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MORNING NEWS BRIEFING – MARCH 15, 2022

Posted By: Rick Bulow March 15, 2022

Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday March 15, 2022

1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL

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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES

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Jonathan Cahn Reveals The Mystery That Will Determine America’s Future…And Yours
The Epoch TimesMarch 15, 2022
WORDS OF WISDOM
“Be faithful in small things because it is in them that your strength lies.”
MOTHER TERESA
MORNING BRIEF TOP NEWS

Fox News Reporter ‘Seriously’ Injured While Covering Ukraine War: Official

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Sen. Paul Unveils Measure to Eliminate Dr. Fauci’s Position

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4th Round of Ukraine–Russia Talks Paused

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Putin Spokesman: Russia’s Invasion Going According to Plan

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Taiwan Will Defend Differently Than Ukraine in Event of Chinese Invasion: Expert

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‘Overwhelming’ Need to Investigate COVID-19 Vaccine Tinnitus: Researchers

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Judge Permanently Blocks Release of Records of Probe into Bob Saget’s Death

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New Study Confirms Ivermectin Outperforms Other Options

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POSITIVE NEWS

Aesop’s Fables: The Wolf and the Lamb

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EPOCH OPINION

China’s Tech Companies Amplify Russian Propaganda on Ukraine

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Fukuyama Gets the Old Band Back Together

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Ukraine Bioweapons Funded by US? Russia’s Accusation Explained

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Facts Matter (March 14): Deaths Represent 1.3% of Reported Side Effects: Peer-Reviewed CDC Study; CDC Changes Risk Formula

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3.) DAYBREAK

Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 2022
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1.
Despite Oil Crisis, New Drilling Permits Plummet 85 Percent

From the story: The Biden administration has considerably slowed its approval of new oil and natural gas drilling leases on public lands, despite facing pressure to more aggressively urge fossil fuel companies to increase their production in the face of high domestic energy prices (Washington Times). From the Wall Street Journal:  Mr. Biden has dispatched officials to cajole the Saudis to pump more oil, but they won’t take the President’s call. The mob bosses of Venezuela and Iran will have to be bribed with U.S. sanction concessions to be able to sell more. Why not do everything possible to expand American energy production instead? The question will give the President a choice. If he says yes, we can hold him to that policy standard. But if Mr. Biden says no, we’ll know he’s siding with his climate emissary John Kerry and the progressive left against the urgent economic and strategic interests of the United States. The voters can judge accordingly (WSJ).

2.
Russia Struggles to Control Ukraine

Russian National Guard chief Viktor Zolotov admitted “not everything is going as fast as we would like” (Daily Caller). From another story: The Ukrainian military says it has repelled a Russian attempt to take control of the strategic port of Mariupol. The Ukrainian military’s General Staff said in a statement that Russian forces retreated after suffering losses (Washington Times). This report from the front lines includes a timeline map showing where Russia advanced then stalled and, in some cases, lost ground (Washington Post). Meanwhile, video captured the moment a Russian missile hit a city bus (NY Post). From Hugh Hewitt on Xi, Putin and Khamenei: There is no “international rules-based order” when two nuclear powers and one near-nuclear power act in concert to invade and assault neighbors, conduct genocide, kidnap Americans. What’s it going to take for Team @JoeBiden to wake up to reality of the world? (Twitter).

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3.
Russian TV News Editor Protests War During Newscast

From the story: During the evening broadcast on Channel One Russia, the most prominent news network in the country, a demonstrator with a sign rushed onto the set standing behind the anchor and chanted in Russian, “No to war! Stop the war!” Her sign read in Russian, “Stop the war! Don’t believe propaganda! They’re lying to you here!” with “Russians against war” written in English. 

Fox News

4.
Poll: 67 Percent of Americans Say Disney was Wrong to Oppose Florida Bill

Unlike other polls, this one used the actual wording of the bill, which changed the outcome entirely (Daily Wire). From Jerry Bowyer: Here’s what happens when pollsters ask question based on what the bill actually says (Twitter). Yesterday, Ed Morrissey looked at an ABC poll that found the opposite but was clearly fish (Hot Air).

5.
Battleground States Seeing Highest Inflation

The Democrats worse nightmare is coming true. And the cities of Tampa, Atlanta, Phenix and Miami are witnessing double-digit inflation.

Axios

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6.
Putin Signs Law to Seize Foreign-Owned Planes

From the story: Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a law Monday that would give Russian airlines the ability to seize foreign-owned airplanes so they can be re-deployed for domestic flights amid crippling sanctions that have negatively impacted its aviation industry. The law would allow the airlines to take and operate planes leased by foreign companies that have stopped businesses operations in the country over its invasion of Ukraine, the state-owned TASS news agency reported. The planes will be certified by certification centers and test laboratories, the news outlet reported. The move is an attempt to circumvent Western sanctions that have resulted in multiple countries, including the United States, closing their airspace to Russian airliners.

Fox News

7.
USA Today Names a Man as One of the Women of the Year

They honored the man Rachel Levine as “the highest-ranking openly transgender official when the Senate confirmed her as assistant secretary of health in October 2021” (USA Today). The insults to women continue.  From Matt Margolis: In fairness, even Kamala Harris was included among the honorees, so the bar must be really, really, low. But it is still insulting that Rachel Levine, a biological man, was included on the list (PJ Media).

8.
Director Jane Campion Jokes the Williams Sisters “Do Not Have to Play Against the Guys”

The director gave an awkward speech at the Critics Choice Award where she said the Williams don’t have to play against the guys “like I have to” (Mediaite). The left went ballistic, and Campion later apologized, calling her comment “thoughtless” (Fox News).

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9.
Idaho Legislature Passes Six-Week Abortion Ban

It passed overwhelmingly and is headed to the desk of Republican governor Brad Little.

Fox News

10.
Leaked Documents Reveal School District Hiding Children’s Gender Change from Parents

From the story: The instruction was part of several recent staff development sessions for teachers in the Eau Claire Area School District in central Wisconsin that focused on safe spaces, gender identity, microaggressions, and oppression. According to one of the trainers, parents who disagree with their kids about gender identity issues are guilty of a form of “abuse.” The trainers also encouraged the teachers to be activists: “to vote, to demonstrate, to protest.”

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4.) THE SUNBURN

Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 3.15.22

Coffee is for closers. So is Sunburn, your morning rundown of Florida politics.

Florida is flush with cash, and lawmakers voted to put it to use by passing a $112.1 billion budget on Monday.

The spending plan includes a $1.7 billion increase in K-12 schools funding, a 5.4% across-the-board pay raise for state employees, boosts to environmental programs, and a grab bag of tax cuts — including a one-month moratorium on the state’s 25-cents-per-gallon gas tax that will save motorists an estimated $200 million.

The budget, which is $11 billion more than the current year, passed with a unanimous vote in the Senate and a 105-3 vote in the House — the nays came from Democratic Reps. Mike Grieco and Dotie Joseph and Republican Rep. Anthony Sabatini.

With the budget settled and shipped to DeSantis, the Legislature adjourned Sine Die shortly after 1 p.m. The traditional hankie drop marked the end of a Legislative Session that saw numerous controversial bills pass along partisan lines, including a 15-week abortion ban and the so-called “Don’t Say Gay” bill, which has snagged national headlines in recent weeks.

It ain’t over until the hankie drops. Image via WLRN.

While Democrats lamented the focus on those issues — and their inability to stop them from passing — DeSantis all but took a victory lap in the Capitol rotunda.

“I think you guys gave an enormous amount of good things this Legislative Session. I’m really proud to see a lot of stuff that came across the finish line,” he said in a post-Sine Die news conference that was interrupted by protesters shouting for the state to “stop funding corporations.”

The budget now awaits edits from the Governor, who holds line-item veto power. Last year, DeSantis was thought to have wielded a relatively light touch when he slashed $1.5 billion to leave a $101 billion budget.

— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —

—@ChrisSprowls: Politics shouldn’t be about catering to the most powerful voices or cowering in fear from the angriest ones; it’s about giving a voice to the everyday moms and dads who pay their bills, go to work and parent their kids. This is who we serve. The House has adjourned Sine Die.

Tweet, tweet:

 

—@FLCaseyDeSantis: I am continually thankful for the support I’ve received during my cancer fight and inspired to help others in theirs — grateful that the Legislature joined @GovRonDeSantis in prioritizing funding for the second leading cause of death in Florida with a $100 million investment.

Tweet, tweet:

 

—@LeaderBookFL: Since I was elected to the @FLSenate in 2016, I have been fighting to eliminate the diaper tax for Florida’s families. After years of hard work, I am proud to share that the 2022 state budget — as approved today — finally includes the removal of the sales tax on diapers.

Tweet, tweet:

 

—@AnnaForFlorida: Just pulled into our Orlando Office and a constituent saw us and asked me to investigate something locally for him — told him we would absolutely take care of it!!! Feels good to be home.

—@KevinCate: Florida state government is so embarrassing.

— DAYS UNTIL —

House GOP retreat in Ponte Vedra Beach — 8; the third season of ‘Atlanta’ begins — 8; season two of ‘Bridgerton’ begins — 10; The Oscars — 12; ‘Macbeth’ with Daniel Craig and Ruth Negga begin performances on Broadway — 14; Florida Chamber’s 2nd Annual Southeastern Leadership Conference on Safety, Health + Sustainability begins — 14; Grammys rescheduled in Las Vegas — 19; MLB Opening Day — 23; ‘Better Call Saul’ final season begins — 34; Magic Johnson’s Apple TV+ docuseries ‘They Call Me Magic’ begins — 38; 2022 Florida Chamber Transportation, Growth & Infrastructure Solution Summit — 44; ‘The Godfather’ TV series ‘The Offer’ premieres — 45; 2nd half of ‘Ozark’ final season begins — 45; federal student loan payments will resume — 47; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 52; Florida TaxWatch’s Spring Meeting — 57; ‘Obi-Wan Kenobi’ starts on Disney+ — 71; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ premieres — 73; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 79; California, Iowa, Mississippi, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico and South Dakota hold midterm Primaries — 84; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 116; San Diego Comic-Con 2022 — 129; Michael Mann and Meg Gardiner novel ‘Heat 2’ publishes — 147; ‘The Lord of the Rings’ premieres on Amazon Prime — 171; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 205; Cormac McCarthy’s ‘The Passenger’ releases — 223; ‘Black Panther 2’ premieres — 242; ‘The Flash’ premieres — 245; McCarthy’s ‘Stella Maris’ releases — 252; ‘Avatar 2′ premieres — 277; ‘Captain Marvel 2′ premieres — 341; ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ premieres — 374; ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ premieres — 500; ‘Dune: Part Two’ premieres — 584; Opening Ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games — 864.



— SINE DIE NOTES —

“Legislature wraps up combative culture-war Session” via Skyler Swisher and Jeffrey Schweers of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida lawmakers finished their work at the Capitol on Monday, delivering DeSantis culture war victories as he heads into re-election but prompting protesters to shower him with fake money as he listed his legislative wins. The Republican-controlled Legislature, working overtime for the Regular Session scheduled to end Friday, approved a $112 billion state budget, officially ending the two-month Legislative Session. He called 2022 “the year of the parent” in Florida. “We in Florida showed a commitment to education — not to indoctrination,” DeSantis said in a speech from the Capitol rotunda.

“Despite deep divisions, Ron DeSantis says Session marked ‘year of the parent’” via John Kennedy of USA Today — DeSantis joined Florida legislative leaders after the 2022 Session ended Monday to declare that Republican-backed measures guiding what is taught in schools had made this the “year of the parent in the state of Florida.” The two-month Session was marked by highly partisan clashes, with ruling Republicans advancing new restrictions on abortion, migrants coming to Florida, and an elections measure aimed at satisfying a GOP voting base animated over claims of election fraud. But lawmakers focused most intently on schools, imposing new regulations on how race, sexual orientation, and gender identity are discussed and heightening the public’s ability to object to books on school library shelves.

Ron DeSantis closes out the 2022 Session with lots of praise and a few protests. Image via Citrus County Chronicle.

“DeSantis: ‘A lot of nursing homes will be very, very happy’ after 2022 Session” via Christine Jordan Sexton of Florida Politics — During a Monday afternoon ceremony to mark the end of the 2022 Legislative Session, DeSantis said he thinks there will be “a lot of nursing homes that are very, very happy.” Asked whether he would veto HB 1239, which allows nursing homes to lower the amount of direct nursing care requirements from 2.5 hours a day to 2 hours a day, DeSantis focused on the amount of increased funding for nursing home providers that was included in the budget instead. In all, lawmakers directed $293 million for increases to nursing homes.

“Democrats reflect as Session closes: ‘I don’t think people realize how bad it would have been’” via Anne Geggis of Florida Politics — Senate Democrats Monday vowed to fight harder to win elections and lamented that not much was done to address kitchen-table issues that concern Floridians. Instead of addressing the prohibitive cost of housing, gas, and property insurance, they argued that many hours were consumed with so-called “culture war” issues. Democrats referenced bills that will limit abortion to 15 weeks into a pregnancy, set up reviews for school instructional materials, restrict the way teachers should talk about LGBTQ issues, and limit discussions about racism. “It’s a free state of Florida unless you’re a woman, unless you’re gay, … unless you are a student in a classroom; unless you have a history that you don’t want to be erased,” said Democratic Leader Lauren Book.

“Closing time: Aaron Bean and the art of agreeable disagreement” via Andrew Meacham of Florida Politics — Sen. Bean has developed a singular brand of across-the-aisle workmanship that extends well beyond the Capitol. He has run a combined 16 years in both houses with a spirit of unstinting optimism and elbow grease. He has served on several committees and chaired the Senate Appropriations Committee. He is used to dueling with colleagues over ideas; harsh rhetoric from citizens in recent years is another matter. “We are more polarized than ever,” Bean said, a development he attributes, in large measure, to social media. Now that term limits have ended his Senate service, Bean will have more time for the golf course. He does have another career brewing, however. “I want to be a motivational speaker,” he said.

For Aaron Bean, Sine Die was a bittersweet goodbye.

“Closing time: Jeff Brandes — integrity, bucking trends and ‘running to the fight’” via Andrew Meacham of Florida Politics — While no one would mistake Sen. Brandes for a Democrat, he has charted his own course on Republican politics. Among other things, exposure to the state’s prison system has turned him into a strong advocate for reforming such features as mandatory minimum sentencing. At farewell remarks for him in the Senate, numerous colleagues who had fought Brandes on other issues praised his commitment to taking a longer look at Florida’s prisons. That same commitment likely cost Brandes his chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee. After 10 years dominated by the Legislative Sessions for the first three months, Brandes is fine with his term limit. “When you sign up to get married, you marry Jeff; you don’t marry the Senator,” he said. “I’m ready to go home.”

“Closing time: Kelli Stargel — the greatest asset is experience” via Andrew Meacham of Florida Politics — Sen. Stargel began her political career in the House in 2008. Her husband, John Stargel, had formerly represented that district. And Kelli Stargel fought off voices questioning her credentials to serve, some of them from voters and some in her own head. John Stargel, a lawyer now an appeals court judge, backed her. But she still feared public speaking and wondered how her course credits at Tallahassee Community College compared with all the lawyers she would be arguing bills with. So, she studied everything, dissecting bills as she held a growing number of committee assignments, including chairing the Budget Committee for the past several years. “Kelli didn’t go to law school, but she’s the best lawyer in this chamber,” said Senate Majority Leader Kathleen Passidomo, a veteran lawyer.

“Closing time: Audrey Gibson, an independent thinker not afraid to cause a stir” via Andrew Meacham of Florida Politics — Sen. Gibson demanded maximum responsiveness to the public from her staff, muscularity from her fellow Democrats, and as much cooperation as she could coax from Republicans. Always prepared, she annotated the working drafts with sticky notes. Sometimes she used a different kind of sticker to affix on the lapels of colleagues who had delivered on a favor or performed well, the kind a schoolteacher might collect that say things like “Good job!” “Brilliant!” or “Way to go!” Sen. Bobby Powell, the Democrat Minority Leader Pro Tempore, told Gibson her relaxed, natural interpersonal style had helped him drop his guard when he got to the Senate in 2015. “I’ve never seen you hold a grudge or dislike anybody,” he said.

— DATELINE TALLY —

“Redistricting litigation now being waged on two fronts — state and federal court” via Michael Moline of the Florida Phoenix — A second lawsuit has been filed amid the political impasse between DeSantis and the Florida Legislature about how to redraw Florida’s congressional districts. This time, the venue is the federal court sitting in Tallahassee. As with a similar lawsuit filed Friday in a state trial court also in Tallahassee, the new action argues the dispute between the Governor and lawmakers threatens voters’ right to cast ballots in constitutionally apportioned districts. The plaintiffs in the federal case include Common Cause of Florida, FairDistricts Now, and five individual Florida voters. FairDistricts was behind the constitutional amendment requiring the Legislature to draw political boundaries without favoring politicians or political parties or that diminish minority voters’ ability to elect candidates of their choice.

“Lawmakers deliver a DeSantis priority — eliminating standardized testing” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Legislative leaders have sent DeSantis a bill replacing the Florida Standards Assessment with progress monitoring, a priority of the Republican Governor as he seeks re-election. The proposal (SB 1048) would replace the annual standardized testing with a computer-based progress monitoring screening in English language arts and mathematics. The progress monitoring, spaced three times a year, would begin in the 2022-23 school year for pre-kindergarten through 10th grade students. Hialeah Republican Sen. Manny Díaz Jr. sponsored the bill, which originated after DeSantis rolled out the proposal in September.

In 2022, Manny Diaz delivered. Image via Colin Hackley.

“DeSantis receives bill keeping college presidency candidates secret” via Florida Politics — Legislation that could keep candidates for college presidencies anonymous for part of the search process moved to DeSantis on Monday. Florida lawmakers approved earlier this month legislation that would provide a public records exemption for information about applicants seeking state higher ed presidential positions. SB 520 will, if signed into law, keep the identities of early presidential search candidates shielded from public records requests, to allow applicants more freedom to apply for jobs without disclosing those searches to current employers. Finalists, however, would not be subject to the secrecy pledge.

“With budget approved, Lauren Book finally secures long-sought diaper tax break” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Senate Democratic Leader Book has pushed to make diapers tax-free in Florida dating back to her first Legislative Session in 2017. With the 2022 budget approved, it looks like she’s finally secured that tax exemption for families. One catch: while Book has pushed to make the tax exemption permanent, the budget provision approved by lawmakers only puts the exemption into effect for one year. Nevertheless, it’s a long-sought win for Book. The bill to exempt diapers from sales tax came up short again this year, but last month, House negotiators floated an idea to insert a one-year tax exemption into the budget. That proposal stuck, and lawmakers approved the budget Monday, ending the 2022 Legislative Session.

“Matt Willhite scores with legislation for veterans, police, patients and hurricane safety” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — For Rep. Willhite, the end of the 2022 Legislative Session marked another successful period of bipartisan lawmaking in which he saw through several important items. This Session was also his last, for now, as he has set his sights on winning a Palm Beach County Commission seat in November, a move that will let him spend more time with his family. Willhite, an active-duty firefighter, had his two teenage sons join him in Tallahassee for the end of Session. Their presence, he said, reinforced his desire to spend more time with them, his wife, and their two dogs.

“Florida’s early learning programs garner bipartisan support in budget” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — They always say it’s “about the children,” and this year, that proved to be entirely true. There should be little argument that kids exposed to early learning are more likely to succeed in school and life. Enter the Florida Legislature. Not known these days for bipartisanship, lawmakers nonetheless came together to support early childhood learning. Conservatives appreciate these programs as an important facet of parental choice, while moderates know they make it possible for low-income parents to work. United in this common interest, lawmakers made strategic new investments that will help stabilize the early learning workforce, expand access to high-quality programs, and support parent choice at the foundation of the Florida education system.

“Budget conference: Legislature gives FSU $125M for new health center” via Tristan Wood of Florida Politics — The $125 million will help FSU plan and build the Florida State University Health Science Tallahassee Center. The 137,700 square foot building, whose funding was backed by Senate President Wilton Simpson, will be the cornerstone of developing an academic health center in partnership with Tallahassee Memorial Healthcare. The facility will be focused on clinical care, research, biomedical innovation, and education, said FSU spokesperson Dennis Schnittker. The facility is projected to have an economic impact of about $217 million annually and support more than 1,500 jobs directly and indirectly. Another allocation FSU received was $20 million earmarked for operational enhancement.

Wilton Simson helps FSU with major health center funding.

“State budget has $80 million for new UF Health trauma center named after Leon Haley” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — The proposed state budget contains $80 million to build a new trauma center for UF Health Jacksonville that would be named in honor of the late Leon Haley Jr., who was CEO at the hospital until his death last summer in a watercraft accident. Russ Armistead, who came out of retirement to return as CEO of UF Health Jacksonville after Haley’s death, called it a “watershed event” for the hospital. “We just as a safety net hospital have never had the financial resources, and frankly wouldn’t have the resources, to build something like this,” he said. “It’s a huge deal for the city and the region.” This week, the final round of budget talks was finalized adding the $80 million to the proposed 2022-23 budget that state lawmakers voted on Monday.

“Bringing home the bacon: What Leon legislative delegation got into 2022-23 state budget” via James Call of USA Today — There’s over $100 million more money than usual for the Greater Capital Region in the state budget lawmakers wrote for the fiscal year beginning July 1. The local economy always benefits from state spending; government and three state higher education institutions serve as Tallahassee’s economic pillars. But the state is flush with billions in federal aid. Stripping away appropriations for Florida A&M, Florida State, and Tallahassee Community College along with annual base spending, one finds Leon County’s statehouse delegation secured at least another $140 million in expenditures for programs and supplies. Probably the most significant economic stimulus is a 5.38% across-the-board pay raise for state workers, along with more money to make $15 a minimum wage for state employment.

— TALLY 2 —

“U.S. Surgeon General warns parental rights bill hazardous to Florida kids’ health” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Yet another member of the Joe Biden administration has raised concerns about Florida’s newly passed Parental Rights in Education legislation, saying that it could harm the very youth it purports to protect. The bill bans discussion of sexual orientation and gender identity in kindergarten through third grade and requires that such topics be age-appropriate and developmentally appropriate in all other grades. In a series of tweets Monday, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy raised the latest series of concerns from the Biden administration. “Florida’s recent law restricting discussion about gender identity in school has understandably raised serious concerns. The law concerns me too,” Murthy asserted.

Vivek Murthy says Florida’s parental rights bill comes at the expense of children’s health. Image via AP.

“How business got the upper hand over local government in 2022 Florida Legislative Session” via James Call of USA Today Network — Lawmakers continued to boost Florida’s business-friendly reputation in 2022, opening legal avenues to protect profits and to avoid lawsuits from workers. And although there is nothing like the $543 million tax refund corporations reaped in 2020, the apparent death of a data privacy bill saved what could have been hundreds of thousands of dollars for a mid-size company to comply. A business lobbyist said overall it was a good Session, while one of the House’s leading Democrats called it a mixed bag. “It does not look like they’re getting the major tax break through the Senate. That is a win for people in Florida when it comes to just tax policy,” said Rep. Anna Eskamani.

“Joint Legislative Auditing Committee publishes 2021 lobbying firm audit list” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — More than 20 lobby firms were randomly selected for the audit. Those tapped by the Committee now have 30 days to choose an audit firm if they so choose. After that, audits may begin as early as March 14 and conclude June 30. The Committee is designed to “provide continuous oversight of government operations, in part, through the auditing and review activities of the Auditor General and the Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability.” Land O’ Lakes Republican Rep. Ardian Zika and Ocala Republican Sen. Dennis Baxley led it as alternating chairs. In all, four Senators and five Representatives sit on the panel. Read the complete audit list.

“Insurance reform died last week. Will lawmakers come back to address it in Special Session?” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Insurance reform is dead for the 2022 Legislative Session, confirmed Sen. Jim Boyd. Unlike in 2022, when a bill made it across the finish line as the last bill of Session, that’s not happening this time. There are already rumblings a Special Session could lie in the immediate future. “It’s pretty likely,” said Brandes about chances of a Special Session. “Say it’s 70%-30% that it happens. We just have to see if additional companies fail.” For the second year in a row, industry changes desired by the Senate could not find traction in the House. The Legislature closed business on Friday, the last scheduled day of Session, passing no legislation.

Jim Boyd vows insurance reform will return from the dead.

“Historians draw parallels between ‘Don’t Say Gay’ legislation and purge of gay teachers decades ago” via Kathryn Varn of The Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Those who have studied the history of the state’s treatment of LGBTQ Floridians argue the message it sends and some of the language used to defend the bill hearken back to another, darker time in Florida’s history. They say the false idea that exposing children to LGBTQ themes is a form of indoctrination, or that gay and transgender adults are out to recruit children into their ranks, is baked into Florida’s history. It dates back to a legislative purge of gay and lesbian teachers in the 1950s and ‘60s.

“John Oliver calls Bob Chapek’s explanation for Disney donations to ‘Don’t Say Gay’ politicians ‘actively insulting’” via Tom Tapp of Deadline — “When we donate money to different political candidates, we have no idea how they’re going to vote going forward into the future,” said Disney CEO Chapek at a shareholder meeting this past week. Chapek made his statement in response to criticism that Disney had donated to Sen. Baxley, one of the chief sponsors of the state’s so-called “Don’t Say Gay” bill. “Disney should absolutely have had a pretty good idea how Dennis Baxley would vote when they gave him money, given that he’s not been shy about sharing his views on a host of topics,” Oliver said. Oliver brought the receipts to prove his point, highlighting that Baxley once suggested that “abortion is causing Europeans to be replaced by immigrants and [is] paving the way for the end of Western civilization.

— STATEWIDE —

“Gas prices hit record high after second week of 40-cent increases” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — As the fallout from Russia’s charge into Ukraine continues to spill throughout the West, Florida’s gas prices have shattered their previous record high. That’s according to AAA — The Auto Club Group. Gas prices last week crossed $4 for the first time since 2008 and didn’t stop there. Prices topped out at $4.38 per gallon on Friday before falling slightly over the weekend to $4.35 per gallon on Sunday. AAA’s Florida ticker had dropped to $4.34 per gallon by Monday morning, one cent higher than the national average. The previous record high for Florida gas prices was $4.08 per gallon, set in September 2008.

Might as well, right?

“Jury rules against Florida DCF: Agency failed to intervene, then 6-year-old was brutally attacked” via Jesse Mendoza of The Sarasota Herald-Tribune — A jury ruled against the Florida Department of Children and Families on Friday in a $28 million court case stemming from a 2015 agency decision allowing a mentally unfit Sarasota woman to keep custody of her 6-year-old daughter. Twelve hours after the DCF allowed the woman to keep custody, she tried to drown the child and stabbed her 14 times. The jury ruled against DCF following a two-week trial over the case and found that two agency investigators violated state policies for the child’s safety investigation. DCF representatives did not return phone messages seeking comment.

“Remains of a half-billion downed trees left from Hurricane Michael feeding Bertha fire” via Tom McLaughlin of the Pensacola News Journal — Gulf County Emergency Management Director Matt Herring has long suspected that at some point in the weeks, months, and years following Hurricane Michael, Northwest Florida would face something akin to the Bertha Swamp Road Fire. “In my opinion, it was an inevitability,” he said as the blaze continued a largely unhindered assault on more than 33,000 acres of timberland in Gulf, Bay and Calhoun counties. The fire was moving along a track that traces the course the Category 5 Michael took as it emerged from the Gulf of Mexico on Oct. 10, 2018, at Mexico Beach. Experts say that is no coincidence, as what remains of the half-billion trees felled by the storm were helping feed the flames.

“Florida Clerks celebrate ‘Sunshine Week’” via Florida Politics — Florida Court Clerks & Comptrollers is celebrating “Sunshine Week” by spreading the word on how Floridians can find or request public records. Sunshine Week is an annual event launched in 2005 by the News Leaders Association, which bills it as a “celebration of access to public information.” This year, it is being held March 13-19. Florida Clerks noted that county clerks provide citizens access to public documents, ensure access to county financial information, offer fraud services for the public to shed light on allegations of fraud and waste, and enhance access to public information by harnessing new technologies to provide more official documents and services online. The organization also offered a handful of tips for Floridians who make public records requests.

“More than 100 Haitian migrants land in Florida Keys, gather in yard of oceanfront home” via David Goodhue and Jacqueline Charles of the Miami Herald — For the second time in two weeks, a large group of Haitian migrants has come to shore in the Florida Keys. Monroe County Sheriff Rick Ramsay said 100 to 150 people arrived in a sailboat Monday morning off Summerland Key, about 20 miles from Key West. Photos provided by the Sheriff’s Office show a large group of people gathering in the yard of an oceanfront home on Summerland Key. It is unclear whether the boat came directly from Haiti or elsewhere in the Caribbean. But last week, a source in Haiti who monitors maritime migrant operations said two boats had left the country’s northwest coast on Tuesday and more were scheduled to leave over the weekend. All were bound for the Florida shorelines, the source said.

— 2022 —

“How an uptick in censures among local Republicans signals a growing radicalism” via Seth Masket of FiveThirtyEight — The Republican National Committee’s censure last month of GOP Reps. Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger was a historical rarity — national parties almost never reprimand their own officeholders. But in many ways, it was the culmination of what’s been happening at the state level. State and local parties are increasingly disciplining their officeholders, and it’s mostly happening on the Republican side. State parties have issued several censures since the beginning of 2021. It’s not just state parties, either. Censures aren’t as well documented at the county level, as there are more than 3,000 counties in the U.S. versus just 50 states, but I found in a search of nearly 7,000 newspapers using NewsBank, a news research database, an explosion of censures, especially in 2021, at the county level.

“Nikki Fried campaign announces trio of key communications hires” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Democrat Fried has made three significant communications hires for her 2022 gubernatorial campaign. Keith Edward takes over as communications director. Benjamin Kirby comes on as communications and policy adviser. Caroline Korba will now be Fried’s press secretary. The hires are part of a campaign reset Fried began touting last week. She recently named Matthew Van Name as senior adviser and strategic manager. Van Name had been Fried’s chief of staff in her first term as Agriculture Commissioner. Campaign manager Farah Melendez parted with Fried mid-month as part of a campaign reorganization.

Nikki Fried staffs up. Again.

“Duval’s Reggie Gaffney stretches fundraising lead in Senate bid” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Jacksonville City Councilman Gaffney stretched his fundraising lead in February for his Senate campaign. However, he was helped by the fact that his principal opponent could not fundraise at all. Gaffney filed in Senate District 6 but is running in what will be the Senate District 5 Democratic Primary under the redistricting maps passed this Legislative Session. He raised $15,000 and spent over $16,000 on consultant and legal fees. The Committee has nearly $355,000 on hand as of the end of February. Gaffney raised another $6,600 to his campaign account, where he has roughly $120,000 on hand. But his main opponent, Rep. Tracie Davis, should be expected to gain ground now that the Legislative Session is ending.

“DeSantis endorses Blaise Ingoglia in SD 11 Primary” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — DeSantis just picked a side in a heated Florida Senate Primary. On Monday, he endorsed Rep. Ingoglia in Senate District 11. “Blaise Ingoglia is a strong conservative who fights to keep Florida free and to deliver for his constituents,” DeSantis tweeted from his campaign account. Ingoglia, a Spring Hill Republican, faces Rep. Ralph Massullo, a Lecanto Republican, for the open seat. Consultant Brad Herold shared polling conducted in January by LiveSurvey that found DeSantis’ endorsement could play a huge role in the nomination fight. It found 76% of GOP voters were more likely to back the candidate with DeSantis’ endorsement, and 63% were “much more likely” to do so.

“Anna Eskamani files for re-election in new HD 42” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Eskamani has filed for re-election to the Legislature. The move sidelines much of the speculation the Orlando Democrat has her eye on a run for Congress. “It’s official: our new district via redistricting for the 2022 Election Cycle will be House District 42,” Eskamani tweeted. The two-term Representative confirmed to Florida Politics she intends to seek re-election. Asked if she has ruled out a run for Congress, she replied, “I am running for re-election and very focused on getting to know our new district and finishing my Ph.D. at UCF!” That’s more academically confident than politically committed. But while there’s talk about Eskamani running to succeed U.S. Rep. Stephanie Murphy, Florida’s 7th Congressional District leans Republican on a map passed by the Legislature.

“Chad Chronister endorses Stacy Hahn for Hillsborough County School Board” via Daniel Figueroa IV of Florida Politics — On Monday, Hillsborough County Sheriff Chronister announced he is endorsing Hillsborough County School Board District 2 incumbent Hahn in the November General Election. Hahn is running for her second four-year term on the body governing the third-largest public school district in the state and eighth largest in the nation. Chronister and Hahn have about 30 years of experience in their respective fields. Hahn has been an educator and administrator working through nearly every grade level. Chronister has been with the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO) since 1992. Then-Gov. Rick Scott appointed him Sheriff in 2017 after the retirement of David Gee. Hahn’s only challenger is Damaris Allen, an education activist and former president of the Hillsborough County PTA.

Stacy Hahn gets major backup in her campaign.

“Here’s what’s on the ballot as Pinellas County holds eight municipal elections Tuesday” via Daniel Figueroa IV of Florida Politics — Belleair Beach, Belleair Bluffs, Clearwater, Madeira Beach, Oldsmar, Redington Shores, St. Pete Beach, and Tarpon Springs all have elections Tuesday. According to the Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections, more than 120,000 of Pinellas’ nearly 700,000 voters are eligible to participate. Clearwater is the largest municipality in the county with seats on the ballot — and, so far, one of the most dramatic. District 5’s race pits former Scientologist Aaron Smith-Levin against art studio owner Lina Teixeira and Pastor Jonathan Wade. Smith-Levin’s bid has caused quite the stir. Most of his campaign is focused on standing against Scientology’s growing foothold on Clearwater. Polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. More information is available on the Supervisor of Elections website.

“Redistricting Gainesville has some in fear of unintended consequences for Black candidates” via Andrew Caplan of The Gainesville Sun — There is a growing fear among some Gainesville residents that a tentatively approved redistricting map of the city will significantly change the representation of a seat historically held by Black leaders. Compounding the dilemma is an upcoming midterm election expected to turn out five to six times more voters than a typical city race. That’s because this is the first Gainesville election under a new schedule that moves it from a stand-alone municipal ballot to a state and national election, and four Commission seats, including Mayor, are up for grabs. Though the District 1 seat isn’t available in 2022, adding in a predominantly White neighborhood that is already one of the most civically engaged pockets of residents within the city could have unintended consequences.

“Gainesville Commissioners ‘kick the can’ on possible ballot measure for own assistants” via John Henderson of The Gainesville Sun — A proposal to change the Gainesville city charter and allow city commissioners to hire their own paid assistants has been stopped in its tracks. The proposal would need voter approval, and a proposal brought forth by the City Attorney had a ballot question for the Nov. 8 elections. Commissioner Adrian Hayes-Santos said Monday that there is not yet an exact cost of hiring assistants. But it could end up being $50,000 or more per assistant, which would add up to more than $350,000 annually, based on a study from the city’s Office of Equity and Inclusion that said it would cost at least $150,000 plus benefits to hire three assistants.

— CORONAVIRUS —

“Spring Break 2022: Florida reports 10,000 COVID cases, 863 newly reported deaths in a week” via Mike Stucka and Jennifer Sangalang of The Palm Beach Post — It’s “Spring Break season” for Florida — and the state continues to see a decline in COVID-19 cases. From No. 31 to No. 42 to No. 37: COVID-19 cases are declining, with Florida reporting 10,211 cases and 863 newly recorded deaths. This week, the state moved up a few spots from No. 42 to No. 37 on a list of states where coronavirus spreads the fastest. Also, this is the fourth consecutive week that Florida reported fewer than 100,000 cases in one week. Florida reported far fewer coronavirus cases in the week ending Sunday, adding 10,211 new cases. That’s down 26.1% from the previous week’s tally of 13,823 new cases of the virus that causes COVID-19.

“Dr. Joseph Ladapo ‘cherry-picking’ studies to back no COVID-19 vaccines for kids, researchers say” via Ian Hodgson of the Tampa Bay Times — When the Florida Department of Health released new guidelines last week suggesting healthy children should not get the coronavirus vaccine, it cited several studies to back up the position. But at least four of the experts whose research was cited say their work was taken out of context. They said they disagreed with Florida Surgeon General Ladapo’s conclusion that the vaccine was more dangerous than the virus for healthy children. Each of the three studies cited by the state concluded vaccines are safe and effective. Florida health officials did not mention that in their two-page guidance.

Selectively choosing research data is not how it works.

“Leon County’s COVID-19 cases plummet by 48%; county considered low risk for transmission by CDC” via Mike Stucka of the Tallahassee Democrat — Mirroring the statewide trend, COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations continue their weekslong decline in Leon County. As of Monday afternoon, there were seven COVID-19-positive patients in Tallahassee: Four in Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare and three in HCA Florida Capital Hospital, formerly known as Capital Regional Medical Center. A week before, there were a dozen people hospitalized with the virus.

“Palm Beach County public schools to stop COVID-19 contact tracing” via Matt Papaycik of WPTV — The School District of Palm Beach County is stopping its contact tracing efforts as COVID-19 transmission continues to decrease in our community. In a news release Friday afternoon, the district said contact tracing in its schools and at district ancillary facilities would end effective March 22, when students return from Spring Break. Parents and guardians will still be notified if someone in your child’s class has tested positive for COVID-19. In addition, school nurses will continue to test symptomatic students who have a consent form on file. The district is also offering a “Test to Know” program at certain schools, where non-symptomatic students and staff members who feel they may have been exposed to COVID-19 can receive a rapid antigen test.

“Business as usual at St. Johns County schools as the district drops last COVID-19 restrictions” via Colleen Michele Jones of The St. Augustine Record — The St. Johns County School District is rolling back the last couple of COVID-19 protocols that had still been in place even as the pandemic waned. At the most recent school board meeting, Superintendent of Schools Tim Forson announced two changes that will go into effect when classes resume after the spring break on March 21. Schools will be reopened to visitors and volunteers, and indoor event capacity will return to 100%. It had been at 75% since the school year started.

“The pandemic has led to a re-evaluation of alternative forms of Florida education” via Jennifer Reed of Florida Trend — A flood of families went remote during the 2020-21 academic year, doubling Florida Virtual School’s enrollment to more than 12,600 full-time students. And even as Florida’s traditional brick-and-mortar schools have essentially returned to their pre-pandemic operations, FLVS’ enrollment remains high. This academic year, the school projects a full-time enrollment of more than 11,000 K-12 students. Part-time enrollment is up as well, with 173,768 students taking at least one class to supplement in-person courses at other schools between July and December 2021, a 4% increase over that same period in 2019.

— CORONA ECONOMICS —

“From pandemic to prosperity: Bipartisan solutions to support today’s small businesses” via Goldman Sachs — The way we do business and buy products and services has fundamentally changed. The pandemic further accelerated this shift. It’s time to modernize the SBA to serve small businesses in today’s economy better. Reauthorization will help the SBA adapt to today’s small business landscape and equip it with additional resources and new capabilities. Retention is a major issue; 75% of small-business owners having difficulty retaining employees said they can’t afford to compete on salaries, 67% can’t afford to compete on benefits, and 39% said they couldn’t afford to offer a retirement plan. Renew the COVID-19 Economic Injury Disaster Loan program, which expired at the end of 2021, to provide access to capital for small businesses still struggling from the pandemic’s impacts. In the coming months, Goldman will team up with local small-business owners and Florida lawmakers, including Sen. Shev Jones and Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, to discuss the report and ongoing efforts to modernize programs to reflect today’s economy.

“Flight cancellations continue at Orlando International after weekend of huge delays” via Joe Mario Pedersen of the Orlando Sentinel — Thousands of passengers this weekend had their flights canceled or delayed at Orlando International Airport leaving some without a way back home. A total of 204 flights were canceled between Saturday and Sunday due to a combination of severe weather that ran through the Sunshine State on Saturday, personnel shortages and a high demand of customers, according to MCO spokesperson Carolyn Fennell. Among the thousands affected was Colorado Springs resident Gabrielle Kallin who flew into MCO early Friday with a party of five looking forward to celebrating her bachelorette weekend in St. Augustine.

— MORE CORONA —

“These schools did less to contain COVID-19. Their students flourished.” via Perry Stein of The Washington Post — As school systems around the country were battening down for their first remote start-of-school in the fall of 2020, the Lewis-Palmer district here was embarking on another kind of experiment: Elementary students would be in class full time, sitting maskless at communal tables. The band program would resume in-person classes, saxophonists and flutists playing a few feet apart. The high school football teams would practice and compete. While most of the nation kept students at home for part or all of the last academic year, these schools in the suburbs of Colorado Springs, like thousands of others around the country, opened with the overwhelming majority of students in their seats. Masks were optional in elementary school.

“Surge of omicron infections prompts lockdowns in China“ via Keith Bradsher of The New York Times — Several of China’s most significant factory cities have ordered a lockdown, halting production of Toyota cars and Apple iPhones. Theaters, cinemas, and many restaurants have closed in Shanghai. On Monday, the northeastern province of Jilin banned its 24 million residents from leaving the province or traveling between cities. China is grappling with its largest surge of COVID-19 infections since the coronavirus first emerged in central China more than two years ago. Even as countries in the West are now loosening or abandoning mask mandates and other measures, Chinese officials are implementing some of their most rigorous methods. That is in large part because China can’t afford to lift restrictions. In China’s vast rural areas, hospitals and medical facilities are often basic, and a major outbreak could quickly overwhelm hospitals.

China is dealing with its largest surge of COVID-19 infections since the coronavirus first emerged more than two years ago. Image via Reuters.

“Meal-kit delivery companies flourished early in the pandemic but are struggling now” via Laura Reiley of The Washington Post — The pandemic drove a fresh burst of interest in meal-kit delivery and recipe boxes in the United States, as homebound families sought convenient and healthy home-cooked meal options. Those days are over. Experts say that a post-pandemic resumption of regular life has led to fewer meals eaten at home once again, and meal-kit subscriptions are struggling. Meal-kit delivery giants like HelloFresh, Sunbasket, and Blue Apron are faring worse or dealing with much slower growth, especially compared to 2020 record highs, partly due to fierce competition from more than a dozen newer companies like Freshly, EveryPlate and others. Competition is also coming from fully reopened restaurants hustling to regain customers and delivery companies like DoorDash and Uber Eats.


— PRESIDENTIAL —

“Donald Trump’s shadow lurks over Joe Biden’s support for Ukraine” via Jonathan Lemire of POLITICO — Trying to keep Vladimir Putin at bay without escalating the standoff into World War III, Biden has pushed allies to hold together, resisted calls for more direct confrontation, all while attempting to manage the economic impacts back home. The moment has showcased his pledge to reset America’s relationship with the world after four tumultuous years of Trump. Trump has been out of office for nearly 14 months yet has shadowed over the current conflict. The same Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, from whom Trump tried to ply damaging information about Biden’s family, has emerged as a heroic symbol of national strength. The same defense systems, the Javelin missiles, that Trump threatened to withhold in a scheme that eventually led to his first impeachment, have been instrumental in defending Ukraine.

More than a year out of office, and Donald Trump is still giving Joe Biden troubles. Image via AP.

“Why Americans may — or may not — blame Biden for higher gas prices” via Santul Nerkar of FiveThirtyEight — When President Biden announced last week that he was banning Russian oil imports to the United States to retaliate against Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, he conceded that Americans would pay more for gas as a result. “Defending freedom is going to cost,” Biden said. “It’s going to cost us as well.” But higher prices at the pump and elsewhere aren’t new. For nearly a year now, Americans have faced sharply rising inflation, and the latest numbers were further confirmation of that reality: U.S. prices last month rose 7.9% year-over-year, the largest such increase since 1982 and a continuation of a worrying trajectory as the country recovers from the pandemic recession and a beaten-down supply chain.

“How is Biden doing in Miami-Dade County? New poll has good and bad news” via Bianca Padro Ocasio of the Miami Herald — As Biden’s approval numbers fail to stabilize across the country, his popularity in Miami-Dade, a county crucial to Florida Democrats as they head into the 2022 midterms, is above the national average. But Biden’s support among those surveyed by Bendixen & Amandi International this month is practically the only good news for Democrats. The bad news is that Biden has been unable to gain ground against Trump, leading in the poll by seven points — the same margin of victory he had in the county in 2020. It’s a similar story when Biden is matched up against DeSantis, a vocal critic of the President and potential 2024 presidential contender. If the election were held today, the poll shows that voters would choose Biden over DeSantis by just six percentage points in Miami-Dade.

— UKRAINE —

“‘All art must go underground:’ Ukraine scrambles to shield its cultural heritage” via Max Bearak and Isabelle Khurshudyan of The Washington Post — Emptying a museum is a gargantuan task, and the entire workforce of the Andrey Sheptytsky National Museum in Lviv had been at it for a week before the final piece, a century-old portrait of the museum’s namesake, was taken down, leaving the last of its walls bare. Ihor Kozhan, the director of the grand gallery opposite Lviv’s opera house, explained the rush. “There is an egomaniac in Moscow who doesn’t care about killing children, let alone destroying art,” he said. “If our history and heritage are to survive, all art must go underground.” Across Ukraine, artists, gallerists, curators and museum directors are desperately but carefully unhooking, wrapping and stashing away the country’s hefty cultural endowment as Putin’s onslaught closes in.

Unfortunately, stripping art from Ukraine is nothing new. Image via The Washington Post.

“Ukraine missionary, diplomat and pastor in Jacksonville advocate for the war-torn place they call home” via Beth Reese Cravey of The Florida Times-Union — When Jacksonville-based missionary Kathy Gould left Ukraine after the Russian invasion in late February, the people she left behind asked her to give the rest of the world a message. “Tell the world about us,” one woman said. “Help the world hear and see.” Gould has been doing just that ever since. She has done multiple media interviews, talking about the Ukrainian people she came to know and love over her 29 years in Kyiv. But watching her homeland under attack has been both excruciating and maddening.

“Hungary has become the E.U. home of Kremlin talking points” via Lily Bayer of POLITICO — Ukrainian arms may be sold to “terrorists” in France. Zelenskiy behaves like Adolf Hitler during the waning days of World War II. What’s remarkable is that these arguments are coming from pundits, TV stations, and print outlets linked to Hungary’s ruling Fidesz party, whose leader, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, has publicly joined with Western allies in condemning Russia over its invasion. He has supported massive E.U. sanctions crippling Russia’s economy and even said NATO troops would deploy to Western Hungary. However, within Hungary, his party is often sending a much different message. From state-owned media to pro-government outlets propped up with taxpayer-funded advertising, pundits linked to Fidesz promote conspiracy theories about the conflict and relativize Russia’s aggression.

“Once a powerful symbol in Russia, McDonald’s withdraws” via Dee-Ann Durbin of The Associated Press — Two months after the Berlin Wall fell, another potent symbol opened its doors in the middle of Moscow: a gleaming new McDonald’s. It was the first American fast-food restaurant to enter the Soviet Union, reflecting the new political openness of the era. So, it was all the more poignant when McDonald’s announced it would temporarily close nearly 850 stores in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. McDonald’s Russian website on Monday read: “Due to operational, technical and logistical difficulties, McDonald’s will temporarily suspend service at its network enterprises from March 14.”

— D.C. MATTERS —

“Who, us, fight? Senate GOP vows ‘respectful’ Supreme Court hearings” via Marianne Levine of POLITICO — Senate Republicans aren’t coalescing around a single approach to Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s nomination to the Supreme Court yet — except that they’ll keep it classy. “ … we’re not going to get in the gutter like the Democrats did,” said Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee. That’s a subtle but unmistakable reference to Justice Brett Kavanaugh. But Democrats had a plan before those sexual assault accusations surfaced … Other Supreme Court fights in recent years have also seen the minority party align around one major strategy: For Justice Amy Coney Barrett, Democrats focused chiefly on health care; for Justice Neil Gorsuch, they homed in on the Senate rule that Republicans changed to get him confirmed. But for Jackson, the GOP doesn’t quite have a theme.

Senate Republicans promise to be fair to Ketanji Brown Jackson. We’ll see. Image via AP.

“Sarah Bloom Raskin’s Fed nomination appears doomed after Joe Manchin opposes her record” via Rachel Siegel of The Washington Post — Raskin’s nomination to the Federal Reserve Board appeared all but doomed on Monday after Sen. Manchin, a key Democratic vote, said he opposed her because of her stance on energy in an era of inflation. “I have carefully reviewed Raskin’s qualifications and previous public statements,” Manchin said. Raskin’s nomination to the vice-chair for supervision was already under pressure, with Republicans initially opposing her candidacy over her focus on climate change and its threat to financial stability.

“Palm Beach County’s largest free clinic gets major boost with $1 million in funding” via Wells Dusenbury of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Boynton Beach’s Caridad Center, the largest free health clinic in Florida, will be making some upgrades after receiving more than $1 million in federal funding. Congresswoman Lois Frankel announced the sizable grant Monday during a news conference at the center, located on Boynton Beach Boulevard, just west of Florida’s Turnpike. The money was secured as part of this year’s congressional spending bill. The Caridad Center provides medical, vision and dental care for the uninsured and underserved children and families of Palm Beach County. The funding will be allocated for a variety of services. Laura Kallus, CEO of the Caridad Center, said the money would purchase new equipment for their dental clinic.

“Have Chinese spies infiltrated American campuses?” via Gideon Lewis-Kraus of The New Yorker — Franklin Tao, a forty-seven-year-old chemistry professor at the University of Kansas, departed China with just enough time to make it home for the fall semester. Tao deplaned in Chicago and was greeted by two agents from the Department of Homeland Security, who diverted him for questioning. Tao was arrested under the China Initiative program, begun by Trump’s Department of Justice in 2018, to combat Chinese espionage. According to Jeff Sessions, the Attorney General who launched the Initiative, China had designs on American scientific prowess and ran missions against targets “like research labs and universities.”

“About 140 Haitian migrants land in Keys” via Christina Vazquez, Janine Stanwood and David Selig of WPLG Local 10 News — A group of about 140 Haitian migrants came to shore in the Lower Florida Keys on Monday morning, border authorities confirmed, the latest in a string of suspected smuggling operations. Monroe County Sheriff’s Office said it received the initial call of the large group of migrants landing near Summerland Key, about 20 miles from Key West. U.S. Customs and Border Protection also responded to the scene and is the lead agency investigating. “Border Patrol Agents and local law enforcement partners are responding to investigate a potential maritime smuggling event near Cudjoe Key, CBP spokesperson Adam Hoffner said. “At this time, the investigation is still ongoing.”

— CRISIS —

“Virginia Thomas, wife of Supreme Court justice, says she attended Jan. 6 ‘Stop the Steal’ rally before Capitol attack” via Mariana Alfaro of The Washington Post — Virginia Thomas, wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, for the first time has publicly acknowledged that she participated in the Jan. 6, 2021, “Stop the Steal” rally on the Ellipse that preceded the storming of the Capitol by a pro-Trump mob, raising questions about the impartiality of her husband’s work. Thomas, who goes by Ginni, said she was part of the crowd that gathered on the Ellipse that morning to support Trump. Thomas said she was at the rally for a brief time, got cold, and went home before Trump took the stage at noon that day.

Ginni Thomas admits she was in the thick of things on Jan. 6.

“‘Gutted’: What happened when a Georgia elections office was targeted for takeover by those who claim the 2020 election was a fraud” via Stephanie McCrummen of The Washington Post — More than 10,000 election offices throughout the country are now being targeted for takeover by a Republican Party in thrall to false claims that the 2020 presidential race was stolen. The effort is playing out in Georgia through statewide legislation and, more surgically, through a patchwork of new county-specific laws. The measures are targeting rural counties that have long been majority-White, GOP strongholds where the people running elections have often come from Democratic and Black communities, a legacy of the civil rights struggle in the rural South. This status quo is being dismantled, with the common goal being tighter Republican control.

— EPILOGUE TRUMP —

“Trump PAC highlights Rick Scott, reminding where loyalties lie” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — After Scott released his controversial “11-point plan to rescue America,” speculation has abounded about whether Trump wants Scott to lead Senate Republicans after November. More reason to speculate on that came Monday, with the Trump-affiliated Save America PAC sending out a helpful “ICYMI” email highlighting a media appearance from the Florida Republican Senator over the weekend. The shoutout from Trump World came after days of Scott defending his “Rescue America” framework not just against Democratic criticisms but those of Trump nemesis Mitch McConnell himself. Saying he intended to lead the party last November, McConnell rebuked the proposal, vowing that proposed tax hikes on lower-income people and potential sunsets of Social Security and Medicare “will not be part of our agenda.”

Donald Trump tries to put Rick Scott in his place.

“Trump tells supporters they must fight to the death to stop schools from teaching kids about systemic racism” via Bess Levin of Vanity Fair — Conservatives are using CRT as a tool to fan the flames of yet another culture war and scare voters — some of whom were told over the weekend that CRT is so dangerous they must literally be willing to die to stop it. Yes, in a characteristically unhinged speech, Trump warned his followers: “Getting critical race theory out of our schools is not just a matter of values, it’s also a matter of national survival. We have no choice, the fate of any nation ultimately depends upon the willingness of its citizens to lay down and they must do this, lay down their very lives to defend their country.”

“Trump: I am not using campaign funds for new plane” via Bob Cusack of The Hill — Trump on Monday said he is not using any campaign funding to construct a new plane. In a phone interview, Trump took issue with an article by The Hill over the weekend that cited a fundraising email his political action committee recently sent out. “The story was incorrect,” Trump told The Hill. “I already have a plane, the same one I used on the 2016 campaign,” Trump said his plane is being serviced in Louisiana and should be back in the air in 90. Pressed on why the fundraising email that mentioned his plane asked for donations, Trump responded, “I don’t know. I never saw the email [before it went out].”

— LOCAL NOTES —

“Miami Beach’s latest road-raising squabble: Who gets swamped by the floodwaters?” via Alex Harris and Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — Residents gripe about lengthy construction time, cost overruns, the changed aesthetic and lost parking spots — and some even question the need to do these projects in the first place. But the biggest concern, by far, is what happens to that water that used to pool on the low streets. Last year, some property owners sued the city over its road-raising program, alleging that the higher roads pushed floodwaters onto their low-lying properties and swamped their homes. “Road raising done right is just fine,” Miami Beach Commissioner Mark Samuelian told the Miami Herald. “The question is where you do it, when you do it and how much you do it.”

Mark Samuelian says raising roads is effective in dealing with climate change — if it’s done right. Image via Facebook.

“Miami-Dade deleted critical audio files from Surfside collapse search-and-rescue effort” via Monique O. Madan of USA Today — A Miami-Dade County employee deleted critical audio files chronicling the search-and-rescue effort of the first frantic hours of the Surfside condo collapse, one of the deadliest building disasters in U.S. history, a USA Today investigation found. The audio included communications that Miami-Dade Fire Rescue tactical teams had with central dispatchers as they searched for survivors in the immediate aftermath of the disaster that struck the Champlain Towers South condominium at 1:23 a.m. on June 24.

“Unemployment steady in Palm Beach County, but gap in open jobs versus labor pool narrows” via Antonio Fins of the Palm Beach Post — The number of open jobs in Palm Beach County outpaced the number of job seekers for the seventh straight month even as the local unemployment notched slightly upward. That’s one reason, CareerSource of Palm Beach County said, that wages and salaries grew faster in South Florida than in any of the nation’s other large metropolitan areas, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. State officials said Monday the county’s unemployment stood at 3.4% in January 2022, a shade higher than the 3.4% rate to close out 2021. The county’s rate was lower than both the state (3.5%) and national (4.4%) numbers.

“Because of growth and a fear of contaminants, West Palm considering a new way to get water” via Kimberly Miller of the Palm Beach Post — When Henry Flagler tapped a couple of shallow duck ponds to bring water to his burgeoning Palm Beach empire, was he considering the cyanotoxin cylindrospermopsin? Could the oil baron, railroad tycoon, and visionary hotelier fathom in the late 1890s that a 21st-century pandemic would spur the biggest building boom in West Palm Beach’s history, straining a vulnerable water supply beset by climate change and a population surge? The Flagler Water System has evolved in the past 100-plus years to draw upon Grassy Waters Preserve — a historic headwaters of the northern Everglades now buoyed by the beleaguered Lake Okeechobee. Today, the ad-libbed system brings water to an estimated 130,000 people in West Palm Beach, Palm Beach and South Palm Beach.

“Work-life balance? County attorneys are ‘burned out,’ and Commissioners want to lighten the load” via Mike Diamond of the Palm Beach Post — The County Attorney’s office, suffering from a serious case of burnout, will soon be hiring three new lawyers and a paralegal. Palm Beach County Commissioners recently approved a special appropriation of $591,547 to hire more staff to lighten a heavy workload that has resulted in a number of County Attorneys resigning in recent years. “The constant routine, weeknights, weekend and periodic holiday work, has resulted in the loss of rest and recuperation and family time. While litigation staff is aware that trial preparation requires extra hours, the lack of recovery time following a trial is resulting in rapid burnout and turnover,” County Attorney Denise Coffman wrote in an executive brief to the County Commission.

“House linked to Jordanian royal family sells for $45.36 million in Palm Beach” via Darrell Hofheinz of the Palm Beach Post — A Palm Beach lakefront estate owned for years by entities associated with the Jordanian royal family has sold for $45.36 million, the price reported Monday in the local multiple listing service. The 1990s-era house at 1330 N. Lake Way was most recently owned by Sherouq LLC, a Delaware-registered limited liability company, property records show. That company is linked in business records to Princess Al Hussein Al Saleh, sister of the late King Hussein of Jordan. The house replaced one that the king had reportedly used as a vacation home. According to an MLS listing updated Monday, the sale of the Mediterranean-style house closed Friday.

“University of Miami opens medical offices in downtown West Palm Beach and Palm Beach” via Alexandra Clough of the Palm Beach Post — The University of Miami Health System has opened a major medical clinic on the waterfront in West Palm Beach to treat existing patients, lure new ones and establish a base for an expanded medical presence in the county. The medical offices are on the second floor of a two-story building at 185 Banyan Blvd. The building is part of Flagler Banyan Square, the mixed-use project at Banyan Boulevard between Olive Avenue and Flagler Drive. UHealth’s space is above Elisabetta’s Ristorante. UHealth’s multi-specialty clinic quietly opened last November, but a formal opening was delayed until this month due to the coronavirus pandemic. A ribbon-cutting is set for Tuesday.

“Hialeah makeover focuses on arts district, transit hubs, big bet on Factory Town, and much more” via Andres Viglucci of the Miami Herald — Bit by bit, the snarl of aging warehouses, train tracks and potholed streets that make up east Hialeah’s old industrial districts are seeing something novel: new buildings mixing housing and shops, plans for new public spaces and a bike trail beneath the elevated Metrorail lines, and even an unusual music and entertainment district in a vast old mattress factory called Factory Town that’s generating considerable buzz. The new development, already underway or in the planning stages, clusters around the industrial corridors’ two Tri-Rail stations, known as the Hialeah Transfer Station, connecting to Metrorail. Between the two, there’s the rising Leah Arts district and Miami developer Avra Jain’s ambitious plan for Factory Town.

“Second fire in five months leaves more homeless at Jacksonville Heights Apartments; this time arson” via Dan Scanlan of The Florida Times-Union — Twyla Randall had just said her nighttime prayers when she said she saw the flashing fire truck lights and an apartment across from hers ablaze. Afterward, she learned the fire in that second-floor unit at the Jacksonville Heights Apartments at 8050 103rd St. was apparently set as police announced an early Monday arson arrest of a woman who lived there. This is the second time the Westside apartment complex has been hit by a major fire in recent months, this time leaving 30 people homeless, according to the Jacksonville Fire and Rescue Department. Randall is concerned for those left homeless, including an elderly woman.

This Jacksonville Heights apartment complex catches fire again. This time it’s arson. Image via First Coast News.

“Duval’s half-cent sales tax garners $110M in 1st year, but public awareness needs improvement” via Joe McLean — The Committee overseeing Duval County’s half-cent sales tax for school improvement said in its annual report that it’s already ahead of schedule for how much revenue has been collected. According to the report, the county’s half-cent sales tax generated more than $110 million in 2021, the first year that the tax has been in effect since approved by voters to help repair and replace aging schools. That’s well ahead of the projection of $88 million for last year. The money is specifically earmarked for new school construction, backlogged maintenance projects, and security upgrades, with each school’s to-do list spelled out in an online dashboard.

“Does Pensacola really need half a dozen new hotels? Tourism numbers say, yes, it does.” via Emma Kennedy of The Pensacola News Journal — While the initial throes of the pandemic did cause a temporary standstill, the pent-up demand for travel that followed hasn’t slowed down going into 2022. The demand has spurred a slew of new hotel developments and short-term rentals that will increase the Pensacola area’s tourism capacity in the next few years. But can the area handle that much more capacity? Based on how Tourism Development Tax spending has shot up and how high hotel occupancy got last summer, tourism officials think so.

“A piece of Pensacola history was saved from the sea. Then it was saved from an attic.” via Colin Warren-Hicks of the Pensacola News Journal — A long-lost piece of Pensacola history has been salvaged for the second time. A historic American flag, recently discovered in a nearly forgotten, 80-year-old U.S. Army trunk tucked away in an attic, will be transported back to the Gulf Coast later this month. The flag was salvaged in the early 1940s from the San Pablo, an approximately 300-foot ship commonly referred to as the “Russian Freighter” sunk in the Gulf off Pensacola in 1944. Family members of the now-deceased retired U.S. Army Col. Robert Edward Jones, who originally salvaged the flag, will deliver and donate the historical item to the Pensacola Lighthouse and Maritime Museum on March 16.

— TOP OPINION —

“Why climate resilience strategies won’t save Florida” via John Morales of The Washington Post — Florida is spending loads of money in the name of “climate resilience.” But don’t count on that to save Florida. Without measures to address climate change at its source, all that money will be as useful as a heap of soggy dollar bills. Florida’s sea levels are increasing faster than the global rate, due in part to ocean currents in the area. Saltwater inundation of the city streets, so-called sunny day flooding, has been up 400% since 2006. A more significant proportion of hurricanes are reaching catastrophic intensities, with the potential to drive a deeper and more destructive storm surge farther inland.

— OPINIONS —

“Passing the ‘anti-woke’ bill is last feather on the Florida Legislature’s racist cap” via Fabiola Santiago of the Miami Herald — If there’s anything we learned from this Legislative Session in Florida, it’s the undeniable reality that racism is alive, and unfortunately thriving, in the highest corridors of the Sunshine State. Time for the hashtag #SOSFlorida. Somebody come rescue what lawmakers left of our civil rights. “This is where ‘woke’ goes to die,” DeSantis bragged in a speech to the conservative Federalist Society and the Legislature went to work doing the dirty work of hiding horrific Black Florida history from students and grown-ups in the name of white comfort. On Thursday, senators passed HB 7, the last of several bills fueled not by need but by political culture wars in a year when DeSantis is up for re-election.

“Richard Corcoran’s impact on Florida education was immense” via Joe Henderson of Florida Politics — While we were all drinking from the culture war fire hose last week, the story of Corcoran leaving as Florida’s Education Commissioner quickly came and went. There was just too much other stuff going on to give that news its proper due. Corcoran had more impact on how Florida educates its students than anyone since Jeb Bush. During his time as Speaker of the House, Corcoran helped orchestrate a major expansion of charter schools; you can decide how good that was. In 2019, he pushed through a major overhaul of how the state funds its colleges and universities. But he was also confrontational when school districts balked at his edicts. That was particularly true on mandatory masks and other measures used to mitigate the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Early-childhood education is in crisis” via Ali Demaria for the Orlando Sentinel — The early childhood education industry is in crisis and has been for many years. The cost is typically too high for the clientele, yet the revenues are not high enough to cover basic operational expenses. This business model failure, heightened by the economic strain of the pandemic, leaves many preschools and early childhood organizations without viable operational alternatives. The child care system, like health care, affects most of us at some time in our lives. Some families depend on it to keep their livelihood while others only need it periodically; however, the issues remain the same. Research indicates that children develop strong social and cognitive skills with exposure to quality early child care, and parents or caretakers depend on child care programs to provide them the time to work and engage in our local economy.

“In too deep — clean water regulations can make you sink or swim” via Michelle Diffenderfer and Rachael Santana for Florida Politics — The term “waters of the United States” (WOTUS) determines whether a particular water body or wetland falls under the jurisdiction of the federal government pursuant to the Clean Water Act (CWA). In Florida, which is, by any definition, a “wet” state, regulation of waterways and wetlands touches a broad segment of our population and our economy. The Obama, Trump, and now Biden administrations have since proposed rule changes to the definition of WOTUS. Volatility as to the definition of such a pivotal term has resulted in severe regulatory whiplash. This wave of change and uncertainty as to the definition of WOTUS has wide-ranging impacts both nationally and in Florida. Looking ahead, we hope for predictability and consistency for the rules governing the regulation of our nation’s waters.

“Are lawmakers in Congress trying to hurt Florida’s small businesses?” via Sheffie Robinson for Florida Politics — The critical ingredients for small businesses to be more successful are inexpensive and amazing digital tools that help with project management, branding, finding customers and selling products. But I’m concerned because Congress doesn’t seem to understand how valuable digital tools are for small businesses. Legislation that could force Google and Facebook to break into smaller companies might seem reasonable to average folks, but it could really hurt small businesses. If Facebook and Instagram have less data because they are divided, small business advertising campaigns will be less successful and attract fewer new customers. Not only will the business lose, so will consumers looking for a new nail salon or local diner.

— TODAY’S SUNRISE —

Sine Die has come and gone. The 2022 Legislative Session is finally over, with a couple of days’ extension. DeSantis says it was “the year of the parent” in the Legislature, with the passage of “Stop Woke” and the so-called “Don’t Say Gay” bills.

Also, on today’s Sunrise:

— Redistricting maps have been drawn and approved, but they still aren’t on the Governor’s desk and he’s still hinting at a veto.

— As the Session ends, there’s already talk about a Special Session to focus on the unaddressed problem of homeowners insurance.

— The Democrats had a pretty soul-baring Session. They say it upped their visibility.

To listen, click on the image below:

— ALOE —

“Can Tom Brady shine in his NFL reboot? Heck yes, history says” via Joey Knight of the Tampa Bay Times — After 22 seasons, seven world titles, and volumes of NFL records, we’ve finally discovered what makes Brady like all the other garden-variety GOATs. He can’t stay away from the arena. History is rife with legends lured from a brief retirement by the insatiable desire for one more title or ovation. How has it typically worked out? That’s a case-by-case thing. So, let’s examine some NFL cases. In the immediate wake of Brady’s announcement that he’ll play a 23rd NFL season following a 40-day “retirement,” we researched how other prominent players did in their respective second acts.

Tom Brady’s return is not as far-fetched as one would believe. Image via AP.

“Cameron Smith of Jacksonville wins 2022 The Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass” via Clayton Freeman of The Florida Times-Union — Smith captured the biggest title of his career on Monday, shooting 13-under 275 to win The Players Championship. The 28-year-old, originally from Australia before relocating to the First Coast, hit 10 final-round birdies and survived a near-disaster on No. 18 to card a closing 66 to finish one stroke ahead of India’s Anirban Lahiri. He weathered the ups and downs near the end of both the front and back nine, including three consecutive bogeys at No. 7, No. 8 and No. 9. His greatest escape came on the 18th when he drove wide right into pine straw and then slashed a second that bounded diagonally across the fairway and splashed into the water. But he hit his approach to 3 feet and sank his bogey putt.

“NCAA men’s tournament best bets: Gonzaga is an obvious choice, but who else can win it all?” via Matt Bonesteel of The Washington Post — Celebrated stats guru Ken Pomeroy ranks teams by something called Adjusted Efficiency Margin (AdjEM). Each team’s AdjEM “represents the number of points the team would be expected to outscore the average D-I team over 100 possessions,” Pomeroy wrote in 2016. Through this method, you have one clean number to see how teams in this year’s field compare to past champions to better gauge their odds of winning it all. The low bar: 19.1. This is the lowest adjusted efficiency margin for any NCAA men’s tournament champion since 2002. The 2014 Connecticut Huskies hold the honor. The “average” champs: 28.2. If a team enters the tournament with an AdjEM number above this one, it’s a very sound choice to be your champ.

“UF’s Mike White leaving Gators for Georgia to coach men’s basketball” via Edgar Thompson of the Orlando Sentinel — White is leaving Florida for Georgia to coach the Dawgs’ men’s basketball team, delivering the stunning news on NCAA Tournament Selection Sunday as the Gators failed to reach the Big Dance for the first time since 2016. UF confirmed White’s decision three days after the Gators’ 83-80 overtime loss to Texas A&M in the SEC tournament quarterfinals, leaving them 19-13. The Gators had been the only SEC team to qualify for the previous four editions of the Big Dance (COVID-19 canceled it in 2020). White ends his seven seasons at UF with a 142-88 record and four NCAA tournament appearances.

“Tim Tebow to speak at UF’s 2022 commencement” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Former starting quarterback and Heisman Trophy winner Tebow, who went on after graduation to make his mark in philanthropy and motivational leadership while playing professional football and minor league baseball, will be the featured university-wide commencement speaker this spring in Ben Hill Griffin Stadium. Tebow, arguably the most dynamic of all the quarterbacks during UF’s glory days, is no stranger to that stadium, which hosted some of his career’s most visible triumphs. UF President Kent Fuchs explained his reasoning for picking Tebow. “Tim Tebow is known as much for his hard work, character and commitment to service as he is for his many achievements. And for those reasons, I know the class of 2022 will benefit greatly from his message and perspective.”

“Central Florida power couple to join SNL’s Pete Davidson on Blue Origin ride to space” via Richard Tribou of the Orlando Sentinel — Blue Origin announced the next set of civilians to take a flight on its New Shepard rocket, and while Davidson may be the headliner, Winter Park couple Marc and Sharon Hagle will be taking the ride, too. Their trip will fulfill a journey that has been in the works for more than a decade. Marc Hagle is President and CEO of Maitland-based commercial property company Tricor International Corp., and Sharon Hagle is the founder of local nonprofit SpaceKids Global and a board member of the onePULSE Foundation. The duo, who would become the first married couple to fly on a commercial spacecraft, had previously been among the first to sign up to fly on Blue Origin competitor Virgin Galactic’s space tourism flights back in 2010, but when that company starts launching customers is unclear.

Pete Davidson’s next headliner is in space.

“Man with one arm fights for right to theme-park thrills” via Kate Santich and Katie Rice of the Orlando Sentinel — Dylan Campbell can deadlift 185 pounds, scale a rock-climbing wall and hold his own in pickup basketball — all with one arm. But in May 2019, when he took his son to Universal’s Volcano Bay Water Theme Park to celebrate his seventh birthday, Campbell was barred from many of the park’s rides. A ride operator and manager told him he needed “two natural functioning hands” — a policy the park acknowledges. “Everybody’s staring as they pull you out of line and tell you that you can’t ride,” said Campbell. Campbell and his attorney allege it’s a violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act, the federal civil rights law that prohibits discrimination against individuals with disabilities in jobs, schools, transportation, and all public and private places open to the public, such as theme parks.

— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —

Celebrating today are former Sen. Mike Haridopolos, Marti Coley Eubanks, and Kristen Grissom of Bascom Communications and Consulting,

___

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


5.) MORNING BREW

March 15, 2022
Morning Brew
TOGETHER WITH NowRx

Good morning. Today is the Ides of March, and to celebrate Max will betray Neal around 2pm ET.

Who will you be betraying today?

—Neal Freyman, Max Knoblauch

MARKETS

Nasdaq

12,581.22

-2.04%

S&P

4,173.11

-0.74%

Dow

32,945.24

+0.00%

10-Year

2.144%

+14.6 bps

Bitcoin

$38,769.96

-0.01%

Netflix

$331.01

-2.74%

*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 5:00pm ET. Here’s what these numbers mean.
  • Markets: Welcome to a bear market! The Nasdaq closed down more than 20% from its peak. For Netflix, it’s like its big pandemic boom never happened—shares have fallen to their lowest level since March 2020.
  • Ukraine: An evacuation convoy of 160 cars was able to leave the besieged city of Mariupol, where residents are facing critical shortages of essential goods. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky will deliver a virtual address to Congress on Wednesday.

DEFENSE

2022’s hottest trend: military spending

F-35 fighter jetsFrancis Scialabba

Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine has sent a wake-up call to European countries that have let their militaries languish like an unattended houseplant.

Germany said it will buy 35 F-35 fighter jets and 15 Eurofighters to replace its geriatric fleet of Tornado jets. It’s the country’s first major deal since announcing a radical upgrade to its armed forces last month worth $112 billion.

Why is that so radical? Because Germany, ashamed of the atrocities it committed in World War II, has been diverting funds away from its military for decades. That’s resulted in a stunning, and sometimes comical, lack of preparedness:

  • More than 20% of Germany’s core weaponry isn’t combat-ready, and only 40% of its helicopters are available for deployment, according to Bloomberg.
  • During one military exercise in 2014, a tank unit resorted to using broomsticks instead of machine guns.

This underinvestment did not go unnoticed in the US, which felt like the friend who always has to foot the bill at dinner. Former President Trump repeatedly knocked NATO allies, and Germany in particular, for not fulfilling their commitment to spend 2% of GDP on defense.

Putin changed all that

Germany, which is currently spending ~1.5% of GDP on its military, announced plans to hike defense spending to more than 2% of GDP last month. Other European countries are doing the same:

  • Sweden (not a NATO member) said it would boost military spending to 2% of GDP “as soon as possible,” citing the worsening security situation in the region.
  • Denmark is aiming to hit 2% of GDP on defense spending by 2033. “Historic times call for historic decisions,” Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said.

What about the US? The war in Ukraine has shifted the mindset on Capitol Hill, too. Democrats who previously opposed increased Pentagon spending, like Chairman of the Armed Services Committee Rep. Adam Smith, acknowledged that the game has changed. “The Russian invasion of Ukraine fundamentally altered what our national security posture and what our defense posture needs to be,” Smith said.—NF

            

WORLD

Tour de headlines

A woman protesting the war on live TVChannel One

🪧 Stunningly brave protest: Marina Ovsyannikova, an editor at Russia’s state TV station Channel One, interrupted the channel’s evening newscast in Russia with a sign that read, “Don’t believe the propaganda, here they are lying to you, Russians against war.” In a video recorded before the incident, Ovsyannikova blamed Putin for the war and said she was “ashamed” of her work that “allowed the Russian people to be zombified,” according to the FT’s Max Seddon. Ovsyannikova has reportedly been detained by police.

 Chinese stocks were routed in historic fashion. Chinese companies listed in Hong Kong had their worst day since the 2008 financial crisis due to a combo of spiraling Covid cases in China, regulatory crackdowns, and Beijing’s cozy relationship with a heavily sanctioned Russia. China’s mainland is currently suffering its worst Covid outbreak since the beginning of the pandemic; closures of Chinese factories could have nasty ripple effects across the global economy.

 From Staten Island to space: Your streak of hearing a news item about Pete Davidson every week since 2017 will continue. Blue Origin announced yesterday that the SNL star will accompany five paying customers for a quick trip to space on March 23. It’s the New Shepard program’s fourth human flight and 20th overall.

            

INTERNATIONAL

Occupy oligarch street

Occupy oligarch street

Activists in London broke into and are occupying a mansion thought to be owned by sanctioned Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska. The protesters said they’ve reclaimed the property in order to “house Ukrainian refugees and refugees from all nations.”

The mansion, located in a wealthy area of London mere blocks away from Buckingham Palace, was initially occupied by the group at around 1am local time on Monday. The activists said they plan to stay until Putin stops the war, although police are attempting to remove them. The whole situation feels like the plots of four musicals being combined into one.

In a similar move, two Russian activists in France broke into and occupied a luxury villa owned by Vladimir Putin’s former son-in-law, Kirill Shamalov, claiming they’d changed the locks and would offer the property to refugees. The pair was arrested by police.

Zoom out: Calls to reclaim the properties of sanctioned Russian billionaires for Ukrainian refugees are growing in Europe. London Mayor Sadiq Khan called the mansion reuse idea “poetic justice” and claimed the properties weren’t homes but, “gold bricks used to launder money.”

According to Downing Street, the idea of using oligarchs’ mansions to house displaced Ukrainians isn’t being ruled out, although it may not be possible given the legal hurdles.—MK

            

TOGETHER WITH NOWRX

An investment even a bear would love 

NowRx

No matter what the future holds, people always need a way to get their meds. That’s what makes NowRx’s tech-powered pharmacy a potentially solid investment—even in a bear market.

NowRx provides free, same-day medication delivery, and they do it using software and robotic tech that cuts down prescription dispensing to less than 30 seconds—while nearly eliminating delay-inducing human errors.

Plus, all that automation lets them operate at a fraction of the cost of major retail chains.

NowRx is moving fast, but there’s still time to invest. The startup saw revenue jump nearly 90% YoY in 2020, and they’ve already raised over $16M from 5K+ investors in this round.

Learn how you can invest in NowRx before shares sell out.

CRYPTO

Into the Iger-verse

Bob Iger as a Genies avatarGenies

If we’ve learned anything in the past year, it’s that if you haven’t heard from someone in three-plus months, they’re about to announce something involving the metaverse. Case in point: In his first career move since leaving the company, longtime Disney CEO Bob Iger has joined the board of directors of a startup focused on metaverse avatars.

The company, Genies, has raised $100 million in funding and, through deals with Warner Music Group and Universal Music Group, has created avatars for artists like Justin Bieber, Rihanna, and Shawn Mendes. Metaverse-heads like Iger can create their own avatars using the company’s tools and dress them in NFT clothing and accessories.

Iger was Disney’s CEO until February 2020, but stayed on as chairman through the pandemic, departing the company in December 2021.

Beyond really craving some Mason Ramsey gear for his digital persona, Iger told the WSJ that Genies appealed to him for its ability to use existing intellectual property in new ways.

“Imagine, you know, letting someone buy a Mickey Mouse avatar and customizing it in a way that not only would we never allow it before, but it was kind of hard to do in the physical world,” Iger told WSJ.—MK

            

GRAB BAG

Key performance indicators

A Ukrainian refugee boy waits with luggageMaja Hitij/Getty Images

Stat: Poland has taken in 1.7 million Ukrainian refugees since the war started, increasing its population by 4.6%. In the United States, that would be equivalent to more than 15 million people entering the country in less than three weeks.

Quote: “I don’t feel that I have earned that right.”

Dolly Parton is removing herself from consideration for the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame because she doesn’t believe she’s produced enough rock songs to fit the bill. She was nominated alongside 17 other noted rock & roll stars including Eminem, A Tribe Called Quest, and Lionel Richie.

Read: The impatience of Job. (Slate)

Ask: On Pi Day yesterday we asked readers whether they prefer savory or sweet pies. 78% said sweet, 22% savory.

            

WHAT ELSE IS BREWING

  • Meta clarified its hate speech policy, saying that users cannot make death threats against Russian President Vladimir Putin and other heads of state.
  • The Covid situation in Hong Kong is dire. The territory has had the highest daily death toll in the world over the past few days, in large part because two-thirds of residents aged 80+ are unvaccinated.
  • Lyft is joining Uber in adding a temporary surcharge to rides to offset the rise in gas prices.
  • Sen. Joe Manchin said he wouldn’t support Sarah Bloom Raskin’s nomination to a top position at the Fed, which is not a bullish sign for her confirmation.
  • JPMorgan will drop its mask mandate in its offices and begin hiring unvaccinated individuals again beginning on April 4.

BREW’S BETS

Work soundtrack: Brew writer Jamie Wilde put together this groovy work flow playlist that’ll help you become your most productive self.

Tech Tip Tuesday: The reviews of the budget iPhone SE are out. Here are write-ups from The Verge, CNET, and the NYT.

Finance, simplified. On CNN’s new podcast, Diversifying, host Delyanne Barros avoids the jargon while validating the complicated emotions we all have about money. Listen now.

 

Self-care starts with legendary sleep. Headspace teamed up with John Legend to bring you their newest sleepcast—a bedtime story narrated by the Legend himself. Start your sleep journey with John Legend here.*

Get someone to watch your back. 24/7. Professionally monitored. That’s what you get with home security from SimpliSafe. With plans starting at less than $1/day, SimpliSafe is home security that’s simple, affordable, and secure. Save 25% + get an outdoor security camera included FREE today.*

*This is sponsored advertising content

GAMES

The puzzle section

Brew Mini: Today’s Mini is called “Showtime.” Play it now to find out why.

Complete The Godfather quote

The Godfather premiered in New York 50 years ago today. We’ll give you the beginning of an iconic quote from the movie, and you have to complete the phrase.

  1. “I’m gonna make him an offer…”
  2. “Revenge is a dish…”
  3. “A man who doesn’t spend time with his family…”
  4. “Leave the gun…”
  5. “It’s a Sicilian message. It means Luca Brasi…”

ANSWER

  1. He can’t refuse.
  2. Best served cold.
  3. Can never be a real man.
  4. Take the cannoli.
  5. Sleeps with the fishes.
          
Written by Neal Freyman and Max Knoblauch

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6.) THE FACTUAL

15 MAR 2022

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The Factual

Facts, not fear.

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Why do police believe someone is targeting homeless people for violence?

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  1. Highly-rated – last 48 hrs
    DC and NYC police announce investigation into string of shootings targeting homeless.
    Washington Examiner (Moderate Right) • Factual Grade 74% • 2 min read

    The shootings have occurred over two weeks, starting in Washington. The shootings have killed two men and injured three so far. The first shooting was on March 3, when police discovered an adult male victim suffering from gunshot wounds. The next incident occurred on Tuesday, when a second man was found injured from gunshot wounds.
    …
    [A Metropolitan Police Department] officer observed a tent fire on Wednesday. After the DC Fire and Emergency Medical Services Department extinguished it, they discovered the burnt remains of an adult male. An autopsy revealed the man died of stab and gunshot wounds.
    …
    The shooter then allegedly moved to New York, where the man shot two and killed one man on Saturday. The attacks are occurring as NYC Mayor Eric Adams is pushing to move the homeless from the subway system. Washington, DC Mayor Muriel Bowser has also been aggressively pushing to clear the city’s homeless encampments in recent months.
  1. Different political viewpoint
    As gunman targets homeless, mayors urge all to seek shelter.
    Associated Press (Center) • Factual Grade 68% • 4 min read
  1. Selected long-read
    Violence against the homeless is increasing, advocates say. [Read free here]
    Washington Post (Moderate Left) • Factual Grade 73% • 6 min read
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“ Yes – We should be weaning ourselves of trade with China whether they continue to trade with Russia or not. China has its own issues whether it is with the human rights with its Uyghur population or with crackdowns in Hong Kong. Imposing penalties on China I believe is inevitable whether Russia is involved or not.”

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7.) LIBERTY NATION

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“If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears.”

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8.) FOX NEWS

 


9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL

 


10.) THE FEDERALIST PAPERS

 


11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE

AEIToday
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AEI’s daily publication of independent research, insightful analysis, and scholarly debate.
Yemen’s Houthis and the expansion of Iran’s Axis of Resistance
Katherine Zimmerman | American Enterprise Institute
The United States must develop a comprehensive approach to Yemen and the region that reflects the new reality of the Houthis as part of Iran’s Axis of Resistance. The Houthis’ incorporation into the Axis broadens the means of action at Iran’s disposal to advance its regional interests, especially as Iran seeks to contest deepening Israeli-Emirati ties.
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With live cameras, the Court would become more like Congress. That’s not a good thing.
Jeffrey A. Rosen | SCOTUSBlog
In adjudicating cases, the Court does not need feedback from the public; it needs to rigorously adhere to the laws enacted by Congress and to the Constitution that undergirds our representative democracy. Cameras do not advance that function.
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We live in a nation of strangers. That needs to change.
Daniel A. Cox | Deseret News
Diversity is not the source of our current problems. We have become troublingly incurious about our neighbors.
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Putin’s biggest lie: Blaming NATO for his war
Hal Brands | Bloomberg Opinion
The growing transatlantic alliance kept the peace in Europe for decades and actually made Russia safer.
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Economics, Housing, and Poverty
Inflation is bad now — but the Fed could return us to the bad old days of the ’70s
Desmond Lachman | New York Post
Foreign Policy and Defense
The return of Pax Americana?
Hal Brands and Michael Beckley | Foreign Affairs
Putin’s aggression: Let’s not be surprised again
John G. Ferrari | The Hill
North Korea shows how the Iranian nuclear deal will fail
Michael Rubin and Anthony Ruggiero | The National Interest
Remind the Kremlin of its weakness
Dalibor Rohac | Quillette
China placed a losing bet on Vladimir Putin
Hal Brands | Bloomberg Opinion
Ukraine war may lead to Middle East and Caucasus crises
Michael Rubin | Washington Examiner
Politics, Society, and Culture
Kemp’s stand in Georgia is a titanic test of Trump’s clout
Chris Stirewalt | The Dispatch
The existential sadness of young Democrats
Timothy P. Carney | Washington Examiner
Biden hides behind Ukraine’s suffering
Marc A. Thiessen | The Washington Post
Head stop
Naomi Schaefer Riley | Commentary
What we’ve learned about spouses and friends from Melinda French Gates
Naomi Schaefer Riley | Deseret News
Children lost, then forgotten: New York City must swiftly complete investigations into the deaths of abused or neglected children
Naomi Schaefer Riley | New York Daily News
Health Care and Technology
‘Healing’ review: More help for mental health, please
Sally Satel | The Wall Street Journal
What happens if the American Innovation and Choice Online Act becomes law? Highlights from an expert panel discussion
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Education
School masking mandates are ending. What have we learned?
Frederick M. Hess | Education Week
How schools’ transgender policies are eroding parents’ rights
Luke Berg | American Enterprise Institute
Against ‘Don’t Say Gay’ propaganda
Max Eden | Newsweek
Podcasts
The view of Ukraine from Georgia
Dalibor Rohac, Iulia Joja, and Ani Chkhikvadze | “The Eastern Front”
What’s next for Ukraine and US inflation?
Hal Brands and Desmond Lachman | “What Happens Next in 6 Minutes”
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12.) THE FLIP SIDE

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Tuesday, March 15, 2022

China and Russia

“President Joe Biden’s national security adviser warned a top Chinese official on Monday about China’s support for Russia in the Ukrainian invasion, even as the Kremlin denied reports it had requested Chinese military equipment to use in the war… Sullivan was seeking clarity on Beijing’s posture and was warning the Chinese anew that assistance for Russia — including helping it avert sanctions imposed by the U.S. and Western allies — would be costly for them…

“Meanwhile, two administration officials said the U.S. had determined that China had signaled to Russia that it would be willing to provide both military support for the campaign in Ukraine and financial backing to help stave off the impact of severe sanctions imposed by the West. The officials said that assessment had been relayed to Western and Asian allies and partners earlier Monday.” AP News

Here’s our recent coverage of China and Ukraine. The Flip Side

Many on both sides argue that in the end China is unlikely to rescue Russia militarily or economically:

“Xi and other top Chinese officials have in the past indicated a desire for China to be acknowledged as a leader within the international community. But by throwing its lot in with Putin—already a global pariah who each day compounds past war crimes with new ones—the Chinese leadership not only risks the status it seeks, but is making three other grave errors. That’s because as the war continues, Russia’s international standing will not only suffer, it will be weakened economically and militarily. As a result, China’s partnership with that country has to be seen as a wasting asset—less valuable to China with each passing day…

“By the same token, if China is seen as providing military aid to Russia or helping Russia evade international sanctions, China will be putting its own economy at risk because it, too, will become the target of U.S.-led Western sanctions… It would be a tragic irony for China. After decades of remarkable economic development, on the verge of claiming a leading role in helping to define the future for the entire planet, they have put all that in jeopardy to ally themselves to a man, Vladimir Putin, who is desperately clinging to a long lost, unlamented past.”
David Rothkopf, Daily Beast

“China may be gambling that the western appetite for punishing Beijing if it sends military aid to Moscow will be weak at a moment of high inflation and sky-high gas prices… But here’s the question: Is China in a position to risk that at the moment? They’re hurting economically already… And they’re on the brink of a long-delayed COVID catastrophe if their lockdown strategy can’t contain the new Omicron outbreak… Does China want to roll the dice that it won’t be hit surprisingly hard too at a moment when the U.S. and EU are in a mood to de-globalize?…

“When China and Russia announced their ‘no limits’ partnership against the west just six weeks ago, Beijing hoped that the alliance would be a force multiplier that gained each of them a sphere of influence at the expense of the U.S. Suddenly, to its horror, China is learning that Russia is a paper tiger not just economically but militarily. The partnership is worth nothing — essentially what the ruble is worth — apart from ensuring Chinese access to Russian wheat and oil. And since Russia has few other global clients for those commodities anymore, they’d have to sell to China even if Beijing threw in with the west here.”
Allahpundit, Hot Air

“Can China provide Putin with an economic lifeline? I’d say no, for four reasons. First, China, despite being an economic powerhouse, isn’t in a position to supply some things Russia needs, like spare parts for Western-made airplanes and high-end semiconductor chips. Second, while China itself isn’t joining in the sanctions, it is deeply integrated into the world economy. This means that Chinese banks and other businesses, like Western corporations, may engage in self-sanctioning — that is, they’ll be reluctant to deal with Russia for fear of a backlash from consumers and regulators in more important markets. Third, China and Russia are very far apart geographically… Beijing is 3,500 miles from Moscow…

“Finally, a point I don’t think gets enough emphasis is the extreme difference in economic power between Russia and China… Putin may dream of restoring Soviet-era greatness, but China’s economy, which was roughly the same size as Russia’s 30 years ago, is now 10 times as large. For comparison, Germany’s gross domestic product was only two and a half times Italy’s when the original Axis was formed. So if you try to imagine the creation of some neofascist alliance — [and] that no longer sounds like extreme language — it would be one in which Russia would be very much the junior partner, indeed very nearly a Chinese client state. Presumably that’s not what Putin, with his imperial dreams, has in mind.”
Paul Krugman, New York Times

“China won’t save Russia’s economy… Russia’s exports are mainly oil, natural gas, and petroleum. This is what makes the already gargantuan supply chain issues virtually insurmountable: Oil and gas are transported through pipelines. There are no spare pipelines running from Russia to China, just lying there waiting to be used in case Russia ever found itself unable to trade with Europe… While Russia may be able to sell a bit more oil and gas to China, it won’t nearly offset the lost exports to Europe and North America…

“Russia has been effectively isolated economically, with few major countries left that it can trade with. China is aware of this, and will almost certainly increase their imports of Russian goods and services—only now, they will pay a fraction of what the West, or indeed they themselves as late as last month paid. After all, what is Russia to do about it? At this point they will be desperate to sell anything at all, just to keep the lights on… China has done this before. When Iran and Venezuela were sanctioned, China swooped in to import vast quantities of oil from them—at bargain prices.”
John Gustavsson, The Dispatch

Other opinions below.

From the Right

“As the Soviet Union collapsed, Russia was frantic to keep its arms-manufacturing hubs working and needed new partners to buy its military goods. China was all too happy to fill the void. Beijing agreed to buy a small batch of Moscow’s Su-27 Flanker fighter jets, a warplane similar to the US Air Force’s vaunted F-15 fighter…

“China canceled the deal in just a few years, claiming the jets did not meet its needs any longer. The CCP then not only stole all the best technology from this elite warplane — it made its own version, the J-11, and sold it on the international arms market, undercutting Russia’s pricing dramatically as it competed for the same customers…

“Moscow was enraged, but it only got worse. Russia forged similar deals with China on air-defense systems, submarines and other military platforms, only to see Beijing lie, cheat and steal any tech it could integrate into its armed forces… Fast forward to the present, and Russia might even be more desperate to make deals with China… and that should make the Pentagon absolutely terrified.”
Harry J. Kazianis, New York Post

From the Left

“Beijing continues to try to convince the West of its neutrality, while using its state-run propaganda machine to promote Russia’s narrative internally and abroad… Chinese and Russian banks are already working together to evade financial sanctions…

“As long as the West deludes itself into thinking China might be a constructive player on Ukraine, a more realistic approach to the Xi-Putin alliance won’t be possible. That’s why lawmakers are trying to pass legislation imposing secondary sanctions on countries such as China that might help Russia out of this economic jam…

“There’s little doubt Xi is eyeing the result of the Ukraine war while weighing whether the West has the will to defend Taiwan. And if China does attack the island democracy, there’s little doubt Putin will reciprocate Xi’s current friendship… [Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska)] and Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.) have introduced bills that would spell out new sanctions and other consequences for China if it attacks Taiwan… We can’t split the Russia-China team, so we will just have to work harder to stop them both.”
Josh Rogin, Washington Post

On the bright side…

This New England zoo just welcomed 3 adorable baby otters.
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13.) AXIOS

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Mike Allen
Mike Allen

⚠️ Good Tuesday morning. Beware: It’s March 15 — the ides of March.

  • Smart Brevity™ count: 1,194 words … 4½ mins. Edited by Zachary Basu.
1 big thing: Tech’s globalist dream is shrinking
Featured image

Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios

The tech world order that came together in the ’90s at the Cold War’s end is falling apart:

  • The break between Russia and the West signals a great retrenchment, Axios managing editor Scott Rosenberg writes from the Bay Area.

Why it matters: The breakup of the USSR in the early ’90s opened an era in which internet use rapidly spread around the globe and U.S. tech companies viewed the entire planet as both factory floor and market.

Working from that assumption helped a handful of companies grow to previously inconceivable size, wealth and power.

  • But the triple whammy of a “decoupling” between the U.S. and China … a global pandemic … and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is rapidly shifting the landscape.

A new COVID outbreak that’s spread from Hong Kong to nearby Shenzhen, China, has led Foxconn — the gigantic Taiwan-based tech supplier — to temporarily close production complexes there that manufacture, among other things, Apple’s iPhone.

  • At the same time, Ukraine’s plight has pushed many U.S.-based tech giants toward taking sides in a major international conflict, turning the power of their platforms toward blocking Russian state propaganda.
  • China became the tech industry’s foundry. But that relationship has begun to unravel, as U.S. distrust of China’s government mounts, American awareness of China’s human rights abuses grows, and China flexes its muscles on the world stage.

What’s happening: All that, plus the pandemic, leaves the U.S. in a “bring production home from overseas” mood.

  • The result is the start of a vast withdrawal from a single global tech market.
  • This grand decoupling goes beyond the “splinternet” phenomenon — the breaking up of the global internet into several different jurisdictional zones with different regulations and dominant powers.

The bottom line: The changes suggest tech’s three decades of up-and-to-the-right growth have peaked.

  • Share this story.
2. Economic world comes unglued

Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios

A sense that the world is coming unglued hangs over global markets and the economy, Axios chief economic correspondent Neil Irwin writes.

  • Why it matters: Aspects of how the world works — taken for granted for a generation — have become deeply uncertain amid war in Europe, new pandemic lockdowns in China and high inflation in the U.S.

The threats are to globalization itself, and specifically the assumption that even countries that have big disagreements can do business with each other on an ever-widening scale.

  • And the faster and more efficient supply chains that companies have built over the course of decades are crumbling in new ways.

State of play: A collision between powerful geopolitical and economic forces is creating rapid whipsawing effects in markets, as traders and policymakers try to make sense of this rapidly changing world.

  • The invasion has caused spiking prices for oil, wheat, and many metals on commodity markets (though those prices pulled back some on Monday), as the productive capacity of two large countries is essentially cut off from the rest of the global economy.

The bottom line: The thing about living through momentous times in history is you don’t know how things are going to end. Markets, and all of us, are just trying to make sense of it in real time.

  • Share this story.
3. Axios-Ipsos poll: Americans ditch masks, gain confidence
Data: Axios/Ipsos poll. Chart: Will Chase/Axios

Americans’ emotional and physical health is bouncing back — along with record confidence about life returning to “normal” as mask mandates are abandoned, Axios managing editor Margaret Talev writes from the Axios/Ipsos Coronavirus Index.

  • Why it matters: Two years after the start of the pandemic, the nation is ready to move on — despite a resurgence of cases in Europe and new lockdowns in China.

64% of respondents now favor federal, state and local governments lifting all COVID restrictions, up 20 points from early February.

  • But three in four say they’d go back to masking if infections increase again where they live.

83% of respondents describe their physical health as good and 84% say their state of emotional well-being is good — the highest shares for both since May 2020.

  • 48% of respondents said “hopeful” describes the way they feel today — the highest share since this time last year when vaccines were becoming broadly available.

Share this story.

4. “They’re lying to you here”
The evening news broadcast on Russia’s main news channel, Channel 1, is interrupted by an antiwar message. Photo: NurPhoto via Getty Images

An employee for Russian state television burst onto the set of a live broadcast last evening, yelling anti-war slogans and carrying a sign that read: “Don’t believe the propaganda. They’re lying to you here.”

  • Why it matters: Viral footage of the stunning protest momentarily disrupted the heavily censored media environment Russia has imposed since the invasion began, Axios’ Zachary Basu writes.

Marina Ovsyannikova, an editor at Channel One whose father is Ukrainian, was arrested and could face up to 15 years in prison under a new law that bans the spread of “fake news” about the Russian military.

  • In a pre-recorded video, Ovsyannikova said she was “very ashamed” of working for “Kremlin propaganda” for so many years, and called for Russians to join anti-war protests.
  • “What is happening in Ukraine is a crime and Russia is the aggressor,” she said. “Only we have the power to stop all this madness.”
Screenshot via MSNBC’s “Morning Joe”

⚡ Breaking: The prime ministers of Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovenia will travel to Kyiv today to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and convey the European Union’s “unequivocal support” for Ukraine.

  • Go deeper: Axios Ukraine dashboard … Axios explainers.
5. Charted: Disinformation gets global spotlight
Data: Zignal Labs. Chart: Axios Visuals

Public awareness of misinformation and disinformation soared over the past two years, Axios’ Sara Fischer and Ashley Gold write.

  • Why it matters: Information warfare and content moderation issues have been brought to the center of public conversation.

New data from Zignal Labs, a social media analysis firm, found that conversations surrounding misinformation and disinformation have only become more frequent since 2020.

  • Today, the topic is a big part of public debate about any major news event, from COVID to elections to racial justice issues — and now the invasion of Ukraine.

Share this chart.

6. 🔮 Scenarios: Politics of Ukraine
Graphic: Mehlman Castagnetti Rosen & Thomas

Bruce Mehlman — founder of the government relations firm Mehlman Castagnetti Rosen & Thomas — sketches how the two parties can spin Ukraine during this year’s midterm campaigns.

  • See the full deck.
7. 🏀 Maddest March

Data: American Gaming Association. Cartogram: Axios Visuals

Data: American Gaming Association. Cartogram: Axios Visuals

With legal sports-betting markets in 30 states plus D.C., this year’s March Madness will generate the most betting in tournament history, Jeff Tracy writes for Axios Sports.

  • An estimated 45 million Americans could combine to wager $3.1 billion on the 2022 men’s tournament, according to the American Gaming Association.

36.5 million of those Americans (81%) plan to wager via bracket contests.

  • But 76% of the money wagered will go to non-bracket bets. That’s up from 55% last year — evidence that bettors are engaging in more single-game betting alongside their traditional bracket pools.

What’s happening: 29 million more Americans can legally bet this year compared to last, with legal markets launching in Arizona, Connecticut, Louisiana, Maryland, North Dakota, South Dakota, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

8. 📷 Parting shot
Photo: Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty Images

The Met Opera and Chorus performs “A Concert For Ukraine” at the Metropolitan Opera House at Lincoln Center last evening.

  • Ticket sales benefited relief efforts.
Mike Allen
Mike Allen

📬 Please urge your friends to sign up here to get their daily essentials — Axios AM, PM and Finish Line.


14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON

 


15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES

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Today's Headlines
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Members of the Chinese delegation leave a Rome hotel after a meeting with U.S. national security officials on Monday. (Reuters)

U.S. warns China not to aid Russia

The White House said national security adviser Jake Sullivan issued a direct warning of consequences to his Chinese counterpart at a meeting Monday in Rome.

By Ashley Parker, Dan Lamothe, Chico Harlan and Cate Cadell ●  Read more »

Fierce fighting continues; talks to resume as civilian toll mounts

LIVE ●  By Washington Post Staff ●  Read more »

How Kyiv’s outgunned defenders have kept Russian forces from capturing the capital

By Sudarsan Raghavan ●  Read more »

Woman bursts onto live Russian state TV to decry war and ‘propaganda’

By Mary Ilyushina and Hannah Knowles ●  Read more »

Stories of birth in wartime are hopeful and heartbreaking

Perspective ●  By Monica Hesse ●  Read more »

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Millions likely to lose Medicaid benefits once the federal public health emergency ends

By Amy Goldstein ●  Read more »

The truth about gas prices and oil production

Fact Checker | Analysis ●  By Glenn Kessler ●  Read more »

NASA astronauts plan spacewalk despite rising tensions between U.S. and Russia

By Christian Davenport ●  Read more »

Opinions

What shocking images of Ukraine’s dead say about media — and our biases

Opinion ●  Opinion by Eugene Robinson ●  Read more »

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The Ukraine war is moving into a new phase. Biden had better get ready.

Opinion ●  Opinion by Joe Scarborough ●  Read more »

For now, Biden’s best course on Ukraine is the one he’s on

Opinion ●  Opinion by the Editorial Board ●  Read more »

Inflation, recession risk are about to get much, much worse

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How does DeSantis sleep at night?

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16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The potential confirmation of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court could slow down …
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March 15, 2022

   

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Ukrainian soldiers and firefighters search in a destroyed building after a bombing attack in Kyiv, Ukraine, Monday, March 14, 2022. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)

U.S., allies push China to rein in Russia as civilian suffering rises in Ukraine

The U.S. and its NATO allies on Monday put heavy public pressure on China to intervene and help stop Russia’s … Read More

By Ben Wolfgang

Top Headlines

 

Foreign fighters looking to join the fight in Ukraine find hurdles, seek their own terms

By Joseph Clark – Read More

Supreme Court nominee Jackson’s record on abortion troubles pro-life advocates

By Alex Swoyer – Read More

Women’s anti-violence law keeps transgender access provision

By Susan Ferrechio – Read More

Dems’ climate change agenda inches forward with $18 billion boost from government spending bill

By Ramsey Touchberry – Read More

Companies add surcharges to cope with rising gas prices

By Sean Salai – Read More

Iranian foreign minister plans Moscow trip to try to save nuclear deal

By Mike Glenn and Haris Alic – Read More

Opinion

 

Biden: ‘I did that!’

By Charles Hurt – Read More

The economic consequences of the Ukraine war

By Richard W. Rahn – Read More

Biden and Congress taking U.S. deeper and deeper into debt

By Cal Thomas – Read More

Politics

 

House Democrats go on offense against vulnerable Republicans with liberal challengers

By Mica Soellner – Read More

49 Senate Republicans pledge to reject any new Iran deal negotiated by Biden

By Haris Alic – Read More

Sen. Joe Manchin opposes Sarah Bloom Raskin for Fed board, endangering nomination

By Haris Alic – Read More

Security

 

‘No-fly zone’ would not have stopped Russian attack on Ukrainian base, Pentagon says

By Mike Glenn – Read More

U.S. struggling for answers on lack of major Russian cyberattack in Ukraine invasion, Warner says

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DHS secretary, Mexican president meet to talk immigration

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Commanders quiet as Jaguars kick off free agency spending spree

By Matthew Paras – Read More

LOVERRO: Soto stays grounded as the face of the Nationals’ franchise

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Cruz deal gives Nationals the veteran hitter they needed

By Jacob Calvin Meyer – 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

  • Putin purges Russian intelligence as military elite suffer devastating losses
  • Zelensky rallies Russians ‘not afraid’ to protest Putin’s invasion
  • Trucker convoy brings traffic and honking to DC

Botched assessment of Ukraine’s will to fight mirrors Afghan intel failures

Botched assessment of Ukraine's will to fight mirrors Afghan intel failures

Fresh off of the Pentagon overstating the strength of the Afghan military ahead of the Taliban’s rapid takeover last year, the head of the Defense Intelligence Agency admitted he underestimated Ukraine’s will to fight in the lead up to Russia’s invasion.

‘Huge’ explosions rock downtown Kyiv

'Huge' explosions rock downtown Kyiv

Large explosions were heard in downtown Kyiv just before dawn on Tuesday, reportedly the result of Russian artillery fire striking residential buildings in Ukraine’s capital city.

Reporters blocked by Ukrainian military from site of Russian attack near Polish border

Reporters blocked by Ukrainian military from site of Russian attack near Polish border

A news crew was unable to reach the site of a deadly Russian missile strike on a Ukrainian training center roughly 10 miles from Ukraine’s border with Poland.

Biden administration tries to cut off Chinese lifeline to Russia

Biden administration tries to cut off Chinese lifeline to Russia

The Biden administration is pressing China to withhold support from Russia as Moscow continues its bombardment of Ukraine.

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Steve Carra drops House bid after Trump shifts support to GOP Rep. Bill Huizenga

Steve Carra is dropping out of the race for the Republican nomination in Michigan’s newly configured 4th Congressional District after former President Donald Trump essentially rescinded his endorsement in favor of incumbent Rep. Bill Huizenga.

Biden gears up for midterm elections as Democrats fear for majorities

Biden gears up for midterm elections as Democrats fear for majorities

After months of the White House dismissing midterm election questions, President Joe Biden is shifting his focus toward November, when the Democrats’ congressional majorities will be on the ballot.

MSNBC considered bringing back Keith Olbermann to replace Rachel Maddow: Report

MSNBC considered bringing back Keith Olbermann to replace Rachel Maddow: Report

MSNBC considered bringing back former political commentator Keith Olbermann to replace Rachel Maddow on the news network, according to a report.

Cargo ship runs aground in Chesapeake Bay near Baltimore

Cargo ship runs aground in Chesapeake Bay near Baltimore

Bad luck strikes again. A year to the month after a cargo ship blocked the Suez Canal, another ship under the same operator, Evergreen Marine Corp., has run aground in the Chesapeake Bay.

Trucker convoy brings traffic and honking to DC

Trucker convoy brings traffic and honking to DC

A convoy of truckers protesting COVID-19 restrictions made its way to Washington, D.C., on Monday, adding to weekday traffic around the Capital Beltway and within the city in what appears to be the convoy’s biggest show of force yet.

‘Thank God’: Five fishermen turned to prayer when boat sank in Caribbean

'Thank God': Five fishermen turned to prayer when boat sank in Caribbean

Five fishermen stranded in the Caribbean for hours after their boat sank Saturday thanked God for saving their lives.

EEOC exploring tracking data about nonbinary workers

EEOC exploring tracking data about nonbinary workers

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is weighing ways in which it can collect data about nonbinary workers consistent with federal law.

THE ROUNDUP

  • Surge of omicron infections prompts lockdowns in China
  • Biden’s Fed nominee doomed
  • DC, NYC police seek suspect in homeless shootings
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES

 


22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT

The Hill's Morning Report
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Ukrainian soldiers and firefighters search in a destroyed building after a bombing attack in Kyiv

© Associated Press/Vadim Ghirda

 

 

Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Tuesday! 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!

Day 19 of the war between Ukraine and Russia was highlighted by key negotiations as discussions between Kyiv and Moscow are set to continue today amid ongoing fighting across the country and the U.S. tries to talk China out of aiding Russian President Vladimir Putin’s efforts.

 

Russian forces on Monday kept up their attacks in Kyiv and Mariupol, a southern port city that has been devastated over the past three weeks, as leading officials on both sides held their fourth series of negotiations. The virtual diplomatic meetings marked the first series of talks in a week, but did not net a breakthrough.

 

A top aide to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky added that officials broke for “a technical pause” after several hours and will resume today.

 

The Associated Press: Ukraine’s capital under fire; leaders of Poland, Czech Republic and Slovenia to visit.

 

The talks between the two sides were not the only high profile back-and-forth on Monday as U.S. officials, led by national security adviser Jake Sullivan, met with their Chinese counterparts in Rome to warn them against providing help to Putin’s war as other nations have closed their doors economically to Moscow.

 

Sullivan met with Yang Jiechi, a senior Chinese foreign policy adviser, for seven hours as the Biden administration tried to deter the country from engaging further with the Russians, a move the White House argued on Monday would be costly (The Associated Press).

 

“If China were to decide to be an economic provider … to Russia, they only make up 15 percent or 15 to 20 percent of the world’s economy. The G-7 (Group of Seven) countries make up more than 50 percent. So there are a range of tools at our disposal,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters, describing the meeting as “intense” (ABC News).

 

However, the Financial Times reported that China’s response to Russia’s request for military equipment was positive, though it remains unclear whether the country has already provided aid or if it intends to do so in the near future. The outlet also reported that Russia requested five types of military gear from Beijing, including surface-to-air missiles, armored and logistics vehicles, and drones.

 

Bloomberg News: China seeks to avoid Russia sanctions sideswipe.

 

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan speaks during a press briefing

© Associated Press/Manuel Balce Ceneta

 

 

Separate talks could also be on the horizon for the White House as President Biden could be set to visit Europe in the coming weeks, a move that would be part of the administration’s response to the Russian invasion. The trip is still in the planning stages, but a visit could include a potential stop in Brussels, the home of NATO. However, an appearance in Ukraine is considered unlikely due to security (The Wall Street Journal).

 

The Associated Press: European Union approves fourth set of sanctions on Russia.

 

Alex Gangitano and Morgan Chalfant, The Hill: Biden finds hands tied on Ukraine.

 

The Hill: Biden yet to see boost from voters despite favorable reviews on Ukraine.

 

On Capitol Hill this week, Zelensky is set to deliver a virtual address to members of Congress on Wednesday as the war is set to reach its fourth week since Russia began striking its neighbor to the west.

 

Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) announced Zelensky’s appearance in a joint letter. The speech is set for 9 a.m. on Wednesday and will be livestreamed for the public (The Associated Press).

 

The address will take place less than a week after Congress OK’d nearly $14 billion in humanitarian and military aid for the ravaged nation. Zelensky previously addressed nearly 300 members of both congressional chambers in a Zoom call earlier this month (The Hill).

 

Pelosi noted during a press conference in New York on Monday that Zelensky asked to deliver the speech when they spoke at the end of last week, adding that members are “thrilled” to hear his remarks.

 

The Wall Street Journal: Zelensky to press Congress for more military gear.

 

Niall Stanage: The Memo: Zelensky virtual address raises pressure on Biden.

 

As The Hill’s Mike Lillis and Cristina Marcos note, Zelensky’s virtual appearance will take place as lawmakers repeatedly force the hand of the administration and press for more aggressive action against Moscow. The House is set to vote this week on legislation to revoke normal trade relations with Russia, a maneuver that will follow a vote to ban Russian oil imports when the Biden administration had initially stiff-armed the idea.

 

The impact has also created a pattern where the White House has moved ahead with certain actions after initially hesitating, with a renewed call for more weapons potentially serving as the next pressure point for the administration.

 

Alexander Bolton, The Hill: Congress looks for Putin pressure points.

 

The Hill: Russian war, inflation pinch U.S. economy.

 

The New York Times: Hundreds escape besieged Mariupol. Tens of thousands remain trapped.

 

The Hill: Australia joins allies, sanctions 33 Russian oligarchs.

 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speaks in Kyiv, Ukraine

© Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via AP

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LEADING THE DAY
CONGRESS: Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) on Monday said that he will oppose the nomination of Sarah Bloom Raskin to serve as the Federal Reserve’s vice chair of supervision, citing her opposition to the fossil fuel industry and officially putting her nomination on shaky ground.

 

Manchin said in a statement that he cannot support Raskin because of his “concerns about the critical importance of financing an all-of-the-above energy policy to meet our nation’s critical energy needs.”

 

“Now more than ever, the United States must have policy leaders and economic experts who are focused on the most pressing issues facing the American people and our nation – specifically rising inflation and energy costs,” Manchin said. “The time has come for the Federal Reserve Board to return to its defining principles and dual mandate of controlling inflation by ensuring stable prices and maximum employment. I will not support any future nominee that does not respect these critical priorities.”

 

The news is a boon to Senate Republicans, who have been targeting Raskin’s nomination for weeks. Republicans on the Senate Banking Committee blocked a preliminary vote on all five of Biden’s Fed nominees last month over concerns about Raskin’s previous work with Reserve Trust, a Colorado-based financial services company given access to the Fed’s payment system (The Hill).

 

Without Manchin, Raskin seemingly has no path forward to win confirmation. Sens. Susan Collins (Maine) and Lisa Murkowski (Alaska), the two foremost GOP moderate senators, both said later on Monday that they too are opposed to her nomination (HuffPost).

 

“I think it’s evident from Joe Manchin’s statement that there is not a path forward for her,” Collins said.

 

Nevertheless, the White House is standing by her and did not give any indication it will pull her nomination in a statement.

 

The Hill: Progressive groups target Schumer in climate spending push.

 

Sarah Bloom Raskin listens during a confirmation hearing

© Associated Press/Bill Clark

 

 

> Funding efforts: Pelosi said Monday it is her “hope” to hold a vote on at “at least part” of the White House’s request for funding to combat COVID-19 this week only days after money to do so was stripped from the year-long government spending bill last week.

 

The omnibus package to fund the government was expected to include $15.6 billion in COVID-19 dollars, but was stripped at the 11th hour because of an outcry by some House Democrats that the money was paid for by clawing back some state aid that was paid out in the American Rescue Plan passed in March 2021 (The Hill).

 

The Wall Street Journal: White House warns of blow to COVID-19 fight as funding stalls.

 

CNN: Plan to reopen U.S. Capitol to the public for first time in two years under review.

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See how we’re working to help you connect safely.

IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
POLITICS: Former President Trump told The Hill’s Bob Cusack on Monday that he is not using campaign funds to build himself a new private plane days after his political action committee directly asked for donations for that purpose.

 

During a phone interview, Trump took issue with an article published by The Hill last week that cited a fundraising email his team recently sent out only days after reports surfaced that he had to make an emergency landing after an engine in the jet flying him to Mar-a-Lago failed. In the email, Trump said his team is “building a BRAND NEW Trump Force One,” suggested it was being constructed.

 

“The story was incorrect,” Trump said in the interview. “I already have a plane, the same one I used on the 2016 campaign,” adding that the plane is being serviced in Louisiana and should be back in the air in 90 days.

 

“It is owned by me and financed by me, with no debt,” Trump continued. When pressed on why the fundraising email that mentioned his plane asked for donations, Trump added, “I don’t know. I never saw the email (before it went out).”

 

“Can you imagine me using campaign funds for a plane?” Trump remarked further, adding that the story was “ridiculous.”

 

> SCOTUS: The push to confirm Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court is also creating an opportunity for Republicans who have an eye toward the looming 2024 GOP presidential nomination battle.

 

As The Hill’s Jordain Carney writes, a fresh round of GOP jockeying will be on full display when Jackson appears before the Senate Judiciary Committee next week, a panel that includes Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) and Ben Sasse (R-Neb.). All four senators are believed to harbor some 2024 aspirations and will get time to question Jackson during her hearings.

 

It’s a dynamic political observers have seen in recent years, especially in 2018, when then-Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) and Sens. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) all took part in the questioning of then-Judge Brett Kavanaugh.

 

NBC News: Democratic National Committee to report $14 million fundraising haul in February.

 

The Hill: Politico demands Hawley stop using Jan. 6 photo on campaign mug.

 

Politico: Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.) sews up support to lead Senate GOP campaign arm in 2024.

 

The Washington Post: Ginni Thomas admits she was at stop the steal rally.

 

> Buckeye politics: Buoyed by a massive advertising blitz, Mike Gibbons has started to find some distance between himself and most of the Ohio GOP Senate field less than two months out from the May 3 primary.

 

Gibbons, an investment banker, has found himself atop two of the most recent polls taken of the bloody primary fight. The most recent survey by Fox News showed Gibbons with a 2-point advantage over former State Treasurer Josh Mandel, with another conducted by The Hill and Emerson College showing him ahead of Mandel by 7 points.

 

As The Hill’s Tal Axelrod writes, his polling success has also put a target on his back as others in the race are expected to make him the subject of late-primary ad buys, betting that Gibbons’s early and consistent screen time has not locked in voters and has, instead, only leased their support.

 

The Hill: Wife of late Minnesota Rep. Jim Hagedorn (R-Minn.) launches bid for seat.

 

Signs proclaim support of Ohio senatorial candidate Mike Gibbons

© Associated Press/Jeff Dean

OPINION
Trump’s endorsements in South Carolina are showcasing his weakness, by Henry Olsen, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3MPnsMT

 

Government is flailing, in part because liberals hobbled it, by Ezra Klein, columnist, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/3KKqDE0

WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at noon.

 

The Senate convenes at 10 a.m. and will resume consideration of Shalanda Young to be director of the Office of Management and Budget.

 

The president and Vice President Harris will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 10:15 a.m. Biden will sign the government funding bill into law at 2:15 p.m. He, along with Harris, First lady Jill Biden and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff, will also take part in an Equal Pay Day event to celebrate Women’s History Month at 5:30 p.m.

 

The vice president will also host the White House Equal Pay Day Summit at 3 p.m., and take part in a conversation with current and former members of the U.S. Women’s National Soccer Team as part of the event at 3:25 p.m.

 

The White House press briefing is scheduled for 1 p.m.

 

📺 Hill.TV’s “Rising” program features news and interviews at http://thehill.com/hilltv and on Facebook at 10:30 a.m. ET. Also, check out the “Rising” podcast here.

ELSEWHERE
➜ CORONAVIRUS: Are COVID-19 cases about to tick upward after infections diminished over the past month? They could be if wastewater is any indication, as more than one-third of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s wastewater sample sites showed rising amounts of virus during the first 10 days of this month (Bloomberg News). Rep. Madeleine Dean (D-Pa.) announced on Monday that she tested positive for COVID-19 and had mild symptoms, likening them to a seasonal cold. Dean is the latest House Democrat to test positive after the party’s retreat in Philadelphia at the end of last week, following Reps. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.) and Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) (The Hill). None of the three were considered close contacts of Biden during his visit to the retreat (The New York Times). … JPMorgan Chase said on Monday that it will lift its ban on hiring unvaccinated individuals and end mandatory testing for employees who are not vaccinated, with both taking place next month. The bank added that masks will be optional at its offices from now on (Bloomberg News).

 

➜ TECH: Meta, the parent company of Facebook, says that it will narrow its guidance on content moderation that currently allows users in some countries to call for violence against Russian aggressors and soldiers within the context of the Ukraine war. Specifically, the updated policy will bar calls for the death of a head of state. “We are now narrowing the focus to make it explicitly clear in the guidance that it is never to be interpreted as condoning violence against Russians in general,” Meta Global Affairs President Nick Clegg wrote in the post (The Hill).

 

➜ SPACE: “Saturday Night Live” star Pete Davidson will headline a group of six people who will temporarily go into space with Blue Origin, the rocket company owned by Jeff Bezos, later this month. Davidson, who has been at the center of the entertainment universe for his relationship with Kim Kardashian, will fly on Blue Origin’s 60-foot-tall New Shepard rocket alongside five paying customers. The rocket is set to take flight on March 23 (CNN).

A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
We’re making investments in safety and security—and seeing results

 

Facebook has invested $13 billion over the last 5 years to help keep you safe. Over the last several months, we’ve taken action on:

    • 62 million pieces of explicit adult content
    • 51.7 million pieces of violent and graphic content

See how we’re working to help you connect safely.

THE CLOSER
And finally … A first for The Met.

 

New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art on Monday announced that Frida Escobedo, a Mexican architect, was selected to become the first woman to design a wing at the museum. In a statement, The Met said that Escobedo was chosen to work on the renovation of its modern and contemporary galleries, which will also contain photographs, drawings and prints.

 

The update will cost roughly $500 million but will create 80,000 square feet of galleries and public space at the museum.

 

Escobedo’s work at The Met is by no means her first high-profile gig, having won widespread praise for her design of the Serpentine Pavilion at Kensington Gardens in London (The Associated Press).

 

A visitor looks at a Van Gogh painting

© Associated Press/Mary Altaffer

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

 


24.) ROLL CALL

Image

Morning Headlines

Drill, baby, drill? Not so fast, say crash-wary energy investors

ImageHigh oil prices are hammering American consumers at the pump, but don’t assume they will prompt a boom in U.S. oil production this year, as market experts point to a number of nonregulatory factors preventing the industry from rushing into drill-baby-drill mode. Read more…

Police proposal would start reopening Capitol later this month

ImagePlans are in the works to reopen the Capitol in phases, starting March 28, according to a proposed Capitol Police plan reviewed by CQ Roll Call. The first phase would permit limited school tours through Senate and House office buildings, escorted by congressional staff. Read more…

The mark of Zelenskyy: History awaits his address to Congress

 

ImageOPINION — President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian people are proving that 2022 isn’t really 1939 or 1940. The longer Ukraine can bravely hold on against Russian forces, the greater the hope that something good can emerge from the horrors of wartime. Read more…

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

Learn more about RevenueStripe...

Democrats push to loosen gig worker tax reporting threshold

 

ImageA group of vulnerable Democrats is pressing for a higher earnings threshold to trigger tax reporting requirements for gig workers and online sellers, arguing that the lower limit that began this year could lead to people paying more tax than they owe. Read more…

Ex-Miami Dolphins head coach Brian Flores throws challenge flag on NFL’s forced arbitration practice

 

ImagePittsburgh Steelers linebackers coach Brian Flores dialed up an all-out blitz against forced arbitration Monday as he helped rally support for a bill to ban the practice. The NFL appears set to enforce a clause in Flores’ contract that would move out of the public spotlight his racial discrimination suit against the league and three teams. Read more…

Manchin says he won’t vote to confirm Fed pick Raskin

 

ImageSen. Joe Manchin III, a Democrat from West Virginia, said Monday that he wouldn’t vote to confirm Sarah Bloom Raskin, President Joe Biden’s nominee to become vice chairman of supervision at the Federal Reserve. Manchin’s break with the president is a significant blow to Raskin’s confirmation chances in a Senate split evenly at 50-50. Read more…

After CDC order, Democrats ramp up push to end border expulsions

 

ImageDemocratic lawmakers have criticized the Biden administration’s decision to exempt only unaccompanied migrant children from a pandemic policy that closed the border to asylum claims, calling on the administration to shield families from the order as well. Read more…

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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK

POLITICO Playbook: Zelenskyy’s must-see TV

By RYAN LIZZA and EUGENE DANIELS

03/15/2022 06:11 AM EDT

Presented by

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delivers a video message to the people joining a rally on the Remember square in Frankfurt, Germany, March 4, 2022.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delivers a video message to the people joining a rally in Frankfurt, Germany, on March 4. | Michael Probst/AP Photo

DRIVING THE DAY

A TALE OF TWO BROADCASTS — In Moscow, the flagship newscast on state television was interrupted Monday by MARINA OVSYANNIKOVA, an employee of the network, who burst into the frame and held up an anti-war poster. In English it said, “No War” at the top and “Russians against the war” at the bottom. In between, in Russian, it said, “Stop the war. Don’t believe the propaganda. They’re lying to you here.”

NYT’s Anton Troianovski noted, “The moment went viral online in Russia, despite the Kremlin’s recent efforts to block dissent on the internet. Within hours, Ms. Ovsyannikova’s Facebook page had more than 26,000 comments, with many people thanking her or praising her for her bravery in Russian, English and Ukrainian.” She was detained by police as of this morning — her whereabouts are unknown.

In Kyiv, President VOLODYMYR ZELENSKYY delivered his latest video address to Ukrainians with a shocking level of confidence. Despite the siege of his cities and the worsening refugee crisis, Zelenskyy sounded like he had the upper hand in the conflict. He addressed Russian soldiers with the same message as Ovsyannikova: they are being deceived.

“The enemy is confused,” he taunted. “They did not expect such resistance. They believed in their propaganda, which has been lying about us for decades.They still can’t recollect themselves. But they have already begun to understand that they will not achieve anything by war.

“Their soldiers know this. Their officers are aware of this. They flee the battlefield. They abandon equipment. We take trophies and use them to protect Ukraine. Today, Russian troops are, in fact, one of the suppliers of equipment to our army. They could not imagine such a thing in a nightmare.”

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ZELENSKYY’S NEXT BIG ADDRESS — On Wednesday, Zelenskyy will speak to Congress virtually. According to one person with knowledge of the address, he plans “to name and shame,” meaning excoriating the West for not doing enough to defend his country, though he will balance his remarks with some gratitude for what has been provided.

WSJ’s Andrew Restuccia and Siobhan Hughes report that it was Zelenskyy who asked Congress to speak. Few world leaders have the kind of moral authority that Zelenskyy has to push Congress. A week ago Saturday, when he addressed members of Congress privately, his pleas for assistance produced a flurry of congressional requests to the Biden administration. The Ukrainian aid package zipping through Congress ballooned in the following days.

Tougher sanctions, advanced air defense weapons, airplanes from Poland, and a no-fly-zone are all still on Zelenskyy’s wish list. His advocates in Washington — lobbyists and members of Congress — told Playbook they have tried to push his government to deemphasize the no-fly zone, which has been repeatedly ruled out by Biden, and focus on beefed up defense assistance that is more achievable, such as S-300 surface-to-air missiles.

MUST-READ — WaPo’s Sudarsan Raghavan has a remarkable report from the front lines that explains with great detail how the Ukrainian resistance has so far surprised the world in holding off the Russian takeover of Kyiv: “How Kyiv’s outgunned defenders have kept Russian forces from capturing the capital.”

The last line of this graf caught our attention: “To be sure, most military analysts and Western officials still predict that Russian forces will eventually encircle Kyiv and push into the capital, possibly aided by airstrikes. While this could prove true, it’s far from clear whether Russia will prevail.”

More and more commentators and reporters are echoing Raghavan’s view that it’s no longer a fait accompli that Russia will prevail.

The other big Ukraine headlines:

— Biden may travel to Europe next week. (POLITICO)

— NATO leaders are weighing plans for an “extraordinary” — i.e., not regularly scheduled — meeting in Brussels next week to discuss the war. (CNBC)

— National security adviser JAKE SULLIVAN had what the administration described as an “intense” seven-hour discussion with a top Chinese diplomat in Rome. Other Biden officials warned there would be “consequences” if Beijing assisted the Russian war effort. (CNN)

— Peace talks are scheduled to resume today. (Reuters)

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ICYMI: Majority of Americans reject so-called government “negotiation” once they learn it could restrict access and choice and chill the innovation of new treatments and cures.

Good Tuesday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza.

BIDEN’S TUESDAY:

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

— 2:15 p.m.: Biden will sign the Consolidated Appropriations Act into law, with Harris and acting OMB Director SHALANDA YOUNG attending.

— 5:30 p.m.: Biden, Harris and first lady JILL BIDEN will deliver remarks at an Equal Pay Day event in the East Room. Among the attendees: second gentleman DOUG EMHOFF, Energy Secretary JENNIFER GRANHOLM, Young, DNI AVRIL HAINES, Council of Economic Advisers Chair CECILIA ROUSE, SBA Administrator ISABELLA CASILLAS GUZMAN and members of the U.S. women’s national soccer team.

HARRIS’ TUESDAY — The VP will also host and speak at the Equal Pay Day Summit at 3 p.m. and have a conversation with current and former USWNT players at 3:25 p.m.

Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 1 p.m.

THE HOUSE will meet at noon and take up several bills under suspension of the rules at 2 p.m., with votes postponed until 6:30 p.m.

THE SENATE is in and will recess from 12:30 p.m. to 2:15 p.m. for weekly conference meetings.

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PHOTO OF THE DAY

Stacey Abrams is pictured. | Getty Images
Georgia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams speaks during a campaign rally in Atlanta, Ga., on Monday, March 14. | Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

PLAYBOOK READS

CONGRESS

SENATE SHOCKER — ​​It’s the Capitol’s election-year surprise: The 50-50 Senate is actually working. “After high-profile partisan failures on President Joe Biden’s signature domestic policy bill and on weakening the filibuster for voting reform, the chamber’s racked up a series of bipartisan accomplishments lately — some of which had eluded Congress for years,” Burgess Everett and Marianne LeVine write. “It’s not always been pretty, but there’s been no debt defaults, no shutdown and no change in chamber control due to a party-switcher.”

TWO YEARS LATER –– The Capitol may soon open to the public after more than two years of closure because of the pandemic, WaPo’s Felicia Sonmez and Marianna Sotomayor report. The proposal has a planned reopening in three phases, with the first beginning March 28 and the final expected to begin on Labor Day.

“On Monday, staffers for the House Administration and Senate Rules committees, the House and Senate sergeants at arms, and members of the U.S. Capitol Police discussed a draft plan for the reopening. The proposal, which has not been finalized, lays out a three-phase plan for reopening the complex to visitors and the general public.”

ALL POLITICS

THE COOLING TRUMP EFFECT? — Republicans looking to run for president in 2024 once lived in fear of crossing DONALD TRUMP. That’s beginning to change. “Over the past few weeks, three would-be presidential candidates who hail from the conservative wing of the Republican Party — Arkansas Sen. TOM COTTON, former Vice President MIKE PENCE and Florida Gov. RON DESANTIS — have prodded at or even outright criticized the former president’s record,” Alex Isenstadt reports. “Taken together, they highlight how the prospective candidates are staking out calculated distance from Trump with an eye toward establishing their own political identities, making clear that they aren’t carbon copies of the former president and signaling to donors and party activists that they’re serious about running in 2024.”

2024 WATCH — Sen. STEVE DAINES (R-Mont.) is eyeing the top spot for the GOP Senate campaign arm ahead of the 2024 cycle, Burgess Everett reports. “The second-term Daines confirmed in an interview that he’s interested in chairing the National Republican Senatorial Committee during the next election cycle. That assignment would put him in charge of winning Senate races in red-leaning states like Ohio, West Virginia and, yes, Montana, where Sen. JON TESTER (D-Mont.) may run for re-election. And Daines seems to be locking up his colleagues’ support for the job.”

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ICYMI: Majority of Americans reject so-called government “negotiation”.

THE WHITE HOUSE 

HEADS UP — Today is Equal Pay Day, “the first in a series of days across the year that highlights how little progress the country has made toward closing the gender pay gap,” The 19th’s Chabeli Carrazana writes. The White House today announced it is “taking steps to reduce gender disparities in the federal workforce. The Office of Personnel Management is expected to propose a resolution to eliminate the use of salary history in setting pay for federal workers, a practice that has been known to carry over discriminatory pay practices from job to job. Biden also signed an executive order directing the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council, which helps direct government procurement, to consider limiting the use of salary history.”

THE PANDEMIC

BUCKLE UP — Wastewater data is sounding an early warning sign that Covid-19 cases have been rising in March in about a third of monitoring sites around the country, Bloomberg’s Drew Armstrong and Andre Tartar report. That’s almost double the proportion from a month prior. “It’s not clear how many new infections the signs in the sewage represent and if they will turn into a new wave, or will be just a brief bump on the way down from the last one.”

— ANDY SLAVITT warned of a possible spring wave coming to the U.S. in a Twitter thread: “An estimated 45% of the US has had omicron recently. That should be highly protective. Those fully vaccinated but who haven’t had omicron should be vulnerable to infection from BA2, but largely won’t be hospitalized or worse. Those without prior infection would be at most risk of infection. Those who haven’t been infected but also aren’t vaccinated or boosted will be at highest risk of hospitalization. So we could see lots of cases, but an even lower portion of ppl hospitalized than last wave.”

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

INFLATION NATION — Rising prices are hitting voters of color hardest, giving Republicans a potential political opening with traditionally Democratic-leaning groups, WSJ’s John McCormick reports. Thirty-five percent of people of color said inflation is causing “major financial strain in their lives,” compared to 28% of white people. The groups most affected in the survey were Black women and Hispanic men, both at 44%. One 47-year-old Latino independent in Colorado “said he was more open to Republicans this year, in part because of inflation.”

DON’T MISS POLITICO’S INAUGURAL HEALTH CARE SUMMIT ON 3/31: Join POLITICO for a discussion with health care providers, policymakers, federal regulators, patient representatives, and industry leaders to better understand the latest policy and industry solutions in place as we enter year three of the pandemic. Panelists will discuss the latest proposals to overcome long-standing health care challenges in the U.S., such as expanding access to care, affordability, and prescription drug prices. REGISTER HERE.

PLAYBOOKERS

John Bolton tells “The Bill Press Pod” he thinks Vladimir Putin may have waited to invade because he thought Trump would win reelection and pull out of NATO. “The Leninist phrase is ‘useful idiot,’ and they haven’t forgotten that in Moscow.” Listen here

Benjamin Hall, a Fox News correspondent, was injured while covering the war in Ukraine, the network reported. Details were scant.

PBS NewsHour’s Jane Ferguson responded with a Twitter thread about how dangerous Ukraine is for journalists: “This war is incredibly tough to cover as a field reporter – unlike any I have seen or experienced before.”

Nieman Lab’s Joshua Benton has a lovely remembrance of the life’s work of his colleague Brent Renaud, who was killed in Ukraine: “Because if there’s even a single thing about Sunday that makes any sense, it’s that Brent Renaud died telling the stories of people caught up in some of humanity’s darkest situations.

WaPo’s Seung Min Kim quipped that Sherrod Brown’s head must be “exploding” over the likely demise of his favored pick for a spot on the Federal Reserve Board. To which Brown’s wife, journalist Connie Schultz, cracked: “Nah, his hair always looks like that.”

Adam Kinzinger let everyone know why he refused an invite to go on Tucker Carlson’s show.

The trucker convoy finally entered D.C., snarling traffic and comparing themselves to the Battle of Jericho.

OUT AND ABOUT — Liechtenstein Ambassador Georg Sparber and Yvonne Sparber hosted a reception honoring the House Chiefs of Staff Association at their Georgetown waterfront home Monday evening, marking 25 years since the first U.S. ambassador to Liechtenstein was accredited. 75 chiefs of staff and staff directors from both parties gathered for specialty curated craft cocktails, wine from the private vineyard of Hereditary Prince of Liechtenstein Alois, and customized cocktail shakers as party favors. SPOTTED: co-chairs Mitchell Rivard and Jonathan Day, Don Andres, James Bernhard, Jaryn Emhof, John Byers, Joshua Cohen, Chris Crawford, Braden Dreiling, Mark Dreiling, Robert Edmonson, Matthew Fery, Justin German, Chris Gorud, Drew Griffin, Liana Guerra, Chloe Hunt, Paige Hutchinson, Mark McDevitt, Jen Bradley, Michael Mucchetti, Nishith Pandya, Tara Rountree and Yardena Wolf. Pics

STAFFING UP — Ramya Prabhakar has joined USAID Administrator Samantha Power’s speechwriting team. She previously was at West Wing Writers and is a member of Speechwriters of Color.

TRANSITIONS — Rachel Meyer is now deputy chief of staff for Project ECHO. She previously was senior director of policy and government affairs at the American Society of Nephrology. … Erica Teasley Linnick is joining NEO Philanthropy to lead the State Infrastructure Fund. She most recently was senior program officer and then acting director of democracy at Open Society Foundations. …

… Reggie Paros is now chief program officer at Millennial Action Project. He previously was director of government relations at Oceans Conservancy. … Jonathan Martinez is now director of federal government affairs at GSK. He previously was legislative director for Rep. Nydia Velazquez (D-N.Y.). Renata Beca-Barragan is now Velazquez’s legislative director.

ENGAGED — Caroline Tucker, comms director for Rep. Blake Moore (R-Utah), and Spencer Hamilton, a legislative correspondent for Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), got engaged Saturday morning at Constitution Gardens near the National Mall. They met last May through mutual friends. Pic … Another pic

HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Reps. Jason Crow (D-Colo.) and Morgan Griffith (R-Va.) … Kevin Munoz … Lenny Alcivar … Brendan Buck of Seven Letter (4-0) … George Holman … Washingtonian’s Jack Limpert … former Sen. Ted Kaufman (D-Del.) … Svante Myrick … POLITICO’s Mallory Culhane … Austin Durrer of Rep. Charlie Crist’s (D-Fla.) office … Megan Uhrich … Marcus Weisgerber of Defense One … Franklin Davis of the American Beverage Association (4-0) … Amanda Broun … Kate Dickens of S-3 Group … Patrick Dellinger of FlexPoint Media … Suzanne Smalley … Lauren Marshall of Sen. Mark Warner’s (D-Va.) office … Joe Carapiet … Ariel Hill-Davis of Solvay America … Jenny 8. Lee … Protocol’s Megan Morrone … Mark J. Green … former West Virginia Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin (7-0) … Tom Baer … Bill Hendrickson (93) … Josh Deckard … NYT’s Sopan Deb

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31.) THE DISPATCH

The Dispatch

THE MORNING DISPATCH

The Morning Dispatch: China’s Russia Triangulation

Plus: Scenes from last night’s closed-door fundraiser for embattled Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney.

The Dispatch Staff 5 min ago

6

Happy Tuesday! Yesterday’s Let Us Know was really more of a formality—of course we’re going to do another Morning Dispatch March Madness bracket pool!

To enter, click here (you will need to have a free ESPN account) and select “Join Group.” The password is “TMD2K22!” and predictions must be completed by Thursday morning before the first games tip off. If you want to be eligible for prizes (including Dispatch Yeti tumblers, mugs, hats, T-shirts, and membership for life), fill out this form so we can connect you with your ESPN entry.

We’ll keep you updated on the leaderboard over the next few weeks—and go Illini! [Editor’s note: Go Badgers.]

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin announced Monday he will not support President Joe Biden’s nomination of Sarah Bloom Raskin to the Federal Reserve Board, effectively dooming the former Treasury Department official’s chances of confirmation. Republicans have held up a vote on Raskin’s nomination for weeks over concerns she would seek to expand the Fed’s mandate to include combating climate change. Senate Banking Committee Chair Sherrod Brown told reporters yesterday he plans to move forward with a vote anyways.
  • Defense Minister Christine Lambrecht announced Monday Germany will buy 35 Lockheed Martin F-35 fighter jets to replace the country’s decades-old Tornado aircraft. Berlin also plans to purchase 15 Eurofighter jets as part of Chancellor Olaf Scholz’ recent pivot on defense spending.
  • Total federal lobbying spending reached a record $3.7 billion in 2021, according to government data compiled by OpenSecrets. Adjusted for inflation, however, lobbying revenues were higher from 2008 through 2011. The figure declined from 2010 to 2016 as a divided Congress prevented major legislation from passing, but has steadily increased since 2017.

Does China Regret Tethering Itself to Putin?

(Photo by Kremlin Press Office/Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images.)

It’s been nearly three weeks since Vladimir Putin launched his so-called “special military operation” in Ukraine, and his greatest accomplishment thus far has been uniting the vast majority of the world in opposition to him. European nations who hemmed and hawed for months over punishing Russia have led the way in imposing perhaps the harshest sanctions regime in history. Public pressure campaigns have rendered it all but impossible for multinational corporations to do business in the geographically largest country on the planet. In a symbolic demonstration of Russia’s isolation, a whopping 141 countries voted in favor of a resolution condemning its aggression at the United Nations earlier this month, compared to just four nay votes and 35 abstentions.

But one of those abstainers is the second most powerful nation in the world. As Russian missiles rain down on Ukrainian cities—1,761 confirmed dead or wounded civilians thus far, according to the UN—the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has sought to publicly straddle the fence between the warring countries. President Xi Jinping has refused to directly condemn Putin’s aggression or label it an invasion, but other high-ranking officials readily admit “what [we] are seeing [in Ukraine] today is not what we have wished to see.” CCP spokespeople and state-owned media outlets have amplified Russian narratives about the war and criticized Western sanctions, but Chinese companies thus far appear to be more or less in compliance with the latter.

Beijing has persistently sought to capitalize on this veneer of neutrality in recent days to boost its own standing on the international stage. “China is willing to continue playing a constructive role in urging peace talks and is willing when necessary to work together with the international community to launch required mediation,” Foreign Minister Wang Yi told reporters last week. Days earlier, Josep Borrel, the European Union’s top diplomat, had argued “it must be China” who brokers a ceasefire, and Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said Beijing had “sufficient tools to make a difference” in talks. Xi spoke with French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz last week to discuss potential diplomatic solutions to the conflict. On Sunday, a Chinese Communist Party advisor published an op-ed in The New York Times: “It’s Time to Offer Russia an Offramp. China Can Help With That.”

But China’s claims of neutrality have always been a facade. Just weeks before Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine—an invasion that U.S. intelligence officials believe the Chinese were aware of in advance—Russian and Chinese leaders issued a lengthy joint statement defining the nature of their relationship and declaring their “friendship” had no limits. “The sides reaffirm their strong mutual support for the protection of their core interests, state sovereignty and territorial integrity, and oppose interference by external forces in their internal affairs,” the more-than-5,000 word document read. “Russia and China stand against attempts by external forces to undermine security and stability in their common adjacent regions, intend to counter interference by outside forces in the internal affairs of sovereign countries under any pretext, oppose color revolutions, and will increase cooperation in the aforementioned areas.”

With the Kremlin increasingly isolated economically as its advances in Ukraine continue to stall, the United States is concerned China is about to hold up its end of the bargain. “[We] are watching closely to see the extent to which China actually does provide any form of support, material support or economic support, to Russia,” National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan told CNN on Sunday, the same day anonymous U.S. officials leaked their belief that Russia asked China for military and economic aid shortly after the invasion began. “It is a concern of ours. And we have communicated to Beijing that we will not stand by and allow any country to compensate Russia for its losses from the economic sanctions.”

Sullivan spent his Monday expressing those worries directly to his Chinese counterpart, meeting Yang Jiechi in Rome for what a Biden administration official described as an “intense, seven-hour” session. “We do have deep concerns about China’s alignment with Russia at this time,” the official told reporters on a call yesterday afternoon that was short on specifics. “The National Security Advisor was direct about those concerns and the potential implications and consequences of certain actions.”

Whether China would so provocatively escalate its involvement in Putin’s war remains to be seen. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi dismissed the reports on Monday, maintaining China is “not a party” to what’s going on in Ukraine and accusing “some forces” of “smearing” the CCP government with disinformation. Despite Putin confirming over the weekend he was shipping in thousands of Middle Eastern volunteer soldiers to help Russian forces in the Donbas region, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov claimed Russia has “no reason” to seek external military assistance because it “has an independent potential to continue the operation.”

But a U.S. diplomatic cable sent to NATO and European allies in recent days reportedly warns that China has “expressed some openness” to potentially providing Russia with military and/or financial assistance, perhaps starting with non-lethal aid like pre-packaged military meal kits. The cable, according to CNN, also suggested China would publicly deny any intentions it has of doing so.

Several regional experts The Dispatch spoke with yesterday, however, were skeptical Xi would tether his country to Putin’s war, which is already showing signs of becoming a years-long quagmire.

“I’m very dubious,” said Joshua Kurlantzick, the Council on Foreign Relations’ senior fellow for southeast Asia. “Even though he has moved China in many authoritarian directions and taken a lot of fairly severe actions, [Xi Jinping] is still a much more cautious actor than Vladimir Putin.” Kurlantzick pointed to recent remarks from the recently retired editor-in-chief of the CCP-aligned Global Times, Hu Xijin, as evidence.

“As a major military industrial power, Russia does not need to ask China to provide substantial military assistance for the limited-scale war in Ukraine,” Hu said in a video posted to social media. He also advocated for a total shutdown on arms dealing in general: “All countries should stop providing military assistance to any side of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and only humanitarian aid is allowed.”

Why might Xi be treading so carefully? He has hundreds of billions of reasons to be cautious. “If Xi Jinping were to move into a position of more active support for Russia in this conflict—so going beyond amplifying Russian disinformation and [actually] helping Russia evade sanctions or providing military resupply—he would be taking a huge strategic risk,” Hal Brands, a global affairs professor Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, told The Dispatch. “He would be exposing Chinese firms to U.S. sanctions on a scale that the Chinese have never wanted to do before … [and] risk dramatically accelerating decoupling between the U.S. and China. In part because of the effect those sanctions would have, and in part because—by making China complicit in Russian behavior in this conflict—he would give so much ammunition to China’s critics in the United States.”

But Bonny Lin, the director of the China Power Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, believes Xi could view this moment as an opportune time to accelerate that decoupling. “If you look at the level of censorship within China—how it’s very pro-Russian, blaming the United States and blaming the West for what’s happening in Ukraine—it’s basically China doubling down on Xi Jinping’s decision to deepen relations with Russia,” she said. “It’s hard not to see a future in which Chinese leadership believes that there’s very little upside to working with the United States and the West. … [In that future,] what is there for China to lose by working with Russia?”

A lot, Brands argues. “I think [the war has] had the effect of making the Chinese look pretty bad in the eyes of a lot of European countries in particular,” he said. “In the near term, the effect of this crisis is to push Russia and China closer together, because neither of them has a good alternative to the other. But over the longer term, I think it gives us a preview of how this relationship might ultimately come apart, because the Chinese are starting to realize that Putin sometimes does things that blow back on Beijing, and the Russians are going to be forced into a position of dependence on China that will be much more extreme than the one they occupy today, which will actually be pretty uncomfortable for Moscow over time.”

Cheney: ‘We Do Not Need to Choose Between Socialism and Insurrection’

At a rally over the weekend in South Carolina, former President Donald Trump once again delivered a long, meandering speech—a discursive set of observations on everything from the 2020 election (“Our election was rigged and we can never let this happen again”) to national security (“my personality is what kept us out of war”) to China (“we respected each other, but I said, ‘President [Xi], we’re eating chocolate cake’—and it was beautiful chocolate cake”).

And as he does nearly every time he speaks, Trump took aim at the Republicans he deems insufficiently supportive. No one seems to pique his anger more than Wyoming Representative Liz Cheney. “She’s a terrible person,” Trump said. “And she has no idea what she’s doing.”

Cheney’s blunt denunciations of Trump’s dishonesty and determination to hold him accountable for attempting to steal the election have had consequences. She was bounced from her position as the third-ranking Republican in the House of Representatives; she’s been denounced by Republican leaders in Wyoming; and, most recently, she was censured by the Republican National Committee as they defended the “legitimate political discourse” on January 6. There is little Donald Trump wants more than to see her lose her seat in Congress.

But Cheney is pushing back, and she’s got company. In recent weeks Republicans who have been  reluctant to challenge Trump have found their voices. When the RNC censured Cheney and Rep. Adam Kinzinger, several GOP leaders in the senate, including Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, spoke out against the measure. Former vice president Mike Pence has offered blunt criticism of his former boss over January 6th and his obsession with the 2020 election, criticism echoed by Chris Christie, a longtime Trump enthusiast. Earlier this month, after Trump praised Putin’s “genius” and said his invasion of Ukraine was “wonderful,” Pence said there is no room in the GOP for “apologists for Putin.” Even GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy, who’s gone out of his way to avoid criticizing Trump as he seeks to become speaker of the House after the midterms, directly contradicted the former president when he said he doesn’t think there’s “anything savvy or genius” about Putin.

It was in this somewhat friendlier political environment that Cheney raised more than $500,000 at a fundraiser Monday evening at the McLean Hilton hotel in suburban Washington.  Senator Mitt Romney co-hosted the event and praised Cheney’s courage in brief remarks to the roughly 200 people in attendance, a crowd that included 2016 presidential candidate Carly Fiorina, former solicitor general Ted Olson, and other top Republican officeholders and appointees. “It was a strong showing and I would say that a good number of the people there were Trump voters, too,” former Rep. Barbara Comstock told The Dispatch.

Cheney spoke informally for a little more than twenty minutes, addressing challenges at home and abroad. “The threats we face are so grave, we need to elect serious people who understand the importance of our oath to the Constitution,” she said, according to sources in the room. “I will do everything in my power to make sure we’re not a country that does not recognize the peaceful transfer of power.”

Cheney rejected the view that the current political battles in America should be seen as a contest between extremes. “We do not need to choose between socialism and insurrection,” she said. “As Republicans, we must demand more from our elected officials. We must demand seriousness.”

The contest has become something of a referendum on the future of the GOP, with avatars of the pre-Trump GOP contributing to Cheney, including former president George W. Bush, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, top GOP strategist Karl Rove, and McConnell, among others.

Trump is supporting Cheney’s main opponent in the GOP primary, Harriet Hageman, a onetime Cheney supporter who told the New York Times in January, “I don’t know the answer” when asked who had won the 2020 presidential election. The primary election, almost certain to determine who will represent Wyoming in the next Congress, is scheduled for August 16. With 69.9 percent of the vote to Biden’s 26.6 percent, Trump almost tripled Biden’s raw vote total in 2020, his largest margin in any state in the country.

Worth Your Time

  • To fully understand Putin’s assault on Kyiv, you need to think back to Budapest, Prague, and Warsaw, Michael Ignatieff argues in a rich historical essay published by Persuasion. “This story of four Eastern European capitals, all under attack from Russia, over the past 70 years makes nonsense of the claim that NATO expansion eastward caused this crisis,” he writes. “Eastern Europeans have always understood that an authoritarian Russia, whoever rules it, has never tolerated a free state on its borders. Mr. Putin’s brutality has a pedigree.”
  • As Timothy B. Lee notes in his latest Full Stack Economics newsletter, there’s a serious risk of a recession this year. “The most severe recessions of the last 50 years—in 2008 and the double-dip recessions in the early 1980s—followed the biggest price spikes of the last 50 years. The smaller oil price jumps in 1990 and 2000 were followed by mild recessions,” he writes. “One interpretation is that high oil prices directly cause recessions. Perhaps the extra costs of energy imports force firms to lay off workers and cut output. Or maybe consumers respond to rising gas prices—and the fear of further increases in the future—by cutting spending in other categories. But economists have also suggested a more subtle explanation: central banks tend to overreact to oil supply shocks, tightening monetary policy too much and thereby triggering a recession.”

Presented Without Comment

Twitter avatar for @axiosAxios @axios

The head of the Russian National Guard — and a close Putin ally — said that the invasion of Ukraine was going slower than expected. The comments are the strongest admission yet that the invasion has not gone according to plan. Russian National Guard chief says Ukraine invasion has been slower than expectedIt’s the strongest admission yet that Russia’s invasion has not gone according to plan.trib.al

March 14th 2022

34 Retweets71 Likes

Also Presented Without Comment

Twitter avatar for @maxseddonmax seddon @maxseddon

A woman burst onto Russia’s main live evening newscast today with a sign that says: “Stop the war Don’t believe propaganda They’re lying to you” And chanting: “Stop the war! No to war!”

March 14th 2022

23,236 Retweets87,063 Likes

Also Also Presented Without Comment

Twitter avatar for @FoxNewsFox News @FoxNews

Musk challenges Putin to ‘single combat’ over Ukraine, Russia responds: ‘Weakling’ Musk challenges Putin to ‘single combat’ over Ukraine, Russia responds: ‘Weakling’Tesla CEO and SpaceX founder Elon Musk challenges Russia’s Putin to single combat, placing Ukraine as a wager.foxbusiness.com

March 14th 2022

76 Retweets509 Likes

Toeing the Company Line

  • Harvest leads the site today with a lengthy profile of Jaime Herrera Beutler, the Washington state Republican whose 2020 vote to impeach Donald Trump has drawn her a MAGA challenger who’s chummy with the white nationalist fringe.
  • On Monday’s episode of Advisory Opinions, David and Sarah discuss the latest on Texas’ abortion law before turning to the avalanche of misleading commentary about Florida’s so-called “don’t say gay” law. Stick around for a thoughtful conversation about teachers’ free speech rights, pronouns, and critical race theory.
  • It’s Tuesday, which means Dispatch Live is back tonight! Tune in at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT for a conversation with David, Sarah, and American Enterprise Institute senior fellow Adam White on all things Supreme Court. What should we expect from Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s confirmation hearings? What cases currently in front of the Court does the panel find most interesting?

Let Us Know

Are we on the verge of a new Cold War? Are we already in one?

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Charlotte Lawson (@lawsonreports), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).

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32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION

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Tulsi Gabbard and Mitt Romney get into nasty spat over US funded biolabs in Ukraine
Grandstanding, calculated dispute, whatever it is, Tulsi Gabbard and Sen. Mitt Romney got into a nasty Twitter spat after Gabbard published a video encouraging all involved forces to destroy “dangerous pathogens” housed in the US-funded biolabs in Ukraine. Romney called Gabbard a traitor and Gabbard insisted Romney resign.
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William Jacobson

“HELLO SOUTH FLORIDA — I’ll be there for two speaking engagements in Miami and Boca on March 31 and April 1. (Not fooling.) Details to follow.”

 

  • Mary Chastain: “Monday was great! We spent most of the day at White Sands National Park. Beautiful and breathtaking. Now I’m in Tucson and hitting Tombstone today! I’m so excited to see the OK Corral reenactment. The movie Tombstone is one of the best movies ever made. Plus it has everyone in it. I mean everyone!”
  • Leslie Eastman: “Florida cops have arrested an alleged drug dealer they say sold the fentanyl-laced cocaine to several West Point cadets who overdosed during a spring break trip this week. The only potential upside to this story is that the magnitude of the incident serves as a reminder that fentanyl has a very low lethal dose and that every single drug illegally obtained must be assumed to contain it. Florida Man Recently Arrested in Connection to Overdoses of Six West Point Cadets“
  • Stacey Matthews: “Things have gotten so bad for Kamala Harris that the White House is now having to alter official transcripts and add words she should have said during public appearances in Europe but didn’t.”
  • David Gerstman: “Vijeta Uniyal blogged about an Iranian missile attack aimed at the US Consulate in Erbil, Iraq (part of the semi-autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government). According to an Iranian “news” site, the missiles were aimed at “Zionist strategic centers.” Unfortunately, some US officials parroted this Iranian charge, until reversing themselves. You can decide whether the idea to give Iran’s claim more oxygen was incompetent or malicious.”
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE

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03.15.2022

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‘My Panda, My Choice, Mom’: Disney And Pixar’s ‘Turning Red’ Has Some Parents Outraged Over Themes

By Amanda Harding

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‘Woke Brat’: Emma Watson Slammed For Apparent Swipe At J.K. Rowling

By Hank Berrien

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Investors Crowdfunded The Purchase Of A Private Island. Now They Have Their Own ‘Micronation.’

By Zach Jewell

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Media Figure Says It’s ‘Convenient’ Police Don’t Have Bodycam Footage Of Moments Beto Staffer, Officer Allegedly Assaulted Her

By Amanda Prestigiacomo

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‘Basically Endorses McCarthyism’: ABC’s ‘The View’ Slammed For Suggesting Gabbard Be Investigated, Arrested

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‘I’m Gonna Die. This Is Awful’: Amy Schumer Recalls Difficult IVF Process And Choosing To Have One ‘Perfect’ Child

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34.) DESERET NEWS

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By Ashley Lee Tuesday March 15, 2022
Good morning. Salt Lake City will have a high of 58° and a low of 36°.

 

Do you remember the photo of the pregnant woman being carried from the maternity hospital that was damaged by shelling in Mariupol, Ukraine last week? The Associated Press reported that both she and her baby died. I know it’s a grim piece of news to start the morning with, but it’s one that I can’t stop thinking about.

 

But I’ll leave you with a more positive Ukraine-related story. Two Utah County kids decided on our their own last week to start a hot cocoa stand to raise money for families in Ukraine. Thus far, they’ve raised $4,400, with an anonymous donor pledging to double whatever they receive.

 

Also on our mind today: What you should know about the Jewish holiday Purim, why rising interest rates are pricing out even more homebuyers and how to make Roblox and Minecraft safe for kids.

The Fed is set to raise interest rates. What will it mean for you?

What’s happening: The Federal Reserve is expected to raise interest rates this week — for the first time in three years — by .25%.

 

What you should expect, according to Phil Dean, former state budget director and public finance senior research fellow at the University of Utah’s Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute:

  • Home loans, car loans and business equipment investments will become more expensive as rates rise.
  • Those with fixed-rate loans for large purchases such as homes and cars are better protected.
  • Those with variable-rate loans, or who are carrying debt on variable-rate credit cards, will experience larger, interest-driven fees.

More rate raises are expected throughout 2022. The hope is to reduce inflation without impeding the growth of the U.S. economy.

Read more about the Federal Reserve’s expected interest rate increase.
ut-oil-031522

What’s the solution to the high gas prices?

The debate over how to ease high gas prices is ongoing. Here are some of the solutions being advocated:

 

More U.S. production

  • Rikki Hrenko-Browning, president of the Utah Petroleum Association, argues that the Biden administration should expedite permitting decisions and leases so the U.S. can quickly increase oil production.
  • “The current administration’s energy policy has resulted in reduced new leases, delays in permitting new wells and delays in extending leases.”

More clean energy

  • A piece by the Center for Western Priorities argues that high gas prices are a reason to transition to clean energy.
  • “We can never be energy independent while we rely on a fuel source that is both controlled by the global market and highly susceptible to international conflict and manipulation by autocratic regimes.”

In any event, the Russian war in Ukraine can’t be solely blamed for high gas prices. Prices had already increased by 30% before the invasion began.

 

The increase is tied up in a 40-year high in inflation and an industry that has been constrained like many others by supply chain issues and a shortage of labor.

 

Read more about potential solutions to high gas prices.

 

More in Politics

  • Why one Republican now regrets not voting to impeach Trump (Deseret News)
  • Why Disney is stopping all political donations in Florida (Deseret News)
Round out your day (v5)

 Health

  • Dr. Fauci warns war in Ukraine could lead to the ‘devastating’ spread of tuberculosis (Deseret News)
  • The fourth COVID-19 vaccine shot is necessary, Pfizer CEO says (Deseret News)
  • Bird flu was discovered again in Kansas and Illinois. It is not a threat to humans, experts say (Deseret News)
  • Better air in classrooms matters beyond COVID. Here’s why schools aren’t there yet (NPR)

Faith

  • What to know about Purim, the most joyful —and rowdy — of Jewish holidays (Deseret News)
  • How 2 international agencies will use $4M from Latter-day Saint Charities to help Ukraine refugees (Deseret News)
  • President Nelson remembers Sister Donna Packer as a ‘mother, sister, saint and daughter of the living God’ (Church News)

Economy

  • Why rising interest rates are pricing out even more homebuyers (Deseret News)
  • PCMR owner Vail Resorts sets a $20-per-hour minimum wage (ParkRecord.com)

Safety

  • Deadly weekend of wrong-way crashes prompts plea from Utah troopers (KSL.com)
  • How to make Roblox and Minecraft safe for kids (Deseret News)
  • Deadly Salt Lake City RV fire shows how Utah’s lack of homeless shelters can lead to disaster (The Salt Lake Tribune 🔒)

Environment

  • Why there’s not much room for optimism with Utah water supplies (Deseret News)
  • What can you do to reduce your carbon footprint? Here are some tips (Deseret News)

The West

  • I spent a week living in the wilderness. Here’s what I learned about surviving modern life (Deseret News)
  • ‘A once-in-a-lifetime experience’: Biologists catch wolverine 43 years after species’ 1st Utah sighting (KSL.com)
  • 25 years and counting: Wilderness Volunteers continues to play vital role in Southern Utah, nation (St. George News)

The Nation

  • Biden’s Fed nominee Raskin imperiled by Democrat’s opposition (Reuters)

The World

  • Russian shelling hits Kyiv as peace talks continue (Deseret News)
  • Nuclear conflict is now ‘back within the realm of possibility,’ U.N. official says (Deseret News)
  • China’s COVID-19 outbreak continues. Here’s what we know (Deseret News)
  • Utah innovator working to get high-tech recon drones to Ukrainian troops (Deseret News)

Trending

  • Perspective: The lessons for the rest of us in Tom Brady’s unretirement (Deseret News)
ut-byu-031522

What BYU’s bigger, deeper, faster defensive line brings to the table

One obviously beefed-up position in BYU’s spring drills is the defensive line.

 

They’re older, seasoned, a little stronger, deeper and have added speed.

 

If that unit proves to be effective in 2022, it will go a long way to help coach Kalani Sitake continue a streak of wins, even with a schedule that includes Arkansas and Notre Dame.

 

Read more about the Cougars’ defensive line.

 

New With:

  • BYU Cougars: Did losing big men this season cost BYU shot at Big Dance?
  • Utah Jazz: Jazz falter down the stretch in loss to Milwaukee Bucks
  • Utah State Aggies: Aggies eager to make a run in the NIT
That’s all for this morning. Check your inbox tomorrow for more news from the Beehive State and beyond!

 

And tell us what you think about Utah Today by replying to this email or emailing newsletters@deseretnews.com.

 

— Ashley

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35.) BRIGHT

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Tuesday, March 15, 2022

The Return of Earmarks
Congress passed a $1.5 trillion omnibus spending bill last week that funded domestic priorities and sent $14 billion in military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine. It was also the first spending bill in roughly a decade to pass chock full of earmarks – that is, funding for projects designed to benefit certain Members of Congress.

Chris Jacobs has more in The Federalist:

“As if the rushed process that led to the passage of last week’s omnibus spending legislation wasn’t bad enough in itself, members of Congress had more than 4,000 reasons not to vote for the spending bill, in the form of earmarks that made their return to Washington for the first time in a decade.

The process late last week proved chaotic, even by congressional standards. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., had to strip out additional Covid funding because some House Democrats opposed paying for the spending by rescinding some of the hundreds of billions in federal bailout funds pledged to states. On the plus side, however, the drama in Washington meant a delayed start to congressional Democrats’ “retreat” (read: vacation) in Philadelphia, resulting in the cancellation of “a performance by storied drag queen Lady Bunny” (seriously).

But the piece de resistance of Washington corruption came with the return of earmarks—367 pages of them. At a time our nation faces $30 trillion in debt—not to mention rising inflation—lawmakers saw fit to spend your money on things like $3 million for a museum dedicated to the life of Mahatma Gandhi.”

Citizens for Renewing America also put out this partial list of earmarks. In the Senate, an amendment offered by Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) to prohibit funding for earmarks in the bill failed by a vote of 35-64, with 15 Republicans (including the GOP minority leader Mitch McConnell) voting in opposition to the amendment.

Some on the right oppose earmarks out of concern for spending. Others support earmarks as a means of more tightly controlling where federal money goes (as opposed to outsourcing that decision to a bureaucrat). The latter reason was enough to compel House Republicans to vote to bring the practice back last year.

My issue with earmarks has always been about their ability to entrench established politicians, dull legislative creativity, and pass bad bills. This comes from my own experience as a young hill staffer working when earmarks were the coin of the realm. It’s not an exaggeration to say that earmarks were all we did. We didn’t read bills (except to find our own earmark), and we didn’t write bills, we just met with people who wanted earmarks. And, as a 24-year-old legislative staffer, I had to become an expert on odd things like municipal pools – which basically just involved me calling a lot of state and federal agencies to have them explain how it all worked. Even when Congress appropriates the funds, the bureaucrats still oversee the implementation.

But the biggest problem with earmarks is that they grease the skids for otherwise bad bills. Legislation that might have failed otherwise will pass, because each Member wants their project funded. There is no incentive to oppose the bill because the policy is wrong. If you want to get re-elected, you have to vote for the bill that contains your earmark. So the bad policy sails, for want of a taxpayer funded Teapot Museum.

SCOTUS Nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson: Judicial System “Unfair” To Sex Offenders
In an unsigned note (to which she later disclosed authorship) while at Harvard Law School, Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson called for judges to change their analytical framework for evaluating constitutionality of certain state sex offender statutes.

More from The Blaze:

“She argued that judges should not “rely on legislative intent” to determine whether a state sex offender statute violates the Constitution, and she rejected other analytical frameworks established by court precedent at the time.

“Although ‘[a precise] analytical solution is almost impossible to construct,’ this Note suggests that such a principled approach in­volves assessing the impact of sex offender statutes and deeming the laws ‘punitive’ to the extent that they operate to deprive sex criminals of a legal right in a manner that primarily has retributive or general­ deterrent effects,” she wrote in her conclusion.”

Confirmation hearings are likely to start next week, as early as Monday. Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, has vowed to give Judge Jackson a “fair, thorough hearing” and said “we’re not going to get in the gutter like the Democrats did.”

Tuesday Links

  • The quotes from GOP voters in this piece, wowza: Liz Cheney turns to Democrats to save her hide
  • Will the dollar survive as the world’s reserve currency?
  • Conservative activist Ginni Thomas responds to attacks on her career and that of her husband, Justice Clarence Thomas
  • Martin Gurri on the mass ideological conversion of our institutions (the National Archives places warning labels on the Constitution because it may trigger some identity groups….what?)
  • Peter van Buren: Tell me how Ukraine ends

Weekly Wine Tip
This one goes out to Lisa for her big Texas move. All of America’s 50 beautiful states produce wine, with varying success, but Texas is making some decent vino! The best I’ve had from Texas is McPherson Cellars out of Lubbock, which makes red, white, and rosé varietals. The “Les Copains White” is a blend of the French Marsanne, Rousanne, Viognier, and Picpoul, and is a total party pleaser. Highly recommend.

BRIGHT is brought to you by The Federalist.
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Rachel Bovard is the policy director at the Conservative Partnership Institute, and a sommelier on the side. Follow her on Twitter at @rachelbovard.
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER

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Recent Articles

Chernobyl and the Lies of COVID

Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
All the lessons we should have learned from the nuclear disaster at Chernobyl fell on deaf ears. Read More…


Warmongering Risks GOP Gains this November

Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
Lindsey Graham and other warpath Republicans are sucking up all the oxygen.   Read More…


The Human Cost of Putin’s Ego

Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
There once was a nursing home near Kyiv and it was a place with a touch of magic…. Read More…


The Four Pillars of Vacuity

Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
David Banks’s “Four Pillars” educational reform policy is simply more of the same.  Read More…


COVID Care Fiasco: The Hill-Lawrie Video

Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
How the medical establishment lays down the law. Read More…


Does Bucknell’s Commitment to Diversity Run More than Skin-Deep?

Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
Why is the faculty of Bucknell University opposed to diversity of ideas? Read More…


Recent Blog Posts

Planned Parenthood’s bizarre promotion of abortion at the ultra-hip SXSW festival in Austin
Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
Planned Parenthood obviously has more money than it knows how to spend well.  Read more…


Leftists dream of interning anyone who challenges their Ukraine narrative
Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
Romney’s insistence that Tulsi Gabbard committed “treason” is just the leading edge of a disturbing trend.  Read more…


The Ukraine crisis may be more of a boon to the globalists and Western left’s agenda than is apparent at first glance.
Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
As GOP politicians walk right into a trap.  Read more…


New York Times columnist uses Shakespeare to deify Zelensky and push for war
Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
Maureen Dowd gets all gushy again.  Read more…


In today’s heated environment, even mustard politics are too hot to handle
Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
It can be problematic to live in a world in which everyone feels compelled to virtue signal and no opinion is too inconsequential to attack.  Read more…


While all eyes are on Ukraine, China continues undermining America’s wellbeing
Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
It turns out that it’s not just fentanyl and infectious diseases that China’s sending to America.  Read more…


Gas prices and racism
Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
The answer to high gas prices is to fight back — and have some fun doing so.  Read more…


Proof positive that China is a bigger threat than Russia
Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
Sickeningly, it is already clear that the winner of the Russia-Ukraine War will be…China  Read more…


Ukraine deserves American support
Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
Recall who the Russians are, and what their history has been in Eastern Europe.  Read more…


AVG all over again
Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
Can the spirit of Claire Chennault and his “Flying Tigers” soar once again over the steppes of Ukraine?  Read more…


Fewer Doritos in my bag
Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
The Biden Inflation is cutting deep.  Read more…


Hope for the future
Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
Modern teenagers, who are known to lack common sense and sound judgment, when provided clear, concise information, can easily discern evil from good and chose good.  Read more…


Putin’s excuses for starting the war are fake
Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
What we’re seeing now is an extension of endless centuries of Russian and Soviet policy.  Read more…


When coyotes are the battleground to take your rights away
Mar 15, 2022 01:00 am
When Progressives say the Second Amendment is about hunting, you can show them Vermont leftists’ rabid desire to ban hunting, too.  Read more…


Biden about to get caught flat-footed on another crisis: Ukraine war–generated global food shortages
Mar 14, 2022 01:00 am
So who has confidence in Joe Biden’s ability to navigate the coming grain shortages as a result of Russia’s Ukraine attack?  Read more…


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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL

 


38.) THE BLAZE

 


39.) THE FEDERALIST

 


40.) REUTERS

 


41.) FIRST RIGHT

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March 15th, 2022

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03/15/2022 05:11 CDT


JOE MANCHIN BLOCKS KEY BIDEN NOMINEE; OIL EXECUTIVE SAYS BIDEN LYING ABOUT AMERICAN ENERGY


TODAY’S TOP TEN

MANCHIN DOES IT AGAIN!

JOE MANCHIN TEAMS WITH REPUBLICANS and all but tanks Biden’s nominee for top bank regulator at the Fed. Yahoo.

RESEARCHER TELLS DURHAM HE SAW HOLES in the Alfa Bank hoax before Democrats shopped it to the FBI. Margot Cleveland.

OIL EXECUTIVE REJECTS JOE BIDEN BLAME, says administration is slow walking permits for American energy. Breitbart.

BIDEN ADMINISTRATION IS ACTIVELY PARTNERING with Putin on climate and Iran. The Federalist.

TULSI GABBARD UNLOADS ON MITT ROMNEY for “treasonous lies” smear. Twitchy.

NEW TEXAS ELECTION INTEGRITY LAWS flag 27,000 mail-in ballots for rejection in primary. The Western Journal.

GOOGLE ATTACKS INVESTORS BUSINESS DAILY for reporting on its own poll. Issues & Insights.

THESE DEMOCRAT MEGADONORS MAKE A $108 MILLION “lucky bet” on Wall Street. Now the feds are investigating. Free Beacon.

DESANTIS WARNS LEFTISTS WILL REIMPOSE COVID restrictions following midterms. Daily Wire.

85 PERCENT OF MARYLAND STUDENTS not proficient in math after COVID school closures. Daily Wire.


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COMMENTARY WORTH READING

  • Get rid of masks on planes. Karol Markowicz.
  • The stench of Obama Spygate won’t go away. George Neumayr.
  • Making sense of Biden’s energy policy. Paul Gottfried.

VIDEO WORTH WATCHING

  • Rep. Donalds: It’s going to difficult to reverse what Joe Biden unleashed on the United States. Media Research Center.
  • Bill Maher: My politics haven’t changed — the Democrats have. Grabien News.
  • Trump ad targeting Hillary: “Justice is coming!” Rumble.

LATEST FIRST RIGHT PODCAST

  • An interview with Wisconsin talk show host and election expert Dan O’Donnell. Rumble.

OFFBEAT BEAT

  • The greatest battle weapon ever devised? Warfare History Network.

TWEETS OF NOTE

  • (@GOP) Even before Russia invaded Ukraine, the average cost for a gallon of gas had risen by $1.14 since Biden became president. He created this gas price crisis. Tweet.
  • (@robbystarbuck) Hey, remember when China pumped our social media full of propaganda videos of people falling down dead at the start of COVID and then our media hyped it up and then Democrats destroyed our country? I wish more folks questioned WHY China did that. They planned this. Tweet.

MOST CLICKED ITEM YESTERDAY

  • BEWARE: SOME OF THE UKRAINE NARRATIVES you are being fed are fake. The Last Refuge.

BONGINO REPORT TOP HEADLINE AT TIME OF EMAIL

  • Rand Paul Introduces Bill to Fire Fauci BONGINO REPORT.

42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE

 


43.) REDSTATE

 


44.) WORLD NET DAILY

Country pays out $45 million to victims of COVID vaccines
Posted by Art Moore
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These bags might look the same, but you won’t be getting as many chips. Read more…
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This guy says the horrific part out loud. Read more…
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This woman’s pregnancy story is shocking. Read more…
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Then a state government got involved. … Read more…

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When a licensed therapist encountered regulations that forced her to turn away potential clients for her online services, the federal courts got involved.

Now the fight continues, and it has much to do with the First Amendment. … Read more…

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News media in this American city engulfed by people living on street didn’t even mention the prolific offender’s status. Read more…
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This video is infuriating. Read more…
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45.) MSNBC

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March 15, 2022

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This is the worst way to show support for Ukraine

by Zeeshan Aleem

Perhaps one of the America’s most disheartening reactions to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is the disturbing trend of people vilifying, ostracizing and publicly humiliating Russians who live or own businesses in the U.S. Zeeshan Aleem has a fitting description for these actions: “xenophobic bullying.”

 

Besides the fact that “many of the people and institutions being condemned are themselves critics of Russia,” Aleem writes, “attacking a person or an institution for being Russian or vaguely Russian-looking without regard for their position on the war is not expressing solidarity with Ukraine; it’s jingoism and Russophobia.”

 

Read Zeeshan Aleem’s full analysis in your Tuesday MSNBC Daily.

TOP STORIES

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A collage of Henry Ford and Putin

Matthew Dowd

What Henry Ford’s legacy teaches us about the dangers of Tucker Carlson

Ford’s history of mass producing hate is a cautionary tale for today. Read More

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Hayes Brown

Zelenskyy’s leadership under pressure highlights the idiocy of Trump’s betrayal

Two clowns became president. Only one became a leader. Read More

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Ja’han Jones

Supreme Court justice’s wife attended pro-Trump rally ahead of Jan. 6 attack

This development throws the entire U.S. judicial system into question. Read More

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Steve Benen

DeSantis derides Disney as part of avoidable culture war clash

DeSantis’ political operation sent an email to supporters accusing “woke” Disney of “echoing Democrat propaganda.”  Read More

TOP VIDEOS

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Ali Velshi

Facts about Russia’s war in Ukraine find a way past Putin’s censorship

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The ReidOut

Ukraine expert doubts Putin’s war strategy: ‘Russians can’t even control one city’

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All In 

Russian media reportedly urged to promote Tucker Carlson ‘as much as possible’

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Zerlina

What we know about the new ‘Deltacron’ variant

MORE FROM MSNBC

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Our Plan Your Vote tool is now live for the midterms with key information on the voting rules where you live, including registration, mail-in voting, changes since 2020 and more.

 

Head to NBCNews.com/PlanYourVote to get the latest voting rules in your state. 

The world has gone through a once-in-a-century pandemic that disrupted nearly every aspect of our lives. We’re in the beginning of an energy transition unlike anything the industrialized world has ever attempted. And it can be very difficult amid war, plague, insurrection and climate disaster to conceive of what a flourishing future might even look like. From the future of energy to entertainment, Chris Hayes asks some of his biggest questions in his inaugural “Future of” miniseries.

 

On the second episode of the series, Chris talks to Cathie Wood, founder, CEO and CIO of ARK Invest. They discuss the revolutionary technology that penetrates our lives, the investors who bet big on those developments and how the world adapts to the seismic shifts that follow. Wood also shares her outlook ahead for the metaverse, autonomous vehicles, finance and more. 

Listen now on your favorite podcast platforms:

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46.) BIZPAC REVIEW

 


47.) ABC

March 15, 2022 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
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Morning Rundown
WHO verifies 31 attacks on health care in Ukraine: Days after a Russian bombing of a maternity ward in Mariupol, Ukraine, that killed at least three people, including a pregnant woman, and injured at least 17, the World Health Organization verified on Monday that there have been at least 31 Russian attacks against Ukraine health care facilities, medical staff and ambulances. WHO’s surveillance system for the attacks verified that at least 24 health care facilities have been damaged or destroyed. WHO also verified in a statement that five ambulances have been destroyed in attacks. The attacks on health care targets have also caused at least 12 deaths and 34 injuries since the Russian invasion began. While hundreds of civilians were able to flee Mariupol on Monday during a lull in attacks by Russian forces, a senior U.S. official told ABC News that it is unlikely that Russian attacks on Ukraine will stop any time soon. Meanwhile, as a fourth round of talks between Ukraine and Russia were postponed until Tuesday, the International Court of Justice announced it will soon issue a ruling on allegations brought against Russia by Ukraine regarding the invasion.
Suspect arrested in shootings of homeless men in NYC, DC: A law enforcement source told ABC News early Tuesday that Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives agents arrested a man investigators believe is the suspect in the shootings targeting homeless people in New York and Washington, D.C. Agents located the suspect through information gathered from investigative leads and confidence is high that this is indeed the suspect, the source said. The arrest comes a day after the mayors of both cities offered a $70,000 reward in connection to deadly shootings involving people experiencing homelessness. In a rare joint press conference on Monday, New York City Mayor Eric Adams and Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser spoke about what they called a “cold-blooded attack” and how their cities were working together on the investigation. The first shootings occurred in Washington on March 3, 8 and 9. The victim found on March 9 was discovered by police when they were responding to a tent fire. The two shootings in New York occurred on March 12. One victim was injured and another was killed, according to a joint news release. Because of similarities in “the modus operandi of the perpetrator, common circumstances involved in each shooting, circumstances of the victims and recovered evidence,” both New York City and Washington, D.C., police departments are jointly investigating the shootings. “Homelessness should not be homicide,” Adams said. Tune in to “GMA” at 7 a.m. ET for the latest on this story.
Los Angeles Unified School District says it’s keeping mask mandate: As the majority of states ended mask mandates in schools this month, Los Angeles Unified School District said it’s keeping its mask mandate in place — at least temporarily — even as California drops its requirement for masks in indoor public settings. Across the state, several K-12 schools dropped their face covering requirements Monday after the state lifted its mandate over the weekend, but LAUSD, which is the second-largest school district in the country, said it does not want to drop the mask requirement as it works on a plan with partners, including teachers’ unions, to move away from mandates and toward “strongly recommending” masks indoors. While some parents are divided on the mandate, some teachers’ unions have pushed back and said it would be “premature” to drop such requirements.
Grandfather recalls hugging grandkids for the 1st time in 8 years after stroke: A video of an Arkansas man giving his grandsons a two-armed hug for the first time has touched the hearts of many. The now-viral video on Facebook, which was shared by Emily Sisco, an adjunct professor of occupational therapy at Arkansas State University, shows her dad, Kevin Eubanks, tearfully holding his grandsons, Cope, 9, and Rigney, 6. The moment was special for Eubanks, 60, whose left arm was injured following a stroke in 2014 and temporarily rendered the left side of his body paralyzed. But last month, Eubanks was given a soft, stretchy wristband tool called a “HugAgain” that allowed him to link his arms into a circle shape and lift them together for a warm embrace with the boys. “I just cried and cried and cried,” Eubanks told “GMA.” While many around the world have inquired about the “HugAgain” product, which isn’t in production yet, Eubanks hopes the video reminds others not to underestimate the effect of a touch of some kind. “That personal touch sends a message to that person that you love them,” he said.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” with the Oscars on the horizon, Penelope Cruz, who’s nominated for best actress for her performance in “Parallel Mothers,” sits down with Chris Connelly to talk about her latest projects. Plus, Olena Zelenska, the first lady of Ukraine, speaks out to ABC News exclusively via WhatsApp. What is her message to Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, and to the world? All this and more only on “GMA.”
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN

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Today’s Top Stories from NBC News

TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 2022

Good morning, NBC News readers.

 

Civilians in Kyiv are increasingly coming under fire as Russia has stepped up its attacks on Ukraine’s capital.

 

Here’s the latest on the war in Ukraine and everything else we’re watching this Tuesday morning.

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Kyiv hit by Russian strikes; European leaders head to capital

Article Image

Rescuers work next to a residential building damaged by shelling in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Tuesday. (Ukrainian State Emergency Service / Reuters)


Russian strikes hit a residential area of Kyiv Tuesday as Moscow’s assault increasingly threatened Ukraine’s capital. Despite the ongoing fighting, both sides are set to renew talks. 

 

Kyiv’s Mayor Vitali Klitschko called for a 35-hour curfew to be imposed as the city came under intensifying attacks. Telling residents to prepare to remain at home or at a bomb shelter for the next two days, he called it a “difficult and dangerous moment,” on his Telegram channel.

 

Even with the city under fire from the air and fighting raging outside it on the ground, the leaders of three European countries were heading to Kyiv to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in a show of support.

 

And while the West rallies around Kyiv, the United States once again warned China against offering military or financial aid to Moscow as fears of the conflict morphing into a proxy war grow. 

 

“We have communicated very clearly to Beijing that we won’t stand by,” State Department spokesperson Ned Price told reporters after National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan met with Chinese diplomat Yang Jiechi in Rome. “We will not allow any country to compensate Russia for its losses.”

 

Follow our live blog and watch NBC News Now for all the latest updates. 

 

Read more of our in-depth coverage: 

  • Protester with ‘No War’ sign walks onto Russian state TV set
  • QAnon, Ukraine and ‘biolabs’: Russian propaganda efforts boosted by U.S. far right 
  • Why are Ukraine’s cheap, slow drones so successful against Russian targets?

Tuesday’s Top Stories

Article Image

How Hong Kong went from ‘zero-Covid’ to the world’s highest death rate

Despite having two years to prepare, critics say the government was caught off-guard by a virus outbreak that has killed thousands of unvaccinated seniors.

READ MORE
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Fake heiress Anna Sorokin is likely to have been deported, her attorney says

The scammer who posed as a German heiress has been in ICE custody since she was released from prison last year.

READ MORE
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Gunman who attacked Florida yoga studio gave off decades of warning signs, Secret Service finds

Scott Beierle’s offensive and criminal behavior presented missed opportunities to prevent the rampage, the agency found.

READ MORE
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OPINION

The suicide of Stanford soccer star Katie Meyer and the toll of perfectionism  

As a society, we revere and reward perfection. We need to let up on the gas pedal of pressure to perform, author Debby Waldman writes in an opinion piece. 

READ MORE

Also in the News

Mississippi governor signs law limiting discussion of race in schools

‘Appalling’ attack: Asian woman punched 125 times in New York assault; suspect charged with attempted murder as hate crime

Australian appeals court overturns teenagers’ groundbreaking climate change case

Idaho passes Texas-inspired bill to ban abortion at 6 weeks

Florida judge permanently blocks release of Bob Saget death records

India court upholds state’s ban on hijab in class 

Editor’s Pick

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Plan Your Vote

Plan Your Vote, NBC News’ interactive voting information database, is back for the 2022 primary and midterm elections. Explore your state’s upcoming deadlines, get answers to common voting questions and see changes to voting rules since the 2020 election.

READ MORE

Select

Sleep Awareness Week comes right on the heels of Daylight Saving Time — here are some notable deals from sleep essentials retailers worth considering.

One Fun Thing 

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Norwegian kids describe shock at finding New Hampshire school’s boat

Over a year ago, sixth and seventh grade students at Rye Junior High School in New Hampshire sent their class boat project sailing.

 

But the Rye Riptides was no ordinary boat, it was hooked up with high-tech GPS equipment so the students could track its adventure. 

 

The little boat’s remarkable voyage across the ocean came to an end after a fellow middle schooler found it off the coast of Norway.

 

Watch a video about the boat that brought kids on two sides of the world a sense of joy and discovery. 

Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.

 

If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com 

If you’re a fan, please forward it to your family and friends. They can sign-up here.

 

Thanks, Petra Cahill

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52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE

 


53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER

 


54.) TOWNHALL

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Was This the Sign That King Nothing Was Leading Us into Decline? 
Matt Vespa
Can We Have Some Real Talk About Ukraine?
Kurt Schlichter
The Progressive Mindset is Evil
Derek Hunter
CNN’s Oliver Darcy Races to Defend NY Times Writer From His Own Comments 
Brad Slager
Ukraine: What Is in America’s Interest?
Dennis Prager
In Pursuit of the Normal
Salena Zito
Bill Ending Sunday Hunting Ban on Public Lands Heads to Governor Youngkin’s Desk 
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And That’s Why They Call It ‘the Swamp’
Stephen Moore
Beware: Mexico To Unleash Massive Wave of 70,000 Migrants Toward U.S. Border in Unnoticeable ‘Ant Operation’
Todd Bensman
Tipsheet
Dem Congresswoman Says It’s ‘Un-American’ to Blame Biden for Gas Prices
Spencer Brown
Democrats Are Unpatriotic Cowards…And Here’s the Poll to Prove It
Matt Vespa
Former Democratic Congressman Attributes AOC’s 2018 Election Win to Donald Trump
Landon Mion
U.K. Supreme Court Rejects Julian Assange’s Request to Appeal U.S. Extradition
Landon Mion
‘The View’ Hosts Call on DOJ to Investigate Tucker Carlson, Tulsi Gabbard Over Ukrainian Biolab Comments
Landon Mion
Former CNN Correspondent Mocks Fox News Reporter Getting Injured in Ukraine
Matt Vespa
Officer Who Used Justified Lethal Force Against Wannabe Killer Ma’Khia Bryant Cleared of Wrongdoing
Matt Vespa
Ukraine’s Plan B — As in ‘Berlin’
Oliver North and David Goetsch
Is There a Peace Deal Putin and Zelensky Can Accept?
Pat Buchanan
They Are Not “Trash.” Protecting Our Founding Documents and Founding Fathers Before They Are Banned
Douglas MacKinnon
“Sell By” Date Has Passed For Peppermint Patty
Tom Tradup
The Time for Daylight Saving is Long Gone
Jeff Crouere
Deeper And Deeper in Debt
Cal Thomas
Ukraine Teaches Us That Diversity in Refueling Tanker Fleet Is Not Optimal
Maj. Gen. Paul Vallely
The Russian Propaganda Lie Continues
Kenny Cody
American Food Security IS American National Security
Andrew Langer
As Inflation Rocks America, Biden Extols American Rescue Plan
Chris Talgo
White House Doubles Down on Inflation Blame Game 
Katie Pavlich
U.S. Inflation and Reliance on Russia Are Symbolic of Biden’s Domestic and International Failures 
Congressman Andy Biggs
Americans’ Opinions of Russia Have Hit a New Low 
Madeline Leesman
Fox News Correspondent Benjamin Hall Injured in Ukraine
Spencer Brown
Political Cartoons
Bearing Arms
Supposed expert downplays role of guns in resisting invasion |
New York woman faces prison over Pennsylvania straw buys |
Dishonest and sneaky “gun control” measures in omnibus spending bill |
When can Ukraine expect those American ammo donations? |
Firearms industry steps up to arm Ukraine |
Ocala driver arrested for firearm on passenger seat |
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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 Tuesday, March 15, and we are covering an expected briefing by the Ukrainian president, a serial shooter on the East Coast, and much more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
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NEED TO KNOW

Zelenskyy to Brief Congress

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will speak virtually in a joint address to the US Congress tomorrow, congressional leaders announced. The address comes on the heels of almost $14B in aid from the US to Ukraine and a move to halt Russian oil imports. Zelenskyy, who has remained on the ground in the capital of Kyiv, is expected to reiterate the need for a Western-backed no-fly zone across Ukraine.

 

The announcement came as US and Chinese officials met in Rome, amid rumors China was considering military assistance to Russia. Beijing denied the reports.

 

Separately, Russian officials alleged 23 civilians (paywall, Reuters) were killed and 28 injured in the eastern separatist city of Donetsk by a Ukrainian missile. Observers said the claims had not been verified.

 

More than 2.8 million refugees have fled the country. Neighboring Poland, whose population is roughly 38 million, has taken in an estimated 1.7 million Ukrainians. See a map of refugee flows here.

 

See map updates and photos from the ground here.

Protests in Corsica

The French government is calling for a return to calm after protests broke out on the island of Corsica over an attack on a jailed nationalist figure. Yvan Colonna, 61, was strangled by a fellow detainee earlier this month and left in a coma. Thousands of people took to the streets, some ransacking a bank and storming into a justice building. Police deployed tear gas and water cannons. At least 67 people have been injured.

 

Colonna has been serving a life sentence on mainland France for assassinating Police Chief Claude Érignac in 1998. Colonna, who has claimed innocence, was arrested in 2003 after a five-year search and convicted in 2007. Colonna’s supporters have demanded his transfer to Corsica, which authorities have rejected. French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said he plans to visit Corsica Wednesday to talk with local officials.

 

Colonna’s assailant, Franck Elong Abe, was indicted with attempted murder in association with a terror group.

East Coast Serial Shooter

Officials from New York City and Washington, DC, are coordinating a search for a suspect believed to be involved in the shootings of five people across both cities over the past two weeks. Police say the suspect has targeted the homeless population late at night. Two people have died, one in each city.

 

The attacks began in Washington, where two victims suffered nonfatal gunshot wounds March 3 and March 8. Police responded to a tent fire March 9, finding a deceased victim with multiple stab and gunshot wounds. Officials believe the suspect traveled north to New York City, where two additional victims were shot—one fatally—in the early hours of March 12 in lower Manhattan.

 

In New York City, it marks the latest serial attack against the homeless population. Four people were killed in a 2019 attack in Manhattan, and two others were killed during a 2021 stabbing spree in the city’s subway system.

In partnership with The Motley Fool

IDENTIFYING BIG TRENDS

Have you stayed up to date with the biggest trends shaping society and business over the past two decades? Probably. But did you invest in companies blazing the trail beforehand? Unlikely.

 

Which is why it’s so astounding that The Motley Fool has identified some of the world’s biggest trends before they’ve “gone mainstream.” Take, for example, the e-commerce revolution: The Motley Fool recommended people invest in Amazon in September 2002 (now up 18,926%). Or the rise of streaming entertainment: They recommended Netflix in December 2004 (now up 19,408%). Or what about the online travel boom? The Motley Fool recommended Booking Holdings in May 2004 (now up 8,272%). With any of these investments, the average person could’ve sold their positions and rested on their laurels.

 

But The Motley Fool team isn’t made up of average people. Today, they think 5G is poised to be the next world-changing trend. And they’ve identified one stock that they believe will lead the way as 5G technology proliferates. Members of The Motley Fool can access this exclusive report for free: sign up today.

 

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IN THE KNOW

Sports, Entertainment, & Culture

> Fox News journalist Benjamin Hall, who is Fox’s State Department correspondent,  injured while covering Ukraine invasion (More) | WWE Hall of Fame pro wrestler Scott Hall dies at 63 after complications from surgery (More)

 

> Men’s NCAA basketball tournament kicks off tonight with the First Four from Dayton, Ohio (More) | See full men’s bracket (More) | Women’s tourney kicks off tomorrow (More)

 

> HBO Max and Discovery Plus to be combined into single streaming platform (More) | Dolly Parton removes herself from consideration for 2022 class of Rock & Roll Hall of Fame (More)

Science & Technology

> Russia dismisses reports, commits to allowing US astronaut aboard the International Space Station to return to Earth; Mark Vande Hei will depart aboard a Russian capsule March 30 (More)

 

> Researchers pinpoint the difference in immune cell types linked to infant lymphoma; discovery may provide a route to treatment that has evaded doctors for decades (More)

 

> Astronomers discover 40-trillion-mile-long beams of matter and antimatter emanating from a distant pulsar; behavior may help explain the abundance of positrons in the universe (More) | What are pulsars? (Watch)

Business & Markets

In partnership with The Ascent
> US stock markets fall (S&P 500 -0.7%, Dow 0.0%, Nasdaq -2.0%); oil prices drop below $100 per barrel (More) | Chinese stock markets fall near double-digits, largest drop since 2008 (More)

 

> Former Disney CEO Bob Iger joins the board of metaverse startup Genies after investing in company (More) | NFT company behind Bored Ape Yacht Club acquired the CryptoPunks collection; Yuga Labs now holds NFTs worth a total of over $5B in market cap (More)

 

> Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) signals opposition to Sarah Bloom Raskin’s nomination to the Federal Reserve, potentially sinking her candidacy (More)

From our partners: A card so lucrative, The Ascent’s credit card expert personally signed up for it. And it’s an absolute slam-dunk if you’re looking for a one-card wallet. Big first-year bonus, up to 5% cash back, no annual fee, and the list goes on.

Politics & World Affairs

> British high court declines WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s request for appeal to halt extradition to the US on espionage charges (More)

 

> Hong Kong’s COVID-19 death rate nears 38 per 1 million people amid delayed omicron surge, close to four times the US peak during the winter of 2020-21 (More)

 

> Australia and the Netherlands begin international legal action over the 2014 downing of flight MH17; passenger flight was shot down over Ukraine during the Russian annexation of Crimea (More)

IN-DEPTH

What Social Media Doesn’t Tell Us

Platformer | Casey Newton. CrowdTangle cofounder Brandon Silverman opens up about the role of social networks in war coverage and beyond, as well as how these public spaces can thrive with more data transparency and fact-checking programs. (Read)

Succulents Under Siege 

Nat Geo | Dina Fine Maron. Rare succulents in South Africa are at the center of a fight between police and poachers who raid farmlands for the coveted tiny plant. (Read, paywall)

APPLE, 5G, AND US GDP

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Fishermen dredge up 12,000-year-old woolly mammoth tooth.

 

A rare glimpse of a double-spot octopus.

 

A ranking of the 25 best “Batman” villains.

 

The highest of high tea parties.

 

Clickbait: When balancing a lawnmower on your chin pays off. (w/ video)

 

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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH

 


64.) NATIONAL REVIEW

 


65.) POLITICAL WIRE

 


66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS

 


67.) ZEROHEDGE

 


68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT

 


69.) FRONTPAGE MAG

 


70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE

 


71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF

 


72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION

 


73.) POPULIST PRESS

Democrats in full attack mode after a recent revelation regarding the spouse of a Supreme Court Justice

Biden Finally Get’s The News He Was Dreading…

TOP STORIES: 

  1. Dems Want Jail For SCOTUS Justice’s Spouse After New Revelation

  2. ‘Dictator in chief’ Dr. Fauci’s power to be limited by Rand Paul
  3. Trump Promises Total Ban Once GOP Takes Back Congress

  4. Biden Finally Get’s The News He Was Dreading…

  5. BREAKING: Fox News journalist is injured while reporting from Ukraine
  6. After Three Decades, It’s Now Over For America…
  7. The US Is Heading Towards Another Devastating Crisis

  8. “Justice Is Coming!” Trump Releases New Video
  9. Durham Busts Hillary In Biggest Scandal Yet

  10. SCOTUS Justice Issues Dire Warning

 

IN DEPTH… 

  1. FOX’s Benjamin Hall Injured in Kyiv  New
  2. UN: Nuclear war ‘within realm of possibility’  New
  3. Russia Asks China for ‘Military Assistance’  New
  4. PAC: Trump Breaking Law by Not Announcing Run  2 hours ago
  5. DARPA denies part in 2016 DNC hack  2 hours ago
  6. Antifa rioter sentenced to 5 years  3 hours ago
  7. Tulsi Gabbard demands Romney resign  3 hours ago
  8. Zelensky to address U.S. Congress  3 hours ago
  9. Emails: Chris Cuomo offered rare plasma  3 hours ago
  10. Manchin Voices Opposition to Biden Fed Nom  3 hours ago
  11. Russia threatens to pay foreign debts in rubles  3 hours ago
  12. Biden Complains Struggling Americans Just Don’t Get How Great the Economy Is  New
  13. GOP Bill to Help Victims of Vax  New
  14. Gasoline’s record run pauses  3 hours ago
  15. Researcher: Saw Holes In Alfa Bank Hoax Beforehand  3 hours ago
  16. NH GOP divided on gerrymandering  3 hours ago
  17. Graham: No-Fly Zone if Chem Weapons  3 hours ago
  18. Oil Pipeline: Manchin Rips Biden Appointee  3 hours ago
  19. Union Will Force School Masks Beyond Mandate  3 hours ago
  20. Atlantic: Nuclear war bad for climate ?  4 hours ago
  21. Dem Strategist: Kamala’s Europe Tragedy  4 hours ago
  22. Watters calls out Congress war profiteers  4 hours ago
  23. Ukraine’s Fight Is About Europe’s Future  4 hours ago
  24. Grassley: ‘Biden Admin Wanted to send MiGs’  4 hours ago
  25. Navy Deploying New Tech  4 hours ago
  26. Japan Worried about Russian Navy Group  4 hours ago
  27. What Will Putin Do If Russia can’t win?  4 hours ago
  28. Patriarch Blames War on West’s ‘Russophobia’  4 hours ago
  29. If China helps Russia evade sanctions…  4 hours ago
  30. Broadcaster: War ‘Distracts’ From Climate Change  4 hours ago
  31. Massive Berlin Protest  4 hours ago
  32. Can We Have Some Real Talk?  4 hours ago
  33. NYT: Trump Would Let Russia Invade  4 hours ago
  34. Double-Digit Inflation by Summer  4 hours ago
  35. House Dems Cancel Looming Embarrassment  4 hours ago
  36. TikTok breeding ground for mental disorders  4 hours ago
  37. Rhetorical Gymnastics of Climate Change  4 hours ago
  38. Why Are Leftist Policies So Bad?  4 hours ago
  39. Navy Officer Falsified Letters For Afghan Visas  4 hours ago
  40. Dem official charged with ballot tampering  4 hours ago
  41. Farmers hit hard by price increases  4 hours ago
  42. Pelosi: Spending ‘reducing debt, not inflationary’  4 hours ago
  43. Saudi phone-snub: Trevor Noah rips Biden  4 hours ago
  44. Laid-off Keystone workers BLAST Biden  4 hours ago
  45. Tom Brady coming BACK  4 hours ago
  46. Chris Wallace to replace Cuomo?  4 hours ago
  47. Amazon quits Seattle location over crime  4 hours ago
  48. Nets’ Kevin Durant: ‘Stupid’ NYC Policy  4 hours ago
  49. Poland: Can no longer absorb refugees  5 hours ago
  50. More American troops deploy overseas  5 hours ago
  51. At NATO base, soldiers prep for next move  5 hours ago
  52. Clouds over Merkel legacy  5 hours ago
  53. China wanted to appear neutral. It isn’t  5 hours ago
  54. PUTIN SEEKS MILITARY EQUIPMENT FROM CHINA  5 hours ago
  55. OBAMA COVID…  5 hours ago
  56. PFIZER CEO: Fourth $hot Now ‘Necessary’  5 hours ago
  57. Gas prices pushing up everyday costs  5 hours ago
  58. Recession Risks Piling Up…  5 hours ago
  59. Biden Urged to Blunt…  5 hours ago
  60. Jussie Smollett put in psych ward  5 hours ago
  61. WH spooked over unlawful entry  5 hours ago
  62. Working on Russia sanctions…  5 hours ago
  63. Weakness of the Despot…  5 hours ago
  64. Phones addictive. Betting, too. Now combined  5 hours ago
  65. Karma: Worst Covid Outbreak in China ever  5 hours ago
  66. Phoenix Gave Employees Lead Poisoning  12 hours ago
  67. Mexico To Unleash 70,000 Migrants  12 hours ago
  68. America’s First Liberty  12 hours ago
  69. Musk mocks Biden’s ‘green’ hucksters  1 day ago
  70. Heroes of the Ukrainian Refugee Crisis  1 day ago
  71. WH puts BBB on backburner  1 day ago

SCOTUS Justice Issues Dire Warning

TOP STORIES: 

  1. ‘Dictator in chief’ Dr. Fauci’s power to be limited by Rand Paul

  2. Trump Makes HUGE Promise if GOP wins…

  3. Biden Finally Get’s The News He Was Dreading…

  4. BREAKING: Fox News journalist is injured while reporting from Ukraine
  5. After Three Decades, It’s Now Over For America…
  6. The US Is Heading Towards Another Devastating Crisis
  7. “Justice Is Coming!” Trump Releases New Video
  8. Durham Busts Hillary In Biggest Scandal Yet

  9. SCOTUS Justice Issues Dire Warning

  10. Jussie Smollett Takes a Turn For The Worse After Saying “Im Not Suicidal”

  11. Democrat Sentenced to Five Years In Prison
  12. Texas Rangers Raid Administration Office
  13. UPDATE: Intel points to heightened risk of chemical attack in Ukraine…
  14. Trump Makes Huge Announcement
  15. White House Doctor Issues Urgent Warning To Biden…
  16. Biden Unleashes Pure Rage on Americans
  17. Kamala Harris’s Embarrassing Eastern Europe Trip

 

IN DEPTH… 

  1. FOX’s Benjamin Hall Injured in Kyiv  New
  2. UN: Nuclear war ‘within realm of possibility’  New
  3. Russia Asks China for ‘Military Assistance’  New
  4. PAC: Trump Breaking Law by Not Announcing Run  2 hours ago
  5. DARPA denies part in 2016 DNC hack  2 hours ago
  6. Antifa rioter sentenced to 5 years  3 hours ago
  7. Tulsi Gabbard demands Romney resign  3 hours ago
  8. Zelensky to address U.S. Congress  3 hours ago
  9. Emails: Chris Cuomo offered rare plasma  3 hours ago
  10. Manchin Voices Opposition to Biden Fed Nom  3 hours ago
  11. Russia threatens to pay foreign debts in rubles  3 hours ago
  12. Biden Complains Struggling Americans Just Don’t Get How Great the Economy Is  New
  13. GOP Bill to Help Victims of Vax  New
  14. Gasoline’s record run pauses  3 hours ago
  15. Researcher: Saw Holes In Alfa Bank Hoax Beforehand  3 hours ago
  16. NH GOP divided on gerrymandering  3 hours ago
  17. Graham: No-Fly Zone if Chem Weapons  3 hours ago
  18. Oil Pipeline: Manchin Rips Biden Appointee  3 hours ago
  19. Union Will Force School Masks Beyond Mandate  3 hours ago
  20. Atlantic: Nuclear war bad for climate ?  4 hours ago
  21. Dem Strategist: Kamala’s Europe Tragedy  4 hours ago
  22. Watters calls out Congress war profiteers  4 hours ago
  23. Ukraine’s Fight Is About Europe’s Future  4 hours ago
  24. Grassley: ‘Biden Admin Wanted to send MiGs’  4 hours ago
  25. Navy Deploying New Tech  4 hours ago
  26. Japan Worried about Russian Navy Group  4 hours ago
  27. What Will Putin Do If Russia can’t win?  4 hours ago
  28. Patriarch Blames War on West’s ‘Russophobia’  4 hours ago
  29. If China helps Russia evade sanctions…  4 hours ago
  30. Broadcaster: War ‘Distracts’ From Climate Change  4 hours ago
  31. Massive Berlin Protest  4 hours ago
  32. Can We Have Some Real Talk?  4 hours ago
  33. NYT: Trump Would Let Russia Invade  4 hours ago
  34. Double-Digit Inflation by Summer  4 hours ago
  35. House Dems Cancel Looming Embarrassment  4 hours ago
  36. TikTok breeding ground for mental disorders  4 hours ago
  37. Rhetorical Gymnastics of Climate Change  4 hours ago
  38. Why Are Leftist Policies So Bad?  4 hours ago
  39. Navy Officer Falsified Letters For Afghan Visas  4 hours ago
  40. Dem official charged with ballot tampering  4 hours ago
  41. Farmers hit hard by price increases  4 hours ago
  42. Pelosi: Spending ‘reducing debt, not inflationary’  4 hours ago
  43. Saudi phone-snub: Trevor Noah rips Biden  4 hours ago
  44. Laid-off Keystone workers BLAST Biden  4 hours ago
  45. Tom Brady coming BACK  4 hours ago
  46. Chris Wallace to replace Cuomo?  4 hours ago
  47. Amazon quits Seattle location over crime  4 hours ago
  48. Nets’ Kevin Durant: ‘Stupid’ NYC Policy  4 hours ago
  49. Poland: Can no longer absorb refugees  5 hours ago
  50. More American troops deploy overseas  5 hours ago
  51. At NATO base, soldiers prep for next move  5 hours ago
  52. Clouds over Merkel legacy  5 hours ago
  53. China wanted to appear neutral. It isn’t  5 hours ago
  54. PUTIN SEEKS MILITARY EQUIPMENT FROM CHINA  5 hours ago
  55. OBAMA COVID…  5 hours ago
  56. PFIZER CEO: Fourth $hot Now ‘Necessary’  5 hours ago
  57. Gas prices pushing up everyday costs  5 hours ago
  58. Recession Risks Piling Up…  5 hours ago
  59. Biden Urged to Blunt…  5 hours ago
  60. Jussie Smollett put in psych ward  5 hours ago
  61. WH spooked over unlawful entry  5 hours ago
  62. Working on Russia sanctions…  5 hours ago
  63. Weakness of the Despot…  5 hours ago
  64. Phones addictive. Betting, too. Now combined  5 hours ago
  65. Karma: Worst Covid Outbreak in China ever  5 hours ago
  66. Phoenix Gave Employees Lead Poisoning  12 hours ago
  67. Mexico To Unleash 70,000 Migrants  12 hours ago
  68. America’s First Liberty  12 hours ago
  69. Musk mocks Biden’s ‘green’ hucksters  1 day ago
  70. Heroes of the Ukrainian Refugee Crisis  1 day ago
  71. WH puts BBB on backburner  1 day ago

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74.) THE POST MILLENNIAL

 


75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS

 


76.) THE DAILY DOT

Daily Dot

Tuesday, March 15, 2022

Hey readers! Andrew here. Welcome to the Tuesday edition of Internet Insider.

 

It has been a busy few days for the Daily Dot team, with a large group of our reporters covering South by Southwest. They’ve done a lot of great work, and I hope you’ve been able to follow along.

Today, we’ve got the most important internet culture news of the day, plus I dive into a recent major biometrics privacy win by activists.

Let’s dive right into the news.

—A.W. 

Did a friend forward this? Subscribe here.

BREAK THE INTERNET

Ukraine: As we’ve noted quite a bit in this newsletter, the Russian government’s invasion of Ukraine is playing out online in vivid and heartbreaking ways. The latest example of that comes from a report from our Tech Reporter Mikael, who notes how one viral video appears to show empty grocery store shelves in Ukraine. One user commented on the video: “Where is all that humanitarian aid?”

Yikes: Director Jane Campion is being criticized online for putting down Serena and Venus Williams during her acceptance speech at the 27th Critics Choice Awards on Sunday night. Our Culture Reporter Michelle dives into the backlash Campion received.

SXSW: The Daily Dot has been covering South by Southwest (SXSW) all weekend. While some of you have probably seen our special edition newsletters from the conference, there’s even more reporting on our site. Check out all of our SXSW coverage—including movie reviews, analysis, and more—here.

TECH ANALYSIS 

Andrew Wyrich with the text 'Tech Analysis' next to him.

Binary code on palm print against a black screen.

Moab Republic/Shutterstock (Licensed) 

A big win in the fight for biometric privacy 

The rise of biometric scanning technology, like facial recognition, has faced a torrent of criticism in recent years from privacy advocates, civil rights groups, and more.

 

So when Amazon announced that it would be bringing its “Amazon One” palm scanning technology to the Red Rocks Amphitheatre as a way to enter the music venue, it was no surprise that the decision was met with intense pushback.

 

In November of last year, digital rights group Fight for the Future launched a campaign where artists and activists urged the venue to stop using the palm scanning technology. That campaign included an open letter signed by 300 artists and 35 organizations condemning the use of the technology.

 

Now, that pushback has resulted in the venue to decide not to offer the scanning technology as a form of ticketless entry.

 

Last week, Fight for the Future said the communications director at Denver Arts and Venues, which runs the Red Rocks Amphitheatre, said that it had not been in contact with Amazon “for months” and that the palm scanning tech would not be used at their venues.

 

“I’m not sure what the future of this technology is, but at this point it doesn’t involve our venues,” the official said, according to Fight for the Future.

 

The decision was hailed as a victory by the digital rights group.

 

“Red Rocks’ decision to abandon Amazon palm scanning puts the venue on the right side of history, as a defender of human rights and the privacy of music fans. Other venues should similarly listen to the hundreds of artists, organizations, and fans who don’t see this technology as ‘convenient’ but recognize it as a tool of corporate surveillance and super-charged state violence,” Leila Nashashibi, a campaigner at Fight for the Future, said in a statement.

 

Amazon’s palm scanning has also caught the attention of Congress. Last year, a group of senators sent a letter to Amazon CEO Andy Jassy where they asked to know more about how the company plans to use the biometric data they collected with the palm scanners after the retail giant said it would begin rolling out the scanners at its Whole Foods stores.

 

The palm scanners, the senators said, raised “serious questions about Amazon’s plans for this data and its respect for user privacy.”

 

—A.W. 

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🔑 KEY STORIES

A side by side of the DoorDash app and a TikTok of an employee who says gas prices caused them to make $6 an hour.

DoorDash driver says gas prices are disrupting wages

A TikTok user has ignited debate after posting about her DoorDash woes amid rising gas prices.

Screenshots from a TikTok where a woman says she was denied a job and later applied as a white person and got an interview.

Black TikToker says she applied to job and got rejected—but got accepted when she applied as a white person

A TikToker has gone viral after claiming that lying about her race landed her a job interview. The user claimed after being denied a job, she re-applied and put her “race as Caucasian” and got a call the next day.

Oculus Quest 2 Giveaway

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Viral Labor

In an age where many people live and work online, the internet has become the home of the modern picket. In “Viral Labor,” the Daily Dot explores the way workers are fighting for their rights and using the internet to advocate for themselves.

*The Daily Dot may receive a commission in connection with purchases of products or services featured here.

WE WANT YOUR FEEDBACK! 

As we build this newsletter, we’re always looking for ways to improve and feature content that you want. We want you to be excited to see our emails each day.

 

The best way for us to make this newsletter better is to hear from you.

 

I’d love to get any feedback for you via our brief survey. I will personally be reaching out to survey respondents.

— Kahron Spearman, community manager

BEFORE YOU GO

A Starbucks employee has gone viral after sharing her coworker’s special greeting to a drive-thru customer on TikTok. Part of the greeting is: “Good morning, welcome to Starbucks, where my anxiety is chronic but our coffee’s iconic.” 

A split screen of a Starbucks coffee cup and an employee speaking to a customer.

Shutterstock (Licensed), @.kmelodyk/TikTok (Fair Use) 

INTERNET EXPLORERS

Psst: Can We Interest You in Some Fake Internet Points?

If you’re as obsessed with Internet Culture as we are, then chances are, you know a few more people of culture as well. We’d like to meet them. Introduce us and we’ll toss some sweet fake Internet points your way. Get enough FIPs, and we’ll share some cool shtuff you cannot get anywhere else.

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77.) HEADLINE USA

 


78.) NATURAL NEWS

NaturalNews.com
World war escalation being aggressively pushed to achieve starvation milestones
Mike Adams Biden and NATO don’t want peace in Ukraine. They need a world war in order to pick up their depopulation agenda that didn’t achieve the extermination milestones they had hoped to achieve with covid vaccines.

In order to achieve the much larger die-off they desire, globalists need to decimate the global supply chain that provides food and energy to the world.

The only way to halt the starvation of billions of people and avoid the scenarios described here is to find peace in Ukraine, reverse the economic sanctions and remove Democrats from power before they completely destroy the existing energy infrastructure that feeds the world.

Get the full analysis details in today’s feature article and podcast here.

New Videos from Brighteon.com
Situation Update, Mar 14, 2022 – World war escalation being aggressively pushed by Putin, Biden and NATOWatch this video
DHS Head Announces New Speech-Control Laws – Questioning Incompetent Government Will Be IllegalWatch this video
8 Reasons to incorporate spirulina into your daily regimenWatch this video
Featured Articles
Food insecurity worsening already following Russian invasion of Ukraine, as countries begin withholding exports and hoarding commoditiesBy JD Heyes | Read the full story
Russia presents compelling new evidence of U.S.-backed bioweapons labs in Ukraine after document proves their existenceBy JD Heyes | Read the full story
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Former NIH head Frances Collins touts using threat of unemployment to push covid vaccine compliance, leaked recording revealsBy JD Heyes | Read the full story
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More of Today’s ArticlesGoogle “alternative” DuckDuckGo has become “Google Lite” with decision to censor sites over “disinformation”
For the past few years, as search and tech behemoth Google began leaning heavily to the left and became a full-fledged propagandist for the deep state, more and more Internet users switched to …Leaked audio recording reveals Obama-Biden regime officials plotting coup against Ukrainian president in 2014
As the current Biden regime offers its love and support to Ukraine following an invasion by more than 100,000 Russian forces, a newly resurfaced leaked audio indicates that a pair of Obama …NY Times reporter admits a “ton” of federal informants were in the crowd during Jan. 6 Capitol “riot,” says “ridiculous pee tape” of Trump does not exist
A veteran reporter for The New York Times has made several stunning admissions and statements that were captured on undercover video by Project Veritas, including verification that the FBI had …Sign this petition to stop the WHO from destroying U.S. sovereignty in times of health “emergencies”
Stand for Health Freedom has put together a petition calling on the people of the world to speak out against the World Health Organization’s (WHO) proposed “Pandemic Treaty” and …Pushing for WWIII: U.S. military-industrial complex continues to escalate conflict with economic sanctions
NATO’s relentless push for anti-Russian hatred across the global economy could force China to retaliate if its own businesses end up getting punished in all the fray. CNBC’s Eunice Yoon …Is the Russia invasion of Ukraine a Trojan Horse for The financial reset?
Putin, it would seem, has decided to invade Ukraine as an attempt to prevent the expansion of NATO into the Russian borders. This has been an increasing threat to Russian security according to …Report: US lags behind Russia, China in hypersonic weapons race
The United States has fallen behind Russia and China in the hypersonic weapons race. According to a Bloomberg report, the Air-Launched Rapid Response Weapon (ARRW) intended for use by the U.S. …

All the ‘experts’ were wrong on covid. Now they’re forced to admit it
Countries around the world are signaling they are “done with COVID.” Like asylum patients who have finally been taken off their …

Covid Newspeak: Altering definitions to alter perceptions
By a Biomedical Scientist “The purpose of Newspeak was not only to provide a medium of expression for the world-view and mental habits proper to the devotees of Ingsoc, but to make all other …

Revealed: China-owned Forbes fired a top transparency columnist after a pressure campaign from Fauci’s NIH
Long-time transparency advocate Adam Andrzejewski had his 8-year-long Forbes column cancelled after pressure exerted by the U.S. government, specifically Tony Fauci’s National Institutes …

      
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79.) POLITICHICKS

 


80.) BLACKPRESSUSA

 


81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL

 


82.) CNN

  Listen to CNN 5 Things View in browser

5 things

Alternate text

Tuesday 03.15.22

Wouldn’t it be nice if we could just “make more rain” to combat the drought? Well, some parts of the US are doing exactly that. Scientists are flying planes into clouds and injecting them with silver iodide to make more rain and snow. Some call the process necessary, but others say modifying the weather is getting in the way of nature. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day.
By Alexandra Meeks

Firefighters work to extinguish a fire in Kyiv Tuesday after strikes on residential areas. 

1

Ukraine

 

Pressure is mounting on President Biden and NATO members to provide further assistance to Ukrainians. Russian troops continue to strike residential buildings and populated areas, and recently left smoldering homes in the besieged city of Mariupol. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has asked Biden to ratchet up efforts to cut off Russia from international trade and to continue targeting the Russian elite. The US and its allies have issued a wide range of actions in recent weeks intended to punish Moscow, including harsh new sanctions aimed at imposing severe costs on the Russian economy. However, while Biden is working to isolate and punish Russia, American officials are expressing concern about the budding partnership between Moscow and Beijing. The US now has information suggesting China has expressed some openness to providing Russia with assistance as part of its war on Ukraine, a Western official and a US diplomat told CNN. President Zelensky is also planning to virtually address Congress tomorrow.

 

Want to help? Learn how to support humanitarian efforts in Ukraine here. CNN’s audience has contributed more than $5.2 million to the humanitarian relief work according to Public Good, the online donation platform partnering with CNN.

2

Coronavirus

 

The US has crossed into year three of the Covid-19 pandemic, and while the numbers of cases, hospitalizations and deaths are heading in the right direction, health experts say the world is certainly not out of the woods yet. There are an average of about 1,200 Americans dying from Covid-19 each day, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. However, over the next few weeks, the CDC forecasts a decrease in hospitalizations and deaths, particularly as the weather improves and people head outside, where it’s less likely that they’ll catch Covid. In China, though, 37 million people are currently in Covid lockdown as the country battles its worst coronavirus outbreak since the early days of the pandemic.

3

Rideshare apps

 

Rideshare companies Uber and Lyft have announced plans to add a small fee on rides to help drivers deal with rising gas prices across the country. Starting tomorrow, Uber users will pay an extra $0.45 or $0.55 per trip and an additional $0.35 or $0.45 for Uber Eats for at least the next two months, depending on the location. Uber said all of the money from the surcharges will go to drivers to help “soften the burden” of higher gas prices. Lyft did not specify how much extra passengers will pay or when the surcharge will go into effect. As of today, the national average price for gas is $4.31 a gallon, with California holding the highest price at $5.75 a gallon. 

4

Abortion

 

The Colorado House of Representatives yesterday passed a bill supporting abortion rights. The legislation states that “every individual has a fundamental right to use or refuse contraception [and] every pregnant individual has a fundamental right to continue the pregnancy and give birth or to have an abortion.” The Democratic sponsor of the bill hailed its passage as a “big win for protecting access to abortion and reproductive health care.” Some Republicans, on the other hand, strongly disagree. This comes after restrictive abortion laws have been recently advanced by Republican state legislatures across the country. Florida, West Virginia and Arizona have all moved on 15-week abortion bans this session. And in Idaho, the state legislature gave final approval yesterday to a bill that would ban abortion after six weeks and allow the father, sibling, grandparent, aunt or uncle of the fetus to bring legal action against the medical professional who performed the abortion.

5

Australia

 

An Australian court has overturned a landmark climate ruling — spearheaded by a group of teenagers — that ordered the federal environment minister to consider the impact of carbon emissions on children when approving new coal mining projects. The case was brought by eight Australians under 18 years old. Outside the Federal Court in Sydney today, the lead litigant in the case said she was “devastated by the decision and so, so angry.” The Australian government is considered a laggard on climate action. In October, days before the COP26 climate talks in Glasgow, Prime Minister Scott Morrison finally announced the country would join other developed nations by aiming to reach net-zero emissions by 2050.

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People are talking about these. Read up. Join in.

Ford will ship Explorers without all the parts — and add them later

Well, having most of a car is better than no car at all, right?

 

Dolly Parton bows out of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame nominations

The country superstar took herself out of the competition, saying she didn’t feel like she’d “earned that right.” Dolly is, and will forever be, a class act.

 

Sleeping with even a small amount of light may harm your health

We’ve all fallen asleep with the TV on at some point… but is it really that bad? Learn why experts say you should close your curtains and turn the TV off.

 

The Rolling Stones announce new ‘Sixty’ tour

The legendary band isn’t done rocking yet! They’ve scheduled 14 shows this summer in celebration of their 60th anniversary.

 

Holes the size of city blocks are forming in the Arctic seafloor

Sounds like a deep issue… Scientists say this is the result of a frozen layer of Earth’s surface thawing underneath the seabed.

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122

That’s how many migrants arrived in the Florida Keys yesterday in a “smuggling event,” a Border Patrol official said. The migrants are believed to be Haitian and many were in need of medical attention. The arrival comes little more than a week after another boat carrying about 300 migrants, also believed to be Haitian, ran aground near Key Largo.

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Their accomplishments are titanic and inspiring. Serena and Venus, I apologize and completely celebrate you. 

 

— Director Jane Campion, apologizing to tennis stars Venus and Serena Williams for a comment she made during her acceptance speech at Sunday night’s Critics Choice Awards. “The Power of the Dog” director received backlash after she acknowledged other best director nominees and then said, “Venus and Serena, you’re such marvels. However, you don’t play against the guys, like I have to.” In addition to being inaccurate (the tennis champions have faced off against men), some viewed Campion’s statement as dismissive of two successful Black women’s accomplishments.

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83.) THE DAILY CALLER

 


84.) POWERLINE

Daily Digest

Link to Power LinePower Line

  • Today’s Satire Is Tomorrow’s Woke Dogma
  • Speaking of Out-of-Control Crime . . .
  • The Great Police Reversal of 2022
  • End Civil Service Protection?
  • Today’s Stan: On the “Great Society”
Today’s Satire Is Tomorrow’s Woke Dogma

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 07:59 PM PDT

(Steven Hayward)A reader sends along this article, supposedly by a real estate professional, about the sales terms that you should no longer use to promote a house on the market. I can’t tell if this story is deadpan satire, an earnest attempt to adapt to our wokerati, or a prophecy about the future. You decide:

Some of my clients’ multiple listing services flag questionable words and phrases, while others do not. Some of my clients take my fair housing-related recommendations with good grace, while others do not.

Let me be clear — there may be hair-splitting among different associations and different MLSs about the specifics of certain terms and descriptors. The goal, however, is less about rigid adherence to a set of rules and more about making everyone feel comfortable and seen. This can be difficult if you don’t confront your unconscious biases or if you don’t admit that discriminatory language is a problem in the first place. . .

Great schools

You already know that you shouldn’t be talking about schools, but this phrase still pops up frequently. If you wish to talk about proximity to local schools, you can do so by including the distance to area schools, but you shouldn’t be making any assertions or assumptions about the schools in the neighborhood and their quality. . .

Nice neighbors

Similarly, making assertions about the neighbors can be misleading and inaccurate. When it comes down to it, you don’t know what the neighbors are really like or how they’re likely to greet a newcomer to the neighborhood.

Walking distance

For those who are older or who are struggling with limited mobility, walking distance may be a misleading or problematic assertion. It’s much easier to provide fractional mileage by using Google Maps. For example, “This charming neighborhood is conveniently located near Trader Joe’s (0.2 mi), Whole Foods (0.4 mi) and Glenmuir Park (0.6 mi).” . . .

Master’s suite/bedroom/bathroom

This is a phrase that should be avoided on a number of counts, not least of which is the assumption that the owner of the home is or should be a man. In place of this, consider owner’s suite/bedroom/bathroom or primary suite/bedroom/bathroom. . .

Phrases related to race, gender identity, sexuality, nationality, cultural identity

It should go without saying but any word or phrase related to any of these items should be left out of your property descriptions.

A single point of view is not the only one that matters. By making property descriptions more appealing to a wider variety of potential buyers, you create the circumstances for housing to be truly fair and for the homebuying experience to be more enjoyable and more meaningful for everyone.

There’s much more in this vein in the complete article. As I say, I can’t tell if this is for real or not. The author, Christy Murdoch, may be a subtle genius. I say that because of this one sentence in the last item here: “A single point of view is not the only one that matters.” But a “single point of view” is the core of wokeness. What a brilliant way of sending it up.

Or it could be she really means it.

  
Speaking of Out-of-Control Crime . . .

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 05:07 PM PDT

(Steven Hayward)Today it was revealed that Amazon is closing its downtown Seattle office, with 1,800 employees, because of out-of-control crime. Among other recent victims of downtown crime was an Amazon engineer who was assaulted with a baseball bat near the office in late January.

To learn this story you had to go to the Daily Mail in London. As of this writing, the Seattle Times has nothing on the story at their home page or business page.

Here’s some of the Daily Mail report:

Amazon will relocate all 1,800 workers from its downtown Seattle office as the area continues to be plagued by crime in the woke Pacific Northwest bastion, where the police budget has been cut by $36million since 2019 – and now other businesses are starting to do the same.

Citing an increase in violent crime in the downtown Seattle area, Amazon made the announcement Friday that it would temporarily relocate its workers from their office at Third Avenue and Pine Street.

‘Given recent incidents near Third and Pine, we’re providing employees currently at that location with alternative office space elsewhere,’ an Amazon spokesman told DailyMail.com in a statement. ‘We are hopeful that conditions will improve and that we will be able to bring employees back to this location when it is safe to do so.’

Amazon isn’t the only one:

But the final straw for many businesses to move their employees from the area or close their doors was the fatal shooting of a 15-year-old Michael Delbianco on March 2 in the 1500 block of Third Avenue, which is near where Amazon’s office building is located.

Piroshky Piroshky bakery owner Olga Sagan, 38, made the tough decision to close her shop after the shooting. But said she constantly found the entrance blocked with drug users who refused to move – and she says the Seattle Police Department did nothing to help. . .

The McDonald’s on Third Avenue also closed for the safety of their employees.

I like this statement from the office of Seattle’s new mayor:

‘Mayor Harrell will continue to develop a comprehensive approach to public safety in collaboration with police and safety advocates, community members, service providers, and businesses, including Amazon, to activate, revitalize, and restore downtown for all.’

In other words, nothing substantial will be done. That’s what “comprehensive approach” always means. I need to add it to my lexicon for: “Continue with liberal spending and constituency-stroking programs that have no effect on the real problem.”

  
The Great Police Reversal of 2022

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 10:35 AM PDT

(Steven Hayward)Has there ever been a faster cycle of liberal non-sense to the “never mind” stage than the case of “Defund the Police?”

Of course, simply refunding the police is not sufficient when there is an all-out attack on the police for their practices, or DA’s who have decided to play catch-and-release. Should we be surprised that more and more police officers conclude it isn’t worth the trouble to arrest someone if they’re going to be back on the street in hours and have their charges dropped?

We shouldn’t be surprised, then, to see soaring complaints and formal investigations into police officers for not doing their jobs. The San Francisco Chronicle reported (by way of Reddit, since the Chron has a paywall) recently:

More S.F. residents share stories of police standing idly by as crimes unfold: ‘They didn’t want to be bothered’

Is property crime in some ways allowed in our city? Are police on an unofficial strike or work stoppage?

Now, a man police believe is the culprit is in jail — busted only because he allegedly went on to commit more vandalism days after the Wine Society mess. But the episode spotlighted an issue bigger than one arrest: a pattern of some officers on the San Francisco force seemingly uninterested in dealing with crime.

After reading the column about the parklet, Supervisor Hillary Ronen wrote a letter to Scott demanding answers. She told him she’d witnessed officers tell her constituents there’s no point in investigating or arresting a suspect because Boudin won’t prosecute anyway — an assertion the D.A. rejects, though he does strive to reduce incarceration.

The letter highlighted alarming data backing up many residents’ concerns that police have thrown up their hands. For example, last year the Department of Police Accountability opened 595 cases into alleged police wrongdoing; the largest share by far, 42.6%, related to “neglect of duty.” That percentage has ticked up steadily since 2016, when neglect of duty made up 32% of complaints.

Ronen’s letter stated that of all the crimes reported in San Francisco in 2021, just 8.1% led to an arrest, the lowest rate in a decade. Just 3.5% of reported property crimes yielded an arrest. And, of course, that doesn’t include all the crimes residents have stopped bothering to tell police about.”…

Just how did people think police officers would respond to a non-stop campaign to demonize them? (Note, however, that the real and unstated subtext of the WaPo story linked here is the power of police unions, which are no different in their effect than teachers unions and other public employee unions that should be curtailed or abolished.)

  
End Civil Service Protection?

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 08:57 AM PDT

(Steven Hayward)Trump—remember him?—is out with a proposal to repeal the Pendleton Act and other legal foundations of the civil service in the federal government. “We will pass critical reforms making every executive branch employee fireable by the president of the United States. The deep state must and will be brought to heel,” Trump said over the weekend.

Cooler heads have rushed to say this is a really really bad idea. They are likely right: a completely politicized government bureaucracy could make things even worse than they are right now, given that there is a nearly inexhaustible supply of idealistic leftists to fill government jobs—qualifications and experience not necessary. (Just conjure in your mind 100,000 former bartenders with honors degrees like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez filling the ranks of federal agencies.)

But it may be yet another really bad idea (like term limits) whose time has come. And I suspect it would be extremely popular with voters between the coasts.

It would have the merit of clarifying the character of our government, and attaching complete accountability to the president, who today dodges it by attributing unpopular actions to “independent agencies” and other permanent organs of the administrative state that run along without regard to election returns. If the permanent government today consciously considers itself as internal opposition (the “Resistance”!) to Republican presidents, what do we have to lose by enabling a president to fire hundreds of thousands of bureaucrats?

As usual, Trump has put his finger on something that undoubtedly bothers millions of Americans whose livelihoods have been decimated by the government’s actions during COVID-19, while federal employees all got pay raises, and did their non-work from home. Worth an extended debate. . .

  
Today’s Stan: On the “Great Society”

Posted: 14 Mar 2022 08:22 AM PDT

(Steven Hayward)Today’s quote from a certain forthcoming book: Stan Evans, speaking to the Philadelphia Society in 1967, as LBJ’s “Great Society” was just getting rolling:

The most important of the reversals which confronts us, the most important of the inversions worked upon the American system by the ministrations of the Great Society and of the other representatives of the liberal orthodoxy which have preceded it, is the inversion which has taken place in the American character. The Founding Fathers assumed a certain character type to exist in the United States which would allow a regime of freedom to exist. John Adams put it very succinctly when he said, “Without virtue there can be no political liberty.”. . .  The Great Society reverses the equation: it assumes and encourages a lack of internal self-discipline which makes people incapable of selecting purposes and incapable of organizing their behavior. . . What this amounts to is a kind of infantilization of the American culture. . .

If you are curious for more, you can listen to the whole speech here.

  
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85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION

 


86.) THE PATRIOT POST

 


87.) DECISION DESK HQ

 


88.) DIGG

 


89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – LUNCH BREAK

 


90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE

 


91.) USA TODAY

usatoday.com
Daily Briefing
TUESDAY, MARCH 15
Firemen are at work to extinguish a fire that broke out in an apartment building hit by shelling in Kyiv on March 15, 2022, after strikes killed at least two people, Ukraine emergency services said as Russian troops intensified their attacks on the Ukrainian capital.
‘Chance to survive’: Zelenskyy tells Russian troops to surrender
Russia and Ukraine plan more talks, the NCAA men’s basketball tournament begins and more news to start your Tuesday.
Good morning, Daily Briefing readers. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told Russian troops in a video that they can surrender and will be treated “decently.” It comes as the leaders of Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovenia said they would travel to the Ukrainian capital Kyiv “to express the European Union’s unequivocal support for Ukraine and its freedom and independence.”
It’s Jane, with Tuesday’s news.
🔴 Idaho became the first state to pass abortion legislation modeled after Texas’ six-week ban that would allow family members to sue any doctor who performs an abortion during a pregnancy longer than six weeks.
🤒 People who were bedridden for a week or more with COVID-19 remain at increased risk for anxiety and depression more than a year later, according to a new study.
⚖️  Ginni Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, acknowledged in an interview that she attended the Donald Trump rally that preceded the Capitol riot
“I was disappointed and frustrated that there was violence" after President Donald Trump's rally Jan. 6, 2021, says Virginia "Ginni" Thomas, wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas.
“I was disappointed and frustrated that there was violence” after President Donald Trump’s rally Jan. 6, 2021, says Virginia “Ginni” Thomas, wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas.
Patrick Semansky/AP
🎤 Dolly Parton won’t be headed into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame this year. The icon asked the Hall to withdraw her name from the 2022 ballot, saying “I don’t feel that I have earned the right.”
🥊 “Stakes are Ukraine”: Elon Musk is challenging Russian President Vladimir Putin to a one-on-one fight.
🔵  Social media feeds don’t always fill to the brim with tributes after a prolific celebrity dies. William Hurt, Hugh Hefner and the complications of talking about people after they die.
🎧 On today’s 5 Things podcast, White House correspondent Maureen Groppe looks at China’s role amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. You can listen to the podcast every day on  Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or on your smart speaker.
Here’s what’s happening today:

Russia pounds Ukrainian cities as the two sides plan more talks

The latest round of talks between Ukrainian and Russian officials aimed at ending or curtailing the devastating bombardment of Ukraine will continue Tuesday . Shortly before dawn, large explosions thundered across the Ukrainian capital Kyiv. A series of Russian strikes hit a residential neighborhood, igniting a huge fire and a frantic rescue effort in a 15-story apartment building. At least one person was killed and others remained trapped inside. The latest negotiations, held by video Monday, were the fourth round involving higher-level officials from the two countries. They were halted for a “technical pause,” said Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Podolyak tweeted that the negotiators would discuss “peace, cease-fire, immediate withdrawal of troops & security guarantees.”
📩 Ukraine-Russia crisis: The latest news straight to your inbox. Sign up for the newsletter here.

Documents due in Jan. 6 Capitol riot investigation

Six individuals must produce documents for the Jan. 6 committee by Tuesday and appear for deposition between March 22-29, according to subpoenas filed by the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack at the U.S. Capitol. The subpoenas claim the individuals promoted false claims that the 2020 presidential election was fraudulent and participated in various actions based on those claims, including attempts to delay the certification of electoral votes on the day of the attack. Committee chairman Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., said in a statement that Cleta Mitchell, Kenneth Chesebro, Christina Bobb, Katherine Friess, Kurt Olsen and Phillip Kline reportedly attempted to “disrupt or delay the certification of electoral votes and any efforts to corruptly change the outcome of the 2020 election.”

Just for subscribers:

🚨 “Horrific and senseless” murders in New York City and Washington, D.C. are the latest jolt for homeless advocates. What needs to change?
💸 How the Fed’s first rate hike in more than 3 years will affect credit card, mortgage and savings rates.
🔵 “We are going abroad”: After a deadly Russian airstrike near the Ukrainian border, Poles are increasingly on edge.
✈️ “It’s not your job to make other people behave better”: How to safely handle unruly travelers.
🐍 Bobcat vs. python: A rare video captured a Florida bobcat raiding an Everglades snake nest for eggs.
These articles are for USA TODAY subscribers. You can sign up here. 
Are you already a subscriber and want all of the subscriber-only content emailed to you directly every day? We can do that! Sign up for that here.

NCAA men’s basketball tournament begins with play-in matchups

The NCAA men’s basketball tournament gets started Tuesday with a pair of play-in games. Texas A&M Corpus Christi and Texas Southern kick things off when the two 16 seeds face off. Texas A&M Corpus Christi is coming off a win in the Southland Conference Championship Game, while Texas Southern won comfortably in the Southwestern Athletic Conference title game. The winner of this matchup will go on to face Kansas, the top seed in the Midwest Region. In the second matchup of the evening, Indiana will face Wyoming in a battle of No. 12 seeds. Most recently, both teams lost in the semifinals of their conference tournaments –  Indiana in the Big Ten and Wyoming in the Mountain West. Awaiting the winner of Indiana-Wyoming will be Saint Mary’s College, the No. 5 seed in the East Region.

Daunte Wright’s family to meet city official about future of memorial

Daunte Wright’s parents, and the family’s attorney, will meet with the Brooklyn Center city manager and the city attorney Tuesday after the family was informed of plans to take down a memorial at the intersection where Wright was fatally shot by a police officer, the Star Tribune reported. In an interview Sunday, Katie Wright asked to keep the memorial in place, saying it’s “not hurting anybody but it will hurt a lot of people taking it down.” Daunte Wright was killed on April 11 after officers pulled over the 20-year-old Black man for having expired license tags and an air freshener hanging from his rearview mirror — violations that civil rights activists say are used as a pretext to stop Black motorists. Kim Potter, the white former police officer who said she confused her handgun for her Taser when she fatally shot Wright, was sentenced last month to two years in prison.

MLB offseason moves continue: Where will Freddie Freeman land?

Major League Baseball teams will look to make more roster moves Tuesday, with a number of marquee free agents still available and trade talks underway across the league. However, many fans and players will keep an eye on where star first baseman Freddie Freeman will sign. Freeman, a five-time All-Star and 2020 National League MVP with the Atlanta Braves, appears to be switching teams this offseason after the Braves traded for first baseman Matt Olson from the Oakland A’s Monday. In addition to Freeman, other star position players like third baseman Kris Bryant, outfielder Nick Castellanos and shortstops Carlos Correa and Trevor Story are still free agents.

ICYMI: Some of our top stories yesterday

🔴 WWE Hall of Famer Scott Hall, who played iconic Razor Ramon in the 1990, died on Monday, WWE announced. He was 63.
🏀 “Completely devastated and heartbroken”: NCAA Tournament’s biggest Selection Sunday snubs.
🎥 Sandra Bullock talks Brad Pitt in “Lost City”: “I had to ask him for a fourth day for free.”
📱 5 ways you’re ruining your expensive phone, laptop, tablet, and TV.

📸 The Chicago River goes green for St. Patrick’s Day 📸

Kayakers make their way up the Chicago River on March 16, 2019, after the river was dyed green in celebration of St. Patrick's Day.
Kayakers make their way up the Chicago River on March 16, 2019, after the river was dyed green in celebration of St. Patrick’s Day.
Jerry Lai, USA TODAY
Crowds of people turned out in Chicago over the weekend to celebrate St Patrick’s Day. The city once again dyed its river green, a decades-long tradition, and the first St. Patrick’s Day parade was held in three years after the previous two were scrapped due to COVID.
Honoring Saint Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland, St. Patrick’s Day is celebrated every year on March 17, the anniversary of his death in the fifth century.
Scroll through the gallery to see the festivities kick off early on the Chicago River.
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92.) THE DAILY BEAST

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The Big Holes in the Blanket Sanctions of Russian Oligarchs

By Jose Pagliery, Scott Bixby, Adam Rawnsley

In the Venn diagram of government entities sanctioning oligarchs, a lot of prominent Russian billionaires are slipping through the bureaucratic cracks.

Suspect Nabbed in Murders of Homeless Men in D.C., NYC

By Allison Quinn

The arrest came just hours after police released surveillance images of the man suspected of gunning down two men sleeping on the streets and attacking three others.

Chumbawamba Tried to Save the World. Can They Do It Again?

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Evan Rachel Wood: Manson Tortured Me With a Nazi Whip

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In Part Two of Amy Berg’s harrowing documentary “Phoenix Rising,” Wood details how the rock star allegedly terrorized her when she tried to escape and raped her in her sleep.

Trump Loves to Watch Ohio Candidates Trying to Kiss His Ass

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Putin Killed Trump’s ‘America First’ Movement

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‘Mrs. Maisel’ Finale Finally Lets Midge and Lenny Bruce Bone

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1. 3 NATO Leaders Head to Kyiv to Show Support to Ukraine

 IN THE LINE OF FIRE 

Prime Ministers of Poland, Czech Republic, and Slovenia will meet with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky in the besieged Ukrainian capital.

2. MoMA Stabbing Suspect Gary Cabana Arrested in Philadelphia

 NABBED 

Police say the 60-year-old attacked two museum workers Saturday after being denied entry into the museum over an expired pass.

3. Feel Like a Boss With BOSS’ New Luxurious Basketball Gear

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BOSS’ new basketball clothing line combines luxury quality with fan-inspired design

4. Tiananmen Square Protester Fatally Stabbed in His Law Office

 ‘CAN’T BELIEVE IT’ 

Jinjin Li was jailed in China for nearly two years.

5. Proud Boys Leader Had Memo on Seizing Govt Buildings: Report

 ‘UNSUSPECTING’ 

The targets on Jan. 6 reportedly included the Supreme Court along with six House and Senate office buildings.

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93.) JUST THE NEWS

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DAILY NEWSLETTER

Biden’s inflation blame game: President insists his policies not behind high prices

With inflation soaring and Americans hurting, Democrats point finger at COVID, Putin, company greed — but not government spending, which experts say is the main cause.

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Shrinking food supplies, soaring prices could trigger global unrest, key GOP lawmaker warns


26 states have either passed or are in the process of adopting constitutional carry laws


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COVID vaccine mandates challenged by pro athletes, litigation, scientific research


U.S. officials: Biological research facilities in Ukraine are not bioweapons labs


House Republicans investigate Biden admin’s release of notorious Russian cybercriminal


Ukraine President Zelensky to make virtual address to joint session of Congress


Gabbard calls on Romney to ‘resign’ or provide evidence for his ’treasonous’ claim about her


Gas prices, already at record highs, expected to go higher


Sen. Paul has new plan to remove Fauci as top US infection scientist, eliminate his NIAID post


Manchin says no on confirming Raskin for Fed position, likely derailing Biden, fellow Dems’ effort


Idaho on track to ban abortion after six weeks, emulating Texas law


Estonia becomes first NATO country to formally call for Ukraine no-fly zone


Over 60% of voters don’t think Biden will be able to prevent Russia-Ukraine war from spreading, poll


More than 40,000 Syrians enlist to fight for Russia, human rights group says


Russia makes good on vow to ban Instagram, following similar move for Facebook, Twitter


Russia claims advances in Donbass, moves to encircle Ukrainian forces


Florida legislature passes budget with $1 billion in tax relief and savings


Oil prices dip Monday as Ukraine and Russia negotiate


Fox News reporter Benjamin Hall wounded outside of Kyiv


Michigan paid $2.4 billion in ‘improper payments’ to Medicaid, CHIP beneficiaries


Ex-CIA operative: Unless US decides to ‘strike’ Iran’s nukes, GOP has little choice but to accept ‘containment strategy’


Russia is seeking military aid from China as Ukraine campaign continues, say U.S. officials


Ohio governor signs law authorizing concealed carry without permits


Half of US states to exceed revenue projections with COVID money, high wages, prices factors, report


Judge grants family request to seal Bob Saget’s death records


Catholic nun gets temporary exemption from D.C. healthcare worker vax mandate following lawsuit


D.C. police commander retires after internal probe, reports used cruiser to come and go from bar


China locks down buildings, cities as COVID-19’s Omicron variant spreads


Pregnant woman, baby in Ukraine die after maternity hospital bombing


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94.) SHARYL ATTKISSON

 


95.) RIGHTWING.ORG

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96.) NOT THE BEE

 


97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT

 


98.) NEWSMAX

 


99.) MARK LEVIN

March 14, 2022

Posted on March 14, 2022

March 14, 2022

On Monday’s Mark Levin Show, there have always been American enemies, but we’ve never seen our enemies treated as well as they are treated by President Biden. Even before they were invaded, Ukraine requested harpoon missiles from the Biden Administration and these supplies never materialized. Biden is a liar who lacks the temperament that is necessary to effectively lead our nation. Then, irrespective of the invasion of Ukraine one interview that all of the mainstream media will air is their interview with former Attorney General Bill Barr to trash Trump. This is a shameless distraction from an individual that was once respected by this program. Barr now happily sits for interviews with hosts and networks that once decreed him as long as he’s trashing Trump. Later, isolationism in the face of growing totalitarianism isn’t something we can hide behind. Biden being an isolationist make him more dangerous than FDR. Now the U.S is allowing Putin to decide what weapons can or can’t be used on the battlefield. Putin is a war criminal who has no problem killing civilians and has no issue with escalating the situation, so why do we? Afterward, author Craig Shirley calls in to discuss his new book April 1945: The Hinge of History and how America emerged as a superpower after WWII. Shirley added that our previous stance as isolationists is very reminiscent of what is happening in Europe today.

THIS IS FROM:

1945
We Might Know Why Joe Biden Is So Afraid To Give MiG-29 Fighters To Ukraine

Washington Free Beacon
Iran Claims Responsibility for Missile Strike on US Consulate

Office of the Historian
American Isolationism in the 1930s

AP
Iran fires missiles into northern Iraq in retaliation attack

Jewish Insider
All Republican senators except Rand Paul express opposition to looming Iran deal

Right Scoop
“Have we learned NOTHING?” Netanyahu blasts Biden for CONTINUING Iran nuke talks after ROCKET ATTACK

NY Post
‘Toxic behavior’: Norah O’Donnell’s attitude under fire at ‘CBS Evening News’

Wall St Journal
China Pursues Afghanistan’s Mineral Wealth After U.S. Exit

Yahoo News
Ginni Thomas confirms she attended Jan. 6 ‘Stop the Steal’ rally but says she left before Capitol riot

The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.

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100.) CIVIL DEADLINE

 

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George Soros Trying to Ignite World War III After Recent Op-Ed
George Soros Trying to Ignite World War III After Recent Op-Ed
The Great Recession - Here's Why Workers Said They Quit Their Jobs in 2021
The Great Recession – Here’s Why Workers Said They Quit Their Jobs in 2021
BREAKING: President Zelensky Ready to Agree to Some of Putin's Terms to End War
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NYT Reporter Reveals SHOCKING Information Regarding Jan 6th
NYT Reporter Reveals SHOCKING Information Regarding Jan 6th
WATCH: Psaki Wishes She Stayed Home After The Tables Get Turned During Presser, ‘You Guys Say All Options…
WATCH: Psaki Wishes She Stayed Home After The Tables Get Turned During Presser, ‘You Guys Say All Options…
Jen Psaki Gets Tongue-Tied When Confronted on US Importing Russian Gas Still (VIDEO)
Jen Psaki Gets Tongue-Tied When Confronted on US Importing Russian Gas Still (VIDEO)
Former AG Barr Reveals What He Saw in Video of Epstein 'Suicide' from Prison
Former AG Barr Reveals What He Saw in Video of Epstein ‘Suicide’ from Prison
Worst Mayor in the Country Compares Genitals to Intimidate Officials
Worst Mayor in the Country Compares Genitals to Intimidate Officials
BREAKING REPORT: Vatican Preps for Conclave as 'Pope Is Dying'
BREAKING REPORT: Vatican Preps for Conclave as ‘Pope Is Dying’
New Proposed Bill Would Make It Legal to Murder Babies Well After Birth
New Proposed Bill Would Make It Legal to Murder Babies Well After Birth
 

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UNBELIEVABLE! FBI Sources Committed Entrapment to Manipulate Men in Alleged Whitmer Kidnapping Plot
UNBELIEVABLE! FBI Sources Committed Entrapment to Manipulate Men in Alleged Whitmer Kidnapping Plot
George Soros Trying to Ignite World War III After Recent Op-Ed
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The Great Recession - Here's Why Workers Said They Quit Their Jobs in 2021
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BREAKING: President Zelensky Ready to Agree to Some of Putin's Terms to End War
BREAKING: President Zelensky Ready to Agree to Some of Putin’s Terms to End War
NYT Reporter Reveals SHOCKING Information Regarding Jan 6th
NYT Reporter Reveals SHOCKING Information Regarding Jan 6th
WATCH: Psaki Wishes She Stayed Home After The Tables Get Turned During Presser, ‘You Guys Say All Options…
WATCH: Psaki Wishes She Stayed Home After The Tables Get Turned During Presser, ‘You Guys Say All Options…
Jen Psaki Gets Tongue-Tied When Confronted on US Importing Russian Gas Still (VIDEO)
Jen Psaki Gets Tongue-Tied When Confronted on US Importing Russian Gas Still (VIDEO)
Former AG Barr Reveals What He Saw in Video of Epstein 'Suicide' from Prison
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Worst Mayor in the Country Compares Genitals to Intimidate Officials
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BREAKING REPORT: Vatican Preps for Conclave as 'Pope Is Dying'
BREAKING REPORT: Vatican Preps for Conclave as ‘Pope Is Dying’

 

 

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101.) THE GELLER REPORT

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CDC data: Millennials experienced ‘a Vietnam War’ in 2nd half of 2021

The only thing worse than the horror of this democide is the left’s cover-up of it.CDC data: Millennials experienced ‘a Vietnam War’ in 2nd half of 2021

‘Shocking’ spike in deaths coincides with vaccine mandates, booster shots

By Art …

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Michigan: Democrat elections official charged with ballot tampering

Just for knowing, At the time Funk, a Democrat, was running for re-election. She narrowly won in the unofficial count.“Election officials must uphold the integrity of their positions,” said Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel. If only …

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NYPD Commissioner calls for an end to bail reform laws as NYC crimes soar

Closing the barn doors after the horses have bolted or in this case, murderers, rapists and criminals.Photo: Beating in broad daylight in mid-town.

NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell calls for an end to woke bail reform laws that let …

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Judge Orders Corrupt Wisconsin Speaker To Turn Over Deleted Emails, Texts About 2020 Election Review

Make no mistake, RINOs are as destructive to the nation as the Democrat party of treason.Corrupt Wisconsin Speaker Robin Vos Blocks 2020 Election Decertification, Spends Time Getting His Wife a Position with the GOP Instead

Vos ordered to …

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Amnesty’s US director: Israel shouldn’t exist ‘as a state for the Jewish people’

And there it is. Amnesty International is an anti-Semitic and anti-Israel hate group. No rational person should given Amnesty any credibility.An offensive, anti-Semitic attack on Israel. Remember this when Amnesty publishes future …

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How Biden Has Forced Israel to Attack Iran

You think things are bad in Ukraine? Well, you ain’t seen nothin yet. The Biden Administration is about to sign off on a nuke deal with Iran, that has been brokered by Russia and China. A deal that will guarantee war in the Middle East, because …

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Geller Report News

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  • UN Warns Individualistic Conservatives Threaten the Planet

  • ADL’s Anti-Semitism Report Ignores Islamic Jew-Hatred

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  • Multiple Long-Range Ballistic Missiles Fired At U.S. Consulate in Erbil, Iraq, Reportedly From Iran
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102.) CNS

 


103.) GLADWIRE

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When A Coyote Finds A Dog Toy In Her Backyard, She Couldn’t Believe What Happened Next
When photographer Pamela Underhill Karaz walks out her back door…
Dad Steals Daughter’s Soda, When She Finds Out Her Argument Will Make You Howl With Laughter
Dad Steals Daughter’s Soda, When She Finds Out Her Argument Will Make You Howl With Laughter
As you may know, many toddlers don’t like it when…
Teen Surprises Mom And Cut Dreads After 9 Years, Then One Look And She’s In Tears
Teen Surprises Mom And Cut Dreads After 9 Years, Then One Look And She’s In Tears
Max had grown up for most of his life with…
88 Year Old Man Was Dared To Design A Machine That Helps Thousands Of Homeless
88 Year Old Man Was Dared To Design A Machine That Helps Thousands Of Homeless
Bob Rutherford had a friend who dared him, and the result was a brand new…
Shelter Dogs Are Excited When These Special Visitor Arrive, They Are About To Get Huge Surprise
Shelter Dogs Are Excited When These Special Visitor Arrive, They Are About To Get Huge Surprise
Each community is full of its own local heroes. Whether they are police officers, firefighters,…
Company Finds Creative Solution That Feeds Stray Dogs And Cats For Free!
Company Finds Creative Solution That Feeds Stray Dogs And Cats For Free!
I’m sure we have all had those creative, innovative ideas for a new invention but…
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104.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL

 


105.) DC CLOTHESLINE

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World war ESCALATION being aggressively pushed by Biden and NATO because tyrants need a food scarcity crisis to reach global depopulation milestones
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The plot thickens: Hunter Biden investment firm funded Ukraine biolabs
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Catastrophic Inflation: “I’ve Never Seen Prices Jump This High, This Fast”
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11 Signs U.S. Relations With China Are Deteriorating And That An Invasion Of Taiwan Is Drawing Near
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No Reprieve For Consumers As Congress Gives Themselves A Raise & Inflation Expected To Continue Soaring
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More Than 8,000 Single Black Mothers Fill Out Online Application for 110 Slots to Get Guaranteed Monthly Income in 70% Black Birmingham, Alabama
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Shortage of cooking oil now on horizon as Indonesia sees panic buying, hoarding of valued commodity
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The REAL WWIII Started Years Ago and It’s Not Between the US and Russia
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TWO Colorado County Clerks Offer Help in Exposing Election Fraud
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Russia, China, Brazil and India Want US Biolabs in Ukraine Investigated
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The West Declared Economic War On Russia, And Now Russia Is Striking Back In A Major Way
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After denying existence of US bio labs in Ukraine, Biden regime warns that Russia could release the bioweapons they contain
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Democrat Denver D.A. to Drop Murder Charge Against Unlicensed Security Guard Who Killed Trump Supporter
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106.) ARTICLE V LEGISLATORS’ CAUCUS

 


107.) OFF THE PRESS

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At OffThePress.com we highlight the news and stories being neglected and ignored by the mainstream press. Here’s what we’re watching RIGHT NOW!

TODAY’S TOP STORIES

Now You’re Talking: Trump Makes Proposal To Wreck The Deep State

Now You’re Talking: Trump Makes Proposal To Wreck The Deep State

Liz Cheney Is So Unpopular In Wyo. She’s Hurting Her Dad’s Reputation

Liz Cheney Is So Unpopular In Wyo. She’s Hurting Her Dad’s Reputation

CLARENCE THOMAS’ WIFE PUSHES BACK ON MEDIA SMEARS, J6 CHARGE

Fight Back Against ‘Guilt Tipping’ — 20% For Handing You A Bag

Connecticut Sets Stage To Pay Striking Workers With Tax Dollars

Connecticut Sets Stage To Pay Striking Workers With Tax Dollars

Plans To Drill World’s Deepest Hole To Supply ‘Inexhaustible’ Energy

Iranian Honeypot Stabs Man During Sex In Vegas As Revenge For Soleimani

WATCH: Spoofed By ‘SNL’

WATCH: Spoofed By ‘SNL’

William Hurt, Oscar-Winning Actor, Dies At 71

William Hurt, Oscar-Winning Actor, Dies At 71

Election Official In Michigan Charged With Ballot Tampering

Highlighting News & Stories Ignored by Mainstream Press

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108.) SONS OF LIBERTY

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Counterfeit Christianity: I Am Not Perfect, Just Forgiven
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Latest CONvid-1984 Propaganda: China Locks Down Millions Over Omicron Scariant
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Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla Claims Fourth Booster & Yearly mRNA Injections Needed Despite Lack Of Safety Or Effectiveness
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Idaho Agents Of The State Kidnap Baby From Good Mother – Child Grows Worse In Their Custody (Video)
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Holocaust Survivor Warned Americans About Blindly Supporting COVID Tyranny – We Didn’t Listen (Video)
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Cops In America Have So Much Militarized Gear, They’re Sending It To Ukraine
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Catastrophic Inflation: “I’ve Never Seen Prices Jump This High, This Fast”
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Is Washington Fighting Russia Down to the Last Ukrainian?
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11 Signs US Relations With China Deteriorating As Invasion Of Taiwan Draws Near
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2 Years After Death Of DHS Whistleblower Philip Haney, Coroner Rules It Suicide (Video)
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WHO Told Ukraine To Destroy “High-Threat Pathogens” In Biolabs Funded By US
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109.) STARS & STRIPES

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March 14, 2022 | View in browser
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No changes expected for US troops in Poland despite Russian missile strikes near Ukraine-Polish border

U.S. military personnel will remain in Poland to help defend the NATO country despite a Russian missile attack over the weekend on a Ukrainian military facility about 15 miles from the Ukraine-Polish border, a senior U.S. defense official said Monday.

Read more >

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US sends sizable contingent to Norway for giant NATO exercise in region rattled by Russia

Several thousand U.S. Marines and sailors are among the roughly 30,000 troops from 27 NATO and partner countries taking part in Norway’s largest military exercise since the end of the Cold War.

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https://www.stripes.com/incoming/hytikf-150322ENERGYCOSTSphoto01.jpg/alternates/LANDSCAPE_300/150322ENERGYCOSTSphoto01.jpg

Skyrocketing energy costs showing up in bills for US bases, military personnel across Europe

U.S. military installations throughout Europe are estimating they will collectively pay at least $50 million more for gas and electricity in the next year, amid soaring wholesale energy prices exacerbated in some cases by a reliance on Russian natural gas.

Read more >

https://www.stripes.com/incoming/bxyg1f-Main-story-4.jpg/alternates/LANDSCAPE_300/Main%20story%204.jpg

From tents to tiny shelters, VA begins aggressive push in LA to end veteran homelessness

VA Secretary Denis McDonough on Feb. 25 announced his goals for veteran homelessness in 2022, one of which is to get at least 1,500 homeless veterans in Los Angeles into permanent housing. Nationally, he wants the VA to house 38,000 veterans this year. If the department achieves those goals, it will have housed 10% more veterans in Los Angeles and nationwide than in 2021.

Read more >

https://www.stripes.com/incoming/qj260o-150322DARWIN-MARINESphoto01.jpg/alternates/LANDSCAPE_300/150322DARWIN-MARINESphoto01.jpg

US Marines begin arriving in Australia for another six-month training mission

A contingent of up to 2,200 U.S. Marines has begun arriving for a six-month rotation to Australia’s northern city of Darwin

Read more >

https://www.stripes.com/incoming/vijfur-150322JAPAN-VIRUSphoto01.jpg/alternates/LANDSCAPE_300/150322JAPAN-VIRUSphoto01.jpg

US military begins to ease COVID-19 mask policies at bases across Japan

Yokota Air Base and Kadena Air Base dropped their mask mandates, with some exceptions.

Read more >

https://www.stripes.com/incoming/p5pdcn-150322PARA-SKIERSphoto01.jpg/alternates/LANDSCAPE_300/150322PARA-SKIERSphoto01.jpg

Former Navy SEAL wins more gold with Paralympic ski relay team in Beijing

Former Navy SEAL Dan Cnossen and three teammates had the fastest time in the mixed 4×2.5km relay on the final day of the Beijing 2022 Games.

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Video | Stripes in 7 for March 14, 2022

This edition includes info on U.S. troops in Poland, efforts to streamline the delivery of household goods and more.

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US warns Chinese on support for Russia in Ukraine war

Face to face, President Joe Biden’s national security adviser warned a top Chinese official on Monday about China’s support for Russia in the Ukrainian invasion, even as the Kremlin denied reports it had requested Chinese military equipment to use in the war.

Read more >

https://www.stripes.com/incoming/elo71m-Kyiv/alternates/LANDSCAPE_300/Kyiv

Russia keeps up attacks in Ukraine as two sides hold talks

A fourth round of high-level discussions between Ukrainian and Russian officials is underway even as Moscow’s troops press their assault on Kyiv and other cities.

Read more >

https://www.stripes.com/incoming/5mtit6-3-14-22-kyiv-apartment/alternates/LANDSCAPE_300/3-14-22%20kyiv%20apartment

Kyiv residents on edge after strikes devastate civilian homes

Fears mounted that if Russian forces continue to close in on the capital, it could soon face immense damage and high civilian casualties.

Read more >


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110.) RIGHT & FREE

 


111.) UNITED VOICE

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112.) THE DAILY SHAPIRO

March 14, 2022

70% Disapprove Of Biden’s Handling Of Gas Prices, Inflation: Poll

By Joseph Curl

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Jussie Smollett Put In Jail’s Psych Ward After Being Deemed Self-Harm Risk, Brother Claims

By Joseph Curl

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Colin Kaepernick Mocked For Begging NFL To Play — After Comparing League’s Draft Combine To Slavery

By Virginia Kruta

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Jussie Smollett Told Attorneys He Would Get Harsher Sentence Because He’s Black: Report

By Hank Berrien

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‘In Bed With Your Wife’: Pete Davidson Taunts Kanye West

By Hank Berrien

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Science: The Sports World Is Seeing The Absurdity Of Kyrie Irving’s Plight

By Joe Morgan

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113.) INSURGENT CONSERVATIVES

 


114.) WAKING TIMES

 


115.) UNCOVER DC

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Actual Journalism™

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The People’s Convoy: Thirteen Trucks for Thirteen Perished American Soldiers

After a brutally cold weekend for The People’s Convoy at the Hagerstown Speedway, thirteen trucks planned to break off from the larger convoy to pass through the city of D.C. as a part of the convoy’s roll around the city. As he traveled the beltway on Monday morning, trucker Allen Kelly told UncoverDC that he was […]

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Navy Seal v. Austin Exhibit: Soldiers Will Try. Soldiers Will Fail.

Exhibits were filed today in Navy Seal v. Austin, with Exhibit 1 highlighting the unprecedented correspondence between what appears to be upper ranks of the military discussing COVID-19 vaccine mandates. The two-page exhibit, coming from Deputy Joint Surgeon Geoffrey I. Powell, MPAS, PA-C, wastes no time instructing subordinates in the operation to allocate the mandated […]

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Dark To Light: Dragonslayers with Larry Schweikart

We are thrilled to be joined for the first half of today’s show by Dr. Larry Schweikart, author of the new book “Dragonslayers: Six Presidents And Their War With the Swamp.” We talk about the book and how each of the six navigated their way through a war with their own respective swamp. You can […]

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The News of Today is the History of Tomorrow March 14, 2022

The News of Today is the History of Tomorrow IN POLITICAL NEWS 1) In the deluded world of President Rutabaga, the DemoKKKrats would “add seats” in 2022. -And I’m the Grand Emperor of Saturn. 2) Meanwhile, the Demented Pervert gave an utterly incoherent speech on Ukraine, using his Uncle Pedo creepy whisper again. DISTURBING! Joe […]

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New York State Skirmishes Against School Board Meeting Arrests

Now passing for light entertainment in Monroe County, New York, as elsewhere, the arrest of a parent at a school board meeting is winding its way through the legal system and pinging the news cycle. Where this particular little event differs from similar others is that the parent who was hustled into a police vehicle […]

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