Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday March 17, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
Mar 17, 2020
|
Happy St. Patrick’s Day from Washington, where Irish cheer is dampened a wee bit by the closure of bars and restaurants during the coronavirus pandemic. Much the same likely is the case where you work or live. President Trump announces new precautions even as mayors and governors wrestle with such decisions. How does this compare to the swine flu? We’re glad you asked. Plus: the role of personal responsibility, the lesson in testing delays, scenes from Madrid, and COVID-19 and the race card. On this date in 1762, the world’s first St. Patrick’s Day parade is held in New York City by Irish soldiers serving in the British army. Sláinte! |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Add morningbell@heritage.org to your address book to ensure that you receive emails from us.
You are subscribed to this newsletter as rickbulow1974@gmail.com. If you want to receive other Heritage Foundation newsletters, or opt out of this newsletter, please click here to update your subscription. |
THE EPOCH TIMES
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
DAYBREAK
|
THE SUNBURN
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
JUST THE NEWS
|
THE FLIP SIDE
- Subscribe
- Past Issues
- RSS
- Translate
|
AXIOS
☘️ Good Tuesday morning. I hope this St. Patrick’s Day brings health and safety to you and yours. And please thank a front-line health professional.
- Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,157 words … 4½ minutes.
- If this email was forwarded to you, please sign up here.
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
The coronavirus pandemic is a disaster with no modern parallels, with no escape and no safe harbor, Axios Future correspondent Bryan Walsh writes.
- The big picture: Even the worst calamities — from natural disasters to terrorist attacks — have happened in one place, at one time.
- But the truly global catastrophe of the coronavirus will touch everyone, everywhere, for a long time.
You could hear new urgency yesterday from President Trump, as he ditched the hopeful talk and warned at a White House briefing: “I’ve spoken, actually, with my son. He says: ‘How bad is this?’ It’s bad. It’s bad.”
- The crisis was once expected to last weeks or two months. Now even Trump fears a long, sad summer: “[T]hey think August. Could be July. Could be longer than that.”
- Six counties in the Bay Area have issued shelter-in-place warnings, the strongest U.S. clampdown yet as a host of cities and states force bars, gyms and other public places to close.
As America comes to grips with the extent of these social-distancing measures, it’s natural to reach for historical comparisons: Those examples can offer the comfort that the U.S. has made it through dark times before.
- But we’re used to seeing terrible events befall a city, or a region — not the whole country all at once, let alone the whole world.
It may be more instructive to go all the way back to World War II, which saw the strict rationing of consumer goods, full-scale mobilization of civilian industry, even “dimouts” of New York’s skyline.
- The American public, of course, rose to the occasion.
- The question is whether we can do the same now, at a time when the muscle memory of sacrifice has atrophied.
The bottom line: We’re just beginning an endurance test that has no clear end.
Grand Central Station yesterday. Photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Chilling new projections: The White House’s tougher line yesterday appears “to draw on a dire scientific report warning that, without action by the government and individuals to slow the spread of coronavirus, … 2.2 million people in the United States could die,” reports the N.Y. Times’ Sheri Fink, an M.D. and Ph.D.
- The group projects that 8% to 9% of people in the most vulnerable age group, 80+, could die if infected.
- The report was released yesterday by an epidemic-modeling group at Imperial College London.
The lead author told the Times “that his group had shared their projections with the White House task force about a week ago and that an early copy of the report was sent over the weekend.”
- Trump’s new recommendations: “Avoid gathering in groups of more than 10 people. Avoid discretionary travel. And avoid eating and drinking at bars, restaurants, and public food courts.”
Economists have removed their rose-colored glasses in recent weeks and are beginning to price in scenarios for the world that are as bad or much worse than the global financial crisis, Axios Markets editor Dion Rabouin writes.
The big picture: The U.S., the world’s biggest economy, is likely to have a recession this year and the #2 economy, China, has already undergone a significant slowdown.
- That alone would have been enough to weigh on global growth. But because major economies like Italy, Germany, the U.K., France and Japan also are facing major outbreaks of their own, there is growing fear of the entire world’s GDP growth turning negative for multiple quarters this year.
- As of Monday night, 15 countries had at least 1,000 confirmed cases of coronavirus, and 12 of those were among the world’s 25 largest economies.
Worse, many of the countries expected to be hardest hit by the outbreak are in some of the weakest economic positions, especially those in the eurozone.
The bottom line: A major struggle for policymakers is that much of the outbreak’s economic impact is not yet measurable. That makes preparing for and assessing the potential for damage a new challenge.
In a new work-from-home world, the tech industry is swooping in to reshape how we shop, eat and entertain ourselves, Axios’ Scott Rosenberg, Kia Kokalitcheva and Ina Fried write.
- Why it matters: Trends toward e-commerce, delivery services and online entertainment have long been underway. This moment is accelerating them — and pushing the companies behind them to a new position of dominance.
E-commerce: Amazon announced yesterday that it plans to hire 100,000 new full- and part-time employees in the U.S. to meet surging demand. It also said it’s increasing pay by $2 an hour through the end of April.
Food: Instacart said earlier this month that its sales during the past week were 10 times higher than the prior week — and 20 times higher in states like California and Washington.
- Restaurants are shifting to deliveries and curbside pickups as a way to stay in business.
- GrubHub and Uber Eats are temporarily suspending commission fees to help smaller restaurants as they work to stay afloat via delivery.
- They’re also rolling out no-contact delivery options so customers and drivers don’t have to interact with each other.
Entertainment: As Americans at home search for a way to break their boredom, Universal announced it would make its in-theater movies available online — abandoning the “theatrical release window” and breaking what may be Hollywood’s last taboo.
Strong majorities of Americans trust major health agencies to protect the country from the coronavirus, while fewer trust President Trump, Axios managing editor David Nather writes from an Axios/SurveyMonkey poll.
- Why it matters: The results suggest that health officials have a high degree of credibility in this crisis — and that Trump is on safer ground when he closes ranks with them, as he did in his unusually candid remarks at yesterday’s press conference.
Between the lines: There’s no significant difference between Republicans and Democrats in terms of trust in agencies like the CDC, the NIH and state health departments.
- With Trump, however, the partisan differences on trust are pretty much what you’d expect. However, independents aren’t split down the middle — only about three in 10 trust him.
- Trump’s trust level on the coronavirus is slightly lower than his approval rating in the same survey: 47%. His average approval rating usually hovers around 42%, per FiveThirty Eight.
Graphic: Harry Stevens/The Washington Post. Used by permission.
The internet loved an interactive article by the WashPost’s Harry Stevens, an Axios alumnus, that uses bouncing balls to show how to slow coronavirus: “Why outbreaks like coronavirus spread exponentially, and how to ‘flatten the curve.'”
- Why it matters: “[W]ithout any measures to slow it down, COVID-19 will continue to spread exponentially for months.”
- “To understand why, it is instructive to simulate the spread of a fake disease through a population. We will call our fake disease simulitis.”
Some voters wore gloves to cast early ballots Saturday in Chicago. Photo: Noreen Nasir/AP
An old-school form of communication — the mail — is becoming a saving grace as coronavirus forces states to scrap in-person voting, Axios’ Alexi McCammond writes.
- Three states vote today — Arizona, Florida and Illinois. All have multiple confirmed cases of coronavirus, and are scrambling to go ahead with primaries that rely heavily on mail ballots.
- Ohio called off its primary late last night, after its health director declared a health emergency.
- Louisiana and Georgia have postponed their primaries, originally scheduled for later this year.
Why it matters: Caucuses were the first electoral tradition on the chopping block after the Iowa debacle. Polling places and voting lines could soon be next.
🗳️ AP last night declared Joe Biden the winner of last week’s all-mail Democratic primary in Washington state, giving him five of six wins for March 10.
- Bernie Sanders won North Dakota.
Hat tip: Axios’ Dominique Taylor
📬 Be safe, be careful. And please tell a friend about Axios AM/PM.
THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
|
Copyright © 2020 MEDIADC, All rights reserved.Washington Examiner | A MediaDC Publication 1152 15th Street NW Suite 200 | Washington, DC 20005 |
You received this email because you are subscribed to Examiner Today from The Washington Examiner. Update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive.We respect your right to privacy – View our Policy Unsubscribe |
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
|
PRO TRUMP NEWS
THE HILL
|
ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
White House officials and the top Senate Republican said late Monday economic aid to households affected by the COVID-19 pandemic is on track despite concerns among the GOP rank and file in that chamber about the impact of paid leave requirements on small businesses. Read More…
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine declared late Monday night that the “polls will be closed” in the Buckeye State on Tuesday, amid confusion over whether the state will hold its primary election as scheduled. Read More…
Coronavirus Special Report: Morning minute 3/17
CQ Roll Call brings you the latest roundup of policy news on coronavirus to start your day. First up, the coronavirus stimulus bill passed the House late Monday and heads to the Senate today. Plus, what will the coronavirus mean for 2020 primaries? We’ll be back later today with more policy news — stay tuned. Listen here…
Here are all the Capitol Hill coronavirus cases we know of so far
As the number of confirmed coronavirus cases balloon across the United States, Capitol Hill has not been immune to the crisis, albeit on a much smaller scale. Read More…
Senate passes 77-day FISA surveillance stopgap
Senators on Monday passed a 77-day extension of surveillance authorities that lapsed over the weekend. The passage of a bill by voice vote would revive and extend surveillance powers — including those under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act — until the end of May. Read More…
Could Joe Biden give a boost to an Irish American museum?
At least one pair of Irish eyes is smiling this St. Patrick’s Day as a result of Joe Biden’s sudden rise in the presidential sweepstakes. The former vice president’s Irish heritage could help revive interest in an Irish American Museum in Washington. Read More…
Reporters get new guidelines as Hill coronavirus cases grow
Capitol Hill’s exposure to the coronavirus is growing, and reporters were asked to do their part as measures to combat the virus that causes COVID-19 escalated significantly around the Capitol on Monday. Read More…
Capitol Insiders Survey: Hill aides want to leave the Capitol
There’s strong support among congressional staffers for shutting down the Capitol complex and attempting to hold hearings and votes remotely in order to protect people from the coronavirus, according to CQ Roll Call’s latest Capitol Insiders Survey. Read More…
Bracing for coronavirus, hospitals call for more funding
Hospitals are seeking more funding as they brace for more patients with COVID-19 infections and potential shortages of workers and supplies. Read More…
Airlines seek $58 billion in aid for business lost to pandemic
U.S. airlines on Monday asked the federal government for nearly $60 billion in aid as passengers stay home to avoid the COVID-19 pandemic. Read More…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2020 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
POLITICO PLAYBOOK
DRIVING THE DAY
SOMETIMES — and it’s not often — members of Congress decide to go big and move quickly with a breakneck speed that’s hard to fathom. That may be happening right now with the PHASE THREE stimulus.
SOME KEY SENATE REPUBLICANS HAVE DECIDED that while they are in the Capitol, they should clear the decks, because if they leave, they may not be able to come back for a while.
WHEN OUR COLLEAGUE JOHN BRESNAHAN caught Sen. MARCO RUBIO (R-Fla.), he put it like this: “I don’t think we can assume that we can keep reconvening the Senate every week like we did this week. I don’t think we can make that assumption. … With what might happen to airlines or travel schedules, with individual members having to go into quarantine or being exposed — I don’t think we can operate as if we can just bring the Senate and House back whenever we want.” Bres and Brianna Gurciullo’s story
CAVEAT: Nothing is decided. Things go sideways in the Capitol every day. But there seems to be a new move-with-speed vibe pulsing through the Senate GOP.
HERE’S WHAT WE KNOW AS OF 6 A.M. EASTERN: Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN and the TRUMP ADMINISTRATION are eager to inject hundreds of billions of dollars into the American economy right now, and they want Congress to move with alacrity.
MNUCHIN is expected to return to the Capitol today asking for a PHASE THREE package of $850 BILLION or more, according to multiple sources involved in assembling this deal. As a point of comparison, the Joint Committee on Taxation said the paid leave provision in PHASE TWO cost $100 billion. TARP was $475 billion, but financial institutions eventually paid the government back.
MNUCHIN — who, without a doubt, has emerged as the savviest administration figure in dealing with Congress — will have policy suggestions, but Congress is going to have a big say on the policies. The TRUMP ADMINISTRATION does not give a lick about the price tag at this point. It just wants action, and fast.
A BIG CHUNK OF THIS $850 BILLION is likely to be the payroll tax cut, which faces uncertain prospects in Congress.
WE TEND TO BE SKEPTICAL, because these things usually take time on Capitol Hill. Unless they don’t.
THE $850 BILLION FIGURE may be calming to markets. The FT says European markets were up as much as 3%, but they slipped just before 6 a.m. Dow Futures seesawed this morning — they were up, but then nosedived and were in the red as we published.
THE HOUSE IS OUT until the Senate moves. If the Senate clears the package this week, we have to imagine the House will come back to pass it at some point soon. They have to give their members 24 hours’ notice before bringing them back to D.C.
BUT FIRST the Senate will have to pass PHASE TWO, which was locked up in the House until Monday afternoon. The administration is going to have to convince weary Republicans that they should clear the legislation and focus their energy on PHASE THREE. Sen. TOM COTTON (R-Ark.) has been agitating against the bill as currently written, and his legislative director sent an email urging senators to join him in opposition.
ONE OF THE BIG ELEMENTS OF THE PHASE THREE PACKAGE clearly is going to be money for the airline industry, which has been very hard hit by an almost immediate halt in air travel.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK … UNITED AIRLINES CEO: CORONAVIRUS ‘MUCH WORSE’ THAN 9/11 … OSCAR MUNOZ, the CEO of United Airlines, sent a letter Monday to MNUCHIN, Speaker NANCY PELOSI, House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY, Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL and Senate Minority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER. … NOTABLE: The letter was co-signed by United’s CEO and employee union leaders.
— KEY EXCERPTS FROM THE DIRE LETTER: “On behalf of the nearly 100,000 airline professionals at United Airlines, we — the leaders of the company’s management and organized labor unions — have a simple message: please act quickly – this week – to protect our livelihoods. …
“We unequivocally support prudent steps like these to keep the American people safe. But, these actions have also created a fast-moving, financial crisis unlike anything the U.S. airline industry has faced before. In fact, the financial impact of this crisis on our industry is much worse than the stark downturn that we saw in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks.
“March is typically our busiest month of the year. This year, in just the first two weeks of March, we have welcomed more than one million fewer customers on board our aircraft than the same period last year. We’re also currently projecting that revenue in March will be $1.5 billion lower than last March. The bad news is that it’s getting worse. We expect both the number of customers and revenue to decline sharply in the days and weeks ahead.”
THEY’RE LINING UP, HAT IN HAND … WAPO: “Casinos ask Congress for emergency aid as coronavirus toll sweeps industry,” by Jeff Stein, Rachel Siegel and Jonathan O’Connell
WHAT SCHUMER IS THINKING: SCHUMER is the Senate minority leader, but in an instance such as this — crisis in divided government — the New York Democrat will hold a lot of cards. PHASE THREE will need 60 votes, and SCHUMER is the only guy who can get them there.
— In the Phase One bill, SCHUMER asked for $8.5 billion when President DONALD TRUMP was asking for $2 billion, and the bill ended up at $8.3 billion. … SCHUMER and PELOSI took a unified stance on their demands in PHASE TWO, and they got much of everything they asked for.
— NOW, AS THE SENATE EYES PHASE THREE, SCHUMER is planning to focus on the following: addressing hospital capacity issues, expanding unemployment insurance, increasing Medicare funding and postponing federal loan payments. He wants to draw a distinction between what he believes to be the Republicans’ position — bailouts for favored industries — and his.
— SCHUMER will send Dems a PowerPoint this morning, and the Dem Caucus will review it during their party lunch today. That lunch conversation will be held on a conference call.
BY THE WAY: IF YOU EVER NEEDED a crisis to show why Congress might want to consider some form of mobile voting, this is it.
WSJ ED BOARD: “Ideally the Treasury would present it to the public in a way that also offers more financial relief for individuals whose incomes may also fall as the economy closes. Our preference would be a tax cut rather than more spending or tax rebates that may not get to people for months. The payroll tax cut that Mr. Trump is floating won’t stimulate the economy. But it will let Americans keep more of their own take-home pay, and it may be the best of the urgent ideas to cope with an economic pause.
“All of this will take more vigorous leadership and explanation than we’ve seen so far from the Fed, the Treasury, the White House or Congress. Treasury Secretary Mnuchin has become a junior legislative negotiating partner with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi when he ought to be thinking through the larger financial and economic issues. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell isn’t inspiring confidence by copying the 2008 playbook without explaining the current problem and rationale for action.
“The White House will have to lead and offer financial and economic solutions, not merely settle for what Mrs. Pelosi will allow behind closed doors. This means more than random tweets with policy impulses and cheerleading. As flight director Gene Kranz says in ‘Apollo 13,’ ‘work the problem, people.’”
Good Tuesday morning. Happy St. Patrick’s Day. Primaries are happening in Arizona, Florida and Illinois. But Ohio is a maybe, at best.
BREAKING OVERNIGHT: “Ohio governor shutters polling places for Tuesday’s primary,” by Zach Montellaro and Alice Miranda Ollstein … Steven Shepard on how to watch tonight’s primaries
HAPPENING THIS MORNING — The coronavirus task force will hold a press briefing at 10:30 a.m. The markets are due to open at 9:30 a.m.
INSIDE THE TASK FORCE … NYT’S MAGGIE HABERMAN and NOAH WEILAND on A10: “Inside the Coronavirus Response: A Case Study in the White House Under Trump”: “The culture that President Trump has fostered and abided by for more than three years in the White House has shaped his administration’s response to a deadly pandemic that is upending his presidency and the rest of the country, with dramatic changes to how Americans live their daily lives.
“It explains how Mr. Trump could announce he was dismissing his acting chief of staff as the crisis grew more severe, creating even less clarity in an already fractured chain of command. And it was a major factor in the president’s reluctance to even acknowledge a looming crisis, for fear of rattling the financial markets that serve as his political weather vane.” NYT
NEW … DAN DIAMOND: “White House deploys SWAT teams of technocrats in attempt to fix testing”: “As hospitals grapple with more coughing and feverish emergency-room visitors than they can test, the White House has deployed a SWAT team of fixers and technocrats to ramp up coronavirus testing, in an implicit acknowledgment that the Trump administration’s response has continued to fall short of what is needed.
“About 100 staffers and outside advisers, split between the health department and the White House, are currently working on teams to rapidly increase supplies of test kits and cope with shortages across the country, said four people with knowledge of the strategy.
“‘This is the A-team of people who get shit done,’ said one official, who’s worked with some of the staffers leading the effort. ‘We’ve got to show the American people that we can deliver on the testing promises’ after weeks of President Donald Trump vowing that ‘anybody who needs a test can get a test’ — a claim that doesn’t match the growing number of doctors, hospitals and patients who have said they’re still waiting for access and results.” POLITICO
OH YEAH, THERE’S A PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY GOING ON — “Bernie’s not planning on going quietly,” by Holly Otterbein and David Siders: “Bernie Sanders’ path to the Democratic nomination is closing, but a quick exit is far from guaranteed — even if he gets wiped out Tuesday. From his debate posture to staffing moves to the ‘virtual rally’ he convened Monday evening, the Vermont senator is signaling that he may not be ready to concede.
“If Sanders remains in the race, it will be in part to keep his ‘political revolution’ alive. According to people familiar with his thinking, Sanders will not only consider what’s best for his campaign, but also the progressive movement.
“Many of Sanders’ aides and allies also expect him to press onward after Tuesday. They see a benefit in amassing as many delegates as possible in order to influence the party platform at the Democratic National Convention this summer — even if Sanders himself can’t win the nomination.” POLITICO
TRUMP’S TUESDAY — The president will participate in a phone call with restaurant executives at 9:30 a.m. in the Oval Office. He’s due to meet with tourism industry execs at 2 p.m. in the Cabinet Room, followed by a phone call with supply retailers and wholesalers at 3:30 p.m. in the Oval Office and a meeting in the Oval with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at 4:30 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
NEW LIVE TRACKER: “How many coronavirus cases have been reported in each U.S. state?”
BACKSTORY … NAHAL TOOSI, DANIEL LIPPMAN and DAN DIAMOND: “Before Trump’s inauguration, a warning: ‘The worst influenza pandemic since 1918’”: “The briefing was intended to hammer home a new, terrifying reality facing the Trump administration, and the incoming president’s responsibility to protect Americans amid a crisis. But unlike the coronavirus pandemic currently ravaging the globe, this 2017 crisis didn’t really happen — it was among a handful of scenarios presented to Trump’s top aides as part of a legally required transition exercise with members of the outgoing administration of Barack Obama.
“And in the words of several attendees, the atmosphere was ‘weird’ at best, chilly at worst.” POLITICO
BEN WHITE: “Trump faces echoes of 1929 in a race to save the U.S. economy”
POLITICO Playbook newsletter
Sign up today to receive the #1-rated newsletter in politics
NYT: “As Market Convulses, Big Banks Plan to Borrow Funds From Fed,” by Kate Kelly, Andrew Ross Sorkin and Jeanna Smialek: “Eight major financial-services firms are borrowing money from the Federal Reserve, a day after the central bank urged them to tap its short-term funding facility to make it easier for credit to continue flowing through the economy, as the coronavirus pandemic continues to roil markets.
“Morgan Stanley was the first within the group to tap the Fed’s so-called discount window on Monday, according to three people familiar with the matter. Other banks, including Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase — all members of the Financial Services Forum, an industry trade group — are expected to borrow as early as Tuesday, the people said. …
“That group action is in response to direct encouragement from the Fed, which had urged banks on Sunday to act to destigmatize the use of central bank funding at a tumultuous time. Since the virus first began infecting Americans, all three major stock indexes have experienced protracted drops, and investors have begun to worry about companies’ access to cash and credit.”
ACROSS THE POND … DAVID HERSZENHORN and RYM MOMTAZ: “Europe hunkers down for war against coronavirus”: “EU leaders on Monday imposed a new wave of drastic measures aimed at slowing the spread of the coronavirus that has infected more than 180,000 people worldwide, killed more than 7,000 and is now threatening to overwhelm health systems in the richest, most-advanced countries on Earth.
“‘We are at war,’ French President Emmanuel Macron declared in a televised speech to his nation, in which he announced a 15-day lockdown that would permit only the most essential movements, beginning at noon on Tuesday.
“’It is of course a sanitary war,’ Macron said. ‘We are not fighting against an army, or another nation. But the enemy is here. It is invisible, elusive and it is progressing. And this requires our general mobilization.’” POLITICO Europe
PLAYBOOK METRO SECTION … WAPO: “D.C. bars and restaurants have final dine-in service, for now, as coronavirus restrictions grow,” by Darran Simon
VALLEY TALK — “Bay Area orders ‘shelter in place,’ only essential businesses open in 6 counties,” by Erin Allday: “Six Bay Area counties announced ‘shelter in place’ orders for all residents on Monday — the strictest measure of its kind yet in the continental United States — directing everyone to stay inside their homes and away from others as much as possible for the next three weeks in a desperate move to curb the rapid spread of coronavirus across the region.
“The directive was set to begin at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday and involves San Francisco, Santa Clara, San Mateo, Marin, Contra Costa and Alameda counties — a combined population of more than 6.7 million. It is to stay in place until at least April 7. The three other Bay Area counties — Sonoma, Solano and Napa — did not issue similar mandates.” San Francisco Chronicle
BIG ON MUELLER TWITTER — “Justice Department drops plans for trial over Russian interference in 2016 U.S. election,” by Josh Gerstein: “With jury selection set to begin in just over two weeks, prosecutors asked a federal judge to permanently dismiss the charges special counsel Robert Mueller brought two years ago against two Russian firms linked to a St. Petersburg businessman known as Putin’s chef, Yevgeny Prigozhin.
“The move scuttles a trial that could have drawn the ire of President Donald Trump: a high-profile showcase of U.S. intelligence agencies’ evidence that Russian trolls sought to stir up support for him in the 2016 presidential election while fighting against his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton. U.S. District Court Judge Dabney Friedrich, a Trump appointee who oversaw the case, formally dismissed the charge against the two Russian firms Monday night.” POLITICO
MEDIAWATCH — “The coronavirus fake news pandemic sweeping WhatsApp,” by Janosch Delcker, Zosia Wanat and Mark Scott
— WAPO’S PAUL FARHI and SARAH ELLISON: “On Fox News, suddenly a very different tune about the coronavirus”: “On his program on Friday, [Sean] Hannity — the most watched figure on cable news — lauded the president’s handling of what the host is now, belatedly, referring to as a ‘crisis.’
“‘Tonight, we are witnessing what will be a massive paradigm shift in the future of disease control and prevention,’ he said. ‘A bold, new precedent is being set, the world will once again benefit greatly from America’s leadership. … The federal government, state governments, private businesses, top hospitals all coming together, under the president’s leadership, to stem the tide of the coronavirus.’” WaPo
PLAYBOOKERS
Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.
IN MEMORIAM — “Former Rep. Richard Hanna, GOP moderate from Upstate NY, dies at 69,” by The Post-Standard’s Mark Weiner: “Former U.S. Rep. Richard Hanna, a fiercely independent Republican from Upstate New York who championed LGBT and women’s rights, died Sunday at a hospital in Oneida County. He was 69.
“Hanna’s family said in a statement that he died surrounded by loved ones ‘after a private and courageous battle with cancer.’ Hanna, of Barneveld in Oneida County, served three terms in Congress representing an eight-county district that stretched from Lake Ontario to the Pennsylvania border.” Syracuse.com
TRANSITION — Jennifer Earyes is now head of policy at the Structured Finance Association. She previously was director of corporate development and head of the LIBOR transition office at Navient.
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Andrew Kovalcin, principal at Advanced Advocacy. What he’s been reading: “Timothy Ferriss’ punchy ‘The 4-Hour Workweek’ — it’s an entertaining and insightful read that delves into entrepreneurship and the future of work. Too often we get entangled in the D.C. grind and forget to focus on what matters most. Ferris focuses on ‘lifestyle design’ — suggesting we simply enjoy life along the way, while at the same time increasing our effectiveness to achieve meaningful goals. I started Advanced Advocacy for this purpose. I am living this in real time, and like many people, I’m still very much a work in progress.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Rep. Denver Riggleman (R-Va.) is 5-0 … Rep. Dave Joyce (R-Ohio) is 63 … Tim Burger is 54 (h/t Blain Rethmeier) … Judy Stecker, deputy COS for strategy and operations at HHS … Laurel Strategies CEO Alan Fleischmann … Mark Paustenbach, SVP at Rokk Solutions (h/t Tim Burger) … former CIA Director Michael Hayden is 75 … Eileen O’Connor, SVP of comms at the Rockefeller Foundation (h/t Ashley Chang) … Carl Leubsdorf is 82 … Zach Lamb … Harrell Kirstein … Scott Rogers … Emily Cohen … Angela Landers … POLITICO’s Sarah Owermohle and Connor Foxwell … Lisette Morton … Jill Collins … Patrick Murphy of 3 Click Solutions (h/t Jon Haber) … API’s Mary Schaper … Myrlie Evers-Williams is 87 … Joe Hines, digital director at Stand Up America (h/t Ryan Thomas) … Christina Saull … Mike Glover … CNN’s Kate Sullivan … Alex Ball …
… Allan Keiter, founder and publisher of 270toWin … Stefano Dotti, ROKK associate account executive (h/t Lindsay Singleton) … Lani Short … Maureen Henehan … Ethan Porter, assistant professor of media and public affairs at GW, is 35 … former Rep. Cynthia McKinney (D-Ga.) is 65 … Veronica Pollock … NBC News’ Sally Bronston … Tom Karrel … CBS’ Trey Sherman … Robert J. Luck is 41 … NRDC’s Mark Drajem is 53 … Jennifer Small … Scott Schwaitzberg … Charlie Olson … Facebook’s Erin Murray Manning … James Flexner … Ben Miller, VP of production at Convergence Media … Fred Anklam … Yahoo’s Dylan Stableford … Zachary Silver … Mike Goscinski … MSNBC’s Tiffany Mullon … Emma Vitaliano … WSJ’s Anna Rafdal … Uber’s Annaliese Rosenthal … Angie Goff … Larry Farnsworth, president of Gavel Public Affairs, is 45 … Liz Doherty … Rebecca Cooper
Follow us on Twitter
AMERICAN MINUTE
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
|
CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
|
PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: My Starbucks Is Closed and I Want All of You to Visit Me In Prison Because Reasons
Oh, That’s the Real World
Are we all in this virtual quarantine bunker forever?
No.
Are we all in it for a while?
Most definitely yes.
We are now in Week Two of the New Reality and I think America is, for the most part, reacting well.
I know that may seem a little off given what I have been writing about until now, but one thing changed on Monday — I ventured out into the world.
I had to go to my credit union to make sure that all of the finances were sorted out well for the rest of the quarantine. I also had to handle cash whilst doing this so — UNCLEAN!
Just to make things interesting, I decided to go to the Whole Foods Market across the street and see how that hot mess was playing out.
Turns out, not so messy at all.
Americans were out shopping in a grocery store acting like normal Americans shopping in a grocery store.
No panic.
No hoarding.
No shoving each other about.
Just people shopping.
IT WAS GLORIOUS.
Yeah, they were out of toilet paper, but they still had a lot of boxes of tissues, so I loaded up.
Paper is paper, people. I’ve got ten boxes of the stuff with lotion on it here, so I’m sure I’ll survive the BATHROOM APOCALYPSE just fine.
This is the America that happens off of social media. The America that those of us who spend too much time on social media need to be reminded about. THIS IS AMERICA.
We’re not all on Twitter, and that’s difficult to realize because Twitter has actually been doing its job rather well the past few weeks. There are people out there just doing life, being careful, and not spreading the stuff all about the place right now. The good America.
Yes, we all have to be careful now, but we don’t have to lose our minds.
Do remember that, as always, the mainstream media is mostly lying to you. They are awful human beings who would rather have this virus kill people and shame ORANGE MAN BAD than share anything useful that would save lives.
Yes, I’m saying that they would be OK with people dying to advance their political agenda.
We cannot for a moment lose sight of the fact that there are people trying to use this panic to advance draconian leftist agendas.
Our new reality is a difficult reality but I think we’re handling it well because we’re Americans. We will probably manage this God-awful nightmare better than any large population will, because that’s us.
Remember, this plague may kill a few of us, but we’re going to kill it.
Yes, I’ve been working from home forever. Now that I’m supposed to work from home, it’s kind of irritating.
Because American.
My only real problem is that it’s shut down the Starbucks that I like to work remotely from. I know most of you are going to bitch at me for liking Starbucks coffee but, I’m sorry, you’re all wrong. And you all know how this works here at the Morning Briefing. It’s my fiefdom. What I say goes.
Yes, they’re still open for drive-through but that’s not convenient for me.
I’m an American, I am attached to my convenience.
Feel free to comment.
I’m sure I’ll have a comforting reply.
PJM Linktank
Astounding Ignorance: Bulwark Contributor Molly Jong-Fast Doesn’t Know What Federalism Is
No, The Coronavirus Emergency Spending Bill Still Hasn’t Made It to the Senate. Here’s Why.
But Dutch: Dutch PM Announces He Opts for Extremely Risky ‘Herd Immunity’ in Battle Against COVID-19
WATCH: Chinese Government Encourages Italians to Fight Coronavirus Racism by Hugging Strangers
Prager: Why the Remedy May Be Worse Than the Disease
Let’s Talk About Joe Biden’s Terrible, Economy-Destroying Ideas
OK, then what?!?!? By Bernie’s Abortion Logic, the Government Must Buy Guns for Poor Civilians
Dutch PM Announces He Opts for Extremely Risky ‘Herd Immunity’ in Battle Against COVID-19
‘Prepping’ for COVID-19 in LA Includes Everclear, Weed, and Guns, So This Should Work Out Well
UK Health Official: Coronavirus Crisis Will Last a YEAR, Ebb in Summer, ‘Come Back in November’
VIP
The Kruiser Kabana Episode 23: Notes From Quarantine With Conservative Podcast Legend Fingers Malloy
VodkaPundit: The Homefront: How Americans Cope with Coronavirus
VIP Gold
Socialists: This Coronavirus Pandemic Proves Socialism Is The Only Path Forward
From the Mothership and Beyond
Gun Stores Start To Feel Pinch As Ammo Flies Off Shelves
Pro-Gun Software Developer Killed In Police Raid
UK: On Second Thought, Our Coronavirus Strategy Could Kill 250,000 People
Movie Theaters Are Closing Because Of Coronavirus, Some Worry They May Never Reopen
We’re Paying The Price For The Death Of Journalism
Residents In the Bay Area Are Now Under the Strictest Lockdown Orders In the Nation
Joe Biden Facing The Same Internal Foe That Clipped Hillary Clinton’s Presidential Dreams
Robert Mueller’s Biggest ‘Bombshell’ Indictment Just Got Dismissed With Prejudice
Solomon: Sally Yates, Obama DOJ Officials Voiced ‘Alarm’ Over FBI’s Treatment of Michael Flynn
Legal Aid Society calls for an immediate moratorium on NYPD arrests because of coronavirus
Bee Me
Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Gorgeous
The Perfect Song For Now:
We’re gonna make this fun, kids. I promise.
___
PJ Media Associate Editor Stephen Kruiser is the author of “Don’t Let the Hippies Shower” and “Straight Outta Feelings: Political Zen in the Age of Outrage,” both of which address serious subjects in a humorous way. Monday through Friday he edits PJ Media’s “Morning Briefing.”
THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Getting Busy Flattening the Corona Curve
Plus, some quick notes on why your governor can close the bars.
The Dispatch Staff | 6 hr | 4 |
Happy Tuesday, and happy St. Patrick’s Day! If you hadn’t guessed by now, your Morning Dispatchers—Declan Patrick Garvey, Andrew Jacob Egger, Stephen Forester Hayes—have a little bit of Irish in ‘em. Reader Suzanne from Zionsville, Indiana, submits A Biologist’s St. Patrick’s Day Song for this most unconventional of celebrations.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- As of Monday night, there are now 4,661 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the United States (a 23.5 percent increase over yesterday) and 85 deaths (a 23.2 percent increase over yesterday).
- The White House released even stricter public health guidance in an effort to curb these numbers as much as possible: Americans should avoid gathering in groups larger than 10; they should work from home whenever possible; they should avoid non-essential travel and public places like bars and restaurants.
- Despite a judge’s ruling, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine and Health Director Dr. Amy Acton announced that the primary elections scheduled for today will no longer be held due to the health emergency posed by the coronavirus. Illinois, Florida, and Arizona are still slated to go to the polls.
- The Health and Human Services Department suffered a cyber-attack “aimed at undermining the response to the coronavirus pandemic,” according to Bloomberg News. The administration has yet to identify which foreign state carried out the attack.
- Republican Sens. Mitt Romney and Tom Cotton are advocating for direct cash transfers to Americans—Romney’s proposal calls for $1,000 checks—in an effort to stave off the worst of the coronavirus-inspired economic downturn.
- Stocks plunged yet again on Monday—the Dow dropped almost 3,000 points—but futures indicate today will look a little rosier.
- The Senate passed a stopgap extension of FISA surveillance in order to focus on the coronavirus. The 75-day extension passed by voice vote and now needs to be approved by the House.
- In the interest of protecting classified information and preserving national security, the Justice Department dropped charges against two Russian companies accused of interference in the 2016 election by Robert Mueller.
- The House passed a revised version of its coronavirus emergency package; the Senate is expected to take it up as early as today.
Flattening The Curve: It’s Not Just About The Beds
Since we first started heavily covering the coronavirus outbreak a few weeks back, one of the things we’ve focused on has been the now-ubiquitous concept of “flattening the curve”—the strategy of minimizing the virus’s danger by slowing the rate of infections to ensure that hospitals are not overwhelmed by a sudden wave of patients. Generally, the curve is thought of in terms of keeping serious infections below the inflection point of maximum U.S. hospital capacity—ensuring there are enough beds, ventilators, and the like to go around.
But it’s a mistake to think of the capacity problem purely along the lines of a static capacity breakpoint, as we’re already beginning to see as the virus continues to spread. The current state of treatment in U.S. areas that are already more heavily hit, such as Washington State and New York, show that it also makes a big difference how far short of that line a given hospital system can stay—and that, on the other hand, all is not lost if demand exceeds capacity in some areas, provided there are still less affected areas in the region to pick up the slack.
Wondering How These Quarantines Are Legal?
David French and Sarah Isgur joined forces Monday to answer the flurry of legal questions surrounding the mandated closures around the country in their legal podcast, Advisory Opinions. You can also read more about the legal stuff here [NEED LINK] with some thoughts and excerpts below:
Are all these state closure orders evidence that the president is failing?
The closures are coming from governors because the governors have the relevant legal authority. Think of it like this: Just as the president and the federal government act at the peak of their powers when national security is threatened, America’s governors are often at the peak of their power when public health is at stake.
Can the government really order churches to close without violating the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment?
If a state closure order targeted churches—and churches only—it would almost certainly be unconstitutional. But the state closure orders in response to COVID-19 represent classic examples of a “neutral law of general applicability” that are presumptively lawful. If restaurants and bars and movie theaters are closed at the same time, churches won’t enjoy any special protection under the Free Exercise Clause.
Can the president declare martial law and, well, become a dictator?
Declaring an emergency—even a public health emergency—doesn’t unlock a secret back door out of the Constitution. Rather, it mainly unlocks specific additional statutory powers, and those powers—such as making grants, waiving various regulations, and activating military medical resources—typically fall well short of the kind of general police power that American governors enjoy.
Worth Your Time
- China was the first country to suffer from the coronavirus, and it will be the first to recover. And the Washington Post reports that Chinese leaders are planning on how this time advantage can be used to help the country take over significant industries.
- In other China coronavirus news, the New York Times reports that the Chinese government is trying desperately to reshape the narrative about the virus’ origin and its own response. And officials are doing so through the ominously named “internet police,” who censor dissenting voices online and show up at dissenters’ doors to interrogate them and force them to renounce their views.
- While other countries around the world rushed to get coronavirus tests out to help stem the flow of the epidemic, the United States’ response time has been relatively slow, in large part because the first set of tests sent out to health facilities by the CDC were declared unusable. The New Yorker walks readers through just how this happened.
- Wondering what an effective public health response to a COVID-19 outbreak would look like? In the Journal of American Medicine, Jason Wang, Chun Ng, and Robert Brook argue Taiwan’s handling of the coronavirus represents “an example of how a society can respond quickly to a crisis and protect the interests of its citizens.”
Presented Without Comment
Hundreds of billions of locusts are swarming through parts of East Africa and South Asia in the worst infestation for a quarter of a century, threatening crops and livelihoods.
Toeing the Company Line
- One of the questions we’ve been getting the most in recent days here at The Dispatch is what authority states and localities are drawing on to close private establishments and mass gatherings as they look to slow the spread of COVID-19. If you enjoyed today’s TMD item and David’s piece on the subject, be sure to check out the latest Advisory Opinions podcast for an even deeper discussion.
- A bonus editon of Thomas Joscelyn’s Vital Interests newsletter takes a look at some of Bernie Sanders’ comments in Sunday’s debate, arguing the Vermont senator was misguided in attributing (very real) reductions in poverty in China to the Communist Party’s authoritarian bent. “China’s economic growth over the last 40 years is due to the government’s adoption of liberal economic reforms—the same types of policies that Sanders often rails against. China’s relative economic prosperity isn’t the result of the politburo’s planning. Instead, the Chinese government realized it had to allow more domestic competition and economic freedom in order for its people to be raised out of poverty.”
- If you missed it yesterday, Samuel J. Abrams argues that, as much as the coronavirus is disrupting our lives, it’s possible that it could also upend our political polarization. And that, at least, would be a good thing.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Sarah Isgur (@whignewtons), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
4 |
Top posts
LEGAL INSURRECTION
|
THE DAILY WIRE
|
DESERET NEWS
|
BRIGHT
|
ReplyForward
|
AMERICAN THINKER
|
|
THE BLAZE
More from TheBlaze
Listen live to Blaze Radio Tune in to the next generation of talk radio, featuring original content from hosts like Glenn Beck, Pat Gray, Stu Burguiere, Steve Deace and more!
One last thing … A Kentucky man who tested positive for COVID-19 is being monitored by law enforcement after refusing to self-quarantine following his coronavirus diagnosis, in a move Gov. Andy Beshear (D) called “a step I hoped that I’d never have to take.”What are the details?”We have had the first instance of an individual who has refused to s … Read more
You might like … Got friends?
© 2020 Blaze Media LLC. All Rights Reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted in to receive emails from Blaze Media. 8275 S. Eastern Ave, Ste 200-245 Las Vegas, Nevada, 89123, USA |
THE FEDERALIST
|
NOQ REPORT
NOQ Report Daily |
- Even with the coronavirus, there is hope
- Coronavirus will discourage primary voter turnout. Who benefits?
- Stu Burguiere: Every word AOC says about coronavirus is wrong
- CNN Twitter account claimed date of Ohio primary has been changed. It hasn’t.
- 90% of Seattle coronavirus infections came from a single introduction from China
- The real threat of the coronavirus is what happens after it’s gone
- Testing for COVID 19 is increasing in scale and innovation
- Democratic Debate: Joe Biden did enough to be the Democrats’ better bad choice
- The Christian has no reason to fear Wuhan Coronavirus
Even with the coronavirus, there is hope
Posted: 17 Mar 2020 05:34 AM PDT As we wait through the panic and growing stresses associated with the Chinese Coronavirus, some are coming to the realization that things may never get back to normal in America. There’s a deep despair coming over many who know their funds are growing short and their cupboards are becoming bare. But there’s hope on the horizon. In fact, there are several reasons for Americans to be encouraged not only by what our representatives in government are doing but also in the way we’re reacting to this crisis. It’s very easy to look around and see the negatives. A growing number of Americans have become so jaded and uncaring that we believe the status quo is political polarization, religious indifference, and cultural outrage. Perhaps, just maybe, this pandemic is exactly what we needed in order to break from the trend of divisiveness that has engulfed our nation for years. Perhaps, just maybe, this is the wake up call we’ve needed for so long. Now is the time to come together… by being apart. It seems like a contradiction at first, but time is both the great healer and the promoter of decadence. For too long, the only things that have been healing are our combative nature towards those we oppose and scars we’ve accumulated through battles over our differences. For too long, the only thing that has been decaying is the sense of unity that once made America so strong. News reports are loaded with doom and gloom, but what they’re not telling you is we’re face-to-face with an unambiguous opportunity to fight this invisible foe as a nation. In many ways, this is the type of unifying event we’ve needed for a while. We must be unified in our actions of avoiding each other, of preventing further contractions of this disease through isolation. It sounds like an oxymoron, unifying in solidarity through solitude, but if we stop and think about it, this may have been the only way for a unified goal to have been presented to a polarized society. There is plenty of ugliness happening around us. Some of us have participated. We’ve felt glee in grabbing the last few packages of hand sanitizer even as we knew we probably wouldn’t use it all. We knew by taking the last bottles there was someone else who may have needed it, but we took it nonetheless. We’re seeing guns and ammunition flying off the shelves, and while we may support the 2nd Amendment wholeheartedly, it’s concerning to know that some intend to use these weapons not to protect their families but to be ready to take from others if the situation continues to deteriorate. The world seems to be turning towards self-protection above all things, and that’s an ugly position for us to be in. But like I said before, there’s hope. We have to believe that because it’s necessary for us to make it through this crisis. We have to believe that because it’s true. Mainstream media is bent on making the coronavirus pandemic as bad as possible. It isn’t just that fear sells news better than hope, but more importantly the media has political foes they want to destroy. The coronovirus is, from their perspective, a much better angle to pursue for their political purposes than Russian hoaxes or impeachment debacles. The coronavirus may or may not be an existential threat to America, but mainstream media is definitely going to push for it to do as much political damage as possible. Yet even in their unhinged desires to see harm done to their political foes even if it causes harm to innocent Americans, we can still find hope. That hope comes in the form or redemption. When we beat the coronavirus—and we will beat the coronavirus—we can look back and add the media’s attempts to damage this nation to their body of anti-American work. We can hang it like an albatross about their necks as a reminder that they put their political agenda above the well-being of the nation that makes their jobs possible. We are seeing hope coming from our government. I know, it’s hard to see through all of the negative reporting, but at nearly every level and across the political spectrum we’re seeing the right decisions made. That doesn’t mean we have to agree with them. It doesn’t mean that all of them are correct. It doesn’t even mean that their motivations for making these moves are honorable. But the fact that everyone is government is focused on finding solutions is heartening. It’s hopeful. In many ways, I can say it’s unexpected as we have grown so accustomed to politicians making purely political decisions. Regarding the coronavirus, the decisions have generally been righteous. I can already see people reading that and shaking their heads, but that’s the politics speaking. If we take the politics out of it, we’ll see that generally speaking, the right moves are being made in this regard. Sure, we can point to Nancy Pelosi trying to sneak in abortion funding into the first coronavirus aid bill and condemn her for it, but the bill itself is a testament to Capitol Hill’s desires to make things right. Is it wrong to close everything down in ways that harm the economy and prevent people from getting paychecks? Yes. But if those same people went to work and caught a life-threatening disease, what good is the paycheck other than covering their funeral expenses? Now is not the time to second-guess decisions. It’s a time for unity, and the best way we can express that unity is by helping where we can and otherwise avoiding contact with others. We can beat this. We’re Americans. Help those who need it, do what we can to preserve our health and the health of those for whom we are charged, and buckle down for a few weeks. That’s what’s required. If we can do this as individuals and families while allowing government and the private sector to contend with logistics of this disease, we can emerge in a few weeks with this disease licked. That’s the hope that’s within us, but there’s an even greater hope that must shine through. I am a Bible-believing, sinful man, but I know there is an eternal hope that covers me. I do not fear the coronavirus, nor do I fear the turmoil that will arise if we do not get a handle on this soon. If this coronavirus gets out of control despite our best efforts as individuals within the greatest nation in the world, then it was meant be. And therein lies the greatest hope that’s within us. The end is a new beginning for those who believe on Jesus Christ and repent for our sins. Even as we fight for this world, for our nation, for our family, and for ourselves, we mustn’t forget that no matter how bad it gets, we have wonders ahead of us that will make the pain and suffering of this world obsolete. Nevertheless, we’re here today. We must fight. We must persevere until that’s no longer possible. Thankfully, as we can come together as a nation, even in our solitude, we can beat this thing that has plagued us. And perhaps, just maybe, we can be stronger as a people when it’s all said and done. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Even with the coronavirus, there is hope appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Coronavirus will discourage primary voter turnout. Who benefits?
Posted: 17 Mar 2020 12:48 AM PDT Will the Chinese Coronavirus affect the primaries in four (and possibly three) states? Yes. Will it be enough to sway the results. It’s possible, though unlikely at this point because so many absentee ballots have already been sent in. But until we see actual numbers, there’s no way to tell for sure. The one thing that’s certain is uncertainty. In Ohio, for example, a last-minute attempt by Governor Mike DeWine failed to postpone the election. But the Governor is moving forward with his plans anyway despite a court ruling against the postponement. He has ordered polling stations to remain closed on Tuesday. Arizona, Illinois, and Florida are moving ahead with their primaries. Former Vice President Joe Biden and Senator Bernie Sanders are the two remaining viable candidates for the Democratic nomination for president. The coronavirus threat would seem to benefit Sanders whose base is generally much younger than Biden’s. The coronavirus can be contracted by anyone but the death rate is much higher in older people. As the death toll in the United States approaches 100, nobody under the age of 40 has died from the disease and only a handful under 60 have. The one benefit for Biden is that older voters are generally more likely to have mailed in their ballots already. Add in the lower level of voter participation among Sanders’ younger base and the end results may end up being nearly the same as if the coronavirus had never escalated into a national emergency. Democrats would like for the nomination process to end as quickly as possible so their nominee, likely Biden, will be able to switch gears to general election mode and the party can work towards unifying those who feel cheated by the system, namely Sanders supporters who are seeing shadows of the 2016 election emerging in 2020. If the results of Tuesday’s primary yield unexpected wins for Sanders, expect the DNC to move to postpone or otherwise adjust voting procedures in near-future primaries. They don’t want the coronavirus to continue to muddy the waters. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Coronavirus will discourage primary voter turnout. Who benefits? appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Stu Burguiere: Every word AOC says about coronavirus is wrong
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 09:53 PM PDT Why was South Korea able to react so much more quickly to their Chinese Coronavirus spread than the United States? According to Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, it’s due to their single-payer healthcare system. Even if we dismiss the failures of China’s similar system or Italy’s vaunted model for Medicare-for-All, we should still take a closer look at what South Korea did differently. The Blaze host Stu Burguiere did just that. He analyzed a Tweet sent out by AOC that currently has nearly 30k retweets. It seems her sheep are all about it.
What Burguiere found was that AOC’s Tweet was factually and intellectually wrong. The biggest problem was in HOW South Korea has been able to do so much better at getting people tested. Their solution: Turning quickly to the private sector to come up with a solution. Marxists, at this point, will gasp. Surely it was their government-run healthcare system that made things better, right? Wrong. It was the decision by their government-run healthcare system to decide early on that this was too complex for them to handle, so they unleashed the private sector in their nation to respond for them. Why haven’t we done the same here? Actually, we have. It just didn’t happen until very recently. Now that it has, testing is going up dramatically. Both vaccines and treatments are being fast-tracked to approval. All of this was only able to happen because, like South Korea, the Trump administration did what they’ve been trying to do systematically from the beginning: Eliminate bureaucratic roadblocks to private sector solutions. My fellow NOQ writer, Stacey Lennox, put together an excellent breakdown of what’s happening and why. Her article yesterday is a clear and, frankly, angry declaration about the reality of the situation versus the way it’s being reported by mainstream media. As Stu Burguiere and Stacey Lennox realize, there’s a very wide gap between the narrative the left is pushing to promote their agenda and the reality of this administration’s efforts to keep us safe. The truth about the Chinese Virus must be spread far and wide. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Stu Burguiere: Every word AOC says about coronavirus is wrong appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
CNN Twitter account claimed date of Ohio primary has been changed. It hasn’t.
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 05:24 PM PDT CNN’s Twitter account has over 45 million followers. Many of them are in Ohio. According to a Tweet by CNN, Tuesday’s primary election has been moved to June. It has not. Will Twitter suspend the account for spreading false election information? Their Terms of Service indicate they should, and they have suspended much smaller accounts in the past for even making jokes that seem to be election date, time, or location “disinformation.” What CNN Tweeted was very clearly worse than obvious jokes. The Tweet stayed live for 29 minutes before CNN finally removed it. In that amount of time with so many followers, the damage was done. One can argue that with a single Tweet, CNN likely misinformed more people about an election date than all of the combined conservative accounts suspended over jokes since the policy was initiated. Ohio Governor Mike DeWine had requested to move the primary to June, but the courts denied the request and the election will proceed on Tuesday. The mistaken headline and Tweet seemed to have been pre-written based on the assumption the move of the primary would be granted. There is no way the reporters, even ones at CNN, could have mistaken the ruling as it was unambiguous. It seemed everyone involved was just being sloppy. The coronavirus may end up being a major influence on the primary because frontrunner Joe Biden holds the lion’s share of support from elderly Democrats. His remaining opponent, Bernie Sanders, has a much younger support base. CNN has acted in favor of Biden and against Sanders for months. CNN is a “news” outlet that thrives on fake news and constantly spreads disinformation. Perhaps Twitter just assumes nobody takes them seriously anymore. After all, they often appear to be a parody account. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post CNN Twitter account claimed date of Ohio primary has been changed. It hasn’t. appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
90% of Seattle coronavirus infections came from a single introduction from China
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 04:25 PM PDT When President Trump restricted travel to and from China nearly two months ago, the outcry from the left was deafening. Everyone from Democrats to the World Health Organization to mainstream media panned the move as racist and xenophobic. Now, information stemming from genome sequencing of those infected indicate the President’s unpopular move was not only correct, but may have happened too late.
The Wuhan coronavirus may not be as fatal as it was initially believed, but its spread is far greater than the flu or anything major we’ve seen in decades. This is due in part because asymptomatic people can be contagious for over a week. As the disease spreads across the country and around the world, one political assessment cannot be disputed: The left’s love for open borders has, is, and will continue to exacerbate the problem. We, as a nation, must control our borders. That means three things need to change as soon as possible. First, we need to stop the flow of illegal immigrants into our nation. Any thoughts that this is not the case need only to learn about the masses of people coming from nations where the infection is already bad, entering the United States illegally through the borders made porous by Democratic policies. Second, we must allow for instant actions by the White House that are above reproach from legal objections. The President has always enjoyed wide powers when it comes to who can enter the country and how they do so, but during the Trump administration there have been floods of legal challenges to every single travel restriction and border security move that he’s made. Third, we need to overhaul the process for entering our nation legally. Better screening and more importantly better tracking of those who come here from foreign lands must be brought forward in the form of legislation. This cannot be an executive order. It must be codified.
For now, the focus is on stopping the coronavirus from spreading and mitigating the damage from it. But changes need to be made to prevent something like this from happening in the future. That starts with immigration and travel restrictions. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post 90% of Seattle coronavirus infections came from a single introduction from China appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
The real threat of the coronavirus is what happens after it’s gone
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 04:04 PM PDT The end of the coronavirus pandemic may seem like an eternity away, especially when we consider we’re at about the same stage China was in two months ago. Then again, we got ahead of it for the most part with travel bans from the White House and awareness by the American people, so it could also come to an end very quickly. The President has said the tail end of the outbreak could reach July or even August. We won’t know until it’s nearly over, and even then there will be lingering doubts until it’s completely vanquished. But just because we don’t know when it will end doesn’t mean we shouldn’t get ready to deal with the post-coronavirus complications. There will be a few. Even if it ended today and everyone miraculously got better, the damage that has already been done will take time to get fixed. Before I get all doom and gloom about the negative effects the coronavirus will have on America even after it has run its course, let’s start with some of the positive things that will come from this.
There will be long-lasting negative effects that will emerge following the end of the pandemic. That’s what happens following large-scale fear events. One need only look to how horrible 9/11 was. Thousands died and life in America was disrupted for a while, but we recovered. Unfortunately, we also inherited the Patriot Act and two Middle East wars as a result. As bad as 9/11 was, the actions taken in the aftermath lasted for years (and are still lasting in Afghanistan nearly two decades later) were actually much worse. The same thing, only larger scale, is poised to take place following the coronavirus. Here are four things that need to be addressed once our society goes back to “normal.”
We must come together as a nation to fight this pandemic. But we cannot dismiss the problems that will arise when the disease itself is contained. Take precautions now, but be ready to fight against what comes after. The Patriot Act will pale in comparison. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post The real threat of the coronavirus is what happens after it’s gone appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Testing for COVID 19 is increasing in scale and innovation
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 10:36 AM PDT Testing for disease takes many forms and may utilize a number of methods. COVID 19 testing is no different. However, like the media fails to make the distinction between legal and illegal immigration when they discuss the topic, they are failing to explain the nuance in medical testing. All of the information about the current activities of the Coronavirus Task Force were contained in the daily press briefing that have occurred on Saturday and Sunday. Screening TestsLet me start with one example that I hope will make what is going on more clear. Forgive me if I gross you out, but it is illustrative. If a patient has symptoms of a urinary tract infection, they go to the doctor. The pee in a cup. In a fairly short period of time the doctor comes into the room. They tell the patient they do indeed have a urinary tract infection. Then the doctor prescribes an antibiotic that is effective against a large number of bacteria that commonly cause urinary tract infections. The patient received a screening test in the doctor’s office. We have these for common viruses like seasonal varieties of the flu and strep throat. We do not have a test like this for COVID 19 yet. According to Dr. Birx, the Coronavirus Task Force Coordinator, an effective in office screening test for the virus is probably six months away. Laboratory TestingWhat you may not know, is the urine sample is then sent to a lab to be cultured. The bacteria is identified. This ensures the antibiotic you received will effectively kill the specific bacteria causing your infection. The doctor changes your medication if it is not effective for the bacteria that was found. The part of the sample that is sent off to the commercial lab is evaluated in a high throughput test. This test is automated to identify a specific bacteria or virus. It does this by looking for specific markers such as unique proteins. Depending on the test, this can take hours or several days. This is where we are heading this week with COVID 19. In order to conduct tests at the volume required for people displaying COVID 19 symptoms, an automated test had to be developed and distributed to the high volume commercial labs. Because the symptoms of COVID 19 can mimic an allergy attack, a cold or the the flu, the volume of potential subjects needing to be tested far exceeded the capability of the manual tests the CDC, state labs and university labs were conducting. This has been explained in painstaking detail by the Task Force. Yet the media is not explaining this nuance to you. Manual TestingBy the coverage you would think the same test the CDC was doing just needed to be given to the commercial labs. This is simply untrue. The CDC had the capacity to process only 40-60 tests a day using the manual method. State and university lab capacity would be about the same. They were operating under the Flu Surveillance Program until the regulatory structure was relaxed in short order to pursue more innovative solutions. The previous protocol was simply not adequate for the current challenge. The development of an automated high throughput test will exponentially increase this capacity as they come on line this week. According to the Task Force press conference, the development of this test has been underway for a period of weeks and received approval from the Food and Drug Administration in an astounding five hours. It is in the process of being distributed to 2,000 of the largest commercial labs. The predicted turn around time is 24 hours through the automated test. It was several days not including transport through the CDC, state and university labs. Yes, there was an issue with the testing media in some of the initial CDC tests. That was weeks ago and continuing to conflate this with where we are today is dishonest and deliberate. Large Scale TestingIn addition to the high through put tests, the Public Health Service in conjunction with FEMA has developed a detailed plan to conduct the tests at scale. These testing sites will roll out first in the areas with the most community spread. Then they will roll out nationally. In a historic public-private partnership, corporations like Walmart and Walgreens will devote portions of their parking lots to set up testing sites. This serves two purposes. First, it helps prevent further spread by not requiring people to enter waiting rooms and hospitals to be tested. It also helps prevent stress on the healthcare system by distributing testing facilities broadly and off-site. In those areas that have conducted a large number of tests, the COVID infection rate is between 1-2% of tests. If 100% of those tested arrived at a hospital, the wait would be hours. It would also interfere with emergency care for patients with other health issues. The infected 1-2% would also be exposing much larger numbers of people if traditional health sites were uses. Other Good NewsThe Task Force has learned from the experience of other nations that experienced outbreaks prior to the United States. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar has been granted emergency authorities by the President to manage the crisis. The HHS has a complete inventory of the healthcare assets we have, including those held by Department of Defense and other agencies. We are protecting our healthcare facilities and personnel by taking testing off site. However, Azar says we must plan for the worst in any event. Most of the patients with COVID 19 will not require hospitalization or specialized care. Azar said one learning is to limit the number of facilities where these patients are housed. This may include community hospitals and even mobile hospitals or MASH units used by the military. This limits the need to protect uninfected patients and limits the number of healthcare providers who could be exposed. In addition vaccines are in various stages of testing in Israel, Australia and the United States. This is happening in record time. Three medications are also already in use to help mitigate the symptoms of the infection. One is a new medication developed for SARS 9 (also a coronavirus) that is being used off label for COVID 19. The other two are generic medications that have been used for years to treat malaria and severe inflammation. Please Listen to the ExpertsAs testing rolls out, not everyone needs a test. If you are asymptomatic, the task Force asks you to follow the guidance put out by the CDC and your state and local governments. This is so those in the most vulnerable populations can be tested quickly and efficiently. Also, our supply chains for food and other necessary items are intact. Both the Task Force and the executives from the retail groceries are asking everyone to do normal weekly shopping. Store hours may be modified to provide for deep cleaning and stocking, but they will remain open. With increased testing, we will see an increase in the number of cases. This makes sense as testing scales up to cover large portions of the population. This was seen in every country that has scaled testing and you should not be unnecessarily alarmed if you see sensational coverage. The Coronavirus Task Force is full of career professionals who have been working to protect public health for decades. They are giving daily press conferences to update Americans that may not be broadcast on news channels. However, you can go to the White House Youtube channel and see if a press conference is scheduled for today and set a notification so you may watch. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.var wWidgetConf_b1a6d20b69 = {rows: 4,cols: 1,backgroundColor: ‘rgb(240, 240, 240)’,textColor: ‘rgb(0, 0, 0)’,displayContent: ‘0’,contentSort: ‘0’,contentType: ‘0’,showTitle: ‘1’,showThumb: ‘1’,widgetID: ‘wWidget_b1a6d20b69’}; (function() { The post Testing for COVID 19 is increasing in scale and innovation appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Democratic Debate: Joe Biden did enough to be the Democrats’ better bad choice
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 08:23 AM PDT The Democratic nomination is all but locked up for former Vice President Joe Biden. Last night’s 11th Democratic Debate was Senator Bernie Sanders’ last chance to cast enough doubt on Biden that primary voters felt uncomfortable with him taking on President Trump in the general election and he failed to do that. Biden’s overall performance was terrible, but he maintained composure and lucidity for the most part. There were times when he seemed to get agitated, especially when Sanders called him out over his past support for cutting social security. He seemed lost at times; during a ten-second span he confused the coronavirus, SARS, and swine flu. But those minor flubs and short flash of anger weren’t enough to derail him. Sanders needed nothing short of a derailment from Biden to get back in the race, and Biden didn’t take the bait. Moreover, Sanders had a mediocre performance by his standards, barely coming out on top or performing equally as badly as Biden by most commentators’ reckoning. It’s time for Republicans to prepare for a Biden nomination. Thankfully, they did get some juice from the debate as Biden made several mistakes that will not endear him to Independent voters. He declared an end to drilling, effectively claiming to be prepared to reduce our fossil fuel superiority or subvert it completely. He also noted that he would pick a female running mate rather than the most qualified person for the job. Former candidate Andrew Yang seemed to take exception to that.
Nevertheless, Biden did just enough to stave off any lingering doubts of his ability to carry the nomination. Sanders will likely need to drop out soon or he and his supporters will be bombarded by ridicule from the DNC. It’s already happening to some extent, yet the #NeverBiden crowd among Sanders supporters seems to be getting more vocal, if not outright growing. Joe Biden’s debate performance was embarrassing and nonsensical, but he held it together just enough to not lose the voters necessary to secure the nomination. The GOP must focus on him as Democrats are clearly choosing senility over socialism. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Democratic Debate: Joe Biden did enough to be the Democrats’ better bad choice appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
The Christian has no reason to fear Wuhan Coronavirus
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 07:40 AM PDT If you are a materialist, then this world is all that there is. Then the risk of losing everything however small is a panic to be avoided at all cost. If you are a Buddhist, then the material world is inconsequential, and there is nothing to fear. However the Christian believes that the material world is both consequential and not all that there is. Yes it is consequential that the fate of the eternity will be determined but the material world is under the control of our sovereign God. So what threat does the Wuhan Virus really pose? On the surface, the threat is already minimal. What started out a mystery wrapped in big government China soon garnered the media attention to cause worldwide panic. Some of you in pure game theory fashion stocked up on goods accordingly. But the virus is here and thus far the results are underwhelming. While Italy is a hotspot in the west, the country is a lesson on the failures of socialized medicine in confronting pandemics. In America, nearly half the deaths came from a single nursing home in Washington. But it’s hardly been a significant outbreak otherwise, just one that’s gotten attention. Interestingly enough, for a virus, small children seem disproportionately better off compared to the Swine Flu epidemic in 2009. The deaths have almost all come from older individuals with underlying health issues. As every state except West Virginia is reporting cases, the virus is everywhere and it is likely everyone will come into contact with it prior to any vaccination. I have possibly been exposed at least three times, not including the times my wife has been exposed. So the Wuhan Corona Virus is coming for us and there’s little stopping this modern day plague. This crisis was too good to let go to waste. Already those who carry on business as usual to support their families or local businesses are being told that they hate old people, while the government usurps authority prohibited by the First Amendment. To me, there’s far greater reason to fear the precedent we are setting as it relates to national emergencies, and far more reason to acknowledge the evil mob mentality of fellow man. But I want to remind us of two lesson that apply not only to our current situation but others as well. 1. God is in controlThe virus is in God’s hands. Is it a plague on nations? I would consider America to have been already under the judgment of God, though cannot speak so affirmatively for others. But the Bible tells us how the world will end, though we differ on eschatology, we can all affirm that plague will not be the end of the world. Romans 8:28-39 reads:
If you are a Christian, there is no reason to fear for God is with us, and no plague can separate us. If you are not a Christian, if you do not consider yourself among God’s elect, call upon the name of Jesus so that you may repent and be saved. 2. Do not let the pagans define your witnessJesus talks about rejection by the world. He did not conform his message so that the world would love him or think that he was doing good. I say this in regards to how we love our neighbors. Is social distancing loving our neighbors or continuing to support local businesses, especially while global recession is nigh? I will not let the pagans answer this question for me and neither should you. In Christianity, we have our own relationship with Jesus as our intercessor, and the Holy Spirit in our hearts to help us navigate the application of Scripture in individual situations. Do not let the pagans who reject God define how it is that you should follow God. This is strategically unwise, if not a rebellious act that will make your faith complicit to the world. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post The Christian has no reason to fear Wuhan Coronavirus appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
You are subscribed to email updates from NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. |
Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
ARRA NEWS SERVICE
ARRA News Service (in this message: 17 new items) |
- Trump Quarantines Abortion Money in Virus Bill
- Iran on the Brink – as Killer Pathogen Ravages the Country
- Coronavirus: Nation’s Internet Providers Have Made #SelfDistancing Telework a Piece of Cake
- Massive US Military Exercise in Europe Is Still a Go, Despite Travel Restrictions
- 1,657 Chinese Tried To Enter U.S. From Mexico In Last 6 Months
- Coronavirus Pandemic, Don’t Panic, The Debate
- The Social Distancing and Quarantine Quagmire
- Lawyers for Hillary Clinton Ask Appeals Court to Overturn Order for Her Deposition
- The Coronavirus Option: Illinois Mayor Uses Crisis To Gain New Powers
- Paper Pusher . . .
- Arrogant CNN ‘Hosts’ Repeatedly LIE, Insist Trump Dubbed the Coronavirus a ‘Hoax’
- America In a New Upside-Down World
- The Coronavirus Hoax
- Fear Itself
- In NRA Supported Lawsuit, Oregon’s Top Court Rejects Flawed “Gun Safety” Ballot Title, Description
- Professor, Punished for Not Using Preferred Pronouns, Appeals After Judge Dismisses Case
- If Not for the FBI’s PC Willful Ignorance, at Least 70 People Wouldn’t Have Been Killed
Trump Quarantines Abortion Money in Virus Bill
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 06:35 PM PDT by Tony Perkins: While lots of Americans are hunkered down at home, the U.S. Senate is holed up in its offices — waiting for a crack at the House’s coronavirus bill. And while there’s a lot of uncertainty about what’s actually in the package, Republican leaders won’t have to contend with at least one thing: abortion funding. The version that passed Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) chamber in the wee hours of Saturday morning wasn’t what the House majority was hoping for. After word leaked out that Democrats had tried to tack on a secret slush fund for abortion, even MSNBC couldn’t hide its shock. “What does that have to do with COVID-19?” host Joy Reid asked. What indeed, Senator Ben Sasse (R-Nebr.) argued. With schools closing and most every gathering postponed, he couldn’t believe that Pelosi’s priority was getting more money in the hands of people who take life, not treat it. “Speaker Pelosi should be fighting the coronavirus pandemic, not politicizing emergency funding by fighting against the bipartisan Hyde Amendment,” he insisted. “We need to be ramping up our diagnostic testing, not waging culture wars at the behest of Planned Parenthood. Good grief.” When the White House got wind of the Democrats’ plan, President Trump wasted no time warning House leaders what would happen to the bill if it got to him with that language: Absolutely nothing. Keeping a promise he made at the March for Life in 2019, the administration made it crystal clear that he wouldn’t allow Pelosi to hijack the crisis with her radical plans to overthrow the Hyde amendment. Emergency or no emergency. “As the House conducts its business,” the president wrote in a shot across the bow last January, “I urge that it respect and continue these other important pro-life protections… I will veto any legislation that weakens current pro-life federal policies or laws — or that encourages the destruction of innocent human life at any stage.” The pressure worked. By the time the House voted, the language that would have compromised the Hyde amendment was gone. In an interview on “Washington Watch” last Friday, Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) cheered the administration’s stand but warned that Congress still isn’t out of the woods yet. “They removed the anti-Hyde amendment provision. So we got that back and protected the unborn, at least… [But] we have to be vigilant — that’s for sure… [There are] provisions that have nothing to do with the coronavirus basically being thrown into this thing. And that’s just par for the course for the activist Left.” Like a lot of Republicans, he also urged caution on a bill of this magnitude. “It’s a far-reaching and expansive and bill on spending,” Congressman Biggs explained, and although both chambers are doing their best to work quickly, there are still very serious legislative landmines. “Panic is no friend to sound policymaking,” NRO pointed out. As important as it is to combat the virus, it’s just as important to make sure America isn’t ravaged by Congress’s solutions. Right now, neither side of the aisle can even put a price tag on the bill — because no one can predict how widespread the pandemic will be. “Most of the measures in this [plan] are something that the senators support,” Senator Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) agreed. But there are concerns just the same — for small businesses, certainly, and the U.S. deficit. “Many of the 40 House Republicans who opposed the measure Saturday morning complained that they only had a few minutes to read the bill text,” Fox News’s Chad Pegram writes. “And, to this point, no one truly knows the cost of the measure. It’s anywhere from tens of billions of dollars to the hundreds of billions of dollars.” For Congress, it’s a delicate balance. As much as everyone wants to help the economy, conservatives understand: we can’t afford to create more permanent spending programs and entitlements. Hopefully, a number of these concerns will be sorted out by the Republican Senate, where Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has promised to work quickly but thoughtfully. In the end, Senator Ron Johnson (R-Wisc.) advised, Congress needs to “approach this with a level head and pass a bill that does more good than harm.” It would be better to pass nothing, he said, than to rush through anything that could haunt us later on. Tony Perkins (@tperkins) is President of the Family Research Council . Article on Tony Perkins’ Washington Update and written with the aid of FRC senior writers. Tags: Tony Perkins, Family Research Center, FRC, Family Research Council, Trump Quarantines, Abortion Money, in Virus Bill To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Iran on the Brink – as Killer Pathogen Ravages the Country
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 06:14 PM PDT . . . Regime asks for $5 billion in IMF aid as it continues to propagate conspiracy theories and bankroll terrorist groups.
by Ari Lieberman: According to the latest coronavirus statistics emerging from Iran’s health ministry, 724 people have succumbed to the disease while nearly 14,000 are infected. Nothing the regime says can be trusted and most experts agree that these figures represent a gross understatement. In fact, it would be fair to say that Iran is now the global epicenter for COVID-19. Based on open sources and utilizing various mathematical models, The Atlantic’s Graeme Wood demonstrates how it is possible, and even likely that the virus has already infected at least 586,000 Iranians. Some of the models posited by Wood indicate that as many as 8,000,000 Iranians have been infected. The article was published on March 9, so we can assume that the numbers have increased exponentially since then. According to the latest figures from the World Health Organization, COVID-19 has claimed 6,492 lives and infected 168,834 globally. Even if we were to adopt the lower estimate cited in Wood’s article, the Islamic Republic’s infection rate is still nearly 3.5 times higher than the entire world’s infection rate combined. We do not know how many Iranians have died from the Wuhan virus but a figure of 22,268 would not be an unreasonable estimate. We arrive at this number by multiplying the conservative infection rate estimate of 586,000 by 3.8 percent, which represents the global mortality rate. To place things in proper perspective, in November 2019, the regime employed its Basij militia thugs to murder 1,500 anti-government protesters. The Wuhan virus has already claimed the lives of 14.5 times that amount. In the city of Qom, authorities are preparing mass burial pits to accommodate hordes of coronavirus-related deaths. So extensive are the burial trenches that they can be seen from space. Smuggled videos surfacing on the internet through social media show masses of bodies, all victims of the deadly virus, piled up in hospital morgues. On March 8, Iranian authorities claimed that 194 people had died from the coronavirus. But on that day, a representative of Iran’s health minister in the northern province of Gilan stated that more than 200 people had died of coronavirus in that province alone. The number of dead in a single Iranian province exceeded the total national figure of 194 announced by the government. The regime has only itself to blame for this health catastrophe. A combination of government incompetence, a propensity to engage in obfuscation and conspiracy theories, and a near-psychotic inability to acknowledge fallibility, contributed to the spread of the disease. The government was aware of the COVID-19 problem well before it reached pandemic proportions but took little, if any, corrective action. No effort was made to restrict flights to and from China. No effort was made to quarantine the city of Qom, ground zero for coronavirus in Iran. And no effort was made to close a shrine in that city, which served as a known breeding ground for the transmission of the virus. Iranian authorities however, did undertake extraordinary measures to stop ordinary Iranian citizens from disseminating information about the outbreak, unleashing their cyber police on them. In typical fashion, Iran is responding to the crisis with conspiracy theories and is now blaming the United States and the Zionists (read Jews) for the coronavirus. On March 5, Hossein Salami, the head of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, suggested that the coronavirus pandemic was the result of a biological attack engineered by the United States against China and Iran. This absurd canard was echoed by several top Iranian officials, including Salami’s dissembler boss, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The Iranian propaganda outlet, Press TV, featured no less than three articles claiming that the coronavirus was engineered by Israel to attack Iran. Iran’s president, Hassan Rouhani and his oleaginous foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, blamed U.S. sanctions for the uncontrolled outbreak of COVID-19, and not Iranian bungling and deliberate efforts to suppress knowledge of its spread. Iran is already facing a credibility problem with its own people. Following the downing of Kiev-bound Flight 752 in January, the regime denied any culpability and only admitted responsibility when it realized that it could no longer hide the truth. The majority of Iranians distrust their government and hold them in contempt. Iran is desperate and the regime has belatedly come to recognize that it is unable to contain this epidemic, which has already affected the highest military and political echelons of the government. Dozens of Iranian parliamentarians, cabinet members, diplomats, and members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corp are either infected or have died from coronavirus. Clearly, COVID-19 has decimated the ranks of Iran’s ruling theocratic elite. Desperate, the regime has turned to the International Monetary Fund for help. They have asked for $5 billion in assistance. It’s the first time in six decades that Iran has asked for such assistance. The U.S. is the IMF’s largest donor so the U.S. will have veto power over any such disbursement. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo made clear however, that any aid to Iran to deal with COVID-19 should be conditioned on Iran’s release of foreign nationals it has taken hostage. Iran is currently holding four U.S. citizens, including Robert Levinson, who has been held hostage for 13 years. Iran is also illegally detaining citizens of France, Austria, Sweden, Australia and the UK. Some of these hostages have dual citizenship. In addition to releasing hostages, Iran should also be required to suspend its rogue ballistic missile and nuclear programs. It should also be required to halt its proxy wars and suspend aid to terrorist groups like the Lebanese Hezbollah. Iran provides Hezbollah with $700 million on a yearly basis. It also provides substantial assistance to Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Houthi rebels in Yemen and as assortment of allied Iraqi Shia militia groups. The IMF should not be required to subsidize Iran’s healthcare while the kleptocratic regime of the Islamic Republic squanders Iran’s wealth on weapons of mass destruction and bankrolling terrorism. Iran has endured hardship in the past but the challenges that the regime currently faces is unlike any other it has faced before. The combination of crippling sanctions, plunging oil prices, soaring inflation, high unemployment, increasing displays of open dissent, bumbling public relations fiascos, and ravaging killer pathogens has created the perfect storm for the collapse of the regime. For most of the civilized world, it won’t come soon enough. Tags: Iran on the Brink, Killer Pathogen Ravages, the Country To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Coronavirus: Nation’s Internet Providers Have Made #SelfDistancing Telework a Piece of Cake
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 05:52 PM PDT by Seton Motley: Once upon a time, We the Connected didn’t have an inkling of the inconceivable value of our digital data. Our mass ignorance allowed Huge Tech companies like Google and Facebook – to become Huge Tech companies. By mass harvesting our data…and mass selling it to the highest bidders. Finally, We the Connected began to ask “Google gives everything away for free – how are they worth nearly a trillion dollars?” Which began the Privacy Wars. But that’s a story for a different day. For the longest time – most of us thought the Internet was a giant “free” party. Where nigh every manner of things was without charge – and just a couple of clicks away. Except for our way to actually get to the party. Before you could mingle there – you had to be taken there. And We the Connected – had to pay to get connected. The Internet Service Providers (ISPs) don’t make their living via data collection. They make their living – by making it possible for the Huge Tech companies to make their huge livings via data collection. ISPs are our ride to the Internet party. The ISPs – are our Internet Uber. And their charging us to get to the “free” party – instantly renders them the least popular people of your Internet experience. Because human nature. But: We the Connected are finally figuring out the “free” Internet keg party Google and Facebook are throwing – is actually a MASSIVE identification theft operation. Which makes the ISPs charging us for a ride to the rip off – seem orders-of-magnitude less offensive. But for the last quarter century – as governments everywhere developed their Internet policies – the ISPs were the villains, and Big Tech the good guys. A false storyline aided and abetted by much larger Big Tech’s MUCH larger government bribery…oops, I mean lobbying budgets. Because: Please remember the scale of the respective players. Our nation’s largest traditional ISP – augmented by TV and phone – is Comcast (Market Cap: $170 billion). Our largest wireless ISP – augmented by several other businesses – is AT&T (Market Cap: $235 billion). Without the ISPs – none of us would have ever heard of the likes of Google or Facebook. Because we couldn’t have clicked our way to the likes of Google and Facebook. Google and Facebook are exclusively data collection businesses – laying in wait for the ISPs to deliver them their victims. And Google is worth $768 billion – or almost FOUR TIMES the value of AT&T. And Facebook is worth $443 billion – or almost THREE times more than Comcast. And these Big Tech Market Caps – are after a month of Coronavirus stock market collapses. The Dow has gone from ~28,000 – to ~20,000. A near 30% decline. A month ago, both these Tech giants were flirting with trillion dollar valuations. Speaking of Coronavirus…. We are in the midst of the biggest, stupidest freak out I have ever seen in my excruciatingly elongating existence. Compared to the 2009 swine flu pandemic – this thing is NOTHING. Unlike the 2009 swine flu pandemic – we are shutting down the entire US economy in response to this relative NOTHING. What are governments themselves doing? And recommending – and increasingly demanding of us (without any authority whatsoever to do so)? Telework. OPM Recommends Telework to Prevent Coronavirus Spread Trump Administration, in Strongest Terms Yet, Encourages Agencies to Use Telework Coronavirus: Two States Divert to Telework. Are Others Ready? Coronavirus Forces World’s Largest Telework Experiment What Coronavirus Could Mean for the Future of Telework In this telework “experiment” – I have the utmost confidence. Because the nation’s ISPs – have spent more than a trillion dollars making us ready. We have “average” Internet speeds – that are exponentially faster than 99% of us need to do what we do for work…away from work. Because the ISPs have made us ready, this freak out-induced telework “experiment” – should begin a worldwide workplace revolution. A billion-plus additional people will realize the amazing new world the world’s ISPs have created for us. Where they too can use their connections – to break their tethers to offices and vehicular commutes. This will almost certainly be the brightest side of this Coronavirus nonsense. I have thoroughly enjoyed my personal telework – for nearly a decade now. I am quite sure nigh everyone else does – and will. So I’ll say it yet again – because too many people never say it at all: “Thank you VERY much, ISPs.” Tags: Seton Motley, Less Government, Coronavirus, Nation’s Internet Providers, Have Made, #SelfDistancing Telework, Piece of Cake To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Massive US Military Exercise in Europe Is Still a Go, Despite Travel Restrictions
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 05:37 PM PDT
by Nolan Peterson: KYIV, Ukraine—Due to the coronavirus pandemic, the U.S. military has plans to scale back, but not cancel, its biggest military exercise in Europe in 25 years. Some 20,000 U.S. troops were slated to deploy to Europe and back this spring for the Defender-Europe 20 exercise, which was to last through May and take place in 10 European countries. U.S. European Command said on Thursday that “in light of the current coronavirus outbreak” it was “reducing” the number of U.S. participants in Defender-Europe 20. “We take the Coronavirus outbreak seriously and are confident that by making this important decision we’ll continue to do our part to prevent the further spread of the virus,” U.S. European Command officials said in a statement. That announcement followed President Donald Trump’s Wednesday address to the nation in which he announced restrictions on travel from Europe in a bid to limit the spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus. “We can always do another Defender. Right now public health concerns ought to take priority,” said James Jay Carafano, vice president for The Heritage Foundation’s Davis Institute for National Security and Foreign Policy. Triage However, Europe is now registering more new coronavirus cases than any other global region, raising concerns about the wisdom of going forward with the exercise, albeit on a smaller scale than originally planned. “The virus is the culprit. Leaders must take prudent action now to preserve the force structure required to respond to a crisis should we need to,” said John Venable, senior research fellow for defense policy at The Heritage Foundation. “Without an exercise, we could still deploy to fight,” Venable told The Daily Signal. “It would be ugly, but we could make it happen. We need to exercise that process but … we can always do it another time.” Defender-Europe 20 is a unique chance for the U.S. military to practice the logistical challenge of deploying a large force to Europe—and then bringing everything and everyone home. According to a U.S. military statement, the exercise’s overarching objective is to “validate” America’s ability to deploy personnel and equipment to Europe, as well as “to test the national support of hosting nations.” The American forces scheduled to deploy to Europe this spring comprise units from 15 U.S. states. An additional 9,000 American military personnel already stationed in Europe were to participate in Defender-Europe 20, as well as 8,000 troops from other allied nations. “Nothing has been lost,” Carafano said of the possibility of the exercise’s cancellation. “Even the planning to this point is something to build on.” The first coronavirus case among U.S. military personnel in Europe was announced on March 6—a sailor stationed in Naples, Italy, reportedly tested positive for the disease. On Wednesday, the Pentagon announced that Norwegian officials had canceled a military exercise called Exercise Cold Response 20, in which the U.S. was also a participant. According to a U.S. European Command press release, the decision was “a precautionary measure in response to the ongoing outbreak of COVID-19 and to protect the health and safety of all participants and local population.” While U.S. military planners didn’t call out Russia by name, exercises like Defender-Europe 20 are clearly meant to show Moscow that the U.S. is willing and able to defend its European allies by force. The Obama administration announced the European Reassurance Initiative, or ERI, in June 2014, three months after Russia illegally annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula and launched military operations in eastern Ukraine. The program called for a buildup of U.S. military forces and equipment in Eastern and Central Europe, as well as rotating military exercises throughout the region. Totaling roughly $1 billion in 2014, the ERI was meant to be a temporary measure to deter Russia from military provocations and show NATO and its European partners that the U.S. was committed to their defense. However, since taking office, the Trump administration has boosted spending for the Obama-era program, now known as the European Deterrence Initiative, underscoring that the Russian threat to NATO and its European partners has not dimmed since 2014. With about $6 billion pledged for the program in fiscal year 2020, the number of American troops scheduled to rotate in and out of Europe was set to ratchet up this year. “This exercise is not a one-off,” Heritage’s Carafano said of Defender-Europe 20. “This will be the new normal. The U.S. has to demonstrate it can reinforce Europe quickly. It’s a key component of conventional deterrence.” Tags: Massive US Military Exercise, in Europe, Is Still a Go, Despite Travel Restrictions To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
1,657 Chinese Tried To Enter U.S. From Mexico In Last 6 Months
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 05:21 PM PDT
by Free Press International News Service: Since October, authorities have apprehended more than 150,000 illegals attempting to cross into the U.S. from Mexico. That number includes more than 1,600 from China, according to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). DHS said the number of illegals includes nationals of 72 countries that are currently affected by the coronavirus. “All it would take is a single infected individual to impact the detained migrant community within DHS facilities,” a senior DHS official told Breitbart News. “Without proper precautions, which can only happen through orderly, lawful migration, the virus threatens to spread rapidly. Any halting of [Remain in Mexico] would exacerbate this threat.” Of the 1,657 Chinese nationals apprehended at the southern border since October, nearly 350 sought to enter the U.S. illegally within the last few months, including several within the last few days, DHS said. “We have a unique public health threat posed by individuals arriving unlawfully at the border, where migrants, law enforcement officials, frontline personnel, and the American public are put at risk,” the DHS official said. DHS data shows that Brazil, where 151 cases of the coronavirus are confirmed, has had about 6,400 of their nationals arrive at the U.S.-Mexico border since October. Eight Iranian nationals, 12 Italian nationals, 346 Russian nationals, 160 Romanian nationals, 204 Vietnamese, 827 Indian nationals, and 1,045 nationals from Cameroon have also attempted to cross the border into the U.S. since October. Those countries, as of March 13, had a combined coronavirus-infected population of nearly 30,000 and 1,781 deaths. Mexico now has at least 12 confirmed cases of the coronavirus, and since October, nearly 110,000 Mexican nationals have inundated the southern border. Every confirmed coronavirus case in Mexico involves a person who recently traveled abroad or has been in close contact with a person who recently traveled abroad. Tags: Free Press International, News Service, Free Pressers, 1,657 Chinese, Tried To Enter U.S., From Mexico, In Last 6 Months To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Coronavirus Pandemic, Don’t Panic, The Debate
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 04:57 PM PDT
by Gary Bauer: Coronavirus Pandemic For example, the CNN moderators began last night’s Democrat debate with a lengthy segment on the virus outbreak. Former Vice President Joe Biden and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders spent the first half hour doing everything they could to undermine confidence in our government and score cheap political points on suffering. In Bernie’s case, he exploited the virus to push for outright socialism, repeatedly insisting that “Medicare for All” was the solution. In Biden’s case, it was just pure demagoguery. (See below.) Over the weekend, the administration team dominated by health experts continued to announce new initiatives and public-private partnerships, while providing the American people with as much up-to-date information as possible. For example, the first human vaccine tests will be administered today. President Trump did his best to try to calm the growing signs of panic. There were fist fights in grocery stores over the weekend. So Trump brought in the heads of America’s major grocery chains. They said that supply lines were fine but people have to stop panic buying. Trump shared this information, urged calm and told people there will be plenty of food. Immediately, the media attacked him for sending mixed messages. It pains me to say this, but there are powerful people in the media who want panic because they believe this is the monster that can finally take down Trump. For one brief shining moment last week, some outlets, including Fox News, appropriately started emphasizing the recovery rate from the virus. By Saturday that useful information was completely gone. Will somebody please tell me why it is not a rational, responsible thing for the media to report the recovery rate? Doing so would help to minimize panic. The fact that the media are not doing it is beyond disgusting. During Saturday’s briefing, Surgeon General Jerome Adams blasted the media for focusing on partisanship and finger-pointing. He urged reporters to concentrate their efforts on providing “more stories about how people can protect themselves.” Here in the metro Washington area, the first three patients who were diagnosed with the virus two weeks ago have already recovered and are back at work. Why is that not major news? The president and vice president have repeatedly stressed that for the overwhelming majority of people, this is not a deadly threat. From everything we see, that is exactly correct. Yet they are attacked for saying it. Don’t Panic One of the things the government is struggling with is our dependence on global supply lines. Donald Trump has been warning about this problem for decades. As soon as he took office, he tried to address that vulnerability, but he has been opposed by left-wing politicians like Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders, as well as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. When Trump urged American CEOs to start thinking about getting their factories out of China and bringing them back home, he was mocked as a “dictator” by free market advocates, libertarians, Never Trumpers and media elites. He was right then, and the disruption caused by the coronavirus and China’s subsequent threats have further proven the point. HHS Hacked Would you rather have Joe Biden or Barack Obama in office (here, here and here) when something like this is happening? Or the team we have now? That’s easy for me to answer, and I suspect it’s an easy call for most Americans too. The Debate For example, Biden announced that in the first 100 days of his administration, no illegal alien in America would be deported for any reason. Assuming that there is another outbreak of coronavirus next year, if Biden is in office we will have hundreds of thousands of people from Latin America pouring across our southern border because the newly-elected president has announced a de facto amnesty – a ban on deportations for the first 100 days. Here’s another example. The U.S. economy in general is taking a beating right now, and our energy industry in particular is struggling as Russian and Saudi oil floods the market in a price war. What did Biden and Sanders say they would do to address climate change? They both promised to drive a stake through the heart of the American energy industry by banning fracking, among other things. More than six million Americans are employed by various sectors of the U.S. energy industry. At a time when we are reeling economically, Biden and Sanders are promising to destroy millions of American jobs! Incredibly, the CNN moderators didn’t blink at these wildly insane suggestions. At one point, Biden and Sanders argued about whether Fidel Castro and the Soviet Union accomplished a few good things. Sanders wanted to argue that China has done good things too. Biden, who not that long ago defended China, suddenly started bashing China. For whatever reason, Sanders pulled his punches. He could have said, “Mr. Vice President, you weren’t bashing China when you took your son to Beijing and he left with a billion-dollar contract from the Chinese.” Lastly, any pro-life voter who thinks it won’t make much difference whether Biden is president needs to think again. The alleged “moderate” Joe Biden told Bernie Sanders that he was all in on forcing American taxpayers to subsidize abortions. He said it was an essential part of his commitment to “public funding for all healthcare.” For the 20% of Democrats who claim to be pro-life, there is nothing “moderate” about Biden’s pro-abortion extremism. In the middle of a crisis in which we are worried about people dying, it is astonishing that the leaders of the Democrat Party are committed to ensuring that as many innocent babies as possible will die this year and next year and every year after that. Tags: Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Coronavirus Pandemic, Don’t Panic, The Debate To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
The Social Distancing and Quarantine Quagmire
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 03:19 PM PDT . . . Quarantines and social distancing measures are NOT to “contain” the coronavirus.
by Mark Alexander: I have spent more time on conference calls in the last week than in any week since the 9/11 Islamist attack on our nation. Most of those conversations have been on the grim side of the balance sheet. But let me reiterate, what causes me most heartburn right now is the impact the “viral fear pandemic” and the economic realities of trying to mitigate the actual threat is having on working men and women and their families. That being said, there has been a lot of social-media misinformation about a “Stafford Act” presidential declaration of a “national quarantine” for most “nonessential” workers nationwide. Allow me to dispel that rumor, and to clarify the purpose of the current quarantines and “social distancing” measures — the motives of which are to prevent overwhelming our medical-response capabilities. On Friday, President Donald Trump declared a national emergency as authorized by the Stafford Act, an important measure supporting the government and private-sector response to the COVID-19 epidemic in the U.S. This was a major step to reducing government regulatory and bureaucratic barriers to response and recovery, and it provides significant economic assurances for state and local governments and businesses nationwide. That was an important measure, and while there are no “good options” for dealing with this epidemic, some options are better than others, and the administration continues to implement those options. For context, as I have written previously, the notion of containing the WuFlu epidemic is absurd. It was nationwide by February. And, to be clear, infectious-disease deaths associated with COVID-19 could far exceed the 2017-18 flu season, when the CDC estimated the U.S. flu death toll was 80,000. About that “presidential quarantine”? There is NO proposed presidential declaration of a national quarantine, much less any Stafford Act or constitutional authority for such. Quarantines have obviously and necessarily been in the range of discussions for the last three weeks — and have been part of the pandemic table-top planning exercises for three decades. Because of misinformation circulated on social media – most likely disseminated by Chinese or Russian directorates of disinformation, in recent days some people have declared they have a “friend of a friend” who has a direct line to the White House or Pentagon. Nonsense. The National Security Council released a statement refuting the misinformation yesterday: “There is no national lockdown. The CDC has and will continue to post the latest guidance on #COVID19 #coronavirus.” For the record, such a “national quarantine” would be exponentially more economically devastating than the current state- and local-mandated measures, and the Trump national-security team is, appropriately, leaving decisions about what to shutter and where, to state and local governments. The administration is rightly concerned that any centralized “one size fits all” approach would not be effective. To that end, five states took additional measures over the weekend to close restaurants and bars — and that is how these decisions should be made. But it should be noted that state quarantine declarations could significantly impede commutes between states. Accelerating the “national quarantine” rumor was a revised CDC guidance with more restrictive recommendations for group gatherings. But what most set off the misinformation bomb were remarks by the highly respected director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Dr. Anthony Fauci, who also serves as the administration’s spokesman for the epidemic response. According to Dr. Fauci: “I think Americans should be prepared that they are going to have to hunker down significantly more than we as a country are doing. We feel that with rather stringent mitigation and containment, without necessarily complete lockdown, we would be able to prevent ourselves from getting to where, unfortunately, Italy is now. … With regard to domestic travel bans, we always talk about it, consider everything. But I can tell you that has not been seriously considered, doing travel bans in the country. … I don’t see that right now or in the immediate future. Everybody has got to get involved in distancing themselves socially. … Everything is on the table. Right now, myself personally, I wouldn’t go to a restaurant. I just wouldn’t because I don’t want to be in a crowded place.” Dr. Fauci had earlier said, “I would like to see a dramatic diminution of personal interaction. … Whatever it takes to do that, that’s what I would like to see. … The virus is not a mathematical formula. There are going to be people who are young who are going to wind up getting seriously ill. So, protect yourself.” He noted, “For most people, the coronavirus causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia. … The vast majority of people recover. People with mild illness recover in about two weeks, while those with more severe illness may take three weeks to six weeks to recover.” Regarding the notion that the recommendations are overkill or overreacting, he added, “If you think you’re in line with the outbreak, you’re already three weeks behind. So you’ve got to be almost overreacting a bit to keep up with it. … People need to understand that things will get worse before they get better. … What we’re trying to do is to make sure they don’t get to the worst-case scenario.” Dr. Fauci is an academician/physician and government-agency head — which is to say his views, while very informed from the medical perspective, are not tempered by other realities, like the economic implications for American workers and their families. To better understand the motives behind “self-quarantines” and “social distancing,” these measures serve primarily two objectives. First, the measures are NOT to “contain” the virus. It is assumed that about half of Americans will contract the coronavirus variant causing COVID-19 illness, and a fraction of those will require significant medical attention. Fauci’s reference to what has happened in Italy is a reference to the spike of those requiring medical attention, which overwhelmed Italy’s domestic medical capabilities. Thus, the objective of increasing individual isolation here is to “flatten the infection curve” in order to retard the exponential rate of spread — how fast we get it — and thus not reduce the infections but spread the demand on our ability to provide medical attention over a longer period of time. To be clear, the isolation measures being taken by citizens at higher risk — those over age 60 and those with medical conditions that make recovery more difficult — will prevent infections. But again, the coronavirus variant causing COVID-19 illness will remain in circulation nationwide for a long time, especially if it is not slowed by warmer weather as is often the case with seasonal flu epidemics. Wide distribution of effective vaccines is still at least 8-10 months out, if not longer. The second motive behind increasing individual isolation is equally important. Retarding the rate of infectious spread allows more time to develop and ramp up medical-treatment protocols. The key question about “hunkering down” is, for how long? Are we going to flatten the infectious-spread curve so long that we flatline the economy? Here is what I can tell you for sure. Donald Trump has more business experience than any president in a century. As I noted above, while there are no “good options” for dealing with this epidemic, some options are better than others, and this president and his administration understand that as well as any president in my lifetime. Moving forward, as Trump declared last week, “Everybody has to be vigilant and has to be careful. But be calm.” I would add for those who are in judicious contact with others, maintain an infectious and confident smile, and pass it along! (Visit our updated COVID-19 contagion preparedness and response resource page, “WuFlu and You,” and see our related pages.) —————————— Tags: Mark Alexander, The Patriot Post, Social Distancing, Quarantine Quagmire To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Lawyers for Hillary Clinton Ask Appeals Court to Overturn Order for Her Deposition
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 02:55 PM PDT Judicial Watch (Washington, D.C.): Lawyers for former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her former Chief of Staff Cheryl Mills have asked the Court of Appeals to overturn a U.S. District court order granting Judicial Watch’s request for their depositions about Clinton’s emails and Benghazi attack records. Lawyers for Clinton and Mills filed a “Petition for Writ of Mandamus” earlier today. The Clinton request comes in Judicial Watch’s lawsuit that seeks records concerning “talking points or updates on the Benghazi attack” (Judicial Watch v. U.S. Department of State (No. 1:14-cv-01242)). Judicial Watch famously uncovered in 2014 that the “talking points” that provided the basis for Susan Rice’s false statements were created by the Obama White House. This Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit led directly to the disclosure of the Clinton email system in 2015. On March 3, 2020, Judge Lamberth granted Judicial Watch’s request to depose Clinton about her emails and Benghazi attack documents. The court also ordered the deposition of Mills and two other State Department officials. Additionally, the court granted Judicial Watch’s request to subpoena Google for relevant documents and records associated with Clinton’s emails during her tenure at the State Department. In December 2018, Judge Lamberth first ordered discovery into whether Secretary Clinton’s use of a private email server was intended to stymie FOIA; whether the State Department’s intent to settle this case in late 2014 and early 2015 amounted to bad faith; and whether the State Department has adequately searched for records responsive to Judicial Watch’s request. The court also authorized discovery into whether the Benghazi controversy motivated the cover-up of Clinton’s email. The court ruled that the Clinton email system was “one of the gravest modern offenses to government transparency.” The State and Justice Departments continued to defend Clinton’s and the agency’s email conduct. Judge Lamberth overruled Clinton’s and the State and Justice Department’s objections to limited additional discovery by first noting: Tags: Judicial Watch, Lawyers for Hillary Clinton, Ask Appeals Court, to Overturn Order, for Her Deposition To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
The Coronavirus Option: Illinois Mayor Uses Crisis To Gain New Powers
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 02:35 PM PDT by Free Press International: In signing an executive order declaring a citywide state of emergency to address the coronavirus, the mayor of Champaign, Illinois also gave herself the power to ban the sale of firearms. Meanwhile, New York City’s socialist Democrat mayor on Saturday suggested the coronavirus could be justification for nationalizing “crucial industries” in the United States. Mayor Deborah Frank Feinen signed the executive order on Thursday. The order “comes with extraordinary powers for the mayor to enact over a short period of time as the city combats the spread of the coronavirus,” the Washington Examiner reported. Among the powers Feinen gained herself is the power to ban the sale of guns, ammunition, alcohol, and gasoline. Feinen could also cut off access to individuals’ gas, water, or electricity. The city also has the ability to “take possession of private property” or order the temporary closing of all bars or liquor stores. Jeff Hamilton, the city’s manager, told WAND, “The executive order allows the city to be flexible to properly respond to the emergency needs of our community. None of the options will necessarily be implemented but are available in order to protect the welfare and safety of our community if needed.” The Champaign City Council on Friday held a meeting to address concerns about the mayor’s order. Deputy Mayor Tom Bruno noted that each ordinance considered under the executive order would be ratified by the council. The city also released a statement claiming that the council and the mayor would only take steps “necessary to ensure the health, safety, and welfare” of the city. Mayor Bill de Blasio told MSNBC’s Joy Reid that the federal government needs to assure that there is a steady supply of hand sanitizer and ventilators for people who’ve contracted the virus. “Here’s the reality: This is a war-like situation,” de Blasio said. “We’re in a wartime scenario with a Mar-a-Lago attitude being used by the federal government.” De Blasio added: “This is a case for a nationalization of crucial factories and industries that could produce the medical supplies to prepare this country for what we need. People are going crazy trying to get hand sanitizer.” Industries responsible for providing medical supplies like ventilators should be brought under the yoke of the federal government, de Blasio said, adding that New York state officials are taking a similar position to help provide citizens with sanitizer. “We’ll be providing this to governmental agencies, schools, the MTA, prisons, etc., because you can’t get it on the market, and when you get it it’s very, very expensive,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said at a March 9 press conference. Tags: Free Press International, News Service, Free Pressers, The Coronavirus Option, Illinois, Mayor Deborah Frank Feinen, uses crisis, signed executive order, to gain new powers To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Paper Pusher . . .
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 02:19 PM PDT . . . The run-on toilet paper and paper towels due to the coronavirus panic have needlessly made it a rare commodity in many places.
Tags: Editorial Cartoon, AF Branco, Paper Pusher, run-on, toilet paper, paper towels, due to, coronavirus panic To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Arrogant CNN ‘Hosts’ Repeatedly LIE, Insist Trump Dubbed the Coronavirus a ‘Hoax’
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 02:18 PM PDT
by Curtis Houck : In a horrendous lie on CNN first flagged by the Trump campaign, CNN hosts Ana Cabrera and Boris Sanchez displayed gross arrogance, immaturity, and snarkiness in repeatedly lying by telling viewers on Saturday and Sunday that President Trump initially chalked up the coronavirus to having been “a hoax.” Fact-checker after fact-checker (and even liberal ones like The Washington Post) decried this falsehood, but in Zuckerville, such gaslighting is not only encouraged, but it’s become a requirement to survive at CNN. Sunday afternoon, Cabrera directly blamed the President for the coronavirus outbreak and peddled the “hoax” lie. As part of a seven-minute meltdown, she insisted that a lack of funding for an Obama-instituted program on pandemics.
Earth to CNN: Facts change. Sure, critique the President’s demeanor. By all means take issue with a press conference or a tweet. It’s all fair game! But making faces, sighing, and lashing out (see Fake News Jim and Fredo for other examples) solves nothing when it comes to being a host and so-called journalist. Certainly, Cabrera and her bosses feel much better after such snarky takedowns that leave them near tears, but their punditry doesn’t help prevent the spread or cure anyone of the virus. Then again, as we saw with the Surgeon General, any and all pushback of the liberal media hurts their feelings. With such sarcastic (and, yes, arguably juvenile) outbursts encouraged at CNN, Cabrera will certainly find herself promoted in no time. Prior to Cabrera’s Sunday afternoon segment, there were three Saturday segments between Cabrera and Sanchez that pushed the lie. After two soundbites from Friday afternoon’s Rose Garden press conference, Cabrera stated without evidence at 3:21 p.m. Eastern that Trump trumpeted “original claims of a hoax” being afoot concerning the coronavirus. Cabrera showed herself to be someone beyond parody when she brought on Trump aide-turned-hater Anthony Scaramucci, wondering whether there’s anyone “who privately would tell the President, you can’t call this a hoax, it’s no joke, and you are going to put everyone at risk if you don’t take this seriously.” In the 7:00 p.m. Eastern hour, Sanchez lamented to former Obama official Samantha Vinograd that the President has “suggested that this coronavirus epidemic — pandemic is a hoax perpetrated by Democrats.” Later, Sanchez hyped: “Case in point. Two weeks ago, Trump called the response about the gravity of the virus a hoax. It’s not.” PENCE [on 03/13/20]: Thank you, Mr. President. It is — this day should be an inspiration to every American because thanks to your leadership from early on, not only are we bringing a whole of government approach to confronting the coronavirus, we’re bringing an all of America approach. SANCHEZ: We have to reflect on those comments from Vice President Mike Pence. And that kind of leadership that he’s talking about, especially considering the President’s own words on coronavirus over the last few weeks. TRUMP [on 02/29/20]: Democrats are politicizing the coronavirus. [SCREEN WIPE] One of my people came up to me and said, “Mr. President, they tried to beat you on Russia, Russia, Russia. That didn’t work out too well. They tried the impeachment hoax. And this is their new hoax.” [SCREEN WIPE] [on 03/06/20] I like this stuff, I really get it. People are surprised that I understand it. Every one of these doctors said, “How do you know so much about this?” Maybe I have a natural ability. Maybe I should have done that instead of running for president. (….) SANCHEZ: Remember that famous sign that President Harry Truman kept on his desk? “The Buck Stops Here.” Apparently, it’s no longer in the Oval Office. But not to worry! PENCE [on 03/13/20]: Throughout this process, Mr. President, you’ve put the health of America First. SANCHEZ: Yeah. Outside of calling the response to coronavirus a hoax when it resulted a pandemic, assuring everyone could get tested when they clearly and still cannot, and announcing a national scale website in a partnership with Google that does not exist, the President has you covered. March 14, 2020 3:20 p.m. Eastern [ON-SCREEN HEADLINE: Global Pandemic; Trump Gets Tested for Virus After Downplaying Threat for Weeks] ANA CABRERA: President Trump has been giving regular updates to the public about coronavirus, but —and this is a huge but — the information he gives is not always accurate and he often downplays the threat and contradicts statements he or his expert advisers have previously said. PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP [on 02/29/20]: Democrats are politicizing the coronavirus. [SCREEN WIPE] This is their new hoax. [SCREEN WIPE] [on 03/10/20[ It will go away. Just stay calm. KRISTEN WELKER [TO TRUMP] [on 03/13/20]: Dr. Fauci said earlier this week that the lag in testing was, in fact, failing. Do you take responsibility for that, and when can you guarantee that every single American who needs a test will be able to have a test? What’s the date of that? TRUMP [on 03/13/20]: Yeah, no, I don’t take responsibility at all. YAMICHE ALCINDOR [on 03/13/20] [TO TRUMP]: You said that you don’t take responsibility but you did disband the White House Pandemic Office and the officials that were working in that office left this administration abruptly, so what responsibility do you take to that? [SCREEN WIPE] TRUMP: You say, me. I didn’t do it. We have a group of people. I could ask perhaps my administration, but I could perhaps ask Tony about that because I don’t know anything about it. CABRERA: And yet despite these inaccuracies, blame shifting moments, original claims of a hoax, Vice President Mike Pence has been effusive in his praise of the President. VICE PRESIDENT MIKE PENCE [on 03/13/20]: Mr. President, from early on, you took decisive action. [SCREEN WIPE] Throughout this process, Mr. President, you’ve put the health of America first. CABRERA: With me now, President Trump’s former White House Communications Director, Anthony Scaramucci. Good to have you here, Anthony. Is this what it looks like to work with Trump behind the scenes? Is there no one who privately would tell the President, you can’t call this a hoax, it’s no joke, and you are going to put everyone at risk if you don’t take this seriously? —- [ON-SCREEN HEADLINE: Global Pandemic; Trump Says He’s Considering Domestic Travel Restrictions] SAMANTHA VINOGRAD: This is a case where we don’t want to follow the leader, when it comes to appropriate behavior and we really need to question what is driving his policy making at this point. SANCHEZ: He did allude to trying to follow the CDC guidelines today when he talked about trying not to shake hands. He acknowledged that he didn’t do it before he was a politician. VINGRAD: Which he did yesterday. [ON-SCREEN HEADLINE: Global Pandemic; Trump Tested for Coroanvirus, Awaiting Results] SANCHEZ: Right but he’s been doing it all this time and he’s been having rallies with large crowds in which he suggests that this coronavirus epidemic — pandemic is a hoax perpetrated by Democrats. (….) 7:40 p.m. Eastern [ON-SCREEN HEADLINE: National Emergency; Trump Gets Key Facts Wrong During Briefings] SANCHEZ: President Trump has been giving regular updates to the public about coronavirus, but — and this is a major but — the information that he gives isn’t always accurate. He often downplays the threat and he contradicts statements he or his own advisers have previously made. Case in point. Two weeks ago, Trump called the response about the gravity of the virus a hoax. It’s not. —- [ON-SCREEN HEADLINE: Presidential Response; Trump on Coronavirus: From “Hoax” to National Emergency] BORIS SANCHEZ: You may have caught this — the President was soaking in the praise at the rose garden yesterday for his leadership during the global pandemic. VICE PRESIDENT MIKE PENCE [on 03/13/20]: Thank you, Mr. President. It is — this day should be an inspiration to every American because thanks to your leadership from early on, not only are we bringing a whole of government approach to confronting the coronavirus, we’re bringing an all of America approach. SANCHEZ: We have to reflect on those comments from Vice President Mike Pence. And that kind of leadership that he’s talking about, especially considering the President’s own words on coronavirus over the last few weeks. PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP [on 02/29/20]: Democrats are politicizing the coronavirus. [SCREEN WIPE] One of my people came up to me and said, “Mr. President, they tried to beat you on Russia, Russia, Russia. That didn’t work out too well. They tried the impeachment hoax. And this is their new hoax.” [SCREEN WIPE] [on 03/06/20] I like this stuff, I really get it. People are surprised that I understand it. Every one of these doctors said, “How do you know so much about this?” Maybe I have a natural ability. Maybe I should have done that instead of running for president. SANCHEZ: The kind of leadership Trump was accepting praise for would have presumably led to a focus on testing kits. There’s a shortage of them now, instead of talking about a Democrat hoax. The U.S. is still fighting a dangerous uphill battle to find out the scope of that problem. DR. ANTHONY FAUCI [on 03/11/20]: The system does not — is not really geared to what we need right now. What you are asking for. That is a failing. CONGRESSWOMAN DEBBIE WASSERMAN SCHULTZ (D-FL) [on 03/11/20]: A failing, yes — FAUCI [on 03/11/20]: It is a failing. Let’s admit it. SANCHEZ: “A failing. Let’s admit it.” We don’t have enough tests and simply saying that something is true doesn’t make it so. It’s not just coming from Democrats or the media, you can ask a staunch defender of the President, Senator James Langford. Listen. TRUMP [on 03/06/20]: Anybody that wants a test can get a test. SENATOR JAMES LANKFORD (R-OK) [on 03/11/20]: No. It’s not consistent right now. That’s obviously the goal, to get testing for everybody who wants testing, to get it in multiple locations, but that’s not accurate right now. MANU RAJU [on 03/11/20]: Should he stop saying that? LANKFORD [on 03/11/20]: Yeah. People should not say if you want a test you can go get a test right now. SANCHEZ [SMIRKING]: Well, the President is quick to accept credit for what appears to be like a solution, like that national rollout of a Google website that Google never agreed to. Don’t ask him to take the blame that most still can’t get tested in this country. KRISTEN WELKER [TO TRUMP] [on 03/13/20]: Dr. Fauci said earlier this week that the lag in testing was, in fact, failing. Do you take responsibility for that, and when can you guarantee that every single American who needs a test will be able to take a test? What’s the date of that? TRUMP [on 03/13/20]: Yeah, no I don’t take responsibility at all. SANCHEZ: Remember that famous sign that President Harry Truman kept on his desk? “The Buck Stops Here.” Apparently, it’s no longer in the Oval Office. But not to worry! PENCE [on 03/13/20]: Throughout this process, Mr. President, you’ve put the health of America First. SANCHEZ: Yeah. Outside of calling the response to coronavirus a hoax when it resulted a pandemic, assuring everyone could get tested when they clearly and still cannot, and announcing a national scale website in a partnership with Google that does not exist, the President has you covered. Curtis Houck (@CurtisHouck) is the Managing Editor of NewsBusters for the Media Research Center. Tags: Curtis Houck, Media Research Center, CNN ‘Hosts’ Repeatedly LIE, Insist Trump Dubbed, Coronavirus a ‘Hoax’ To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
America In a New Upside-Down World
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 01:28 PM PDT by Dr. Victor Davis Hanson: The world is changing at a pace not seen in years, and it is no time to become captives of fear despite the real and immediate dangers we face.
The coronavirus and the ensuing panic, at least for a few more weeks, have stagnated the economy and scared global financial markets, accompanied by both collateral, and independent and simultaneous, bad news. Rumor- and panic-mongers predominate; the rational and reasonable are written-off as naïve and out of it. Thousands may die, but millions who will not are terrified into anxieties and sleeplessness that they will. COVID-19 itself has raised fundamental questions about the merits of globalization in general, and in particular the wisdom of any sovereign nation outsourcing key industries like high-tech, pharmaceuticals, medical supplies, and food processing to an autocratic, non-transparent—and dangerous—nation like China. The current oil glut and price crash—a result of a Saudi-Russian price war, in part directed at record U.S. production, in part due to the crumbling of OPEC, and less demand as a global public, frightened by the specter of the Wuhan virus, stays closer to home—are radically changing the relationship between oil sellers and buyers. In particular, vulnerable cash-hungry exporting countries like Iran, Russia, and Venezuela are losing clout. Interest rates are also dropping. The world at large may for a time experience historic de facto negative interest. Trump Was Right About China Donald Trump was ridiculed for taking on the Chinese juggernaut in 2017, even though he was not wrong that China was a serial world trade cheater—manipulating currencies, dumping products below the cost of production, appropriating technology, infringing on patents and copyrights, and running up huge asymmetrical trade surpluses. The writ against his pushback on China was that it was hopeless to fight a 1.4-billion-person powerhouse, destined to surpass the United States in annual GDP in just a few years. Or Trump was deemed naïvely reckless, given that to achieve symmetry, legality, and fairness would incur too much pain and involve ossified and discredited concepts like tariffs. But either by design or accident, the Trump standoff tore off the China scab. The exposed putrid wound beneath has terrified the world: lying, deceit, and subterfuge surrounded the mysterious COVID-19 contagion that emerged from Wuhan late last year and now has spread worldwide and panicked the globe. The coronavirus helped remind the world that the Hong Kong democracy protests, the creepy 1-million-person reeducation camps for Uyghur Muslims, and internal Chinese Orwellian surveillance were characteristic not aberrant. In a reductionist sense, it is not surprising that a China, systematically lying to and cheating its trading partners, cannot be trusted to tell the world how a virus was born on its own soil, spread among its population, and hopped oceans into other nations. When the virus peters out and the panic fades, China may be permanently rebranded and recalibrated by the world at large. Its trading partners will trust it far less to honor any commitments or to abide by any international agreements. Supply chains will be diversified. Tourism will be reduced in fears another such coronavirus will follow SARS and COVID-19—and be hushed up. Countries that had particular close commercial and cultural ties with China—Iran, South Korea, and Italy—were hurt most during the epidemic by Chinese silence and duplicity. Some assembly plants will be shut down. Nations will be less trusting to outsource key industries to Chinese companies. Supply chains were changing before the epidemic and will redirect even more afterward. In sum, China’s mercantile system will take a hit. The only country that can match and surpass its economic output, the United States, will be the long-term beneficiary as investors and businesses look away from Beijing to a more transparent partner. More Bad News for Bad Actors Crashing oil prices will also hurt the expansionary agendas of Vladimir Putin’s Russia, especially in places like Syria and Eastern Ukraine. Russia is already bleeding billions of dollars by propping up the murderous Assad dictatorship in Syria. Soon it will be doing so with far less apparent discretionary income. Iran may be the biggest loser of the current chaos. U.S. sanctions already had cut Iranian oil revenue by about 90 percent. The remaining ten percent of sales, and in addition whatever income Iran received through smuggling and illicit sales, may be worth about half of what such reduced revenue garnered just a few months ago. The theocracy has lost all credibility with the financially strapped Iranian people, 1,500 of whom it recently murdered in the streets. The mullahs lied to Iranians both about the shooting down of the Ukrainian jetliner and the extent of the COVID-19 infection sweeping through their country. The U.S. policy of “maximum pressure” replacing the flawed and appeasing Iran nuclear deal, will be seen as especially more effective each week. Certainly, the regime is threatened with financial crises not seen since its war with Iraq in the 1980s, but this time of its own making and due largely to its own duplicity. The Toll—and Eventual Upside—at Home Whatever the ultimate human and economic toll from the coronavirus, there is no doubt that Trump, as president, will be blamed for the economic slowdown of spring and perhaps even early summer. The media despises the president as does entertainment, academia, and the media, ensuring in popular culture and the news that he will be demonized in a way Obama was not, despite reacting far more slowly, to the swine flu threat of 2009. But here are some caveats. Warmer weather and spring, global quarantines, travel bans, more testing and increased knowledge of the virus may all eventually conspire to slow its spread. And when its relative non-lethality is fully digested (perhaps 98 or 99 percent of those in the general population below 65 in previously good health who are infected recover), and the cases begin dropping off, the economy will not just recover but take off. That more positives come back from far more testing does not necessarily mean a pandemic in the tens of millions of cases is certain, but perhaps reflects that the continuing ripples of the initial outbreak. In the two to three months when China did not apprise the world of the outbreaks and 10,000 and more a day were flying into American airports from China, lots of Americans were exposed and became carriers, and either had no symptoms or attributed their illnesses to the flu or bad colds as still more were infected. After all, it is hard not to concede that hundreds were not coronavirus positive of the million or so Chinese visitors who arrived in the United States during that critical time frame between November and January. As is always the case at the beginning of an economic recovery, the end of a war, or the relief that follows from the departure of a plague, the public rejoices and then spends and splurges. Reason will eventually replace panic as Americans conclude that COVID-19, while more lethal to vulnerable age groups and those with chronic illnesses, may not be quite as pandemic in the manner of historic influenzas such as those in 1918 (500,000 plus US deaths) or even 1957 (70,000 deaths). That ensuing economic uptick will be multiplied by crashed oil prices that are likely to help U.S. consumers while not permanently hurting U.S. frackers, much less the U.S. economy, which is both the world’s largest consumer and producer of oil and natural gas. More likely, it will do more damage to the oil-producing Middle East and Russia. American consumers will receive a huge stimulus of reduced prices at the gas pump, just as summer driving approaches. Near-zero interest rates may be bad for the long-term economy. They punish thriftiness and (especially elderly) Americans who will lose real dollars on their savings accounts while rewarding the indebted. But in the short term, the cheaper borrowing will spur home and car sales and major consumer purchases. Who would wish to game the election-year politics of these chaotic times, especially the more macabre calculations of the electoral beneficiaries of the media-driven hysteria over the COVID-19? Nonetheless, Vegas handicappers might envision the speculation not to whether Trump will be hurt in the late spring polls by the global panic and growing number of U.S. COVID cases (he already is), but whether he will be hurt enough to matter when the economy inevitably picks up again by later spring and summer. One key will be how well each day Trump talks sense to the nation, explains all the measures the government currently is taking, and reassures the panicked public that whatever downturn the United States might experience over fears of a viral epidemic will be eventually mitigated by the facts of the outbreak, despite the greater dangers to those of us over 65. Most of the data suggest that about 99 of every 100 infected under 65 will recover, the great majority without complications from the infection, allowing us to focus on those most vulnerable and most in need of medical intervention. The government is currently hellbent on ensuring that the virus slows. Facilities will treat the sick. Vaccinations are on the way in 2021. And prior travel bans, border security, and crackdowns on China’s trade cheating were wise and can be expanded. Near-zero interest rates may be bad for the long-term economy. They punish thriftiness and (especially elderly) Americans who will lose real dollars on their savings accounts while rewarding the indebted. But in the short term, the cheaper borrowing will spur home and car sales and major consumer purchases. Who would wish to game the election-year politics of these chaotic times, especially the more macabre calculations of the electoral beneficiaries of the media-driven hysteria over the COVID-19? Nonetheless, Vegas handicappers might envision the speculation not to whether Trump will be hurt in the late spring polls by the global panic and growing number of U.S. COVID cases (he already is), but whether he will be hurt enough to matter when the economy inevitably picks up again by later spring and summer. One key will be how well each day Trump talks sense to the nation, explains all the measures the government currently is taking, and reassures the panicked public that whatever downturn the United States might experience over fears of a viral epidemic will be eventually mitigated by the facts of the outbreak, despite the greater dangers to those of us over 65. Most of the data suggest that about 99 of every 100 infected under 65 will recover, the great majority without complications from the infection, allowing us to focus on those most vulnerable and most in need of medical intervention. The government is currently hellbent on ensuring that the virus slows. Facilities will treat the sick. Vaccinations are on the way in 2021. And prior travel bans, border security, and crackdowns on China’s trade cheating were wise and can be expanded. All That Can Be Done Again, the key is not to damn the panic over the virus, but to understand and accept it—while reassuring Americans that all that can be done is being done, and what downturns they now experience will soon be overshadowed by even more jobs and greater economic expansion and wealth creation to come. We sometimes forget, in legitimate fears of the coronavirus, that every action prompts a reaction and the massive curtailments of the U.S. economy can have as many health consequences as the virus itself—if millions lose income and jobs, become depressed in self-isolation, increase smoking, and drug and alcohol use, and postpone out of fear necessary buying and visits to doctors and hospitals for chronic and serious medical conditions unrelated to the virus. In addition, it is not wrong to remind the public that current but once caricatured policies of secure borders, targeted travel bans, demands for transparency and symmetry from major U.S. trading partners, recalibration with China, and a return of manufacturing and assembly of key U.S. industries, from high-technology to pharmaceuticals, was long overdue—and must continue to ensure U.S. security and the long-term health of its people. Let us relearn that at times of crisis our country is singularly resilient and self-sufficient, and we have only ourselves to save ourselves, or as FDR said in 1932 at the height of the Great Depression, “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” Tags: Victor Davis Hanson, America, In a New, Upside-Down World, To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
The Coronavirus Hoax
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 01:05 PM PDT
by Dr. Ron Paul: Governments love crises because when the people are fearful they are more willing to give up freedoms for promises that the government will take care of them. After 9/11, for example, Americans accepted the near-total destruction of their civil liberties in the PATRIOT Act’s hollow promises of security. It is ironic to see the same Democrats who tried to impeach President Trump last month for abuse of power demanding that the Administration grab more power and authority in the name of fighting a virus that thus far has killed less than 100 Americans. Declaring a pandemic emergency on Friday, President Trump now claims the power to quarantine individuals suspected of being infected by the virus and, as Politico writes, “stop and seize any plane, train or automobile to stymie the spread of contagious disease.” He can even call out the military to cordon off a US city or state. State and local authoritarians love panic as well. The mayor of Champaign, Illinois, signed an executive order declaring the power to ban the sale of guns and alcohol and cut off gas, water, or electricity to any citizen. The governor of Ohio just essentially closed his entire state. The chief fearmonger of the Trump Administration is without a doubt Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health. Fauci is all over the media, serving up outright falsehoods to stir up even more panic. He testified to Congress that the death rate for the coronavirus is ten times that of the seasonal flu, a claim without any scientific basis. On Face the Nation, Fauci did his best to further damage an already tanking economy by stating, “Right now, personally, myself, I wouldn’t go to a restaurant.” He has pushed for closing the entire country down for 14 days. Over what? A virus that has thus far killed just over 5,000 worldwide and less than 100 in the United States? By contrast, tuberculosis, an old disease not much discussed these days, killed nearly 1.6 million people in 2017. Where’s the panic over this? If anything, what people like Fauci and the other fear-mongers are demanding will likely make the disease worse. The martial law they dream about will leave people hunkered down inside their homes instead of going outdoors or to the beach where the sunshine and fresh air would help boost immunity. The panic produced by these fearmongers is likely helping spread the disease, as massive crowds rush into Walmart and Costco for that last roll of toilet paper. The madness over the coronavirus is not limited to politicians and the medical community. The head of the neoconservative Atlantic Council wrote an editorial this week urging NATO to pass an Article 5 declaration of war against the COVID-19 virus! Are they going to send in tanks and drones to wipe out these microscopic enemies? People should ask themselves whether this coronavirus “pandemic” could be a big hoax, with the actual danger of the disease massively exaggerated by those who seek to profit – financially or politically – from the ensuing panic. That is not to say the disease is harmless. Without question people will die from coronavirus. Those in vulnerable categories should take precautions to limit their risk of exposure. But we have seen this movie before. Government over-hypes a threat as an excuse to grab more of our freedoms. When the “threat” is over, however, they never give us our freedoms back. Tags: The Coronavirus Hoax, Ron Paul To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Fear Itself
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 12:50 PM PDT by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” Not often do I quote FDR. Strictly speaking, his statement was false then — at the beginning of the decade-plus-long Great Depression that led to WWII. And it is false now. There is plenty more to fear than merely fear itself. But it does point up the importance of not allowing fear to drive our decisions — as individuals, in families, as well as for governments and civil society. We are facing a worldwide pandemic, something not seen in over 100 years, which we can only hope is not more global or deadly than the so-called Spanish Flu in 1918. This is largely uncharted territory. Therefore, even when public officials make what turn out to be poor decisions, I plan to be as understanding as possible. This is not aimed at any specific public official or specific accompanying criticism. Instead, let it be a broad policy — though, of course, we must hold corrupt or criminally negligent decisions accountable. It’s a great time to give each other a break from politics and to foster a spirit of love and connectedness to our neighbors — even [gulp] politicians — replacing the natural fear that will otherwise occupy our thoughts and actions. During this crisis, I hope that officials at all levels will summon ‘We, the People’ to do what we can as volunteers, whether working sequestered in our homes or in roles outside the home. We are an enormous strength. And please, oh leaders, fill the information vacuum with daily accurate information — keep Anthony Fauci close to a microphone. And help them, journalists. Let’s rise to the occasion by getting tough and staying united. This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. Tags: Paul Jacob, Common Sense, Fear Itself To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
In NRA Supported Lawsuit, Oregon’s Top Court Rejects Flawed “Gun Safety” Ballot Title, Description
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 12:39 PM PDT by NRA-ILA: The NRA has a great record of ensuring that the language used for ballot measures in Oregon is fair, accurate and clear. In 2018, an NRA-backed challenge successfully opposed the language of proposed ballot titles for Initiative Petition 43 (a failed “assault weapons” and magazines ban) and Initiative Petition 44 (likewise withdrawn). In the most recent instance, Oregon’s highest court again agreed with the NRA in a case arising out of a challenge to the ballot title for a “gun safety” initiative. Initiative Petition 40 was filed last year, intended for inclusion on the November 2020 ballot. If passed, this measure would significantly restrict the ability to keep a firearm available for defensive use. It would result in state legislation mandating that firearms that are not being carried or under direct control be kept locked or placed in locked storage, as set out in the initiative. The owner or possessor of a gun would face criminal liability for failing to secure a gun. In addition to compromising the personal safety of lawful gun owners, the initiative contains an unusual and punitive civil liability component. An owner or possessor who violates the gun-securing requirement, regardless of inadvertence, negligence, recklessness or harmful intent, would be strictly liable for any death, damage or injury that results from another person obtaining the gun, in the four years following the violation. Similar criminal and civil liability would apply when a gun is sold, given as a gift, loaned, or otherwise “transferred” to another person without first being locked or secured, unless one of the exceptions applies. Other parts of the initiative restrict the access to and use of guns by minors, and impose a reporting requirement for lost and stolen guns (with criminal and strict liability penalties for violations in both cases), and grant the state health authority the power to set standards for acceptable trigger locks, cable locks, and gun safes. Under Oregon law, once a petition to initiate new legislation is filed and found to comply with the initial legal requirements, the state attorney general must prepare a four-part ballot title. This consists of a caption, a “simple and understandable statement” of up to 25 words to describe the result if the initiative is approved by the voters, an analogous statement of the result if the measure is rejected, and last, a “concise and impartial” summary describing, generally, the objective of the initiative. Before this document is finalized, though, the general public has a limited period in which to provide written comments. Otherwise, citizens who continue to have concerns regarding the ballot title’s accuracy, scope or impartiality may apply to have a court review the proposed ballot title to ensure it is compliant and not misleading. The NRA filed extensive written comments on the draft ballot title for Initiative Petition 40 (see page 85 of the comments link). Following the public comment period, the attorney general certified a new and modified ballot title. Unfortunately, this certified ballot title gave rise to fresh concerns, which could only be addressed by court review. Accordingly, the NRA (through NRA Oregon State Director Keely Hopkins) and others initiated legal proceedings, asking the court to evaluate the wording. On March 5, the Supreme Court of Oregon issued its decision, ruling that the ballot title failed to comply with the statutory requirements. First, the caption was inaccurate and under inclusive. Although the initiative itself clearly applied to owners, possessors and transferors of guns, the caption referred exclusively to “owners.” “As written, the caption does not accurately reflect the scope of IP 40. It could cause potential petition signers and voters to incorrectly conclude that, if they do not own a firearm, IP 40 will not affect them.” The caption also failed to refer to the unusual “strict liability” provisions. “To adequately alert potential petition signers and voters to that substantial change in the law, the caption must identify the heightened liability that IP 40 would impose.” Other problems were found with the “yes result” statement (describing the results of a “yes” vote). This, like the caption, improperly referred only to “owners.” It also incorrectly implied that, under the initiative, firearms had to be secured only when “stored or transferred.” Voters and petition signers, though, were unlikely to interpret “stored” to include all of the “other common circumstances” in which firearms would have to be secured under the initiative. With this decision, the certified ballot title goes back to the state’s attorney general. “Now it’s up to the attorney general to correct those issues to ensure Oregon’s voters truly understand the unreasonable restrictions they are faced with accepting,” noted Ms. Hopkins. Significantly, these kinds of initiative measures are often proposed after duly elected legislators decide that the proposals are unworkable or unnecessary or otherwise lack merit. Earlier this year, Oregon’s legislators again rejected attempts to enact a firearm storage bill, HB 4005A, that essentially replicated the provisions of Initiative Petition 40. The NRA’s efforts now focus on three new, overlapping “gun safety” initiative petitions underway in Oregon: Initiative Petition 60 (ban on “large capacity” magazines, and increased restrictions, including age limits, wait periods, and transfer requirements on semiautomatic firearms defined to be “semiautomatic assault firearms”), Initiative Petition 61 (restrictions on the sale, purchase, and transfer of semiautomatic guns defined to be “semiautomatic assault firearms”), and Initiative Petition 62 (ban on “large capacity” magazines). A legal challenge to the ballot language of Initiative Petition 60 was filed in February, claiming that the wording is “deceptive and fails to adequately convey to voters the sweeping changes” that are proposed by the initiative. Court challenges to the ballot titles for Initiative Petitions 61 and 62 have since been filed, as well. Your NRA will keep you updated on future developments. Tags: NRA-ILA, NRA, In NRA Supported Lawsuit, Oregon’s Top Court, Rejects, Flawed “Gun Safety” Ballot Title, Description To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Professor, Punished for Not Using Preferred Pronouns, Appeals After Judge Dismisses Case
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 12:10 PM PDT Rachel del Guidice: A professor at an Ohio university is appealing a federal judge’s ruling that he contends compels him to say something he doesn’t agree with. “Professors don’t give up their First Amendment freedoms simply by choosing to teach,” said Travis Barham, senior counsel at Alliance Defending Freedom, a Christian legal aid group that represents the professor. Nicholas Meriwether, a philosophy professor at Shawnee State University in Portsmouth, Ohio, says he was “illegally disciplined” by his employer because he chose not to adhere to a male student’s insistence on being referred to with female titles and pronouns. “Dr. Meriwether received a written warning … threatening him with ‘further corrective actions’ if he does not start expressing the University’s desired message,” Barham said in an email to The Daily Signal, adding: “Public universities have no business trying to force people to express ideological beliefs that they do not hold,” Barham told The Daily Signal. “Dr. Meriwether remains committed to serving all students with respect, but he cannot express all messages or endorse all ideologies. “When the university tried to force him to do this and then punished him for exercising his rights, it violated the First Amendment,” Barham said. U.S. District Judge Susan Dlott threw out the lawsuit Feb. 12, and Alliance Defending Freedom announced Thursday that it is appealing her decision. Dlott, appointed by President Bill Clinton in 1995, is senior judge of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. Emilie Kao, director of the DeVos Center for Religion and Civil Society at The Heritage Foundation, told The Daily Signal in an email that Meriwether is being robbed of his constitutional rights. “Compelling a university professor to utter scientific falsehoods in the name of a political ideology is un-American,” Kao said. “The Constitution protects the freedom to speak according to one’s conscience. It must be protected on controversial issues like transgender ideology if diversity of thought and intellectual integrity are to be preserved.” Jonathan Butcher, a senior policy analyst in Heritage’s Center for Education Policy, said in a written statement provided to The Daily Signal that “students and professors should be allowed to speak freely on public policy issues of the day and not fear reprisal from the university based on positions the school has decided to take on such topics.” The Daily Signal is the multimedia news organization of The Heritage Foundation. Tags: Rachel del Guidice, The Daily Signal, Professor, Nicholas Meriwether, Punished for Not Using Preferred Pronouns, Appeals, After Judge Dismisses Case To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
If Not for the FBI’s PC Willful Ignorance, at Least 70 People Wouldn’t Have Been Killed
Posted: 16 Mar 2020 11:44 AM PDT by Robert Spencer: As if participating in the failed deep state coup against President Trump weren’t enough, the FBI has covered itself in glory once again. A new report released Wednesday documents how the feds missed opportunities to stop at least six lethal terror attacks on American soil. The report focuses on failures of “oversight” and “procedure,” but itself becomes part of the problem, in failing to note that the Bureau’s troubles go much deeper. According to the Washington Times, those six attacks killed 70 people, and each of their perpetrators “had been on the FBI’s radar.” Nonetheless, “agents quickly closed the cases after concluding they were not national security threats, Justice Department Inspector General Michael E. Horowitz said in the report.” The attackers, according to the Times, included these jihad terrorists:
Santiago was a convert to Islam who said that he committed his murders in the service of the Islamic State (ISIS). Horowitz observed that “the FBI has acknowledged that various weaknesses related to its assessment process may have impacted its ability to fully investigate certain counterterrorism assessment subjects, who later committed terrorist acts in the United States.” Of course it did, because the FBI is still institutionally committed to ignoring, downplaying, or denying the motivating ideology behind jihad terrorism. Failing to investigate suspected jihadis is all part of the same willful ignorance. The bureau doesn’t want to appear “Islamophobic” by scrutinizing these people too closely; such scrutiny would abet the impression that there is something about Islam that incites some believers to violence, and the feds have already ruled out that possibility. The Horowitz report won’t lead to the fixing of the problem, either. It makes scant mention of Islam and jihad, and makes no attempt whatsoever either to identify or explain the importance of the motivating ideology behind jihad terror attacks. This problem goes back to the early years of the Obama administration, and is the result of Obama’s deliberately chosen policy. On October 19, 2011, Farhana Khera of Muslim Advocates wrote a letter to John Brennan, who was then the assistant to the president on national security for Homeland Security and Counter-Terrorism. The letter was signed not just by Khera, but by the leaders of virtually all the significant Islamic groups in the United States: 57 Muslim, Arab, and South Asian organizations, many with ties to Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood, including the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), the Muslim American Society (MAS), the Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA), Islamic Relief USA; and the Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC). The letter denounced what it characterized as U.S. government agencies’ “use of biased, false and highly offensive training materials about Muslims and Islam,” as well as supposedly biased trainers (including me), and demanded that all such materials be removed, although the letter didn’t even attempt to prove that any of the objectionable material was actually inaccurate. Brennan assured Khera that all her demands would be met. He detailed other specific actions being undertaken, including “collecting all training materials that contain cultural or religious content, including information related to Islam or Muslims.” In reality, this material wouldn’t just be “collected”; it would be purged of anything that Farhana Khera and others like her found offensive—that is, any honest discussion of how Islamic jihadists use Islamic teachings to justify violence. And so it has been in the FBI and other agencies ever since. This is what has led to the failure of the intelligence community, and a great many of the procedural errors upon which the report does focus: agents in all too many cases simply didn’t know what to look for, or how to understand the significance of the information they did have. Unless and until this is corrected, these failures of oversight and procedure will continue, no matter what safeguards are put into place. Tags: Robert Spencer, Jihad Watch, PJMedia, FBI’s PC Willful Ignorance, 70 People, Have Been Killed To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
You are subscribed to email updates from ARRA News Service. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. |
Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
REDSTATE
Robert Mueller’s Biggest ‘Bombshell’ Indictment Just Got Dismissed With Prejudice
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the RedState.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions You can unsubscribe by clicking here. Or Send postal mail to: * Copyright RedState and its Content Providers. |
AMERICAN SPECTATOR
NBC
|
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: The 2020 Democratic race could be frozen in place after Tuesday’s primaries
It’s likely — if not certain — that tonight’s Democratic presidential primaries in Arizona, Florida and Illinois will be the last ones for the next two months.
And it’s unclear what, exactly, is going to happen today in Ohio, where the state’s governor said he wouldn’t open the state’s polling places, defying a judge who declined to postpone the state’s primary.
REUTERS/Aaron Josefczyk
It all freezes into place a Democratic nominating contest – with uncertainty about when it all begins again.
And that raises questions about the state of Bernie Sanders’ campaign (given that Joe Biden’s lead is going to grow after tonight’s contests), about the Democratic convention in July (will the health landscape improve by then?), and about whether states and the federal government can institute a vote-by-mail system for November.
Already, Georgia (originally set for March 24), Louisiana (April 4) and Kentucky (May 19) have postponed their primaries to later dates, as other upcoming states are almost guaranteed to follow.
Here is the state of the Democratic race heading into tonight’s contests: Joe Biden leads Bernie Sanders by 152 pledged delegates, according to NBC News’ count.
That’s with about half of all delegates now awarded, and it will be about 60 percent done after tonight (and depending on what happens in Ohio).
Biden has won 871 pledged delegates, or 50 percent of all pledged delegates allocated so far.
Sanders has won 719, or 42 percent.
To reach the magic number of 1,991 pledged delegates, Biden will need to win 50 percent of the remaining unallocated pledged delegates.
Sanders will need to win 56 percent.
Those numbers will change after tonight – most likely helping Joe Biden and hurting Bernie Sanders.
And then we’re going to have to wait.
|
TWEET OF THE DAY: Postponed (or not?)
|
Why President Trump’s tone changed on the coronavirus
President Trump’s tone certainly changed when it comes to the coronavirus.
“This is a bad one, this is a very bad one. This is bad in the sense that it’s so contagious,” he said yesterday.
Fox News changed its tone, too.
And the New York Times gives a possible explanation for Trump’s change.
The Times writes:
“Sweeping new federal recommendations announced on Monday for Americans to sharply limit their activities appeared to draw on a dire scientific report warning that, without action by the government and individuals to slow the spread of coronavirus and suppress new cases, 2.2 million people in the United States could die.”
More:
“The authors said that so-called mitigation policies alone — isolating people suspected of having the virus at home, quarantining their contacts and separating the most vulnerable people from others — might reduce the peak demand on the health care system by two-thirds and deaths by half if applied for three months. But that would still result in hundreds of thousands of deaths and in health systems “overwhelmed many times over,” they said.”
|
2020 VISION: Everything you need to know about the March 17 primaries
Four states hold their Democratic presidential primaries today, and here’s a breakdown of what you need to know about each contest – by final poll closing time.
7:30 pm ET: Ohio (136 pledged delegates at stake – unaffiliated and GOP voters can request a Dem ballot). NOTE: That’s assuming that the state’s primary is NOT postponed tonight.
8:00 pm ET: Florida, though most polling places in the state close at 7:00 pm ET (219 pledged delegates – closed primary for Democrats)
8:00 pm ET: Illinois: (155 pledged delegates – unaffiliated and GOP voters can request a Dem ballot)
10:00 pm ET: Arizona (67 pledged delegates – closed primary for Democrats)
Also in Illinois today, keep an eye on the Dan Lipinksi-versus-Marie Newman Democratic rematch in the state’s third congressional district. Newman, a progressive, narrowly lost to the antiabortion-rights incumbent two years ago.
|
Dispatches from NBC’s campaign embeds: On the eve of Primary Day, Bernie Sanders admitted that his campaign isn’t panning out quite the way he planned, per NBC’s Gary Grumbach. “We are winning the generational battle. Now, for whatever reason, and I plead guilty to this, maybe it’s some of my own doings or lack of doings, we’re doing poorly with older people that’s just, simply a fact,” he said during his virtual rally on Monday. “I gotta work on that,” Sanders admitted.
But the campaign’s national co-chair Nina Turner said they are not going to relent: “We are not relenting, we are pressing on towards the high prize which is justice, economic justice, political justice, social justice, and environmental justice,” she said. “We are going to continue to fight, to turn this thing around and, baby, we can do it because there is no force greater on this Earth than a conscious minded people on the move.”
Grumbach, along with NBC’s Marianna Sotomayor and Amanda Golden wrote more about what this campaign will continue to look like without in-person campaign events, and perhaps with postponed voting here.
|
DATA DOWNLOAD: And the number of the day is … 21,361
21,361.
That’s Joe Biden’s margin of victory over Bernie Sanders in Washington state – in the actual number of votes – with 99 percent in.
On Monday, a week after the contest took place on March 10, NBC News projected Biden the apparent winner in Washington, with Biden at 575,291 votes (38 percent) and Sanders at 553,930 (36 percent).
With Biden’s victory in Washington, that means he won five out of the six Democratic contests last week – with his sole defeat in North Dakota.
|
THE LID: Worried sick
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at the partisan divides in how Americans are viewing the coronavirus crisis.
|
ICYMI: News clips you shouldn’t miss
The president finally pivoted to talking about the gravity of the coronavirus situation. So what comes next?
The Dow slid 3,000 points yesterday on its worst day ever.
Ohio’s elections today are in absolute chaos as the governor and a federal judge spar over the right thing to do.
Will turnout be affected in today’s primaries? Maybe less than you think.
The White House is planning to ask for another major supplemental funding request for the federal response to the virus.
A week later — NBC News is projecting Joe Biden as the winner in the Washington primary.
|
CBS
|
|
|
IJR
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
|
TOWNHALL
FACEBOOK TWITTER |
ADVERTISEMENT | ||||||||
|
|
|
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions You can unsubscribe by clicking here. Or Send postal mail to: * Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers. |
REALCLEARPOLITICS
|
CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
|
TWITCHY
|
|
ReplyForward
|
HOT AIR
ADVERTISEMENT | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
NATIONAL REVIEW
|
|
NATIONAL JOURNAL
|
This email was sent to rickbulow74@live.com. If you no longer wish to receive these emails you may unsubscribe at any time.
GATEWAY PUNDIT
|
FRONTPAGE MAG
|
ReplyForward
|