Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday September 8, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
September 8 2020
Good morning from Washington, which the radical left hopes to transform into its own image. Americans have precious little time to stand up for free elections and traditional values, David Harsanyi and Star Parker write in separate pieces. On the podcast, a retail development and ownership expert explains retail’s key role in economic recovery. Plus: the strong foundation of marriage; a court victory for the transgender agenda; and more than 30 media rationales for violent unrest. On this date in 1974, President Gerald Ford, who took office with Richard Nixon’s resignation a month earlier, pardons Nixon for any crimes he may have committed or participated in as president.
A federal court decided that schools can’t ban students from using the restroom that matches their desired gender identity, in what BuzzFeed calls “a significant legal win for transgender rights.”
Dozens of news outlets provided a platform for commentators who sought to either justify the violence as a valid protesting technique or as a form of righteous rebellion against an unjust system.
As Manhattan Institute’s Heather Mac Donald explains, “A police officer is 18 1/2 times more likely to be killed by a black male than an unarmed black male is to be killed by a police officer.”
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THE RESURGENT
THE EPOCH TIMES
“Love is not affectionate feeling, but a steady wish for the loved person’s ultimate good as far as it can be obtained.”
Amazon is allowing attacks on the police with items accusing law enforcement of being murderers and pigs, and sells shirts which say “Cops Kill Kids” on them.
This comes in the midst of radical hatred for the law that is leading to popular anarchy and social unrest.
These hateful items completely ignore police officers who have children, and who work hard to keep a safe environment for families everywhere. Such products only create a climate of distrust towards those responsible for maintaining law and order.
Please hold Amazon to task for this lie. Sign the petition, urging Amazon to remove its offensive anti-police products.
Story Claims Left is Preparing for MAGA Violence Should Trump Lose
A cluster of far left groups, like Planned Parenthood and MoveOn, are among those who appear to believe the right is where the violence may come (Daily Beast). From Mollie Hemingway: Resistance figures signaling that they are prepping for violent resistance to 2020 election if they lose. All while claiming that what they’re AKSHUALLY doing is preparing for, uh, widespread GOP violence. Really. Some interesting projection and propaganda here (Twitter). From Michael Dougherty: There’s no talk whatsoever among mainstream or even Breitbartian Republicans of putting on displays of force on the streets around election time. But there’s a TON of it among elite Dems! (Twitter). From Will Chamberlain: Seems like the party that is currently setting cities on fire is the party that’s more likely to set cities on fire if they lose (Twitter). From Erielle Davidson: Pretty sure it’s not Trump voters burning down major cities right now. How unintelligent do these orgs think the American public is? (Twitter).
2.
Serbia and Kosovo Sign “Breakthrough Economic Accord”
Signed at the White House, Trump playing a major role (Washington Post). From Hugh Hewitt: Elite media all but ignored the immense significance of the Kosovo-Serbia agreement — two countries whose enmity has required tens of thousands of Americans over two decades to spend years away from their families to prevent savage killing. Astonishing (Twitter).
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3.
Bolton: Claim Trump Called Fallen Soldiers “Losers” is “Simply False”
The Atlantic piece takes yet another hit. Bolton was on with Martha MacCallum on Fox News. Bolton, who has proven he is not afraid to say very negative things about Trump, says he was, in fact, in the room when the unnamed sources said this happened and it simply did not occur (Fox News). From Brit Hume: Once again Trump is embroiled in a heated controversy. Once again, it is about something he’s alleged to have said. And once again, his reported comments are at odds with his record, this time on veterans and the military. Such disparities have been a constant in his presidency (Twitter).
4.
New York Times Makes Hero of Jacob Blake
Telling his tale in glowing terms (New York Times). Strangely downplayed in the story: His alleged sexual assault. From another story: The woman who survived the sexual assault has been pretty much ignored. But Jacob Blake, the alleged assailant, is now the darling of the Left and the media. Not only did he stand accused of that assault, but he knowingly endangered his own children’s lives by attempting to flee the police (Washington Examiner). From Ben Shapiro: Here’s the NYT, just making a hero of a man who allegedly digitally raped a woman with her child in the room (Twitter).
5.
Democrats Worry About States Where Kanye West in On the Ballot
From the story: Of the states where West has been victorious in his long shot bid, the most keenly-watched swing states are Colorado and Minnesota, both competitive states that lean Democrat and voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016. In Colorado, Clinton won by a narrow five percentage points, and Minnesota, she only won by 1.5 percentage points. Minnesota also has a history of being receptive to third parties, compared to other states, according to J. Miles Coleman, associate editor at Sabato’s Crystal Ball, a political analysis institution run by the University of Virginia Center for Politics (ABC News). The Wall Street Journal looks the mayhem a close election could bring (WSJ). Another article looks at Democrat fears Trump could win on law and order (Politico).
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6.
Antifa Continues Mayhem in Portland
Andy Ngo has video of a fire they set (Twitter) and harassing a black motorist (Twitter). And the attacks continue in Seattle as well (Twitter). Meanwhile, a study reveals violence found at hundreds of demonstrations (Washington Examiner).
7.
Discover Blocks Donations to Christian Site
Which was collecting for teen, Kyle Rittenhouse, who shot three people while being attacked.
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President Donald Trump will highlight his environmental agenda as he campaigns in Jupiter today.
The White House says Trump will stop in Florida to remind voters there of his conservation and environmental protection efforts in the Everglades region.
Donald Trump will visit Jupiter to talk about environmental issues. Image via AP.
For the federal budget year beginning Oct. 1, the White House said, Trump asked Congress for $250 million in annual funding to accelerate the construction of infrastructure for the Everglades as part of the South Florida Ecosystem Restoration. The project aims to improve the Everglades by enhancing regional water storage capacity and reducing harmful discharges from Lake Okeechobee.
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The Joe Biden campaign said Monday that VP nominee Kamala Harris will campaign Thursday in Miami.
It will be Harris’ first in-person appearance in Florida since becoming the Democratic Party’s Veep nominee.
Doug Emhoff and VP candidate Kamala Harris are coming to Florida. Image via AP
Her husband, Doug Emhoff, will accompany her. Emhoff kicked off a “Believers for Biden” series of virtual events on Aug. 28 with Jewish leaders.
That’s how a top Democratic strategist describes the less-than-full-throated support by Florida House Victory for Democratic incumbents in battleground districts.
Dylan Sumner, a partner at Deliver Strategies and one of Florida’s top Democratic vendors, recently emailed a dire warning: “Unless [House Victory] quickly embarks on the greatest surge in financial support of House Dems over the next four weeks, the Dem. field is on a trajectory for the lowest amount of resources in targeted races in the modern political era.”
In at least six districts, there has been little or no financial support to Democratic candidates, with 22 “battleground” districts getting less than $384K combined. Many within the Party privately share these concerns, and some candidates already assume Party help will not be forthcoming at all, at the same time fearing being outspent by Republican opponents.
But not everyone is predicting doom.
“Major spending typically comes closer to the elections, too, so ideally that’s what we’ll see,” Democratic Rep. Anna Eskamani said. “I’m sure more will come in the coming weeks.”
>>>Speaking of House campaigns … it’s official; vaunted field organizer Kevin Sweeny is helping Chris Sprowls retain (and build out?) the GOP advantage in the Florida House. Sweeny is a veteran of Florida politics, having managed campaigns and legislative affairs for a variety of interests, first as a consultant with Public Concepts in West Palm Beach, then as chief of staff to Rep. Stan Mayfield and Sen. Charlie Dean, campaign manager to Dean and Sen. J.D. Alexander, and leading the political and legislative charge at FJA. “Kevin Sweeny is a friend and the best grassroots operative in Florida politics,” says Speaker-designate Sprowls. “We are pleased to have him as part of our 2020 House Majority Team.”
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Prayers for the departed — “Christopher Benjamin’s wife, Carleen Aneesa Nelson-Benjamin, dies weeks after his election to Florida House” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — The Miami Gardens Democrat wrote on a Facebook post a summary of his wedding vows, closing with the phrase “All I am is for you.” Nephew Zamir Brown, a policy analyst with The National Health Law Program, confirmed the death in an Instagram post. “Auntie Carleen Aneesa Nelson-Benjamin, there are no words that could ever amount to the love and healing you gave to this world and everyone you came in contact with. You were too great for this world and this world did not deserve you. May Allah grant you the most beautiful palace and an exalted status in paradise. Ameen.” On Aug. 18, Benjamin won election in House District 107.
RIP to Carleen Aneesa Nelson-Benjamin, wife of Christopher Benjamin, who died this week. Image via Facebook.
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Are you ready for some football? — Republican Fantasy Football League — Tuesday night marks the draft of the 24th season of the Republican Football League. Started at the RPOF in 1997, when Lawton Chiles was Governor and Bill Clinton had been reinaugurated, but the Florida GOP had just won a majority in the Legislature the year before. Each year, the winner earns the Madden Trophy. Among this year’s players are Slater Bayliss, Chris Brown (Commissioner), Steve and Brandi Brown, Chris Clark, Tom DiGiacomo, Eric Eikenberg, Randy Enwright, Towson Fraser, Clint Fuhrman, Mike Hanna, David Johnson, Jamie Miller, Jim Rimes, Bob Sparks, Todd Thomson and Cory Tilley.
Situational awareness
—@SarahHuckabee: The Atlantic story on @realDonaldTrumpis total BS. I was actually there and one of the people part of the discussion — this never happened. I have sat in the room when our President called family members after their sons were killed in action, and it was heart-wrenching …
Tweet, tweet:
—@RichardCorcoran: Thanks to @GovRonDeSantis Friday Night Lights is alive and well in Florida! Suwannee Bulldogs v. Santa Fe Raiders.
—@Conarck: Lots of wide-open spaces in South Beach. I asked a couple of masked people on a stroll what they expected to see. They said a lot more crowds. That’s due to the virus or the weather? “In Miami? the weather,” one said. “No one gives a shit about the virus,” the other agreed.
—@FloridaGOP: We oppose Amendment 3, which has been FALSELY described as simply opening primaries in FL. Not true. It abolishes party primary elections and limits voter choice. Proponents are blatantly misleading the public through offensive targeted ads. Vote NO on 3.
Days until
2020 NFL Season begins — 3; Walmart Amazon Prime competitor, Walmart+, will launch nationwide — 8; Rescheduled date for French Open — 14; First presidential debate in Indiana — 22; “Wonder Woman 1984” premieres — 25; Preakness Stakes rescheduled — 26; Ashley Moody’s 2020 Human Trafficking Summit — 29; First vice presidential debate at the University of Utah — 30; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 36; Second presidential debate scheduled in Miami — 38; NBA draft — 39; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 39; NBA free agency — 41; Florida Chamber’s Future of Florida Forum — 43; Third presidential debate at Belmont — 46; 2020 General Election — 57; “Black Widow” premieres — 60; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 64; College basketball season slated to begin — 72; “No Time to Die” premieres — 74; Pixar’s “Soul” premieres — 74; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 85; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 86; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 153; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 165; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 298; New start date for 2021 Olympics — 319; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 326; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 426; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 522; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 564; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 756.
Presidential
“More Americans predict Donald Trump will win the presidential debates than Joe Biden, poll shows” via Maureen Groppe and Sarah Elbeshbishi of USA Today — Could the debates do for Trump what the conventions didn’t? A poll indicates many voters think that’s possible. A greater share — 47% — predicted Trump will win the debates than the 41% who said Biden will. That’s despite the fact that only 33% of respondents who watched at least some of the conventions said the political events made them more likely to support Trump; 37% said the conventions made them less likely. Independents picked Trump over Biden as the likely winner of the debates by 10 percentage points: 47%-37%.
Most voters think Donald Trump will win the debates over Joe Biden.
“Trump plays defense with the military weeks before election” via Lara Seligman of POLITICO — Trump is once again fending off a fresh set of attacks from the military, this time as he’s forced to explain away allegations that he disparaged fallen and wounded service members, just before a critical stretch of the election. Still, it’s a difficult situation for Trump, who from the beginning of his presidency has surrounded himself with military trappings and boasted about “rebuilding” the armed services. Experts and former top military officials say the quotes from the article are dangerous not just for losing actual voters tied to the military — but potentially turning off a narrow slice of undecided voters who may not love either 2020 candidate but still revere troops and veterans.
“Biden aiming ads at military families” via Alexi McCammond of Axios — Biden’s campaign is seizing on new accusations about Trump insulting veterans, investing heavily in ads to sway voters around military bases in five swing states. “Protect Our Troops,” an ad that debuted earlier this year highlighting Biden’s family connections to the U.S. military and plans to support troops, will relaunch this week as part of a $47 million ad buy across TV, digital and radio. Voters living near bases like Fort McCoy in Wisconsin or Fort Bragg in North Carolina will see the ad on Facebook and Instagram. The campaign is targeting households in a 50-mile radius of military bases in those two swing states, as well as Arizona, Pennsylvania and Florida. The ad follows a report that cites multiple unnamed sources and alleges Trump privately referred to American soldiers who’ve died in war as “suckers” and “losers.” Trump and several current and former aides on the record have denied the report, while some news outlets report confirming portions of it.
“Trump fixates on the promise of a vaccine — real or not — as key to reelection bid” via Philip Rucker, Josh Dawsey and Yasmeen Abutaleb of The Washington Post — Trump is so fixated on finding a vaccine for the novel coronavirus that in meetings about the U.S. pandemic response, little else captures his attention, according to administration officials. Trump has pressed health officials to speed up the vaccine timeline and urged them to deliver one by the end of the year. He has peppered them with questions about the development status and mass-distribution plans. And, in recent days, he has told some advisers and aides that a vaccine may arrive by Nov. 1, which just happens to be two days before the presidential election. Trump’s desire to deliver a vaccine by the time voters decide whether to elect him to a second term is in part a campaign gambit to improve his standing with an electorate that overwhelmingly disapproves of his management of the pandemic.
“Kamala Harris says she won’t take Trump’s word on vaccine efficacy” via Sydney Maki of Bloomberg — Harris told CNN that she wouldn’t take Trump’s word alone on the efficacy of a coronavirus vaccine. “I would not trust Donald Trump, and it would have to be a credible source of information that talks about the efficacy and the reliability of whatever he’s talking about,” Harris said in an interview with CNN’s “State of the Union.” “I will not take his word for it.” Trump has accused employees at the U.S. FDA of attempting to sabotage his reelection by slowing down coronavirus research. Concern about pressure from the White House to speed up the vaccine’s development and approval pushed drugmakers to plan a public pledge to not send any Covid-19 vaccine to the FDA for review without extensive safety and efficacy data. Still, health officials inside the Trump administration have said the process will be based entirely on science, and FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn, a Trump appointee, has said he wouldn’t participate if he thought a vaccine were being rubber-stamped.
“How Trump’s billion-dollar campaign lost its cash advantage” via Shane Goldmacher and Maggie Haberman of The New York Times — Brad Parscale, the former campaign manager, liked to call Trump’s reelection war machine an “unstoppable juggernaut.” But interviews with more than a dozen current and former campaign aides and Trump allies, and a review of thousands of items in federal campaign filings, show that the President’s campaign and the RNC developed some profligate habits as they burned through hundreds of millions of dollars. Since Bill Stepien replaced Parscale in July, the campaign has imposed a series of belt-tightening measures that have reshaped initiatives, including hiring practices, travel and the advertising budget. Under Parscale, more than $350 million — almost half the $800 million spent — went to fundraising operations, as no expense was spared in finding new donors online.
Brad Parscale once called the Donald Trump reelection machine a ‘juggernaut.’ That may not be the case. Image via AP.
“Why Biden could still lose the suburbs to Trump” via David Siders of POLITICO — A raft of recent polls suggest Trump’s law-and-order rhetoric, amplified by the Republican National Convention and turmoil in Kenosha, Wis., is doing little to cut into Biden’s lead. But in swing state suburbs, local party officials are meeting the Labor Day start of the fall campaign with an undercurrent of uneasiness about how quickly Trump shifted the focus of the campaign to public safety — and away from the more damaging discussion of his erratic response to the coronavirus pandemic. Interviews with more than two dozen Democratic Party officials and strategists in the suburbs reflect confidence in Biden’s ability to compete with Trump on issues surrounding this summer’s civil unrest, but also widespread concerns about the political volatility — and potential allure — of the president’s law-and-order message.
“Biden lags among Florida Hispanic voters” via Marc Caputo of POLITICO — Biden is underperforming among Florida Hispanic voters while Trump has marginally increased his numbers from 2016, according to a new poll in the must-win battleground state for the president. Biden leads Trump among Hispanics by 53-37% in the poll conducted for Equis Research, a Democratic Latino research firm. While his advantage seems large, Biden’s 16-percentage point margin spells potential trouble for him because it’s 11 points lower than what Hillary Clinton received in 2016 exit polls, when she lost the state to Trump. At the same time, Trump is running slightly ahead of his statewide Hispanic performance in 2016 by about 2 points thanks to increased backing from conservative Cuban American voters and additional support from a broader coalition of Latino voters, specifically men, whom the president’s campaign has courted.
“To reach Hispanic voters in Florida, presidential campaigns turn to Bad Bunny” via Bianca Padró Ocasio of the Miami Herald — In the fight for Hispanic votes in Florida, the latest weapon is Puerto Rican trap singer Bad Bunny. Both presidential campaigns are making a play for Hispanic voters in Florida and also in Arizona by launching dueling videos featuring the Puerto Rican rapper’s music. Florida is home to over a million Puerto Ricans, many of whom live in Central Florida, and make up nearly a third of eligible Hispanic voters living in the state. The musical outreach effort comes as polls in the battleground states show Democratic presidential nominee Biden’s lead over Trump slightly shrinking.
“At least 4 boats sink during ‘Trump boat parade’ in Texas, officials say” via Bryan Pietsch and Aimee Ortiz of The New York Times — The authorities rescued numerous people from the waters of Lake Travis in Texas on Saturday after at least four boats sank at an event promoted as a Trump Boat Parade, officials said. The Sheriff’s Office in Travis County received “multiple” calls of boats in distress starting at 12:15 p.m. local time, a spokeswoman, Kristen Dark, said. Christa Stedman, a spokeswoman for Austin-Travis County Emergency Medical Services, said no injuries had been reported. Firefighters pulled “numerous” people out of the water, said Braden Frame, president of the Lake Travis Fire Fighters Association. It was not clear how many had needed rescuing, he said.
“Hundreds of boaters gather in Choctawhatchee Bay for Trump flotilla” via Nick Tomecek of the NWF Daily News — Choctawhatchee Bay was packed with hundreds of boaters Saturday eager to show their support for Trump. Boats of all sizes adorned with American flags and various Trump memorabilia participated in the Emerald Coast Florida Trump Flotilla near the Brooks Bridge. The flotilla moved west toward Navarre to join with another boat parade to attempt a Guinness Book of World Records’ “World’s Largest Boat Parade” entry. Trump supporters were also stationed on the Brooks Bridge, waving at passing motorists and the flotilla as boats made their way underneath. The Trump event was organized by Anne Ziegenhorn and Deidre Cannon, co-administrators of the “I’m a Florida Trump Girl” Facebook page.
A Trumptilla along the Emerald Cost attempted a world record for boat parades. Image via Walton Sun.
“Trumptilla II: President’s backers are loud and proud during Intracoastal boat bash” via Larry Keller of The Palm Beach Post — The circus arrived in Jupiter on Monday. Not under the Big Top, but on water and in the air, as supporters of Trump’s reelection bid held a boisterous procession in watercraft that ranged from a jet ski to yachts and party boats rented for the event. But first, four parachutists dropped from the sky, unfurling “Trump 2020” and American flags. Choppers flew noisily overhead, with one toting a U.S. flag. Two drones hovered above the scene. The boating extravaganza was similar to the first “Trumptilla” that came together May 3 at the same location.
Get ‘er done
In a new campaign spot, Vern Buchanan is touting a list of bipartisan accomplishments, including 22 legislative initiatives signed into law under three Presidents.
The Longboat Key Republican is featuring his record in “Vern Gets it Done,” the second digital ad in this campaign cycle. The video follows a commercial launched last week that highlights Buchanan’s efforts to help the family of a Bradenton soldier killed in a tragic training accident.
According to a campaign statement, since coming to Congress in 2007, Buchanan passed legislation ranging from the first-ever federal penalty for animal cruelty to addressing the opioid crisis. The campaign contrasts Buchanan’s record with former presidential candidate Ron Paul, who served in Congress for 22 years and only passed one bill.
The spot also features testimonials from community leaders, including Bradenton Mayor Wayne Poston and Manatee County Commissioner Carol Whitmore, both praising Buchanan for his ability to “break through the Washington gridlock” to get things done for his region.
“He’s not a ceremonial Congressman; he’s a working Congressman,” Poston says in the ad. “You have to be concerned first and foremost about your community and not yourself. Vern sees that.”
“September surprise: Florida tries to awaken millions of nonvoters” via Steve Bousquet of the South Florida — Better late than never. In the coming days, Florida will turn to the Postal Service for more help but this isn’t about mail-in ballots. It’s about being able to vote. The state will send about 4 million postcards to people living here who are not registered to vote. The message in English and Spanish will be that they should go to the online voter registration website and sign up for the 2020 election. It’s unprecedented. In the nation’s largest swing state, with its history of razor-thin margins and reputation for trying to suppress turnout, this long-awaited effort to expand the pool of eligible voters could shake things up with eight-and-a-half weeks to go. Why would Republicans do it when the latest poll shows the race in Florida between Trump and Biden a dead heat?
“The push for a $15 minimum wage in Florida is on and these groups are leading the fight” via Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times — A coalition of progressive groups, social justice activists and labor organizations are joining forces to fight for a $15 minimum wage in November. The combined effort, to be announced Wednesday, will kick off with a series of protests and rallies throughout Labor Day weekend. On Thursday morning, local fast-food workers will go on strike and caravan from one Tampa McDonald’s to another. “This pandemic has shown, clearer than ever, that our system is broken, especially for Black and brown essential workers,” said Gail Rogers, a 60-year old McDonald’s worker in Tampa who is coleading the coalition. “No essential worker should be making poverty wages, plain and simple.”
The fight for a $15 minimum wage is on in Florida.
Assignment editors — Florida Legislative Black Caucus Chair Sen. Bobby Powell and Caucus leaders including former Rep. Sean Shaw, Sen. Randolph Bracy, Senate Minority Leader Audrey Gibson, House Minority Leader-Designate Bobby Dubose and Rep. Dotie Joseph will hold a virtual news conference to discuss their concerns about Florida’s Open Primaries ballot initiative, Amendment 3, noon, registration available here.
“Poll: CD 4 incumbent John Rutherford leads Democratic challenger Donna Deegan by 27 points” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — In a survey conducted Sept. 2 by St. Pete Polls, Rutherford is the choice of 62% of the 1,037 likely voters polled, while Deegan lags far behind with the support of just 35%, with the remainder undecided. The district, which includes Nassau and some of Duval and St. Johns counties, is set up as a safe Republican seat, giving the Congressman a structural advantage demographically. GOP voters account for 297,712 of the district’s 607,634 registered voters, compared with 170,254 Democrats, with independents and third-party registrants making up the balance. Rutherford is outperforming even Trump, who leads Biden 60% to 36%.
“Lara Trump campaigns for bigoted conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer” via Rachel Olding of the Daily Beast — Trump’s daughter-in-law knocked on doors in Florida on Tuesday for Loomer, the bigoted conspiracy theorist and notorious internet troll vying for a seat in Congress. Before she won the Republican primary in Florida’s deeply-blue 21st District, Loomer was most famous for chaining herself to Twitter’s front door while wearing a yellow Star of David, spreading conspiracy theories about the 2017 Las Vegas mass shooting, being permanently banned from Uber Eats for calling for an Uber without a Muslim driver, and bragging about being a #ProudIslamophobe. None of that has discouraged Trump’s campaign surrogate Lara Trump from hopping aboard the Loomer train.
Lara Trump has jumped on the Laura Loomer train.
Larry Sabato predicts tough reelection race for Democratic Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell — Sabato’s “Crystal Ball” now sees the race for Florida’s 26th Congressional District as a tossup. The shift was announced Thursday. Sabato’s House race rating system had previously pegged the district as leaning Democratic. Mucarsel-Powell is competing against Republican candidate Carlos Giménez, who currently serves as the Miami-Dade County Mayor. In late July, analysts at the Cook Political Report also shifted the race from “leaning Democratic” to a “tossup.” Mucarsel-Powell won the seat from Republican Carlos Curbelo in 2018 by just 2 percentage points. Mucarsel-Powell herself has previously predicted the race will be “one of the toughest” in the nation. Her district covers parts of Miami-Dade County as well as Monroe County.
“On the floor for the Red Pill Roadshow, a QAnon tent revival” via Claire Goforth of the Daily Dot — On Aug. 25, some of the biggest names in QAnon attended the Red Pill Roadshow at the Jacksonville Ice & Sportsplex. QAnon is a conspiracy theory that a Satanist pedophile cabal controls the world. They believe Trump is at war with this cabal, sometimes called the Illuminati. The Red Pill Roadshow was equal parts spectacle, lunacy, and convention — but mostly grift. There’s a growing grifter class of QAnon personalities. For their marks, the QAnon faithful, the show was a chance to mingle with other members of the quasi-religious conspiracy theory community. It was kind of sad to see them taken advantage of. Originally planned when the Republican National Convention was to be held in Jacksonville, organizers soldiered on, undeterred, after the RNC moved online due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Leg. campaigns
“Chris King seeking to elevate Democrats in ‘Gillum-King’ districts” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — King is pursuing a new effort in Florida Democratic Party politics by hosting online forums with legislative candidates in districts held by Republicans, but in which the Andrew Gillum-King ticket did well in 2018. King has launched a series of social media forums he calls “Let’s Talk.” He’s seeking to lend his support by providing opportunities for Democratic candidates to introduce themselves to his followers. To date, a half dozen such forums carried on Facebook and Twitter platforms have averaged more than 12,500 views each. His staff said there were 20,000 for an August 23 forum that featured Julie Jenkins running in House District 60 and Jessica Harrington running in House District 64. King’s effort is focused in seven districts that Gillum and he carried at the top of the ticket, but which Republicans won in district elections in 2018, plus a handful more Republican-held districts where the Gillum-King ticket came close.
Chris King is looking to turn Republican districts that leaned Democrat in the Gubernatorial election.
“Residents of east Seminole question if Jason Brodeur will protect rural zone” via Martin E. Comas of the Orlando Sentinel — Two years ago, as a member of the Florida House, Brodeur voted four times for legislation that would have helped the proposed River Cross development sidestep county rules meant to protect rural lands in eastern Seminole County. Brodeur, a Republican who is now running for a seat in the Florida Senate in one of the most hotly contested elections in the state this year, said he voted for the controversial legislation by mistake and that he is committed to protecting Seminole County’s rural boundary. But activists who have been fighting the River Cross plans for years are skeptical — especially because Brodeur is a longtime friend and political ally of Chris Dorworth, the lobbyist and former legislator who is the developer of River Cross and who is continuing to pursue the massive project.
“HD 42 candidates Barbara Cady, Fred Hawkins paint differing pictures of Hawkins’ record” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Suspended Republican Osceola County Commissioner Hawkins proudly points to his support for the controversial Osceola Parkway extension through Split Oak Forest as a win-win; the sometimes-troubled NeoCity high-tech manufacturing center is a long-term project worth continued support. They all are all positive developments presented as evidence of his effectiveness in 12 years on the Commission. Frustrations, Cady said, come from people who feel their needs have not been addressed as the bulldozers roll. Lending some extra drama to the election, Hawkins was arrested June 21 after the FDLE investigated an incident at an election meeting of the Turnberry Reserve Homeowners Association in Osceola County. It led to DeSantis suspending him from office.
“In Central Florida state House race, Geraldine Thompson and Bruno Portigliatti offer different approaches to crises” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Offering their own approaches and priorities to fix the health and economic impact, Rep. Thompson and Portigliatti are battling for that challenge. For Thompson, the impacts are exacerbations of chronic problems that already needed more attention before the coronavirus crisis. Now, more than ever, she says, the district needs an advocate for such things as issues ranging from livable wages to expansion of health care access, public education support to investment in affordable housing. For Portigliatti, the priority is getting the economy safely rebooted. Then many of the other issues can be addressed in a healthy environment. That makes the election more critical, he says, made worse, because many people do not believe they’re being represented.
>>First in Sunburn — a look at Portigliatti’s TV ad debuting today.
“Familiar community voices Daisy Morales, Jesus Martinez battle for open HD 48” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Morales, a supervisor in the Orange County Soil and Water Conservation District, has been active in community and Democratic Party affairs, focusing on the environment and social services. A New Yorker of Puerto Rican descent, she’s worked for the U.S. Navy and other federal agencies, including the Department of Justice and Department of State. “The people know me, and I know them,” Morales said. “I know their needs.” Republican Martinez is a real estate mortgage broker, a church pastor, a former Spanish radio and TV show host, and a mentor to youth. Last year the Trump administration brought him to the White House to serve in a conference advising on Hispanic concerns.
“Rene Plasencia, Nina Yoakum offer experience or new direction in HD 50” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Now is not the time to bring a new person in House District 50 and replace someone with strong experience, growing authority, and the ears of Legislature leaders, contends Republican Rep. Plasencia. “This is the point where government experience matters,” he says. Experience, authority and closed-door meetings with party leaders are not serving the people of HD 50 if the results leave people with public policies and decisions that are not helping them, charges Democratic candidate Yoakum. “I have a lot of energy, empathy and passion for this job,” she says. “I will vote the way my constituents want me to vote. I will vote to make it a better place for teachers, for helping professions.
“Drake Buckman, Fiona McFarland prepare for battle in deep purple HD 72” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Sarasota once again finds itself as the center of one of Florida’s hottest legislative races. Buckman, a Sarasota Democrat, faces McFarland, a Sarasota Republican,in deep purple House District 72. Already, there’s tenseness in the air, as the longtime trial lawyer gears up to face the already running campaign machine behind a Trump-connected political newcomer. “I’m expecting to get slandered. I’m anticipating it,” said Buckman. “But we are moving forward and have got support from every neighborhood in this district.” McFarland, meanwhile, sounds boisterous as she readies for the final weeks of the campaign. “I feel like we have put in a good amount of work to connect with voters and get out and talk to people.
Corona Florida
“Weekend COVID-19 reporting lull brings 1,838 cases, 22 deaths” via Florida Politics staff reports — State health officials on Monday reported 1,838 total COVID-19 diagnoses and 22 fatalities tied to the virus, a continuation of favorable trends for Florida. The Department of Health now shows that 648,269 people, including 639,166 Floridians, have tested positive for the novel coronavirus in the Sunshine State. With the newly confirmed deaths, 12,023 people have died in Florida, including 11,871 residents. Those updates come in the 24 hours since DOH and the Division of Emergency Management released their previous report Sunday morning. Over the last seven days, the death toll has grown by an average of 98 residents, down from a peak average of 185 a month ago. Monday also marks the first time since deaths surged in Florida that the average daily death toll fell below 100.
“Ron DeSantis builds up comeback message as COVID-19 ticks down in Florida” via Skyler Swisher of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — DeSantis has been crisscrossing Florida and handing the microphone to coaches ready to play ball, brewers eager to pour pints again, and a doctor with controversial views who has the president’s ear. The story DeSantis wants to tell: Florida has the novel coronavirus under control, and the state’s quarantine-weary everyday Joes and Janes think it’s time to get back to normal. Florida’s tourism-based economy is firing back up, and better days are ahead, DeSantis has stressed in panel discussions held from Miami to Jacksonville. “We will never do any of these lockdowns again,” DeSantis said during a stop in The Villages. “I hear people say they will shut down the country, and honestly I cringe.” The governor’s efforts to put COVID-19 in the rearview mirror come as Trump and his Democratic opponent Biden are effectively tied in Florida ahead of the Nov. 3 election.
Ron DeSantis is strongly suggesting Florida has coronavirus under control.
“DeSantis wants a closer look at local mask orders. Counties and cities shrug.” via Charlie Frago, Tracey McManus, Barbara Behrendt and Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — For months, DeSantis has said counties and cities should take the lead in deciding whether to require people to wear masks. On Friday, though, his office sent out a letter requesting the state’s 67 counties send him copies of their mask orders and other coronavirus pandemic measures they’ve taken. State and local governments have battled for years over who calls the shots where and who controls what. Often, the term “home rule” is used to defend the powers of county and municipal governments. And, in recent years, county commission chambers and City Halls have reverberated with that phrase as local officials assert state overreach.
“Florida is privatizing state-run COVID-19 testing sites” via Ben Conark and Daniel Chang of the Tampa Bay Times — Less than two months after state-run COVID-19 testing sites were overwhelmed with demand amid a surge in new infections, Florida officials are turning to a single private vendor to reduce operating costs for the sites, beginning with a Broward County site at the busiest intersection in Pembroke Pines. The state will consolidate vendors for nurses, equipment and lab work at the testing site at C.B. Smith Park, according to Division of Emergency Management Director Jared Moskowitz. “We are right sizing the testing sites,” he said, adding that the division is cutting costs as demand for tests has waned. He said the state is looking to make similar changes at other state-run testing sites.
“State, federal testing rules raise questions” via The News Service of Florida — Florida’s long-term care industry and a top state regulator are befuddled by what appears to be competing state and federal regulatory requirements for conducting coronavirus tests of visitors and staff at long-term care facilities. The issue involves whether a rule published by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services conflicts with three state emergency rules and a new executive order lifting a moratorium on visitation at nursing homes and assisted living facilities. The federal rule requires testing, with the frequency dictated by coronavirus positivity rates in the counties where facilities are located. The state rules require testing of facility staff every two weeks.
“As Florida’s jobless website crashed, state lawmakers scrambled to help” via Lawrence Bower of the Tampa Bay Times — In the first four months of Florida’s pandemic-triggered unemployment crisis, state lawmakers and their staff referred at least 60,000 jobless Floridians to the state’s unemployment agency for help filing for and receiving state benefits, department data shows. As millions of desperate out-of-work Floridians looked for a way to receive benefits through the state’s broken website, their desperation prompted many to turn to their state local lawmakers’ offices, typically staffed by just three or four people, including the lawmaker. All 159 state lawmakers and their staffs responded and sent names, detailed unemployment information and contact information to the state’s Department of Economic Opportunity, according to department data from March to June obtained through a public records request.
“Chris Latvala hospitalized again due to COVID-19” via Allison Ross of the Tampa Bay Times — State Rep. Latvala has been hospitalized for a second time due to COVID-19. “I am back in the hands of medical professionals at Largo Medical (Center),” Latvala wrote on his Facebook page. “This is the hardest thing I have ever faced in my life.” In a text message Saturday afternoon, Latvala, a Clearwater Republican who represents Florida’s 67th House District, confirmed he was still hospitalized, but did not provide more details about his symptoms. Latvala announced nearly a week ago that he had tested positive for the coronavirus.
Best wishes to Chris Latvala, who is back in the hospital with COVID-19.
“Food licenses used to open Florida’s bars get mixed reviews, some say a gimmick” via Dara Kam of Florida Today — Folks are bellying up to the bar as taverns throughout the state are getting libations flowing again through a process some industry insiders are branding a gimmick. Bar, pub and tavern owners are selling hot dogs, cold sandwiches and Hot Pockets so they can reopen under an approach authorized by DeSantis’ administration amid the coronavirus pandemic. Crafty pub owners are adding simple fare to suds and shots after getting licensed to sell prepared food, but critics scoff at the state’s approach. “I didn’t do anything different but put a damn Crock-Pot on my bar,” Becky Glerum, the owner of Paddy Wagon Irish Pub in Plant City, told The News Service of Florida a day after she reopened her business this week.
Back to school?
“Between COVID-19 and layoffs, schools may not have enough teachers to get through the year” via Bracey Harris and Neal Morton of the Pensacola News Journal — Each year, the Clark County School District in southern Nevada relies on substitutes like Valenzuela to fill hundreds of teacher vacancies and cover day-to-day teacher absences. The district also recruits educators from overseas and brings recent retirees back to the classroom temporarily. Those patchwork solutions, however, may be in jeopardy, as the ongoing pandemic and deepening recession throw new challenges at school districts trying to stanch teacher shortages across the country. A potential exodus of older educators susceptible to the coronavirus and those with existing health problems may fuel already high turnover. A full third of teachers told Education Week they were somewhat or very likely to leave their job this year — compared with just 8% who leave the profession in a typical year.
“South Miami Senior High student arrested in some cyberattacks against Miami schools” via Colleen Wright and Erin Doherty of the Miami Herald — A 16-year-old student at South Miami Senior High has been arrested in connection with some of the cyberattacks that have throttled Miami-Dade County Public Schools’ first week of online learning. The school district made the announcement via email around 9:30 a.m. Thursday. The email included the arrest affidavit, which shows an arrest was made 2:43 a.m. Thursday by Miami-Dade Schools Police. According to the affidavit, the student admitted to using a tool, the name of which was redacted in the report, to attack the school district’s network. According to the report, the student admitted to launching eight attacks beginning Wednesday morning at a location between Zora Neale Hurston Elementary and W.R. Thomas Middle.
Police are accusing David Oliveros, a junior at South Miami Senior High, of eight cyberattacks against the District. Image via Miami-Dade Corrections.
“PBC public schools will reopen campuses Sept. 21” via Andrew Marra of The Palm Beach Post — DeSantis has given Palm Beach County public schools permission to postpone reopening campuses until Sept. 21, offering a lifeline to a school district struggling with communication and personnel problems. The Friday extension came the same day the governor approved the county’s move to the second phase of the state’s reopening plan, a step that would have required campuses to welcome back students Sept. 15. DeSantis’ extension buys the public schools an extra week to prepare for the return of perhaps 100,000 students to its roughly 180 campuses. Tens of thousands more students are expected to continue learning online. After concluding no school board vote was necessary, district administrators announced the new reopening date to parents and employees Friday evening. The county’s public schools “will reopen brick and mortar schools to in-person instruction on Monday, September 21,” the message said.
“‘I’m disgusted’: School board skewers district’s treatment of high-risk employees” via Andrew Marra of The Palm Beach Post — Stunned Palm Beach County School Board members ripped school district leaders Wednesday after learning they failed to set up a process for employees with health concerns to request to work from home when campuses reopen. With in-person classes expected to begin in less than two weeks, district leaders admitted they had not yet put together a system for teachers and other school employees to apply for remote work if they face elevated health risks from COVID-19. Echoing complaints last week by the teachers union, board members accused Schools Superintendent Donald Fennoy’s administration of deceiving them about the possibility that some employees would be granted permission to work from home.
“Olympia High School closes campus after 6 COVID-19 cases, Orange district says” via Lisa Maria Garza and Leslie Postal — Olympia High School is temporarily closing its campus and switching entirely to online learning after six COVID-19 cases were confirmed within the school, district officials said Sunday. It is the first Orange County public school to shut down because of virus cases. Harmony Middle School in Osceola County announced its two-week closure on Aug. 28 after 10 staff members either tested positive for the coronavirus or needed to be tested because they’d been in close contact with an infected employee. Orange County Public Schools said in a statement on Sunday that Olympia will be closed from Sept. 8 through Sept. 18, and on-campus students will shift to the district’s virtual program LaunchEd@Home.
“Doctor calls Baker High School football game ‘Super-Spreader’” via Jamarlo Phillips of Action News Jax — High school football is officially back. But in Baker County, not all suggested COVID-19 safety measures were followed at Friday night’s game against Bradford. The two teams faced off in front of stands packed with fans, and there weren’t many masks or much social distancing in place. “It is a critical lack of leadership from the top down to the bottom up,” said Dr. Jeffrey Goldhagen. Video of fans posted to Action News Jax’s Twitter page has reached nearly 2 million views overnight. No school or county rules and policies were broken. However, the video shows most people right next to each other with no face coverings.
“PCPS student numbers drop, could impact state funding by millions” via Kimberly C. Moore of The Lakeland Ledger — The enrollment numbers are coming in and they are alarming for those who understand how Polk County Public Schools receives state funding. The district has seen a drop in enrollment of 7,590 students from last school year thanks to the global COVID-19 pandemic that has kept children at home to learn online or switch to smaller charter or private schools. Since Florida funds school districts based on student enrollment, it could mean a drop of $56.4 million if the Florida Legislature doesn’t continue a stopgap measure put in place by state Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran as part of his emergency order to districts to return to in-person learning. “Commissioner Corcoran issued an emergency order that preserves funding continuity by addressing issues related to declining enrollment as well as changes in the delivery of instruction to our students,” said state Sen. Kelli Stargel, the chairwoman of the powerful Education Appropriations Subcommittee.
“This luxury Disney World resort wants to home-school your kids” via Natalie B. Compton of The Washington Post — Hotels and resorts across the country are pulling out all the stops to make up for lost business during the pandemic. They are offering work-from-home amenities. They are housing college students. They were even offering luxury quarantine packages. With millions of children going to school remotely this fall because of the coronavirus outbreak, the Four Seasons Resort Orlando at Walt Disney World Resort is now trying to corner the very stressed-out parent market by tempting them with “schoolcation” promotions. It’s school, at a luxury resort, with Disney World in your backyard (if you can afford it). Can real school ever feel special again? “This new offering exclusively for our Resort guests will be both helpful to parents, as well as something really fun for kids to experience,” said Thomas Steinhauer, the resort’s general manager, in a news release.
Corona local
“Labor Day weekend typical of pre-COVID holiday” via Jim Thompson of NWF Daily News — A tourist season that foundered early, but rebounded as state and local restrictions imposed as a result of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic have been lifted or eased, posted a strong Labor Day holiday weekend performance. Across the area, the weekend featured the crowded beaches and bumper-to-bumper traffic along U.S. Highway 98 that marks the last long weekend of the summer in typical years — although, for some this year, the beaches of Northwest Florida wouldn’t have been a typical destination. Several miles east, at the Miramar Regional Beach Access on Scenic Gulf Drive in Walton County, Ashton Kennedy was enjoying time away from Baton Rouge. In Louisiana, he explained, strict COVID-19 protocols, including a mask-wearing mandate, are in place. So, he said, a visit to Florida, with fewer restrictions, was a nice change of pace.
“COVID-19, a stigma to many, quietly taking toll on South Florida’s Haitian community” via Jacqueline Charles and David Ovalle of the Miami Herald — Fritzner Fabre, a health care aide who cared for coronavirus patients, spent his final days holed up in a ramshackle North Miami-Dade efficiency, coughing and wheezing. He was 41 when he died at the hospital. Another Miami man, architect Pierre Martin, suffered from heart troubles and diabetes. Believing he’d simply caught a cold, Martin refused to go to the hospital until it was too late. He was 69 when COVID-19 killed him. Then there was Pastor Marcel Métayer, who kept his Fort Lauderdale Baptist church open as a spiritual haven for the local Haitian-American community, even as the coronavirus surged during the summer. The faithful noticed Métayer, 63, gasping during his sermons. He died on July 28.
More local
“Workers reveal Disney is covering up its COVID-19 cases” via Tarpley Hitt of The Daily Beast — Four sources familiar with the matter said that Disney has kept the total number of positive cases at the district under wraps, alerting unions only to the positive test results of their members — often days after the fact, risking further exposure — and leaving workers to guess for themselves why colleagues disappeared for days at a time, or why 11 people from the 12-person Horticulture Irrigation team didn’t show up to work for a full week. “Basically all of our COVID information has come from word-of-mouth,” said Alicia, the spouse of a cast member whose contract prohibits them from speaking to the press, “co-workers texting each other, co-workers talking to each other, and things that my [spouse] has seen on the job. None of this is from any of the managers. Disney management is not really officially acknowledging that any of this is happening.”
Workers are accusing Disney of hiding true COVID-19 numbers.
“Another death in Jackson County, a virus hotspot” via CD Davidson-Hiers of the Tallahassee Democrat — A 54-year-old Jackson County man died of the coronavirus, the state health department reported. Officials say he had come into contact with someone positive for the virus. He now is the 69th person in Jackson County to have succumbed to the virus. The pandemic has brutalized Jackson, a county of fewer than 50,000 people. In August, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported the Panhandle county was among the nation’s Top 10 coronavirus hotspots. Part of the problem likely is the above-average number of prisons, where social distancing is difficult and sometimes impossible:
“FSU beginning random COVID-19 testing; students who don’t comply face possible sanctions” via Byron Dobson of the Tallahassee Democrat — Random COVD-19 testing for asymptomatic students, faculty, and staff on Florida State University’s campus will begin Sept. 14 and continue this fall. The goal is to test at least 5% to 10% of those who are on campus daily based on the average from the prior week, Renisha Gibbs, associate vice president for human resources and finance and administration chief of staff said in a campus memo. “Each week, students, faculty, and staff who are engaged in on-campus activities will be randomly selected to participate and notified by email and MyFSU push notification on Sunday with a reminder sent Monday. Those selected will be directed to make a testing appointment at the Tucker Civic Center,” Gibbs said. Appointments must be scheduled no later than Tuesday, and specimen collection must be completed by Friday of that week.
Corona nation
“Experts project autumn surge in coronavirus cases, with a peak after Election Day” via Joel Achenbach and Rachel Weiner of The Washington Post — Infectious-disease experts are warning of a potential cold-weather surge of coronavirus cases, a long-feared “second wave” of infections and deaths, possibly at a catastrophic scale. It could begin well before Election Day, Nov. 3, although researchers assume the crest would come weeks later, closer to when fall gives way to winter. An autumn surge in covid-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, would not be an October surprise: It has been hypothesized since early in the pandemic because of the patterns of other respiratory viruses. “My feeling is that there is a wave coming, and it’s not so much whether it’s coming but how big is it going to be,” said Eili Klein, an epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
“Debate rages over whether FDA should use emergency powers to clear a coronavirus vaccine early” via Laurie McGinley and Carolyn Y. Johnson of The Washington Post — A fierce debate has erupted over whether the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) should use its emergency authority to clear a coronavirus vaccine before it is formally approved — a move opponents warn could pose safety dangers and inflame anti-vaccination sentiment but others say could save thousands of lives by speeding protection from the virus. With concerns growing about the politicization of the FDA amid a botched White House rollout of the agency’s emergency authorization of convalescent plasma and sharply criticized comments by FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn, some scientists and bioethicists are demanding the agency forgo the use of its emergency authority for a vaccine.
FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn is caught in the middle of a fierce vaccine safety debate.
“COVID-19 vaccine developers prepare joint pledge on safety, standards” via Peter Loftus and Jared S. Hopkins of The Wall Street Journal — Several drugmakers developing COVID-19 vaccines plan to issue a public pledge not to seek government approval until the shots have proved to be safe and effective, an unusual joint move among rivals that comes as they work to address concerns over a rush to mass vaccination. A draft of the joint statement, still being finalized by companies including Pfizer Inc., Johnson & Johnson and Moderna Inc. and reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, commits to making the safety and well-being of vaccinated people the companies’ priority. The vaccine makers would also pledge to adhere to high scientific and ethical standards in the conduct of clinical studies and in the manufacturing processes.
“‘Small events add up to a lot’: Limited gatherings quietly emerge as source of coronavirus infections” via Jorge L. Ortiz of USA Today — Images of packed beaches, lakes and bars have made the rounds on traditional and social media for much of the summer, drawing scorn from those concerned about the coronavirus spreading among those crowds. Less prominent but also troubling are the growing instances of case clusters arising from smaller gatherings. Contact tracing yields information about the sources of infections as the USA, by far the world leader in total COVID-19 cases and deaths, grapples with how to keep its population safe while propping up a flagging economy. More than 182,000 Americans have been killed by the disease. The hasty reopening of businesses across much of the nation after the spring shutdown was largely blamed for a summer surge in infections, but social functions of various sizes among relatives, friends and co-workers may have been a contributing factor as well.
Corona economics
“New jobless claims drop in Florida” via Jim Turner of The News Service of Florida — The U.S. Department of Labor estimated Florida received 39,335 first-time unemployment claims last week. That was down from a revised 51,647 the prior week, when Florida also saw a decrease. Florida also had the biggest decrease in first-time applications for the second consecutive week. After Florida’s 12,312-claim decrease. Florida’s unemployment rate jump from 10.3% in June to 11.3% in July as the state grappled with a surge in COVID-19 cases early in the summer. That represented an increase of 122,000 people, putting the number of Floridians out of work at 1.125 million.
“‘A tale of 2 recessions’: As rich Americans get richer, the bottom half struggles” via Megan Cassella of POLITICO — The path toward economic recovery in the U.S. has become sharply divided, with wealthier Americans earning and saving at record levels while the poorest struggle to pay their bills and put food on the table. The result is a splintered economic picture characterized by high highs and incongruous low lows in the stock market: Nearly 30 million Americans are receiving unemployment benefits, and the jobless rate stands at 8.4 percent. And that dichotomy, economists fear, could obscure the need for an additional economic stimulus that most say is sorely needed. The trend is on track to exacerbate dramatic wealth and income gaps in the U.S., where divides are already wider than any other nation in the G-7, a group of major developed countries. Spiraling inequality can also contribute to political and financial instability, fuel social unrest and extend any economic recession.
The current pandemic recession is not affecting everyone equally.
“Trump’s rebound story meets mounting bankruptcies” via Ben White of POLITICO — While Trump prepares to promote an economic rebound, a wave of business failures is set to tell another story. Economic-relief money drying up in August and September will mark a final blow for some firms that had managed to hang on so far with government aid — which now appears unlikely to be renewed for weeks, if ever. Cold weather and flu season could end outdoor dining, halt other indoor activities and contribute to COVID-19 outbreaks at workplaces. And economists expect weak demand and tight credit — especially for smaller businesses — to add to the tens of thousands of firms that have already collapsed amid the COVID-19 pandemic, while restraining entrepreneurs hoping to replace them.
“Advertisers seek right to cancel TV spending as pandemic roils fall season” via Alexandra Bruell of The Wall Street Journal — Advertisers are pressing for unprecedented flexibility to back out of monthslong spending commitments with TV networks, concerned that the coronavirus pandemic is sapping the fall schedule of new programming and threatening the NFL’s season. By this time of year, advertisers usually have struck broad deals governing the TV season that starts each September. This year, the pandemic scrambled the equation, delaying those deals and introducing new risks for marketers, most notably, whether the content on which they want to advertise will even get aired. After several college-football conferences decided not to play in the fall, Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. shifted some of its ad spending from college football to NFL games, said Chris Brandt, the company’s chief marketing officer. He now is asking networks for the ability to back out of those spending commitments if professional football games get canceled.
“Airlines are removing seats to make space for gadgets and seafood” via Kyunghee Park, Layan Odeh and Richard Weiss of Bloomberg — Cargo, one of the least glamorous aspects of flying, is proving a rare ray of light for airlines amid the coronavirus gloom. The grounding of passenger planes at a time of increased demand for everything from medical supplies to iPhones has boosted freight rates. With much of the world’s population housebound and shopping online instead of hitting the malls, analysts see no letup in demand, particularly as the peak year-end holiday season approaches. “Airfreight is going to be a bright spot for carriers at least for this year because while borders are closed that doesn’t mean people aren’t buying,” said Um Kyung-a, an airline analyst at Shinyoung Securities Co. in Seoul.
Airlines are ditching passenger seating for cargo space.
More corona
“Pandemic is threatening a decade of progress in child mortality rates” via Eileen Drage O’Reilly of Axios — Within a mere eight months, COVID-19 has damaged years of global progress in children’s health and other areas by disrupting essential health services in many countries. These disrupted services will result in a myriad near- and long-term health problems. The global health organization PATH points to a projected increase in deaths in children under the age of 5 that could erase up to a decade of progress, according to preliminary findings shared first with Axios. Decades of global progress in education, electricity access, and gender equality have been lost due to the pandemic. And, those most vulnerable will likely continue bearing the brunt of those costs.
“COVID-19 could eclipse 9/11 in causing police officer deaths” via John Bacon of USA Today — Scores of law enforcement officials, from beat officers and detectives to border patrol agents and prison guards, have died of COVID-19. The Officer Down Memorial Page, a nonprofit organization dedicated to honoring fallen officers, lists more than 100 who lost their lives to the virus. Spokeswoman Jessica Rushing said her organization has about 150 more such fatalities awaiting formal verification. In Glen Ridge, Officer Charles Roberts, praised by his peers as “the face of the police department” who had a smile for everyone, died in May. The tragic result is that line-of-duty officer deaths in 2020 have already exceeded the total from 2019 when gunfire and vehicle crashes accounted for two-thirds of the 147 fatalities counted by the Officer Down Memorial group.
COVID-19 may soon overtake 9/11 for police officer deaths.
“The pandemic is ruining our sleep. Experts say ‘coronasomnia’ could imperil public health.” via Karin Bruilliard and William Wan of The Washington Post — As if the novel coronavirus has not already wrought devastation aplenty on the world, physicians and researchers are seeing signs it is doing deep damage to people’s sleep. “Coronasomnia,” as some experts now call it, could prove to have profound public-health ramifications — creating a massive new population of chronic insomniacs grappling with declines in productivity, shorter fuses and increased risks of high blood pressure, depression and other health problems. Even before the virus, lack of sleep was a simmering public-health crisis associated with a suite of maladies. Roughly 10 to 15% of people worldwide were suffering from chronic insomnia, the struggle to fall or stay asleep at least three nights a week for three months or longer. Crises such as natural disasters or terrorist attacks are known to trigger short-term sleeplessness.
“Deep cleans and disinfecting mists might not keep us from getting the virus, but they sure make us feel better” via Maura Judkis of The Washington Post — Despite initial reports warning people that the novel coronavirus can be transmitted from contaminated surfaces, the C.D.C. has told Americans in no uncertain terms that the virus is primarily transmitted person-to-person, through breathing, speaking, shouting and singing. While it may be possible to catch the coronavirus from a doorknob or a package, it’s a long shot, and “not thought to be the main way the virus spreads,” says the agency. Yet, six months into the pandemic, Americans seem determined to Clorox their way to absolution. They’re wiping down soccer balls, Lysoling beach chairs, touching PIN pads with “touch tools” and gloves, and cleaning bags of Tostitos with diluted bleach.
Smoldering
If you watch one thing — “Kirk Herbstreit breaks down in tears talking about racism on ESPN’s ‘College GameDay’” via Cindy Boren of The Washington Post — The college football season has begun and, during an era of protests and a coronavirus pandemic, ESPN’s first Saturday telecast was anything but usual. The hosts were far apart, broadcasting from their homes rather than appearing before a boisterous, sign-loving crowd on a campus somewhere, and “College GameDay” devoted time to the protests of systemic racism and police brutality that have taken place across the country. Herbstreit broke down in tears as he spoke of the need to change. He shared a quote from Benjamin Franklin that he had been given by Stanford Coach David Shaw and he wondered what will follow, asking, “What will lead to change?”
Tweet, tweet:
“Clad in riot gear, police arrest 15 people after clashes with protesters in Tallahassee” via Nada Hassanein of the Tallahassee Democrat — What began as a peaceful march on Saturday afternoon ended with more than a dozen arrests and heated clashes between officers and demonstrators in front of the Old Capitol building. The protest came a day after a Leon County grand jury chose to exonerate Tallahassee Police Department officers involved in the three lethal force shootings of Mychael Johnson, Tony McDade and Wilbon Woodard. Before marching from Bronough Street to Monroe Street, protest organizers reminded the crowd not to engage agitators or counterprotesters and to move off the streets and into the sidewalk when asked by police. At least a dozen were on the ground, several linking arms, as officers pulled on their arms and legs to separate them and take them into custody. In total, 15 were arrested, according to a City of Tallahassee news release sent out on behalf of the arresting agencies.
“‘Our voice is crucial’: How Jacksonville’s young people are fighting for Black lives” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — In Jacksonville, young people’s quests for social justice and anti-racism takes many forms. Their paths to get where they are now look different, too — whether it’s through protests organized at school, registering to vote or participating in marches, people from different economic and cultural backgrounds are getting involved in the fight for social justice and equity — but they all have one commonality: they vehemently believe that Black Lives Matter. As the city’s youth enters voting age and adulthood, they’re coming to terms with the widespread systemic inequality people of color — especially Black people — face daily.
“Activists call to cut policing in Orange schools, echoing national debate” via Cristóbal Reyes and Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel — Amid a national debate about police brutality, some Orange County activists want the county’s public schools to cut back on spending for school police officers and spend the money instead on counseling and mental health services for students. The Orange school district’s proposed budget, tentatively adopted in July and set for a final vote Tuesday, includes a $1.1 million hike for police services, much of that earmarked for school resource officers, often called SROs. The new money would pay for officers for three new campuses and cover increased expenses, but it would also allow the district to put a second police officer on five campuses — three middle schools, a K-8 school and an alternative school, according to a memo from district staff sent to school board members last month. The district then would have 256 SROs for 210 campuses, it said.
“Black gun groups thrive across South Florida in times of civil unrest” via Austen Erblat of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Black gun owners are finding camaraderie in groups forming across South Florida, one-stop destinations that let them address gun issues, learn self-defense and plan ways to volunteer in the community. They say these groups offer a strong alternative to the National Rifle Association, the politically powerful gun advocacy organization that has been engulfed in scandal in recent months. Feeling alienated by the NRA, they’re finding their own way to push gun rights locally. The groups have become timely during a period of civil unrest, as protests are staged across the country over the high-profile killings of George Floyd and other Black people. Gun ownership is not just about guns and bullets, “it’s a political statement,” says Travis Campbell, the president and founder of the Black Arms Gun Club of South Florida. The organization is based out of Miami but its members are from Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties, and the club meets at various shooting ranges in South Florida.
Black gun groups are increasing in popularity as civil unrest worsens. Image via WLRN.
“Milton ‘Naked and Afraid’ man launches Florida chapter of Defenders of Freedom” via Savannah Evanoff of the NWF Daily News — Some people know Jamie Wells from his Milton edition of “Naked and Afraid.” A nude Wells spent two weeks in the wilderness documenting his experience on social media to not only entertain followers like the Discovery Channel’s survival series but also raise awareness for veteran suicide. And it did. Wells cites the statistic that 22 veterans on average lose their lives to suicide each day. But he realized he could do more. Wells is launching a Florida chapter of the nonprofit Defenders of Freedom with the motto “Action vs. awareness.” Wells originally planned to start his own nonprofit until he reached out to his friend Donna Cranston, the founder of Defenders of Freedom in Coppell, Texas. She suggested he start a local chapter instead.
“Amid Kenosha unrest, Wisconsin suburbs become a crucial testing ground for Trump’s appeals to White grievance” via Robert Klemko and Robert Costa of The Washington Post — Four years after Trump stunned Democrats and won Wisconsin by a margin of 22,748 votes, or less than 1 percent, the state’s suburban counties around Milwaukee are once again a critical battleground in the presidential race — and, in the aftermath of recent events down the road in Kenosha, the unexpected crossroads of the nation’s reckonings on racial justice and Trump. In the towns and small cities near Lake Michigan, the White suburban voters who form the backbone of the Republican Party’s power base in Wisconsin are weighing the visceral White grievance appeals from the president against Democratic nominee Joe Biden’s calls for racial reconciliation.
Statewide
What Jimmy Patronis is reading — “Florida attracts more northerners” via Marcelle Sussman Fischler of The New York Times — In June, despite being reluctant to move away from their close-knit New Jersey family, they bought a home in Boca Raton, in a new development that is planned like a country club without the golf. And they are not alone. According to an August report, new contracts for single-family homes and condominiums continued to rise in five south and central west coast Florida counties — after having doubled in July. In Palm Beach County, new single-family and condo contracts remained significantly above levels from a year ago, with a 268% increase in single-family contracts over $1 million. In Miami-Dade, Pinellas, and Hillsborough counties, much of the annual gain was at higher price points. Brokers say that many of those moving to Florida are coming from northern cities.
“DeSantis signs military veteran fraud protections, 9 other bills” via News Service of Florida — DeSantis signed 10 bills into law on Friday, including one to bolster fraud protections for military veterans. The governor’s bill action Friday came hours after he received the final 26 measures approved by lawmakers during the 2020 legislative session, which ended in May. The Florida Veterans Protection Act adds veterans to the existing “White Collar Crime Victim Protection Act.” The law makes it a first-degree felony victimize 10 or more veterans out of at least $50,000. The law, which goes into effect on Oct. 1, already applies to the victimization of 10 or more elderly individuals. Many of the bills DeSantis signed Friday focused on extending existing public records exemptions. DeSantis has now signed 187 bills into law from the 2020 session, including the $92.2 billion budget, and vetoed three measures.
Deloitte’s settlement with Rhode Island’s was not disclosed — Deloitte didn’t tell the Agency for Health Care Administration about a $30 million settlement with the state of Rhode Island before it was awarded a $135 million contract to build a Medicaid data “warehouse” for Florida. As reported by Matt Dixon of POLITICO Florida, records submitted by Deloitte during the procurement process claimed the company had not faced any “administrative or nonadministrative sanctions” in the past five years. Florida requires vendors to disclose sanctions when they submit bids for state contracts, however, Deloitte claimed the sanctions records fell under a trade secret records exemption. AHCA negotiators awarded Deloitte a perfect score in the sanctions section of their bid, giving it an advantage over second-place bidder Accenture.
Deloitte’s big settlement with Rhode Island was never disclosed to Florida officials.
“Lawmakers to look at state finances” via The News Service of Florida — A joint House and Senate committee will meet next week in Tallahassee to consider a detailed report about Florida’s finances. The Joint Legislative Budget Commission will meet Sept. 10 to receive a presentation about a draft long-range financial outlook. The report, which is produced annually, provides extensive information about state revenues and expenses and projections for the coming years. But lawmakers will face additional issues next week because of the pandemic, which caused state general revenue to fall about $1.9 billion below estimates in the recently completed 2019-2020 fiscal year. Also, general revenue is projected to be about $3.4 billion below earlier estimates in the fiscal year that started July 1.
First on #FlaPol — “School safety official, former soccer player named Senate Sergeant-at-arms” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Damien Kelly — Florida’s top school safety official, a veteran law enforcement officer and a former professional soccer player — will be the Senate’s next Sergeant-at-arms. President-Designate Simpson‘s office named Kelly, who played soccer professionally before beginning his law enforcement career, as the next man tasked with protecting Florida’s upper house. “Damien Kelly is truly a fine public servant,” Simpson said in a statement. “His professionalism, cool temperament, management expertise, and decades of service in law enforcement is a perfect fit for the needs of the Senate at this time.”
“NRA lobbyist Marion Hammer continues fight over emails” via Jim Saunders of The News Service of Florida — Hammer is continuing a legal battle against a California attorney who sent graphic emails to her after the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland. Hammer’s attorneys this week asked the full 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to take up her case, alleging that attorney Lawrence Sorensen violated state laws about issues such as cyberstalking, harassment and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The request came after a panel of the Atlanta-based appeals court last month upheld a district judge’s decision to dismiss the case. The case stems from two emails that Sorensen sent to Hammer that included photos of gunshot wounds, including fatal wounds suffered by President John F. Kennedy.
Happening today — The Florida Supreme Court will consider five cases, including an insurance dispute stemming from Hurricane Frances. Citizens Property Insurance Corp. is pushing back on the possibility of compensating owners of Brevard County apartment buildings for lost rental income from the 2004 storm. Arguments will be held by video conference, 9 a.m. Livestream information here.
Lobby regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Jason Allison, Robert Hosay, Foley & Lardner: Blue Prism
Brian Bautista, David Browning, Nelson Diaz, Clark Smith, The Southern Group: Caesars Enterprise Services, Vault Medical Services
Slater Bayliss, The Advocacy Group at Cardenas Partners: Environmental Defense Fund
Robert Burleson, Jose Diaz, Ballard Partners: Barry University, Emerald Coast Striping
Christopher Dawson, GrayRobinson: Contact Network d/b/a InLine
Richard Pinsky, Akerman: GeoToll
Local notes
“Investigation of North Port city manager reveals details of affair with subordinate” via Earle Kimel of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — A 59-page investigation of North Port City Manager Peter Lear documented both an affair with a subordinate and a plan to move her out from reporting to a potentially stern boss and create a new department under one of her former bosses — relocated to the third floor, near the city manager’s office suite. The inquiry, conducted by Fort Myers-based Sproat Workplace Investigations, may have detailed more. Still, founding partner Vicki Sproat noted an arbitrary Sept. 4 deadline imposed by the North Port City Commission on Aug. 17, cut things short.
Top opinion
“Presidents are expected to set the national tone. What we got with Donald Trump has been catastrophic.” via The Washington Post editorial board — The great fear of these early Americans was that the presidency could fall into the hands of a demagogue: someone like the incumbent, Trump, whose impact on the nation’s political culture over the past three-plus years has been, if anything, more damaging than his impact on public policy. Where past occupants of the office have at least paid lip service to its inspirational aspects, and where both of his immediate predecessors, George W. Bush and Barack Obama, actively campaigned on themes of unity, Trump lives by a different credo: “When someone attacks me, I always attack back … except 100x more.” This is a formula for upwardly spiraling conflict. Consistent with it, Trump has used the bully pulpit — magnified by social media — to debase public discourse.
Opinions
“Trump puts Israel’s security in danger with deal to sell fighter jets to United Arab Emirates” via Debbie Wasserman Shultz for the Miami Herald — The normalization of relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates is an important breakthrough, consistent with the long-term, bipartisan goals of several U.S. administrations. As important, it also appears to have ended the possibility of Israel’s annexation of parts of the West Bank, which Trump foolishly put on the table earlier this year. But the good news comes with a catch. UAE leaders have made clear they believe that they received a commitment from the Trump administration to purchase the American-made F-35 aircraft. Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, Jared Kushner, signaled as much when he told Fareed Zakaria on CNN that the normalization deal “should increase the probability” that the UAE’s long-standing request to purchase the aircraft will be approved.
“DeSantis’ emotional announcement seemed a rare, welcome and overdue display of empathy” via The Miami Herald editorial board — DeSantis choked up during a news conference last week. He took a timeout, several seconds of silence in front of the media, to compose himself before continuing to discuss his order to allow family members back into the nursing homes and assisted living facilities where their loved ones have been isolated … since March. The sight was, at once, heartwarming and heart-rending. We have no idea what exactly rendered him speechless that day, but it was a display of empathy that has been missing for far too long from his handling, and mishandling, of the coronavirus pandemic in Florida. “It weighs on me to think of people who passed away not just from COVID, but from natural causes, without being able to say goodbye. We had to do something,” DeSantis said.
Today’s Sunrise
Gov. DeSantis wants people to start vacationing in Florida again. Sunrise examines a new campaign encouraging Floridians to jump-start the tourism business by taking a staycation in their own state.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Florida’s Department of Health is reporting 22 more fatalities and almost 2,000 new coronavirus infections on Labor Day, as DeSantis says the numbers are looking better. There is, as usual, a caveat.
— One side of society that has the Governor’s attention — alcohol. Specifically, the bars and brew houses shut down after they were accused of spreading COVID-19 when restrictions were relaxed in May. DeSantis would like to find a way to get them back in business.
— Trump visits Jupiter to talk about the environment. He wants to spend a quarter-billion dollars in next year’s budget on infrastructure projects for the Everglades. Democrats say that would be good if he hadn’t gutted the federal agencies that are supposed to be preventing pollution.
— Condolences to Rep. Benjamin of Miami Gardens, elected to the Florida House when he won the primary for HD 107 last month. His wife died over the holiday weekend.
— The Florida Supreme Court takes on a case that could impact your homeowner’s insurance. Citizens Property Insurance is being sued over claims from Hurricane Francis in 2004.
— Checking in with two Florida Men who had a really bad weekend — only one survived.
“‘Tenet’ tallies $20.2M as Americans step back into theaters” via Jake Coyle of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — In a litmus test for American moviegoing in the pandemic, Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” brought in an estimated $20.2 million through the holiday weekend in U.S. and Canadian theaters. The result could be greeted as either the rejuvenation of U.S. cinemas — more Americans went to the movies this weekend than they have in nearly six months — or a reflection of drastically lowered standards for Hollywood’s top blockbusters given the circumstances. About 70% of U.S. movie theaters are currently open; those in the country’s top markets, Los Angeles and New York, remain closed. Theaters that are operating are limiting audiences to a maximum of 50% capacity to distance moviegoers from one another. “Tenet” played in 2,810 North American locations, about three-fourths of what most major releases typically launch in.
“Tenet” led the pack in a very restricted box office release. Image via AP/Warner Bros. Entertainment.
What James Miller is reading — “Michael Mann’s ‘Heat’ at 25: A newly relevant study in loneliness” via Marc Rivers of NPR — For the last few months, the threat of COVID-19 has forced millions of Americans to go against our biological and emotional needs and stay apart from one another. Physical touch has gone from comfort to taboo, other people represent potential dangers rather than safe havens. Feelings of impotence are bound up in our current state of loneliness, in the understanding that you, yourself, are not enough, even as you also understand that you’re unable to do anything about that.
“Peloton plans sub-$3,000 treadmill and new high-end bike” via Mark Gurman of Bloomberg — Peloton Interactive Inc. is preparing to launch a cheaper treadmill and a new high-end bike, while cutting the price of its existing bike to stoke demand as many gyms remain closed, according to people familiar with the matter. The new treadmill, called Tread, will cost less than $3,000, compared with $4,295 for the current model. It will also be smaller and have a cheaper belt design like most other treadmills on the market versus the current model’s slat design. The existing Peloton treadmill will continue to be sold as the company’s high-end offering and will be renamed the “Tread+,” the people said. They asked not to be identified discussing private product plans. The new stationary bike will be a premium offering called Bike+, and will likely cost more than the current $2,245 version. Peloton will then drop the price of the existing machine to less than $1,900, the people said. The shares fell almost 4% to $79.05 in early trading in New York.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to former U.S. Rep. Mark Foley, Rep. Thad Altman, former Rep. Ed Narain, former St. Petersburg City Councilman Jeff Danner, Karen Castor Dentel, and Sean Phillippi. Belated happy birthday wishes to Chris Cate, Melanie Griffin, Chris Hong of The Florida Times-Union, and Jenna Box Sarkissian.
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Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
California official: Family behind gender reveal party triggering El Dorado fire may have to foot bill: report
A California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection official told the Daily Mail the couple responsible for triggering the El Dorado wildfire during a gender reveal party gone astray could be liable to foot the entire bill for the destruction, which is expected to cost millions.
The fire was started by a smoke-generating pyrotechnic device used for the gender reveal party on Sept. 5 in the El Dorado Ranch Park in Yucaipa.
Bennett Milloy, a spokesperson for California’s Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, told the outlet that the couple hosting the party was still at the scene when firefighters arrived. “We know how it started because they were still there,” Milloy said. “That, and the fact that there were surveillance cameras in the park.”
The couple could also face a variety of criminal charges, which would be more severe depending on whether or not homes were destroyed.
“They genuinely believed it was an accident,” Milloy added. “But I think now they understand the gravity of the situation.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– California wildfire prompts air rescues of more than 160 stranded campers
– Gender-reveal pyrotechnic sparked massive El Dorado fire
– Creek Fire in California generates smoke clouds up to 50,000 feet, hundreds airlifted to safety
– California firefighters battle wildfire; Oak Glen ordered evacuated
John Bolton disputes claim Trump disparaged fallen American soldiers in France: ‘Simply false’
Former national security adviser John Bolton disputed the main contention of The Atlantic’s recent report alleging President Trump disparaged fallen American soldiers in France, calling some claims “simply false” in an appearance on “The Story” Monday.
“I don’t know who told the author that, but that was false.”
Trump and the White House have vehemently denied the article and slammed its claims as “a hoax.” Two sources who were on the trip in question with Trump also denied the legitimacy of the claims.
But two former senior Trump administration officials told Fox News while Trump did not disparage the war dead at buried at Aisne-Marne, he has disparaged veterans in the past. One said Trump had used the term “sucker” to refer to Americans who fought in Vietnam, a claim Bolton said he wouldn’t put past the president. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Trump thanks John Kelly aide who denied hearing president call fallen Marines losers
– Does John Bolton’s memoir undercut The Atlantic on Trump’s canceled visit to US cemetery in France?
– Trump 2020 campaign spokesman blasts report Trump disparaged American war dead as ‘fake’
Black jogger detained in Florida for fitting suspect description has been offered job in sheriff’s department
A Black jogger who was detained in Florida last month for matching the description of a burglary suspect has been offered a job in the county sheriff’s office for the way in which he handled the encounter with the deputies who detained him.
Joseph Griffin, who is a registered nurse and former military veteran, was out jogging in Deltona, Fla. when deputies stopped him for matching the description of the suspect they were looking for: a Black male, with a white tank top, dark shorts, and a beard.
“You’re not in any trouble or anything. There was a burglary that happened, you kind of fit the description. Let me just make sure you’re not him, OK,” the deputy can be heard telling Griffin on the 17-minute body camera footage.
“I’m gonna detain you, look, you’re not under arrest. I’m detaining you right now because you fit the description,” the deputy says.
The deputies continue to assure Griffin that he is not under arrest but just fits the description of the man they are looking for. One deputy even offers to hold Griffin’s cellphone to continue recording their interaction.
Griffin kept his calm with the deputies for another 13 minutes before they allowed him to leave. He said his experience as a law enforcement officer in the military allowed him to remain calm and compliant. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Detroit police chief defends ‘necessary’ force when protesters aren’t peaceful
– Dinesh D’Souza says recent riots and political unrest could lead to ‘rise of citizen militias around the country’
Louisiana police shoot, kill Black man outside store
– Salt Lake City PD suspends officer after K9 bites man who says he was complying with orders
TODAY’S MUST-READS: – Gordon Chang warns China ‘configuring its military to kill Americans’
– Hair salon owner thanks supporters after more than $300G raised
– Candace Owens responds to Cardi B’s claim she betrayed race: ‘Stop reading your DNC script’
– Florida man allegedly fatally shoots mom after arguments over orange juice, air conditioning: report
– Florida man dies after escaping custody, jumping into bay while handcuffed, authorities say
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– One-quarter of Americans say finances improved under Trump
– Trump eyes ‘decoupling’ from China
– Starbucks to add plant-based food, beverages to menus in Asia
#TheFlashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Tucker Carlson talks about how Labor Day was different from past years.
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Tech’s biggest, richest companies have proved powerless to stop or stem the pandemic — largely because the companies’ own products have destabilized the public sphere, managing editor Scott Rosenberg writes from the Bay Area.
Why it matters: No one expects tech companies to develop vaccines or promulgate quarantine policy on their own. But in a crisis, U.S. leaders turn to the tech industry for resources, innovations and problem-solving muscle.
Flashback: Silicon Valley saw the crisis as a moment to shine.
The pandemic provided an opportunity to reverse years of negative publicity about data privacy, misinformation and hate speech, and charges of anti-competitive practices — and apply engineering prowess to a collective threat.
Tech’s products and services became the backbones of our quarantined lives.
The industry’s failures fall into three categories:
1. Data distrust. Tech’s mindset is data-driven. But coronavirus data became a partisan flashpoint early on, as the Trump administration — fueled by a populist resentment of experts — sought to downplay the pandemic’s impact.
2. Limits of incrementalism. Tech’s preference is to break big, “hairy” projects down into small pieces and tackle those fast with “minimum viable products.”
That doesn’t work well with a problem like the pandemic, with its tangle of human factors.
3. Consensus-building blind spot: The social media universe built by Silicon Valley, with its libertarian-individualist roots, efficiently breaks the public down into targetable chunks and amplifies divisive voices.
Companies around the world are trying to solve the back-to-work puzzle — but few workers trust their bosses to make the right decisions, Erica Pandey writes.
Just 14% of employees trust CEOs or senior managers to lead the return to work, according to a late August poll for an Edelman Trust Barometer special report, “Workplace Trust and the Coronavirus.”
Only half believe their offices are safe.
CEO Richard Edelman said: “This return to workplace is huge for business, if done safely and well.”
“If not, you’ll have a 2008 moment, when trust in business was really diminished.”
Workers also expect their bosses to take a stand against systemic racism, according to another new Edelman report.
61% of Americans expect corporations to publicly speak out against racial injustice.
Still, people have placed far more trust in companies to respond to racial injustice (71%) than in the government (36%).
The bottom line: Between navigating the return to work and responding to racial justice protests, businesses have an opportunity to distinguish themselves to workers and consumers alike.
This holiday shopping season will mean an avalanche of e-commerce deliveries, merchants running promotions earlier than ever, and tight crowd control on Black Friday, managing editor Jennifer Kingson writes from New York.
Why it matters: Retailers desperately need the revenue from this critical time of year — and they fear that overwhelmed package-delivery services will leave their customers high and dry (and angry).
More people than ever say they’ll be buying most of their stuff online.
With Halloween expected to be a bit of a bust, more stores will put renewed emphasis on Christmas and other year-end holiday sales.
2020 is expected to be the biggest year yet for a trend called “click and collect,” or “BOPUS” (buy online, pick up in store).
🥃 Karl Haller, an IBM retail expert, says: “We’ve got a polarizing election that’s going to boost liquor sales.”
Tens of thousands of college students across the country have gotten infected with the coronavirus, and thousands more are being sent home to potentially spread the virus to their families and communities, Caitlin Owens writes.
Why it matters: These concentrated outbreaks — and any subsequent mishandling of them — could fuel larger outbreaks across the country as we head into a fall that’s already expected to be extremely difficult.
Colleges and universities have found at least 51,000 coronavirus cases already, according to a campus tracker the N.Y. Times built (subscription).
Each of these schools has reported more than 1,000 cases: Illinois State University, the University of South Carolina, Auburn University, the University of Alabama and UNC Chapel Hill.
In a deeply reported articleon “How Trump’s Billion-Dollar Campaign Lost Its Cash Advantage,” the N.Y. Times’ Shane Goldmacher and Maggie Haberman found this spending:
“Super Bowl ads that cost $11 million.”
“$156,000 for planes to pull aerial banners in recent months.”
“Hershey Company, the chocolate-maker ($337,000), which cover costs for items such as the White House-branded M&Ms given away by administrations of both parties.”
Former campaign manager Brad Parscale “had a car and driver, an unusual expense for a campaign manager.”
The U.S. has spent the largest share of its GDP on discretionary stimulus spending compared to other major economies, but it’s spent the smallest share on clean energy, Amy Harder writes from a new analysis by Rhodium Group.
Why it matters: To what degree the world invests in clean-energy technologies as it recovers from the pandemic-induced recession could go a long way toward reaching climate goals.
Joe Biden today launches an ad, “Fresh Start,” in which a narrator says over a clip of President Trump brandishing the Bible, plus a glimpse of Charlottesville: “This is our chance to put the darkness of the last four years behind us.”
“We’ve had four years of a president who brings out the worst in America. Isn’t it time we had a president who brought out the best?”
The ad will run in all the core battleground states — Arizona, Florida, North Carolina, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
Plus Minnesota, Nevada and Ohio — and national cable.
President Trump launches a new ad this week promising: “In the race for a vaccine, the finish line is approaching.”
The ad distorts a Joe Biden quote. “I would shut it down,” Biden told ABC’s David Muir in response to a question about what he would do if scientists recommended another shutdown. Biden’s next sentence, not in the ad, was: “I would listen to the scientists.”
Trump’s ad will run in North Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan, as well as on national cable.
Trump campaign communications director Tim Murtaugh said in a statement that the ad strategy “reflects the unique 2020 campaign calendar.”
The campaign points out that this year’s calendar is radically different, and says buys will emphasize early-voting states as they come online.
9. Zoom founder joins list of richest Americans
With so many of us spending so much of our day on Zoom calls, the pandemic has been a boon for Zoom.
Eric Yuan, CEO of Zoom Video Communications, with a net worth of $11 billion, is among this year’s newcomers to the Forbes 400, the magazine’s 39th annual ranking of the richest Americans.
Also joining the Forbes 400: Jim Koch, co-founder and chairman of the Boston Beer Company, producer of Sam Adams beer, with a net worth of $2.6 billion; and at age 38 the youngest newcomer … Trevor Milton, founder of electric and hydrogen-electric truck maker Nikola.
President Trump dropped to No. 352 from 275 last year, and his estimated net worth fell to $2.5 billion from $3.1 billion, as the value of office buildings, hotels and resorts took a pandemic hit, Forbes says.
Covers, from left: Netflix co-CEO Reed Hastings … Asana CEO Dustin Moskovitz … entertainment mogul Tyler Perry … biotech billionaire and L.A. Times owner Patrick Soon-Shiong … Aqua-Spark impact investor Amy Novogratz.
Joe Biden’s all-things-to-all-people approach has helped him unify his party. But it is laying the groundwork for internal battles, while Wall Street leaders plan to have their way with a president many expect to be unusually susceptible to outside pressure.
The announcement by the panel’s chairwoman late Monday followed a Washington Post report that Louis DeJoy urged employees at his former business to give to GOP candidates and then boosted their bonuses to defray the cost.
The singer-songwriter of “Black Like Me” and “What Are You Gonna Tell Her?” has become country music’s go-to person for guidance during America’s reckoning with racial injustice.
More than 1,000 supporters of President Trump, including some aligned with white nationalist extremist groups, gathered in a show of force against left-wing protesters.
By Samantha Schmidt, Fenit Nirappil, Abigail Hauslohner and Tim Craig ● Read more »
Hundreds of Arabic Twitter accounts hurled bile and threats at the Saudi dissident before his disappearance. Some say the verbal attacks may have violated U.S. law.
Revelations from a genealogy web site raise tough questions for a former sperm donor, highlighting the promises and perils of online genetic databases.
We’ve taken one of the most critical fields of human learning and dumbed it down with our own prejudices and guilt. Imagine if we turned this all on its head.
Long before the president’s views of the military would emerge as a flash point in his 2020 reelection campaign, Trump had an extensive track record of incendiary and disparaging remarks about veterans and military service.
Fired FBI special agent Peter Strzok’s latest claims about the events leading to the bureau’s opening of the Trump-Russia investigation are contradicted by the timelines presented in reports by special counsel Robert Mueller and DOJ Inspector General Michael Horowitz.
Zach Fuentes, the former deputy White House chief of staff, denied hearing that President Trump once referred to dead U.S. soldiers as “losers” and dead Marines as “suckers.”
A Major League Baseball general manager was thrown out of a game on Sunday after not wearing a face covering and yelling at officials while standing in an empty box suite.
Conservative commentator Candace Owens was a top-trending search result on Twitter on Sunday night following a high-profile back-and-forth with rapper Cardi B.
Contests for the 12 governor’s offices up in November are mostly snoozers, with incumbents or members of the same party now in office strongly favored to win.
Democrats hold three of Iowa’s four House seats, and they’re trying to keep it that way. Democratic Rep. Abby Finkenauer is a crucial part of those plans.
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
Election 2020: Trump, Biden spar in Labor Day blitz.
COVID-19 vaccine is latest flashpoint in White House race.
US summer of coronavirus ends with health officials worried.
Virus puts added strain on Gaza’s overwhelmed health system.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/CAROLYN KASTER
Trump, Biden duel over economy, workers in Labor Day blitz; Vaccine latest flashpoint in White House campaign
On Labor Day, the key presidential election figures sparred on the economy, American workers and the coronavirus as the traditional start of the two-month sprint to the U.S. election took on a juggernaut pace.
Vaccine Flashpoint: In the meantime, the prospect of a vaccine to shield Americans from infection has emerged as a major point of contention in the White House race as Trump accused Democrats of “disparaging” for political gain a vaccine he repeatedly has claimed could be available before the election.
Trump made the accusation a day after the Democratic vice presidential candidate, Sen. Kamala Harris, said she would trust public health experts and scientists over Trump on a potential vaccine, Darlene Superville reports.
Deep-seated concerns exist in a fraught election year about political influence over development of a vaccine, and whether one produced under this process will be safe and effective.
The virus has killed nearly 190,000 Americans and infected more than 6 million others under Trump’s watch.
Congress Returns: Hopes are dimming for another virus relief bill as Congress returns to session. Talks between top Democrats and the Trump administration broke off last month and remain off track. Recent conversations among the key players have led to nothing. And toxic relationships among those players are making it harder to break the impasse, Andrew Taylor reports.
AP PHOTO/MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ
American summer of COVID-19 ends with health officials worried; Hopes for antibody tests still unfulfilled
The lost and deadly American summer of 2020 won’t be easily forgotten.
One New Hampshire woman, taking her first trip out of state since the outbreak, said “I saw it as the turning of the corner. We survived this. Let’s live life a little,” as she sat in traffic in North Carolina on the long trip home.
Antibodies: Coronavirus tests touted by President Trump and his top officials to help reopen the economy are widely available, but predictions for their usefulness haven’t panned out. The tests check the blood for antibodies that help fight off infections. But scientists still haven’t determined whether those antibodies shield someone from getting infected again. And medical experts warn the tests cannot be safely used to return workers to the office, Matthew Perrone reports.
In part because of the punishing blockade, the virus was not detected among the general population until late August. It has since infected over 1,000 people in the densely populated territory, which is home to 2 million Palestinians. Nine people have died. Fares Akram reports from Gaza City.
Panama Migrants: Hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of migrants are stranded around the world because of border closures aimed at curbing the spread of the coronavirus. Panama, the slender bottleneck between the North and South American continents, is a transit point for virtually every migrant heading from South America to the U.S. by land. It closed its borders in March.
The closure left nearly 2,000 migrants from Haiti and a handful of African and Asian countries stuck in camps in the jungle along Panama’s northern and southern borders, Juan Zamorano reports.
India Surge: 1,133 deaths have been reported in the past 24 hours, the nation’s highest single-day total. The Health Ministry also reported close to 76,000 new cases, raising India’s tally to nearly 4.3 million — second only to the U.S. and maintaining an upward surge amid an ease in nationwide restrictions to help mitigate the economic pain.
Africa Tourism: The World Travel and Tourism Council estimates the drop in travel caused by the pandemic will see Africa lose between $53 billion and $120 billion in contributions to its GDP in 2020. Kenya expects at least a 60% drop in tourism revenue this year.
South Africa expects a 75% drop. South Africa’s Tourism Business Council says 1.2 million tourism-related jobs are already impacted. South Africa’s borders, including virtually all international flights, have been closed for nearly six months and there are no signs of them reopening. Gerald Imray reports from Cape Town.
Spain Education: The highly anticipated return to classrooms in the country is becoming a nightmare for many families who face being charged with absenteeism if they don’t send their children to schools because they fear illness. Over 8 million students are beginning the academic year this week or next.
More than half a million people have contracted the virus in Spain and at least 29,500 have died. The country currently has the highest rate of contagion in western Europe, Sara Puig reports from Barcelona.
China WHO: President Xi Jinping has praised Beijing’s role in battling the pandemic and expressed support for the World Health Organization. His praise for the country and for the U.N. health agency was a repudiation of U.S. criticism and a bid to rally domestic support for Communist Party leadership.
Japan Economy: The country has reported its economy shrank at a record rate in the April-June quarter, even worse than initially estimated. The pandemic, which has people staying home, restaurants and stores empty or closing, and travel and tourism nose-diving, has hurt all the world’s economies and many companies. But it has slammed Japan’s export-reliant economy.
AP FACT CHECK
Trump’s errant views on voting, Biden miscues
President Donald Trump has been putting forth convoluted guidance to his supporters on submitting double votes in the November election. Meanwhile, Democratic rival Joe Biden falsely claimed to have been the first person to have called for the use of emergency production powers in the pandemic.
California’s largest utility shut off power to 172,000 customers to guard against its power lines and other equipment sparking wildfires. High winds are forecast for the next two days, and fire danger is high throughout wildfire-ravaged California. It was a scorching Labor Day weekend that saw several major wildfires break out in different parts of the state.
Saudi Arabia’s state television says final verdicts were issued in the case of slain Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi after his son announced pardons that spared five from execution. The court issued final verdicts against eight people, ordering a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison for the five. The trial was widely criticized – no senior officials nor anyone suspected of ordering the killing was found guilty. The killing cast a pall over Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who has denied involvement.
Poisoned Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny’s condition has improved, allowing doctors to take him out of an induced coma, the German hospital treating him said. German experts say Navalny, who fell ill on a domestic flight in Russia, was poisoned with a substance belonging to the Soviet-era nerve agent Novichok. The German government last week demanded that Russia investigate the case.
Prince Harry has repaid 2.4 million pounds ($3.2 million) in British taxpayers’ money that was used to renovate the home in Windsor intended for him and his wife Meghan before they gave up royal duties. Harry and his wife agreed to pay back the money when they quit as senior working royals. They recently bought a house in Santa Barbara, California, and announced a deal with Netflix to produce films and TV series.
We’ll leave you with this …
Big tippers: Alaska man joins push to aid restaurant workers
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If cases of the flu and COVID-19 rise simultaneously, there are worries that resources at area hospitals could be squeezed. At the height of COVID-19 earlier this year, many Illinois hospitals ran low on intensive care unit beds — and that was after the flu season had subsided.
Lawyers for 17-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse have argued that he clearly acted in self-defense when he shot three people — two fatally — at a protest in Kenosha late last month.
However, the success or failure of a potential courtroom self-defense claim could hinge on questions about the Antioch teen’s actions before he fired and details that have yet to emerge, defense lawyers in Wisconsin said. As in other states, the law in Wisconsin allows people to use guns to defend themselves against serious threats, but there are exceptions to that right.
An 8-year-old girl was killed and three adults were seriously injured when someone shot into a car Monday evening in the Canaryville neighborhood on the South Side, authorities said. So far this year, at least 175 children ages 16 or younger have been shot in Chicago, with at least 21 of them dying, according to Tribune data.
Chicago Inspector General Joseph Ferguson’s office interviewed Mayor Lori Lightfoot as part of his investigation into the incident where then-police Superintendent Eddie Johnson was found asleep at the wheel, but the city continues to withhold his full report on the incident.
Emails obtained by the Tribune show Ferguson’s office scheduled separate hour-and-a-half-long interviews with Lightfoot and her chief of staff a couple of weeks before she fired Johnson. It’s unknown what investigators asked Lightfoot, who publicly acknowledged last fall that she would be a witness in the investigation.
A few months ago, Tribune food writer Nick Kindelsperger watched as his Instagram feed became inundated with a taco he’d never tried before called quesabirria. It is, without a doubt, the taco Chicago needs to get through 2020.
Months of debate, anxiety, preparation and anticipation are culminating with the kickoff Tuesday of the most unusual school year in decades, with yellow buses and packed backpacks replaced by computer screens and hopes for a better experience than in the spring.
If remote school goes according to plan, more than 300,000 Chicago students will be sitting behind computer screens this week, many of them meeting their teachers virtually for the first time. Nader Issa has the story…
Activists called it a “No Labor Day” event, as they unveiled a report Monday finding appalling diversity statistics within apprenticeship programs run by Illinois trade unions.
The girl was traveling in a car with three other people, including her mother, when someone in another car opened fire at 47th Street and South Union Avenue, police said.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It’s Tuesday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators and readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 188,941. Tuesday, 189,215.
Lawmakers are bracing for a tumultuous post-Labor Day stretch as they start returning to Washington today and political gridlock complicates nearly every effort, with the November elections standing only 56 days away.
The Senate is set to reconvene today, while the House is expected to return in full next week. However, their return is unlikely to change much as a deal on a coronavirus relief package remains well out of reach and lawmakers have retreated into their political bunkers to ride out the remaining eight weeks until Election Day.
On Monday, President Trump laid those complications bare as he held a news conference from the North Portico — a rare location — to launch blistering attacks against former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), claiming that they would “collapse” the economy if elected. He also criticized them for engaging in “anti-vaccine rhetoric” (The Hill).
“Contrary to all of the lies, Biden wants to surrender our country to the virus,” Trump said during the 46-minute press conference. “He wants to surrender our families to the violent left-wing mob, and he wants to surrender our jobs to China. Our jobs and economic well-being.”
“Biden doesn’t have a clue,” he said, adding at one point that the former VP is “stupid.” “You know he doesn’t have a clue. In prime time he wasn’t good, and now it is not prime time.”
As Trump spoke, Biden appeared in Lancaster, Pa., — one of two Labor Day stops — and told reporters that he would get a vaccine tomorrow if public health experts deem it safe and effective. However, he continued to criticize the president for politicizing the approval process.
“One of the problems with playing with politics is he’s said so many things that aren’t true, I’m worried if we do have a really good vaccine, people are going to be reluctant to take it,” Biden said. “He’s undermining public confidence. But pray God, we have it — if I could get a vaccine tomorrow, I’d do it. If it cost me the election, I’d do it. We need a vaccine and we need it now” (CBS News).
The Associated Press: Trump, Biden spar over economy, workers in Labor Day blitz.
The Hill: Biden vows to be “strongest labor president you’ve ever had.”
Tim Alberta: Blowout for Biden or narrow win for Trump?
The Washington Post: Trump says he’s open to investigation of Postmaster General Louis DeJoy’s campaign fundraising.
The presence of the campaign has also helped to derail negotiations toward another massive COVID-19 relief package, which have been largely dormant for nearly a month after talks broke down due to its potential size and scope. Democrats, led by Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), want any package to eclipse $2 trillion, while White House negotiators have refused to budge north of $1.3 trillion.
When asked why he hasn’t invited Pelosi and Schumer to the White House in an attempt to nail down a deal to inject more stimulus into the economy — which Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin still believes is necessary, Trump indicated that the idea is futile.
“They don’t want to make a deal because they think it’s good for politics if they don’t make a deal. … I know who I’m dealing with. I don’t need to meet with them to be turned down,” Trump said.
When a reporter followed up asking why Trump doesn’t take the high road and invite them, he responded: “I am taking the high road. I’m taking the high road by not seeing them. If I thought it would make a difference, I would do it in a minute.”
With the upper chamber back in session, Senate Republicans are expected to move toward a $500 billion targeted package as soon as this week. Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), a member of GOP leadership, said over the weekend that they expect opposition from Democratic leaders on the slimmed down bill (The Washington Post).
One potential headache that is seemingly in the rearview mirror as Congress returns is a potential government shutdown. Over the weekend, Mnuchin and Pelosi announced a deal to pass a clean funding bill to keep the government open until December at the current levels.
Worth noting: Trump himself has not yet weighed in on whether he supports a clean funding package, and nothing is final until he says so. There are 22 days until the government runs out of funding.
The Hill: Discord over state and local funds plagues coronavirus talks.
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LEADING THE DAY
2020 CAMPAIGNS & POLITICS: In a development few saw coming months ago, the Trump campaign is suddenly facing a potential cash crunch, having already spent $800 million of the $1.1 billion raised dating back to the start of 2019 with less than two months until Election Day.
The New York Times detailed the massive spending the campaign has taken on, with nearly half of the $800 million spent going toward fundraising operations. What the campaign spent early on has taken its toll in some ways, forcing the campaign to roll back major ad expenditures during August.
During the two weeks of the national party conventions, Trump’s team spent only $4.8 million compared to $35.9 million by the Biden campaign. The Trump campaign also spent more than $100 million on ads pre-conventions, with new campaign manager Bill Stepien trying to get the team’s finances in order for the final stretch run.
“The most important thing I do every day is pay attention to the budget,” Stepien told the outlet.
> Battleground wars: With Biden appearing in the Keystone State on Monday, the vice presidential nominees held dueling events in Wisconsin as the Biden campaign has escalated its travel across battleground states.
Harris made her first stop as part of the ticket in Wisconsin on Monday, appearing for events with union workers and Black business owners. However, in her most notable stop, she met with the family of Jacob Blake, with Blake joining the conversation via phone from his hospital bed. According to Benjamin Crump, Blake’s attorney, Harris told Blake that she was “proud” of him.
“Sen. Harris had an inspirational and uplifting one-hour visit with Jacob Blake, Jr. and his family today. She spoke individually with each family member about how they were handling the trauma and urged them to take care of their physical and mental health. In a moving moment, Jacob Jr. told Sen. Harris that he was proud of her, and the senator told Jacob that she was also proud of him and how he is working through his pain,” Crump said in a statement.
Harris will follow up the Wisconsin trip with her first appearance in Florida on Thursday, with a stop planned in Miami.
The Washington Post: Kamala Harris visits Milwaukee for her first in-person campaign event.
As for the vice president, he delivered remarks to supporters in La Crosse, Wis., and criticized Biden for not condemning antifa and for not coming out strong enough against the riots in Kenosha, Wis., following the Blake shooting.
“For months, all Joe Biden talked about was peaceful protesters. Last week, after three months of silence he spoke out against violence in every form it takes. But right after he said that, he criticized law enforcement and he never condemned antifa. He never called out his campaign staff or his running mate for raising money to bail out violent criminals,” Pence said.
Hours later, Biden appeared for interviews with local TV stations in Central Pennsylvania telling WGAL-8 that he “absolutely” condemns antifa and “violence no matter who it is.”
The former vice president also took a shot at the president’s physical fitness while defending attacks from the Trump campaign that he’s “lost a step.”
“Look at how [Trump] steps and look at how I step. Watch how I run up ramps and how he stumbles down ramps, OK?” Biden told ABC-27.
The New York Times: Pence and Harris vie for Wisconsin as Trump vents from the White House.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CORONAVIRUS: The COVID-19 summer, for all intents and purposes, ended as the Labor Day weekend came and went, with major annual gatherings across the country being moving to a virtual setting or nixed completely, and public health officials fretting about another post-holiday spike in cases could be on deck.
As The Associated Press noted, college football stadiums across the country were largely empty as the start of the season went off with a whimper, and Labor Day parades across the country were canceled to stem the spread of the virus.
The Hill: FDA moves on vaccines spark political worries.
> Lobbying: Families and households are not the only ones facing COVID-19 induced financial constraints as charities struggle to make up for the billions of dollars in lost revenue as Americans conserve cash during uncertain times.
As The Hill’s Alex Gangitano reports, charity organizations have lost billions in revenue during the pandemic, making the sector one of many to seek support from Congress at a time when negotiations over another COVID-19 relief package show little sign of a breakthrough.
Traditional methods of fundraising for charities — concerts, festivals and galas — have all been canceled or significantly scaled back due to public health concerns. Nonprofits and charitable organizations are now looking ahead to the holiday giving season in hopes of donations to make up for shortfalls over much of the year.
“Volunteers are essential to our efforts during the holidays — Red Kettles, the Angel Tree program, and food distribution — so we are working hard to train and protect those individuals so that we can continue to provide for the most vulnerable Americans. Without those volunteers, our commitment to meeting needs could be compromised,” said Kenneth G. Hodder, national commander of The Salvation Army in the United States.
The Hill: Lysol, Charmin keep new consumer brand group lobbyist busy during pandemic.
Daily Beast: Workers reveal Disney is covering up its COVID cases.
OPINION
The tax cut for the rich that Democrats love, by Richard V. Reeves and Christopher Pulliam, opinion contributors, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/2Gz42yd
Dad, please get a COVID-19 shot, by Marc Siegel, opinion contributor, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/3h8Tzq7
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WHERE AND WHEN
The House will convene at 9:30 a.m. for a pro forma session. The House Financial Service Subcommittee on Diversity and Inclusion holds a virtual hearing at noon with witnesses from federal regulatory agencies to discuss expanding the inclusion of women and minorities. The full House will return on Monday.
The Senate meets at 3 p.m. to resume consideration of the nomination of Brett Ludwig to be a judge with the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin.
The president delivers remarks about the environment in Jupiter, Fla. At 7 p.m., Trump holds a campaign rally in Winston-Salem, N.C., at the Smith Reynolds Regional Airport and returns to Washington tonight.
👉 INVITATION: The Hill Virtually Live hosts The Future of Education on Thursday for a two-part event (at 11 a.m. examining innovations in K-12 and at 1:30 p.m. discussing higher education). Can this moment serve as a catalyst to address persistent divides and inequities? Featuring former University of Miami President and former Health and Human Services Secretary Rep. Donna Shalala (D-Fla.); Rep. Mark Walker (R-N.C.), a member of the House Committee on Education and Labor and vice chairman of the House Republican Conference; Sal Khan of Khan Academy Inc. of California and many more experts. RSVP HERE.
➔International: Alexei Navalny, a top opposition voice to Russian President Vladimir Putin, was taken out of an induced coma on Monday and has seen his condition improve more than two weeks after being poisoned. According to the Charité clinic in Berlin, Navalny has responded to voices and is being weaned off mechanical ventilation, but it remains too early to know the long-term impact of his situation. Navalny was poisoned with a nerve agent akin to Novichok on Aug. 20. The Kremlin on Monday vehemently denied any involvement in Navalny’s poisoning (AFP). … Eight individuals were convicted and sentenced to prison terms for their involvement in the death of the late Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi. The eight people were part of the more than dozen Saudi agents who were sent to the nation’s consulate in Istanbul to carry out the murder in October 2018. According to The Washington Post, the unnamed individuals received prison terms ranging from seven to 20 years (The Hill).
➔ Tech: Disney saw a massive jump in subscribers for its streaming platform, Disney+, over the weekend after its unusual rollout of “Mulan,” which was set to be released in March and was subsequently pushed back due to COVID-19. While the app costs $7 per month, downloading the movie on the platform costs an additional $29.99 — a technique Disney has yet to attempt. The movie was only released to theaters in countries where the app is unavailable. Driven by the movie, spending on the app jumped 193% compared with the previous week (Bloomberg News).
➔ Wildfires: California finds itself fighting a multi-pronged battle against three major wildfires that have ravaged parts of the state, with a fourth growing quickly, especially across parts of Northern California. As of Tuesday morning, 2 million acres have been burned across the state this year, with firefighters having trouble containing multiple blazes that are currently raging, with a heat wave and dry winds in recent days creating even more problems. The situation also forced PG&E, San Francisco-based power provider, to start turning off power in “high fire-threat” areas, with the outages impacting 172,000 customers in 22 counties. PG&E called the move a safety measure due to the weather conditions (Reuters).
And finally … Major League Baseball is set to honor one of its legends again. Similar to how MLB treats Jackie Robinson Day in April, the league is allowing all Puerto Rican players to don No. 21 in honor of Roberto Clemente as the league celebrates his impact on baseball.
On Wednesday, all MLB teams will announce their nominee for the Roberto Clemente Award, which is handed out during the World Series to the player “who best represents the game through extraordinary character, community involvement, philanthropy and positive contributions, both on and off the field” (MLB.com). Additionally, all Pittsburgh Pirates players will also wear the No. 21 to honor one of the best players in the team’s history.
Clemente was killed in a plane crash on Dec. 31, 1972 as he attempted to bring supplies to Nicaragua in response to an earthquake (The Associated Press).
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POLITICO Playbook: Trump to announce SCOTUS list as early as Wednesday
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DRIVING THE DAY
HAPPY BEGINNINGTO THE END of the summer 2020 — did it even happen at all? — and thanks to Blake Hounshell for taking the wheel for a few days.
NEW … TWO WHITE HOUSE HAPPENINGS for your radar: The TRUMP ADMINISTRATION expects to announce President DONALD TRUMP’S list of proposed Supreme Court justices as early as Wednesday. THEY ALSO are actively planning to announce expanding the drilling moratorium off the coasts of Southern states including Florida. They believe both are keys for the campaign, quite clearly: Conservatives are eagerly awaiting TRUMP’S potential court choices, and they say many in the South want to stop drilling off its shores.
THE GOVERNMENT IS SLATED TO SHUT DOWN in 22 DAYS, and color us skeptical of all the ‘we-decided-not-to-shut-it-down’ talk from Speaker NANCY PELOSI and Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN. Does anyone actually actively plan to shut down the government? If the two sides don’t get an agreement, are we to believe that after all of the back and forth and calls for a Covid relief deal, Democrats are just gonna fold and agree to a clean government funding bill? And Republicans are going to give up on their priorities, too? Just weeks before an election? We’re not predicting a shutdown. We’re just saying that we don’t think we’ve seen the last frame of this movie yet — nor do many in the Capitol and White House.
AS OF RIGHT NOW, Senate Republicans are working behind the scenes to see if they can get 51 votes for a “skinny” Covid bill that they hope to release this week. That bill will include an extension of the PPP, more enhanced unemployment and money for schools and day care. The inability to get 51 GOP votes would be a big defeat for the White House and Senate GOP leadership. At this moment, the leadership is trying to find a sweet spot in policy that would get them 51 votes — and there’s no guarantee that will happen. Marianne LeVine and John Bresnahan: “Senate returns with a path to nowhere on coronavirus aid”
ANOTHER DYNAMIC TO WATCH FOR: The White House expects to embrace a $1.5 trillion price tag for a Covid bill this week. That’s a bit more than where they were, and represents some baby steps on their behalf toward a bill.
MICHAEL COHEN called TRUMP a cult leader in an interview that will air on “NBC NIGHTLY NEWS” tonight. Cohen will also join RACHEL MADDOW on MSNBC at 9 p.m. tonight. Clip from “NBC Nightly News”
FRONT: NYTwent with a two-column, all-caps headline: “TRUMP WAR CHEST OF OVER $1 BILLION IS DWINDLING FAST”— it’s a scoop-filled SHANE GOLDMACHER and MAGGIEHABERMAN piece about how the TRUMP campaign squandered its cash advantage.
EYES EMOJI — “Trump Weighs Putting Up to $100 Million of His Cash Into Race,” by Bloomberg’s Jennifer Jacobs, Mario Parker and Bill Allison: “President Donald Trump has discussed spending as much as $100 million of his own money on his re-election campaign, if necessary, to beat Democratic nominee Joe Biden, according to people familiar with the matter.
“The billionaire president has talked about the idea with multiple people, though he hasn’t yet committed to any self-funding, according to people briefed on internal deliberations. Though Trump personally contributed $66 million to his 2016 campaign, it would be unprecedented for an incumbent president to put his own money toward winning a second term.” Bloomberg
BREITBART has U.S. Ambassador to France JAMIE MCCOURT denying The Atlantic’s story about TRUMP allegedly calling fallen U.S. troops “losers” and “suckers.”
DRIVING THE DAY … Sen. KAMALA HARRIS (D-Calif.) will attend a virtual fundraiser.
NYT, A15: JONATHAN MARTIN and ALEX BURNS: “Pence and Harris Vie for Wisconsin as Trump Vents From the White House”: “For a few hours, the unofficial Labor Day start to the fall presidential campaign centered around Wisconsin, as Vice President Mike Pence tried to poach Democrats in this Mississippi River town and Senator Kamala Harris sought to rally the Democratic base in Milwaukee.
“But their dueling events at opposite ends of this increasingly pivotal state — as well as Joseph R. Biden’s visit to another battleground, Pennsylvania — were soon overwhelmed by a force as strong as any current: President Trump’s thirst for attention.
“The only member of the two tickets not to be on the campaign trail Monday, Mr. Trump abruptly called a White House news conference and then used it to air a range of personal and political grievances. He called his opponents names — Mr. Biden was a ‘stupid person’ and Ms. Harris was ‘not a competent person.’ Yet more notable than his usual partisan insults was his extraordinary attack on the country’s senior military officials. …
“For the purposes of the campaign, Mr. Trump’s preoccupation with the Atlantic article illustrated the limited value of the presidential bully pulpit in the hands of a candidate unwilling to drive a focused message.”
NEW … DCCC I.E. RESERVING ANOTHER $2.6 MILLION: THE HOUSE DEMOCRATS’ independent expenditure arm has placed another round of TV reservations across the country, illustrating their opportunities to flip a series of Republican seats, and highlighting some of their vulnerable members.
THE DCCC’S BIGGEST BUY is in Texas, where they put $1.029 million on San Antonio TV, which could help flip Rep. CHIP ROY’S Austin-to-San Antonio seat, or help the Dems capture retiring Rep. WILL HURD’S district along the Mexican border.
IN ATLANTA, THE DCCC put $771,000 on TV, trying to either flip the seat currently held by retiring Rep. ROB WOODALL (R-Ga.) or defend Rep. LUCY MCBATH (D-Ga.) in the competitive suburbs.
IN NEW YORK, Dems have put $650,000 on New York City cable to try to flip the Long Island seat held by retiring GOP Rep. PETER KING.
A SERIES OF SMALLER BUYS: $35,000 in Iowa for Rep. ABBY FINKENAUER, $90,000 in Indianapolis to flip the seat currently held by retiring GOP Rep. SUSAN BROOKS and $30,000 in New Mexico to help Democratic Rep. XOCHITL TORRES SMALL.Details on the new reservations
TRUMP’S TUESDAY — The president will leave the White House at 11:20 a.m. en route to West Palm Beach, Fla. He will travel to Jupiter, Fla., and arrive at 2:55 p.m. at the Jupiter Inlet Lighthouse and Museum. He will deliver remarks on “environmental accomplishments for the people of Florida” at 3 p.m. Afterward, Trump will depart for Winston-Salem, N.C., where he will deliver remarks at 7 p.m. Trump will depart at 8:30 p.m. and return to Washington. He will arrive at the White House at 10:10 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
HMM — “House Oversight Committee will investigate Louis DeJoy following claims he pressured employees to make campaign donations,” by WaPo’s Amy Gardner: “House Democrats are launching an investigation of Postmaster General Louis DeJoy and called for his immediate suspension following accusations that he reimbursed employees for campaign contributions they made to his preferred GOP politicians, an arrangement that would be unlawful.
“Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.) said in a statement late Monday that the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, which she chairs, would begin an investigation, saying that DeJoy may have lied to her committee under oath. Maloney also urged the Board of Governors of the U.S. Postal Service to immediately suspend DeJoy, whom ‘they never should have hired in the first place,’ she said. A spokesman for the Postal Service did not immediately respond to a request for comment.” WaPo
CALIFORNIA BURNING … LAT: “Bobcat fire in Angeles Forest threatens foothill cities amid California’s worst fire season on record,” by Ben Poston, Harriet Ryan and Mary Forgione: “As several wildfires raged across Southern California on a third day of excessive heat, the National Forest Service announced unprecedented closures of campgrounds and trails amid the largest fire season on record.
“Through only early September, wildfires so far this year have burned more than 2 million acres in the state, surpassing 2018 for the most acres destroyed in a year, according to figures from the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection and Times research.
“After historic high temperatures in the region over the weekend, officials with the National Forest Service announced they would temporarily close eight national forests at 5 p.m. Monday because of the extreme heat and dangerous fire conditions. Closing those recreation areas — including the Angeles, San Bernardino, Los Padres, Cleveland, Stanislaus, Sierra, Sequoia and Inyo national forests — will help reduce the potential for human-caused fires, they said.” LAT
BEYOND THE BELTWAY … SAM SUTTON in Trenton: “How Covid-19 made New Jersey’s Phil Murphy the most powerful governor in America”: “New Jersey endows its governors with the most executive power in the nation. Chris Christie knew it and used that broad authority to become a hero of the Republican Party — a state-level strongman who forced Democrats to do his will or face his wrath.
“Few thought Phil Murphy, his Democratic successor, would consolidate that power even further. Murphy struggled early on to move his progressive agenda through the solidly Democratic Legislature. Rival factions formed to oppose him. His signature proposal — a new tax on millionaires — was rejected twice.
“Now, six months into a global pandemic that’s shattered the state’s economy and killed roughly 16,000 residents, Murphy has become one of the most popular governors in New Jersey history — and discovered just how much say he has over the state and its government.”
BUSINESS BURST — “Production Problems Spur Broad FAA Review of Boeing Dreamliner Lapses,” by WSJ’s Andrew Tangel and Andy Pasztor: “Production problems at a Boeing Co. 787 Dreamliner factory have prompted air-safety regulators to review quality-control lapses potentially stretching back almost a decade, according to an internal government memo and people familiar with the matter.
“The plane maker has told U.S. aviation regulators that it produced certain parts at its South Carolina facilities that failed to meet its own design and manufacturing standards, according to an Aug. 31 internal Federal Aviation Administration memo reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
“As a result of ‘nonconforming’ sections of the rear fuselage, or body of the plane, that fell short of engineering standards, according to the memo and these people, a high-level FAA review is considering mandating enhanced or accelerated inspections that could cover hundreds of jets.” WSJ
SPOTTED at a Zoom birthday gathering for April Ryan, hosted by Jawn Murray: Susan Rice, Tyrese Gibson, Valerie Jarrett, Jonathan Capehart, Kym Whitley, Kevin Lewis, Sybil Wilkes, David Swerdlick, Lisa France, Kenny Lattimore, Brian Courtney Wilson, Maysa, BeBe Winans, Stacey Cole Wilson and Vashti Murphy McKenzie.
NEW … UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO INSTITUTE OF POLITICS FELLOWS for the fall: James Bennet, Jelani Cobb, Addisu Demissie, Scott Jennings and Samantha Vinograd.
TRANSITION — Cassie Moreno is now press secretary for Sen. Mark Warner’s (D-Va.) reelection campaign. She previously was comms director for Suraj Patel’s congressional campaign in New York, and is a Michelle Wu and Seth Moulton alum.
ENGAGED — Austin Cantrell, owner of Cantrell Communications Inc. and a Trump White House alum, and Sage Anne Norberg, an elementary special education teacher in Palm Beach County, got engaged Friday night in Lauderdale-by-the-Sea, Fla. They met sitting next to each other on a Spirit Airlines flight from BWI to FLL in 2018. Pic… Another pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Betsy Struse, director of international government relations for Cargill, and Charley Struse, project executive with Miller, welcomed Schuyler Gracie Struse on Friday. Pic…Another pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Ali Pardo, deputy comms director for the Trump campaign. What she’s been reading: “Anything and everything I can find on training a new puppy. We are going to have our hands full after the election.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is 79 … formerDefense Secretary Jim Mattis is 7-0 … Rep. Mike Simpson (R-Idaho) is 7-0 … David Dixon … Steve McMahon, CEO and co-founder of Purple Strategies (h/ts Jon Haber) … Don Schimanski … JoAnne Anton (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Jonathan Rosen, principal and co-founder of BerlinRosen … Richard Cullen … Sharon Páez of Potomac Waves Media, Shatter and Hilltop Public Solutions … Zack Ford … POLITICO’s Jeremy White and Bryan Sauka … Rhea Beal … WSJ’s Akane Otani … Jason Mattera … Alexis Marks Mosher of Apple … Harry Liberman … Gabby Deutch … Lenore Cho … Nick Bouknight … Charlotte Ivancic … Andrea Hoffman … Jaime Lennon … Mike Danylak … Will Batson … Ruben Verastigui …
… Axios’ Alayna Treene (h/t Shannon Vavra)… former Sen. Sam Nunn (D-Ga.) is 82 … Howard Lorber … Samantha Osborne Reynolds, senior director at Scripps (h/t husband Matthias) … Deloitte’s Mark Abman … Diedtra Henderson … former NEC Director Al Hubbard … Bob Bierman … Michael Pratt … Morgan Hook of SKDKnickerbocker … Marco Romeo … Will Brunelle … Judy Diaz … Jillian Harding … Andrei Berman … Jess Tocco, SVP at Rasky Partners and CEO of A10 Associates … Matthew McGregor … WNYC’s Andrew Golis … Carey Hickox … Dan Gurley … Andy Zack … Dylan McDowell … Kim Coalter … Jasi Edwards … Brookly McLaughlin … Michael Johns … Brandon Wright … Gail Leftwich Kitch … Les Wexner is 83 … Jill McClain
Jerusalem, Tisha B’Av, destroyed by Babylon, Rome, then after centuries, recognized as Capital of Israel
“Let us go up at once, and possess the land; for we are well able to overcome it,” shouted Joshua and Caleb, after they spent 40 days spying out the Promised Land.
But the other ten spies gave a bad report, causing the Israelites to lose heart.
This sad day was Tisha B’Av – the 9th day of the Hebrew month of Av.
As a result of their doubt, the Israelites wandered in the desert 40 years.
Tisha B’Av in the year 587 BC was the day the Babylonians destroyed Solomon’s Temple in Jerusalem, and carried the Tribe of Judah into captivity.
The Jews that returned from the Babylonian Captivity to Jerusalem built the Second Temple c.516 BC, which was expanded by King Herod c.19 BC.
Rome’s destruction of the Jerusalem began in 66 AD, when Roman Emperor Nero appointed General Vespasian to put down a revolt in Judea.
Soon after Nero’s order, Rome experienced chaos with the year of four emperors.
Nero committed suicide in 68 AD.
His successor, Galba, was assassinated within 8 months, in 69 AD.
His successor, Otho, committed suicide within 2 months.
His successor, Vitellius, was executed within 8 months.
Vespasian was the next Emperor and his son, Titus, continued the conquest of Judea.
Titus surrounded Jerusalem and starved inhabitants for months.
Titus ordered Jewish deserters from Jerusalem to be crucified around the walls.
By the end of July, 70 AD, the Roman Army broke through the walls.
The Second Temple was destroyed on Tisha B’Av, 70 AD.
By September 8, 70 AD, all of Jerusalem was completely conquered.
Historian Josephus recorded that over a million Jews were killed in the siege.
According to historian Eusebius, Romans hunted down and killed all descendants of the royal line of David.
The Jewish Temple was so completely destroyed that only the foundation stones of the retaining wall of the Temple Mount were left, which are the very bottom rows of the Wailing Wall.
Jewish Temple treasures were carried off to Rome, as shown on the Arch of Titus, and were used to finance the building of Rome’s Colosseum.
The Colosseum was so named as it was next to Nero’s 100 foot high bronze Colossus Statue depicting the Roman sun god Apollo, modeled after the 100 foot high bronze Colossus Statue of Rhodes depicting the Greek son god Helios.
France’s gift of The Statue of Liberty-the New Colossus was modeled after it.
Shortly after the destruction of Jerusalem, Emperor Vespasian caught a slight illness in 79 AD which led to severe diarrhea and death.
His last words were: “Oh dear! I think I’m becoming a god!”
His son, Titus, became the next Emperor and two months later Mount Vesuvius erupted.
The volcanic eruption destroyed the Bay of Naples, including the cities of Herculaneum and the immoral resort city of Pompeii.
Thousands of Romans were buried alive under feet of volcanic ash.
Then, in the spring of 80 AD, the city of Rome caught fire.
Flames burned out of control for three days and nights destroying much of Capitoline Hill, the Temple of Jupiter, Pantheon, and Pompey’s Theater.
Then followed the worst outbreak of plague that Rome had yet endured.
In spite of all this, Titus insisted on dedicating the Colosseum to commemorate his victories in the Jewish wars.
For 100 days, thousands were killed in executions and gladiatorial fights, in addition to 5,000 animals.
Immediately following the games, Titus died, having been in office just two years.
He is rumored to have been poisoned on orders of his brother, Domitian, who became the next emperor.
In 135 AD, on the date Tisha B’Av, Roman Emperor Hadrian had another 500,000 Jews massacred at Betar during Bar Kokhba’s revolt.
Emperor Hadrian believed the source of Jewish rebellion was their faith, so he executed Jewish scholars, prohibited the Torah and the Hebrew calendar, and burned the sacred scroll on the Temple Mount.
In his attempt to completely erase Jewish history from the land, Emperor Hadrian changed the name of Judea to “Syria Palaestina.”
This is the origin of the region being referred to as “Palestine.”
Hadrian also changed the name of Jerusalem to “Aelia Capitolina,” and banned Jews from entering on pain of death.
Eusebius wrote in his History of the Church (ser. II, vol. I, book IV, chapter VI):
“The Last Siege of the Jews Under Hadrian: The whole nation was prohibited from this time on by a decree, and by the commands of Hadrian, from ever going up to the country about Jerusalem.
For the emperor gave orders that they should not even see from a distance the land of their fathers. Such is the account of Aristo of Pella.
And thus, when the city had been emptied of the Jewish nation and had suffered the total destruction of its ancient inhabitants, it was colonized by a different race, and the Roman city which subsequently arose changed its name and was called Aelia, in honor of the emperor Aelius Hadrian.”
Cassius Dio wrote in Roman History (69.12):
“At Jerusalem, Hadrian founded a city in place of the one which had been razed to the ground, naming it Aelia Capitolina, and on the site of the temple of the god he raised a new temple to Jupiter.
… This brought on a war of no slight importance nor of brief duration, for the Jews deemed it intolerable that foreign races should be settled in their city and foreign religious rites planted there.”
Eusebius wrote in Demonstratio Evangelica (8.3; 405, circa 314 – 318 AD):
“Jerusalem … is even now like a quarry, all the inhabitants of the city choosing stones from its ruins as they will for private as well as public buildings.
And it is sad for the eyes to see stones from the Temple itself, and from its ancient sanctuary and holy place, used for the building of idol temples, and of theatres for the populace.”
Emperor Hadrian’s reign saw the beginning of the end of Roman expansion.
Shortly after Hadrian, the Roman Empire transitioned to maintaining its borders, then began contracting.
Hadrian’s Wall across the whole of Britain marked the Empire’s furthest extent, except for the brief 20 year period of Antonine’s Wall.
Around 165 AD, the “Antonine Plague” broke out which, according to Roman historian Dio Cassius, killed 2,000 a day, devastating the Roman army, and leaving an estimated 5 million dead.
From c.324–638 AD, Jews were allowed to enter Jerusalem once a year to pray at the Western Wall on Tisha B’Av.
Over the following centuries, the Land of Israel was invaded or occupied by:
135 AD Roman Empire
390 AD Byzantine Empire
614 AD Sassanid Persians
635 AD Umayyad Caliphate
750 AD Abbasid Caliphate
909 AD Fatimid Caliphate
1071 AD Seljuk Turks
1099 AD Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem
1187 AD Ayyubid Sultanate
1260 AD Mongolian Empire
1291 AD Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt
1517 AD Ottoman Sultanate
1660 AD Druze Dynasty
1799 AD French Napoleon
1844 AD Tanzimat Ottoman Empire
1864 AD Ottoman Vilayet of Syria
1917 AD Britain Mandate
1948 AD The State of Israel.
For centuries, people across the world desired to pilgrimage to Jerusalem, including Mark Twain and Abraham Lincoln.
The Library of Congress has a scrapbook with an account by Rev. N.W. Miner of Springfield, who officiated Lincoln’s burial, in which are recalled President Lincoln’s last words while at Ford’s Theater with his wife:
“Mrs. Lincoln informed me that … the very last moments of his conscious life were spent in conversation with her about his future plans …
He said he wanted to visit the Holy Land and see those places hallowed by the footprints of the Saviour. He was saying there was no city he so much desired to see as Jerusalem.”
In 1917, Britain issued the Balfour Declaration establishing the Jewish homeland.
On May 14, 1948, the State of Israel came into being again.
In 1967, Jerusalem was once again under Jewish control.
Israel maintained its independence after the 1973 Yom Kippur War, and Jerusalem was reaffirmed as Israel’s capital with “The Basic Law: Jerusalem, the Capital of Israel,” passed in 1980.
The United Nations was created, in part, to protect Jews after the Nazi holocaust, and one of the first acts of the U.N. was to recognize the State of Israel.
Despite this, the U.N. Security Council threatened to divide Jerusalem and take a third of Israel to create a “Palestinian” State.
The Roman Empire experienced a series of disasters after it forced Jews from their land.
Some consider it more than coincidental, the timing of certain disasters following attempts by the United States to force Jews to give up their land.
On October 30, 1991, President George H.W. Bush signed the Oslo Accord pressuring Israel to give “land for peace.”
The next day, “The Perfect Storm” hit New England causing damages over $100 million, including 30 foot waves demolishing the home of President George H.W. Bush at Kennebunkport, Maine.
On August 23, 1992, President George H.W. Bush pressured Israel with the Madrid “land for peace” agreement.
The same day, Hurricane Andrew smashed into Florida causing $30 billion in damages, destroying over 180,000 homes.
On January 16, 1994, President Bill Clinton met in Geneva with Syria’s President Hafez el-Assad to discuss Israel giving up the Golan Heights in exchange for peace.
Within 24 hours a 6.9 Earthquake devastated Southern California.
On January 21, 1998, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was snubbed at the White House when President Clinton and Secretary of State Madeleine Albright refused to have lunch with him. The same day, the Monica Lewinsky sex scandal erupted.
On September 28, 1998, Secretary of State Albright detailed another “land for peace” agreement requiring Israel to surrender 13 percent of the West Bank and Gaza.
President Clinton met with Yasser Arafat and Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House, followed by Arafat telling the United Nations there would soon be a Palestinian State.
The same day, Hurricane Georges hit the Gulf Coast causing $1 billion in damages.
On October 15, 1998, Yassar Arafat and Benjamin Netanyahu met in Maryland to discuss Israel giving up 13 percent of the West Bank and Gaza in exchange for “peace.”
Two days later, tornadoes hit Texas leaving $1 billion in damages.
On December 12, 1998, President Clinton arrived in the Palestinian area to discuss Israel giving up “land for peace.”
The same day, President Clinton was impeached.
On May 3, 1999, Yasser Arafat had scheduled a press conference to announce a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as the capital.
The same day, the most powerful tornado storms to hit the United States whipped through Oklahoma and Kansas.
On June 8, 2001, President George W. Bush sent Secretary Tenet to Jerusalem with a proposal to exchange land for a “Roadmap to Peace.”
The same day, tropical Storm Allison hit Texas causing $7 billion in damage and closing George Bush Airport for two days.
As part of a U.S. brokered “disengagement” deal, on Tisha B’Av, 2005, Jews began to be forcibly evacuated from Gaza.
The last Jewish residents were dragged out on August 22, 2005. The very next day, a tropical depression in the Atlantic turned into Hurricane Katrina and headed straight for New Orleans, forcing tens of thousands to evacuate.
Property damage in New Orleans exceeded $81 billion.
Nearly 2,000 people died. It was one of the deadliest hurricanes in U.S. history.
The word “Islam” means submission to the will of Allah. A “Muslim” is one who has submitted to the will of Allah.
The Islamic concept of “peace” is when the world submits to will of Allah.
In other words, to a fundamental Muslim, “world peace” means “world Islam.”
The Islamic concept of “treaty” is “hudna,” which means, when you are weak make treaties until you grow strong enough to disregard them.”
British philosopher Thomas Hobbes wrote in Leviathan (1651, pt. 1, ch. 13):
“Force, and fraud, are in war the two cardinal virtues.”
When an enemy is willing to negotiate, it is a sign of their weakness.
The fundamentalist concept is – when your enemy shows fear and weakness, that is Allah giving them to you — it is an indicator Allah wants you to attack them.
Instead of “land of peace,” when Hamas took over Gaza, they began digging more tunnels and firing thousands of rockets into Israel.
Just two weeks after Jewish residents were forcibly removed from Gaza, followed by Hurricane Katrina, President Bush delivered a Day of Prayer and Remembrance address, September 8, 2005:
“Hurricane Katrina was one of the worst natural disasters in our Nation’s history and has caused unimaginable devastation and heartbreak throughout the Gulf Coast Region …
Communities … decimated … Lives … lost … Hundreds of thousands of our fellow Americans are suffering great hardship.”
Though not a call to repentance, as past Presidents had proclaimed, President Bush did end his Day of Prayer and Remembrance with:
“To honor the memory of those who lost their lives, to provide comfort and strength to families of the victims …
I call upon all Americans to pray to Almighty God and to perform acts of service … Across our Nation, many selfless deeds reflect the promise of the Scripture:
‘For I was hungry and you gave Me food; I was thirsty and you gave Me drink; I was a stranger and you took Me in.'”
On December 6, 2017, President Donald J. Trump had the United States officially recognize Jerusalem as the capital of the State of Israel:
“My announcement today marks the beginning of a new approach to conflict between Israel and the Palestinians …
I have determined that it is time to officially recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel …
This is a long-overdue step to advance the peace process and to work towards a lasting agreement.
… Israel is a sovereign nation with the right like every other sovereign nation to determine its own capital …
It was 70 years ago that the United States, under President Truman, recognized the State of Israel. Ever since then, Israel has made its capital in the city of Jerusalem — the capital the Jewish people established in ancient times …
Today, Jerusalem is … the heart of one of the most successful democracies in the world.”
Numbers 24:9:
“Whoever blesses Israel will be blessed, And whoever curses Israel will be cursed.” (Good News Translation)
Psalm 122:6:
“Pray for the peace of Jerusalem: they shall prosper that love thee.”
Send this to everyone you know. Let’s get every vote counted. The media has made it clear that in order for your vote to count, you must take action. But, how can you make sure YOUR ballot is counted? How Can I Make Sure My Ballot is Counted in the …
President Donald Trump will travel to Jupiter, Florida, where he will deliver remarks to supporters then travel to Winston-Salem, North Carolina, for a campaign rally. Keep up with Trump on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 9/8/20 – note: this page will be updated during the day if …
Two police union officials fault local prosecutors for allowing riots to continue through lenient policies and refusals to charge violent demonstrators to the highest extent of the law. Both of the union bosses used Portland as a model for an inept prosecutorial system and they applauded a recent decision by …
Family meant everything to Army Sgt. 1st Class Ron Rosser, who was the second oldest of a whopping 17 siblings. It was that love of family that drove him to the front lines of the Korean War. There, during one of the coldest days of winter, he single-handedly took out …
Better hang on to your sandwich Folks! Hillary Clinton lost several rust belt states and the election because she took the working class vote for granted. Joe Biden is setting himself up to repeat her mistake. “Lunch-bucket Joe” thinks he can win middle class votes by taking away their jobs …
A New York assistant principal has been placed on administrative leave after he recorded himself at Rochester protests screaming “F-k the police,” video shows. Ninth-grade Advanced Placement school teacher Steven Lysenko attended Rochester protests where he took a Facebook Live video of himself screaming about police while wearing a Black …
President Donald Trump holds a news conference Monday to update the nation on recent developments. The conference is scheduled to begin at 1:00 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication …
Another Tuesday is upon us, my Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I sincerely hope you’re all having a good one so far.
The post-Labor Day home sprint to the presidential election is also now upon us. It’s time for the candidates to refine their messages and swing for the fences.
While Crazy Joe the Wonder Veep continues history’s most tragic struggle with teleprompter reading, President Trump is busy using the power of the incumbency to laser focus and finish big. The reason that the media is working hard to keep the hit piece on Trump by The Atlantic alive is to deflect from Biden’s complete lack of a real campaign.
President Trump is getting around to something that I’ve been hoping he’d tackle for a while. The mainstream media has been writing a fiction story about Black Lives Matter for years now and really slathering on the glowing embellishments since the everything hit the fan in May.
A few months ago, a good friend who doesn’t bury her nose in political news 24/7 asked me to describe Black Lives Matter in just a few lines. I replied, “It’s a Marxist, anti-cop movement. ”
If you’ve got a more succinct — and correct — description, please share it with me.
The big problem with celebrities who have been eager to agree with the sentiment that black lives matter is that most of them don’t understand that they’re endorsing the organization Black Lives Matter and all it stands for. The one exception is the National Basketball Association. I truly believe that the league knows exactly what it’s signed onto.
President Trump has the best platform to push back against the BLM-as-justice-seeking-saints narrative, and he’s doing it well now. Tyler recently wrote about Trump’s recent moves to counter the critical theory cancer that’s plaguing the United States:
On Friday, Russell Vought, director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), sent a memo to the heads of executive departments and agencies, ordering them to cease using curricula based on Marxist critical theory for their employee trainings.
“It has come to the President’s attention that Executive Branch agencies have spent millions of taxpayer dollars to date ‘training’ government workers to believe divisive, anti-American propaganda,” Vought wrote. The OMB director seems to have been referring to the 1,483 pages of Department of Defense (DOD) training materials Judicial Watch unearthed in July. An April 2015 training, for instance, branded the idea that “individual effort is key to success” as a form of “Racist Behavior.”
Vought referenced training sessions that teach that “virtually all White people contribute to racism” and others claiming that “there is racism embedded in the belief that America is the land of opportunity or the belief that the most qualified person should receive a job.”
Critical race theory is the rocket fuel that makes BLM violent. None of it is about George Floyd, despite the constant media reassurances that that’s what is motivating them.
The BLM/Antifa violence is obviously playing into Trump’s hands. The riots may guarantee his re-election. It speaks well of his leadership instincts that his detractors say he doesn’t have that he’d rather expose them and shut them down even if it might work out better for him if they continued to rage on.
Trump also took aim at the execrable “1619 Project” from The New York Times. More from Tyler:
On Sunday, President Trump also brought a similar strategy to the Department of Education (DOE). He responded to someone warning that California schools have started teaching from the 1619 Project, which claims that America’s true founding came not with the Declaration of Independence in 1776 but with the arrival of the first black slaves in 1619.
(While the first black slaves arrived in the land that would become South Carolina as early as 1526, the 1619 Project is more concerned with branding America as inherently and fundamentally racist than with particular dates. The project’s founder, Nikole Hannah-Jones, has admitted that her enterprise is “not about history,” but rather about “memory” and the “national narrative.”)
As for schools teaching from the 1619 Project, the president tweeted that the “Department of Education is looking at this. If so, they will not be funded!”
Hit ’em where it hurts: the money.
The “1619 Project” is just another mainstream media work of fiction intent on keeping alive the Critical Race Theory notion that all white people are racist all the time. It’s divisive, actually racist garbage that was funded and published by a pathetic progressive American media white guilt fever dream.
BLM’s Marxist roots are proof the the end game is the destruction of our institutions. We’ve seen that with the defund police stuff this summer.
Good for Trump for going after the academic commie crap that ignited and perpetuates the anti-American violence.
See also: we’re doomed to go down this Marxist toilet if the drooling idiot Biden wins in November.
Peak 2020, Ladies and Gentlemen
Another Reason Why Grandpa Gropes Can’t Be Allowed to Win
Great interview between Carson and Pryor here. Even Pryor’s digs at Reagan in the beginning were funny because his timing is perfect. He also didn’t dwell on politics, like the political screed hacks of today. You’ll lament the current state of late night talk shows even more after this.
I’m just one raging ball of COVID questionable choices now.
Happy Tuesday! We hope you all enjoyed your long weekend as much as we did.
Starting today, we’re offering you a chance to experience a full Dispatch membership for the next 30 days, risk-free. We hope that with the election in full swing and so much information chaos out there, The Dispatch can help you make sense of what’s really important and worth your time.
During this 30-day trial, you’ll have access to member-only editions of all of our Dispatch newsletters, and you’ll be able to join our members-only Dispatch Live virtual gatherings.
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The United States confirmed 24,936 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday, with 4.2 percent of the 588,909 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 274 deaths were attributed to the virus on Monday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 189,206.
In the midst of ongoing demonstrations, Belarusian opposition leader Maria Kolesnikova—a member of the opposition Coordination Council set up to ensure a power transfer—has disappeared. Witnesses claim to have seen her being abducted by masked men in a public park in Minsk, while Belarusian police have denied detaining her.
In an afternoon press conference on Monday, President Trump called Joe Biden a “stupid person” and described Sen. Kamala Harris as “not a competent person,” excoriating them for questioning whether the White House was pushing a politicized vaccine timeline. He also defended himself from the article in The Atlantic that claimed he had called veterans “suckers,” arguing that soldiers loved him in spite of their commanders, who, in his telling, “want to do nothing but fight wars” in order to make money for arms manufacturers.
On Sunday, California Gov. Gavin Newson declared a state of emergency in Fresno, Mariposa, San Diego, and San Bernardino counties as fires continue to burn across California, which is enduring a heat wave. A record 2 million acres have burned this year.
Democrats on the House Committee on Oversight and Reform are launching an investigation into whether Postmaster General Louis DeJoy reimbursed employees at his former company for donating money to GOP candidates he supported.
Alexei Navalny, the Russian opposition leader who German doctors maintain was poisoned, has been brought out of a medical coma and is responsive.
The Home Stretch
Every four years, Labor Day kicks off the final two months of a presidential election cycle, the most intense period in American politics. It’s here.
In 2020, these final months will take place during a global pandemic and a deep recession, with pockets of civil unrest serving as reminders of deeply strained racial relations and simmering anger from protesters, counterprotesters and those caught in their battles. Our politics are more polarized than at any time in recent memory and candidates for office routinely make apocalyptic predictions about the consequences of victory by their partisan rivals. Hostile foreign governments seek to disrupt the election and even the intelligence community’s warnings about those capabilities and intentions have been weaponized for partisan purposes.
Through all of this, polling of the presidential race has been surprisingly stable: Joe Biden is a heavy favorite to win, currently boasting a 7 percent polling average lead nationwide. The Economist election projection has Trump’s odds of winning at 1 in 6. Sean Trende, the senior elections analyst at RealClearPolitics puts Trump’s chances at 1 in 7. Election forecaster FiveThirtyEight has Trump’s odds at closer to 3 in 10.
Last week we told you we were launching a new newsletter from Scott Lincicome. Well, today’s the day! In the first edition, Scott explains that he will be writing weekly on the “wild world of Washington wonkery.”
This, of course, will include trade and international economic policy (something I’ve also taught at Duke), but we’ll also look at other pressing or trendy economic issues of the day—things like wage stagnation, supply chains, “deindustrialization,” living standards, physical and occupational mobility, entitlement spending, and so on—citing to the latest data or research from think tanks and academia and then translating it (well, trying to, at least) into language that normal, non-nerds can more easily understand. For example, I’ll soon be taking a deep dive into the theory and history behind economists’ longstanding aversion to tariffs and then look at the actual results of those policies in recent years (spoiler: They’re not great, Bob.)
Beyond those lessons, we’ll look at how broader economic and policy concepts—the “seen versus unseen,” opportunity costs, “public choice,” price signals, etc.—fit into our daily lives, highlighting the weird, wonderful, and often hilarious world that is the free(ish) market.
Scott approaches these issues with a clear perspective—capitalism is a force for good. But you’ll find that Scott is anything but dogmatic, always testing his assumptions based on facts and data. (Except when it comes to the proper way to make nachos, where he’s mulish in his devotion to dressing each individual tortilla chip, one-by-one.)
Of course, I will have a viewpoint—freer markets are (usually) better markets; things are (mostly) getting better all the time; good intentions and $2.70 will get you a cup of coffee; etc.—and will argue for certain positions and against others. (And, not too long ago, these “Hayekian fundamentalist” viewpoints were pretty common among conservatives too!) Given the rise of economic populism and nationalism on the left and the right, I will certainly devote ample space here to debunking some of the most well-worn myths about “libertarianism,” trade, immigration, jobs, living standards, and other issues that buttress those growing, illiberal movements. I’ll also devote more than a few characters to the wonders of modern capitalism that we all—even me!—take for granted every day (though I still smile at my supermarket’s $10 dozen of roses—hooray cheap luxury!).
What’s it going to look like?
I expect the format of Capitolism to be somewhat similar to what you’ve experienced among the other newsletters: a main “column” on the news and issue of the week, followed by a couple sections of quicker hits on relevant and irrelevant matters. This may include but not be limited to (1) a Chart of the Week, with some sort of eye-popping data on a popular policy issue; (2) some bizarre (hilarious) product or service showing how Markets Are Weird; (3) since we do love consumption here at Capitolism, a somewhat serious (unpaid) endorsement for a miraculous product that I just can’t live without; (4) a healthy dose of dad jokes and puns (which, it should be noted, are considered by #science to be a sign of incredible wit and intelligence); and/or (5) quick links to some of the best policy writing that I’ve read that week.
One important note: If you want to receive Capitolism in your inbox, you must opt-in here. The first few editions will be sent to all of our readers who opt-in, but after that the newsletter will go only to paid members. If you would to receive Capitolism to your inbox, please go add it to your preferences here.
Worth Your Time
You might look at Mulan’s beautiful mountain scenery in a different light after reading Isaac Stone Fish at the Washington Post. “The most devastating part of ‘Mulan,’” Fish writes, “isn’t the story. It’s the credits.” Fish blasts Disney for thanking four CCP propaganda bureaus and the Public Security Bureau of the city of Turpan—all of which operate in the Xinjiang region. By accepting the aid of these agencies and filming in Xinjiang, Fish writes, Disney “worked with regions where genocide is occurring, and thanked government departments that are helping to carry it out.”
American Compass, a new think tank founded by economist Oren Cass, chose this Labor Day to launch a monthlong policy forum, “A Seat at the Table: A Conservative Future for the American Labor Movement.” The group started off with a statement signed by, among others, Yuval Levin, Marco Rubio, and Jeff Sessions, arguing for the importance of organized labor as “vital mediating institutions” and advocating for the consideration of various labor law reforms. “We endorse no specific proposal,” they write, “but believe that various combinations hold the potential for substantive reform that would advance our priorities of improving the lives of workers and their families, deepening our communities, and strengthening the nation.”
For months, there have been whispers among top Republicans about the astonishing spending of the Trump campaign. An investigation by two of the top New York Times political reporters, Maggie Haberman and Shane Goldmacher, finds many reasons to justify those concerns. “Of the $1.1 billion his campaign and the party raised from the beginning of 2019 through July, more than $800 million has already been spent. Now some people inside the campaign are forecasting what was once unthinkable: a cash crunch with less than 60 days until the election, according to Republican officials briefed on the matter.” Under former campaign manager Brad Parscale, “more than $350 million—almost half of the $800 million spent—went to fund-raising operations, as no expense was spared in finding new donors online.” Those lists, of course, have value well beyond the end of the current campaign.
David’s Sunday French Press stresses the importance of responsible gun ownership and discusses the American social compact: “the government recognizes and defends fundamental individual liberty, and the individual then exercises that liberty virtuously, for virtuous purposes.” But he’s dismayed that two recent events—the McCloskeys waving guns at protesters in St. Louis and Kyle Rittenhouse’s arrest in Kenosha on charges of shooting three protesters, two fatally—have left many Christians celebrating irresponsible and reckless behavior.
Danielle Pletka questions whether Democrats will be any better at promoting democracy than Donald Trump has been. While noting Trump’s affinity for cozying up to tyrants and his own autocratic leadership style, Pletka points out some examples of hypocrisy from Democrats.
On Friday’s Dispatch Podcast, Sarah and Steve welcomed conservative commentator and talk radio guru Erick Erickson for a wide-ranging discussion on politics, the conservative movement, the 2020 election, and the need for grace. Erick walks through his reasons for supporting Donald Trump over Joe Biden, while admitting that some days he thinks about just staying home instead. If you’re interested in reading Erick’s newsletter, “Confessions of a Political Junkie,” you can check it out here.
Kemberlee Kaye: “The political world might be awful, but I’m pretty pumped about several upcoming projects we have in the pipe here at the foundation!”
Leslie Eastman: “I believe that President Donald Trump’s executive order ending the use of Critical Race Theory in federal training sessions is one of the most important acts he has taken during his presidency.”
Stacey Matthews: “A viral video tweeted by the left that allegedly shows President Trump looking “lost and disoriented” is proven to be fake news, wildly taken out of context.”
David Gerstman: “Whatever one thinks about the governmental responses to COVID, the experience of Stacey Matthews and her parents makes clear that if one gets the virus, it can be debilitating.”
Legal Insurrection Foundation is a Rhode Island tax-exempt corporation established exclusively for charitable purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to educate and inform the public on legal, historical, economic, academic, and cultural issues related to the Constitution, liberty, and world events.
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“Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden was finally forced to confront the left-wing violence that has been plaguing America’s major cities for months on end…”
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BLM Mob Terrorizes Residents in Pittsburgh
New data shows that 48 of America’s 50 largest cities have been hit with “Black Lives Matter” protests during recent months; in some locations, the protests devolve into violent riots on a near-nightly basis. Over the weekend, a large group of BLM demonstrators in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania descended on a restaurant with outdoor dining to terrorize patrons enjoying lunch.
Disturbing footage shows the mob aggressively advance on an outdoor dining space. One demonstrator approaches an older couple, and then drinks the beer in front of them, while a fellow demonstrator smashes a glass at a table. Another screams at the diners, “F**k the white people that built the system!” As diners pick up their belongings and leave the restaurant, protesters call them an “embarrassment.” No arrests have been made in connection to the incident, although Pittsburgh police say they are investigating.
This weekend also saw BLM protestors lighting a fire near Portland’s police precinct, and naked demonstrators “demanding action” outside a police headquarters in Rochester, New York.
Biden’s Edge Over Trump Disappears in Texas
A combination of domestic migration from Democrat-led states and an increasing share of young, diverse voters in Texas could mean the traditionally-conservative state will trend blue in November. Recent polls even showed that Joe Biden was leading President Donald Trump by five points in the state–but now that lead has evaporated.
A Dallas Morning News poll released Sunday shows that Biden’s five-point lead has turned into a two-point deficit among likely voters in Texas. Forty-eight percent of respondents back Trump, while 46 percent support Biden. Trump’s increasing poll numbers in the state come after a successful GOP convention, during which the president made “law and order” a major theme, and as BLM rioters create havoc in cities around the nation. Democrats haven’t won statewide in Texas since 1994. However, Trump did not perform as well in Texas in 2016 as previous GOP nominees, winning the presidential race by only nine points.
Nearly 1,000 People Moving to Florida Per Day as Residents Flee New York
The Sunshine State is seeing “unprecedented demand” in home sales, with about 950 people moving to the state every day. Coronavirus shutdowns and oppressive state tax rates have caused waves of residents to flee states like New York, Connecticut, New Jersey, and Illinois in record numbers. The trend has been sped up even further as corporations are increasingly opting to allow employees to work remotely on a permanent basis.
New York State, in particular, is facing fiscal disaster as high-earners leave for greener (and sunnier) pastures. The state faces a $30 billion budget hole; New York City a further $9 billion. Even before the next phase of the coronavirus, rioting, or tax-related sjourns, New York confronts fiscal Armageddon. Unless the state gets a federal bailout, it will likely be forced to drastically cut spending or declare bankruptcy.
What to Read – Out of Mao’s Shadow
China is now a massive world player, expanding its wealth and influence rapidly with no signs of slowing down. While much of the United States economy remains closed due to the pandemic, China’s economy is nearly fully reopened. The nation is further closing its gap with the US economy.
It is critical that Americans understand our greatest geopolitical threat, and its history. Out of Mao’s Shadow: The Struggle for the Soul of a New China, by journalist Phillip Pan, is a quick, easy, yet informative read that examines the battle for the nation’s future through personal stories of artists, lawyers, businesspeople, and activists working to build a more democratic China. It’s an easy-to-understand primer on post-Mao China that reads like a novel.
Kristin Tate is an author and columnist focused on taxation and government spending. Her latest book, The Liberal Invasion of Red State America, was published by Regnery Publishing in 2020. She is a Robert Novak Journalism Fellow at the Fund for American Studies, examining the size, scope, and cost of the federal workforce. Kristin also serves as analyst for the nonprofit group Young Americans for Liberty, aiding the organization in its mission to promote limited government and fiscal responsibility. You can follow her on Twitter at @KristinBTate.
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Sep 08, 2020 01:00 am
Democrats still talk a lot about slavery, but all they succeeded in doing was to move blacks to a different plantation. Read More…
Meanwhile, back at the U.N …
Sep 08, 2020 01:00 am
The latest tweet from the global clown’s outfit declares men the source of all the world’s problems. Read more…
Another Trump hoax and Biden’s mental decline
Sep 08, 2020 01:00 am
Democrats grabbed onto a snippet of a video to claim (falsely) that Trump is confused, but they can’t hide from Biden’s extreme and visible decline. Read more…
Green energy is not so green
Sep 08, 2020 01:00 am
Why export our sunshine, wind, and water while leaving our abundant fossil sunshine locked underground as “politically stranded assets”? Read more…
Q names pedophile politicians vulnerable to blackmail
Sep 07, 2020 01:00 am
You are not supposed to pay attention to anything published on the website QAnon. But when the combined forces of the mainstream media and Democrats tell us to avert our eyes, absolute obedience may be a mistake. Read more…
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Black Lives Matter protesters harassed and assaulted a McDonald’s restaurant manager and another employee in a video captured during the protests in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The video from Saturday shows a man with a bullhorn harassing the manager with many others chanting with him. The manager appears frustrated and tries to get them to leave … Read more
New book shows how Lt. Col. Alex Vindman was the real instigator of the Ukraine investigation that formed the pretext for Democrats’ impeachment of President Trump.
The next president will likely solidify a lasting majority on the courts of appeals, either cementing President Trump’s judicial legacy or largely undoing it.
What started as a piece about Trump’s fight for the return of college football quickly spirals into an attempt to tie Travis and his popular blog to Trump and the pesky conservatives who appear on his radio show.
So what exactly did The Atlantic and its legions of friends do wrong here, and why can’t we believe its claims about President Trump’s fallen soldier comments on its face?
It makes sense to assume mayors of dense cities are finally being punished for their feckless ways, but data showing accelerated urban flight isn’t there.
Every stimulus grabs control from shoppers and hands control to government people. You will pay again later by getting less for the lower-value dollars as Social Security checks.
If courts do uphold this order, Joe Biden could use the Public Health Service Act to impose his own unilateral agenda, just as President Trump has done.
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
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Today’s big show on Freedom First Network will premier four incredible interviews. We’ll launch with Jeremy Boreing, co-founder of The Daily Wire. Singer and patriot Joy Villa streams immediately after Jeremy, following by journalist and activist Savanah Hernandez. The show finishes off with QAnon aficionado Praying Medic.
The intention is to have these types of heavy hitters on premier interview shows at least once a week. Freedom First Network is a group of several shows and podcasts that work together to bring conservative messages to the forefront. In this tumultuous election year, there are few things more important than bringing the truth to light.
Be sure to refresh this page at 10am Pacific or visit Freedom First Network for the livestream.
It’s a heck of a lineup. Jeremy Boreing, Joy Villa, Savanah Hernandez, and Praying Medic will be delivering the insights Americans need to hear today at 10am Pacific, 1pm Eastern.
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.
Despite the push from everyone on the left and many on the right to make the upcoming coronavirus vaccines a crucial and required part of American life, the majority of Americans are not excited about it. They are skeptical of the efficacy and concerned about the dangers. Around two-thirds of Americans will wait before taking the vaccine or will not be taking it at all.
It has, of course, turned political just like everything else has this election year. We have the White House pushing to have it out before the election and we have Democrats claiming it will need to wait until after the election. Neither stance is scientific; it will come when it comes and only after it is properly tested. If that’s tomorrow, it’s tomorrow. If it’s some time in 2021, so be it. Setting political dates or criteria is ludicrous, and the people are reacting accordingly. According to BGR:
A new poll about coronavirus vaccines shows that two-thirds of Americans aren’t willing to get a COVID-19 vaccine.
A quarter of those interviewed says they won’t ever get the vaccine, while 44% of them said they’d rather wait and see how the initial round of immunization goes.
The recent controversies about vaccine emergency use abroad and in the US might explain why some people might are more reticent than before to these potentially life-saving drugs.
To be clear, I’m rooting for it to come out before the election. I won’t be taking it myself, but if it will help keep President Trump in office, excellent! The concern for me and for many patriots is whether local governments will try to attach some sort of mandate to it. Healthcare falls into the realm of states and cities. At least it did before Obamacare, but the Constitution puts it on the states’ plates to make such decisions. Which states or cities will say that only citizens who have been vaccinated can do this, that, or the other? We will see, as JD noted in the latest episode of Non-Compliant America.
One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” to be skeptical of anything as politicized as the COVID-19 vaccine, especially when we consider the disease itself is mild for everyone under the age of 50.
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 Doris Matsui has lived in Maryland since 1979 when her late husband was on Capitol Hill. She won his seat after he died and continued to live in Maryland. The problem is that she’s supposed to be a representative of the people in Sacramento, California.
In the latest Freedom Discourse, JD talked to her GOP challenger, Chris Bish, about her campaign and the filing she made with various election officials. Here is her official release:
Sacramento, Calif. – Candidate for Congress Chris Bish today filed with Sacramento County Registrar and Yolo County Registrar, a challenge to Doris Matsui’s ballot eligibility. Using mortgage documents, tax records and voter registration data, Bish proves Matsui’s primary domicile is located in Maryland. Bish shows Matsui declared her Maryland home as her primary residence to claim tax exemptions and to refinance her mortgage in 2017.
Bish in the Declaration states “Since 1979, Doris Matsui has repeatedly shown her intent was to make her domicile and her primary residence in the State of Maryland prior to April 2020 and in the District of Columbia with her billionaire husband. Pursuant to the election Code of California, Doris Matsui is not qualified to run for Congressional office in California and I hereby challenge her to certification as a candidate.”
We are proud to endorse Chris Bish for Congress. California needs someone who actually lives in the state as their representative and America needs conservative leadership to support President Trump’s agenda.
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.
The United Nations is a social justice organization. They have been for years as they’ve followed the trends around the world of getting “woke” and trading their fundamental mission for something both idiotic and nefarious. But you probably knew all that. What you may not have known is that they’ve taken to conflating issues in ways that baffle the masses.
Their latest unhinged Tweet is a perfect example of where this powerful organization is heading.
The #COVID19 pandemic is demonstrating what we all know: millennia of patriarchy have resulted in a male-dominated world with a male-dominated culture which damages everyone – women, men, girls & boys.
When a Tweet has nearly six times as many comments as likes, it’s getting ratioed. And for good reason. This is a nonsensical Tweet that bridges the formidable gap between social justice attacks on the so-called “patriarchy” with the COVID-19 pandemic. Sorry, nameless United Nations weekend intern, but this makes no sense at all. Twitter let them have it.
What kind of nonsense is this? I’m so sick of these woke activists
It is my sincere hope that Trump ends US funding for the UN during his 2nd term, and kicks you out of New York. You can then set up your HQ in Zimbabwe or Pakistan and preach to everyone there about the patriarchy
‘What we all know.’ This is the UN on ‘social justice’ theory. Some people still pretend such theory has only corrupted the universities. That is wrong. It is corrupting everything. https://t.co/Ioz8LrRj7I
— Nick Searcy,INTERNATIONAL FILM & TELEVISION STAR (@yesnicksearcy) September 7, 2020
The only reason you are posting this is because you are losing ground in the USA. We The People Know What The UN Is All About. We Don’t Need You & We Certainly Don’t Want You.
— TheCloser General Flynn Is An American Hero (@CodeOfPatriots) September 7, 2020
FIFY: The #COVID19 pandemic is demonstrating what we all know: the Communist Party of China damages everyone – women, men, girls & boys. https://t.co/siOcTM7Rci
As the saying goes, “Get woke, go broke.” But the United Nations is far beyond being broke, so where do they go from here? When you’ve hit rock bottom, clowning yourself on Twitter seems like the best remedy.
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.
Joe Biden has a problem. Okay, so he has many problems, but one in particular is pretty big. The radical left wing of his party are pulling their tentative support. Why? Because he’s just not “woke” enough and has been leaning towards the middle to draw in moderate and Independent voters. That’s not sitting well with the Democratic-Socialists. According to The Guardian:
“I don’t want to vote for Joe Biden and I don’t want to vote for Trump,” said Jason Kishineff, who is running for city council in American Canyon, California. “I think either choice is going to lead to human extinction.”
Kishineff is part of a progressive, far-left group of voters who say they will not vote for Biden, even if it means a Trump victory, largely because of the candidate’s failure to adopt a progressive agenda on healthcare, mass incarceration, the environment and policing.
In 2016, this group was part of the estimated 5 million Americans who voted for third-party candidates, including hundreds of thousands of voters in swing states like Florida and Michigan.
But two months ahead of the presidential election – and after fours years of Trump – experts say the group is less of a factor for Democrats than it was in 2016. That shrinking power could serve either to further alienate progressive voters, or coax them into an eventual vote for Biden, especially if he chooses to adopt more leftist policies.
With vaccine popularity slim, will leftist politicians try to force citizens to take it?
A new poll about coronavirus vaccines shows that two-thirds of Americans aren’t willing to get a COVID-19 vaccine.
A quarter of those interviewed says they won’t ever get the vaccine, while 44% of them said they’d rather wait and see how the initial round of immunization goes.
The recent controversies about vaccine emergency use abroad and in the US might explain why some people might are more reticent than before to these potentially life-saving drugs.
Jake Tapper’s alleged election interference is a bigger problem than most realize
The National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) on Sunday night raised concerns that CNN anchor Jake Tapper may be “meddling” in House races beyond the 17th congressional district in Pennsylvania.
Responding to a report from Breitbart News on how Jake Tapper attempted to convince rising GOP star candidate Sean Parnell to run in a district other than the 17th, the NRCC raised questions about Tapper’s actions in this case and wondered if he has engaged in activity like this in other districts with other candidates as well.
The Portland narrative mainstream media dropped because it blew up in their faces
American Airlines announced on Sunday that it would allow flight attendants to wear “Black Lives Matter” pins on their uniform while on duty, according to a Fox News report. The announcement was met with support as well as backlash.
“Clearly we live in a time where it is so important to have a dialogue about this important issue of racism in our society and try to find common ground,” American Airlines wrote in a company-wide announcement. “American is truly committed to having an inclusive culture that is welcoming to all and a reflection of our country and world.”
“This is why American is so committed to creating a more tolerant and diverse team,” the airline company said. “Through our partnership with American’s office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, we are continuing to work through an overall plan for addressing these issues in our workplace.”
American Airlines is also reportedly working on designing its own signature pin to show “its symbolic support of a diverse and inclusive work environment.” American Airlines noted that the diversity pin will be created by its Black Professional Network.
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.
“Mulan” is a popular tale being retold by Disney in their latest attempt to rejuvenate old titles by filming them as live-action movies. Say what you will about the practice (I hate it), but this latest endeavor isn’t really all that scandalous. HOW they did it, WHO they worked with, and WHO they offered praise to has turned into such a scandal, even far-left Washington Post and Axios had to lambaste the radical progressive entertainment giant.
This is truly outrageous: The new live-action Mulan THANKS the Turpan Public Security Bureau (in southern Xinjiang) in the credits. That specific public security bureau has been deeply involved in the Xinjiang concentration camps.
Millions of Uighur and other minority groups are being persecuted, jailed without cause, tortured, and even killed in Xinjiang. China denies any wrongdoing, just as they deny every evil deed they commit on a daily basis, but their economic strength has endeared them to greedy super-corporations like Disney, Apple, and the National Basketball Association. They trade economic favors for praise, buy positive publicity in mainstream American media, and intimidate anyone who dares to speak a narrative other than “everything’s sunny in China!”
Disney has long-praised China as the market they need to crack in order to achieve world entertainment domination, and “Mulan” was supposed to be a gift. But to get it done, they had to hop into bed with agencies that are directly responsible for not only the persecution of Uighurs, but also the coverup of their sins. According to the Washington Post:
But there’s a dark side to those landscapes. Disney filmed “Mulan” in regions across China (among other locations). In the credits, Disney offers a special thanks to more than a dozen Chinese institutions that helped with the film. These include four Chinese Communist Party propaganda departments in the region of Xinjiang as well as the Public Security Bureau of the city of Turpan in the same region — organizations that are facilitating crimes against humanity. It’s sufficiently astonishing that it bears repeating: Disney has thanked four propaganda departments and a public security bureau in Xinjiang, a region in northwest China that is the site of one of the world’s worst human rights abuses happening today.
More than a million Muslims in Xinjiang, mostly of the Uighur minority, have been imprisoned in concentration camps. Some have been released. Countless numbers have died. Forced sterilization campaigns have caused the birth rate in Xinjiang to plummet roughly 24 percent in 2019 — and “imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group” fits within the legally recognized definition of genocide. Disney, in other words, worked with regions where genocide is occurring, and thanked government departments that are helping to carry it out.
Disney lost their appeal long ago for many Americans who value freedom. This latest move to work with and embrace agencies responsible for the worst human rights crisis of our time should be the nail in their public relations coffin.
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.
When The Atlantic posted their story about President Trump allegedly calling fallen military personnel “losers,” I immediately assumed one of their anonymous sources was Zach Fuentes. The former Deputy White House Chief of Staff is a loyal support of former COS John Kelly. More importantly, he would have been close by when President Trump heard news about inclement weather.
I was almost exactly right. Not only is Fuentes declaring his support for Kelly, who President Trump has soured on since removing him from the White House, but he would have been very close when the President allegedly called dead soldiers “losers.” According to The Atlantic, President Trump was reacting to news about the weather being bad at the cemetery when he allegedly insulted their memory. If he really had said it, Fuentes definitely would have heard it. He was the one who delivered the weather report to President Trump personally.
“You can put me on record denying that I spoke with The Atlantic,” Fuentes told Breitbart News on Monday. “I don’t know who the sources are. I did not hear POTUS call anyone losers when I told him about the weather. Honestly, do you think General Kelly would have stood by and let ANYONE call fallen Marines losers?”
He specifically also stated that he believes The Atlantic’s sources “are unlikely first hand accounts.”
“They are conflating those people from something the day after,” Fuentes said.
Kelly and the President have had minor spats ever since the general left his position at the White House. He was also very likely there and would have had no problem calling the President out if he had used such terms about fallen soldiers. It’s ludicrous to think Kelly would not have rebuked the President then or confirmed the report now. Fuentes’ denial should put this whole silliness to rest.
The first name that popped in my head as an “anonymous source” for The Atlantic was Zach Fuentes as he would have been there and is a staunch defender of John Kelly. His debunking of the story is tremendous. Case closed.
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.
Chuck Woolery is a rare breed of Hollywood elite. His decades of work on television as the host of many popular game shows makes him basically royalty in Tinseltown, but his conservative values and intellectual strength make him a Hollywood enigma. But when he’s right, he’s right, and there’s no denying an insight he posted on Twitter today.
Trump has been the cause of an interesting phenomenon. Republicans are now the party of the working man and the Democrats are the party of the cooperate rich. Have you noticed the switch?
Before the 2008 election, Democrats had established themselves as a party that works for the working class. It was a false label that was driven by their dependency on Big Labor, but the power of union propaganda had given them election strength for decades. They instantly abandoned that premise with the nomination of Barack Obama who chose to usher in an era of Democrats that believed in identity politics as their driving predicate.
Labor unions still hold sway over the party, as California demonstrates on a daily basis, but there was no need for Democrats to focus on them when they thought they had a more powerful tool in their toolbox. Today, identity politics drives nearly everything within the party, and until recently they also held sway over the working class. Then, Donald Trump ran for president and demonstrated a true adoration for workers.
The results of his pre-coronavirus presidency was nothing short of miraculous for the middle class. Unemployment numbers were low and prosperity was high. And with the Democrats paying more attention to gender identity than paying the mortgage, they watched their support from everyone other than social justice warriors and the union bosses still in their pocket evaporate. To fill the hole in fundraising, they turned to the corporate elite to drive them financially.
Today, Democrats are the party of big donors. Outside of Bernie Sanders, the majority of financial support for Democrats comes not from their old bread-n-butter but from the hyper-wealthy. Those who don’t have to worry about paying the bills are ready to buy their own agendas from Democrats after failing to do so from Trump’s Republican Party. This isn’t the party of the George H.W. or George W. Bush anymore.
With less than two months until election day, it’s telling that the only message coming from Democrats is “orange man bad.” As Chuck Woolery noted, the working class has abandoned them, opting instead to Make America Great Again.
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.
A 12-year-old boy had police sent to his home and received a five-day suspension when a toy gun was visible on the screen in his virtual classroom. The teacher at Widefield District #3
Now, the parents are rightly furious because the overreaction has traumatized their son. According to Fox News:
The El Paso County Sheriff’s Office said although the teacher thought it was a toy gun authorities still did a welfare check on Isaiah Elliott without parental notification.
“It was really frightening and upsetting for me as a parent, especially as the parent of an African-American young man, especially given what’s going on in our country right now,” Curtis Elliott, Isaiah’s father, told KDVR. He said his son, who has been diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and has learning disabilities, wasn’t aware the gun was shown on screen in his distance learning.
“He was in tears when the cops came. He was just in tears. He was scared. We all were scared. I literally was scared for his life,” said Curtis Elliott.
Virtual classrooms are a window through which the nanny state can extend its reach into the home. See a toy, call the police, suspend the kid, rinse, repeat. Public education was bad before COVID-19. Now it’s ludicrous.
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.
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“We’re having a heat wave, a tropical heat wave. The temperature’s rising, it isn’t surprising.…”
That’s from something. I’m not sure what. A musical of long ago.
No matter. It is hot as blazes here in Sunny Cal. It’s over 110 here in Beverly Hills, and even in my swimming pool, it’s hot. So, I checked with the weather about Rancho Mirage. Not much hotter there than here. I think I’ll go out there and lie in my fabulous bedroom of my fabulous house, and dream of youth. I didn’t deserve the house or the youth.
“There’s no way you can do any homework on Black Lives Matter and not see that it’s a Marxist political organization,” Jason Whitlock, America’s bravest sportswriter, told Tucker Carlson of Fox News. “[BLM] is not about black death. It’s not about black men.” Whitlock, who is himself black, knows whereof he speaks.
Freddrick Hadden was shot to death by a sheriff’s deputy in Burke County, Georgia. A habitual felon who had only recently been released from prison, Hadden had kidnapped his ex-wife at gunpoint. When Deputy Eric Madison pursued Hadden to a home near Hephzibah, the woman escaped Hadden’s vehicle. She was shot twice by Hadden before Deputy Madison returned fire, killing the kidnapper and saving the woman’s life.
Any study of 20th-century history would be incomplete without at least a passing understanding of the Cultural Revolution in China, the events and tactics of that decade-long bonfire of one of the world’s longest-lasting and richest traditional patrimonies illuminating so much of what kinetic socialism wreaks upon a society.
Benjamin Franklin is usually credited for observing that nothing in this world is certain but death and taxes. As it happens, he didn’t originate the aphorism, and there is at least one certainty missing from the list — that the Democrats will never allow an election to pass without trying to scare elderly voters by fabricating some fell GOP conspiracy to kill Social Security.
September 8, 2020 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Gender reveal photo shoot sparks California wildfire: A gender reveal photo shoot allegedly caused one of this weekend’s destructive wildfires in California, according to firefighters. Representatives from the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, known as Cal Fire, said a smoke-generating pyrotechnic device that was used during the photo op on Sept. 5 allegedly sparked the El Dorado fire, which is burning near Oak Glen in San Bernardino County. The county district attorney’s office will determine if the family will face charges. As a result, the U.S. Forest Service closed down several forests in Southern California Monday and prohibited the use of ignition devices in all forests throughout the state to prevent more fires from erupting. The El Dorado fire is one of several wildfires ravaging the state, which has been experiencing record heat over the weekend. As of Tuesday morning, the El Dorado fire had spread over 9,671 acres and was 7% contained, according to Cal Fire. The Creek fire has forced Fresno and Madera County mountain communities to evacuate as the blaze has encompassed 135,523 acres so far. California National Guard aircrews said they rescued 200 people by helicopter from extreme conditions due to the Creek fire, in order to bring them to safety. “It was five times worse than any of those pictures,” said CH-47 pilot and California National Guard Chief Warrant Officer Five Joseph Rosamond. “Every, every piece of vegetation as far as you can see around that lake was on fire.”
College students suspended for defying COVID-related restrictions: As the U.S. braces for a possible “second wave” of COVID-19 this fall, students from several universities, including Northeastern, New York University and West Virginia University are facing consequences after defying coronavirus-related restrictions. After receiving reports of “large crowds of young people gathering in Washington Square Park” in lower Manhattan over the weekend, NYU said it suspended more than 20 students for violating its coronavirus-related health and safety rules. Marc Wais, NYU’s senior vice president for student affairs, said that the university will take disciplinary action if students are found to have participated in a gathering that impacts the community’s health and safety, and that they will likely be suspended if they’re found to be the instigator of a party. So far, NYU has suspended more than 20 students. Northeastern University said it’s “dismissed” 11 students who were found together in a hotel room in violation of university and public health protocols that prohibit crowd gatherings. Meanwhile, West Virginia University said it put 29 students on interim suspension on Sunday “amid ongoing COVID-19 investigations.” It’s also canceled in-person classes from Sept. 8 through Sept. 25 due to climbing COVID-19 cases and “crowded indoor gatherings.”
Prince Harry, Meghan repay $3 million Frogmore Cottage renovation costs: After Prince Harry and Duchess Meghan inked a deal with Netflix to produce films and series, the couple are now officially “financially independent” from Harry’s father, Prince Charles. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex announced Monday that they have “fully” reimbursed British taxpayers for the expenses to renovate their U.K. home, Frogmore Cottage. The 2019 renovations came at a price of 2.4 million pounds, or about $3 million, ahead of the birth of their first child, Archie, drawing some public scrutiny. “This announcement today really shuts down any criticism about whether they should pay it back sooner,” ABC News contributor Victoria Murphy said. “They have now released all their ties to any kind of public funding which is a significant step as they shape their new lives.” The property will remain the family’s U.K. private residence, a spokesperson for the couple said in a statement. In July, they moved to a new home in Santa Barbara, California.
Everyone wants this 7th grader’s secret wing sauce recipe: 12-year-old A’Jzala Johnson has been keeping busy during quarantine by developing her own tangy wing sauce recipe and it’s been a total hit. A’Jzala, of Luling, Louisiana, said she began experimenting after she completed remote learning and was able to perfect her top-secret sauce. On her first day, A’Jzala sold 40 five-ounce bottles through Facebook and word of mouth, and sales have since expanded outside of Louisiana to places like Chicago, Atlanta and parts of Texas. “I’m proud of her,” A’Jazala’s mom, Alicia Johnson, told “GMA.” A’Jzala’s ultimate dream is to see her product in food stores across the country. “Once I get big, big I want to have a food truck and I want to start my own business,” she said.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Baby Yoda is back and we have a sneak peek of season two of “The Mandalorian.” Plus, Sara Evans joins us to talk about her new memoir, “Born to Fly.” And Gabrielle Union joins us to chat about the new season of “L.A.’s Finest” and shows us how her family is adjusting to going back to school. All this and more only on “GMA.”
President Donald Trump is doubling down on his “law and order” message, despite questionable results. California’s wildfires devastate mountain communities. And Michael Cohen’s damning new book hits bookstores today.
Here’s what we’re watching this Tuesday morning.
Trump doubles down on crime message as polls suggest it’s a risky gamble
The crime-heavy focus during the Republican National Conventionappears to have fallen flat, a new wave of surveys has suggested — even as President Donald Trump appears increasingly reliant on the issue as a core element of his re-election strategy.
Following a carefully choreographed conventionfocused on playing up fears of violent crime, lauding law enforcement and portraying Democratic nominee Joe Biden as a tool of violent anarchists, Trump stayed mostly on his law-and-order message last week, NBC News White House reporter Shannon Pettypiece writes.
But even though worries about crime have ticked up in the past month, according to polls released last week, there have been no surveys pointing to public safety as a top issue for voters.
More troubling for Trump, the latest surveys suggest that even if crime were to become a driving issue, the president does not appear to have a striking advantage over Biden.
The Trump campaign has gone all in on its “law and order” message. But, according to some polls, voters say they trust Biden more on public safety issues. (Photo: Evan Vucci/ AP)
Dozens trapped, thousands without power as wildfires consume California
Heavy smoke made it impossible for helicopters to land and remove the dozens trapped by the Creek Fire, the Fresno Fire Department said in a tweet late Monday. Another attempt to reach the people at Lake Edison and China Peak would launch once conditions improve, they said.
Fires have already burned through at least two dozen homes in the small mountain town of Big Creek, officials said.
“Words cannot even begin to describe the devastation of this community,” one resident said.
Michael Cohen’s new book hits shelves today. What’s in it?
President Trump is an authoritarian, racist sexual predator,according to a new book by his former lawyer and confidant, who says Trump openly mocks the working-class Americans he has duped into supporting him.
In “Disloyal: A Memoir,” the lawyer, Michael Cohen, writes that he believes his longtime client won’t leave office willingly if he is defeated in the November election.
While Cohen’s book is filled with similar stark warnings, he doesn’t offer any major new revelations about alleged Russia ties, sexual assaults or racism, writes Ken Dilanian, a reporter who covers intelligence and national security for NBC News.
Instead, Cohen, who served prison time for lying to Congress and doesn’t expect readers to like him, paints a more subtle portrait of moral decay.
The White House has dismissed Cohen’s book as “fan fiction.”
“He readily admits to lying routinely but expects people to believe him now so that he can make money from book sales,” White House deputy press secretary Brian Morgenstern said in a statement.
Cohen spoke exclusively with NBC News’ Lester Holt ahead of the book’s release today and called his former boss a racist “cult leader.”
He said the purpose of the book is really to be a clarion call to “from one former cult member to the current ones,” saying: “Open your eyes as I have. And I want you to appreciate that Donald Trump cares for no one or anything other than himself.”
Tune in for more of the interview on “TODAY” and “Nightly News with Lester Holt” at 6:30 p.m. ET.
Reporters asked Biden at a campaign stop whether he would take a COVID-19 vaccine if the Trump administration offered one before Election Day. On Sunday, his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., had said she would not solely trust Trump’s word about the safety of any vaccine that was rolled out to the public before the election — comments Biden echoed.
“I would want to see what the scientists said,” Biden said, insisting that he would want “full transparency” from the administration about any potential vaccine.
Trump reprimanded Biden and Harris on Monday and said that they “should immediately apologize for the reckless anti-vaccine rhetoric that they are talking right now.”
“If I could get a vaccine tomorrow, I’d do it,” Biden said Monday. “If it cost me the election, I’d do it.” (Photo: Kevin Lamarque / Reuters)
Welcoming voters, not fans: Sports teams push for their stadiums to become polling sites
With the coronavirus pandemic still raging, the facilities allow for physical distancing that may not be possible at traditional polling places.
And with many of the venues located within inner cities where polling places are often plagued by long lines, their availability may draw in voters who otherwise would not or
could not spend hours waiting to cast their ballots.
“I want to get between 50 and 100 arenas open across the country,” said Eugene Jarecki, co-chair of the Election Super Centers Project, the nonpartisan group spearheading the project. “I think each one of them can process about 40,000 people. So do the math on how huge that could be.”
One of the voting centers will be in Houston’s Toyota Center, home of the Houston Rockets. (Photo: Scott Halleran / Getty Images file)
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Plus
A top Belarusian opposition figure was detainedwhile trying to cross into neighboring Ukraine.
Prince Harry and Meghan have repaid the approximately $3 millionin public funds used to renovate their residence on the grounds of Windsor Castle.
Summer’s not over yet: Some remote workers are extending their vacations — to the delight of resort owners.
Listen to our Into America podcast. In the latest episode, host Trymaine Lee talks to jazz legend Wynton Marsalisabout his writing process, how politics influences his music, and the magic of New Orleans.
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, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Trump narrows the battleground deficit, but Biden is still above 270 electoral votes
Last month, we said that when Joe Biden is leading a presidential race – consistently – by double digits nationally, it shouldn’t be surprising to see him exceed 300 electoral votes in election projections.
Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
And now that some of those same national polls are more in the 7- to 8-point range, it’s not surprising that Biden’s lead is lower than 300 electoral votes, but higher than the 270 needed to win.
That’s where we have Biden versus Trump in our second battleground map of 2020, which is based on public and private polling, as well as conversations with strategists watching the presidential race.
Biden is at 290 electoral votes, Trump is at 163 and 85 are in the Toss Up category.
(Our August battleground map was Biden 334, Trump 125 and Toss Up 79.)
The big changes: We moved Florida and North Carolina from Lean D to Toss Up (given the polling that has narrowed in both states), and we moved Texas from Toss Up to Lean R (given that national Dems are no longer really advertising in the state).
Solid D: CA, DE, DC, HI, MD, MA, NY, VT, WA (130 electoral votes)
A reminder: Not all Likely, Lean and Toss Up states are created equally.
Here are the Lean D states in order of most likely to go Biden’s way to least likely: MN, NH, NV, MI, NE-2, AZ, WI and PA.
And here are the Toss Up states in order from mostly likely to go Biden’s way versus Trump’s: NC, FL, GA, ME-2, IA, OH.
As our friend Amy Walter recently wrote, “[A] seven or eight-point margin may not be enough to put Georgia or Texas into Biden’s column. But, it’s enough to get him the states he needs to hit 270. The closer the margin is to four points (like we saw back in March), the less helpful the national polls become.”
Biden outspent Trump by $18 million over the airwaves – in a single week
The New York Times traces how President Trump lost his fundraising advantage to Biden.
And here’s one consequence of that development: Biden is now crushing Trump over the TV and radio airwaves with less than two months before the election.
According to ad-spending data from Advertising Analytics, the Biden campaign spent $24.5 million over the airwaves from Sept. 1-7, while the Trump campaign spent $6.2 million.
Team Trump got some serious help from the GOP Super PAC Preserve America, which narrowed the overall Team Biden (campaign + outside groups) versus Team Trump (campaign + outside groups) to $29.4 million to $23.3 million.
But here’s the advertising race over the past week in the Big Six battlegrounds when the spending is reduced to just the two main campaigns:
AZ: Biden $2 million, Trump $0
FL: Biden $5.1 million, Trump $1.9 million
MI: Biden $2.6 million, Trump $0
NC: Biden $3.0 million, Trump $1.3 million
PA: Biden $4.7 million, Trump $0
WI: Biden $2.2 million, Trump $670,000
Watching and counting the vote
On “Meet the Press” last Sunday, one of us interviewed the secretaries of state/election heads for the battleground states of Michigan, North Carolina and Ohio – as part of NBC News’ continued look at HOW the vote will be conducted and counted in November.
Some of their observations:
Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose: “[T]he thing that we’re thinking about more than anything right now is poll worker recruitment. It takes 35,000 Ohioans to run in person Election Day. And so we’re doing all we can to recruit those poll workers.”
Karen Brinson Bell, executive director of the North Carolina State Board of Elections: “I think North Carolina’s uniquely positioned [to deal with absentee and mail-in ballots] because we, you know, began sending out absentee-by-mail ballots on September 4th to nearly 600,000 absentee requests that we had received. We are ahead of the game in sending out those ballots. That’s more time for voters to return them.”
Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson: “[W]e should be prepared for this to be closer to an Election Week, as opposed to an Election Day. I mean, the bottom line is we are not going to have the full results and a counting of all of our ballots on Election Night. We already know that. We’ve asked the legislature to make changes to the law to give us more ability to be prepared and count those ballots more efficiently. They have not acted for reasons that I don’t fully, completely understand. But that said, we’re increasing tabulators. We’re increasing capacity to more efficiently and securely count those ballots. But I’m also laser-focused on accuracy. And if it takes a few extra days to ensure we have a full and accurate counting of the results of every race, that’s what it’s going to take.”
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
6,327,499: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 154,471 more than Friday morning.)
190,374: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 2,563 more than Friday morning.)
82.84 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
Over 250,000: The number of coronavirus cases between August 2 and September 2 that could be linked to the Sturgis motorcycle rally, according to a new estimate by the Center for Health Economics & Policy Studies
42 percent: The share of Americans who say they’re more worried about businesses reopening too slowly, compared with 33 percent who said the same in July, according to a new NBC News| SurveyMonkey tracking poll.
More than $800 million: How much the Trump campaign and the party has spent of the $1.1 billion it raised from the beginning of 2019 through July.
More than 1,000: The number of Trump supporters who gathered for a pro-Trump “cruise rally” in Portland yesterday.
2020 VISION: Biden slams Trump over alleged military comments
Joe Biden slammed President Trump for comments he allegedly made about American service members several times over the last weekend, per NBC’s Marianna Sotomayor.
“As out of touch as Trump’s language on the economy is, when it comes to veterans, he’s downright un-American. I’ve never said that about a president ever, ever, ever. But calling those who have served, risked their lives, even gave their lives for our nation ‘losers and suckers.’ These are heroes,” Biden said.
Biden also flipped his language a bit on a coronavirus vaccine on Monday. Early in the day while in Pennsylvania, Biden told union members during a roundtable if he could “get a vaccine tomorrow, I’d do it. If it cost me the election, I’d do it.” By later in the day though, a caveat was added: “Only if it was completely transparent and other experts in the country could look at it. Only if we knew all of what went into it. Because so far nothing [Trump’s] told us has been true,” he said.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Ramping it up (literally)
Ad Watch from Ben Kamisar
Today’s Ad Watch takes a look at the massive TV-ad spending disparity in today’s New Hampshire GOP Senate primary between Corky Messner and Dan Bolduc.
Bolduc, a decorated military and an advocate for treating PTSD, had initially been seen by many establishment Republicans as the kind of candidate who would give the party its best shot at challenging Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen. He’s backed by former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, as well as Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton and the Senate Conservatives Fund.
But it was another military veteran, Corky Messner, who won the backing of President Trump and his former campaign manager, Cory Lewandowski, who had flirted with running for the seat himself, as well as Citizens United head David Bossie and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul.
Messner, backed by personal loans of almost $3.9 million to his campaign, has blanketed the airwaves for a more than 10-1 advantage over Bolduc — Messner has spent $870,000 on TV and radio ads this cycle compared to $79,000 for Bolduc, according to Advertising Analytics.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
In an exclusive interview with NBC’s Lester Holt, former Trump attorney Michael Cohen describes the president as a “cult leader.”
Trump is doubling down on his tough-on-crime message. But polls show it’s far from a slam dunk.
Sports teams are pushing for their arenas to be used as voting centers — but not all have been successful.
House Democrats are launching an investigation of Postmaster General Louis DeJoy over accusations that he reimbursed employees for political donations.
The president says he’s taking the “high road” by not meeting with Democrats on coronavirus relief efforts.
Joe Biden’s policy platform aims to make both centrists and progressives happy. Could it cause a battle between the two if he wins?
An increase in virus cases in Europe is sparking fears of a second wave.
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Eye Opener
Authorities called the situation in California “life-threatening,” as dozens of wildfires continue to burn. Also, President Trump is accusing Joe Biden and Kamala Harris of being anti-science after they said he’s politicizing the search for a coronavirus vaccine. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener.
Watch Video +
Dozens of wildfires threaten the West
Watch Video +
How arrests in Philly schools dropped by 84% in 5 years
Read Story +
Back to school in South Africa means longer days and some students living with teachers
Watch Video +
Former FBI agent Peter Strzok on his new book “Compromised”
Seven years after invoking Dickens, Mayor Bill de Blasio presides over a yawning safety gap in New York City neighborhoods.
By Rafael A. Mangual City Journal Online
September 7, 2020
Fifteen years later, many African-Americans still don’t find opportunity or public safety in New Orleans.
By Nicole Gelinas City Journal Online
September 4, 2020
Later today, 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.
“In both New York and London, core office districts have been empty for half a year. Both cities face a long, hard slog of recovery. But London has an edge: a more rational approach to public transportation.”
By Nicole Gelinas New York Post
September 8, 2020
“[The] differences on race relations and the protests are not the only differences between the candidates. Their foreign policy views could not be more dissimilar.”
By Judith Miller, Douglas E. Schoen The Hill
September 6, 2020
Join us tomorrow 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.
Join Heather Mac Donald and Brian Anderson on Thursday for a conversation about Mac Donald’s recent work, her experience with the new social-media speech codes, and more.
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.
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.
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
09/08/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Battle of the Burbs; Canceling Book Critics; Star Search
By Carl M. Cannon on Sep 08, 2020 08:05 am
Good morning. It’s Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2020. Fifty-four years ago today, a “starship” named the USS Enterprise fulfilled its creator’s mission of boldly going where no network series had gone before. “Star Trek” made its debut.
As I noted a few years ago when writing about this groundbreaking program, the suits at NBC were lukewarm about Gene Roddenberry’s project and major newspaper television critics seemed to miss the point of the show. Even the great Isaac Asimov quibbled with the science. (Taking aim in TV Guide at both “Star Trek” and “Lost in Space,” Asimov complained that “nobody seems to know what a galaxy is.”)
“Star Trek” had a devoted following, but was expensive to produce while generating only middling ratings, and was canceled after three seasons. It proved, however, to be that rare Hollywood creation that was perfect for its time — and also timeless.
In truth, “Star Trek” never really went away: Its re-runs have delighted insomniacs for decades, spinoff shows keep being churned out, and feature movies starring the original cast members grossed somewhere in the vicinity of $11 billion. I’ll offer a thought on why that is so in a moment. First, I’ll 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:
* * *
Is Trump Really Winning Back Suburban Women? The president’s law-and-order message appears to be resonating, but whether it can carry him to victory is far from clear, Susan Crabtree reports.
Not in Our Town? How About “Not in Our Country?” Frank Miele recalls the efforts of Billings townspeople 25 years ago to rebuff hate groups, a coming-together he sees lacking now as antifa and others attack police officers in Portland, Kenosha and elsewhere.
After Kenosha & Portland, Why Aren’t We Talking About Guns? Bill Scher considers the lack of fresh dialogue about gun control, especially among Democrats, following the shooting of protesters and counter-protesters in those cities.
Biden’s Plan — Building Back America’s Industrial Base. Former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson lauds the Democratic nominee’s proposals for restoring the U.S. manufacturing sector.
Inside an Elite Cancel Culture Session. In RealClearInvestigations, Richard Bernstein unpacks a secret Zoom meeting where the liberal National Book Critics Circle met the enemy and it was … one of them.
Research Saves Lives, Price Controls Put Them at Risk. In RealClearHealth, Jennifer Popik argues that innovation in the U.S. drug industry is only possible because the U.S. has preserved a free market for pharmaceuticals.
Inside an Elite Cancel Culture Session. In RealClearInvestigations, Richard Bernstein unpacks a secret Zoom meeting where the liberal National Book Critics Circle met the enemy and it was … one of them.
How Wars Are Won and Lost. In RealClearHistory, Nicholas Evan Sarantakes reviews Cathal Nolan’s “The Allure of Battle.”
Remains of Antarctic Elephant Seal Found in an Indiana River. RealClearScience editor Ross Pomeroy has the story.
* * *
Although the first episode of “Star Trek” debuted Sept. 8, 1966, many of its most memorable features and characters were added as it went along that first season and into the next. The iconic mission statement, for example, didn’t come until a November episode when viewers first heard the now-famous opening narration by Capt. James T. Kirk, played by William Shatner:
“Space, the final frontier. These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise. Its five-year mission: to explore strange new worlds; to seek out new life and new civilizations; to boldly go where no man has gone before.”
That phrase “to boldly go” entered the American lexicon. So did others, some of them profound, such as “the prime directive,” and others whimsical, like “Beam me up, Scotty” (even though that exact phrase — like “Elementary, my dear Watson” and “Play it again, Sam” — were never uttered in the original).
By themselves, such catchphrases might merely be evidence that the show was well-written. But they also quickly became cultural touchstones. Why is that? I can think of three reasons:
First, the show first aired halfway between President Kennedy’s assassination and the moon landing he’d committed the United States to achieving. In other words, in the years 1966 to 1969, American’s hearts and heads were in the heavens — in a good way.
Second, “Star Trek” anticipated the future, and viewers sensed it. Those cool communications devices foretold the cellular “flip phone” by decades. It anticipated social progress in even more impressive ways, most conspicuously in the person of Lt. Uhura. Not to put too fine a point on it, but the demographically diverse crew of the USS Enterprise was far ahead of what NASA was doing at that time.
Finally, the show reflected Gene Roddenberry’s own irrepressible optimism about the future. This isn’t uniquely American, but it is very American, and “Star Trek” depicted it as a universal trait human beings would take with them into the galaxy (sorry, Isaac Asimov) as they interacted — and even intermarried — with other species.
Asimov himself came to see this, and pretty quickly. In 1967, he gave an interview to Time magazine in which he said that he spent most of his time writing in his attic. When he needed a break, he relaxed by watching television. His favorite show? “Star Trek.”
An expanding community of progressive Jews cloak themselves in distorted “Jewish” concepts, they in the name of Judaism at first advocate Israel’s dissolution, but ultimately would dismantle Judaism itself. For the broader non-Jewish radical community, such progressive Jews play an important, indeed indispensable role in launching the summer of insurrection marking the start of their overt war to dissolve Western civilization. For these progressive Jews, their focused hatred of Israel does not emanate from affinity, but from the same place of their non-Jewish colleagues in so obsessively hating Israel: an understanding that the story of Israel is a critical foundation of the story of the West, and that its destruction is a foundational aspiration for those seeking to destroy the West.
The Chinese Communist Party is doing a fundraiser. It’s getting Wall Street’s help to tap American investors for many billions of dollars to underwrite a PRC conglomerate called Ant Group. If they do massively underwrite Ant’s upcoming Initial Public Offering in Hong Kong, Beijing believes its crackdown on that territory will be validated.
Fortunately, a new risk profile by RWR Advisory Group reveals seven compelling reasons not to invest in Ant, including the company’s reported involvement in human rights abuses, diversion of users’ private data and ties to the Chinese military.
President Trump is running this fall on a platform that showcases his serious differences with Vice President Biden about China. Opposing U.S. investments in malevolent CCP companies and standing with the people of Hong Kong – not validating their oppressors – should be a basis for strong bipartisan agreement.
Learn more at DivestChinaNow.org.
This is Frank Gaffney.
KEN TIMMERMAN, President and CEO of the Foundation for Democracy in Iran, Author of Deception: The Making of the YouTube Video Hillary and Obama Blamed for Benghazi, Author of Dark Forces: The Truth About What Happened in Benghazi, Nationally recognized investigative reporter:
Iran’s involvement in the attack on US government facilities in Benghazi
Iran’s extensive military expertise
Was Joe Biden aware of the attack on the US embassy in Benghazi while it was happening?
SAM FADDIS, Former CIA Ops Officer, Spent twenty years as an Operations officer in the Middle East, South Asia and Europe, Former Candidate for Congress, Senior Subject Matter Expert at Axon/Lockheed Martin, Author of Beyond Repair: The Decline and Fall of the CIA (2009):
The revolution taking place in America at the moment
Various communist organizations in the United States
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AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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September 8, 2020
Celebrate Entrepreneurs, Don’t Guillotine Them
By Raymond C. Niles | Imagine a benefactor, almost a Santa Claus, who provides millions of dollars worth of goods each day to millions of customers. The goods are more bountiful, cheaper, and easier to purchase from his store than any single…
AIER’s Leading Indicators Index Improves in August but…
By Robert Hughes | The historic plunge in economic activity resulting from the repressive lockdown policies implemented to slow the spread of Covid-19 has begun to reverse. However, inconsistent policies across industries and regions are…
Assar Lindbeck – Sweden’s Greatest Economist Died 90…
By Joakim Book | Last Friday, the Swedish economist Assar Lindbeck died at the respectable age of 90. A long life of economic scholarship, teaching, policy advice, and public debate came to an end. Working away at his calling until his death…
The Fed’s Policy Shift to Let Inflation Rip Higher Is…
By Simon Constable | “It’s hard to see the Fed achieving higher inflation, given its recent failure in this matter. A quick look at the monthly consumer price index data over the last decade shows that for the vast majority of the period…
By Peter C. Earle | There is growing awareness of something we’ve known for probably five months: that Covid-19 is overwhelmingly dangerous only to the elderly, individuals with compromised immune systems, and those with major or numerous…
By David Hebert & Stephen C. Miller | “This semester, millions of college students are unfortunately going to face a test that is far more important than any exam, assignment, or project that they will ever get in any of their classes. This is the…
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 bow tie in the richest possible color and greatest detail. The tie is adjustable to all sizes. 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.
The autumn begins in earnest, your life is about to be inundated with pumpkin-spice everything, and the presidential election kicks into a higher gear. Today we dispel the “the polls are always wrong and don’t mean anything” argument, looking hard at the aggregate polling in the swing states in the 2018 midterms. You can find a few surprises here and there, particularly in the Sunshine State, but by and large, pollsters knew what they were doing two years ago.
Psst! The State Polls Were Pretty Darn Accurate in 2018!
When we discuss the presidential polling in 2020, what should interest us the most is the state polling for Arizona, Florida, maybe Georgia, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, North Carolina, probably Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin . . . and that’s about it. Maybe New Hampshire and Maine’s Second Congressional District.
And perhaps the most important question is, do the state polls in aggregate give us a good sense of who is going to win in these key states? In a lot of the big statewide races in these states in 2018, the aggregate polling did give us a clear view of who was ahead.
“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
He invested in many of the most valuable stocks in recent history, long before they were household names… including: Netflix, Apple and Amazon. And now he is super “Bullish” on this breakthrough technology that is known in Silicon Valley and Manhattan as “TaaS”. Go here to get the top pick free…
Following our Thursday report identifying SoftBank as the primary – but not only – catalyst behind the bizarre moves in high beta tech names and the broader market over the past several weeks (confirmed later by the FT and WSJ), an odyssey…
Authored by Thor Lihaug via TheDuran.com, Over the last two decades, Western economies have been increasingly driven by debt. A significant contributor to the 2008 stock market crash was unsustainable debt. How did we fix the problem?
A 20 year old from a wealthy family is being charged for her role in participating in a 3 hour Black Lives Matter “protest” in Manhattan that resulted in nearly $100,000 worth of damage being done to businesses. Clara Kraebber was arrested…
We are sure, somewhere deep down in the bureaucracy of banality that is California’s representative government, there is good reason for each of these ‘policies’… but seriously, one could be forgiven for thinking that the Golden State’s…
Hours after CNN reported the existence of the now-infamous Steele Dossier on January 10, 2017 – choosing to withhold key details because they hadn’t been “independently corroborated,” BuzzFeed’s Ben Smith decided to kick the door in…
Authored by Bill O’Reilly, A friend of mine has a sign on his lawn that says “Black Lives Matter.” Since I grew up with him in Levittown, New York, where blacks were not allowed to purchase homes, that piqued my interest. He explained…
The key to being consistently profitable as a trader is to focus on high-probability trades. And in this powerful eBook by Dave Acquino, titled The Ultimate Income Trading System, you’ll see exactly how Dave and so many of his students do just that. They make 4%, 5% or 6% on each trade and they’re in the trade for just 11 hours. CLICK HERE for instant access…
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Joe Biden on Monday joined far-left AFL-CIO for a virtual event. The 77-year-old was visibly exhausted as he read from his teleprompter. Biden was breathing… Read more…
The Black Lives Matter activist who attempted to kill Trump supporter and Proud Boy Shane Moon has been arrested and will appear in court on… Read more…
Seattle police on Monday charged through a barricade of Antifa militants who were throwing rocks, bottles and projectiles at officers. Antifa terrorists gathered outside of… Read more…
For some reason this was ignored by the national mainstream media? Black Lives Matter mob stormed a McDonald’s restaurant in Pittsburgh this weekend. The mob… Read more…
29-year-old Jacob Blake was shot 7 times in the back by a Kenosha police officer in August after he brawled with the cops, resisted arrest,… Read more…
Former Obama director of the Central Intelligence Agency John Brennan was interviewed for eight hours in August by U.S. Attorney John Durham at CIA headquarters…. Read more…
New York’s Governor Andrew Cuomo’s and his Health Commissioner, Howard Zucker, are facing mounting, angry and now even bi-partisan calls for a federal investigation into… Read more…
Last week the FBI arrested two Minnesota men after a set-up operation where they pretended to be Hamas operatives. The men were arrested for attempting… Read more…
Biden’s running mate Kamala Harris traveled to Kenosha, Wisconsin on Monday and met with Jacob Blake’s family and legal team. 29-year-old Jacob Blake was shot… Read more…
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[Subscription Required] The central bank is on a one-way path to a larger role in our government and economy. Wall Street is thrilled, Main Street not so much.
Senator Rand Paul and Kiron Skinner will discuss The Future of Foreign Policy and Alliances on Capital Conversations on September 9, 2020 at 1:00pm ET.
(This is a draft of an oped. I got done and saw it’s 1500 words, so I’m posting it for your enjoyment rather than go through a painful 600 word diet. Diet later. Maybe.)
Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon and owner of about 11 percent of Amazon stock, recently became the first person in history to be worth more than $200 billion. Bezos’s net worth has skyrocketed as Amazon’s share price increased about 85 percent since February, before the pandemic.
The inability of the United States, in cooperation with like-minded nations, to implement a consistent policy toward the greater Middle East and North Africa region (spanning Morocco in the west to Iran in the east and encompassing the northern countries of Syria and Iraq to the southern countries of Sudan and Yemen) has contributed to the extent of the region’s unravelling, diminishing American influence there.
Following my last post on debt I’ve thought a bit more, and received some very useful emails from colleagues. A central clarifying thought emerges. The main worry I have about US debt is the possibility of a debt crisis.
Chris Pullman and Richard Reeves at Brookings write opposing a reinstatement of the deduction for state and local taxes on the federal income tax. Jonathan Parker, a great economics tweeter, tweets approvingly, I offer a little more guarded approval.
The recently released quarterly GDP growth numbers for the first quarter of FY2020-21 should alarm us all. The 23.9% contraction in India (and the numbers will probably be worse when we get estimates of the damage in the informal sector) compares with a drop of 12.4% in Italy and 9.5% in the US, two of the most Covid-affected advanced economies.
Why bother with a column about House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to a San Francisco hair salon earlier this week – an appointment that caused political embarrassment for America’s highest elected Democrat as a surveillance camera caught her violating, at the time, at least two local ordinances (getting her hair done indoors and not wearing a mask)?
Vladimir Putin is a notorious risk-taker. Many of his ventures have paid off for him, but did his luck run out when a suspected plot to take out opposition leader Aleksei Navalny veered wildly off course? Instead of being pronounced dead from “natural causes” upon arriving on a flight to Moscow, as was purportedly planned, Navalny lies in a coma in a Berlin hospital, full of a poison accessible only to the Russian military and its Kremlin-successor security service, the FSB.
Election Day is Nov. 3. But if the vote is close, we might not know who wins control of the White House until December or even January. Multiple, complex scenarios could play out before either Donald Trump or Joe Biden takes the oath of office Jan. 20.
How do we prepare for a future that is unpredictable? That’s the question at the heart of Margaret Heffernan’s new book, Uncharted: How to Navigate the Future. Heffernan is a professor at the University of Bath, but she is also a serial entrepreneur, a former CEO, and the author of five books on leadership, innovation, and the challenge of unleashing talent and creativity in large organizations.
The director of school choice at Reason Foundation and an adjunct scholar at Cato Institute, Corey DeAngelis, joins Paul E. Peterson to discuss DeAngelis’ new study which finds a correlation between receiving a school voucher in Milwaukee and a reduction in criminal activity.
In August, the unemployment rate declined by 1.8 percentage points to 8.4 percent, and the number of unemployed persons fell by 2.8 million to 13.6 million. Both measures have declined for 4 consecutive months but are higher than in February, by 4.9 percentage points and 7.8 million, respectively.
Turkey, Russia and China are just three countries taking advantage of the moment to act aggressively around the world and test American resolve. All three are betting that the United States is too mired in crisis to react powerfully to strategic challenges overseas. All three might be making a miscalculation.
Hoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson discusses how Joe Biden has put himself in a socialist straight jacket based on the his polices and the reality of implementing them.
Hoover Institution fellow Scott Atlas discusses the coronavirus task force and some of his concerns concerning the closure of schools and online learning.
Thank goodness that President Trump has appointed a knowledgeable, credible counterbalance to the Coronavirus Taskforce. Dr. Scott Atlas is not a bureaucrat like Dr. Anthony Fauci or Dr. Deborah Birx; he is a world-renowned scientist and physician who seems to actually study the totality of the impacts of the COVID-19 epidemic. Dr. Fauci, by contrast, has repeatedly conceded that he hasn’t considered the economic impacts and secondary public health crises of his COVID-19 advice.
Dr. Scott Atlas, the controversial newest addition to the White House Coronavirus Task Force, says he is a “straight shooter.” He proceeded to demonstrate that in a lengthy and wide-ranging interview with BBC Radio Friday.
It sounds unlikely but the most appalling instance of journalistic malpractice last week was not when The Atlantic published anonymous allegations that President Trump disparaged American troops behind closed doors—it was Joe Biden’s so-called press conference following another shaky, rambling, and dishonest speech disguised as a “campaign event.”
Upright: “I think the narrative that the police are in some epidemic of shooting unarmed black men is simply a false narrative and also the narrative that’s based on race. The fact is that it is very rare for an unarmed African American to be shot by a white police officer.” —Attorney General William Barr
Jan Hatzius, a Goldman Sachs expert that co-authored the record, said to POLITICO that U.S. financial end results because July substantiate the partnership in between wellness and also development. The economic situation’s enhancement, he kept in mind, represents an increasing allotment of the American populace based on condition and also regional hide directeds– coming from regarding 40 per-cent in June to its own existing 80 per-cent.
An elderly gent in California made a comment that sadly captures the mood in the nation’s biggest state: “In California these days, you can’t tell whether mask wearers are fighting the virus, the smoke, or the police.”
Charles Dallara, The Partners Group USA chairman, and former CEO of the Institute of International Finance, joins ‘Squawk on the Street’ to discuss if a recovery could happen without additional stimulus.
BROOKFIELD – David X. Sullivan, the Republican candidate in the Fifth Congressional District, says GOP President Donald Trump’s recent payroll tax suspension has helped boost the economy.
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