 12 nominations, including four acting honors.
🏈 Opinion: New Miami Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel doesn’t owe anyone an explanation about his Blackness.

Grab a couple slices: It’s National Pizza Day

Wednesday is a day to save some dough on one of the most popular foods. Feb. 9 is National Pizza Day, and businesses across the nation are celebrating with discounted pizza and other specials. With the Super Bowl on Sunday, there will be more pizza deals this weekend, and you’ll also be able to find heart-shaped pizza ahead of Valentine’s Day. USA TODAY’s Kelly Tyko gives the rundown on how you can snag a deal on a tasty slice or two from Domino’s, Papa John’s and many more pizza outlets.

📸 Oscar nominations are here! Meet the top contenders for the 2022 Academy Awards 📸

Best picture: “King Richard”
Best picture: “King Richard”
Chiabella James, Warner Bros. Pictures via AP
The 2022 Oscar nominations are in! And Jane Campion’s Western tale “The Power of the Dog” is looking like a front-runner with 12 nominations.
Will “King Richard” star Will Smith reign on Oscar night? He’s up for best actor in a contingent that includes Denzel Washington (“The Tragedy of Macbeth”), Javier Bardem (“Being the Ricardos”), Benedict Cumberbatch (“The Power of the Dog”) and Andrew Garfield (“tick, tick … BOOM!”).
Recent Golden Globe winner Nicole Kidman (“Being the Ricardos”) will be going for her second best-actress win against Olivia Colman (“The Lost Daughter”), Jessica Chastain (“The Eyes of Tammy Faye”), Penelope Cruz (“Parallel Mothers”) and Kristen Stewart (“Spencer”).
The 94th annual Academy Awards, airing March 27, will again have a host – for the first time in four years – plus plenty of intrigue about who’s getting what honors.
Scroll through the gallery to see the top contenders.
Contributing: The Associated Press
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST


93.) JUST THE NEWS


94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON

 


95.) RIGHTWING.ORG

 


96.) NOT THE BEE

 


97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT

 


98.) NEWSMAX

 


99.) MARK LEVIN

February 8, 2022

 

February 8, 2022

On Tuesday’s Mark Levin Show, Republicans can never advance the cause of liberty as long as political thugs like Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, or his carbon copy cronies are in power. He’s done nothing to advance the conservative movement. How often has McConnell appeared on conservative media outlets? He hasn’t, he exploits the grassroots Constitutional base for their election while resenting what they stand for. The media rarely attacks these Senate Republicans because they work hand in glove with the media. Has McConnell called for the impeachment of President Biden? Of course not, he’s a Svengali that makes raw brash power-grabs to replace conservatives with moderates that he can control. Then, January 6th was not a violent insurrection. The only person that was killed was shot by the Capitol Police. Therefore, Democrats within the media and their partners in the Republican Party like McConnell, Adam Kinzinger, Liz Cheney, have to lie and twist the truth to include people that died from natural causes while near the Capitol (per the DC Medical examiner’s report). Later, a BLM arsonist that burned a building and killed a man is requesting leniency and has not been charged with the death of the man found in the pawnshop he burned. Yet, McConnell and the Democrats are focused on the people being charged with trespassing at the Capitol Building. The insurrection didn’t start on January 6th, it started when they tried to oust a sitting president in any number of ways that skirted the intent of our Constitution from attacking him internally to changing the voting laws in the 2020 election. Afterward, Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich calls in regarding another lawsuit he’s filed against the Biden Administration for failing to keep the country and Arizona safe by securing the southern border. Brnovich argues that the current invasion of violent gangs, cartels, and drugs is a violation of the Constitution and that the state will have to do what the federal government is not to protect citizens in Arizona.

THIS IS FROM:

Rumble
Mitch McConnell: Jan 6 Was A Violent Insurrection; Wrong To Censure Cheney, Kinzinger

The Blaze
DOJ asked for lenient sentence for 2020 rioter who burned down pawn shop, killing one man. Prosecutors even cited MLK.

Fox News
Obama, Holder slam GOP states for gerrymandering, but silent as Democrats do the same thing

Just The News
Feds steer $200M in COVID-19 relief to left-wing nonprofit to aid illegal entrants

Just The News
Biden administration funding crack pipe distribution, saying it’s needed for racial equity

Washington Free Beacon
Congress Probes NIH for Spending $2.5 Million Injecting Puppies With Cocaine

Townhall
We Now Know How Many Americans Biden Left Behind in Afghanistan

Rumble
Dem Rep Jeffries Credits Biden For States Dropping Mask Mandate

Fox News
Pelosi spent over $500K on private jets despite claiming ‘we have a moral obligation’ to reduce emissions

Daily Mail
Trouble in paradise? Scowling Barack Obama inspects the construction of his new multimillion-dollar Hawaii mansion and controversial sea wall which his neighbors fear will erode the beachline

Fox Business
Rep. Jamie Raskin failed to report huge stock payout for his wife, a Biden Fed nominee

AZAG
The Federal Government’s Duty To Protect the States And The States’ Sovereign Power Of Self Defense When Invaded

Daily Caller
Mike Tirico Is Returning Early From The Olympics For Unknown Reasons

The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.

Image used with permission of Getty Images / Mark Wilson


100.) CIVIL DEADLINE

Civil Deadline
Today’s Hot Stories
Biden Targets Gun Owners, Uses the Debunked Claim 2nd Amendment Banned Cannon Ownership (VIDEO)
Biden Targets Gun Owners, Uses the Debunked Claim 2nd Amendment Banned Cannon Ownership (VIDEO)
Whenever a conversation on gun restrictions and the Second Amendment…
BOOM! Judge Rules Against Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and the MDHHS in Lawsuit
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Americans in Democrat-run states have suffered under a blanket of…
Biden Quickly Goes Full-Blown Racist During Speech that Trump Would Have Been Crucified Over
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I think almost everyone is intrigued by the concept of Area 51 and the possibility…
The 5 Biggest COVID Lies Science Experts and the Government Have Told Us
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For two years now, the world has been consumed by a horrible pandemic. SARS CoV2,…
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The 5 Biggest COVID Lies Science Experts and the Government Have Told Us
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The 5 Biggest COVID Lies Science Experts and the Government Have Told Us
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For two years now, the world has been consumed by a horrible pandemic. SARS CoV2,…
'The Masked Singer' Judges WALK OFF SET in Protest After This Singer is Unmasked
‘The Masked Singer’ Judges WALK OFF SET in Protest After This Singer is Unmasked
The Masked Singer is a wildly popular FOX Primetime series. Season 7 will premiere on March…
BREAKING! GOP Just Seized Majority Control in Senate!
BREAKING! GOP Just Seized Majority Control in Senate!
Believe it or not, the Republicans currently have majority control in the Senate. That’s right.…
Joe Rogan Gets MASSIVE Offer to Ensure Censorship-Free Podcasting
Joe Rogan Gets MASSIVE Offer to Ensure Censorship-Free Podcasting
Unless you’ve been hiding under a rock then you’ve probably…
Woke School Forces Masked Kindergarteners to March While Chanting Blаck Lives Mаtter (VIDEO)
Woke School Forces Masked Kindergarteners to March While Chanting Blаck Lives Mаtter (VIDEO)
Don’t let your guard down because liberals are going to…
Biden Targets Gun Owners, Uses the Debunked Claim 2nd Amendment Banned Cannon Ownership (VIDEO)
Biden Targets Gun Owners, Uses the Debunked Claim 2nd Amendment Banned Cannon Ownership (VIDEO)
Whenever a conversation on gun restrictions and the Second Amendment…
BOOM! Judge Rules Against Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and the MDHHS in Lawsuit
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Americans in Democrat-run states have suffered under a blanket of tyrannical restrictions and gubernatorial mandates.…
Biden Quickly Goes Full-Blown Racist During Speech that Trump Would Have Been Crucified Over
Biden Quickly Goes Full-Blown Racist During Speech that Trump Would Have Been Crucified Over
Radical liberals enjoy painting everything as racist. They play the race card at every opportunity.…
RNC Gives Two RINOS the Boot –
RNC Gives Two RINOS the Boot – “No Longer Support Them As Members of the Republican Party”
Sometimes we might think the Republican Party looks like a feature exhibit on a safari.…
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101.) THE GELLER REPORT

Breaking news stories the media complex won’t cover. Share widely.

For more information on any post below, click through to read the full article on our website.


Ron DeSantis Slams Media Over Ficticious Trump Feud, Calls Reports: “Total bunk, Donald Trump is a friend of mine, I think they’re just making it up”

Of course the left is trying to create a rift between President Trump and Governor DeSantis. They know that a Trump-DeSantis ticket will defeat anyone that the Left runs in 2024. #TrumpDeSantis2024!Ron DeSantis Rebukes Media Over Alleged Trump …


Pelosi Congress Claims Sovereign Immunity in Federal Court to Keep Secret January 6 Videos and Emails

The dark, dirty Democrats fear sunlight — “said to be the best of disinfectants”. January 6th was an insurrection – by Democrats.Pelosi Congress Claims Sovereign Immunity in Federal Court to Keep Secret January 6 Videos and Emails …


College Undergraduate Enrollment Fell By More Than One Million Students Since 2019

Silver lining. Getting our kids out of those toxic leftwing indoctrination cesspools is an important step to getting our country, our freedom and our sanity back.Think of all the the minds that have been saved from their poison.

The …


Biden Admin Plunders $200M in COVID-19 Relief To Left-Wing Nonprofit For Illegal Immigrants

Feds steer $200M in COVID-19 relief to left-wing nonprofit to aid illegal entrantsThe Vera Institute of Justice reportedly received more than $10 million in funding from progressive megadonor George Soros’ Open Society Foundation from 2016 to …


Crime Up 60% in NYC IN JUST THE LAST WEEK

When Democrats rule. G-d help us.Related: Biden’s first year in office saw 73 police officers killed — most deaths since 1995

Crime up 60 percent citywide in the past week, NYPD stats show

By Larry Celona and Jorge Fitz-Gibbon, NY …


Hamas-CAIR’s Hijacks Minneapolis Mayor’s Press Conference

Except for a body cam video, not many details are known about the shooting of Amir Locke during a Minnesota police raid.But one thing you can be sure of: CAIR’s Jaylani Hussein will compare it to the killing of George Floyd.

When the …


Virginia Supreme Court Sides With Youngkin On Executive Order Against School Mask Mandates

Will leftist school tyrants continue to defy the law nd sacrifice our children?‘A Win For Families’: Virginia Supreme Court Sides With Youngkin On Executive Order Against School Mask Mandates

By Dillon Burroughs • Feb 7, 2022 …


Teror-Regime Iran chief of staff: We’ll be one of the world’s largest arms exporters

Iran is already arming terror groups throughout the Middle East. Now that economic sanctions have been lifted by the Biden Administration, with more relief to come after the U.S officially re-enters the JCPOA, we can expect Iran to export even more …


WATCH: Hundreds of ‘Palestinian’ protestors march in Toronto, call for intifada against Israel

Under Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Canada was perhaps the safest country for Jews outside of Israel. In particular, it would have been unthinkable that Toronto would be unsafe and uncomfortable for Jews. With the left firmly in charge of Canada, …


Diplomats: Debate on Israel’s African Union Status Suspended

The Palestinian Authority has been working feverishly to have Israel’s status as an “observer state” removed from the African Union. That is because they know that Israel’s flowering relations with Africa, will end the automatic majority …

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We cover the news for you, and as always – you’re our best source!


102.) CNS

 


103.) RELIABLE NEWS

 


104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL

Independent Sentinel

Anonymous people pour in illegally non-stop in many areas of our border and it’s a lot more than 2 million. Our leaders don’t even care if they are criminals or terrorists.

ESPN’s racist.

McConnell is clearly not a serious Republican. He calls the J6 rally/riot a violent insurrection and rails against censure of Kinzinger and Cheney.

The Feds, disguised as construction workers, searched a Republican congressman’s office — no crime, no warrant, just spying or intimidating.

Trudeau goes full dictator, but truckers don’t back down.

Israel: Being vaxxed makes no difference in hospitalization and death re Omicron.

image Horror at the BorderWhile the RINOs and Democrats worry about Ukraine’s borders and sovereignty, look at what one spot on our border looks like on the first clip. We know the Democrats want…
image Whistleblower: ESPN’s a ‘Blatantly Racist’ Workplace EnvironmentProject Veritas released a new undercover video today recorded within ESPN that revealed what appears to be a workplace environment full of toxic racist tension. The Whistleblower-recorded audio and video show numerous…
image Status of Truckers Blocking the Ambassador BridgeTruckers are blocking the Ambassador Bridge connecting Detroit, Michigan, and Windsor, Ontario. It is one of the busiest crossings in North America. They are calling for reinforcements. They say They…
image Alberta and Saskatchewan to End All COVID RestrictionsUndoubtedly in response to the trucker protests, Alberta and Saskatchewan premiers announced plans to end all COVID mandates in phases. ALBERTA Alberta premier Jason Kenney announced on Tuesday that the…
image Powerful People Who Plan to Continue Face MaskingDr. Anthony Fauci, the medical tyrant running the country, wants forced masking of children until we all feel safe. He needs to retire but won’t because he is having a…
image GiveSendGo Founder Calls Out Authoritarian GoFundMe & Big TechThe founder and CFO of the platform, Jacob Wells, called out GoFundMe and Big Tech for their “authoritarian style of social platforms,” which he says promotes bias as fact and causes…
image Congressional Staffers to Unionize – It Gives More Power for Unions & DemsThe White House on Tuesday threw its support behind a new movement by congressional staffers to unionize. They aren’t spoiled, insufferable, and overpaid enough. Now they need a too-powerful union…
image McConnell Thinks He’s a Dem Activist – Attacks J6 Rioters as InsurrectionistsMitch McConnell really has got to go. He is blatantly damaging the Republican Party prior to an important election. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell disagreed vehemently Tuesday with the Republican National Committee’s recent…
image Probe Underway of Capitol Police for Warrantless Search of GOP Rep’s OfficeThe inspector general for the U.S. Capitol Police has opened an investigation into allegations that one of its officers surreptitiously entered Rep. Troy Nehls’ office and took photographs. The Texas…
image US Trade Deficit Soars Under BidenThe Wall Street Journal reports that the US trade deficit is at a record high under Joe Biden. The trade gap — the difference between what the United States sells…
image Jen Psaki Responds to the Trucker Protest StupidlyWhite House press secretary Jen Psaki responded to a reporter’s question about the trucker protest during today’s presser. The reporter also asked what steps the administration is taking to prevent…
image Trudeau, a Canadian Fidel, Threatens Protesters with More RestrictionsTo our Fellow Canadians, the time for political overreach is over.  Our current government is implementing rules and mandates that are destroying the foundation of our businesses, industries, and livelihoods. …
image DHS Posts a New Terror Porn MemoMayorkas’s Department of Homeland Security issued a new “National Terrorism” bulletin on Monday, warning of a “continued  heightened threat environment” across the United States. Now, what could that be about?…
image Biden Funds a Soros Open Borders Group with $$$Federal budget watchdog Open the Books revealed that Biden’s Department of Health and Human Services awarded a $164 million contract to left-wing advocacy organization Vera Institute of Justice to fund lawyers for…
image “Lowest Ratings in Olympic History” After All That NBC SycophantryCCP butt-kissers, NBC, are getting their ratings’ butts kicked during the Beijing Olympics. The ratings are the worst in history so far. NBC says their audience fell 43% from the…
image It’s a Crime to Be Unvaxxed in Austria and Police Are Going To Pull Them Off the RoadAustrian President Alexander Van der Bellen imposed new Covid restrictions that require all adults in the country to be fully vaccinated and boosted or face fines until 2024. Drivers will be pulled…
image “Mayorkas Is a Pathological Liar and Sociopath” – Victims Don’t CountMayorkas is a pathological liar and sociopath: Victims of immigrant crime advocate tears into Biden’s DHS head for opposing “deporting ANYONE” and demands he be “put behind bars” The President…
image 80% of Israel’s Hospitalized Are Vaxxed and Death Rates Are ClimbingIsrael is one of the most vaccinated countries in the world with some on their 4th booster, and almost all on their 3rd. Yet they’ve set a COVID-19 case record…
image Watch the Coutts ‘Fringe Minority’ Protesters from the AirThe Coutts ‘fringe minority’ protest continues to demand the cancellation of the mandates, and you can watch the endless line of protesters from the air in the second clip below….
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