MORNING NEWS BRIEFING – JULY 22, 2020

Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday July 22, 2020

THE DAILY SIGNAL

Jul 22, 2020

Good morning from Washington, where President Trump resumes briefings on COVID-19, with more discipline. Fred Lucas reports on that as well as charges against a couple who feared what “Black Lives Matter” marchers might do. On the podcast, Sen. Mike Lee has some wisdom for those who are defacing statues. Plus: bias at the nation’s premier African American museum; America’s homeland security chief on the chaos in Portland, Oregon; and the secretary of state’s human rights mission. On this date in 1862, President Abraham Lincoln tells his Cabinet that he will issue a proclamation to free slaves when the Union achieves a significant military victory—which comes at Antietam just over two months later.

COMMENTARY
Photo
By Jarrett Stepman
It’s clear that American institutions—whether they are our schools or national museums—are being used as vehicles to promote “critical race theory” and other divisive doctrines.
ANALYSIS
Photo
By Rachel del Guidice
“I think we need to start defunding those who hate America because they’re hating America on America’s dime,” says Sen. Mike Lee.
NEWS
Photo
By Fred Lucas
“Whether you like the mask or not, they have an impact, they’ll have an effect—and we need everything we can get,” says President Trump.
COMMENTARY
Photo
By David Ditch
The bill’s text—produced July 16—is a staggering 689 pages long, meaning that no representative’s office has had the time to properly vet it before the vote.
COMMENTARY
Photo
By Emilie Kao
As noted by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, the original 30 rights in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights have been expanded exponentially by the United Nations and the Council of Europe into 1,377 rights provisions in 64 agreements.
NEWS
Photo
By Fred Lucas
“Every Missourian has the right to protect their family and their personal property,” tweets Missouri Gov. Mike Parson.
NEWS
Photo
By Rachel del Guidice
“If you’re a violent rioter or looking to inflict damage on property or law enforcement officers, you need to find another line of work. We will not retreat,” says acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf.
LOGO-CHARCOAL_75percent.jpg

The Daily Signal is brought to you by more than half a million members of The Heritage Foundation.

How are we doing?
We welcome your comments, suggestions, and story tips. Please reply to this email or send us a note at comments@dailysignal.com.

The Daily Signal
214 Massachusetts Avenue, NE
Washington, DC 20002
(800) 546-2843

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 RESURGENT

THE EPOCH TIMES

Alternate text
Alternate text

Protect Your Retirement from COVID-19 with a Home Delivery Gold IRA. Delivered right to your doorstep. You don’t have to worry anymore.

 

Alternate text
Alternate text

“The shoe that fits one person pinches another; there is no recipe for living that suits all cases.”

 

CARL JUNG

 

Alternate text
FBI: Roy Den Hollander Identified as Suspect in Shooting at Judge’s House

FBI: Roy Den Hollander Identified as Suspect in Shooting at Judge’s House

US Calls on Chinese Regime to End Persecution of Falun Gong

US Calls on Chinese Regime to End Persecution of Falun Gong

Pelosi Says Trump Will Be Leaving ‘Whether He Knows It Yet or Not’

Pelosi Says Trump Will Be Leaving ‘Whether He Knows It Yet or Not’

Supreme Court Expedites NY Grand Jury Request for Trump Tax Returns

Supreme Court Expedites NY Grand Jury Request for Trump Tax Returns

‘The Sky Was Falling’: Memories of Growing Up Under Religious Persecution in China

‘The Sky Was Falling’: Memories of Growing Up Under Religious Persecution in China

Trump Says Daily Virus Briefings to Resume as Cases Surge

Trump Says Daily Virus Briefings to Resume as Cases Surge

Confederate Flag Proudly Displayed by Southerners: Trump

Confederate Flag Proudly Displayed by Southerners: Trump

Alternate text
Alternate text

You can rollover Your IRA/401K into Physical Gold and have it delivered to your doorstep. Find out how 1,000s of American retirees are protecting their future with a TAX FREE Home Delivery transfer… The only way to personally control your Gold IRA yourself. For a limited time only Red Rock Secured is offering up to $3,500 in free gold or silver on new qualifying accounts. Click here for your free guide and find out if you qualify.

 

Alternate text

 

Alternate text
Alternate text

 

Alternate text

Beijing’s coverup of the coronavirus outbreak, its heavy-handed tactics in Hong Kong, and what some are calling a genocide of the Uyghurs have forced many people to awaken to the chilling realities of the Chinese Communist Party.

 

Copyright © 2020 The Epoch Times, All rights reserved.

You are receiving this email because you opted in to receive newsletter communications from The Epoch Times.

 

Our mailing address is:

The Epoch Times

229 W. 28 St. Fl. 5
New York, NY 10001

Click here to unsubscribe.

DAYBREAK

Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
Having trouble viewing this email? View the web version.
The Daybreak Insider
SPONSORED BY
Pepperdine University
WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 2020
1.
Planned Parenthood Finally Coming to Grips with Racism of Founder

From Karen Seltzer, the chair of the New York affiliate’s board: “The removal of Margaret Sanger’s name from our building is both a necessary and overdue step to reckon with our legacy and acknowledge Planned Parenthood’s contributions to historical reproductive harm within communities of color.”  But they remain okay with killing babies (Hot Air). On June 6, Alexandra DeSanctis wrote “I wonder, too, whether these crusaders will train their gaze on one of our nation’s far more serious offenders of racial equality: Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger. She was, after all, a foremost proponent of the eugenics movement — motivated by her particular animus toward poor non-whites — and her campaign to legalize birth control was motivated in large part by her desire to prevent the “unfit” and “feeble-minded” from reproducing” (National Review). From Katie Pavlich: Slavery in America ended. Planned Parenthood’s racist and eugenic mission, led by Sanger, continues everyday. Planned Parenthood ends black lives, which was her goal, every day. This is simply a way to continue the coverup while carrying out her evil goals (Twitter).

2.
Hewitt: Trump Has a Solid Record to Run On

He ends with this: An often hysterical media endlessly chants the same anti-Trump refrains. But voters have to ask themselves: Which man do they want squaring off against Xi Jinping, rebuilding the economy, appointing judges, funding the military? (Washington Post). From David Limbaugh: Purveyors of conventional political wisdom miss the reality on the ground. They fail to grasp how much Trump supporters appreciate that he counters the liberal media narrative, that he’s calling out the anti-Americanism of the Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s and the insane radicalism of their energy-and-economy-destroying green agenda. Trump supporters don’t believe he’s inhumane for refusing to allow America to be paralyzed by fear, and for insisting that we reopen the economy and get our kids back to school. They deny that he’s racially insensitive because he believes we should protect our borders and shouldn’t kneel for the national anthem (Townhall).

Advertisement
3.
Massive, Angry Crowds Continue in Portland

Thousands crowded the streets and chanted, somewhat more peacefully early in the day (Twitter) though Portland claims there are no gatherings allowed of more than 25 people (Oregon).  They looted and set fires (Twitter). Townhall’s Julio Rosas looks at the hypocrisy of the New York Times and the polar opposite ways they frame this as opposed to how they framed the protests of the Tea Party (Twitter).  Erick Erickson argues to let Portland burn (Erickson).

4.
Ted Cruz Introduces Bill to Force City Leaders to Protect the Citizens

From the op-ed:  Local leaders who allow rioters to destroy lives and businesses need to be held accountable. That’s why I’m introducing the Restitution for Economic losses Caused by Leaders who Allow Insurrection and Mayhem Act—Reclaim for short. The bill would hold state and local officials liable when they abdicate their legal duty to protect the public in cases where death, serious bodily harm or significant property damage have occurred.

WSJ

5.
Over a Dozen Shot at Chicago Funeral Home

At a service for a shooting victim (Washington Times). About the time the gunfire rang out, the mayor of Chicago tweeted this: Under no circumstances will I allow Donald Trump’s troops to come to Chicago and terrorize our residents (Twitter). From Larry Elder: A Chicago funeral leaves at least 14 wounded—this after last weekend which left 12 dead. How many confederate generals were spotted leaving the scenes of the crime? (Twitter).

Advertisement
6.
Google Accused of Blacklisting Conservative Sights

Townhall, PragerU and Red State among them (The Federalist). Another story notes “The search engine powerhouse, which lamented President Trump’s election in 2016 and published a document entitled “The Good Censor”, was no longer showing results for conservative sites like The National Pulse, Breitbart, Citizen Free Press, the Daily Caller, Red State, The Bongino Report and more” (National Pulse). The American Spectator noticed they, too, had vanished in Google (Spectator).  From Rod Dreher: So, apparently it’s happening to other conservative writers and websites too, this sudden blacklisting by @Google. Is it a conscious choice by Google, or a hack? Whatever the truth, it’s a reminder that Google has far too much control over information access (Twitter). From Mollie Hemingway: One might assume it’s more a “test run” of how to more effectively interfere in the 2020 U.S. election than anything else (Twitter).

7.
Atlantic Finally Admits Police Abolitionist Story Based on False Narrative

After being confronted repeatedly by The Federalist, who did the homework the Atlantic editors neglected (The Federalist). From David Harsanyi: In the old days, a piece like this would be pulled, and someone would be in big trouble. Today you get bogus clarifications and no one cares. As AC once put it, the moral truth is more important than the factual one (Twitter).

8.
Democrats Plan Dirty Play if They Take the Senate

From the discussion with Democrat Chuck Schumer: When asked by reporters if, like presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, he would be open to ending the filibuster, he said it would be up for discussion if Democrats, who currently hold 47 Senate seats, win the majority. “Job number one is for us to get the majority. We don’t take anything for granted but it’s looking better and better,” he said. “Once we get the majority, we’ll discuss it in our caucus. Nothing’s off the table.”

National Review

Advertisement
9.
Major League Baseball Defends Disrespecting National Anthem

Justifying those who kneel in their official tweets (Red State).  Already, fans are calling for a boycott (Washington Times).

Copyright © 2020 DaybreakInsider.com

SUBSCRIPTION INFO

This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It is only sent to people who signed up from one of the Salem Media Group network of websites OR a friend might have forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy.

Unsubscribe from The Daybreak Insider

OR Send postal mail to:
The Daybreak Insider Unsubscribe
6400 N. Belt Line Rd., Suite 200, Irving, TX 75063

Were you forwarded this edition of The Daybreak Insider?
Get your own free subscription

Copyright © 2020 Salem Media Group and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.

THE SUNBURN

The Florida Chamber Foundation’s Prosperity Initiative has pored over the data.

It knows how many Florida children live in poverty, and it knows what parts of the state they live in down to the ZIP code level.

But just because half of Florida’s poorest children live in 150 of the state’s 983 ZIP codes doesn’t mean life is peachy in the other 833: Inequality of opportunity exists in every corner of the state.

Opportunity inequity and child poverty exist in every corner of Florida. Image via AP.

On Wednesday, the Florida Prosperity Initiative is holding a discussion on what businesses can do to provide those children with a pathway out of poverty.

The 10 a.m. virtual event, titled “Ending Inequality of Opportunity,” will see Greater Gainesville Chamber President Eric Godet, Broward College President Gregory Haile Rep. Rene Plasencia join Florida Chamber President Mark Wilson to discuss what those pathways might look like and how businesses can become part of the solution.

The discussion kicks off with a primer on Florida’s equity gaps and ways to ensure all voices are heard, from the poorest ZIP code to the most prosperous.

The panel will then discuss how to create safer communities and explain how the justice system could work smarter instead of harder.

Wednesday’s event is part of a series that continues with a July 29 panel on child care and families; an Aug. 7 overview of health care and food security; an Aug. 12 talk on education and jobs; and an Aug. 19 discussion on the cost of living in Florida.

More information and registration details are available on the Florida Chamber website.

Situational awareness
Tweet, tweet:

@RealDonaldTrump: Mail-In Voting, unless changed by the courts, will lead to the most CORRUPT ELECTION in our Nation’s History!

@RealDonaldTrump: Looking forward to live sports, but any time I witness a player kneeling during the National Anthem, a sign of great disrespect for our Country and our Flag, the game is over for me!

@MLB: It has never been about the military or the flag. The players and coaches are using their platforms to peacefully protest.

@MattGaetzLiz Cheney has worked behind the scenes (and now in public) against @realDonaldTrump and his agenda. House Republicans deserve better as our Conference Chair. Liz Cheney should step down or be removed.

@BernieSanders: Rep. Ted Yoho should spend his time fighting for the thousands of Floridians who are about to lose unemployment benefits and face evictions, not denigrate and insult a champion of working families like @AOC. We need more AOC and less Yoho in Congress.

@RepJoseOliva: Congratulations to @FredPiccoloJr, a talented and principled professional. I was very fortunate to work with him in the Speaker’s Office and more so to call him a friend. Gov. [RonDeSantis will be well served.

@MDixon55: Best part of not starting until next week is @FredPiccoloJr gets to write all the member tweets congratulating him on his new gig

@Ylichterman: my new favorite thing is when meetings are phone calls instead of zooms

Days until
MLB starts — 1; WNBA starts — 3; PLL starts — 3; TED conference rescheduled — 4; Florida Bar exams begin in Tampa — 6; NBA season restart in Orlando — 9; NHL resumes — 10; Florida primaries for 2020 state legislative/congressional races — 27; Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee begins — 28; “Mulan” premieres (rescheduled) — 30; Indy 500 rescheduled — 32; Republican National Convention begins in Charlotte — 33; NBA draft lottery — 34; Rev. Al Sharpton’s D.C. March — 37; U.S. Open begins — 40; “A Quiet Place Part II” premieres — 44; Rescheduled running of the Kentucky Derby — 45; Rescheduled date for French Open — 60; First presidential debate in Indiana — 69; “Wonder Woman” premieres — 72; Preakness Stakes rescheduled — 73; First vice presidential debate at the University of Utah — 76; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 82; Second presidential debate scheduled at Miami — 85; NBA draft — 86; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 86; NBA free agency — 89; Third presidential debate at Belmont — 92; 2020 General Election — 104; “Black Widow” premieres — 111; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 113; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 121; “No Time to Die” premieres — 121; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 132; “Top Gun: Maverick” premieres — 154; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 200; New start date for 2021 Olympics — 366; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 374; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 471; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 569; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 611; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 653; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 807.
Corona Florida
Florida adds more than 10,000 coronavirus cases as state total climbs past 360,300“ via Michelle Marchante of the Miami Herald — Florida’s Department of Health on Monday confirmed 10,347 additional new cases of COVID-19, bringing the state’s total to 360,394 known cases. There were also 90 new Florida resident deaths announced, bringing the statewide resident death toll to 5,072. As of 3:30 p.m. Monday, there were 9,489 COVID-19 patients admitted to hospitals throughout the state, according to the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration dashboard. Of those, 2,052 were in Miami-Dade, 1,266 in Broward, 624 in Palm Beach, and 15 in Monroe County, according to the agency.

Ron DeSantis believes Florida will soon contain virus outbreak” via Terry Spencer, Bobby Caina Calvan and Kelli Kennedy of The Associated Press — DeSantis expressed confidence that Florida will soon contain its coronavirus outbreak and that hospitals can handle the current influx of patients, putting forward a positive case even as the state’s average daily death toll is now the nation’s worst. DeSantis told reporters at a state Capitol news conference that hospital admissions and the percentage of tests coming back positive seem to be plateauing or declining in much of the state and that hospitals have sufficient capacity in their intensive care units and overall. “The trend is much better today than it was two weeks ago,” DeSantis said. “I am confident that we will get through this. I am confident that the folks … in our hospital systems will continue to do a great job and meet the demand. There is a lot of anxiety and fear out there and I think we are going to be able to get through it. We are not there yet.”

Volunteers load groceries into cars during a food distribution event at St. Monica’s Catholic Church in Miami Gardens. Image via AP.

ICU capacity not a concern for DeSantis, hospital experts” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — As more than 9,500 people are currently hospitalized for COVID-19 and more than 50 hospitals’ ICUs are at capacity, DeSantis wants to assure Floridians that hospitals aren’t overloaded. Data released by the Agency for Health Care Administration doesn’t convey hospitals’ abilities to add beds or transfer patients to other facilities within their medical system, the Governor sought to clarify with a Tuesday roundtable with medical leaders. “Just understand, we have a lot of rural communities and hospitals that have zero ICU capacity under any circumstances,” DeSantis said. “They just don’t have them, and if there is a need for that level of care, then patients are sent to areas that are a little bit more populated that have it.” As of Tuesday afternoon, 9,508 patients are hospitalized for COVID-19.

Should federal unemployment benefits be extended? DeSantis won’t weigh in.” via Lawrence Mower and Kirby Wilson of the Tampa Bay Times — For hundreds of thousands of Floridians, federal unemployment payments have been a lifeline during the coronavirus pandemic. Those payments are set to expire Saturday. Yet when asked whether Congress should extend them, DeSantis avoided answering the question during a Tuesday news conference. “I haven’t been following what they’re doing,” he told a reporter. A spokeswoman for the governor did not respond when asked the same question on Monday. Whether to extend the federal $600-per-week benefits is one of the most pressing issues facing Congress, which reconvened this week with a focus on debating another coronavirus relief package.

Back to school?
School reopening ‘strings’ bedevil stimulus talks” via Nicole Gaudiano, Michael Stratford and Juan Perez of POLITICO Florida — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Republicans will include $105 billion as part of the economic stimulus bill they plan to roll out this week to ensure “educators have the resources they need to safely reopen.” Claiming to one-up House Democrats, the majority leader said the impending bill includes even more education funding than the competing plan the House passed in May, H.R. 6800 (116). Democratic leaders say the Republican offer is dead, however, if those dollars are tied to Trump’s demands that schools reopen for in-person instruction this fall. “The devil is in the details,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer says ‘the devil is in the details’ when it comes to negotiations for stimulus.

Virus concerns nudge some teachers toward classroom exits” via Kantele Franko of The Associated Press — As pressure mounts for teachers to return to their classrooms this fall, concerns about health risks from the coronavirus are pushing many toward alternatives, including career changes, as others mobilize to delay school reopenings in hard-hit areas. Teachers’ unions have begun pushing back on what they see as unnecessarily aggressive timetables for reopening. The largest unions say the timing should be guided by whether districts have the ability, and funding, to implement protocols and precautions to protect students and teachers, even if that means balking at calls from Trump to resume in-person instruction. On Monday, a teachers union filed a lawsuit to block the reopening of schools in Florida, where state officials have ordered school districts to reopen campuses as an option unless local health officials deem that to be unsafe.

‘Not the same kids’: Preparing for social, emotional challenges when students return to school” via Casey Chapter of the Tallahassee Democrat — On the first day of school, students will not hug friends after months away from the classroom. They will not share smiles with teachers who never got a formal goodbye. Rather, with half their faces covered while filing off school buses, children in Leon County Schools will receive temperature checks and medical screenings from staff. Then, they’ll sit in socially-distanced classrooms. Returning to school during the coronavirus pandemic will be a different experience for every student, but for some it may be jarring. As School Board Chair Dee Dee Rasmussen said during a recent board meeting: “The kids that left us at Spring Break are not the same kids that will be coming back.”

Leon County School Board Chair Dee Dee Rasmussen says the kids that left for Spring Break are not the same ones who will be coming back. Image via the Tallahassee Democrat.

Aug. 31 is proposed new start date for Palm Beach County schools” via Lois K. Solomon of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Palm Beach County students will likely have to wait three more weeks for the start of their virtual classes. The proposed new opening date is Aug. 31. The School Board will vote on Wednesday whether to select that Monday instead of Aug. 10, the previously planned start date. The board is planning to train teachers in the coming weeks in how best to teach classes online in new formats that they say will provide an improved learning experience over the spring semester. The later start also allows time for the delivery of 82,000 laptop computers to be used at home by needy students. Those deliveries are expected to begin Aug. 17, School Board member Karen Brill said.

— “First day of school in Escambia County will likely be delayed two weeks” via Kevin Robinson of the Pensacola News Journal

— “Okaloosa superintendent recommends pushing back start date to Aug. 31” via Wendy Victora of the NWF Daily News

— “Santa Rosa County schools look to push back first day, offer remote learning option” via Jim Little of the Pensacola News Journal

School nurses furloughed as classes go online” via John Pacenti of The Palm Beach Post — Some 233 school health employees, woven into the educational experience, on Monday became collateral damage to the economic ravages of the coronavirus pandemic. Palm Beach County’s Health Care District, which employs the nurses, health care technicians and their supervisors, confirmed on Monday that it made the “difficult decision” to furlough them. The furlough follows one that came in March. “How can a nurse be out of a job during a pandemic? That just blows my mind,” said one school nurse who declined to be identified. The reason cited for the furloughs is simple: The county’s school district announced it would start the school year with remote learning with no end in sight. Some of these nurses will not be coming back even when in-person classes resume.

Meanwhile …“Rick Scott’s grandchildren will be ‘distance learning’ when school starts” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Scott wants schools open, but he said his grandchildren won’t be in them. On Tuesday’s edition of Varney and Co. on the Fox Business Network, the first-term Senator from Naples said that while parents should have “choice,” that choice should include distance learning in addition to five days in brick and mortar buildings. “My daughters are going to be more focused on distance learning right now to make sure their children are safe,” Scott told Varney. “Other parents are going to want to make sure their kids are in the classroom.” Scott said that parents have their own reasons for sending their kids to school, such as free lunches. “Some [parents] are going to do it because it’s a way for students to get a subsidized meal, things like that,” Scott said.

Corona local
Miami-Dade changes COVID reporting calculations to align with state” via Daniel Chang and Ben Conarck of the Miami Herald — After months of posting a higher rate of positive test results for COVID-19 than the state, Miami-Dade County officials have changed the way they calculate and report the metric. The county changed the way it calculates the rate in order to more closely align with the Florida Department of Health’s method of arriving at the local positive test rate for new cases. The county’s rate has been higher than the state’s for months, a discrepancy that caused difficulty for local leaders trying to determine whether to impose closures and other safety measures. On Tuesday, the New Normal dashboard also was changed to add a page showing the state’s positivity rate chart for Miami-Dade.

South Florida hospitals scramble to reinforce nurses, treatments as COVID surge continues” via Ben Conarck and Daniel Chang of the Miami Herald — Nearly six weeks into South Florida’s COVID resurgence, the region’s largest nonprofit hospital system has been pushed deep into surge mode, with Baptist Health of South Florida treating 831 COVID patients. That’s over a third of the roughly 2,300 hospitalized with the disease throughout Miami-Dade, and nearly double the number of COVID patients being treated at the county’s public hospital, Jackson Health System, which had 453 patients on Tuesday morning. Baptist Health, Jackson Health and Memorial Healthcare System in Broward have all shouldered high patient loads for weeks, and all reported operating near capacity despite having recently received new shipments of remdesivir, one of the few treatments proven to reduce hospital stays.

With the spread of COVID-19 increasing, many hospitals in South Florida are working overtime to reinforce nurses and treatments.

Miami puts cops on alert for crackdown on wearing masks” via Wells Dusenbury of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Miami is cracking down on wearing masks this week, assembling a team of 39 police officers dedicated solely to enforcing mask violations amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Mayor Francis Suarez announced the stepped-up enforcement effort Tuesday — one of the many ways that local governments across South Florida are trying to curb the virus’ spread while holding off on issuing stay-at-home orders. The decision comes five days after Miami-Dade commissioners passed an ordinance giving all of the county’s code and fire inspectors the power to issue tickets of up to $100 for individuals and $500 for businesses, bringing an increase to the number of officials — in addition to police — who can enforce the rules.

University of Miami will turn a dorm into COVID-19 quarantine space” via Alexis Masciarella of the Miami New Times — The state’s public universities have said they’ll offer in-person classes with strict guidelines. The University of Miami, meanwhile, is already making plans for what will happen when one the inevitable occurs and one or more of its 17,000 students gets sick. UM will quarantine sick students at Mahoney-Pearson Residential College, a dorm typically reserved for upperclassmen. Mahoney-Pearson meets CDC guidelines with its availability of single dorm rooms and private bathrooms that will be set aside and utilized for quarantine purposes if needed. Nearby hotels will be used if space at Mahoney-Pearson is unavailable.

UM will quarantine sick students at Mahoney-Pearson Residential College, a dorm typically reserved for upperclassmen.

Assignment editors — Rep. Shevrin Jones, Broward Mayor Dale Holness, Broward County Commissioner Dr. Barbara Sharief, Broward Sheriff Gregory Tony, West Park Vice Mayor Brian Johnson and West Park Commissioner Felicia Brunson will hold a news conference to discuss the ongoing health crisis in the importance of COVID-19 community testing, 9 a.m., Koinonia Worship Center and Village, 4900 W Hallandale Beach Blvd., Hollywood. RSVP by email at jessica.garafola@myfloridahouse.gov with subject line “Press Conference RSVP.”

Maskless block party in western PBC fuels talk of Glades curfew” via Eliot Kleinberg of The Palm Beach Post — Frustrated by reports of a 600-person weekend block party in Pahokee that saw neither face masks nor social distancing, Palm Beach County’s chief administrator says she’s considering a curfew for the Glades during the coronavirus pandemic if there’s no better way to stop large crowds from gathering and potentially spreading the illness. “I don’t foresee having to implement a curfew,” Verdenia Baker said on Monday, “but I will if I have to.” Public health officials have warned throughout the pandemic that large, informal gatherings such as block parties are prime spots for spreading the virus, which people pass to each other through droplets of saliva. Many have called for limits of 10 people in any group setting. The crowd gathered Saturday night about three blocks from the center of the town along Lake Okeechobee, the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office reported.

More local
‘It is not improving.’ Pinellas hospitals give a grim coronavirus update.” via Mark Puente of the Tampa Bay Times — As the coronavirus continues to spread across Florida, leaders of Pinellas County’s top hospitals urged the County Commission to keep the local emergency order in place and to continue the requirement to make people wear masks in public. Hospital executives from AdventHealth, BayCare and HCA told commissioners about nursing shortages, slow test results, rising virus cases, intensive care units filling up with patients and a drop in the average age of people getting sick from COVID-19. Those younger patients are now requiring advanced medical care to fight the virus, doctors said. “We have not made a huge dent in flattening the curve,” said Dr. Larry Feinman, chief medical officer for 18 HCA hospitals in West Florida. “It is not improving and you need to know that.”

Pinellas County Commissioners keep social distance in their first in-person meeting in months. After medical professionals told them ‘it is not improving’ the Commission voted 7-0 to extend the county’s emergency order. Image via Pinellas County Commission.

Tampa General doctor: ‘our slope actually is a little above’ NYC at its coronavirus peak” via Seán Kinane of WMNF — Florida now has more average daily deaths than any other state. Dr. Jason Wilson, the Medical Director of the Clinical Decision Unit at Tampa General Hospital, says Hillsborough County’s coronavirus infection numbers are very close to New York City’s at the height of the pandemic there. Dr. Wilson said despite the immense infection numbers, Florida may be reaching a plateau. A month ago, Florida was averaging 33 coronavirus deaths a day. Overall, 5,317 people have died in Florida from COVID-19 since March 1 and nearly 370,000 have tested positive for the disease. About 19% of tests have returned positive in Florida over the last week, compared to 10% a month ago and 2.3% in late May.

Hillsborough commission to kill emergency group” via C.T. Bowen of the Tampa Bay Times — Hillsborough County is now poised to kill its Emergency Policy Group. Commission Chairman Les Miller Jr. proposed last week to keep the group in place to address weather emergencies, but to strip it of its authority to deal with the coronavirus pandemic. Instead, the Hillsborough County Commission voted unanimously Tuesday to advance a planned ordinance change abolishing the group entirely. The vote came after Fire Chief Dennis Jones said the county should have a unified response to all hazards and should not have a separate body to respond to hurricanes. “I think it will save lives,” said Commissioner Pat Kemp. “… It’s not working well for us at this time.”

Corona nation
Donald Trump backtracks on masks, calling them ‘patriotic’ after allies split” via David R. Baker and Margaret Newkirk of Bloomberg — Trump’s administration on Monday pushed to encourage mask-wearing, explicitly endorsing a measure widely seen as crucial to stemming the coronavirus pandemic, and potentially quelling a bitter debate that experts say costs lives. The president, who for months resisted covering his face in public, tweeted that “it is Patriotic to wear a face mask when you can’t socially distance.” The reversal followed polls that showed Trump’s refusal to champion masks was out of step with citizens worried by rising case counts nationwide. It also comes as Republican governors, facing outbreaks spiraling beyond control, begin to break with Trump on the issue.

Donald Trump backtracks on wearing masks, now calling it ‘patriotic.’

Former CDC chief: Most states fail to report data key to controlling the coronavirus pandemic” via Lena H. Sun of The Washington Post — Six months after the first coronavirus case appeared in the United States, most states are failing to report critical information needed to track and control the resurgence of COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, according to an analysis released Tuesday by a former top Obama administration health official. The analysis is the first comprehensive review of covid-19 data that all 50 states and Washington, D.C., are using to make decisions about policies on mask-wearing and opening schools and businesses. Some essential information that would show response effectiveness is not being reported at all. Only two states report data on how quickly contact tracers were able to interview people who test positive to learn about potential contacts.

U.S. lab giant warns of new COVID-19 testing crunch in autumn” via David Crow of The Financial Times — The largest laboratory company in the U.S. warned it will be impossible to increase coronavirus testing capacity to cope with demand during the autumn flu season, in a sign that crippling delays will continue to hamper the US response to the pandemic. James Davis, executive vice president of general diagnostics at Quest Diagnostics, said “other solutions need to be found” to detect positive patients in addition to the nasal swab tests currently in use. The comments come as testing companies including Quest and its main rival LabCorp are already struggling to keep up with demand.

Corona economics
Republicans back stimulus checks but payroll tax cut in question” via Laura Litvan and Erik Wasson of Bloomberg — Republicans crafting their own plan for a new U.S. virus-relief bill broadly endorsed a fresh round of stimulus checks to individuals, extended supplemental jobless benefits and more money for testing while voicing doubts over Trump’s desired payroll tax cut. The details remained in flux Tuesday as GOP senators hashed out their opening bid in negotiations with Democrats on legislation to prop up the hobbled U.S. economy. The differences between the GOP and White House threatens to push any action on the stimulus into August. A linchpin for Republicans is Trump’s insistence on cutting or suspending the payroll tax paid by employers and employees, which funds Social Security and Medicare. Trump has suggested he might not sign a bill without the payroll tax cut.

Mitch McConnell and Senate Republicans are crafting their own virus relief bill, which will include another round of stimulus checks. Image via Bloomberg.

Florida adds 120,000 new unemployment claims in one week” via Drew Dixon of Florida Politics — Floridians filed more than 120,000 new unemployment claims in the past week as the depths of the coronavirus outbreak linger well into the summer, according to Florida Department of Economic Opportunity data released this week. Total unemployment claims increased to 3.18 million since the pandemic began to sweep through Florida in March, up from 3.06 million the week prior. There was a slight slowdown in jobless claims last week, more at the pace of late June and early July. And new claims are far from the 500,000 claims filed weekly in the early months of the economic slowdown.

DeSantis stays quiet on liability issues” via Christine Sexton of the News Service of Florida — Twenty-one Republican governors sent a letter this week to congressional leaders arguing that businesses, health care workers and schools need lawsuit protections because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but DeSantis did not sign-on. Congress is considering another COVID-19 relief package, and many Republicans contend that liability protections need to be part of any legislation that is ultimately passed and sent to Trump. DeSantis was one of five Republican governors who did not sign on to the request, along with the governors of Georgia, Massachusetts, South Dakota and Vermont. It wasn’t the first time that DeSantis, who is an attorney, has been mum on the issue of lawsuit protections.

Banks eye ditching real estate with workers wanting to stay home” via Jennifer Surane of Bloomberg — Roughly 61% of bank executives surveyed by Accenture Plc said they don’t expect all of their employees to be called back to the office, and more than 40% said they plan to reduce their real estate footprint as a result of the coronavirus pandemic and their new workforce strategies. Many financial-services firms are considering a hybrid model in which employees come to the office three days a week and work from home the other two, according to Laurie McGraw, head of Accenture’s capital markets practice in North America. The country’s biggest banks have slowly begun returning some workers to offices in recent weeks after sending them home in March to slow the spread of the virus. Still, some have had to pull back on their efforts as states around the U.S. see a spike in cases.

More corona
Double-shot COVID-19 vaccines multiply immunization challenges” via James Paton, Robert Langreth and Stephanie Baker of Bloomberg — When it comes to protecting the world from the coronavirus, two doses of a vaccine may be better than one. But doubling the number of jabs each person needs could complicate efforts to immunize billions of people. The latest results from front-runners in the sprint to come up with a vaccine, including the University of Oxford-AstraZeneca Plc partnership and Moderna Inc., highlight that prospect. Both efforts are conducting final-stage testing with two doses. Producing vaccines and deploying them to the world’s population in the midst of a pandemic would be a massive feat even if researchers are able to deliver single-dose inoculations. A need for two would make manufacturing and logistics even more complex. Those challenges would get even tougher if a vaccine’s efficacy wanes over time and repeat doses are needed, potentially every year.

Two doses of a vaccine make vaccinating billions of people considerably more challenging.

What Evan Power is reading — “Wearing a mask ‘reduces deadly power of virus’” via The Times — Masks do help to protect the wearer, as well as people they meet, according to research by infectious disease experts. A team at the University of California, San Francisco, says masks can reduce the amount of virus that gets into someone’s system, meaning they do not get as badly sick. In England, face coverings are mandatory on public transport and will become so in shops and supermarkets from July 24. The requirement appears to have strong public support, with only 19% of Britons opposing compulsory wearing of masks in shops, according to a survey last week by the research company ORB International.

Smoldering
Trump’s show of federal force sparking alarm in cities” via Colleen Long, Ben Fox and Jill Colvin of The Associated Press — Trump is using the Department of Homeland Security in unprecedented ways as he tries to bolster his law and order credentials by making a heavy-handed show of force in cities around the nation in the lead-up to the November elections. Trump has already deployed Homeland Security agents to Portland on the grounds of protecting federal buildings from protesters, drawing intense criticism from local leaders who say the federal presence has only exacerbated tensions rather than promoting public safety. Under Trump’s latest plan, yet to be publicly announced, about 150 Homeland Security Investigations agents would go to Chicago to help local law enforcement deal with a spike in crime.

Chicago police and activists crowd around a vehicle that tried to drive through the protesters’ circle in Chicago. Image via AP.

Majority of voters say U.S. society is racist as support grows for Black Lives Matter” via Sabrina Saddiqui of The Wall Street Journal — Voters in growing numbers believe that Black and Hispanic Americans are discriminated against, and a majority of 56% holds the view that American society is racist, a new Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll finds. The poll finds that Americans of all races and age groups share significant concerns about discrimination nearly two months after George Floyd, a Black man, was killed in police custody in Minneapolis. Nearly three-quarters of Americans, 71%, believe that race relations are either very or fairly bad.

Hate speech has soared online since George Floyd’s death” via Sara Fischer of Axios — Since the day after Floyd’s death on May 26, the rate of hate speech online in the U.S., as tracked by one digital measurement firm, has been nearly three times higher than typical. On June 3, at the height of nationwide protests, DoubleVerify, which uses its own technology to scan pages online so advertisers can avoid objectionable content, says instances of hate speech were more than 4.5 times higher than usual, the highest-ever rate it has measured to date. States with heavy protests experienced the highest levels of hate speech online.

How a one-man Black Lives Matter protest has tested Miami town’s police force” via Aaron Leibowitz and Charles Rabin of the Miami Herald — When 20-year-old Sebastian De La Hoz embarked on a one-man Black Lives Matter protest from the Freedom Tower in downtown Miami last month, he walked for hours, finding himself 10 miles away in the sleepy coastal town of Bay Harbor Islands, north of Miami Beach, as the sun went down. His June 4 protest, 10 days after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, was seemingly the only BLM action to reach the small, mostly white community. And his subsequent arrest for blocking traffic became not only an ordeal for him, but also a test for the police department when one officer-involved questioned the decision.

BLM organizer grabbed flags from a Cubans for Trump caravan. Now he faces robbery charge” via David Ovalle and Charles Rabin of the Miami Herald — One of the chief organizers of Black Lives Matters protests in Miami is facing felony charges after he was accused of stealing a flag from a car during a recent Cubans for Trump caravan in downtown Miami. Jonathan Gartrelle, has been one of the most visible protest figures over weeks of protests in Miami over police brutality. He was jailed Monday night and released early Tuesday after posting bond. The arrest comes as the Miami police department has stepped up arrests on Black Lives Matter protesters in recent days, charging those they say are obstructing traffic. Gartrelle himself was struck by an SUV during the Cubans for Trump caravan on Saturday after stepping in front of the vehicle on the roadway, although police claimed he did not want to pursue charges.

South Beach resident Jonathan Gartrelle participates in a BLM protest in Wynwood. Gartrelle is now facing felony theft charges for stealing a flag from a car. Image via the Miami Herald.

Pensacola attorneys say there are no legal grounds to stop Confederate monument removal” via Kevin Robinson of the Pensacola News Journal — The Sons of Confederate Veterans, Save Southern Heritage and other groups obtained an emergency temporary restraining order to prevent the city from removing the controversial monument. They argued taking down the monument would violate Pensacola’s own historic preservation and archaeological review ordinances, as well Florida statutes against disturbing tombs with “possible historical human remains.” Pensacola Mayor Grover Robinson said city attorney Susan Woolf thoroughly reviewed applicable laws before the City Council voted to remove the monument last week. “We don’t have any remains of any soldiers that were buried there,” Robinson said.

D.C. matters
Trump aims to bar those in U.S. illegally from reapportionment” via Kevin Freking and Mike Schneider of The Associated Press — Trump signed a memorandum Tuesday that seeks to bar people in the U.S. illegally from being counted in congressional reapportionment, a move that drew immediate criticism and promises of court challenges on constitutional grounds. Trump said that including people who are in the country illegally in the apportionment process “would create perverse incentives and undermine our system of government.” Reapportionment is the process for redistributing seats in the U.S. House of Representatives based on changes in population found in each decennial census. The Supreme Court blocked the administration’s effort to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census form, with a majority saying the administration’s rationale for the citizenship question appeared to be contrived.

Donald Trump signed a memorandum barring those in the country illegally from counting toward congressional reapportionment. Image via AP.

Matt Gaetz demands Liz Cheney be removed from House GOP leadership” via Axios — U.S. Rep. Gaetz called on House Republican Conference chair Liz Cheney to “step down or be removed” after a heated conference meeting on Tuesday. His call came after U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan and other members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus attacked Cheney, the most senior female Republican in the House, for breaking with Trump on several occasions and supporting a primary opponent against Rep. Thomas Massie. Behind the scenes, about five or six members of the House GOP conference are upset at Cheney, but the majority support how she has carried herself, a source familiar with the meeting told Axios’ Alayna Treene.

Democrats defend Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez after tense exchange with Ted Yoho” via Sarah Ferris of POLITICO — Democrats are rallying to the defense of Ocasio-Cortez after she was reportedly verbally harassed by a Republican lawmaker outside of the Capitol on Monday. The progressive New York Democrat was confronted by Yoho over her views that joblessness and poverty have caused a surge of crime in New York City in recent weeks, a confrontation that was witnessed and recounted by a reporter of The Hill newspaper. “I never spoke to Rep. Yoho before he decided to accost me on the steps of the nation’s Capitol yesterday,” Ocasio-Cortez tweeted Tuesday in response to the story. Yoho called Ocasio-Cortez “disgusting” when he walked past her on the steps of the Capitol on Monday, referring to her comments on crime. “You are out of your freaking mind,” he said.

Statewide
Fred Piccolo is named DeSantis spokesperson” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — Piccolo, the communications director for the Florida Speaker of the House, will move to a new role as the chief spokesperson for DeSantis. Piccolo replaces Helen Aguirre Ferré, who was named Thursday the new executive director of the Florida Republican Party. Piccolo is a native of Buffalo, New York, who moved to Florida in 1984 and attended high school in St. Petersburg. He attended the University of Central Florida, graduating with a degree in history and economics, and earned a law degree from Stetson University. Piccolo has been the primary spokesperson for the last two speakers of the Florida House of Representatives, José Oliva of Miami Lakes and former state Representative and current Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran.

Congratulations to Fred Piccolo, who has been named Ron DeSantis’ new communications director. Image via Twitter.

University system fights fee refunds case” via the News Service of Florida — The state university system is asking a Leon County circuit judge to toss out a potential class-action lawsuit in which students are seeking partial refunds of fees they paid for the spring semester. The lawsuit stems from universities shutting down their campuses because of the coronavirus pandemic and moving to online classes. The plaintiffs argue they should receive partial refunds of such expenses as activities fees, athletics fees and transportation fees. But in a motion to dismiss the case, attorneys for the university system’s Board of Governors argued, in part, that the system’s fee structure is established in state law.

Challenge to dog racing ban goes to appeals court” via the News Service of Florida — A legal challenge to a 2018 constitutional amendment that will end greyhound racing in Florida has gone to a federal appeals court. The industry group Support Working Animals, Inc., and individual plaintiffs filed a notice they Are appealing a June 12 decision by U.S. District Judge Mark Walker, who granted a request by Attorney General Ashley Moody to dismiss the case. As is common, the notice does not detail arguments the plaintiffs will make at the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The lawsuit argues that the voter-approved ballot measure violates a series of rights under the U.S. Constitution, including equal-protection rights because horse racing will be allowed to continue at pari-mutuel facilities while dog racing will be blocked.

John Couriel disqualification sought in Renatha Francis appointment case” via the News Service of Florida — Attorneys for state Rep. Geraldine Thompson are seeking the disqualification of Justice Couriel from a case challenging the appointment of Palm Beach County Circuit Judge Francis to the Florida Supreme Court. DeSantis announced the appointments of Couriel and Francis to the Supreme Court. While Couriel has started serving as a justice, Francis is ineligible to serve on the high court until Sept. 24, when she will mark her 10th year as a member of The Florida Bar. Thompson filed a lawsuit contending that the Florida Supreme Court Judicial Nominating Commission “exceeded the limits of its authority” by including Francis’ name on a list of nine nominees sent to DeSantis.

Utility regulators to eye COVID-19 customer impacts” via the News Service of Florida — The Florida Public Service Commission has scheduled a meeting to get briefed on the financial impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on utility customers. During the July 29 meeting, utilities will discuss issues such as the numbers of customers who are late in making payments or who have stopped making payments and the resulting amount of “bad debt,” according to a notice for the meeting. Early in the pandemic, utilities took steps such as suspending service disconnections for nonpayment of bills. But as the pandemic has continued, at least some utilities are moving toward resuming more-normal business operations.

FEMA stands firm on Oct. 11 for tenants at Bay County camps to find permanent housing” via Jacqueline Bostick of The Panama City News-Herald — For Cathy Coy, Oct. 11 is coming too soon. The date is the deadline for the 49-year-old and her fellow FEMA tenants in temporary housing units to find permanent housing. “Hopefully, it all comes together and they do something (else). Otherwise, good luck getting me out of here,” Coy said, reaching down to pet her rescue dog Angel. She is one of 224 tenants participating in the program, which was offered to Panhandle residents who lost their homes to Hurricane Michael. She has lived at the FEMA group site at the fairgrounds on 15th Street and Sherman Avenue in Panama City since it opened March last year.

Happening today — The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission begins a two-day virtual meeting to consider a draft rule that would suspend wild oyster harvesting in Apalachicola Bay through the end of 2025 as well as a proposal to move the end of the commercial stone crab season from May 15 to April 15, 9 a.m. meeting will be livestreamed on The Florida Channel.

Broward clerk of courts to admit fault in ethics probe over finances” via Rafael Olmeda of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Broward Clerk of Courts Brenda Forman is set to resolve a state ethics probe this week by admitting she misstated her financial status for four straight years, starting when she first became a candidate for public office. Forman, 62, and the Florida Commission on Ethics reached a proposed agreement in which she will pay a $5,000 fine for apparently blurring her financial assets and debts while omitting bank account information — Forman admitted the errors and said she overlooked some instructions and didn’t understand others. She denied deliberately misleading the commission.

Broward Clerk of Courts Brenda Forman is resolving a state ethics probe by admitting she misstated her financial status for four years. Image via Law.com.

Ex-Seminole Tax Collector Joel Greenberg was stealing customer IDs ‘until his last day in office,’ feds say” via Jeff Weiner and Martin E. Comas of the Orlando Sentinel — When federal agents raided the Lake Mary home of then-Seminole County Tax Collector Joel Greenberg in late June, they said they found in his wallet a pair of fake driver’s licenses he’d manufactured using the personal information of customers who’d surrendered old IDs to his office. But evidence that Greenberg was habitually exploiting his public office to create bogus identification cards didn’t stop there, prosecutors say. Inside Greenberg’s work vehicle, agents found his backpack, which held three more licenses from Canada, Virginia and Florida, belonging to Seminole County residents who’d recently obtained new Florida licenses.

‘Your ass is the devil’ — Miami Beach locked in racy sex harassment suit” via Francisco Alvarado of Florida Bulldog — What started out as a close workplace friendship between two Miami Beach female finance department employees has devolved into a lurid sexual harassment lawsuit against the city. Ginette Luxama, a former city financial analyst, recently sued Miami Beach in Miami federal court alleging her ex-boss, deputy finance director Allison Williams, regularly demeaned her by making lewd and inappropriate comments about her body in the months before she was fired on May 1, 2019. Luxama claims that on three occasions last year Williams also inappropriately touched her buttocks and her breasts, as well as instructing her not to bend over because her body was sexually arousing to other employees. After she was fired, Luxama filed a discrimination complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and Florida Commission on Human Relations, the lawsuit states.

UF students, get used to this topic: artificial intelligence” via Divya Kumar of the Tampa Bay Times — The University of Florida announced a $70 million partnership that will bring artificial intelligence to the forefront of the school’s technology programs and introduce the topic more broadly to the student body. The joint effort with the California-based company NVIDIA will result in the hiring of 100 new faculty and touch every UF graduate with at least one class exposing them to artificial intelligence concepts, the university said. It also will give UF the fastest artificial intelligence supercomputer in higher education, officials said. The discipline is a branch of computer science that has brought the world products like self-driving cars, food delivery robots and computers that engage humans in a game of chess.

Lobby regs
Erin BallasJack CoryKeyna Cory, Public Affairs Consultants: Florida Nurses Association

Richard HeffleyKelly Horton, Heffley & Associates: Accountable Care Transactions, Coastal Diagnostics Group

Nick IarossiRon LaFace, Capital City Consulting: AMN Healthcare, Integrated Home Care Services

Chris Moya, Dean Mead: Transformations Treatment Center

2020
Trump’s reelection effort has spent more than $983 million, a record sum at this point in the campaign” via Michelle Ye Hee Lee and Anu Narayanswamy of The Washington Post — Trump’s campaign, the Republican Party and two affiliated committees have spent more than $983 million since 2017, a record-breaking sum toward a reelection effort at this point in the presidential campaign, new filings show. The Trump campaign alone has spent $240 million, and presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden’s campaign has spent $165 million, as the two sides ramped up their general-election efforts, according to Federal Election Commission filings made public Monday. Trump has raised and spent money on his reelection bid since 2017, earlier in his term than previous presidents. At this point in 2012, the Barack Obama campaign, the Democratic Party and a joint fundraising committee had spent roughly half that amount, at about $552 million, federal records show. Trump’s 2016 campaign, run on a shoestring budget, cost $878 million.

Donald Trump’s spending on his reelection effort is already approaching a whopping $1 billion. Image via Getty.

Joe Biden’s campaign ready to turn up effort in Florida” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Having spent about $15 million on its swing-state advertising in the past five weeks, Biden‘s presidential campaign intends to spend $15 million more this week across Florida and five other states. The campaign announced Tuesday it is ramping up its general election paid media efforts across TV, radio, digital, and print while releasing another COVID-19-related commercial, “Truth,” one on Biden’s record, “Tested,” and a new Spanish-language ad, “Soñar es lograr.” The Florida advertising, which last week expanded into Fort Myers, will now move into Panama City and Pensacola and Mobile, Alabama, as the Biden campaign stakes a claim in the Panhandle. In “Truth,” a one-minute ad, Biden makes a case for a unified, national approach, personal responsibility, and lead-by-example leadership from the White House to battle the coronavirus outbreak.

Anti-Trump Lincoln Project founders set sights on Marco Rubio, DeSantis” via Florida Politics — “We burned our boats and our bridges when we did this,” said John Weaver, a founder of the Lincoln Project, speaking with Craig Melvin on MSNBC. “There’s no going back here. We have announced what we are doing, we said we wanted to be part of a grand coalition that dispatched Trump and Trumpism. People forgot about the Trumpism part.” To accomplish that, Weaver said Trump supporters in the U.S. Senate and statehouses should expect to be targeted. “(That includes) these MAGA governors in Florida, and Texas, and Georgia, and Arizona. They were so afraid of offending the President that they were literally willing to sacrifice their citizens as opposed to doing the right thing with the COVID pandemic.”

State presses case on felons’ voting rights” via Dara Kam of the News Service of Florida — Accusing voting-rights groups of “a grievous bait-and-switch,” lawyers for DeSantis asked a federal appeals court to keep hundreds of thousands of felons from voting unless they pay court-ordered financial obligations associated with their convictions. The DeSantis administration is asking the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to reverse a ruling by a Tallahassee federal judge in a legal fight that could have a significant impact on the outcome of the November presidential election in Florida. U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle in May cemented an October preliminary injunction in which he decided the state cannot deny voting rights to felons who cannot afford to pay court-ordered financial obligations.

Convention countdown
Republican Mayor backs Sheriff’s Jacksonville convention security concerns” via David Smiley of the Miami Herald — Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry said that he agrees with the Duval County sheriff that the existing security plan and resources for the Republican National Convention are inadequate, and said he would not be comfortable hosting the event next month unless that changes. “Any event, anything we put on in the city of Jacksonville, I have to have my sheriff telling me it can be done,” said Curry, the Republican co-chairman of the 2020 Jacksonville Host Committee, “that he has the resources he needs and that it can be done in a safe and responsible way.” But he said those efforts must address concerns raised Monday by Republican Sheriff Mike Williams that planning for event security is “past the point of no return.”

Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry and Sheriff Mike Williams share the same concerns over security for the RNC.

RNC to hawk Donald Trump Jr.’s new book” via Alex Isenstadt of Politico — Trump has a new book coming out next month, and he’ll have a powerful ally helping him sell it: the Republican National Committee. The RNC is buying copies of the first son’s forthcoming “Liberal Privilege,” which it will offer to donors who contribute at least $75. The committee orchestrated a similar fundraising campaign last year around Trump’s previous book, “Triggered” — a move that led to accusations that the RNC was boosting sales to land him in the coveted top slot of The New York Times bestseller list.

More from the trail
Federal reports show Florida Democrats raised $1.2M, Republicans $720K in June” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Florida Democrats outraised Republicans last month, but trail by millions in cash on hand, new reports filed with the Federal Elections Commission show. The Democratic Executive Committee of Florida brought in $1.21 million across 500 contributions last month. The party raised half again more than it did in May, when it reported $829,000 in receipts, though it finished June with less money in the bank. The declining balance stems from nearly $1.35 million in spending, including $215,000 in transfers to the Florida Democratic Party’s nonfederal account; $112,000 to Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Florida for health insurance premiums; $65,500 for mailers from Mission Control, Inc.; and $55,000 to 76 Words for digital media services. Heading into July, the account had about $495,000 in the bank, down from $893,000 heading into June. The committee also had $913,000 in debts, putting it in the red overall. Also of note, the federal account doesn’t list any loan repayments for the Paycheck Protection Program funds it received last month.

NRA puts support, firepower behind Byron Donalds in critical CD 19 primary” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — The National Rifle Association endorsed Donalds for Congress Tuesday. “I’m honored to receive an endorsement from the NRA,” Donalds said. “I have always fought to protect law-abiding citizens’ right to defend themselves and the ones they love, even when it was not popular. “ The support could prove critical for Donalds, a top contender in the heated Republican primary in Florida’s 19th Congressional District. One of two lawmakers still in the running, Donalds is the only candidate who voted against a school safety and gun control package following the Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in 2018. That legislation drew a lawsuit from the NRA, which argued against raising the gun purchasing age in Florida from 18 to 21. The bill also put a three-day waiting period on gun purchases.

Byron Donalds’ big get — an NRA endorsement.

Shadowy group weighing in on SD 9 Democratic primary” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — A political committee sent two mailers in the Senate District 9 Democratic primary race in the past few days attacking candidate Patricia Sigman and endorsing candidate Rick Ashby. Fine for Ashby, if the mailers are legitimate. However, Floridians for Equality & Justice is not registered as a political committee with the state. Sigman’s allies believe it’s a fraud, that it’s using illegal “dark money” to try to influence an election. And they’re raising suspicions that it might be perpetrated by Republicans trying to stop Sigman from winning the August 18 Democratic primary. As one mailer charges, Sigman indeed is the preference for the Democratic establishment in Tallahassee.

Direct mail roundup: Irv Slosberg’s credibility on COVID-19 called into question” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — Mailers dinging Slosberg’s health care credentials amid the coronavirus pandemic are showing up in Florida Senate District 29. “What is Irv Slosberg hiding behind his mask?” the mailer asks, before answering with a trove of headlines related to the Boca Raton Democrat’s time on the Palm Beach County Health District and his response to past emergencies. One jab dates back 15 years when the former lawmaker rolled out “Slosberg Emergency Management Aid” amid hurricane season. Slosberg was running for state Senate then, too, and his opponent, now-U. S. Rep. Ted Deutch labeled it a “crass political ploy.” The mailer cites another article from the aughts, detailing Slosberg’s removal from the health district “for abusing his position for political purposes.” The mailer also smacks him for at one time being a registered Republican.

— “Florida Chamber of Commerce backing Danny Burgess’ bid for Florida Senate” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics

House candidate Jeff Hinkle accused of copyright infringement” via Tom McLaughlin of the NWF Daily News — Crestview Community Television owner Ken Nielsen has threatened to sue Hinkle for copyright infringement. A letter sent to Hinkle from Nielson’s attorney accuses him of hijacking images of himself and some of his opponents and using them in his political advertisements. “My client has informed me that several unauthorized and unlicensed social media posts containing his copyrighted works were published on both your personal Facebook page and your campaign’s Facebook page,” the letter from attorney Jimmie Bailey said. Hinkle and fellow Republican House candidate Jonathan Tallman have also been contacted by the National Rifle Association about improperly using the agency’s trademark logo on campaign materials. Both have received cease and desist letters this campaign season from an attorney for the organization.

Aggressive fundraisers emerge in Democrats’ battle royal for HD 48” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — A business-oriented Democrat and another with Central Florida’s progressive and labor union community support are emerging as election forces in a five-way primary battle royal for the House District 48 seat that suddenly became available in May. Democratic former Rep. Amy Mercado announced she would not seek a third term but would instead run for Orange County Property Appraiser. Her exodus led to a scramble between real estate manager Nelson Pena, who’s got a long history of serving on civic boards, Hilton hotel industry strategic planner Tony Tsonis, with close ties to Orlando’s dominant tourism community, and former Soil and Water Conservation District Supervisor Daisy Morales.

— “For a Republican, Ned Hancock cuts a lot of checks to Democrats” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics

— “Florida doctors back Fiona McFarland over Donna Barcomb” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics

Michael Weinstein’s pandering loses him support from police — and those who oppose police — alike” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — In the latest example of questionable ethics, HD 81 candidate Weinstein wanted it both ways. He wanted the endorsement of the Palm Beach police union — and he wanted the support of voters who may disagree with the police union. So, he said one thing in his interview with the union and the very opposite thing in his interview with the South Florida Sun-Sentinel and in talks at Black churches in the district. It didn’t take long for folks to find out. The union immediately recanted their endorsement of him, and individual voters expressed feeling lied to and used.

— “Omari Hardy records second-best fundraising period this cycle” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics

Firefighter orgs back Chip LaMarca as he expands cash lead in HD 93” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Two organizations representing Florida’s firefighters and paramedics are endorsing LaMarca as he seeks to fend off a Democratic challenger in House District 93. The Florida Professional Firefighters and the Broward County Council of Professional Fire Fighters endorsed LaMarca Tuesday. The Tuesday announcement comes days after new financial reports showed LaMarca expanding his cash lead over Democratic challenger Linda Thompson Gonzalez. “Rep. Chip LaMarca has been a strong advocate for firefighters, both in local government and now in Tallahassee,” said Wayne “Bernie” Bernoska, president of the FPF, which represents 27,000 firefighters and paramedics across the state. J. Scott Bayne, chairman of the Broward County Council of Professional Firefighters, said LaMarca’s opposition to a bill making it harder to collect union dues played a role in his group’s endorsement.

Chip LaMarca

Chip LaMarca snags a key endorsement from Florida firefighters and paramedics, as well as expanding a cash lead in his reelection bid.

— “Meet Christopher Benjamin, a Democrat running for House District 107” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics

‘”A resource desert.’ Democrats running for Florida House tackle overlooked District 117” via Bianca Padró Ocasio of the Miami Herald — An entrepreneur, an educator, and a former political aide are vying to replace House Minority Leader Kionne McGhee in the majority-Black district that includes parts of Naranja, Goulds, Richmond Heights, Homestead and Florida City. McGhee ran unopposed in 2016 and 2018. He’s now running for Miami-Dade County Commissioner in District 9, which overlaps with parts of House District 117. All three candidates — Kevin ChamblissHarold Ford and Jessica Laguerre Hylton — agreed in interviews that the district has been overlooked by county and state officials when it comes to infrastructure and economic development.

Down ballot
Melba Pearson internal poll shows statistical tie in Miami-Dade County State Attorney race” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — A new poll commissioned by the Pearson campaign shows a statistical tie in the race for Miami-Dade County State Attorney a month out from the election. Pearson is seeking to unseat Katherine Fernandez Rundle, who has served as State Attorney for the 11th Judicial Circuit for 27 years. The survey, conducted by Independence Campaigns, shows Fernandez Rundle earning 39% of the vote to Pearson’s 38%. That’s well within the poll’s margin of error of plus or minus 4.04 percentage points. Independence Campaigns contacted 581 likely voters via text message from July 8-9. Another 23% of voters remain undecided, which is more than enough to swing the race in either direction. Publicly-released internal campaign polls should be taken with a healthy dose of skepticism. Though their findings may be accurate, campaigns have an incentive to withhold internal polls with poor results and only release favorable polls to the public.

Internal polling puts Melba Pearson at a statistical tie in the Miami-Dade County State Attorney race.

Tourism, development donors help finance 2 Orange County commissioners’ races, but steer clear of 3rd” via Jason Garcia of the Orlando Sentinel — Many of Orlando’s traditional power brokers, from real estate developers to tourism businesses to lobbyists, are spending thousands of dollars to help two Orange County commissioners win reelection this year; but staying out of a third commissioner’s race. The list is lengthy. Campaign-finance records show that billboard giant Clear Channel, concrete manufacturer Cemex, liquor retailer ABC and amusement park operator SeaWorld, as well as lobbying groups representing hotels, apartment landlords and the construction industry, have all given money to Commissioner Betsy VanderLey, who is running for reelection in Orange County’s District 1, and Commissioner Mayra Uribe, who is running for a second term in District 3.

Rick Singh maintains he did ‘nothing wrong’ after prosecutors say documents from his office were altered” via Caroline Glenn of the Orlando Sentinel — Singh, the Orange County Property Appraiser, on Monday dismissed criticism over a state attorney’s findings that his office altered documents for an audit, though he conceded he should not have posed for a photo that was staged to justify his travel to a Curry Festival in Tampa. The photo of Singh next to a festival banner was actually taken at a park near his Windermere home years after the event, prosecutors said. At a news conference, Singh called to address the findings released last week by State Attorney R.J. Larizza, who opted against charging him with official misconduct, Singh was asked why he agreed to participate in the photo. Singh denied that his office altered documents about his fuel purchases on an office credit card and some other expenses despite Larizza’s 10-page memorandum.

As Singh moves on from probe, Orange County property appraiser race simmers” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — When the State Attorney’s Office for Florida’s 7th Judicial Circuit announced Friday it had insufficient evidence to prosecute Singh on charges of falsifying records, he declared himself to be cleared and vindicated of what he called a political smear. With about a month before the August 18 Democratic primary that should decide the victor, recent fundraising had all but dried up for Singh’s reelection. Yet his opponents, Rep. Amy Mercado and business owner Khalid Muneer have not seen their campaigns catch fire, at least through the July 10 campaign finance reports filed with the Orange County Supervisor of Elections.

Months before election, Largo Commission candidate has raised $50,000” via Rebecca Torrence of the Tampa Bay Times — As election season nears, some Largo residents may still be thinking of the 2018 city election, or the lack thereof. When no one stepped up to run against any of the four incumbents in the race, the election was canceled altogether. The 2020 Largo election won’t suffer the same fate. Three spots on the Commission are open, and four candidates have announced their campaigns. The race for mayor remains uncontested, with Mayor Woody Brown running for reelection. The same is true for Seat 4′s incumbent Commissioner Jamie Robinson. But in Seat 3, incumbent Curtis Holmes will face Largo resident Eric Gerard in November. As of June 30, Gerard had raised $50,000. Holmes had raised $20,935.

Being a School Board member isn’t a hobby, but David Graham treats it like one” via Florida Politics — Graham wants a seat on the Sarasota County School Board, but it’s not clear why. Though he works for Sarasota County Schools as an analyst, his own campaign only gives it a passing mention. Instead, the bullet points are reserved for jobs that are, at best, tangentially relevant to the position he’s seeking. Fidelity, Lloyd’s of London, Goldman Sachs. Big names, yes, but not particularly germane to his school board pitch. That’s on-brand for Graham. He wants to be on the School Board but can’t be bothered to make a compelling case for voters to entrust him with the responsibility.

David Graham seems to want to be on the Sarasota County School Board, but his campaign hardly mentions it.

Danny Leeper doesn’t live in his district, investigation finds” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — The Florida Constitution requires elected officials to live in the districts they represent. The rule has some vagaries. For one, candidates can run in districts they don’t live in, and many do. But once they are elected, there’s no gray area. They must live in their district for the duration of their term. If they move into another, they must resign. A couple of years ago, Leeper moved out of his home in Nassau County District 1 and into another within District 2. Leeper claims a homestead exemption on the District 2 home. His wife lives at the home — the address is printed on her driver’s license, voter registration, real estate license and vehicle registrations.

Top opinion
Darkened cars, battle fatigues, military hardware — what happened to Officer Friendly?” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — Abundant federal funds for tactical gear, water cannons, and other battleground vehicles have contributed to the militarization of civilian police forces and to what has been described as a “warrior mentality” better suited for combat patrols, than for cultivating trust in American cities. Trump has now sent militarized agents from several federal departments to snatch citizens off the streets of Portland, Oregon. Unlike local police, the agents wear combat fatigues and military helmets and not one stitch or badge of identification. They refuse to identify themselves or tell their victims why they’re being kidnapped. Those are the tactics of storm troopers serving an administration whose disrespect for the Constitution, indeed for all human rights, is total.
Opinions
What Pinellas schools must do to reopen safely” via Nancy Velardi of the Tampa Bay Times — Pinellas County Schools still plan to open on the original start date of Aug. 12. Many parents and teachers have called and written to me, worried about returning to schools under the current plan, which offers three options. One is in-person with safety protocols, and two are virtual options, one connected to the student’s school of record while the other would involve separating the child from their chosen school. The schools are the centers of the communities, and the spread of the virus will not stay isolated in the schools, which is horrific enough, but will be brought home to the teachers’ and students’ families and thus spread throughout the surrounding communities. When dealing with the lives of children, an abundance of caution must be taken. An all-virtual start of school until the numbers decline in all categories would provide that caution for all involved.
Today’s Sunrise
Florida’s Department of Health reports almost 9.500 new cases of coronavirus and 136 new fatalities from COVID-19. But our optimist-in-chief doesn’t seem to be worried by those numbers.

Also, on today’s Sunrise:

— Gov. DeSantis holds a roundtable discussion with doctors in hopes of reassuring the public that hospitals are not overrun by COVID-19 patients and there are plenty of beds available.

— When holding coronavirus updates, DeSantis likes to surround himself with doctors … Except for one notable exception. In the early days of the pandemic, Florida Surgeon General Scott Rivkees was a regular, but we haven’t seen much of him since Rivkees went off message and said we might need to maintain social distancing until next year. Did the Governor disappear him?

— The Governor was also asked if he supported the extension of the $600-dollar weekly unemployment benefits from the feds. He offered an answer, without actually answering the question.

— Robert Weissert of Florida TaxWatch talks about a new report critical of the legislative plan to build a toll road that will stretch 150 miles from Citrus County to the Georgia border.

— Checking-in with a Florida Man accused of taking the kids out for a Sunday drive while he was drunk. Also, a Florida Woman was busted for trying to steal a sex toy from Walmart.

To listen, click on the image below:

Instagram of the day
Aloe
‘Saturday Night Live’ plots return to studio production” via Brian Steinberg of Variety — If NBC and Lorne Michaels have their way, NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” this fall could move from being produced from cast members’ homes to being made the old-fashioned way, “from New York.” Michaels and his team are making plans to bring the show back to NBC’s Manhattan studios for the venerable late-night program’s 46th season, according to two people familiar with the matter, the latest of TV’s wee-hours programs to try and navigate a new normal in the midst of a pandemic that makes the process of putting on a TV show anything but. To be certain, any concepts for the fall would hinge on how the nation is grappling with the coronavirus pandemic and the safety of the “SNL” cast and crew. NBC has yet to announce a premiere date for “Saturday Night Live.”

What Erin Ballas is reading — “The Hallmark Channel just launched a line of wines inspired by their Christmas movies” via Nicholas Rice of People — The Hallmark Channel is set to make the classic pairing of drinking wine and watching movies even more delightful, as the network teams up with Wines That Rock to launch Hallmark Channel Wines, a set of holiday-themed wines inspired by the networks many Christmas films. With a goal to make your days more merry and bright, the soon-to-be-released wines come in two delicious flavors: “Jingle,” a rich, full-bodied premium cabernet sauvignon with aromas of cherry, dark chocolate, and a hint of holiday spice; and “Joy,” a special crisp sauvignon blanc featuring notes of tropical fruits, white peach, and ripe pineapple. The wines can be purchased as a 2-pack, 4-pack, 6-pack or a case of 12, but only a limited number of the wines will be bottled in time for the holiday season.

Mysterious 450-foot ‘blue hole’ off Florida has researchers looking for signs of life” via Mark Price of the Miami Herald — Tales of the ocean swallowing places are as ancient as the myth of Atlantis, but there is an element of truth in the science, according to an NOAA-backed expedition set for Florida’s Gulf Coast. The ocean does open and consume areas of seafloor. However, these are basically sinkholes, similar to those that gobble suburban homes in Florida, NOAA says. When it happens in the ocean, it’s called a “blue hole” and what’s inside them is largely a mystery, NOAA reports. Scientists have no idea how many “blue holes” exist or where they are most likely to be found, NOAA says.

Scientists have embarked on a journey to the “deep” to explore blue holes, which are underwater sinkholes, like sinkholes on land. Image via NOAA/Facebook.

There’s a new drive-in movie theater on Biscayne Bay: Be sure to bring your boat” via Madeleine Marr of the Miami Herald — We get it. After months of quarantine, you want to be entertained. While options are a little slim amid this relentless pandemic, there are still a few things to do in South Florida. Believe us when we say we are looking hard to find them, folks. For movie buffs, a new drive-in theater opened in Fort Lauderdale through July. And for seafarer types, may we suggest checking into Ballyhoo Media’s “boat in” theater. The folks behind that massive Super Bowl party in Before Times will host a screening of “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl,” from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday on Biscayne Bay in front of the old Miami Marine Stadium in Virginia Key.

Happy birthday
Best wishes to Sen. Vic Torres, Rep. Alex AndradeEric Draper of Audubon Florida, the great Vic DiMaioMissy Timmins, and David Warner. Belated wishes to Kelly Reichelderfer.

FOX NEWS

JUST THE NEWS

THE FLIP SIDE

View this email in your browser

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Senate Filibuster

Last week, the New York Times reported that Joe Biden stated he would “have to take a look” at the filibuster if elected. New York Times

From the Left

The left supports eliminating the filibuster, arguing that it will be necessary to enact progressive policies.
“If a Republican minority blocks civil-rights legislation again in 2021, ‘the pressure to get rid of the filibuster would be unbearable, and [Democrats] would have to get rid of it,’ predicts Adam Jentleson, a former deputy chief of staff to Reid and the author of an upcoming book about the Senate, Kill Switch. Starting next year, Democrats ‘simply could not explain’ to their coalition and the broader public alike that they would fail ‘to pass a new civil-rights agenda in deference to the procedural tool that was invented by segregationists to uphold Jim Crow and white supremacy. That is an unsustainable argument for Democrats to make.’”
Ronald Brownstein, The Atlantic“[Democrats would] need to choose one of three paths. First, they could maintain the filibuster, giving Republicans the ability to block all significant legislation, while also retreating from the executive overreach that has defined the Trump years. This would result in a weak presidency and none of the progressive change Democrats long for. Second, they could maintain the filibuster, giving Republicans the ability to block all meaningful legislation, but continue the Trumpian executive overreach, allowing Biden to pursue progressive goals through regulation and executive orders…“Third, they could abolish the filibuster, and use House and Senate majorities to pass as much progressive legislation as they can agree on. This would toss out a senatorial tradition but would strengthen Congress as a whole, and make it a more equal partner to the presidency… If you’re Biden or Schumer, it’s obvious which of these three choices will accomplish the most and undermine our political system least. If they get the chance, Senate Democrats should abolish the filibuster.”
David Plotz, Business Insider“[The filibuster is an] accident of history. It came about only because when the Senate reorganized its rules in 1806, it accidentally deleted the clause allowing for debate to be ended by majority vote. It didn’t even occur to anyone to try to halt legislation by endlessly talking for several more decades. For over a century afterwards, filibusters were primarily used by racists to stop civil rights legislation. Only during the Obama years did they become routine, with Republicans trying them on almost every piece of legislation (and now Democrats doing the same to Trump)… Virtually every other legislative body in the world works by majority vote, and the Senate would be fine doing so as well.”
Ryan Cooper, The Week“Angus King, the Maine independent who caucuses with the Democrats, told The Hill that scrapping the filibuster ‘would be a huge mistake.’ After all, ‘if we didn’t have the 60-vote rule today, the ACA would be gone.’… [but] It is not, in fact, true that the filibuster saved the Affordable Care Act. To the contrary, McConnell failed to get so much as 50 votes for a watered-down version of Obamacare repeal that would have left its Medicaid expansion intact…“If Mitch McConnell believed that abolishing the filibuster was in the long-term best interest of his party and its donor class, ethical scruples would not have prevented him from scrapping it. The fact that the legislative filibuster remains in place — contrary to Donald Trump’s wishes — reflects the GOP’s awareness that the supermajority requirement favors conservatism.”
Eric Levitz, New York MagazineSome, however, note that “Any Democrat tempted to destroy the legislative filibuster, should consider the cost of giving a future GOP majority the power to realize a right-wing agenda and control the federal budget without any input from the minority… Lasting major legislation like Social Security, Medicare, the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, Medicare prescription drugs, the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the 1965 Voting Rights Act and many others were accomplished with large Congressional majorities. This has contributed to the staying power of these public policies. Eliminating the filibuster would take us in precisely the wrong direction.”
Richard A. Arenberg, The Hill

From the Right

The right supports keeping the filibuster, arguing that it promotes consensus and blocks overly partisan policies.
“The framers faced the same problem that has faced many republics in the past: balancing the need for widespread democratic access to political power, which helps to confer legitimacy, with the need for more narrow administration that frustrates and defeats the will of the people when the people have gone mad, as they do from time to time. What they came up with was a mix of democratic and anti-democratic institutions: in the legislative branch, a popularly elected House that serves as the accelerator and an appointed, quasi-aristocratic Senate that serves as the brakes…

“Democrats looking to eliminate the filibuster in 2021 should keep in mind that in January 2017 the elected branches of the federal government were under unified Republican control led by Paul Ryan, Mitch McConnell, and Donald Trump, three representatives of the will of the people to whom Democrats very much wanted to say ‘No.’”
Kevin D. Williamson, National Review

“Supermajority rules are purposefully in place all throughout the U.S. government. They exist in the procedures to amend the constitution, overriding vetoes, and convicting presidents in an impeachment trial… The federal government, while slow and at times inefficient, is working as intended. Jefferson, fearing the possibility of a fast-paced federal government, penned a letter to James Madison saying ‘I own I am not a friend to a very energetic government. It is always oppressive.’…

“The opposition party being able to yell ‘stop’ at potentially harmful legislation is a critical part of the protection of minority rights. The filibuster protects the minority party and provides a much-needed check on government. It allows for our system of governance to be steadied, tending more towards federalism, allowing for compromise within the Capitol, and making discussion before passing critical legislation necessary… The shift in tone by Minority Leader [Chuck] Schumer is striking, who had previously warned Republicans of invoking the ‘nuclear option’ on Supreme Court nominations, previously stating: ‘Mr. President, the 60-vote bar in the Senate is the guardrail of our democracy.’”
Alberto Bufalino, The American Conservative

“Democrats removed the filibuster for judicial nominees (except the Supreme Court) in 2013, because they were frustrated by Republican Senate opposition to Barack Obama’s appointees to the bench. That has come back to bite them as it opened the door for President Trump and Senate Republicans to streamline confirmation of judicial nominees—and to kill the filibuster for Supreme Court nominees.”
Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal

“Americans are generally not in favor of pure party-line votes. A pure partisan vote was a criticism of the vote to impeach President Trump and legislation passed during the first two years of Obama’s presidency. Most Americans are also not comfortable with sweeping change. Incremental and consensus-based change is how our government has operated… If the filibuster is taken away, the Senate will become less deliberative. It will be a rubber stamp for the president’s agenda when they are from the same party. It will become a barricade when they are from opposite parties.”
Stacey Lennox, PJ Media

The Hoover Institute’s John Cochrane writes, “Why are our politics so polarized? One answer is that elections are more and more winner take all. The more it is winner take all, the more incentive there is for scorched-earth tactics to win, or to keep from losing… The first function of a democracy is a peaceful transition of power. That requires losers to accept their fate, acknowledge the legitimacy of the outcome, regroup and try again. And they have to be able to do that.  We are not a pure democracy. We are set up as a republic, with elaborate protections for electoral minorities. The point is to keep those electoral minorities from rebelling. Union first, ‘progress’ second.”
John Cochrane, The Grumpy Economist

On the bright side…

Country Time sending $100 stimulus checks to kids with lemonade stands.
WIVB

The Flip Side team spends hours each night scanning the news, fact-checking, and debating one another, so your 5 minutes each morning can be well spent. If you’ve found value in our work, we welcome you to help sustain our efforts and expand our reach. Any support you can provide is greatly appreciated!
 

You have <<RH_TOTREF>> referrals.
Your bear mug is at 25 referrals!

Share The Flip Side just a few more times, and we’ll mail our favorite mug in the world your way.

Share on Twitter – Share on Facebook – Share via Email

Or, copy/paste your referral link to others:
<<RH_REFLINK>>

 

Copyright © 2020 The Flip Side, All rights reserved.

You can unsubscribe from this list here.

AXIOS

Axios AM

By Mike Allen
Mike Allen
Mike Allen

Happy Wednesday!

🇨🇳 Breaking: The Trump administration told China to close its diplomatic consulate in Houston “to protect American intellectual property and American’s private information,” State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus told Axios this morning.

  • A police official told Axios’ Rebecca Falconer that Chinese consulate officials at the building were believed to be “burning their own paperwork.” Details.

💻 Take a virtual trip to Colorado with Axios’ Sara Fischer tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET. She’ll interview Gov. Jared Polis and Coffee at The Point owner Ryan Cobbins. Register here.

1 big thing: November could bring Bush v. Gore II
Featured image

Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios

Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, North Carolina and Georgia are the battlefronts for voting rights advocates and election lawyers in a year one national expert says could make Bush v. Gore look like “a walk in the park,” Axios’ Stef Kight writes.

  • “I think there’s going to be litigation everywhere,” MIT political scientist Charles Stewart III tells Axios.
  • Why it matters: If elections are close in these states, it could set off waves of protests and lawsuits over turnout, ballot access and alleged fraud — undercutting the perceived legitimacy of the results.

These states share three overlapping factors that could create a perfect storm for legal challenges: competitive elections, surging coronavirus numbers, and little experience historically with voting by mail.

  • U.S. Election Assistance Commissioner Donald Palmer tells Axios he believes that some states that have traditionally experienced 5%-10% levels of absentee voting could see it swell to 60%-70% because of the pandemic.
  • Palmer also is watching swing states Michigan and Virginia, which along with Pennsylvania recently moved to no-excuse absentee voting and now will have to make that transition with surging interest in vote-by-mail options.

Between the lines: Texas is another state to watch. It’s long been at the center of voting rights battles, and polls show a tight presidential race.

2. “Parent pods” trend
Featured image

Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios

Neighbors are banding together to hire private instructors as a way to secure child care and make up for some of the gaps online-only classes will leave in their kids’ educations, Axios’ Caitlin Owens and Sara Kehaulani Goo report.

  • Why it matters: Parents want to be sure their children don’t fall too far behind, but this trend could deepen the educational divide along racial and class lines.

Driving the news: Pandemic “pods” — a group of families agreeing to limit their interactions outside that circle — have thrived as a safe way to help kids interact with their friends and give parents some time to work.

  • Now, enterprising parents are offering teachers who don’t want to return to the classroom a competitive salary to instead teach a handful of students in a home environment.

How it works: One way is for several families with kids in the same grade agree to form a “pod” and hire a tutor or teacher at home during the workweek. Costs vary, but can top $1,000 per month, according to the Washington Post.

  • For families with preschoolers, often it’s a babysitter — like a nanny share, but with several families pooled together.

This is primarily an option for wealthier, mostly white families, and some school districts already saw many Black children struggle to show up to online learning during the spring.

  • Some parents will invite lower-income families to join their pod, and could even subsidize their share of the cost, but heavily segregated school districts mean that can only go so far.
  • Some families are explicitly saying that they don’t want children of essential workers in their pods, as they can’t fully socially distance.

Share this story.

3. Bottom line for each tech CEO

Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios

Axios’ Kyle Daly narrates the key point that each of the big four tech CEOs will make during their joint, virtual testimony Monday at an antitrust hearing of the House Judiciary Committee.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg: Congress should pass better laws. Let’s work together and do that!

  • Zuckerberg will likely argue that Congress needs to write laws to bolster election security and establish consistent online privacy standards.
  • Facebook’s goal is to see such laws written carefully and applied consistently.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai: We won search by doing it well — why punish us for that?

  • Google doesn’t dispute its clear dominance in search, nor of certain corners of the online advertising market.
  • But it contends that digital advertising is in fact wildly competitive.

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos: We’re big because we’ve always given users what they want — fast delivery, wide selection and good prices.

  • Bezos is likely to point to Amazon’s ability to get goods to Americans’ homes during the pandemic as a public service.

Apple CEO Tim Cook: Our App Store creates opportunity for countless developers — and Google’s Android controls more of the smartphone market, anyway.

  • Apple has faced criticism for the way it develops and features its own apps that compete with third-party programs, as well as for the commissions it takes from app makers.
  • Expect Cook to cite the size and vitality of the app market and the continued enthusiasm of Apple’s customers.

Share this story.

4. 14 shot in Chicago as Portland flares

Chicago police talk to reporters at the scene. Photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images

In Chicago, at least 14 people were shot last evening in the Gresham neighborhood on the city’s South Side, the Chicago Tribune reports.

  • The shots were fired at funeral attendees from a speeding vehicle.

The context: President Trump plans to send about 150 Homeland Security agents to Chicago to deal with a crime spike, AP reports.

Tear gas and crowd munitions were deployed by federal police during protests in Portland on Tuesday. Photo: Beth Nakamura/The Oregonian via AP

The Trump administration is facing growing pushback — in the courts and on the streets — over sending federal agents to Portland, Oregon, where protests have spiraled into violence, AP’s Gillian Flaccus writes.

  • Why it matters: The presence of federal agents in progressive Portland has energized two months of nightly protests that had begun to shrink.
5. Scoop: New Comey book coming in January
Cover: Flatiron

In a new book 10 days before the inauguration, former FBI Director James Comey will take aim at politicization of the Justice Department under President Trump, who fired him.

  • Saving JusticeTruth, Transparency, and Trust,” out Jan. 12, is a follow-up to Comey’s No. 1 New York Times bestseller, “A Higher Loyalty.”
  • A press release from Comey’s publisher, Flatiron, says he’ll also discuss his career prosecuting mobsters in New York. Comey famously compared Trump to a mob boss in his last book.

The state of play: Comey has kept a relatively low profile since his last book.

  • He has written occasional op-eds and hot tweets, but resisted numerous invitations to appear on TV.
  • Comey envisions the new book as an effort to remind Americans about the core principles of the justice system and how to rebuild them under what he hopes will be a new administration.
  • The publisher calls it “a clarion call for a return to non-partisan law enforcement centered on American values.”

Behind the scenes: Matt Latimer and Keith Urbahn of Javelin represented Comey.

6. Pic du jour
Photo: Leah Millis/Reuters

President Trump resumed coronavirus briefings with a solo outing:

  • “It will probably, unfortunately, get worse before it gets better — something I don’t like saying about things, but that’s the way it is. It’s the way — it’s what we have. If you look over the world, it’s all over the world, and it tends to do that.”
7. Data du jour: Presidents and the market
Note: Chart shows total return of the Russell 3000 index with Jan. 1, 1979 = 100. Growth rate is calculated as the compound annual growth rate over the 4 or 8 years from inauguration. Data: Factset; Chart: Danielle Alberti/Axios
Note: Chart shows total return of the Russell 3000 index with Jan. 1, 1979 = 100. Growth rate is calculated as the compound annual growth rate over the 4 or 8 years from inauguration. Data: Factset; Chart: Danielle Alberti/Axios

President Trump has been good for the stock market — but not as good as most of his predecessors, chief financial correspondent Felix Salmon writes.

  • Why it matters: Presidents don’t have a huge effect on the stock market, but overall, Democrats have outperformed Republicans in recent history.

By the numbers: Stocks have risen by an annualized 13.7% over the course of the Trump administration, if you look at total return with dividends reinvested.

  • That’s a very healthy performance, but lags Reagan (14.1%), George H.W. Bush (15.1%), Obama (16.5%), and Clinton (16.7%).
  • Only George W. Bush oversaw a worse performance for the stock market than Trump in modern times. Bush was in office during the global financial crisis.

Share this graphic.

8. Opinion sections become battlegrounds
Featured image

Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios

Journalists at The Wall Street Journal and the New York Times are urging their bosses to re-evaluate how their opinion sections operate after a slew of controversies in recent months, Axios’ Sara Fischer writes.

  • Why it matters: In print, opinion pieces were physically segregated from the rest of the paper in a way that they aren’t online, making it harder for readers to differentiate.

A group of 280 journalists at The Journal and Dow Jones sent a letter to the paper’s publisher yesterday asking for clearer differentiation between news and opinion content online, The Journal reports.

Opinion-page controversies have also flared at the Times, and, to an extent, The Washington Post:

  • The Times faced an employee upheaval after its opinion section published a controversial piece in June by Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.).
  • The Post was slammed by media critics last summer for publishing an opinion piece by Charlie Kirk, a conservative activist and Trump supporter.

Our thought bubble: These tensions have existed for years, but they have become amplified by an increasingly hyper-partisan news cycle driven by social media.

  • Traditional newsrooms tried to draw clear boundaries between news and opinion with separate management structure and offices. News organizations that emerged during the digital era rarely publish editorials and more freely mix news and opinion.

The bottom line: Subscribers today want to support news organizations that reinforce their world views — and are quick to cancel their subscriptions when they’re unhappy.

9. How Kevin McCarthy will campaign in a pandemic
Featured image

Photo: Caleb “Birthday Today” Smith

To get back on the campaign trail this summer and fall, House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy has procured dozens of WHOOP fitness trackers — which monitor respiratory rate as a clue to COVID — for his political and fundraising staff in D.C. and across the country.

  • Why it matters: McCarthy, who represents Bakersfield and works closely with California’s tech community, will wear a WHOOP sensor and band himself, harnessing wearables to help keep aides and supporters safe.

Go deeperGQ on NBA and PGA use of fitness trackers to detect COVID.

10. 🏀 Sneak peek: NBA’s new sidelines
Photo: Tim Reynolds/AP

At the NBA’s first scrimmage today, there’ll be no bench. Courtside broadcasters won’t be courtside. The stat crew will work in an oversized hockey penalty box, AP’s Tim Reynolds writes from Lake Buena Vista, Fla.

  • Seating in the bench areas will be assigned, with folding chairs spaced out several feet.

“Black Lives Matter” stretches on either side of the center stripe.

Mike Allen
Mike Allen

📱 Thanks for reading Axios AM. Please invite your friends to sign up here.

THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES

THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The Washington Times
MORNING EDITION
WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 2020
Like Us. Follow Us.                                     
Federal officers use crowd control munitions to disperse Black Lives Matter protesters outside the Mark O. Hatfield United States Courthouse on Tuesday, July 21, 2020, in Portland, Ore. (AP Photo/Noah Berger)
‘Violence, chaos and anarchy’: Feds reject ‘invasion’ claims as riots rageDemocrats and mayors escalated their calls Tuesday for federal law enforcement to withdraw from Portland, but if they did, acting … more
Top News  Read More >
Trump admits coronavirus crisis ‘may get worse before it gets better’
President Donald Trump holds a face mask as he speaks during a news conference at the White House, Tuesday, July 21, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Capitol Hill negotiations over coronavirus relief bill intensify
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said that children were being harmed by the shutdowns. He and many other Republicans are in favor of reopening schools. (Associated Press)
Trump signs order barring illegal immigrants from census count
President Donald Trump holds an image of the U.S. border wall being built between the U.S. and Mexico as he participates in a border security briefing at United States Border Patrol Yuma Station, Tuesday, June 23, 2020, in Yuma, Ariz. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Conservatives, libertarians push back on Portland crackdown: ‘Cannot give up liberty for security’
In this Nov. 6, 2019, file photo, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., responds to reporters at the Capitol in Washington. Paul wants to combat the rising debt load for college students by allowing them to dip into retirement accounts to help pay for school or pay back loans. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)
Chinese hackers targeted COVID-19 research firms, Justice Department alleges
This Friday, March 22, 2019, file photo shows the Department of Justice Building in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta) ** FILE **
Mike Pompeo defends Trump’s hawkish line against China
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo speaks at the National Constitution Center about the Commission on Unalienable Rights, Thursday, July 16, 2020, in Philadelphia. (Brendan Smialowski/Pool via AP)
SUBSCRIBE TODAY

Click to subscribe to trusted and exclusive reporting only on The Washington Times
Click to subscribe to trusted and exclusive reporting only on The Washington Times
Opinion  Read More >
Vandals, Marxists, Antifa lay siege to Portland, while Dems decry federal intervention
Governors try to seal off states but forget about economic and personal freedoms
When governors try to seal off their states for COVID-19 illustration by The Washington Times
To wear a mask or not to wear a mask, during Wuhan virus pandemic
To Mask or Not to Mask Illustration by Greg Groesch/The Washington Times
Politics  Read More >
Sen. Mitt Romney slams Germany troop withdrawal as ‘slap in the face’ to ally
Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, leaves a Republican luncheon on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, June 4, 2020. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) ** FILE **
Matt Gaetz accuses Liz Cheney of working against Trump, calls for her to step down
Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., steps off Air Force One upon arrival Monday, March 9, 2020, at Andrews Air Force Base, Md. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) ** FILE **
Chuck Schumer: Trump is chiefly to blame for state of coronavirus pandemic
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of N.Y., speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill, Tuesday, June 30, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta) ** FILE **
Special Reports for Times Readers
Security  Read More >
Confederate military base name change prompts sharp Trump veto threat
In this Jan. 4, 2020, file photo a sign for at Fort Bragg, N.C., is shown. A warrant officer stationed at Ft. Bragg was convicted in a civilian court of sexual abuse of a minor, but must be additionally convicted in a court martial in order to be dishonorably dismissed from the service. (AP Photo/Chris Seward, File) **FILE**
Pentagon looks toward troop rotations rather than permanent overseas bases
U.S. paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division from Fort Bragg in North Carolina take part in a military exercise &#39;Saber Strike 2018&#39; at the at the Gaiziunai Training Area some 130 kms (80 miles) west of the capital Vilnius, Lithuania, Saturday, June 9, 2018. A major U.S.-led military exercise with 18,000 soldiers from 19 primarily NATO countries is taking place in the alliance&#39;s eastern flank involving Poland and the three Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania. (AP Photo/Mindaugas Kulbis)
Lindsey Graham says Obama-era officials to be called to testify before Senate
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., speaks during Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, June 3, 2020. (Greg Nash/Pool via AP) ** FILE **
Sports  Read More >
Joey Votto, Reds players kneel as MLB anthem protests spread
Cincinnati Reds&#39; Phillip Ervin, left, Joey Votto, left middle, Amir Garrett, middle, and Alex Blandino, right, kneel during the national anthem prior to an exhibition baseball game against the Detroit Tigers at Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati, Tuesday, July 21, 2020. (AP Photo/Aaron Doster)
Redskins rookies likely to report Thursday as NFL, players negotiate protocols
In this Feb. 20, 2020, file photo, Ohio State defensive lineman Chase Young watches a drill at the NFL football scouting combine in Indianapolis. Young is a likely first round pick in the NFL Draft Thursday, April 23, 2020. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall) ** FILE **
High school football this fall? Not in D.C., Montgomery County and elsewhere
Mick Hoffman, executive director of the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association, poses for a photo, Thursday, July 16, 2020, sitting in the empty stands of the Renton School District&#39;s Renton Memorial Stadium, which is used for high school football, soccer, and track events in Renton, Wash. Hoffman and other administrators across the country are facing difficult decisions regarding the overwhelming uncertainty of whether high school sports can go forward this fall as the clock ticks closer to the start of the 2020-21 school year with little clarity in place for an obvious and safe path moving forward for athletics. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

Facebook  Twitter  Instagram  Google+  RSS Feeds

© The Washington Times, 3600 New York Avenue NE, Washington, DC 20002

 

You received this email because you signed up for newsletters from The Washington Times.
Manage my newsletters | Unsubscribe
3600 New York Avenue NE Washington, DC 20002

THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

 

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

HIGHLIGHTS

What’s on the table in pandemic relief talks

What's on the table in pandemic relief talks

President Trump and Senate Republicans are beginning negotiations with House Democrats on a new round of coronavirus pandemic fiscal relief. Here are some of the major policies under consideration.

Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib face Democratic primary stress tests

Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib face Democratic primary stress tests

Two “Squad” members are on the defensive as they seek reelection for the first time.

Jews back Biden even as anti-Semitism rears its head on the Left

Jews back Biden even as anti-Semitism rears its head on the Left

President Trump is headed for a drubbing from Jewish voters this fall even as the Democratic Party’s support for Israel wanes and elements of the liberal base flirt with anti-Semitism.

‘Talibanisation’ feared in African Sahel as Europe steps up presence and reliance on US

'Talibanisation' feared in African Sahel as Europe steps up presence and reliance on US

French President Emmanuel Macron recently sat down with the leaders of the five Sahel countries of Africa to declare a dubious success against jihadist terrorist groups in the region.

ADVERTISEMENT

Just weeks until Biden announces his VP pick. Here’s who’s on top

Just weeks until Biden announces his VP pick. Here's who's on top

Just weeks remain until Joe Biden announces his running mate, and more than a half-dozen women are top contenders in his search.

States split over exempting religious schools from pandemic closures

States split over exempting religious schools from pandemic closures

As many states prepare to keep students learning online in the fall, some are weighing whether to extend religious exemptions to schools run by churches.

US ambassador inquired about moving British Open to Trump property at president’s request: Report

US ambassador inquired about moving British Open to Trump property at president's request: Report

President Trump reportedly pressed a U.S. ambassador to raise the possibility of hosting the British Open at his golf course.

Mike Pence ‘wouldn’t hesitate’ to send his children back to school for in-person classes

Mike Pence 'wouldn't hesitate' to send his children back to school for in-person classes

Vice President Mike Pence said he would send his children back to school without hesitation if they were still young enough to be attending classes during the coronavirus pandemic.

‘Taking further action’: Twitter bans thousands of QAnon accounts in sweeping crackdown

'Taking further action': Twitter bans thousands of QAnon accounts in sweeping crackdown

Twitter is taking new actions to curtail followers of the so-called QAnon conspiracy theory in an effort to crack down on misinformation and harassment.

Delaware donor claims he wore a wire to help FBI investigate Biden fundraising

Delaware donor claims he wore a wire to help FBI investigate Biden fundraising

Christopher Tigani, a former Delaware political donor who was arrested for campaign finance violations, revealed he helped the FBI investigate whether Joe Biden or his staff knew about his illegal activities by wearing a wire.

‘Circumstances have changed’: DOJ ready for more Mueller report declassifications

'Circumstances have changed': DOJ ready for more Mueller report declassifications

More than a year after special counsel Robert Mueller’s report was released, the Justice Department has determined more of the redacted report can be declassified.

US offers $5M reward for information leading to the arrest of Venezuela chief justice

US offers $5M reward for information leading to the arrest of Venezuela chief justice

The United States is offering $5 million for information leading to the arrest or conviction of Maikel Moreno, president of Venezuela’s highest court.

THE ROUNDUP

ADVERTISEMENT

 

Washington Examiner
Follow on Twitter   Friend on Facebook
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

Chicago Tribune
VIEW IN BROWSER JULY 22, 2020 CHICAGOTRIBUNE.COM

DAYWATCH

Good morning, Chicago. Here’s the coronavirus news and other stories you need to know to start your day.

1

Mayor Lori Lightfoot says Chicago expects influx of federal agents to help city fight violence, ‘but we do not welcome dictatorship’

President Donald Trump will be sending federal law enforcement agents to help police and the U.S. attorney’s office fight Chicago violence and the city intends to cooperate, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said.

But Lightfoot also said Tuesday that her administration would be vigilant to ensure the Trump administration doesn’t repeat in Chicago what happened in Portland, Oregon.

2

At least 15 people shot in exchange of gunfire at funeral in Gresham neighborhood on South Side, authorities say

At least 15 people were shot Tuesday evening in the Gresham neighborhood on Chicago’s South Side and one person was in custody, authorities said.

About 6:30 p.m., shots were fired at attendees of a funeral in the 1000 block of 79th Street from a black vehicle speeding west, according to First Deputy Superintendent Eric Carter, who spoke at the scene Tuesday night

 

 

3

The tally is in: An estimated 4,400 Chicago-area businesses have closed during the pandemic. 2,400 say they’ll never reopen.

Chicagoans have watched for months as “For Sale” and “For Rent” signs popped up in windows of their favorite coffee joints and neighborhood bars, and they’ve wondered whether treasured restaurants will ever reopen. A tally is in: The coronavirus pandemic has forced an estimated 4,400 businesses in the Chicago area to close, including 2,400 that say they won’t reopen.

4

Students push back against in-person bar and medical college exams amid coronavirus fears: ‘We’re forced to choose between our livelihoods and our lives’

Designed to measure fitness, character and competence, the bar exam is a grueling 12-hour test typically administered over a two-day period to thousands of recent law school graduates. But with coronavirus cases still surging in many parts of the nation, some law school graduates view this communal experience not as a shared rite of passage but as a potentially life-threatening risk.

 

 

5

Having an owner who works from home is a ‘pet’s dream.’ But what happens when you go back to work?

The stay-at-home order made for the “perfect” time to adopt, said Rachel Stopchinski. She adopted Mocha — a 2-year-old black cat — from PAWS Chicago in May, seeking a companion for her other cat. Mocha had been at PAWS for more than two years because her epilepsy required a home that could provide a special level of care. Stopchinski, who also has epilepsy, said she connected to Mocha’s story and the timing was just right.

PRO TRUMP NEWS

 

CHICAGO SUNTIMES

The latest on the mass shooting outside a Gresham funeral home

Chicago Sun-Times Morning Edition
Fifteen people were shot Tuesday evening outside a funeral home in Gresham on the South Side — the largest number of victims in a single Chicago shooting in recent memory.
The victims, listed in conditions ranging from serious to critical, were being treated at five area hospitals, Chicago Police First Deputy Supt. Eric Carter said. All the victims ages range from 21 to 65, police said. Read our staff report…
15 shot outside Gresham funeral home

Lightfoot, White House signal Trump might not send Portland-style strike force to Chicago

Will Wisconsin be the next state added to Chicago travel order?

GOP legislators: Democrats should demand Springfield action to address ‘breach of trust in government’

Pritzker preaches ‘personal responsibility’ as Illinois COVID-19 positivity rate inches upward with another 955 cases

Auburn Gresham residents frustrated by weeks of missing mail delivery

Slight majority of CPS parents want schools to reopen in some form, poll finds

United loses $1.6 billion in 2nd quarter

Did you enjoy this issue?
Sun-Times Morning Edition

Our award-winning local news and political coverage sent directly to your inbox every morning.

If you don’t want these updates anymore, please unsubscribe here.
If you were forwarded this newsletter and you like it, you can subscribe here.
Powered by Revue
© 2020 Chicago Sun-Times, 30 N. Racine Ave. Suite 300, Chicago, IL 60607

THE HILL

The Hill's Morning Report
Presented by Facebook

© Getty Images

 

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

Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 140,534. Tuesday, 140,909. Wednesday, 142,068.
Consensus is eluding Senate Republicans, who began drafting another massive coronavirus relief package this week as the Trump administration and lawmakers face a tight timeline, a $1 trillion goal, and an abundance of ideas about what Americans and the economy need before the November elections.

 

The Senate GOP conference has been meeting around the clock as it races toward making a proposal. However, as The Hill’s Jordain Carney writes, the talks have not yielded anything meaningful yet as lawmakers remain all over the map on myriad issues, including what to do about unemployment benefits, whether to include a payroll-tax cut and the overall price tag of the bill.

 

The looming proposal is unlikely to receive unanimous support from within the conference, as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) noted on Tuesday. The comments came after a meeting where Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows briefed lawmakers, with the marathon talks carrying on throughout the day.

 

“We’ve got some people who are going to balk at how much it is, probably going to balk at some of the specific provisions within it, and you know we won’t have everybody, but you want to try to get as many as you can,” Sen. John Thune (S.D.), the No. 2 ranking Republican, told The Hill.

 

NBC News: “What in the hell are we doing?” Senate Republicans clash over coronavirus relief.

 

The Washington Post: White House, GOP in disarray over coronavirus spending plan as deadline nears on expiring emergency aid.

 

Among the most contentious issues remains the future of unemployment benefits as the $600 per week add-on that was included in the CARES Act in March expires at the end of the month.

 

“They’re thinking about doing 70 percent of the amount,” Trump said, indicating plans to knock the total down to around $175 or $200 from the $600 in added unemployment benefit enacted four months ago. “The amount would be the same, but doing it in a little bit smaller initial amounts so that people are going to want to go back to work as opposed to making so much money that they really don’t have to.” 

 

NPR and CNBC: $600 federal unemployment boost expires at the end of this week for recipients in most states even though the expiration date is July 31.

 

Keeping the price tag for the package around $1 trillion, as Mnuchin had hoped, has also proved to be a challenge, according to The Hill’s Alexander Bolton. A number of proposals now being pushed by administration officials, GOP lawmakers and Democrats could easily push the next COVID-19 relief bill beyond the $2 trillion mark, lawmakers and aides acknowledge.

 

Some Senate Republicans are already complaining that the price tag and the process have gotten out of control even as McConnell tries to put a hard cap on the size of the legislation.

 

“It’s already spiraled out of control,” said Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) following the conference’s meeting with Mnuchin, Meadows and National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow.

 

Meanwhile, the process is a waiting game for Democrats as they prepare for the GOP’s proposal. Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), who along with Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) met with Mnuchin and Meadows on Tuesday afternoon, declared that Republicans are “in shambles.”

 

“They’re all in disarray — you hear different Republicans say different things — and we can’t negotiate on a vague concept. That’s not how it’s going to work,” Schumer told reporters. “We need a specific bill” (The Hill).

 

The Hill: McConnell previews some GOP coronavirus relief bill provisions.

 

The Hill: White House doubles down on payroll tax cut opposed by GOP senators.

 

The Associated Press: GOP splits as virus aid package could swell past $1 trillion.

 

© Getty Images

A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
Facebook launches Global State of Small Business Report

 

At Facebook, we are committed to helping small businesses succeed. We partnered with the World Bank and the OECD to survey businesses in 50+ countries and regions to understand the challenges they face and ways we can better support them.

 

Go further: Read the first report.

LEADING THE DAY
CONGRESS: Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) found herself in the crosshairs of House conservatives on Tuesday as they loudly aired grievances against her during a conference meeting on Tuesday morning.

 

As The Hill’s Juliegrace Brufke details, Reps. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), Chip Roy (R-Texas) and Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) engaged in a heated back-and-forth with Cheney, the No. 3 House Republican, in full view of the House GOP conference over a series of perceived slights. Headlining the complaints were her endorsement of Massie’s primary challenger, her support for Anthony Fauci and her public breaks with the president as speculation rages that she is setting herself up for a post-Trump Republican Party.

 

Following the meeting, Gaetz took his disagreement public, calling for Cheney’s ouster as House GOP conference chairwoman, which Donald Trump Jr. backed in a tweet of his own (The Hill). Cheney fired back at the president’s eldest son, noting that he is not a part of the House Republican Conference (The Hill).

 

Despite the complaints, Cheney still enjoys the support of many rank-and-file members. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) expressed his support for her as conference chairwoman later on Tuesday, telling reporters they are “honored” to have her in the post.

 

“It was a premeditated hit job,” one House GOP member told the Morning Report. “She’s well respected, and the Freedom Caucus went too far.”

 

The Bottom Line: The pile-on from the House Freedom Caucus (HFC) comes as the group’s influence has dwindled during the GOP’s time in the minority. In the majority, the caucus could gum up legislation and make life miserable for leadership. Today, the group is a minority of the minority and is having trouble finding its way without the power it enjoyed. Adding to the problems, the HFC is also going through a transitional period in leadership after Meadows departed Congress in March. As a second GOP member put it, “They are irrelevant.”

 

Paul Kane & Rachael Bade, The Washington Post: House conservatives challenge Liz Cheney, question her loyalty to Trump.

 

© Getty Images

 

> Capitol clash: Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and Ted Yoho (R-Fla.) were at the center of attention on Tuesday after The Hill’s Mike Lillis reported on a heated encounter between the two on the east front steps outside the House chamber on Monday night where Yoho, a member of the House Freedom Caucus, called his colleague a “f—ing bitch.”

 

The exchange started when Yoho told the progressive New York City member she was  “disgusting” for recently suggesting that poverty and unemployment are driving a spike in crime in New York City during the coronavirus pandemic.

 

“You are out of your freaking mind,” Yoho told her, with Ocasio-Cortez telling him he was being “rude.” Shortly after, with Ocasio-Cortez out of earshot, Yoho muttered the vulgar term while walking toward the House office buildings.

 

Ocasio-Cortez, a frequent target of GOP attacks, said that while she usually gets along with Republican lawmakers, this type of encounter was a first.

 

“In all these intense news cycles, I have never, ever been treated that way by another member before,” she said. “I’m frankly quite taken aback.”

 

> Defense bill: The House passed the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) by a veto-proof majority, 295-125, on Tuesday only hours after the White House issued a veto threat over the renaming of military installations named after Confederate figures.

 

The bill earned the support of 108 Republicans, though some who voted in favor could change their votes to support a veto. The 125 “no” votes included 43 Democrats. As The Hill’s Rebecca Kheel writes, the $740.5 billion defense bill covers topics of all stripes, including a 3 percent pay raise for troops and the creation of a $3.6 billion fund to counter China in the Indo-Pacific region. It also sets aside $1 billion for the Pentagon to deal with pandemic preparedness amid the coronavirus crisis.

 

The Senate is expected to pass its version of the NDAA later this week. The upper chamber’s bill would require that bases and other property be renamed in three years, while the House’s version would force them to be renamed within a year.

 

****

 

CORONAVIRUS: Trump on Tuesday, while reading from prepared notes during a 25-minute White House briefing, said the coronavirus in the United States “will probably, unfortunately, get worse before it gets better.” He also persisted in saying COVID-19 will “disappear” (The Hill).

 

The president, eager to reclaim some of the large television and social media viewership he captured in April during lengthier, free wheeling briefings, assured the public that while he understands people will judge him in November based on his handling of the coronavirus crisis, “We’re going to get it taken care of.

 

Trump, who appeared without Vice President Pence or any of the government’s top public health experts, denied that he’d ever been opposed to masks as a precaution against infection, pulling one out of his pocket for the cameras. “I’m getting used to the mask,” he said, arguing he’s worn face coverings in elevators to help protect his masked security detail and in settings where he cannot practice social distancing.

 

“I have no problem with masks,” Trump emphasized after months of telling the public he would not wear a face covering because he tests negative for COVID-19 so often. “Whether you like the mask or not, they have an impact,” he added a day after tweeting a black and white photograph of himself wearing what he called a “patriotic” mask. “It helps. It helps” (The Associated Press). 

 

As The Hill’s Niall Stanage writes, Trump has changed his tack to try to re-engage with the battle against the coronavirus after a lengthy period when he played down the threat.

 

Trump said he’ll continue to hold regular press briefings about COVID-19 and the federal response, adding the next one will focus on the U.S. economy.

 

> Anthony Fauci: The government’s leading infectious disease expert was not invited to join Trump at the White House briefing on Tuesday, but the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases takes calls from senators and governors and grants plenty of interviews to describe the U.S. surge in infections and deaths nationwide this month. He hammered home to The New York TimesIt’s clear what’s going on. Young people are saying to themselves: `Wait a minute. I’m young, I’m healthy. The chances of my getting seriously ill are very low. And in fact, it is about a 20 to 40 percent likelihood that I won’t have any symptoms at all. So why should I bother?’ What they’re missing is something fundamental: By getting infected themselves — even if they never get a symptom — they are part of the propagation of a pandemic. They are fueling the pandemic. We have to keep hammering that home, because, as much as they do that, they’re completely relinquishing their societal responsibility.”

 

> The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with which Trump has clashed in the past, released data on Tuesday showing that the reported number of people infected with COVID-19 in parts of this country is actually two to 13 times higher (The New York Times).

 

> West Coast: After bending its coronavirus curve, California is poised to take over from New York as the record-holder among states with the highest number of coronavirus cases. It has recently been reporting about 9,000 new cases each day (CNN). California Health and Human Services Secretary Mark Ghaly said on Tuesday, “If the data trends continue to such a place that we don’t think we will get [to recovery], we will return to dimming in some areas of the state. We will always have our finger on the dimmer switch. We are not afraid to use it, and we will continue to be guided by data” (Deadline).

 

> Texas: The University Interscholastic League, the organization that governs high school sports in Texas, ruled on Tuesday that the size of public high schools will determine when football, volleyball, tennis and cross country can resume in the midst of the coronavirus crisis. Smaller schools can start practicing in August. Larger schools must wait until September, the league said (Texas Tribune).

 

> Virus science: The backbone of what scientists hope will become a successful vaccine for use with the novel coronavirus is … another family of common viruses. Adenoviruses, which cause a wide range of relatively tame illnesses in people of all ages, are used with Ebola vaccines, and some researchers hope they can one day become the bulwark of a cancer vaccine. At least five vaccine candidates for COVID-19 are built on the backs of adenoviruses, a common family of pathogens that are often used as vehicles for delivering a variety of therapies to human cells. A sixth candidate uses a near relative of the family (The Hill). … An estimated 4 in 10 people infected by the highly contagious coronavirus do not ever have symptoms, creating a “silent spread” risk that scientists believe must be controlled if the world hopes to eventually halt the spread of the pathogen. “For control, to actually keep the virus from coming back, we’re going to have to deal with this issue,” said Rein Houben, a disease tracker at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (The Associated Press).

 

© Getty Images

IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
POLITICS & CAMPAIGNS: GOP strategists around the country are concerned that the president’s vocal opposition to mail-in voting is resonating with Republicans, imperiling years-long efforts by the party to sign people up to vote by mail.

 

As Reid Wilson writes, expanded mail-in voting has become a pillar of modern political campaigns, enabling both parties to lock down millions of votes days and weeks before Election Day and to narrow their focus onto those who have not yet voted, conserving precious time and resources in the closing days of an election.

 

“Whether we like it or not, increased vote-by-mail is going to be a reality this fall,” said Phil Cox, a former head of the Republican Governors Association. “Successful campaigns will need an integrated mail-in ballot strategy that blends messaging, modeling, and targeting. Anything short of that will be conceding votes.”

 

The New York Times: Trump’s Tulsa rally didn’t draw a big crowd. But it cost a lot.

 

Bangor Daily News: Maine brewery cancels Trump campaign event, saying it was misled over details.

 

The Hill: Pandemic imperils redistricting reform efforts.

 

The Associated Press: Trump aims to bar those in U.S. illegally from reapportionment.

 

> Biden spends: Former Vice President Joe Biden’s campaign is set to spend at least $15 million on a new ad buy in the coming week on the heels of another strong month of fundraising for his operation.

 

According to The Hill’s Max Greenwood, the upcoming ad buys are expected to exceed the $15 million the campaign spent over the past five weeks, with ads continuing to air in a number of key battleground states. The ads will feature in Arizona, Florida, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin but will seek to expand its reach in the aforementioned states by placing buys in more media markets.

 

The Associated Press: Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s (D-Mass.) new role: Key Joe Biden policy adviser.

 

Politico Magazine: Delaware beer distributor: I wore a wire to probe Biden’s fundraising.

 

The Kansas City Star: Sen. Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) picks preferred successor, endorses Rep. Roger Marshall (R-Kan.) over Kris Kobach in Senate race.

 

****

 

ADMINISTRATION: The White House as soon as this week may unveil one or more executive orders aimed at lowering drug prices, The Hill’s Peter Sullivan reports. One idea under discussion is to link some U.S. drug prices to lower prices paid overseas. Many Republicans and drug companies oppose the idea, fearing price controls and violations of free market principles.

 

Trump’s expected executive action tackles an unresolved issue important to voters about 15 weeks before Election Day. Democrats have been pounding Republicans on health care themes, pointing to the administration’s determination to overturn the Affordable Care Act.

 

> Trump and Maxwell: The president on Tuesday offered warm words to Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime companion of Jeffrey Epstein.

 

Epstein died in jail while awaiting trial in an incident later determined to be suicide. Maxwell stands accused of recruiting and facilitating the abuse of underage girls by Epstein.

 

“I just wish her well, frankly,” Trump said when asked about the 58-year-old British socialite who was Epstein’s romantic partner and was known to Trump in New York and Florida. Maxwell was denied bail last week and will remain behind bars as she awaits trial on charges she recruited girls for the financier to sexually abuse more than two decades ago (The Associated Press).

 

> The Justice Department on Tuesday accused two Chinese hackers of stealing hundreds of millions of dollars of trade secrets from companies across the world and more recently targeting firms developing a vaccine for the coronavirus (The Associated Press).

 

> Department of Homeland Security (DHS): The federal government continued to argue with elected officials in Portland, Ore., Chicago and other major U.S. cities about the government’s authority to send federal law enforcement agents to intervene in urban protests and demonstrations. Portland’s unrest has continued for 54 consecutive days (The New York Times). Acting DHS Secretary Chad Wolf on Tuesday said federal agents in Portland “will not retreat” (The Hill).

 

Instead of tamping down the turmoil, the presence of federal agents in Portland — and particularly allegations they have whisked people away in unmarked cars without probable cause — has given new momentum and a renewed focus to protests that had started to devolve into smaller, chaotic crowds. The use of federal agents against the will of local officials has also set up the potential for a constitutional crisis — and one that could escalate if Trump sends federal agents elsewhere, as he says he plans to do (The Associated Press). In Chicago on Tuesday evening, fourteen people were injured during a shootout at a funeral as the city reels from a surge in gun violence. Seventy people were shot in Chicago over the weekend and 15 were struck by gunfire on Monday (NBC News).
> Trump and his resorts: U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain Robert Wood Johnson IV, the New York Jets owner, told multiple colleagues more than two years ago that Trump asked him to see if the British government could help steer the world-famous and lucrative British Open golf tournament to the Trump Turnberry resort in Scotland.

 

The ambassador’s deputy, Lewis A. Lukens, advised Johnson it would be an unethical use of the presidency for private gain and Johnson should drop the idea. But a few weeks later, the ambassador raised it with the secretary of state for Scotland, David Mundell. Johnson’s efforts were unsuccessful. The Trump family owns two resorts in Scotland and one in Ireland, which have lost money under the president’s ownership (The New York Times).

 

> On Tuesday, the president announced he will award the Presidential Medal of Freedom to former Kansas Rep. Jim Ryun (R), 73, a legendary track and field competitor and Olympic middle-distance runner who won a silver medal in 1968 (Wichita Eagle).

OPINION
The U.S. has a stronger hand in its tech battle with China than many suspect, by David Ignatius, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3fUn3rO

 

Trump needs to stop making fun of Joe Biden’s mental lapses, by Marc A. Thiessen, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3eR0YsI

 

Nothing can justify the attack on Portland, by Quinta Jurecic and Benjamin Wittes of Lawfare, legal opinion contributors, The Atlantic. https://bit.ly/2BkWOM5

A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
Facebook helps small businesses with the Summer of Support Program

 

As many storefronts remain closed, Boost with Facebook’s Summer of Support program is helping millions of people and small business owners gain skills and find resources they need to grow and transition online.

 

Learn more about the program.

WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 9 a.m.

 

The Senate convenes at 10 a.m. and resumes consideration of the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal 2021. The Senate Environment and Public Works Committee holds a 10 a.m. hearing with experts on how to halt the spread of zoonotic diseases (which is how COVID-19 began as a leap from animals to humans).

 

The president will participate in the ceremonial swearing-in of Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought at 12:30 p.m. He’ll have lunch with Vice President Mike Pence and receive his intelligence briefing. At 3:15 p.m. in the East Room, Trump will deliver a speech about “Operation Legend” and his efforts to curb what he calls “violent crime in American cities.”

 

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is in Denmark this morning sat down with Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen in Copenhagen. Pompeo also met at midday with Danish Foreign Minister Jeppe Kofod, Faroese Minister for Foreign Affairs and Culture Jenis Av Rana, and Greenlandic Minister for Foreign Affairs and Energy Steen Lynge. The secretary attends a working lunch and joint press conference with Kofod. In the afternoon, Pompeo meets with staff and families from the U.S. Embassy in Copenhagen.

 

Economic indicator: The National Association of Realtors (NAR) at 10 a.m. releases data on existing home sales in June. The NAR expects to see a strong rebound following a nearly 10 percent drop-off in May.

 

The Washington Post Live hosts a streamed conversation about the global economy at 9:15 a.m. with European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde. Information is HERE.

 

👉 INVITATION: The Hill Virtually Live event Thursday at 1 p.m. “Diabetes and the COVID Threat,” focuses on effective diabetes care during the COVID-19 crisis, with Reps. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.) and Tom Reed (R-N.Y.), the co-chairs of the Congressional Diabetes Caucus, plus a panel of health experts. Moderator: The Hill’s Editor at Large Steve Clemons. Registration HERE.

 

The Hill’s Coronavirus Report has updates and exclusive video interviews with policymakers emailed each day. Sign up HERE!

 

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

ELSEWHERE
 International: The British government was unable to find out if Russia meddled in the 2016 Brexit referendum, according to a new parliamentary report released on Tuesday. According to the report by Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee, Russia attempted to meddle in the Scottish independence referendum in 2014, but it was unclear if it did in Britain two years later. The report called for an investigation by intelligence services and for it to subsequently be made public (Reuters).

 

 State Watch: Federal officials on Tuesday arrested Ohio Speaker of the House Larry Householder (R) and four others in connection with a public corruption racketeering conspiracy involving $60 million. Householder is one of the biggest names in Ohio politics and has been a major player for years in the state’s Republican Party (Cincinnati Enquirer).

 

➔ Immigration: The nation’s business community, represented by the National Association of Manufacturers, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, National Retail Federation and other groups, filed suit on Tuesday in the U.S. District Court for Northern California seeking to overturn Trump’s proclamation in June banning entry into the United States for foreigners on certain temporary work visas — including high-skilled H-1B visas— through the end of the year. In a joint statement, the groups said, “Our lawsuit seeks to overturn these sweeping and unlawful immigration restrictions that are an unequivocal ‘not welcome’ sign to the engineers, executives, IT experts, doctors, nurses, and other critical workers who help drive the American economy” (Bloomberg News and Axios).

THE CLOSER
And finally … As copy editors know only too well, typos can be any writer’s undoing.

 

A Long Island criminal defendant tried faking his death to avoid a jail sentence, but the phony death certificate his lawyer submitted had a glaring spelling error that made it a dead giveaway for a fraud, prosecutors said on Tuesday.

 

Robert Berger, 25, of Huntington, N.Y., now faces up to four years in prison if convicted. That’s in addition to pending sentences for earlier guilty pleas to charges of possession of a stolen Lexus and attempted grand larceny of a truck — punishment prosecutors say he was looking to avoid.

 

At first glance, Berger’s purported death certificate looked like an official document issued by the New Jersey Department of Health, Vital Statistics and Registry, but there was one big problem: Registry was spelled “Regsitry,” prosecutors said. There were also inconsistencies in the font type and size that raised suspicions, they said.

 

Berger’s next court date is July 29 (The Associated Press and Newsday).

 

© Getty Images

The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE! 
TO VIEW PAST EDITIONS OF THE HILL’S MORNING REPORT CLICK HERE
TO RECEIVE THE HILL’S MORNING REPORT IN YOUR INBOX SIGN UP HERE
Facebook Twitter Linkedin Email
The Hill

 

View in your browser

ROLL CALL

Image

Morning Headlines

ImageTop negotiators from the White House and Capitol Hill worked through differences on a new round of coronavirus relief legislation Tuesday, although it was clear by day’s end that there wasn’t yet agreement even among Republicans on what their opening offer should be. Read More…

ImageWhile Congress jostles over whether businesses should get extra protections from lawsuits related to COVID-19 in the next pandemic relief bill, legal action across the country highlights the stakes for states struggling to reopen their economies. Read More…

Cheney and Gaetz and Massie and Trump: House GOP tangled up over loyalty

 

ImageHours after the first in-person House Republican Conference meeting in months erupted in tensions between Chairwoman Liz Cheney and several rank-and-file members, Cheney and other GOP leaders sought to present a united front, even as she stood by the positions that got her crossways with colleagues. Read More…

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

Learn more about RevenueStripe...

Rock, meet hard place: Senate appropriators’ dilemma

 

ImageAs House members start debating spending bills, they are leaving their Senate counterparts in the dust. The ostensible holdup is the lack of an agreement between the Senate Appropriations chairman and ranking member on amendments, but election-year politics appears to be the real culprit, budget experts say. Read More…

Trump and Biden’s 2020 challenge: 3 percent or bust

 

ImageOPINION — History tells us that when one presidential candidate’s lead goes above 3 percent nationally, the size of the lead is likely to produce both at least a plurality in the popular vote and a win in the Electoral College. The challenge for the Trump campaign is to tighten this year’s race, targeting that all-important 3 percent. Read More…

House to vote on public lands bill passed by Senate

 

ImageThe House is expected to pass bipartisan public lands legislation Wednesday, delivering a victory for at-risk Republican senators up for election and sending hundreds of millions of dollars to a federal conservation fund. Read More…

‘We need the Blue Jays’: Hurdles remain ahead of baseball’s opening day

 

ImagePhiladelphia Phillies first baseman Rhys Hoskins told his wife that she would largely need to quarantine over the next weeks and months if the attempt to hold a truncated Major League Baseball season amid a global pandemic has any chance. He said he was not alone. 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.

 

1201 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Suite 600
Washington, DC 20004

POLITICO PLAYBOOK

POLITICO Playbook: Inside the coronavirus relief talks

Presented by

DRIVING THE DAY

AS OF NOW, REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS aren’t saying much about the coronavirus relief negotiations. But here’s what some people involved told us privately Tuesday:

— “THE TWO PARTIES ARE SO FAR APART that it is extremely difficult to envision getting any kind of compromise by the end of July.”

— ANOTHER SOURCE involved in the talks put it this way: 0% chance there will be a bill passed by the end of July, 40% chance there is a bill by mid-August.

— A THIRD SOURCE suggested that Republicans are irreparably split, and they’ll never be able to find unity in their fractured conference.

EVERYTHING SAID DURING A CONGRESSIONAL NEGOTIATION is posturing, in some way, shape or form. Each side is trying to gain leverage over the other by talking tough, saber-rattling and generally trying to throw the other side back on its heels.

BUT AFTER TWO DAYS of back-and-forth negotiation, it seems evident that the effort to craft and pass a Covid relief bill not only will slip into August, but could also easily subsume the first two weeks of next month. The two sides are miles apart on issues large and small, and neither side has an obvious incentive to cave or relent. Internally, both Republicans and Democrats have divisions — the GOP more than Dems — and those remain unresolved.

HERE’S ONE ANECDOTE THAT HELPS ILLUSTRATE THE DISCONNECT: On Tuesday afternoon, Speaker NANCY PELOSI hosted Senate Minority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER, Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN and White House chief of staff MARK MEADOWS in her office suite for a meeting. This was meant to be a touch-gloves moment for the two sides, which will be at loggerheads for the next few weeks. Internally, in the Capitol, the move was seen as risky by some Republicans. Why would the administration meet with PELOSI before Senate Republicans put out their bill?

BUT, REGARDLESS of the concerns, they headed to PELOSI’S quarters for the meeting. SCHUMER entered through the main entrance, walking through a clutch of reporters to remind us that the Republicans were in “shambles.” MEADOWS said little on his way in.

WHEN THEY GOT TO THE TABLE — attendance was light, there were fewer than a dozen present — Republicans were ticking off their priorities, and noting that they had come to the Democrats’ side on several issues. THE ADMINISTRATION and Senate Republicans were willing to increase money for schools to $105 BILLION, which they noted, was $5 BILLION more than Democrats had in their HEROES Act back in May.

PELOSI AND SCHUMER immediately interjected that no, they needed way more than that for schools — their number by now was closer to $400 BILLION, which reflected an updated total from the Senate Democrats’ bill. Democrats argue Republicans have dawdled for more than two months, so the need for money for schools has ballooned. Republicans say that Democrats were already looking for more cash. Both sides saw this as an illustration of just how far apart they are at the moment.

PELOSI AND SCHUMER emerged from that late-afternoon session with MEADOWS and MNUCHIN to say that Republicans are in disarray — not totally wrong, but not quite right either — and they would wait until the GOP put out their bill to begin negotiations.

SENATE REPUBLICANS EXPECT to put out their legislation today or early Thursday, and Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL warned that it will have most of his conference on board, but perhaps not all of it. He repeatedly said Tuesday that Democrats are not irrelevant in this process — meaning the legislation will obviously be a negotiated product, like most things in the Senate.

YOU SHOULD READJUST YOUR THINKING as to when this bill will get done. The goal is not to get a bill passed by the end of next week — as MNUCHIN is running around the Hill suggesting. The goal is to get a bill by some point in August, and even that will be a hard-fought battle.

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION NEGOTIATORS expect to be in the Capitol this afternoon. … HOW IT’S PLAYING: POLITICO … NYT … WAPO

Good Wednesday morning.

SIREN … JAKE SHERMAN and JOHN BRESNAHAN: “Matt Gaetz appears to run afoul of House ethics rules”: “Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz has privately engaged in several spending practices in his nearly four years in office that appear to be in conflict with the House’s ethics rules, a POLITICO investigation has found.

“Gaetz, a close ally of President Donald Trump from the Florida Panhandle, improperly sent tens of thousands of taxpayer dollars to a limited liability company linked to a speech-writing consultant who was ousted from the Trump administration, in direct conflict with House rules.

“In another possible violation, a private company installed a television studio in his father’s home in Niceville, Fla., which Gaetz uses when he appears on television.

“Taxpayers foot the bill to rent the television camera, and the private company that built the studio — which Gaetz refuses to identify — takes a fee each time he appears on air, his office said. It’s unclear how much it cost the private company to construct the studio.

“This may run afoul of the House gift rule, which prohibits any lawmaker, aide, and their family members from accepting gifts worth more than $50. The official definition of a gift is very broad and covers virtually any good or service with monetary value.

“Gaetz’s office denies wrongdoing in both cases. Gaetz’s aides said the House Ethics Committee approved both arrangements but declined to produce any evidence that that was the case. His latest actions suggest a broader pattern by the second-term lawmaker of pushing the bounds of — if not outright defying — restrictions intended to guard against corruption and conflicts of interest.” POLITICO

— IT TOOK GAETZ weeks upon weeks to respond to these instances, and even then, he was circumspect. In our time covering Congress, these are very unusual practices.

BREAKING OVERNIGHT — “China Says U.S. Ordered It to Close Houston Consulate,” by WSJ’s Chun Han Wong in Hong Kong: “China said the U.S. ordered the abrupt closure of its consulate in Houston, a dramatic escalation in bilateral tensions that Beijing condemned as outrageous and unprecedented.

“Washington’s demand, issued Tuesday, marked ‘a political provocation unilaterally launched by the U.S.,’ Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said Wednesday at a routine briefing in Beijing. ‘China urges the U.S. to immediately rescind its erroneous decision, otherwise China will undertake legitimate and necessary responses.’

“Morgan Ortagus, a spokeswoman for the State Department, said Washington ordered the closure of the Chinese consulate in Houston ‘in order to protect American intellectual property’ and the private information of U.S. citizens.” WSJ

— KPRC 2: “Houston fire and police respond to reports of documents being burned at Consulate General of China”

FRONTS: NYTwith a terrific story on TRUMP pressuring his ambassador in London for the British open … N.Y. POST … WSJ

THE BRIEFINGS ARE BACK … GABBY ORR: “Staring down defeat, Trump attempts a coronavirus reset”: “A month ago, he insisted the novel coronavirus was ‘dying out’ in the U.S. As the pandemic overwhelmed huge swaths of the nation, he maintained the threat was ‘fading away.’ Health officials across the nation begged him for more attention on the widening health crisis — and he wanted little to do with them. …

“Compared to previous disorderly spectacles that sometimes exceeded two hours, Trump’s appearance at a White House lectern on Tuesday hinted that significant changes are underway as he and his aides refocus their attention on the No. 1 threat standing between them and a second term. The format of the briefing — a mostly scripted, solo Trump — also suggested a detente was reached among opposing White House factions that spent the past few weeks clashing over the role their embattled boss should play in responding to the alarming resurgence of Covid-19 in southern and southwestern states.” POLITICO

PLAYBOOK METRO SECTION — “Fairfax, Loudoun, Montgomery call for all-virtual start to school year, scrapping earlier plans,” by WaPo’s Hannah Natanson and Donna St. George: “In a major reversal, the superintendents of three large public school systems in Virginia and Maryland are calling for an all-virtual start to the fall semester, scrapping earlier plans to offer a mix of in-person and distance learning.

“The superintendents of Fairfax County Public Schools and Loudoun County Public Schools, both in Northern Virginia, argued for an online-only start in meetings with their school boards Tuesday. The superintendent of Montgomery County Public Schools in Maryland announced the switch in an email late Tuesday afternoon to parents, students and staffers.

“All three districts are among the largest and most highly regarded public school systems in the Washington area. They are all defying intense pressure from the Trump administration, which has urged schools nationwide to reopen their doors five days a week come fall.” WaPo

TALKER, NYT A1: “Trump’s Request of an Ambassador: Get the British Open for Me,” by Mark Landler in London, Lara Jakes and Maggie Haberman: “The American ambassador to Britain, Robert Wood Johnson IV, told multiple colleagues in February 2018 that President Trump had asked him to see if the British government could help steer the world-famous and lucrative British Open golf tournament to the Trump Turnberry resort in Scotland, according to three people with knowledge of the episode.

“The ambassador’s deputy, Lewis A. Lukens, advised him not to do it, warning that it would be an unethical use of the presidency for private gain, these people said. But Mr. Johnson apparently felt pressured to try. A few weeks later, he raised the idea of Turnberry playing host to the Open with the secretary of state for Scotland, David Mundell.

“In a brief interview last week, Mr. Mundell said it was ‘inappropriate’ for him to discuss his dealings with Mr. Johnson and referred to a British government statement that said Mr. Johnson ‘made no request of Mr. Mundell regarding the British Open or any other sporting event.’ The statement did not address whether the ambassador had broached the issue of Turnberry, which Mr. Trump bought in 2014, but none of the next four Opens are scheduled to be played there.

“Still, the episode left Mr. Lukens and other diplomats deeply unsettled. Mr. Lukens, who served as the acting ambassador before Mr. Johnson arrived in November 2017, emailed officials at the State Department to tell them what had happened, colleagues said. A few months later, Mr. Johnson forced out Mr. Lukens, a career diplomat who had earlier served as ambassador to Senegal, shortly before his term was to end.” NYT

NEW … AD WARS: A health care trade group is launching an ad campaign to push back on a plan the White House is considering to try to eliminate rebates for government drug plans. PCMA, the Pharmaceutical Care Management Association, is running the ad that claims the plan would lead to a significant increase in premiums for seniors on FOX NEWS’ “Fox & Friends” and during Sean Hannity’s and Tucker Carlson’s nightly programs. A source familiar with the effort says the group is committed to spending seven figures toward a state-based campaign targeting vulnerable GOP senators on the issue if it remains in play. The ad

VEEPSTAKES — “Elizabeth Warren’s new role: Key Joe Biden policy adviser,” by AP’s Will Weissert: “Warren, a Massachusetts senator and leading progressive, has become an unlikely confidant and adviser to Biden, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee. They talk every 10 days or so, according to aides to both politicians who spoke on condition of anonymity to freely describe their relationship. Those forums have provided opportunities for Warren to make a case on top policy issues to Biden, who ran a more centrist primary campaign.

“He adopted Warren-endorsed plans on personal bankruptcy, expanding Social Security benefits and canceling student-loan debt for millions of Americans. She also helped devise important portions of his post-pandemic economic recovery proposals.”

DOWN BALLOT: “Gardner: NRSC should pull anti-Hickenlooper ad in Colorado,” by James Arkin: “Sen. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.) — in a rare break with his own party’s campaign arm — is calling on the National Republican Senatorial Committee to pull a controversial television ad that attacks his Democratic opponent, former Gov. John Hickenlooper.

“The ad criticizes Hickenlooper over a deadly gas explosion in the state in 2017. After the spot began airing last week, Erin Martinez, whose husband and brother died in the explosion, called it ‘horrifying’ and said it disgraced her family members’ legacy. Hickenlooper and Democrats in the state echoed her calls for it to be taken down.

“Gardner, who was the NRSC chair in the 2018 election cycle, said in a statement to POLITICO that he spoke to Martinez on Tuesday. He disavowed the committee’s ad and said he wanted Republicans to stop running it.” POLITICO

CNN’S MANU RAJU and ALEX ROGERS: “Susan Collins withholds support from Trump despite endorsing previous GOP presidential nominees”

TRUMP’S WEDNESDAY — The president will participate in the ceremonial swearing-in of Russ Vought as OMB director at 12:30 p.m. in the Oval Office. He will have lunch with VP Mike Pence at 12:45 p.m. in the private dining room, then is due to receive his intel briefing at 2 p.m. in the Oval Office. He will deliver remarks on “Operation Legend: Combating Violent Crimes in American Cities” at 3:15 p.m. in the East Room.

PLAYBOOK READS

BETSY WOODRUFF SWAN, NATASHA BERTRAND and DANIEL LIPPMAN: “Trump administration weighs a show of force in more cities”: “Portland may just be the beginning. Federal law enforcement agencies are gearing up to expand their footprint nationwide in the coming weeks, despite concerns about the recent scenes of violence and chaos in Oregon.

“Department of Homeland Security officials have considered deploying mobile field forces to protect federal property in cities around the country that experience unrest, two people familiar with the discussions told POLITICO. And the Department of Justice is planning to expand ‘Operation Legend,’ a law enforcement initiative launched by Attorney General Bill Barr earlier this month to fight ‘the sudden surge of violent crime’ in Kansas City, Mo.

“DOJ plans to announce this week that the operation, which involves agents from the FBI and the Drug Enforcement Administration, will expand into more cities, a DOJ official told POLITICO. ‘We are seeing success in our Kansas City operation and have already arrested some wanted fugitives,’ the DOJ official said.”

VALLEY TALK — “Facebook Creates Teams to Study Racial Bias, After Previously Limiting Such Efforts,” by WSJ’s Deepa Seetharaman and Jeff Horwitz: “Facebook Inc. is creating new teams dedicated to studying and addressing potential racial bias on its core platform and Instagram unit, in a departure from the company’s prior reluctance to explore the way its products affect different minority groups.

“The newly formed ‘equity and inclusion team’ at Instagram will examine how Black, Hispanic and other minority users in the U.S. are affected by the company’s algorithms, including its machine-learning systems, and how those effects compare with white users, according to people familiar with the matter.

“An Instagram representative confirmed the move, adding that the Facebook platform is also creating a similar product team for its namesake app. ‘The racial justice movement is a moment of real significance for our company,’ said Vishal Shah, Instagram’s head of product. ‘Any bias in our systems and policies runs counter to providing a platform for everyone to express themselves.’” WSJ

— THE VERGE’S CASEY NEWTON: “Antitrust investigations aren’t the biggest threat to Facebook’s future”

— NBC: “Twitter bans 7,000 QAnon accounts, limits 150,000 others as part of broad crackdown,” by Ben Collins and Brandy Zadrozny: “Twitter announced Tuesday that it has begun taking sweeping actions to limit the reach of QAnon content, banning many of the conspiracy theory’s followers because of problems with harassment and misinformation.

“Twitter will stop recommending accounts and content related to QAnon, including material in email and follow recommendations, and it will take steps to limit circulation of content in features like trends and search. The action will affect about 150,000 accounts, said a spokesperson, who asked to remain unnamed because of concerns about the targeted harassment of social media employees.

“The spokesperson said that as part of its new policy, the company had taken down more than 7,000 QAnon accounts in the last few weeks for breaking its rules on targeted harassment.”

PLAYBOOKERS

Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.

SPOTTED at a Bipartisan Policy Center Zoom awards dinner hosted by BPC President Jason Grumet: Sens. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), Patty Murray (D-Wash.), Tina Smith (D-Minn.) and Bill Cassidy (R-La.), Reps. Garret Graves (R-La.) and Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.), Julián Castro, Henry Cisneros, Bob Dole, Olympia Snowe, Robbie Bach, Marlene Colucci, Bill Frist …

… Esther Coopersmith, Tom Daschle, Kimberly Olson Dorgan, Dan Glickman, Christine Gregoire, Kathy “Coach” Kemper, John and Diana Villiers Negroponte, Michael Steele, John and Betty Ann Tanner, Andrei Iancu, Ashok Mirpuri, Dirk Wouters, Grace Koh, Kelsey Valentine, Sidney Collie, Bojan Vujic, Kevin McGinnis, Selena Strandberg, Janet Pitt and Kaivan Shroff.

BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Arshi Siddiqui, partner at Akin Gump. A trend she thinks doesn’t get enough attention: “More and more, there is a sense that people abroad aren’t necessarily welcome to study and work in the U.S. Attracting the best and brightest from all over the world has always been a driver of U.S. innovation and economic growth. My dad came to the U.S. on a scholarship for his Ph.D., and just like so many other immigrants, the American dream and American values are core to his story even though he was not born here. Hopefully, those types of stories will not be forgotten.” Playbook Q&A

BIRTHDAYS: Bob Dole, former Senate majority leader, is 97 (h/t Scott Reed) … Rep. John Larson (D-Conn.) is 72 … Rep. Robert Aderholt (R-Ala.) is 55 … Don Van Natta Jr. is 56 … Reid Cherlin … U.S. Ambassador to NATO Kay Bailey Hutchison is 77 … David Shuster … Erin Perrine, director of press comms for the Trump campaign, is 32 (h/t husband Nick) … Port Side Strategies’ Will Fischer … POLITICO’s Craig Howie and Seamus Dowdall … Amanda Kules … Tarun Chhabra … Alex Pappas … Caleb Smith … Sarah Hummell … former VA Secretary David Shulkin is 61 … Whitney VanMeter, VP of political affairs at UPS (h/t Jon Haber) … AJ Jorgenson … Annie Lowrey … former Rep. Mike Ferguson (R-N.J.) is 5-0 … former Rep. Curt Weldon (R-Pa.) is 73 … Ella Mizrahi … Elise Shutzer, director of field operations at Pew Charitable Trusts, is 4-0 … Kevin Cameron is 28 … Liza Rodler … Sarah Litke of Plurus Strategies … Rainesford Stauffer … Anne Szkatulski …

… Brandt Anderson, national security adviser for Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.) (h/t Chuck Nadd) … The Daily Beast’s Sam Brodey … WSJ’s Warren Bass (h/t Ben Chang) … Joy Yunji Lee, counsel for the Republican National Convention … Jamaican PM Andrew Holness is 48 … Buzz Brockway … Jerry Smith … Vicki Nguyen … Sarah Obenour … Stephan Tisher … Eugene Carpino … Amy Littleton is 3-0 (h/t Tucker Middleton) … Natacha Hildebrand … Breanna Chandler … Sandra Perez Hawthorne … Lindsey Neary … Mike DiRienzo (h/t Tim Burger) … Maor Cohen … Emily Carpeaux … AP’s Peter Prengaman … Ceci Alvarez … CNN’s Terence Burlij … Shelly Porges … Nathan Naylor … Soren Dayton … Mike Gibson … Mike Moffo … Kerry Allen … Travis Korson … Sam Chiron … Enrique Goñi … Jeff Winmill … Andrew Feinberg … John Kim Cook … Kim Anderson … Les MacDonald (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Maury Forman is 61 … Christine Patronik-Holder … Ben Leubsdorf

Follow us on Twitter

AMERICAN MINUTE

  SHARE:
Join Our Email List
American Minute with Bill Federer
Carl Sandburg, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Poet: “When a nation goes down … one condition may always be found; they forgot where they came from”
“I see America, not in the setting sun of a black night of despair ahead of us,
I see America in the crimson light of a rising sun fresh from the burning, creative hand of God.
I see great days ahead, great days possible to men and women of will and vision,”
stated poet Carl Sandburg in an interview with Frederick Van Ryn of This Week Magazine (January 4, 1953, p. 11.)
Carl Sandburg was born on January 6, 1878, to Swedish immigrants who worked on the railroad.
After 8th grade, Carl Sandburg left school, borrowed his father’s railroad pass, and traveled the country as a hobo.
Carl Sandburg volunteered for military service, was sent to Puerto Rico in the Spanish-American War, and then attended college on a veteran’s bill.
Carl Sandburg wrote children’s fairytales, called Rootabaga Stories, and mused of his wanderings in American Songbag.
Carl Sandburg wrote in Remembrance Rock (1948, ch. 2, p. 7):
“A baby is God’s opinion that the world should go on.”
He continued:
“A baby, whether it does anything to you, represents life.
If a bad fire should break out in this house and I had my choice of saving the library or the babies, I would save what is alive .
Never will a time come when the most marvelous recent invention is as marvelous as a newborn baby.
The finest of our precision watches, the most super-colossal of our supercargo plants, don’t compare with a newborn baby in the number and ingenuity of coils and springs, in the flow and change of chemical solutions, in timing devices and interrelated parts that are irreplaceable.
A bab y is very modern. Yet it is also the oldest of the ancients. A baby doesn’t know he is a hoary and venerable antique — but he is.
Before man learned how to make an alphabet, how to make a wheel, how to make a fire, he knew how to make a baby — with the great help of woman, and his God and Maker.”
Carl Sandburg i, in 1926, wrote Abraham Lincoln-The Prairie Years, and in 1939 he wrote Abraham Lincoln-The War Years , for which he received a Pulitzer Prize.
In 1959, Sandburg was invited to address Congress on Lincoln’s birthday.
On October 25, 1961, Sandburg was invited to the White House by John F. Kennedy.
In his Complete Poems, for which he won a Pulitzer, 1951, Carl Sandburg wrote:
“All my life I have been trying to learn to read, to see and hear, and to write.
At sixty-five I began my first novel …
It could be, in the grace of God, I shall live to be eighty-nine …
I might paraphrase: ‘If God had let me live five years longer I should have been a writer.'”
In his poem Prayers of Steel, Carl Sandburg wrote:
“Lay me on an anvil, O God.
Beat me and hammer me into a crowbar.
Let me pry loose old walls.
Let me lift and loosen old foundations.
Lay me on an anvil, O God.
Beat me and hammer me into a steel spike.
Drive me into the girders that hold a skyscraper together.
Take red-hot rivets and fasten me into the central girders.
Let me be the great nail holding a skyscraper through blue nights into white stars.
Sandburg wrote:
“God,
The game is all your way, the secrets and the signals and the system; and so for the break of the game and the first play and the last.
Our prayer of thanks.”
Sandburg wrote in “Washington Monument by Night” (Slabs of the Sunburnt West, 1922):
“The Republic is a dream. Nothing happens unless first a dream.”
Carl Sandburg wrote:
“When a nation goes down, or a society perishes, one condition may always be found; they forgot where they came from.
They lost sight of what had brought them along.”
Sandburg’s statement is similar to Pulitzer Prize winning historian Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., who wrote in an op-ed titled “Folly’s Antidote” (The New York Times, January 1, 2007):
“History is to the nation as memory is to the individual.
As persons deprived of memory become disoriented and lost, not knowing where they have been and where they are going, so a nation denied a conception of the past will be disabled in dealing with its present and its future.
‘The longer you look back,’ said Winston Churchill, “the farther you can look forward” …
I believe a consciousness of history is a moral necessity for a nation.”
John F. Kennedy wrote in the Introduction to the American Heritage New Illustrated History of the United States (1960):
“History, after all, is the memory of a nation.
Just as memory enables the individual to learn, to choose goals and stick to them, to avoid making the same mistake twice – in short, to grow – so history is the means by which a nation establishes its sense of identity and purpose.”
If history is the memory of a nation, then America has national Alzheimer’s.
Harvard Professor George Santayana wrote in Reason
in Common Sense (Vol. I of The Life of Reason, 1905):
“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
Judge Learned Hand wrote:
“The use of history is to tell us … past themes, else we should have to repeat, each in his own experience, the successes and the failures of our forebears.”
Aristotle, in his book Rhetoric (4th century BC), called this “deliberative rhetoric,” using examples from the past to predict future outcomes:
“The political orator is concerned with the future: it is about things to be done hereafter that he advises, for or against.”
Lord Acton wrote in 1877:
“The story of the future is written in the past.”
Patrick Henry stated March 23, 1775:
“I know of no way of judging the future but by the past.”
Edmund Burke wrote in Reflections on the Revolution in France, 1790:
“People will not look forward to posterity who never look backward to their ancestors.”
Cicero stated in Ad M. Brutum, 46 BC:
“Not to know what happened before you were born is to be a child forever.”
Will & Ariel Durant wrote in The Story of Civilization, 1967:
“History is an excellent teacher with few pupils.”
The Durants wrote in The Lessons of History, 1968:
“Civilization is not inherited; it has to be l earned and earned by each generation anew; if the transmission should be interrupted … civilization would die, and we should be savages again.”
Reagan warned the Phoenix Chamber of Commerce,
March 30, 1961:
“Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn’t pass it to our children in the bloodstream.
The only way they can inherit the freedom we have known is if we fight for it, protect it, defend it and then hand it to them with the well thought lessons of how they in their lifetime must do the same.
And if you and I don’t do this, then you and I may well spend our sunset years telling our children and our children’s children what it once was like in America when men were free.”
Carl Sandburg died July 22, 1967.
At his 85th birthday party (6 January 6, 1963, Sandburg had stated ( The Best of Ralph McGill: Selected Columns, 1980)
“Time is the coin of your life. You spend it.
Do not allow others to spend it for you.”
President Ronald Reagan stated in his State of the Union Address, January 25, 1984:
“Each day your members observe a 200-year-old tradition meant to signify America is one nation under God.
I must ask: If you can begin your day with a member of the clergy standing right here leading you in prayer, then why can’t freedom to acknowledge God be enjoyed again by children in every school room across this land?
America was founded by people who believed that God was their rock of safety …”
Reagan concluded:
“I recognize we must be cautious in claiming that God is on our side, but I think it’s all right to keep asking if we’re on His side … Carl Sandburg said,
‘I see America not in the setting sun of a black night of despair … I see America in the crimson light of a rising sun fresh from the burning, creative hand of God.'”
Schedule Bill Federer for informative interviews & captivating PowerPoint presentations: 314-502-8924 wjfederer@gmail.com
American Minute is a registered trademark of William J. Federer. Permission is granted to forward, reprint, or duplicate, with acknowledgment.
https://newsmaven.io/americanminute/

CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS

 

Connect: Facebook Twitter YouTube
“Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things,” (Philippians‬ ‭4:8‬, ESV‬‬).

Ernst Introduces Bill Rewarding COVID-19 Front Line Workers

By Caffeinated Thoughts on Jul 21, 2020 05:01 pm
WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, on Tuesday introduced her new bill to allow essential workers on the front lines of COVID-19 to keep more of their hard-earned dollars.

“Our essential workers have risen to the challenge and continued in their daily jobs – to care for and protect Iowans, to produce and deliver food and essential goods, and to uphold our nation’s critical infrastructure throughout this pandemic,” Ernst said. “These front line workers—our nurses, truck drivers, and grocery store workers, child care providers, and so many others—have kept life going and our supply chains intact. These men and women are putting the interests of their fellow Americans ahead of their own. Each and every morning, they wake up and go to work, and they should be rewarded for their selfless service.”

Under Ernst’s FRNT LINE Act, federal income taxes would be suspended for essential workers up to an annual income cap set at the highest level of pay for an enlisted person in the U.S. Armed Forces. Additionally, the bill would provide suspension of federal payroll taxes for essential workers who earn up to $50,000 annually.

Several industry groups—including the National Restaurant Association, the Food Industry Association, the International Dairy Foods Association, and 24 others– wrote a letter supporting Ernst’s FRNT LINE Act.

“The FRNT LINE Act provides important tax benefits to essential food and agriculture workers, including restaurant workers. We’re proud to support this bill, which helps ensure we can continue feeding our communities and supporting our supply chain partners, ” said Sean Kennedy, Executive Vice President of Public Affairs, National Restaurant Association.

“Our employees have done an outstanding job providing an essential service through this pandemic,” said Fareway President and CEO Reynolds W. Cramer. “In addition to our efforts internally over the past few months, we appreciate Senator Ernst’s efforts to recognize them for their unwavering commitment through this unparalleled time.”

Listen to her call with Iowa’s press below:

Watch her address her 99-county tour where she listened to Iowans’ concerns including the importance of the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), support for rural health care, and access to child care for Iowa’s working families, and introduced her latest bill during a media avail.

Read in browser »
share on Twitter Like Ernst Introduces Bill Rewarding COVID-19 Front Line Workers on Facebook

Poll: Young Leads Axne In Tight Race in Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District

By Shane Vander Hart on Jul 21, 2020 03:16 pm
DES MOINES, Iowa – A new internal poll shows that Republican challenger and former U.S. Rep. David Young holds a slight lead over Democratic incumbent U.S. Rep. Cindy Axne in Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District race.

The poll surveyed 400 registered likely voters in the district on July 7-9, 2020. The margin of error is +/-4.9 percent. The poll was conducted by the Terrance Group and commissioned by Young’s campaign and the National Republican Congressional Committee.

Young leads Axne 44 percent to 43 percent with the Libertarian nominee, Bryan Holder, drawing six percent. Seven percent of those polled said they were undecided. In March, Terrance Group found Young and Axne were tied 48 apiece, and Holder was not part of that poll.

The rematch between Young and Axne is considered a toss-up by Cook Political Report. Axne unseated Young in 2018 in a close race, edging the two-term congressman 49.3 percent to 47.1 with under 8,000 votes separating the two.

Axne heads into November with a significant voter registration advantage. There are over 15,000 more registered Democrats than Republicans, something she did not enjoy in 2018.

Read in browser »
share on Twitter Like Poll: Young Leads Axne In Tight Race in Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District on Facebook

Recent Articles:

Test Iowa Clinic Site Opens in Plymouth County
Nunn Called to Active Military Duty
Video: South Dakota Means Business
Pompeo in Iowa Discusses How His Faith Impacts His Work as Secretary of State
Reynolds Says Iowa Schools Must Prioritize In-Person Instruction When Reopening

Launched in 2006,  Caffeinated Thoughts reports news and shares commentary about culture, current events, faith and state and national politics from a Christian and conservative point of view.

Donate
Caffeinated Thoughts
P.O. Box 57184
Des Moines, IA 50317
(515) 321-5077
Editor, Shane Vander Hart
Connect: FacebookTwitterInstagram, and YouTube.
Share
Tweet
Share
Forward
Copyright © 2020 Caffeinated Thoughts, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

 

CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS

 

CDN’s Daily News Blast delivers the day’s news first!
View this email in your browser

CDN Daily News Blast

07/22/2020

Excerpts:

Poll: Skepticism Amongst Americans Over Coronavirus Death Count Is Growing

By Harry Whitehead –

Americans are becoming increasingly more skeptical about the reported coronavirus death count, a Tuesday poll suggests. Over 140,000 people have died from coronavirus in the United States as of July 20, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The Axios-Ipsos poll released Tuesday shows 31% of Americans …

Poll: Skepticism Amongst Americans Over Coronavirus Death Count Is Growing is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Most Americans Oppose Removing Confederate Statues, WaPo Poll Finds

By Chris White –

statue of liberty weeping

More than 50% of Americans oppose removing public statues dedicated to Confederate generals, according to a Washington Post/ABC poll published Monday. The poll showed 80% of Republicans and 56% of independents oppose removing such monuments, while 74% of Democrats support ridding the country of statues commemorating the Confederacy. Nearly 60% of …

Most Americans Oppose Removing Confederate Statues, WaPo Poll Finds is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

President Donald Trump’s Schedule for Wednesday, July 22, 2020

By R. Mitchell –

Donald Trump speech

President Donald Trump will Swear-in the director of the OMB, have lunch with Vice President Mike Pence, receive his daily briefing, then deliver remarks on Operation Legend. Keep up with Trump on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 7/22/20 – note: this  page will be updated during the …

President Donald Trump’s Schedule for Wednesday, July 22, 2020 is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

33 Illegal Aliens Found in Box Trucks at Immigration Checkpoints

By R. Mitchell –

EDINBURG, Texas – Smugglers continue to use dangerous tactics during alien smuggling attempts. Yesterday afternoon, agents working at the Javier Vega Jr. Checkpoint referred a box truck to the secondary inspection area after a Border Patrol K9 alerted to the vehicle. At secondary, agents opened the cargo area and discovered …

33 Illegal Aliens Found in Box Trucks at Immigration Checkpoints is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Two Chinese Government Hackers Charged for Stealing Research Including COVID-19 Research

By R. Mitchell –

A federal grand jury in Spokane, Washington, returned an indictment earlier this month charging two hackers, both nationals and residents of the People’s Republic of China (China), with hacking into the computer systems of hundreds of victim companies, governments, non-governmental organizations, and individual dissidents, clergy, and democratic and human rights …

Two Chinese Government Hackers Charged for Stealing Research Including COVID-19 Research is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Hillary Clinton Suggests Roger Stone Blackmailed Trump Into Commuting His Prison Sentence

By Chris White –

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton suggested Monday night that President Donald Trump commuted Roger Stone’s prison sentence to prevent his former adviser from revealing what happened during the 2016 election. Stone blackmailed the president, forcing Trump into commuting the longtime GOP operative’s sentence or risk having his former confidante …

Hillary Clinton Suggests Roger Stone Blackmailed Trump Into Commuting His Prison Sentence is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Teachers Unions Sue DeSantis For Trying To Open Schools

By Thomas Catenacci –

The nation’s largest teachers unions filed a lawsuit Monday against the State of Florida over a department of education emergency order, which demanded schools reopen in August. The Florida Education Association was joined by the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association in suing Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis …

Teachers Unions Sue DeSantis For Trying To Open Schools is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Laredo CBP Officers Seize Over $1.3 Million in Methamphetamine

By R. Mitchell –

LAREDO, Texas—U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), Office of Field Operations (OFO) officers at the Juarez-Lincoln Bridge intercepted methamphetamine totaling over $1.3 million in street value. “Drug smuggling organizations attempt to smuggle contraband into the U.S. daily,” said Port Director Gregory Alvarez, Laredo Port of Entry. “Though their methods range in …

Laredo CBP Officers Seize Over $1.3 Million in Methamphetamine is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

FBI Memo Raises Red Flags About Dossier Sources Behind Allegations Against Trump Aide

By Chuck Ross –

An FBI memo declassified on Friday provides the most detail so far about the sourcing for the infamous Steele dossier. The memo shows that two Russian sources provided the information regarding Carter Page, the former Trump campaign aide surveilled by the FBI.  The involvement of the sources raises further questions …

FBI Memo Raises Red Flags About Dossier Sources Behind Allegations Against Trump Aide is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Watch: President Trump Holds a Press Conference – 7/21/20

By R. Mitchell –

President Donald Trump holds a press conference Tuesday to update the nation on recent events. The president is scheduled to speak at 5:00 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication …

Watch: President Trump Holds a Press Conference – 7/21/20 is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Watch: White House Press Briefing with Kayleigh McEnany – 7/21/20

By R. Mitchell –

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany holds a briefing Tuesday to update the nation on recent developments. The briefing is scheduled to begin at 11:00 a.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit …

Watch: White House Press Briefing with Kayleigh McEnany – 7/21/20 is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

See all breaking news, conservative commentary, political cartoons and more posted to CDN at our Home Page.
Follow on Twitter
Friend on Facebook
Add on Google Plus
Copyright © 2020 Conservative Daily News, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

 

PJ MEDIA

The Morning Briefing: They’re Not Really ‘Secret Police’ If We’re All Talking About Them

AP Photo/Noah Berger
Federal Police Are the Worst Secret Ever

Happy Hump Day, dear readers of the Kruiser Morning Briefing.

Today we will be revisiting an old nemesis: the false narrative. This week it’s about something that the Democrats and their flying media monkeys are calling the “secret police.”

I wrapped up yesterday’s Briefing by saying that “This is all so wearisome.” I may have been talking about Andrew Cuomo then but, let’s face it, that’s a line we could all be applying to so much these days. Today I find myself thinking the same thing about this seemingly never ending leftist tantrum over the police that started way back when His Blessed Lightbringerliness Barack Obama was president.

This week’s tantrum has taken on an altered reality quality that’s even a bit much for the Dems as they’ve turned the police into a shadow squad of feds that they’re calling the secret police.

Federal police presence is required many of the Democrat-fueled riot cities because the local officials have abandoned their municipal and county police forces, leaving them defenseless in the face of unhinged mobs. Mobs that Democrats and the media are still pretending are peaceful.

The latest bout of pique from the perpetually aggrieved liberals began when President Trump dispatched federal police to Portland, OR because, as Jeff recently wrote, its prog mayor has helped turn the city into a perpetually riotous hellhole.

police
 (AP Photo/Noah Berger)

As their collective madness worsens, American leftists keep creating boogeymen who don’t exist. They are now referring to duly appointed, very public officers operating under the auspices of the Department of Homeland Security as “secret” police.

We’re not talking about a fringe group of Twitter commies pitching a fit. The increasingly-impaired bag of vile who is currently serving as the Speaker of the House of Representatives is in on it. Her alcoholic Trump Derangement Syndrome is so strong that she is disparaging good federal police officers who are carrying out their duties in cities where Democrats have abandoned the law-abiding citizens to lawless packs of criminals.

The Democrats and their riotous minions have largely been successful at ruining police in their cities, so now they’re moving on to discrediting higher level cops. They won’t be happy until they’ve neutered law enforcement at all levels and given this party-sponsored lawlessness free reign throughout the land.

President Trump is thwarting those plans by sending federal police to these once-great cities that have now turned into clogged civic toilets. They’re not troops, they’re cops dealing with two-bit criminals who wouldn’t have made it this far without the institutional backing of corrupt politicians. Stacey explained in a recent post that federal police are always working in American cities.

police
 (AP Photo/Noah Berger)

We are all supposed to shut down our lives because COVID-19 cases are spiking but Democrats would have us ignore spikes in violence and just let them play out. The long term consequences of the latter course of action will be far more detrimental to the future of the Republic. But, hey, if elected Democrats can score some cheap shots on Twitter against the President of the United States, it’s all good to them.

Again, wearisome.

The Only Good Taliban Is…
PJM Linktank

How do you say “Go to hell” in Mandarin? One Day After Cuban Feuds with Cruz, NBA Reveals Black Lives Matter Logo On Court

As I was saying yesterday…Two Charts That Reveal How Bad New York’s Botched Coronavirus Response Was

Austin’s Democrat Rule Is Racking Up A Body Count

Anyone voting for him is as stupid as he is. Biden: You Know What We Need? More Islam in the Schools

Too bad, I really want to watch all of the Dem hellholes burn. After Democrat Cities Descend Into Chaos, ‘Defunding the Police’ Loses Support

Bomb Australia. Australian Doctors Want to Rename ‘Irrelevant and Misogynistic’ Body Parts Named for Men

Planned Parenthood Cancels Margaret Sanger. Will Nancy Pelosi and Hillary Clinton Return Their Awards?

Preliminary Studies of a New COVID-19 Treatment Show There May Be No ‘Silver Bullet’

Defund public schools. Majority of Voters Believe America Is a Racist Country

Tom Cotton Compares Portland Antifa to Confederate Rebels, Leftists Lose Their Minds

FBI Arrests Ohio House Speaker, Former GOP Chairman in Alleged $60M Bribery Scheme

GOP Congressman Calls AOC a ‘Fu**ing Bi**ch’ in Spat on Capitol Steps

High School Teacher in Michigan Fired for Saying ‘Trump Is Our President’ on Social Media

Trump Admin Moves to Protect Women in Homeless Shelters From Dangerous Obama Trans Policy

#MeToo Goes After Fox News With a Vengeance

While Statues of American Heroes Come Down, Turkey Honors a Slaver, Mass-Murderer, and Pedophile

VodkaPundit: Insanity Wrap #10: Netherlands Paid Islamic Terrorists, Plus Portland’s Menacing Mob Moms

Drawing the Line in Portland

BOMBSHELL: FBI Investigated Joe Biden’s Campaign for Corruption

Doubts About Security at GOP Convention May Doom the Event

Jesus Statues Vandalized, Beheaded in U.S. as China Rips Down Jesus Posters in Homes

VIP

The Kruiser Kabana Episode 54: Townhall’s Matt Vespa On Stupid Polls and How Awful COVID Football Will Be

Corpse Found in Minneapolis Pawn Shop Burned Down During George Floyd Riots

VIP Gold

Should Conservatives Prepare for Civil War?

Support for Black Lives Matter Is Dropping Among White People, but Don’t Blame Racism

Spectator Uncovers Some Problems With The Allegations Against Tucker Carlson

From the Mothership and Beyond

PA Sheriff Overwhelmed By Demand For Concealed Carry Licenses

LAPD Officer Under Fire For Competitive Shooting Background

Gun Control Group Opposes Bill Reducing Training Requirement For Armed Teachers

Federal Lawsuit Filed Over Illinois FOID Card Delays

These people are clinically insane. NYC Assemblywoman Hoping To Disarm Peace Officers

Will The McCloskey Case Actually Go To Trial?

How deep are Britain and China’s economic ties?

An ever-worsening hellhole run by a progressive blithering idiot. Multiple Victims Shot Outside of Chicago Funeral Home

House Passes NDAA Reauthorization as White House Threatens to Veto

Revenge: The NYT Reporter Who Reportedly Tried to Dox Tucker Carlson Got a Taste Of His Own Medicine

ICYMI: Twitter Censored Goya Foods, But Said It Was ‘In Error’

Yes, Anti-Semite Linda Sarsour Endorsing Joe Biden Is a Huge Problem for Democrats

It’s Official: Trump Gets the WH Budget Czar That Democrats Hate

Cancel Granny Boxwine. Nancy Pelosi Uses Insect Killing Reference to Describe President Trump Leaving the White House

Brutal: Under Tough Questioning, China’s Ambassador to the UK Can’t Explain Disturbing Video of Uighurs

Trump Issues EO to Keep Illegal Immigrants off the Census

Did a WH Reporter Just Call Kayleigh McEnany a ‘Lying B*tch’ During the Briefing?

DOJ: Chinese hackers stole “hundreds of millions of dollars” of secrets

Black Lives Matter Attempts to Start Riot at Dallas Restaurant, Get Denounced by Black Patrons

UPDATE: Gym Owner Who Was Shut Down by Tattle-Tale Gets Relief From City Bureaucrats

CNN Reporter Melts Down After Trump Campaign Spox Uses CNN Link to Disprove Her Coronavirus Claims

Gavin Newsom’s Alcohol Regulators Have Defined What Constitutes a Bar “Meal” – Here’s What Doesn’t Qualify

Walmart’s Big Announcement on Thanksgiving 2020 Could Leave Americans Scrambling on Black Friday

Former MLB Player Blasts Giants After Team Posts Video of Players, Coach Taking a Knee

How to Make the Most of Your Health Savings Account Right Now

He’s made new friends since the police unions abandoned him. Biden Endorsed By Million Muslim Votes Summit, Pledges To End Travel Ban “On Day One”

Do they even hear themselves? Ellison: Come On, Do You Really Want Police Responding To A Rape?

Delta Airlines Follows Southwest Into The Layoff Zone

Minnesota: We Should Give Unemployment Benefits To High School Students

Spoiler alert: probably not. Georgia Dem To Joy Reid: Do You Plan To Ask Biden About His Repeated Use Of The N-Word?

WaPo Poll: Americans Not As Woke As WaPo Would Have You Believe

Oh. Cenk Uygur signing up citizens to remove President Trump from office if the military won’t

Jonathan Turley helps ABC News’ Jonathan Karl find the part of the Constitution that allows President Trump to send DHS personnel into cities

What’s he afraid of? Joe Biden refuses to take questions after campaign stop in Delaware

Ted Yoho’s office denies calling AOC a ‘f*cking b*tch’ but says her policies are ‘bulls*it’

BRUTAL trip down memory lane: Drew Holden’s receipt-filled thread of media/Left pushing discredited Steele dossier a DOOZY

‘Security risks?’ Richard Grenell brutally enlightens Lefties on Biden’s anti-LGBT track record and they just can’t DEAL

George Stephanopoulos’ wife says parents should watch porn with their kids

Lock the cancel crowd in an asylum and leave them there. St. Junipero Serra could soon be removed from California county seal

Catholic, Eastern Othodox Churches to observe day of mourning for Hagia Sophia

The Soviet Socialist Republic of California. Los Angeles Coronavirus Update: County Supervisors Vote To Empower Employees, Unions In Creating “Health Councils” To Report Businesses In Violation Of COVID Orders

Get woke, go broke. This is going to ruin the NFL. NFL to allow players to wear helmet decals featuring names of people killed by police: report   

Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana

I’m going to start an online tequila and doughnut tasting club.

___

Kruiser Twitter
Kruiser Facebook
PJ Media Senior Columnist and 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.” His columns appear twice a week.

WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER

 

Cut to the News
Cut through the clutter to today’s top news
July 22, 2020
Good morning
Welcome to today’s top news.
Leading the News . . . 
Trump strikes new tone to warn of worsening pandemic . . . President Trump resumed his coronavirus briefings after a more than two-month hiatus to deliver what for him is a startling warning: The pandemic is likely to get worse before it gets better. Appearing before reporters in the White House briefing room, he asked people to wear masks when they cannot socially distance and urged young people to avoid crowded bars where the virus could spread. It marked a striking change in tone after weeks in which officials emphasized successes in manufacturing personal protective equipment and ensuring the availability of ventilators while playing down surging numbers of cases as “embers.” “It will probably, unfortunately, get worse before it gets better,” said Trump, “something I don’t like saying about things, but that’s the way it is.” Washington Examiner
Coronavirus
Image
Covid antibodies fade rapidly . . . Recovering from Covid-19 may not offer much lasting protection from future infections for those with only mild cases, according to a report that suggests caution regarding so-called herd immunity as well as the durability of vaccines. Research involved antibodies taken from the blood of 34 patients who had recovered after suffering mainly mild symptoms that didn’t require intensive care. The first analysis was done on antibodies taken an average of 37 days after symptoms began, with a second after about 86 days, or less than three months. The researchers found that antibody levels fell quickly, with a half-life of about 73 days between the two time frames. Bloomberg
Tourist boats show contrast in Canadian and US approaches to virus . . . Photos from Niagara Falls on Tuesday showed the stark difference in how the United States is handling the coronavirus pandemic compared to Canada, with two tourist boats complying to respective social distancing health precautions, appearing in contrast. Canadian ferries were limited to just six passengers per boat, out of a 700 person capacity on Tuesday. But on the US side, the ferries are operating at 50% capacity, 200 people, according to Maid of the Mist boat tours. Daily Mail
Politics                       
Image
Trump asked US ambassador to UK to get British Open moved to his resort . . . The American ambassador to Britain, Robert Wood Johnson IV, told multiple colleagues in February 2018 that President Trump had asked him to see if the British government could help steer the world-famous and lucrative British Open golf tournament to the Trump Turnberry resort in Scotland, according to three people with knowledge of the episode. The ambassador’s deputy, Lewis A. Lukens, advised him not to do it, warning that it would be an unethical use of the presidency for private gain, these people said. But Mr. Johnson apparently felt pressured to try. A few weeks later, he raised the idea of Turnberry playing host to the Open with the secretary of state for Scotland, David Mundell. New York Times
Jews to back Biden even as anti-Semitism rears its head on the left . . . President Trump is headed for a drubbing from Jewish voters this fall even as the Democratic Party’s support for Israel wanes and elements of the liberal base flirt with anti-Semitism. Biden is on track despite the president’s remarkably pro-Israel agenda. Republicans blame Trump’s provocative personality and combative social media presence for overshadowing his accomplishments and shielding Democrats from blowback. Washington Examiner
GOP congressman calls AOC a “fucking bitch” . . . Rep. Ted Yoho (R-Fla.) was coming down the steps on the east side of the Capitol on Monday, having just voted, when he approached Ocasio-Cortez, who was ascending into the building to cast a vote of her own. In a brief but heated exchange, which was overheard by a reporter, Yoho told Ocasio-Cortez she was “disgusting” for recently suggesting that poverty and unemployment are driving a spike in crime in New York City during the coronavirus pandemic. “You are out of your freaking mind,” Yoho told her. Ocasio-Cortez shot back, telling Yoho he was being “rude.” The two then parted ways. Ocasio-Cortez headed into the building, while Yoho began descending toward the House office buildings. A few steps down, Yoho offered a parting thought to no one in particular. “Fucking bitch,” he said. The Hill
Biden: Vice presidential choice is about administration that “looks like America” . . . Joe Biden spoke Monday about his vice presidential choice, suggesting it was effectively an affirmative action program. “I am not committed to naming any but the people I’ve named, and among them, there are four black women,” Biden told MSNBC Monday. “It is important that my administration, I promise you, will look like America, from vice president, to Supreme Court, to Cabinet positions” So, okay, how about choosing someone who looks like they can handle the job? Who looks like they are qualified? That would also look like America, IMO. And maybe, ensure that the right person is in the toughest and most important job in the world. White House Dossier
Pelosi call Covid-19 “the Trump virus” . . . Nancy Pelosi has called the coronavirus the ‘Trump virus’, criticizing President Donald Trump for failures in his response to the pandemic. Appearing on CNN on Tuesday evening, Pelosi told Wolf Blitzer that the president had made a bad situation worse. The speaker said Trump could’ve been forcefully recommending mask-wearing and socially distancing instead of being dismissive and trying to hold rallies and making masks ‘a manhood thing.’ Daily Mail
Trump on Ghislaine Maxwell: “I wish her well” . . . I mean, for God’s sake. What is he thinking? Is he thinking? Kind of undermines one of his best arguments, which is that Biden is the one who has a screw loose. Maybe tomorrow he’ll wish the Zodiac Killer well. White House Dossier

Trump moves to bar counting of illegal immigrants as part of the census . . . President Trump Tuesday issued a memo that prevents illegal immigrants from being counted as part of the census.

From the memo: President Trump is issuing a memorandum clarifying that illegal aliens are not to be included for the purpose of apportionment of Representatives following the 2020 census. Giving congressional representation and political influence to illegal aliens – people who have blatantly disregarded our laws – would be a perversion of our democratic principles. White House Dossier

Because it doesn’t make any census.

National Security     
Image
US to close Chinese consulate in Houston as tensions escalate . . . China vowed to retaliate after it said Wednesday it was abruptly ordered by the United States to close its consulate in Houston, a move that represents the latest sign of deteriorating relations between the two superpowers. The U.S. State Department said in a statement that the closure was to protect American intellectual property and private information. Local media in Houston on Tuesday night reported that documents were being burned in a courtyard at the consulate. USA Today
Chinese hackers accused of trying to steal vaccine research . . . The Department of Justice announced Tuesday it has charged two Chinese hackers with trying to steal US COVID-19 research as well as other sensitive government information. Chinese Nationals Li Xiaoyu, 34, and Dong Jiazhi, 31, allegedly stole ‘hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of trade secrets, intellectual property, and other valuable business information in a sophisticated, decade-long scheme. They’re accused of hacking hundreds of companies, government organizations, dissidents, human rights activists and private companies, including those engaged in COVID-19 vaccine research. Daily Mail
Pompeo calls for coalition against China . . . The Trump administration is the first that has taken the threat from China seriously. The Chinese communists are not just ruling inflicting tyranny at home, they are seeking to expand their influence overseas. They want economic and then military control over countries around the world in an effort that will eventually deny the United States allies and markets. We have no choice but to oppose them. According to the Washington Examiner: British and American officials need to help establish an international “coalition” to counter threats from the Chinese Communist Party, according to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. White House Dossier
International                
Image
Africa begins to have second thoughts about taking Chinese money . . . A growing number of African activists and policymakers are questioning the deluge of Chinese credit—some $150 billion in 2018, according to researchers at Johns Hopkins University—that has fueled a debt crisis aggravated by the new coronavirus. Nigerian lawmakers are reviewing Chinese loans they say were unfavorable. Activists in Kenya are demanding the government disclose the terms of Chinese credit used to build a 292-mile railway. And Tanzanian President John Magufuli calls an agreement his predecessor made with Chinese investors, to build a $10 billion port and economic zone, a deal “only a madman would sign.” Bloomberg
Money                           
Image
GOP backs stimulus checks . . . Republicans crafting their own plan for a new U.S. virus-relief bill broadly endorsed a fresh round of stimulus checks to individuals, extended supplemental jobless benefits and more money for testing while voicing doubts over President Donald Trump’s desired payroll tax cut. The details remained in flux Tuesday as GOP senators hashed out their opening bid in negotiations with Democrats on legislation to prop up the hobbled U.S. economy. The differences between the GOP and White House threatens to push any action on the stimulus into August. Bloomberg
Jeff Bezos made $13 billion Monday . . . Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos added $13 billion to his net worth Monday, setting a new record for the largest wealth increase in a single day. Bezos’ additional $13 billion comes after Amazon stock jumped 7.9% Monday before the second-quarter earning’s report, according to Fox News. Bezos’ total net worth sits at $189 billion after increasing $74.4 billion this year, according to the Billionaire Index. Daily Caller
Wow. I didn’t even make half of that Monday.
You should also know 
Image

At least 15 people shot at Chicago funeral . . . At least 15 people were shot Tuesday evening in the Gresham neighborhood on Chicago’s South Side and one person was in custody, authorities said. About 6:30 p.m., shots were fired at attendees of a funeral in the 1000 block of 79th Street from a black vehicle speeding west, according to First Deputy Superintendent Eric Carter, who spoke at the scene Tuesday night.

The funeral attendees exchanged gunfire with those in the vehicle, he said. The vehicle then turned north on Carpenter Street, and shots continued to be fired at the funeral attendees, Carter said, before the vehicle crashed midway down the block. Those inside the vehicle fled, he said. Chicago Tribune

Thank God the mayor has the situation under control or things could get bad.

Twiter bans 7,000 QAnon accounts . . . Twitter announced Tuesday that it has begun taking sweeping actions to limit the reach of QAnon content, banning many of the conspiracy theory’s followers because of problems with harassment and misinformation. Twitter will stop recommending accounts and content related to QAnon, including material in email and follow recommendations, and it will take steps to limit circulation of content in features like trends and search. The action will affect about 150,000 accounts. The spokesperson said that as part of its new policy, the company had taken down more than 7,000 QAnon accounts in the last few weeks for breaking its rules on targeted harassment. NBC News

I’m not a QAnon fan. But I don’t get it. Why aren’t people allowed to have a conspiracy theory? And who decides what’s a conspiracy theory?

Guilty Pleasures        
Image
Fifty-mile wide swarm of ants seen over UK . . . A 50-mile-wide swarm of flying ants has been making its way over the UK – and it’s so huge that it has been spotted from space. The enormous cloud of insects was picked up by the Met Office’s weather radar over Kent and Sussex, on England’s southeast coast. The weather service said smaller swarms could be seen over London. Sky News

New England invaded by chipmunks . . . There were plenty of acorns this spring, and now the chipmunks are driving people nuts. Their frenetic activities can be entertaining. But this summer in New England the varmints are making a nuisance of themselves, darting to and fro, digging holes in gardens, and tunneling under lawns.Plentiful acorns last fall meant there was still plenty of food on the ground when the chipmunks emerged from winter and got busy breeding this spring. The result is a bumper crop of the critters. Fox News

Do you love Cut to the News? Let your family and friends know about it! They’ll thank you for it. Spread the word . . . 
By Email – use the message that pops up or write your own.
On Twitter – ditto
On Facebook – On FB, write your own message
Have a great day.
Keith
Keith Koffler
Editor, White House Dossier and Cut to the News
If you enjoy Cut to the News, please help support it. Donate here today. Thank you for your generosity.
Got this from a friend? Subscribe here and get Cut to the News sent to your Inbox every morning.

 

Editor
White House Dossier
http://www.whitehousedossier.com
P.O. Box 27211,
Washington, DC 20038Unsubscribe | Change Subscriber Options

THE DISPATCH

The Morning Dispatch: A Nervous Breakdown for the GOP

Plus, President Trump resumes his coronavirus briefings.

Good news! Sarah, Jonah, Steve, and David are back with a Dispatch Live this Thursday, July 23 at 8:30 p.m. ET/5:30 p.m. PT. Exclusive for members of The Dispatch, these semi-regular livestream events feature a lively discussion of current events where members can ask questions and participate in a Live Chat.

Whether it is happy hour or time for a nightcap in your time zone, we encourage you to sit back and enjoy your beverage of choice. If you are curious what Dispatch Live is all about, check out the recording of the July 2 session here. We made a recording of this edition available to readers of our Dispatch Weekly newsletter on July 4.

Upgrade to members status today and look for our Dispatch Live emails in your inbox for instructions on how to join us this Thursday and at future engagements.

`Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • The United States confirmed 73,919 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday, with 9.8 percent of the 754,858 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,035 deaths were attributed to the virus on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 141,992.

  • A new report from the Centers for Disease Control estimated the true number of coronavirus cases in the United States could range from six to 24 times the number of confirmed cases, depending on geographic location. Much of the study’s data is from March and April, but it concludes that the vast majority of Americans are still vulnerable to COVID-19.
  • FBI agents arrested Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder and four others—including former Ohio GOP Chairman Matt Borges—as part of a $60 million bribery and racketeering investigation. “This is likely the largest bribery, money laundering scheme ever perpetrated against the people of the state of Ohio,” said U.S. Attorney David DeVillers.
  • President Trump signed an executive order yesterday ordering the Census Bureau to exclude undocumented immigrants from the population count that establishes how many members of Congress each state is apportioned.
  • Joe Biden rolled out a $775 billion plan on Tuesday that would deploy tax credits and subsidies to make child care more affordable, establish universal pre-K for 3- and 4-year-olds, and lower taxes for Americans who care for elderly family members themselves.
  • The Justice Department indicted two Chinese nationals for hacking into a number of businesses, governments, and non-governmental organizations over the past 10 years. Biotech companies working on COVID-19 vaccines and treatments were a recent target of the duo.
  • Twitter announced a crackdown on the QAnon conspiracy theory yesterday, removing more than 7,000 accounts associated with it from its platform and blocking tweets sharing links associated with the theory.

The Post-Trump Jockeying Has Begun—Four Months Early

If you ask a Republican elected official today what he or she thinks of President Trump and his efforts to Make America Great Again, you’ll likely get the same answer that you would have gotten yesterday, or a year ago, or any day since Trump solidified his hostile takeover of the GOP on November 8, 2016: “I support the president.” Some might even go out of their way to praise his golf game.

But 104 days out from November’s election, Trump is now trailing Joe Biden nationally by nearly 9 points—and Republican members of Congress are starting to scramble to hedge their bets.

Whether it comes in 2021 or 2025, there is going to be a post-Trump GOP. Heck, that reality is one of the reasons the newsletter you’re reading right now exists in the first place. Privately, many Republicans are beginning to come to terms with that great unknown, and the increasing likelihood it will be upon us in four months, not four years. Yesterday provided a remarkable window into the fierce battles for the soul of the party to come.

As Steve reports in a piece for the site, Tuesday’s House Republican Conference meeting—conducted on a day when more than 1,000 Americans died from COVID-19 and about a week before key CARES Act provisions are set to expire—quickly devolved into what can only be described as a group venting session for Freedom Caucus members, in which they took turns airing their grievances with Conference Chair Rep. Liz Cheney.

Trump: The Virus ‘Is Likely to Get Worse Before It Gets Better’

President Trump held his first coronavirus-focused press briefing since April yesterday, speaking to reporters alone rather than being accompanied by Dr. Fauci, Dr. Birx, and other members of the coronavirus task force. The task force’s daily briefings were originally called off months ago when it became clear the president’s combative tone and freewheeling rhetoric were hurting his political standing and unnerving many Americans.

In contrast to the March and April briefings, however, Tuesday’s press conference was remarkably muted and to-the-point. Trump spent about 15 minutes reading written remarks—largely staying on script and avoiding his characteristic ad-libbing—and then took questions for a similar period of time before ending the event. The president’s tenor wasn’t entirely devoid of his usual Trumpian eccentricities (repeatedly insisting on calling COVID-19 the “China virus,” for example), but the 30-odd minute briefing was a relatively professional affair, when compared to its chaotic daily renditions in the earlier months of the coronavirus pandemic.

Worth Your Time

  • In her latest for Harper’s, Annie Hylton profiles Syrian human rights lawyer Anwar al-Bunni and his search for war criminals of Bashar al-Assad’s regime among European refugees. The heart rending story details the detainment, torture, and execution of many thousands of innocent civilians in Syria and the ongoing effort to hold the perpetrators accountable. “For al-Bunni’s part, such cases are about more than the people on trial. They are about laying bare Assad’s atrocities—torture, murder, gender-based violence—in a court of law, for the historical record,” Hylton writes. “Al-Bunni believes that Raslan’s case will “give hope to the victims, who, after nine years now, think nobody cares about what happened in Syria.” He wants to send Assad’s regime a message: “Justice is coming.”
  • President Trump reportedly asked Woody Johnson—New York Jets owner turned U.S. ambassador to the U.K.—if he could convince the British government to move the annual British Open golf tournament to the Trump Turnberry resort in Scotland. Johnson’s deputy, Lewis Lukens, emailed State Department officials about the incident, and a few months later he was gone—Johnson forced him out. Johnson, the White House, and the State Department declined to comment on the story from Mark Landler, Lara Jakes, and Maggie Haberman in the New York Times.

Presented Without Comment

Toeing the Company Line

  • If you read yesterday’s Morning Dispatch, you’ve heard about the constitutional questions surrounding the federal government’s intervention in Portland. The latest French Press(🔒)shifts gears, bringing a discussion of competence to the table. David highlights the discord sown when government actors fail to restore peace at the same time that they actively violate civil liberties. “Why do I say the Trump response is incompetent?” he asks. “It commits the cardinal sin of responding to civil unrest, in that it introduced enough additional force to inflame the resistance but not enough additional force (or effective tactics) to quell the resistance.”
  • In the year of murder hornets and extraterrestrial life, no claims are too outlandish to rule out completely. Alec’s latest Dispatch Fact Check debunks viral reports that the Trump reelection campaign planned to use a blimp equipped with “state-of-the-art spy gadgets” to collect voter information and request donations from Americans below.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Sarah Isgur (@whignewtons), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Nate Hochman (@njhochman), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).

LEGAL INSURRECTION

Share This

UConn Medical School Suspending Honor Society Over Fear That Merit-Based Criteria is Racist

Writer: For Next 10 Years Top 100 Colleges Should Only Accept Students from Families That Make Under 100K

Students at Harvard Law School Call for ‘Automatic Bar Admission’

 

Legal Insurrection Foundation is a Rhode Island tax-exempt corporation established exclusively for charitable purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to educate and inform the public on legal, historical, economic, academic, and cultural issues related to the Constitution, liberty, and world events.

For more information about the Foundation, CLICK HERE.

Legal Insurrection Foundation
18 Maple Avenue #280 ​ Barrington, Rhode Island 02806
info@legalinsurrection.com

Follow Us

Having trouble viewing this email? View it in your web browser
Unsubscribe

THE DAILY WIRE

Daily_Wire_Banner-copy-2

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

The Daily Wire
Learn more about RevenueStripe...
Ben Shapiro
Bens Latest Op-Ed

“Today, the nostrum goes, it is not enough for Americans to be not racist. They must be “anti-racist.” … What, pray tell, is the difference between being against racism and being anti-racist?….”

KEEP READING
You Might Like
Learn more about RevenueStripe...
 

The Daily Wire

© Copyright 2020, ‌The Daily Wire‌
‌The Daily Wire‌  ‌15021 Ventura Blvd #503‌ ‌‌ ‌Sherman Oaks‌ CA‌  ‌91403‌  ‌‌

Privacy Policy | Terms of use
You are subscribed as rickbulow1974@gmail.com
Manage my preferences | Click to unsubscribe

 

DESERET NEWS

View this email in your browser
Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Why this man says America needs to talk about political ethics

What’s causing the delay in COVID-19 test results?

Retail amid the pandemic: ‘A case study in randomness for business survival’

Will college football’s independents form their own conference? They’re ready, if they have to

Utah’s ‘Mighty Five’ national parks suffer mightily from low visitation

College football 2020: Here’s what each conference has decided … so far

MORE NEWS

Like receiving news in your inbox? Sign up for another free Deseret News newsletter.
Want to see your company or product advertised in our newsletters? Click here.
Copyright © 2020 Deseret News, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

Axios AM

By Mike Allen
Mike Allen
Mike Allen

Happy Wednesday!

🇨🇳 Breaking: The Trump administration told China to close its diplomatic consulate in Houston “to protect American intellectual property and American’s private information,” State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus told Axios this morning.

  • A police official told Axios’ Rebecca Falconer that Chinese consulate officials at the building were believed to be “burning their own paperwork.” Details.

💻 Take a virtual trip to Colorado with Axios’ Sara Fischer tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET. She’ll interview Gov. Jared Polis and Coffee at The Point owner Ryan Cobbins. Register here.

1 big thing: November could bring Bush v. Gore II
Featured image

Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios

Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, North Carolina and Georgia are the battlefronts for voting rights advocates and election lawyers in a year one national expert says could make Bush v. Gore look like “a walk in the park,” Axios’ Stef Kight writes.

  • “I think there’s going to be litigation everywhere,” MIT political scientist Charles Stewart III tells Axios.
  • Why it matters: If elections are close in these states, it could set off waves of protests and lawsuits over turnout, ballot access and alleged fraud — undercutting the perceived legitimacy of the results.

These states share three overlapping factors that could create a perfect storm for legal challenges: competitive elections, surging coronavirus numbers, and little experience historically with voting by mail.

  • U.S. Election Assistance Commissioner Donald Palmer tells Axios he believes that some states that have traditionally experienced 5%-10% levels of absentee voting could see it swell to 60%-70% because of the pandemic.
  • Palmer also is watching swing states Michigan and Virginia, which along with Pennsylvania recently moved to no-excuse absentee voting and now will have to make that transition with surging interest in vote-by-mail options.

Between the lines: Texas is another state to watch. It’s long been at the center of voting rights battles, and polls show a tight presidential race.

2. “Parent pods” trend
Featured image

Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios

Neighbors are banding together to hire private instructors as a way to secure child care and make up for some of the gaps online-only classes will leave in their kids’ educations, Axios’ Caitlin Owens and Sara Kehaulani Goo report.

  • Why it matters: Parents want to be sure their children don’t fall too far behind, but this trend could deepen the educational divide along racial and class lines.

Driving the news: Pandemic “pods” — a group of families agreeing to limit their interactions outside that circle — have thrived as a safe way to help kids interact with their friends and give parents some time to work.

  • Now, enterprising parents are offering teachers who don’t want to return to the classroom a competitive salary to instead teach a handful of students in a home environment.

How it works: One way is for several families with kids in the same grade agree to form a “pod” and hire a tutor or teacher at home during the workweek. Costs vary, but can top $1,000 per month, according to the Washington Post.

  • For families with preschoolers, often it’s a babysitter — like a nanny share, but with several families pooled together.

This is primarily an option for wealthier, mostly white families, and some school districts already saw many Black children struggle to show up to online learning during the spring.

  • Some parents will invite lower-income families to join their pod, and could even subsidize their share of the cost, but heavily segregated school districts mean that can only go so far.
  • Some families are explicitly saying that they don’t want children of essential workers in their pods, as they can’t fully socially distance.

Share this story.

3. Bottom line for each tech CEO

Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios

Axios’ Kyle Daly narrates the key point that each of the big four tech CEOs will make during their joint, virtual testimony Monday at an antitrust hearing of the House Judiciary Committee.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg: Congress should pass better laws. Let’s work together and do that!

  • Zuckerberg will likely argue that Congress needs to write laws to bolster election security and establish consistent online privacy standards.
  • Facebook’s goal is to see such laws written carefully and applied consistently.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai: We won search by doing it well — why punish us for that?

  • Google doesn’t dispute its clear dominance in search, nor of certain corners of the online advertising market.
  • But it contends that digital advertising is in fact wildly competitive.

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos: We’re big because we’ve always given users what they want — fast delivery, wide selection and good prices.

  • Bezos is likely to point to Amazon’s ability to get goods to Americans’ homes during the pandemic as a public service.

Apple CEO Tim Cook: Our App Store creates opportunity for countless developers — and Google’s Android controls more of the smartphone market, anyway.

  • Apple has faced criticism for the way it develops and features its own apps that compete with third-party programs, as well as for the commissions it takes from app makers.
  • Expect Cook to cite the size and vitality of the app market and the continued enthusiasm of Apple’s customers.

Share this story.

4. 14 shot in Chicago as Portland flares

Chicago police talk to reporters at the scene. Photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images

In Chicago, at least 14 people were shot last evening in the Gresham neighborhood on the city’s South Side, the Chicago Tribune reports.

  • The shots were fired at funeral attendees from a speeding vehicle.

The context: President Trump plans to send about 150 Homeland Security agents to Chicago to deal with a crime spike, AP reports.

Tear gas and crowd munitions were deployed by federal police during protests in Portland on Tuesday. Photo: Beth Nakamura/The Oregonian via AP

The Trump administration is facing growing pushback — in the courts and on the streets — over sending federal agents to Portland, Oregon, where protests have spiraled into violence, AP’s Gillian Flaccus writes.

  • Why it matters: The presence of federal agents in progressive Portland has energized two months of nightly protests that had begun to shrink.
5. Scoop: New Comey book coming in January
Cover: Flatiron

In a new book 10 days before the inauguration, former FBI Director James Comey will take aim at politicization of the Justice Department under President Trump, who fired him.

  • Saving JusticeTruth, Transparency, and Trust,” out Jan. 12, is a follow-up to Comey’s No. 1 New York Times bestseller, “A Higher Loyalty.”
  • A press release from Comey’s publisher, Flatiron, says he’ll also discuss his career prosecuting mobsters in New York. Comey famously compared Trump to a mob boss in his last book.

The state of play: Comey has kept a relatively low profile since his last book.

  • He has written occasional op-eds and hot tweets, but resisted numerous invitations to appear on TV.
  • Comey envisions the new book as an effort to remind Americans about the core principles of the justice system and how to rebuild them under what he hopes will be a new administration.
  • The publisher calls it “a clarion call for a return to non-partisan law enforcement centered on American values.”

Behind the scenes: Matt Latimer and Keith Urbahn of Javelin represented Comey.

6. Pic du jour
Photo: Leah Millis/Reuters

President Trump resumed coronavirus briefings with a solo outing:

  • “It will probably, unfortunately, get worse before it gets better — something I don’t like saying about things, but that’s the way it is. It’s the way — it’s what we have. If you look over the world, it’s all over the world, and it tends to do that.”
7. Data du jour: Presidents and the market
Note: Chart shows total return of the Russell 3000 index with Jan. 1, 1979 = 100. Growth rate is calculated as the compound annual growth rate over the 4 or 8 years from inauguration. Data: Factset; Chart: Danielle Alberti/Axios
Note: Chart shows total return of the Russell 3000 index with Jan. 1, 1979 = 100. Growth rate is calculated as the compound annual growth rate over the 4 or 8 years from inauguration. Data: Factset; Chart: Danielle Alberti/Axios

President Trump has been good for the stock market — but not as good as most of his predecessors, chief financial correspondent Felix Salmon writes.

  • Why it matters: Presidents don’t have a huge effect on the stock market, but overall, Democrats have outperformed Republicans in recent history.

By the numbers: Stocks have risen by an annualized 13.7% over the course of the Trump administration, if you look at total return with dividends reinvested.

  • That’s a very healthy performance, but lags Reagan (14.1%), George H.W. Bush (15.1%), Obama (16.5%), and Clinton (16.7%).
  • Only George W. Bush oversaw a worse performance for the stock market than Trump in modern times. Bush was in office during the global financial crisis.

Share this graphic.

8. Opinion sections become battlegrounds
Featured image

Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios

Journalists at The Wall Street Journal and the New York Times are urging their bosses to re-evaluate how their opinion sections operate after a slew of controversies in recent months, Axios’ Sara Fischer writes.

  • Why it matters: In print, opinion pieces were physically segregated from the rest of the paper in a way that they aren’t online, making it harder for readers to differentiate.

A group of 280 journalists at The Journal and Dow Jones sent a letter to the paper’s publisher yesterday asking for clearer differentiation between news and opinion content online, The Journal reports.

Opinion-page controversies have also flared at the Times, and, to an extent, The Washington Post:

  • The Times faced an employee upheaval after its opinion section published a controversial piece in June by Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.).
  • The Post was slammed by media critics last summer for publishing an opinion piece by Charlie Kirk, a conservative activist and Trump supporter.

Our thought bubble: These tensions have existed for years, but they have become amplified by an increasingly hyper-partisan news cycle driven by social media.

  • Traditional newsrooms tried to draw clear boundaries between news and opinion with separate management structure and offices. News organizations that emerged during the digital era rarely publish editorials and more freely mix news and opinion.

The bottom line: Subscribers today want to support news organizations that reinforce their world views — and are quick to cancel their subscriptions when they’re unhappy.

9. How Kevin McCarthy will campaign in a pandemic
Featured image

Photo: Caleb “Birthday Today” Smith

To get back on the campaign trail this summer and fall, House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy has procured dozens of WHOOP fitness trackers — which monitor respiratory rate as a clue to COVID — for his political and fundraising staff in D.C. and across the country.

  • Why it matters: McCarthy, who represents Bakersfield and works closely with California’s tech community, will wear a WHOOP sensor and band himself, harnessing wearables to help keep aides and supporters safe.

Go deeperGQ on NBA and PGA use of fitness trackers to detect COVID.

10. 🏀 Sneak peek: NBA’s new sidelines
Photo: Tim Reynolds/AP

At the NBA’s first scrimmage today, there’ll be no bench. Courtside broadcasters won’t be courtside. The stat crew will work in an oversized hockey penalty box, AP’s Tim Reynolds writes from Lake Buena Vista, Fla.

  • Seating in the bench areas will be assigned, with folding chairs spaced out several feet.

“Black Lives Matter” stretches on either side of the center stripe.

Mike Allen
Mike Allen

📱 Thanks for reading Axios AM. Please invite your friends to sign up here.

BRIGHT

Share with a friend you think would love this! Share with a friend you think would love this!
Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Fox News Under Attack
Sean Hannity and Tucker Carlson are named in what has to be among the most on-its-face frivolous sexual “harassment” lawsuits I’ve ever seen. The former is accused of what amounts to awkward Boomer-style matchmaking for younger colleagues, and the latter of the heinous crime of making a single comment about being alone in the city and removing his – wait for it – jacket in between television takes.

From Matt Walsh at The Daily Wire:

“A frequent Fox guest named Cathy Areu (she was not an employee of the company at the time of these alleged incidents) says she was victimized by Sean Hannity in March of 2018 when the host supposedly presented $100 and offered to give it to any man on the staff who would take her on a date. A few months later she was on Carlson’s show when, she claims, Carlson mentioned that he’d be alone in the city that evening. The lawsuit also says that Carlson changed his jacket in front of her and that she wasn’t able to escape this terrible scene because she was ‘tied to her chair’ by her microphone. Areu makes similar claims against other Fox employees and personalities, and she says she was punished when she turned down Carlson’s alleged implied potential proposition by only being invited on the show three times afterwards…

We should note that the lawsuit does contain a more serious allegation. A woman named Jennifer Eckhart says that former Fox anchor Ed Henry raped her while she was naked and handcuffed. This also raises questions, such as why she’s filing a civil complaint rather than a criminal complaint after allegedly being physically restrained and assaulted. If true, Henry would be guilty of multiple felonies — kidnapping among them — and should be going to prison for the rest of his life… in any case, the Henry allegations have no bearing on the allegations against Hannity and especially Carlson, which are absurd and gratuitous by any measure.” 

It’s hard to see silly charges like these (excluding the very serious rape allegation, which should be investigated criminally as well as civilly) as anything other than an attempt to paint a permanent asterisk next to the names of media figures the left doesn’t like, so that in future stories they can write “Fox News host, accused earlier this year of sexual misconduct…” to continue the smear for the many readers who won’t dig into the specifics of the allegations.

Those suspicions are hard to quash when one considers a second kind of below-the-belt attack launched against Tucker Carlson this week.

From The Federalist:

“The New York Times is threatening Tucker Carlson with publicizing where his family lives. In his most recent segment of ‘Tucker Carlson Tonight’ on Fox News, Carlson announced The New York Times is set to release an ‘intrusive’ story about where he lives to demonstrate that they ‘want this show off the air’…

Carlson has good reason to fear. In 2018, his family faced a slew of attacks on their home after a ‘left-wing journalist’ released the address to his house in Washington, D.C. One night, Antifa members ‘vandalized’ Carlson’s home and ‘threatened’ his wife while he was away. The Carlson family also received death threats via mail and more Antifa visits, which eventually forced them to move.”

A Growing Consensus on the Danger of China
While roiling domestic troubles have often overshadowed coverage of action America and our allies have taken against China, this has been a big week in that regard. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo delivered a critical speech denouncing Chinese aggression in the South China Sea and making it clear that the U.S. would not recognize China’s expanding territorial claims there. And that’s just the start of what has been a week of getting tough with the authoritarian state.

Helen Raleigh writes:

“On July 14, President Trump signed the Hong Kong Autonomy Act, enabling the U.S. government to impose sanctions on Chinese officials and businesses that have either aided or abetted the enforcement of Beijing’s new security law in Hong Kong. In a rare event in today’s divided country, the legislation was passed Congress earlier in July with overwhelming bipartisan support.

Trump also signed an executive order revoking the special trading status the United States had maintained with Hong Kong since 1997, when the United Kingdom handed the city back to Beijing’s control under the ‘One Country, Two Systems’ framework…

As if Tuesday couldn’t get any worse, on that same day, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced that China’s telecom giant Huawei will be banned from Britain’s 5G network. Despite warnings from both U.S. intelligence and the U.K.’s National Cyber Security Center regarding Huawei’s potential threat to national security, until earlier this year, the Johnson administration insisted on having Huawei build the ‘non-critical’ portion of Britain’s 5G — the next-generation telecommunications network. The United States, Australia, and New Zealand, three countries in the Five Eye intelligence alliance, have all barred the installation of Huawei equipment as a part of the 5G network in their countries…

Then, on July 15, Pompeo revealed that the United States will place visa bans on employees of Huawei and possibly other Chinese technology companies for ‘their role in enabling human rights abuses at home and abroad.’ This announcement came only one week after the Trump administration imposed sanctions on several senior officials of the CCP, accusing them of playing key roles in human rights abuses against Uyghur Muslims and other religious minorities in Xinjiang, China.”

Let us hope these tough actions will be enough to deter China in what is clearly shaping up to be a second Cold War.

Fashion Moment of the Week
Vogue has a good little roundup of some of the best summer dresses, ranging in price from $75 to $300. There’s something for every summer dress fan here, from LWDs, to cotton midis and ruffled maxis, to breezy silk shifts, so find your silhouette and go for it.

I’m a big fan of the easy summer dress; a good mid-point between the need to stay comfy and cool (ugh, this heat wave though) and backsliding into shorts and tee shirts. Or these horrifying sweat shorts also recommended by Vogue. If you wear them I will leave the electronic pages of BRIGHT and come haunt you.

Wednesday Links
A grim marker: daily coronavirus deaths in the United States top 1,000 for the first time since May. (Axios)

Three in four Americans fear life will never return to pre-coronavirus normal. *raises hand* (Study Finds)

Mask battles aren’t new; a historian chronicles familiar-sounding debates from the 1918 Spanish Flu epidemic. (The Conversation)

Trump makes dumb comment about Ghislaine Maxwell – “I wish her well, frankly” – in otherwise-solid presser. (New York Post)

The woke cultural revolution spreads from the NYT to the WSJ newsroom. (The New York Times)

Illinois (and DC) continues to flagrantly violate its citizens’ Second Amendment rights in the midst of turmoil spiking gun sales. (Chicago Tribune)

The Atlantic finally forced by Chris Bedford’s fact-checking to admit that a story it ran was based on a false narrative. (The Federalist)

Unsettling: Google appears to test its ability to blacklist conservative media in runup to the election. (The Federalist)

My colleague, the indomitable Julie Gunlock, just launched a podcast on “bespoke parenting.” What is bespoke parenting you ask? Listen to the inaugural episode to find out. (IWF)

Karol Markowicz joins the podcast to talk about why, as a naturalized American having immigrated from the USSR as a child, she loves America. (Radio Hour)

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

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

www.GetBRIGHTemail.com

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

Note: By using some of the links above, Bright may be compensated through the Amazon Affiliate program and Magic Links. However, none of this content is sponsored and all opinions are our own.

AMERICAN THINKER

 

View this email in your browser

Recent Articles

The Insidious Impact of Twitter

Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
Twitter has evolved into a primary source of fabricated stories and copy farming for the media, the principal driver of policy for the political parties, particularly the Democrats, and a vehicle to intimidate businesses and major corporations.  Read More…


How to Spank the Establishment Media

Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
If one disapproves of the lying and distortions put out by the mainstream media, there’s a way to fight it: don’t pay for it. Read More…


Speaking Out Against Robin DiAngelo’s Toxic White Fragility

Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
Robin DiAngelo has done for whiteness studies and modern antiracism what Jimmy Hoffa did for the Teamsters.  Read More…


America is Structurally Anti-Racist

Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
America is the most important and successful anti-racist political project in human history.  Read More…


BLM Republicans

Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
In the face of this cultural onslaught by the Left, supported by our dominant institutions, the Republicans speak of “police reform,” renaming military bases, and eliminating Columbus Day.   Read More…


Last Stand to Save America as Founded

Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
We must do everything in our power to reelect our remarkable president.  Read More…


Recent Blog Posts

Google blacklists American Thinker and reverses it after its blacklisting of conservative sites is exposed
Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
Google calls it a “technical error”  Read more…


Ludicrous sexual harassment claims made against Tucker Carlson
Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
The leftist establishment is determined to take out Tucker Carlson by fair means or, mostly, foul.  Read more…


Black Lives Matter reveals a generation of damaged straight, white women
Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
It’s horrifying watching videos of manifestly unhappy young women who are the victims of decades of leftist lies.  Read more…


A viral video should force woke leftists to face the truth about themselves
Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
In less than two-minutes, this video reveals that, as between the fringe right and those at the heart of the Democrat party, there’s little difference.  Read more…


Dem eulogies for a long-term member of Congress who was called its ‘conscience’ … then and now
Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
Honoring the late Rep John Lewis with words that resemble those applied to KKK leader Robert Byrd and other villains.  Read more…


Twitter purges QAnon presence on its platform
Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
Antifa still has a home on the social media platform, but QAnon is gone.  Read more…


Sending in the feds… to Chicago!
Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
After carping and snarking, Chicago’s Mayor Loro Lightfoot reluctantly agrees to receive federal troops that President Trump has offred to send to tame the tidal wave of violence engulfing the Windy City.  Read more…


Daniel Silva’s latest book, The Order
Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
A bestselling author seems to have been co-opted by the left.  Read more…


Don’t bail out the Post Office
Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
Instead of showering money on USPS, Congress should repeal the monopoly on first class mail delivery.  Read more…


I guess that Brian Stelter doesn’t get Portland
Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
Brian Stelter thinks that the Portland riots are all a right-wing plot.  Read more…


Allen West overcomes a motorcycle accident to become Texas GOP chair
Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
It is West’s avowed belief that, if Texas’ freedom can be preserved, then America’s freedom may likewise be protected.  Read more…


It’s time to ‘choose life’ by reopening America’s schools
Jul 22, 2020 01:00 am
School districts throughout the land should all come to one life-saving decision — to open the nation’s schools for the benefit of all children.  Read more…


Trump baits a trap for Biden
Jul 21, 2020 01:00 am
Democrats are laughing uproariously over Trump’s “cognitive test” comments, little realizing the last laugh will be on them.  Read more…


Denver disgrace deepens as Michelle Malkin calls out perps and enablers of attack on Sunday’s aborted pro-police rally
Jul 21, 2020 01:00 am
It’s come to this…  Read more…


Tucker Carlson denounces The New York Times for threatening his family’s safety and Times responds
Jul 21, 2020 01:00 am
The Times is using mafia tactics in order to silence Carlson’s wildly successful conservative broadcast,  Read more…


View this email in your browser
American Thinker is a daily internet publication devoted to the thoughtful exploration of issues of importance to Americans.

 

This email was sent to <<Email Address>>
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
AmericanThinker · 3060 El Cerrito Plaza, #306 · El Cerrito, CA 94530 · USA

LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL

THE BLAZE

THE FEDERALIST

Your daily update of new content from The Federalist
Be lovers of freedom and anxious for the fray
07/22/2020
List Of 183 Monuments Ruined Since Protests Began, And Counting
Jonah Gottschalk
Most monuments torn down were not by protesters, but by city officials after pressure or threats from protesters.
Biden’s $10 Trillion In Proposed Spending Puts Bernie Sanders In Charge Of The Democrat Ticket
Tristan Justice
When the Biden campaign released the 110-page ‘Biden-Sanders Unity Task Force Recommendations,’ it became clear Sanders was now running the show.
Church Was Never Meant To Be Masked
Kylee Zempel
Does performing a demoralizing mask exercise guard a church from public criticism? Or is it a cheap virtue signal to the onlookers who hate our gathering whether we are in a pandemic or not?
Black Portland Police Officer: Black Lives Matter Is White People Telling Black People What To Do
Glenn T. Stanton
From one black Portland police officer’s frontline experience, the Black Lives Matter protests in his city are not about helping black people attain better lives.
You Won’t Believe What Kind Of Sex Ed LGBT Activists Want In Texas Public Schools
Jonathan Covey and James Wesolek
Leftist LGBT advocacy groups seek to hijack Texas ‘sex-ed’ to teach medically inaccurate, highly sexualized LGBT programming as early as kindergarten.
Schools Are Closing Not Because They Should, But Because They Can
Auguste Meyrat
When public school districts have a monopoly, they can easily justify delaying school or implementing extended closures. School choice is the solution.
Congress’ Coronavirus Response Could Cause Mass Layoffs Right Before The Election
Willis L. Krumholz
Congress has created a policy cocktail, authored by both Republicans and Democrats, that may keep our unemployment rate elevated throughout 2020.
Why Democrats’ Complaints About Trump’s Pardon Power Are Feckless Bloviating
Elad Hakim
If Democrats so desperately want to change the clemency laws, they should do so by way of a constitutional amendment. Otherwise, they should stop whining.
Amazing New Science Finds Thousands Of Tiny Preemies Can Survive
K. Mockaitis
The U.S. treatment protocol for 22- and 23-week newborns must be grounded in the latest science and in clinical judgment for each newborn’s unique circumstances.
WHO Spokeswoman Spreads Communist Coronavirus Propaganda From Notorious Conspiracy Website
Jonah Gottschalk
The source is known for defending Hezbollah, despising Israel, and arguing that claims about concentration camps in China are greatly exaggerated.
Immigrant Karol Markowicz On Why She Loves America And New York
Karol Markowicz joined Ben Domenech to discuss her view of America, including her thoughts on…
SIGN UP FOR A FREE TRIAL HERE.

The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.

“You must read The Transom. With brilliant political analysis and insight into the news that matters most, it is essential to understanding this incredible moment in history. I read it every day!” – Newt Gingrich

 

 

Sent to: rickbulownewmedia@protonmail.com
Unsubscribe

The Federalist, 611 Pennsylvania Ave SE, #247, Washington, DC 20003, United States

NOQ REPORT

NOQ Report Daily

Link to NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes

Aubrey Huff’s epic rant on social justice major league sports is why we MUST boycott until things change

Posted: 22 Jul 2020 05:15 AM PDT

Former major league slugger and World Champion with the San Francisco Giants Aubrey Huff took to Instagram yesterday to denounce recent moves in professional sports, particularly his former team, in their quest to be “woke.” Many players and coaches will be kneeling before games during the singing of the national anthem. They will be given the “option” of wearing Black Lives Matter insignia on their jerseys. Major League Baseball has embraced modern progressivism and thereby turned their backs on patriotic, freedom loving Americans across the country.

Here’s the rant:

View this post on Instagram

Led by the social justice warrior champion @sfgiants. #baseball #america #sports

A post shared by Aubrey Huff (@huffdaddy76) on 

As JD covered in the latest episode of Conservative News Briefs, this needs to become a rallying cry for sports fans to do what many have been threatening to do for a long time: Boycott. And as he noted, this isn’t another example of participation in cancel culture. This is about our need to stop paying people who hate us and our worldview. This is about sending a message that they need to keep their politics off the field because, as Huff noted, people don’t turn on sports to get political. They turn on sports to get away from the rigors and drama of real life. We watch to be entertained, not to be chastised or preached to about our beliefs.

There is already enough turmoil in America. Professional sports are designed to pit the best athletes in the world against each other so we can cheer and boo, be amazed and be disappointed, but all within the realm of entertainment. This isn’t about culture, religion, politics, or public relations gimmicks. We watch sports for the sport of it.

Many conservatives have threatened to boycott. I know I have. But it’s hard. We love our baseball, football, basketball, hockey, or whatever other sports we watch. There is absolutely no room for social justice sports. That’s not what we asked for and it’s not what we need, so why are we paying them with our money and attention? The answer is simple. We shouldn’t, not until they’re made to come to their senses.

Just play the damn games. These men have reached the highest levels of skill and athleticism, which is exactly what we want to see. We neither expect nor crave political statements of athletes or coaches on the field. Aubrey Huff is spot on here.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.


 


The post Aubrey Huff’s epic rant on social justice major league sports is why we MUST boycott until things change appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes.

Twitter locks Jewish accounts displaying Star of David over ‘hateful imagery’

Posted: 21 Jul 2020 05:41 PM PDT

The persecution of Jews didn’t end following World War II. It didn’t get better once Israel became a nation again or after they were attacked by a horde of Muslim nations in 1967. It hasn’t ended even today as anti-Semitism is on the rise. Even Big Tech companies like Twitter are getting in on the action as they’ve begun locking out accounts that display the Star of David.

Unbelievablehttps://t.co/C5pjJMyndq

— Mark R. Levin (@marklevinshow) July 21, 2020

Twitter is now deeming the Star of David as “hateful imagery” … more here: https://t.co/4JrNUTRJRA

H/T @Angela_Lynnx3 pic.twitter.com/aeeeIaYuwP

— StopAntisemitism.org (@StopAntisemites) July 20, 2020

Pure anti-Semitism is already present on the “platform” itself, a platform that panders to atheists, Muslims, and other religious groups while regularly suppressing accounts espousing Judeo-Christian beliefs. Real hate speech is common and often goes unchecked with Twitter regularly claiming they simply do not have the bandwidth to investigate all occurrences. But they somehow found the time to go after accounts with “hateful images” like the historic Jewish symbol, the Star of David.

While it’s possible that this is just a matter of multiple oversights, the more likely scenario given Twitter’s track record is that social justice warriors and supporters of Palestine are using their power within the company to passive-aggressively and anonymously express their anti-Semitism. This could not be algorithmic as the image filter on Twitter requires very specific imagery to automatically lock out accounts. These actions required the hands of actual humans acting against Jews.

According to the Campaign Against Antisemitism:


Several Twitter users have contacted Campaign Against Antisemitism in recent days reporting that their accounts have been locked, and Twitter has provided the following rationale: “What happened? We have determined that this account violated the Twitter Rules. Specifically for: Violating our rules against posting hateful imagery. You may not use hateful images or symbols in your profile image or profile header. As a result, we have locked your account.”

The social media platform advises users that if they delete the “hateful imagery”, i.e. the Star of David, the account may be unlocked.

The Stars of David in the profile pictures of locked accounts vary from artistic blue Stars of David and graffitied white Stars of David to, most ironically, a portfolio of yellow Stars of David.

Stephen Silverman, Director of Investigations and Enforcement at Campaign Against Antisemitism, said: “It is deplorable enough that Twitter consistently fails to act against antisemitism on its platform, but now it is taking action against Jews for the simple crime of showing pride in their identity by displaying a Star of David. It never fails to astound just how low Twitter is prepared to go.

“So often social media companies claim that they lack the resources to tackle hate on their platforms, but Twitter has put the lie to that claim by demonstrating that it does have the resources, but chooses to target the benign symbol of a victimised minority instead of the countless racists who use its platform with impunity.

“Twitter must immediately restore these accounts, apologise to the owners, and pledge finally to take robust action against the antisemites whom it has enabled for so long.”


This will go generally unreported in mainstream media and swept under the rug by Twitter. It’s incumbent on those who believe in freedom to get the word out about this blatant anti-Semitic attack by Big Tech.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.


 


The post Twitter locks Jewish accounts displaying Star of David over ‘hateful imagery’ appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes.

Ken Cuccinelli educates Rand Paul on DHS actions in Portland

Posted: 21 Jul 2020 03:49 PM PDT

Acting Deputy DHS Secretary Ken Cuccinelli had some choice words in the form a of Twitter thread yesterday. They were directed at a conservative ally in Washington DC, Senator Rand Paul, who appears to have been taken in by propaganda on mainstream media being used to improperly portray Homeland Security’s recent actions in Portland, Oregon.

(2/x) … “these situations” include attacks on federal law enforcement OFFICERS (not troops) and federal facilities; (2) it overlooks @DHSgov’s statutory responsibility to protect the federal facilities and personnel under violent attack; (3) did I mention there are no “troops”?

— Acting Deputy Secretary Ken Cuccinelli (@HomelandKen) July 21, 2020

(4/x) (5) federal agents are not “rounding people up at will.” This is an incredibly offensive assertion. It suggests @DHSgov officers randomly picked this subject up – that’s ridiculous. They identified themselves 3 blocks away to the subject, at which point he fled on foot…

— Acting Deputy Secretary Ken Cuccinelli (@HomelandKen) July 21, 2020

(6/x) … the picture in the tweet.@DHSgov , #FPS , @CBP , & @ICEgov officers and agents are preserving liberty (and life and property) in Portland. I would have been happy to explain that to Sen. @RandPaul if he had asked.

— Acting Deputy Secretary Ken Cuccinelli (@HomelandKen) July 21, 2020

The ongoing riots in Portland and progressive cities across the nation have endangered the well-being and property of law abiding American citizens. While Paul is correct in asserting that this is a local law enforcement issue, we’re now nearly eight weeks into the “protests” with no signs of deescalation. Local law enforcement has had their collective hands tied by radical leftist politicians, leaving DHS no choice but to defend federal property on their own.

A viral video made its rounds the other day and apparently captured the attention of the Senator. But as Cuccinelli noted in his Twitter thread, the viral video only tells a small part of the story. In the video, DHS officers can be seen apprehending a man in front of a federal building and putting him into a van. The optics on this were rightly negative as it seemed like the type of actions we would see in East Germany before the wall came down.

Cuccinelli gave the incident context and corrected some of the errors reported by mainstream media and embraced by the Senator. What was seen was the culmination of a three-block chase that started because the suspect matched the description of a rioter who had just assaulted a federal law enforcement officer. They weren’t randomly “rounding people up” but were acting on their authority and under the precepts of probable cause to take a suspect into custody and question him in a safer location.

Paul’s point is that we cannot devolve into a society in which federal law enforcement keeps an iron grip over any jurisdiction. The fact that they can does not mean they ever should, and with all of the turmoil across the nation we’re hearing calls for federal intervention coming from all sides, including many constitutional conservatives who would normally oppose such actions. There is always a risk of overreach and Paul is right to monitor for such actions. Thankfully, what’s happening in Portland right now is not an example of it. They handled the situation properly.

I like Paul, and nine times out of ten he’s on the right side of a debate. He’s correct when he said we cannot give up liberty for security. But it’s equally right that we cannot give up security over false leftist narratives. Cuccinelli was justified in his response.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.


 


The post Ken Cuccinelli educates Rand Paul on DHS actions in Portland appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes.

Cuban American who warned about destructive force of socialism talks to Glenn Beck

Posted: 21 Jul 2020 02:51 PM PDT

Those who truly know about socialism oppose it. Those who do not support it. This aphorism has been confirmed time and time again. The video we’re presenting is a prime example of that wisdom. The Blaze also did a fine write-up on the warning that is well worth a look.

The Babalú Blog, a website of Cuban-Americans that work tirelessly to conserve liberty and expose the ravages of communist Cuba, also confirms this adage.

Babalú Blog is the brainchild of Valentín Prieto. In 2003, he came to the realization that there simply wasn’t a media platform or venue for likeminded Cuban-Americans to share their thoughts about Cuba, the dictatorship there, U.S. policy toward that dictatorship, music, culture, food, etc. That being the case, he set out to create one.

So, at Babalú, our slogan is “an island on the net without a bearded dictator.” We take an old-school, hard line stance against the dictatorship in Cuba and generally are aligned with conservative politics. We have a loyal core readership, we’ve met with Presidents and Senators and the New York Times, one of the worst culprits in the whitewashing of the Cuban dictatorship, called Babalú “a rabid anti-Castro forum.” That’s a description we wear with pride.

Why do those who truly know about socialism oppose it?

This is another of a long series of questions that leftists can never answer. They somehow don’t seem to understand that socialism is built on a lie. The promise is that somehow the workers will control the means of production, even though that never happens.

Infuriatingly enough, this is often used as an ‘ad hoc rescue’ of the ideology as a means to pretend that ‘socialism has never been tried before’. The fact is that like many aspects of socialism, that is just an unfulfilled promise like all of the others.

The most realistic description of socialism comes from Lawrence Reed, president of the Foundation for Economic Education:

Socialism isn’t about free choice, it’s about concentrating power into the hands of government elites—ultimately through force.

Socialism is the concentration of power into the hands of government elites to achieve the following purposes: central planning of the economy and the radical redistribution of wealth.

Socialism is based on wealth redistribution by force

There are two other basic questions leftists can never answer – because they go straight to the heart of what is wrong with it and why it never works.

Does socialism require wealth redistribution? Yes or No?

The answer is yes to this one given Marx’s maxim:

“From each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs.” Karl Marx

Or the most basic perusal of the left’s socialist national agenda. This is followed up by the second question:

Does wealth redistribution require force? Yes or No?

Obviously, it takes the threat or application of force to take property from one group and redistribute it to another to buy votes. But leftists can’t admit to this basic truth.

There are only two forms of human interaction – voluntary co-operation or coercion. Economic liberty is based on voluntary co-operation. It should be clear by now that socialism is based in Coercion.

This is why economic liberty is superior to socialistic slavery, it also explains quite a few leftists’ lies.

The bottom line: Socialism is based on lies

We’ll finish this up with a quote from Mark Perry of the American Enterprise Institute: Why Socialism Failed: A 2018 Update.

Socialism is the ultimate Big Lie. While it falsely promises prosperity, equality, and security, it delivers the exact opposite: poverty, misery, inequality, and tyranny. Equality is achieved under socialism only in the sense that everyone is equal in his or her misery.

In the same way that a Ponzi scheme initially succeeds but eventually collapses, socialism may show early signs of success. But any temporary accomplishments quickly fade as the fundamental deficiencies of central planning emerge. It is the initial illusion of success that gives socialism its pernicious, seductive appeal. But in the long run, socialism has an unbroken track record of being a formula for tyranny, poverty, and misery.

[Emphasis added]

At its base level, socialism is founded in force, but the left cannot admit this basic truth so it has to cover it with lies. That is why it’s opposed by those such as Mr. Alvarez who truly know it’s ‘secrets’. That is also why you need to have publications like the Babalú Blog, The Blaze and The NOQ report for that matter. We expose the lies in the fervent belief that eventually people will wake up to the lies and send it to the ash heap of history.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.


 


The post Cuban American who warned about destructive force of socialism talks to Glenn Beck appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes.

The left’s attack on the McCloskeys is an attack on all freedom-loving Americans

Posted: 21 Jul 2020 07:33 AM PDT

2020 has been a very sad year for many. But arguably the saddest universal challenge that will have the longest-lasting effects is neither the economic challenges nor the precedent set regarding pandemics. Hidden beneath the cacophony of bad news this year is the unprecedented attack by the radical left on our Constitutional rights. Some will say they’ve been under attack for decades, even centuries, and that is quite true. But until 2020, it was never conceivable that mob rule could supersede the Constitution. That’s exactly what we’re seeing today.

The battle has gone from being widespread and diverse to focusing on one couple in St. Louis. The McCloskeys were defending their property and their lives when they took to their yard armed against a mob that had just broken a gate to trespass on private property. Now, they’re being charged with a crime, and while there are conservatives coming to their assistance on the legal front, it still bodes ill for a nation that has “leaders” willing to annihilate the Constitution for the sake of virtue signaling to the passing mob.

This must be taken with the seriousness of an existential threat. Why? Because all it takes is one win against the Constitution from the left in order to give them the opening to start chipping away at the entirety of it. That’s not hyperbole. If it is deemed by our judicial system that we are not allowed to protect ourselves from mobs, then mobs win. They will win now and they will continue to win. Coming back from this type of loss would be nearly impossible. Once you give the radical left an inch, they take every last mile we have left.

On the latest episode of the NOQ Report Podcast, I analyzed the situation which is both loony as well as terrifying. St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner has taken a clear cut case of Second Amendment rights, property rights, and castle doctrine and engaged in judicial activism from in front of the bench. Any other year, I’d say she has about as much of a chance spontaneously combusting as she has of making the charges she filed against the McCloskey’s stick, but this is 2020. If we’ve learned anything this year, it’s to never underestimate the efficacy of political insanity.

Every patriotic American who still believes in freedom should take a direct interest in this case. The McCloskeys must be exonerated. In fact, their case should be thrown out prima facie. But we have to do more than hope this happens. We have to watch. We have to pray. We have to use this case as a way to teach the radical left the mob simply cannot rule.

To keep our Constitutional rights, we have to win every single battle against the authoritarian left. They only have to win one major battle for everything to come crashing down. That’s why the McCloskey’s plight is so important.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.


 


The post The left’s attack on the McCloskeys is an attack on all freedom-loving Americans appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes.

Call out anyone who calls them ‘protesters’

Posted: 21 Jul 2020 06:22 AM PDT

The latest episode of Conservative Playbook focuses on one word: “Protesters.” It’s a word being used by too many people, even on the right, when referring to the people in places like Seattle, Portland, and Chicago. These people are not protesters. The violence and anarchy they’re bringing to their cities have nothing to do with protests. Even if government met their demands, they’d keep rioting and come up with different reasons.

As our EIC noted on Twitter:

“Protesters” don’t loot Amazon Go stores.

“Protesters” don’t set police buildings on fire.

“Protesters” don’t come armed with bats and other weapons.

Call them rioters. Call them anarchists. Call them opportunists. Call them idiots.

Just don’t call them “protesters.”

— JD Rucker (@JDRucker) July 20, 2020

It doesn’t matter who does it. Mainstream media. Democrats. Republicans. Social media “friends.” Anyone who uses the word “protesters” when referring to the domestic terrorists in Democratic cities across the nation must be corrected.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.


 


The post Call out anyone who calls them ‘protesters’ 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

Link to ARRA News Service

No Blogger Posts On July 21, 2020

Posted: 21 Jul 2020 04:02 PM PDT

Dr. Bill Smith, Editor, ARRA News Service: Due to surgery today, I will be unable to make posts today. However all articles submitted today will still be considered for posting during the remaining days of this week if my ability allows it.  I would appreciate your prayers.


Tags: Editorial comment 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

 

RedState Morning Briefing
CNN Reporter Melts Down After Trump Campaign Spox Uses CNN Link to Disprove Her Coronavirus Claims

    READ STORY    
ADVERTISEMENT
Tucker Carlson’s Fans Give the New York Times Doxing Team a Dose of Their Own Medicine

    READ STORY    
The Threat That Tucker Carlson Poses to the Media

    READ STORY    
Woke Red Bull Execs Fired After Attempting to Force Company Into Black Lives Matter Virtue Signal

    READ STORY    
Syracuse University Tacitly Endorses Harassment, Intimidation of Conservative Student Journalist

    READ STORY    
ADVERTISEMENT
McCloskey Gun Inoperable When Police Seized It, But Prosecution Ordered Crime Lab to Make It Operable and ‘Lethal’

    READ STORY    
Major League Baseball Goes to Bat for Kneeling, and It Looks Like a Strike-Out

    READ STORY    
Tennessee Man Was Called by the State About His COVID Case, and It Highlights a Huge Problem

    READ STORY    
Kayleigh McEnany Schools Media on Federal Response in Portland and Jonathan Turley Finishes Them Off

    READ STORY    

 

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:
RedState Unsubscribe
1735 N. Lynn St – Suite 510, Arlington, VA 22209

* Copyright RedState and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.

AMERICAN SPECTATOR

 

ABC

July 22, 2020 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Senate GOP supports another round of stimulus checks to Americans: With unemployment benefits set to expire at the end of the month, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday that Senate Republicans plan to support another round of stimulus checks — or “direct payments” — to Americans in their next coronavirus relief proposal. A timeline for these checks was not specified and it’s unclear who would get them, as Senate Republicans want a lower income threshold to qualify. The cap on payments in the first CARES bill was $99,000.The proposal includes $105 billion for schools, plus additional money for child care and reimbursements for safe workplace initiatives — including funding for remodeling, cleaning and personal protective equipment. The package would also include funding aimed at speeding along vaccine production, and providing liability protections for businesses, schools and health care providers. In his first press briefing in nearly three months, President Donald Trump also shared his plans for the next economic relief package. “We’re working very hard on it. We’re making a lot of progress,” he said. “I think we’re going to get it done.” Get the latest mobile updates about the coronavirus here.
City council passes resolution calling for independent investigation into Elijah McClain death: City council members in Aurora, Colorado, unanimously passed a resolution allowing for an “independent, unbiased” investigation into the death of Elijah McClain, a 23-year-old unarmed Black man who died after he was apprehended by Aurora, Colorado, police in August 2019. Back in June, when his death received renewed attention in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd — an unarmed Black man who was killed by Minneapolis police — Aurora city leaders said that a Connecticut attorney was leading a third-party investigation into McClain’s death. However, city council members noted that the attorney was a former police officer who worked closely with police departments, according to ABC Denver affiliate KMGH. The resolution stated that a neutral third investigation is needed “to discern the facts about what transpired that night of August 24, 2019.”
Female doctors share the mic on Instagram to shine a light on Black women’s health: A group of 80 female physicians are joining forces in a social media campaign called #SharetheMedicalMic to put a spotlight on Black physicians and health care for Black women. The campaign, which was organized by Dr. Renee Paro and Dr. Lauren Powell, is modeled after #ShareTheMicNow, a movement in which celebrities give their social media platforms to Black women for a day. Today, 40 white female physicians with social media followings will hand over their platforms to 40 Black female physicians. “Many times I don’t think people see a lot of Black faces from a physician standpoint, so a campaign where you’re seeing them all at once is really helpful for the community,” said Dr. Jessica Shepherd, a Dallas-based OBGYN who is taking over the social media platforms of Dr. Jennifer Lincoln, a Portland-based OBGYN. “Even outside of medicine, I feel like some Black professionals feel their voices are not heard enough.”
Happy 7th birthday, Prince George!: Prince George, the eldest child of Prince William and Duchess Kate, turns 7 today, and to celebrate, Kensington Palace released two new smiley photos of the young royal. The celebration will be private, as George and his two younger siblings, Princess Charlotte, 5, and Prince Louis, 2, have spent the past several months with their parents at their family’s Anmer Hall home in Norfolk, following stay-at-home orders issued by the U.K. government because of the coronavirus pandemic. William and Kate have been dealing with homeschooling their kids just like millions of other parents. “Yeah, homeschooling is fun,” William said with a laugh during an interview in March. See the adorable photos taken by Duchess Kate here.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Chefs Michael Symon and Pati Jinich join us for a backyard barbecue cook-off to celebrate National Grilling Month. Then, celebrity stylist Melissa Garcia joins us from her home to share some looks that will keep you cool and stylish all summer. Plus, we’re asking, “What is colorism?” Deborah Roberts dives into the bias of skin tone with the hope of challenging others to speak out against discrimination. All this and more only on “GMA”!
Will Halloween be canceled? What costumes will be appropriate amid racial reckoning
Halloween is three months away, but it’s already a topic of conversation when it comes to what costumes will be appropriate this year.
Put some good in your morning
[PHOTO: House Wine rosé and Cheez-It white cheddar limited-edition summer boxes.] Limited edition Cheez-It and wine boxes now come with rosé for summer
[PHOTO: Britney Spears on July 22, 2019 in Hollywood, Calif.] Britney Spears posts makeup-free selfie
[VIDEO: Girl with spinal injury sings along to 'Hollaback Girl' at physical therapy session ] Girl with spinal injury sings along to ‘Hollaback Girl’ at physical therapy session
[PHOTO: Robin Williams and Zelda Williams arrive at How Robin Williams’ daughter is honoring him on what would’ve been his 69th birthday
Read more →
‘I will not sacrifice myself,’ says teacher fed up with back-to-school debate
This middle school teacher is saying the back-to-school debate is a “lose-lose situation any way you look at it.”

NBC MORNING RUNDOWN

Image

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Good morning, NBC News readers.

 

President Donald Trump levelled with Americans about the severity of the coronavirus pandemic, the U.S. escalated its rift with China, and Chicago was rocked by more gun violence.

 

Here’s what we’re watching this Wednesday morning.

Trump says coronavirus crisis will probably ‘get worse before it gets better,’ 

President Donald Trump offered a newly sober projection for the coronavirus pandemic on Tuesday, warning Americans that the country had not yet seen the worst of it.

 

“It will probably, unfortunately, get worse before it gets better. Something I don’t like saying about things, but that’s the way it is,” Trump said at his first coronavirus-related press conference in months.

 

The president, who has been resistant to wearing a face covering in public, also encouraged Americans to wear a mask to help stop the spread of the virus.

 

“We’re asking everybody that when you are not able to socially distance, wear a mask. Get a mask,” he said during the notably solo event.

 

“Whether you like the mask or not, they have an impact, they’ll have an effect, and we need everything we can get.”

 

While Trump mostly levelled with the American people about the challenges the country faces in a way he had not in the past, he still made numerous false statements about the U.S. mortality rate, hospital capacity and states’ preparedness to combat the virus. Read our fact check.

Coronavirus a ‘Category 5’ emergency for Florida’s older population

Even as young adults have been the recent focus of concerns about growing COVID-19 cases across the United States, a Florida senior living advocacy group is likening the state’s skyrocketing deaths to the kind of destruction caused by a catastrophic hurricane.

 

“If the coronavirus in Florida were a hurricane, its intensity in two weeks has reached Category 5 status,” LeadingAge Florida CEO Steve Bahmer said during a video conference Monday.

 

“Over the past two weeks, Florida has become the epicenter of the COVID-19 epidemic,” Bahmer said.

 

Florida is particularly susceptible to the virus as older Americans tend to have underlying conditions that exacerbate its impact —  and one in five Floridians is 65 or older.

 

 

  • The U.S. death toll from coronavirus has surpassed 142,700 according to NBC News’ tally.
Image

Standoff in Portland as chaos envelopes parts of the city

For nearly two months, protesters have gathered in a park in downtown Portland to demonstrate against police brutality. But recently, demonstrations have become increasingly heated after federal forces arrived without the consent of local leaders.

 

The standoff between law enforcement and protesters in the streets of downtown Portland has caused what some legal experts say could be a constitutional crisis.

 

This week an older group of parents have joined the demonstrations in an attempt to form a barrier between protesters and law enforcement, shouting things like “Feds stay clear, moms are here!”

 

“What really crossed the line for me was when the feds started picking people off the street,” said Leslie Yeargers, a Portland resident and mother of two children in their early 20s who attended her first protest Monday night. “That is a totalitarian and authoritarian tactic, and I don’t want it in my city and I want them gone.”

 

News Analysis: Trump is tempting violence with his vow to deploy more federal police. But to what end? NBC News’ Jonathan Allen asks in a news analysis.

Image

‘What in the hell are we doing?’ Senate Republicans clash over coronavirus relief

Beset by internal divisions and clashes with the Trump administration, Senate Republicans downplayed the prospects Tuesday of enacting new coronavirus relief before key programs like boosted unemployment payments expire.

 

Republicans continue to negotiate among themselves but broadly oppose an extension beyond this week of the $600 weekly federal jobless benefit that millions of Americans are collecting.

 

Complicating Republican talks is the White House, which is trying to cut funding for COVID-19 testing and demanding a payroll tax cut that many in the president’s party oppose.

 

At a meeting of Republican lawmakers Tuesday, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas cast doubt on the spending talks, asking, “What the hell are we doing?” according to a Republican source familiar with his remarks.

U.S. orders closure of China’s Houston consulate as tensions rise

The State Department has ordered the closure of China’s Houston consulate in a move that the Chinese Foreign Ministry on Wednesday called an “outrageous and unjustified” provocation.

 

The move was just the latest incident in a relationship between the two superpowers that has become increasingly strained.

State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus said the U.S. was acting to “protect American intellectual property and Americans’ private information.”

Image

Want to receive the Morning Rundown in your inbox? Sign up here.

Plus 

THINK about it 

My father showed me the power of nonviolence. John Lewis lived it, Bernice King writes in an opinion piece.

Live BETTER 

Is it coronavirus or Lyme disease? Similar symptoms could create confusion. Here’s what you need to know.

Shopping

Quarantine is an ideal time to reorganize your refrigerator. Here are the seven best storage solutions, according to a home organization professional.

One fun thing 

The hit movie “Airplane!” is 40 years old.

 

It would be easy to put the comedy on a no-fly list of offensive films. But, that would be a mistake because it demonstrates how to push boundaries in the right way, cultural critic Bryan Reesman writes in an opinion piece.

Alternate text

A scene from the 1980 movie “Airplane!” (Photo: Allstar Picture Library Limited)

Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.

 

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

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

 

Thanks, Petra Cahill

NBC FIRST READ

Image

From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg

FIRST READ: Cracks in the GOP over Trump are beginning to show

Last Friday, we told you a significant divide existed between the pro-Trump and the pro-party wings of the GOP.

 

And on Tuesday, that divide became evident for all of Washington to see, when pro-Trump House conservatives went after Liz Cheney, the third-ranking member of the House Republican leadership.

 

Over, in part, Cheney’s support for Dr. Anthony Fauci (!!!).

Alternate text

Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call

“Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., later Tuesday called on Cheney to resign or ‘be removed’ as the House Republican Conference chair. As chair, Cheney is the sole female member of the House GOP leadership,” NBC’s Kasie Hunt writes.

 

“Gaetz’s tweet quickly received support from other prominent Republicans, including Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, and the president’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., who compared Cheney to Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, the only GOP senator to vote to convict Trump during his impeachment trial.”

 

And it’s not just Gaetz vs. Liz Cheney.

 

It’s the clash between the White House and Senate Republicans over what should be in the next round of coronavirus-relief stimulus – before we even get to the Democrats’ demands.

 

And it’s Allen West – yes, THAT Allen West – becoming the new chair of the Texas Republican Party, in a state that’s becoming more problematic for the GOP.

 

“There are three words I hate to hear used: I hate ‘big tent.’ I hate ‘inclusiveness.’ And I hate ‘outreach,'” West said, according to the Almanac of American Politics, per the Texas Tribune. “I think you stand on the principles that make you great, which transcend everybody in America, and people will come to it.”

 

President Trump deliberately remade the Republican Party in his own image. And the question becomes: What happens to the GOP when he’s no longer president – either after November or after 2024?

 

Remember, Allen West and his politics existed before Trump became president.

Romancing the tone

On Tuesday – five months since the coronavirus pandemic became a crisis inside the United States – President Trump finally admitted reality.

 

“It will probably, unfortunately, get worse before it gets better — something I don’t like saying about things, but that’s the way it is,” he said.

 

But as NBC’s Kristen Welker reported on “TODAY” this morning, Trump didn’t answer an important question in his admission: What comes next?

 

What’s the best way to combat the virus and avoid future outbreaks?

 

What does getting “worse before it gets better” mean for the schools that Trump wants to reopen?

 

Did Trump’s desire to reopen the country – before it was ready – make things worse?

 

And what is he doing TODAY to take on the coronavirus?

 

In fact, his public schedule has nothing related to the coronavirus.

DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers that you need to know today

3,909,514: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials.  (That’s 54,359 more cases than yesterday morning.)

 

142,959: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 993 more than yesterday morning.)

 

47.22 million: The number of coronavirus TESTS that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.

 

7,000: The number of QAnon accounts that Twitter has banned as part of a larger crackdown on the conspiracy theory’s social media users

 

TWEET OF THE DAY: Fare thee well

Image

2020 VISION: Obama and Biden have a socially-distanced conversation

The Biden campaign has released a video of former President Barack Obama and his vice president – Biden – having a socially distant conversation, NBC’s Mike Memoli reports.

 

The video was recorded earlier this month in Washington, D.C., and the full video will come out Thursday.

 

But here’s the excerpt the Biden camp released:

 

BIDEN: “Can you imagine standing up when you were president and saying ‘it’s not my responsibility. I take no responsibility.’ Literally. Literally.”

 

OBAMA: Those words didn’t come out of our mouths while we were in office.”

 

BIDEN: “No. I don’t understand his inability to get a sense of what people are going through. He just can’t – he can’t relate in any way.” 

 

OBAMA: “Well, and one of the things I have always known about you Joe, it’s the reason I wanted you to be my vice president, and the reason why you were so effective…it all starts with being able to relate. If you can sit down with a family and see your own family in them, and the struggles that you’ve gone through or your parents went through or your kids are going through, if you can connect those struggles to somebody else’s struggles, then you’re going to work hard for them. And that’s always what’s motivated you to get into public service.”

 

Stalemate

It’s unlikely there will be enacted coronavirus relief before key programs expire, given Senate Republicans’ slow negotiations on Capitol Hill.

 

Per NBC’s Capitol Hill team, the White House is still demanding a payroll tax cut, as well as a cut in funding to coronavirus testing. The one area of agreement seems to be around the decision to not extend the weekly $600 federal unemployment benefit that millions of Americans are collecting. But before the caucus can argue with the White House’s tax cut and test funding demands, they have to get on the same page with each other – and some Republicans have said they will not support any new spending  at all (like Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul).

 

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said he will be introducing a bill in the next few days that “enjoys fairly significant support among Republican senators.”

 

But with so much up in the air, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz may have summed it up best when, according a Republican source familiar with his remarks, asked his caucus, “What the hell are we doing?”

 

You can read more about the Senate Republicans’ negotiations here.

 

THE LID: A change is gonna come 

Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we sifted through some of the most important findings from our NBC/WSJ poll questions on race and discrimination.

ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?

Trump reportedly asked the U.S. ambassador to the U.K. to look into getting the British Open for his Scotland golf resort.

 

Things are getting pretty heated with Senate Republicans arguing over coronavirus relief.

 

Democrats are eyeing a new party platform.

 

Climate activists are sizing up Joe Biden’s plan for clean energy.

 

Here’s the latest on the standoff in Portland between protestors and federal law enforcement.

 

State officials want to speed up the process to count mail-in ballots.

 

The speaker of the Ohio State House has been arrested in what agents call the “largest bribery scheme” in state history.

 

The Black Lives Matter movement doesn’t want a singular leader. Politico looks at why.

 

The New York Times traces Andrew Gillum’s rise and fall.

Thanks for reading.

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

 

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

 

Thanks,

Chuck, Mark, Carrie and Melissa

CBS

 

Email Not Displaying? Click Here

 

CBSNews

 

Eye Opener

President Trump warned the coronavirus will get worse before it gets better, and encouraged Americans to wear a mask as he resumed speaking at White House coronavirus briefings. Also, the Trump administration plans to send federal troops into Chicago after the actions of federal forces in Portland sparked nationwide outrage. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.

Watch Video +

 

Trump warns Americans of coronavirus pandemic's severity

Trump warns Americans of coronavirus pandemic’s severity

Watch Video +

NFL star accepts Holocaust survivor's invitation to Auschwitz

NFL star accepts Holocaust survivor’s invitation to Auschwitz

Read Story +

Judge denies early release of girl detained for not doing homework

Judge denies early release of girl detained for not doing homework

Read Story +

A new name, a new album: The Chicks are back

A new name, a new album: The Chicks are back

Watch Video +

Shark populations decimated around the world

Shark populations decimated around the world

Watch Video +

 

 

 

 

CBSN

 

CBS News logo

Copyright © 2020 CBS Interactive Inc. All rights reserved. The email address for this newsletter is rickbulownewmedia@protonmail.com.
Unsubscribe from this email | Manage your preferences | Newsletter help | Privacy policy

Watch CBSN on Amazon Fire TV Watch CBSN on Android TV Watch CBSN on Apple TV Watch CBSN on Roku Watch CBSN on Xbox
Download CBSNews App for iOS Download CBSNews App for Android

IJR

MANHATTAN INSTITUTE

 

 July 22, 2020
Featuring the latest analysis, commentary, and research from Manhattan Institute scholars

EDUCATION

Photo: Mario Tama/Getty Images

Thomas Sowell Has Been Right From the Start

His latest book on charter schools continues his research on minority success in education.
By Jason L. Riley
The Wall Street Journal
July 22, 2020

CRIME & POLICING

Photo: Scott Heins/Getty Images

Policing on the Brink: A Conversation with William Bratton

Former NYPD and LAPD commissioner William J. Bratton joins Brian Anderson to discuss the troubling state of crime and law enforcement in America, the NYPD’s decision to disband its plainclothes unit, the challenges of police morale and recruitment, and more.

Photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Underground, a Pandemic of Lawlessness

New York’s subways are much more dangerous than they were last year.
By Nicole Gelinas
City Journal Online
July 21, 2020

Photo: fotograv/iStock

Statement to the President’s Commission on Law Enforcement: Working Group on Respect for Law Enforcement

Rafael Mangual submitted testimony to the Presidential Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice.

Photo: Vagabondatheart/iStock

Gateway to the Wild West

The accelerating collapse of St. Louis, the most violent city in America
By Jordan Duecker
City Journal Online
July 21, 2020

ECONOMY & FINANCE

Photo: Vagabondatheart/iStock

Seattle’s Tarnished Dream

A generous safety net doesn’t mean much if you can’t find jobs or afford housing.
By Jacob L. Vigdor
City Journal Online
July 21, 2020

UPCOMING EVENTS

Coping with State and Local Fiscal Distress

Join the Manhattan Institute tomorrow for a discussion on how states and localities are coping with fiscal distress with Yale Law’s David SchleicherDavid Skeel of the University of Pennsylvania, and the Manhattan Institute’s Chris Pope and moderator Allison Schrager.

FEATURED BOOK

Now Available in Paperback: The Diversity Delusion

America is in crisis—from the university to the workplace. Toxic ideas first spread by higher education have undermined humanistic values, fueled intolerance, and widened divisions in our culture. Heather Mac Donald’s The Diversity Delusion (now in paperback) argues that we are creating a nation of narrowed and intolerant minds, primed for grievance and victimhood, which puts our competitive edge at risk.

FEATURED EVENT

A Conversation with Senator Tom Cotton on Effective Policing and the Rule of Law

On July 20, Senator Tom Cotton joined Manhattan Institute president Reihan Salam for a discussion on the future of policing in America and the challenges of public debate in an age of polarization.

PRESIDENT’S UPDATE

President’s Update: Summer 2020

With America and its cities still reeling from the Covid-19 pandemic and the recent civil unrest, Manhattan Institute scholars are charting a path forward at the federal, state, and local levels. Read more in the Summer 2020 update from president Reihan Salam.
READ MI’S SUMMER 2020 UPDATE
SUPPORT
Manhattan Institute is a think tank whose mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice and individual responsibility.
52 Vanderbilt Ave. New York, NY 10017
(212) 599-7000
SUPPORT MI

Copyright © 2020 Manhattan Institute, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:

Manhattan Institute

52 Vanderbilt Ave.

New YorkNY 10017

Add us to your address book

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

LOUDER WITH CROWDER

TOWNHALL

FACEBOOK         TWITTER
ADVERTISEMENT
Columnists
Support Your Local Sheriff and Camouflaged Federal Officers 
Kurt Schlichter
‘Equal Justice’: The Politicization of Prosecution
Marina Medvin
Historical Ignorance and Confederate Generals
Walter E. Williams
Progressive Policies Wreck Everything
John Stossel
AARP to Seniors: We’re Not Accountable to You
Phil Kerpen
Open Schools This Fall
Star Parker
Four More Examples of Media Bias
John R. Lott, Jr.
The Journalistic Malpractice of Touting ‘Devout’ Biden
Tim Graham
Biden Would Emulate Henry VIII
Terry Jeffrey
ADVERTISEMENT
Biden Will Destroy the Suburbs
Betsy McCaughey
Trump’s Heavy-Handed Reaction to Police Brutality Protests Belies Promise of ‘Law and Order’
Jacob Sullum
‘Mask Police’ is Not the Answer
John and Andy Schlafly
Radicalization at the Smithsonian
Bob Barr
What Jewish Privilege Really Looks Like
Michael Brown
President Trump Must Repeal Tariffs If He Wants To Win In November
Jesse Grady
5 Myths About the Right to Keep and Bear Arms
Mark Overstreet
Desperate Times, Disheartened Dad
M.D. Kittle
I Was Wrong About Jerry Falwell, Liberty U, And COVID-19
Jerry Bowyer
The Only Poll That Matters
Steve Sheldon
Video
Gov. Evers: Saying Abortionists ‘Execute Babies’ Is ‘Blasphemy’
Trump blasts Schiff as ‘political hack’
Pelosi’s condescension offers some laughs
Pelosi open to border infrastructure
INVESTING
I Was Wrong About Jerry Falwell, Liberty U, And COVID-19
World’s Leading New Testament Scholar On How The Church Should Respond To Pandemic
Even Angels Couldn’t Make Socialism Work
States With The Highest Taxes And Greediest Politicians
The Left Sells Socialism With Race
Far Left And Far Right Are Not Very Far Apart
Tipsheet
Alas, Cities Finally Confirm What We Already Knew Regarding the Spike in COVID Cases
Matt Vespa
Battle of Portland: Mayhem Erupts as Leftist Rioters Clash with Federal Agents
Matt Vespa
Despite Woke Pressure, Red Bull Stands its Ground
Madeline Peltzer
Multiple Victims Shot Outside of Chicago Funeral Home
Reagan McCarthy
House Passes NDAA Reauthorization as White House Threatens to Veto
Reagan McCarthy
BREAKING: President Trump Urges Americans to Wear a Mask
Katie Pavlich
Planned Parenthood’s New York Chapter Cuts Association with Racist Founder 
Reagan McCarthy
Revenge: The NYT Reporter Who Reportedly Tried to Dox Tucker Carlson Got a Taste Of His Own Medicine
Matt Vespa
Kentucky Couple Under House Arrest Because They Refused to Sign Self-Quarantine Documents
Alex Corey
First China Gave Us Wuhan Coronavirus, Now They’re Trying to Steal the Vaccine 
Katie Pavlich
ADVERTISEMENT
Political Cartoons
Bearing Arms
Connecticut 13-Year-Old Charged With Armed Robbery | Tom Knighton
Black Militia Promises Thousands For Armed March In Louisville | Cam Edwards
LAPD Officer Under Fire For Competitive Shooting Background | Tom Knighton
NYC Assemblywoman Hoping To Disarm Peace Officers | Cam Edwards
NYPD Commissioner: It’ll Take Time To Address “Uptick” In Violence | Tom Knighton
_______SUBSCRIPTION INFO_______
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the Townhall.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:
Townhall Daily Unsubscribe
P.O. Box 9660, Arlington, VA 22219


* Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.


 

REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE

07/22/2020
Share: Twitter Facebook Pinterest LinkedIn Google Plus Instapaper

Carl Cannon’s Morning Note

GOP Divide; a Better Model; the Heat Is On

By Carl M. Cannon on Jul 22, 2020 09:23 am
Hello, it’s Wednesday, July 22, 2020. The weather forecaster on the local NBC affiliate in Washington, D.C., did not mince words this morning. High of 96, with high humidity — “miserably hot,” he said — and the probability of severe thunderstorms.

“Miserable” pretty much sums up the weather in much of the country this month, and it comes at the worst time for America’s barkeeps and restaurateurs. As these proprietors try to cobble together a new business model by converting parking lots to outdoor dining sites, selling drinks to-go and making other concessions to the pandemic, a historic heat wave has decimated their traffic before they even had much chance to get going. “When it rains, it pours” hardly describes their ill fortunes this year.

It’s happened previously, and before air conditioning was widespread — when such weather was lethal. I’ll have more on this truism, focusing on the heat wave of 1936, in a moment. First, I’d point you to RealClearPolitics’ front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters and contributors, including the following:

*  *  *

Next COVID Relief Package Stirs Division — Within the GOP. Phil Wegmann has the story.

Military Needs a President Who Leads by Example, Not by Tweet. Afghanistan War veteran and former GOP congressman Charles Djou enumerates the reasons he’s supporting Joe Biden.

News Outlets Turn Blind Eye on The Trace’s Anti-Gun Bent. John R. Lott Jr. spotlights reporting for Scientific American and other publications that has not disclosed the funding for writers with a supposedly neutral take on gun rights/gun control.

Facebook Thrives in the “Outrage Economy.” In RealClearPolicy, Eric Bovim likens the social media platform to an arms dealer — war is good no matter who’s winning, so as long as both sides keep buying ads.

Corporate America Must Protect Itself From Conspiracy Theories. In RealClearWorld, Matthew Ferraro warns that disinformation is a business risk like any other, and smart companies need to prepare for them.

Address COVID Testing Delay … Now. In RealClearHealth, Kevin Pham addresses a key roadblock to flattening the rise in cases.

Could Caesar Sanctions Spell the End of War in Syria? In RealClearDefense, Howard Shatz examines the potential impact of the Caesar Syria Civilian Protection Act.

Pipeline Shutdown Could Hurt Low-Income Americans. In RealClearEnergy, Albert Wynn assesses a judge’s recent decision on the Dakota Access project.

*  *  *

The United States was in the midst of the Great Depression — and a presidential election — in 1936, a year that began with extreme winter weather. In Washington, D.C., in late January, the temperature averaged only 14 degrees. A huge snowstorm cut off the Appalachians from the Eastern Seaboard. In the Midwest, record snowfalls were followed by record cold spells. One town in North Dakota went 41 consecutive days without the mercury topping zero. Ski rescues were common from the Sierra Nevada mountains to Maine, while rivers froze over as far south as Richmond. Entire communities were cut off without power for weeks. That February, Americans prayed for warmer weather. Those prayers would be mocked. The March snowmelt produced destructive floods. April brought killer tornadoes. But the worst of it arrived in June when it suddenly — and for a long time — became unbearably hot.

The Great Heat Wave of 1936, largely forgotten now, smothered the East Coast and Upper Midwest with furnace-like temperatures. In mid-July, it reached 104 degrees in Philadelphia and Washington; 107 in Baltimore. In Toronto, it reached 100, exacting a death toll there not seen since the 1918 influenza pandemic. If you sought refuge — and shade — in New York City’s Central Park on July 9, you were braving 106-degree temperatures. Some businesses, notably movie theaters, had air-conditioning, as did a few homes. But the vast majority of Americans were left to fend for themselves any way they could. New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia opened all public beaches at night. Detroit’s Belle Isle resembled a Gypsy camp as thousands of Michiganders spent nights on the beach there.

The worst of it was felt in the Midwest. The extreme heat that struck the Plains States destroyed crops and felled people from the Dakotas to the Red River Valley, setting records that have never been topped: 111 in Decorah, Iowa; 110 in Bismarck, N.D.; 108 in Rochester, Minn. Ten Detroiters were felled on the first day of the heat wave. On the worst day, St. Paul alone lost 51 people.

“Healthy men and women would start off for work in the morning and never come home, falling in the streets or at work when they were overcome by the sun and heat,” Detroit News reporter George Cantor wrote on the 60th anniversary of the disaster.

“Weeping relatives besieged Receiving Hospital and the morgue, where the dead were lined up in corridors since no space remained on the slabs,” Cantor added. “Doctors and nurses collapsed at their stations, overcome by heat and fatigue. ‘It’s as if Detroit has been attacked by a plague out of the Middle Ages,’ one observer wrote.”

It didn’t abate until September. When it did, an estimated 5,000 Americans had perished, along with 1,100 Canadians. What did people do then? Resumed their lives, mostly. There was a Depression to contend with, crops to tend, factories to run, and babies to feed. Meanwhile, another kind of storm was brewing across the ocean: War clouds were again gathering in Europe.

Carl M. Cannon
Washington Bureau chief, RealClearPolitics
@CarlCannon (Twitter)
ccannon@realclearpolitics.com

Having trouble viewing this email? | [Unsubscribe] | Update Subscription Preferences

Copyright © 2020 RealClearHoldings, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in at our website.

Our mailing address is:

RealClearHoldings

666 Dundee Road
Bldg. 600

Northbrook, IL 60062

Add us to your address book

REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY

 

07/22/2020

RCP Poll Averages & Election 2020

As of Jul 22, 2020 @ 09:30AM EST

As of Jul 22, 2020 @ 09:30AM EST

The Single Stock Retirement Plan

RCP Front Page

Latest on Coronavirus (COVID-19)

As of Jul 22, 2020 @ 09:30AM EST

Next COVID Relief Package Stirs Division — Within the GOP

COVID-19: More Testing … and More Delays

Are You Lonesome Tonight?

Videos

Subscribe to All RCP Sites Ad-Free

1-Week Ad-Free Trial
Facebook
Twitter
Website

View in browser | Unsubscribe | Update preferences

You are receiving this email because you opted in at our website.

Copyright © 2020 RealClearHoldings, All rights reserved. 

RealClearHoldings

666 Dundee Road
Bldg. 600

NorthbrookIL 60062

Add us to your address book

 

CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY

The violence plaguing many of America’s major cities may be seen by some as a reaction to the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, but a closer examination indicates that there is much more involved. The violence has largely been perpetrated by Antifa and the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement. Antifa is Maoist in its philosophy and BLM was founded by self-described Marxists. What we are seeing is in fact a communist insurrection aimed squarely at the United States Constitution.

Click here to sign up.

In the first of the Center for Security Policy’s five-part Biosecurity Webinar series, China expert Gordon Chang and national security expert Claudia Rosett discussed the Chinese government’s criminal negligence that caused the coronavirus to become a pandemic and how the World Health Organization’s (WHO) collaboration with Beijing covered up the danger and denied the world crucial time that could have saved hundreds of thousands of lives.

Click here to read more and watch the whole video.

Highlighted Articles/Interviews

End the Chinese Communist Party’s abuse of diplomatic cover

Yesterday, the Trump administration ordered Communist China to close its consulate in Houston, prompting diplomatic personnel there to begin burning documents in the facility’s outdoor courtyard. The scene evoked memories of Japanese diplomats doing the same on the eve of their nation’s attack on Pearl Harbor.

Reasons given for the shuttering were China’s theft of intellectual property and private data. Given the Chinese Communist Party’s conduct in this country, however, other abuses of the PRC’s diplomatic privileges may include: forcing Chinese nationals to spy in this country; suborning Americans through the so-called “Thousand Talents” program; running influence and intimidation operations on college campuses; and supporting the more than twenty “Communist Chinese military companies” ominously doing business here.

The truth is the CCP is our enemy. Rolling up and shutting down such threatening behavior conducted here under diplomatic cover is both prudent and necessary.

This is Frank Gaffney.

TODD BENSMAN, Senior Fellow at the Center for Immigration Studies, Writing Fellow, Middle East Forum, Author, the Federalist:

  • What is “mass asylum fraud”?
  • Public health issues associated with illegal immigration

FRED FLEITZ, President and CEO Center for Security Policy, Former CIA analyst, Former Chief of Staff for Amb. John Bolton in the State Dept., Author of The Coming North Korea Nuclear Nightmare: What Trump Must to Reverse Obama’s Strategic Patience (2018):

COL (RET) JOHN MILLS, Former Director, Cybersecurity Policy, Strategy, and International Affairs, Office of the Secretary of Defense:

  • The impact of voting fraud on US elections
  • Voter fraud taking place in Virginia
  • What are the chances of voter fraud happening in the 2020 presidential election?

KEVIN FREEMAN, Senior Fellow at the Center for Security Policy, Host of Economic War Room on TheBlaze TV, Author of “Game Plan” and “Secret Weapon”:

  • Is the stock market on the verge of a collapse?
  • The economic war between the US and China
  • What is the difference between shareholder and stakeholder capitalism?
TWEET OF THE DAY
DONATE
Facebook
Twitter
Website
Secure Freedom Parler
Copyright © 2020 Center for Security Policy, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
2020 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Suite 189
Washington, D.C.  20006
(202) 835-9077

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

BERNARD GOLDBERG

A new post from Bernie.

Off the Cuff: White Supremacy Then and Now

By Bernard Goldberg on Jul 22, 2020 02:00 am

Below is a sneak peek of this content! New York Times opinion columnist Charles Blow recently argued that “white supremacy is the biggest racial problem this country faces.” He couldn’t be more wrong. That’s the topic of my Off the Cuff audio commentary this week. You can listen to it… CONTINUE
Read More »

share on Twitter Like Off the Cuff: White Supremacy Then and Now on Facebook

Click for Bernie's Bio

About Bernie

Bernard Goldberg, the television news reporter and author of Bias, a New York Times number one bestseller about how the media distort the news, is widely seen as one of the most original writers and thinkers in broadcast journalism.  He has covered stories all over the world for CBS News and has won 13 Emmy awards for excellence in journalism.  He won six Emmys at CBS, and seven at HBO, where he now reports for the widely acclaimed broadcast Real Sports[Read More…]

Bernie’s Amazon Page

Copyright © 2020 BernardGoldberg.com, All rights reserved.

TWITCHY

________SUBSCRIPTION INFO________

This email is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this email on the Twitchy.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:
Twitchy Unsubscribe
P.O. Box 9660, Arlington, VA 22219


* Copyright Twitchy and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.


HOT AIR

ADVERTISEMENT
Pelosi on CNN: America is suffering from “Trump’s virus”, you know
Karen Townsend
Video: New York City shuts down its “occupied” zone
Jazz Shaw
Escalation: US orders China to close its Houston consulate
Ed Morrissey
Politico wonders: Will Trump pardon … Ghislaine Maxwell?
Ed Morrissey
ADVERTISEMENT
Huge. Ohio Republican state House Speaker arrested in staggering corruption case
Jazz Shaw
VIP Gold Chat today with Cam Edwards and Ed Morrissey! 
Ed Morrissey
Has Biden peaked? 
Allahpundit
Republican Party of Texas elects Allen West as chairman, Sets course to keep Texas red
Karen Townsend
Spectator uncovers some problems with the allegations against Tucker Carlson 
John Sexton
Pentagon: Esper wants federal cops in Portland to stop wearing military uniforms
Allahpundit
Ellison: Come on, do you really want police responding to a rape?
Ed Morrissey
Dems want GOP rep sanctioned for calling AOC a “f***ing b*tch”
Allahpundit
Jerusalem Post: Another case of apparent coronavirus reinfection after recovery
John Sexton
Delta Airlines follows Southwest into the layoff zone
Jazz Shaw
Trump on Ghislaine Maxwell: I wish her well
Allahpundit
McConnell: GOP’s Phase 4 bid includes $$ for schools, businesses, families — but maybe not a payroll tax cut 
Ed Morrissey
FBI Deputy Director announces charges against Chinese hackers
John Sexton
Minnesota: We should give unemployment benefits to high school students
Jazz Shaw
Freedom Caucus warns Liz Cheney in meeting: Stop defending Fauci and start defending Trump 
Allahpundit
Today’s hot topics on #TEMS: Missile defense, doxxing offense, policing common sense, Phase 4 expense, and more!
Ed Morrissey
Too gross to check: Did Ghislaine Maxwell hire political-hit buffoons to smear victims — and get Berman fired?
Ed Morrissey
WHO sent investigators to China to identify the source of the coronavirus (but don’t expect much)
John Sexton
California city scrubs BLM street mural rather than approve MAGA mural 
Jazz Shaw
NBC/WSJ poll: Actually, we should remove Confederate statues and let athletes kneel at the national anthem 
Ed Morrissey
Planned Parenthood of New York: We’re cancelling Margaret Sanger for supporting eugenics
Allahpundit
Police find body in Minneapolis pawnshop which was burned during riots in May
John Sexton
Chicago Fraternal Order of Police President begs Trump for help. Mayor is “a failure”
Jazz Shaw
Georgia Dem to Joy Reid: Do you plan to ask Biden about his repeated use of the N-word?
Ed Morrissey
Where wokesters and racists agree
Allahpundit
Should we just let Portland burn?
Jazz Shaw
LATEST HEADLINES
Reuters “Birx is getting increasingly frustrated”
CNN Rand Paul on Liz Cheney: “I don’t think she’s good for the country”
Ted Cruz A way to take back Portland
Jennifer Senior I spoke to Anthony Fauci. He says his inbox isn’t pretty.
Rand Paul It’s time to demilitarize the police
NBC Trump looks to use executive orders to move agenda beyond coronavirus
BuzzFeed DHS employees worry that Portland response is destroying agency’s reputation
NYT Minneapolis PD sees surge of departures in aftermath of Floyd protests
Politico Trump administration weighs a show of force in more cities
Mediaite Pelosi on pandemic: “Clearly it is the Trump virus”
C2H U.S. orders China to close Houston consulate
WSJ House passes defense bill after Trump issues formal veto threat
NYT Trump’s request of an ambassador: Get the British Open for me
Agnes Callard Should we cancel Aristotle?
BBC The people with hidden immunity against COVID-19
NYT Big leads tend to erode. Is Biden’s edge different?
Guardian Disney theme park staff worry about COVID-19: “I can’t bring it back home”
Weill, Ross Who actually wants Trump to send in the feds? Police unions
David Catron Will teachers’ unions reelect Trump?
Kevin Williamson Elites’ endless quest for social status is fueling our present moral panic
ADVERTISEMENT

 

__________________________SUBSCRIPTION INFO__________________________

WERE YOU FORWARDED THIS EDITION OF THE HOT AIR DAILY?
You can get your own free subscription to the #1 blog delivered to your email inbox early each morning by visiting: http://www.hotair.com

This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on Hot Air 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:
Hot Air Daily Unsubscribe
P.O Box 9660, Arlington, VA 22219


* Copyright Hot Air and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.

AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH

  SHARE:
Join Our Email List
July 22, 2020
“Systemic Racism” Theory is the New Political Tribalism

By Richard M. Ebeling | “A freedom not based on race, nationality, language, or religion, but on an idea of the unique and valued individual who is at liberty to live his own life, peacefully in voluntary mutual association with others.

Read more
www.aier.org

Share this:
Welcome to the Frankfurtian World

By Joakim Book | “Wherever one turns, the political discourse seems entirely uninterested in the Enlightenment project – the values of 17th and 18th century philosophers imploring us to use reason to approach scientific truth and an intelligent…

Read more
www.aier.org

After 30 Years, Did the Disabilities Act Work?

By James Bovard | “The ADA’s absurdities and ritualized legal racketeering are occurring in an era when Americans have become far more humane, rational, and compassionate towards the disabled. It is time to end the flying kangaroos,…

Read more
www.aier.org

The Fed Can’t Make Pi

By Thomas L. Hogan | In 1897, the Indiana state legislature proposed a bill to assign a specific value to the mathematical constant pi. The Greek letter π, or “pi,” is often used to represent the ratio of a circle’s circumference to its diameter.

Read more
www.aier.org

Free to Choose: Human Challenge Trials for Vaccines

By Arthur M. Diamond, Jr. | “Libertarians believe that adults should be free to choose large risks in the pursuit of adventures like free diving, extreme skiing, and space exploration. The case is all the stronger that adults should be free to…

Read more
www.aier.org

It’s the small things that we use daily in life that reveal our loyalties. This is precisely why we made an AIER coffee mug. It suggests stability, dignity, and determination. It has personalized a matte-finish exterior with a shiny lip and interior. It has a 17-oz capacity and a flat handle for comfort. It says everything it needs to say!
Frederic Bastiat wrote with urgency and passion for the free society, even until his last breath. He knew that political systems were not enough to preserve freedom.
We need public consensus that comes from practical and moral conviction. He left us with the perfect model for how to obtain this.
This is why AIER has put together this collection consisting of five of Bastiat’s most lucid and compelling pieces. There are many others, so please just consider this the essence of his work, a beginning and not an end.
Follow AIER

NATIONAL REVIEW

Morning-Jolt.png
WITH JIM GERAGHTYJuly 22 2020
hero

The Concerning COVID Deaths Trend

On the menu today: Coronavirus deaths in the U.S. exceed 1,000 for the first time in a while as researchers work to pinpoint the virus’s fatality rate, a biological woman who identifies as a man has sued a Catholic hospital for refusing to perform “transition surgery,” and Chuck Schumer joins Joe Biden in signaling his willingness to end the legislative filibuster in the Senate.

The Number of U.S. Coronavirus Deaths Is Rising Again

Yesterday, there were a little over 1,000 new deaths from coronavirus reported in the U.S., the highest daily death toll reported since late May, aside from a few aberrations in June when higher numbers were reported from unknown dates. According to the New York Times database that tracks reported infections and deaths, the “seven-day average of deaths in the United States reached 810 on Tuesday, up from an average of about 475 in early July, though still far below the country’s April peak of 2,232.”

We’re nowhere near where we were in the spring, that’s for sure, but the trend is a little concerning. In a press conference, President Trump acknowledged that the situation with the virus likely will “get …   READ MORE

spacer
ADVERTISEMENT
Facebook launches Global State of Small Business Report

fb_flex_gallery_door_570.jpg

At Facebook, we are committed to helping small businesses succeed. We partnered with the World Bank and the OECD to survey businesses in 50+ countries and regions to understand the challenges they face and ways we can better support them.

Go further: Read the first report.

TRENDING ON NATIONAL REVIEW

1. China’s Monstrous Abuse of Uighur Women

2. 2020 The Movie: D.C. through the Looking Glass

3. How the Chinese Communist Party Has Botched Its Xinjiang Coverup

TOP STORIES

DALIBOR ROHAC

Why Europe’s Chances of a Strong Economic Recovery Are Slimmer than the U.S.’

The continent’s market rigidities and its lack of effective federal structures and a shared political outlook are …

DAN MCLAUGHLIN

Revisiting the Numbers: The COVID-19 Death Toll

Americans are still facing a greater ongoing threat from COVID-19 than many other parts of the world, and that …

NEWS

U.S. Orders Closure of Chinese Consulate in Houston, Residents Call Fire Department in…

The U.S. ordered the consulate to close within 72 hours, citing “massive illegal spying and influence operations” …

PAUL R. MICHEL AND MATTHEW J. DOWD

Countering China’s Technology Offensive

China is already rapidly gaining on the United States and could surpass it within this decade, and perhaps even by …

ROBERT VERBRUGGEN

Our Still-Raging Drug Epidemic

After dipping slightly in 2018, raising hopes that the drug epidemic had finally started to wane, fatal overdoses …

NEWS

Trump Signs Order Excluding Illegal Immigrants from Census to Prevent Inflated…

The president’s order is expected to face legal challenges, including from the American Civil Liberties …

WHAT NR IS READING

The Case for Nationalism: How It Made Us Powerful, United, and Free

BY RICHARD LOWRY

“Makes an original and compelling case for nationalism . . . A fascinating, erudite—and much-needed—defense of a hallowed idea unfairly under current attack.” — Victor Davis Hanson

LEARN MORE

PODCASTS

PHOTOS

VIDEO

NRPLUS ARTICLES

Ready for Election Season?

National Review subscribers get the most out of National Review. Don’t miss out.

SEE MY OPTIONS
ADVERTISEMENT
national review

Follow Us & Share

19 West 44th Street, Suite 1701, New York, NY, 10036, USA
Your Preferences | Unsubscribe | Privacy
View this e-mail in your browser.

NATIONAL JOURNAL

 

GATEWAY PUNDIT

Web version
Oops! Cathy Areu Sues Tucker Carlson for ‘Inappropriate Behavior’… But Then This Old Tweet Popped Up
On Monday night top talent at FOX News were mentioned in a lawsuit by former employee Jennifer Eckhart and frequent guest Cathy Areu. Former FOX… Read more…
Photo Appears to Show Black Lives Matter Supporters Holding Down and Kneeling on Neck of White Baby
UPDATE: The Clark County Sheriff’s Office in Ohio has launched an investigation over the photo. UPDATE 2: The grandmother of the child from the father’s… Read more…
BREAKING: Fire and Police Respond to Reports of Documents Being Burned at Consulate General of China in Texas
The Houston police and fire department are at the Consulate General of China responding to reports of documents being burned in the courtyard. The Houston… Read more…
STUNNING FOOTAGE from China’s Hubei Province — Barge Slams into Bridge, Mudslide Caught on Video – Massive Destruction (VIDEOS)
Hubei Province in China, whose capital is Wuhan, is now facing devastating floods as well as other regions in the heart of China. Below a… Read more…
Chuck Schumer Says President Trump is a “Threat to Public Health” (Video)
Senator Chuck Schumer (Democrat – New York) attacked President Trump from the Senate floor on Tuesday. The Minority leader called President Trump a “threat to… Read more…
Mark McCloskey: Democrats Are Trying to Create a Kent State Situation and Blame it on Trump – “They Don’t Care How Many People Die in the Process” (VIDEO)
The St. Louis prosecutors on Monday filed charges against Mark and Patricia McCloskey for unlawful use of a weapon and flourishing. Last month Mark McCloskey… Read more…
Here We Go… Twitter Bans THOUSANDS of QAnon Accounts for Some Reason… But Mostly Because They’re Pro-Trump
Twitter on Tuesday banned THOUSANDS of QAnon accounts for some reason. “Twitter Safety” said it was because QAnon accounts have “the potential to lead to… Read more…
Yesterday’s Google “Glitch” that Disappeared Conservative Websites Reveals Secret Blacklist – Proves CEO Sundar Pichai Lied to Congress Under Oath
Democracy Dies in Darkness It is clear today that Google, Facebook and Twitter are using their own political blacklists to censor and diminish traffic to… Read more…
Republicans Attack Top Representative Liz Cheney for Her Lack of Support for President Trump – Call for Her Removal
House Representative Liz Cheney is the third highest Republican in the US House of Representatives.  She is House GOP Conference Chair and she is being… Read more…
You Might Like
Advertisement
Facebook Twitter

Copyright © 2020 All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy

This email was sent to rickbulow1974@gmail.com. You are receiving this email because you asked to receive information from The Gateway Pundit. We take your privacy and your liberty very seriously and will keep your information in the strictest confidence. Your name will not be sold to or shared with third parties. We will email you from time to time with relevant news and updates, but you can stop receiving information from us at any time by following very simple instructions that will be included at the bottom of any correspondence you should receive from us.

Our mailing address is: 16024 Manchester Rd. | St. Louis, MO 63011

Unsubscribe or Update Preferences

FRONTPAGE MAG

FrontPage Mag

FRONTPAGE MAG DAILY
JULY 22, 2020

FaceBook
Twitter

Please consider making a tax-deductible donation to support FrontPageMag’s efforts to continue publishing articles such as this!

Donate
FPM

HOOVER INSTITUTE

A daily digest of analysis and commentary by Hoover fellows. Problems viewing this email? View this email in your browser
hoover daily report
Wednesday July 22nd, 2020
FEATURED
Back From The Future
via GoodFellows: Conversations From The Hoover Institution

Something offbeat this week: the three “GoodFellows” hopping into a DeLorean time machine, à la Back To The Future, speeding two summers into the future and reporting back on what they saw. Hoover senior fellows John Cochrane, Niall Ferguson and H.R. McMaster foresee a 2022 in which the coronavirus seems “so 2020”, the cancel culture overplayed its hand, China suffers an internal backlash, and America pays a price for spending/currency choices.

Teacher Union Demands Far-Left Economic Policies Before Reopening Classrooms
by Lee Ohanian via California on Your Mind

United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA), the union that represents more than 600,000 Los Angeles K–12 public school teachers, has demanded that far-left statewide economic policy changes and social justice initiatives be accepted in return for reopening Los Angeles school classrooms once restrictions are lifted.

When Is A Mask More Than A Mask?
by David Davenport via The Washington Examiner

Many crises of the still-young 21st century are readily associated with symbols or pictures. If I were to show you a hanging chad, for example, it would bring to mind the presidential election crisis of Bush v. Gore in 2000. Surely, planes crashing into the World Trade Center in 2001 powerfully depict the story of Sept. 11 and the subsequent war on terror. Shrinking icebergs bespeak climate change; a pile of colorful pills, an opioid crisis; a police officer on George Floyd’s neck, a cry for racial justice.

The Human Prosperity Project On Socialism And Free-Market Capitalism Kicks Off Speaker Series With A Conversation Featuring Condoleezza Rice
via Socialism and Free Market Capitalism: The Human Prosperity Project

The Human Prosperity Project, a Hoover research initiative in which scholars survey empirical data regarding the historical record of socialism and free-market capitalism, has launched a new online speaker series featuring Hoover fellows’ commentary on the world’s most prominent and conflicting economic systems.

Personal Freedom And The Moral Case For Capitalism
via Socialism and Free Market Capitalism: The Human Prosperity Project

The Hoover Institution presents an online virtual speaker series based on the scholarly research and commentary written by Hoover fellows participating in the Human Prosperity Project on Socialism and Free-Market Capitalism. Tune in on Thursday, July 23, 2020 a11:00 am PT.

ANALYSIS AND COMMENTARY
The Tyranny Of Groupthink
by Josef Joffe via The American Interest

To understand the Woke New World, read what Tocqueville wrote about America 200 years ago (while keeping Pogo and George Orwell in mind).

The New Accountability Assignment
by Michael J. Petrilli mentioning Chester E. Finn Jr. via Education Next

Post-Covid, judge schools based on what they ask students to read, write, and do, in addition to how much students learn.

He Didn’t Have To
by David R. Henderson via EconLog

Another way many of us think unclearly is by going through life with a list of made-up obligations. We wake up in the morning with a long list of “must do” items. After a while, our feet start dragging and we feel a heavy burden on our shoulders. But we “must” press on. Such phony obligations get in the way of clear thinking.

INTERVIEWS
George P. Shultz: Learning From Experience
interview with George P. Shultz via Hoover Virtual Policy Briefings

A Hoover Virtual Policy Briefing with George P. Shultz: Learning From Experience
Tuesday, July 21, 2020 at 11AM PT/ 2PM ET.

The Victor Davis Hanson Podcast: Dunking On The NBA
interview with Victor Davis Hanson via The Victor Davis Hanson Podcast

Hoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson discusses the reasons and consequences of keeping America’s classrooms locked, free speech on campus, the NFL and NBA prioritizing woke, Donald Trump’s interview with Chris Wallace, and what 2021 might look like in Joe Biden’s America.

H. R. McMaster In Conversation With James Strock
interview with H. R. McMaster via Sonoma Valley Authors Festival

Hoover Institution fellow H.R. McMaster discusses his book Battlegrounds: The Fight to Defend the Free World.

Ed Next Book Club: Terry Moe’s Special Interest
interview with Terry M. Moe via Ed Next Book Club – Education Next

Hoover Institution fellow Terry Moe discusses unions and his book Special Interest: Teachers Unions and America’s Public Schools.

[Message clipped]  View entire message