Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday September 2, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
September 2 2020
Good morning from Washington, where President Trump is back after a trip to Kenosha, Wisconsin, to pledge solidarity and relief after nights of mayhem. Fred Lucas reports. On the podcast, Heritage Foundation legal expert Amy Swearer sorts what we know about the bloodshed and other violence in Kenosha. Plus: Sebastian Gorka on the struggle in our streets; Jarrett Stepman on media madness amid the rioting; and Walter Williams on where the left gets diversity wrong. On this date in 1969, America’s first automatic teller machine, or ATM, opens at Chemical Bank in New York’s Rockville Centre.
“Rittenhouse was never the initial aggressor in either of the deadly confrontations. In fact, both times, he was actively trying to remove himself from the confrontation,” says Heritage Foundation’s Amy…
A book titled “In Defense of Looting: A Riotous History of Uncivil Actions” got coverage by major media websites, including HuffPost and National Public Radio, which receives taxpayer funding.
Our political clashes now go much deeper and are more existential. They are rooted in issues that our media and our traditional political class have no interest in addressing.
What explains the fact that over 80% of professional basketball players are black, as are about 70% of professional football players? Only an idiot would chalk it up to diversity and inclusion.
President Trump calls the heads of large corporations “weak” for donating to the main Black Lives Matter organization, saying it is Marxist and bad for the black community.
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“Don’t use words too big for the subject. Don’t say infinitely when you mean very; otherwise you’ll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite.”
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From the story: … the U.S. seven-day rolling average of new cases has fallen by about 40% from its peak on July 25. Hospitalizations and deaths in hot spots peaked at about the same time in apparent contradiction to epidemiological models that have predicted two- to three-week lags between cases, hospitalizations and deaths. Hospitalizations are down by 62% in Texas, 60% in Florida, 48% in Utah, 45% in California, and 44% in Louisiana from their peaks, which all occurred between July 21 and 24. Arizona’s hospitalizations began increasing in late May, a week or two earlier than in most states, and have fallen 78% since topping out July 12.
Pelosi Used Shuttered Salon Even Though Ordinances Keep Them Closed
From the story: Salon owner Erica Kious, in a phone interview with Fox News on Tuesday, shared details of Pelosi’s visit. Kious explained she has independent stylists working for her who rent chairs in her salon. “One of the stylists who rents a chair from me contacted me Sunday night,” Kious said. A screengrab of the text message she received from one of her stylists, and obtained by Fox News, said: “I’ll be there at 2:45 tomorrow. Pelosi assistant just messaged me to do her hair” (Fox News). From Guy Benson: Real talk: Pelosi, a multimillionaire, is happy to performatively preen about “science” & in favor of business-crushing restrictions because she knows even minor inconveniences won’t actually apply to her (Twitter). From Seth Mandel: I tried telling y’all once the squad rolled her on that resolution she was a shell of her former self. Meanwhile Schumer’s terrified of his caucus. Dimwit mayors ignoring Biden as their cities burn. I can’t believe I’m saying this but: they need Harry Reid (Twitter).
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3.
Biden Campaign Continues to Work to Appear Disturbed by Violence
From David Harsanyi: Trump and Republicans have been condemning violence for months. They were pilloried for it. It wasn’t that long ago that Senator Tom Cotton wrote an op-ed in the New York Times suggesting Trump send National Guard troops to quell riots. The entire condemnation of Cotton was predicated on the notion that he wanted to deploy the military to crush peaceful “protesters.” Perhaps the reality of situation escaped the attention of many media figures who for months were diligently downplaying the existence of the looting, rioting, arson, statue-toppling, and murder. Perhaps these reporters and pundits fooled themselves into believing that Marxist Antifa “protesters” were really akin to the G.I.s landing in Normandy to stop the Nazis (National Review). Meanwhile, with Biden saying he won’t ban fracking, here’s video of Biden saying he will ban fracking (Twitter). Trump leads in a new poll out of North Carolina (The Hill).
4.
NPR Caught Lying About Trump Statement
From the story: Public funding for National Public Radio was under fire on Tuesday after the network posted an inflammatory tweet with verifiably false information about President Trump’s comments regarding a shooting in Kenosha, Wisconsin. “President Trump declined to condemn the actions of the suspected 17-year-old shooter of 3 protesters against police brutality in Kenosha — claiming, without evidence, that it appeared the gunman was acting in self-defense,” the tweet said on Monday evening (Townhall). Trouble is, there is an actual video of him being chased and attacked (Twitter).
5.
Washington D.C. Mayor Targets Benjamin Franklin, Jefferson, Washington
From the story: The honorees whom the committee says should not have public works named for them include presidents Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, Andrew Jackson, William Henry Harrison, John Tyler, Zachary Taylor and Woodrow Wilson; Revolutionary leader Benjamin Franklin; inventor Alexander Graham Bell; and national anthem writer Francis Scott Key (Washington Post). From Becket Adams: Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser has taken a break from her busy schedule of ignoring violent anti-police protests in her own city to figure out which problematic historical figures need to disappear from the public square (Washington Examiner).
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6.
Biden Spokeswoman Says He’s Yet to Visit Wisconsin to Avoid Upsetting “Peaceful Nature” of Protests
From the story: “Vice President Biden is looking forward to getting to Wisconsin very soon, it’s a priority for us,” Sanders told CNN Tuesday. “Look, he doesn’t want to do anything that would create a tussle, if you will, on the ground. He doesn’t want to do anything that would upset … the peaceful nature of what’s currently happening in Kenosha but also throughout the state at large.”
FBI Warns Chicago Police Gangs May Be Joining to Kill Cops
From the story: “We have been made aware of this threat by a law enforcement partner,” a Chicago police spokesperson told Fox News on Tuesday. “The Chicago Police Department takes all threats against officer safety seriously and we will take all necessary measures to safeguard our officers.”
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Rep. Dane Eagle could be the next head of the Department of Economic Opportunity.
According to sources familiar with the selection process, Eagle is in the running to replace Ken Lawson, who resigned as DEO’s executive director on Monday after a tumultuous 2020.
When the coronavirus pandemic and the ensuing mass job losses caused the state’s unemployment system to faceplant, Gov. Ron DeSantis pushed Lawson to the side and put the Department of Management Services Secretary Jonathan Satter in charge.
Dane Eagle gets a consolation prize for not winning the congressional primary, a spot as DEO chief.
DeSantis didn’t mourn Lawson’s resignation on Monday, telling media instead that he wants to move fast on the new appointment — shortly after Lawson’s exit was reported, the Governor said he could name a replacement in as little as 24 hours.
It’s a timeline Eagle could oblige.
The Fort Myers Republican is term-limited in the state House and there’s little to no legislative work to handle before his successor takes the reins and his most recent job lead — representing Florida’s 19th Congressional District — fell through when fellow Rep. Byron Donalds beat him by a hair in the primary election.
Though DC may be out of the cards, a longer tenure in Tallahassee and a top-level job in the DeSantis administration is a decent consolation prize.
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First on #FlaPol — “Ron DeSantis extends SAT and ACT deadline for Bright Futures Scholarship” — DeSantis is giving recently-graduated high school seniors a second chance to achieve a qualifying SAT or ACT score for a Bright Futures scholarship because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Students who graduated in the 2019-2020 school year will have until Dec. 1 to meet the minimum qualifying score requirement. Both SAT and ACT tests across the country have been canceled because of the pandemic. In June, the Florida Department of Education extended the qualification deadline for Bright Futures Scholarship Awards to July 31. But that deadline came and went with no SAT tests. And while some ACT tests were administered, many tests were canceled or reached capacity.
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The Republican Party of Florida has submitted its list of presidential electors to Gov. DeSantis.
The list includes 29 recommendations — one for each of the state’s electoral votes — and features several lawmakers, influencers and current and former party leaders.
Senators on the list include Joe Gruters, who chairs RPOF, as well as incoming Senate President Wilton Simpson and his likely successor, Kathleen Passidomo. Sen. Keith Perry also got the nod.
Joe Gruters was nominated to be one of Florida’s presidential electors.
Representatives include incoming House Speaker Chris Sprowls and Rep. Daniel Perez, who is set to lead the chamber after the 2024 election. They’re joined by Reps. Randy Fine and Jason Fischer.
Other notables include South Florida business owner Maximo Alvarez, who spoke at the RNC; Southern Group lobbyist Nelson Diaz; Charter Communications VP and former Constitution Revision Commission member Marva Johnson; Keiser University founder Belinda Keiser; former Sen. Pat Neal; and Florida GOP Vice-Chair Christian Ziegler.
Florida law requires the state executive committee of each political party to send their presidential elector picks to the Governor by Sept. 1.
The Governor must then nominate the recommendations, pulling only from each political party’s recommendations.
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GrayRobinson is entering a new fiscal year, and many of its employees are celebrating with a title bump.
“As we continue to build on our 50-year foundation and begin our new fiscal year, we are proud to announce the promotion of 15 of our attorneys and consultants across Florida and in Washington, D.C.,” said GrayRobinson president and CEO Dean Cannon.
GrayRobinson’s Dean Cannon is making several personnel moves.
“These individuals are proven stewards of our firm’s culture and core principles, and consistently demonstrate a tremendous work ethic and deliver value for our clients, especially during these challenging times. We congratulate them and look forward to their continued success here at GrayRobinson.”
On Tuesday, the firm announced the promotions: Topping the list is Joe Fitos of GrayRobinson’s Orlando office — he’s now an equity shareholder.
Richard Danese, Matthew Jones, Ashley Lukis, Craig Novick, Rebecca Rodrigues and Tiffany Walters all became shareholders; Greg Mesack was moved up to government consultant; Stephen Anderson ascended to of counsel; and Hannah Becker, Emily Pineless, Josef Rosen, Jonathan Sieg, Tucker Thoni and Jennifer Vanover were promoted to senior associate.
The promotions went into effect Sept. 1.
Situational awareness
—@realDonaldTrump: It never ends! Now they are trying to say that your favorite President, me, went to Walter Reed Medical Center, having suffered a series of mini-strokes. Never happened to THIS candidate — FAKE NEWS. Perhaps they are referring to another candidate from another Party!
—@SVDate: Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien, ridiculing [Joe] Biden for campaigning in Minnesota: “This would be like our campaign scheduling a trip to one of the reddest states in the country.” Like, say, Oklahoma?
—@Brfreed: If one candidate leads slightly in, say, New Hampshire, at 11 p.m. on Nov. 3 with 65% of votes counted, but loses slightly after counting is done on Nov. 5, that’s not the result of any chicanery, “rigged vote,” or an army of antifa super-soldiers. It’s just the final count.
—@AlexBerenson: Boom. @GovRonDesantis has led the way all along. He hasn’t gotten the political credit yet, and he may not for years. But he will. The reality will be impossible to argue.
—@NoahPransky: Screw up Florida coronastats, get fired. Screw up Florida unemployment checks (@Deloitte), get a giant contract extension! Lessons learned by all.
—@JimmyPatronis: When the FL Treasury received ~$5.9 B in CARES Act funding, our team worked to invest these dollars to generate capital for priorities like health care, schools & roads. Through strategic investments, I’m proud to say we’ve generated $41 M in interest.
—@Rob_Bradley: So often, government plays catch up when it comes to infrastructure needs. Florida is ahead of the curve on transportation and environmental infrastructure. Thanks to @BillGalvano and my colleagues in the @FLSenate for boldly moving forward on M-CORES and the EAA Reservoir.
—@ChrisLatvala: Thank you for all the well wishes and prayers. I should be able to be discharged today to finish my recovery at home. I am a blessed man and God is good. Thank you again to the amazing staff at Largo Medical.
Days until
Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” rescheduled premiere in U.S. — 2; Rescheduled running of the Kentucky Derby — 4; 2020 NFL Season begins — 8; Walmart Amazon Prime competitor, Walmart+, will launch nationwide — 13; Rescheduled date for French Open — 20; First presidential debate in Indiana — 28; “Wonder Woman 1984” premieres — 31; Preakness Stakes rescheduled — 32; Ashley Moody’s 2020 Human Trafficking Summit — 35; First vice presidential debate at the University of Utah — 36; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 41; Second presidential debate scheduled in Miami — 44; NBA draft — 45; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 45; NBA free agency — 48; Florida Chamber’s Future of Florida Forum — 49; Third presidential debate at Belmont — 51; 2020 General Election — 63; “Black Widow” premieres — 67; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 69; College basketball season slated to begin — 78; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 80; “No Time to Die” premieres — 80; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 93; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 159; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 171; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 304; New start date for 2021 Olympics — 325; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 332; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 430; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 528; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 570; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 762.
Smoldering
“‘Civil unrest’: Leon County enacts curfew to curb violence at protests” via Karl Etters of the Tallahassee Democrat — Saying Leon County is in a state of “civil unrest” and pointing to troubling intelligence, local officials instituted a curfew through Sept. 8 at the request of law enforcement. The emergency order issued by Leon County Commission Chairman Bryan Desloge cites violence at a protest Saturday in which a man pulled a handgun during an altercation with demonstrators in front of Florida’s Capitol. “Leon County Sheriff Walt McNeil requested the countywide curfew in an effort to prevent further violence and unrest,” county news released on the curfew said. Starting Wednesday and lasting through Sept. 8, a curfew is in place from 11 p.m. to 5 a.m. Most of the protests in Tallahassee have been during the day.
Leon County enacts a curfew to help stem violent protests.
“Gunfire in a Tallahassee parking lot leads to arrest of armed couple, complaints of racism” via Jeff Burlew of the Tallahassee Democrat — Charles McMillon Jr. was dropping off a U-Haul van with his young son and childhood friend Kendrick Clemons on Thursday night when out of nowhere bullets started flying. They had just parked the van at a U-Haul drop-off spot at the Fountain Plaza strip mall on Apalachee Parkway and were sitting in McMillon’s truck getting ready to go. As he typed in the mileage on a phone app, a gunshot rang out. They looked back and saw an older couple coming toward them, both pointing guns in their direction. They yelled “Don’t move!” and other commands to surrender. But McMillon threw his GMC truck in reverse, drove around the van, and sped off in a blind panic. They heard more gunfire as they fled. It turned out the two shooters, Wallace Fountain and his wife, Beverly Fountain, own the strip mall and were staking it out inside a U-Haul of their own. They said they were having problems with people stealing gas and wanted to scare off any culprits. But McMillon and Clemons said the Fountains, who are white, never asked why they were there or even whether they needed any help. They just opened fire.
“After 11 years, Miami-Dade on the brink of having civilian police review board again” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — Miami-Dade on Monday moved to the brink of reviving its police review board after county commissioners passed compromise legislation that Mayor Carlos Giménez said he wouldn’t veto. Backers of the Independent Review Panel agreed to spare county employees and elected officials from subpoenas issued by the civilian panel, and Gimenez gave reluctant support for allowing the new law take effect. He had vetoed two versions with subpoena power in 2018 and in July when sponsor Barbara Jordan used the momentum from protests tied to the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis to try and revive an oversight board last in operation 11 years ago.
“New policy means Jacksonville police bodycam videos released in weeks vs. months, years” via Dan Scanlan of The Florida Times-Union — Police bodycam video of officer-involved shootings in Jacksonville should be released faster via a new policy announced Tuesday by the State Attorney’s Office. The change could see those videos released within a month of an officer-involved shooting involving the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office, instead of taking almost a year or more as seen in the past such as following the Dec. 14 death of Jamee Johnson. The changes announced by State Attorney Melissa Nelson come after months of repeated demands for faster release of bodycam video from families of those shot as well as recent protests at the Sheriff’s Office, Duval County Courthouse and elsewhere in the country. “No later than 30 days” into its investigation into whether an officer’s use of force was lawful or not, the State Attorney’s Office will now tell the Sheriff’s Office whether it has any objection to public release of the bodycam video, Nelson said. It will be up to the Sheriff’s Office to release the video as the State Attorney’s Office then completes its full investigation within a new six-month deadline, Nelson said.
“Pinellas County Sheriff updates search warrant policy in wake of high-profile national incidents” via Ryan Hughes of WFLA — Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri announced that his agency has changed the way it serves search warrants. It comes on the heels of high-profile incidents across the U.S., including the death of Breonna Taylor, a Kentucky woman shot and killed when police served a warrant on her boyfriend’s home. “The preservation of life and the mitigation of harm to members or occupants and the public, in general, are paramount considerations when deciding how to serve a search warrant,” the sheriff said during a news conference. Gualtieri hopes the changes cut down on the risk for all involved. As of Sept. 1, the sheriff announced that deputies must conduct surveillance to see who lives at a home or business and how often they come or go. Deputies cannot go through with a so-called “dynamic entry,” where they use force to enter, unless completely necessary, he said.
Bob Gualtieri is making changes in the way Pinellas County Sheriffs serve search warrants.
“Far-right militias are learning impunity from the cops” via Melissa Gira Grant of The New Republic — There have only been 12 days in 2020 in which police did not kill someone in the United States. As of August 22, the day before Officer Rusten Sheskey of the Kenosha Police Department shot and paralyzed Jacob Blake, police nationwide had killed 751 people this year. Going by years past, it’s entirely reasonable to assume that very few of the officers who have killed people in 2020 will be charged with a crime, and even fewer will be convicted. It is not an exaggeration to say that almost every day in this country, police get away with murder. Police know this. So do others who see themselves as agents of law and order.
“Black Lives Matter and ‘antifa’ are not the same thing” via Jonathan Capehart of The Washington Post — Can’t believe I have to say this, but here goes. Black Lives Matter and “antifa” are not the same thing. Let me repeat. Black Lives Matter and antifa are not the same thing. This moment of clarity (I hope) was inspired by a headline in the New York Post clearly designed to rile its conservative audience and one loyal reader in particular by the name of Donald Trump. “Man suspected in deadly Portland shooting calls himself ‘100% ANTIFA’” was based on a report in the Oregonian newspaper with this more newsy headline, “Man under investigation in fatal shooting after pro-Trump rally allegedly took loaded gun to earlier Portland protest.”
Presidential
“Can Florida save us from a contested Presidential election?” via Ed Kilgore of New York Magazine — As we get closer to November 3, a “Red Mirage” scenario, in which Trump takes an early lead based on the higher proclivity of his supporters to cast the first votes that will be counted, is becoming more and more plausible. Democrats who fear that Trump will use this statistical anomaly to claim victory based on unsupported assertions of mail-ballot fraud are trying to take countermeasures. Florida is a state with considerable experience in handling large numbers of mail ballots. Moreover, the partisan split in voting methodology that could produce the Red Mirage in other places probably won’t prevail there, since Florida Republicans convinced Trump to express confidence in the Sunshine State’s voting-by-mail system which, of course, he is utilizing himself. So Florida will likely get returns in relatively quickly and they won’t have a partisan skew, or at least not enough of one to call exit polls into question. And here’s where the Democratic hope comes in: If Biden wins Florida on election night, it gets very difficult to project an ultimate Trump victory.
“Poll shows 7-point swing for Joe Biden in Tampa market following $1.7 million EDF ad buy” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — A new poll from ALG Research for the Environmental Defense Action Fund shows a 7-point swing for Biden in the Tampa media market, following the launch of a $1.7 million EDF television campaign directed at Tampa Bay voters. Before the ad campaign, polling from AGL Research had shown Trump leading in the critical market. That poll, released July 6, showed a competitive margin between the two candidates at the time, Biden trailed by just 3 points in the Tampa market. However, the July poll showed Biden with a 15-point lead in Hillsborough County. Biden also held a 5-point lead in Pinellas County. Following the run of the ad, which criticizes Trump’s leadership on environmental issues and his declarations that climate change is “a hoax,” Trump now trails Biden by 4 points in the Tampa market, according to polling released last Wednesday.
Joe Biden is enjoying a seven-point swing in the Tampa market. Image via AP.
“A GOP election dilemma: Twitter Donald Trump keeps boxing out humanized Trump” via Meredith McGraw of POLITICO — For one week, the Republican Party sent out a parade of people to make the case that Trump, insulter-in-chief, has a heart. Within days, Twitter Trump had returned. At the Republican National Convention, everyone from little-known Americans to first lady Melania Trump insisted the Trump seen lashing out on social media and in news conferences is not the compassionate man they see “when the cameras are off,” as Vice President Mike Pence put it. But over the weekend, Trump went right back to his bare-knuckle approach. He insulted his niece and boosted a video from a white nationalist user that falsely blamed “Black Lives Matter/antifa” for a violent 2019 incident. He mocked and retweeted profane jokes about the Portland mayor and retweeted a video of Trump supporters in Portland shooting paintball guns and pepper spray at racial justice protesters in the city, saying it “cannot be unexpected.”
“Swift Boat mastermind to launch massive super PAC to boost Trump” via Alex Isenstadt of POLITICO — Senior Republicans are launching a massive super PAC this week to bolster Trump’s reelection in the final stretch of the campaign — a move that comes as the president has been pummeled by Biden on TV. The new organization, Preserve America, is poised to begin a $30 million advertising blitz, an amount that’s likely to escalate in the weeks to come, two people familiar with the effort told POLITICO. The super PAC is expected to draw the support of a range of GOP megadonors, including Las Vegas casino mogul Sheldon Adelson and Home Depot co-founder Bernie Marcus. Preserve America will be overseen by Chris LaCivita.
“An unlikely state tightens up” via David Siders of POLITICO — Minnesota, which once looked like a vanity project for Trump, is suddenly emerging as a critical test of his effort to turn his campaign around. Interviews with more than a dozen officials and strategists from both parties in recent days depict a state in which Biden is leading, but where the President is making inroads in rural Minnesota. Public surveys and internal polling by Democrats and Republicans alike in recent weeks has suggested the race is narrowing, though with Biden still ahead. In a sign of its increasingly competitive nature, Biden today will begin airing his first television ads in the state, in the Twin Cities as well as Duluth and Rochester markets. And last week, Biden included Minnesota in a list of battleground states he said he wants to visit — travel that suggests the state is far from a lock.
“Biden campaign launches official Animal Crossing: New Horizons yard signs” via Makena Kelly of The Verge — Starting today, September 1, Animal Crossing: New Horizons players will be able to deck out their island homes with Biden yard signs as part of the campaign’s broader initiative to organize voters online this fall. Since the start of the coronavirus outbreak in the U.S. earlier this year, campaigns like Biden’s have been forced to entirely rethink how they organize voters. Instead of in-person rallies, Biden’s team has opted for livestreamed events and fundraisers along with socially distanced productions and interviews. The entire Democratic National Convention was held virtually earlier this month, with most guests streaming in over video software like Zoom to deliver speeches. The Biden-Kamala Harris campaign released four sign designs for players to download, featuring the official Biden-Harris logo, Team Joe logo, the “Joe” Pride logo, and an image of aviator sunglasses shaded in red, white, and blue. Players will be able to access the designs in-game by scanning the design QR codes through the Nintendo Switch Online app.
2020
“U.S. Chamber of Commerce again endorses Democrat Stephanie Murphy” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Adding credibility to her claim to be a moderate on fiscal issues and pro-business, Murphy‘s reelection campaign announced she has again been endorsed by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Murphy is seeking a third term representing Florida’s 7th Congressional District, a swing district representing Seminole County and parts of northern, eastern, and central Orange County. She faces Republican nominee Leo Valentín in the November 3 General Election. He has sought to paint her as a closet socialist, or at least someone under potential great influence of the Democratic Party’s socialist wing. It’s a characterization that Murphy has roundly dismissed. She calls herself a “proud capitalist.” Many of her endorsements and donors to her campaign, which already includes the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other business groups, support her contention.
Stephanie Murphy, a ‘proud capitalist,’ again gets the approval of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
“Miami Democrat wants gun dealers held responsible for suspected straw purchases” via Alex Daugherty of the Miami Herald — A new bill from Miami Democratic Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell would make gun dealers responsible for identifying when customers are purchasing a weapon for someone else and halting the transaction. Mucarsel-Powell will introduce her bill, called the Firearms Retailer Code of Conduct Act, when the House of Representatives comes back to Washington after Labor Day. She announced the legislation during a news conference held Tuesday with the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, the March For Our Lives and Parkland parents Fred Guttenberg and Manuel Oliver, who both lost their children during the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. The bill would require gun dealers and their employees to regularly complete training to identify and stop suspected illegal purchases. It would also require dealers not to sell guns to anyone who appears to be intoxicated or those at the risk of harming themselves or others.
“Jaguars launch voter registration initiative” via John Reid of The Florida Times-Union — The Jaguars launched an initiative Tuesday to raise awareness and encourage voter registration before the Oct. 5 deadline for the general election in November. The franchise’s campaign will include public service announcements, grassroots engagement, and local and national partnerships and activations through social media. “You can look at voting as a privilege, and as a naturalized U.S. citizen, you can be assured that I do,” Jaguars owner Shad Khan said. “But I also see it as a civic responsibility. If we’re serious about being better in our communities and throughout our nation, and all voices being heard and respected, we have to participate in the electoral process. No exceptions.” The Jaguars’ public service campaign will feature coach Doug Marrone and quarterback Gardner Minshew.
Meanwhile … “The curious saga of the deceased Herman Cain’s living Twitter account” via Travis M. Andrews of The Washington Post — Cain died on July 30. So it naturally came as a surprise when, two weeks later, his Twitter account tweeted a link to an anti-Biden video with the caption, “Just in case you thought Biden’s candidacy was going to be anything other than completely nuts, team Trump has released a new video. #JoeBiden #KamalaHarris.” It was the account’s first tweet since announcing Cain’s funeral on Aug. 7. At the time, the account still bore Cain’s name and photograph. It looked as if the man himself had tweeted. He began trending, with outrage appearing alongside the many “Weekend at Bernie’s” jokes. The account soon changed its name to the Cain Gang and changed its bio to “Official Twitter for Team Cain. Formerly run by Herman Cain, now supervised by his team and family. The mission continues.”
Herman Cain may be gone, but his Twitter account lives on. image via AP.
“Twitter forces Democratic candidate to delete post flouting voter suppression rules” via Cristiano Lima of POLITICO — Twitter on Tuesday forced a Democratic House candidate to delete a tweet that urged supporters of Trump to vote the day after this November’s election, a company spokesperson confirmed. The company said an Aug. 18 tweet by the campaign for Elizabeth Hernandez, who is challenging GOP Rep. Kevin Brady for his seat in Texas’ 8th Congressional District, violated its rules against voter suppression. Twitter’s action against a Democrat follows a number of efforts by the company to crack down on deceptive messages from Republicans, including Trump and his campaign. Twitter’s rules on election misinformation prohibit “posting or sharing content that may suppress participation or mislead people about when, where, or how to participate in a civic process.”
Leg. campaigns
“Can Republicans take back the Senate District 37 seat from a well-funded incumbent?” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — As of late May, Democratic Sen. José Javier Rodríguez was facing a clear path to reelection in Senate District 37. The incumbent had built up a sizable war chest after narrowly winning the seat in 2016 by fewer than 6,000 votes. That’s a margin of just over 3 percentage points. The Democrat succeeded Republican Sen. Miguel Diaz de la Portilla. With Republicans intent on spending big in several open Senate races, it looked like Sen. Rodríguez might coast to a second term. That changed when Senate GOP leadership announced they were backing Latinas For Trump founder Ileana Garcia in her bid to challenge Sen. Rodríguez. Garcia officially filed for the seat on June 1. Garcia worked in the Trump administration. She served as the first Hispanic female Deputy Press Secretary at the Department of Homeland Security under Trump. She previously founded Latinas For Trump.
Ileana Garcia is taking on a well-financed incumbent in Senate District 37.
“Last Democratic House hopeful denied chance to qualify for ballot” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Florida courts denied a candidate from trying to qualify in the only House district with no Democrat running. Anita Huffman, a Freeport Democrat, previously filed to run in House District 5 against Rep. Brad Drake, but she did not qualify based on a problem with her paperwork. She was part of a progressive effort to run Democrats in every open House and Senate seat in Florida this year. Division of Elections officials rejected her qualification documents based on a notary that was signed instead of stamped. Attorneys for Huffman argued state officials normally allow the correction of minor errors, and thus it should be considered a mistake by the state not the candidate. But Circuit Court Judge Angela Dempsey ruled on Tuesday state officials applied the law consistent with statute. No corrections are allowed to be made to documents after noon on the qualification date.
“David Smith, Pasha Baker press different commitments to service in HD 28” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Florida House District 28’s very different election candidates, Republican Rep. Smith and Baker, each says the proof of their commitments to the community is in decades of public service outside elected office. Their very different public service commitments, each say, have transformed their campaigns in very similar ways heading toward the Nov. 3 General Election. Smith spent 30 years in the Marines, rising to the rank of colonel and serving combat duty along the way. In 2018 he won the HD 28 seat. His commitment, Smith said, not only helped make him one of the most effective freshmen of his or any class, sponsoring six policy bills and 10 local appropriations that were approved and signed into law, it has kept him busy through the coronavirus crisis to help people get unemployment benefits and to help businesses get resources they needed.
David Smith, Pasha Baker have different approaches to the idea of ‘public service.’
“Jackie Toledo enters General Election with $59K more than opponent Julie Jenkins” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Toledo will start her General Election campaign with $59,500 more than Jenkins as the two battle for House District 60. Toledo, the incumbent Republican, finished the most recent period, which spanned Aug. 14 through Aug. 21, with about $140,930 cash on hand, while Jenkins left with $81,430. The recent period covered the week of the August Primary Election, which was on Aug. 18. Toledo raised $13,240 in the most recent reporting period, and spent $8,588. Jenkins raised $6,122 in the same period, but did not have any expenditures. Donors to Toledo’s campaign this period include Florida Farmers and Ranchers United PAC, which gave $1,000, as well as the Florida HIV AIDS PAC, which also gave $1,000. Jenkins’s primary contributors were made up of several dozen individuals.
“Daniella Levine Cava touts another $1 million raised as former rival endorses Steve Bovo” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Levine Cava says she raised another $1 million in just 10 days following the Aug. 18 Primary Election. The announcement comes as former mayoral candidate Xavier Suarez is endorsing Bovo over Levine Cava. Candidates last submitted official fundraising reports on Aug. 14, covering pre-primary fundraising through Aug. 13. Those reports showed Levine Cava was one of the best fundraisers in the contest, raising $3.73 million between her campaign and her PC, Our Democracy. Bovo raised $2.22 million through Aug. 13. That’s still a hefty sum but well short of Levine Cava’s total. Now, Levine Cava Senior Adviser Christian Ulvert, says his candidate has banked another $1 million ahead of the Nov. 3 General Election.
Daniella Levine Cava banks another $1 million.
“Orange County voters to decide Split Oak question after judge’s ruling” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — A circuit judge slapped down a request by Osceola County to stop an election question about the Split Oak Forest from appearing on the Orange County ballot in the General Election. Circuit Court Judge Patricia Strowbridge abated Osceola’s request for an injunction to stop Orange County voters from considering a proposed county charter amendment. The proposal would put additional preservation protections on the Split Oak Forest Wildlife and Conservation Area. Osceola County filed suit last week seeking an injunction to prevent the ballot question from going before Orange County voters. Strowbridge told Osceola that before it could sue Orange it must first go through mediation with the neighboring county. That process would take far more time than the critically-short period, days, that Orange officials have to finalize the ballot layout for the Nov. 3 election. Consequently, Orange County Supervisor of Elections Bill Cowles said Tuesday the ballots would be sent to the printers with the charter amendment question on them, meaning Orange voters will get to vote on the issue. Military vote-by-mail ballots are sent out by Sept. 16.
Corona Florida
“Florida reports 7,569 COVID-19 cases because lab ‘dumped’ months-old tests, DeSantis says” via Howard Cohen, David J. Neal and Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — The Florida Department of Health on Tuesday reported 7,569 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 because, DeSantis’ office said, Quest Diagnostics suddenly unloaded 80,000 test results, some of which were as old as April. After what DeSantis called a “dump” of test results, the state of Florida dumped Quest Diagnostics. “To drop this much unusable and stale data is irresponsible and Quest has abdicated their ability to perform a testing function in Florida,” the Florida Department of Health said on its Twitter feed. DeSantis “is ordering all Florida executive agencies to sever their COVID-19 testing relationships with Quest effective immediately.” “This is the most egregious dump we have,’‘ DeSantis said Tuesday at a media event in Jacksonville.
Quest Diagnostics dumped nearly 8,000 old COVID-19 TESTS.
“Quest data dump raises new concerns about whether COVID data is underreported” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — For months, Florid officials have used test results as the foundation on which it has built a response to the coronavirus pandemic, but the revelation that a lab that has supplied 22% of all of the test results has been withholding results for months has raised new concerns about whether the state has been underreporting its data. “It’s rank incompetence on the state and federal level,’’ said Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber after the Florida Department of Health announced it had severed ties to Quest Diagnostics because the laboratory violated state law and failed to report nearly 75,000 coronavirus tests. “No national testing program and absurd turnaround times on the state level means we are flying blind.”
“Florida announces it will lift ban on nursing home visits” via Kelli Kennedy and Bobby Caina Calvan of The Associated Press — DeSantis will lift the state’s ban on visiting nursing homes that cut off vulnerable seniors from family since mid-March over fears of spreading the new coronavirus. With his voice cracking at times, he wondered aloud if his actions might have contributed to suffering in his state as he made his announcement during a round table in Jacksonville. “Part of having a healthy society is understanding that human beings seek affection,” DeSantis said. The visibly emotional governor paused to collect himself, and silence filled the room for about 20 seconds. “I think it’s difficult to think that some of our actions may have precipitated,” the governor said, his final word barely audible as he invited another speaker to take over. DeSantis said he would lift the ban on visitations in an executive order later Tuesday, following recommendations from a nursing home task force.
Florida earned $41M in interest on CARES funding — The state’s Treasury Division generated $41.25 million in interest from CARES Act funding for the state’s general fund, Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis said Tuesday. “When Treasury received the nearly $5.9 billion in CARES Act funding, our team went to work in investing these dollars to generate more capital for priorities like health care, schools and roads,” Patronis said. “Through these strategic investments, we’ve generated more than $41 million that can be used for any purpose the Governor and Legislature deem necessary. That’s a huge sum of cash that can positively impact our communities. With the coronavirus affecting state finances, every dollar counts, and I want to thank the Trump Administration for giving states the opportunity to keep the generated interest.”
Back to school?
“Cyberattack, plus software failure, responsible for Miami-Dade Schools’ woes, Alberto Carvalho says” via Colleen Wright of the Miami Herald — Miami-Dade Schools Superintendent Carvalho said the district suffered a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack Monday morning, simultaneously with a software glitch that blocked access to the district’s servers, rendering multiple online school district features useless and teaching nearly impossible. Carvalho said the FBI and Secret Service have been called in and subpoenaed Comcast, the school district’s internet provider, around 3 p.m. He said he did not know who the perpetrator may be, but vowed to prosecute to the fullest extent of the law. “Yesterday I said I was frustrated and disappointed,” Carvalho said. “Today, I am frustrated and angry.”
Miami-Dade County School Superintendent Alberto Carvalho said the district faced a number of technical problems as school reopens.
“Classrooms could reopen in 2 weeks. But now the county wants businesses to go first.” via Andrew Marra of the Palm Beach Post — They insisted for weeks they wanted no part in school-reopening decisions, but now Palm Beach County government leaders are requesting public school campuses stay closed at least until the end of September. Postponing the reopening of classrooms would let movie theaters, bowling alleys and escape rooms go first — and allow health officials to keep watch for any increases in COVID-19 infections before campuses welcome back as many as 180,000 students. The request — the first time the county government has officially waded into the school-reopening debate — came from County Administrator Verdenia Baker, who revealed a step-by-step plan Monday for the county to move into the second phase of Florida’s reopening plan Sept. 8.
“Palmetto High School sends more than 100 students into quarantine” via Ryan McKinnon of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — More than 100 students and staff from Palmetto High School in Manatee County have been sent into 14 days of isolation as school officials identified possible COVID-19 exposure, according to a pending release to the school community and confirmed by district officials. Palmetto High Principal Carl Auckerman was expected to notify the community of an “abnormal number of students being quarantined” Tuesday evening, according to a copy of his ConnectEd message obtained by the Herald-Tribune. Manatee School Board member Scott Hopes and a second high-ranking district leader confirmed that there were more than 100 students affected. Auckerman’s message says that health officials couldn’t definitively rule that students were not exposed, suggesting that teachers were not using seating charts, which are vital to accurate contact tracing.
“Chiles principal confirmed coronavirus cases, shared ‘frustrations’ in email before school start” via CD Davidson-Hiers of the Tallahassee Democrat — The week before classrooms reopened to students, Lawton Chiles High School had two employees test positive for COVID-19, and Principal Joseph Burgess is urging the Leon County School district to be transparent with families about confirmed cases of the virus among employees. “I have asked the District since Coach (Mike) Eto’s COVID-positive case became public if we could at least be transparent about staff positive diagnosis (without divulging names) to be transparent with all of you,” Burgess wrote in an Aug. 27 email to staff, which discussed some of his “frustrations” with issues of transparency. “I have that same hope for us with our students and parents — again without names being divulged — as collective health requires transparency,” Burgess said.
Corona local
“Girl, 6, survived dangerous journey to U.S. She now is Florida’s youngest coronavirus victim.” via Juan Carlos Chavez of the Tampa Bay Times — Astrid Reyes was a brave girl when her mother brought her to the United States a year ago to escape poverty and violence in Honduras. The journey took a month. Both mother and daughter evaded the dangers immigrants face in their quest to reach the United States and apply for asylum. They endured inclement weather and the stalking of criminals, slept in the open and went hungry. Astrid never complained. She never shed a tear. She was 6 years old. On Aug. 19, Astrid died in the emergency room of Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg. She is the youngest person in Florida to die from complications of COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the coronavirus.
More local
“Five more Universal Orlando hotels announce layoffs; 1,291 workers affected” via Caroline Glenn of the Orlando Sentinel — Universal Orlando, still reeling from the months when the coronavirus outbreak made ghost towns of its theme parks, has announced more layoffs at five of its hotels. In all, 1,291 employees at Royal Pacific Resort, Sapphire Falls Resort, the Aventura and two of Universal’s new Endless Summer hotels are indefinitely furloughed or were permanently terminated, according to notices filed with the state. About 176 employees who worked at a support facility for the hotels were also let go. Last week, Universal said 839 people at three of its other hotels, the Hard Rock, Loews Portofino Bay and Cabana Bay Beach Resort, had also either been temporarily furloughed or laid off.
The Aventura Hotel is one of five Universal resorts that are laying off nearly 1,300 employees.
“A food bank gives groceries to furloughed Disney workers. The car line stretches for 2 miles” via Gabrielle Russon of the Orlando Sentinel — At 4 a.m., the first furloughed workers arrive to stake out their spots for free groceries. They wait for 4 1/2 hours in their cars, their masked faces lit up by their cellphones in the darkness. If they show up late, the food — frozen chicken, fresh tomatoes and gallons of milk — might run out. By 9 a.m., the nearly bumper-to-bumper row of cars stretches 2 miles, clogging up one lane of Orange Blossom Trail and heading down Landstreet Road. In the line are hundreds of people: Furloughed Disney World employees, welders who saw business shrivel up, hotel workers unceremoniously laid off in mass numbers, and others. No questions are asked. There is no need to show proof of how the coronavirus pandemic has destroyed people’s livelihoods in the tourism capital of the world. Just join the line.
“Orlando-area hotels try to attract ’work from home’ families” via DeWayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — Some Central Florida resorts are morphing the pandemic-bolstered “work from home” trend into a business promotion: Work from hotels. More elbow room, strong and reliable Wi-Fi and redefined “working vacations” are among the inspirations for relocating home offices, at least temporarily, executives say. Children attending virtual school can also be a factor. “You see people with their laptops out at the pool, in the lobby, in a coffee shop … so you know it’s probably been happening for a while now,” said Jim Vespa, resort president of Margaritaville Resort Orlando. “But now we’re kind of putting some marketing dollars behind it.” Margaritaville’s current “Work From Your Home Away From Home Package” includes breakfast for two people each day and a $50 resort credit for customers who book by Aug. 31 and travel by the end of 2020.
“Seminole stops new applications for virus relief because of ‘overwhelming’ response” via Martin E. Comas of the Orlando Sentinel — Less than a week after opening an online portal to help individuals and homeowners struggling financially because of the coronavirus pandemic, Seminole County on Tuesday announced that it has suspended taking applications for the program because of the huge response. County officials said they need time to process the “overwhelming number” of applications from homeowners seeking CARES Act money to help them pay their mortgages, rents, or utility bills. “Bear with us,” Commission Chairman Jay Zembower said. “We’ll get through this. And our hopes are that once we get through these 11,500 applications, we’ll have enough money to help additional families.” The $7-million assistance program pays for up to three months of an individual’s mortgage or rent, and utility bills.
Corona nation
“Virus crisis easing across Sun Belt but could heat up again” via Matt Sedensky of The Associated Press — The torrid coronavirus summer across the Sun Belt is easing after two disastrous months that brought more than 35,000 deaths. Whether the outbreak will heat up again after Labor Day and the resumption of school and football remains to be seen. Seven of the nine states along the nation’s Southern and Western rim are seeing drops in three important gauges — new deaths, new cases and the percentage of tests coming back positive for the virus. Alabama is the only state in the region to see all three numbers rising; Mississippi’s deaths are up, but positive rates and cases are dropping. In Florida, where reported deaths from COVID-19 are running at about 114 a day on average, down from a peak of 185 in early August, DeSantis went so far as to announce Tuesday that he is easing the state’s 5-month-old ban on visitors to nursing homes.
The coronavirus summer across the Sun Belt is easing after two disastrous months that brought more than 35,000 deaths. Image via AP.
“The most American COVID-19 failure yet” via Olga Khazan of The Atlantic — Contact tracing, the last two-thirds of health wonks’ “test-trace-isolate” mantra, was supposed to get us out of the pandemic. In the United States, this whole process is failing. There is no national contact-tracing program in the U.S., and contact tracers who work for local health departments in areas with the most coronavirus cases have reached just a fraction of the patients who have tested positive. At one point in Miami, contact tracers were able to reach only 17% of the infected. The response rates here are far lower than those in other countries. Less than 1% of sick people fail to respond to contact tracers in Iceland. In New Zealand, 86% of people contacted by tracers respond within 48 hours.
“How Trump sowed COVID-19 supply chaos. ‘Try getting it yourselves.’” via Michael C. Bender and Rebecca Ballhaus of The Wall Street Journal — Sergio Melgar, the chief financial officer for the largest health care system in central Massachusetts, was about to run out of medical-grade N95 masks. A Chinese company poised to replenish the supply wanted the money upfront. It was after midnight on March 20, too late to arrange a wire transfer. So Mr. Melgar took out his own credit card and authorized a $100,000 charge. “If I don’t do this,” he recalls thinking, “we will run out.” Days earlier, as the spread of the coronavirus pandemic was becoming clear in the U.S., stoking panic about shortages of medical supplies, the Trump administration signaled to states they shouldn’t expect the federal government to meet their medical-supply needs.
“Did COVID-19 cause only 6% of coronavirus deaths? Viral posts misrepresent CDC report” via Katie Camero of the Miami Herald — A statistic from the CDC about coronavirus deaths in the United States has sparked a wave of confusion on social media. COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, was the “only cause mentioned” on death certificates in 6% of deaths involving the virus, the CDC said last week. Some people mistakenly took that to mean the remaining 94% of coronavirus-related deaths were caused by other underlying health conditions and not COVID-19. The misconception went viral on social media; Twitter removed a tweet on Sunday that promoted the false interpretation of the CDC’s data, which Trump shared to his 85.6 million followers, media outlets reported.
“Axios poll: A harsh verdict for government’s coronavirus response” via Sam Baker of Axios — Most Americans think the federal government is making the coronavirus pandemic worse, according to the latest installment of the Axios-Ipsos Coronavirus Index. This is a pretty searing indictment of the federal response — not only that it has not helped, but that it’s part of the problem. There’s a stark partisan divide here. 74% of Republicans say the federal government is making things better, while 80% Democrats say the federal government is making things worse. Most independents (68%) also say the government is making things worse. Overall trust in the federal government hasn’t changed much over the past few weeks, but it’s far below the levels we measured in the spring.
Corona economics
“Global trade seen rebounding faster now than post-Lehman” via Catherine Bosley of Bloomberg — Global trade is on course to recover more quickly from the coronavirus pandemic than after the 2008 financial crisis, according to Germany’s Kiel Institute for the World Economy. Shipping volumes are already back at levels that took more than a year to reach following the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., hinting at a V-shaped recovery, the institution’s President Gabriel Felbermayr said. Trade has seen a “deep slump and a quick rebound,” he said. “The current situation is significantly better” than a decade ago. The pandemic has pushed the global economy into what may be its deepest slump since the Great Depression. The initial rebound reflects the lifting of severe restrictions to contain the virus, and policymakers have warned against premature optimism that the worst has passed. The World Trade Organization said earlier this month that projections for a strong, V-shaped trade rebound in 2021 might be “overly optimistic.”
The global economy seems to be bouncing back quicker than in previous recoveries. Image via Getty.
“Small-business failures loom as federal aid dries up” via Ben Casselman of The New York Times — Tens of thousands of restaurants, bars, retailers and other small businesses have already closed. But many more have survived, buoyed in part by billions of dollars in government assistance to both businesses and their customers. The Paycheck Protection Program provided hundreds of billions in loans and grants to help businesses retain employees and meet other obligations. Billions more went to the unemployed, in a $600 weekly supplement to state jobless benefits, and to many households, through a $1,200 tax rebate. Now that aid is largely gone, even as the economic recovery that took hold in the spring is losing momentum. The fall will bring new challenges: Colder weather will curtail outdoor dining and other weather-dependent adaptations that helped businesses hang on.
“Food experts worry as USDA reinstates food stamp recertification” via Raquel Martin of WFLA — The U.S. Department of Agriculture is reinstating pre-pandemic rules that require applicants already approved for food stamps to prove their income is low enough to keep the benefits. Though the USDA says it will give states some wiggle room in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) recertification process, food assistance advocates fear millions of needy families could fall through the cracks. “It’s quite alarming, especially for households with children,” said Dottie Rosenbaum of the Washington-based Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, which encourages policies that combat poverty. The process requires extra paperwork and sometimes interviews. The USDA waived it in March to help states process a flood of new SNAP applicants faster. It goes back into effect this month. Rosenbaum argued the USDA should not reinstate the rules.
“Florida businesses could get break on workers’ comp insurance” via Jim Saunders of the Miami Herald — For Florida businesses struggling during the COVID-19 pandemic, here’s a bit of good news: Workers’ compensation insurance costs could go down in 2021. State insurance regulators have received a rate filing that would reduce premiums next year in the workers’ compensation system by an average of 5.7%, which would be the fourth straight year of premium decreases, according to information released Tuesday. The National Council on Compensation Insurance, which makes annual rate filings for the industry, pointed to “unprecedented results” in the workers’ compensation insurance system nationally. Florida’s average rates dropped 7.5%, after reductions of 13.8% in 2019 and 9.5% in 2018.
“Amazon drivers are hanging smartphones in trees to get more work” via Spencer Soper of Bloomberg — A strange phenomenon has emerged near Amazon delivery stations and Whole Foods stores in the Chicago suburbs: smartphones dangling from trees. Contract delivery drivers are putting them there to get a jump on rivals seeking orders, according to people familiar with the matter. Someone places several devices in a tree located close to the station where deliveries originate. Drivers in on the plot then sync their own phones with the ones in the tree and wait nearby for an order pickup. The reason for the odd placement, according to experts and people with direct knowledge of Amazon’s operations, is to take advantage of the handsets’ proximity to the station to get a split-second jump on competing drivers.
More corona
“Third virus vaccine reaches major hurdle: Final U.S. testing” via Lauran Neergaard and Carla Johnson of The Associated Press — A handful of the dozens of experimental COVID-19 vaccines in human testing have reached the last and biggest hurdle, looking for the needed proof that they really work as a U.S. advisory panel suggested Tuesday a way to ration the first limited doses once a vaccine wins approval. AstraZeneca announced Monday its vaccine candidate has entered the final testing stage in the U.S. The Cambridge, England-based company said the study will involve up to 30,000 adults from various racial, ethnic and geographic groups. Two other vaccine candidates began final testing this summer in tens of thousands of people in the U.S. One was created by the National Institutes of Health and manufactured by Moderna Inc., and the other developed by Pfizer Inc. and Germany’s BioNTech.
AstraZeneca’s vaccine candidate has entered the final testing stage in the U.S. Image via AP.
“America is facing a monkey shortage” via Sarah Zhang of The Atlantic — In the past seven months, more than 100 COVID-19 vaccines, therapies, and drugs have been pushed into development. But for any of these treatments to make it to humans, they usually have to face another animal first: a monkey. And here, scientists in the United States say they are facing a bottleneck. There just aren’t enough monkeys to go around. The reasons for the shortage are threefold. First, COVID-19 has created an extraordinary demand for monkeys. Second, this coincided with a massive drop in supply from China, which provided 60% of the nearly 35,000 monkeys imported to the U.S. last year and which shut off exports after COVID-19 hit. And third, these pandemic-related events are exacerbating preexisting monkey shortfalls.
“COVID vaccine front-runner held back by China’s spat with Canada” via Bloomberg — One of the world’s fastest-moving efforts to develop a Covid-19 vaccine is falling behind rivals, its advance appearing to be stymied by political tensions between China and Canada and concerns its shot may not work as well as others. CanSino Biologics, the Chinese company which in March started the world’s first human tests on an experimental coronavirus shot, has yet to kick off critical final-stage trials on the vaccine it developed with the Chinese military. Meanwhile, rivals are well into this last phase of testing. With its Phase III trials yet to begin, CanSino’s setbacks offer a look at both the scientific and political incertitudes companies are battling as they race to produce a vaccine against the virus.
“Apple and Google team up to send you notifications if you’ve been exposed to COVID-19” via Dalvin Brown of USA Today — Apple and Google teamed up to develop push notifications that let iOS and Android users know if they might have been exposed to COVID-19. The companies announced the news on Tuesday and the effort is called Exposure Notifications Express. It’s an opt-in based system that lets your local public health agency alert you to potential coronavirus exposure via a notice on your smartphone. It’ll also allow the agency to guide residents on actions to take if they’ve been exposed, according to Apple and Google. The development picks up where the company’s other collaborative effort left off. They previously worked together to create Bluetooth technology that helped health agencies develop mobile apps that can identify people who’ve been near with someone infected with the coronavirus.
Apple and Google will soon be providing virus contact-tracing tools to app developers.
“Uber to require that passengers provide face-mask selfies” via The Associated Press — Mask slackers will now have to provide photographic proof they’re wearing a face covering before boarding an Uber. The San Francisco-based company unveiled a new policy Tuesday stipulating that if a driver reports to Uber that a rider wasn’t wearing a mask, the rider will have to provide Uber with a selfie with one strapped on the next time they summon a car on the world’s largest ride-hailing service. The mask verification rule expands upon a similar requirement that Uber imposed on its drivers in May to help reassure passengers worried about being exposed to the novel coronavirus that has upended society. Now, Uber believes it’s time to help make its drivers feel safer, too. The requirement will roll out in the U.S. and Canada later this month before coming to other parts of the world.
D.C. matters
“Marco Rubio says congressional oversight of intelligence faces ‘historic crisis’ following DNI announcement” via J. Edward Moreno of The Hill — Sen. Rubio, acting chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said congressional oversight is facing a “historic crisis” after the Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe notified Congress on Saturday that the intelligence community will be scaling back in-person congressional briefings on election security. “Congressional oversight of intelligence activities now faces a historic crisis,” Rubio said in a statement. “Intelligence agencies have a legal obligation to keep Congress informed of their activities.” In his letter to Congress announcing the change, Ratcliffe said that the intelligence community would switch over to written updates on election security issues to ensure that intelligence information “is not misunderstood nor politicized.”
Marco Rubio says cutbacks on in-person congressional hearings on election security are causing a ‘historic crisis.’ Image via Getty.
“Rick Scott defends Ken Lawson after DeSantis dis” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Former Gov. Scott came to the defense of Lawson, the former head of the Department of Economic Opportunity, Tuesday. “Ken Lawson is a good friend who has been committed to serving the people of Florida. I wish him all the best in this next phase,” Scott tweeted, just a little more than 24 hours after Lawson’s resignation became public knowledge. Though Lawson helmed DEO since 2019, he was one of a few high-profile holdovers from the Scott era. But it’s Lawson’s DEO tenure (or the denouement thereof) that will be remembered. DeSantis sidelined Lawson this spring after the state’s unemployment compensation system broke down. In comments to media Monday, the Governor reminded reporters that Lawson had been rendered redundant.
“Federal workers will have taxes deferred under Donald Trump’s order, sparking outcry they’re being treated as a ‘guinea pig’” via Tony Romm and Eric Yoder of The Washington Post — The U.S. government will implement an across-the-board payroll tax deferral for about 1.3 million federal employees starting in mid-September, forcing some workers to take a temporary financial boost now that they likely will have to repay next year. Unions have sharply criticized the government’s decision, fearing federal workers may not have a choice in whether to take the deferral, resulting in them receiving smaller paychecks in 2021 until the past-due taxes are paid off. Trump’s order specifically targets the 6.2 percent tax that employers deduct from their workers’ wages so the government can fund Social Security. His directive postpones payment of those taxes until January, at which point employers are required to start collecting back what is owed, perhaps by withholding double the amount they usually take until May. The deferral applies only to people who earn up to $4,000 on a biweekly basis, and less than $104,000 annually.
Statewide
“The clock is running on remaining 2020 bills still on Ron DeSantis’ desk” via the News Service of Florida — A final batch of bills approved this year by the Legislature, many scheduled to become law Oct. 1, continue to await a call from DeSantis. The 26 remaining measures, ranging from a revamp of the state’s specialty license-plate system to putting additional teeth into the fight against shark finning and trying to curb e-cigarette use by teens, have been sitting in the House and Senate since the legislative session ended on March 19. “The Senate is coordinating with the governor’s office to send the bills over as the governor is ready to receive them, understanding that the first priority at this time is the governor’s role in leading our state’s response to the ongoing pandemic,” Senate spokeswoman Katie Betta said Monday. DeSantis has signed 177 bills into law from the session, including the $92.2 billion budget, and vetoed three measures. Most of the bills, including the budget, went into effect with the July 1 start of the fiscal year.
The clock is ticking on Ron DeSantis.
Enrollment up at Florida universities — At least half the state’s 12 public universities are reporting an uptick in enrollment, Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO Florida reports. FAU reported the largest increase, with about 1,000 more students registered this fall compared to last. UCF followed with 600 more students; UWF added about 200 more; UNF is up 100; Florida Poly is up 80. Meanwhile, FSU and FIU reported a drop in enrollment. Florida State’s freshman class dropped from 7,100 last year to about 6,000 in fall 2020. FIU’s freshman class is down by 267 students year-over-year.
“As Helen Levine retires, USF St. Pete loses a quiet but formidable force” via Divya Kumar of the Tampa Bay Times — Levine grew up as an “academic brat” in Tallahassee, the daughter of a professor who moved between college towns and taught life lessons at the dining room table. As a child, she thought everyone knew words like “tenure.” And she learned to be fascinated by what fascinates faculty, a quality that served her well these last 11 years as regional chancellor for external relations at the University of South Florida’s St. Petersburg campus. When Levine retires on Friday, her colleagues say they will bid farewell to a quiet but formidable force who worked behind the scenes to secure the campus’ growth. Levine first witnessed USF St. Petersburg’s blossoming fortunes when she attended the ribbon cutting of its bookstore in the early 2000s while working for then-Mayor Rick Baker. Later, as a USF employee, she saw her role as a matchmaker of sorts.
“Courts are cautiously preparing for the resumption of jury trials” via Jim Ash of Florida Bar News — With COVID-19 infection rates slowing, courts throughout Florida are beginning to plan for the resumption of jury trials. While the prospect still remains “a big question mark,” Florida’s busiest court system could see a limited resumption of jury trials as early as October, said 11th Circuit Chief Judge Bertila Soto. “I along with all the other chief judges want to make sure that we start getting to the backlog of cases,” she said. By Aug. 27, an Office of State Courts Administrator website showed that more than half Florida counties had transitioned from Phase 1 to Phase 2 health restrictions, conditions that could permit jury trials under certain conditions.
“Sweetwater commissioner unseated incumbent in 2019. But she didn’t live in the city.” via Aaron Leibowitz of the Miami Herald — Sweetwater Commissioner Sophia Lacayo, who became the city’s first Nicaraguan American commissioner last year, has resigned and pleaded guilty to a perjury charge after falsely saying she lived in the city during her election campaign, the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office announced Tuesday. Lacayo had sworn she lived at an address on Southwest Seventh Street near 18th Avenue in Sweetwater, when in fact she lived at a different address in unincorporated Miami-Dade, the State Attorney’s Office said. She has been sentenced to one year of probation for the first-degree misdemeanor, agreeing not to run for office again during that period, to take an ethics course with the county ethics commission, and to pay $3,750 in investigative costs.
Top opinion
“It has come to this: Ignore the CDC” via Harold Varmus and Rajiv Shah of The New York Times — We were startled and dismayed last week to learn that the CDC, in a perplexing series of statements, had altered its testing guidelines to reduce the testing of asymptomatic people for the coronavirus. These changes by the CDC will undermine efforts to end the pandemic, slow the return to normal economic, educational and social activities, and increase the loss of lives. Like other scientists and public health experts, we have argued that more asymptomatic people, not fewer, need to be tested to bring the pandemic under control. Now, in the face of a dysfunctional CDC, it’s up to states, other institutions and individuals to act. Understanding what needs to be done requires understanding the different purposes of testing. Much of the current testing is diagnostic. People should get tested if they have symptoms — respiratory distress, loss of smell, fever. There is no argument about this testing, and the altered CDC guidelines do not affect it.
Opinions
“What polio can teach us about this pandemic” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — Some stunning news on successful vaccines was announced just a few days ago. No, not for the coronavirus. But for polio, which has now been eliminated from Africa. This is great news for a continent where the disease paralyzed 75,000 children a year just a generation ago. Wild polio now exists in only two countries, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Beating polio is a remarkable story of science, persistence and enlightened public policy. Some people reading this may know of a loved one or a friend who suffered paralysis or perhaps even died. It’s common to compare the current pandemic to the Spanish flu outbreak of 1918, but better lessons might be drawn from the decadeslong battle to end polio, which was defeated by a vaccine, something that didn’t exist for the flu a century ago. In waiting for that miracle polio cure, Americans sacrificed and took care to keep their children as free and far from polio as possible.
“Worried about a disputed election? Steel yourself” via Cass R. Sunstein of Blomberg — Suppose that as of Nov. 4, Trump is unquestionably ahead in the key states — say, Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. But suppose, too, that as those states count absentee and mail-in ballots, it becomes clear that Biden has won. Predictably, Trump alleges fraud. Everything will ultimately turn on the vote of the Electoral College, scheduled for Dec. 14, and on what happens on Jan. 6, when Congress meets to declare the winner. But if we have a fierce dispute in late November and early December, how on earth do we get to a final decision in early January? The Electoral Count Act of 1887 was designed to answer that question. Unfortunately, the act also leaves some important questions unresolved.
“Scare enough people, especially people of color, and Trump might be able to defeat Joe Biden and Kamala Harris” via Lucy Morgan of the Florida Phoenix — Twenty years ago, Black voters in Tallahassee complained when law enforcement officials set up roadblocks between minority neighborhoods and the precincts where they vote — on Election Day. You can imagine the uproar it caused. Now Trump is threatening to send all sorts of law enforcement officials into voting precincts all across the nation: sheriffs and their deputies, the FBI, federal prosecutors, attorneys general — all the power he can amass to monitor voting. I’m sure that will make our voters feel extra safe. Not. It’s yet another attempt to cut down the number of people who cast their ballots.
“A Biden presidency will move the U.S. toward a far-left future” via Michael Waltz with the Washington Examiner — A nightmare scenario for conservatives is staring us right in the face. It’s Jan. 20, 2021. In Washington, the weather is cold, the sky is gray, and snowflakes dust the ground. On the steps of the Capitol, Biden places his right hand on the Bible and takes the oath of office to become the 46th president of the United States. Biden’s allies cheer, knowing things are about to change massively in America, and these allies, once deemed too far-left and radical to be taken seriously, now have not only voices but seats at the table. Together, Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer begin the process of rubber-stamping legislation cutting private health care options for individuals, paving the way for government-controlled insurance and Veterans Affairs-style hospitals, lifting restrictions on abortion, raising taxes, and curtailing the right to own most firearms.
“Trump’s secret plan to open Florida to offshore oil drilling must be stopped” via Sean Shaw in the Tampa Bay Times — Fishing in the gorgeous blue waters off Florida’s Gulf Coast is a passion of mine and has been part of my life since I was a young boy. Then and now, every time I cast my reel into the sea and watch the sunrise over the vast expanse of water, I feel connected to our planet and the countless generations of people that have relied on our seas for their life-giving resources. Floridians love and cherish our beaches, coasts, and marine waters. They are core to our identity and way of life. But our oceans are under threat. Oil drilling — something Floridians vehemently oppose — could destroy our precious waters and our quality of life.
“Carlos Curbelo: Time is running out to solve the worsening climate crisis” in The Invading Sea — Here is an edited version of an interview the Alliance for Market Solutions (AMS) conducted with Curbelo, a former Congressman and now a member of AMS’ advisory board: What influenced your commitment to addressing climate change and your interest in climate policy? In early 2015, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) scientists visited my congressional office. They reviewed data and maps with me that made clear the threat sea-level rise and climate change posed to my community and my state. I had not gone to Congress thinking that I would prioritize environmental issues, but I quickly realized I did not have a choice.
“The changing face of Broward County Democrats” via Mitch Ceasar of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Within the last few weeks, our county has experienced a historic Democratic primary election. Five countywide positions presumably will all be filled by minority candidates. These sweeping victories prove that Broward politics have generationally changed — and county leadership will better represent and reflect today’s population. The political history of Broward County over recent decades has certainly been one of demographic evolution, driven by snowbirds from the Northeast, immigration from the Caribbean and points south, powerful storms and now a pandemic.
Instagram of the day
Aloe
“Tiz the Law draws No. 17 post as 3-5 Kentucky Derby favorite” via Gary Graves of The Associated Press — Kentucky Derby favorites will need to take the long route toward winning the Run For The Roses. Tiz the Law is the 3-5 morning-line favorite for the 146th Derby and will attempt to become the first winner from the No. 17 post position drawn for Saturday’s rescheduled marquee race for 3-year-olds. The best finish in 41 starts from that spot was a second-place by Forty Niner in 1988 and two thirds. Not that trainer Barclay Tagg is fazed by the spot. “Well, I like it being on the outside,” said Tagg, who won the 2003 Derby and Preakness with Funny Cide. “I didn’t particularly want to be out that far, but it’s what we have. He seems to handle everything that gets thrown at him, so we have to leave it up to him.” All the race favorites will break from the outside at Churchill Downs. Second choice Honor A. P., at 5-1 odds, drew the No. 16 post on Tuesday. Authentic is the 8-1 third choice from the far No. 18 slot, which last year earned 65-1 long shot Country House the glory when the colt crossed the finish line second before being awarded the victory after Maximum Security was disqualified for interference.
Tiz the Law, the favored horse in the Kentucky Derby, drew post 17 for Saturday’s race.
“For 25th anniversary, Epcot food and wine festival gets lighter and longer” via Kelly A. Stefani of the Tampa Bay Times — The coronavirus pandemic didn’t stop Walt Disney World from celebrating the silver anniversary of the 25th annual Epcot International Food and Wine Festival. They changed the name slightly, lost some crowd-favorite elements and extended the run for a record number of days. This year’s festival, called Taste of Epcot International Food and Wine Festival, is without cooking demonstrations and Eat to the Beat concerts. It started much earlier than usual, on July 15 when Epcot reopened after a nearly four-month closure, and it is expected to run through late fall or early winter. No official end date has been announced. Without celebrity chefs hosting cooking demonstrations or concerts by pop stars like Sugar Ray and Boyz II Men, Disney fans are calling Taste of Epcot “the light version” of what became one of the largest food festivals in the country. In previous years, people would flock to Epcot, planning their vacations around it, and the lines, especially on the weekends, could swell 50 people deep.
“Twitter to add context to Trending Topics” via Kate Conger and Nicole Periroth of The New York Times — Twitter said Tuesday that it would add more context to topics that trend on its service, an effort to clean up a feature that has often been used to amplify hate and disinformation. The change comes as Twitter and other social media companies struggle to respond to disinformation surrounding the U.S. presidential election. But it stops short of a solution that some Twitter employees and external activists have proposed: eradicating Trending Topics altogether. Twitter offers trends to help users identify which topics are most popular. But the system has often been gamed by bots and internet trolls to spread false, hateful or misleading information. The episodes have led some Twitter employees to believe the feature is not worth its liabilities.
“Japanese company completes manned ‘flying car’ test flight” via Jacob Knutson of Axios — SkyDrive has successfully tested its flying car with a passenger on board, the Japanese company announced in a news release. The modest test — four minutes in the air — brings humanity one step closer to one day combining the automobile and airplane, potentially doing away with the hassle of airports, commercial pilots and traffic jams, according to AP. SkyDrive’s SD-03 model vehicle, operating with eight motors and two propellers on each corner, lifted a single pilot about 10 feet into the air, according to The New York Times. Because the vehicle takes off vertically, it does not require long runways like current commercial and private airplanes. SkyDrive’s chief executive Tomohiro Fukuzawa told AP that “Of the world’s more than 100 flying car projects, only a handful have succeeded with a person on board.”
SkyDrive’s SD-03 model electrical vertical takeoff and landing vehicle. Image via Reuters.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to Rep. Spencer Roach and Dr. Judithanne Scourfield McLauchlan.
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Pelosi caught getting hair done at coronavirus-shuttered San Francisco salon
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited a coronavirus-shuttered San Francisco hair salon on Monday afternoon for a wash and blow-out, despite local ordinances keeping salons closed amid the pandemic, Fox News had learned.
In security footage obtained by Fox News, and timestamped Monday at 3:08 p.m. Pacific time, the California powerhouse is seen walking through eSalon in San Francisco with wet hair, and without a mask over her mouth or nose.
Salons in San Francisco had been closed since March and were notified they could reopen Tuesday for outdoor hairstyling services only.
“It was a slap in the face that she went in, you know, that she feels that she can just go and get her stuff done while no one else can go in, and I can’t work,” salon owner Erica Kious told Fox News, adding that she “can’t believe” the speaker didn’t have a mask on. CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Nancy Pelosi ‘hypocrite’ for visit to salon closed due to coronavirus, Harmeet Dhillon says
– SEE IT: Video footage shows Pelosi at San Francisco salon appointment
– Tucker Carlson blasts Pelosi over visit to shuttered San Francisco hair salon
– Judge Nap explains if Pelosi could become acting president if election results are delayed past Jan. 20
Incumbent Markey’s primary win deals Kennedy clan first Massachusetts defeat
U.S. Rep. Joseph Kennedy III, grandson of the late U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, became the first member of his storied political family to lose a Massachusetts race Tuesday night when he conceded defeat in a Democratic primary to incumbent Sen. Edward Markey.
Kennedy, 39, was riding a wave of support from the Democratic Party’s progressive wing – including from Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts.
Speaking to supporters, Kennedy said he conceded to Markey, 74, about two hours after polls closed in the Bay State – bringing an end to a primary battle that grabbed national attention as it turned increasingly bitter this summer.
“The senator is a good man,” Kennedy said. “You have never heard me say otherwise.”
Speaking an hour later in his hometown of Malden, Markey thanked Kennedy and also noted their race had “been fierce at times but fueled by a shared commitment to the people of this great Commonwealth.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Richard Neal, influential Dem rep, survives progressive primary challenge
– AOC wades into another primary fight, again goes against Pelosi in Massachusetts
– Pelosi backs Joe Kennedy in Senate primary against liberal incumbent, draws AOC scorn
– Markey builds leads in hotly contested Senate primary with Kennedy: polls
Chicago restaurant fires server after police detective gets receipt saying, ‘Quit your job!’
A Chicago restaurant server, who reportedly wrote “Quit your job!” on a detective’s receipt Sunday, has been fired.
Local media outlet CWB Chicago said the detective threw away his food from the Happy Camper restaurant in the Wrigleyville neighborhood of Chicago fearing it had been tampered with after receiving the message on the check.
On Monday, Happy Camper posted a statement about the incident on its website and Facebook page, saying it had fired the employee.
“We sincerely and humbly apologize — the action of one does not accurately reflect who we are as a company,” the post said. “We have zero tolerance for any behavior that doesn’t give our customers the full respect they deserve.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Utah waiter claims family wearing Trump 2020 hats wrote gay slur on his tip
– Texas restaurant hosts ‘Karen Day,’ provides free food to anyone named Karen
– Restaurant in China apologizes after asking customers to weigh themselves before ordering
– Florida waitress writes uplifting ‘Black Lives Matter’ note on couple’s receipt, pays bill
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Tech-savvy trolls send Biden, Trump web traffic from unwanted domains
– Pence says ‘I don’t recall’ being put on ‘standby’ over Trump health concerns
– Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs get Super Bowl rings — then QB proposes to longtime girlfriend
– Georgia runner seen slapping reporter’s bottom on live TV pleads guilty to sexual battery
– Omar, Tlaib call on MSNBC host Joy Reid to apologize after comments deemed Islamophobic
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– TikTok deal talks are snarled over fate of app’s algorithms
– Exxon weighs global job cuts after unveiling Australian lay-off
– US stockpiling 3 different types of coronavirus vaccines through ‘Operation Warp Speed’
#TheFlashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Sean Hannity says Democrats are desperate and terrified that their presidential candidate, Joe Biden, is “weak and feeble.” In addition, their radical socialist platform is the most extreme of any party in history, Hannity says, with their denial of riots in Democrat-controlled cities that are now completely out of control.
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“New York City postponed students’ return to classrooms by more than a week to keep working on coronavirus safety precautions, announcing the delay Tuesday after teachers said they might OK a strike over the city’s drive to open schools… instead of starting a mix of in-person and remote learning on Sept. 10, the city’s more than 1 million public school students will start remote-only classes Sept. 16. In-school instruction will begin Sept. 21.” AP News
The New York Times reports that “New Yorkers are fleeing to the suburbs… Since the pandemic began, the suburbs around New York City, from New Jersey to Westchester County to Connecticut to Long Island, have been experiencing enormous demand for homes of all prices… At the same time, the number of properties sold in Manhattan plummeted 56 percent… It is an exodus that analysts say is reminiscent of the one that fueled the suburbanization of America in the second half of the 20th century.” New York Times
Both sides are critical of NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio’s lack of preparation for opening schools:
De Blasio and Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza “have failed to write coherent reopening protocols; failed to incorporate school principals in strategic planning, thereby transforming potential allies into hostile outsiders with no stake in success; failed to develop useful remote-instruction plans should that once again become necessary; and failed to engage parents in the process, likely converting an army of potential supporters into confused antagonists.” Bob McManus, New York Post
“In their efforts to assure the city that schools will be safe, de Blasio and Carranza promised they would be deep cleaned every day. But there are no plans to beef up custodial staff. Custodians will find themselves under enormous strain as they are expected to do far more work, with much higher stakes, and it’s not clear they will have the proper resources and supplies… De Blasio and Carranza have made other safety promises that manage to be both improbable and underwhelming…
“‘All students and staff will be teaching in safe spaces with proper ventilation,’ Chancellor Carranza said at a press conference… To make good on Carranza’s promise, the city dispatched a little more than a hundred Department of Education inspection teams, which were given one week to review 1,700 city schools… They’ve now been given more time. But will it be enough? ‘Roughly 650 of the 1,500 buildings surveyed in 2019 by city inspectors had at least one deficiency in their exhaust fans,’ reported the New York Daily News… There is also the promise of a full-time nurse in every school building. This is miles away from reality in the cash-strapped school system, where just last fall it was reported that ‘more than 700 of New York City’s schools go a partial or full day without a nurse on site.’” Jason Farbman, Jacobin Magazine
Other opinions below.
From the Left
Jia Lee, a special education teacher at the Earth School and a United Federation of Teachers (UFT) chapter leader, states that “When we talk about safely reopening schools, it’s irresponsible and unconscionable to take a citywide average. We live in a huge city, with 1.2 million students — Brooklyn itself is almost the size of Chicago. And the reality is that transmission rates in some working-class neighborhoods are still very high. In Sunset Park in Brooklyn, for example, the transmission rate was recently as high as 7 percent, and you have a similar dynamic in some neighborhoods in the Bronx and Queens…
“And this isn’t just an issue for those neighborhoods. We have a lot of citywide schools in New York, which means that you’re going to have a whole lot more students from neighborhoods with higher COVID rates traveling on the subway all across the city, potentially bringing the virus into other neighborhoods. So at this moment, a safe reopening in our city means starting remotely only.” Eric Blanc, Jacobin Magazine
Regarding the city as a whole, “Leadership is desperately needed if [the] spiral is going to be reversed. But this is something that is, frankly, in short supply. The relationship between New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo (D) and de Blasio is dysfunctional at best… Cooperation with each other and outside stakeholder residents (other than the wealthiest taxpayers, whom Cuomo is begging to return to New York City) is often nonexistent…
“The situation of the city’s restaurants, 40 percent of which did not pay one cent of rent last month, is instructive. Indoor dining is now permitted in nearby Westchester and Long Island, but not in New York City, despite the city’s less than 1 percent coronavirus positivity rate…
“Instead of offering help, Cuomo is threatening to revoke permission for city restaurants to offer outdoor dining, one of their few financial lifelines, to counter a possible second wave of the virus. Meanwhile, de Blasio is now suggesting indoor dining will not resume in any capacity until next year. An estimated 50 percent of workers in the sector remain unemployed, and the New York City Hospitality Alliance is threatening to sue.” Helaine Olen, Washington Post
“New York never got over its beggar’s mentality from the ’70s; even at peak affluence, it was still tossing huge, needless subsidies to corporations and developers in exchange for fanciful promises of job creation. The Hudson Yards development, for instance, cost New York $6 billion in taxpayer subsidies. Yet more than 90 percent of the office workers there were simply relocated from offices in Midtown Manhattan, just a few blocks away…
“That’s what the real battle for New York is going to be about. It will mean once again changing the city’s power relationships: reining in the landlords, ending the giveaways to developers and companies that are dying to come here already, and pouring money back into the city’s tattered public services, to help working people survive and prosper.” Kevin Baker, The Atlantic
“The consulting and finance bros of the Village, Murray Hill, and the Lower East Side may be stuck at their family home in North Jersey or Connecticut (if they’re younger), or lodged in some Instagrammable enclave (if they’re older). But the Rockaways, on the southern edge of Queens, 16 train stops from the edge of Manhattan, have been whizzing on any given weekend with a welcoming middle-class medley of energy…
“The large playgrounds at the Marcy Houses in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, are still home to an interplay of children’s laughter and 20-somethings’ music. In Liberty Park, Queens—where my barber, at last, can give me a haircut—the old blue-collar white guys still nod to passersby as they mow their front yard. At Brooklyn Bridge Park, I saw how happy hour has moved outdoors, and I eavesdropped on picnic rendezvous between young couples and circles of friends. In Central Harlem, ’80s and ’90s R&B still thumps from the late afternoon to the late evening, vibrating in your chest…
“New York isn’t dead—it’s as vital as ever, just changing, for a while or forever, like always. Perpetual shift is the only rhythm this city knows.” Talmon Joseph Smith, The Atlantic
From the Right
“De Blasio’s plan has also not solved the riddle of who will be doing remote teaching while most teachers are occupied in the classroom—or how students reliant on school buses will get to school. This centrally developed plan, imposed on hundreds of thousands of parents and tens of thousands of teachers, is the opposite of what’s needed to build trust and compliance. De Blasio has been misguided from the beginning because he fundamentally distrusts local decision-making and engagement, seeing variety as synonymous with inequality…
“Teachers and parents in the highly selective high schools have voiced strong opposition to in-person instruction. These students, high-achieving and highly motivated, could likely learn successfully from home without the lengthy commutes that many of them face to get to school… Had the mayor deferred to [these] parents’ and teachers’ wishes and permitted complete remote instruction, he could have turned three large school buildings over to in-person teaching of thousands of lower-income students, or those with special needs. These are the very students for whose interests he claims to be fighting.” Ray Domanico, City Journal
“Mayor Bill de Blasio just folded like a cheap beach chair — twice in two days, flinching first on his vow to lay off 22,000 city workers, then on his promise to open schools on Sept. 10… The shift left parents who’d planned for their kids to begin at least hybrid learning next week scrambling. It also left everyone wondering why, with months of relatively few COVID infections, the mayor couldn’t have worked out a deal earlier — if he was going to cave in anyway in the end…
“De Blasio’s schools flip follows by a day his retreat on sending pink slips to 22,000 workers. He’ll now give lawmakers more time to let him borrow billions… Borrowing should be a last resort. As the Citizens Budget Commission’s Maria Doulis suggests, the city could dodge new debt or layoffs by just getting its workers to kick in a few bucks a month for health-care costs. But this mayor is constitutionally unable to stand up to the municipal unions to protect the larger public.” Editorial Board, New York Post
“Our biggest cities have exceeded the viable scale of their operation as we enter an era of resource and capital scarcities that will inescapably shrink economies. Their infrastructure is too complex and costly to maintain. The skyscrapers and megastructures that were built to accommodate a particular way of organizing work have very suddenly gone obsolete. The cities face default on their ruinous debt obligations and pension promises…
“By May 2020, The New York Times reported that 420,000 residents had fled America’s largest city… The wealthiest neighborhoods were the biggest losers—and they were the city’s leading taxpayers. Of course, the initial impetus for flight was fear of catching Covid-19 in an environment densely packed with people. But as corporate offices shuttered, many of these refugees performed their work duties at home over the Internet, and it dawned on the corporations that perhaps it was a waste to lease expensive, high-status headquarters in Manhattan.” James Howard Kunstler, The American Conservative
“New York City is not dead, but it is on life support… Three long-term challenges stand out: the city’s tax base is worryingly fragile, its workforce is highly remote-able and its leadership is uniquely weak… just 100,000 families pay half of New York City’s income tax revenue. These jobs and families were already leaving New York City going into this year, and both desperation and critical mass in the face of COVID-19 drove their lives and work to go virtual…
“Responding with higher taxes or worse service does more harm to lower-income New Yorkers while doing little to boost New York’s competitiveness. Trimming fringe benefits, renegotiating labor agreements or introducing cost-saving innovations in government would yield greater gains while leaving core services intact, but they are politically dead on arrival. This is why New Yorkers today instead endure cuts to parks and trash pickup — the things that make life livable in Gotham — while leaving intact, say, $1.5 billion in teacher backpay for work done up to a decade ago in the last recession.” Michael Hendrix, New York Daily News
🖥️ Situational awareness: Stephanie Winston Wolkoff, out with a new book about working with her former friend Melania Trump, tells the Washington Post that the first lady regularly used private email in the White House, including accounts from the Trump Organization and MelaniaTrump.com, plus iMessage and Signal.
1 big thing: Here comes the real recession
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Economists are warning that the downturn caused by the pandemic is now creating another recession: mass job losses, business failures and declines in spending even in industries not directly hit by the virus, Axios Markets editor Dion Rabouin writes.
Why it matters: The looming recession — a possible recession within a recession — is less severe than the coronavirus-driven downturn. But it’s more likely to permanently push millions out of the labor force, lower wages and leave long-lasting scars on the economy.
Darius Dale, managing director at Hedgeye Risk Management, tells Axios: “Our view is that the U.S. economy is transitioning from a depression to a recession and not a recovery.”
The warning signs seen by Ernie Tedeschi, a managing director and policy economist for Evercore ISI, and others:
The increasing number of layoffs that have gone from classified as temporary to permanent.
The increasing numberof men who have lost jobs in recent months — a traditional recession dynamic and reversal of the trend that saw more women being laid off in early months.
The rising rateof long-term unemployment, an unfortunate hallmark of the Great Recession.
What to watch: It’ll be hard to see the recession in most data, because third-quarter economic growth will be compared to the second quarter, which was the worst downturn in history.
Absent another wave of lockdowns, Q3 GDP growth should be the highest ever — but largely because of pent-up demand and the simple fact that most U.S. businesses are allowed to operate.
The historically right-leaning National Association for Business Economics recently released a poll of its members that found two-thirds believe the economy is still in a recession.
More than a third (37%) see a one-in-two chance of a double-dip recession — an occurrence that Hunter notes is “extremely rare.”
The bottom line: The recession within a recession is giving economists flashbacks of 2008 and the long recovery needed to get many of the country’s lower-income citizens back on their feet.
The difference this time is that it follows an economic shock that caused at least three times the number of job losses as 2008, and has put four times as many people on government unemployment insurance.
2. Gallup: U.S. perceptions of race relations hit low
Americans’ view of relations between races is now the most negative of any year since Gallup started asking the question in 2001.
“Most Americans were upbeat about white-Black relations from 2001 through 2013. … The sharp decline … in 2015 followed numerous high-profile incidents in the prior year of unarmed Black citizens being killed by white police officers,” Gallup reports.
3. Child care industry’s plight
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
The child care industry is collapsing under the strain of the pandemic, Axios’ Erica Pandey reports.
Without financial help, 50% of day care centers will go out of business, erasing some 4.5 million slots for young kids, the Center for American Progress projects.
Day care centers got $3.5 billion in aid under the CARES Act, but economists say the industry needs around $10 billion per month to make it through the crisis.
Why it matters: With parents making up a third of the U.S. workforce, the fate of schools and day care centers and the strength of the economy are inextricably linked — given that the hit to closed schools could be an estimated 3.5% of GDP.
People watch fireworks near the Washington Monument at the close of the Republican National Convention. Photo: Andrew Harnik/AP
The Washington Monument and Jefferson Memorial are among the targets of a task force D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser named this summer amid nationwide protests, AP’s Ashraf Khalil reports.
The committee yesterday recommended changes for dozens of monuments, schools, parks and buildings because of their namesakes’ association with slavery or racial oppression.
Bowser was advised to ask the federal government to “remove, relocate, or contextualize” the Washington Monument, Jefferson Memorial and the statue of Christopher Columbus outside Union Station.
Some of the proposals from DCFACES (District of Columbia Facilities and Commemorative Expressions) are non-starters: Many of the most prominent monuments and statues stand on federal land, outside D.C. control.
Also included are proposals to rename schools named for Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin and “Star-Spangled Banner” composer Francis Scott Key.
5. Axios-Ipsos poll: Big gap in what experts, voters expect Nov. 3
Despite possible chaos in this year’s vote count (see our “Red Mirage” scenario from “Axios on HBO”), one in three Americans still thinks we’ll know who won the presidential election on the night of Nov. 3, a new Axios-Ipsos poll finds.
Six in 10 expect the winner to be announced within a couple of days.
Why it matters: The gap between public expectations and what experts are warning — that it may take weeks — shows the risk of a national crisis over trust and acceptance of this year’s results, whether President Trump wins a second term or Joe Biden unseats him, Axios White House editor Margaret Talev writes.
The count is expected to take longer than normal in part because of the massive increase in demand for mail-in ballots as a result of the coronavirus.
Legal challenges, including attempts to have ballots rejected or restored, could add to delays.
JPMorgan quant analyst Marko Kolanovic told investors to position for rising odds of President Trump winning, per Bloomberg.
The context:Betting odds, which earlier had Trump well behind Joe Biden, are now nearly even, which the strategist said is partly due to the impact of violent protests on public opinion.
🚨 Based on past research, polls could shift five to 10 points from Biden to Trump if the perception of protests shifts more from justice to violence, Kolanovic said.
7. A first: A Kennedy loses in Massachusetts
Sen. Ed Markey celebrates with his wife, Dr. Susan Blumenthal, after speaking last night at a public library in Malden, Mass. Photo: Allison Dinner/Getty Images
Sen. Edward J. Markey, 74, who rebranded himself from career politician to progressive warrior, won the Massachusetts Democratic Senate primary, beating 39-year-old Rep. Joseph P. Kennedy III by 11 points, the Boston Globe reports.
Markey, endorsed by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, “rode to victory on a wave of enthusiasm from young progressive activists inspired by his environmental work.”
8. Virus changes weather reporting
Executives at weather news companies say that the pandemic has forever changed the way they operate Axios’ Sara Fischer reports.
The use of drones has increased at The Weather Channel as a way to do more on-the-ground storytelling while maintaining social distance.
Warning businesses about severe weather has also become an investment focus for AccuWeather, especially for places that have moved some virus-linked operations outdoors.
The bottom line: “Weather and storms are the great equalizer. They don’t have an agenda when it comes to race, religion, creed, or socio-economic status,” The Weather Channel’s Nora Zimmett told Axios.
In this photo from Sept. 2, 1945, servicemen, reporters and photographers perch on the USS Missouri for the onboard ceremony in which Japan surrendered, ending World War II.
The two sides signed documents officially ending years of bloody fighting in a ceremony aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay, with an armada of American warships and planes hovering nearby. Go deeper.
10. 1 fun thing: Trading cards top S&P
Sports trading cards are enjoying something of a renaissance, fetching greater value than ever before and engendering excitement not seen since their last golden age in the 1990s, Axios Sports reporter Jeff Tracy writes.
A Mike Trout rookie card sold for $3.9 million last week, breaking the all-time record set in 2016 by the famous T206 Honus Wagner ($3.12 million).
Why it matters: The PWCC 500 Index, which is essentially the S&P 500 for trading cards, has reported a 12-year ROI of 175% compared to just 102% for the S&P.
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Mike Allen
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President Trump’s interview with Laura Ingraham was the latest example of Trump making a controversial comment that kicks off a news cycle during an appearance with a sympathetic host trying unsuccessfully to keep him on message.
Markey secured the Democratic nomination for the Senate, turning back a challenge from Kennedy, a scion of the political dynasty long seen as a rising star.
“Melania and I both didn’t use White House emails,” Stephanie Winston Wolkoff said in an interview with The Post upon the publication of her tell-all memoir, “Melania and Me: The Rise and Fall of My Friendship with the First Lady.”
The moratorium, issued under the banner of the CDC, seeks to help as many as 40 million Americans experiencing financial hardship as a result of the pandemic, but does not set aside any new federal dollars for renters or landlords.
Elliott Broidy, who helped raise millions for Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign and the Republican Party, is under scrutiny for his alleged role in foreign lobbying efforts.
By Matt Zapotosky, Carol D. Leonnig and Rosalind Helderman ● Read more »
AG Barr cracks down on FISA abuse in politicsAttorney General William P. Barr announced new limits Tuesday on the government’s ability to conduct surveillance of political campaigns, saying … more
President Trump is on firmer footing to flip Minnesota for the first time in almost half a century as political ground in the state shifts after George Floyd’s death this summer.
Joe Biden is increasingly casting the violence in cities such as Portland and Kenosha as a right-wing phenomenon stoked by President Trump, in an effort to undercut the “law and order” case against the Democratic ticket.
The list of Rep. Don Young’s politically incorrect utterances over his 47-year House career is too long to recount. Eyeing November, Democrats think the Alaska Republican’s off-the-cuff approach will catch up with him just as swing-state polls show voters getting weary of President Trump’s incendiary style.
The former military lawyer who led the prosecution against Bowe Bergdahl criticized President Trump’s public comments about the convicted U.S. Army deserter, saying the politicization of the case nearly reversed the conviction.
The Trump administration and Michigan officials cast doubt on claims about Russians hacking voter databases from the Wolverine State that were published in Russian media and amplified on social media by U.S. journalists and other left-leaning accounts with large followings.
The FBI is looking into reports from pilots in California that someone was flying a jetpack thousands of feet in the air near the path of incoming aircraft at Los Angeles International Airport.
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Baseless tale of ‘thugs’ flying to protests peddled by Trump.
Major antibody study offers hope for virus vaccine efforts.
Exclusive: Migrants trying to reach Europe risk deadly Atlantic.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI
Trump takes hard line in Kenosha, blames ‘domestic terror’ for violence and raises false flag on ‘thugs’ flown to protests
Standing in Kenosha, the epicenter of the latest eruption over racial injustice in America, President Donald Trump made no mention of what sparked the unrest in Wisconsin.
Instead, the president took a hard line and came down squarely on the side of law enforcement. He blamed “domestic terror” for the violence.
Trump’s motorcade passed throngs of demonstrators, some holding American flags in support of the president, others jeering while carrying signs that read Black Lives Matter.
AP Analysis: After struggling to settle on a clear and concise reelection message, Trump has zeroed in on his 2020 rallying cry. Four years ago, it was “Build the Wall,” a simple yet coded mantra to white America that nonwhite outsiders threatened their way of life.
This week, Trump has re-centered his campaign on another three-word phrase that carries a similar racial dynamic: “Law and Order.” The president’s shifting message carries obvious risks just nine weeks before Election Day, Steve Peoples and Zeke Miller write.
Conspiracy Theory: Trump is recycling a baseless tale to claim that recent protests have been orchestrated by powerful people in “dark shadows” who arranged flights for black-clad ”thugs.” Trump has offered only a vague secondhand story and says the matter is under investigation. His unsubstantiated claim echoes viral hoaxes that spread across Facebook and Twitter about protests calling for racial justice. Amanda Seitz and David Klepper have that story.
Portland: The police chief has denounced protest vandalism this week in Oregon’s largest city after people broke windows and set a fire inside the upscale apartment building where Mayor Ted Wheeler lives. The demonstration began late Monday and stretched into Tuesday.
Breonna Taylor: A lawyer for her family says a plea deal was offered to an accused drug dealer that would have implicated Taylor in a drug operation weeks after her killing by police. Her death has sparked months of protests in Louisville by activists who along with celebrities and athletes have called for the officers to be charged in her death.
The plea deal revelations came as protesters planned to demonstrate this weekend outside the Kentucky Derby, which will be run without fans because of the pandemic, Dylan Lovan reports from Louisville.
California Fatal Shooting: A Black man was shot and killed by Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies after he was stopped for a traffic violation while riding a bike, then ran from police, punched one officer and then dropped a bundle that included a gun. The Monday afternoon shooting death of Dijon Kizzee in South Los Angeles prompted a peaceful protest.
AP PHOTO/RAMON ESPINOSA
Extensive antibody study offers hope for virus vaccine efforts; Cuba closes off Havana to stamp out spread
The report, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, was based on tests on more than 30,000 people in Iceland. It found antibodies lasted for at least four months after diagnosis, AP Chief Medical Writer Marilynn Marchione reports.
Cuba Quarantine: Authorities have imposed a strict 15-day lockdown of Havana seeking to stamp out the low-level but persistent spread of the coronavirus in the capital. Aggressive anti-virus measures, including closing down air travel, have virtually eliminated COVID-19 in Cuba with the exception of Havana, where cases have surged from a handful a day to dozens daily over the last month. Havana is now under a 7 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew, reports Andrea Rodriguez.
The U.N. Security Council will hold a high-level summit during the annual meeting of world leaders at the General Assembly later this month to discuss security threats in the world after the pandemic ends.
Australian hot spot Victoria state has extended its state of emergency for another six months as its weekly average of new infections dipped.
South Korea has seen a triple-digit daily jump in reported coronavirus infections for the 20th straight day.
U.S. Ventilators: The Trump administration is cancelling some of its remaining orders for the life-saving breathing machines, after rushing to sign nearly $3 billion in emergency contracts as the pandemic surged in the spring. The Department of Health and Human Services said that the national stockpile has now reached its maximum capacity, with nearly 120,000 available for deployment.
AP PHOTO/EMILIO MORENATTI
AP Exclusive: Migrants trying to reach Europe pushed to deadly Atlantic
The shift in migration comes after the European Union funded Morocco to keep migrants from crossing the Mediterranean Sea to southern Spain, reports Renata Brito.
Although sea arrivals to mainland Spain have decreased by 50% compared to last year, landings in the Canaries have increased by 550% and haven’t been this high in over a decade.
On August 19, 15 lifeless Malians were spotted inside a wooden boat by a Spanish plane 92 miles from the island of Gran Canaria and towed back to port.
Less than 24 hours later, the AP witnessed one migrant boat rescued and brought to the island with 12 people and four dead. The survivors had witnessed their comrades die along the way.
“It is not normal. A human being shouldn’t do this. But how else can we do it?” That’s what one man, who fled Mali after his father was killed in an extremist attack targeting an army base near his village, told AP.
More than 250 people have died or gone missing in the Atlantic route so far this year, according to the International Organization for Migration.
AP FACT CHECK
Trump misstates what happened in Kenosha
President Donald Trump is not waiting for a trial to sort out what happened on the streets of Kenosha, Wisconsin, where prosecutors say a 17-year-old with a semi-automatic rifle fatally shot two men on a night of protest and violence. He’s giving an account at odds with the authorities who charged Kyle Rittenhouse with homicide.
The Khmer Rouge’s chief jailer, who admitted overseeing the torture and killings of thousands of Cambodians while running the regime’s most notorious prison, has died. Kaing Guek Eav, also known as Duch, had been serving a life prison term for war crimes and crimes against humanity. Duch in 2009 was the first senior Khmer Rouge figure to face the U.N.-backed tribunal that had been assembled to deliver justice for the genocide during the regime’s brutal rule of Cambodia in the late 1970s.
U.S. Sen. Edward Markey has defeated challenger U.S. Rep. Joe Kennedy III in the Democratic Senate primary, setting the stage for another possible six-year term and marking the first time a Kennedy has lost a race for Congress in Massachusetts. The win also denies a Senate seat to a member of the younger generation of the storied political family.
World War II ended 75 years ago, but some countries commemorate it on different days. Today is the anniversary of the formal Sept. 2, 1945, surrender of Japan to the United States, when documents were signed in a ceremony aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay. It’s known as V-J Day in some countries. But some nations mark Aug. 15 as the war’s end, the day Japan’s emperor made a speech announcing the surrender.
A former friend and adviser of Melania Trump says she made recordings of her conversations with the first lady because she needed evidence to protect herself amid questions about the costs of President Trump’s inauguration. Stephanie Winston Wolkoff is the author of “Melania and Me: The Rise and Fall of My Friendship with the First Lady,” released this week.
We’ll leave you with this …
Samsung touts $2,000 foldable phone as a ‘VIP’ experience
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President Donald Trump took his reelection message of law and order to riot-torn Kenosha and the key swing state of Wisconsin on Tuesday, saying he doesn’t believe law enforcement is systemically racist and contending that those protesting for structural change in American society are ignoring those who want safety.
Making the trip over the objections of the Democratic governor and mayor, the Republican president lavished praise on a state essential to his 2016 victory and a crucial one for his reelection prospects against Democrat Joe Biden. Trump vowed to pump millions of dollars to help rebuild Kenosha and fund law enforcement efforts statewide.
As colleges across the country allow students to return for fall classes, many are ramping up enforcement of new rules to curtail the spread of COVID-19. The stakes are high: Universities that can’t contain the virus on campus have paused in-person classes or reverted to remote learning entirely, sending students home for the rest of the semester.
The initial story of Caleb Reed’s death was tragic enough: A 17-year-old activist with a bright future killed on a West Rogers Park sidewalk when someone shot from a passing car. But a month later, as prosecutors brought charges in the case, a more devastating narrative emerged: Reed was killed by his own friend shooting blindly at a car down the street.
White House coronavirus response coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx expressed concern during a visit to Chicago Tuesday about the growing number of counties in Illinois where 5% to 10% of COVID-19 tests are coming back positive.
Chicago’s meteorological summer didn’t set too many records as it happened, but higher-than-normal temperatures each month stacked up to make for the hottest summer on record, according to the National Weather Service.
President Donald Trump visited Kenosha on Tuesday and promised $5 million for the Wisconsin city’s law enforcement and for small businesses that were “ravaged by anti-police and anti-American riots” following days of unrest sparked by the shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man, by police.
Trump did not try to visit Blake, who was shot by Kenosha police on Aug. 23 and left paralyzed from the waist down, or his family. In fact, the president pretty much stayed away from the entire topic of the shooting that sparked days of civil unrest. Rachel Hinton has the story…
Neighbors, activists and relatives of Jacob Blake took part in a community block party that made the neighborhood feel more like a Labor Day weekend than the epicenter of the nation’s latest reckoning with police violence and racism.
Before Trump arrived to inspect the ruins of Rode’s camera store, Lynn Sweet swung by to see the damage. Planted in the debris was a sign sardonically noting, “Gone in a flash.”
Tobolski admitted Tuesday in federal court in Chicago to taking more than $250,000 in bribes and extortion payments. He is cooperating with investigators.
Dr. Allison Arwady, commissioner of the Chicago Department of Public Health, said Tuesday that Indiana may soon be added to Chicago’s quarantine travel list, too.
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 has the reins while Al Weaver is off this week. You can find us @asimendinger and @alweaver22 on Twitter and please recommend the Morning Report to your friends. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 183,068. Tuesday,183,598. Wednesday, 184,689.
Today President Trump will visit North Carolina, a state he won in 2016, to talk about America’s military might and defenders of U.S. freedom.
Polls show that Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden are neck and neck in the Tar Heel State (The Hill) as Vice President Pence plans events in Raleigh on Thursday (WNCN).
On Tuesday, the president was in another battleground state, Wisconsin, to hail law enforcement in Kenosha (pictured above) while warning that, in his view, Democratic politicians leave America’s citizens vulnerable to violent mobs and “domestic terrorism.” By Labor Day, Pence, who also campaigned this week in swing-state Pennsylvania, will be in LaCrosse, Wis., and is expected to echo many of the Trump campaign’s MAGA themes (The Associated Press).
The loop through five or six key battleground states will continue as Trump and Pence work to mobilize their base of largely white, older and non-college-educated voters who pay close attention to the president’s messages about risks of “lawlessness” from outsiders and what he described this week as malevolent people plotting in the “dark shadows” of major cities.
Trump toured property damage in Kenosha on Tuesday while largely sidestepping the police shooting of Jacob Blake, the 29-year-old Black man shot in the back more than a week ago and still hospitalized. Hundreds of peaceful anti-Trump protesters congregated at the spot where Blake was shot seven times in the back (The New York Times).
Blake’s shooting on Aug. 23 set off days of demonstrations and renewed calls for investigations and policing reforms while Black Lives Matter protests continued in Portland, Ore., Washington, D.C., and other cities.
“We should talk about the kind of violence we’ve seen in Portland and here and in other places,” Trump said when asked by reporters about systemic racism, police killings and calls for racial justice.
The Hill: Trump announced the administration would provide roughly $1 million to support Kenosha law enforcement, nearly $4 million for local businesses affected by recent unrest and close to $13 million for statewide efforts to prosecute criminals.
The Associated Press: Trump visits Kenosha and calls violence “domestic terrorism” while reluctant to address racial justice.
BuzzFeed News: A Portland shooting victim, who died Saturday during competing protests between supporters of Black Lives Matter and conservative backers of law enforcement, was identified on Tuesday as 39-year-old Aaron Danielson, a resident of the city. Danielson appeared to have been at the protests with Patriot Prayer, a far-right pro-Trump group active in the Pacific Northwest. Police say they are still investigating and cannot say if the fatal shot to Danielson’s chest was politically motivated.
The New York Times’s Visual Investigations unit describes how the fatal shooting in Portland unfolded, using videos and images HERE.
The Washington Post: Upper Midwest emerges as most crucial Biden-Trump battleground.
> Cash dash: Democratic nominee Biden — who today will focus on the challenges of reopening schools during the pandemic (The Hill) — is expected to shatter records with more than $300 million raised in August for his campaign, surpassing previous monthly hauls by candidates of both parties. It is more, for instance, than Trump and Hillary Clinton raised in August 2016 — combined. In July, Trump and the Republican National Committee out-raised Biden and the Democrats, $165 million to $140 million. The Trump campaign has not announced its August fundraising total but has said it raised $76 million over the our-day GOP convention last week, slightly more than the $70 million the Biden campaign said it collected during the Democratic convention a week earlier (The New York Times).
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2020 POLITICS & CAMPAIGNS: Congressional incumbents swept races in the Massachusetts Democratic primary on Tuesday, with Sen. Edward Markeysuccessfully rebranding himself as a progressive warrior to defeat Rep. Joe Kennedy III, while Rep. Richard Neal held his seat against a challenge from Alex Morse.
Markey, 74, who helped champion the Green New Deal with firebrand Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez (D-N.Y.), called his win important for the future of the left wing of his party during a victory speech Tuesday delivered in his hometown of Malden, Mass. “It is a real reaffirmation of the need to have a movement, a progressive movement of young people demanding radical change, demanding justice,” he said (The Hill).
Kennedy’s loss in a race in which the competitors were largely in sync on policy raised questions about whether the storied family political dynasty that held the nation’s imagination for the better part of a century came to an end in 2020 (The Boston Globe, subscription). The defeat marked the first time in U.S. history that a Kennedy lost a congressional race in the state.
The Hill’s Julia Manchester reports how Markey, who at one point was assumed to be headed toward retirement, triumphed after Kennedy, 39, the grandson of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, embarked with a double-digit lead in what became a bare-knuckles race that eventually cast him as an underdog.
The Associated Press: Markey defeats Kennedy III in Massachusetts’s Senate primary.
The Hill: Neal beats back a primary challenge from Morse in Massachusetts’s 1st Congressional District.
ABC News: Neal defends seat against progressive challenger.
The Hill: Rep. Seth Moulton fended off two primary challengers to win the Democratic nomination in Massachusetts’s 6th Congressional District on Tuesday. He’s favored to win reelection in November.
Joshua Green, Bloomberg Businessweek special elections issue: There are at least nine types of voters who will decide the 2020 elections (including “shy Trumpers,” “double haters,” “swinging seniors” and Florida Latinos).
More politics news: An internal U.S. Postal Service audit faulted both the Postal Service and local elections offices for more than 1 million primary election ballots that were mailed to voters late, raising questions about trouble ahead as tens of millions of voters are expected to rely on sending their ballots by mail by Nov. 3 because of the pandemic (The New York Times). … Twitter removed an Aug. 12 video from a Trump tweet after a copyright complaint involving use of the song “Electric Avenue” by the president’s campaign (The Hill). … It remains unclear exactly why Trump went to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center with unscheduled haste and vague explanations in November. A new book by New York Times Washington correspondent Michael Schmidt reports that Vice President Pence was alerted to be on standby in case he had to temporarily assume the powers of the presidency (CNN). Trump on Tuesday denied on Twitter that he suffered from a series of mini-strokes (The Hill). However, no mainstream news outlets had reported he went to Walter Reed for suspected strokes (CNN).
More headlines: In Alaska, the demise of the state’s bipartisan House majority is in part due to national Republicans who invested a lot of money during the primaries to defeat some of their own members, even though the party has clear majorities in both legislative chambers (The Hill). … Some lobby groups representing industries such as financial services and oil and gas describe their worries about potential impacts next year, should Democrats have control of the White House and both chambers of Congress (The Hill). … At the same time, JPMorgan Chase & Co. says investors should prepare for rising odds that Trump wins a second term, even if the summer’s bets were on Biden (Bloomberg News). … Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) takes heat over her recent visit to a San Francisco hair salon (The Associated Press).
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CONGRESS: Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Tuesday told Congress that Trump backs more COVID-19 relief for struggling workers and businesses. With more urgency, he said he is ready to restart negotiations with Pelosi after weeks of stalemate.
Senate Republicans next week plan to bring to the floor a pared-down COVID-19 relief bill costing approximately $500 billion, but House Democrats have said that proposal falls far short of their compromise bid of $2.2 trillion and are expected to block it. Democrats and GOP negotiators are not expected to resume detailed talks in earnest until later this month (The Hill).
Mnuchin said Trump and fellow Republicans support provisions to approve funding for schools, COVID-19 testing, vaccine development and deployment, more loans to small businesses, continued enhanced unemployment benefits, child care, nutrition, agriculture, help for the Postal Service, and liability protection for universities, schools and businesses (The Hill). The list is designed to complement some of the Democrats’ priorities, although the specifics are far apart.
The Hill: Pelosi said on Tuesday that Democrats and the GOP “continue to have serious differences” on coronavirus relief.
The Hill: House Democrats flag nearly $3 billion in problematic small business relief.
Early in August, Trump walked away from the legislative discussions with Democrats and said his executive pen could implement some of his favored initiatives to help American workers, including a temporary cut in the payroll tax, which is by law paid jointly by employees and employers.
The Hill’s Naomi Jagoda reports that Trump’s payroll tax deferral period begins this month but few businesses are expected to participate in a plan that would boomerang against workers early next year when the relief must be repaid and the government’s largesse in effect reverts to a loan.
Under guidance issued by the IRS last week, employers have the option to stop withholding Social Security payroll taxes from paychecks from Sept. 1 through Dec. 31 for employees who earn less than $4,000 on a biweekly basis. The money would then be collected by having businesses withhold catch-up taxes from workers’ paychecks in the first four months of 2021. The administration says the hole in the Social Security Trust Fund will be filled with general revenues, and it has dismissed criticism that unemployed Americans cannot benefit because they have no paycheck. Trump says if he’s reelected, he’ll work with Congress to do away with the payroll tax and make the relief permanent.
“This is like other tax deferrals that we gave, which were very helpful to people,” Mnuchin told the House Oversight and Reform Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis. “This is money in people’s pocket that they need now that is very important and very meaningful.” The secretary a few months ago was not a strong booster of Trump’s payroll tax idea because he said there were not enough votes for it in Congress.
Many employers are wary of Trump’s executive fallback. “It seems risky for employers, so I think they will shy away from it,” said Amie Kuntz, an Iowa-based CPA at RubinBrown LLP.
Payroll tax reductions for federal workers who meet the income threshold outlined by Trump in his Aug. 8 order will kick in by late September (Federal News Network).
IRS guidance for employers explaining the payroll tax changes ordered by the president appeared late last week HERE.
The Hill: The Trump administration on Tuesday issued a sweeping ban on rental housing evictions that tests the legal authority of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to take action to prevent the spread of communicable diseases.
Reuters: More Federal Reserve stimulus for the economy is needed “in coming months” to fight pandemic headwinds, Fed Governor Lael Brainard said on Tuesday. The timetable she outlined puts any Fed decision on further economic stimulus beyond the Nov. 3 elections, while acknowledging that the revised framework released last week by the central bank will begin to shape concrete decisions. … Richmond Federal Reserve President Tom Barkin told The Wall Street Journal in an interview that the U.S. economy will need sustained support in a slowing labor-market recovery (Reuters).
****
CORONAVIRUS: New York City’s public school system, the largest in the country serving 1.1 million children, will delay the start of the school year by 10 days to try to avert a teachers’ strike and to give teachers, administrators and families more time to prepare for in-person instruction, which will begin Sept. 21 (The New York Times).
> Nursing homes: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) grew visibly emotional on Tuesday while announcing that his state will lift its ban on visitors at nursing homes ordered in March to try to curb COVID-19 infections at a time when people over 50 and especially over 80 were at the highest risk of life-threatening complications from the new coronavirus. Lifting restrictions on hugging and touching is part of ongoing debate and critics were quick to express concern over what they believe will be a patchwork approach among facilities statewide. It’s unclear how many of the state’s more than 4,000 nursing homes, assisted living facilities and group homes will choose to open to visitors in any capacity (The Associated Press).
> Convalescent plasma does not improve COVID-19 survival: A panel of experts convened by the National Institutes of Health undercut an emergency authorization recently issued by the Food and Drug Administration, saying there is not enough evidence to recommend use of convalescent plasma for hospitalized coronavirus patients. It’s the latest clash about hyped, ineffective and dangerous coronavirus treatments or disputed guidance embraced within some parts of the government (Bloomberg News).
> Vaccine triage: A U.S. advisory panel released a draft plan on Tuesday proposing how to ration the first doses of any approved vaccine. The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine proposed giving the first doses to high-risk health care workers and first responders. Initial supplies of any early vaccine are expected to be limited to up to 15 million people. Next on the priority list: older residents of nursing homes and other crowded facilities; people of all ages with health conditions that put them at significant danger; teachers and other school staff; workers in essential industries; and people living in homeless shelters, group homes, prisons and other facilities. Healthy children, young adults and everyone else would not get the first vaccinations but would be able to get them once supplies increase, according to the draft plan.
The panel of experts described “a moral imperative” to lessen the burden of COVID-19 on Blacks, Hispanics, Native Americans and Alaska Natives, and suggested state and local authorities could target vulnerable neighborhoods using data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (The Associated Press). The academies group is asking for public comments on the plan through Friday.
> U.S. vs. World Health Organization: The administration said on Tuesday the United States will not join the world health group’s COVID-19 global initiative to develop, manufacture and distribute an effective coronavirus vaccine. The decision represents a gamble by Trump — one that could threaten to leave the United States behind if the first viable vaccine candidate emerges from another country (The Hill).
> The people’s house: The coronavirus prompted the White House to bar tourists during a tumultuous period in which the grounds and residence also became fenced off against anti-Trump protesters. The first family more frequently hosted events that included select groups of visitors during an election year, such as the president’s South Lawn acceptance speech last week. But limited public White House tours are to resume beginning on Sept. 12 (The Associated Press and The Hill).
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!
OPINION
What if the Supreme Court has to become involved in the election? by Lawrence Friedman, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3hPYiOh
The coming blue-city exodus, by Merrill Matthews, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2YW0SLq
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The House will convene at 10:30 a.m. on Friday for a pro forma session.
The Senate meets at 10 a.m. on Friday for a pro forma session. The full Senate is scheduled to meet on Tuesday.
The president will travel to North Carolina to name Wilmington as a World War II Heritage City (an annual designation he created with the Pentagon last year) while aboard the battleship USS North Carolina (North State Journal).
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will hold a news conference at 10 a.m. (live streamed at www.state.gov).
➔ Administration: Attorney General William Barron Tuesday announced new restrictions for secret applications made to judges under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) for surveillance of political candidates or their aides. The changes are intended to make law enforcement officials more stringent in pursuing the type of surveillance conducted in 2016 on a former adviser to Trump’s campaign. The changes come in response to concerns long expressed by Trump and his allies, who protested irregularities found in FBI wiretap applications under FISA (The Washington Post and The Hill).
FBI Director Christopher Wray on Tuesday said his agency had instituted FISA changes and welcomes the additional restrictions announced in writing by Barr. “The FBI has been working diligently to implement these corrective actions,” Wray said. “The additional reforms announced today, which we worked on closely with the Attorney General’s office, will build on the FBI’s efforts to bolster its compliance program.”
➔ Courts: A U.S. appeals court on Tuesday granted Trump’s request to delay Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. from accessing his tax returns in connection with a criminal probe of his business practices. The unsigned order by a panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit in Manhattan was a victory for the president in his yearlong quest to block Vance (pictured below) from enforcing a grand jury subpoena to obtain copies of eight years of personal and corporate returns. Trump challenged an Aug. 20 decision by a U.S. district judge to let Vance obtain the returns from the president’s longtime accounting firm Mazars USA (Yahoo News).
THE CLOSER
And finally … In the wild, word is out about the charms of a Safeway store in Kings Beach, Calif., at the north end of Lake Tahoe, apparently a popular stop for lumbering bears on the hunt for food. This week, it was the fresh produce display that attracted a furry thief, according to a customer’s video evidence. On Aug. 18, a bear — it could be the same one — made off with a bag of Tostitos from the same grocery store (CBSLocal).
Unfortunately for them, bears are bold when they lose their fear of humans and make a dash for snacks.
ROLL CALL
POLITICO PLAYBOOK
Brace for impact
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DRIVING THE DAY
GOOD MORNING, and happy Wednesday. We should all begin to focus our attention on the end of this month and the fiscal stimulus/government funding mess that awaits Washington — because it is massive, can easily go off the rails and is very far from being figured out.
THE OVERVIEW: As we’ve mentioned a few times, government funding runs dry Sept. 30. Because Congress is Congress, and the TRUMP White House is the TRUMP White House, Covid relief remains unfinished as well.
THESE TWO DISCUSSIONS —government funding and Covid relief — will be paired this month, and it seems almost inevitable that they get wrapped into one package, which should pass by the end of the month. Our confidence level is low that this will happen without major turbulence, and perhaps a government shutdown. In other words, this is real, so brace for impact.
A FEW THINGS HAVE BEEN HAPPENING BEHIND THE SCENES:
1) WHEN SENATORS return next week, they are expected to vote on the GOP’s “skinny” (i.e. stripped-down) Covid relief bill — they’re going to call it “targeted,” because some think skinny sounds bad. Everything, including timing, is subject to change, because this is a moving target. As of now, the measure does NOT include direct payment checks, but does include many of the other agreed-upon items like money for schools and unemployment benefits. Senate Republicans are close to garnering 51 votes for this bill, and it seems like the leadership is rowing toward a WEDNESDAY vote. Again — neither timing nor the contents of the bill are set.
— REMEMBER: This bill is not meant to become law, but rather to serve as a marker for where Senate Republicans stand when negotiations begin in earnest. Senate Republicans have yet to garner 51 votes for anything, so this is a step in the right direction for them.
2) WE KEEP HEARING that the House Problem Solvers Caucus is going to come out with a bill or a plan. Cool — but you should ignore this unless they are all going to stick together and vote as a bloc. Power is in coalitions in the House — not statements. If you don’t stick together and vote together, you may as well tweet a statement and move on with your life.
3) PEOPLE SEEM TO BE PUTTING STOCK in Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN’S testimony Tuesday, and his promise that he was going to call Speaker NANCY PELOSI. Here’s what PELOSI had to say about that call: “Sadly, this phone call made clear that Democrats and the White House continue to have serious differences understanding the gravity of the situation that America’s working families are facing.” The full Pelosi statement on the 36-minute phone call
— IN OTHER WORDS,PELOSI andthe WHITE HOUSE are no closer to an agreement than they ever were.
SO … SHOULD WE START THINKING ABOUT A GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN? Readers of this fine newsletter will know that we frequently tease the possibility of government shutdowns because they are real, and they happen far more than they probably should.
— CONSIDER THIS: There are, at most, 11 days in session for the two sides to pass government funding, and solve the stimulus riddle that’s had PELOSI, MNUCHIN and White House chief of staff MARK MEADOWS tied up for months. That’s not much time.
COULD TIME and a deadline force the two parties together? Maybe, but serious differences remain between PELOSI, Senate Minority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER and the WHITE HOUSE. For example, Dems want $900 billion in state and local aid, and Republicans want around $150 billion to $200 billion. They also are apart on school aid: Dems want something on the order of $400 billion, and Republicans are at $105 billion.
SOME PEOPLE ARE BETTING THAT HOUSE DEM MODERATES start to buckle. Maybe — but we haven’t seen anything like that yet. Will vulnerable Senate Republicans? Again, it’s possible but we have no evidence of that happening at the moment.
NEXT WEEK is all about posturing. We should start to see actual movement and get a real sense of where things stand the week of Sept. 14. Again: brace for lots of turbulence here.
62 DAYS until Election Day.
NEW … POLITICO/MORNING CONSULT POLL … MELANIA TOPS IVANKA … 62% of Republicans viewed first lady MELANIA TRUMP’S convention speech favorably, while 54% of Republicans viewed IVANKA TRUMP’S speech favorably. … Overall, 33% viewed MELANIA’S speech favorably, and just 26% viewed IVANKA’S speech favorably.
NEW … BIG GRINNELLNATIONAL POLL(Selzer and Company): JOE BIDEN49, DONALD TRUMP 41 … THIS POLL was conducted Aug. 26-Aug. 30.
“PRESIDENT BIDEN” … TOP-ED: PHIL GRAMM and MIKE SOLON in the WSJ: “Prosperity Rides on a Republican Senate:A Democratic majority would be a rubber stamp for a President Biden’s ruinous economic agenda.”
THE ATHLETIC IS SKEPTICAL OF TRUMP’S BIG 10 MOVE — “Why President Trump’s ‘surreal’ call likely won’t change the Big Ten’s course,”by Nicole Auerbach: “Multiple sources in the Big Ten said that there remain ‘many hoops to jump through’ in working toward eventually restarting fall sports following the league’s Aug. 11 postponement. One source characterized the idea of restarting ‘immediately’ as ‘a really big longshot.’ …
“The Big Ten is expected to lay out a series of requests for White House assistance in areas to be determined, a league source said. Those requests could center on areas whose inadequacy led to the postponement in the first place, such as rapid testing, contact tracing and medical equipment to help with cardiac testing.”
INCUMBENCY PREVAILS … STEPHANIE MURRAY in Boston:“Markey overcomes Kennedy challenge in Massachusetts”: “‘Tonight is more than just a celebration of a movement,’ [Sen. Ed] Markey said in his victory speech in Malden, Mass. ‘It is a reaffirmation of the need to have a movement, a progressive movement, of young people demanding radical change, demanding justice. A movement giving voice and power to young people when for far too long they were ignored.’
“Markey also said the intraparty battle was ‘fierce at times,’ though he praised Kennedy’s commitment to the commonwealth. Kennedy shared a similar message during his concession speech after speaking with Markey.
“‘The senator is a good man. You have never heard me say otherwise,’ Kennedy said at his primary night event in Watertown, Mass. ‘It was difficult at times between us. Good elections often get heated. But I’m grateful for the debates, for his commitment to our commonwealth and for the energy and enthusiasm that he brought to this race.’ Another incumbent prevailed in a House district in Western Massachusetts, where House Ways and Means Committee Chair Richard Neal easily dispatched his young, progressive opponent, Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse. He led by 20 points when The Associated Press called the race.”
— PELOSI and AOC split matches here. PELOSI endorsed KENNEDY and NEAL, and AOC endorsed MORSE and MARKEY.
WHOA … NYT’S SHANE GOLDMACHER:“Joseph R. Biden Jr. is expected to report a record-breaking haul of donations for August, raising more than $300 million between his campaign and his shared committees with the Democratic Party, according to two people familiar with the matter.
“The sum would shatter past monthly records as small donors have poured money into Mr. Biden’s coffers, especially since the selection of Senator Kamala Harris as his running mate, and big contributors, from Silicon Valley to Wall Street, have given checks that can be as large as $721,300.
“In a sign of the financial momentum behind Democrats, ActBlue, the main site that processes donations to the party, reported the second-biggest fund-raising day in its history on Monday, with more than $35 million donated. A majority of Mr. Biden’s August total came from online grass-roots donors, according to another person familiar with the figures.”
BIDEN HAS A NEW MINUTE-LONG SPOT condemning rioting. It uses clips from his Pittsburgh speech and imagery from riots. Watch the spot
A FEW REPUBLICANS PINGED US after TRUMP tweeted about longshot candidate KIMBERLY KLACIK, the Republican running in D+26 Baltimore (the district formerly held by the late ELIJAH CUMMINGS). Here’s what House GOP watchers said about that: Imagine if TRUMP tweeted about front-line Rs who could actually knock off Ds!
OK, THEN … WAPO: “U.S. says it won’t join WHO-linked effort to develop, distribute coronavirus vaccine,”by Emily Rauhala and Yasmeen Abutaleb: “The Trump administration said it will not join a global effort to develop, manufacture and equitably distribute a coronavirus vaccine, in part because the World Health Organization is involved, a decision that could shape the course of the pandemic and the country’s role in health diplomacy.
“More than 170 countries are in talks to participate in the Covid-19 Vaccines Global Access (Covax) Facility, which aims to speed vaccine development, secure doses for all countries and distribute them to the most high-risk segment of each population.”
“The plan, which is co-led by the WHO, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations and Gavi, the vaccine alliance, was of interest to some members of the Trump administration and is backed by traditional U.S. allies, including Japan, Germany and the European Commission, the executive arm of the European Union.”
“Tom Gram’s century-old camera shop burned to the ground a week ago during the unrest in Uptown Kenosha. Gram said he declined President Trump’s request to be a part of his tour of damage Tuesday in Kenosha. Instead, a former owner of the shop was invited and he praised the president’s efforts. …
“Gram said he got a call Monday from the White House asking if he’d join the president on a tour that would showcase his leveled business, but Gram immediately refused. ‘I think everything he does turns into a circus and I just didn’t want to be involved in it,’ Gram said. To Gram’s surprise, he watched on TV as the president showed up with the store’s former owner and President Trump made it seem like the store was still his.”
ABC: “DHS withheld July intelligence bulletin calling out Russian attack on Biden’s mental health,”by Josh Margolin, Lucien Bruggeman, Will Steakin and Jonathan Karl: “In early July the Department of Homeland Security withheld publication of an intelligence bulletin warning law enforcement agencies of a Russian scheme to promote ‘allegations about the poor mental health’ of former Vice President Joe Biden, according to internal emails and a draft of the document obtained by ABC News.
“The draft bulletin, titled ‘Russia Likely to Denigrate Health of US Candidates to Influence 2020 Election,’ was submitted to the agency’s legislative and public affairs [office] for review on July 7. The analysis was not meant for public consumption, but it was set to be distributed to federal, state and local law enforcement partners two days later, on July 9, the emails show.
“Just one hour after its submission, however, a senior DHS official intervened. ‘Please hold on sending this one out until you have a chance to speak to [acting Secretary of Homeland Security Chad Wolf],’ wrote DHS Chief of Staff John Gountanis, according to an email obtained by ABC News. That was nearly two months ago. But the bulletin was never circulated.”
THE JUICE —GOP data firm Cygnal has acquired Harper Polling, the polling shop run by NRCC alum Brock McCleary. He’ll be a VP at Cygnal and open a Pennsylvania office with the Harper team. (h/t Morning Score)
NEW … CLF — the House GOP super PAC —knocks Rep. ELAINE LURIA (D-Va.) in a new ad as being a phony, and attempts to tie her to PELOSI. 30-second spot
TRUMP’S WEDNESDAY: THE PRESIDENT will head to Andrews at 11:45 a.m. for his flight to Wilmington, N.C. At 1:55 p.m., he’ll get to Battleship, North Carolina, where he’ll speak about designating Wilmington an American World War II Heritage City. He will get back to the White House at 4:45 p.m.
BIDEN will receive an education briefing, and then he will speak about Covid-19’s impact on “students, educators and children” and his plan to reopen schools.
PLAYBOOK READS
PLAYBOOK METRO SECTION … WHO KNEW?! … WAPO: “Numbers are running out for the 202 area code in D.C.,”by Emiliy Davies: “The next D.C. area code is expected to be announced by the end of the year, according to Beth Sprague, director of NANPA, before it is rolled out in stages in mid-2022. … As of Aug. 20, Sprague said there are only 23 ‘prefixes’ — which are the first three numbers following the area code — still ready for use.”
CORONAVIRUS RAGING — “How a Bus Ride Turned Into a Coronavirus Superspreader Event,” by NYT’s Roni Caryn Rabin: “In late January, as the new coronavirus was beginning to spread from China’s Hubei Province, a group of lay Buddhists traveled by bus to a temple ceremony in the city of Ningbo — hundreds of miles from Wuhan, center of the epidemic.
“It was a sunny day with a gentle breeze, and the morning service was held al fresco, followed by a brief luncheon indoors. A passenger on one of the buses had recently dined with friends from Hubei. She apparently did not know she carried the coronavirus. Within days, 24 fellow passengers on her bus were also found to be infected.
“It did not matter how far a passenger sat from the infected individual on the bus, according to a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine on Tuesday. Even passengers in the very last row of the bus, seven rows behind the infected woman, caught the virus.” NYT
DEFENSE CONTRACTOR READING — “China is ramping up nuclear and missile forces to rival U.S., Pentagon says,” by WaPo’s Paul Sonne: “China is building up its nuclear and missile forces and is mobilizing vast resources to rival the Pentagon’s, the Defense Department said in its annual report on Chinese military power, which concluded that the country’s armed forces in certain areas had eclipsed the U.S. military.
“The report, released Tuesday by the Pentagon, comes as the U.S. military shifts its focus from Middle East counterinsurgencies that have dominated its operations for two decades toward a possible future conflict with China and Russia, in what defense leaders have dubbed ‘an era of great power competition.’
“China’s armed forces, the Pentagon said, not only are acquiring sophisticated new technology and weaponry but also are overhauling their organizational structures, as China aims to complete a military modernization by 2035 and establish a ‘world-class military’ that can rival or exceed that of the United States by 2049.
“Beijing’s goal, the report says, is then to leverage its new military might to achieve its foreign-policy objectives in the Western Pacific and to assert itself globally.” WaPo … The report
VALLEY TALK — “TikTok Deal Talks Are Snarled Over Fate of App’s Algorithms,” by WSJ’s Liza Lin, Aaron Tilley and Georgia Wells: “Deal talks for TikTok’s U.S. operations have hit a snag over the question of whether the app’s core algorithms can be included as part of a deal, according to people familiar with the matter.
“The algorithms, which determine the videos served to users and are seen as TikTok’s secret sauce, were considered part of the deal negotiations up until Friday, when the Chinese government issued new restrictions on the export of artificial-intelligence technology, according to people familiar with the matter.
“Now both sides are trying to figure out whether the order means the algorithms need Chinese government approval for transfer, and if so, whether Beijing would sign off. The complexity involved has reduced the chances that a deal could be completed soon.” WSJ
SPOTTED at a Zoom party Tuesday night for David Rubenstein’s new book, “How to Lead” ($18.24 on Amazon), hosted by David Marchick with an interview by Ken Burns: Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Madeleine Albright, Sylvia Burwell, Tom Nides, Josh Bolten, Bob Barnett, Steve Case, Bill Frist, Mike Mullen, Dina Powell McCormick, Indra Nooyi, Mike “Coach K” Krzyzewski, Mack McLarty, Nelson Cunningham, Jorge Guajardo, Virginia Boney, Ken Duberstein, John Allen, Richard Haass, Walter Isaacson, David Axelrod, Chris Ullman and Andrew Ross Sorkin.
TRANSITION — Mustafa Jumale is joining Voice for Refuge Action Fund as political director. He previously was policy manager for Black Alliance for Immigration Justice, and is a Keith Ellison alum.
BIRTHWEEK (was Tuesday): Nathan Klein, IE director for America First Action
BIRTHDAYS OF THE DAY: Rep. John Rutherford (R-Fla.) is 68. What he’s reading: “For fun, I’m reading ‘One Second After’ by William Forstchen. I’m also reading ‘Rules for Radicals’ by Saul Alinsky. It’s been interesting to see parallels to some of what’s going on in our country today.” Playbook Q&A
— Emily Porter, partner at the Nickles Group. How she thinks the Trump presidency is going: “The Republican convention was very compelling, and the president made a strong case for why he should be reelected. While obviously unconventional, he does what he says he’s going to do.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Lisa Barclay, partner at Boies Schiller Flexner … James Rosen, national investigative reporter for Sinclair’s D.C. bureau … Jess Fassler … former Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) is 69 … former Sen. Alan Simpson (R-Wyo.) is 89 … former Rep. Earl Pomeroy (D-N.D.) is 68 … J.P. Freire … Yahoo News’ Dan Klaidman is 56 … Zakiya Thomas … Taylor Hennings, Tim Kaine’s Virginia/Northeast finance director … Coleman Hutchins … Molly McUsic, president of the Wyss Foundation … Elizabeth Birch, VP of CBRE (h/t Teresa Vilmain) … Tom Manatos, VP of government relations at Spotify and founder of Tom Manatos Jobs … Kris Balderston (h/ts Jon Haber) … Bill Bode, senior policy adviser for Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) … NPR’s Don Gonyea … Kevin Smith of the White House …
… Raney Aronson-Rath, executive producer of “Frontline” … Harvey Levin is 7-0 … Boeing’s Bryan Watt … Laurie McCord … Seth Gainer, legislative assistant for Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) … Peter Petrihos (h/t Tim Burger) … Will Attig, executive director of the Union Veterans Council (h/t Josh Cohen) … Evan Viau of the House Energy and Commerce telecom subcommittee minority staff … Ethan Zorfas, VP at Axiom Strategies … POLITICO Europe’s Laura Greenhalgh … Joe Shonkwiler … NBC’s Xuan Thai … Czech PM Andrej Babiš is 66 … Evan Rosenfeld … Margot Edelman … Netflix’s Ferial Govashiri … Dylan Vorbach … Melissa Joseph Muntz … Andrew Shine … Michael Kolenc … Scott Petersen … Kim Bowman … Wayne Washington … Jennifer Hanley … Ian Kremer … Kai Bird … Seth Zweifler
This was the fate of John Bunyan, author of the world renown book Pilgrim’s Progress.
John Bunyan was born in Bedford, England, in 1628, nearly a century before the Europe’s Age of Enlightenment.
About 20 years after the Pilgrims landed in America a Civil War began in England in 1642.
On one side was the Royalist Anglican “Cavaliers” who supported King Charles I, and on the other side, three were the Puritan Parliamentarian-Covenanters, led by Lord Fairfax and Oliver Cromwell.
In 1644, at the age of 16, Bunyan joined the Puritan Parliamentary Army and fought under Oliver Cromwell during the English Civil War.
Eventually, the Puritans captured Charles I, and beheaded him in 1649.
His 21-year-old son, Charles II, fled to France in 1651, to be under the protection of his first cousin, the young 13-year-old King Louis IVX.
John Bunyan served as a soldier for three years, having escaped death several times.
He then returned to live in his cottage in the village of Elstow.
Being poor and unskilled, he learned from his father the trade of a tinker.
His life changed when he married his young, pious wife.
She had two books she inherited from her father, Arthur Dent’s Plain Man’s Pathway to Heaven, and Lewis Bayly’s Practice of Piety.
Apart from that, the newly-weds owned little, “not having so much household-stuff as a dish or a spoon betwixt us both.”
Their first daughter was blind, then they had another daughter and two sons.
In 1657, at age 29, Bunyan became a Baptist minister.
Oliver Cromwell demoted Anglican ministers, including Rev. Lawrence Washington, the great-great-grandfather of George Washington.
This led to Rev. Lawrence Washington’s son, John Washington, becoming a merchant and sailing to Virginia in 1657.
When Puritan leader Oliver Cromwell died in 1558, it led to a royalist movement to restore the monarchy in 1660, with King Charles II.
Admiral William Penn, Sr., helped bring Charles II back from France.
Charles II began an intense period of royal retribution, arresting and killing those who took part in killing his father.
The purge broadened into a wave of persecution against of non-Anglican, non-conformist Christians.
Puritans, Separatists, Baptists, and other dissenters were spied upon, censored, and arrested simply for holding unauthorized religious meetings which the government had deemed illegal.
In 1662, Parliament passed the Act of Uniformity, which required all preachers to submit and believe exactly what the government told them to believe.
If not, they could not be ordained by an Anglican bishop, which was necessary to get official state permission to preach.
The Act required everyone to say prayers out of the revised Book of Common Prayer.
In 1664, Parliament passed the Act of Conventicles, which made it illegal for five or more people to have a religious meeting apart from the Church of England.
The punishment for violation was arrest, imprisonment, and in some cases, torture and death.
In 1665, Parliament passed the Five Mile Act where a dissenting preacher was not allowed to come within five miles of any town.
This continued in the colony of Virginia, where in the town of Culpeper, the Anglican government arrested Baptist pastors.
Prior to the Revolutionary War, James Madison wrote to William Bradford, January 24, 1774:
“There are at this time in the adjacent Culpeper County not less than 5 or 6 well meaning men in jail for publishing their religious sentiments which in the main are very orthodox.”
Currently, many socialist, communist, and sharia Islamic regions around the world have laws discriminating against Christians who spread Biblical views, including areas of the Middle East, Iran, North Korea, Europe, Africa, South America, Turkey, China, and now Hong Kong.
In the United States, this has manifested in leftist driven governors, courts, as well as state and federal government bureaucracies.
Advocates of LGBTQ values exhibit aggressive intolerance toward those holding Biblical views, as evidenced in cases regarding cake bakers and photographers.
In August of 2014, Houston’s first openly lesbian mayor subpoenaed the sermons of all the city’s pastors who opposed a LGBTQ ordinance.
The U.S. Department of Justice, (WND.com, August 31, 2017), even issued a subpoena to force a Baptist pastor in Culpeper, Virginia, to disclose under oath his views on sharia Islam.
In 2020, numerous governors in their Covid corona virus response have decided keep marijuana shops open, liquor stores open, abortion clinics open, and casinos open, deeming them essential businesses; while at the same time arbitrarily ordering churches to stay closed as being non-essential.
In 17th century England, John Bunyan was arrested for having an unauthorized religious meeting and for preaching without government permission.
Bunyan wrote in A Relation of My Imprisonment:
“Upon the 12th of … November 1660 … the justice … issued out his warrant to take me … as if we that were to meet together … to do some fearful business, to the destruction of the country;
… when alas! the constable, when he came in, found us only with our Bibles in our hands, ready to speak and hear the word of God …
So I was taken and forced to depart … But before I went away, I spake some few words of counsel and encouragement to the people, declaring to them … that they would not be discouraged, for it was a mercy to suffer upon so good account …
We suffer as Christians … better be the persecuted, than the persecutors.”
Bunyan was imprisoned for a total of twelve years, from 1660 to 1672, and again, from 1675 to 1676.
During his imprisonment, John Bunyan supported his family by making shoelaces.
It was during this time that he began writing The Pilgrim’s Progress, eventually published February 18, 1678.
John Bunyan died August 31, 1688.
At the time of his death, the world was experiencing momentous events:
England’s William and Mary were leading the Glorious Revolution;
William Penn was founding Pennsylvania; and
Ottoman Muslim Turks were laying siege to Vienna.
Pilgrim’s Progress is an allegory where a pilgrim traveler, named Christian, flees from the City of Destruction.
He is directed by Evangelist to follow the straight and narrow path toward the Celestial City of Zion.
Along the way, he overcomes temptations, depressions, deceptions, and persecutions.
The friends and dangers that Christian meets along the way inspired many subsequent stories and novels, such as:
Sir Walter Scott’s The Heart of Midlothian (1818);
Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist (1838) is subtitled “The Parish Boy’s Progress”;
Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Celestial Railroad (1846);
Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women (1868);
Mark Twain’s Innocents Abroad or the New Pilgrim’s Progress (1869);
John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress was translated into over 200 languages and, after the Bible, was the world’s best-seller for hundreds of years.
It has never been out of print.
Considered one of the most significant works of English literature, it was found in nearly every colonial New England home, along with the Bible and Fox’s Book of Martyrs.
Ben Franklin wrote in his Autobiography:
“From a child I was fond of reading, and all the little money that came into my hands was ever laid out in books.
Pleased with The Pilgrim’s Progress, my first collection was of John Bunyan’s works in separate little volumes …”
Franklin continued:
“My old favorite author, Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress … has been translated into most of the languages of Europe, and suppose it has been more generally read than any other book, except perhaps the Bible.”
President Grover Cleveland had memorized The Pilgrim’s Progress as a youth, commenting:
“I have always felt that my training as a minister’s son has been more valuable to me as a strengthening influence than any other incident in life.”
President Theodore Roosevelt stated while laying the cornerstone of the office building of the House of Representatives, April 14, 1906:
“In Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress you may recall the description of the man with the muck-rake,
the man who could look no way but downward, with the muck-rake in his hand, who was offered a celestial crown for his muck-rake,
but who would neither look up nor regard the crown he was offered, but continued to rake to himself the filth of the floor.”
President Bill Clinton remarked at the Retirement of General Colin Powell in Arlington, Virginia, September 30, 1993:
“General Powell, I am reminded of the words of another young valiant warrior, spoken when, like you, he was finishing one journey and beginning a second.
… John Bunyan wrote in Pilgrim’s Progress of the warrior valiant at the end of his life, as he prepared to present himself to the Almighty.”
“As I walked through the wilderness of this world, I lighted on a certain place where was a den, and I laid me down in that place to sleep: and, as I slept, I dreamed a dream.
… I dreamed, and behold, I saw a man clothed with rags, standing in a certain place, with his face from his own house, a book in his hand, and a great burden upon his back.
… I looked, and saw him open the book, and read therein; and, as he read, he wept, and trembled;
and, not being able longer to contain, he brake out with a lamentable cry, saying, What shall I do?”
Leaving the City of Destruction, Christian was chased by Obstinate and Pliable, who tried to get him to turn back.
Determined to keep going, he was mired in depression and doubts crossing the Slough of Despond, but was rescued by a man named Help.
Christian was easily led astray by Mr. Worldly Wiseman from the town of Carnal Policy.
He then tried to obey all the burdensome rules and regulations of Mr. Legality.
He was almost crushed by Mt. Sinai till Evangelist reappeared and rebuked him, putting him back on the narrow path — the King’s Highway of grace.
At the door of the Wicket Gate, Christian was shot at by the arrows from Beelzebub. Just in time, Goodwill reached out and yanked him through the doorway.
Continuing along in The Pilgrim’s Progress, John Bunyan wrote:
“Christian ran thus till he came at a place somewhat ascending, and upon that place stood a cross …
So I saw in my dream, that just as Christian came up with the cross, his burden loosed from off his shoulders, and fell from off his back.”
Traveling further in The Pilgrim’s Progress, John Bunyan wrote:
“Then said Christian, You make me afraid, but whither shall I fly to be safe?…
To go back is nothing but death; to go forward is fear of death, and life-everlasting beyond it. I will yet go forward …
… Frighted with the sight of the lions … Christian said to himself again,
These beasts range in the night for their prey; and if they should meet with me in the dark … how should I escape being by them torn in pieces? …
… He lift up his eyes, and behold there was a very stately palace before him … He entered into a very narrow passage … he espied two lions in the way …
The porter at the lodge … perceiving that Christian made a halt as if he would go back, cried unto him, saying,
‘Is thy strength so small? Fear not the lions, for they are chained, and are placed there for trial of faith where it is, and for discovery of those that had none. Keep in the midst of the path, and no hurt shall come unto thee’ …
… He went on, trembling for fear of the lions, but taking good heed to the directions of the porter; he heard them roar, but they did him no harm …”
John Bunyan continued, that at the Palace Beautiful, Christian was clothed in the Armor of God,
He then had to go alone through the Valley of Humiliation, where he recited Psalm 23:
“Yea, though I walk through the Valley of the Shadow of Death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.”
Christian traveled further:
“But now, in this Valley of Humiliation, poor Christian was hard put to it … a foul fiend coming over the field to meet him; his name is Apollyon.
… Then did Christian begin to be afraid, and to cast in his mind whether to go back or to stand his ground.
But he considered again that he had no armor for his back; and therefore thought that to turn the back to him might give him the greater advantage with ease to pierce him with his darts.
Therefore he resolved to venture and stand his ground …”
Bunyan added:
“The monster was hideous to behold; he was clothed with scales … wings like a dragon, feet like a bear, and out of his belly came fire and smoke …
Apollyon straddled quite over the whole breadth of the way, and said … prepare thyself to die; for I swear by my infernal den, that thou shalt go no further; here will I spill thy soul.
… And with that he threw a flaming dart at his breast; but Christian had a shield in his hand, with which he caught it …
Apollyon as fast made at him, throwing darts as thick as hail; by the which, notwithstanding all that Christian could do to avoid it, Apollyon wounded him in his head, his hand, and foot …”
Bunyan concluded:
“This sore combat lasted for above half a day, even till Christian was almost quite spent; for you must know that Christian, by reason of his wounds, must needs grow weaker and weaker …
… Christian’s sword flew out of his hand. Then said Apollyon, ‘I am sure of thee now.’
And with that he had almost pressed him to death, so that Christian began to despair of life;
but as God would have it, while Apollyon was fetching of his last blow, thereby to make a full end of this good man, Christian nimbly stretched out his hand for his sword, and caught it, saying,
… ‘Rejoice not against me, O mine enemy; when I fall I shall arise’; and with that gave him a deadly thrust, which made him give back …
And with that Apollyon spread forth his dragon’s wings, and sped him away, that Christian for a season saw him no more …
A more unequal match can hardly be, —
Christian must fight an angel; but you see,
The valiant man by handling Sword and Shield,
Doth make him, though a Dragon, quit the field.”
Soon after this horrifying experience, Christian met a fellow-pilgrim named Faithful, and the two of them traveled to Vanity Fair where they were almost enticed with pleasures and every worldly temptation.
As they maintained holy lives and resisted the sensual traps. the towns people grew incensed at them.
Faithful confronted the sin of the town and they were jailed in a cage.
A rigged jury sentenced Faithful to be martyred.
President Ronald Reagan greeted Australia’s Prime Minister, June 30, 1981:
“Robert Louis Stevenson wrote, ‘We are all travelers in what John Bunyan calls the wilderness of this world.
And the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend – they keep us worthy of ourselves.”
Christian escaped, and met another traveler, Hopeful.
The straight and narrow path was rocky, so they took a parallel softer path along the Hill Lucre which gradually got them lost.
They were trapped by Giant Despair, who chained them in Doubting Castle.
The Giant threw poison and a dagger into the cell and told them to commit suicide.
Depressed in the dungeon they prayed and sang, as the Apostle Paul did when in a dungeon.:
Christian and Hopeful “… began to pray, and continued in prayer till almost the break of day.
Now, a little before it was day, good Christian, as one half amazed, brake out in this passionate speech: — What a fool, quoth he, am I, thus to lie in a stinking dungeon, when I may as well walk at liberty! I have a key in my bosom, called Promise, that will, I am persuaded, open any lock in Doubting Castle.”
They escaped and made it back to the King’s Highway.
They were almost led astray by Flatterer and nearly fell asleep crossing the Enchanted Land.
Seeing Immanuel’s Land in the distance, they saw someone walking toward them in the opposite direction.
They ran into Atheist going in the opposite direction, who told them that there was no Heaven and no God, and that they should turn back.
They refused and kept going ahead.
Thankfully, they had been previously warned by Shepherds, so they continued on.
They finally came to the last test, the River of Death.
They saw a man named Ignorance get into a ferryboat named Vain Hope, trusting in his good works instead of God’s grace.
The ferryman took him across, but he ended up on a byway to Hell.
Christian and Hopeful took courage and began wading across the River of Death.
It kept getting deeper and deeper, but they kept going forward in faith trusting in God’s promises.
They sank under the billowing waves, till they were suddenly pulled out on the other side.
They were ushered by angels and gloriously welcomed into the Celestial City of Zion:
“Now while they were thus drawing towards the gate, behold a company of the heavenly host came out to meet them …
… These are the men that have loved our Lord when they were in the world, and that have left all for his holy name … that they may go in and look their Redeemer in the face with joy.
… Then the heavenly host gave a great shout, saying, ‘Blessed are they which are called unto the marriage supper of the Lamb.'”
… Oh, by what tongue or pen can their glorious joy be expressed! …
… Now I saw in my dream that these two men went in at the gate: and lo, as they entered, they were transfigured, and they had raiment put on that shone like gold.
There was also that met them with harps and crowns …
… Then I heard in my dream that all the bells in the city rang again for joy, and that it was said unto them, ‘Enter ye into the joy of your Lord.’
… I also heard the men themselves, that they sang with a loud voice, saying,
‘Blessing and honor, and glory, and power, be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb, for ever and ever.'”
President Franklin D. Roosevelt wrote January 19, 1936:
“When Theodore Roosevelt died, the Secretary of his class at Harvard, in sending classmates a notice of his passing, added this quotation from Pilgrim’s Progress:
‘My sword I give to him that shall succeed me in my pilgrimage, and my courage and skill to him that can get it.
My marks and scars I carry with me, to be a witness for me that I have fought His battles who now will be my rewarder.'”
By Shane Vander Hart on Sep 02, 2020 01:00 am
David Young, the Republican nominee in Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District race, released his second ad targeting U.S. Rep. Cindy Axne’s health care plan. Read in browser »
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Sep 01, 2020 09:17 pm
Individuals and business owners in Benton, Boone, Cedar, Jasper, Marshall, Polk, Poweshiek, Scott, Story, and Tama counties may now apply for the FEMA Individual Assistance Program. Read in browser »
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Sep 01, 2020 09:00 pm
Viral #Traffickinghub movement, now two million strong, wants Pornhub shut down for allegedly enabling and profiting from rape and sex trafficking. Read in browser »
By Shane Vander Hart on Sep 01, 2020 01:25 pm
Shane Vander Hart discusses four Republicans that he would like to see run for President in 2024. Read in browser »
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.
President Donald Trump will travel to Wilmington, North Carolina, to designate it as the first American World War II Heritage City. Keep up with Trump on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 9/2/20 – note: this page will be updated during the day if events warrant Keep up …
How the numbers and words were spun. Okay, so by now we’ve all heard about the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) updating the COVID-19 figures to admit only six percent of all people who contract COVID-19 have died directly from the illness; the narrative around this story is …
Democratic Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi attended a hair appointment in San Francisco Monday, though indoor hair salons in the California city are currently closed due to the coronavirus pandemic, Fox News reported. Security footage obtained by Fox News shows a wet-haired Pelosi walking through eSalon in San Francisco …
SALT LAKE CITY — U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) announced Tuesday the results of recent enforcement actions targeting removable aliens who have been arrested for, or have pending charges or convictions, for crimes involving victims in Utah, Nevada, Idaho and Montana. “The aliens targeted during this operation preyed on …
Portland’s next mayor could be an open supporter of Antifa, the violent, far-left movement whose members have unleashed violence in cities across America. Left-wing activist Sarah Iannarone will face incumbent Democratic Mayor Ted Wheeler in a runoff election on Nov. 3 after neither candidate received a majority of votes in …
NFL GET WOKE GO BROKE In a rambling display of virtue signaling, Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll complained whites weren’t listening to blacks. The lecturing ‘Karen’ then blathered on about how white folks needed to learn ‘real history’ and that slavery has never gone away. Well, Pete…we do know that …
Each weekday, the Department of Justice will highlight a case that has resulted from Operation Legend. Today’s case is out of the District of New Mexico. Operation Legend was launched in Albuquerque on July 22, 2020, in response to the city facing a record-breaking homicide rate. United States vs. Manuel …
President Donald Trump will participate in a roundtable with law enforcement and community leaders to discuss the lawlessness in Kenosha, Wisconsin. The event is scheduled to begin at 2:30 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the …
Portland police are reportedly investigating a self-identified Antifa member in connection with the shooting death of a Patriot Prayer group member at a Black Lives Matter protest on Saturday. The Oregonian and Wall Street Journal report that police are investigating Michael Forest Reinoehl over the shooting. Portland police have declined …
Sometimes you have to pinch yourself to see what reality is. Or perhaps it’s all in the Matrix. Joe Biden made a big splash in the media recently to announce that he would disavow the ongoing riots and violence occurring across the nation. Would Joe Biden come out of his …
With the election almost here democrats are quick to blame all the violence and continuing deaths from the China Virus on Trump. This mantra has been repeated by the likes of Pelosi, Schumer and other democrat leaders and TV News Pundits. This is ridiculous and a true example of Trump …
Each weekday, the Department of Justice will highlight a case that has resulted from Operation Legend. Today’s case is out of the Western District of Missouri – the district where the Department of Justice launched Operation Legend, in honor of four-year-old LeGend Taliferro who was shot while he slept in …
Happy Hump Day friends and readers. If there’s whiskey in your coffee this morning we all understand at this point.
A popular, oft-used refrain regarding the Democrats these past few years is: all they had to do was not be insane. The implication there is that things on the Republican side of the aisle are pretty crazy and the Democrats had a low bar to clear. We can debate that (I disagree) in depth another day. It is, however, plain for all to see that the Democrats have indeed lost they’re freakin’ minds.
I am reminded of a conversation I had with one of my first cousins. He’s always been liberal, more progressive than Democrat these days, so we mostly talk about food and music now. While having lunch late last fall he wandered into politics and asked me where I “was on the whole Trump thing.” I calmly explained what I liked — all of it having to do with policy — but concluded by saying that what keeps me supporting him is the fact that nearly everyone on the left has become a lunatic.
This morning’s subject of mental instability comes from our nation’s capital. Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser — a Democrat, of course — has put together a group to determine whether the Washington Monument is a racist symbol of oppression or something.
“We believe strongly that all District of Columbia owned public spaces, facilities and commemorative works should only honor those individuals who exemplified those values such as equity, opportunity, and diversity that DC residents hold dear,” the committee’s chairs, Bowser advisor Beverly Perry and public library director Richard Reyes-Gavilan, wrote in a letter introducing the report.
The commission analyzed historical figures commemorated in public monuments according to eight “DC values”: accessibility, diversity, equity, livability, opportunity, prosperity, resilience, and safety. They examined whether such figures participated in slavery, supported “systemic racism,” supported the “oppression of persons of color and/or women,” was a member of “any supremacist organization,” or violated the D.C. Human Rights Act, which prohibits discrimination based on “age, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity, and national origin.”
Whenever the SJW Democrats start packing on the woke keywords like that it all begins sounding like Charlie Brown’s teacher in my head.
The notion that the “values” that “DC residents hold dear” are now even dancing in the vicinity of canceling George Washington is all you need to know about how far afield the woke American Democrats have gone.
More:
In any case, the commission decided that only 153 of the 1,330 individuals commemorated in the names of schools, parks, government buildings, and monuments are “problematic” enough to warrant excision from the public consciousness. How generous of them!
Among the damned are Presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, Andrew Jackson, William Henry Harrison, John Tyler, Zachary Taylor, and Woodrow Wilson; Declaration of Independence signers Benjamin Franklin and George Mason; inventor Alexander Graham Bell (he was a racist supporter of eugenics); and Francis Scott Key, author of the national anthem.
I’ve written and said many times that I don’t care whose feelings are hurt in the pathetic quest for woke perma-grievance. There is no level of capitulation that will make the whining stop. These aren’t fringe Democrats, these are the Democrats now.
There is no real quest for justice among the social justice warriors, there is only the warrior quest. The Democrats became so used to caving to the lunatic fringe simply because they were louder that they were soon hijacked by the outliers.
There’s a lot of talk about Washington, D.C., becoming a state. The Democrats would love that because it would mint two new Senate seats that would never, ever be held by Republicans. Looking at the kinds of Democrats the D.C. residents elect to run things at the municipal level, I’m not sure that they should be allowed to run a game night in their own homes, let alone a state.
These tantrums are wearisome. The Democrats are sanctioning a re-writing of history all because they hope it will make the shrieking brats shut up.
White House rejects DC proposal to remove the Washington Monument . . . The White House flatly rejected calls Tuesday by a Washington D.C. city committee to “remove, relocate or contextualize” historical statues and memorials, including some of the city’s best-known tourist attractions. A working group tasked by Mayor Muriel Bowser identified dozens of schools, parks, monuments, statues and buildings named after historical figures that they believe represent an oppressive or racist history. The list of historical figures they identified included former presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, Andrew Jackson, William Henry Harrison, John Tyler, Zachary Taylor and Woodrow Wilson. The list also included other key American figures like Founding Fathers Benjamin Franklin and George Mason, inventor of the telephone Alexander Graham Bell and composer of the national anthem Francis Scott Key. “By publishing a plan that recommends potentially removing the Washington Monument, Christopher Columbus Statue, Andrew Jackson Statue, and Jefferson Memorial—among many other ludicrous recommendations—the radically liberal mayor of Washington, D.C., is repeating the same left-wing narrative used to incite dangerous riots: demolishing our history and destroying our great heritage,” White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany said in a statement Tuesday. Fox News
Here we go. You knew this was coming.
Coronavirus
Coronavirus antibodies do not fade quickly . . . Antibodies that people make to fight the new coronavirus last for at least four months after diagnosis and do not fade quickly as some earlier reports suggested, scientists have found. Tuesday’s report, from tests on more than 30,000 people in Iceland, is the most extensive work yet on the immune system’s response to the virus over time, and is good news for efforts to develop vaccines. Fox News
Divorce rate spikes during pandemic . . . Divorce rates have spiked in the U.S. during the coronavirus pandemic as couples have been stuck at home for months. The number of people looking for divorces was 34 percent higher from March through June compared to 2019, according to new data collected Legal Templates, a company that provides legal documents. The combination of stress, unemployment, financial strain, death of loved ones, illness, homeschooling children, mental illnesses, and more has put a significant strain on relationships. Fox News
“Until death do us part, or until we have to spend too much time together.”
Politics
How Trump could lead on Election Night but still lose . . . The electoral map could show a victory for President Donald Trump on Nov. 3, even if he ultimately loses the election, according to Hawkfish, a Democratic analytics firm. The twist could occur as millions of voters, the majority of whom are Democratic, will likely choose to vote by mail due to the coronavirus pandemic, according to Hawkfish’s research. These votes, the firm says, may not be counted by Nov. 3, likely giving Trump an early lead over Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden. Daily Caller
Pelosi breaks Covid rules to get a wash and a blow-out . . . House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited a San Francisco hair salon on Monday afternoon for a wash and blow-out, despite local ordinances keeping salons closed amid the coronavirus pandemic. In security footage obtained by Fox News, and timestamped Monday at 3:08 p.m. Pacific Time, the California powerhouse is seen walking through eSalon in San Francisco with wet hair, and without a mask over her mouth or nose. The stylist doing her hair can be seen following her wearing a black face mask. Salons in San Francisco had been closed since March and were only notified they could reopen on Sept. 1 for outdoor hairstyling services only. Fox News
From Julius Caesar, to Napoleon, to Winston Churchill, great leaders have always been able to get a wash and a blowout, no matter what. Why should Pelosi be denied the same right?
Hunter Biden holds stake in Chinese company sanctioned for human rights abuses . . . Hunter Biden holds a stake in a Chinese surveillance company that is under U.S. sanctions for human-rights violations, complicating his father Joe Biden’s campaign promise to crack down on American businesses with financial ties to China’s humanitarian abuses. Bohai Harvest RST Shanghai Equity, an investment firm that Hunter Biden owns a stake in, initially invested in Megvii, a sanctioned Chinese tech company that specializes in facial recognition software, in 2017, according to the company’s website. The firm holds a nearly 2 percent stake in Megvii through two holding companies, according to a prospectus filed by Megvii as part of its application for a listing on the Hong Kong stock exchange last year. Washington Free Beacon
Trump comes to Kenosha bearing gifts . . . Despite being asked to stay away by local officials, President Trump Tuesday traveled to Kenosha, Wisconsin, the latest city being torn apart by rioters.
The people of the city who aren’t trying to burn it down will thank him for stopping by. He said he would provide money to help rebuild the place and for public safety. Wisconsin is a key swing state. I’m willing to bet that the riots inspired by leftists will hand in the state in November. According to the Washington Examiner: President Trump announced that he will provide $4 million to businesses devastated by unrest in Kenosha, Wisconsin, as well as $1 million to local law enforcement agencies and more than $42 million for public safety across the state. White House Dossier
Trump finally goes after Drudge . . . President Trump took aim at historically conservative news aggregate giant Drudge Report, saying the site opposed his bid for president in 2016. On Tuesday, the president blasted the site for linking to an article focusing on his denial that he took an emergency visit to Walter Reed Medical Center in 2019 after suffering a series of “mini-strokes,” a response to claims written in a book by New York Times reporter Michael Schmidt. However, Schmidt did not specifically write that the president suffered “mini-strokes.” “Drudge didn’t support me in 2016, and I hear he doesn’t support me now. Maybe that’s why he is doing poorly. His Fake News report on Mini-Strokes is incorrect. Possibly thinking about himself, or the other party’s ‘candidate,'” Trump tweeted. Washington Examiner
Latest poll has Biden up by seven . . . The political conventions over, Joe Biden now leads Donald Trump in the race for the White House by 50%-43%, the new USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll finds. That seven-point advantage has narrowed from the 12-point edge he held in June. As Labor Day looms, launching the campaign’s final sprint, the survey finds significant skepticism about whether the election itself can be trusted. If their candidate loses, one in four voters say they aren’t prepared to accept the outcome as fair and accurate – a signal of potential trouble ahead for a nation already engulfed in a deadly pandemic and riven over issues of racial justice. USA Today
Kennedy fails to unseat Markey in Massachusetts primary . . .
For most of the 60-year history of the Kennedy dynasty, it’s been easier to imagine its last act as coming in a burst of triumph, a spasm of violence or a dream-shall-never-die promise of enduring hope. On Tuesday, however, what might be the final note of this political symphony was written not in glory or tragedy, but in numbers, the sad prose of politics. Sen. Ed Markey 55.6 percent, U.S. Rep. Joseph P. Kennedy III 44.4 percent. In a Democratic primary. In Massachusetts.
The 74-year-old Markey, who was first elected to the House in 1972, was supposed to be the type of proud, uncharismatic incumbent whom Kennedys routinely dispatch to retirement homes or ambassadorships. Politico
I never thought I’d be rooting for Ed Markey for anything. Rep. Joe Kennedy challenged a sitting senator for no good reason other than he wants to run for president one day, and he’s a Kennedy.
Trump says Biden on “some kind of enhancement” . . . Truump on Tuesday reiterated his call for both candidates to take a drug test ahead of the presidential debates this month, claiming without evidence that Democratic nominee Joe Biden is “on some kind of an enhancement.” “He’s on some kind of an enhancement in my opinion,” Trump told Fox News. “And I say we should both — I should take a drug test, so should he. The Hill
Pence says he doesn’t recall being on standby during Trump hospital visit . . . Vice President Mike Pence has said that he doesn’t recall being asked to go on standby to assume the presidency during President Donald Trump’s unannounced visit to Walter Reed Medical Center in November, after reports emerged this week that Trump was suffering from mini-strokes at the time. ‘I don’t recall being told to be on standby,’ Pence told Fox News in an interview on Tuesday. ‘I was informed that the president had a doctor’s appointment, [but] I’ve got to tell you, part of this job is you are always on standby if you are Vice President of the United States.’ Daily Mail
Trump can keep his tax returns, for now . . . A U.S. appeals court on Tuesday granted President Donald Trump’s request to delay Manhattan’s district attorney from accessing his tax returns in connection with a criminal probe of his business practices.
The unsigned order by a panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan was a victory for the president in his yearlong quest to block District Attorney Cyrus Vance from enforcing a grand jury subpoena for eight years of personal and corporate returns.
Trump has been challenging an Aug. 20 decision by U.S. District Judge Victor Marrero to let Vance obtain the returns from the president’s longtime accounting firm Mazars USA. Reuters
National Security
Facebook and Twitter say Russia again targeting US with disinformation . . . The Russian group that interfered in the 2016 presidential election is at it again, using a network of fake accounts and a website set up to look like a left-wing news site, Facebook and Twitter said on Tuesday. The disinformation campaign by the Kremlin-backed group, known as the Internet Research Agency, is the first public evidence that the agency is trying to repeat its efforts from four years ago and push voters away from the Democratic presidential candidate, Joseph R. Biden Jr., to help President Trump. New York Times
Trump administration standing by to replace Portland police with federal agents . . . Looks like President Trump is fed up with night after night of riots in a U.S. city. According to the Washington Examiner: Acting Secretary of Department of Homeland Security Chad Wolf warned the mayor of Portland, Oregon, that failure to take additional actions to quell violence in his city may result in the Trump administration supplanting local and state authorities. White House Dosser
International
Japan’s Suga in line to become next PM . . . Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga on Wednesday said he would run for leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), formally entering a race he is already heavily favored to win to become the next prime minister. A longtime aide to outgoing Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Suga said he decided to stand for party leader to avoid a political vacuum during the coronavirus pandemic. Abe announced his decision to resign last week, citing poor health. Reuters
Money
Trump payroll tax deferral finds few takers among businesses . . . September kicks off the payroll tax deferral period initiated by President Trump last month, but few businesses are expected to participate in a plan that would likely lead to less take-home pay for workers early next year. Under guidance issued by the IRS last week, employers can stop withholding Social Security payroll taxes from paychecks from Sept. 1 through Dec. 31 for employees who make less than $4,000 on a biweekly basis. The money would then be collected by having businesses increase the amount of taxes withheld from paychecks in the first four months of 2021. The Hill
White House says CDC will halt renter evictions using quarantine rules . . . The Trump administration said it will use its quarantine authority to keep renters in their homes during the coronavirus pandemic as a way to prevent an eviction crisis that could worsen economic strains. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention plans to temporarily halt evictions of consumers earning no more than $99,000 a year to prevent the virus from spreading, a senior administration official said Tuesday. The policy will take effect immediately. Bloomberg
You should also know
Hundreds of thousand of dollars in donations for Kenosha gunman Rittenhouse . . . Supporters of Kenosha gunman Kyle Rittenhouse have donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to his legal defense in spite of fundraising hiccups following last Tuesday’s shooting. A fundraiser for Mr. Rittenhouse hosted on the Christian crowdfunding site GiveSendGo had received more than 7,500 donations totaling over $320,000 of its $200,000 goal as of Tuesday afternoon. L. Lin Wood, a defense lawyer for the teenage murder suspect, said that more than a half-million dollars in donations had been made to his legal fund as of late Monday, meanwhile. Mr. Rittenhouse, 17, of Antioch, Ill., has been charged with homicide in connection with the shooting deaths last Tuesday of two people killed in nearby Kenosha, Wisconsin. Washington Times
Baltimore school buckles to BLM demands . . . An elite private school in Baltimore founded by Jews is revamping its curriculum in response to a pressure campaign by Black Lives Matter activists demanding an examination of the school’s “wealth hoarding” and “tolerance of Zionism.” BLM activists’ latest academic target is Baltimore’s Park School, which was founded in 1912 by Jews who were barred entry into the city’s existing private schools. In a letter to the school, an anonymous group identifying itself as the “Black at Park Organizing Collective” calls for “an examination of Park’s history: its inception, early exclusions, culture of whiteness and wealth hoarding, its tolerance of Zionism, and its parasitic relationship to Baltimore City.” Washington Free Beacon
Youth minister, 44, who slapped reporter on butt pleads guilty to sexual battery . . . A married youth minister who slapped the behind of a female reporter on live television as she delivered a report in Georgia has pleaded guilty to a sexual battery charge. Thomas Callaway, 44, was sentenced to a year probation and fined $1,000 by a Savannah judge who accepted his plea for the misdemeanor count on Tuesday. The judge also ordered him to perform 200 hours of community service, court records show. Daily Mail
Graceland vandalized with BLM graffiti . . . The walls outside of Graceland in Memphis, Tenn., were tagged with graffiti by vandals on Sunday, with phrases like “BLM” and “No Justice No Peace.” Graceland is the site where rock legend Elvis Presley formerly resided. The Levitt Shell stage, an amphitheater where Presley gave his first paid concert, was also vandalized with similar messages. Fox News
Guilty Pleasures
FBI investigating report of “guy in a jetpack” flying 3,000 feet above LAX . . . The Federal Aviation Administration said two airline flight crews reported seeing what “appeared to be someone in a jetpack as they were on their final approaches to LAX around 6:35 p.m. PDT Sunday.” Fox 11 Los Angeles obtained recordings of communications between the aircraft and the tower. “Tower, American 1997, we just passed a guy in a jetpack,” a pilot said. “American 1997, OK, thank you, were they off to your left side or your right side?” the controller asked. “Off the left side at maybe 300 yards or so at our altitude,” the pilot said.Another pilot also reported a sighting. “We just saw the guy pass by us in the jetpack,” he said. The controller then advised another aircraft flight crew to use caution. Fox News
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Trump Visits Kenosha
Plus, a Kennedy loses a Massachusetts primary for the first time ever.
Happy Wednesday! There was a whole thing about Trump and “mini-strokes” yesterday that we’re not going to touch with a 10-foot pole. You’re welcome.
A reminder: This is the version of TMD available to non-paying readers. We’re happy you’ve made The Dispatch part of your morning routine, and we hope you’re enjoying The Morning Dispatch and the rest of our free editorial offerings. If you do, we hope you’ll consider joining us as a paying member. In addition to the full version of TMD each day, you’ll get extra editions of French Press, the G-File, Vital Interests, our campaign newsletter The Sweep, and our other paid products. And members can engage with the authors and with one another in the discussion threads at the end of each of our articles and newsletters. If this appeals to you, we hope you’ll please join now.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The United States confirmed 44,254 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday, with 6.3 percent of the 703,946 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,050 deaths were attributed to the virus on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 184,629.
Facebook and Twitter announced the removal of several accounts and pages they traced back to Russian officials. The accounts circulated misinformation about race relations, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, and President Trump’s policies. A portion of the disinformation campaign, according to Graphika researchers, attempted “to build a left-wing audience and steer it away from Biden’s campaign.”
An appeals court panel granted President Trump’s request to temporarily block Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance from accessing Trump’s financial records as part of Vance’s investigation into the Trump Organization and then-candidate Trump’s hush money payments to various women.
The Justice Department unveiled reforms to the oversight of the FISA process yesterday that will establish an FBI Office of Internal Auditing and more closely monitor “any surveillance applications targeting elected officials and political campaigns.” In announcing the reforms, Attorney General Bill Barr said: “What happened to the Trump presidential campaign and his subsequent Administration after the President was duly elected by the American people must never happen again.”
The Trump administration—building on the president’s August 8 executive order—announced yesterday the CDC will invoke its authority to halt evictions through the end of 2020 in an effort to slow the spread of the coronavirus. “American renters who meet certain conditions cannot be evicted if they have affirmatively exhausted their best efforts to pay rent, seek government rental assistance, and are likely to become homeless due to eviction,” the White House said in a statement.
Two Democratic congressional incumbents—Sen. Ed Markey and Rep. Richard Neal—fended off primary challenges when Massachusetts residents went to the polls on Tuesday. Markey, endorsed by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, defeated Rep. Joe Kennedy III, who had been backed by Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.
The Real World Toll of Looting and Rioting
President Trump embarked on a trip to Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Tuesday to show support for local law enforcement and survey the damage looters and rioters inflicted in the wake of the police shooting of Jacob Blake.
“I came to thank the law enforcement, the police. They’re incredible,” Trump said in his remarks touring the emergency operations center in Kenosha. “And the National Guard has been truly amazing. They all got together. They coalesced. The minute they got here, it was over,” he added, referring to the street violence.
Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers first authorized use of the National Guard on Monday, August 24—one day after the shooting of Jacob Blake—to “support local law enforcement in Kenosha County to help protect critical infrastructure and assist in maintaining public safety and t
The ability of individuals to peacefully protest.” He authorized another 500 National Guard members to support law enforcement in Kenosha County on August 26, and on August 27 he announced that he’d be coordinating with other governors under the Emergency Management Assistance Compact to bring additional National Guard members from Arizona, Michigan, and Alabama to the Badger State.
Sen. Ed Markey handily won his Democratic primary in Massachusetts yesterday, defeating challenger, Rep. Joe Kennedy III, who conceded the race last night.
In some ways, it was the type of contest that’s become increasingly common in the Democratic Party over the last few years: A young progressive challenger up against an older establishment incumbent.
But the race for Ed Markey’s Senate seat featured a few variations on the theme. In this case, the “young progressive challenger” came from America’s most establishment political family: Kennedy’s “people,” as they might say in certain parts of Massachusetts, boast a 26-0 record in primary races. The “older establishment incumbent” here was 74-year-old Ed Markey, a congressman since 1976 who moved to the Senate in 2013 and who was, in a feat of political jiu-jitsu, able to cast himself as an avatar of the progressive left, snagging a coveted endorsement from Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
The Kennedy winning streak has been broken. Recent polls showed Markey entering Tuesday with a solid lead, having surpassed the 39-year-old Kennedy, who many considered the favorite when he jumped into the race. Record turnout was expected, and nearly 800,000 voters had already cast their ballot by mail ahead of Tuesday. Kennedy, a grandson of Robert, was hoping his name would draw some low-propensity voters to the polls on election day. The swell did not materialize.
It’s no big secret that social justice activism and progressivism have dominated academia for decades. But John McWhorter, a professor at Columbia University, thinks things are getting exponentially worse. “Academics are really, really worried about their freedom,” he writes in The Atlantic this week. He recounts messages he’s received from hundreds of fellow academics concerned about changing norms on campuses across the country. “Very few of the people who wrote to me are of conservative political orientation,” McWhorter says. “Rather, a main thread in the missives is people left-of-center wondering why, suddenly, to be anything but radical is to be treated as a retrograde heretic.”
The term “colorblindness”—once perceived as the pinnacle of social justice parlance—has now been cast aside by some figures on the left as yet another iteration of racism. Activists and scholars have thrown out “colorblindness” in favor of “race consciousness,” which refers to the practice of treating members of different races differently based on the power structures that underlie every facet of our society. But human beings are tribal creatures, Matt Lutz argues in a piece for Persuasion, meaning this approach to remedying race relations may do more harm than good. “If people become extremely sensitive to racial differences, most of them will not become crusaders for racial justice,” he writes. “Many will instead advocate for the interests of their own racial group.”
Check out this Intelligencerarticle for a freewheeling conversation about the merits of populism between columnist Park MacDougald and Thomas Frank, a self-described populist and founding editor of The Baffler magazine. The two take a deeper look into the roots and evolution of the populist movement, reaching the conclusion that the Democratic party has abandoned the working class in favor of economic elites and college students. “The left seems more interested in replicating Twitter in people’s individual lives than it is in movement building, far more interested in this constant struggle for individual righteousness,” Frank asserts. “There is no solidarity in a meritocracy—it’s about you as an individual being better than every other individual.”
On the latest episode of Advisory Opinions, David and Sarah are joined by The Babylon Bee’s editor-in-chief, Kyle Mann, who discusses the challenges of writing satire in a cultural moment when it’s not always easy to determine fact from fiction. “There is an element where it’s not that our articles are too close to reality, it’s that reality is too close to satire,” Mann explains. Tuesday’s episode would be incomplete without its requisite dose of legal nerdery. Tune in to hear David and Sarah discuss the never-ending saga with Michael Flynn, the McGahn case, and Sarah Palin’s defamation case against the New York Times.
William Jacobson: “IS SARAH PALIN’S LAWSUIT AGAINST NY TIMES GOING TO TRIAL? You betcha.“
Kemberlee Kaye: “I’m not sure how you explain this away.”
Mary Chastain: “Bill de Blasio is ruiningNYC. But what else is new?”
Leslie Eastman: “If California’s Democrats feel the need to pull a reparations for African Americans stunt right now, exactly how badly is Joe Biden actually doing in the super-secret internal polling? I bet the numbers are crap-tastic for the Democrats.”
David Gerstman: “New York City used to be a dangerous place. In 1993, when Rudy Giuliani was elected there were over 1,900 murders in New York City. When Giuliani left office in 2001, that number was 649, roughly one third. It’s hard to imagine a metric that better describes Giuliani’s success in governing New York. With Bloomberg as mayor, that number was even cut in half. Even under current Mayor Bill DeBlasio, the number of murders annually in New York City has remained low. However, as Mary Chastain blogged, shootings in New York have reached their highest level in five years; nearly double the number the same time last year. Keeping a city safe requires will and effort, something DeBlasio seems to not care about at all. The increase in shootings comes against the backdrop of defunding the police, something that DeBlasio has been doing, limiting the necessary resources to maintain order in the city.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “The Palestinians are “deeply pained” to witness the flight carrying the first official Israeli delegation to the United Arab Emirates following the last month’s historic peace agreement brokered by President Donald Trump, Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said. “It pains us to see an Israeli plane land in the United Arab Emirates,” he complained, as the first-ever commercial flight from Israel to the UAE landed at the Abu Dhabi airport on Monday.”
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“In June 2019, Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) tore into former Vice President Joe Biden in a Democratic primary debate. She openly suggested that he was a racist whose past political activity would have kept a …”
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Democrats Stop Denying the Existence of Riots, Blame Trump Instead
This is the biggest gaslighting, ludicrous, obvious lie I’ve ever seen the media propagate in my lifetime, and that’s a lot of lies! While just weeks ago Democrats and media (but I repeat myself) were insisting that riots were figments of Republicans’ imaginations and labeling them “mostly peaceful protests” as arson-lit fires raged behind them, now that polls show concern among voters post-Kenosha, the message has flipped on a dime. Now, leftist BLM riots in Democrat-led cities are President Trump’s fault.
“Democrats have recently joined forces in blaming President Trump of fanning the flames of violence. While this is nothing new, it is concerning evidence of a pattern among the left…
House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) echoed Bass’s sentiment. According to The Hill, Schiff stated: ‘The president is willfully fanning the flames of this fire,’ adding, ‘The president is only motivated by one thing: what is in it for him. He sees this violence and his ability to agitate more of it as useful to this campaign. What it does to the country, the loss of life, he doesn’t care.’
Joe Biden’s deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield chimed in and accused President Trump of “inciting violence.” There is, however, ample evidence to discredit these unsubstantiated allegations…
Most important to note, of course, is that the violence occurring in various American cities has nothing to do with the president. Rather, it is the byproduct of weak (or nonexistent) leadership by Democrats and their unwillingness to condemn the violence.
In Portland, Oregon, Gov. Kate Brown (D) and Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler have allowed anarchists to run wild throughout the city, fostering an environment of lawlessness and chaos. Contrary to the claims of Democrats that Trump is inciting unrest, city and state officials in Oregon have rejected the president’s continued offers to send members of the National Guard to the city to address the disorder.”
Unfortunately, truth is not always necessary to do serious political damage. However, Sean Trende over at RealClearPolitics does an excellent job combing through decades of election messaging and concludes that the riots could still harm either candidate, despite Trump’s incumbency.
“This, then, is how the issue of crime and rioting is potentially dangerous to Biden, even though it is happening on Trump’s watch. The Republican argument will be “the people rioting in Portland and Seattle and Kenosha are not Trump supporters, and he will be more likely to stop them.” It may not be fair (most antifa supporters don’t care for Biden either), and it certainly may not work. We’ll have to wait for more polling to know for certain, which, fortunately, we should get in the next few days. It would be a mistake, however, to assume that voters will blame this on the incumbent this time.”
I’ve summed up my thoughts on this jaw-dropping messaging switcheroo in this homemade meme.
DC Mayor Suggests Renaming and Removing National Monuments
Apparently the always-on-the-edge-of-violence mobs roaming the city and screaming at diners and neighbors walking their dogs is not Mayor Muriel Bowser’s priority in the city of DC, nor the District’s skyrocketing crime rate. No, what concerns Mayor Bowser, besides the giant Black Lives Matter mural on 16th Street, is the offensiveness of the Washington Monument, Jefferson Memorial, and other honorifics given to American heroes.
“The Jefferson Memorial, Washington Monument, and other notable buildings, statues, schools, and memorials named after historical figures in Washington DC are at risk of being “removed, renamed, or contextualized” as newly recommended by a working group created by DC Mayor Muriel Bowser…
Among the namesakes the commission targeted for removal were Christopher Columbus, Benjamin Franklin, Andrew Jackson, Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, Francis Scott Key, William Henry Harrison, and George Washington.
The 1,300 “assets” the commission reviewed and recommended for alterations include public schools, libraries, community centers, parks, government buildings, streets, roads, and bridges. Although the federal government controls most DC ‘landmarks and memorials,’ the commission also included these in its recommendations for removal or revision.”
No word on whether the District of COLUMBia will be ditching its colonial namesake.
Representative Chip Roy (R, TX 21), however, reminded the Mayor that the District of Columbia is ultimately governed by Congress, and threatened to advance legislation stripping their powers. Another good reminder that the Founding Fathers knew what they were doing when they decided that the seat of the nation’s capital should NOT be a state.
Fashion Moment of the Week
Can you believe it’s September already? Between quarantines and riots, it sure seems like we’ve missed out on most of the year. But one thing we can still look forward to is fall fashion. Like, I’m sure, many of you, we decided to forgo a summer trip this year, but we are looking to visit the Hudson Valley this October. (Incidentally, if you have recommendations of particularly cute towns, trails, cabins, or Airbnbs, please tweet them to me at @inezfeltscher!)
In anticipation of a little leaf peeping, I put together this “Hudson Valley chic” hearts list on Rent the Runway. A few highlights are this Hunter Bell midi (or its fraternal twin, which I wore last fall to the pumpkin patch), a crisp blazer that will look perfect with jeans and boots, this roomy See by Chloe saddlebag in the perfect fall shade, and this unusual hip-length leather moto perfect for newly-chilly evenings. Also, be sure to check out this neutral-yet-standout light coat from Toccin and… could this be the ultimate fall dress in plaid flannel from Ralph Lauren polo?
You can see all these along with my other selections by perusing the curated list, and don’t forget to use my code (RTRDC114A05) if you haven’t tried RTR Unlimited before, and get $100 off the first two months.
Wednesday Links
President Trump visits post-riot Kenosha. (NY Post)
More New Yorkers (53 percent) support the NYPD than Mayor Bill de Blasio. (Manhattan Institute)
One of the best pieces I’ve read in months, justifying my “it can always get worse” attitude. A great title also should intrigue enough of you to give it a click: “Vote for the Czar, It’s Important.” (WSJ)
John McWhorter: “Academics are really, really worried about their freedom” if they flout progressive orthodoxy in any way. (The Atlantic)
Despite all the turmoil at home, 2020 could still be the China election. (Spectator USA)
Democrats in Congress to weaponize IRS (AGAIN) and sic them on the NRA. This sits especially badly with me given the irritating fact that Lois Lerner isn’t in prison. (The Federalist)
Andrew Sullivan defends himself against the smears published by the New York Times. (Twitter/Substack)
Corona rules for thee but not for me: Pelosi gets a blowout in San Francisco. (NY Post)
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.
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.
They are after him again. The voices of mainstream media, the voices that are supposed to protect our First Amendment rights, are attempting to quiet still another of those commentators who refuse to join the mobs in the street. I am speaking of Tucker Carlson, host of one of the most popular talk shows on cable TV, and of course the cable network is Fox News if you did not know. Fox News and Tucker are terribly popular. So, they are to be shut down by the voices of the mob.
Before the big competition on Nov. 3 there are and will be many sub-competitions. There’s the competition for campaign cash, the game of endorsements, the battle of social media (odd name, as these media get more unsocial every year), not to mention the endless talking heads. A lesser known contest, and one Democrats usually hold a wide lead in, is the clash of the tee-shirts.
Fourteen years ago today marks the low point of the Iraq War. Mounting U.S. casualties and raging sectarian violence in an undeclared civil war was the order of the day. That changed late in the afternoon when Sheik Sattar Bezia abu Risha handed me a hand written three page document that would become the charter of the Anbar Awakening.
I’ve got a bone to pick with Coronavirus (CV) data.
CV data isn’t tracked by city: it’s tracked by zip code (too detailed) and by county (not specific enough).
Instead, in this article, I’ll assume the main county represents the main city. In other words, the main county includes most of the main city population, although city and county are not correlated one-to-one.
The assumption works well for most cities, so the point I make is valid: Cases and deaths are highest in a few large cities.
It’s two months out from the election and the New York Times has decided to once again conjure up the specter of Russian interference in American politics. The charges are the same as last time — gullible Americans being brainwashed against the Democratic establishment — but the evidence presented veers off into parody.
The United States is becoming increasingly secularized. This is not conjecture, nor a conspiracy. According to Pew Research Center data from the years 2007 to 2014, the number of Americans who identify as ‘Christians’ declined from 78.4% to 70.6%, and those identified as ‘Unaffiliated’ increased from 16.1% to 22.8%. Not shockingly, 27% of those in California in this nationwide study identified as ‘Unaffiliated,’ which is far greater than all of the Midwest, South, and parts of the Northeast (New York also being 27%).
Join Larry J. Sabato and the Crystal Ball team tomorrow (Thursday, Sept. 3) at 2 p.m. eastern for the next installment of our new Sabato’s Crystal Ball: America Votes webinar series.We will be discussing the fallout from the two party conventions, the race for the House, and the state of the polls with a special guest. If you have questions you would like us to answer on air about these or other topics, just send us an email at goodpolitics@virginia.edu. We’ll try to get to as many reader questions as possible — and if your question doesn’t get answered this week, we may answer it in a future episode.
You can watch via YouTube; while you’re there, subscribe to our University of Virginia Center for Politics YouTube channel (the name of the channel is UVACFP). The program will also be available at our YouTube channel (and at the original link) if you can’t tune in live. An audio-only version will also be posted at our podcast page. The podcast is also available on SoundCloud, and it will be on other podcast platforms soon.
If you missed it, you can also find last week’s episode at our YouTube channel or directly at this link. We tackled the Republican National Convention, the Senate, the swing state of North Carolina, and more.
If you would like to sign up for Thursday’s webinar and get e-mail alerts about future episodes, sign up at our Eventbrite page and select the “season pass” option.
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By Louis Jacobson
Senior Columnist, Sabato’s Crystal Ball
KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE
— In the past decade, four governors faced either a criminal case or sexual misconduct allegations while in office. That may sound like a lot, but it’s actually quite low by recent historical standards.
— Gubernatorial bad behavior peaked between 2003 and 2009, an era personified by such governors as Connecticut Republican John Rowland and Illinois Democrat Rod Blagojevich as well as New York Democrat Eliot Spitzer and South Carolina Republican Mark Sanford.
— There doesn’t seem to be a single reason for the decline in gubernatorial scandals, though declining scrutiny by a shrinking local news media, changes in prosecutorial priorities, and Supreme Court decisions making it harder to prove criminal malfeasance have probably played a role.
— Even as gubernatorial scandals have dwindled, investigations of Congress and key legislative leaders such as state House speakers have remained robust.
A lack of gubernatorial scandal
These may be grim times, with the coronavirus pandemic and its resulting economic downturn. But as governors become key figures in fighting both scourges, the American public appears to be lucky that we’re in something of a golden age for gubernatorial propriety.
In the past decade, there have been four governors to face either a criminal case or sexual misconduct allegations while in office: Virginia Republican Bob McDonnell, Alabama Republican Robert Bentley, Oregon Democrat John Kitzhaber, and Missouri Republican Eric Greitens. McDonnell was term-limited; the other three were forced to leave the governorship under pressure.
If that sounds like a lot of corrupt and/or scandalized governors, it’s actually not, at least by historical standards. Here’s a chart showing the number of sitting governors who experienced criminal problems or sex scandals in any given year going back a quarter century.
Figure 1: Gubernatorial scandal by year, 1995-present
As Figure 1 shows, gubernatorial bad behavior peaked between 2003 and 2009, the era personified by such governors as Connecticut Republican John Rowland and Illinois Democrat Rod Blagojevich (both of whom went to prison) and New York Democrat Eliot Spitzer and South Carolina Republican Mark Sanford (who had sex scandals while in office).
All told, between 2003 and 2009, slightly more than three sitting governors, on average, were experiencing legal issues or sexual misconduct allegations.
By contrast, since 2011, the average has been less than one scandal at a time. And compared to the earlier generation of scandals, they’ve tended not to drag on very long, and as such did little to hamper state governance.
For instance, the scandal involving Kitzhaber, which involved the use of state resources to aid his fiancee, Cylvia Hayes, was public for less than six months, and it ended with Kitzhaber’s resignation just weeks after taking the oath of office for his fourth term. Greitens, meanwhile, resigned amid allegations of blackmail related to a woman with whom he was having an affair; his resignation occurred less than five months after the allegations became public. (Related criminal charges were dropped.)
I’ve used a pretty strict definition to calculate these numbers; there were also more borderline cases in the first decade of the century than in the second.
In my analysis here, I’ve followed the guidelines I used in my two previous columns on this subject for Governing in 2013 and 2016: I’ve included governors only if the governor’s troubles became publicly known while he was still in office. (I’d say “he or she,” but not a single female governor made this list.)In measuring how long a governor’s scandal lasted, I started the count when serious questions began being aired publicly, and I stopped counting when they left office, even if their troubles persisted after their departure. For this article, I’m also ignoring letters sent in late August by the head of the Justice Department’s civil rights division to four Democratic governors (Tom Wolf of Pennsylvania, Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan, Phil Murphy of New Jersey, and Andrew Cuomo of New York) over their handling of nursing homes during the coronavirus crisis.
Here’s the dishonor roll:
Elected 1990
Arizona Republican J. Fife Symington was convicted of seven felony counts of fraud in 1997 and resigned office. His conviction was later overturned and Symington was pardoned by President Bill Clinton. (Duration of scandal: 1996-97)
Elected 1991
Democrat Edwin Edwards of Louisiana went to prison in 2002 for bribery related to casino licenses. (Duration of scandal: 1995)
Elected 1992
Democrat Mike Lowry of Washington state settled a sexual harassment claim by a former aide, denying wrongdoing but paying the plaintiff $97,500 and agreeing to sexual harassment training sessions. He declined to seek a new term after the revelations. (Duration of scandal: 1995-1996)
Rowland pled guilty in 2004 to corruption-related charges and resigned office. (Duration of scandal: 2003-2004)
Kentucky Democrat Paul Patton admitted to an improper role in promoting an employee at the request of Tina Conner, a woman he was having a relationship with. Ultimately, he admitted to two violations, paid a $5,000 fine, and faced a public reprimand. (Duration of scandal: 2002-2003)
Elected 1998
Republican George Ryan of Illinois was convicted in 2006 for corruption-related charges. (Duration of scandal: 2000-2002)
Democrat Bob Wise of West Virginia acknowledged an affair in 2003 and announced he would not seek re-election the following year. (Duration of scandal: 2003-2004)
Elected 2001
Democrat Jim McGreevey of New Jersey acknowledged an affair with a male former appointee who claimed sexual harassment. He resigned his office. (Duration of scandal: 2004)Elected 2002
Blagojevich, after years of investigations, was impeached in 2009 and convicted of corruption-related charges in 2010 and 2011. The Democrat served part of a 14-year prison sentence before it was commuted by President Donald Trump. (Duration of scandal: 2004-2009)
Sanford disappeared from the state in 2009, first telling reporters he was hiking the Appalachian Trail. After his return, it was discovered he was having an extramarital affair and had traveled to Argentina to see the woman. Ultimately, Sanford was censured by the state legislature. (Duration of scandal: 2009-2010)
Elected 2003Republican Ernie Fletcher of Kentucky was investigated for subverting the state’s hiring system; after being indicted, he reached an agreement with the state attorney general that resulted in the charges being thrown out. (Duration of scandal: 2005-2007)
Elected 2006
Nevada Republican Jim Gibbons experienced several controversies starting from the day he was elected, including allegations of sexual assault (which resulted in no criminal charges) and a gifts-for-contracts scheme (for which he was cleared by the Justice Department in 2008). He also was found to have exchanged hundreds of texts on a state cellphone with a woman who was not his wife; this became a factor in a messy divorce. (Duration of scandal: 2007-2010)
Democrat Eliot Spitzer of New York resigned after acknowledging that he had been seeing a prostitute. (Duration of scandal: 2008)
Elected 2009
McDonnell was found guilty of public corruption charges, but the conviction was overturned by the Supreme Court in 2016. (Duration of scandal: 2013-2014)
Elected 2010
It took the gubernatorial class of 2010 — which included 23 governors — six years to produce its first scandal-tinged member.
That would be Bentley, who was caught saying sexually explicit things to his senior political advisor, Rebekah Caldwell Mason, on a leaked audio recording. Facing impeachment, Bentley resigned in 2017 and pled guilty to two misdemeanor campaign finance charges. (Duration of scandal: 2016-17)
Elected in 2014 (final term of office)
Kitzhaber (Duration of scandal: 2014-15)
Elected in 2016
Greitens (Duration of scandal: 2017-18)
A number of governors don’t make the cut for this list. From the previous decade, I excluded several governors whose administrations faced ethical or legal controversies but were either cleared or never directly charged. These include Republican Judy Martz of Montana, Republican Frank Murkowski of Alaska, Democrat Bill Richardson of New Mexico, Democrat Jim Doyle of Wisconsin, and Republican Matt Blunt of Missouri. And two governors had convictions that emerged only after they were term-limited (North Carolina Democrat Mike Easley) or lost a bid for a second term (Alabama Democrat Don Siegelman).
A few more recent controversies also fall short of inclusion. Aides to New Jersey Republican Chris Christie — but not Christie himself — faced charges over 2013 lane closures on the George Washington Bridge, the controversy known as “Bridgegate.” Kentucky Republican Matt Bevin faced scrutiny for questionable pardons, but that came after he’d lost and left office. And West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice faces ongoing investigations, but they relate to the billionaire’s business holdings and largely predate his ascension to the governorship.
So why are there so few gubernatorial scandals these days? Here are some possibilities:
Luck and timing: Both of the periods when there were zero gubernatorial scandals came after elections with large classes of incoming governors — 2010 and 2018. So it could be as simple as new governors not having time to turn bad.
“Corruption often creeps in after a public official has been in office for a while, and there may not yet have been time for newcomers to commit crimes or for investigations to be completed,” said Barbara McQuade, a University of Michigan law professor and the U.S attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan between 2010 and 2017.
Rise of the ideologues: Politicians today seem less likely to view government as a source of spoils. Instead, the motivating factor is more likely to be partisanship and the culture war. That makes traditional types of corruption less appealing.
A shrinking local media: The number of statehouse reporters has decreased dramatically in recent years, with veteran journalists retiring or taking buyouts and some news organizations closing statehouse bureaus entirely. This reduces the amount of fodder for investigations and scandals.
“Local newspapers continue to lose staff and resources, and that could make a difference,” said Michael D. Gilbert, a University of Virginia law professor.
Deterrence due to digital detection: “Technology permits investigators to track electronic communication, the movement of money and even location,” McQuade said. “Officials know it is not as easy to get away with corruption as it was in the old days.”
Prosecutorial changes: Prosecutors “may be allocating resources elsewhere,” said Juliet Sorensen, a Northwestern University law professor.
There is some data to support this theory. White-collar criminal cases, of which corruption cases are one type (though far from the only one), have fallen consistently since their most recent peak in 2011. In 2019, federal white-collar cases hit their lowest level in at least 33 years and are now just over half of their level in the 1980s and 1990s.
Public corruption cases “are hard to detect and hard to prove, so they take a lot of resources,” said Randall D. Eliason, a George Washington University law professor and former assistant U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia specializing in public corruption cases. “Law enforcement is a finite resource, and every administration sets priorities. So if you have a greater focus on immigration, or drugs, or violent crime, for whatever reason, you can see a drop-off in public corruption cases.”
Changes in legal interpretations: Perhaps the biggest change has been in jurisprudence. “Corruption cases are just a lot harder to prove than they were 10 or 20 years ago, because the legal theories used to pursue such cases have been dramatically curtailed,” Eliason said.
In 1999, the Supreme Court ruled in U.S. v. Sun-Diamond Growers of California that a gratuity to an official must be directly linked to an official act for criminal law to apply; a series of ongoing gifts without linkage is insufficient for a conviction. Then, the 2010 case Skilling v. U.S. curtailed the use of honest services fraud cases, which some prosecutors had turned to after the Sun-Diamond ruling.
In 2016 came the ruling that overturned Bob McDonnell’s conviction; it narrowed the definition of “official act” to exclude actions like arranging meetings or making phone calls in exchange for secret gifts. And earlier this year, the Supreme Court threw out the Bridgegate-related convictions, arguing that “not every corrupt act by state or local officials is a federal crime.”
The string of Supreme Court cases “has left us with a system in which only the most clumsy and obtuse corrupt officials will end up being prosecuted,” Eliason has written.
Other targets may be juicier: It’s worth noting that even as gubernatorial scandals have declined, congressional scandals have remained common. Just in the past two years, Republican Reps. Duncan Hunter of California and Chris Collins of New York have left Congress due to criminal investigations.
More intriguingly, powerful state legislators seem to have become bigger targets for criminal investigations in the past half-decade.
In a case that has taken years to sort out, some of the corruption and money laundering convictions of former New York Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver have been upheld.
In addition, former speakers Bobby Harrell of South Carolina and Gordon Fox of Rhode Island resigned amid criminal cases, and former Alabama House Speaker Mike Hubbard was convicted on 12 felony corruption counts.
Earlier this year, Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder was arrested and charged with conspiracy to commit racketeering as part of a nuclear plant bailout he helped pass.
Also this year, Illinois’ largest utility, ComEd, settled a case with federal prosecutors that focused on secret payments to allies of long-serving Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan; Madigan has not been charged and remains in his position.
Why might legislative leaders have become more attractive targets for prosecution? My former Governing colleague Alan Greenblatt has suggested that even powerful lawmakers attract less media and public scrutiny than governors do, which might give them a false sense of security.
In addition, even the top legislators often represent small, safe districts where voters may give them more running room than a governor who has to woo a broad coalition of voters statewide. Another former Governing colleague, Alan Ehrenhalt, has suggested that the low salaries paid to legislators often require that they, unlike governors, hold outside jobs that can bring a host of potential conflicts of interest.
Louis Jacobson is a Senior Columnist for Sabato’s Crystal Ball. He is also the senior correspondent at the fact-checking website PolitiFact and was senior author of the 2016, 2018, and 2020 editions of the Almanac of American Politics and a contributing writer for the 2000 and 2004 editions.
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A registered sex offender is facing homicide charges in the shooting death of a teenage boy in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, the Morning Call reported. In 2015, the suspect was entered as a lifetime sex offender into Pennsylvania’s Megan’s Law registry for involuntary deviate sexual intercourse. Boy dies after Harrisburg shooting; sex offender charg … Read more
Roy Moore was dragged through the mud as evil scum for accusations similar to those Jacob Blake’s girlfriend made to police, but Blake is being sainted.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was exposed attending a shut down hair salon in San Francisco Monday without a face mask, blowing off mandates Democrats are publicly keen on enforcing.
Some people refuse to acknowledge unpleasantness, but that is a grave error. Too often, behind the pleasant scenery of an ideological filter is a wretched reality of often horrifying proportions.
There’s absolutely no way it was all a convoluted Rube Goldberg of an attempt to wrest power from the duly elected president, because that would be too insane even for fiction.
Trump kept his word on abortion, religious liberty, and the rule of law. The radicals running the Democratic Party have shown they’ll do anything for power.
Senate insiders obviously coordinated with allies in the media to spin the 1,000-page report in a desperate effort to revive the Russian collusion hoax.
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Actor Scott Baio will not be running for office any time soon. He loves his family too much to put them through the negatives associated with being a politician or even running for office. But that was the only thing JD couldn’t get out of the conservative Hollywood icon in the latest episode of the NOQ Report. As far as opinions about the leftist lurch by the Democratic Party and the feckless leadership of California Governor Gavin Newsom, Baio was ready and willing to express his thoughts.
One thing is certain: Baio’s patriotic nature and love for this country are apparent with everything he does. His long acting career has not hampered his willingness to speak out, including last month’s #WalkAway event in Los Angeles. And just as he did during his speech at the 2016 Republican National Convention, he did not hold back on his criticism of Democratic leaders who are trying to tear this nation apart.
Of particular and personal interest to Baio was the way the coronavirus lockdowns have prevented American families from living their lives as they should. Kids need to be in school, interacting with their peers. Adults need to be at work making a living and advancing their family’s prosperity. We are a free nation, but it’s often hard to tell when we look at the draconian mandates being placed on Americans today.
There is no career more scrutinized and often vilified from multiple fronts than being a conservative in Hollywood, but Scott Baio has risen to the challenge, embraced his worldview, and worked to bring truth to light.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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.
If there was an article that makes clear the decline of The Gospel Coalition, K. Edward Copeland ramble about why he hates the month of August is it in this post. The article appropriately titled “Why I Hate August” was published on Saturday in reaction to the Kenosha riots and Kyle Rittenhouse. Copeland begins with by setting up all the reasons he should like the month of August in order to draw a distinct contrast not based on his own experiences.
My sister and I were born in August. As a child, I confessed Christ in August. As an adult, I vowed fidelity to my bride in August.
I read in history books that “20 and odd Negroes” from the White Lion, an English ship, were brought to the Virginia colony at Point Comfort on the James River on August 20, 1619, and sold for food. Yet when I saw the relatively recent magazine images, I began to suspect August was still a dangerous month for bodies like mine—even hundreds of years later.
Copeland’s [feigned] conception of the month of August is as pagan as a horoscope and quite selective in its historicity. This is to set up the “egregious contrast” between the treatment of blacks in August and Kyle Rittenhouse.
This August, however, the hurt is amplified by an egregious contrast.
Kyle Rittenhouse killed people in the middle of the street (on camera and in front of witnesses) and then, smoking rifle at his side, casually strolled past law enforcement. He didn’t run away. He didn’t hide. He showed no fear. He assumed there was something about his person that would allow him to approach law enforcement with a visible semi-automatic weapon that had just taken lives—and live to tell about it. More than a few witnesses pointed out that he had just shot several people. Yet he was able to leave the scene and the state.
Already, Copeland is lying about the events that take place to formulate a racist narrative. He conveniently leaves out the fact that Kyle Rittenhouse was defending himself from felons who were attacking him. So the remainder of this article is predicated in lies.
When armed mass shooters (Kyle Rittenhouse, Dylan Roof, etc.) are apprehended without incident, and unarmed black people are killed out of fear that they might be armed, we have a more insidious problem than “a few bad apples.” This thing is cultural, pervasive, and abominable.
The contrast is not egregious, but this comparison is. Conveniently, Copeland, writing on a “Christian” publication has no qualms about lumping Kyle Rittenhouse in with Dylan Roof who shot up a black church in South Carolina. This comparison is slanderous. Copeland continues his contrast with Kyle Rittenhouse and alleged sex offender Jacob Blake.
If your default impulse is to try to justify the seven or eight bullet holes in Jacob Blake’s body—He’s no angel;What was in his system?He was probably reaching for a weapon;He should have complied;We don’t have all the facts—just consider the facts we actually do know about Kyle. He took lives in front of physical and digital witnesses. He’s alive. No bullet holes in his body. He will be charged and tried in court, not on the streets, as it should be in a just society.
Alleged sex offender Jacob Blake had just attacked a police officer and was reaching for a weapon. He was asking to be shot. Are the police supposed to simply let him wave a knife around and wait for him to put it down. Dylan Roof surrendered to police. If a police officer shot him while he surrendered, they would likely face internal affairs to the same if not less public intensity that they would for shooting someone whose technically unarmed but attacking police.
The inconsistency between how these two bodies were treated in Kenosha reinforces my childhood suspicions.
Again, I do not think he actually had these suspicions because becoming woke is a conversion experience. But Copeland does wrap up his slander with a little self-awareness.
Those who claim my same convictions about Christ will be the first and loudest to castigate me for these observations. They’ll be the most proficient at finding some excuse for Rittenhouse, the most cavalier in discounting my trauma, the most eager to somehow find a “Marxist” or “Critical Race Theory” connection in my reflections. And that hurts my heart, literally and profoundly.
That’s right. I not only discount his trauma, but I am going to the wall for Kyle Rittenhouse because this is an Arch Duke Ferdinand incident. If he gets shafted by the system, the system has stripped the rights of the people to defend himself. The most basic rights our country was founded on are under attack by those who charged Kyle Rittenhouse. Furthermore, we should live in a world where seventeen year olds step up when the government refuses to do its job and not enough adults are willing. That is masculinity and we need more of that. And yeah, Copeland sounds a lot like blatant Marxist Robin DiAngelo. Copland closes with this:
I hate August because I have a growing suspicion that no video evidence, no panel discussion, no theological argument will convince some to live out what we know to be true: God did not color-code human dignity and worth. Black and brown bodies are made in his image, like all others, and should not be desecrated or treated as disposable.
False teachers, like Beth Moore, have a habit of always focusing on their opposition, to delegitimize their criticism and scoff at the idea that they have strayed from orthodoxy into a false gospel. This article is evidence that The Gospel Coalition is no better and deeply corrupt. At The Gospel Coalition, a false teacher can break the 9th Commandment with impunity.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it. When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that. Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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.
Representative Joe Kennedy III, grandson of Democratic icon Robert F. Kennedy, will no longer be serving on Capitol Hill next January. He has lost his primary battle for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate in Massachusetts to incumbent Ed Markey.
It wasn’t just a battle between a long-time lawmaker and an upstart Kennedy. It pitted the insurgent radical progressive wing of the party against the more moderate Democratic Establishment. Markey, who co-authored the Green New Deal with Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, received endorsements from Democratic Socialists like AOC and Senator Elizabeth Warren. Meanwhile, Kennedy received the rare primary endorsement of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi as part of her effort to maintain a closer proximity to the political middle.
But Markey prevailed by double-digits, further signaling Democratic voters are embracing the far-left ideological shift of the party. It demonstrated that this isn’t an issue of the new replacing the old as some have speculated; Kennedy is 39 while Markey is 74. Despite being young, popular, and a Kennedy, the Establishment-backed Democrat was no match for the “woke” authoritarian.
Across the nation, Democratic primaries have leaned towards the most progressive candidates in many races. The shifting party sentiment is one of the biggest reasons many Democratic voters are taking the “red pill” and opening their eyes to the radical nature the new version of the party has adopted.
Still, this was Kennedy’s race to lose until very recently when groups like the Justice Democrats threw their weight behind Markey. According to Politico:
Kennedy, the scion of the state’s best-known political family, was favored to win when he entered the race a year ago, and many suspected Markey might retire to avoid an embarrassing loss. But Kennedy became the underdog in the final weeks of the campaign. And unlike other primary battles, it’s was Markey, the 74-year-old incumbent, who morphed into the favorite candidate of young liberals taking on the party establishment.
“Tonight is more than just a celebration of a movement,” Markey said in his victory speech in Malden, Mass. “It is a reaffirmation of the need to have a movement, a progressive movement, of young people demanding radical change, demanding justice. A movement giving voice and power to young people when for far too long they were ignored.”
The Kennedy brand is associated with the Democratic Party of old, a party that was once patriotic and worked across the aisle to make this nation stronger. Today, such sentiments in the party are lost as radical progressives take over.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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.
Attorney Lin Wood, who is representing Kyle Rittenhouse against the multiple charges leveled against him, had his Twitter account locked out today by the social media giant. He is expected to have his account reinstated early tomorrow morning. Unlike most circumstances in which a Twitter account is locked, there does not appear to be an explanation attached to Twitter’s message.
Twitter often restricts accounts, particularly those belonging to politically or culturally conservative users, based on mass-reporting done by the opposition. If a particular Tweet is reported by enough credible accounts, the algorithm kicks in and limits it. This can be reversed by a manual check by Twitter, but Wood’s account is popular but not “verified” with a blue checkmark. It is unlikely it will receive a manual review.
Wood has made many enemies on Twitter as a result of his pro-American stance. He has been attached loosely to he QAnon movement which has also been heavily censored by Twitter. His profile uses one of the hashtags from QAnon, #WWG1WGA, which means “Where We Go One We Go All.”
As long as Twitter keeps censoring conservatives, it risks its protection under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. We will keep a close eye and anxiously await Lin Wood’s return.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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.
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi took on an attitude of “do as I say and not as I do” this week when she was caught on video getting her hair done in San Francisco. This is problematic as local ordinances in her congressional district have kept hair salons closed down since March. The owner of the salon, who was not involved in the “wash and blow-out” that Pelosi illegally secured for herself, was not pleased that she has been without income for months but Democratic “leaders” like Pelosi could break the rules.
“It was a slap in the face that she went in, you know, that she feels that she can just go and get her stuff done while no one else can go in, and I can’t work,” Kious told Fox News, adding that she “can’t believe” the speaker didn’t have a mask on.
Outdoor salon services were approved to begin today, but eSalon in San Francisco does not offer them. Masks are required throughout the styling. Security video shows Pelosi was not wearing a face mask over her nose or mouth and had her styling performed inside.
Salon owner Erica Kious, in a phone interview with Fox News, shared details of Pelosi’s visit. Kious explained she has independent stylists working for her who rent chairs in her salon.
“One of the stylists who rents a chair from me contacted me Sunday night,” Kious said.
A screengrab of the text message she received from one of her stylists, and obtained by Fox News, said: “I’ll be there at 2:45 tomorrow. Pelosi assistant just messaged me to do her hair.”
Kious replied: “Pelosi?”
Nancy Pelosi joins Lori Lightfoot and Gretchen Whitmer as Democrats who mark harsh, unnecessary COVID-19 rules for “common folks” that they break because they believe they’re more important than the rest of us.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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.
During the Democratic National Convention, several “Never Trump” Republicans spoke out against the man they hate the most. Their speeches were widely publicized, but the message was always the same: Orange Man Bad.
The Republican National Convention also featured a few Democrats and former Democrats who now support President Trump. One amazing speaker was Representative Vernon Jones who rocked the house at the RNC before speaking to our friends at Flockop about the experience. His message to America was different from the Never Trump Republicans at the DNC. He noted how the Democratic Party as a whole has shifted so far to the left in recent years, he didn’t leave them. They left him.
The interview, which was featured along with other great guests during the Freedom First show last weekend, was one of the most enjoyable aspects of the event.
This amazing interview with Vernon Jones is worth watching and sharing. It shows why President Trump and the GOP have a wonderful opportunity to bring over voters in November who have never voted Republican.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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.
We’ve been making this point for months. While the left hides in an echo chamber that falsely thinks that repeatedly chanting “peaceful protester” will conjure up this vision in everyone’s mind the truth is that people are waking up to what the left has in store.
The one honest line in Biden’s speech, threatening violence if he doesn’t win
The fact is that gun and ammo sales are soaring to unheard-of heights, along with secondary supplies. So while the left might think that trying to turn 180 degrees at the last minute will work for them. The people know who is fomenting the “mostly peaceful” rioting.
Biden is denouncing violence while threatening the same if his side doesn’t get their way has to be a record in modern hypocrisy. The left is learning that lies only work for a limited time, that is why they are losing.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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.
by Tony Perkins : “It can get out of hand in a blink of an eye,” Shelby Talcott said. And she ought to know. The Daily Caller reporter has been in a half a dozen riot-ravaged cities over the last few months — and the things she’s seen are tough to shake.
“This is far more organized than I think people realize,” she warned. There are the loads of bricks and frozen water bottles trucked in to use as weapons. Rocks, glass, and firecrackers.
Then, there’s the money trail — a seemingly endless cash flow that’s bankrolling plane tickets, hotel rooms, even clothes. “They’re becoming more coordinated,” she warned. But unfortunately for them, so is Homeland Security.
Monday, on “Washington Watch,” Acting Secretary Chad Wolf said that his team won’t hesitate to hold people accountable — even if the city’s leaders won’t. “[Democrats] have fostered this environment where it’s okay to do these criminal acts. It’s okay to harass individuals… it’s okay to scream and yell at them, maybe even assault them. They’ve created this environment, that it’s okay to do it. And it’s just not acceptable. And the president’s been very explicit about that — and I will continue to talk about it…”
He pointed to the hands-off approach in Portland, where the district attorney went so far as to publicize a list of crimes he wouldn’t prosecute people for. “One of those happens to be if you interfere with a police officer or you criminally trespass… So again, what does that mean? It’s an open invitation to continue this lawlessness.” Which, Wolf shakes his head, has been going on for more than 90 days. And while DHS and other agencies can send help, the reality is this, he says, “At the end of the day… the protection of individual communities are up to local officials and law enforcement.”
In the meantime, Wolf explained, he and Attorney General William Barr are launching a joint operation to quell the unrest. The instigators of this violence — whether it’s Black Lives Matter or Antifa — are being thoroughly investigated, he revealed. And so are the individuals funding this traveling band of anarchists.
Congressman Ralph Norman (R-S.C.), whose wife, Elaine, was one of the people accosted leaving the president’s RNC speech, is convinced that this level of destruction doesn’t just happen “by the luck of the draw.” On the plane to D.C., Elaine saw “30 to 40 passengers [wearing] the same Black Lives Matter shirts, had the same knapsack on their back. All of them were going to Washington. Then when they got there, she noticed three vans that they all… got on, and I assume went to downtown to hear the president’s talk… Somebody is paying for this. And we’ve got to get to the bottom of it.”
Just this week in D.C., Shelby explained, she overheard march organizers talking to people who’d been sent in from the west coast cities. “We actually saw [what] appeared to be the same Black Lives Matter van that had been in Portland a few weeks earlier.” This is where, as Rep. Norman suggested, we could be looking at a legitimate criminal conspiracy. Lives have been lost in these communities. Businesses destroyed. It’s something, at the very least, the FBI should be looking into.
The Democrats, meanwhile, aren’t interested in blaming anyone — or anything — but Donald Trump. “First, they denied that there was any violence going on at all,” Wolf said. “It was mainly, if you recall, ‘peaceful protesting.’
Then, they tried to blame the Department of Homeland Security, particularly in Portland, for causing the violence. And now you see them trying to blame President Trump for causing this violence.
So it’s come almost 360 degrees trying to find a cause for this. And I think most reasonable Americans understand what’s going on out there — that if you have… officials that demonize law enforcement, that attack law enforcement, that allow rioting in the streets, and they’re not taking decisive action — that’s what breeds this lawlessness.”
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by Gary Bauer: Trump In Kenosha: President Trump went to Kenosha, Wisconsin, today. The community endured several days of violent rioting after the shooting of Jacob Blake. As is often the case, initial reports did not tell the whole story.
Joined by Attorney General William Barr and Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Chad Wolf, the president toured areas of the city devastated by rioting and participated in a roundtable event on community safety.
The roundtable event was attended by local leaders and several business owners whose companies were destroyed by the riots. The president praised the National Guard and local law enforcement, and promised to provide financial support to the affected businesses and their employees. Trump said:
“Kenosha has been ravaged by anti-police and anti-American riots. Violent mobs damaged at least 25 businesses. . . These are not acts of peaceful protests but domestic terror. . .
“To stop the political violence, we must confront the radical ideology that supports it. . . We must give far greater support to our law enforcement. . . We can’t be threatening them. . .
“We cherish our law enforcement. . . We have to condemn dangerous anti-police rhetoric. It’s very unfair. . . The vast and overwhelming majority of police officers are honorable, courageous and devoted public servants. . . When allegations of police wrongdoing are reported, they must be fully and fairly investigated. And that’s what we’re doing.”
The president also denounced efforts to defund the police and coddle criminals, and he promised to help Kenosha rebuild with direct federal support to small businesses, law enforcement and aid to crime victims.
Whose Violence?
Yesterday we told you that the left was attempting to change the narrative about the rioting that has taken place in the past three months. The left claims that “It’s all Trump’s fault” and “It’s happening in Trump’s America.”
It will stop if Joe Biden is elected, or so Biden says. That sounds like a threat: “Vote for me and the rioting will end.” Is Biden attempting to hold the country hostage?
As absurd as this new narrative is, the left is going all out to convince you not to believe your own eyes. MSNBC’s Joy Reid suggested that the real threat came from conservative Second Amendment supporters. While Trump supporters have guns, “Black Lives Matter kids have skateboards and a bull horn,” she insisted.
Rep. Jim Clyburn (D-SC) suggested that the rioting was being done by white supremacists. Just because many of the rioters are white, Democrat politicians assume they must be Trump supporters.
The idea that conservatives are responsible for the rioting in the Democrat-dominated cities of Chicago, Minneapolis, Portland, Seattle and Washington, D.C., is sheer lunacy. Conservatives are not trying to burn down federal courthouses or private businesses. They are not blockading ICE offices or setting up “autonomous zones.”
It is also very revealing that various Oregon state law enforcement agencies (here and here) are refusing to go into Portland because of weak left-wing political leadership.
And it’s the left – not the right – that is defending looting because it “attacks some of the core beliefs and structures of cisheteropatriarchal racial capitalist society” and “rejects the legitimacy of ownership rights and property.”
While Biden got a lot of praise yesterday from the media for condemning violence, it was a weak statement and a far cry from Bill Clinton’s “Sister Souljah moment.”
Biden did not condemn attacks on law enforcement. He did not denounce the “defund the police” movement. He did not denounce Antifa or the extreme agenda of the Black Lives Matter organizations.
He can’t because these entities and their allies are all part of the left’s base. And if Biden won’t do that, he’s unfit to be president.
That’s why police organizations (here, here and here) are endorsing President Trump, not Joe Biden.
Trust me, the men and women on the Thin Blue Line know who is assaulting them and which side is responsible for this violence!
Like the career politician he is, Biden offered a lot of hot air and virtually no solutions. The only things we know for sure that he will do are raise your taxes and shut the country down again.
Meanwhile, President Trump is calling for law and order, and urging calm.
Yesterday, the president reminded Laura Ingraham that he has repeatedly offered to mobilize the National Guard and deploy other federal law enforcement agents to end the violence, but Democrat politicians have repeatedly refused offers of federal help.
Ingraham asked the president if he wanted his supporters to confront the rioters and he said, “Oh, I don’t want them to. Leave it to law enforcement.”
Targeting Antifa
The Justice Department appears to be taking the threat of Antifa much more seriously. Conservatives have been urging action against this radical group for years.
Last night, Tucker Carlson asked Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Chad Wolf what was being done to hold the leaders of Antifa responsible. Wolf said:
“This is something I have talked to [Attorney General Barr] personally about, and I know [the Justice Department is] working on it. . . The Department of Justice is also targeting and investigating the head of these organizations, [and] the individuals that are paying for these individuals to move across the country.”
I am glad to hear it. It can’t happen fast enough.
Educating Patriots
For many years now, I have been warning against the “anti-American history” our children are learning in our public schools. More recently, we have sounded the alarm on the 1619 Project from the New York Times. In yesterday’s report, we specifically called out the radical “ethnic studies” program that California bureaucrats are pushing in the Golden State.
I am pleased to report that President Trump raised the issue of American education yesterday during his White House press briefing, echoing many of our concerns. He said:
“What we’re witnessing today is a result of left-wing indoctrination in our nation’s schools and universities. Many young Americans have been fed lies about America being a wicked nation plagued by racism. . .
“The left’s war on police, faith, history, and American values is tearing our country apart. . . The only path to unity is to rebuild a shared national identity focused on common American values and virtues, of which we have plenty. This includes restoring patriotic education in our nation’s schools. . .”
The War On Faith
The left continues exploiting the coronavirus to wage war on men and women of faith. Here are the latest skirmishes.
In Minnesota, state bureaucrats are refusing to provide regular services to Christian and other private schools as long as the public schools remain shut down. That means busing services, counselors, special education teachers and even school nurses will be provided virtually if at all.
Under state law, private schools can qualify for the “same” level of service as public school students. Thanks to the pandemic, that level of service isn’t very much at all these days. So the private schools get virtually nothing either, even though they are trying to provide full service to their students.
In California, state bureaucrats are ratcheting up the pressure on Pastor John MacArthur. Los Angeles County is now canceling Grace Community Church’s lease on a parking lot it has used since 1975.
Why is the county doing this? Is Grace Community Church regularly staging massive protests against California officials? Well, in its own way, it is. They are defying absurd rules against holding in-person worship services.
I suppose instead of calling their services “worship,” they should call them “protests.” Maybe then the left-wing bureaucrats would back off.
———————– Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
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. . . Biden and his enablers can’t decide whether the mayhem helps or hurts his candidacy.
Dr. Victor Davis Hanson
by Dr. Victor Davis Hanson: It is not just conservatives at the recent Republican National Convention who wonder why the Democratic Party and its media appendages have not without qualification decried the looting, arson, violence, and occasional killing that have swept the nation’s cities.
Recently even left-wing CNN’s incendiary Don Lemon wondered out loud why Joe Biden and the Democratic powers have not at least tried to square the circle of deploring police overreach while at the same time going through the motions of condemning the utter lawlessness that often breaks out at dusk in Chicago, Portland, and Seattle, and now in smaller cities such as Kenosha, Wis. What Lemon praised in June, he now seems terrified about in August. But for that matter, most retired generals and media anchors who assured us in June that there were only a “small” number of violent protesters have long grown silent after the occupation of Seattle and the Alamo siege of the police precinct in Portland.
This fight of voter backlash about crime has infected the entire Democratic elite — glued to volatile internal polls that do not lie — whether it is Nancy Pelosi’s demanding no debates, Michelle Obama’s obsessing with “Vote! Vote! And Vote!” or Hillary Clinton’s urging Biden to never “under any circumstances” concede the election that apparently she now believes he could well lose.
There are lots of answers (and none are mutually exclusive) that explain the silence about the violence.
Run Out the Clock?
There are fewer than 70 days left to Election Day. Joe Biden was told that it was still wise to sit on his once-sizable lead.
In other words, until recently, he planned to run out the clock in hopes that the late-August Trump resurgence would be too incremental to catch Biden before Election Day.
Or put more crudely, Biden figured that the dangers of going out on the campaign trail and conducting a real campaign — town halls, whistle-stop speeches, unscripted press conferences, no-holds-barred, one-on-one media interviews — and risking another Biden senior moment (or worse) far outweighed any downside of deliberately waging a virtual campaign as a virtual candidate.
For the past three months of nightly violence, Biden has proven correct that it would be blamed on the sitting president. Yet any time Biden does impromptu or unscripted riffs, he says things that sound either incoherent or offensive — or racist. And any time he stays in his basement and keeps mum, he cedes the media cycle to Trump, whose job description is to deal with the worst year in American history since 1941–42, given the plague, lockdown, recession, street violence and revolution, and general Trump derangement syndrome.
So it is a question of whether riots like those in Kenosha will continue until November and finally reach a tipping point where millions of swing voters believe that the silence of Biden and his Democratic Party fuel the protests, and thus force them to make the necessary adjustments on Election Day.
Biden’s masters are now rethinking that very question: Can he stay mute? Will the riots subside? Are the polls to be trusted? Is it 1988 or 2016 redux? Can Trump still be blamed for the chaos? Will the military wing of the Democratic Party at least be more selective in its politicized violence?
Biden’s Socialist Straitjacket?
Or is the problem more fundamental? Is Biden so compromised by the politics of his own nomination that he cannot fault Antifa, BLM, and by association the left-wing, local blue-state district attorneys general, city councils, mayors, and governors who appease and encourage the urban war zones? If he did so, would he bleed support from among his new socialist coalition with Bernie Sanders and the squad?
That is, Biden was resurrected from his primary coma by wealthy Democrats terrified of a Sanders nomination, the utter failure of the Bloomberg antidote, and the mysterious lockstep departure from the race of all his earlier Democratic-primary rivals.
The subtext is that to win, he needs the radical vote, the identity-politics vote, and the Sanders vote to make up for the deplorables, clingers, and irredeemables of the key swing states who are never again going to vote Democratic. Antifa/BLM and their sympathizers are now Biden’s new socialist base.
America is both being held hostage by thugs in the street and in reaction blackmailed by the Democratic Party. The street brigades and their various enablers know that they represent a key constituency in the new socialist Democratic Party. And so they will riot and burn until Election Day in the belief, as narcissists, that they are winning converts, but also in their surety that Biden will be elected by the sheer chaos they spawn on Trump’s watch.
Then mysteriously, as his part of the crooked bargain, President-elect Biden will begin pushing the AOC/Sanders agenda (Green New Deal, high taxes, Medicare for All, open borders, reparations, etc.), and — presto! — the violence will magically dissipate. So the thinking goes, as ol’ Joe from Scranton plays the uniter-in-chief.
For Biden to preempt and demand that the paramilitaries of the new Democratic Party stop the pyrotechnics and destruction now would signal to Antifa/BLM that he is welching on his unspoken agreement, or that in fact he would soon backslide after Election Day.
The result is that Joe sorta wants to defund the police, but sorta not entirely. He now wants the violence to sorta stop, because it now sorta helps Trump. And he sorta thinks that looting and arson are bad, but also sorta believes they are sorta justified by the death of George Floyd.
The Biden Echo Chamber?
It also may be that Biden and the hard Left have no idea how badly the violence is hurting their cause. They may ignore their own internal polls, even though such paid contractors are not hired to lie to their employers in confidential memos. They may not even believe Las Vegas bettors, whose loyalty is to moneymaking, not candidates, and whose betting spreads are radically changing in Trump’s favor.
They assume that arson and looting are aired only on Fox News and a few local affiliates and talk radio. The major networks, NPR, PBS, and the left-wing cable outlets such as CNN and MSNBC stick to the script; sanitize or ignore the fires, violence, and looting, and contextualize the rebellion as righteous, justified anger at the criminal police. The New York Times and Washington Post and most other newspapers and left-wing websites do the same.
Just as Hillary sincerely believed that she had to go to Georgia and Arizona on the eve of the 2016 election to win a landslide mandate, so Biden is still convinced by his progressive puppeteers that the violence is so discrediting those who sympathize with Nixonian “law and order” that it’s helping his cause. Hillary, Robbie Mook, and John Podesta, remember, still believed in the Blue Wall hours or perhaps even days after it was rubble. A delusionary Hillary still claims that she believes in the Russian-collusion hoax, and that her own bought-and-paid-for Steele dossier was factual — because MSNBC and the New York Times tell her so.
The result seems to be that Biden may wish to change his mind about his virtual campaign and his silence on the violence, but only from expediency, not principle, and he cannot quite do so convincingly.
Looting Is Not Theft?
The last possible reason for the silence is the most dangerous of all: Looting is simply no longer a crime but a redistributive lark. Has Biden bought into the increasingly faddish left-wing view that looting is merely an overdue redistribution of someone else’s property, not theft of one’s own? From Vicki Orsterweil’s crackpot book In Defense of Looting to the decisions of blue-state district attorneys not to prosecute most crimes of looting, the Left has created a cottage industry of redefining looting and vandalism as cries-from-the-heart social justice. Biden in his dotage either buys into these crackpot ideas or is savvy enough to realize he’s a figurehead, propped up to put a thin veneer on the state in a radical Jacobin nuthouse.
Watch Trump’s approval polls that are ever so insidiously rising. Even in the predominately left-wing orthodox surveys, they begin to near 46 percent. That suggests the rope-a-dope strategy is now inert and that Biden must leave the basement and play for a time the centrist role of a Hubert Humphrey or Bill Clinton, and he may even have a scripted Sister Souljah moment.
At some point, Biden and his handlers will finally conclude that Kenosha was not an outlier but a symptom and that, as the memory of George Floyd fades, and as the mobs of the nocturnal rioters erode, we are getting down to the proverbial Weatherman-like hardcore agitators. And that means the diminished but more venomous Antifa and BLMA remnants will try to up the ante and torch, loot, shoot, maim, and wreck all the way to the suburbs.
The result is that Biden will wage a half-campaign and issue serial half-lamentations about the violence, because he has become a half-candidate. Like his media and party enablers, he still has no real idea whether the violence helps or hurts him, whether it is good or bad for the country, or whether his left-wing base is a bit too much at times or dangerous. So, like all half-things, he splits the difference and ends up saying half of nothing.
———————— Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution where many of his articles are found; his focus is classics and military history. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush. National Review.
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by Michelle Malkin: American workers across the wage scale are hurting. Small-business owners across the country are fighting for their survival. Young people face more uncertainty than ever about their futures and ability to put food on the table.
As we head into Labor Day weekend, I would like to offer a friendly reminder from the “America First” right to the Beltway Republican message machine and the Trump campaign’s social media mavens: Now is not the time to be cheerleading for pandemic profiteers, tech billionaires, and “woke capital” globalists who are addicted to cheap foreign labor and abhor American sovereignty. According to one analysis by Oxfam, 17 out of the top 25 most profitable U.S. corporations — including Microsoft, Johnson & Johnson, Facebook, Pfizer and Visa — are projected to rake in $85 billion more in 2020 than in previous years as upward of 40 million Americans are out of work.
SwampCons keep touting the “booming stock market” and “record” S&P 500 highs. President Donald Trump himself bragged last week, “NASDAQ has broken the record, I think 16 times already, during a pandemic.” He also warned Republican National Convention viewers that Joe Biden is bad for our “retirement” nest eggs and “401(k)s.” True enough. But what about the tens of millions who’ve lost their jobs and those who haven’t even had the chance to start putting away any savings?
Moreover, why should any “Make America Great Again” populists wave pom-poms for Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, Google/Alphabet and Facebook? The founders, top executives and elitist employees of these Silicon Valley firms — the top five companies in the NASDAQ index — hate America, sabotage U.S. workers through advocating for mass migration, Black Lives Matter and antifa anarchy, and they openly disparage and discriminate against Trump-supporting customers.
In ordinary times, I used to be one of those reliable voices touting the “free market,” “invisible hand” and miracles of American capitalism over “socialism.” But our current condition is not one of “limited government conservatism” vs. “big government socialism.” As I’ve illustrated all summer long, we live in a bloody state of anarchotyranny. The lawless reign while big business collectively allies itself with the mob to reap profits at the expense of the law-abiding.
Back in February, I reported to you on the myth of the American worker shortage by spotlighting more than 50 stories of tens of thousands of recent U.S. worker layoffs in tech and other high-skilled industries. Among the U.S. corporations and institutions responsible for laying off, replacing, offshoring, and outsourcing tens of thousands of American jobs:
Wayfair, TripAdvisor, LogMeIn, Inc., Zume Pizza, VMWare, Shutterfly, Intel, Comcast, Xilinx, 23andMe, NortonLifeLock, AT&T, Macy’s, Walgreens, Uber, Lyft, UCSF Medical Center, Baptist Health, Sysco, WeWork, American Family Insurance, Tennessee Valley Authority, Amway, UPS subsidiary Coyote Logistics, Comcast, Lime, Bird, Unicorn, Getaround, Cerner, Oracle, Samsung US, Edmunds.com, Textron Aviation, Morgan Stanley, Spirit AeroSystems, Mozilla, UiPath, Plexus, Cisco, Ancestry.com, Clover Health, State Street Corporation, Anthem, Transamerica, Verizon, MassMutual, Disney, Carnival, Abbott Labs, EmblemHealth, Harley Davidson, Cargill, Eversource Energy, Best Buy, Southern California Edison and Qualcomm.
Six months later, record layoffs are piling up.
–Last week in California, VMWare, downtown San Jose’s Hilton Hotel, Veritas, Blackhawk Country Club, Gap, Chartwells and Silver Creek Sportsplex in San Jose all announced hundreds more Bay Area layoffs.
–Among the companies confirming new COVID-related permanent layoffs reported by The Wall Street Journal: GM Resorts International, Stanley Black & Decker Inc. and Coca-Cola.
–American Airlines Group Inc. and United Airlines Holdings Inc. are threatening to ax more than 53,000 workers unless they get new federal bailouts. Frontier Airlines signaled nearly 400 layoffs in Colorado.
–Even as it crowed about record quarterly sales, Salesforce handed out pink-slip notices to 1,000 of its employees.
–Despite promising not to cut workers in the midst of the COVID chaos, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo are now all considering doing just that.
–In Florida, more than 1,900 hotel employees are facing layoffs or temporary layoffs at Loews Hotels and Co and Marriott.
–Telecom giant Cisco plans to lay off an unspecified number of workers amid business troubles.
–Manufacturing giant 3M slashed 1,500 jobs at the beginning of the month.
–Walmart laid off laying off hundreds of employees in its logistics, real estate and retail location planning departments over the past two months.
–Hundreds of health care workers have been laid off in Cook County, Illinois, Cape Cod, the University of Texas Medical Branch Health system, Lynwood Hospital in Los Angeles and Minnesota’s state hospital system.
Remember these laid-off workers when Beltway crapweasels come back from their Labor Day holiday to lobby for more imported foreign farmworkers, work permits for illegal immigrant DREAMers, H-1B tech visas, more foreign doctors and other medical professionals, Silicon Valley tax breaks and Fortune 500 bailouts.
I repeat: There is no American worker shortage — only a shortage of politicians who truly put American workers first.
————————— Michelle Malkin is mother, wife, blogger, conservative syndicated columnist, and author. She shares many of her articles and thoughts at MichelleMalkin.com. Article shared by Rasmussen Reports.
Tags:Michelle Malkin, Rasmussen Reports,
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by Stephen Moore: President Donald Trump isn’t the first incumbent president to run for reelection facing a deficit in the late summer polls. At this stage of the election cycle in 1948, no one thought Democrat Harry Truman had a prayer of winning as he sank in the polls.
Newsweek magazine likened the Truman campaign in the month before the election to a “ship beating itself to pieces against a rocky shore.”
The “never Trumans” in the Democratic party were not much different from the Republicans’ never Trumpers, a group of neoconservatives who Trumpism has thrust into irrelevancy. In the election of 1948, Southern Democrats rallied around Dixiecrat and South Carolina Gov. Strom Thurmond, and Henry Wallace ran as a Progressive Party candidate.
So, how did Truman pull off the “miracle of ’48”?
In the last three months of the campaign, he adopted an ingenious strategy of running against the “do-nothing Republican Congress.” He fled Washington by train on his “whistle blow” tour through the heartland. He pitted the social and financial concerns of blue-collar Americans, farmers and faith-based voters against the moneyed interests and deep-pocketed lobbyists on the East Coast. This, of course, led to the populist, “Give ’em hell, Harry” rallying cry of Middle America.
He warned voters that if they “stay at home” on Election Day, they would only “keep these reactionaries in power” and “deserve every blow you get.”
Trump should borrow this strategy from Truman. There is no economic or political gain from swimming in the swamp and negotiating a “fiscal stimulus” bill with the Democrats that will be larded up with special interest spending.
He should campaign against House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s $3 trillion monstrosity of a “stimulus” bill containing goody bags, paid for by taxpayers, to every liberal special interest group imaginable. That bill stimulates nothing but Pelosi’s contributor list — from teachers unions to environmental lobbyists to trial lawyers to government workers. Americans are disgusted by the opportunism of Democrats — that they would dare use a public health crisis to fund union pensions, the National Symphony Orchestra and environmental justice grants, whatever those are.
Trump is the modern-day Truman against a lifetime politician and his running mate, another lifetime politician — neither of whom have any business or job-creating experience. He could barnstorm around the country denouncing Democrat tax hikes and their obsession with issues such as climate change that would require strangling our energy industry. This would be cheered in China and Europe, but it would hobble America’s Midwestern industrial base and put millions of miners, drillers, truckers, construction workers and other hard hats in unemployment lines.
The Democrats have been apologists for the rioters, gangs, looters and anarchists who have burned down inner-city neighborhoods, harming the very minorities they say they want to help. Trump could win the election as the candidate of public safety alone.
The most populist issue of all is to fully open the American economy in a safe and effective way to reduce unemployment and get American families a paycheck. Democrats have defined themselves as the lockdown party.
Truman used to say: “I didn’t give them hell. I just told the truth, and they thought it was hell.” Trump’s special challenge is that, unlike Truman, he isn’t just up against a corrupt East Coast elite core of deep-state, deep-pocketed lobbyists and the wealthy social snobs who view Middle America as flyover country. He also must combat the bleed-blue media.
Given how unpopular the media is today, he can even turn the bias and blinding hatred at places such as CNN from a liability into an asset by again running against the fake news industrial complex. All of this is to say that voters need to be reminded daily that the left doesn’t just disdain Trump but also disdains the values and pro-America principles of Trump voters. Time to rile up the “deplorables” again, circa 1948 and 2016.
—————————- Stephen Moore is a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation and an economic consultant with FreedomWorks. He is the co-author of “Trumponomics: Inside the America First Plan to Revive the American Economy.” H/T Rasmussen Reports.
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by Patrick Buchanan: Potential collisions between the U.S., Russia or China are not even back-burner issues this election year. Meanwhile, we are consumed by the coronavirus, the crashed economy, racial divisions and riots that have ripped apart cities like Portland, Seattle, Minneapolis and Kenosha since the Memorial Day death of George Floyd.
In northeast Syria last week, a U.S. military vehicle collided with a Russian armored vehicle, injuring four American soldiers.
Both the Americans and Russians blame each other for failing to follow established rules of the road. Had an American been killed, we could have had a crisis on our hands.
Query: With the ISIS caliphate dead and buried, why are 500 U.S. troops still in Syria a year after Donald Trump said we would be pulling them out? What are they doing there to justify risking a clash with Russian troops who are in Syria as the invited allies of the Damascus regime of Bashar Assad, whether we approve of his regime or not?
Nor was this the only U.S.-Russian faceoff last week.
Over the Black Sea, two Russian military jets swept past the nose of an American B-52, one of the bombers on which the airborne leg of our strategic deterrent depends. The Russian Su-27s flew so close to the B-52 that their afterburners shook the eight-engine bomber.
What was a nuclear-capable B-52 doing over the Black Sea, which is to Russia what the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico are to us?
That B-52 overflight of the Black Sea was part of an exercise in which six U.S. B-52s overflew all 30 NATO nations in one day — from the U.S. and Canada to Spain and the Balkans and to the eastern Baltic Sea — in a military exercise to test Russian air defenses.
At the end of August, the Russian navy conducted its own war games near Alaska, involving dozens of ships and aircraft, the largest such drill in these northern seas since Soviet times.
Russia’s navy chief, Adm. Nikolai Yevmenov, said 50 warships and 40 aircraft took part in the Bering Sea exercise, which involved multiple practice missile launches. Said the admiral: “We are holding such massive drills there for the first time ever.”
As Trump rebuilt the U.S. military, Vladimir Putin reciprocated.
And, last week, Putin had a pointed warning for any nation that meddles in Belarus. With Alexander Lukashenko, the Belarusian autocrat facing huge and hostile demonstrations demanding he resign, Putin put out word that outside intervention to effect Lukashenko’s removal could cause Russian special forces to intervene.
The fall of Lukashenko from power, after 25 years ruling Belarus, could lead to a crisis as NATO allies Lithuania and Poland both border on the former Soviet republic of 9.5 million people.
Also in late August, on the other side of the world, China conducted a huge naval exercise in the South and East China seas and Taiwan Strait.
After an American U-2 overflew its ships during the exercise, Beijing denounced the “naked provocation” and test-fired four ballistic missiles into the South China Sea. Two of those missiles have been described as “carrier killers.” They are said to have been developed to attack aircraft carriers such as the 100,000-ton vessels that serve as the backbone of the fleets the U.S. Navy deploys in these same waters.
The U.S. has been sending its own warships into what an angry China claims are its territorial waters around the atolls and reefs it has fortified and converted into air and naval bases in the Paracel and Spratly islands.
What exactly is our ultimate goal here?
China has also been ramping up pressure on Taiwan by having military planes and warships circumnavigate the island and by sending aircraft across midpoint in the Taiwan Strait.
Taiwan recently purchased 66 US F-16s for delivery over the next 10 years. Yet, its armed forces are no match for Beijing’s. And China has put the world on notice that any move by Taiwan toward independence would cross a red line and be crushed by Beijing.
Is America prepared to fight China over fortified rocks and reefs in the South China Sea to which we have no territorial claim? Are we prepared to fight China to prevent the gradual absorption of Taiwan, which Richard Nixon conceded in 1972 we do not deny is a part of China?
In its confrontation with Iran, the U.S. seems about to suffer a setback in the Security Council. Our attempt to effect a “snapback” of U.N. sanctions on Iran, for violating the 2015 nuclear deal, seems certain to be rejected by our three principal NATO allies, as well as Russia and China.
How would Tehran’s victory in the U.N. over the U.S., which would open the door to sales and purchases of weapons by the ayatollah’s regime, be received?
Potential collisions between the U.S., Russia or China are not even back-burner issues this election year. Meanwhile, we are consumed by the coronavirus, the crashed economy, racial divisions and riots that have ripped apart cities like Portland, Seattle, Minneapolis and Kenosha since the Memorial Day death of George Floyd.
Still, Leon Trotsky had a point when he said, “You may not be interested in war, but war is interested in you.”
——————– Patrick Buchanan (@PatrickBuchanan) is currently a blogger, conservative columnist, political analyst, chairman of The American Cause foundation and an editor of The American Conservative. He has been a senior adviser to three Presidents, a two-time candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, and was the presidential nominee of the Reform Party in 2000.
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. . . He never directly condemns BLM or antifa, and he claims Trump’s fanning the flames.
by Douglas Andrews: Joe Biden just flubbed his Sister Souljah moment. Badly.
In May 1992, the notorious rapper was asked a question about black-on-white violence during that year’s deadly Los Angeles riots. Her response — “Why not kill a white person?” — caused a furor, and it caused Bill Clinton to seize the moment. Soon thereafter, while speaking to Jesse Jackson’s Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, Clinton denounced Sister Souljah. And that was all it took to reassure Middle America that he and his party were squarely on their side.
Yesterday in Pittsburgh, Joe Biden had a similar opportunity — at least on its surface. Biden hadn’t said so much as an unkind word about Black Lives Matter or its white-privileged partners in crime, antifa, since this year’s rioting began in late May with the death of George Floyd. He and his running mate, Kamala Harris, never specifically call out either “organization,” and nary a word was mentioned about any of it (outside the standard leftist pablum about “police brutality”) during the entire week of the Democrat confab. Why? Biden doesn’t dare condemn BLM or antifa, because their support is absolutely necessary for him to win in November.
Even a gentle calling-out of these leftist thugs for their leading role in the arson, looting, and violence in our streets would’ve been welcome. Instead, Biden threatened that if we don’t elect him, his constituents will burn this country down: “Does anyone believe there will be less violence in America if Donald Trump is reelected?” Biden demanded to know. “Ask yourself: Do I look like a radical socialist with a soft spot for rioters? Really?” No, but that’s exactly what his puppeteers look like.
Moreover, as the Wall Street Journaleditorial board writes, “Mr. Biden assailed the excessive use of force by police, and then he turned to the ‘violence of extremists and opportunists — right-wing militias, white supremacists, vigilantes — who infiltrate protests carrying weapons of war.’”
No one — no one — believes the police and the “right-wing militias” are to blame for the torching and pillaging of our nation’s cities. And yet that’s where Joe Biden went. Perhaps he thinks the cops are burning down their own precincts? Is it any wonder, then, that President Donald Trump on July 15 received the endorsement of the National Association of Police Organizations — a group that had twice endorsed the Obama-Biden ticket?
So much for ol’ Scranton Joe speaking truth to power. “Silence is violence,” as the BLM Marxists like to say.
To be clear, Biden finds himself in a hole of his own party’s making. The Democrats have long been the 98-pound weaklings in the law enforcement debate — which is why the antifa thugs and the BLM bullies feel free to continually kick sand in their faces. There’s no other way to say it: Democrat mayors, Democrat governors, and Democrat presidential candidates are soft on crime.
As columnist Charles Hurt points out, even Biden’s running mate, former prosecutor and California Attorney General Kamala Harris, “worked so hard to ingratiate herself with the increasingly unruly mob that she went on record a few weeks back raising money ‘to help post bail’ for those arrested during the riots — riots they now claim to oppose.”
The American people are finally getting sick of all this, and it’s showing up in the polls — which is why Biden’s handlers felt the urgency to act. As W. James Antle III reports, “The civil unrest unfolding in cities across the country is starting to rival the coronavirus as a source of voter concern. … A recent Pew poll found violent crime suddenly a top five issue, just a few points behind the coronavirus. CNN’s Don Lemon commented last week that the violence was hurting Democrats.”
Even more telling — and more welcome — is the plummeting support for Black Lives Matter. As Antle continues, “Marquette Law School found 61% to 38% backing in mid-June yet a 48% to 48% split in early August.”
Will this cause Biden and his party to part ways with BLM and its thuggish, money-grubbing tactics and its effort to infect our nation’s schools with its radical “antiracism” ideology? Don’t count on it. Democrats need an angry and energized hard-left black vote to offset the inroads Donald Trump has made with more mainstream blacks.
Time was when the Democrats believed in the power of words over the violence of the street. But, as columnist Joy Pullmann points out, when the Left’s arguments became old, tired, stale, and unbelievable, “They started breaking things and attacking innocent civilian bystanders. When Rep. Maxine Waters encouraged mob violence against people for the crime of supporting Donald Trump, Joe Biden didn’t sternly warn her to stop. When the Democrat mayor of Washington, DC, didn’t provide enough police to keep historic monuments safe from fires and defacement, and elderly people and U.S. senators safe from mobs of politically motivated rioters, Joe Biden didn’t stand up and demand equal protection under the law for peaceful civilians to attend presidential speeches no matter their political beliefs.”
A decent, self-respecting media wouldn’t let Joe Biden get away with this hasty and desperate rebrand or his laughable effort to blame this orgy of leftist violence on Donald Trump. An honest Fourth Estate would call Biden out at every campaign stop between now and Election Day for his bald-face blame-shifting and his law-and-order me-tooism. Of course, that’s wishful thinking.
Still, and try as they might, Joe Biden and his handlers can’t rewrite recent history. Nor can they cause the American people to un-see what they’ve been seeing on their smartphones and TV screens for the past three months: mayhem caused by Joe Biden voters in cities run by Joe Biden supporters.
On November 3, it’s Trump or the Mob. That’s the choice.
———————— Douglas Andrews writes for The Patriot Post.
Tags:Douglas Andrews, The Patriot Post, Biden’s Silence Condoned the ViolenceTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Our federal government was for the last half-century-plus run by a Democrat-Republican Uni-Party.
Both alleged Parties spent decades paying lip service to great chasms of difference between their respective policy prescriptions.
But both alleged Parties secretly agreed on just about everything.
And everything DC did – stole power and money from us…and gave it to them and their cronies.
I was born and raised in the DC area. I witnessed first-hand this ongoing, rolling nightmare mess for decades. Anyone who denies there is a Deep State Swamp – is either titanically ignorant…or lying.
And so it has been with Intellectual Property (IP) and its protection.
“The Congress shall have power…To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.”
The Constitutional default – is quite obviously on the side of IP and its holders. DC laws that undermine IP and its holders – also undermine the Constitution.
But for decades, the DC maxim has been “The Constitution be damned – there are cronies to be bribed.”
Which is the only coherent explanation for the anti-Constitution and woefully misnamed 2011 America Invents Act (AIA).
“The America Invents Act (AIA) was the single worst disaster in the 226 year history of the U.S. patent system. The AIA did very real damage – enough to put many inventors out of business and discourage many others.”
Did the allegedly Constitution-defending Republican Party oppose the AIA? Heavens no – they CO-SPONSORED it. The Uni-Party had struck again.
“(I)t was a great new law for the large multinational corporations who pumped hundreds of millions of dollars into Washington D.C. in the form of political contributions and funding for a massive public relations campaign….”
“(I)t was a great new law for the large multinational corporations who pumped hundreds of millions of dollars into Washington D.C. in the form of political contributions and funding for a massive public relations campaign….”
“(T)he Act clearly favors large corporations…over smaller companies and start-ups….
“(T)he Act expands the Prior Use defense to patent infringement to apply to all inventions…in a manner that encourages those with sufficient R & D resources — generally, large companies….
“Many provisions of the Act also directly or indirectly result in additional costs which can disproportionately affect smaller companies or individuals with smaller patenting budgets;…It seems obvious that larger companies…are in a better position to expend additional resources on these activities than are smaller companies or start-ups.”
The IP-loathing Barack Obama Administration then spent a half-decade creating awful US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) regulations around the awful AIA.
Enter the Swamp-draining Trump Administration – and its USPTO Director Andrei Iancu.
Iancu has been making some very good Office regulatory changes. Including some pertaining to the heinously awful AIA.
The uber-crony “large multinational corporations” – won’t stand for that.
“The lawsuit…is challenging what the tech giants are calling the NHK-Fintiv rule. In the complaint, the tech giants allege that rule…undermines the American Invents Act.”
To which we say – outstanding.
The America Invents Act undermines the Constitution. And Intellectual Property. And its holders.
Here’s hoping the judge(s) in question quickly rule accordingly.
———————– Seton Motley is the President of Less Government and he contributes articles to ARRA News Service. Please feel free to follow him him on Facebook.
Tags:Seton Motley, Less Government, Trump Administration, Cleans Up Cronyism, Cronies Sue Trump AdministrationTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Kerby Anderson: If you use the word dementia, you usually use it to describe a disease that affects the elderly. But doctors are starting to talk about a new type of cognitive condition affecting younger individuals.
They call it “digital dementia.” It results, they say, from the overuse of digital technology, such as smartphones and computers. Brain function deteriorates because of digital overuse.
The left side of the brain is generally associated with rational thought (numbers, and facts). The right side is responsible for creative skills and emotional thought. If the right side is underdeveloped over a long period, dementia develops.
The phenomenon of “digital dementia” was first noticed in South Korea. That should not be surprising, since that country has such a large population of Internet users. It is also one of the most digital nations in the world and a place where Internet addiction was identified as far back as the late 1990s.
They found that heavy users of digital technology are more likely to develop the left side of their brains. This leaves the right side untapped and underdeveloped. This affects attention and memory span, which could lead to early onset of dementia in a percentage of the cases. They also found that children were more at risk than adults because the brains of children were still developing.
The Korean findings come after a study done at UCLA found that young people were increasingly suffering from memory problems. A percentage of young men and women complained that their memory was poor.
These initial studies are one more reason why parents need to monitor the digital world of their children. Digital dementia is just one of many reasons we need to protect children from the digital media storm.
——————– Kerby Anderson@KerbyAnderson) is an author, lecturer, visiting professor and radio host and contributor on nationally syndicated Point of View and the “Probe” radio programs.
Tags:Kerby Anderson, Viewpoints, Point of View, Digital DementiaTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
. . . if ‘mayor doesn’t clean it up, we will go in and do it for them’
by Robert Romano: “Portland is a mess, and it has been for many years. If this joke of a mayor doesn’t clean it up, we will go in and do it for them!”
That was President Donald Trump on Twitter renewing his warning to Oregon Democratic Governor Kate Brown and Portland Democratic Mayor Ted Wheeler that if they will not get political violence in Portland, Oreg. under control soon, he will have no other choice but to federalize the National Guard to restore civil order in the city.
The siege of the Mark O. Hatfield Federal Courthouse by Antifa and other violent rioters has been going on for more than three months now in the wake of the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis police custody. U.S. Marshals and other federal law enforcement have been needed to keep the building from being burnt to the ground.
On Aug. 30 the violence turned deadly when Aaron Danielson, a member of the Patriot Prayer group that often clashes with Antifa in the streets of Portland, was shot dead on the streets in an unprovoked attack. The killer remains at large.
The President’s call for Oregon to bring in the National Guard followed Wisconsin Democratic Governor Tony Evers agreeing to bring in the National Guard following the Kenosha shootings of Jacob Blake by police officer Rusten Sheskey on Aug. 23, and Anthony Huber and Joseph Rosenbaum by Kyle Rittenhouse on Aug. 25.
The rapid escalation we are witnessing should be incredibly chilling to the American people, a demonstration of what happens when riots taking place across the country are allowed to continue unabated. This is dangerous. Now, armed citizens are hitting the streets and taking matters into their own hands — with deadly results.
Is anyone surprised? Portland is a powder keg and has been a hotbed for violence by Antifa and other groups for years. It’s open rebellion in the streets of America. And it will only get worse until authorities can remove the political violence from their cities.
Last month, in testimony before the House Judiciary Committee on July 28, Attorney General William Barr blasted the violence, saying, “What unfolds nightly around the courthouse cannot reasonably be called a protest; it is, by any objective measure, an assault on the Government of the United States.”
Barr explained the violence at the end of July, “In recent nights, rioters have barricaded the front door of the courthouse, pried plywood off the windows with crowbars, and thrown commercial-grade fireworks into the building in an apparent attempt to burn it down with federal personnel inside. The rioters have started fires outside the building, and then systematically attacked federal law enforcement officers who attempt to put them out—for example, by pelting the officers with rocks, frozen water bottles, cans of food, and balloons filled with fecal matter. A recent video showed a mob enthusiastically beating a Deputy U.S. Marshal who was trying to protect the courthouse – a property of the United States government funded by this Congress – from further destruction. A number of federal officers have been injured, including one severely burned by a mortar-style firework and three who have suffered serious eye injuries and may be permanently blind.”
Why have Oregon authorities failed to act? That’s anyone’s guess but the American people are blaming liberal city mayors.
A July 29-30 Rasmussen Reports poll found that 50 percent of likely voters believe political leaders in major cities like Portland and Seattle are facilitating violent protests by limiting police response. That includes 72 percent of Republicans, 33 percent of Democrats and 48 percent of unaffiliated voters who think Democrats are allowing the urban violence to spread. Only 31 percent of all voters disagreed. 19 percent were unsure.
The only thing the riots — and the lack of a meaningful response in some cases — are accomplishing is to unite public opinion against the rioters.
And when there is a clear dereliction of duty by a state to maintain order, then the federal government has a responsibility under law to act.
Under 10 U.S. Code § 252, “Whenever the President considers that unlawful obstructions, combinations, or assemblages, or rebellion against the authority of the United States, make it impracticable to enforce the laws of the United States in any State by the ordinary course of judicial proceedings, he may call into Federal service such of the militia of any State, and use such of the armed forces, as he considers necessary to enforce those laws or to suppress the rebellion.”
Enacted in 1792 in response to the Whiskey Rebellion and updated in 1795, in 1807 as the Insurrection Act, in 1861 and 1956, the law allows the President to restore order whether the state’s governor wants it or not. It was used by George Washington to put down the Whiskey Rebellion, by Abraham Lincoln to wage the Civil War and by Dwight Eisenhower in 1957 when Arkansas attempted to use the Arkansas National Guard to block Brown v. Board of Education and Eisenhower federalized the Guard to enforce it. In Lincoln and Eisenhower’s cases, neither intervention was requested by state governors.
Are we witnessing the dawn of another civil war? It’s an unsettling thought, but the longer it takes for the violence to be quelled, the more it looks that way — and the danger grows that it will continue to spread everywhere. The President has a responsibility first and foremost to preserve the Union. Oregon had its chance. Time’s up.
——————– Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.
Tags:Robert Romano, Americans for Limited Government, As Violence Escalates in Portland, President Trump Declares, if ‘mayor doesn’t clean it up, we will go in and do it for them’To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:AF Branco, editorial cartoon, Head Honcho, Biden, used as a tool, radical left, get into the White House, their radical agendaTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Elyssa Koren: The federal government has taken a bold pro-life stand against the United Nations bureaucracy in asserting that “international human rights law does not recognize any ‘right to abortion.’” This declaration comes in response to a May 27 letter sent to the United States from the U.N. Working Group on Discrimination Against Women and Girls claiming that the U.S. was impinging on a so-called “right to abortion” as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In delivering a powerful response, the U.S. has taken the opportunity to take two extremely important actions. First, it has clarified that abortion is not a “human right.” Second, it has issued a strong rejection of the U.N.’s coercive bureaucratic reach. Both of these actions will have far-reaching effects beyond simply informing the U.N. of American opposition to its abortion agenda.
As evidence mounts that the U.N. is using its coronavirus relief aid to promote abortion, the crucial importance of U.S. resistance must be underscored. In standing up to the U.N., the U.S. defends not only its own sovereign integrity but also that of the many member states that often find themselves too vulnerable to U.N. pressures to fight back.
Ecuador, for instance, which received $8 million in U.N. COVID-19 aid with a provision that it legalize abortion, will undoubtedly benefit from the U.S.’s pro-life assertion. Abortion is illegal in Ecuador, and yet the U.N. delivered box abortion kits as part of its “Minimum Initial Service Package“ for humanitarian relief.
The Working Group letter, referenced by the U.S. as “bizarre and inexplicable,” singled out pro-life measures in Texas, Oklahoma, Alabama, Iowa, Ohio, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Tennessee. Its claim is that these states “with a long history of restrictive practices against abortion, appear to be manipulating the [COVID-19] crisis to severely restrict women’s reproductive rights.” Delving into the pro-life policies of not only a sovereign country, but also of its individual states, represents a gross interference in our domestic affairs.
Abortion, as the U.S. made clear in its rebuttal, is not a matter of international jurisdiction. Moreover, it is critically important that the autonomy of our 50 states be protected. The U.N. has no right to meddle in the federal structure so core to the American democratic identity. It is severely inappropriate for the U.N. to attempt to override the domestic abortion debate transpiring at the state level in our country.
The U.S. is unequivocally correct — there is no right to abortion in international law. In fact, as indicated by the travaux preìparatoires of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, international law explicitly recognizes the unborn child’s human rights. Article 6(5) of the treaty protects the right to life of unborn children whose mothers have been sentenced to death. One could make a strong case for the opposite of what the U.N. contends: International law, in fact, mandates the protection of the right to life for everyone at all stages of life.
The U.S. response states that U.N. efforts to promote abortion are “a perversion of the human rights system and the founding principles of the United Nations.” This is exactly right. The international human rights project, created in the aftermath of World War II, was launched to deal with the real and pressing human rights abuses. The U.S., in its letter, references U.N. inaction with regard to, among others, forced abortion in China as evidence of its misdirected and hypocritical focus. As the U.S. states, “the United Nations system … has been notably quiet on this topic, even as they find ample opportunity to opine on matters of American domestic political concern.”
Not mincing words, the response emphasizes that the U.S. regards the human rights system of the U.N. as “utterly broken.” This is as a result of its penchant to promote false rights — “a practice that devalues the entire human rights enterprise and leads to absurd outcomes such as the above-referenced [Working Group] letter.” The tragic corollary of the U.N.’s myopic abortion promotion is a catastrophic disregard for the human rights violations that take place all around the world without redress.
As the draft report of the U.S. State Department Commission on Unalienable Rights recently made clear, the U.N. is not the appropriate venue for the hashing out of non-consensual agendas, such as abortion. The commission notes that the international human rights project is strongest when “grounded in principles so widely accepted as to be beyond debate” and “weakest when it is employed in disputes among competing groups in society over political priorities.” The solution is that controversial claims to new “rights” are best handled at the domestic level of each sovereign state.
The U.S. letter closes with a striking warning: “If you truly are concerned about the integrity of the United Nations human rights system, we urge you to reconsider the approach that has led you and your colleagues to this sad point, so far from the noble purpose for which this institution was founded 75 years ago.”
Restoring the integrity of the human rights project, so tarnished by U.N. missteps, demands that international institutions back off the promotion of controversial issues that should be handled by individual countries. Standing up for the right to life is essential if we are to secure the future of the human rights system.
———————— Elyssa Koren (@Elyssa_ADFIntl) is director of United Nations advocacy for ADF International.
Tags:Elyssa Koren, ADF International, UN Attempts, To Exploit, COVID-19, To Push AbortionTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
. . . President Trump is keeping his promises; fake news won’t cover it. by Ryan Hite: Candidate Trump knew that the American people were tired of being unnecessarily entangled in the affairs of other nations. He promised to defeat the ISIS threat and withdraw our troops from Syria, and he kept his promise.
“In December 2018, after utterly destroying the grip of ISIS on portions of Iraq and Syria, President Trump announced a withdrawal of American troops from Syria,” said Ed Martin, president of Phyllis Schlafly Eagles. “This was a huge promise kept from his campaign — to finish a job and bring our troops home from needless foreign entanglements.
“There is no reason to risk the lives of America’s men and women in uniform to fight endless wars in the Middle East. When Trump eliminated the threat of ISIS, it was time to come home from Syria. Promise made, promise kept.”
President Donald Trump made many significant promises to the American people. During the first three and a half years of his administration he has delivered. The radical left hates this agenda and the Fake News won’t cover it, but voters need to be educated before they go to the polls in November.
——————- Ryan Hite, Communications Director for Phyllis Schlafly Eagles.
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The following article was written by Ronald J. Rychlak, Distinguished Professor at the University of Mississippi School of Law. He is one of the world’s foremost experts on the role of the Catholic Church during the Holocaust. He serves on the board of advisors of the Catholic League.
Vatican Archives
by Ronald J. Rychlak: For decades now, critics of the Catholic Church have insisted that no assessment of Pope Pius XII and the Holocaust would be valid until all of the archives were examined. That argument has always struck me as weak. There is plenty of evidence to show that Pius defied the Nazis, aided the Jews, and encouraged the rescuers. Still, the critics insisted that no judgment could be final until all the documents were examined.
Earlier this year, the final archives were made available to researchers. Unfortunately, the coronavirus outbreak forced them to close soon thereafter (preventing my own scheduled research trip this summer). They re-opened and again re-closed. The result is that only a handful of relevant documents have been discovered. Yet, the critics who long insisted that all of the evidence had to be evaluated wasted no time in claiming that these new documents condemn the Church and the pope.
The first claim was made by Fr. Hubert Wolf of the University of Münster. He found an internal memorandum cautioning the pope not to accept all of the claims being made about the Holocaust and tried to twist it into proof of Pius XII’s anti-Semitism. It did not hold up to close scrutiny. (See The First Outrage from the New Archives, Catalyst, June 2020).
The newest outrage comes from long-time papal critic David Kertzer. Writing in The Atlantic, he claims that he and his researchers have found documents that show the postwar Vatican supported the “kidnapping” of two Jewish boys whose parents perished in the Holocaust, the so-called Finaly affair.
This matter started on February 14, 1944, when Gestapo agents entered the village of Tronche, France. They arrested two Jewish refugees from Austria, Fritz and Annie Finaly (also sometimes spelled Finely). The Finalys were transported to Auschwitz, never to be seen again. Their children (Robert, aged three and Gerald, aged two) were left behind. A Catholic woman named Antoinette Brun took the two boys into the Grenoble founding home, which she ran. She soon came to love the boys and was named provisional guardian. In 1945, after learning of their parents’ death, she began the process to formally adopt them.
After the war, an aunt from New Zealand wrote a letter asking that the boys be sent to her. Brun resisted, and soon the family sent a representative (the boys’ aunt, a sister-in-law to their father) to plead with Brun in person. She still resisted, and in 1948 she had the boys baptized into the Catholic Church. That had serious implications within the Church; it meant that they were now Catholic, and the Church could not turn her back on them.
Unlike the Nazis, for whom Jewishness was a racial matter, once someone is baptized into the Church, they are Catholic, plain and simple. This helped many victims thwart the Nazis and avoid deportation, either with actual conversion or with falsified papers, but it complicated things here. The parents were no longer in the picture, and many in the Church assisted Brun as she resisted efforts to relocate the boys.
In 1949, the Finaly family filed suit to have the children sent to an aunt in Israel. The lawsuit went on for almost four years, and the evidence was conflicting. The boys’ late father had told friends that he wanted to have his sons brought up in France, but there was debate about his (and their mother’s) religious wishes. For their part, the boys were said to have wanted to stay in France with Brun.
Kertzer cites as his new evidence, a “Vatican document coming from Church sources in Grenoble.” Discussing Brun’s stance, it says “Her attitude, motivated by her conscience from the fact that the boys are Christian, is approved by His Excellency Cardinal Gerlier” (the archbishop who oversaw Grenoble). In addition to that memo about Gerlier, however, there is a January 1953 letter from him, that clearly indicates his strong discomfort with Brun’s position. (Kertzer attributes this to the fact that “the press had gotten hold of the story,” though it seems to have been in the news well before the date of the letter.)
Cardinal Gerlier’s letter asked for guidance on a particular matter. “In these conditions, should one be advised to refuse, come what may, to return the children, who belong to the Church by their baptism and whose faith, in all likelihood, would scarcely be able to resist the influence of the Jewish milieu were they to come back?”
After setting up his essay to discuss this difficult question, Kertzer lets it hang for a couple of pages while he goes over material that he covered in his earlier writings, including the false claim that Pius XII did nothing when Germans rounded up almost 2000 Roman Jews. (See New Books Attack Catholicism, Catalyst, October 23, 2001 and The Controversy Over Edgardo Mortara Catalyst, May 25, 2018). When he returns to the question at hand, it is not advice from the pope that we see as his new evidence, but a memorandum from the Holy Office that said the health of the soul was a matter of divine right of children who had reached the age of reason, and the Church had the duty to defend them.
Note that this had nothing to do with their Jewishness. If the children had been from an atheist family, a Hindu family, or a Muslim family, the answer from the Holy Office would have been the same. As Kertzer quotes from Future Cardinal and Vicar General of Rome, Angelo Dell’Acqua, “The Catholic Church not only has rights with respect to [the Finaly boys], but duties that it must fulfill.” There was clear debate within the Church as to the correct avenue.
French courts ultimately sided with the Finaly relatives, but when authorities went to get the boys, they were missing. Friends and supporters of Ms. Brun (who was arrested and held for six weeks), including some Catholic priests and nuns, had spirited them off to Spain.
Several arrests were made, and the Church got some bad press. Contrary to what the critics claimed, however, the Catholics involved were not acting on behalf of the institutional Church.
When she was asked by the press about her Catholicism, Brun said she “didn’t give a fig for the Pope.” Bishop Alexandre Calliot of Grenoble took to the radio airwaves to demand that anyone with information about the missing boys contact the authorities. One of the first to comply was a priest in Spain who reported on their whereabouts.
For his part, Pius XII approved an agreement that was negotiated between Cardinal Gerlier and the chief rabbi of Paris. It called for sending the children to their relatives in France, but provided for their free choice when it came to religion. Several of the pope’s top advisors advised him to reject any agreement that sent Catholic children to live in a Jewish household.
As the matter was unfolding, and the boys were still in hiding, the French ambassador presented the Vatican with a report that said, “The Governor of San Sebastián [in Spain’s Basque region] continues to think … that … ‘without a formal order from Rome, the boys will remain in the shadows.’” Soon thereafter, a representative of Cardinal Gerlier made the final trip into Spain to get the boys. They were waiting in the home of a Spanish provincial governor, and Church officials helped bring them back to France. As Time magazine explained (November 7, 1955): “the Roman Catholic hierarchy had helped in getting the Finaly brothers back” to their Jewish relatives.
After the family had taken custody, the boys were flown to Israel. Aware that this was an open breach of the agreement and meant they would be instructed in the Jewish faith. Giovanni Battista Montini, the future Pope Paul VI, noted that this affair, “had inflicted a serious blow to the Church’s … prestige in the world.” Some within the Vatican urged the pope to publish an article that would “unmask the Jews and accuse them of disloyalty.” Despite this advice, and despite having been presented with a draft article, Pius did not publish it.
While rushing to judgement on the basis of a couple of new archival documents, Kertzer completely overlooks the new evidence laid out in Mark Riebling’s book Church of Spies: The Pope’s Secret War Against Hitler (see When the Pope Tried to Kill Hitler, Catalyst, November 16, 2015) documenting Pius XII’s role in the plot to assassinate Hitler. Nor does he discuss the disinformation campaign against Pius conducted by the Soviets during the Cold War. He also fails to mention Pope Pius XII’s 1942 Christmas address or his open encouragement to Howard Wisla in 1941 that he must “Always be proud to be a Jew.” Ignoring elements like these render his conclusions simply invalid.
This whole event is reminiscent of another controversy that took place back in 2004, when The New York Times and other publications reported on the discovery of a document in a French archive, purportedly authorized by the Vatican, saying that Church authorities should not return “hidden” Jewish children (like the Finaly boys) to their families if they had been baptized. Long before any serious research could take place, critics were coming out from every rock to condemn kidnapping by Pius XII and the Catholic Church.
To those of us who had studied the work of Pius XII, the directive immediately seemed suspicious, and for good reason. The real directive, dated October 23, 1946, and authorized by Pope Pius XII, was quickly found in the Vatican archives. It was quite different from what had been reported in the news.
It seems that there were other Catholics who, like Ms. Brun, grew quite attached to Jewish children in their charge. The directive told the rescuers to return these children, baptized or not, to blood-related relatives who came to get them. Over and above that, if no relatives survived to reclaim the children, and if individuals or organizations unrelated to the children now wished to adopt them or transfer them to a new environment, each request was to be examined on a case-by-case basis, always with a sense of justice for the child, and with a sense of what their parents would have wanted for them. The children were not to be ‘dumped’ on the first agency that came along.
This directive is perfectly in line with Judeo-Christian compassion and responsibility. It is also very probative of Pius XII’s mindset on these issues. It is far more probative than the internal memoranda that Wolf and Kertzer have used to infer what Pius XII thought. Like any large entity, the Holy See has memoranda prepared on many issues. The advice found in one memo often conflicts with that of another. That is a good thing. What matters is the final decision. In the Finaly case, Pius—against the advice of some—returned children to their families. That’s because he was a good man and a good leader.
——————- Ronald J. Rychlak, Distinguished Professor at the University of Mississippi School of Law. He is one of the world’s foremost experts on the role of the Catholic Church during the Holocaust. He serves on the board of advisors of the Catholic League.
Tags:More Misuse, Vatican Archives, Ronald J. Rychlak, Distinguished Professor, University of Mississippi School of LawTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Mark Tapscott: HillFaith has from the first post in July 2018 been kept scrupulously non-partisan and will continue to be so as long as I have anything to say about it.
To paraphrase the New Testament, there is no Jew or Greek, no Slave or Free, no Rich or Poor, and no Democrat or Republican in the Gospel of Jesus Christ. He frees all alike who recognize Him as their resurrected Savior.
But abuses by government are happening at all levels in this country that are officially justified by the Covid Pandemic, but which clearly have little or nothing to do with stopping the spread of a disease whose dangers it is becoming increasingly clear have been severely exaggerated.
Exhibit A in this is the unconstitutional abuse heaped upon Pastor John MacArthur and Grace Community Church by California and Los Angeles officials. Three times Grace has been ordered to stop its in-house worship services and three times the courts have upheld the church’s claim that such orders are unconstitutional and thus not binding.
Now the angry officials are back a fourth time, springing an out-of-the-blue cancelation of a parking lot lease Grace has had with the county for 45 years. Closing this lot could shut down Grace, subject it to a lengthy and expensive legal battle and ultimately threaten its survival.
The following video of MacArthur focuses in on the key issue: Are restrictions on constitutionally guaranteed First Amendment freedoms, including the freedom of religious practice, justified by the actual lethality of Covid?
The answer appears to be no, based on the government’s own data. One need not agree with MacArthur’s contention that such attacks are ultimately satanic in origin to recognize that it’s time to stop these abuses. This isn’t a Democrat or Republican issue, it’s an issue of fundamental constitutional liberty. Is anybody on the Hill listening?
———————– Mark Tapscott is HillFaith’s editor, author, IT jockey, spiritual guide, chief bottle washer and overall Jack-of-All-Trades.
Tags:Mark Tapscott, HillFaith, Churches, Are Defending The First Amendment, Does Anybody In Congress Care?To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
California’s AB 5 law will effectively ban gig economy platforms like Uber and Lyft.
At a time when California is suffering from high unemployment, lawmakers should
make is easier—not harder—for people to find flexible income opportunities.
by Rachel Greszler: With the COVID-19 recession causing high unemployment around the country, now is the time for policymakers to lift barriers to earning an income.
With limited operations and selective lockdowns making business activity difficult for both employers and employees—especially workers who have children at home or other obligations—promoting worker flexibility is essential.
Unfortunately, California lawmakers are taking the opposite approach by pushing a law that will limit income opportunities and worker flexibility.
At 13.3% in July, California’s unemployment rate is among the highest in the nation. In Los Angeles County alone, the July unemployment rate was a dismal 17.5%.
Instead of focusing on getting Californians safely back to work and opening doors to income opportunities for the state’s 2.5 million unemployed workers, California politicians are driving out companies that offer such opportunities.
California passed a law, AB 5, in 2019 that effectively seeks to outlaw many forms of self-employment, including gig economy platforms, which use technology to match people seeking services with those willing to provide them.
The AB 5 law requires individuals who contract out their services, such as those who drive for Uber or Lyft, to become employees of the companies or individual with whom they contract.
Uber and Lyft continued to treat drivers as independent contractors, based on their argument that drivers remain in control of their work, including which jobs they accept. But then a group of California politicians sued the companies.
When a California judge ruled that Uber and Lyft had to treat drivers who use their services as employees, the companies announced they would shut down their California operations at midnight on Aug. 20.
That would have caused hundreds of thousands of drivers to lose income opportunities, and millions of Californians to lose access to a simple, low-cost, and easily-accessible transportation option.
But then, perhaps realizing the likely detriment, a judge issued a temporary stay to allow Uber and Lyft a few extra weeks to continue their operations while developing a plan for how they can operate while treating drivers as employees.
It’s unclear whether Uber and Lyft will develop plans to comply with the law, or if they will simply pack up and leave the state.
But Lyft says that if it has to turn drivers into employees, “80% of drivers would lose work and the rest would have scheduled shifts, and capped hourly earnings.” As a result, customers would face reduced service availability.
Uber also said that 76% of drivers of drivers could lose their work and prices could rise as much as 120% for customers.
Instead of on-demand ride-share companies, Uber and Lyft would resemble taxicab companies.
That would be bad news for Uber drivers.
An economic analysis based on data from 1 million Uber drivers showed that the median Uber driver would not drive at all if they were forced to submit to a taxicab employment structure.
That’s because workers who choose gig platforms place a high value on a fully-flexible work. For Uber drivers, that value equals more than 40% of their earnings (over $150 per week, for the median Uber driver who works about 16 hours per week).
Most people who drive for Uber do it to supplement their household income. Many are parents, some are students, others are entrepreneurs, some are between jobs, and others are retired.
Taking away a full-flexibility income opportunity would hurt the overwhelming majority of gig economy workers who don’t want to be forced into formal employment.
In fact, 51% of all freelancers say there is no amount of money that would definitely cause them to work in a traditional job. Moreover, 21% of freelancers say they are unable to work for a traditional employer because of their own health condition, with another 18% citing family circumstances as a barrier to traditional work.
California’s efforts to kill ride-sharing would also be bad news for Californians.
Ride-sharing provides millions of rides per week in California. As a convenient and affordable service, ride-sharing is particularly important to low-income households and individuals with disabilities who disproportionately rely on ride-sharing for transportation and independence.
While politicians have chosen to target Uber and Lyft, any number of companies could be next.
In fact, the city of San Diego already sued Instacart—a personal shopping service best known for delivering groceries and medications. In late February, a San Diego judge issued an injunction against the company, but a temporary stay, issued a few days later, has allowed Instacart to continue its operations awaiting its appeal.
During COVID-19, Instacart has served as an accessible and affordable way for at-risk and quarantining individuals to have their prescriptions and groceries delivered to their doors.
Similar gig platforms that provide hot food delivery services, such as DoorDash, served as lifeboats to tens of thousands of restaurants, helping to keep them afloat during the pandemic.
But California’s AB 5 law expands far beyond the gig economy. It potentially affects anyone who serves as their own boss.
Doctors were among one of the fortunate occupations to receive a special exemption from AB 5, but imagine if they hadn’t, and the only available physicians in the state were those willing to give up their independent practices and become employees of hospitals or large healthcare companies. That could have been catastrophic during COVID-19.
There’s never a good time to drive out flexible employment opportunities or to take away accessible and affordable services, but now—amid a global health pandemic and high unemployment—is the worst time to do so.
Californians will have a chance to vote on a referendum on the Nov. 3 election ballot that would exempt app-based drivers from AB 5, provided the app companies provide certain benefits and guarantees. But that would still leave many other independent workers and freelancers in the fray—subject to potential lawsuits if they continue to practice their livelihoods.
Instead of micromanaging income opportunities out of existence, policymakers in California should focus on policies that foster flexibility and that open doors to work opportunities for all Americans.
———————- Rachel Greszler writes for The Daily Signal and is a research fellow in economics, budget, and entitlements in the Grover M. Hermann Center for the Federal Budget, of the Institute for Economic Freedom, at The Heritage Foundation.
Tags:Rachel Greszler, Daily Signal, Politicians, Seek to Drive Out, Income Opportunities, in CaliforniaTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
. . . Former university student pleads guilty to federal terrorism charges.
Tnuza Jamal HassanRAMSEY COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE
by Stephen Montemayor: A 22-year-old Minneapolis woman who failed in her bid to join al-Qaida and subsequently tried to set a series of fires at St. Catherine University in St. Paul in 2018 pleaded guilty Wednesday to federal terrorism charges.
Tnuza Jamal Hassan admitted to one count of attempting to provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization at her former school’s campus.
Hassan also faces arson charges in Ramsey County in connection with trying to set fires in six buildings on the campus. Hassan admitted setting the fires months after she tried to fly to Afghanistan to join al-Qaida.
According to Hassan’s plea agreement, when she was a freshman at St. Kate’s she drafted an anonymous recruitment letter that encouraged others to join the terrorist group and delivered it to two other Muslim students at the university.
In September 2017, she bought a round-trip ticket without her family’s knowledge from Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport to Dubai and another ticket from Dubai to Kabul, Afghanistan. She said Wednesday that she had no plans to return to the United States but instead wanted to join al-Qaida in Afghanistan. However, she was stopped from continuing on to Afghanistan because she was not aware that she needed a visa to enter that country.
Hassan lied to investigators from Customs and Border Protection and the FBI about writing the recruitment letter, but she did tell agents that joining al-Qaida was the purpose of her attempted trip to Afghanistan. As part of her plea agreement, Hassan acknowledged Wednesday that while she did not plan to be a fighter for the terrorist group, she wanted to lend her support “by other means.”
Hassan again left her family’s home on Jan. 8, 2018, without their knowledge, and moved into a St. Catherine University dorm lounge without the school’s permission. She stayed there until Jan. 17, when she tried to set fires in six buildings at the school. In her plea agreement, Hassan said she set the fires “as a retaliatory act against the United States for its opposition to [al-Qaida] in Afghanistan.”
Hassan’s attorneys declined to comment on the case on Wednesday.
U.S. District Judge Patrick Schiltz scheduled Hassan’s sentencing for Dec. 17. Her charges carry a possible 20-year maximum federal prison sentence and lifetime supervised release.
Hassan was deemed competent to stand trial earlier this year. At a December 2019 hearing, a forensic psychologist told the court that she upgraded Hassan’s diagnosis from schizophrenia to a “mood disorder with a psychotic component” after earlier symptoms disappeared under medical observation and despite Hassan declining medication.
————————– Stephen Montemayor covers politics and government in Minnesota. He previously reported on federal courts and law enforcement for the Star Tribune.
Tags:Stephen Montemayor, Star Tribune, Tnuza Jamal Hassan, al-Qaida, setting fires, St, Catherine university, St Paul, MNTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
At the very least, and perhaps at the very most, defend our rights.
Now, rights-defense is not easy; folks in government along with folks who demand more government have other plans. It’s easier to attack peaceful people for not doing what you want than to come to the aid of victims who are under attack — or have been conned or kidnapped — by really sick and evil people.
So every now and then it is a good idea to call attention to governments actually doing Job One.
The U.S. Marshals Service put out a press release last week, and it got some attention: “U.S. Marshals find 39 missing children in Georgia in ‘Operation Not Forgotten.’”
This law enforcement campaign “resulted in the rescue of 26 children, the safe location of 13 children and the arrest of nine criminal associates. Additionally, investigators cleared 26 arrest warrants and filed additional charges for alleged crimes related to sex trafficking, parental kidnapping, registered sex offender violations, drugs and weapons possession, and custodial interference.”
The coverage of the operation so far has produced little beyond what’s in the press release. So our job is to praise the effort and hope that the these children are cared for and can begin to heal.
We live in a time of heightened awareness of the “trafficking” of under-age persons for prostitution and sex slavery. We can thank Jeffrey Epstein for that. And the U.S. Marshals and local law enforcement for this rescue.
This is, after all, the reason we have governments in the first place.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob
—————— Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
Tags:Paul Jacob, Common Sense, Government’s Job OneTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
The coronavirus pandemic has accelerated the timetable dramatically, so the crisis is now, and its manifestation is financial. Only schools with significant endowments can do without tuition for any length of time. This means many of the more than 5,000 universities in the United States will not be able to open this year and the rest will be teaching at distance.
For about 20 years, on and off, I was a professor of political philosophy. So believe me when I say the financial problems of the university come from how Americans see the university. The professors who teach the students are oddly deployed. They have the responsibilities of teaching, researching and serving on committees to manage the department. They also have a guarantee of academic freedom. Once tenured, after about seven years of service, they can no longer be fired except for cause. This guarantees them academic freedom, to challenge accepted truths and stand against conventional wisdom. One of the less appetizing aspects of American life (or all life) is the periodic fashions that hold certain ideas to be unacceptable. During various times in history, including our own, those holding these ideas were hunted down and banished. Academic freedom was meant to be a bulwark against conformity.
There is perhaps no place in which conformity rages more than in the university. Outsiders do not get tenure, and having gotten tenure they don’t get to sit on the cool committees that run the place, nor do they get to go to faculty parties, which on reflection is another benefit of being intellectually boorish. This affects teaching and research. As a professor, I taught between zero and nine hours per week during my career. After factoring in the holidays, professors are working part-time. Yes, there are office hours and times saved for grading papers – for which God frequently provides graduate assistants in better universities – but the teaching load is remarkably light even at its heaviest.
This is meant to free professors for research. But there is no quality control on research. In my academic career, I wrote two books and a bunch of articles. No one really read any of them, which was a mercy since they were really bad. But I made full professor on the strength of that, and at that point, I could climb no higher and could not be fired.
All of this is financed by federally backed loans – which permits universities to raise the price of entry, knowing that students will borrow money to pay the costs, which cover staff as well as the land the campus is built on. The university could easily sell that land and move into prefab buildings in the inner city, but then their entire marketing strategy would collapse. For students, the attraction of college is that it offers a chance not to think about the meaning of life, as the liberal arts demand, but to enjoy the company of their contemporaries, drink heavily and spend a couple of weeks pounding out bad papers for which they get high grades because they will at some point evaluate their professors, and hilariously the professors care.
This is financially unsustainable and quite unlike European universities. The university emerged in Europe to teach the tradition of ideas, not for vocational training. This inevitably attracted the high born, who could afford it. It was the origin of the liberal arts as a mode of thought. It was designed to keep tradition of knowledge derived from Plato and Aristotle alive through the ages, albeit in the hands of the literate aristocracy. That higher education has since been democratized is good, but it’s unclear whether the average American 19-year-old is able or willing to grasp the truth and the beauty of the liberal arts.
It is intellectually unsustainable too. The founding mission of the university was to preserve and transmit tradition to the future. The university has adopted other tasks such as engineering, social work and kinesiology. All are useful and necessary, but the liberal arts have gotten lost. Technology is critical, but it derives from a tradition few know and which is indispensable for us to know who we are and what our obligations are.
Those who study the liberal arts are the few. The many must study the useful and necessary crafts. Philosophy and mechanical engineering occupy different realms. What will emerge from this, I suspect, will be not a university encompassing everything that generates student loans, but a recognition that while all must know of the liberal arts, few can or want to master them. It is not the university but knowledge that we must care about, and we must not confuse teaching with research, or animal husbandry with the history of ideas. Both are needed. They do not enrich each other as much as divert resources. Schools of philosophy should be modest, small and filled with 40-year-olds. Schools of biology should be ambitious, large and filled with 20-year-olds. It will not be a measured or deliberate approach that will take us here. It will be closures and the drying up of funds.
———————— Dr. George Friedman is an internationally recognized geopolitical forecaster and strategist on international affairs and the founder and chairman of Geopolitical Futures (@GPFutures).
Tags:Dr. George Friedman, The Crisis of the University, and The Liberal ArtsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Andrè Taylor, right, listens as Horace Lorenzo Anderson, left, speaks about his son,
Horace Lorenzo Anderson Jr., who was killed June 20 in a shooting in the
vicinity of the Capitol Hill Organized Protest area, on June 29 in Seattle, Washington.
by Mary Margaret Olohan: The father of a young man killed in Seattle’s Capitol Hill Organized Protest zone has filed $3 billion in claims against King County, the city of Seattle, and Washington state.
“It is important to hold our government leaders accountable so this will not happen again,” attorney Evan Oshan said in a statement, according to the publication. “Those in positions of power must not be allowed to hide from their duty to act responsibly and protect citizens. With power and prestige comes responsibility!”
Anderson was shot inside the outskirts of CHAZ, which was later renamed CHOP, early in the morning June 20 and carried by bystanders to Harborview Medical Center, according to KING 5. The 19-year-old died at the hospital, the publication reported.
Horace Lorenzo Anderson, father of a 19-year-old killed in Seattle’s CHOP, breaks down in tears on Hannity talking about his son and how he has not heard from any of Washington State’s public officials:
“The thing that we really need to focus on is that there was a, an individual who lost his life unnecessarily and he, it was predictable, it was preventable, and this should have never happened,” Oshan said in an interview with KING 5.
Oshan told KING 5 that the police precinct near the zone was “given up,” and said emergency medical crews nearby did not provide aide to Lorenzo Anderson.
“What I do know is that EMS did not come in and take care of Lorenzo as he lay bleeding. This was a totally lawless situation. It puts him in great danger and it was just wrong,” Oshan said.
An official with the city of Seattle told KING 5 the city cannot comment on pending claims, though the official confirmed to KING 5 that the city received the claim. The city of Seattle did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Daily Caller News Foundation.
————————— Mary Margaret Olohan (@MaryMargOlohan) is a reporter covering social issues for The Daily Caller News Foundation. Article shared by The Daily Signal.
Tags:Mary Margaret Oloha, The Daily Signal, CHOP Victim’s Father, Files $3 Billion in Claims, Against Local GovernmentTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
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Sep 02, 2020 01:00 am
Trump put in the effort in 2016 and playing the long game to garner a grassroots movement inside the African American voting bloc. Read More…
Sep 02, 2020 01:00 am
In the 75 years from V-J Day to today, America has changed, from united as we have ever been to disunited as we have ever been. How did this happen? Read More…
Self-defense in an America where laws are disregarded
Sep 02, 2020 01:00 am
If flight is impossible, fight is the only option. If a mob approaches our vehicle, the decision is already made. The vehicle becomes the instrument of self-defense and the mob endures the consequences. Read more…
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Morning Rundown
Breonna Taylor’s boyfriend sues police and city of Louisville: Kenneth “Kenny” Walker, the boyfriend of Breonna Taylor, has filed a lawsuit against the city of Louisville and the Louisville Metro Police Department, asking for immunity for his actions during the deadly raid that took place at Taylor’s home in March. Walker is seeking immunity under Kentucky’s “Stand Your Ground” law, which protects anyone acting in self-defense. The night that Louisville police officers broke into Taylor’s apartment, Walker, who has a conceal-carry permit, fired a single shot “downward to scare away intruders,” according to the lawsuit. The shot allegedly hit an officer and the two other officers returned fire into the apartment, killing 26-year-old Taylor. Walker was arrested and charged with attempted murder, though that charge was later dropped. Kentucky’s attorney general and the FBI are still investigating Taylor’s shooting, and Walker said the suit would prevent officials from re-arresting and charging him for any crime related to the incident. Walker’s attorney says his client was wrongfully and illegally arrested, detained, charged and prosecuted. “My life changed forever,” Walker said Tuesday during a press conference. “I was raised by a good family. I am a legal gun owner and I would never knowingly shoot at a police officer.”
Apple, Google unveil phone update for users to see possible exposure to COVID-19: Apple and Google announced they’re rolling out an update called “Exposure Notifications Express” that will more easily notify users — who chose to participate — of possible COVID-19 exposure. The update will allow iOS and Android users to receive exposure notifications on their phones from public health officials without a custom app. The notification technology relies on Bluetooth data to determine whether a user has been in the proximity of another user who has tested positive for COVID-19. In the case of a possible exposure, public health officials will also provide the user guidance on what to do next. Maryland, Nevada, Virginia and Washington, D.C., will be the first in the U.S. to deploy the new notification system. It is expected to roll out to other states later this fall.
Fans want a Chadwick Boseman statue to replace a Confederate monument in his hometown: More than 30,000 people have signed a petition asking for a statue of Chadwick Boseman to replace a Confederate monument in the late actor’s hometown of Anderson, South Carolina. The petition, which centers on the Confederate monument that stands in front of the Anderson courthouse, was launched by an anonymous Anderson resident and is addressed to local government officials. “With Chadwick Boseman’s early passing, it is important that we honor a true local legend [by] immortalizing him in stone in front of the courthouse,” the petition reads. “It is time to unify Anderson around a true local hero and time to honor all South Carolinians, not just the ideals of a few.” Boseman, who was 43 when he died of colon cancer on Aug. 28, was best known for his groundbreaking role as King T’Challa in “Black Panther.”
Mom shares hilarious 1st day of school photos of her kids: One mom’s back-to-school photo looks like none she’s ever taken before but has struck a chord with parents around the country. Julie Burton, a mom of two daughters from Overland Park, Kansas, snapped a picture of her rising ninth and sixth graders still asleep in bed. “Everyone seems to relate to this picture, whether their kids are in-person or virtual,” Burton told “GMA.” Since she shared the photo online, Burton said many have recreated it with their own families. “I’m glad others feel like their kids have really taken to the sleeping-in part!” she added.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” get your dancing shoes ready! We are revealing the season 29 cast of “Dancing With the Stars.” Plus, Ledisi chats about her new album hitting the charts and how she recorded the last few songs on her own in quarantine. All this and more only on “GMA.”
President Donald Trump’s visit to Kenosha, Wisconsin, drew a mixed reaction, Sen. Ed Markey held off a Kennedy primary challenge in Massachusetts and convalescent plasma may not be a plausible treatment for COVID-19 after all.
Here’s what we’re watching this Wednesday morning.
How did Trump’s visit to Kenosha play out? Depends on who you talk to
To many who live in Kenosha, NBC News’ Janell Ross reports, Trump seemed interested only in making his own points, not in listening to their concerns. But to others, the president’s visit was a welcome affirmation of the social order.
“Listening is one of the great strengths of a leader,” said the Rev. Murry Wilson, an associate pastor at Second Baptist Church, one of Kenosha’s predominantly Black congregations. “And what our president demonstrated by coming here today was not that.”
But that’s not how Jim Larsen, a white factory worker, saw Trump’s tour of his city.
“It sends the right message about who is in charge and who needs to stand down, what kind of country this is supposed to be and how people ought to behave,” he said.
But family members of Jacob Blake, the Black man whose shooting by police officers sparked many of the protests, weren’t interested in the president’s message.
“Trump has an agenda. It’s hate and division and re-election,” said his uncle Justin Blake. “But we have one, too, and that’s justice for little Jake.”
Markey fends off Kennedy in Massachusetts Senate primary that divided Democrats
Sen. Ed Markey on Tuesday held offa primary challenge from Rep. Joe Kennedy III in a race that divided progressive and establishment Democrats.
From a distance, the race appeared to be similar to others around the country where longtime Democratic politicians were ousted in primaries by younger, more progressive challengers. But different dynamics were in play in the Markey-Kennedy fight.
Kennedy, 39, wasn’t considered more liberal than Markey and he hails from one of the country’s most powerful political dynasties — his grandfather was Sen. Robert Kennedy, and JFK was his great-uncle.
Markey, 74, a longtime House member who was elected to the Senate in 2013, has his own progressive bona fides: He is one of the co-sponsors of the Green New Deal, which earned him the endorsement of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey beat Rep. Joe Kennedy III in the primary challenge. (Photo: Gretchen Ertl / Reuters)
Trump’s ‘plane loaded with thugs’ conspiracy theory matches months-old rumor
The conspiracy theory that President Trump pushed Monday that a plane “almost completely loaded with thugs” had been set to disrupt the Republican National Convention was almost identical to a rumor that went viral on Facebook three months ago.
In an interview with Fox News host Laura Ingraham, Trump claimed that “we had somebody get on a plane from a certain city this weekend, and in the plane it was almost completely loaded with thugs, wearing these dark uniforms, black uniforms, with gear and this and that.”
He then claimed the matter was “under investigation right now.”
There is no evidence of any such flight. And the claim almost directly matches a viral Facebook post from June 1 that gained so much steam in Idaho that a police department issued a statement insisting it was “false information.”
Trump also alleged in his interview with Ingraham that a group of people from “the dark shadows” are controlling Biden. (Photo: Saul Loeb / AFP – Getty Images)
Convalescent plasma not recommended to treat COVID-19, government panel says
The COVID-19 Treatment Guidelines Panel, part of the National Institutes of Health, said it had reviewed all of the available research on convalescent plasma, including the FDA’s analysis that led to its emergency use authorization.
“There are currently no data from well-controlled, adequately powered randomized clinical trials that demonstrate the efficacy and safety of convalescent plasma for the treatment of COVID-19,” the group wrote online.
They say you should never meet your heroes. One TODAY producer is proud to say she met hers— King T’Challa aka: Chadwick Boseman.
Shopping
Bottle of wine — check. Opener? Here are the best wine openers, according to experts.
One amazing thing
Just hours before Hurricane Laura lashed Louisiana, a team of neonatal nurses sprung into action, including one nurse expecting her own baby any day now.
Their mission: To evacuate 19 babies from the neonatal intensive care unit to higher ground and make sure they were in a safe place before the hurricane hit.
Thanks to a lot of teamwork and hustle, they succeeded.
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
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Ben Kamisar and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: After the conventions, Trump is still stuck in the low 40s
After the conventions, Trump is still stuck in the low 40s: We have our first live-caller national polls since the Republican convention concluded, and President Trump continues to trail challenger Joe Biden, with the president’s numbers still stuck in the low 40s.
And that’s a precarious position for an incumbent with 62 days until Election Day.
A USA Today/Suffolk poll shows Biden ahead by 7 points among registered voters, 50 percent to 43 percent – down from Biden’s 12-point lead back in June.
And a Grinnell College poll, conducted by Des Moines Register pollster Ann Selzer, finds Biden up by 8 points among likely voters, 49 percent to 41 percent.
AP Photo/Andrew Harnik
More important than the size of Biden’s leads are Trump’s 41 percent and 43 percent ballot numbers in both polls. They show an incumbent with a low ceiling after his convention and before the debates begin later this month.
Maybe that changes. But it hasn’t changed yet.
Also in the Grinnell poll, Trump’s overall job rating stands at 42 percent, just 39 percent approve of his handling of the coronavirus, and only 38 percent say they approve of his understanding of people like me.
But 52 percent of likely voters in the poll approve of his handling of the economy.
Fauci issues Labor Day warning
In an interview with NBC’s Sheinelle Jones on “Today,” Dr. Anthony Fauci warned Americans to be careful about their activities over the Labor Day holiday.
“When you have a holiday like Labor Day – we have seen, after Fourth of July, we saw after Memorial Day, a surge in cases. Wear a mask. Keep social distancing. Avoid crowds. You can avoid those kind of surges. You don’t want to be someone who’s propagating the outbreak. You want to be part of the solution, not part of the problem,” he said.
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
6,100,320: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 44,588 more than Tuesday morning.)
185,909: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 1,133 more than Tuesday morning.)
78.4 million: The number of coronavirus TESTS that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
17.1 million: The number of people across the world who have recovered from the coronavirus, according to Johns Hopkins University.
11: The number of days New York City will delay its first day of in-person schooling, as announced Tuesday.
2020 VISION: Markey, Neal win in Massachusetts
In one of the last marquee primary contests of the 2020 cycle, Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., defeated challenger Joe Kennedy III, 55 percent to 45 percent.
It is the first time a member of the Kennedy clan has lost a Dem primary in Massachusetts.
Also in the Bay State, Rep. Richard Neal – chair of the Ways and Means Committee – easily beat progressive challenger Alex Morse, 59 percent to 41 percent.
Back to Kennedy’s loss: It’s notable how so many political dynasties have come to an end (or close to it) over the last four years. The Bushes. The Clintons. And now the Kennedys.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Let’s get physical, physical
AD WATCH from Liz Brown-Kaiser
Today’s Ad Watch looks at Republican Bob Good’s first campaign ad in VA-5 – an ad a top DCCC aide was quick to label a “racist dog whistle.”
“With chaos in our streets, Cameron Webb would make things worse. Webb would defund the police while crime spikes,” the TV spot’s narrator says over dissolving footage of destruction and protests into a photo of Webb, Good’s Democratic opponent.
“Look past the smooth presentation. Webb’s real agenda: government-run health care, higher taxes on the middle class, police defunded, crime unchecked.”
“Let’s say it plainly, this #VA05 ad is a racist dog whistle running because Bob Good knows he can’t explain why voters should trust him over Cameron Webb to keep them safe during COVID-19,” DCCC communications director Cole Leiter tweeted Monday.
Asked to respond to the DCCC’s accusation, the Good campaign told NBC News that, “We categorically deny there is anything that is racist or a ‘dog whistle’ in the ad and would ask what specifically are the Democrats claiming would make it so?”
The controversial spot is airing in the Roanoke-Lynchburg media market in southwest Virginia, according to Advertising Analytics, part of the New Jersey-sized district spanning most of central Virginia and including Charlottesville.
Still no relief
Despite an entire summer of negotiating, Congress is still not close to passing another round of coronavirus relief legislation.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi spoke with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Tuesday, and this was her take from that call: “Sadly, this phone call made clear that Democrats and the White House continue to have serious differences understanding the gravity of the situation that America’s working families are facing.”
And without Democratic support, any Republican bill is likely going nowhere.
Despite that, GOP Sen. John Barrasso told reporters that Senate Republicans intend to vote on a skinny coronavirus package next week. “We have a focused, targeted solution that we hope that the House would pass and the House would agree to. It’s focused on getting people back to work, getting kids back to school,” Barrasso said.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The Department of Homeland Security delayed the release of an intelligence bulletin that warned Russian actors were going to try to influence the 2020 election by criticizing the mental and physical health of the presidential candidates.
America will not join a global effort to develop and equitably distribute a coronavirus vaccine co-led by the World Health Organization, an organization President Trump has maligned.
The Trump administration is delaying evictions for four months through the CDC’s quarantine powers, as concerns about the implications of pandemic-related lost income rise.
An NIH panel has said that despite the FDA’s emergency authorization for convalescent plasma as a COVID-19 treatment, there remains no solid evidence for recommending it.
Mississippi Democrat Mike Espy has launched his first TV ad, which hits Republican Cindy Hyde-Smith for a past remark referencing a “public hanging.”
Melania Trump used private email accounts and an encrypted messaging app for official business, a former colleague claims.
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President Trump toured damage done in Kenosha, Wisconsin by recent protests as critics accuse the president of stoking racial tensions. Also, the Army announced changes to top leadership at Fort Hood after a slew of recent killings linked to the base, including the murder of Specialist Vanessa Guillen. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
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Trump makes controversial visit to Kenosha amid unrest
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Trump “brought more tension” to Kenosha with visit, state AG says
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Grandpa who survived COVID recalls harrowing double-lung transplant
The Manhattan Institute is proud to announce five outstanding nonprofits and their leaders as recipients of its 2020 Civil Society Awards. This year’s winners were selected from nearly 200 nominations from 37 states and 107 cities around the country. Each organization will be honored with a $25,000 prize at the annual Civil Society Awards event, which will be held virtually on October 29, 2020.
New York City’s teachers won’t walk out—but talk of a work stoppage obscures Mayor de Blasio’s failure to plan for a successful school reopening.
By Ray Domanico City Journal Online
September 1, 2020
As its Marxist pedigree makes clear, Black Lives Matter is committed to overthrowing our entire system.
By Mike Gonzalez City Journal Online
September 1, 2020
On September 8, 2020, please join Manhattan Institute fellow Coleman Hughes and Jamil Jivani, the author of Why Young Men, for an important conversation. Hughes and Jivani will discuss the barriers to success that people of color face in life and in the workplace—asking which ones are simply imagined, and which ones are real.
Please join us on September 9 for a conversation between Manhattan Institute president, Reihan Salam, and writer and author, David Goodhart, for a discussion on the politics of meritocracy, the future of populism, and the prerequisites for social cohesion.
Are the police friend or foe? Are they necessary to preserve order, or are they unnecessarily intrusive? Do they have society’s best interest in mind, or are they racist and violent? Heather Mac Donald, Senior Fellow at the Manhattan Institute, analyzes the numbers behind these hot-topic questions.
What’s driving crime upticks in New York City? How will the NYPD navigate the challenges posed by recent policy shifts? How should the Department balance the public’s appetite for reform with the need for order maintenance and public safety? Rafael A. Mangual hosted an important discussion exploring these and other questions with the 44th Commissioner of the NYPD, Dermot Shea.
A new survey of New York City adults provides the clearest and most comprehensive window into the state of public opinion in New York City since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic and nationwide urban unrest. A new report, authored by MI’s director of state and local policy, Michael Hendrix, discusses the survey’s findings.
The wave of colleges forgoing in-person instruction for the coming academic year has sparked a national conversation about the overall value of higher education, which often comes with a hefty tuition price tag. A new report from Beth Akers identifies an important question that’s not been asked in previous analyses of tuition inflation: Why has market pressure failed to mitigate rising costs, as would normally happen in competitive markets for other products and services?
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.
Manhattan Institute is a think tank whose mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice and individual responsibility.
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REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
09/02/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Doubting Joseph; Lincoln’s Warning; Tiger by the Tail
By Carl M. Cannon on Sep 02, 2020 08:56 am
Good morning, it’s Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2020, the 75th anniversary of V-J Day. Today is when the United States celebrates its military victory over the Empire of Japan. The treaty signed aboard the USS Missouri marked the official end of World War II, an unimaginable conflagration that claimed the lives of some 15 million combatants around the globe — and at least three times that many civilians.
“It was too much death to contemplate, too much savagery and suffering,” wrote historian Donald L. Miller. “For those who had seen the face of battle and been in the camps and under the bombs — and had lived — there was a sense of immense relief.”
Although combat operations had effectively ended with the detonation of nuclear bombs over two Japanese cities in early August, Japan’s formal surrender took place on this date, Sept. 2, 1945.
Two weeks earlier, Harry Truman heralded the end of the war in a White House news conference. “This is the day we have been waiting for since Pearl Harbor,” the president said. “This is the day when fascism finally dies, as we always knew it would.”
That same day, in a radio address to the nation, Emperor Hirohito urged his people to accept the surrender. His emphasis was somewhat different: Hirohito blamed his country’s defeat on the United States’ deployment of the “new and most cruel bomb” over Hiroshima and Nagasaki. That may be how it seemed to the emperor, but in truth Japan’s plight was foreordained — in a way Nazi Germany’s was not — after the events of Dec. 7, 1941.
I’ll have more on this idea 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:
* * *
Tables Turned: Biden Now Distrusts U.S. Intelligence. Susan Crabtree examines the nominee’s efforts to downplay assessments that China is working to deny Donald Trump a second term.
A Timely Message on Mob Rule From Our 16th President. Jean M. Yarbrough revisits a warning Abraham Lincoln issued nearly two centuries ago.
Riot-Riddled Cities Aren’t “Donald Trump’s America.” Liz Harrington counters Joe Biden’s assertion by citing overwhelming support in Portland, Seattle and elsewhere for Democratic leaders and their policies.
Excerpt From Carter Page’s “Abuse and Power.” The Trump campaign consultant discusses being targeted by the FBI’s Russia collusion probe in his new book on the ordeal.
Young People Should Organize Against Coronavirus Lockdowns. Jason Garshfield argues that members of his demographic group have had no voice in decisions that affected them greatly.
The Pessimistic Intellectual Roots of BLM, Woke America. In RealClearInvestigations, John Murawski reports on “critical race theory,” which underpins much of today’s racial reckoning.
First Impressions vs. the Full Facts. In RealClearPolicy, Robert Cherry discusses the complications that arise in police brutality cases when additional information comes to light — and is often dismissed by those whose biases have already been confirmed.
Pandemic Heroes Need Their Pensions Saved. In RealClearHealth, John Boehner and Joe Crowley urge Congress to include multi-employer pension plan reform in the next stimulus bill.
Learning From California’s Blackouts. In RealClearEnergy, Tony Clark offers a warning for the rest of the country.
* * *
For Americans who lived through it, and their numbers dwindle with each passing day, the fact that Pearl Harbor was bombed on a Sunday added to the perfidy of the attack. In his captivating book, “December 1941,” author Craig Shirley set the scene this way:
“Sunday in America was a day for relaxing, whether you followed the fourth commandment or not. It was a day for church, for family meals, for reading the newspapers, listening to the radio, going for long walks, for afternoon naps, for working in the yard and visiting with neighbors.
“Sunday, December 7 was different.”
Moving a huge armada across 4,000 miles of open water without detection, as the Japanese Imperial Navy did, remains a source of amazement and controversy. This much can be said with certainty: Japanese stealth depended on naval skill and discipline, and in fleet commander Isoroku Yamamoto, the emperor’s navy had an officer up to the task. The invading flotilla refueled at sea on December 3. After that, the orders were for radio silence, only to be broken on the morning of the invasion with the code words “Tora! Tora! Tora!” (“Tiger! Tiger! Tiger!”) — if the surprise element of the attack had worked.
That very call went out a few minutes before 8 a.m. local time. In Hawaii, residents could see and hear the attacking planes. On the mainland, the news was first conveyed by CBS broadcaster Webley Edwards, who interrupted his popular program, “Hawaii Calls,” with a terse bulletin. “Attention. This is no exercise. The Japanese are invading Pearl Harbor.”
“Tora! Tora! Tora!” would become an infamous phrase in the United States, but Yamamoto’s fleet, as the decorated Japanese admiral himself soon realized, had awakened the tiger in the hearts of tens of millions of Americans. Pearl Harbor roused an enemy who would be passive no more.
Did Yamamoto, who didn’t survive the war, really utter the fateful words — “I fear all we have done is to awaken a sleeping giant and fill him with a terrible resolve” — put in his mouth by Hollywood screenwriters? No, but it seems to have reflected sentiments he expressed.
Yamamoto, who didn’t survive the war, wasn’t alone in his misgivings. The first Japanese prisoner of war was captured at Pearl Harbor that day. His name was Kazuo Sakamaki, and he was one of 10 sailors on the five two-man Japanese mini-submarines that slipped into the harbor the morning of the attack. All were destroyed and the crewmen killed, save one.
Lt. Sakamaki was sent to the mainland to a Tennessee prison camp that housed captured soldiers who had fought for the Third Reich. Like the Germans, Sakamaki was surprised at the lack of brutality, the quality of the medical care, and the amount of food given the prisoners. As he knew, these amenities were denied to those unfortunate enough to be captured by the Japanese. Equally strange, the prisoners were allowed access to American news media, which Sakamaki soon came to realize essentially reported the truth about the progress of the war. When those outlets conveyed the news of the U.S. Navy’s pivotal victory at the Battle of Midway, newly arrived Japanese POWs disbelieved it. Not Lt. Sakamaki. He’d paid close attention when he was transported by railroad across the United States, and had been awestruck by the vast size and industrial power of America.
As historian John Toland, who later interviewed Sakamaki, put it, the young officer had seen “countless factories and endless fields” on his long train trip across the country, and realized “that tiny Japan had yet to feel the full might of the United States.”
What are the national security implications of large-scale mass migration? How can foreign threats -from both state and non-state actors- exploit mass migration to cause upheaval and create an existential threat to a nation?
CSP looks at these and related issues in its newest publication, “Mass Migration in Europe: A Model for the U.S.,” by well-known author Robert Spencer.
Americans are struggling to come to terms with the significance of the ongoing insurrection on America’s streets. How does one understand the motives of those who chant “Black Lives Matter” while demanding to topple a statute erected by freed slaves to celebrate their own emancipation?
After 9/11, American citizens were encouraged by leftists to ask, “Why do they hate us?” Today the same people, trained by years of victim-blaming to hold themselves accountable for terrorism both foreign and domestic, are asking a similar question. “What flaw of ours makes these nice mobs so angry?”
“You gonna believe me or your own eyes” is a line made famous by the Marx Brothers. Lately, Marxists of another stripe and their allies seem to think the American people will believe them rather than what can be readily observed about the violence traumatizing cities across the country.
For example, Vice President Joe Biden and his supporters insist that the riots, looting and loss of life are President Trump’s fault. We’re told that white supremacists are the perpetrators, not the Antifa or BLM radicals observed committing such crimes.
The Left is skilled at the art of deflection and projection. But no amount of spinning and dissembling by President Trump’s opponents or their media enablers, will alter a reality your own eyes can readily discern: We are being subjected to a determined effort to overthrow our constitutional Republic.
See it; stop it.
This is Frank Gaffney.
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):
Where does the US stand with respect to sanctions on Iran?
How Europe is appeasing Iran
An intelligence report John Ratcliffe is rumored to be releasing in the near future
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”:
A potential disconnect in the US stock market
Could the Chinese crash our stock market?
The need to reinstate the uptick rule
ROBERT SPENCER, Director of Jihad Watch, Weekly columnist for PJ Media and FrontPage Magazine:
Jihadist infiltration of the BLM riots in the United States
Is US law enforcement aware of the Jihadist threat?
MICHAEL CUTLER, Retired Senior Special Agent of the former Immigration and Naturalization Services, Hosts the radio show “The Michael Cutler Hour” on Friday evenings on BlogTalk Radio:
Joe Biden’s plan for immigration
Democrats’ continual blame of President Trump for the riots across America
Below is a sneak peek of this content! Sports is where we go to get away from the daily barrage of partisan politics. At least, it used to be. That’s the topic of my Off the Cuff audio commentary this week. You can listen to it by clicking on the… CONTINUE Read More »
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…]
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WERE YOU FORWARDED THIS EDITION OF THE HOT AIR DAILY?
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AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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September 2, 2020
How Government Sells Fear and Sickness: The Case of the Flu
By Barry Brownstein | This fall expect the government-funded flu propaganda machine to be out in full force telling you it is your duty to receive a flu vaccination. In language similar to what they use for masks, we are instructed by the Centers…
Light-Vehicle Sales Top 15-million Annualized Rate in August
By Robert Hughes | Sales of light vehicles totaled 15.2 million at an annual rate in August, continuing a rebound from the 8.7 million pace in April. The pace of sales in April was the lowest on record since this data series began in 1976 and…
By Warren C. Gibson | “Sound bites may be good for political harangues but they are never enough for true understanding. Dissing profits is misleading if no distinction is made between consumer-driven competitive profits and crony-capitalist ones…
By Robert Hughes | The Institute for Supply Management’s Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index rose again in August, posting a 56.0 percent reading for the month, up from 54.2 percent in July. The latest result is the third consecutive reading…
By Michael Munger | “The Noble Lie is not noble; if we all repeat it and we are taught it in state schools, before long it’s not even a lie. Because worshippers of the state actually persuade themselves that the whole thing is true. Yes, we are…
By Martin Kulldorff | Climate scientists are frustrated by people who do not believe in climate change. In epidemiology, our frustration is with anti-vaxxers. Most anti-vaxxers are highly educated but still argue against vaccination. We now face a…
Edward C. Harwood fought for sound money when few Americans seemed to care. He was the original gold standard man before that became cool. Now he is honored in this beautiful sewn silk tie in the richest possible color and greatest detail.
The red is not just red; it is darker and deeper, more distinctive and suggestive of seriousness of purpose.
The Harwood coin is carefully sewn (not stamped). Sporting this, others might miss that you are secretly supporting the revolution for freedom and sound money, but you will know, and that is what matters.
The focus should have been on the aged with underlying conditions living in nursing homes.
The models nowhere included what ended up being our reality, even though that reality was upon us as early as February when people in nursing homes began to die in Washington State. We should have seen it long before the lockdowns began.
Now the modelers in the epidemiological profession need to learn what the economists figured out long ago: Human life is too complex to be accurately modeled, much less predicted.
Want to get in on stocks that are about to skyrocket? Maximize your gains by getting in a trade before takeoff and riding it out before the downturn. VantagePoint is offering a FREE live masterclass to demonstrate our advanced forecasting right in front of you. Capitalize on potential profits now and reserve your seat today!
The pandemic-induced summer of escape from New York continues at a moment violent crime is on the rise, restaurant and public venue closures make the city less appealing, public transit is reeling in debt, and remote working set-ups are…
The trend we have been noting for the last week has accelerated overnight and ‘the streams have crossed’, with the average bookie now seeing it more likely that President Trump wins the 2020 election that Joe Biden. Source: RealClearPolitics…
The US State Department illegally monitored the social media accounts of 13 conservative Americans, including Donald Trump Jr., Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham, Lou Dobbs and Jack Posobiec, according to Just The News , citing memos scheduled…
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) – who invited people to tour Chinatown in late February to prove that coronavirus was ‘no big deal’ – has just been caught ignoring a San Francisco city ordinance ordering hair salons to remain closed…
A disturbing video has surfaced on social media showing a man striking another unsuspecting man with an apparent brick in Baltimore City. The short video shows a man running up with a brick in hand and then smashing it over the head of…
In an unprecedented move on Tuesday, with Congress unable to reach a common ground on virtually any stimulus extension, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention unveiled today it would temporarily – at least through the end of 2020…
Bill Gates says this new technology will single handedly change computing. And it’s on the cusp of FDA approval that could send this $4 tech stock soaring – with gains of 1,000% possible. Urgent details here…
On the menu today: Nancy Pelosi goes to a shut-down hair salon, mask-free, demonstrating that we never had a chance at uniform obedience to coronavirus restrictions, because so many leaders believed they were exempt; as well as assessing “Sister Souljah” moments, real and imagined.
Americans Won’t Follow the Rules Because Their Leaders Won’t Follow the Rules
The validity and value of a rule should not be determined by who is enforcing it or whether the enforcers of the rule follow that rule themselves. If the rule is a good idea, someone else choosing to break that rule doesn’t make the idea behind the rule any less bad.
“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
77-year-old Joe Biden left his basement on Monday and traveled to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania for a ‘big speech.’ There was a handful of reporters sitting in… Read more…
Maskless Pelosi in shuttered San Francisco salon Nancy “Antoinette” Pelosi this week waltzed into a shuttered hair salon in San Francisco and got her hair… Read more…
It’s Tucker Time! Fox News host Tucker Carlson on Tuesday evening released audio of CNN anchor Chris Cuomo confiding in Michael Cohen. Trump’s former… Read more…
Video released on Tuesday shows Queen Nancy Pelosi at a shuttered salon getting her hair done on Monday. Only the little people had to follow… Read more…
In October 2019 House Democrats called in fired US Ambassador Marie Yovanovich to testify in their sham impeachment proceedings. Yovanovich was a noted Trump-hater who… Read more…
Nothing is safe from the mob. Not even Graceland. Black Lives Matter vandalized Graceland overnight with graffiti to “Defund the police” and “F*ck 12” (f*ck… Read more…
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At this disrupted time centered around the COVID-19 pandemic affecting all parts of the globe might there be a way to assess the relative standing of national regimes and the geographical regions as fields in which their interests may compete?
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, September 3, 2020 at 11:00 am PT.
Since 2012, Japan’s prime minister, Shinzo Abe, and China’s authoritarian leader, Xi Jinping, have been fencing with each other throughout Asia and beyond. Under Abe, Japan not only embarked on its boldest, if incomplete, economic reforms, it also embraced a far larger and more active role on the global stage, built up its military, and threw away decades of self-imposed restraints.
Hoover Institution fellow Amy Zegart discusses John Ratcliffe’s, the director of national intelligence, announcement that the intelligence community would cut back on its briefings to Congress on electoral security.
Hoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson discusses silence about violence, Joe Biden’s trip to Pittsburgh, Donald Trump’s trip to Wisconsin, Portland madness, British SJWs shocked by Rule Britannia, and internal tensions among Red China’s leaders.
Hoover Institution Bjorn Lomborg discusses whether human innovation can stop climate change, or will it simply manage and delay the challenges it poses.
The Hoover Institution is hosting A Conversation with Representative Bi-khim Hsiao and Hoover Senior Fellow Larry Diamond on Friday, September 11, 2020 from 1:00 p.m. – 2:00 p.m. PDT.
[Subscription Required] So we enter another week enveloped in smoke, here in California. Can you imagine the public and political reaction if this were caused by a private-sector activity?
President Donald Trump’s newest Covid-19 adviser on Monday traveled to the swing state of Florida, where he said there is no need to test healthy people for infection and urged the state not to fear the virus, which has killed more than 182,000 people nationwide and infected more than 6 million.
The Sino-American clash has been escalating and some commentators claim the arrival of “Cold War 2.0.” Some scholars argue that this competition will reveal the answer to a fundamental question: political capitalism versus liberalism capitalism.
From protecting its most vulnerable senior residents to getting children safely back into school, The Villages is getting the COVID-19 response outbreak right, state and national leaders said Monday.
At the Democratic National Convention, viewers heard from an Arizona man whose young son was born with a congenital heart defect, a Wisconsin woman with an autoimmune disease and cancer survivors from several states. Their stories highlighted the importance of health care — and the protections provided by the Affordable Care Act.
When I first started practicing in the late aughts, I found that a lot of what I was seeing about patents in various academic papers and studies, on Capitol Hill, and even in Supreme Court decisions, didn’t really reflect the reality of what I was seeing in practice, talking to innovators.
mentioning Kevin Hassett via Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR)
The Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research invites you to join us for a virtual associates meeting with Austan Goolsbee and Kevin Hassett on Tuesday, September 15, 2020 at 12:00pm PT.
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
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