Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday Septemer 10, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
September 10 2020
Good morning from Washington, where President Trump names 20 more candidates he would consider for the next Supreme Court vacancy. Fred Lucas reports on how the president characterizes them, and also covers in cases of voter fraud in two states. On the podcast, The Heritage Foundation’s Mary Clare Amselem takes on the idea that “nice white parents” ruined public schools. Plus: the Trump’s administration’s pro-life record, and the irrepressible Diamond and Silk join “Problematic Women.” On this date in 1813, Capt. Oliver Hazard Perry leads nine American ships to victory over six British warships in the Battle of Lake Erie during the War of 1812.
President Trump adds 20 names to his list of candidates for the Supreme Court, including six women, three Senate Republicans, and a state attorney general.
“All of these cases show that we do have problems in the election system,” says Hans von Spakovsky, manager of the Election Law Reform Initiative at The Heritage Foundation.
In addition to enacting policies that promote the cause of life, the Trump administration has taken significant action to protect rights of conscience, particularly in the context of health care.
If we “completely [remove] the role of parents altogether … then we have a system where … teachers [decide] how your children are going to be raised,” says The Heritage Foundation’s Mary Clare Amselem.
“We need to stop segregating ourselves based off the color of our skin and realize that we’re all Americans, and it’s only one race and that’s a human race,” says Silk.
Religious Jews and Christians are taught to look inward for both the source of their problems and the solutions: What have I done wrong? What can I change in my life to solve my problems?
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THE RESURGENT
THE EPOCH TIMES
You’ve been selected to participate in a special 2020 PRO-LIFE SURVEY to gauge the enthusiasm of the Pro-Life Movement.
“The health of the eye seems to demand a horizon. We are never tired, so long as we can see far enough.”
Students for Life of America, the largest pro-life youth organization in the nation with more than 1,200 active groups, is conducting this survey to help us gauge the enthusiasm of the pro-life movement in 2020.
With their full embrace of late-term abortion and even infanticide, the Abortion Lobby’s true colors have been exposed like never before…and many Americans are rejecting their abortion extremism.
Will you please click hereto begin your 2020 PRO-LIFE SURVEY?
Months of heavy rain have battered China with record floods. And there are growing fears that the Three Gorges Dam may break. It’s the world’s largest hydroelectric project, and it’s been marred by controversy for decades.
Following the historic Israel-UAE agreement (Fox News). From Tom Cotton: Eight years of Obama-Biden foreign policy set the world on fire, from ISIS in the MidEast, to PRC island-building in the Pacific. Donald Trump brokered historic deals between Israel/UAE & Kosovo/Serbia. Obama’s Nobel Prize was a joke. This is deserved (Twitter).
2.
Poll: Trump Tightens Race
Down six to Biden, according to Morning Consult, which had Biden up ten in late august (Morning Consult). The story claims Biden is in better shape than Hillary four years ago, but that depends on the poll. Hillary had a stretch in early September when her lead was in the low single digits. But In early October, it ballooned. On October 9, 2016, NBC/WSJ had her up by 14 points (RCP).
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3.
Woodward Book Claims Trump Hid Truth of Coronavirus from America
Trump told Woodward he didn’t want to cause a panic. And much of the media spent the day criticizing Trump for this (Fox News). Erick Erickson offered this insightful observation: You say the President failed to lead and misled the public and downplayed the virus. One of your own had the President on tape admitting to willful downplaying of the virus to avoid sparking a panic. The bodies pile up and your reporter colleague says nothing so he can sell a book (Twitter). Another story notes “Trump had nothing to gain politically by downplaying the virus if he knew it was worse than it was. In fact, he had everything to lose when it inevitably got worse, and again, the claim here is that he knew all along. What that does is give us insight into his thinking at the time and why he chose to not start yelling from the rooftops that everyone was going to die. It should also be noted that state and local officials, along with many national Democrats, were downplaying the virus well into early March” (Red State).
4.
Fires Ravage West Coast
Hot temps and high winds are fueling the fires (NY Times). Some are calling it a “once-in-a-generation” event in Oregon (Fox News). As expected from any top Democrat, Obama blamed Climate Change (Twitter).
5.
Los Angeles Bans Halloween
From Ed Morrissey: What presents a bigger transmission risk — kids in masks on porches, or massive numbers of adults crowding into public squares and shouting slogans? Los Angeles County health officials chose the former, declaring a ban on Halloween trick or treating to prevent the spread of COVID-19. This was probably not going to be a big year for trick or treating anyway, but a formal ban on candy collection raises some questions about government power and its arbitrary applications
From the story: “Not all heroes wear capes,” DC Comics announced on its website. “Wonder Woman has been an inspiration for decades, and while not everyone would choose her star-spangled outfit for themselves, her compassion and fairness are worthy of emulation. We’ll be presenting tales of the real-world heroes who take up Diana’s mantle and work in the fields of science, social justice activism, diplomacy and more!”
Two Women Who Assaulted a Child and Took His Trump Hat Charged with Hate Crime
From the story: Olivia Winslow and Camryn Amy, both 21 and from Wilmington, were indicted by a New Castle County grand jury on Tuesday on charges of second-degree robbery, second-degree conspiracy, endangering the welfare of a child, third-degree assault, attempted third-degree assault, offensive touching and felony hate crimes.
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With the arrival of September, the rhythm of life in Florida turns to thoughts of helmets, shoulder pads, and touchdown passes. Given everything, it’s not necessary to ask if most people are ready for some football.
They’re ready for anything that resembles life as we knew it before the pandemic struck, and a slice of the old normal arrives Thursday night.
That’s when the National Football League season kicks off with a must-watch matchup between the defending Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs and the Houston Texans. For three-plus hours, in the comfort of living rooms throughout Florida, the only face masks we need to worry about are those attached to football helmets.
Football in the COVID-19 era will soon begin.
Downer alert: You still need to wear a face-covering if you plan to watch in a public setting. Deal with it.
If past is prologue, TV ratings for NFL games may set records.
Ratings for the NFL Draft in April were 35 percent higher than in 2019. More than 55 million people tuned in for at least part of the three-day draft-a-palooza. Image what those numbers will be for actual games.
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Miami Dolphins, and Jacksonville Jaguars play this Sunday. Limited in-person seating is available at the stadiums in Miami and Jacksonville, but the Bucs and New Orleans Saints will play to an empty Mercedes-Benz Superdome.
Don’t forget the colleges.
Miami, Florida State, and South Florida start their seasons over the next three days, while other state schools crank it up later this month.
High school football also is underway throughout the state.
Social distancing and other COVID-19 precautions will be in place in all situations, including on the sidelines. We’re used to that by now, and if that’s what it takes to get a slice of something familiar back in our lives, bring it on.
“Texans-Chiefs set to kick off NFL season unlike any other” via Dave Skretta of The Associated Press — It has been a mere eight months since Patrick Mahomes led Kansas City from a 24-0 hole to beat Deshaun Watson and the Houston Texans in the divisional round of the playoffs, a brutally efficient comeback that ultimately propelled the Chiefs to their first Super Bowl title in 50 years. A whole lot has changed, though. The coronavirus pandemic effectively canceled the entire NFL offseason along with all four preseason games. That means their rematch at Arrowhead Stadium on Thursday night will be the first game for anybody since February. It also means the crowd at what is historically one of the toughest road venues in the league will be limited to about 17,000 fans.
“What to watch for in an abnormally normal 2020 NFL season” via Neil Paine of FiveThirtyEight — Ready or not, the NFL will kick off its 2020 schedule Thursday with the defending champion Kansas City Chiefs hosting the Houston Texans. It comes against a backdrop of pandemic and protest that will no doubt affect the season beyond the league simply emptying the stands and conceding a few words of support. We admittedly don’t know what 2020 will hold for the NFL as it confronts its many off-field challenges — but we do have some ideas about how its teams will perform on the field. We’ve reloaded our NFL prediction model with the latest roster moves ahead of Thursday’s game and simulated the schedule 100,000 times to generate projected records and playoff odds for each team.
“How COVID-19 upended typical offseason training routines” via Kaelen Jones of The Ringer — Deshaun Watson could win an MVP this season. Odell Beckham Jr. could reclaim All-Pro status. CeeDee Lamb could win Offensive Rookie of the Year. There is no shortage of storylines and possibilities entering the NFL season. But if any of these examples are to come to fruition, the work to put them in motion will have begun far earlier than Thursday, when the 2020 season kicks off. This season, many NFL players underwent unique offseason training routines to navigate around the coronavirus pandemic that impacted all aspects of the sport this summer. Perhaps more than ever, players relied on their personal trainers and sports performance specialists to maintain shape and rehabilitate.
“The sounds of silent NFL stadiums” via Nora Princiotti of The Ringer — The person in charge of what you hear when you watch a football broadcast is called an audio mixer. It’s an apt title since the sounds from the stadium that come into people’s living rooms are like the ingredients of a recipe: They’re collected in raw form from the field, the sidelines, and the stands; measured out, and mixed together. The final product delivered to viewers represents what they’d hear if they were at the game themselves, but it’s not an exact replica. A good audio mixer can make viewers feel like they’re close to the action by letting them clearly hear the quarterback’s clap that breaks the huddle or audible calls at the line of scrimmage.
“Bye-bye Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders, NFL boots them and mascots from field sidelines” via CBS DFW — The NFL is not allowing cheerleaders and mascots on the field during the 2020 football season. During the coronavirus pandemic, teams are being allowed to set their own policies when it comes to fan attendance. But according to NFL Network reporter Tom Pelissero, the protocols for the NFL and NFL Players Association have been changed and the updated rules have been sent to the clubs. In addition to cheerleaders and mascots, sideline sports and news reporters, and pregame reporters will also not be allowed on the field level during games. “There is no game day entertainment personnel allowed on the field this season. However, the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders will be permitted to perform on the end zone touchdown decks during the game,” said Charlotte Jones Anderson.
“Gamblers factoring virus into their football bets this fall” via Wayne Parry of The Associated Press — There’s a new factor in play for gamblers looking to bet on football this fall: In addition to point spreads, home-field advantage (or this year, the lack thereof) and the weather, bettors are taking the coronavirus into account before plunking down their cash. In a year in which the pandemic has upended every major sport, the arrival of NFL and college football brings unique challenges. In stadiums without fans, does a home-field advantage even exist? And if not, is it worth laying three points for? Will the lack of a preseason benefit offenses or defenses — or could both be equally rusty in the early going? Does that make overs or unders the smart play?
“Now that the NFL supports Colin Kaepernick’s fight, what’s next?” via Rob Maaddi of The Associated Press — Four years later, the NFL admitted it was wrong and said it now supports Kaepernick in his fight against racial injustice, encouraging players to take a stand — or a knee — for the cause. What happens next? The league’s 101st season kicks off Thursday night, when the Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs host the Houston Texans. NFL end zones will be inscribed this season with two slogans: “It Takes All Of Us” on one side, “End Racism” on the other. As part of its social justice awareness initiatives, the NFL also will allow similar visuals on helmets and caps. Players will be permitted to wear decals on the back of helmets, or patches on team caps.
“CBS Sports chairman says NFL ad sales matching 2019 pace; Social justice issues to get airtime but balance is the goal” via Dade Hayes of Deadline — With the start of an NFL season like no other just days away, Sean McManus said advertising sales are on pace with the 2019 season, with a sizable chunk of Super Bowl inventory sold out. On a Zoom call with the media lasting an hour and a half, McManus acknowledged that broadcasts will bear the marks of the two major themes of 2020: social justice issues and COVID-19. The network’s goal will be to strike a balance between acknowledging Black Lives Matter and other political and social flashpoints and serving fans looking only for game action. “We’re not going to keep our heads in the sand,” McManus said.
“Yes, Dan Snyder could actually lose ownership of his team” via Luke Mullins of Washingtonian — During the two decades that Snyder has owned Washington’s NFL team, local sports fans have grown accustomed to chaos, controversy, and disappointment. But the events of this summer have made clear that this once-proud franchise is even more dysfunctional than we imagined. In July, the team relented to years of pressure and announced it would change its name. Days later, The Washington Post published a report in which 15 women alleged that they were sexually harassed while working for the team. When the Post made the team aware of its findings, three employees who were accused of improper behavior left the club. The team hired an attorney to conduct an investigation into the organization.
“UF study eyes health effects for retired NFL players” via The News Service of Florida — Nearly half of former National Football League players who used opioids in 2010 continue to use them today, and nearly 60% experience moderate to severe depressive symptoms, a University of Florida study shows. Published in the Journal of Drug and Alcohol Dependence, the study examined the long-term effects of opioid use in retired NFL players. The study is based on phone interviews with 90 former NFL athletes who had participated in a 2010 study — also conducted by the university’s College of Public Health and Health Professions — on opioid use. For the new study, researchers asked players to answer questions about their former careers, body aches and pains, mental health and levels of substance use.
Situational awareness
—@MiamiCurt: Bob Woodward managed to do what Bob Mueller did not do: Get [Donald] Trump to talk, at length, although not under oath. Still, on tape and no denying what was said. As a reporter, I once again take my hat off to Woodward.
—@JazzShaw: So to be clear, Bob Woodward supposedly had a Trump quote from Feb 7 saying he knew the virus was airborne and deadly. But it couldn’t be released until his book came out in … September, 8 wks before the election. OK then.
—@Poynter: We will never know how America’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic might have been different if Woodward revealed in February that President Trump considered the virus to be deadly and that he underplayed his concerns so as not to alarm the public.
—@RexChapman: The dude who was tweet-screaming “LIBERATE MICHIGAN” didn’t want us to panic, y’all.
—@SenTomCotton: Disney is addicted to Chinese cash and will do just about anything to please the Communist Party. Disney even thanked the CCP thugs who are locking up people in concentration camps. This is evil behavior from a once-great American company.
—@MDixon55: Politically this boils down to @GovRonDeSantis and Broward Democrats vs @votegeraldine and the conservative Florida Supreme Court The messaging tightrope you need to walk to imply @votegeraldine (identified only as dem rep) doesn’t want a Black woman on top court is something
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Days until
Apple announces new iPhone — 5; Walmart Amazon Prime competitor, Walmart+, will launch nationwide — 6; Rescheduled date for the French Open — 11; First presidential debate in Indiana — 19; “Wonder Woman 1984” premieres — 22; Preakness Stakes rescheduled — 23; Ashley Moody’s 2020 Human Trafficking Summit — 26; First vice presidential debate at the University of Utah — 27; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 33; Second presidential debate scheduled in Miami — 35; NBA draft — 36; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 36; NBA free agency — 38; Florida Chamber’s Future of Florida Forum — 40; Third presidential debate at Belmont — 42; 2020 General Election — 54; “Black Widow” premieres — 57; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 62; The Masters begins — 63; College basketball season slated to begin — 70; “No Time to Die” premieres — 72; Pixar’s “Soul” premieres — 72; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 83; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 83; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 150; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 163; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 295; New start date for 2021 Olympics — 316; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 324; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 424; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 520; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 562; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 754.
Our poll
If today were Election Day, Joe Biden would have at least 29 electoral votes in the bag.
That’s according to a new survey conducted by St. Pete Polls, which found 50% of likely Florida voters would back Biden in the presidential race compared to 47% who said they would vote to give Trump four more years in the White House.
Less than 2% of voters remain undecided, the poll found, and about 2% will vote for a third-party candidate.
It’s a narrow but distinct lead for Biden, falling just outside the pollster’s 1.9% margin of error.
Conducted on Sept. 7 and 8, the poll represents the outfit’s first post-political conventions results and the first released after Labor Day.
Joe Biden would take Florida if the election were held today. Image via AP.
The poll also asked voters how they planned to cast their votes, finding 42% planned to send their ballot in through the mail. About 32% said they planned to vote early in-person, while 27% said they would head to the polls on Election Day.
That’s a slight shift from July when the same pollster found more than 49% of voters planning to vote by mail, while under 27% anticipated early voting and just around 24% planned to vote at precincts.
However Florida voters plan to vote, they appear determined to do so. More than 96% of the likely voters said they are “absolutely certain” they will vote in the election, and another nearly 3% are “very likely” to do so.
The models
To get a reasonable idea of how the presidential race is playing out, state polling is the way to go — particularly in battleground states like Florida. These outlets offer a poll of polls, gauging how Trump or Biden are doing in select areas, then averaging the polls to get a general idea of who leads who nationwide. Sunburn will be updating these forecasts as they come in:
CNN poll of polls: As of Sept. 2, the CNN average gives Biden a 51% chance of winning, with Trump at 43%.
FiveThirtyEight.com: “We’re moving away from the convention period of the race and into the thick of the election. However, the overall race hasn’t changed all that much. Biden has a 74 in 100 chance of winning compared to Trump who has a 26 in 100 shot, those odds have been consistent. Even though the top-line numbers haven’t changed all that much, that doesn’t mean there hasn’t been some movement at the state level. It’s not super easy to find patterns where Biden is gaining or losing ground — still a lot of noise at this point — but it does seem as if, on the whole, there’s been mostly good news for Biden. Except for Florida, which is where Trump has closed the gap the most. FiveThirtyEight also ranked individual states by the likelihood of delivering a decisive vote for the winning candidate in the Electoral College: Pennsylvania leads with 29.5%, while Florida comes in second with 15.8%. Other states include Wisconsin (8.9%) Minnesota (7.2%), Michigan (6.1%), Arizona (6.1%) and North Carolina (5.6%).”
Most recent polling still gives Joe Biden an advantage.
PredictIt: The PredictIt trading market has Biden in the lead, at $0.59 a share, with Trump priced at $0.44.
Real Clear Politics: In polling top battleground states, the RCP average gives Biden a 49.9% likelihood of winning, with Trump getting 43%. Every poll used in the RCP model has Biden up from anywhere between 2 and 15 points.
Presidential
“Bob Woodward book: Donald Trump says he knew coronavirus was ‘deadly’ and worse than the flu while intentionally misleading Americans” via Robert Costa and Philip Rucker of The Washington Post — Trump’s head popped up during his top-secret intelligence briefing in the Oval Office on Jan. 28 when the discussion turned to the coronavirus outbreak in China. “This will be the biggest national security threat you face in your presidency,” national security adviser Robert C. O’Brien told Trump, according to a new book by Washington Post associate editor Woodward. “This is going to be the roughest thing you face.” Matthew Pottinger, the deputy national security adviser, agreed. He told the President that after reaching contacts in China, it was evident that the world faced a health emergency on par with the flu pandemic of 1918, which killed an estimated 50 million people worldwide. Ten days later, Trump called Woodward and revealed that he thought the situation was far more dire than what he had been saying publicly.
Donald Trump admitted to Bob Woodward that he knew exactly how dangerous coronavirus was to the American people.
“Campaign of contrasts: Trump’s raucous crowds’ vs. Joe Biden’s distanced gatherings” via Josh Dawsey, Michael Scherer and Annie Linskey of The Washington Post — When the announcer at Trump’s recent rally here urged a packed airplane hangar of supporters to don their masks, a cacophonous round of boos erupted, followed by defiance. No matter that the attendees’ chairs were inches apart, their temperatures had not been taken and masks were required by the state. Biden, meanwhile, has barely left his home without a mask for months, and he makes a point of keeping voters at a distance from himself and one another. Events at drive-in theaters have been kept under 50 to respect state guidelines. This contrast continued Tuesday, when Trump flew to Florida and North Carolina, addressing crowds in both places, while Biden’s camp announced by 9:30 a.m. that he would make no public appearances all day.
“Biden campaign outraised Trump by over $150 million in August” via Fadel Allassan of Axios — The Trump campaign and its joint fundraising committees with the Republican National Committee raised over $210 million in August, they announced Wednesday. Biden and the Democratic National Committee raised $364.5 million in the same period, dwarfing Trump’s total fundraising haul by over $150 million. It is believed to be the most ever raised by a presidential candidate in a single month. “Democrats pulled out all the stops in an attempt to boost Joe Biden’s campaign this month,” the Trump campaign and the RNC said in a statement. “In addition to the announcement of their vice presidential nominee and DNC Convention which historically brings an influx of cash, Democrats relied heavily on Hollywood celebrities and gimmicks to raise their numbers.”
“‘Nobody likes her’: Trump tries his likability standard for female politicians on Kamala Harris” via Eugene Scott of The Washington Post — It is not surprising that Trump does not believe that Harris would make a better Vice President than Mike Pence. But Trump’s criticism of Harris, the first woman of color to receive a major party’s nomination for vice president, took a turn Tuesday when he called the prospect of her as a future president “an insult” to the United States. “People don’t like her. Nobody likes her. She could never be the first woman president. She could never be. That would be an insult to our country,” Trump said Tuesday at a campaign rally in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The President didn’t say why it would be insulting for Harris to occupy the Oval Office, a position she is not actually running for, although Biden said it was key that his VP pick be ready for the top job on “Day One.” But in the president’s attacks on Harris last month, he used several unflattering adjectives to describe the woman hoping to become Vice President.
“Come on down to Miami, Joe Biden, and look Cuban Americans in the eye” via Fabiola Santiago of the Miami Herald — It was a fitting, unexpected — and safe — gesture from a Catholic presidential candidate educated by nuns in parochial schools. Not to mention, from a former U.S. vice president and senator who met for 45 minutes with Pope John Paul II in pivotal 1980 and discussed, among other topics, the spread of communism in Latin America. But Democratic candidate Biden will have to do more than send a message to Cuban-American voters on the feast day of Our Lady of Charity calling for freedom, respect for human rights and democracy in Cuba. “Jill and I pray that the love and compassion that ‘Cachita’ inspires will fill the hearts of her believers around the world,” Biden said Tuesday in a statement.
“Harris to campaign in Miami today” via Antonio Fins of the Palm Beach Post — The Biden-Harris campaign said Monday the Vice Presidential nominee will campaign in Miami today. It will be Harris’ first in-person appearance in Florida since becoming the Democratic Party’s vice presidential nominee last month. Her husband, Doug Emhoff, will accompany her. Emhoff kicked off a “Believers for Biden” series of virtual events on Aug. 28 with Jewish leaders. Florida is a key state in the election with its 29 electoral votes up for grabs on Nov. 3. On Tuesday, Trump campaigned in Jupiter. He used the event to tout the administration’s environmental record.Jill Biden, the former Vice President’s wife, held a virtual town hall with faculty and students at Pasco-Hernando State College outside of Tampa last week.
“Mike Pence to attend event hosted by QAnon backers” via Brian Slodysko and Michael Kunzelman of The Associated Press — Pence and top officials from Trump’s campaign are slated to attend a Montana fundraiser next week hosted by a couple who have expressed support for the QAnon conspiracy theory, according to an event invitation and a review of social media postings. The hosts of the fundraiser, Caryn and Michael Borland, have shared QAnon memes and retweeted posts from QAnon accounts, their social media activity shows. The baseless conspiracy theory posits that Trump is fighting entrenched enemies in the government and also involves satanism and child sex trafficking.
Mike Pence is headlining an event hosted by QAnon supporters.
“Eric Trump visits Bay County, says Florida is crucial to father’s reelection” via Nathan Cobb of the Panama City News Herald — For Eric Trump, the third child of Trump, Florida “means everything to the White House.” This was among the messages he delivered Wednesday at a rally held in the convention center of the Boardwalk Beach Hotel, located in the unincorporated portion of Bay County. There, with “Make America Great Again” memorabilia in hand, more than 100 supporters gathered to hear Eric Trump campaign for his father’s reelection. The vast majority were unmasked despite ongoing concerns about the spread of the COVID-19 virus. “(Former Vice President Biden has) been a politician for 47 years, a guy who never once signed the front of a check,” Eric Trump said during the rally.
“Barbara Lagoa, Carlos Muniz make President’s shortlist for future U.S. Supreme Court slots” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — On Wednesday, Trump floated two Florida justices as potential additions to the U.S. Supreme Court. Both Lagoa and Muñiz, respectively a former and a current member of the Florida Supreme Court-appointed by DeSantis, were among a list of 20 names introduced by the President to media at the White House. The President envisions as many as four Supreme Court openings being available in the next term, and it’s a sign of the national reputation of both that they were shortlisted along with Sens. Tom Cotton and Ted Cruz. It’s also emblematic of the Governor’s strong position with the President that two of his appointees made the list.
Assignment editors — Florida Trump Victory will host a Law and Order Roundtable featuring Lt. Gov. Jeanette Núñez, Sen. Manny Diaz, Jr.; Ace Cisneros, Manager Lou’s Police Distributors; retired police officers William Morales, Gilbert Morales and Albert Sanchez, 12:30 p.m. Eastern time, 7815 W. 4th Ave, Hialeah. Email Kailey Cotter kcotter@donaldtrump.com with your name and outlet to confirm your attendance.
Ad watch
“America First Action PAC drops $12.7M on Florida ad criticizing Joe Biden tax plan” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — America First Action super-PAC is dropping $12.7 million on a wave of new ads in Florida in hopes of swaying the swing state in favor of Trump’s reelection. The conservative PAC backing Trump is targeting swing states with a new digital and cable ad, “Guess What.” The ad will be broadcast through Election Day in Orlando and West Palm media markets. The new ad, “Guess What,” attacks Biden — alleging that his tax package will hurt the middle class, calling it a plan that would “decimate the potential for economic gains and make it impossible for Florida families and workers to recover in the wake of the coronavirus.” The ad leads with a hit on economic loss from coronavirus, with a man, referred to in the ad as Dan, saying “This has been one of the toughest years of my life.”
“Tampa-focused Democratic ad drills Trump for dissing soldiers” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Democrats are making a big-dollar bet in the Tampa market that Trump‘s reported comments about soldiers will haunt him with military-minded voters in November. On Wednesday, the DNC War Room rolled out a 60-second spot that, as a media release put it, “blasts Trump for his long record of disparaging comments about America’s service members.” The ad, entitled “Sacrifice,” is billed as a six-figure media buy and will be in rotation in the Tampa market, targeting the MacDill Air Force Base area. With shots of battlefield action and a military cemetery, the ad’s stentorian voice-over slams the President for refusing to go to the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery near Paris in 2018, with the Atlantic reporting that Trump allegedly called fallen soldiers “losers” and “suckers.”
“Trump flags in Wellington raise questions about campaign signs” via Kristina Webb of The Palm Beach Post — Political flags at a busy Wellington intersection have prompted questions this week of what is allowed when it comes to campaign signs. The Village received several concerned emails from residents last week after flags supporting Trump’s reelection campaign were posted on the southwest corner of Forest Hill Boulevard and State Road 7, in front of the Mall at Wellington Green. A photo circulating on social media shows that nine flags were affixed to four makeshift flagpoles, which then were attached to a guardrail and a street sign. Royal Palm Beach resident Brandon Mozley took the photo of the flags about 5:45 p.m. on Sept. 1.
2020
“Secretive group pushing Florida constitutional amendment raised money linked to big businesses” via Jason Garcia of the Orlando Sentinel — A secretive nonprofit financing a proposed constitutional amendment that would make it far harder to amend the state constitution in the future has raised money from a group linked to a lobbying organization for Florida Power & Light, U.S. Sugar Corp. and other big businesses. The nonprofit, known as “Keep Our Constitution Clean Inc.,” has spent more than $9 million on a campaign to pass Amendment Four on the 2020 ballot — which, if approved by voters, would require all future amendments to go through two statewide referendums.
“Kat Cammack kicks off CD 3 General Election campaign tonight” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Republican Cammack is gearing up for the General Election in Florida’s 3rd Congressional District. On Thursday, her campaign will hold a kickoff event at Rustic Oaks Ranch, 27317 78th Ave. in High Springs. It runs from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. The event is one of the first for Cammack since her convincing victory in the Republican primary for CD 3. The guest list features several prominent Republicans, including a pair of her primary opponents — former Gainesville City Commissioner Todd Chase and Ryan Chamberlin, an author and speaker. Also attending are Sens. Dennis Baxley and Keith Perry as well as Rep. Chuck Clemons, all of whom represent a slice of the sprawling congressional district.
Kat Cammack takes aim at the General Election.
“Alan Grayson gives Michael Waltz a fundraising motive” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — The Democrat running against Waltz in Florida’s 6th Congressional District, Orlando lawyer Clint Curtis, falls into the less-than-scary category. Curtis isn’t raising much money. He isn’t spending much money. There’s little record of his getting out and about much in the district, which spans from eastern Lake County through Volusia County to the coast, then up the coast through St. Johns County. Though Curtis gives occasional media interviews, those can, in the words of Orlando Sentinel editorial editor Mike Lafferty, “go down a rabbit hole.” The last time Curtis made broadly-reported news was about a year ago when he said a judge had slapped him with a gag order, effectively shutting down his campaign strategy of highlighting his own whistleblower lawsuits. Yet last month, in the August 18 CD 6 primary, Curtis managed to knock off another Democrat who was showing at least a little bit of campaign and fundraising prowess, university instructor Richard Thripp of Daytona Beach.
Tweet, tweet:
“Debbie Mucarsel-Powell accepts debate invites, awaits response from Carlos Giménez” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Mucarsel-Powell says she accepted three separate invitations to debate Giménez as the two battle in Florida’s 26th Congressional District. Those debates, if finalized, would give the candidates a chance to debate in both English and Spanish. Mucarsel-Powell is agreeing to appear in three separate debates hosted by CBS Miami, Telemundo 51 and Radio Actualidad. “South Floridians are facing challenges we’ve never faced before, from an economic recession to a pandemic that is still not under control. While we may disagree on many issues, I am sure we can agree that the voters deserve to hear where we each stand, in English and in Spanish,” Mucarsel-Powell said Wednesday.
“In Miami’s tightest U.S. House race, Giménez, Mucarsel-Powell differ sharply on policy” via Alex Daugherty of the Miami Herald — When Miami-Dade Mayor Giménez walked inside the Homestead Detention Center last year during the height of the national controversy over the Trump administration’s family separation policy on immigration, he made a point of speaking to the children alone and in Spanish. “What I found in that shelter — there was nothing going on there that would make me feel ashamed to be an American,” Giménez, a Republican who is now running for the House of Representatives, said in a recent interview. Rep. Mucarsel-Powell, Giménez’s opponent in the November election, had a very different experience. “I visited the Homestead Detention Center multiple times, and each time it broke my heart,” said Mucarsel-Powell, a Democrat.
Assignment editors — The Florida Alliance for Retired Americans will unveil “Safe & Easy: Vote-By-Mail in Florida” a new public service announcement targeting senior voters as well as a briefing on voting by mail in Florida, 11 a.m. Eastern time, in-person at Leon County Supervisor of Elections Office, 2990 Apalachee Parkway, Tallahassee and online.
“New book names second Florida county with election system hacked by Russia in 2016” via Alex Daugherty of the Miami Herald — A forthcoming book names St. Lucie County as one of two Florida counties whose election systems were hacked by the Russians during the 2016 election. CNN obtained an advance copy of reporter Woodward’s new book “Rage,” which will be released on September 15. The book said the National Security Agency and Central Intelligence Agency have classified evidence that Russians placed malware in the election registration systems of at least two Florida counties. Previous reports named Washington County as one of the two counties, but St. Lucie County hasn’t been identified as the second until now. According to CNN, the book says that “Russians had placed malware in the election registration systems of at least two Florida counties, St. Lucie and Washington.” There’s no evidence that the malware was activated or that voter registration information was altered, according to CNN’s account of the book.
Leg. campaigns
“RSLC confident ‘Blue Wave’ won’t flip Florida House, Senate” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — On Wednesday, Republican State Leadership Committee (RSLC) President Austin Chambers and Senior Adviser Ward Baker gave their views of a pivotal 2020 election for state legislatures. At issue: redistricting, the next big hurdle after the 2020 election in Florida and elsewhere. Despite the favorable map, outside spending will drive action, Chambers noted, requiring a concerted RSLC push so that the party can control the House and the Senate both, as they do now. Thus far, they’ve spent nearly $1 million on the House and the Senate in Florida in the last 18 months, and “significantly more” will be spent to “match the money coming in from outside the state on the Democrats’ side,” Chambers said.
“NPA candidates with Republican connections are on ballot in tight House and Senate races. Are they alternatives or spoilers?” via Annie Martin and Ryan Gillespie of the Orlando Sentinel — A cluster of Central Florida elections that could help tilt the balance of power in the state Capitol have drawn mysterious independent candidates who have barely campaigned beyond paying the filing fee to get their names on the ballot. The presence of the candidates who are unaffiliated with either major political party in the high-stakes races has prompted Republicans and Democrats to accuse each other of planting stooges to siphon votes away from their opponents. The major parties, which are likely to spend millions of dollars on the four races this fall, deny they have anything to do with recruiting NPA candidates. Two of the candidates themselves also brushed off the idea that anyone put them up to add their names to the ballot in an effort to split votes among Republicans and Democrats and, possibly, affect the outcome of the election.
“Eric Holder endorses Patrick Henry’s return to HD 26” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Henry picked up an endorsement from Holder in his campaign to retake Volusia County’s House District 26. Holder’s endorsement came alongside a nod from the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, a group chaired by Holder that aims to get Democrats in office so they have more sway when legislative districts are redrawn for the 2022 elections. “I am honored to have the endorsement of Attorney General Eric Holder, Jr. and the National Democratic Redistricting Committee (NDRC) in my campaign to return to Tallahassee as State Representative for District 26. In 2010, Floridians overwhelmingly spoke out by passing Amendments 5 and 6 — sending a clear message to legislators that districts should be drawn in a fair and impartial manner,” Henry said.
Former Attorney General Eric Holder is backing Patrick Henry in his return to HD 26.
Down ballot
“Daniella Levine Cava holds small lead over Steve Bovo, Jr. in 2020 race for Miami-Dade Mayor, poll says” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — Levine Cava leads Bovo by seven points in the poll by Bendixen & Amandi for the Miami Herald, 39% to 32%. That leaves 29% undecided in a race where about 40% of voters said they held no opinion of either candidate in the contest to succeed term-limited Giménez in November. While the mayoral race is nonpartisan, the contest features two candidates who have touted their party support: Levine Cava as a Democrat and Bovo as a Republican.
“Levine Cava announces COVID-19 recovery plan” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Levine Cava is releasing a new plan to help the county rebound from the COVID-19 pandemic. The plan comes as a new survey from the Miami Herald puts her 7 points ahead of her rival, Bovo. Levine Cava’s RECOVER plan has seven steps: reopen, expand, community partnership, opportunity, vertical integration of county resources, entrepreneurship and jobs, and reinvest. “The best way to tackle and solve the issues Miami-Dade faces is through collaboration and partnerships with our public and private sectors,” said former Democratic Rep. Patrick Murphy, a Levine Cava backer.
Daniella Levine Cava has a plan to help Miami-Dade County recover.
“Jacksonville activists demand Duval elections supervisor expand mail-voting options” via Andrew Pantazi of The Florida Times-Union — Civil rights activists picketed outside the Duval County elections office downtown Tuesday in protest of Elections Supervisor Mike Hogan‘s refusal so far to expand mail-voting options for the November election. The groups said they wanted Hogan to mail every voter a mail-ballot application, to install drop boxes to collect mail ballots, and to ensure Edward Waters College and the University of North Florida had early-voting sites, as they did in 2018. Rev. R.L. Gundy, the pastor of Mt. Sinai Missionary Baptist Church, said activists tried to meet with Hogan to demand changes for two years but Hogan has been unwilling to meet with them.
Corona Florida
“Ron DeSantis’ COVID-19 response rating slips in new poll” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Support for DeSantis’ pandemic response slipped slightly over the last half month, pushing his approval further underwater. That’s according to the latest CNBC and Change Research battleground state poll, which saw the Governor’s approval rating on the issue fall one point to 48% in the last two weeks. A month ago, his approval reached its lowest mark a second time since pollsters first posed the question, bottoming out at 42% amid his push for schools to reopen. Later in the month, his COVID-19 response approval bounced back to 49% with 51% expressing unfavorable views. Now 52% of likely voters in Florida disapprove of the Governor’s response, a gain of one point.
Ron DeSantis’ approval rating on COVID-19 response is starting to slip.
“Coronavirus cases spike among school-age children in Florida, while state orders some counties to keep data hidden” via Lori Rozsa and Valerie Strauss of The Washington Post — A month into the forced reopening of Florida’s schools, dozens of classrooms — along with some entire schools — have been temporarily shuttered because of coronavirus outbreaks, and infections among school-age children have jumped 34%. But parents in many parts of the state don’t know if outbreaks of the virus are related to their own schools because the state ordered some counties to keep health data secret. Department of Health spokesman Alberto Moscoso said in an email last week that “the Department is currently working to determine the best and most accurate manner in which to report information regarding cases of COVID — 19 associated with schools and daycares.” He said the information will be available “in the coming days or weeks.”
“COVID-19 takes toll on people with disabilities” via The News Service of Florida — Fifty-four people served by the Florida Agency for Persons with Disabilities have died of COVID-19, according to a report. In all, 1,196 Agency for Persons with Disabilities beneficiaries have tested positive for the virus, with 803 having recovered. The agency report also shows that 353 workers at group homes or private institutions that care for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities have tested positive for the virus, and six of those workers have died. Additionally, 49 employees of the Agency for Persons with Disabilities have tested positive for the virus, including eight who work at the Sunland Center state institution in Marianna and 16 who work at the Tacachale state institution in Gainesville.
“Jerry Demings will comply but questions DeSantis’ request for coronavirus orders, penalties” via Stephen Hudak and Annie Martin of the Orlando Sentinel — “I hope that the governor’s intent is not to further diminish the authority of local governments,” Orange County Mayor Demings said during an afternoon briefing. “We have to have the ability to react and respond to the pandemic in real-time based upon what we’re seeing here in our unique locations.” Meanwhile, critical health data in Orange County appears to be trending in the right direction with the positivity rate over the past 14 days falling under the 5% threshold which some health experts have suggested means the virus is under control here.
“Christopher Benjamin’s late wife caught COVID-19 while in the hospital for late-stage cancer” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Rep.-elect Benjamin said his wife, before her death, contracted COVID-19 in the hospital while being treated for breast cancer. Carleen Aneesa Nelson-Benjamin died Sept. 6. She had been fighting stage 4 metastatic breast cancer, after first being diagnosed in 2017. Benjamin stressed his wife held the breast cancer treatment center at Memorial Regional in high regard, which is why she had appointments there. He has not been given an explanation to date as to how an outbreak occurred on the floor. As Benjamin prepares for a new stage of life as a public servant, he must do so now as a single father of four. His children range in age from 7 to 20.
Carleen Nelson-Benjamin and Christopher Benjamin at their 2001 wedding.
“Off the road since March, Miami-Dade’s scooter business awaits a COVID reprieve” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — In a Little Haiti warehouse, a good chunk of Miami’s once-bustling scooter fleet sits in the dark, its pink wheels collecting dust. Diego Perelmuter’s job is to tend to the hundreds of scooters Lyft dumped here on March 18, when Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez used emergency powers to order a halt to all bike and scooter rentals as a way to slow the spread of COVID-19. It was the fifth of 83 emergency orders Gimenez would sign over six months, making scooter rentals one of the first industries to close in Miami-Dade. Unlike restaurants, malls, massage studios, barbershops, hotels, gyms, casinos and tattoo parlors, scooter rentals remain banned in Miami-Dade. The scooter industry has been pressing Gimenez’s administration to lift one of the country’s only COVID-related bans on the shared devices.
“Disabled veteran died of COVID-19 in Seminole jail. He was in for drug possession, parole violation” via Grace Toohey of the Orlando Sentinel — Disabled Army veteran Lawrence Carter had been in the Seminole County jail almost nine months waiting for a resolution in his drug possession case when he became the first person to die after contracting COVID-19 during the facility’s coronavirus outbreak. His fiancee, who was Carter’s emergency contact and power of attorney, said she found out he died when she went to the bank last week to pick up some paperwork. The bank had been notified of his death. She had not. “I had no idea,” Christine Deleo said. “The jail never called me or said anything.” Loved ones said Carter posed no risk to the public, but he remained in the jail for months because the new drug possession case, if prosecuted, could have violated his parole conditions from a prior case.
“Hungry late at night? Florida Keys leaders lift limit on restaurant hours, alcohol sales” via Gwen Filosa of the Miami Herald — Florida Keys restaurants can resume regular business hours this week after operating under a nightly curfew since July 24. A restriction that prohibited overnight alcohol sales also has expired. “We’ve got to let our businesses get back to normal,” said Monroe County Commissioner Michelle Coldiron, of Marathon, before a 3-2 vote did away with the limited operating hours. Restaurants no longer have to close at midnight and allowed to reopen at 5 a.m. An earlier curfew imposed for lobster miniseason shut down restaurants at 11 p.m. Alcohol sales at stores also had been banned from midnight to 7 a.m. The restrictions were imposed before lobster miniseason, which was the last Wednesday and Thursday of July, as Monroe County leaders expected large crowds to gather during the coronavirus pandemic.
“Where did all the tourists go? Over the holiday weekend, they were back in the Keys” via David Goodhue and Gwen Filosa of the Miami Herald — Business leaders in the Florida Keys report Labor Day weekend gave a much-needed boost in tourist dollars to the island chain suffering from its busy winter season being cut short because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Unlike many tourist hot spots whose make-it-or-break-it time is summer, hotels, restaurants, charter fishing captains and dive shop operators in the Keys rely on winter visitors to get them through the rest of the year. But the pandemic dealt a blow to the island chain’s economy that will likely be felt for years. Hotels were ordered shut in mid-March. And by the end of the month, Monroe County erected checkpoints at the Keys two entry points to keep tourists away in an effort to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus through the archipelago.
“Lobbyist who attended Florida House Republican’s fundraiser tests positive for COVID-19” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Rep. Jason Shoaf is calling attendees to his Labor Day weekend fundraiser after a lobbyist in attendance tested positive for COVID-19. The event, billed as “Rep. Shoaf Port St. Joe Weekend,” saw attendees board scalloping boats, enjoy a family dinner at Shoaf’s home and explore Port St. Joe. All throughout, the first-term Representative said they took precautions to prevent the spread of the novel disease.“ Know that, when we were fortunate to host a number of folks in my district over the holiday weekend, we took every effort to keep them safe and well,” he said. So far, everyone that has taken a rapid test has returned negative, the Representative said.
Back to school?
“Union says judges should step aside from schools case” via Jim Saunders of The News Service of Florida — The Florida Education Association and other plaintiffs challenging a state order to reopen schools requested that two appellate judges step aside from the case because DeSantis could consider them for an appointment to the Florida Supreme Court. Attorneys for the plaintiffs filed a motion requesting that 1st District Court of Appeal Judges Lori Rowe and Timothy Osterhaus disqualify themselves from the closely watched legal fight over a July 6 state order requiring schools to reopen classrooms in August amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Broward County Public Schools aims for October reopening” via Amanda Batchelor and Christina Vazquez of WPLG — Broward County Public Schools are hoping to reopen to in-person learning sometime in October, as long as the downward trend in COVID-19 cases in the county continues, Superintendent Robert Runcie said Tuesday. “If the current trends continue and we can maintain that and continue on the path to improvement, we will be able to open schools in a phased approach as early as sometime in October,” Runcie said. Runcie said the school district will be holding a workshop Sept. 22 to discuss the strategy of their reopening plan, and whether to reopen with a hybrid or full-time on-site structure.
Robert Runcie is aiming for an October school reopening.
“Dept. of Education approves Duval Schools plan to phase in in-person learning” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — Only sixth-graders in Duval County Public Schools will return to in-person classes five days a week on Monday. Wednesday evening, the school district announced its waiver to stagger the return of in-person schooling by grade level was approved by the Florida Department of Education. That means that on Monday, sixth graders will begin to attend in-person daily, while other middle and high school grades continue to alternate. This shift does not impact elementary school students, whose in-person schedule was already daily, or full-time virtual students. Under the old plan, all students were expected to shift to five-days-per-week starting Monday. Under the new plan, the transitions are staggered by grade level with all in-person learning is scheduled to resume daily by Sept. 28.
“Reopening schools, K-12 platform. Public comments dominate Miami School Board meeting.” via Colleen Wright of the Miami Herald — The Miami-Dade County School Board began Wednesday’s meeting with a special intention. Board Chair Perla Tabares Hantman asked to keep those teachers and students going through the “challenges” of virtual learning in mind. The board then jumped right to it. Four board members walked in six proposals seeking to get to the bottom of the fourth-largest school district’s disastrous debut of its first week of virtual school. The board members want to know how its new online platform, My School Online by K-12, was procured, if the school district could terminate the platform, how the district’s cybersecurity suffered more than two dozen cyberattacks, and have a clearer reopening plan going forward.
“New Pinellas County Schools COVID-19 quarantine guidelines mean even less transparency” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — The Pinellas County Schools district is reporting at least 56 classroom quarantines, but parents, and even some teachers, don’t really know what that means. Last month, the district launched a website providing daily data on COVID-19 cases among students and staff at its schools. The website provides the name of the school affected, the number of students and staff who tested positive, and whether a classroom, bus, or, in one case, a high school football team, had to quarantine. The district does not provide an exact number of quarantines. On Tuesday, the district announced it was changing the way it determines the requirements for quarantines. “The Department of Health has begun a more surgical selection process for determining which students need to quarantine, based on information provided by the district,” the district wrote in an update to press Tuesday.
“More than 800 quarantined after COVID cases at Central Florida schools” via Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel — More than 800 students and staff in Central Florida public schools faced quarantine in the last week because of exposure to the coronavirus, according to updated COVID-19 data reported by local school districts Tuesday. Nearly 400 of the quarantine cases were from Osceola County after positive tests were reported at about a dozen schools, the school district’s weekly COVID report showed. Almost all of those in quarantine were students. Contact tracing led health officials to conclude that 99 teenagers from Tohokepaliga High School needed to be quarantined because they’d been exposed to two students who tested positive, said Dana Schafer, a district spokeswoman, in an email.
Assignment editors — A group of Florida physicians concerned about the rise in COVID-19 cases in schools, severity in children will hold a virtual news conference at 1 p.m. Eastern time. Participants include Dr. Bernard Ashby, Miami cardiologist and Florida State Lead for the Committee to Protect Medicare; Dr. Vincent Roddy, Miami emergency physician; Dr. Ankush Bansal, Palm Beach Gardens internal medicine hospitalist and Dr. Frederick Southwick, Gainesville infectious disease specialist. Zoom call, RSVP to Annika Doner at annika@committeetoprotect.org for the link.
Corona nation
“How Trump squandered February, despite knowing the risk posed by the coronavirus” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — It was a rare moment in which Trump appears to have understood the threat posed by the coronavirus that emerged in China last year. “You just breathe the air, and that’s how it’s passed,” he told Woodward in a phone call. “And so that’s a very tricky one. That’s a very delicate one. It’s also more deadly than even your strenuous flu.” The virus, Trump said, was “deadly stuff.” That call was Feb. 7, more than two weeks after the United States had confirmed its first infection in someone who had traveled to China. Three days later, Trump held a rally at an indoor arena in New Hampshire. It has been obvious since April that the month of February represented a lost opportunity for addressing the threat of the virus. What wasn’t known, though, was that even as he repeatedly played down the threat, Trump privately understood the risk. Even as he tried to maintain a business-as-usual presidency, he knew that the virus was transmissible by air and often deadly.
Donald Trump wasted the entire month of February in his failure to act in the COVID-19 crisis.
“The emotionally challenging next phase of the pandemic” via Juliette Kayyem of The Atlantic — A weary friend of mine, another working mom, recently texted to say she couldn’t decide which aspect of daily life during the coronavirus pandemic was worse: “the insanity or the monotony.” Either way, the misery will not end when 2020 does. The new year will inherit many of the same problems that have become so grindingly familiar in 2020. The C.D.C. got some Americans’ hopes up with its recent instruction that states should be ready to distribute a coronavirus vaccine in the next couple of months. Trump is desperate to convince the public that a vaccine to COVID-19 will arrive by a politically convenient deadline: “maybe even before November 1,” he said Friday, or “sometime in the month of October.”
“NIH: Halted vaccine study shows ‘no compromises’ on safety” via The Associated Press — AstraZeneca’s suspension of final testing of its potential COVID-19 vaccine while it investigates a volunteer’s illness shows there will be “no compromises” on safety in developing the shots, the chief of the National Institutes of Health told Congress on Wednesday. “This ought to be reassuring,” NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins said before a Senate committee. “When we say we are going to focus first on safety and make no compromises, here is Exhibit A of how that is happening in practice.” Late Tuesday, AstraZeneca announced its final-stage studies are on temporary hold while the company looks into whether a test subject’s illness is a side effect of the shot or a coincidence. The company gave no details on the illness, but Collins said it involved a “spinal problem.” Behind-the-scenes monitors known as the “data and safety monitoring board” in Britain paused vaccinations while alerting its safety counterparts in the U.S., said Dr. Moncef Slaoui of Operation Warp Speed, the Trump administration’s vaccine development program.
Corona economics
“Financial pain from coronavirus pandemic ‘much, much worse’ than expected” via Joe Neel of NPR — In America’s four largest cities, at least half of people say they have experienced the loss of a job or a reduction in wages or work hours in their household since the start of the coronavirus outbreak. That’s the finding of a new poll. Many of these problems are concentrated among Black and Latino households in the four cities, according to the poll, which gathered responses from July 1 through Aug 3. Houston had an especially high proportion of Latino households (77%) and Black households (81%) reporting serious financial problems. But the other three cities in our survey have had high rates as well: 73% of Latinos in New York City tell us their household experienced serious financial problems since the start of the coronavirus outbreak, along with 71% of Latinos in Los Angeles and 63% in Chicago.
Coronavirus and its effect on the American economy are much worse than initially thought.
“A vaccine could slow down job growth” via Karl W. Smith of Bloomberg — Falling cases of the coronavirus imply that the U.S. economy could improve over the next month or two as lockdowns ease and Americans resume their normal lives. There is, however, an unexpected short-term risk: that a vaccine will be ready by November. To be absolutely clear, over the medium and long term a vaccine will be a godsend for economic growth. Even if it weren’t, a lower death rate is well worth a few more quarters of higher unemployment. Nonetheless, there is a possibility that the introduction of a vaccine could actually lead to a sharp if temporary deceleration in job growth.
“Copycat websites, newly minted companies, double-dippers cashed in on PPP loans” via Ben Wieder and Meghan Bobrowsky of the Miami Herald — A suspicious online university whose curriculum appears to be cut and pasted from a European school, two companies with nearly identical websites and two others with practically no internet presence — all five of these businesses are connected to the same Texas man. And all five received Paycheck Protection Program loans for a total of at least $3.65 million. But should they have? These companies are among more than 75 businesses that received loans of at least $150,000 from the coronavirus small business relief program but don’t appear to have existed before this spring or to have met other eligibility criteria for the program, which was administered by the U.S. Small Business Administration. Collectively, the questionable loans, which are publicly reported as a range of values rather than a specific amount, totaled somewhere between $20 million and $50 million.
More corona
“How the coronavirus attacks the brain” via Apoorva Mandavilli of The New York Times — The coronavirus targets the lungs foremost, but also the kidneys, liver and blood vessels. Still, about half of patients report neurological symptoms, including headaches, confusion and delirium, suggesting the virus may also attack the brain. A new study offers the first clear evidence that, in some people, the coronavirus invades brain cells, hijacking them to make copies of itself. The virus also seems to suck up all of the oxygen nearby, starving neighboring cells to death. It’s unclear how the virus gets to the brain or how often it sets off this trail of destruction. Infection of the brain is likely to be rare, but some people may be susceptible because of their genetic backgrounds, high viral load or other reasons.
Coronavirus attacks the brain, causing serious neurological complications.
“It’s not easy to get a coronavirus test for a child” via Sarah Kliff and Margot Sanger-Katz of The New York Times — As child care centers and schools reopen, parents are encountering another coronavirus testing bottleneck: Few sites will test children. Even in large cities with dozens of test sites, parents are driving long distances and calling multiple centers to track down one accepting children. The age policies at testing sites reflect a range of concerns, including differences in health insurance, medical privacy rules, holes in test approval, and fears of squirmy or shrieking children. The limited testing hampers schools’ ability to quickly isolate and trace coronavirus cases among students. It could also create a new burden on working parents, with some schools and child care centers requiring symptomatic children to test negative for coronavirus before rejoining class.
“An Olympic gold medalist said she was ‘brave’ for not wearing a mask. It was not well-received.” via Des Bieler of The Washington Post — Olympic gold medalist Kerri WalshJennings apologized Monday for leaving some people “upset” by an Instagram post in which she described going shopping without a face mask, saying she was advocating for individual freedom amid the novel coronavirus pandemic. She wrote that she believes “we have to stay mindful of the FACT that our freedoms have slowly been taken from us with our consent.” On Sunday, Walsh Jennings wrote on her Instagram account that she recently “went shopping without a mask on,” as part of “a little exercise in being brave.”
“Apple design teams develop special face masks for employees” via Mark Gurman of Bloomberg — Apple Inc. has developed masks that the company is beginning to distribute to corporate and retail employees to limit the spread of COVID-19. The Apple Face Mask is the first created in-house by the Cupertino, California-technology giant for its staff. The other, called ClearMask, was sourced elsewhere. Apple previously made a different face shield for medical workers and distributed millions of other masks across the health care sector. Apple told staff that the Face Mask was developed by the Engineering and Industrial Design teams, the same groups that work on devices such as the iPhone and iPad. It is made up of three layers to filter incoming and outgoing particles. It can be washed and reused as many as five times, the company told employees
Smoldering
“New Florida law targets outdated race restrictive covenants” via TaMaryn Waters of the Tallahassee Democrat — A new Florida law tears away the red tape associated with the removal of outdated and racist language embedded in certain real estate documents. Gov. DeSantis signed the law (SB 374) last Friday after a yearlong effort that began in Tallahassee and gained legislative traction, although some say it’s the “first step” in addressing a convoluted process. The bill, sponsored by Democratic Sen. Darryl Rouson of St. Petersburg, “extinguishes discriminatory restrictions from certain real estate documents, such as deeds,” according to the online summary. Last summer, Tallahassee criminal defense attorney Anabelle Dias exposed a racially charged but unenforceable section of a seven-page covenant for a home she’d planned to purchase in Betton Hills.
“Tallahassee police warned demonstrators they could get hurt in protest over use of force” via Jeff Burlew and Tori Lynn Schneider of the Tallahassee Democrat — Tallahassee police warned protesters who gathered at the Capitol to rally against excessive force that they could be hurt themselves if they didn’t disperse. Newly released arrest reports shed additional light on the dramatic response by the Tallahassee Police Department and other agencies during Saturday’s demonstrations. Fourteen protesters were arrested during the unpermitted event, most on misdemeanor charges including unlawful assembly. Another person was cited, TPD said. And while some cheered the crackdown on protesters, others continued to harshly criticize it. On Wednesday, groups including the NAACP and the National Organization for Women joined with several former and current elected officials to condemn the response by TPD, the Leon County Sheriff’s Office and other agencies.
Tallahassee police warned protesters there would be trouble. Image via Tallahassee Democrat.
“In the face of Confederate flags, New Port Richey’s Black Lives Matter activists march on” via Ray Roa of Creative Loafing — In the last few weeks, Pasco County’s Black Lives Matter marches have seen increased attention from the media (and police, who’ve issued amplified sound citations). However, photos and video show peaceful protests — officials with New Port Richey Police Department told Creative Loafing Tampa Bay there’s been zero property damage — and demonstrators are being met with pro-police groups as well as hate groups like the Proud Boys. Last week saw more direct threats of violence. In response, on Wednesday, New Port Richey Police Department’s Deputy Chief Lauren Letona told CL that NPR PD “does not condone acts of violence and take threats very seriously.”
“At USF, 23 research projects will focus on racism and disparities” via Divya Kumar of the Tampa Bay Times — The University of South Florida on Wednesday announced the funding of 23 research projects that will focus on systemic inequality, disparities and other issues of race, an effort that began as a response to local and national protests this summer. About 90 faculty members across eight colleges and all three USF campuses will be involved, with the projects covering a range of topics. One research group will investigate how skin color and facial features can play a role in police violence and racial disparities. Another will study the postpartum health of mothers in Rwanda, while another will examine ways that recruitment of high school athletes can limit their economic and social mobility.
Fried moves
Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried announced a series of policy changes Wednesday aimed at making the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services a more racially inclusive and equitable state agency.
Topping the list is a rewrite of use of force, de-escalation, and excessive force intervention rules for the department’s law enforcement office. Among the new rules is a ban on lateral vascular neck restraint, a potentially deadly type of chokehold common in law enforcement.
Nikki Fried is announcing several policy changes to make her agency more inclusive and equitable.
“Like so many, I watched in horror at the deaths of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, and too many other Black Americans. As a former public defender, I share the deep frustration of the Black community at the senseless, continued murder of Black people, and the failure of leaders in positions of power to make impactful changes,” Fried said. “These improvements to our department’s policies are our first step on the road toward greater inclusion and equity in service to people of color and all our fellow Floridians.”
Updates to the department’s discrimination protections are coming as well, including adding gender identity as a protected class and allowing for third-party witnesses to file discrimination complaints.
“Members of the Black Caucus have worked for decades to build equity in our state and our government,” said Sen. Bobby Powell, Chair of the Florida Legislative Black Caucus. “We appreciate that Commissioner Fried, as an elected Cabinet member, is acknowledging this fight, making it a priority, and taking action to make an impact.”
Fried proclaims September as ‘Hunger Action Month’ — Fried issued a proclamation Wednesday declaring September as Hunger Action Month and urged Floridians to do their part in fighting food insecurity. “A lack of access to reliable, healthy nutrition can cause poor health outcomes, can hold back our children’s development and can force people to make difficult decisions between food and other necessary expenses, like health care,” Fried said. An estimated 3 million Floridians struggle with chronic hunger, and the issue has only been exacerbated by the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. Fried and FDACS encouraged Floridians to donate to or safely volunteer with their local food bank if they are able.
Chamber’s big reveal
The Florida Chamber Foundation’s Business Alliance for Early Learning is making a big reveal this morning.
During a 10 a.m. Zoom conference, the alliance will launch America’s first interactive tool for improving third grade reading scores.
The tool will take third grade reading scores for every public school in Florida and map it against childhood poverty rates. The output will serve as a guide to identify school-level performance gaps so resources can be prioritized to address them head-on.
“Over the next decade the Florida Chamber wants to cut poverty in half and ensure 100% of our third graders are reading at grade level,” Florida Chamber President and CEO Mark Wilson said.
“This first in the nation tool that we are unveiling will help parents, business leaders and policymakers identify Florida’s equity gaps in poverty and education and will help unite the business community to create an opportunity for all Florida children regardless of ZIP code, race, gender or any other factor.”
The Zoom conference will include a primer on third grade reading score data, an overview and demonstration of the new tool, and a question-and-answer session with key stakeholders.
D.C. matters
“Senior DHS official alleges in whistleblower complaint that he was told to stop providing intelligence analysis on threat of Russian interference” via Shane Harris and Nick Miroff of The Wall Street Journal — A senior Department of Homeland Security official alleges that he was told to stop providing intelligence analysis on the threat of Russian interference in the 2020 election, in part because it “made the President look bad,” an instruction he believed would jeopardize national security. The official, Brian Murphy, who until recently was in charge of intelligence and analysis at DHS, said in a whistleblower complaint that on two occasions he was told to stand down on reporting about the Russian threat. On July 8, Murphy said, acting Homeland Security secretary Chad Wolf told him that an “intelligence notification” regarding Russian disinformation efforts should be “held” because it was unflattering to Trump, who has long derided the Kremlin’s interference as a “hoax” that was concocted by his opponents to delegitimize his victory in 2016.
“U.S. EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler defends water, air regulation changes” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — President Barack Obama was obsessed with addressing climate change to the detriment of other environmental protections while Trump‘s administration is focused more on practical, local protections, U.S. EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler said Monday. In an interview with Florida Politics, Wheeler, who has been an administrator or acting administrator for the Environmental Protection Agency since July 2018, contended that many of the environmental gains claimed by the Obama administration did not or could not ever materialize because they were either impossible or essentially illegal. Wheeler gave the interview the day after Trump came to Jupiter to announce a 10-year extension to the federal ban on offshore drilling along Florida’s shoreline. The EPA has little to do with offshore drilling. Still, Trump’s speech was in large part an appeal to environmentally concerned Floridians.
EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler is defending the Donald Trump administration’s changes in water and air regulations.
Statewide
“DeSantis vigorously defends pick for Supreme Court” via Brendan Farrington of The Associated Press — DeSantis sternly criticized a Black Democratic lawmaker for challenging his pick of a Jamaican-American woman for the Supreme Court, saying Wednesday that if the representative wins her case, there will be no Black justices on the high court. State Rep. Geraldine Thompson is challenging the selection of Judge Renatha Francis because she did not meet the constitutional requirement of being a Florida Bar member for at least 10 years. DeSantis knew that when she was appointed in May but said Francis would not take her oath to sit on the Supreme Court until Sept. 24, when she’ll meet the requirement. “The problem I have in this case, is this particular representative has been somebody that’s been very vocal about wanting to have a Black justice on the Florida Supreme Court. Well, guess what? The petition she has filed right now would block a Black Justice,” DeSantis said at a news conference in Broward County.
Geraldine Thompson is relentless in her condemnation of Ron DeSantis’ Supreme Court pick.
“UWF agrees to repay $2.4 million withdrawn from online learning program” via Kevin Robinson of the Pensacola News Journal — The University of West Florida has agreed to repay nearly $2.4 million that state officials say was improperly collected from a statewide online learning program. For roughly six years, UWF managed the Complete Florida Plus Program, a suite of adult learning and library services used at school across Florida. UWF was entitled to a 5% administrative fee for running the program. The university collected only a portion of the fees in the early years of the program, but between 2017 and 2019 went back and collected $2.39 million in fees it had deferred in previous years.
Local notes
“Vern Buchanan urges Sarasota officials to keep kissing sailor on Bayfront” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — The fate of a kitschy kissing sailor statue has long divided Sarasota’s high-minded cultural crowd and the patriotic veteran set. Now Buchanan has weighed in on the matter. He wants Seward Johnson’s Unconditional Surrender statue to remain at its current location on U.S. 41 near Downtown. He wrote a letter to Sarasota City Commissioners on House letterhead defending the monument. “The ‘Unconditional Surrender’ statue is extremely meaningful to Sarasota’s veteran community and honors their sacrifice for our country,” Buchanan wrote. “This statue commemorates a significant moment in our nation’s history that we shouldn’t erase from the Sarasota Bayfront.” The sculpture recreates a sailor at the end of World War II kissing a woman he grabbed in Times Square upon news Japan had surrendered. It’s a moment famously captured in the Alfred Eisenstaedt photograph V-J Day in Times Square and featured in Life Magazine in 1945.
Vern Buchanan is fighting to support Sarasota’s kissing soldier statute.
“JEA spent $238,000 to prepare for Republican National Convention. It likely won’t be reimbursed.” via Christopher Hong of The Florida Times-Union — JEA spent $238,000 preparing for the Republican National Convention and will likely not be reimbursed, adding more money to the city’s tab to host the event that never happened. The city-owned utility’s expenses continue to undermine statements made by Mayor Lenny Curry and his aides, who aggressively courted the event and said local taxpayers wouldn’t pay anything to host it. City Council auditors last week revealed the city could likely absorb $154,000 in overtime pay and consulting fees related to the event. That brings the total of RNC-related costs to $392,000. JEA will likely absorb its costs, as the city never received a federal grant that was supposed to cover JEA and City Hall’s expenses, said JEA spokeswoman Gerri Boyce.
“Jacksonville plans $5 million buyout for flood-prone Ken Knight Drive homes” via David Bauerlein of the Florida Times-Union — When the buyout program launches for Ken Knight Drive in northwest Jacksonville, it will join the South Shores neighborhood where the city in 2019 set aside $4.5 million for purchasing and demolishing 17 homes south of downtown near the St. Johns River. Legislation pending before the Council will add another $5.45 million for up to 22 more homes in South Shores. For the South Shores program, the federal government will pay 75% of the cost and the city will put up the local match. The buyouts along Ken Knight Road will use $5 million in federal Community Development Block Grant money awarded to Jacksonville by the state Department of Economic Opportunity.
“Milton City Councilwoman Heather Hathaway abruptly resigns Tuesday night” via Annie Blanks of the Pensacola News Journal — Milton City Councilwoman Hathaway abruptly resigned at Tuesday night’s City Council meeting, saying she had sold her house in Ward 1 and no longer lived in the appropriate city district. Hathaway, who was first appointed to the seat in November 2017 after Ashley Lay resigned for family reasons, informed the council of her resignation at the start of the meeting. “I was going to let everyone know that we actually closed on our house this past Friday, and I was actually going to announce it tonight since it was the next council meeting,” she said. “But I will be resigning from my seat.”
“The real estate market is booming in South Florida. Here are tips for buyers and sellers looking to jump in” via Amber Randall of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — South Florida’s housing market is booming through the COVID-19 pandemic as homebuyers flock from cities in the north with a new ability to do their jobs remotely from anywhere. While it’s sellers who have the advantage right now — demand is high but supply is limited — there are opportunities for buyers to benefit, as well and local real estate agents are weighing in on how to best take advantage. A new report shows that Florida has become a popular destination for homebuyers from areas like New York, Chicago and Boston. Even rentals of single-family homes are up in South Florida, as some families opt for a safer option until the market stabilizes. Chuck Luciano with South Florida Luxury Advisors in Boca Raton said he hasn’t seen anything like it in the 21 years he has been in the industry.
“Universal’s debt to ride maker could play a role in paralyzed tourist’s lawsuit, attorney says” via Gabrielle Russon of the Orlando Sentinel — Universal Orlando owes the ride manufacturer that built many of the waterslides at Volcano Bay more than $1 million, which could play a role in a lawsuit involving a New York tourist who broke his neck at the park last year, the tourist’s attorney said at a court hearing Wednesday. James Bowen sued Universal after he was paralyzed riding Punga Racers, a slide with a troubled history of people getting hurt since Volcano Bay opened in May 2017, court records show. Lawyers for Bowen and Universal presented their cases virtually Wednesday in front of Orange Circuit Judge Kevin Weiss. The judge did not issue a written ruling about whether Bowen can seek punitive damages in the lawsuit that has revealed a deeper look into theme park safety rarely disclosed to the public.
“Do Pasco Sheriff’s Office surveillance tactics go over the line?” via Joe Henderson of Florida Politics — You live in Pasco County and have one or two run-ins with the Sheriff’s Office on your record. Maybe it wasn’t a major crime, but that doesn’t matter. It’s late, and you’re headed to bed, when … BAM! BAM! Someone is pounding on the door, and without looking, you know who it is because they’ve been there many times before. Pasco County deputies are just checking to see what you’re doing. They know where you live and want you to remember that. They are always watching. This sounds like an Orwellian nightmare. According to a scalding Tampa Bay Times investigative report, though, it’s a reality for those caught in the net of the Intelligence-Led Policing program incorporated by Sheriff Chris Nocco. It’s designed to identify people likely to commit a crime.
Top opinion
“There is no good explanation for Trump’s coronavirus comments to Woodward” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — Trump has made a monthslong series of often bizarre comments about the coronavirus from frequently downplaying it and saying it would just go away, to hyperbolically pitching unproven treatments for it, to ridiculing masks and then briefly embracing them before ridiculing them again, to repeatedly floating potential death tolls that would be surpassed in very short order. The question, as it often is with Trump, is whether the President truly believes his own hype and is just that disconnected from the reality of the situation, or whether he’s just saying stuff to get through a news cycle. A new book from Woodward suggests that it’s very much the latter. Woodward spoke with Trump frequently for the book, titled “Rage,” including early in the coronavirus outbreak. While Trump spent almost the entirety of January, February and early March consistently downplaying the threat, he expressed much more serious concerns in his conversations with Woodward.
Opinions
“A Trump comeback?” via The Wall Street Journal Editorial Board — With eight weeks before Election Day, the state of the 2020 campaign is clear: Trump is trailing Biden, who has succeeded so far in making the race a referendum on the incumbent. If Trump is going to stage a comeback, and not become only the fourth incumbent in a century to be denied a second term, he will have to make the race about policy differences and Biden’s indulgence to the Democratic left. If the race comes down to a character contest, Trump will lose.
“Republicans have insufficient evidence to call elections ‘rigged’ and ‘fraudulent’” via Benjamin Ginsberg for The Washington Post — Legions of Republican lawyers have searched in vain over four decades for fraudulent double voting. At long last, they have a blatant example of a major politician urging his supporters to illegally vote twice. The only hitch is that the candidate is Trump. On Wednesday in North Carolina, he urged supporters to double vote, casting ballots at the polls even if they already mailed in absentee ballots. A tweet claiming he meant only for people to check that their ballots had been received and counted sounded fine — until Trump renewed his original push on Thursday evening in Pennsylvania and again Friday at a tele-rally.
“Go ahead, vote two times.Trump says it’s OK. So what if it’s illegal?” via Carl Hiaasen of the Miami Herald — Even though voting twice in the same election is illegal, Trump last week urged North Carolina residents to vote by mail and also in person. He said it was a good way to test the security of the balloting system. It’s also a good way to create a nightmare for local election officials, seeding the kind of chaos that Trump wants in order to challenge the voting results on Nov. 3. Declared he: “So if you have an absentee ballot … you send it in, but I’d check it, follow it and go vote.” Doing what the President says is actually a felony in North Carolina and many other states.
“Trump is a champion for Florida’s environment” via Randy Fine for Florida Today — The President’s list of accomplishments was extraordinary. First, his administration has prioritized Everglades restoration by committing over $250 million dollars in the 2021 budget. In January 2019, Trump provided $100 million to research and mitigate against toxic algae like the “red tide.” Trump passed legislation to improve water infrastructure across the nation, but specifically to create a reservoir south of Lake Okeechobee. This infrastructure would help combat dangerous algae blooms in the lake thus making it safer for the community.
“Clean energy is key to Florida’s economic revival” via Eddie Fernandez of Florida Politics — The COVID-19 pandemic presents our nation with a public health crisis only rivaled by the ensuing economic crisis. Our policymakers’ initial response tactically focused on preserving jobs, limiting layoffs, and ensuring employers have the necessary cash flow to weather the current storm. Further relief should strategically broaden the scope, from recovery to revival. For long term economic recovery and sustained future economic growth, policymakers should look to industries with strategic potential and strong multiplier effect, among these is clean energy. Thankfully, the Florida Congressional delegation, and specifically Sen. Marco Rubio, have played a lead role in the federal response. This spring, Rubio crafted one of the most expansive federal programs in U.S. history to keep small businesses, the backbone of our economy, running. The Paycheck Protection Program kept shuttered businesses afloat and allowed employers to keep their workers on the payroll during these challenging times.
Today’s Sunrise
Florida’s Department of Health is reporting an uptick in the number of COVID-19 fatalities. The daily death reports had been trending down over the past week, but the state reported 202 more fatalities.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Gov. DeSantis was in Broward Wednesday, one of the counties hardest hit by the virus. But he never mentioned COVID-19. DeSantis was there to try to whip up support for his Supreme Court nominee who doesn’t meet the technical requirements to hold the job.
— Sunrise takes a deep dive into the legal and public relations battle between the Governor and Rep. Thompson.
— More backlash for the President in the aftermath of a scathing report in The Atlantic that says he referred to soldiers who died in action as “losers and suckers.” Some Florida veterans say Trump is unfit to be commander in chief because he doesn’t understand the concepts of empathy or sacrifice.
— A new book from Woodward could solve one of the mysteries of the 2016 election: which Florida counties Russians hacked. We already knew about Washington County; Woodward says the other was Saint Lucie.
— And checking-in with a nearly naked Florida Man accused of stealing from a neighbor’s mailbox.
“Bring on the sand: The ‘Dune’ trailer is worth the hype” via Miles Surrey of The Ringer — There’s a lot going against Denis Villeneuve’s big-screen adaptation of Dune. For one, Frank Herbert’s seminal sci-fi novel might be an unadaptable text — so sprawling and dense that even the inscrutable legend David Lynch couldn’t make sense of it. Can Villeneuve do any better, and pull in the kind of audience that would justify what appears to be such a pricey ordeal from Warner Bros.? (Herbert’s material isn’t exactly as approachable as Star Wars, although Paul Atreides might loathe sand more than Anakin Skywalker.) There’s also the fact that Villeneuve’s Dune is slated to arrive in December, at a time when moviegoers might (quite understandably) still be hesitant to return to theaters in droves amid a pandemic.
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
Trump slams Woodward, says he didn’t want to ‘scare people’ about virus
President Trump defended comments he made earlier this year in interviews with journalist Bob Woodward about the coronavirus pandemic, claiming on Fox News’ “Hannity” on Wednesday night he wanted to “show a calmness.”
“I’m the leader of the country, I can’t be jumping up and down and scaring people,” Trump told host Sean Hannity. “I don’t want to scare people. I want people not to panic, and that’s exactly what I did.”
Excerpts from some of the interviews, which form the basis of Woodward’s forthcoming book, “Rage,” were published by The Washington Post earlier Wednesday. In early February, Trump told Woodward the coronavirus was “deadly stuff” while publicly comparing it to the seasonal flu. More than a month later, on March 19, Trump admitted to Woodward he “wanted to always play it [the virus] down.
“I still like playing it down, because I don’t want to create a panic,” Trump added at the time.
On Wednesday night, the president condemned Woodward as an author of “hit jobs.”
“He does hit jobs with everybody, he even did it on Obama … constant hit jobs. On [George W.] Bush, I guess, they did three books, they were all terrible,” Trump said. “So I figured, you know, ‘Let’s give it a little shot, I’ll speak to him.’ It wasn’t a big deal, I speak to him and let’s see … ” CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Woodward dismisses claims he could have saved lives by publishing Trump’s coronavirus remarks sooner
– Meadows admits ‘I would not have recommended’ Woodward be given access to Trump for interviews
– Sean Hannity shows how Biden, Democrats downplayed coronavirus while Trump took action
– ‘The Five’ react to Trump comments about coronavirus to Bob Woodward
Salon that Pelosi visited is shuttering, owner describes receiving ‘nothing but negativity’
Erica Kious, owner of the coronavirus-closed San Francisco hair salon visited illegally by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi last week, said on “Tucker Carlson Tonight” on Wednesday night she was closing shop for good because of the controversy.
“I am actually done in San Francisco and closing my doors, unfortunately,” she announced.
Fox News obtained surveillance video last week of Pelosi visiting the salon for a hair wash and blowout, despite San Francisco salons being closed at the time because of the coronavirus pandemic. The video also showed Pelosi walking inside the salon without wearing a face mask.
Kious claimed she was subjected to attacks for exposing Pelosi.
“I started to just get a ton of phone calls, text messages, emails, all my Yelp reviews … saying that they hope I go under and that I fail,” she said. “So just a lot of negativity towards my business.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– San Francisco hair salon owner thanks supporters after more than $300G raised
– Tucker Carlson blasts Pelosi over visit to shuttered San Francisco hair salon
– Gutfeld on Nancy Pelosi’s visit to the hair salon
– Ben Shapiro: The real reason Pelosi’s hair salon fiasco should concern Americans
Biden flubs military coronavirus death count, campaign says he accidentally cited Michigan number
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden mischaracterized the number of U.S. military deaths from the novel coronavirus during a campaign stop in Michigan on Wednesday, incorrectly saying more than 6,000 service members had died.
Shortly after the event in Warren, near Detroit, Biden’s campaign quickly clarified Biden had mixed up the numbers for Michigan with those for the military. As of Wednesday, only seven members of the military had died from COVID-19.
“Vice President Biden has the utmost respect for the men and women of the armed services and believes it’s the sacred duty of our country to properly equip them, look after their families when they’re deployed, and care for them when they return,” Biden’s Deputy Rapid Response Director Michael Gwin said in a statement to Fox News.
Biden has taken criticism before for confusing statistics when it comes to the coronavirus pandemic. In June, Biden incorrectly said 120 million people had died from the contagion in the U.S. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Sean Hannity shows how Biden, Democrats downplayed coronavirus while Trump took action
– Biden charges Trump ‘lied to the American people’ on coronavirus threat
– Charlie Kirk: Trump can attack Biden on coronavirus and win votes — here’s how
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Trump’s Supreme Court list: President reveals names of 20 more people he’d consider nominating
– Topless voter shocks New Hampshire poll workers in dispute over political clothing rule
– NYC protesters, leading lives of wealth and privilege, busted for rioting
– Susan Sarandon receives backlash after voicing support against Joe Biden vote
– Arkansas cop killer gets 2 life sentences — plus 835 years
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– TikTok, US discuss ways to avoid sale
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– Deutsche Bank U.S. unit pays $583,000 to settle Ukraine sanctions lapses
#TheFlashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Sean Hannity shared video with viewers on “Hannity” on Wednesday night, showing Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden downplaying the coronavirus one month after President Trump’s China travel ban and also more than a month after the first confirmed case of the virus struck the U.S.
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“President Donald Trump talked in private about the ‘deadly’ coronavirus last February, even as he was declaring to America it was no worse than the flu and insisting it was under control, according to a new book by journalist Bob Woodward… His public rhetoric, Trump told Woodward in March, was part of a strategy to deliberately minimize the danger. ‘I wanted to always play it down,’ the president said. ‘I still like playing it down because I don’t want to create a panic.’” AP News
From the Left
The left argues that Trump’s downplaying of the virus resulted in a significantly higher death toll.
“During a press conference on Feb. 27, for instance, Trump encouraged the public to ‘view this the same as the flu’ and to ‘treat this like you treat the flu.’ Less than three weeks earlier, he told Woodward the disease was ‘more deadly than even your strenuous flus.’… [On March 4] Trump said. ‘When you do have a death … all of a sudden it seems like 3 or 4 percent, which is a very high number, as opposed to a fraction of 1 percent.’ He continued: ‘Personally, I would say the number is way under 1 percent.’ Again, to Woodward less than one month earlier, he said ‘this is more deadly. This is 5 percent.’…
“Despite his apparent understanding of the severity of the disease and its method of transmission, over the next month, in five cities around the country, Mr. Trump held large indoor rallies… When the president dithered on testing and contact tracing, when he failed to make or execute a clear and effective plan for securing personal protective equipment, when he repeatedly belittled and dismissed mask mandates and other social distancing edicts, Mr. Trump knew the virus was deadly and airborne. He knew that millions of people could get sick, and many would die…
“Nearly 200,000 people in the United States have already died, and hundreds of thousands more have suffered grave illness — often followed by a slow, hard recovery and, in some cases, permanent disability. Tens of millions of people have lost their jobs, and millions are on the cusp of losing their homes. School systems and elder care networks are struggling to function. The economy is in tatters. Imagine what this picture could look like today if the president had been honest with the American public on Feb. 7, calmly taken charge of the nation’s response to the pandemic and did his best to protect them.” Editorial Board, New York Times
“Trump claimed in public that the virus would disappear ‘like a miracle.’ He also said that ‘you have 15 people [with the coronavirus], and the 15 within a couple of days is going to be down to close to zero.’…
“Experts say that Trump’s response to the virus — particularly the magical thinking that colored his public comments — fueled the outbreak in America. That fostered a sense of complacency among the public and other leaders, building resistance to necessary public health measures against Covid-19 like social distancing, testing, and masking… The result: The US is doing about seven times worse than the median developed country, ranking in the bottom 20 percent for Covid-19 deaths among wealthy nations. If America had the same death rate as Canada, 100,000 more Americans would likely be alive today.” German Lopez, Vox
“A cynic might suggest that Trump wanted to keep things calm because he was concerned that a plunging stock market would harm his chances for reelection. But let’s lay that aside for the moment and consider Trump’s explanation that he does not want to create panic. That might be news to the President Trump running for reelection. His YouTube video channel is filled with apocalyptic images of violence, economic despair and disaster… Trump says he didn’t want to spark panic. But he’s running on fear.” Glenn Kessler, Washington Post
Regarding Woodward, “Back in February, there were plenty of questions about just how deadly the coronavirus was, and how it could be transmitted. Was it really all that lethal? Could you catch it through the air? Some experts said it probably wasn’t airborne. Few seemed to have definitive answers. But the nation’s most famous celebrity journalist knew — and knew the president did too — but decided not to tell anyone…
“Let’s be clear: Stories take time to authenticate and fact check. But Woodward didn’t hold the story for months in order to fact check it. He wasn’t using the time to report it out… history should never forget that America’s most famous journalist had a rare chance to sound an alarm about the pandemic the country was facing and instead chose to stay silent so he could preserve his access to the White House and sell a few more books to a nation locked down in quarantine.” Andrew Perez and David Sirota, Jacobin Magazine
From the Right
The right is divided about Trump’s comments but generally does not believe that he is responsible for the death toll.
“Any government tends to default to assurances, whether they are warranted or not. Trump’s repeated statements at the outset of the pandemic that ‘we have it under control’ are fairly typical of any leader confronting a situation he or she might not be able to control. His concern about not creating a panic is also reasonable and common enough. His lapse is failing to say consistently from the very beginning, ‘This could be bad, and we should prepare for the worst.’…
“While Trump hewed to his rosy scenario, his administration undertook a concerted effort to solve problems related to the response. It acquired ventilators, stocked the PPE and testing supply chain, and worked closely with states. This story has gone mostly untold, in large part because the president hasn’t related it in detail and his posture has always been that the end of the pandemic is right around the corner.” Rich Lowry, Politico
Some argue that “The idea that he downplayed the severity of the virus in public to avert panic is silly given the time frame. On the day he said that, March 19, New York City was already locking down. San Francisco has been under a stay-at-home order for weeks. Public panic was a fact of life. What Trump was worried about was a panic on the stock market specifically, and the reason that worried him is because he was planning to run this fall on the big beautiful gains in the Dow since he took office… He wasn’t worried about public anxiety over the virus. He was worried about investor anxiety over their portfolios and what it would mean for his election chances.” Allahpundit, Hot Air
“A president who admits that he knew from the beginning how bad this was going to be, but did not level with the American people about the seriousness of the Covid threat. That is damned hard to forgive… [but] I think that even if Trump had been at the top of his game on Covid, it would not have made a significant difference. Major European countries have been much more conventionally governed on their Covid responses, and they’re pretty much on par with us (except Germany, which has been quite good). Even at this late date, we are seeing bars and gatherings of people jammed together, when everybody knows better…
“This isn’t going to hurt Trump much. Way, way too much else going on now. As I’m trying to figure out my vote, I’ve already factored in Trump’s poor early Covid response. I think most people have, on both sides of the issue.” Rod Dreher, The American Conservative
Others argue that “Hindsight is 20/20 and, of course, you can say Trump ‘should have’ declared this or that a few days or weeks earlier. Of course, policymakers don’t have that luxury to look into the future and see what the situation is going to be. Arguments about when something should have been done are useless. It presupposes that another president — perhaps from another party? — would have acted more quickly…
“There was so much disinformation being thrown around by the media in the early days of the pandemic, it’s no wonder people were confused. Remember the ‘ventilator crisis’? And that was Trump’s fault too — even though New York had so many ventilators that they actually sent some to New Jersey a couple of weeks after Governor Cuomo blamed Trump for wanting to kill people. Remember the ‘2 million’ dead Americans? The advice from the surgeon general to stop buying masks?… The WHO was claiming until April that you could catch the coronavirus from any surface. It didn’t take long to debunk that.” Rick Moran, PJ Media
“Normally ‘avoiding a public panic’ would be a reason for praise… Remember that this statement was made around the time that Trump halted flights from China, and Europe shortly thereafter. And what did the media and Democrats say? Xenophobia! Racism! Unnecessary! Keep in mind that as late as March 15 NYC’s Communist Mayor Bill de Blasio was still telling people to attend the St. Patrick’s Day Parade, and San Francisco Democrats were telling people that it’s no problem to attend Chinese New Year. Ask yourself: if Trump had sounded a larger alarm than he did (with the CDC having blown the test regime), just imagine what Democrats and their media toadies would have said. They’d accuse Trump of whipping up panic for political reasons.” Steven Hayward, Power Line Blog
💻 Happy Thursday!You’re invited … Tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. ET, on the 19th anniversary of 9/11, Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian and Dave Lawler will host an Axios Virtual Event on U.S. foreign policy in the post-pandemic world, featuring Ambassador Bill Burns, president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.Register here.
Today’s Smart Brevity™count:1,473 words … 5½ minutes.
1 big thing: Why Trump talked to Woodward
Bob Woodward talks to Scott Pelley on “60 Minutes.” Photo: CBS News
President Trump, who rails about anonymous sources, is suddenly confronted with an extensive, unsparing, on-the-record account of his thinking about America’s virus and race crises — and he’s the source.
Instead of “Rage,” Bob Woodward could have called his book: “Undeniable.”
Why it matters: We get a torrent of tweeted and spoken words from Trump — far more public musing, riffing and ranting than from any president, ever. But it’s not always clear what to believe, what matters, or what will endure.
Now, we can read and hear Trump free-associating for history.
Woodward tapped Trump’s vanity and insecurity to secure an astonishing 18 interviews, totaling nine hours, with the most powerful man in the world.
Woodward was allowed to record all the on-the-record sessions. Audio snippets were released yesterday along with extensive excerpts from the book, out Tuesday.
We know Trump likes to talk to famous people — he complained publicly after he wasn’t interviewed for Woodward’s brutal 2018 Trump book, “Fear.”
And we know Woodward is seductive. “Every president does a Bob Woodward book … and then later comes to regret it,” Karl Rove told Fox News.
So now we have the president — as he fights for reelection 54 days before Election Day — admitting that he deliberately “played down” the coronavirus, at a time when more urgency could have saved lives … blithely rejecting Woodward’s suggestion that white privilege is isolating, and that “we have to work our way out of it to understand the anger and the pain … black people feel” (“You really drank the Kool-Aid … I don’t feel that at all”) … and once again using a “p”-word variant, this time to refer to generals instead of genitals.
Woodward knows the power of tapes, and of the word “cover-up.” On the forthcoming “60 Minutes,” Scott Pelley asks Woodward about Trump telling him in February that the virus was “more deadly than … even your strenuous flus,” while saying publicly three weeks later that “it’s a little like the regular flu.”
“Yes, this is the tragedy,” Woodward says. “A president of the United States has a duty to warn. The public will understand that. But if they get the feeling that they’re not getting the truth, then you’re going down the path of deceit and cover-up.” (Vide0)
At 9:30 last night, Trump did a phoner with Fox News’ Sean Hannity, who came on the air with a “PANIC POLITICS” graphic and said Trump’s China travel ban was part of “serious, severe, quick actions by the president — he took it seriously.”
Trump said of Woodward:
He called. I didn’t participate in his last one — and he does hit jobs with everybody. He even did it on Obama … constant hit jobs. On Bush, I guess they did three books — they were all terrible.
So I figured: You know, let’s just give it a little shot — I’ll speak to him. It wasn’t a big deal. I speak to him, and let’s see.
I don’t know if the book is good or bad — I have no idea. [I] probably, almost definitely, won’t read it because I don’t have time to read it.
Women’s groups are spending millions in battleground states to ward off gender-based smears against Kamala Harris, as misinformation campaigns and misogynistic memes proliferate, Alexi McCammond reports.
Why it matters: They worry that sexist branding of Joe Biden’s running mate could depress turnout by Black and Latina women who don’t consistently vote, but would likely support the Biden-Harris ticket if they did cast a ballot.
The attacks on Harris go well beyond standard fare of criticizing her as “phony” or even as “radical,” veering into misinformation and crude language.
Harris, who is married and a stepmother, is a graduate of Howard University and the University of California-Hastings law school. She’s a former prosecutor, district attorney of San Francisco and California’s attorney general before her election to the U.S. Senate.
An offensive meme circulated so widely that one photographer contracted by the NBA casually shared one on Facebook — and lost his job for it, Yahoo Sports reported. He later said he deeply regretted the move and that it didn’t reflect his own views.
Amazon was selling T-shirts with the same phrase (they later removed them from their marketplace after facing backlash).
PACRONYM, Black PAC, WOMEN VOTE! and Planned Parenthood Votes have launched a $10 million ad campaign to support Harris and are conducting weekly polling to monitor how disinformation is sticking.
The coalition is targeting 5 million voters in swing states, with an emphasis on women of color under 40 who live in urban and rural areas and typically consume little political news.
New coronavirus cases fell by almost 13% over the past week — a significant improvement, Sam Baker and Andrew Witherspoon report.
Why it matters: Things are moving in the right direction again after a brief plateau. Getting the virus under control now will give the U.S. a much better shot at a safe autumn.
The U.S. is now averaging about 37,000 new cases every day. That’s a lot, and we’re not even halfway back to the lower totals we were recording before cases surged this summer.
But the U.S. has been recording steady progress since August.
4. Western inferno: Scientists see worse in future
A record amount of California is burning, spurred by a nearly 20-year mega-drought. To the north, parts of Oregon and Washington state that don’t usually catch fire are in flames, AP science writer Seth Borenstein reports.
Death Valley hit 130 degrees in mid-August, the hottest Earth has been in nearly a century.
Freak natural disasters — most with what scientists say likely have a climate change connection — seem to be everywhere in the crazy year 2020. But experts believe we’ll probably look back and say those were the good old days.
Waleed Abdalati, NASA’s former chief scientist, said the trajectory of worsening disasters — and climate change from coal, oil and gas — is clear, and basic physics.
5. “A devastating milestone”
TIME editor-in-chief and CEO Edward Felsenthal: “For this week’s U.S. cover, we turned to artist John Mavroudis, who — using data from the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center — hand-wrote the death counts in America on every one of the 193 days between Feb. 29, the first confirmation of a COVID-related death in the U.S., and Sept. 8, as it neared time to go to press.”
“Out of that data, the illustration reveals the coming grim milestone of 200,000.” (Latest U.S. death count: 190,872.)
“Creative director D.W. Pine then placed the illustration within a black border — only the second time in our history we have done so, the first being after 9/11.”
6. 📦 Amazon hiring spree: 33,000 slots
Amazon announced it will hire 33,000 new corporate and technology workers at an average compensation of $150,000, including salary and stock.
Catherine Fisher, a career expert at LinkedIn, told ABC News that hiring is strong in “industries that are helping the U.S. navigate this new normal” — transportation and logistics, health care, retail, software, I.T., “jobs that are helping us figure out how to work from home, school from home.”
7. 🎧 What we’re listening to: 2 new pods
Kara Swisher’s “Sway,” a twice-weekly interview podcast from N.Y. Times Opinion, debuts Monday, Sept. 21, promising “smart, substantive, in-depth, and revealing conversations with fascinating people, exposing the nitty-gritty of how power and influence really work in America and around the world.”
8. 🏈 NFL kicks off tonight, with social-justice focus
NFL end zones will be inscribed this season with two slogans — “It Takes All Of Us” on one side, “End Racism” on the other, AP’s Rob Maaddi reports.
The 101st season kicks off tonight at 8:20 p.m. ET as the Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs host the Houston Texans. NBC coverage begins 7 p.m.
As part of its social-justice awareness initiatives, the NFL also will allow similar visuals on helmets and caps. Players will be permitted to wear decals on the back of helmets, or patches on team caps, displaying names or phrases to honor victims of racism and police brutality.
🗞️ In a WashPost op-ed, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and Allen Sills, a neurosurgeon who is the league’s chief medical officer, write:
[O]nly one masked player representative from each team will participate in the coin toss; cheerleaders, mascots, sideline reporters and nonessential personnel will not be allowed on the field; … coaches will be required to wear face masks on the sideline; and players will be urged — required, in some cities — to do the same.
Democrats, led by presidential nominee Joe Biden, denounced President Trump’s actions as revelations from Bob Woodward’s book fueled a sense of outrage.
By Josh Dawsey, Felicia Sonmez and Paul Kane ● Read more »
Critics say the scoop was too important to hold for his new book, but Woodward said he believes his highest purpose isn’t to write daily stories but to give his readers the big picture — one that may have a greater effect.
The trial is on hold as an independent committee investigates whether a case of spinal inflammation in a single British participant is linked to the vaccine. The decision shows that scientists, not politicians, are running the process, experts said.
Despite cries for athletes to “stick to sports,” particularly from conservative pundits and politicians, a 62 percent majority of Americans say that professional athletes should use their platforms to express their views on national issues.
The posture of President Trump and his allies contrasts with a widespread sense around the NFL that Trump’s efforts to drag pro football into another debate in the culture wars could backfire.
The school’s superintendent said he wouldn’t remove any VMI statues or rename any campus buildings and praised Jackson as “a military genius” and a “staunch Christian.”
Retropolis | The Past, Rediscovered ● By Ian Shapira ● Read more »
The board met privately with the postmaster general, who has drawn criticism for his aggressive cost-cutting agenda, which nonpartisan experts and rank-and-file postal workers say caused days-long mail backlogs in communities across the country.
Vice President Mike Pence had a simple message for supporters when he stopped at a campaign office in Murrysville, Pennsylvania. “The road to victory goes straight through Pennsylvania,” he said.
President Trump is racing to fulfill his campaign promise to end “endless wars,” with the announcement of new troop drawdowns in Iraq and Afghanistan, telling a war-weary country that Democratic challenger Joe Biden is a liberal hawk like Hillary Clinton.
Senate Republicans’ failure to coalesce behind a $500 billion coronavirus relief package would jeopardize the party’s three-seat majority in fall elections even as the fate of the legislation appears unlikely to harm President Trump’s bid for a second term.
As pharmaceutical companies race to bring a coronavirus vaccine to market, some epidemiologists think the efficacy of the vaccine should be higher than the 50% standard set by the Food and Drug Administration.
A newly disclosed email adds another wrinkle to the debate over whether Robert Mueller interviewed for the FBI director job after James Comey was fired before becoming special counsel, which President Trump claims he did, but Mueller denied under oath.
WARREN, Michigan — A group of supporters of President Trump clashed with a handful of Joe Biden supporters while attempting to contradict the Democratic presidential nominee’s speech about his plan to encourage buying American in a scene that was the personification of nasty political battles that take place online.
Representatives of the United Arab Emirates and Israel will attend a White House ceremony Tuesday where they will sign a historic treaty normalizing relations, officials said.
Former FBI agent Peter Strzok admitted that he got a key element about the genesis of the Trump-Russia investigation wrong following a question from the Washington Examiner despite the fired bureau agent’s central role in opening Crossfire Hurricane.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious disease expert, said AstraZeneca’s decision to pause clinical trials for a coronavirus vaccine Tuesday should boost public confidence that vaccine makers are putting safety first.
Afghanistan’s First Vice President Amrullah Saleh suffered minor burns from the Wednesday attack, and several of his bodyguards were wounded by the blast. In addition to the 10 dead civilians, at least 31 other people were injured, according to the Associated Press. Saleh’s spokesman, Razwan Murad, labeled the explosion a “vicious terrorist attempt.”
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
‘This is deadly stuff’: Trump’s own words intensify focus on virus.
Exclusive: Scarcity of key material squeezes N95 mask makers.
India has record spike of 95,000 new coronavirus cases.
US wildfires take deadly turn in California, Pacific Northwest.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI
Trump’s own words resharpen focus on virus; Analysis: In Trump’s America, truths are not self-evident
Despite his own efforts to change the national narrative away from a pandemic that has claimed more than 190,000 American lives and infected more than 6 million, most recently hammering a ”law and order” mantra, President Donald Trump can’t seem to escape the coronavirus.
“I wanted to always play it down,” Trump said of the threat from the virus. That was in a private conversation with journalist Bob Woodward in March that became public with the publication of excerpts from Woodward’s upcoming book “Rage.”
In taped conversations released along with the excerpts, Trump insisted he didn’t want to create “panic.” In a taped Feb. 7 call with Woodward, Trump said of the virus, “You just breathe the air and that’s how it’s passed … This is deadly stuff.”
Democratic nominee Joe Biden pounced on the Woodward revelations, declaring that Trump “lied to the American people. He knowingly and willingly lied about the threat it posed to the country for months.
“While a deadly disease ripped through our nation, he failed to do his job — on purpose. It was a life or death betrayal of the American people,” Biden said.
What else is in the book? It also includes some arresting new details about the president’s comments on North Korea’s Kim Jong Un, racial unrest and a mysterious new weapon that Trump says other world powers don’t know about. On North Korea, Trump told Woodward that Kim tells him everything and even shared a graphic account of having his own uncle killed.
Politics As Unusual Analysis: Americans are confronting a lot of thorny questions they’re not used to asking. Can they count on an election every fourth November? Might the armed forces get involved? Will the approval of a vaccine for the coronavirus be guided by science and public health — or by the fact that President Donald Trump wants one out before the election?
As Trump repeatedly warns of a “rigged” election coming up, is America still an example to the world in managing a peaceful transfer of power? Will he even leave the White House if defeated?
Such concerns have long been foreign to the American experience, but Trump has forced people to consider them, writes Calvin Woodward in a striking piece of our times worthy of your time.
GERARDO VILLALOBOS/OUTDOOR RESEARCH VIA AP
Scarcity of key material squeezes medical mask manufacturing; India has record spike of 95,000 new cases
White House officials say U.S. hospitals have all the medical supplies needed to battle the deadly virus, but frontline health care workers, hospital officials and even the Food and Drug Administration say shortages persist.
Pressure on the medical supply chain continues today, and in “many ways things have only gotten worse,” the American Medical Association’s president said recently. Martha Mendoza, Juliet Linderman, Thomas Peipert and Irena Hwang have this exclusive report.
Vaccine: The suspension of a huge COVID-19 vaccine study over an illness in a single participant shows there will be “no compromises” on safety in the race to develop the shot, the chief of the National Institutes of Health told Congress. AstraZeneca has put on hold studies of its vaccine candidate in the U.S. and other countries while it investigates whether a British volunteer’s illness is a side effect or a coincidence. Lauran Neergaard reports.
India Spike: The country reported another record spike of 95,735 new coronavirus infections in the past 24 hours as the virus spreads beyond its major cities. It has confirmed more than 4.4 million cases, and the 1,172 deaths reported in the past 24 hours pushed its death toll past 75,000. It has the second-highest caseload in the world behind the United States, where more than 6.3 million people are known to be infected.
Greece Migrant Camp Blaze: A second fire in the island of Lesbos’ notoriously overcrowded Moria refugee camp has destroyed nearly everything that had been spared in the original blaze, leaving thousands more people in need of emergency housing. Early morning today saw former residents of the country’s largest camp, which had been under coronavirus lockdown, return to the area to pick through the charred remains of their belongings, salvaging what they could.
Israel Political Pandemic: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has long cultivated a symbiotic relationship with the country’s ultra-Orthodox parties, doling out generous subsidies and leaving their insular way of life unperturbed in exchange for ironclad backing that has helped crown him Israel’s longest-serving leader.
Now, with the pandemic raging and the Jewish High Holy days approaching, Netanyahu finds himself caught between his ultra-Orthodox partners and the need to drive down surging infection rates. This balancing act that could plunge the entire country into a new lockdown ahead of the holidays, Tia Goldenberg reports.
At one of the largest hospitals in Nepal, a pharmacist and a taxi driver have teamed up to feed COVID-19 patients, doctors, nurses and health workers — the latest in the One Good Thing series.
AP PHOTO/NOAH BERGER
California fire kills 3, threatens 1000s of homes; Unprecedented fires rage in usually cool, wet Northwest
Deadly wildfires are engulfing three U.S. states simultaneously, threatening further loss of life and home and wreaking catastrophic damage.
California, Oregon and Washington state are all battling explosive and widespread blazes.
Several other people have been critically burned and hundreds, if not thousands, of homes and other buildings are believed to have been damaged or destroyed by the North Complex fire northeast of San Francisco, report Terence Chea and Brian Melley.
Wildfires Rapid Spread: Fire experts say California is seeing more extreme fire behavior driven by drought and warming temperatures that can spread flames far more rapidly, leaving less time for warnings or evacuations. Explosive fires that quickly consume tens of thousands of acres were rare 30 years ago, Don Thompson reports.
Pacific Northwest Wildfires: Numerous wildfires burned in Oregon’s forested valleys and along the coast, destroying hundreds of homes and causing mass evacuations. Farther north, flames devoured buildings and huge tracts of land in Washington state. Several deaths were reported, including a 1-year-old boy in Washington state. Officials said the number of simultaneous fires and perhaps the damage caused was unprecedented.
Oregon Gov. Kate Brown said communities have been “substantially destroyed” and warned there could be numerous fatalities.
Because of its cool, wet climate, the Pacific Northwest rarely experiences such intense fire activity. But experts say climate change driven by human-caused greenhouse gases is expected to keep warming the region, Andrew Selsky and Gillian Flaccus report.
AP FACT CHECK
Biden on autos, virus; Trump on drug prices
President Donald Trump exaggerated his administration’s efforts to lower prescription drug prices while Democratic rival Joe Biden claimed too much credit for reviving the U.S. auto industry and misstated the number of military deaths from COVID-19.
An official at the Department of Homeland Security says he was pressured by agency leaders to make his intelligence reports reflect the priorities of the Trump administration. Brian Murphy also says in a whistleblower complaint that he was demoted from his position at the Office of Intelligence and Analysis in retaliation for refusing to alter his reports on such matters as Russian interference in the election and the extent of the threat posed by white supremacists.
The pandemic has reshaped how the U.S. is observing the anniversary of 9/11. The terror attacks’ 19th anniversary will be marked Friday by dueling ceremonies at the Sept. 11 memorial plaza and a corner nearby in New York. Mike Pence is expected at both remembrances. Donald Trump and Joe Biden plan to attend a truncated ceremony at the Flight 93 National Memorial in Pennsylvania.
Chinese and Russian forces will take part in joint military exercises in southern Russia later this month along with troops from Armenia, Belarus, Iran, Myanmar, Pakistan and others. The exercises running Sept. 21-26 will focus on defensive tactics, encirclement and battlefield control and command. Beijing says the exercises will have special meaning for China-Russia ties while the world is fighting the pandemic.
Kansas City Chiefs fans who file into Arrowhead stadium for a masked and socially distanced start to the NFL season won’t be wearing headdresses or face paint amid a nationwide push for racial justice following the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. The move by the reigning Super Bowl champions has pleased Native Americans as a good first step. But it frustrated some of the 17,000 fans who will be in the stands today.
We’ll leave you with this …
North-South Korean couples try to bridge 75-year division
READ MORE ON AP NEWS
THANKS FOR READING Thanks for reading today’s edition of AP Morning Wire. We’ll see you tomorrow.
Good morning, Chicago. On Wednesday, Illinois health officials reported 1,337 new known cases of COVID-19 and 30 additional deaths, as the positivity rate in Chicago ticked up to 5.1%.
If you’re already gearing up for next month’s spooky holiday, you may need to start brainstorming some trick-or-treat alternatives. Mayor Lori Lightfoot said that Halloween will look different this year as the city works on plans to celebrate and follow public health guidelines.
And although the school year has just begun, some Illinois universities are seeing an early glimpse of the coronavirus pandemic’s effect on enrollment: numbers of incoming freshman and international students shrank.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
Under plans shared Wednesday with the Chicago Tribune, the Department of Water Management envisions a long and costly effort to protect Chicagoans from a widespread public health threat that remained largely hidden for decades.
Earlier this week, someone opened fire on the car Dajore Wilson’s father, D’Andre Wilson, was driving at Union’s intersection with 47th Street. Dajore, her father and a friend were shot. Her mother was injured by broken glass. Only Dajore died.
Now, Dajore’s family is grieving, her father from his hospital bed, as are neighbors who tried to help in the minutes before police and paramedics arrived.
Local and federal officials wrangled Wednesday over who should get credit for a recent dip in Chicago violence, even though 63 people were slain in the city in August and shootings continue at a pace far above last year. Attorney General William Barr said during a visit to Chicago that the federal Operation Legend program has led directly to a significant drop in shootings in the violence-torn city over the past five weeks.
It’s been only nine months since the world learned of a new coronavirus that would trigger a pandemic declaration in March and ultimately disrupt billions of lives.
That’s little more than a blink of the eye when it comes to understanding a novel disease, and the advice from scientists and doctors is still evolving as they accumulate experience with COVID-19.
You don’t have to be an Oscar Mayer wiener to have everyone be in love with you (contrary to the popular 1960s jingle). But with proposal season almost upon us, you can request an appearance by the Oscar Mayer Wienermobile to make your engagement more memorable.
In less than two weeks, an additional 350,000 Illinois residents have requested mail-in ballots, pushing the total number to 1.45 million. That means one in four COVID-19 wary Illinois voters could be choosing the mailbox over the ballot box in the November election.
It could also mean a long election night — or more accurately days and nights — as the state tallies the ballots cast by Nov. 3, a process that can stretch for two weeks, or until Nov. 17. Rachel Hinton has the story…
Sincere Williams, 18, was ordered held without bail for allegedly stabbing Olga Maria Calderon, 32. Williams’ assistant public defender says he suffers from schizophrenia.
So far there are 111 students registered for the program, with children who are 14 or younger, homeless or facing other economic hardship receiving first priority, officials said.
If Trump really did acknowledge the deadly nature of the coronavirus in conversations with author Bob Woodward, and if he told Woodward he deliberately played it down, Lightfoot said the heralded reporter of Watergate fame should explain why he sat on the information for months.
A day before the special committee’s first meeting, Republicans said they will seek answers to the “legitimate, good-faith questions being asked” by their peers and the public.
“Obviously, it is a very different time. And I don’t expect to see mass crowds trick-or-treating like we have in years past. It’s not safe for the children. It’s not safe for the adults,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot said.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It’s Thursday! 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. Wednesday, 189,680. Thursday, 190,872.
Bob Woodward’s new book, “Rage,” presents an evidence-based conclusion about President Trump that is already familiar from public and reported statements from former Cabinet officials, advisers and ex-aides: Trump is “unfit” for office.
The question is whether early comments by the 45th president about the lethality of the coronavirus confided to a bestselling investigative journalist — with Trump’s on-the-record asides to “Bob” — might sour undecided voters on a second term and nudge them to cast ballots for Democratic nominee Joe Biden.
“I wanted to always play it down. I still like playing it down, because I don’t want to create a panic,” Trump told The Washington Post associate editor and author on March 19 while discussing the coronavirus during one of 18 conversations they shared for the book. CNN published several audio clips of conversations quoted in “Rage,” which will hit bookstores next week.
Biden on Wednesday accused Trump of lying to the American people about a contagion that has killed more than 190,000 people in the United States. And Woodward found himself defending his decision not to reveal Trump’s information months ago. Trump, during remarks Wednesday afternoon, called the book “just another political hit job” but defended the disparity between his public reassurances and private alarm in February and March, which he explains as a desire not to show “panic” about COVID-19.
As The Washington Post reports, Trump’s “surprising level of detail about the threat of the virus” emerged in conversations with Woodward on Feb. 7, earlier than previously understood and in stark contrast to the president’s public assurances that the nation would be “fine” and the coronavirus would “disappear.”
“This is deadly stuff,” Trump told Woodward just weeks after a mystery virus in China began to emerge in international headlines and public health experts privately predicted it would become a serious pandemic. “It goes through air. … You just breathe the air and that’s how it’s passed,” he told Woodward.
Trump admitted he knew weeks before the first confirmed U.S. coronavirus fatality that the virus was dangerous, airborne, highly contagious and “more deadly than even your strenuous flus.”
Biden, campaigning in Warren, Mich., on Wednesday, said the recorded evidence showed that Trump “knew how dangerous” the virus was and that “while this deadly disease ripped through our nation, he failed to do his job on purpose. It was a life-and-death betrayal of the American people.”
“It’s beyond despicable,” Biden continued, describing the price of Trump’s governance in terms of lives lost and economic ruin. “It’s a dereliction of duty. It’s a disgrace.”
CNN: During an interview with Jake Tapper in Michigan, Biden said Trump’s public concealment in February of coronavirus risks as he knew them at the time was “almost criminal.”
CNN: New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy (D) said he would have taken aggressive action sooner if Trump had been truthful about the coronavirus in the early days of the pandemic. Murphy signed a lockdown order for New Jersey residents on March 21.
Democratic lawmakers joined Biden in condemning Trump. Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), for example, referred to her father, who died of COVID-19. “Trump had the power to save lives and went out of his way not to,” she tweeted.
West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, a Democrat in a deeply Trump-friendly state, told MSNBC, “I don’t know how you can survive an election, when you’re basically asking the people to give you another four years of anything, when you’re taking an oath and pledge to protect and defend the Constitution but also each and every citizen of this country. And you wouldn’t take something, and we know you wouldn’t take something as that, as serious as it is?”
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany defended the president, saying he “has never lied to the American public on COVID.”
A question in the nation’s capital was why? Why did the president give Woodward such access following the release of his first critical book on Trump titled, “Fear”?
The Washington Post reports that for weeks, the president told advisers that Woodward’s book was likely to be negative, but the White House had done little to prepare for it.
Trump told Fox News’s Sean Hannity during a Wednesday night phone interview, “I don’t know if this book is good or bad. I have no idea, probably almost definitely won’t read it because I don’t have time to read it, but I gave it a little bit of a shot. Sounds like it’s not gonna be good, but if you look at what I said today, I said, ‘Don’t panic.’ We don’t want to be jumping up and down and going well — don’t panic.”
The Associated Press: Trump boasted that Kim Jong Un shared details about killing his uncle. Trump also revealed to Woodward the existence of a secret, new U.S. weapons system, according to reporting in “Rage.”
The Associated Press: Woodward defended his decision not to report Trump’s comments before the release of his September book, saying he needed time to be sure that Trump’s private comments from February were accurate. Woodward will appear Sunday night on CBS’s “60 Minutes,” guaranteeing continued coverage of the book’s contents going into the weekend.
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LEADING THE DAY
2020 CAMPAIGNS & POLITICS: The president on Wednesday reprised a move from his 2016 campaign and released a list of 20 additional potential nominees to the Supreme Court, which included three U.S. senators, a White House lawyer-turned-judge and his former solicitor general.
Trump announced the list from the White House on Wednesday afternoon. It was headlined by Sens. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) and Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and former Solicitor General Noel Francisco.
Also included was Gregory Katsas, a former deputy White House counsel who was tapped to serve on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in September 2017, and Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, a top ally of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.).
As The Hill’s Morgan Chalfant and John Kruzel write, the announcement represents a renewed push to boost support among conservatives 54 days out from the November election, as polls show Trump trailing Biden nationally and in key swing states. In the announcement, Trump warned that the First and Second Amendments could be at risk if Democrats win the election, saying that they would appoint “radical” justices to the high court.
“Over the next four years, America’s president will choose hundreds of federal judges and in all likelihood, one, two, three and even four Supreme Court justices,” Trump said from the Diplomatic Reception Room.
Earlier in the day, the Trump campaign and the Republican National Committee revealed that they raised $210 million in August — $154 million less than the Biden campaign posted. Neither campaign has released cash-on-hand figures (The Hill).
CBS News: Trump unveils list of possible Supreme Court nominees if he wins reelection.
NBC News poll: Biden leads Trump by 9 points in Pennsylvania.
The Hill: Biden leads Trump by 4 points in Wisconsin: poll.
CNBC: Pro-Trump super PAC America First Action kicks off $22 million ad blitz in swing states.
> Obama impact: The Biden campaign is considering the best ways to deploy its strongest surrogate, former President Obama, in the final weeks of the campaign.
As The Hill’s Amie Parnes reports, Biden allies say the ongoing coronavirus pandemic has limited the possibilities for Obama, who is known for his soaring rhetoric at political rallies. Obama has hosted virtual fundraisers and has appeared in a couple of videos for Biden, including one released on Tuesday alongside Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.).
“There’s not a lot he can do at this point,” said one Biden ally close to the campaign. “It’s not like he can do an economic roundtable because this isn’t his campaign.”
Outside of Tuesday’s video, Obama’s last major appearance for Biden was three weeks ago when he delivered a prime time speech during the Democratic National Convention.
As for Harris, she returns to the campaign trail later today with an appearance in Miami, Fla., that is focused on outreach to African Americans and Jewish voters. The stop is her first in the Sunshine State since being named to the Democratic ticket.
The Hill: Democrats fear Biden’s lagging Latino support could cost him.
The Miami Herald: Biden is struggling to win Miami Latinos, new poll finds. Will it cost him Florida?
The Washington Post: Biden and Trump battle in the Rust Belt, each glossing over his own record.
Elsewhere, The Hill’s Reid Wilson interviewed some of those who cast the first votes of the 2020 elections. The main takeaway? They are not fans of Trump.
NBC News: Trump spurns traditional debate prep with first faceoff less than three weeks away.
The Hill: Trump campaign to press ahead with Nevada events after venues pull out.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CONGRESS – CORONAVIRUS: The Senate is expected to vote on a slimmed-down coronavirus relief package — a bill that has no chance to become law — as negotiators remain at a stalemate on a larger aid bill.
Senate Republicans appear to be largely unifying behind the roughly $500 billion package, as a number of GOP senators announced their support for the scaled-back bill on Wednesday. As The Hill’s Jordain Carney notes, Senate GOP leaders want at least 51 of their 53 members to vote for the coronavirus bill — a symbolic victory that would allow them to project unity, which has eluded the conference throughout negotiations on the current bill.
“I’m optimistic we’ll have a good vote on our side,” McConnell told reporters after a closed-door lunch. He declined to say if he has 51 votes in support of the bill; it takes 60 senators to cut off debate and move a measure to a final vote.
The GOP leader also accused Democrats of derailing negotiations on another package as it would benefit them politically to wait to strike an accord until after the Nov. 3 election.
The Hill: Pessimism grows as hopes fade for coronavirus deal.
The Hill: 2024 GOP presidential rivalries emerge on virus package.
As Alexander Bolton writes, McConnell asserted that Democrats have little interest in a deal after Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) said this week that the new GOP proposal is “headed nowhere.”
“The conclusion you can honestly draw from this is they don’t want to do a deal. They don’t want to do a deal before the election because they think that somehow that adversely affects their prospects in the election,” McConnell told reporters.
The GOP legislation is expected to provide $105 billion for education, $16 billion for more virus testing and $190 billion for a second round of Paycheck Protection Program loans. It will also contain language protecting businesses, schools, nonprofit organizations and churches from coronavirus-related litigation except in cases of gross negligence or willful misconduct — an issue McConnell has described as his “red line” in talks.
The Hill: McConnell backs stopgap bill to fund government into December.
> Cure around the corner? Halted vaccine trials help explain how unlikely a vaccine may be this year and how important safety and “no compromises” are during vaccine development, National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins told senators on Wednesday (The Associated Press). … AstraZeneca should know before the end of 2020 whether its experimental vaccine works against the coronavirus, if its human trial phase can restart (Reuters).
> State watch and COVID-19: In New York, indoor dining will be allowed at 25 percent capacity beginning on Sept. 30, Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) announced on Wednesday. The Empire State’s infection rate has been below 1 percent for several weeks, allowing the easing of some restrictions. “Because compliance is better, we can now take the next step,” the governor said (The New York Times). … Los Angeles County, the most populous county in the United States, plans to ban door-to-door trick-or-treating next month because of the risks of exposure to COVID-19. Gatherings and parties with non-household members are not permitted, even if held outdoors. Carnivals and festivals are also banned (KCAL 9). … In some Iowa school districts, administrators are trying to skirt quarantine rules for students in order to sustain in-person instruction. The result places young people at higher risk of contracting the virus, according to public health experts. The method? Musical chairs every 14 minutes (Iowa Starting Line).
OPINION
Trump’s PR can’t stop the virus, by Jonathan D. Moreno and Stephen N. Xenakis, opinion contributors, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2R7zh5A
Trump is nominated for the Nobel Prize for actually doing something, by David Marcus, The Federalist. https://bit.ly/3m9Y5rM
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WHERE AND WHEN
The House will convene on Friday at 1 p.m. for a pro forma session. The full House will return on Monday. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) will hold a press briefing at 10:45 a.m. The House Oversight and Reform Committee will hold a hearing at 11 a.m. on the ongoing census count and time required for “a complete and accurate census.”
The Senate convenes at 10 a.m.
The president meets at the White House at 3:30 p.m. with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. Trump will hold a campaign rally in Freeland, Mich., at 7 p.m.
Vice President Pence will deliver remarks to cadets at the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington. He will return to Washington this evening.
Economic indicator: The Labor Department will report at 8:30 a.m. filings for unemployment insurance during the week ending Sept. 5. The government last week reported U.S. unemployment in August at 8.4 percent.
👉 INVITATION: The Hill Virtually Live hosts The Future of Education 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.
➔ Administration: Attorney General William Barr on Wednesday defended the Justice Department’s involvement in a lawsuit against Trump brought by writer E. Jean Carroll, who has accused Trump of sexually assaulting her in the mid-1990s. During an “NBC Nightly News” interview, Barr said, “This is done frequently. It’s been done for presidents. It’s been done for congressmen. The normal process was followed in this particular case.” … In a whistleblower complaint, a Homeland Security intelligence official told lawmakers on Wednesday his department has been pressured to alter intelligence information to comport with Trump’s political aims and support for Russia and that a former department secretary lied to Congress (The Associated Press). … Gen. Frank McKenzie, commander of U.S. Central Command, said Wednesday that the United States plans to cut the troop presence in Iraq from 5,200 to 3,000 by the end of this month. Speaking to a handful of reporters later, McKenzie provided additional details about the planned withdrawal from Afghanistan, noting that the U.S. military presence would decrease from 8,600 to 4,500 by late October (Politico). The Hill’s Naomi Jagoda reports on Trump’s decision to defer payroll tax payments by members of the military and federal employees. The mandatory order means they will have to repay the taxes next year (Government Executive). … Trump on Wednesday was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by a Norwegian member of parliament based on a deal reached between the United Arab Emirates and Israel (Fox News). That deal between the UAE and Israel is to be signed at the White House next week (The Hill).
➔ The Hill profile: Meet Alexis McGill Johnson, the new president of Planned Parenthood. “She is going to be transformative for where we are at this moment when it comes to reproductive and sexual wellbeing,” said Joia Crear-Perry, founder and president of the National Birth Equity Collaborative, who first met McGill Johnson as a student at Princeton. “She has a vantage point around understanding the complexities of people’s lives, as a black woman, with her own experiences, but also her part of larger movements” (The Hill).
➔ Wildfires: Wildfires raged out of control throughout California and the Pacific Northwest on Wednesday night, killing at least six people in Oregon and devastating half a dozen towns in that state. “This could be the greatest loss of human lives and property due to wildfire in our state’s history,” Oregon Gov. Kate Brown (D) said (NBC News). In Lincoln City, Ore., wildfires forced residents on Wednesday to evacuate (OregonLive). In Northern California, three people died in the town of Oroville overnight (The Associated Press). Residents navigated a red fog and falling ash over parts of California akin to a scene from Mars (NBC News).
THE CLOSER
And finally … It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for this week’s Morning Report Quiz! Inspired by tonight’s season opener between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Houston Texans, we’re eager to test your knowledge on some NFL trivia.
Email your responses to asimendinger@thehill.com and/or aweaver@thehill.com, and please add “Quiz” to subject lines. Winners who submit correct answers will enjoy some richly deserved newsletter fame on Friday.
The 2020 season marks the first of the new decade. Which player threw for the most yards during the 2010s?
Peyton Manning
Drew Brees
Tom Brady
Aaron Rodgers
In its first season under a new name and after discarding the previous Redskins logo, what will the Washington Football Team don on its team helmet?
“W”
“Football Team”
Nothing
Individual player numbers
Which of the following quarterbacks is not expected to open the 2020 season as a starting quarterback?
Nick Foles
Ryan Fitzpatrick
Tyrod Taylor
Gardner Minshew
How many teams will play in new stadiums to start the 2020 season?
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POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Is there anything left to learn about Trump?
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
IS THERE ANYTHING LEFT TO LEARN about President DONALD TRUMP, any fresh analysis that’s left?Has he changed at all — one iota, one shred — over the 1,329 days of his presidency? We grappled with this question in the wake of the excellent reporting in the BOB WOODWARD book. Was there anything at all to take from it? Or are the last three-plus years just a tumbling cycle of repeating self-destruction?
THERE’S ONE THING worth thinking about, and it’s a throughline of TRUMP’S presidency. Imagine if he learned at some point that he can’t go it alone — nor should he. It doesn’t benefit him politically, or the country writ large. It’s actually more advantageous, for him and for the country, to forge alliances and involve others in the machinations of the government.
FOR EXAMPLE …
— SPEAKING TO WOODWARD or any author in and of itself isn’t considered political malpractice. BARACK OBAMA did it, as did JOHN BOEHNER, when WOODWARD was reporting on “The Price of Politics.” But OBAMA enlisted his entire staff to support him — a stenographer was in the room, and key aides were cleared to speak to WOODWARD. For that book, BOEHNER’S teamseems to have forked over filing cabinets’ worth of notes to help give its side of the story. TRUMP, on the other hand, looks to have just held riffing sessions with WOODWARD, while the Washington Post legend burrowed his way into his senior staff with much of the White House none the wiser. THE RESULT is a White House that was almost completely blindsided by Wednesday’s revelations.
— IMAGINE IF TRUMP HAD SWALLOWED HIS PRIDE and personally told congressional leaders what he told WOODWARD about the coronavirus: that he understood how deadly this was, and he wanted Congress to step up and help him beat it. That way, there would’ve been a robust response — and the legislature would’ve had skin in the game. (BTW: Congress was getting briefed about Covid during impeachment in January and February. People were worried. We witnessed it in the Capitol.)
BUT HE DIDN’T DO ANY OF THIS. Instead, he treated WOODWARD — a meticulous reporter with over six decades of work — like a “Dear Diary” hotline, all while much of his professional staff was in the dark.
AS FOR TRUMP, we’ve never been all too interested in his moods, whether he’s seething or not, angry, happy, upbeat — we have found those kinds of nuggets to be fun, but largely immaterial. But what we are interested in is whether he has learned at all about government and how to navigate it. And the analysis at this point has to be that he’s learned very little. The totality of his job isn’t watching television, tweeting and issuing executive orders. It’s governing — even with legislators he doesn’t like, and with a media he considers hostile.
THE PRESIDENT AND SOME OF HIS AIDES NOW SUGGEST we shouldn’t believe this book. No, they aren’t saying the tapes are doctored, but they’re casting doubt on the context in which people said what they said.
HERE’S A RUNNING TALLY … AT DIFFERENT TIMES, THE ADMINISTRATION HAS ASKED US TO NOT BELIEVE:
— ANONYMOUS SOURCES because they are anonymous. (Even though the White House oftentimes demands anonymity.)
— WOODWARD, an 18-time bestseller and two-time Pulitzer winner.
— THE MEDIA, generally speaking.
— THE PRESIDENT’S OWN ADVISERS, who oftentimes advocate for things he doesn’t want, and don’t advocate for things he does want.
— DEMOCRATS — even ones who have been serving for decades.
— REPUBLICANS who don’t like him.
— INTELLIGENCE OFFICIALS, who, in his view, are often wrong.
— GENERALS, at times.
— MEMBERS OF HIS FAMILY who have disparaged him.
— FORMER EMPLOYEES who have witnessed his behavior behind closed doors and then published books about him.
— EXPERTS in medicine or economics who disagree with him.
— WHISTLEBLOWERS.
— OTHER COUNTRIES, whether it be their virus counts, version of events, foreign policy goals, economic metrics, etc.
PLAYBOOK FACTS OF LIFE (ALSO A MIKEY-ISM):WOODWARD is methodical. He’s good. He gets people to talk. People tend not to like that.
TUCKER CARLSON has knives out for Sen. LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-S.C.), who he blamed for trying to undermine TRUMP’S agenda and for putting WOODWARD in touch with the president.h/t The Daily Beast’s Molly Jong-Fast
NYT’S MAGGIE HABERMAN has more deets: “In a conversation with an associate, Mr. Kushner describes his father-in-law as good at getting people to react to their own detriment, gleefully citing the defenses that Democrats issued of the late Rep. Elijah E. Cummings, of Baltimore, Md., and his city, after the president attacked Mr. Cummings.
“‘The Democrats are so crazy, they’re basically defending Baltimore,’ said Mr. Kushner, whose family’s real-estate company is a notorious landlord in the city. ‘When you get to the next election, he’s tied them to all these stupid positions because they’d rather attack him than actually be rational. Mr. Kushner dismissed previous advisers who had left as ‘overconfident idiots,’ and told Mr. Trump that in the final stretch of his term, ‘This is really when you’ll appreciate having the neurotic Jews around.’” Maggie is also above the fold of A1 with a story on Woodward’s book
JOHN HARRIS column:“Trump Is at War With the Shallow State”: “For years, President Donald Trump and his allies have warned about his adversaries in the ‘Deep State.’ The phrase evokes images of anonymous officials with hidden motives buried deep in the government.
“Recent days have made it clearer than ever that the real hazard to Trump is actually the Shallow State. The people saying mean things about Trump aren’t lurking in the shadows. They are well-known names whom Trump recruited to work by his side. Their motives aren’t mysterious. They are obvious: A transactional president encourages transactional behavior in his midst. These sources have shocking stories to tell, but no longer any genuinely surprising ones.”
NYT REVIEW by JENNIFER SZALAI flays WOODWARD: “In Bob Woodward’s ‘Rage,’ a Reporter and a President From Different Universes”: “Woodward ends ‘Rage’ by delivering his grave verdict. ‘When his performance as president is taken in its entirety,’ he intones, ‘I can only reach one conclusion: Trump is the wrong man for the job.’ It’s an anticlimactic declaration that could surprise no one other than maybe Bob Woodward.
“In ‘The Choice,’ his book about the 1996 presidential campaign, he explained something that still seems a core belief of his: ‘When all is said and sifted, character is what matters most.’ But if the roiling and ultimately empty palace intrigues documented in ‘Rage’ and ‘Fear’ are any indications, this lofty view comes up woefully short. What if the real story about the Trump era is less about Trump and more about the people who surround and protect him, standing by him in public even as they denounce him (or talk to Woodward) in private — a tale not of character but of complicity?”
— NYT’S KEN VOGEL, HAILEY FUCHS and LUKE BROADWATER: “Facing calls for his ouster by Democrats and a flurry of investigations on Capitol Hill, Mr. DeJoy informed postal officials that he had selected Peter Pastre, a former Republican congressional aide and insurance lobbyist, to act as a liaison for the agency with Congress and state and local governments, according to people familiar with the discussions.”
DRIVING TODAY: Speaker NANCY PELOSI will give her news conference at 10:45 a.m. WATCH OUT FOR: WOODWARD reaction, and Covid relief news.
ON THE TRAIL … JOE BIDEN will attend virtual fundraisers. … Sen. KAMALA HARRIS (D-Calif.) and DOUG EMHOFF are heading to Miami. Harris will speak about “challenges facing the African American community in South Florida.” Emhoff will meet with rabbis in Aventura. Harris will also attend virtual fundraisers. All of the events will be pooled.
BIDEN said Wednesday in Michigan that 6,000 soldiers died of Covid. He was wrong. Seven did. CNN’sRYAN BROWNE reported this.
— @laraseligman: “A Biden campaign aide tells me the candidate misspoke and accidentally cited Michigan numbers instead of the military figure.”
CNN’S MANU RAJU goes deep on MITCH MCCONNELL: “How McConnell is maneuvering to keep the Senate in GOP hands — and navigating Trump”: “[O]n the morning of February 27, as Washington was coming to grips with the coronavirus, McConnell took Sens. Cory Gardner of Colorado and Steve Daines of Montana to the White House where they made the case to Trump to get behind a public lands bill. Trump quickly got in line, and quipped to his budget chief, Russell Vought: ‘Sorry, Russ,’ according to sources familiar with the episode. …
“‘Not only was it the right thing to do from a good government point of view, but sure — it ought to help Cory and Steve, they did a lot of work on it,’ McConnell told CNN this week. The episode illustrated McConnell’s intense focus at holding onto his perch atop the Senate and keeping the majority in GOP hands, navigating one of the most tumultuous elections of his long political career while finding a way to take advantage of having a Republican in the White House — even one who has a penchant for putting GOP senators in a jam time and again.
“Asked if he thinks Trump is a net positive for Senate Republican candidates on the ticket, McConnell would only say: ‘We’ll find out. That’s something that we’ll only know the day after the election.’ …
“In the Wednesday interview, McConnell said it’s ‘just a hugely challenging cycle to hold onto’ the majority and said it’s a ‘50-50 situation,’ arguing that races in Montana, Colorado, Arizona, Iowa, North Carolina, Maine and Georgia are far too close to call. ‘That’s why I describe it like a knife fight in an alley,’ McConnell said of the battle for the Senate. ‘Everybody’s slugging it out.’”
NEWS FROM WAPO’S ERICA WERNER and JEFF STEIN: “White House looks at more executive actions as coronavirus-relief talks appear finished”: “White House officials have discussed efforts to unilaterally provide support for the flagging airline industry while also bolstering unemployment benefits, according to two people aware of the deliberations who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share internal policy discussions. The White House has also discussed moving without Congress to direct more money for school vouchers and changing President Trump’s recent payroll tax changes to make it more effective.”
REMEMBER HOWARD SCHULTZ? … The Starbucks founder has gotten 8,700 business owners on a letter pushing the RESTART Act, a bill by Sens. MICHAEL BENNET (D-Colo.) and TODD YOUNG (R-Ind.) that has 55 co-sponsors in the Senate. The bill extends the PPP, and stands up new loan programs. The letter
BIG SCOOP … SARAH OWERMOHLE: “Emails show HHS official trying to muzzle Fauci”: “A Trump administration appointee at the Department of Health and Human Services is trying to prevent Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious disease expert, from speaking about the risks that coronavirus poses to children.
“Emails obtained by POLITICO show Paul Alexander — a senior adviser to Michael Caputo, HHS’s assistant secretary for public affairs — instructing press officers and others at the National Institutes of Health about what Fauci should say during media interviews. The Trump adviser weighed in on Fauci’s planned responses to outlets including Bloomberg News, BuzzFeed, Huffington Post and the science journal Cell.
“Alexander’s lengthy messages, some sent as recently as this week, are couched as scientific arguments. But they often contradict mainstream science while promoting political positions taken by the Trump administration on hot-button issues ranging from the use of convalescent plasma to school reopening. The emails add to evidence that the White House, and Trump appointees within HHS, are pushing health agencies to promote a political message instead of a scientific one.” POLITICO
“The screening operations have been held at select airports since January, when the first cases of the disease began to emerge from Wuhan, China. Since March, incoming international flights from select high-risk countries, including much of Europe, China and Iran, among other regions, have been funneled through 15 designated airports in the United States.
“As of Monday, however, international flights will no longer be funneled into select airports for screening purposes and all screenings will come to a halt, according to communications and sources. All screenings and rerouting of select international flights will cease at exactly 12:01 a.m. on Monday, Sept. 14.”
CNN: “Whistleblower accuses Trump appointees of downplaying Russian interference and White supremacist threat,” by Zachary Cohen: “A whistleblower is alleging that top political appointees in the Department of Homeland Security repeatedly instructed career officials to modify intelligence assessments to suit President Donald Trump’s agenda by downplaying Russia’s efforts to interfere in the U.S. and the threat posed by White supremacists, according to documents reviewed by CNN and a source familiar with the situation.
“The whistleblower claims that acting DHS Secretary Chad Wolf instructed DHS officials earlier this year to ‘cease providing intelligence assessments on the threat of Russian interference’ and, instead, focus their efforts on gathering information related to activities being carried out by China and Iran. Trump and several of his top national security advisers have repeatedly sought to emphasize the threat posed by China in recent months while downplaying the intelligence community’s warnings related to Russian interference in the 2020 election.
“DHS did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment regarding allegations that Wolf and Senior Official Performing the Duties of the Deputy Secretary Ken Cuccinelli ordered officials to change intelligence assessments for political reasons but have broadly denied either man took actions that constitute as an abuse of power, as stated in the complaint.”The whistleblower complaint
POLITICO DIGS DEEPER … DAN DIAMOND and ADAM CANCRYN: “$2,933 for ‘Girl’s Night’: Medicaid chief’s consulting expenses revealed”: “When Seema Verma, the Trump administration’s top Medicaid official, went to a reporter’s home in November 2018 for a ‘Girl’s Night’ thrown in her honor, taxpayers footed the bill to organize the event: $2,933. When Verma wrote an op-ed on Fox News’ website that fall, touting President Donald Trump’s changes to Obamacare, taxpayers got charged for one consultant’s price to place it: $977.
“And when consultants spent months promoting Verma to win awards like Washingtonian magazine’s ‘Most Powerful Women in Washington’ and appear on high-profile panels, taxpayers got billed for that too: more than $13,000. The efforts were steered by Pam Stevens, a Republican communications consultant and former Trump administration official working to raise the brand of Verma, who leads the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The prices were the amount a consulting company billed the government for her services, based on her invoices, which were obtained by congressional Democrats.”
WHAT BILL STEPIEN WILL BE READING — “‘I want to be in the Trump party’: GOP rides voter registration surge in key state,” by Holly Otterbein in Philadelphia: “President Donald Trump has trailed Joe Biden in virtually every poll in Pennsylvania this year. But there’s a more tangible piece of data in the state that tells a different story: Since 2016, Republicans have netted nearly seven times as many registered voters here than Democrats.
“The GOP has added almost 198,000 registered voters to the books compared to this time four years ago, whereas Democrats have gained an extra 29,000. Though Democrats still outnumber Republicans by about 750,000 voters in the state, the GOP has seized on their uptick in party members as a sign that Trump is on track to win this critical Rust Belt swing state a second time.” POLITICO
TRUMP’S THURSDAY — The president will meet with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at 3:30 p.m. in the Oval Office. He will leave the White House at 5 p.m. en route to Freeland, Mich., where he’s due to deliver remarks at 7 p.m. He will leave for Washington at 8:20 p.m., arriving at the White House at 10:05 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
MICHAEL STRATFORD: “In crackdown on race-related content, Education Department targets internal book clubs, meetings”: “The Education Department plans to scrutinize a wide range of employee activities — including internal book clubs — in search of ‘Anti-American propaganda’ and discussions about ‘white privilege’ as it carries out the White House’s demand that federal agencies halt certain types of race-related training.
“In an internal email this week obtained by POLITICO, the department ordered a review of agency contracts for diversity training and ‘internal employee activities’ to root out topics such as ‘critical race theory’ or materials that suggest that the U.S. is an inherently racist country. The crackdown comes as the department implements a government-wide directive the White House issued Friday to stop what it called ‘un-American propaganda training sessions’ about race.
“To implement that policy, the Education Department will require each of its offices in D.C., as well as regional outposts throughout the country, to review a range of training materials, including outside contracts for diversity workshops, plus content produced internally at the agency. An Education Department spokesperson did not comment on the internal agency guidance Wednesday night.” POLITICO
— SCHOOLS ACROSS THE COUNTRY are closed. Parents are struggling with home schooling. But this is what the Department of Education is focused on.
THE FIRES OUT WEST — “California fire that killed 3 threatens thousands of homes,”by AP’s Terence Chea in Oroville, Calif., and Brian Melley in Los Angeles: “A Northern California wildfire threatened thousands of homes Thursday after winds whipped it into a monster that incinerated houses in a small mountain community and killed at least three people.
“Several other people have been critically burned and hundreds, if not thousands, of homes and other buildings are believed to have been damaged or destroyed by the North Complex fire northeast of San Francisco, authorities said.
“Some 20,000 people were under evacuation orders or warnings in Plumas, Yuba and Butte counties. Between Tuesday and Wednesday, the fire — which had been burning for weeks in forestland and was 50% contained — exploded to six times its size as winds gusting to 45 mph drove a path of destruction through mountainous terrain and parched foothills.”
ACROSS THE POND — “Brexit negotiations hit low after UK’s ‘carpet-bombing’ tactics,”by Barbara Moens: “U.K. plans for an internal market that undermine parts of the Withdrawal Agreement — and the way in which the British government has announced its intentions — have infuriated the European Union.”
BUSINESS BURST — “TikTok, U.S. Discuss Ways to Avoid Sale,” by Miriam Gottfried, Georgia Wells and Kate Davidson: “TikTok’s Chinese parent, ByteDance Ltd., is discussing with the U.S. government possible arrangements that would allow the popular video-sharing app to avoid a full sale of its U.S. operations, according to people familiar with the matter.
“Discussions around such an option have risen in prominence since the Chinese government took steps that make a sale to a U.S. technology giant like Microsoft Corp. more difficult, the people said. They take place against a fast-approaching deadline that President Trump imposed for TikTok to agree to a sale of its U.S. operations or else be shut down, and as geopolitical wrangling over the app intensifies.
“A number of options remain on the table, the situation is fluid and a sale is still a possibility, the people said. Even if there isn’t a full sale, the outcome would likely involve some sort of restructuring of TikTok, one of the people said. That could involve a deal in which TikTok takes on a U.S. technology partner that helps secure its data and potentially takes a minority stake.” WSJ
SPOTTED at a virtual party for Ilyse Hogue’s new book, “The Lie That Binds” ($19.99 on Amazon), spearheaded by Andrea Hailey and Holland Taylor: Tracy Austin, Dana Delany, Wendy Greuel, Diane Hamwi, Laura Hartigan, René Jones, Rachel Levin, Jennifer Lin, Terri New, Sarah Paulson, Wendy Smith, Joanna Spilker and Martha Swiller.
MEDIAWATCH — Ezekiel Kweku is joining the NYT opinion section as politics editor. He previously was senior editor at New York magazine’s Intelligencer vertical.Announcement
TRANSITIONS — Kerry Rom is joining Targeted Victory today as a director of public affairs. She previously was comms director for Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.), and is a Dan Crenshaw, NRCC and Jeb 2016 alum. … Ben Steinhafel is now a legislative analyst for OPM in the office of congressional, legislative and intergovernmental affairs. He previously was a legislative assistant for Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-Wis). … Kirsten Sutton is now SVP and executive director of the American Bankers Association’s Card Policy Council. She previously was COS for CFPB Director Kathy Kraninger. …
… Jennifer Kohl is joining Purple Strategies as senior director. She previously led the PR team for chef José Andrés and his restaurant group, ThinkFoodGroup, and is an Obama 2012, FDA and Elijah Cummings alum. … John Mercurio is joining the Motion Picture Association as SVP of corporate comms. He previously was global chief comms officer for the Bitfury Group and the International Association for Trusted Blockchain Applications.
ENGAGED — Brian Morgenstern, White House deputy comms director and deputy press secretary, proposed to Teresa Davis, Pentagon deputy press secretary, this weekend at the Omni Homestead in Hot Springs, Va. They met in July 2018 at a friend’s birthday party.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — POLITICO reporter Betsy Woodruff Swan and Axios reporter Jonathan Swan welcomed Esther Jane Swan on Monday. Pic
— Allison Schneider, senior director of comms at the National Beer Wholesalers Association, and Andrew Shult, digital director for the American Investment Council, recently welcomed Graham Shult.
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Emily Berret, director of operations for Speaker Nancy Pelosi. A fun fact about her: “I am obsessed with my dogs. We rescued both of our pups from BREW beagles and are a part of the WeTheDogsDC community that supports D.C. animal rescue organizations. I also take way too many photos of my dogs so they have their own Instagram @barkerofthehouse!” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Neera Tanden, president and CEO of CAP, is 5-0 (h/t Allison Preiss) … Justin Cooper … Tia Torhorst (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Renee Hudson … Hunter Walker, White House correspondent at Yahoo News, is 36 … Jess McIntosh (h/t Jon Haber) … Andrew Shapiro of Beacon Global Strategies … NYT’s Bill Hamilton and Mara Gay … James Killen … USA Today SCOTUS reporter Richard Wolf … POLITICO’s Nahal “Halley” Toosi … former Rep. Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.), who’s running for Senate, is 66 … former Rep. Ted Poe (R-Texas) is 72 … former Sen. John E. Sununu (R-N.H.) is 56 … Michael Moroney, SVP at FleishmanHillard … Donna Harris … Sara Bonjean, president of Rose Strategies (h/t husband Ron) … Bill O’Reilly is 71 … Josh Kutner, chair of the GW College Republicans (h/t Zev Siegfeld) … Alex Bell, senior policy director for the Council for a Livable World (h/t Ben Chang) …
… Chuck Rosenberg, MSNBC contributor and host of “The Oath” podcast … Trey Yingst, Fox News foreign correspondent … Corinne Hoare(h/t Jackie Callan) … Soraya Darabi … Mahen Gunaratna, comms director for New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy … Deirdre Hackleman … Brian Farnkoff … Charlie Szold is 31 … Squarespace’s Amanda Cowie is 36 … Alyssa Bernstein … Paulina Mangubat … Jocelyn Miller Zeitzoff, senior director of partnerships at The Atlantic … Christopher Stio … Josh Nass … Dan Centinello … Molly Bordonaro … Christina Estrada Teczar … Derrek Hofrichter … Gary Polland … Meshal DeSantis … Jack Rivers … Lauren DeFranco … Rey Ramsey … Heather Barber … Andy Levin … Jane Gross … Kimberly Marie Abbott … CNBC’s Hadley Gamble … Barbara Lippert … Oliver Kim … Justin Wiley … Jonathan Soros … Joe Kabourek, campaign manager for Colorado Families First … Joel Judd is 69
Deconstructing California: From Christian Founding to Shutting Down Churches!
George Orwell wrote in his dystopian novel 1984:
“Every record has been destroyed or falsified, every book rewritten, every picture has been repainted, every statue and street building has been renamed, every date has been altered …
Nothing exists except an endless present in which The Party is always right.”
Called “deconstruction” or “cancel culture,” George Orwell described the process where “The Party” falsifies or erases the nation’s past to alter the trajectory of the nation’s future:
“Those who control the past control the future, and those who control the present control the past.”
Senate Chaplain Peter Marshall described this:
“Along with our higher education came a debunking contest … a sort of national sport …
It was smarter to revile than to revere … more fashionable to depreciate than to appreciate …
Debunking is … a sign of decaying foundations.”
The book, A People’s History of the United States (1980), written by socialist author Howard Zinn, is of this debunking genre.
In a revealing turnabout, author Mary Grabar wrote Debunking Howard Zinn in 2019.
Deconstruction, involves is a type of gene-replacement therapy for a culture, selectively re-editing or ridiculing past individuals or events in order to advance a future political agenda.
Karl Marx is attributed with stating:
“The first battlefield is history rewriting”
and
“Take away the heritage of a people and they are easily persuaded.”
Zhou Enlai was the first Premier of the communist People’s Republic of China, who orchestrated Mao Zedong killing an estimated 20 million.
Zhou Enlai stated:
“One of the delightful things about Americans is that they have absolutely no historical memory.”
President Donald J. Trump stated, July 3, 2020:
“Our nation is witnessing a merciless campaign to wipe out our history, defame our heroes, erase our values, and indoctrinate our children.
Angry mobs are trying to tear down statues of our founders, deface our most sacred memorials …
One of their political weapons is ‘Cancel Culture’ — driving people from their jobs, shaming dissenters, and demanding total submission from anyone who disagrees.
This is the very definition of totalitarianism, and it is completely alien to our culture and our values, and it has absolutely no place in the United States of America …”
Karl Marx is attributed with the narcissist statement:
“Accuse others of what you do.”
It is called “psychological projection,” where hateful people accuse their opponents of being hateful.
It is like an autoimmune disease injected into the body politic.
Socialists have used this gaslighting tactic in overthrowing nations, as President Trump explained:
“Our children are taught in school to hate their own country, and to believe that the men and women who built it were not heroes, but that were villains.
The radical view of American history is a web of lies — all perspective is removed, every virtue is obscured, every motive is twisted, every fact is distorted, and every flaw is magnified until the history is purged and the record is disfigured beyond all recognition …
No person who remains quiet at the destruction of this resplendent heritage can possibly lead us to a better future.”
Islamic leaders have used a similar practice in their conquest of infidel lands:
“Abu’l-Hayyaj al-Asadi told that ‘Ali (b. Abu Talib) said to him …
Do not leave an image without obliterating it, or a high grave without leveling it.” (Hadith Bk 4, No. 2115)
Caliph Umar, according to various accounts, ordered the destruction of ancient libraries, including the oldest in the world in Alexandria, Epypt, 641 AD;
Caliph Al-Ma’mun ordered raiders to plunder Pharaohs’ tombs, 832 AD;
Sufi Muhammad Sa’im al-Dahr reportedly destroyed the nose of the Great Sphinx, 1378 AD;
Sultan Mehmet II conquered Constantinople and turned the largest Christian church in the world into a mosque;
Taliban destroyed the Buddhas of Bamiyan in 2001.
Socialist have used the tactic:
French Revolution turned cathedrals in to “temples of reason,” and tore down the statue of Good King Henry IV, 1792, and publicly burned the remains of Ste. Genevieve, the Patron Saint of Paris, 1793;
Stalin changed the name of St. Petersburg to Leningrad, 1924;
Mao Zedung destroyed Beijing’s Gate of China, 1954, and thousands of ancient artifacts during the Cultural Revolution, 1966-1976, including the White Horse Temple in Luoyang, the oldest Buddhist temple in China;
Pol Pot’s Khmer’s Rouge killed anyone in Cambodia who wore eye-glasses as he figured if they could read they knew history, and he wanted to erase history, 1975.
California is deconstructing its history, with socialist-leaning government officials allowing violent Antifa-type groups to pull down statues of its founders, including missionary Junípero Serra.
California was founded with churches, and went on to become one of the most prosperous places on Earth.
Now, California is closing down churches, restricting businesses, experiencing record numbers of people leaving, and has become the most in debt state in America.
What is the real history?
In 1535, Hernán Cortés explored the Baja California Peninsula, sailing the Sea of Cortés and founding the city of La Paz.
In 1539, Francisco de Ulloa sailed around the Cedros Islands off the coast of Baja California.
He was the first to call it “California,” a name taken from a heroic romance novel, Amadis de Gallia, published by Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo around 1510.
In 1542, Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo is believed to be the first European to actually explore the California coast.
Landing at San Diego Bay, then sailing around the channel islands, he claimed “the Island of California” for Spain.
He came ashore at San Pedro bay, which became the port of Los Angeles.
In 1579, Sir Francis Drake, sailing for England’s Virgin Queen Elizabeth I, explored up the coast of California on his voyage to circumnavigate the globe.
Drake anchored north of San Francisco at Drake’s Bay.
In 1595, Spanish explorer Sebastian Rodriguez Cermeno, on his galleon San Agustin, sailed from the Philippines, named for King Philip II of Spain, to map the coasts of Oregon and California, down to Acapulco, Mexico.
In 1769, the first Spanish missions were founded in California by Franciscan missionary Junipero Serra, whose statue is in the U.S. Capitol’s Statuary Hall.
Most of the original cities in California were founded as Spanish Christian missions:
1769 San Diego de Alcalá (grew into San Diego, CA, cultivated the first olives in California)
1770 San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo (grew into Carmel, CA)
1771 San Antonio de Padua (grew into Monterey County, CA)
1771 San Gabriel (grew into San Gabriel, CA, began California’s citrus industry)
1772 San Luis Obispo de Tolosa (grew into San Luis Obispo, CA)
1776 San Francisco de Asís (oldest surviving structure in San Francisco, CA)
1776 San Juan Capistrano (grew into San Juan Capistrano, CA, produced California’s first wine)
1777 Santa Clara de Asís (grew into Santa Clara, CA)
1782 San Buenaventura (grew into Ventura, CA)
1786 Santa Barbara (grew into Santa Barbara, CA)
1787 La Purísima Concepción (grew into Lompoc, CA)
1791 Santa Cruz (meaning Holy Cross, grew into Santa Cruz, CA)
1791 Nuestra Señora de la Soledad (grew into Soledad, CA)
1797 San José (grew into Fremont, CA)
1797 San Juan Bautista (grew into San Juan Bautista, CA, restored with help from the Hearst Foundation)
1797 San Miguel Arcángel (grew into San Miguel, CA)
1797 San Fernando Rey de España (grew into Mission Hills district of Los Angeles)
1798 San Luis Rey de Francia (grew into Oceanside, CA, first California Pepper Tree planted)
1804 Santa Inés (Danish town of Solvang built around mission)
1808 Sacramento Valley and River were christened after the “Most Holy Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ,” the Catholic communion – Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist.
1817 San Rafael Arcángel (grew into San Francisco Bay area, had the first hospital in California)
Prior to the Spanish Christian Missions, the Indian culture regarded manual labor as the role of women, as it was considered degrading for men.
Spanish Christian Missionaries taught men to work in industry and introduced into California irrigation and oranges, grapes, apples, peaches, pears, and figs.
Spanish Christian Missions introduced the Indians to the wheeled cart, which had been in existence in Mesopotamia since the 4th millennium BC, and the wheelbarrow, which was invented in China in the 2nd century BC.
Technologically, native inhabitants had an existence somewhere between the stone age and the bronze age. Spanish Missionaries introduced cattle, oxen, sheep, horses, mules, burros, goats and swine.
Missionaries built foundries, introducing Indians to the Iron Age with blacksmith furnaces smelting and fashioning iron into nails, crosses, gates, hinges, and cannons.
Spain lost California to Mexico in 1821, but instead of giving people rights and freedoms, Mexico set up a monarchy with Augustin Iturbide as Emperor.
Iturbide was executed, and Mexico adopted a Federal Constitution in 1824.
In 1833, General Santa Anna became President and, together with his Vice-President Gomez Farias, instituted anti-clerical Mexican Secularization Acts.
He took all Christian Mission property away from the Catholic Church and sold it to political insiders who supported his government.
In 1834, General Santa Anna suspended Mexico’s Constitution and declared himself dictator, stating to U.S. minister to Mexico, Joel R. Poinsett:
“A hundred years to come my people will not be fit for liberty … a despotism is the proper government for them.”
When several Mexican States opposed Santa Anna, he sent his army and crushed the resistance.
Santa Anna’s ruthless actions precipitated the Texas War of Independence, 1836, and the Mexican-American War, 1846.
After the wars, California was purchased by the United States with the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848.
In 1849, workers in California building a sawmill for John Sutter on the south fork of the American River, discovered gold.
Soon prospectors, called “Forty-Niners,” arrived.
California became the 31st State on September 9, 1850.
California’s Constitution, which prohibited slavery, stated:
“We, the People of the State of California, grateful to Almighty God for our freedom … do establish this Constitution.”
Regarding California’s Catholic Missions, the U.S. Board of Land Commissioners wrote, as recorded in W.W. Robinson’s book, Land in California (Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1948, p. 28):
“The Missions were intended … to be temporary … It was supposed that within that period of time the Indians would be sufficiently instructed in Christianity and the arts of civilized life.”
On May 23, 1862, President Lincoln restored all 21 California Missions taken by anti-clerical Mexican Secularization Acts back to the Catholic Church:
“I grant unto the … Bishop of Monterrey … in trust for the religious purposes … the tracts of land described in the foregoing survey.”
Spanish Missions were an integral part of California’s history.
In 2004, the ACLU, similar to Santa Anna’s Secularization Acts, pressured Los Angeles County to remove a tiny cross from its county seal.
In 2014, the County restored the cross.
The ACLU, with an Orwellian fixation to expunge official public acknowledgement of the state’s Christian founding, brought a lawsuit, and in 2016, U.S. District Judge Christina A. Snyder ruled to remove the cross.
Many citizens are concerned that California may be demonstrating what Massachusetts colonial leader Cotton Mather wrote in Magnalia Christi Americana, 1702:
“Religion begat prosperity, and the daughter devoured the mother.”
Methodist founder John Wesley left a sober warning July 2, 1789:
“Christianity, true Scriptural Christianity, has a tendency in the process of time to destroy itself.
For wherever true Christianity spreads, it must cause diligence and frugality, which, in the natural course of things, must beget riches!
And riches naturally beget pride, love of the world, and every temper that is destructive to Christianity. Wherever it generally prevails, it ultimately saps its own foundation.”
Deuteronomy 6:10-12:
“When the Lord your God brings you into the land he swore to your fathers, to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, to give you—a land with large, flourishing cities … houses filled with all kinds of good things … olive groves …
then when you eat and are satisfied, be careful that you do not forget the Lord.”
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Sep 09, 2020 03:42 pm
MARION, Iowa – On Tuesday, Ashley Hinson, the Republican nominee for Congress in Iowa’s First Congressional District, released her Law Enforcement Advisory Committee comprised of 50 members with each county in the district represented.
Her advisory committee will provide policy recommendations and insight throughout her campaign and more importantly while she is in Congress. The committee is made up of sheriffs, police chiefs, sheriff’s deputies, volunteer firefighters, mental health advocates and law enforcement spouses. Hinson will always support law enforcement and stand against radical policies like defunding the police. Hinson does not support cuts to police budgets.
“I have made it very clear: I do not support defunding the police or cuts to law enforcement funding. As lawmakers, it is our responsibility to work across the aisle to find solutions that hold bad actors accountable. Defunding the police is not a solution. I look forward to leaning on this advisory committee for advice because these folks are the experts in their fields and are dealing with these issues on the frontlines. I’ll support policies in Congress that keep our neighborhoods safe and protect Iowans,” Hinson said.
“The thing I respect the most about Ashley is her deep commitment to solutions and her accessibility. Law enforcement has a lot of challenges and the environment we’re in is making it increasingly difficult to recruit new officers. I trust Ashley to have our back in Congress and continue to support policies that keep our communities safer, just like she’s done in Des Moines,” Greg Graver, Jones County Sheriff, said.
“We need leaders in Washington, like Ashley, who are willing to have these tough conversations and stand up for law enforcement in Congress. Ashley is an ally of law enforcement, and I know that she will listen to us, and work towards solutions everyday in Washington,” Sarah Lacina, Cedar Rapids Police Officer, stated.
Law Enforcement Advisory Committee members:
Amanda
Anderson
Law Enforcement Mental Health Advocate
Dubuque
Rob
Archibald
Hiawatha City Council
Linn
John
Baber
Sgt. Iowa State Patrol and Detective in Linn Co. Sheriff’s Office
Bremer
Greg
Beaver
Mitchell Co. Sheriff
Mitchell
Tim
Beckman
Howard Co. Volunteer Firefighter
Howard
Jason
Bina
Tama Chief of Police
Tama
Kim
Campshure
Law Enforcement Spouse
Linn
Jason
Cromer
Garnavillo Fire Department Volunteer Firefighter
Clayton
Benjamin
Davis
Fayette Chief of Police
Fayette
Jeff
Driscoll
Retired Iowa State Patrol
Dubuque
Dan
Fank
Worth Co. Sheriff
Worth
Marty
Fisher
Fayette Co. Sheriff
Fayette
John
Gehling
Howard Co. Candidate for Sheriff
Howard
Greg
Graver
Jones Co. Sheriff
Jones
Jeff
Harnish
Toledo Chief of Police
Tama
Adam
Hoffman
Mayor of Waverly
Bremer
Steve
Hoffman
Marshall Co. Sheriff
Marshall
Kris
Hudson
Belle Plaine Chief of Police
Benton
Shawn
Ireland
Sgt., Linn Co Sheriff Dept.
Linn
Rick
Jacoby
Poweshiek Co. Reserve Sheriff’s Deputy
Poweshiek
Brad
Jensen
Volunteer first responder and firefighter in Alburnett
By Michael Farris on Sep 09, 2020 03:09 pm
All political factions want to make America great. This includes those who are burning and looting our cities while destroying our history and values in the process.
Nonetheless, I contend that all political factions seek an America in which they can take genuine pride.
But that doesn’t mean there is fundamental agreement, far from it.
One side believes that America has never been great. It has been a country for the oppressors only.
Their vision of future greatness is a socialist state which coerces all into an ostensible agreement with the agenda of the left, replete with economic control and moral chaos led by sexual anarchy.
To this crowd, America never was great. Our goals were not great, and we have no accomplishments in which we can take pride.
Of course, this crowd has no historical examples of greatness because every nation that has pursued this path has devolved into mediocrity and tyranny.
But they dream of a utopia produced by coercive uniformity of belief and expression.
The opposite view is that American ideals are truly great. And though we have erred and faltered, the American dream of freedom, goodness, equality, and prosperity is honorable and continues to be worthy of pursuit.
Politics always has nuances and shades. No political leader of either camp gets everything perfect.
But there can be little doubt that our country is evolving into two diametrically opposed camps.
One says America has never been great and must be remade.
The other says America was founded with great ideals and should be great again.
To tell you the truth, I thought “Make America Great Again” was not the best political slogan. But upon reflection and because of intervening events, I now realize that it actually states a profound truth about this moment, our history, and the wise course for our future.
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Sep 09, 2020 02:48 pm
DAVENPORT, Iowa – Mariannette Miller-Meeks, Republican nominee in Iowa’s 2nd Congressional District race, has announced the formation of an economic advisory council consisting of 63 small business owners from across the district who will advocate for policies to fully reopen the Iowa and U.S. economies, returning them to pre-pandemic employment levels and focusing on ways to bring more jobs and growth to southern and eastern Iowa.
“In these uncertain times, we need leaders in Congress who will preserve, plan ahead and get Iowans safely back to work. We need leaders who will listen but will also act. We are confident that Mariannette Miller-Meeks is the leader who can do exactly that — help reopen our economy, get Iowans safely back to work, and advance policies that will make our economy stronger than ever in the future,” said council chair Barbara Kniff-McCulla of Pella, owner and CEO of KLK Construction and the former president of the National Federation of Independent Business’ Iowa Chapter.
Advisory council members include: Sharron McKee of Appanoose County; Deb Pruess of Cedar County; Dave Kalk of Clarke County; Chris Busker of Clinton County; Gary McPherson, Joe Nichols and Sally Nichols of Des Moines County; Judi Collora and John Mitchell of Henry County; William Clark of Jasper County; Michelle Burgmeier, David Dickey, Cattrione Faircrest and Ron Bovard of Jefferson County; Jack Goedeken, Cathy Grawe and Phil Hemmingway of Johnson County; Tanya and Douglas Webster of Keokuk County; Chris Riegel of Lee County; Robert McCulley, Kevin Schlutz and John Corey of Louisa County; Paul Goldsmith of Lucas County; Michael Jackson of Mahaska County; T. Waldmann-Williams, Lana Pol and Barbara Kniff-McCulla of Marion County; Michael Gaeta, Nancy Miller and Larry Miller of Muscatine County; Ryan Jensen, Jonathan Wallace, David Bosko, Andrew Kay, Bob Olness, Bobby Schilling, Antonio Collins, Jeanelle Westrom, Maggie Tinsman, Carol Paustian, Steve McGuire, KV Dahl, Jim Tucker, Tim Brandenburg, Ron Gruenhagen, Gary Weber and Jane Weber of Scott County; Troy Scheuermann, and Tom Sullivan of Van Buren County; Trudy and Keith Caviness, Marty Helgerson, Jeff Hendred, Sandra Hendred, Scott Kirby, Bryan Lee, Connie Lee, Pam Croft, and Kelli McDonald of Wapello County; Abe Miller of Washington County; and Stan Lovett and David Wampler of Wayne County.
“I am honored to have such a great group of small business owners come together to support our campaign and offer their input on policies to safely reopen our economy” Miller-Meeks said. “I trust the advice and guidance of this group of people who all have a stake in Iowa’s economy. I will always pursue policies that are best for our small businesses, their employees and for the people of the 2nd district.”
Miller-Meeks is an ophthalmologist and a 24-year U.S. Army veteran who represents Iowa Senate District 41, which includes Davis, Jefferson, Van Buren and Wapello counties. She is seeking the seat vacated by U.S. Rep. Dave Loebsack, a seven-term Democratic congressman. After 14 years of Democrat control, Monmouth University polling has placed Miller-Meeks 3 points ahead of her Democratic opponent Rita Hart. Among the 31 Democrat-controlled House districts won by President Trump in 2016, Iowa’s 2nd Congressional District is the only open seat in the country.
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Sep 09, 2020 02:29 pm
DES MOINES, Iowa – The National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) released a new TV ad on Wednesday stating that the Democratic nominee Theresa Greenfield supports radical environmental policies that would send more Iowa jobs to China.
“Hawkeye State voters know they can’t trust Democrat Theresa Greenfield to fight for working families,” said NRSC spokesperson Nathan Brand.“Whether it is evicting Iowa small businesses, supporting radical job-killing environmental policies, or siding with far-left Democrats, Greenfield‘s liberal agenda would bring pain to millions of Iowans at a time they can least afford it.”
Transcript:
For years, China has stolen American jobs.
Now they’ve unleashed the coronavirus hurting our entire economy.
Theresa Greenfield would send more of our jobs to China.
Greenfield supports radical environmental regulations that would destroy six million American jobs while giving China a pass to continue polluting.
Greenfield’s job-killing regulations would cost your family seven thousand dollars a year.
Theresa Greenfield. Weak on China. Wrong on jobs.
Launched in 2006, Caffeinated Thoughts reports news and shares commentary about culture, current events, faith and state and national politics from a Christian and conservative point of view.
President Donald Trump will meet with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo then travel to Freeland, Michigan, where he will hold a Make America Great Again rally. Keep up with Trump on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 9/10/20 – note: this page will be updated during the day …
Democratic 2020 presidential candidate Joe Biden said Wednesday that more than 6,000 military members have died from coronavirus, Department of Defense (DOD) statistics show the real number is just seven deaths. While speaking in Michigan on Wednesday, Biden significantly overstated both the number of COVID infections in the military, as well …
A Transylvania University Assistant Professor apologized after saying he would be watching Nick Sandmann for any misbehavior, according to photos of a Facebook post. The school told the Daily Caller News Foundation that “appropriate university officials” are going to “review the situation.” The Facebook post questioned why the school accepted …
Local leaders in Richmond, Virginia passed a city ordinance Tuesday that prohibits firearms at any public event that requires a permit, an NBC affiliate reported. The new ordinance forbids anyone from transporting, possessing or carrying “any firearms in any public street, road, alley, sidewalk, public right-of-way or any open public …
President Donald Trump updates the nation Wednesday on his list of judicial appointments. The president is scheduled to speak at 3:30 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for details …
President Trump held a rally in Winston Salem, North Carolina to an overflowing crowd of 15,000 people wall to wall in the airplane hangar in Winston Salem Airport. That’s not counting the tens of thousands that thronged the tarmac of the airport just to get a glimpse of him coming …
Truly “A Tale of Two Cities.” On the one hand, the world in history has never seen such progress and success on just about any measure. But when looking at the storm clouds building on the global stage, many wonder what the future will hold. Even with our current society’s …
President Donald Trump will hold a Make America Great Again rally at the Avflight Saginaw hangar in Freeland, Michigan on Thursday evening. Avflight Saginaw is located at 8430 Garfield Road and while the rally doesn’t begin until 7:00 p.m., doors open at 4 and tickets are available HERE. Event Details …
White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany holds a briefing to update the nation on recent developments. The briefing is scheduled to begin at 12:00 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 …
Byron York: Lt. Col. Vindman was the original source of Ukraine Investigation Read More
Jared Kushner:
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Mail-in Ballots
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Too Late?
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Happy Thursday, dear friends of the Kruiser Morning Briefing. Thursdays are my Fridays, so I have a little extra bounce in my step. Or would if I weren’t sitting at a desk. And if bouncing were the sort of thing I did.
Terrified of being embarrassed like they were in 2016, our truth-averse advocacy media hacks are working overtime sowing seeds of dishonesty to prevent President Trump from winning a second term.
I run in some very weird circles personally, professionally, and on social media. A lot of my Facebook feed, for example, is filled with leftist comedian friends of mine who I’ve known for a very long time, some of whom I’m pretty close to. As you can imagine, it’s a hot mess of Trump Derangement Syndrome crap-posting these days. Yeah, it has been since he was elected, but it’s grown like an angry Hulk — the real Hulk, not the nerd wuss hybrid in Endgame — these past two months.
I generally tune them out. It’s a little dance we’ve done for decades. I’ve always been conservative and my politics were always known to my friends in the entertainment industry but we come from a time when liberals didn’t want to cancel anyone who disagreed with them. My friends, colleagues, and I made it work quite well for thirty years.
Buuuuut…it’s 2020.
While I still adhere to the “I don’t let it get to me” policy that I wrote about in (BOOK PLUG INCOMING) Straight Outta Feelings: Political Zen in the Age of Outrage, it doesn’t mean I can’t needle my leftist friends. It just means that I don’t get upset when they lose their Trump-hating minds on me.
Every once in a while if I make the mistake of hitting Facebook after an adult beverage or four, I might leave a comment on one of my liberal comedian friend’s Trump-hatey rage posts. After one escalated discussion with a close friend I began paying a little more attention to what my other FB lefties were on about.
They were all mad at media lies. There wasn’t a policy disagreement among the lot of them. Mostly it was the oft-debunked “he called the virus a hoax” media myth, and the “very fine people” false media narrative.
When the Facebook keyboard warriors aren’t raging, they’re smirking and congratulating one another on being smarter than everyone else, a false sense of superiority also based on media lies.
The most recent topic of smirk was the annual convergence of bikers upon Sturgis, South Dakota, which was dubbed by the media as a COVID supposed “superspreader” event.
Cool story bro, but it never happened.
VodkaPundit well and truly shredded this fairy tale yesterday. In addition to providing the real numbers, Mr. Green gives a disturbing rundown of how many once-respected media outlets were willing to run with the fantastical false narrative stats.
Why did they?
Bikers kinda like America and Trump. ‘Nuff said.
Author Bob Woodward has crawled out from under his Democratic patron rock with a book he hopes will permanently damage President Trump’s hopes for re-election. He accuses Trump of downplaying the coronavirus threat in the early days of this year. Like the “very fine people” thing, this is based on deliberately misrepresenting something the president said, the context of which is plain to any fourth-grader.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the man who was with Trump during DAILY PRESIDENTIAL BRIEFINGS ABOUT THE VIRUS, came to the president’s defense. Matt wrote about it here.
The irony here is that the lefties think it’s conservatives who are swayed by fake news. In reality, they’re just a bunch of dumb fish who keep biting empty hooks and getting reeled in by the media.
We rule or we riot . . . If the idea of a November spent hunkered down at home with mass protests and violence again roiling the streets sounds appealing, don’t worry: The left has a plan for that.A coalition of influential progressive groups—including the SEIU, AFT, Color of Change, Indivisible, MoveOn, and Demos—is organizing, the Daily Beast reports, for “mass public unrest”: “Occupy shit, hold space, and shut things down, not just on Election Day but for weeks.”
Only a fool would think that this “nonviolent civil disobedience” will stay nonviolent after a summer that’s seen over 500 riots across the nation. There’s a reason these “secret” plans were revealed in painstaking detail to a sympathetic outlet, one that would repeat fever dreams about “MAGA violence after election day.” It’s the latest example of the left’s campaign of extortion: If you want the protesting, rioting, and murder wave to end, all you have to do is hand Joe Biden a landslide. Washington Free Beacon
Coronavirus
AstraZeneca still expects to know about Covid vaccine by end of year . . . AstraZeneca should still know by year-end whether its experimental vaccine protects people against coronavirus, as long as it is cleared to resume trials soon, its chief executive said on Thursday amid doubts over its rollout. Governments desperate to put an end to the COVID-19 pandemic which has caused more than 900,000 deaths and huge economic and social disruption during 2020 are pinning their hopes on a vaccine. However British drugmaker AstraZeneca suspended late-stage trials on its potential vaccine this week after an illness in a participant in Britain. Reuters
Woodward under attack for sitting on Trump comment that coronavirus was deadly . . . Bob Woodward, facing widespread criticism for only now revealing President Donald Trump’s early concerns about the severity of the coronavirus, said he needed time to be sure that Trump’s private comments from February were accurate. In Woodward’s upcoming book on Trump, “Rage,” the president is quoted saying the virus was highly contagious and “deadly stuff” at a time he was publicly dismissing it as no worse than the flu. On Twitter and elsewhere online, commentators accused Woodward of valuing book sales over public health. “Nearly 200,000 Americans have died because neither Donald Trump nor Bob Woodward wanted to risk anything substantial to keep the country informed,” wrote Esquire’s Charles P. Pierce. Associated Press
US to end Covid screening for arriving international travelers . . .
The US government is set to end enhanced screening of some international passengers for COVID-19 and drop requirements that travelers coming from the targeted countries arrive at 15 designated US airports, according to US and airline officials and a government document seen by Reuters. The administration earlier this year imposed enhanced screening requirements on travelers who had been in China, the United Kingdom, Brazil, Iran and the Schengen region of Europe. Daily Mail
Politics
Trump defends playing down coronavirus . . . President Trump defended comments he made earlier this year about the coronavirus pandemic in interviews with journalist Bob Woodward, telling Fox News’ “Hannity” Wednesday that he wanted to “show a calmness.”
“I’m the leader of the country, I can’t be jumping up and down and scaring people,” Trump told host Sean Hannity. “I don’t want to scare people. I want people not to panic, and that’s exactly what I did.” Excerpts from some of the interviews, which form the basis of Woodward’s forthcoming book, “Rage,” were published by The Washington Post earlier Wednesday. In early February, Trump told Woodward that the coronavirus was “deadly stuff” while publicly comparing it to seasonal flu. More than a month later, on March 19, Trump admitted to Woodward that he “wanted to always play it [the virus] down. “I still like playing it down, because I don’t want to create a panic,” Trump added at the time. Fox News
Biden: Trump lied about coronavirus . . . Joseph R. Biden pounced on the news Wednesday that President Trump purposely downplayed the threat of the coronavirus in the outbreak’s early stages, calling his conduct a “life and death betrayal of the American people.” Mr. Trump’s confession in a forthcoming book by Bob Woodward — that he minimized the coronavirus threat to prevent mass panic — landed like a bombshell on the campaign trail, putting the president’s team on the defensive and providing Mr. Biden with fresh ammunition to blame him for the U.S. death toll from COVID-19, which passed 190,000 on Wednesday. Washington Times
Fauci says Trump didn’t minimize the virus . . . Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, insisted he did not “get any sense” that President Trump minimized the severity of the coronavirus pandemic after audio emerged of the commander in chief telling journalist Bob Woodward earlier this year that he “wanted to always play it down” to avoid stirring panic. Fauci rejected the idea that Trump misleadingly minimized the threat posed by the virus, adding that he never witnessed the president project an improper lack of urgency during press conferences with the White House coronavirus task force. Washington Examiner
Trump called generals “a bunch of pussies” . . . Former Defense Secretary James Mattis once heard President Donald Trump disparaging top military brass, as he and other national security professionals had deep-seated concerns about the president, according to Bob Woodward’s new book. Mattis heard Trump say in a meeting, ‘my f***ing generals are a bunch of pussies,’ because the military leaders cared more about alliances than trade deals, the book gave as the president’s reasoning. Mattis, who quit the administration in December 2018 after Trump decided to pull U.S. troops out of Syria, talked to Woodward and called Trump ‘dangerous,’ ‘unfit’ and said he had ‘no moral compass.’ Daily Mail
Kim Jong Un called Obama an “asshole” . . . North Korean despot Kim Jong Un considered former President Barack Obama “an a- -hole,” President Trump told Washington Post editor Bob Woodward in touting his own relationship with Kim. Trump made the claim during a series of interviews for Woodward’s upcoming book, excerpts of which were published Wednesday by the broadsheet. By contrast, Kim spoke glowingly of Trump in letters between the two leaders, which Trump has described as “love letters, really,” independently obtained by Woodward. New York Post
Fauci said Trump has attention span of “a minus number” . . . Dr. Anthony Fauci criticized President Donald Trump as ‘rudderless’ in dealing with the coronavirus, according to Bob Woodward’s bombshell new book. The nation’s top infectious disease expert made the comment to an associate, according to Woodward’s book ‘Rage.’ Excerpts of the book came out Wednesday. Trump’s ‘attention span is like a minus number,’ Woodward quotes Fauci as saying. ‘His sole purpose is to get reelected,’ according to the book, which reports Fauci told other players that Trump “is on a separate channel” and wasn’t focussed in meetings. Daily Mail
Biden and DNC outraise Trump by more than $150 million . . . Donald Trump and the Republican National Committee raised $210 million in August, falling $154 million short of Joe Biden’s haul over the same period. Biden and the Democratic National Committee previously announced raising a stunning $365 million last month, a record-shattering total that Trump failed to match. Neither campaign has yet released their cash-on-hand totals, but last month’s fundraising disparity means Biden may have closed Trump’s once-formidable cash advantage. That dwindling cash edge has alarmed Republicans, as the Trump campaign comes under new scrutiny for how it has spent the hundreds of millions of dollars it raised from 2017 until now. Politico
Top Trump officials say Democrats behind DHS whistleblower allegation . . . Two senior Trump administration officials suspect Democrats are the hidden hand behind a Department of Homeland Security official’s claim that agency leaders manipulated internal intelligence reports to match up with false statements President Trumpmade about antifa and anarchists. Brian Murphy, the acting undersecretary who was recently booted from the DHS Office of Intelligence and Analysis, is attempting to save face amid a congressional investigation, both officials alleged. They separately said that they were concerned that the sudden cooperation between Murphy and congressional Democrats may have more to do with Democrats trying to take down the Trump administration two months out from the election than rectifying a smaller matter of how Murphy carried out his job following other complaints. CNN reported earlier Wednesday that Murphy accused acting Secretary Chad Wolf and acting U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Director Ken Cuccinelli of ordering intelligence officials to modify internal reports so that they back up Trump’s claims on liberal movements and far-left threats. Washington Examiner
Trump releases Supreme Court list and challenges Biden to do the same . . . President Trump has most of his party united behind him and can easily release a list of nominees who will satisfy almost everyone. Biden is a liberal pretending to embrace socialism, and so his list will anger one of those wings of his party. And it would make the election more about policy and less about Trump’s Twitter feed, which is where Biden wants to stay focused. Among those added to his 2016 list include 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Bridget S. Bade, Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, and Republican Sens. Tom Cotton, Ted Cruz, and Josh Hawley. White House Dossier
Pelosi’s San Francisco salon goes out of business . . . San Francisco hair salon owner Erica Kious is shutting her doors for good after controversy over a visit by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi last week destroyed her business. “I am actually done in San Francisco and closing my doors, unfortunately,” she announced. Fox News obtained surveillance video last week of Pelosi visiting the salon for a hair wash and blowout, despite the fact that San Francisco salons were closed at the time due to the coronavirus pandemic. The video showed Pelosi walking through the interior of the salon without wearing a mask. Fox News
National Security
Trump bragged to Woodward about secret nuclear weapons . . . President Donald Trump reportedly revealed the existence of and bragged about a supposedly secret nuclear weapons system during an interview with Bob Woodward, according to an excerpt published Wednesday from his new book “Rage.” Trump was speaking to Woodward about how close the U.S. had come to war with North Korea in 2017 when he brought up the nuclear weapons system. “I have built a nuclear — a weapons system that nobody’s ever had in this country before,” Trump reportedly told Woodward, according to The Washington Post. “We have stuff that you haven’t even seen or heard about.” Daily Caller
Russian hackers suspected of targeting Biden-allied firm . . . Microsoft recently alerted one of Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden’s main election campaign advisory firms that it had been targeted by suspected Russian state-backed hackers, according to three people briefed on the matter. The hacking attempts targeted staff at Washington-based SKDKnickerbocker, a campaign strategy and communications firm working with Biden and other prominent Democrats, over the past two months, the sources said. Reuters
International
Navalny getting better, able to speak . . . Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny has made further progress in his recovery after what Germany said was poisoning with a Soviet-style Novichok nerve agent, and is able to speak again, Der Spiegel magazine reported on Thursday. The Kremlin critic is being treated in Berlin’s Charite hospital after falling ill on a Russian domestic flight last month. Reuters
India records nearly 96,000 coronavirus infections in a day . . . India reported record jumps in new coronavirus infections and deaths on Thursday, taking its tally of cases past 4.4 million, health ministry figures showed. In the last 24 hours, 95,735 new infections were detected, with 1,172 deaths accounting for the highest single-day mortality figures in more than a month, to push the toll beyond 75,000. Infections are growing faster in India than anywhere else in the world and the United States is the only nation worse affected. Reuters
Money
Amazon hiring 33K people at salaries averaging $150K . . . Amazon is inviting the public to take part in a virtual career fair next week where prospective hires can submit resumes for its corporate and tech divisions as the retailing juggernaut continues its expansion during the COVID-19 pandemic. In the latest sign of how it’s prospering while others are faltering during the global public health crisis, Amazon said on Wednesday it is seeking to bring aboard 33,000 people for corporate and tech roles in the next few months. Daily Mail
Watchdog says Amazon raised prices on essentials amid the pandemic . . . Amazon charged inflated prices for hand sanitizer, disposable gloves and other essentials months after the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, a consumer watchdog said in a report accusing the world’s largest online retailer of price gouging. The report, released Thursday by Public Citizen, examines roughly two dozen products on Amazon’s site. Relying on its own observations and data from price-tracking sites, the nonprofit public interest group documented price increases of as much as 1,000% when compared with pre-pandemic levels or prices at other large retailers. Bloomberg
You should also know
Netflix releases “Cuties” movie sexualizing children . . . “Cuties,” the award-winning French film featuring young teen dancers was released Wednesday on Netflix and is receiving another round of backlash from viewers for its depiction of children in sexual situations. The film, which is directed by French movie maker Maïmouna Doucouré, centers around Amy, 11, joining young underage female dancers in a group “named ‘the cuties’ at school, and rapidly grows aware of her burgeoning femininity – upsetting her mother and her values in the process,” according to the films description. Footage of the movie began to go viral Wednesday night with many viewers accusing Netflix of promoting pedophilia and sexualizing children for allowing “Cuties” on their streaming platform. Daily Caller
What do the Obamas, with their multi-million dollar Netflix contract, have to say about this?
NY gynecologist accused of sexually abusing patients, including Andrew Yang’s wife . . . A former Columbia University gynecologist accused of sexually abusing more than two dozen patients, including the wife of former presidential candidate Andrew Yang, has been released on $1 million bail. Robert A. Hadden, 62, faces federal charges including six counts of inducing others to travel to engage in illegal sex acts in a federal indictment unsealed Wednesday. The sexual abuse allegations against Hadden date back as early as 1993. Daily Mail
Guilty Pleasures
Woman votes topless after being told anti-Trump T-shirt not allowed . . . A woman voting in Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary found an unorthodox way of protesting an election official who ruled her T-shirt was a form of electioneering: She took it off and voted topless. Exeter Town Moderator Paul Scafidi said the woman walked into the Talbot gymnasium Tuesday wearing a “McCain Hero, Trump Zero” T-shirt. As a ballot clerk was checking her name off the voter list, Scafidi said he informed the woman she could not wear a shirt with a political candidate featured on it while she voted. State law states no person “shall distribute, wear, or post at a polling place any campaign material,” in part, and if convicted, is subject to a fine up to $1,000. USA Today
Man saved by floating Tiki Bar of priests after praying to Jesus for help . . . A man at a New York lake thought he was going to die stranded in the water, until a floating Tiki bar of priests happened to come by, saving his life, numerous sources reported. Jimmy MacDonald was at Lake George in Albany paddling his kayak, and drifted away from his wife and step kids while taking pictures. But choppy water made it difficult for him to get back to shore, and then he tipped over and lost his kayak paddle. He was stranded in 30 feet of water, with his life jacket coming up over his head as he desperately held on to the kayak and his new $1,400 smartphone. He tried to regain control of the kayak, but soon enough, began to lose hope that he’d survive. “That’s when I said, ‘Alright, I think I might die today. I think this might be it.’ I prayed to my lord and savior Jesus Christ for help,” MacDonald said. Daily Caller
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Happy Thursday! Man, was yesterday a news day for the ages. If it’s any indication of what’s to come in the days leading up to the election, we’re in for quite a ride. Strap in and let’s get to it.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The United States confirmed 32,617 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday, with 5.5 percent of the 593,993 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,145 deaths were attributed to the virus on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 190,784.
President Trump admitted to downplaying the threat of the coronavirus to the public in a series of interviews with Bob Woodard for the journalist’s forthcoming book Rage. “I wanted to always play it down,” the president told Woodward on March 19. “I still like playing it down, because I don’t want to create a panic.” During a press conference on Wednesday, the president did not deny making these comments. “I don’t want to create panic, as you say,” he told reporters Wednesday. “And certainly, I’m not going to drive this country or the world into a frenzy.”
Brian Murphy, the former head of the Homeland Security Department’s intelligence branch, said in a whistleblower complaint on Wednesday that several top DHS officials—including DHS acting secretary Chad Wolf and deputy secretary Ken Cuccinelli—ordered him to downplay the threat of Russian election interference and make the threat of white supremacy “appear less severe.” The complaint implies that the DHS officials involved acted outside their authority to censor intelligence that could threaten the president’s re-election chances.
A Norwegian lawmaker has nominated President Trump for a Nobel Peace Prize, citing the U.S. role in brokering a groundbreaking peace deal between Israel and the United Arab Emirates this year.
The president has updated his 2016 shortlist of candidates to fill possible Supreme Court vacancies should he win a second term. Among those on the list: Sens. Mike Lee, Ted Cruz, Tom Cotton, and Josh Hawley.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Wednesday that there is a “substantial chance” Russian authorities were involved in the poisoning of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny.
Trump’s Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day
With less than two months until Election Day on November 3, Donald Trump had the kind of news day that would threaten to sink a traditional candidate. The revelations, any one of which might have dominated news cycles in a less frenzied time, came in rapid succession, leaving even those of us whose job it is to follow and report political news struggling just to keep up. They were not the kinds of stories whose meaning depends primarily on where you sit politically or how you view anonymous sources. Instead, they were developments that grew out of the words and actions of top Trump administration officials—with the most damaging revelations coming from the mouth of the president himself, in recordings of interviews he gave the country’s most prolific chronicler of modern presidencies.
Woodward: Is it a cover-up if you admit it?
First, there were the details leaked in advance from Rage, Bob Woodward’s upcoming second book on the Trump White House. In the critical earliest days of the pandemic’s intrusion into America, Trump frequently pooh-poohed the possibility that it could pose a problem here: “When it gets a little warmer, it miraculously goes away,” he said during a rally in early February. American cases would “soon be down to zero.”
But a full month before he hit send on that tweet, Trump made clear in a call with Woodward that he understood the lethality of the virus and knew well that it posed a far greater threat than the flu.
In an intelligence briefing on January 28, National Security Adviser Robert O’Brien warned Trump about the challenge ahead. “This will be the biggest national security threat you face in your presidency. …This is going to be the roughest thing you face.” Matthew Pottinger, a highly respected Asia specialist on the National Security Council, echoed these concerns, comparing the coming crisis to the influenza pandemic of 1918, which killed tens of millions worldwide. O’Brien, in an interview Wednesday afternoon with Fox News anchor Bret Baier, confirmed his dire warnings.
In a conversation with Woodward on February 7—audio excerpts of which were released Wednesday—Trump was clear-eyed about the dangers presented by the virus.
“It goes through air—you just breathe the air, and that’s how it’s passed. And so that’s a very tricky one. That’s a very delicate one. It’s also more deadly than, you know, even your strenuous flus,” Trump told Woodward. The coronavirus was “deadly stuff,” he repeated—five times deadlier than the flu, perhaps more.
It would be weeks before Trump would be anything close to that bracing in public. “That’s a little bit like the flu, it’s a little like the regular flu that we have flu shots for,” he said during a February 26 press conference. “And we’ll essentially have flu shots for this in a fairly quick manner.”
Why the divergent rhetoric? Trump explained during another interview with Woodward in mid-March: “To be honest with you, I wanted to always play it down. I still like playing it down, because I don’t want to create a panic.”
The desire to try to stave off public paranoia wasn’t unreasonable on its face. But the president’s idea of “playing it down”—insisting all was well while dismissing or ridiculing those who were warning that the opposite was true—didn’t just fail to calm down the nation as public health specialists contradicted his happy talk. It set the tone for the fragmentary, echo-chamber partisan reaction to the virus that dogs us to this day.
Even as Trump acknowledged that he’d deliberately played down the virus, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany insisted he hadn’t done so. “The president never played down the virus,” she said, breaking a promise from her first press briefing when she told reporters, “I will never lie to you, you have my word on that.”
The president also boasted to Woodward about his diplomatic dalliance with North Korean strongman Kim Jong-un. According to Trump, his relationship with Kim had a kind of instant lust-at-first sight quality that he’d sometimes experienced with women. “You meet a woman. In one second, you know whether or not it’s going to happen. It doesn’t take you 10 minutes and it doesn’t take you six weeks. It’s like, whoa. OK. You know? It takes somewhat less than a second.”
The president called the U.S. military “suckers” for failing to receive adequate compensation for America’s longtime troop presence in South Korea. “We’re defending you, we’re allowing you to exist,” Trump told Woodward, speaking of our South Korean allies.
While Trump’s own words dominated the news out of the first leaked excerpts of Rage, other reporting on the book’s contents make clear there is more coming, including the kind of in-the-room background reporting for which Woodward is famous—and controversial.
Trump is reported to have disparaged his top military advisers as copulative felines for their unwillingness to upset alliances in pursuit of a more confrontational trade policy. Gen. James Mattis, Trump’s former secretary of defense, is supposed to have described him as “dangerous” and “unfit.” Former Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats is reported to have expressed similar sentiments. Woodward reports that intelligence officials wondered aloud about Trump’s odd behavior toward Vladimir Putin and Russia.
Dr. Anthony Fauci is supposed to have said that Trump’s attention span is “like a minus number” and that “his sole purpose is to get re-elected.” For his part, Dr. Fauci has (sort of) disputed those quotes. “If you notice, it was ‘others’ who have said that,” he told Fox News yesterday—referring to the fact that Woodward claims to have gotten his quotes secondhand. “You should ask ‘others.’ I don’t recall that at all.” Fauci also said that “I didn’t get any sense that he was distorting anything” about the pandemic.
Woodward’s book will not be released for another five days, but it’s clear that these early leaks are just a preview of what’s to come. Trump gave Woodward 18 on-the-record interviews for the book, a fact that prompted much finger-pointing among supporters yesterday and led Tucker Carlson to cast Trump as a hapless victim of Sen. Lindsey Graham who, Carlson claims, had urged the president to cooperate with Woodward.
Department of Homeland Security
Last week, the political discussion in Washington was dominated by a debate over anonymous sources and when to trust them. An article in The Atlantic by editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg reported that the president had disparaged military leaders, calling them “suckers” and “losers.” Trump critics seized on the report as more evidence that Trump doesn’t respect the sacrifices of military leaders and his defenders dismissed the claims as unreliable, given the unwillingness of Goldberg’s sources to go on the record.
The second major story Wednesday involved claims from a senior official at the Department of Homeland Security, who put his name to several, detailed accusations that top DHS officials had manipulated intelligence for political purposes. Brian Murphy, who formerly headed the DHS intelligence branch, accused top Trump officials of repeatedly ordering him to massage intelligence reporting to better fit the White House’s political messaging. Several of those orders are detailed in the complaint:
In late October 2018, Murphy says he was ordered “to ensure the intelligence assessments he produced … supported the policy argument that large numbers of KSTs [known or suspected terrorists] were entering the United States through the southwest border.” Murphy declined to do so on the basis that he believed following such an order would constitute a felony. This order came just days before that year’s midterm elections; such supposed terrorist infiltrations were a major political theme of the president’s at that time.
In May of this year, Murphy says acting DHS secretary Chad Wolf ordered him to “cease providing intelligence assessments on the threat of Russian interference in the United States, and instead start reporting on interference activities by China and Iran”—an instruction that, Murphy testifies, came directly from the White House. Russia, the U.S. National Counterintelligence and Security Center has said multiple times this summer, continues its covert efforts to boost Trump’s presidential campaign and to damage Joe Biden; it has also said that China and Iran would prefer to see Biden in the Oval Office.
Also this May, Murphy says DHS leadership pressed back against a Homeland Threat Assessment from his office that labeled white supremacy and Russian influence in the United States as U.S. security concerns because of “how the HTA would reflect upon President Trump.” Murphy claims acting Deputy DHS Secretary Ken Cuccinelli specifically ordered him to modify the section on white supremacy to “make the threat appear less severe,” and to “include information on the prominence of violent ‘left-wing’ groups.” The whistleblower complaint was released by the House Intelligence Committee, whose chair, Rep. Adam Schiff, subsequently subpoenaed Murphy to testify before the House Intelligence Committee later this month. Schiff has been an outspoken and highly partisan critic of the Trump administration, a fact that the president’s defenders noted immediately. “The complaint alleges repeated violations of law and regulations, abuses of authority, attempted censorship of intelligence analysis, and improper administration of an intelligence program related to Russian efforts to influence the U.S. elections,” Schiff said in a letter announcing the complaint.
Attempting to silence Fauci
The Woodward book wasn’t Wednesday’s only big Fauci-related story, nor was the whistleblower complaint Wednesday’s only big story alleging the White House exerted political pressure on its experts to present misleading information to the public. Internal Health and Human Services emails obtained by Politicoshow a senior HHS public affairs staffer repeatedly trying to get the National Institutes of Health to change Fauci’s planned remarks for media interviews.
“I continue to have an issue with kids getting tested and repeatedly and even university students in a widespread manner,” Paul Alexander, a senior adviser to HHS assistant secretary for public affairs and longtime GOP political strategist Michael Caputo, said in one such email. “And I disagree with Dr. Fauci about this. Vehemently.”
“Can you ensure Dr. Fauci indicates masks are for the teachers in schools. Not for children,” Alexander said in another email just this week. “There is no data, none, zero, across the entire world that shows children especially young children, spread this virus to other children, or to adults or to their teachers.”
“No one tells me what I can say and cannot say,” Fauci told Politico. “I speak on scientific evidence.”
Pence and QAnon
After all that, this wacky affair reads almost as an afterthought: the Associated Press reported yesterday that Vice President Mike Pence plans to attend a fundraiser next week whose hosts are apparent adherents of the QAnon conspiracy theory, “a wide-ranging conspiracy fiction spread largely through the internet, centered on the baseless belief that Trump is waging a secret campaign against enemies in the ‘deep state’ and a child sex trafficking ring run by satanic pedophiles and cannibals. It is based on cryptic postings by the anonymous ‘Q,’ purportedly a government insider.”
The QAnon theory is nearly three years old now, but has gained new notoriety at several points this year—a candidate espousing it won a Republican primary in Georgia earlier this year, and President Trump has described her as a “future Republican star.” Pence himself formerly told CBS in August that “I don’t know anything about QAnon, and I dismiss it out of hand.”
Will It Matter?
The obvious question, after a brutal day like Wednesday was for Trump: Will it matter?
We won’t speculate here. It’s clear that Trump defenders struggled to minimize or dismiss the flurry of reporting yesterday, whether the mendacity of McEnany or the odd theorizing of Tucker Carlson on Fox News. Carlson wondered why Trump would talk to Woodward at all and placed the blame on Senator Lindsey Graham. But Carlson’s theory— deflecting any blame for the decision from Trump and placing the culpability on Graham alone—was an odd one. “Why would he do something like that? You’d have to ask him. But keep in mind that Lindsey Graham has opposed, passionately opposed, virtually every major policy initiative that Donald Trump articulated when he first ran, from illegal immigration, to pulling back from pointless wars, to maintaining law and order at home. Lindsey Graham was against all of that more than many Democrats. So, maybe you already know the answer.” A senator who has been one of Trump’s most enthusiastic and obsequious congressional supporters for his entire presidency is secretly sabotaging the president by recommending Trump talk to a journalist?
If the subtext of Joe Biden’s pitch to America—and sometimes the text—is a return to normalcy, understood roughly as an end to current chaos, days like yesterday would seem to bolster his case. But it’s worth noting that there have been many stories over the past five years that would have extinguished the careers of a conventional politician but haven’t proven fatal to Trump. And while yesterday was an intense news day by typical standards, we may look back from November and see it instead as relatively normal.
Worth Your Time
Jessica Krug, a left-wing African history professor at George Washington University, resigned Wednesday after admitting she lied about being black for most of her career in academia. Commentary’s Noah Rothman has some insights as to how such a woke professor was able to get away with such an outrageous lie for so long. “A survey of some of the material she was expostulating explains why she coasted under the radar,” Rothman explains. “Krug was saying what her colleagues wanted to hear, and what they want to hear is apologia for violent radicalism.”
In a symbolic head nod to the #OscarsSoWhite campaign in 2015—the woke Twitter trend that criticized Hollywood for its lack of racial diversity in Oscar nominations that year—the academy announced on Tuesday that best picture contenders will soon have to play by a new set of diversity requirements in order to win. But many believe that this decision might backfire on the academy. “That thunk you heard coming out of La-La Land on Tuesday was the sound of the Academy grandly planting its face in the sidewalk by announcing it was formally rejecting the pursuit of artistic quality in favor of a byzantine quota system,” argues Kyle Smith in the New York Post on Wednesday.
Matt Yglesias went on Tyler Cowen’s “Conversations with Tyler” podcast to talk about his new book, One Billion Americans, in which he advocates for massive population growth through immigration and large-scale policies that would make it easier for more people to have more children. He argues that America’s national greatness and achievements have always been predicated on its massive scale, and that the U.S. needs to become a much bigger country to fend off rising threats like China.
Those who consider themselves “NeverTrump” find themselves in a similar place to where they were four years ago—do you support the policies even if you find the man distasteful?—but now have the president’s record to inform their decisions. Where do they stand? Two very different opinion columns in the Wall Street Journal show the debate hasn’t changed. Last week, Michael I. Krauss, a professor emeritus at Geoge Mason, explained that he wrote in Paul Ryan in 2016 but would vote for Trump this time around: He writes: “Despite often-contemptuous hostility by the elite press, and outright civil disobedience by several federal judges, the president has performed his duties and genuinely tried to keep his promises.” Meanwhile, Walter Olson has watched Trump align with strongmen and fail to respond to the pandemic properly, and he has seen enough: “We don’t know when the next crisis will come. It might be a close election in which Mr. Trump needs to accept the decision of the judiciary. We might need national unity. Instead, this man’s tweets are the ground glass in the national milkshake.”
Something Fun
In a world of bloated, indistinguishable campaign spots, this one gets top marks for both brevity and originality.
Critical race theory and radical diversity training initiatives have monopolized elite leftist culture to the point where white liberals are now doing everything they can to shed themselves of the alleged evil that is their skin color, all while distancing themselves from so-called “lower whites.” In yesterday’s French Press, David explains why white, elite Democrats are more likely to care about critical race theory and virtue signaling than their black and brown compatriots and why it’s a problem. “But what elites lack in electoral power, they often make up for in cultural and economic clout, and in that space radicalism can have an oppressive and distorting effect even on the black and brown people they seek to support,” David explains.
In his Wednesday G-File, Jonah explains why Trump’s leaked interviews with Bob Woodward—in which he admitted to downplaying the virus to the public on numerous occasions—didn’t really come out of the woodwork. In the end, the president’s comments aren’t the least bit surprising when you consider his propensity to twist the truth to suit his own personal motives. “My own theory has always been that Trump thinks he can wish, bluster, spin, and bully away inconvenient narratives, in large part because he has had so much success at it in the past,” Jonah argues.
On Monday, Trump said the “top people in the Pentagon probably aren’t [in love with me] because they want to do nothing but fight wars so that all of those wonderful companies that make the bombs and make the planes and make everything else stay happy.” In his latest Vital Interestsnewsletter, Thomas Joscelyn explains why this smear is “grossly inaccurate.” “The chief reason the U.S. has forces in those countries in 2020—more than three and half years into Trump’s presidency—is that the jihadists have kept fighting,” he writes. “Trump could have pushed for a full withdrawal from the 9/11 wars by now, but he chose not to do so. It’s easy to see why—ISIS has survived the end of its territorial caliphate, and other terrorist threats continue to emerge.”
Trump decided to reduce U.S. forces in Iraq and Afghanistan less than a week after Jeffrey Goldberg’s bombshell article in The Atlantic highlighted anonymous accusations of the president’s poor conduct toward American veterans. On yesterday’s episode of The Dispatch Podcast, Sarah, Steve, and Jonah tackle some of the move’s political implications for Trump’s re-election campaign before launching into a lively debate over the ethics of using anonymous sources in journalism.
Let Us Know
Is President Trump serious about the prospect of nominating a current GOP senator to the Supreme Court? Hard to say. But if the screws were on you to choose: Hawley, Lee, Cotton, or Cruz?
So I won’t (again) vote for either major candidate (can’t by my lights).
Maybe it’s sports, but I can’t help but feel my rooting for either Biden or Trump matters – root for Biden as a nicer, more normal guy, with bad policies, or root for Trump (whom I truly can’t stand to listen to), but with significantly better policies (in most areas) – lots of the normal caveats in there, etc.
Not voting for one of them, but can’t decide which one to root for – weird?
Kemberlee Kaye: “Speaks to the horrid state of higher education when the federal government has to threaten withholding federal monies to force first amendment compliance.”
Mary Chastain: “The Best Picture Oscar is the most coveted award in Hollywood. But rules have changed. If your awesome film doesn’t have enough diversity on and off the screen the Academy will not give you the time of day.”
Leslie Eastman: “Legal Insurrection readers may recall that before the violence and thuggery of the BLM/AntiFa “fiery but peaceful” protests, we were covering the costumed theatrics of Extinction Rebellion. The green justice demonstrators are back, targeting several British newspapers and bring the left and the right together in the United Kingdom against their tactics.”
Stacey Matthews: “Per the New York Post, Rep. Max Rose (D-NY) is using digital campaign ads to call NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio “the worst mayor in the history of New York City.” Now if that’s not the understatement of the year…”
David Gerstman: “Mary Chastain blogged that a Norwegian official has nominated President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize. Norwegian Parliament Member Christian Tybring-Gjedde observed, “The people who have received the Peace Prize in recent years have done much less than Donald Trump. For example, Barack Obama did nothing.” One thing to keep in mind about the Trump administration is that in many ways it is as much a repudiation of George W. Bush’s presidency as it is Barack Obama’s. In the wake of the Iraq War, Obama scaled back U.S. involvement in the Middle East by boosting Iran. However, Trump has taken a different approach: he’s been working to bring Iran’s enemies together to blunt the Islamic Republic’s aggression. So far, Trump’s efforts to contain Iran seem to be the more effective way of bringing peace to the region than giving it a blank check to meddle wherever it wants.”
Legal Insurrection Foundation is a Rhode Island tax-exempt corporation established exclusively for charitable purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to educate and inform the public on legal, historical, economic, academic, and cultural issues related to the Constitution, liberty, and world events.
For more information about the Foundation, CLICK HERE.
“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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The Latest Political ‘Scandal’ You Probably Don’t Care About Days after The Atlantic’s political hit piece alleging President Donald Trump denigrated America’s honored dead at Belleau Woods, France, the media unleashed its next “bombshell” report: That President Trump publicly downplayed the COVID-19 virus, despite knowing that it was “dangerous, airborne, highly contagious and ‘more deadly than even your strenuous flus.’” “I wanted to always play it down,” Trump told Woodward on March 19 in one of 18 interviews for his new book, “Rage.” “I still like playing it down, because I don’t want to create a panic.” On cue, Joe Biden delivered a pre-written speech about the “life-and-death betrayal,” showing just how closely the press and Biden campaign coordinate in their opposition to Trump. (Gone are the days when they even try to hide it.) While there’s plenty of room to criticize both Democrats and Republicans’ response to the COVID-19 virus, Trump has a reasonable explanation for what he said to Woodward—one that’s not so maliciously motivated. “I want to keep the country calm,” Trump saidpublicly on March 30. “I don’t want to panic in the country. I could cause panic much better than even you.” Dr. Fauci came to Trump’s defense, telling Fox News he never got the sense that President Trump was downplaying COVID-19: “I didn’t get any sense that he was distorting anything. In my discussions with him, they were always straightforward about the concerns that we had,” he said. And just like that, the media’s love fest with Fauci was over. 💔 The press then moved on to their next targets: GOP members of Congress, whom they would ask to react to a book that the media received early copies of—but wasn’t yet released to the public. When Republicans responded that they haven’t read it…oh, the outrage! All this is to say, election season is on! 🗳️ Only 54 days until Nov. 3. Expect more “bombshells” to come. (BTW—while the media was busy reporting on this “bombshell,” Trump was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize for actually doing something.) Wildfires Rage On
“More than 90 major fires that have burned more than 5,300 square miles – almost the size of Connecticut – are raging in 13 Western states, according to a count by the National Fire Information Center,” writes USA Today. “Thick smoke obliterated the sun in some areas, distant flames turning the sky orange in others.” Some highlights:
In Oregon, almost 100,000 homes and businesses were without power as crews battled large fires in Clackamas County, south of Portland.
Washington state was seeing ‘unprecedented’ fires, with 500 square miles burning on Monday alone.
In Northern California, helicopters have rescued hundreds of people stranded in the Sierra National Forest, where the Creek Fire was burning.
Buzzfeed rounded up some frightening photos of the fires. And this video is surreal. Weather conditions favorable for fire spread are expected to last until Thursday, when calmer winds will hopefully bring the West coast some relief.
“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.”
Remember when Disney executive Bob Iger said it would be “very difficult” to keep filming in Georgia if the state enacted a pro-life law? Well, at least Disney is consistent in its utter disregard for human life.
Thursday Links
Trump releases new list of Supreme Court nominees for second term. It includes Sens. Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley, and Tom Cotton. (The Federalist)
What it takes to preserve friendship amid deep divisions over politics and COVID-19. (NY Post)
The Left: The US is a racist hellhole where many more black and brown people should live. (The Federalist)
Meghan Markle and Prince Harry have …just a few demands for their speaking engagements. (People)
September is NICU awareness month…I shared some thoughts. (Instagram)
And ‘Keeping Up With the Kardashians’ is officially coming to an end. 🍑 (TMZ)
Kelsey Bolar is a senior policy analyst at Independent Women’s Forum and a contributor to The Federalist. She is also the Thursday editor of BRIGHT, and the 2017 Tony Blankley Chair at The Steamboat Institute. She lives in Washington, DC, with her husband, daughter, and Australian Shepherd, Utah.
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Sep 10, 2020 01:00 am
Considering the vast dichotomy in the litany of promises made, it is inevitable that either the moneyed elite or the mob of passionate true believers will be betrayed if Biden wins the election. Read More…
Sep 10, 2020 01:00 am
What has happened with big time sports’ fascination with crunching all kinds of numbers and statistics? Has this fascination with stats vanished in lieu of a political agenda? Read More…
Sep 10, 2020 01:00 am
You’d never let the 2020 version of Uncle Joe babysit your kids, much less run the country. But that’s not stopping the Democrats from propping him up. Read More…
Sep 10, 2020 01:00 am
It’s not a bridge too far to expect sober citizens to exercise their ancient right to self-defense when governments cannot or will not meet their responsibilities to protect and defend. Read More…
Burning cities and fleeing mayors
Sep 10, 2020 01:00 am
The same mayors who have defended, and even promoted, acts of anarchy in their cities in the name of social justice are now feeling that it’s getting a little too close for comfort. Read more…
In defense of our anthem
Sep 10, 2020 01:00 am
Standing for our anthem is not an act of blind patriotism. It is a wide-eyed declaration of respect for the values the flag represents. Read more…
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Join Larry J. Sabato and the Crystal Ball team today at 2 p.m. eastern for the next installment of our new Sabato’s Crystal Ball: America Votes webinar series.We will be discussing today’s Crystal Ball assessment of the Electoral College, as well as our new outlook on the race for the Senate. If you have questions you would like us to answer on air about these or other topics, just send us an email at goodpolitics@virginia.edu.
You can watch via our YouTube channel or at this direct YouTube link, and our first three episodes of the show are archived at our YouTube channel as well.
To support this series and the Center for Politics, text USAVOTES to 41444.
By Larry J. Sabato, J. Miles Coleman, and Kyle Kondik
Sabato’s Crystal Ball
KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE
— Joe Biden is better positioned to win the presidency than Donald Trump, but it would be foolish to rule out another Trump upset.
— Trump’s potential winning map would look a lot like 2016, with perhaps a few changes; Biden’s potential winning map might feature Democratic advances in the Sun Belt and retreats in the Midwest compared to past winning Democratic maps.
— We are moving the single electoral vote in Nebraska’s Second Congressional District from Toss-up to Leans Democratic, which pushes our Electoral College count to 269 electoral votes at least leaning to Biden, 204 at least leaning to Trump, and 65 Toss-up electoral votes (Arizona, Florida, North Carolina, and Wisconsin).
Table 1: Crystal Ball Electoral College rating change
State
Old Rating
New Rating
NE-2
Toss-up
Leans Democratic
The state of the presidential race
Everybody complains about the Electoral College but nobody ever does anything about it.
Before PolitiFact gets hold of this, let’s admit the statement is false in two respects. First, there are loads of plans floating out there to reform or abolish the Electoral College. We’ve dabbled at fixing it ourselves. But nothing’s going to happen this year — and that’s for sure.
Second, everybody is not complaining about the Electoral College. Republicans, for instance. In 2000 and 2016, the GOP has won the presidency while losing the national popular vote, and if Donald Trump wins a second term, he will likely travel this route again in November.
So like it or not, we as a nation are still going to College this fall. The popular vote is fun to talk about, but it is an artificial, powerless concept — as Al Gore and Hillary Clinton know all too well. And because most states are not two-party competitive anymore, we ought to spend the next two months focusing almost entirely on the dozen or so states that will pick the next president: Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Wisconsin. (These are the 13 states we rate as Toss-ups or as Leaning toward one party — additionally, there are competitive, single electoral votes in the ME-2 and NE-2 congressional districts.)
Everybody has a different theory about how the Donald Trump-Joe Biden contest will go, and thousands of people on Twitter fight about it all day long. One thing both sides agree on is that the race in the swing states will, on the whole, be closer than the national vote. In the polling averages, Joe Biden leads by 7-8%. Yet Biden’s lead in most of the swing states is smaller, and sometimes considerably smaller, than his national edge. Therefore, if the contest truly tightens in the next seven weeks, then Biden’s hold on some of the swing states will likely fall to a few points or less — and the makings of another Trump upset will emerge.
This is the scenario that, apologies to Jesse Jackson, keeps hope alive in the Trump camp and causes Democrats to lose sleep with nightmarish flashbacks to 2016.
By no means are the two years, this election and the one four years ago, riding on parallel tracks. Clinton was considerably more controversial than Biden is now. Trump has to defend his record in office; in ’16 he could just go after President Obama and his would-be successor, claiming “only I can fix it.” Plus, this time around, Trump has to defend his handling of the pandemic and make excuses for a bad economy. As the Hotline pointed out Tuesday, Trump was close to or ahead of Clinton in national polls at quite a few points in summer 2016, while Trump hasn’t led Biden in a reputable nonpartisan survey since early April.
It is still not clear precisely how racial justice issues will cut. Recent polls suggest Trump isn’t benefitting, but surveys often fail to pick up white racial resentment: Whites are sympathetic to the plight of Blacks on the record, less so when they mark their ballots in private.
For the record, we didn’t believe the overly rosy summer polls for Biden — who can forget Quinnipiac’s 13% margin for Biden in highly competitive Florida, for example (the pollster’s more recent survey has it at Biden +3). Trump has proven a hundred times that his base will stick with him through thick and thin, and so will other Republicans and GOP-leaning independents in this highly partisan and polarized era. Is Trump more than a few points shy of the 46% he received in 2016? If he is not, an effective get-out-the-vote effort targeting Trump supporters who weren’t registered or didn’t vote four years ago could do the trick. On the other hand, as we have argued for months, the lack of prominent third-party candidates this time means Trump will need more than the 46% he garnered before.
Anyway, everybody’s got a theory and this strange impersonal campaign makes handicapping tougher than usual, especially with so many surprises to come. Right now, you’d rather be Joe Biden, but only a very foolish person would rule out another Trump upset. It is never easy to defeat an incumbent president, even a deeply flawed one. Trump will pull out all the stops, and no doubt he has October surprises — very plural — planned right up until the end.
So let’s look at what Trump’s winning Electoral College map might look like — the one his campaign realistically believes can be achieved — and then do the same for Biden. Finally, we’ll tell you where we believe the map is today (subject to later revisions, inevitably).
Map 1: A good night for Trump
On a good night for Trump, he’d essentially pull off a repeat of his 2016 win, though we think it’s likely there would be at least a few states that change hands. Among the trio of Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, we’ve always regarded Michigan as the likeliest state to revert back to blue. Perhaps after watching the Clinton campaign fail to inspire the necessary turnout in urban areas in those states, the Biden operation does a better job turning out Black voters — but Trump’s rural strength ends up holding, and Democrats can ultimately only flip one of the three back. So in that case, Michigan would seem the most likely state to flip back blue, with Pennsylvania and Wisconsin narrowly sticking with Trump in this scenario.
In terms of expanding their map, the Trump campaign has often cited New Mexico as a Clinton state that they can gain this year. Still, the last Republican to carry New Mexico, George W. Bush in 2004, did so because he was competitive in the suburbs there. Bush took just over 47% in Bernalillo County — the state’s most populous county, which houses Albuquerque — while Trump couldn’t crack 35% there in 2016. There’s little reason to think voters there have warmed to him, and the (limited) polling from the state this year suggests that Trump isn’t in a position to close the eight percentage point deficit he sported in 2016.
Instead, we’d point to another small, western state as a better Clinton-to-Trump prospect: Nevada. Clinton carried the state by a more manageable 2.4% margin in 2016, and there are other structural factors at play that may benefit Republicans.
As 270toWin contributor Drew Savicki pointed out, the state’s light blue lean isn’t something you’d expect just by looking at some of its demographic points. Specifically, less than a quarter of its residents over 25 have a bachelor’s degree or higher — Democrats’ bread-and-butter coalition in the state consists of a diverse coalition of hospitality and culinary workers. By contrast, in both Minnesota and New Hampshire, two other Clinton states that Trump has mentioned targeting, about 35% of adults over 25 are college graduates. As we’ve frequently explained, Democrats have been making gains recently in places that have higher rates of four-year college attainment.
Something that’s helped to keep Nevada blue is the Democrats’ famous turnout operation; honed by former Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid (D-NV) over the last few decades, the “Reid machine” continues to be a powerful force in state politics. Still, there’s some evidence that the Reid machine may have some difficulty adapting this year, as the COVID-19 pandemic has necessitated new forms of campaigning — and voting.
If educational attainment is a reason we’d keep Minnesota and New Hampshire in the Biden column, it may also make sense to put Nebraska’s 2nd District there, as well. About 40% of residents there have a bachelor’s degree or higher, making it more educated than every actual state except for Massachusetts. Earlier this year, we noted that, despite its deep red lean at the statewide level, Nebraska hasn’t been immune to national trends: its two urban centers, Omaha and Lincoln, have gotten more Democratic while its vast rural swaths have drifted more Republican. Just like rural Maine’s redshift meant Trump could net an electoral vote there in 2016, NE-2’s movement in the other direction could stand to benefit Biden. This is the one rating change we are making this week: pushing NE-2 from Toss-up to Leans Democratic.
Back to the Trump winning scenario. On this map, Trump would see his Electoral College tally take somewhat of hit, dropping from 306 in 2016 to 295, but his two maps would be similar. In his 2004 reelection, George W. Bush saw a slight shuffling as well: he largely retained his 2000 coalition, but a few states changed hands. Running against a New Englander in John Kerry, New Hampshire flipped Democratic against Bush that year, but the president saw his electoral tally go up as he narrowly gained Iowa and New Mexico.
In his 2012 reelection, Obama became the only president since the Civil War to earn a second term while not adding a new state to his previous coalition, so Trump gaining Nevada — or any other Clinton state — would be right in line with history, if voters send him back to the White House.
Map 2: A good night for Biden
On a good night for Biden, his current polling situation would essentially manifest itself onto the election map. As of Wednesday morning, the RealClearPolitics average pegged Biden’s national lead at 7.3 percentage points, or the exact same margin Barack Obama earned in 2008. Speaking to the increased polarization that’s taken hold since then, that type of national lead would “only” be good for 350 electoral votes in this scenario, a bit less than Obama’s 365 a dozen years ago.
There’s been some debate this cycle whether a potential Biden victory would either reverse or accelerate political trends. In a reversal election, Biden’s strength would be similar to Obama’s in the Rust Belt, while in a situation where trends accelerate, the Democratic coalition would be marked by gains in the Sun Belt.
For this, we’ve tried to split the difference. In the Rust Belt, Biden’s lead is more than adequate to flip back Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, but Ohio and Iowa — states that gave Trump high single-digit margins in 2016 — may have just become too red. That ME-2 stays red in this scenario may also be a sign that Biden simply couldn’t match Obama’s strength with white working class voters. In the Sun Belt, Biden adds Georgia and Arizona to Obama’s 2008 map, but the biggest electoral prize in the region, Texas, stays Republican, though it’s easy to see Biden getting within a few points in the Lone Star State.
Though the Democrats are sometimes derided as a “coastal party,” looking longer term, this formula may represent a realistic ceiling for future nominees. If the party could continue to sweep the West Coast while winning every state on the Eastern Seaboard but South Carolina in the Electoral College, it would go a long way towards insulating Democratic nominees from further erosion in the Rust Belt.
The bottom line
Map 3 shows our current ratings. Again, this reflects today’s rating change in NE-2. We now have Biden right on the precipice of an Electoral College majority, with 269 electoral votes at least leaning his way. Although we have them as Toss-ups, we also think Biden is in a good position to carry Arizona and Wisconsin, as of today. That would put him at 290 electoral votes.
Florida and North Carolina are significantly closer. Of the Leans Republican states, Trump’s leads in Georgia, Iowa, Ohio, and Texas, as well as for the single ME-2 electoral vote, appear to be quite small.
So Trump has more work to do: He needs all of the Toss-ups just to get to a tie — which would be the craziest possible end to a crazy year, and where the Republicans likely would retain an advantage in a U.S. House of Representatives vote to determine the election. The Industrial North states, to us, remain the key to the election, with Nevada as an underappreciated GOP target as well.
Map 3: Crystal Ball Electoral College ratings
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The two Delaware women who were caught on video ripping up signs supporting President Donald Trump and stealing a red “Make America Great Again” hat while a 7-year-old boy cried and chased after them have been … Read more
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris walked back the Democrat mask mandate in separate Sunday interviews, reversing course on a campaign promise delivered with gusto during Biden’s keynote DNC speech.
It isn’t Carter Page who should be apologizing to his family for what they’ve gone through. It’s the Crossfire Hurricane team, the members of the special counsel team, and the press.
You would think Joe Biden and running mate Kamala Harris would be circumspect about rooting against a vaccine that the nation and the world desperately need as soon as possible.
The actors, actresses, crew, and staff of movies should be made up of men and women who get ahead by virtue of their talent, not group identity quotas.
An ordinance calling for a complete ban on abortion within Lubbock, Texas’s city limits to create a ‘sanctuary city for the unborn’ has gained national attention.
With good news on the horizon for college football, it’s important to stop and assess what the sports media members who were openly rooting against a college football season failed to realize.
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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Marjorie Taylor Greene is going to Capitol Hill. Georgia’s 14th district voted for Donald Trump in 2016 by a 50-point margin. It’s one of the reddest districts in the nation and as the Republican nominee, it’s her seat already. But that doesn’t mean she stops campaigning. There are bigger fish to fry.
First and foremost, Georgia is quickly turning purple and is now considered to be a swing state by most election prognosticators. Currently, President Trump has a 2-point edge in the polls, so he’ll need every vote from Republicans, even in “safe” districts like GA-14. The Senate race is also a contentious one already with a real chance of flipping blue if Republicans don’t come together and fight the purple monster attempting to engulf the state.
But the other reason she is still fighting hard to campaign and raise funds is because she has an important message to bring to the nation. As I learned in my interview for the latest episode of NOQ Report, Greene is not going to Capitol Hill to join the DC Country Club. She’s going there to defend the Constitution, fight for the rights of the people, and bring proper conservative change to the nation’s capital. She hopes to be a positive force within Congress as well as a conservative stalwart who can shift the Republican Party to the right.
We need to bring healthcare back under control of private industry. We need to fully fund and build the border wall. We need to completely defund Planned Parenthood. And of particular interest to Greene is the need to rein in the censorship that’s currently being perpetrated by Big Tech. She experienced it herself yesterday when her Twitter account was suspended over calling for face mask mandates to go away, then she was warned by Facebook about her gun giveaway promotion. Conservatives on Capitol Hill have been discussing doing something about Big Tech censorship. Greene wants to go to Capitol Hill and take action on Day 1.
There were many impressive aspects of this interview worth discussing, but it was a story she told that was truly captivating. She wants to be able to tell her grandchildren and even great-grandchildren that when socialism and communism reared their ugly faces in America, she stood up and helped to fight back against the Marxists. She says we can all do our part in fighting them if we are willing to speak boldly by speaking the truth. That story by itself is worth hearing.
Georgia needs a fighter representing them in DC. America needs constitutional conservatives doing what’s right against the rising Marxism spreading through the left faster than a pandemic. Marjorie Taylor Greene fills both important needs.
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 NBA’s decision to make itself a political platform sheds an uncomfortable light on the arbitrary nature of this “great awokening” we find ourselves in.
Just how do we grapple with a sports organization that declares itself a bastion for social justice by allowing their players to kneel during the national anthem, encourages them to turn their jerseys into messaging boards for woke sentiments, and allows their most lucrative exhibitions (the playoffs) to be postponed by political activism but who, not quite a year ago, kicked fans out of stadiums for wielding “Free Hong Kong” signs and had their players engage in morally compromising Chinese apologetics in order to preserve the lucrative Chinese market?
This is just a snapshot of my distrust of wokeness. Far too often, it’s a narrative that presents American history and American society in the worst possible light while ignoring the evils of the world in both history and in recent times (and against which America, even with her flaws, has stood against unlike any other nation in history).
Wokeness is easily criticized as an anti-American narrative whose chief form of activism is unproductive virtue signaling, largely because its adherents have little to no historical literacy and an overgrown sense of self-righteousness that places its priorities above everything and everyone else.
The same mobs that demand we “Say Breonna Taylor’s name,” wouldn’t know what I was talking about if I asked them to say Horace Lorenzo Anderson’s name. The same mobs that demand justice desecrate the statues of those who fought for justice. The same mobs that shout “Black Lives Matter” are silent in the face of black lives lost in circumstances outside the anti-police narrative.
(This is why I like statements of individual value more than statements of collective value. Black Lives Matter is a collective, narrative-based statement that allows its adherents to select what it cares about, namely African-Americans killed by police. Conversely, when I say that A Black Life Matters, I am moving beyond narrative and definitively saying that all African American life has value, as part of the broader truth that all individuals matter. This statement requires that I care about every instance where black life is lost, including those lost by abortion, gang violence, lawlessness, and by the unlawful acts of law enforcement)
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.
Cancel Culture is a serious problem that has found its way into virtually every aspect of American life. The Social Justice Warriors have become nothing more than Cancel-Anyone-For-Anything Warriors, choosing a target and setting out to find anything they can to destroy that person. This has become standard procedure in today’s political discourse.
Unfortunately, Cancel Culture is not limited to the Progressive Left. While conservatives and even Christians have been calling out this evil mentality that has become obviously mainstream, we have to reflect on our own crowd and our own mentality, eliminating this from within our midst. It’s easy to point our finger at the other side, but we have to make sure that we take responsibility, as well. Conservatives and Christians are not immune to cancelling those we disagree with. In fact, we’ve been leading the charge for way too long. Enough is Enough!
This is what we will be talking about this Saturday, September 12th, during our livestream event Cancelled: Enough is Enough! Headlining this event will be Milo Yiannopoulos, Nick Searcy and Denise McAllister, along with Dr Bobby Lopez. They’ve seen and experienced some form of Cancel Culture and Censorship, and we’ll be exposing the dark underbelly of this mentality.
As Americans, we should be for Free Speech without Censorship. We shouldn’t be destroying each other simply because we disagree. If someone says something controversial or even flat-out offensive, respect their Freedom of Speech and respond with a superior argument. This is the American Way.
If we are going to take back our country, we have to destroy Cancel Culture. Make sure that you tune in on Saturday for this epic live-stream event as we expose just how rampant this is. If we are going to end it, we have to expose it for all to see. Cancelled: Enough is Enough! will do just that… With Milo Yiannopoulos, Nick Searcy, Denise McAllister and Bobby Lopez, this will be the start of the movement to end Cancel Culture once and for all, and bringing back true Freedom of Speech.
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.
Antifa doesn’t like press. They don’t like conservatives. They don’t like people “infiltrating” their midst. Conservative activist Tayler Hansen was acting as all three in Portland last night and paid the price of blood for trying to report on Antifa’s domestic terrorist activities.
Last night in Portland I was beaten bloody by four people in Black Bloc
I began walking away, a few blocks down there was a group of four dressed in Black Bloc waiting for me around the corner.
They proceeded to beat me. I was punched in the face, thrown on the ground where they began kicking me in the back and hitting me in the face again. pic.twitter.com/l8fx1omAAv
Antifa Black Bloc, the most violent wing of the unified Antifa-BLM “protesters” in the American Northwest, has been known to attack anyone trying to document their activities. They were the group responsible for the attack on journalist Andy Ngo in 2018 that left him with permanent brain damage. They’re also the group that accelerated riots and acts of domestic terrorism following the removal of federal law enforcement officers from Portland, a move that was heralded by city and state governments as well as mainstream media as triggering a deescalation that never actually came.
Hansen came into national prominence when he painted a “Baby Lives Matter” mural in front of Planned Parenthood in Salt Lake City, Utah. Since then, he has painted many more such murals but has also taken to reporting as a citizen journalist to expose the antics of Antifa and Black Lives Matter. We interviewed him along with Aubrey Huff, Scott Baio, Juanita Broaddrick, and others two weeks ago:
There is no other way to accurately describe these “peaceful protesters” other than to call them domestic terrorists. They rely on intimidation and violence to get their message across. Tayler Hansen took a beating for trying to expose the truth.
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 president’s authentic bluntness may be more appealing to non-elites of all races than violence and condescending lectures.
Victor Davis Hanson
by Victor Davis Hanson: There are some stunning indications that the supposedly satanic racist Donald Trump could be polling in some surveys around a 35-40 approval rate among Latinos and 20–30 percent among African Americans. Other polls are more equivocal but suggest an unexpected Trump surge among minority voters.
If those polls are accurate and predict November voting patterns, then Joe Biden could lose the popular vote as well as the key swing states by larger margins than Hillary Clinton’s Electoral College losses in 2016.
Indeed, some state polls by CNN and Trafalgar already show Trump to be near even in these purple states. The polling also suggests that, contrary to stereotypical exegeses, nonwhites of the large cities in the Midwest are not necessarily a monolithic voting bloc. So how can this be — given the Obama verdict that Trump is our generation’s Bull Connor, and the Never Trump assurances that the divisive Trump lacks the empathy and appeal of a “coalition building” John McCain or a BLM-sympathizer such as a marching Mitt Romney, and lacks as well the natural resonance the Bush family enjoys with Hispanics?
A number of things are going on that may explain some of these apparent mysteries.
One, Trump is finally beginning to reshape the Republican Party into a middle-class coalition of all races, deliberately pitted against the boutique leftist rich people in Hollywood, Wall Street, the New York and Washington media, Silicon Valley, and the Washington swamp.
Trump boasts far more about lowering minority unemployment than reducing the capital-gains tax, more about reducing drug sentences than the need for unfettered global trade.
The topic of fairness across class divides resonates. Who after all wishes to listen to multimillionaire Nancy Pelosi rail about masks the same day she sneaks, unmasked, into a locked-down salon to get her hair done on the sly? Who wishes to follow the diktats of self-righteous governors such as Gavin Newsom, who pontificated about shutting down wineries only to keep his own open before being ratted out?
In that sense, many African-American middle-class voters might see Don Lemon as arrogant and foolish, much as white middle-class voters see Chris Cuomo this way. Or African Americans might disregard sermons from mansion-living, cashing-in Barack Obama the same way that white working-class voters in Ohio ignore the grifter Hillary Clinton when she offers them another homespun homily.
African Americans might be as embarrassed by Maxine Waters’s rants as whites are by Nancy Pelosi’s — both women are insider, careerist politicians who are never affected by the consequences of their own soap-box ideologies. In other words, there is no reason to be locked into a racial matrix that assumes the proverbial “other” somehow always puts tribal solidarities over class affinities and society’s collective desire to be secure and safe.
Two, those very same people in the news, on television, social media, and the Internet often talk down to voters, of any race or color. They deprecate religion, right to life, and guns, and assume that any who disagree with their neo-socialist worldviews are ignorant rubes.
Whether it’s a shrill Elizabeth Warren or a pompous Joy Reid, they exude pretension and self-righteousness. No one living in smoking California wants to be told that global warming or a dearth of solar power is the reason they can’t go to the mountain lake. Amid raging fires, Californians know that their anti-timber-industry state allowed millions of dead trees to rot as “mulch” that ended up as napalm. They also figure that the ensuing smoke and record heat caused power outages, when new-age wind and solar units went to sleep amid the smoke and night. The entire green-advocacy industry has become an elitist, shrill pastime for mostly wealthy whites who don’t much care about its consequences for working-class minorities — whom they’ve rarely met outside using their services.
Three, minority voters, like all voters, take politicians at their word and distrust what handlers claim their candidates said. They see that when Biden speaks extemporaneously, he not only appears cognitively challenged but racist as well, as if his inner self is now expressed, stripped of the speed bumps and guard rails of conscious self-censorship, social savvy, and awareness.
On camera, Biden may surround himself with people of color, but minorities nonetheless hear some crazy things exiting Biden’s garrulous mouth — the Corn Pop nonsense, the doughnut-shop riff, the condescending racism of “put y’all back in chains,” and “you ain’t black,” asking a black journalist whether he was a junkie or cocaine addict, assuring that all black people think the same way and lack the diversity of thought found in the Latino community, all as fillips to his prior racist history of suggesting that Obama was the nation’s first “clean” and “articulate” black man to run for office, and his even earlier nonsense about the racial “jungle” of the inner city.
No one likes to be lied to or ordered about. Just as the deplorables have been besmirched as smelly, Bible-clinging, gap-toothed, and Neanderthal by elite whites, so elite blacks and their white counterparts assume they can dictate to working-class blacks, slur ministers as minstrels, cheaply call dissidents Uncle Toms, swarm social media to slander black Trump supporters, and assume that it all resonates with a captive black constituency.
Local news, Fox News, YouTube, and social media occasionally break through the national left-wing media censorship of the violence in Portland, Seattle, Minneapolis, Washington, and Chicago. And just as whites are sickened by young, nasal-sounding, cowardly, Antifa activists spitting in the faces of older black and white police officers and trying to burn them up in their own precincts, looting, and destroying shopping centers and stores of inner cities and downtowns, so too are blacks.
Why would anyone sympathize with a cowardly, violent Antifa rioter, outfitted in his ridiculous, pretentious Road Warrior ensemble, screaming in his whiny high-pitched voice, reciting some pseudo-Marxist crib notes from a Sociology 1 class, assuming that he was the real brilliant strategist behind the BLM movement, only to sob and collapse into a fetal position or screaming meltdown when arrested, pushed back by the police, or challenged by counter demonstrators?
The upper-middle-class white leftist, in other words, is not a sympathetic figure among either non-elite blacks or whites. And perhaps the Marxist echelon of BLM and its enablers on television are not either. Minority voters are just as likely to see Antifa thugs as cowards and wimps, and they have no sympathies for inner-city looters who haul off Gucci bags.
Most of the white Antifa mob and its wannabe thousands do not live with minorities and did not grow up with them or go to school with them. Do working-class African Americans enjoy watching white college kids or baristas in knee pads with umbrellas or teachers on full paid sabbaticals or Zoom half-days, ordering their local Target to be torched?
In addition, lots of minorities prefer the company of white working-class people over the pajama-boy wimpy lingo and look of Antifa. In the view of many minorities and working-class whites, Antifa’s Revolución! is a sort of paid-for lark — playacting — but nonetheless a game now costing others by destroying property that is more likely used by minority shoppers than suburban middle-class brats.
No one really likes to hear sermons from condescending journalists, academics, and celebrities. Again, given the thin margins of current elections, small changes in demographics can have radical results: If Joe Biden does not receive 88 percent of the black vote, then his Democratic ticket faces real trouble.
How ironic that the supposedly biased Trump staged an entire convention based on ecumenical class commonalities, when a week earlier woke wealthy liberal people, privileged white and minorities alike, lectured the nation from on high about America’s supposed moral shortcomings.
The pièce de résistance of the Democratic convention was the appearance of the two Obamas of Kalorama and Martha’s Vineyard fame — the one in his now accustomed affected inner-city patois explaining to the supposedly half-woke the dangers posed by wealthy privileged people (like himself?); the other in full teary-eyed Oprah therapeutic mode, implicitly warning about the racist Trump and his racist legions who any day might apparently jump over the security fences on Martha’s Vineyard.
The result may be that a fifth of blacks and over a third of Latinos watching the RNC and DNC conventions preferred authentic bluntness to disingenuous sloganeering.
So Joe Biden has both a race and class problem — the extent of which is not yet clear because polls showing his dramatic drop in minority support are not always reflected in general polls of either the presidential contest or Trump’s approval ratings.
What is clear is that Biden’s party has ridiculed and alienated the white working class — those who are not fragile and have no privilege but who are caricatured (by those who are guilt-ridden, privileged, and quite fragile) as inordinately advantaged.
At the same time, the Left hierarchy has patronized the black working class as unthinking and in need of elite guidance along the lines of the “you ain’t black” Biden directive. And now both groups, unlike in previous elections, may be voting for Trump in numbers scarcely believable for a Republican —if for no other reason than to send a message that the moral certitude and nonstop racial evangelizing of wealthier panderers is long past boring.
———————— Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution where many of his articles are found; his focus is classics and military history. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush.H/T National Review.
Tags:Victor Davis Hanson, Trump, Race, And Class, National ReviewTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Travis Weber and Kaitlyn Shepherd: Tuesday, the Trump administration Department of Justice struck yet another blow for religious freedom in the federal courts — this time by filing an amicus brief with the Indiana Supreme Court in support of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Indianapolis in an important First Amendment case. This is another notch in the belt for President Trump and his DOJ, which has been very impressive on the issue. The Trump administration has been filing briefs and statements in support of religious freedom with the courts faster than President Obama or President George W. Bush did, as even NBC News has noted.
The case at hand here, State of Indiana ex rel. Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Indianapolis v. Marion County Superior Court, concerns the right of the Catholic Church to determine who passes on the tenets and doctrines of its faith to students in Catholic high schools. Cathedral High School had employed a teacher who entered into a same-sex marriage. According to the school’s employee handbook, all teachers at the school performed important religious functions, including providing religious instruction, modeling a religious lifestyle, and supporting Catholic teachings. Teachers were required to conform their “personal conduct” to Catholic teachings. The Archdiocese of Indianapolis sent the high school a directive, explaining that continuing to employ the teacher violated the Catholic church’s beliefs about marriage and would cause the school to forfeit its Catholic identity. The school dismissed the teacher, who sued the Archdiocese for interfering with his employment contract.
In its brief, DOJ argues that the Archdiocese has a First Amendment right to decide who passes on its faith to students in Catholic high schools because of the First Amendment freedom of expressive association, the doctrine of church autonomy, and the ministerial exception, which was upheld only a few months ago by the U.S. Supreme Court in Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru. In that case, the Supreme Court held that the First Amendment prevented it from deciding two teachers’ employment discrimination claims because the ministerial exception protects the right of religious institutions to choose who teaches and passes down religious doctrine when the teachers perform religious functions at the school.
This should all be a no-brainer for government officials in a country like ours with a history of defending religious liberty — but it’s not. The current Democrat candidate for president was part of an Obama administration that aggressively argued to the Supreme Court that religious institutions should possess no such freedom to determine who teaches their faith. Despite a 9-0 rejection by the Supreme Court in Hosanna Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church & School v. EEOC, we can expect a White House occupied by Joe Biden and Kamala Harris to not merely drop the Trump administration’s defense of religious freedom, but reverse course to start working aggressively against it.
A litany of statements on the record and positions taken by both Biden and Harris clearly indicate they will block such religious freedom efforts if allowed to take office. While California Attorney General, Kamala Harris filed a brief against Hobby Lobby in the Supreme Court. As a senator, Harris was an original cosponsor of legislation that would block religious freedom for adoption providers, and introduced legislation gutting Religious Freedom Restoration Act claims. Harris was also an original co-sponsor of the Equality Act, which would be horrific for religious freedom, but which a Biden/Harris administration has pledged to make a priority in the first 100 days in office. As a senator, Harris also openly questioned judicial nominees about their religious beliefs. Add to this Senator Biden’s votes against a constitutional amendment allowing voluntary prayer in school and barring federal courts from taking cases involving prayer in public schools, and we have a clear picture of the alternatives this November when it comes to religious freedom.
The work of President Trump’s DOJ on religious freedom is only one part of his policy accomplishments, but it’s an important one. And it’s one that certainly won’t be around if he’s not reelected in November.
—————————– Travis Weber & Kaitlyn Shepherd wrote this article for the Family Research Council.
Tags:Travis Weber, Kaitlyn Shepherd, Trump’s Religious Freedom Record, Is a Stubborn FactTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Gary Bauer: Trump: The Peace President
President Donald Trump has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. Christian Tybring-Gjedde, a member of the Norwegian Parliament, nominated the president for his success in securing the historic peace deal between Israel and the United Arab Emirates.
That historic agreement – the first Middle East peace deal in more than 25 years – will be formalized at a White House ceremony next week. And it is already yielding results.
Kosovo and Serbia announced late last week that they are opening embassies in Jerusalem. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hailed this breakthrough, saying, “Kosovo will be the first country with a Muslim majority to open an embassy in Jerusalem.”
Tybring-Gjedde said of Trump’s nomination, “I think he has done more trying to create peace between nations than most other Peace Prize nominees.” Well, he’s certainly done more than Barack Obama did when he was nominated.
Obama received the Nobel Peace Prize less than eight months after taking office in 2009. He won simply for “inspiring hope.” In other words, he hadn’t done anything yet.
And by the time Obama left office, Russia had seized the Crimean Peninsula, Libya was in a civil war, China was on the rise in the Pacific and the Middle East was in crisis with the barbarians of the Islamic State and the mullahs of the Islamic Republic of Iran fighting for control.
I’m sure Joe Biden and Kamala Harris will congratulate Trump today. After all, they say they want to bring the country together and what better way do that than by congratulating the president for his Nobel Peace Prize nomination. But I am not holding my breath.
Speaking of peace, the Pentagon announced today that the U.S. is significantly reducing our troop presence in Iraq from 5,200 soldiers to 3,000.
Police Chiefs Quit
Yesterday, the police chief of Rochester, New York, announced his resignation. A deputy chief and commander also resigned.
Chief La’Ron Singletary denounced the media’s reporting on the death of Daniel Prude as a “mischaracterization” and “politicization” of the facts and an attempt to destroy his character and integrity.
Chief Singletary isn’t the only police chief stepping down. In recent weeks, the police chiefs of Atlanta, Dallas, Portland, Richmond and Seattle have all resigned. Three of these six police chiefs were black and two were women. None of these individuals were remotely close to the infamous Bull Connor, quite the opposite.
For years the goal of the civil rights movement was to make police departments more diverse. America’s big city police departments are the most diverse they have ever been in the history of our country.
And yet we’re constantly told there is “systemic racism” in our police departments, meaning the entire department is racist. Officers are being forced to go through diversity training and sensitivity training to get rid of their racism – even as we have more and more police departments led by minority chiefs and supervisors.
Operation Legend
Attorney General William Barr gave an update today on the progress of Operation Legend, a targeted effort by federal agents to crack down on violent crime. More than 2,500 criminals have been arrested, with 600 facing federal charges.
Barr added that the success of Operation Legend has been “most dramatic” in Chicago. The attorney general said:
“Over the first five weeks of Operation Legend in Chicago, murders dropped by 50% over the previous five weeks. August ultimately saw a 45% decrease in murders compared to July, and a 35% decrease compared to June.”
2020 Update
The Trump campaign is expressing confidence as we head into the final stretch of the 2020 campaign. Bill Stepien, Trump’s campaign manager, told reporters that the campaign has mapped out various strategies and scenarios that range from an electoral landslide to winning by a bare majority.
Stepien noted that the campaign is confident in its private polling, which shows a significant increase in the number of swing-state voters describing Joe Biden as “very liberal.”
In addition, polling shows Trump gaining ground with black and Hispanic voters. And we also know more about so-called “shy Trump voters” and how many polls are missing them. (Here and here.)
Meanwhile, former White House stenographer Mike McCormick, who worked with Joe Biden for six years, confirmed what the rest of us have also seen: that the former vice president is “a shell of his former self.”
That said, the Trump campaign is raising expectations for Biden’s performance in the upcoming presidential debates. I think they are wise to do so.
Biden has done several debates this year. Trump hasn’t. Yes, Biden had some bad moments, but he obviously held his own.
More importantly, he will have sympathetic moderators, who I guarantee will insert themselves into the debate by aggressively fact checking the president, just as Candy Crowley did to Mitt Romney. But of course, unlike Romney, Trump will fight back!
Trump’s List
In related news, President Trump today announced his latest list of potential Supreme Court justices should another vacancy open up.
Judges are an extremely important issue to conservative voters as the courts, and the Supreme Court in particular, often end up deciding fundamental issues like the sanctity of life, our Second Amendment rights and the fate of religious liberty.
If President Trump is reelected, he will continue appointing conservative judges to the federal courts at every level. And he has a tremendous chance to make one or even two more appointments to the Supreme Court as left-wing Justices Ginsburg and Breyer are in their 80s.
Two more Trump justices would tip the Supreme Court’s ideological balance decidedly in favor of faith, freedom and life. This issue alone is reason enough for every conservative to vote for the Trump/Pence team!
COVID Update
The number of new reported Covid-19 cases yesterday (22,219) was the lowest daily total in nearly two months. The number of Covid deaths yesterday (358) was the lowest in two weeks. It was also the first time in two months that we had five days in a row with death totals below 1,000 a day.
This is encouraging news that the media are largely ignoring. Instead, they are fretting over a possible post-Labor Day surge in order to keep people panicked.
In related news, Dr. Francis Collins, head of the National Institutes of Health, reassured members of Congress that his agency’s “top priority” is the safety and effectiveness of potential Covid-19 vaccines.
Proud Dad
Carol and I are celebrating our wedding anniversary today. It is a big day for another reason too. Our daughter, Sarah, has written a wonderful book, “The Space Between Us,” that is now available on Amazon.
All of our children have brought us incredible joy. All of them love the God of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and Jesus. Each one believes Jesus is the answer to the ills of mankind. And each of them, including Sarah, has gone into an arena of American life to try to make the country and the world a better place.
Sarah’s latest contribution to the effort to make the world a better place is her wonderful, thought-provoking book, “The Space Between Us: How Jesus Teaches Us to Live Together when Politics and Religion Tear Us Apart.” It is superbly well-written and will make you laugh, cry and think, sometimes simultaneously.
I hope and pray that you will be inspired by Sarah’s book to try to heal the broken relationships in your own family, church and community.
Our country has important conversations and important decisions to make in the years ahead about the sanctity of life, racial discord, religious liberty, rebuilding families and our need to restore virtue to our nation. The Founding Fathers were right – only a virtuous people can remain free.
“The Space Between Us” is an important and compelling contribution to that desperately needed conversation. Order your copy today at Amazon.com.
———————– Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
Tags:Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Mike Gonzalez: Highly paid consultants spouting toxic racist concepts meant to transform society, and ignobly masking them as “anti-racism” training, are to be shown the door of the federal workforce, and hopefully out of corporate America one day, too. And all courtesy of Donald Trump and his Office of Management and Budget director.
Yes, that same Donald Trump whom media types from CNN to the once-staid PBS and NPR call a racist. He has just banned indoctrination sessions currently being imposed on the federal workforce. Not a minute too soon.
The consultants making a mint out of this racket label it “anti-racism” or “diversity” training. They are nothing of the sort. In fact, they push racist concepts that all Americans should spurn. That they are making use of the present crisis following the death of George Floyd to ram their reeducation camps down Americans’ throats is disgraceful.
A well-known example of this indoctrination came recently from the National Museum for African American History and Culture, a Smithsonian institution all taxpayers fund.
Until Trump rightly criticized it and administrators took it down, the museum ran a supposedly “anti-racist” chart that included “hard work,” “cause and effect relationships,” “hard work is the key to success,” “work before play,” and “objective, rational linear thinking” as attributes of “white dominant culture, or whiteness.”
It is truly astonishing that racist messages such as these are not just accepted, but that the trainings that include them are now widespread in the corporate world, academia, and government.
There isn’t a more damaging thing to say to a black child than hard work, delayed gratification, and the use of reason are exclusively the province of white people. And yet, this is the toxic messaging “anti-racism” training spreads every day.
For this reason, it is welcome that Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought (a Heritage Foundation alumnus) has announced that “The President has directed me to ensure that Federal agencies cease and desist from using taxpayer dollars to fund these divisive, un-American propaganda training sessions.”
All agencies will forthwith be “directed to begin to identify all contracts or other agency spending related to any training on ‘critical race theory’ and ‘white privilege,’” wrote Vought.
For all its talk of “privilege,” the consultant class conducting these preposterous exercises is enriching itself on the public dime. One such consultant has already billed the federal government more than $5 million for conducting these sessions, according to Heritage visiting scholar Chris Rufo.
Rufo’s tireless crusade against these nefarious training sessions have done much to bring them to the attention of the Trump administration.
Rufo is right. These exercises have one goal: to completely transform America from what it has been since its founding, and into something it was never intended to be: a state divided into subnational identity groups whose members are filled with grievances so they can seek to change society top to bottom.
These collectives supplant the individual as the main actor of society. Whereas the Founders, influenced by Enlightenment thinkers, believed that individuals had been endowed by their creator with inalienable rights, the new hard left believes that collectivities should be the new agents.
They make use a Marxist tool to change society called “critical theory.” They have more in common with the Maoist struggle sessions of communist China’s Cultural Revolution than with professional advancement seminars.
Critical theory is an unremitting attack on all the norms, traditions, and institutions of American society. It is now all the rage at universities, from critical legal theory in the law schools to critical race theory in the humanities departments, from gender studies to ethnic studies. From there, it has infected the rest of society.
The federal government, until now, has not been an exception. Here are but three sample agencies where this training has taken place:
The Treasury Department, which held a session telling employees that “virtually all White people contribute to racism.”
The Securities and Exchange Commission, where one such session demanded that employees examine their thoughts about “structural and systemic racism.”
The FBI, whose “Office of Diversity and Inclusion” is now hosting weekly “Intersectionality Workshops.”
Our national security may even be compromised. The Department of Homeland Security has hosted a training on “microaggressions, microinequities, and microassaults,” where white employees were told that they had been “socialized into oppressor roles.”
Meanwhile, employees at Sandia National Laboratories, a federal agency that conducts nuclear research, held a three-day reeducation camp for white males, at which they were forced to write letters of apology to women and people of color.
And the federal government is but the tip of the iceberg. According to The New York Times, one of the most sought-after consultants doing these struggle sessions, Robin DiAngelo, since Floyd’s death in May has seen her inbox “flooded with urgent emails: requests to deliver (virtually because of the pandemic) workshops and keynotes at Amazon, Nike, Under Armour, Goldman Sachs. The entreaties went on: Facebook, CVS, American Express, Netflix.”
The examples are too many to record, but we see the consequence of this thinking all around us. The mayhem we are seeing on our streets in Kenosha, Wisconsin; Portland, Oregon; Chicago; New York, and other urban centers is the direct result of this indoctrination.
While a president cannot do anything about corporate America, we welcome this step with government service and hope he uses his bully pulpit to impact corporate America, too.
———————– Mike Gonzalez, a senior fellow at The Heritage Foundation, is a widely experienced international correspondent, commentator, and editor who has reported from Asia, Europe, and Latin America. Shared on The Daily Signal.
Tags:Mike Gonzalez, Trump Bans, Divisive, Un-American Propaganda Training, for Federal WorkforceTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Dennis Prager: As long ago as the 1970s, I came to a major realization. While watching fellow students at Columbia University demonstrate not just against the war in Vietnam but against America — “Amerika,” as many spelled it, the “imperialist,” “colonialist,” “mass-murdering” country — I kept wondering what made these people so hostile to the freest country in human history.
Then, one day, as a result of my having attended a yeshiva (an Orthodox Jewish day school) through high school, the reason became clear. Half of each school day was devoted to religious studies in Hebrew, and the other half was devoted to secular studies in English. This meant that I had been immersed in a religious worldview until college.
Though it was Jewish, this worldview could also be called “Judeo-Christian.” Students at traditionally Christian schools were immersed in essentially the same worldview. We were all taught that the most important battle we need to wage in life was with our own nature. Jews and Christians learned from the same Scripture that “the will of man’s heart is evil from his youth” (Genesis 8:21).
Therefore, being a good person involved a constant battle with our flawed human nature: our urges, appetites and innate weaknesses. This battle was also the only real route to a better world. Every individual had to work on him or herself to be decent, strong, courageous and self-controlled, and every parent had to work, first and foremost, on raising such people.
One day, I came to realize that this was not how the vast majority of my fellow students were raised. They were raised to believe that the great battle in life was not with one’s nature but with outside forces — with parents, in many cases, but most of all with society, i.e., America.
All of us, whatever our political outlook, have to confront personal failure, loss, disappointment and unhappiness. When confronted with these challenges, religious Jews and Christians are taught to look inward for both the primary source of their problems and the primary solutions to those problems: What have I done wrong? What can I change in my life to solve my problems?
Of course, some nonreligious liberals and conservatives also have this attitude. But most of them likely inherited it from religious parents or, at the very least, from parents who were raised in a religious home or a home that retained the remnants of such an upbringing, which was common in pre-1960s America. (It is therefore questionable how many secular parents will succeed in passing this attitude on to their children.)
The left, which proudly rejects Judeo-Christian values, has adopted the opposite of the Judeo-Christian view regarding pain in life. Leftists (as opposed to liberals) hold outside forces responsible for their pain. That is the reason for the litany of left-wing enemies: capitalism, patriarchy, misogyny, systemic racism, homophobia, transphobia, Islamophobia, sexism, xenophobia.
So, then, if you are an unhappy American woman, you can work on yourself and your nature, or you can blame sexism and patriarchy, i.e., men, for your pained state.
If you are an unhappy gay American, you can work on yourself, or you can blame society’s homophobia for your unhappiness.
And, most significantly, if you are an unhappy black American, you can work on yourself and your life, or you can blame systemic racism and whites for your anger and unfulfilled life.
All this explains why the left encourages every group except for white, Christian, heterosexual males to regard themselves as oppressed. The more oppressed women, gays, blacks, etc., see themselves, the more they are alienated from America and its values, and the more they gravitate left. In light of this, I came up with a riddle:
Q: What do you call a happy black person?
A: A Republican.
Without an exception I can recall, over the course of decades, I have guessed the political affiliation of every black caller to my radio show within a minute of talking to them. If they sounded happy, I knew they were a Republican; if they were angry, I knew they were a Democrat. This has held true for male and female callers.
America has been a great country because it was built on the belief that we must all fight against our natures (and fight for our country). It is difficult to overstate the damage the left is doing to this country by abandoning the fundamental Judeo-Christian teaching that we must fight our natures in order to lead a more decent and happy life and replacing it with the belief that we must battle America instead. This replacement inevitably leads to a population of unhappy, ungrateful and mean-spirited human beings — precisely the type of individuals you see rioting and looting, the type of elected officials who do nothing to stop rioters and looters, the columnists and academics who devote their lives to spewing hate-filled lies about America, and the Twitter mobs who comprise the toxic cancel culture.
It will lead to what the left acknowledges it seeks: the end of America as we have known it.
———————- Dennis Prager (@DennisPrager) is a conservative best-selling author, radio talk show host, columnist and public speaker. He appears regularly on conservative TV shows. He is President of Prager University which offers on-line free five-minute videos on various subjects addressed by noted conservatives. He Shared this article on Townhall.com.
Tags:Dennis Prager, Leftists Blame America, Decent People Blame ThemselvesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Joe Biden says, “We will never again be at the mercy of China!” Donald Trump replies, “China would own our country if Joe Biden got elected!”
It’s strange to hear competition, because just a few administrations ago, presidents were eager to celebrate China. “A future of greater trade and growth and human dignity is possible!” said George W. Bush. Bill Clinton praised China’s “positive change” and “great progress.”
What changed? That’s the subject of my new video.
Presidents Clinton and Bush were excited about China because its dictators had finally opened up China’s economy. They got rid of price controls, broke up collective farms, allowed foreign investment and privatized state-run business. China, suddenly, prospered.
“People were so happy to finally see China being set on this path,” says Melissa Chen, who reports on China for the Spectator. The reforms “lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty for the very first time.”
Then, three years ago, Xi Jinping got himself named president for life.
He cracked down on speech, even jokes. After someone noted his resemblance to Winnie the Pooh, all mentions of the character were deleted from China’s internet.
I had thought the internet couldn’t be censored. Bill Clinton said it would be like “trying to nail Jell-O to the wall.”
“The Chinese figured out how to nail Jell-O to the wall,” says Chen. “They built an almost perfectly walled-in internet.”
China does this by employing a million censors. They block Google, Facebook, Twitter and most Western news media. A few computer-savvy Chinese citizens use forbidden apps to get around the censorship, but most don’t get to see the same internet that we see.
People caught accessing banned sites are punished. Police may barge into your home, threaten your family or just restrict your choices.
“You can’t make doctor’s appointments,” explains Chen. “You can’t travel… they’ll block you from buying a train ticket or a plane ticket.”
Life is far worse for religious minorities such as the Muslim Uighurs. The government is waging cultural genocide against them.
About a million Uighurs are locked up in “reeducation” camps, “sometimes for years,” says Chen. “Their family never hears back from them.”
China won’t allow reporters near the camps, but drone footage shows rows of blindfolded people with their heads shaved and their hands tied behind their backs.
Radio Free Asia adds that China’s “reeducation” methods even include having Chinese men replace the Uighur men in families. They “come in and live with a family (and) sleep in the same bed as the wife,” says Chen.
In short, today’s China is, once again, a vicious communist dictatorship.
So, I’m amazed to watch American protesters and hear them say, “America is the world’s biggest problem.”
Even a recent New York Times editorial board member wrote that it was difficult to know whether the United States is “better, worse, or the same” as China.
That equivalence is “bonkers,” replies Chen. “There should be no doubt about the moral equivalence between the two countries.”
For one thing, we Americans are free to criticize our government.
“You can hold up a sign at a protest, saying, ‘Screw Donald Trump; the United States sucks!'” explains Chen. “You cannot do anything remotely similar in China.”
People in Hong Kong tried. Millions attended protests, often waving American flags. Chen says it shows they “have a hankering for American values. They crave this freedom that we take for granted.”
Now they, too, have been silenced by China’s government.
The American protesters who carry “democratic socialism” banners and wave Communist flags (Soviet Communists used to call people like them “useful idiots”) should know what people in Hong Kong know: Socialism leads to real government oppression.
“Why would Americans want this?” asks Chen. “Why would they be waving these Communist flags, wanting socialism?”
———————- John Stossel is author of “No They Can’t! Why Government Fails — But Individuals Succeed.” Article shared by Rasmussen Reports.
Tags:John Stossel, Rasmussen Reports, China’s Dark TurnTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:AF Branco, editorial cartoon, Summer of Love, Obama and Biden, have no problem, cozying up, to high profile, racist and Jew-haters, like FarrakhanTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Former Gov. Mike Huckabee
& Dr Bill Smith, editor
ARRA News Service
by Mike Huckabee: The big argument that the Democrats are making for putting them back in power is that they represent the return of “decency.” Well, they can’t claim to represent competence (look at any city run by Democrats.) But they’re not exactly paragons of “decency,” either.
For instance, are you old enough to remember way back to two or so years ago, when they were the big proponents of the “Me, Too” movement? Women who had long been victims of sexual predators were finally speaking up about it. It was a good thing, until some Democrats like Sen. Mazie Hirono took it too far and started claiming that accusation equaled guilt and men didn’t deserve to have due process rights. But in general, it’s still a good thing, even though a lot of Democrats cooled on it once it started bringing down some of their favorite deep pockets donor/predators, like Harvey Weinstein.
Well, the “pro-decency” Democrats just pounded the last nail into the coffin of “Me, Too,” thanks to Kamala Harris. In an act of epic pandering, she traveled to Kenosha, Wisconsin, for a visit with Jacob Blake, who became the latest leftist victim/celebrity when he was shot and paralyzed by police while resisting arrest. Blake’s legal team released a statement saying, “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… Sen. Harris also discussed the policy changes that she and Vice President Biden will seek, including the Justice in Policing Act and implicit bias training, to make things better for all Americans. She encouraged them to continue to use their voices even through their pain to help America make progress to end systemic racism.”
Wow, that’s a lot to unpack! First of all, she’s “proud of him”? Did she bother while in Kenosha to visit with his victim and ask her about the gross sexual assault she accused him of? (details are at the link, and they’re not for young eyes.) You can argue whether the police used too much force in arresting him, but that doesn’t negate the fact that he was violently resisting arrest on a warrant for trespassing, domestic abuse and felony sexual assault. Quite a record to be proud of!
By the way: Sen. Tim Scott proposed a bill that would have addressed police training, but the Democrats in the Senate, such as Harris, voted it down because they wouldn’t accept it from a Republican. Another proud day in the annals of Democratic decency.
And as the article notes, when former Biden staffer Tara Reade accused Biden of sexually assaulting her, Harris first said she believed Reade, then accepted a spot as Biden’s running mate and now declares him the embodiment of decency.
Dana Loesch has more on Blake’s female victim and why we hear so little about her or Reade: because women victims only matter to Democrats when they are politically useful.
I don’t think the word “decency” means what these Democrats think it means.
———————– Mike Huckabee’s Morning Edition News – The “Pro-Decency” Democrats.
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. . . A mountain of on-the-record denials has left the Atlantic’s reputation in tatters.
by Douglas Andrews : Now that much of the dust has settled from the Atlantic’s dirty hit piece on President Donald Trump, we can decide for ourselves: Do we believe the four “anonymous sources” that Jeffrey Goldberg has staked his reputation on, or do we believe the 21 on-the-record sources who manifestly deny his claims?
When we first reported on this story, only 10 witnesses had come forward to challenge Goldberg’s smear that Trump had, on a 2018 visit to France to commemorate the armistice that ended World War I, called our honored dead “suckers” and “losers” and scrubbed a trip to Aisne-Marne Cemetery because he thought the rain might mess up his hair.
But at some point amid this onslaught of denials — more than a dozen of which are firsthand accounts of the events in question — a defense of Goldberg’s story becomes untenable. That point, we think, is long past. But if anyone still needed convincing, it surely came when White House Deputy Communications Director and Deputy Press Secretary Brian Morgenstern shared a statement from Major General William Matz, secretary of the American Battle Monuments Commission, the man who hosted the event at Aisne-Marne.
Matz began by calling the Atlantic article “false” and “despicable,” and his eyewitness account of the president’s words, actions, and behavior is a mortal blow to Goldberg’s reputation as an honest journalist.
“As a former Army infantryman who has flown on many helicopters,” Matz wrote, “I knew that morning the weather was bad and the ceiling was too low for a safe landing that day. … The next day, I hosted President Trump at Suresnes American Cemetery just outside Paris for the widely publicized ceremony commemorating the 100th Anniversary of the end of World War I. I vividly recall greeting him and standing with him in the pouring rain beside the grave of a WWI soldier, as our superintendent briefed the story of the soldier’s life. The President was deeply moved. … After I introduced him, and as the rain continued, he went on to deliver a powerful and very fitting speech during which he directly addressed the World War II veterans in attendance, calling them out by name and thanking them for their service. Throughout the entire visit, President Trump demonstrated heartfelt admiration for our nation’s heroes.”
Matz then recounted an event that took place seven months later at Normandy — the ceremony commemorating the 75th Anniversary of the June 6, 1944, D-Day landings. At that event, he wrote, “President Trump delivered a very moving, inspirational and impactful speech that captured the heart and soul of every combat veteran present. … I received numerous compliments from the veterans immediately after the ceremony about how appreciative and moved they were of the time President Trump personally spent with each, thanking them for their sacrifice and deeds of courage 75 years earlier.”
But, yeah, this is the same commander-in-chief who supposedly said, “Why should I go to that cemetery? It’s filled with losers.” The same one who allegedly called the more than 1,800 Marines who died at Belleau Wood “suckers.”
“Those who know President Trump,” General Matz concluded, “know that the anonymous smears peddled by The Atlantic have no basis in fact or reality and do a terrible disservice to journalism and to our veterans, living and deceased.”
When pressed about his anonymous sources, Goldberg finally conceded on Monday “that it’s not good enough.” Yet he’s still hiding behind the weakest of excuses. Such as: “They don’t want to be inundated with angry tweets and all the rest,” and, “They don’t want to interfere in democratic electoral processes.”
Huh? If secretly smearing a sitting president two years after the fact and two months before an election isn’t interfering in our electoral processes, then what on earth is?
No less a lefty than Geraldo Rivera isn’t buying Goldberg’s claims or his excuses, and he put General Matz’s closing comments into more — how shall we say this? — enlisted terms: “Why are all anti-Donald Trump stories based on anonymous sources? Wait, let me answer: Because they’re chicken s—t Trump haters. Shame on the reporters who feed on that steady stream of bulls—t.”
———————- Douglas Andrews writes for The Patriot Post.
Tags:Douglas Andrews, The Patriot Post, Trump, Didn’t Disparage, Our TroopsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Dr. Victor Davis Hanson: Joe Biden and his handlers know that he should be out and about, weighing in daily on the issues of the campaign.
In impromptu interviews, Biden should be offering alternative plans for dealing with the virus, the lockdown, the economic recovery, the violence and the looting, and racial tensions.
Yet Biden’s handlers seem to assume that if he were to leave his basement and fully enter the fray, he could be capable of losing the election in moments of gaffes, lapses or prolonged silences.
So wisely, Team Biden relied on the fact that the commander-in-chief is always blamed for bad news–and there has been plenty of bad news worldwide this year.
That reality was reflected in the spring and early summer polls that showed growing discontent with the incumbent Trump, as if he were solely responsible for one of the most depressing years in U.S. history.
But news cycles, like polls, are not always static.
What was true in July is not necessarily so in September and especially in November. Volatile years produce volatile voters. Now, many voters think they see a waning of the virus, a need to get their kids back in school, and a glimmer of hope that the economy is recovering.
A large segment of the public is becoming irate at the nightly looting, destruction and arson that no longer seem to have much to do with the May death of George Floyd while in police custody. Where are the police, the mayors and the governors to protect the vulnerable, the law-abiding, and the small-business owners?
Biden knows the mercurial polls now tell him that he must re-emerge and cease being a virtual candidate. Yet he knows that if he does, he risks losing the race. So his surrogates talk of mandatory fact-checking of the debates–or even canceling them entirely.
Hillary Clinton recently said that Biden “should not concede under any circumstances,” apparently even if he loses the November election. If the rules no longer favor Biden, then it seems time to change the rules.
So Biden has become a tragic prisoner of his own paradoxes.
He is an old centrist who forged a Faustian bargain with socialist Bernie Sanders and his hard-core leftist supporters. That alliance was felt necessary to win the Democratic nomination and the general election.
The hard left provided the urban fireworks this summer that seemed to drive down Trump’s poll numbers. Blue-state governors and mayors contextualized the violence as a “summer of love” or “largely peaceful.”
Biden stayed mum–both because the polls suggested he should remain so, and because he could hardly criticize those whose often violent acts were creating a sense of national anarchy under Trump’s presidency and thus undeniably aiding the Biden candidacy.
But as CNN news anchor Don Lemon recently warned his fellow leftists, the polls are changing. Lemon apparently fears that the public is sick of seeing the urban unrest. Suddenly, many members of the media want Biden to condemn the rioting and violence.
But if Biden does, he might alienate his now-critical left-wing Bernie base. Yet Biden’s continued reluctance to unequivocally fault the rioters and arsonists may be alienating moderate suburban swing voters.
The same paradox surrounds the debates. Should Biden, as promised, debate Trump?
• Yes. But would he thereby blow up his candidacy in a moment of incoherence?• No. But would he end up ridiculed in absentia, like Clint Eastwood’s empty chair at the 2012 Republican convention?Trump never sits still. So should Biden match the president’s frenzied pace and hold town halls, impromptu interviews, tarmac rallies, photo-ops on the campaign trail and daily unscripted press conferences? But to do so could well confirm to voters that he is frail and confused.
How did Biden become a prisoner of his own paradoxes?
Perhaps he knew that he was not physically or cognitively up to running a real campaign. But he ran all the same.
Perhaps he knew that the violence of antifa and other agitators could eventually hurt more than help him, but for months he kept silent about the violence all the same, given the perceived political damage to Trump.
Perhaps he knew that he had always opposed the wacky agenda of Sanders, but Biden wrongly felt he could pose as a moderate in 2020, yet if elected, keep a promise to the socialists of the more radical wing of his party to govern as a leftist.
Perhaps he knows that his new progressive allies would be happy for him to win them a presidency, but even happier for him to then disappear as soon as possible.
Paradoxes happen when what seems real is not–and is known not to be real by those who act as if it is.
———————— Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution where many of his articles are found; his focus is classics and military history. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush. H/T Northwest Arkansas Online
Tags:Joe Biden, Trump, Bernie Sanders, Don Lemon, George Floyd, Victor Davis HansonTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Jerry Cox: On Wednesday President Trump released the names of 20 potential U.S. Supreme Court nominees he is adding to the short list he created in 2016.
Among those named as potential Supreme Court justices is U.S. Senator Tom Cotton from Arkansas.
In response, Sen. Cotton released a statement, saying, “I’m honored that President Trump asked me to consider serving on the Supreme Court and I’m grateful for his confidence. I will always heed the call of service to our nation. The Supreme Court could use some more justices who understand the difference between applying the law and making the law, which the Court does when it invents a right to an abortion, infringes on religious freedom, and erodes the Second Amendment.”
In his remarks, President Trump said the 20 individuals he named would be jurists in the mold of the late Justice Antonin Scalia, Justice Clarence Thomas, and Justice Samuel Alito.
The Trump Administration has made several judicial nominations that impact Arkansas — including Judges Lee Rudofsky, Steve Grasz, David Stras.
Judge Grasz was one of the three judges last month who unanimously decided to unblock four pro-life laws Arkansas passed in 2017. The laws currently are not being enforced pending a hearing before the entire Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals.
At this point there’s nothing to suggest that President Trump will be making another U.S. Supreme Court nomination anytime soon, but it’s good to know which potential nominees his administration might consider.
Tags:President Trump, Names Sen. Tom Cotton, Others, Possible Supreme Court NomineesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:Editorial Cartoon, AF Branco, Dem’s Minions, Democrats have no problem, with riots, protest, spreading the coronavirus, but they’re outraged, over Trump RalliesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: The reports say the color of the top of the Nerf gun is neon green. In the photo I saw, it seemed less colorful than “neon” — but that hardly matters. It is a toy gun. Its ammo is nerfy soft. And it was held by a boy, Isaiah Elliott, briefly, during a Zoom chat educational session as has become common during these days of the pandemic. And his teacher saw it.
And things spiraled out of control from there.
Now, while cities are burning and Marxists are sharpening their knives and dulling their wits for the summer season’s final gasps of “protest,” you might think that teachers and public school administrators would have obtained some perspective.
But no. This is 2020 and we are to be spared nothing.
In a decades-long tradition of educators freaking out at boyish (and girlish) play with pretend firearms, the teacher informed on Master Elliott — though she knew it was a toy gun.
And the school suspended the lad for five days.
This has nothing to do with school safety, of course. The school is virtual, now. Pretense that this is about safety is an insult to not only adult intelligence, but child intelligence, too.
I guess what public school administrators want to teach their charges is that they are running a cult, that boys and girls and all on the sliding scale in-between must OBEY.
Must not offend against the State by showing even playful reverence for the Great Taboo and Talisman of Freedom, the Gun.
Thankfully, young Isaiah is headed to a different school.
And his Nerf play days are not over.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
—————— Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
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by Jon Brown: Former Clinton campaign adviser Dick Morris predicted during a Sunday interview that the 2020 presidential election is going to drag out because of mail-in voting and end up being decided by Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts.
As Breitbart reported, Morris told “The Cats Roundtable” host John Catsimatidis that while he believes it will appear that Trump wins in a landslide on Election Night, Democratic officials in swing states will manage in subsequent days to discover millions of mail-in ballots in favor of Democratic nominee Joe Biden.
Regarding whether the election’s fallout will lead to civil war, Morris said, “Well, there certainly will be major conflict. I hope there won’t be civil war and it’s serious enough that I don’t take your question metaphorically.”
“The blue state governors are mailing out tens of millions of ballots, and they’re going to be returned with a vote on them, probably for Biden,” Morris continued. “And those people will not go to the polls to vote on Election Day. So what you’re probably looking at is that you’re going to have on election night a report that Trump carried […] all of the potential swing states.”
“And they’ll say that Trump has 330-350 electoral votes and won a landslide,” Morris went on. “And then, day after day, week after week, you’re going to find another million ballots counted here, another half-million there, another quarter of a million in another place. And gradually, these Democratic liberal secretaries of state who are in charge of the election in most of these blue states will say, ‘Oh, well, we’re sorry. It turns out Biden carried Wisconsin, not Trump.’”
Morris foretold that, “Then, the Trump people will sue. But that suit will have to be in state court. The state court judges are largely liberal, largely Democrat. And they are going to say, ‘Oh, we rule in favor of the state: Biden carried it.’ Then … they’ll probably go up to the federal courts. And the U.S. Supreme Court eventually will make the decision. And then the entire election will be in the hands literally of John Roberts. And we’ll see what he’ll do.”
“Dick Morris, this is a serious situation,” Catsimatidis interjected. “Me and you have been in politics for 30, 40 years. We know local politics. Nobody cross-checks mail ballots versus actual voting. There’s not enough people in the country to cross-check the difference.”
Morris, who agreed, said, “The Democrats, certainly if they feel they’re legitimately losing the election, are going to use the excuse of the COVID virus — nobody can come out and vote in person, they claim — and to mail-in ballots, and they’re going to deliberately game the system by sending in millions and millions of mail-in ballots for people that don’t exist or have already voted.”
“And the states will not verify the signatures, because they are under the control of Democrats,” Morris added. “And the courts will validate that process because they’re controlled by Democrats.”
During a Monday press conference on the North Portico of the White House, President Donald Trump predicted the fight over mail-in ballots is going to be “the dirtiest fight of all.”
Tags:Jon Brown, Daily Wire, A Serious Situation, Chief Justice John Roberts, Will Decide 2020 Election, Dick Morris PredictsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
The U.S. Marshals Service found 39 missing children in
Georgia in a mission called Operation Not Forgotten.
by Rachel del Guidice: The U.S. Marshals Service found 39 missing children in Georgia over two weeks in a mission called Operation Not Forgotten. The rescued children “were considered to be some of the most at-risk and challenging recovery cases in the area,” the agency said.
How did Georgia state officials work with the Marshals Service to rescue these children, many of whom were being sold for sex? Georgia Attorney General Christopher Carr joins us to discuss . . .
Rachel del Guidice: I’m joined today on “The Daily Signal Podcast” by Georgia Attorney General Christopher Carr. Attorney General Carr, it’s great to have you on “The Daily Signal Podcast.“
Christopher Carr: Rachel, thank you so much for having me. It’s an honor to be on.
Del Guidice: Well, thanks for making time to be with us. So, I’d love to talk about what happened recently. The U.S. Marshals Service recently found 39 missing children in Georgia over a two-week period in a mission of theirs called Operation Not Forgotten. Can you start off by telling us about what Operation Not Forgotten was?
Carr: Absolutely. Operation Not Forgotten was designated to locate and recover missing and endangered children in Georgia and beyond, including some that were known to be victims of sex trafficking.
The important thing, from my perspective, is there were 39 missing child recoveries, of which 15 we know are suspected of being sex trafficking victims. So those children’s lives are going to be forever changed and it’s … a result of the partnerships that we really created.
I commend the U.S. Marshals Service, the FBI, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, our new Human Trafficking Prosecutions Unit, but also the nonprofits that are there to help rehabilitate the kids. And that’s Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, it’s Wellspring Living—great partnerships. But that’s what happens when you have good partnerships and you rescue children.
Del Guidice: You had mentioned sex trafficking and I know a press release from the U.S. Marshals Service said that the missing children who were found were considered to be at some of the most high-risk and challenging recovery cases in the area. So along with sex trafficking, can you tell us what some of those other high-risk cases were?
Carr: Absolutely. You had cases where children were being exploited, you had sexual abuse, you had physical abuse, you had some children that either had medical or mental health conditions.
So in some form or fashion, they were high risk, they had been identified by local law enforcement, by agencies or others, and were given to the Marshals Service to make sure, to check in on their well-being, or in some cases rescue and recover.
So it was a broad-based operation and again, some of our most vulnerable children … were rescued, recovered, and made sure that they were safe.
Del Guidice: Can you kind of give us a little bit of a perspective or look behind the scenes into how an operation like this is successfully executed and what kind of things go into the background and in the execution to do something incredible like this?
Carr: Sure. And I don’t want to get too much into the details of the specifics, but from a high-level perspective, it takes a lot of preparation. It takes a lot of coordination, again, between local agencies and our state agencies.
We had the Department of Family and Children’s Services, for example, that were a part of it and had concerns about some of the children that may have been in their purview. We had local enforcement and others that had identified and provided the names to this … group and for this operation.
But at the end of the day, it takes coordination. It takes preparation. The children that were found in this particular operation were anywhere between 3 and 17 years old. Many were found in Georgia, but others were found as far north as Michigan, some down in Florida, as far west as Oklahoma, and even a couple were identified as being overseas. So that takes preparation, coordination, logistics.
Again, you need law enforcement, you need nonprofits to be able to care for the needs of the children that are found. So it’s an operation, but … partnerships, collaboration, and coordination between these agencies was critical.
Del Guidice: You mentioned partnerships from different agencies and services, state and local. What can you tell us too about how your office was involved in this operation?
Carr: Absolutely. We have a new Human Trafficking Prosecutions Unit. A year ago, July, we started due to the support of Gov. Brian Kemp and the first lady who have made human trafficking a priority for the state, for them personally, our Legislature funded it.
So we … started in September of 2019 with 16 members that included a couple of prosecutors, an analyst, a victim advocate, and an investigator. And for this particular operation, we were in on the front end of it, to make sure that, particularly as it relates to human trafficking and the suspected human trafficking victims, … law enforcement were helping us hold accountable those that were abusing children.
So making sure that we had the right evidence, making sure from a legal perspective for the cases that would be brought in state court in Georgia that we did it the right way. We provided guidance, our investigator was a part of it as well. So really a seamless transition between state, federal, and local law enforcement.
And to be in on the front end from our team’s perspective is invaluable. Because again, we’ve got to make sure that we not only indict, but we convict those that are abusing our children, that are buying and selling children for sex.
Del Guidice: On that note, Attorney General Carr, we’ve talked about how some of these children were rescued due to sex trafficking, they were victims of that, child exploitation, sexual abuse, other different conditions. How widespread, when we look at the problem of the child sex trafficking, is this issue?
Carr: Well, unfortunately, it’s one of those crimes that hides in the shadows. It’s very hard to get the data for exactly how many children have been abused, but this is one of those … crimes against humanity that it’s just morally abhorrent.
I’ve always said one child that we rescue from a life of being abused and trafficked for sexual purposes is a good day. In this particular case, we had 15. But the point is there are more, and oftentimes Atlanta and Georgia seem warrant to a hub for sex trafficking.
Well, it’s hard to know where we fall in the line, because as I said, it’s hard to get the data, but there’s sex trafficking all across the state of Georgia, there’s sex trafficking all across the country, and it’s a global problem.
But I do know this: When you start putting resources together, like we have, you got the state that is now committed to a human trafficking prosecution unit, when you’ve got focus through our Georgia Bureau of Investigation—I’ve said it before, when governors and presidents make issues issues, it matters.
President [Donald] Trump has made this an issue and has put resources … through the federal government toward this issue. Ivanka Trump has become the point in the administration.
I mentioned before Gov. Brian Kemp and the first lady. The first lady has created a commission, called the Grace Commission. That’s bringing all the experts to the table to say, “What are we doing? And what do we need to do next? And what do we need to do better?”
That shows the importance of this issue and the focus on this issue because it’s very difficult to find out what the specific numbers are.
We’re trying to all do better to coordinate so that we are data-driven and we are evidence-based. But at the end of the day, again, one child that’s being abused like this, where we can come in and make a difference and rescue them and hold accountable those that are committing these atrocious crimes, is good as far as I’m concerned.
Del Guidice: On a similar note, Attorney General Carr, as an attorney general of the state, what is your message to other states as well as other attorneys general about the importance of operations like this one?
Carr: Well, the beauty of this initiative and what has happened on the issue of sex trafficking and human trafficking is it’s brought everybody together.
This is an issue where attorneys general talk about this issue, coordinate on this issue, collaborate on this issue. At the national level, regionally, there are conversations that are being had because again, we all recognize the horrific nature of what we are dealing with.
And my background, I was the commissioner of economic development, where you had good success the more people worked together on an issue because no one agency had everything that was needed or any one city or one state. But when you start leveraging the resources that each of us have, you start having great outcomes. And that’s what you see here.
You see law enforcement working together, again, in a regional basis, in a national-type platform, but you also see attorneys general, you see others, you see governors working on this issue.
The other important piece of this really is training and education and awareness in the private sector. Because the more eyes we have on this issue, the more people feel like they can contact law enforcement and say, “Hey, this just doesn’t look right.”
When you see an older adult and a child and they’re not making eye contact or something just seems out of place, it would be better to be wrong than let one more child be in a situation where they’re being abused. And so this has just become an issue that’s gotten into the national consciousness, the national conversation. And that’s a good thing because we don’t need children to be abused.
The average age of sex trafficking victims are 12- to 14-year-old girl. It’s not just girls. It’s also boys. That’s a sixth- to an eighth-grader. They shouldn’t be in a situation where they’re being bought and sold for sex. They should be in school. They should be playing sports. They should be on the theater on the stage. They should be partaking in things that are fun for those in middle school and early high school to be doing, they shouldn’t be abused.
So this is just one of those issues that everybody’s come to the table. And that’s a good thing.
Del Guidice: You had mentioned the importance of training people in the private sector. Are you doing any particular things on that? And if so, what does that look like for you guys, as you reach out to those in the private sector?
Carr: Well, we are, and this is a great example. Just to give you two private sector examples, one, Delta Air Lines, which is headquartered in Atlanta. They have committed as a company to be the eyes in the sky. They’re training all their flight attendants. They’ve been absolutely fantastic.
We’ve got UPS also headquartered in Atlanta that is spearheading truckers against trafficking, doing training programs.
And when you think about it, Delta Air Lines flies all around the world, flies all around, obviously, the United States, they have a reach that’s unbelievable. UPS is in every neighborhood in the world. And so when you train all of your drivers to be aware of the red flags as it relates to trafficking, that’s a good thing.
The state of Georgia, the first lady has implemented a training program for all state employees. Our office works with nonprofits like Wellspring Living and Street Grace to coordinate trainings with our Criminal Justice Coordinating Council at the state level, also with the GBI.
So there’s a number of training programs people can get either through industry, through nonprofits, or through the state of Georgia. Because again, if we could have all 10.6 million Georgians aware of this issue, again, we will be a lot more successful in protecting children.
Del Guidice: Well, that’s incredible. Thank you for sharing that. As we wrap up here, I did want to ask, you all are super busy and I just wanted to ask and see if your office, if there’s anything else you all are working on that you’d like to highlight as the attorney general of Georgia? Would love to hear about that.
Carr: Sure. Well, from Operation Not Forgotten, we have five arrests already and other investigations that are going on as it relates to sex trafficking, and we anticipate that other arrests will be made. And so that relates specifically to that.
But I told you our Human Trafficking Prosecutions Unit is only a year old, but in the one year they’ve been up and really fully staffed and operational.
We’ve placed 18 victims already in a rehabilitation center, such as the state’s Receiving Hope Center, which is operated by Wellspring Living. We’re working cases in 11 of Georgia’s counties. We’ve already indicted five traffickers and have eight ongoing investigations. And we’re about to add another prosecutor to the team.
So we feel very good about where we are, but I think the future is bright as it relates to rescuing victims. And if you are committing acts of sex trafficking, whether you’re a buyer or seller in Georgia, you need to think twice about it because we’re coming after you.
Del Guidice: Well, Attorney General Carr, thank you so much for joining us. There’s been so much bad news lately, and I feel like this is such good news that everyone can really be encouraged by. So thank you for joining us and speaking with us and sharing.
Carr: Absolutely. Thanks, Rachel. Appreciate your interest on this issue.
Georgia’s secretary of state says that 1,000 voters double-voted in the state’s primary election.
Postmaster General Louis DeJoy is the subject of a new investigation by the House Oversight and Reform Committee.
The U.S. has its lowest numbers of coronavirus cases since June.
———————————— Rachel del Guidice (@LRacheldG)is a reporter for The Daily Signal. She is a graduate of Franciscan University of Steubenville, Forge Leadership Network, and The Heritage Foundation’s Young Leaders Program.
Tags:Rachel del Guidice, The Daily Signal, How US Marshals, Rescued 39 Missing Children, in GeorgiaTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Susanne Edward: Though the mainstream media and its flock of so-called “fact-checkers” might be intent on sanitizing Kamala Harris’ stance on the Second Amendment before the election on November 3, her words have left little to the imagination when it comes to how far she is willing to go to disarm you.
Like the vast majority of her party in 2020, Harris has advocated for more regulation when it comes to such policy matters as “universal” background checks and outlawing whole classes of firearms, including naming specific makes and models of popular rifles. Harris even co-sponsored Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s (D-Calif.) latest attempt at an “assault-weapons” ban.
During an appearance on comedian Jimmy Fallon’s show in September last year, amid her own failed Presidential bid, Senator Harris (D-Calif.) explained her push for “mandatory buybacks,” a politically correct euphemism for confiscation, as “mandatory” means you must comply.
“They are weapons of war with no place on the streets of a civil society. I’ve seen assault weapons kill babies and police officers,” said Harris.
A month later, at a March for Our Lives-hosted “gun-safety” event, Harris declared that “we have to have a buyback program.”
“And I support a buyback program. It’s got to be smart. We’ve got to do it the right way,” she said. “But there are five million (assault weapons) at least, some estimate as many as 10 million, and we’re going to have to have smart public policy that’s about taking those off the streets but doing it the right way.”
Can her desire be more explicit?
Throughout the presidential campaign she eventually abandoned, Harris claimed that she would evade the legislative branch to achieve her objectives. During one debate, she said, “Upon being elected, I will give the United States Congress 100 days to get their act together and have the courage to pass reasonable gun safety laws. And if they fail to do it, then I will take executive action.”
But even the mainstream media, which typically supports a staunch anti-gun agenda, have been busily trying to softenHarris’s image when it comes to firearms; perhaps these media members realize that her harsh stance could turn away the millions of new gun owners now endeavoring the protect themselves and their families.
After a Facebook post of a private citizen erroneously attributing a gun confiscation quote to Harris made the rounds this past month, USA Today and Snopes jumped on board with a “false” fact rating. Technically, their assessment is defensible, but the idea that Harris does not support a plan to take firearms from the homes of gun owners isn’t exactly a given.
If a “mandatory buyback” of “assault weapons,” a term that can only be defined politically, was indeed enacted under a Biden-Harris administration, wouldn’t law enforcement be used if some people did not comply?
In 2018, at a U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, Harris said she was for “common-sense” laws, and claimed that “it’s a false choice to suggest that you are either in favor of the Second Amendment or you want to take everyone’s guns away.”
But under the national spotlight, Harris has dropped any nuance on the issue and is now publicly in favor of every flavor of gun control that has thus far been dreamed up by the left.
——————– Susanne Edward writes for NRA’s America’s First Freedom.
Tags:Susanne Edward, Kamala Harris, Second Amendment, Firearms, Gun Rights, ElectionsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Conrad Black: In terms of political ethics and tactics, the Democrats have hit rock bottom. The Atlantic has worked hard to become a third-rate New Yorker in terms both of literary quality and the vitriol of its hatred for President Trump; the magazine has probably confirmed its position with the confection of the uncorroborated and totally implausible allegation that President Trump disparaged American World War I veterans who died in France as “suckers” and “losers.”
It is impossible that any such statement was made by him. He is a proud graduate of the New York Military Academy, and while he was happy to invoke a minor bone-chip in his foot as reason enough not to enter the military during the Vietnam era, that does not disqualify him as an admirer and supporter of the U.S. armed forces. He did not think that the Vietnam War was an intelligent commitment of American manpower and resources, a view shared by many Americans including Joe Biden, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush.
Today that view is indeed the general historical opinion of that war. This president, though, unlike some of his predecessors, believes ardently both in the necessity and the nobility of the U.S. military, and he has done a great deal to strengthen the troops and raise their pay.
It is indicative of the fact that the Democrats are much less overconfident than they were four years ago that they have unleashed their dirty tricks division a month earlier than they did in 2016 with the completely irrelevant Billy Bush “Access Hollywood” tape of locker room indiscretions by candidate Trump 11 years before.
While it was completely irrelevant to whether Trump was worthy of election in 2016, and was somewhat bizarre as it emanated from the campaign of the spouse of, along with John F. Kennedy, the greatest sexual predator in the history of the White House, it was at least an uncontested recording from many years before of Mr. Trump’s opinion of a celebrity’s opportunities for sexual self-assertion. He did say it.
In this latest incident, many people, including almost everyone who would have been present, have all denied that any such utterance had been made. It is inconceivable that this president would think or say anything of the kind.
But the odium of the incident is magnified by the fact that it was clearly staged in a tight sequence coordinated between the Biden campaign and its most rabid press partisans. As soon as the Atlantic story appeared, an anti-Trump veterans’ organization called VoteVets produced a lengthy follow-up Internet statement that the President was not really any friend of the Armed Forces and veterans should take note of his outrageous comments in Paris and swarm the polls in favor of his opponent.
The inevitable “Morning Joe” Scarborough was already thoroughly up to speed early Friday after the Atlantic “revelation,” and fired a full anti-Trump broadside on his MSNBC program. Shortly after, with obvious careful prearrangement, Joe Biden sortied from his basement like a fretful World War II German battleship commander ever-fearful (for good reason) that enemy heavy units might be about.
In response to a planted question from an Atlantic reporter, and with the perfunctory condition of the remarks being true, Mr. Biden delivered a righteous denunciation of the president ending with: “Who does he think he is?” Then he scurried back indoors like the Bismarck, Scharnhorst, or Tirpitz returning at speed to their fjord.
It was perhaps the slimiest smear job in American presidential politics since the McCarthy era. At least the Russian collusion fraud was somewhat ingeniously constructed — requiring, as it did, the partial corruption of the intelligence agencies and the FBI to get it into the press as fruit of a spurious counterintelligence investigation and therefore the infamous Steele dossier pastiche of lies and deformations. That required no journalistic verification.
Evil as it was — as presumably even the lethargically paced Durham investigation will eventually allege — it was intricate, carefully planned by senior officials, and monstrously illegal. This latest allegation is inane and dishonest and no sane person could believe a word of it.
There has been some attempt to keep it afloat by tying it to disparaging remarks Trump has made about the late Senator John McCain. The bad blood between them goes back at least to 2000, when Mr. Trump was contemplating seeking the presidency as the candidate of the Progressive Party (the default name for third parties), which was then inhabited by the imperishable Ross Perot (third party candidate in 1992 and 1996), and the governor of Minnesota, wrestler Jesse “The Body” Ventura.
Mr. Trump won two primaries in 2000, but eventually recognized that third parties never win in the United States, since the rise of the Republican Party in 1856. Even Theodore Roosevelt, also running Progressive, was unable to defeat President Taft in 1912 and merely split the vote, electing the Democrat Woodrow Wilson.
Before departing the race, and after a certain amount of obloquy had been thrown around on all sides, Mr. Trump referred to the two main contenders of the established parties, Republicans George W. Bush, then governor of Texas, and Senator McCain, and Democrats Vice President Al Gore, and New Jersey Senator Bill Bradley, as “a bunch of stiffs.” This was fair comment for an election campaign (and wasn’t altogether inaccurate), but only Mr. McCain seems to have been especially annoyed by it.
In 2016, Mr. McCain accused Mr. Trump’s supporters in his home state of Arizona of being “crazies” and Mr. Trump replied that McCain was a “dummy.” When challenged on the point that he couldn’t say that about a war hero, Mr. Trump imprudently noted that he was a hero because of what he’d endured as a prisoner, and implied that war heroes attain their heroic status in war-making and not in captivity.
It was an ungracious comment, coming from someone who did not do his best to get into action in his country’s uniform when he had the chance. But it was not an unprovoked statement and the nastiness between the two men escalated.
Mr. McCain declined to support Mr. Trump’s presidential candidacy in 2016, played a role in lending credence and momentum to the Russian collusion fraud, killed the administration’s attempted reform of Obamacare despite his previous votes to repeal it, and turned his own funeral into an orgy of Trump bashing, largely by Democrats, in a ceremony that lasted for over two hours, (an hour longer than normal for a pope’s funeral).
To try to keep the vicious libel of the alleged Trump disparagement of war dead alive, rodentine Jack-in-the-box Pete Buttigieg, former mayor of South Bend, Indiana and a cameo figure in this year’s Democratic presidential nomination campaign, popped up. With the motor-mouthed glibness that we still recall, he assimilated Trump’s claim that despite disagreements, he had considerable respect for John McCain, as self-evidently untruthful. Therefore, said Mayor Pete excitedly, his denial that he did not mock American war dead in Paris in 2018, though supported by everyone else who was present, was obviously a falsehood.
This is the Democratic canon: malicious lies supported by stupid lies and disseminated to the world by the morally bankrupt, reflexively partisan Trump-hating media. Biden and his party retained plausible deniability, but a slime operation as egregious as this, as early as this in the campaign, is no sign of confidence by the Democrats.
—————————– Conrad Black is a Canadian writer with an interesting past. Article shared in The New York Sun.
Tags:Conrad Black, The New York Sun, Democrats Hit Rock Bottom, On Election TacticsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Democrats are laying the groundwork for revolution right in front of our eyes.
by Michael Anton: As if 2020 were not insane enough already, we now have Democrats and their ruling class masters openly talking about staging a coup.
You might have missed it, what with the riots, lockdowns and other daily mayhem we’re forced to endure in this, the most wretched year of my lifetime. But it’s happening.
It started with the military brass quietly indicating that the troops should not follow a presidential order. They were bolstered by many former generals—including President Trump’s own first Secretary of Defense—who stated openly what the brass would only hint at.
Then, as nationwide riots really got rolling in early June, the sitting Secretary of Defense himself all but publicly told the president not to invoke the Insurrection Act. His implicit message was: “Mr. President, don’t tell us to do that, because we won’t, and you know what happens after that.” All this enthused Joe Biden, who threw subtlety to the winds.
The former United States Senator (for 26 years) and Vice President (for eight) has not once, not twice, but thrice confidently asserted that the military will “escort [Trump] from the White House with great dispatch” should the president refuse to leave. Another former Vice President, Al Gore, publicly agreed.
One might dismiss such comments as the ravings of a dementia patient and a has-been who never got over his own electoral loss. But before you do, consider also this. Over the summer a story was deliberately leaked to the press of a meeting at which 100 Democratic grandees, anti-Trump former Republicans, and other ruling class apparatchiks got together (on George Soros’s dime) to “game out” various outcomes of the 2020 election.
One such outcome was a clear Trump win. In that eventuality, former Bill Clinton White House Chief of Staff John Podesta, playing Biden, refused to concede, pressured states that Trump won to send Democrats to the formal Electoral College vote, and trusted that the military would take care of the rest. The leaked report from the exercise darkly concluded that “technocratic solutions, courts, and reliance on elites observing norms are not the answer here,” promising that what would follow the November election would be “a street fight, not a legal battle.”
Two more data points (among several that could be provided). Over the summer, two former Army officers, both prominent in the Democrat-aligned “national security” think tank world, wrote an open letter to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs in which they urged him to deploy the 82nd Airborne Division to drag President Trump from the Oval Office at precisely 12:01 PM, January 20, 2021.
About a month later, Hillary Clinton declared publicly that Joe Biden should not concede the election “under any circumstances.” The old English major in me interprets the word “any” to mean “no,” “none,” “nada,” “niente,” “zero,” “zilch” “bupkis”…you get the idea.
This doesn’t sound like the rhetoric of a political party confident it will win an upcoming election. The Cover-Up in Plain Sight. These items are, to repeat, merely a short but representative list of what Byron York recently labeled “coup porn.” York seems to think this is just harmless fantasizing on the part of the ruling class and its Democratic servants. For some of them, no doubt that’s true. But for all of them?
I’m not so sure. In his famously exhaustive discussion of conspiracies, Machiavelli goes out of his way to emphasize the indispensability of “operational security”—i.e., silence—to success.
The first rule of conspiracy is, you do not talk about the conspiracy. The second rule of conspiracy is, you do not talk about the conspiracy.
So why are the Democrats—publicly—talking about the conspiracy? Because they know that, for it to succeed, it must not look like a conspiracy. They need to plant the idea in the public mind, now, that their unlawful and illegitimate removal of President Trump from office will somehow be his fault. Never mind the pesky detail that the president would refuse to leave only if he were convinced he legitimately won. Remember: Biden should not concede under any circumstances.
The second part of the plan is either to produce enough harvested ballots—lawfully or not—to tip close states, or else dispute the results in close states and insist, no matter what the tally says, that Biden won them.
The worst-case scenario (for the country, but not for the ruling class) would be results in a handful of states that are so ambiguous and hotly disputed that no one can rightly say who won. Of course, that will not stop the Democrats from insisting that they won.
The public preparation for that has also already begun: streams of stories and social media posts “explaining” how, while on election night it might look as if Trump won, close states will tip to Biden as all the mail-in ballots are “counted.”
The third piece is to get the vast and loud Dem-Left propaganda machine ready for war. That leaked report exhorted Democrats to identify “key influencers in the media and among local activists who can affect political perceptions and mobilize political action…[who could] establish pre-commitments to playing a constructive role in event of a contested election.” I.e., in blaring from every rooftop that “Trump lost.”
At this point, it’s safe to assume that unless Trump wins in a blowout that can’t be overcome by cheating and/or denied via the ruling class’s massive propaganda operation, that’s exactly what every Democratic politician and media organ will shout. Stop the Presses What then?
The Podesta assumption is that the military will side with the Dems.
There are reasons to fear they might. The Obama administration spent a great deal of political capital purging the officer corps of anyone not down with the program and promoting only those who are. Still and all, determining the outcome of an election would be the most open political interference possible from our allegedly apolitical military, and it’s plausible that the brass won’t want to make its quiet support of the ruling class agenda that overt. The aforementioned Chairman has already stated that the military will play “no role” in the outcome of the election. That’s probably not a feint, but one wonders if it will hold given the obvious attempt to influence military thinking by people like Jeffrey Goldberg in his recent Atlantic essay.
Can the Dems rely on the Secret Service to drag Trump out? I have my doubts on this one. I’ve seen the Service up close; it really is (or strongly appears to be) apolitical. It has a job to do: protect the president, whoever that is. Officers take that job very seriously. If they don’t believe Trump lost, I don’t think they can be counted on to oust him. On the other hand, were they to believe he did lose and was refusing to leave—a scenario I find impossible to imagine but the Democrats insist is just around the corner—it’s possible the Service might act.
Barring all that, what’s left? Remember that phrase from the Dem war game: “street fight.” In other words, a repeat of this summer, only much, much bigger. Crank the propaganda to ear-drum shattering decibels and fill the streets of every major city with “protesters.” Shut down the country and allow only one message to be heard: “Trump must go.” I.e., what’s come to be known as a “color revolution,” the exact same playbook the American deep state runs in other countries whose leadership they don’t like and is currently running in Belarus.
Oust a leader—even an elected one—through agitation and call it “democracy.” The events of the last few months may be interpreted as an attempted color revolution that failed to gain enough steam, or as a trial run for the fall. Is the Trump Administration prepared? Here’s one thing they could do: play their own “war game” scenario so as to game out possibilities and minimize surprises. They should also be talking to people inside and outside of government whom they absolutely trust to get a clearer sense of who on the inside won’t go along with a coup and who might. They also need to set up or shore up—now—communication channels that don’t rely on the media or Big Tech.
Once the ruling class gives word that the narrative is “Trump lost,” all the president’s social media accounts will be suspended. The T.V. channels, with the likely exception of Fox News, will refuse to cover anything he says. Count on it. He’s going to need a way to talk to the American people and he has to find the means, now.
For the rest of us, the most important thing we can do is raise awareness. If there is a conspiracy to remove President Trump from office even if he wins, they’re telling you about it precisely to get you ready for it, so that when it happens you won’t think it was a conspiracy; you’ll blame the president. Don’t be fooled.
—————— Michael Anton is a lecturer and research fellow at Hillsdale College’s Washington, D.C. campus, a senior fellow at the Claremont Institute, and a former national security official in the Trump and Bush (43) administration as well as in the administrations of California Governor Pete Wilson and New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani. He is the author of The Stakes: America at the Point of No Return.
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The 1986 Chernobyl nuclear meltdown doomed nuclear power in the U.S. With new technologies, it’s coming back. (Source: Ingmar Runge.)
by I & I Editorial Board: While the media focus on the chaos in American cities and the COVID-19 shutdowns, you might have missed this good news on the energy front: The federal government just approved a new, smaller, safer nuclear power plant design, putting nuclear back on the nation’s menu of energy choices.
It might not seem like much, but until this decade, the last nuclear power plant built in the U.S. was 1977. Today, there are an estimated 96 nuclear power plants producing 20% of all our electricity and half of our non-carbon-based power.
If that sounds impressive, consider this: As recently as the 1990s, we had 116 nuclear plants. Utilities, tired of the non-stop trouble of justifying a perpetual source of clean, CO2-free energy to radical green groups and burdened by enormous regulatory costs, have been decommissioning older plants.
But late last week, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission approved a new plan for what’s called a “small modular reactor,” or SMR, designed by Portland-based NuScale Power.
Small, yes, but cheaper and safer, too. And it may be an avatar for an avalanche of new nuclear technologies in the works, including thorium and molten-salt reactors that use spent fuel, which will further cut costs and decrease reliance on fossil fuels.
Canada’s Terrestrial Energy has plans to produce 190 megawatts of electricity at a plant in Ontario by 2030. And the price of its energy will be competitive with natural gas, the company says.
TerraPower, with Bill Gates as a founding investor, has designed a sodium-cooled plant that can use spent fuel, depleted uranium, or even unprocessed uranium.
As for NuScale’s SMR, current plans call for Utah Associated Municipal Power Systems, a western energy cooperative, to build the SMRs at the Energy Department’s Idaho National Laboratory, a massive 890-square-mile lab and test site.
The first workable model is scheduled to be switched on in 2029. Eleven more reactors would be put into service the following year. Each reactor, according to NuScale Power, can produce roughly 60 megawatts of energy, enough to supply 50,000 homes.
These smaller reactors include self-cooling systems and automatic shutdown features that, along with their reduced size, make the new plants far safer than first-generation nuclear power, and less costly to run. They’re virtually meltdown-proof.
Why focus on nuclear technology?
It’s not cheaper than coal or natural gas or even some renewable sources. At least, not upfront.
But these up-and-coming technologies have the potential to make our energy supply more secure and end blackouts and brownouts, such as those now taking place in California, which has moved to a radical and plainly foolish reliance on unreliable renewable energy.
And over time, new tweaks in the technology will cut costs, especially if the federal government takes its foot off the regulation pedal. Until now, that has been a major impediment, and cost, for nuclear power.
But these new nuclear models do one other very important thing: they make the Democrats’ outrageously costly and non-science based Green New Deal totally unnecessary.
The Green New Deal (GND) proposal put forth in Congress would require utilities to supply “100% of the power demand in the United States through clean, renewable, and zero-emissions energy sources.”
What’s left out is that the full cost of such a scheme would be enormous almost beyond reckoning.
The American Action Forum, a respected center-right think tank, estimates costs of as much as $51 trillion to $93 trillion over the next 10 years if the GND is passed. In plainer numbers, that’s about $600,000 per American household.
Liberal economist Noah Smith, a finance professor and columnist for Bloomberg, likewise estimates a $6.6 trillion a year cost for the GND. That’s roughly three times what the U.S. government currently takes in from taxes.
To call the GND economically insane might be an understatement. And yet, an entire American political party and some 600 environmental groups think it’s a great idea. Call it Enviro-Socialism.
The GND does not foresee a nuclear future. We do. Small, technologically advanced nuclear power plants would replace the inefficient, costly, unreliable and wasteful renewable energy schemes at the core of the New Green Deal.
——————— Issues & Insights (@InsightsIssues) is a new site formed by the seasoned I & I Editorial Board journalists behind the legendary IBD Editorials page. We’re doing this on a voluntary basis because we believe the nation needs the kind of cogent, rational, data-driven, fact-based commentary that we can provide. Article by I & I Editorial Board.
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Trump admits he deliberately played down coronavirus threat: President Donald Trump said during an interview with journalist Bob Woodward that he deliberately minimized the seriousness of the novel coronavirus to the public despite understanding its true danger, according to reports on Wednesday. “I wanted to always play it down,” Trump said on March 19, according to CNN, which obtained an audio recording of the interview. “I still like playing it down, because I don’t want to create a panic.” But his statements to Woodward, who is working on a book about the president entitled “Rage,” reflect a greater recognition of the threat than he let on publicly. Less than two weeks after his call with Woodward, the president insisted the coronavirus was “just like the flu” and said in a television interview: “I think it’s going to work out fine. I think when we get into April, in the warmer weather, that has a very negative effect on that and that type of a virus.” Since the outbreak began earlier this year, 190,000 Americans have died from the coronavirus. “He knew how deadly it was,” Joe Biden said during a campaign stop in Michigan in response to the reports. “It was much more deadly than the flu. He knew and purposely played it down. Worse, he lied to the American people.” Reacting to reports on Woodward’s new book, Trump said, “I was very open, whether it’s to Woodward or anybody else. It’s just another political hit job, but whether it was Woodward or anybody else, you cannot show a sense of panic or you’re going to have bigger problems than you ever had before.”
AstraZeneca pauses its COVID-19 vaccine trial: After rounds of clinical trials for its global COVID-19 vaccine, pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca temporarily put the brakes on its last stage of trials after a participant came down with an “adverse event.” According to the health news website STAT News, AstraZeneca CEO Pascal Soriot told investors that a woman in the United Kingdom who was injected with the vaccine developed symptoms consistent with a rare neurological condition called transverse myelitis, an inflammatory disease of the spinal cord. “This may be due to an issue related to the vaccine. It also may not,” a spokesperson from Oxford University told ABC News Wednesday. This is the second time in about two months that AstraZeneca’s trial has been halted, and researchers and developers have said that these delays are a normal part of the vaccine development process. “This is an example of how the conduct of clinical trials is supposed to work,” Anna P. Durbin, M.D., a vaccine researcher and professor at John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, told ABC News. “In pausing the trial, AstraZeneca is taking the time to thoroughly review the event and in doing so, ensuring the safety of the product is of highest priority.”
Trick-or-treating not recommended in Los Angeles County because of coronavirus: Door-to-door trick-or-treating is not recommended in Los Angeles County this year to help slow the spread of COVID-19, officials clarified Wednesday. “It can be very difficult to maintain proper social distancing on porches and at front doors [and] ensure that everyone answering or coming to the door is appropriately masked,” read guidance from the county. Because sharing food is also considered to be risky, officials have also asked people not to participate in “trunk or treating” — when kids go from car to car instead of house to house. Parties, haunted houses, carnivals and festivals are banned for the county’s 10 million residents. Since the pandemic began, Los Angeles County has become the top county in the U.S. affected by COVID-19 with nearly 250,000 confirmed cases and more than 6,036 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University. While officials have advised against trick-or-treating this season, they suggested that revelers dress up, decorate their homes and partake in car parades or drive-through events. For tips on how to stay safe while still having fun on Halloween, click here.
2-year-old born with cleft lip adopts puppy with cleft lip: When Brandon Boyers saw a puppy with a cleft lip at the Jackson County Animal Shelter in Jackson County, Michigan, earlier this month, he immediately thought of his son, Bentley. Bentley, 2, was born with a cleft lip and has had two surgeries, including one to fully close his lip. “When Bentley came in to meet the puppy, we had tears in our eyes,” said Lydia Sattler, animal services director of Jackson County Animal Shelter. “He was loving her and she was just eating it up. They were a perfect match for many reasons.” Now, Bentley’s mom, Ashley, who is expecting another baby later this year, says that the duo is inseparable. “They’re the best of friends,” she said. “If Bentley is playing on the playground, she’s next to the slide waiting for him to come down. They do everything together.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” in an ABC special, Robin Roberts sits down with Paige Winter, the teenage girl who was attacked by a shark a year ago. Plus, Tory Johnson has great deals to help you get your best sleep yet. And in part one of our “Extreme Clean” series, we’re breaking down the phenomenon of motivational cleaning videos, which have been sweeping social platforms since the start of the pandemic. All this and more only on “GMA.”
More fallout from the revelations in Bob Woodward’s new book, West Coast wildfires are leaving a trail of devastation and another whistleblower is accusing top Department of Homeland Security officials of distorting intelligence.
Here’s what we’re watching this Thursday morning.
‘Deadly stuff’: Trump admits he intentionally downplayed COVID-19 dangers to Woodward
President Donald Trump acknowledged Wednesday that he intentionally downplayed the dangers of COVID-19 last winter, in an attempt to avoid “panic” and to show “strength” and “leadership.”
His comments came in an attempt to extinguish some of the political firestorm set off by the release of excerpts and audio from journalist Bob Woodward’s explosive new book, “Rage,” due to hit bookstores next week.
“You just breathe the air and that’s how it’s passed,” Trump told Woodward in a Feb. 7 phone call, according to an audio clip posted on the The Washington Post’s website. “This is deadly stuff,” he said.
At the same time, the president was publicly telling Americans that the new virus was no worse than the seasonal flu, that the government had it under control and predicting that it would soon disappear.
In another interview with Woodward a month later, Trump acknowledged that he was trying to downplay the threat.
“I wanted to always play it down. I still like playing it down because I don’t want to create a panic,” Trump said in a March 19 call with Woodward.
More than 190,000 people have died in the United States from COVID-19, according to NBC News latest count.
The political backlash over the president’s comments was fast and furious with Joe Biden and other top Democratsimmediately denouncing Trump.
“It was a life-and-death betrayal of the American people,” Biden said about the revelationsduring a campaign event in Michigan Wednesday. “It’s beyond despicable. It’s a dereliction of duty, a disgrace.”
Woodward’s book is based on 18 on-the-record phone calls he had with Trump from December to July on a variety of subjects — from the race issues roiling America to North Korea.
In one call, Woodward pointed out that both he and the president were white and privileged and asked if Trump was trying to understand the “anger and pain” felt by Black Americans.
“No,” Trump responded. “You really drank the Kool-Aid, didn’t you? Just listen to you. Wow. No, I don’t feel that at all.”
Oregon Gov. Kate Brown said that in the last 24 hours, the state had “experienced unprecedented fire with significant damage and devastating consequences.”
“This could be the greatest loss of human lives and property due to wildfire in our state’s history,” she said at a news conference.
California and Washington weren’t doing much better, with wildfires still raging in both Western states.
An eerie orange and brown glow filled the sky above theSan Francisco Bay Areaon Wednesday, a mixture of fog and smoke from the fires that cast a perpetual rust colored haze over the city.
Locals were perplexed by the strange sky, calling it “creepy,” “apocalyptic” and “like a scene from Mars.”
Barr defends DOJ involvement in Trump sexual assault lawsuit
Attorney General William Barr on Wednesday defended the Justice Department’s involvement in a lawsuit against President Donald Trump brought by E. Jean Carroll, who has accused Trump of sexually assaulting her in the mid-1990s.
In an exclusive interviewwith “NBC Nightly News,” Barr said that under federal law it is “not particularly unusual” for the Justice Department to step in when an elected government official is sued civilly in court.
“This is done frequently. It’s been done for presidents. It’s been done for congressmen. The normal process was followed in this particular case you’re talking about,” he said.
On Wednesday, Trump also released a new list of Supreme Court prospects and pledged to pick a nominee from the conservative list if he is re-elected and has the opportunity to fill another vacancy.
A written complaint by Brian Murphy, who was a top Department of Homeland Security intelligence analyst, accuses top DHS officials of blocking analysis of Russian election interference, watering down intelligence reports about corruption and violence fueling a refugee flow from Central America, and “modify(ing) assessments to ensure they matched up with the public comments by President Trump on the subject of ANTIFA and ‘anarchist’ groups.”
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Plus
“Kicked in the chops”: Thanks to a presidential memorandum, thousands of military service members will get a tax cut over the next few months — but then they will have to pay all the money back in 2021.
E. Jean Carroll vs. DOJ: Trump and Barr’s defamation defense sets another bad precedent, Jessica Levinson, professor at Loyola Law School, writes in an opinion piece.
Bob Edgar and Leteane Monatsi are unable to join large demonstrations for racial justice in Washington, D.C. because their physical disabilities make jostling in large crowds dangerous.
But that hasn’t stopped the father and son. As NBC News’ Andrea Mitchell reports, they protest regularly on their local street corner.
They hope their voices will inspire others to action.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com
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Thanks, Petra Cahill
NBC FIRST READ
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Trump’s on defense — again. He’s running out of time to change that
The first week of campaigning after Labor Day is now halfway over, and President Trump is once again playing defense – on the Bob Woodward book, on another whistleblower’s allegations, and on a report that an administration official was trying to muzzle Dr. Anthony Fauci.
Doug Mills-Pool/Getty Images
It comes after he was already on his heels over the Atlantic article that accused him of disparaging U.S. war dead.
And it comes after Trump TRIED to play offense on “law and order” after the James Blake police shooting in Kenosha – and he’s still trailing in all-important Wisconsin.
No, this presidential contest isn’t over. But Trump, with 54 days until Election Day, is running out of time to turn the race from a referendum on him to a choice election against Joe Biden.
And what has to concern Trump is that A LOT of people in his orbit are talking to Congress (like with the new whistleblower), to the Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg, and to Bob Woodward.
Including the president, who spoke to the famed Watergate journalist 18 different times.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Time is A Flat Circle
A big reason why Trump is behind: He’s underperforming with white voters
Trump is losing Florida seniors by 1 point among likely voters (when he won them by 17 points in 2016, per the exit poll).
What’s more, Biden is getting 41 percent among all white voters in Florida (when Hillary Clinton got 32 percent of them in the Sunshine State).
And it’s just not Florida.
In Pennsylvania, per our NBC/Marist poll, Biden was tied among all white likely voters in the state, 49 percent to 49 percent (when Trump won by them 16 points in 2016).
And in Wisconsin, according to yesterday’s Marquette Law poll, Biden and Trump were also tied among the state’s white voters, 46 percent to 46 percent (when Trump won them by 11 points four years ago).
So for all the attention on Biden’s demographic weaknesses in a race he’s winning, maybe the most important demographic weakness of all is Trump’s underperformance with white voters.
It’s why he’s behind – in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and nationally.
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
6,388,621: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 32,265 more than yesterday morning.)
191,937: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 1,038 more than yesterday morning.)
83.94 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
More than 900,000: The number of people worldwide who have now died of the virus.
47 percent to 43 percent: Joe Biden’s vs. Donald Trump’s share of support in Wisconsin, according to a new Marquette Law School Poll. (That’s within the margin of error.)
62 percent: The share of Americans in a new Washington Post poll who say professional athletes “should use their platform to express their views on national issues.”
2020 VISION: Biden seizes on Woodward’s book
Joe Biden upped his rhetoric Wednesday against President Trump after the revelations from Bob Woodward’s interviews with Trump.
Before boarding a flight back to Delaware, Biden had been in Michigan today for a few campaign stops, Biden said he blamed the president for unnecessary lost lives from COVID-19 and that he should be kicked out of office for downplaying the virus’ danger.
NBC’s Marianna Sotomayor reports on Biden’s remarks:
“The idea that he knew what was going on, he denied that he was briefed, remember he said he wasn’t briefed by the intelligence community how bad it was. He didn’t read it. It’s just flat lies. That’s wrong. It’s totally irresponsible. Totally irresponsible.”
He added, “Kick him out of office.”
On the campaign trail today: President Trump speaks in Freeland, Mich., at 7:00 pm ET.
Ad Watch from Ben Kamisar
Today’s Ad Watch highlights a Democrat on Democrat attack in New York, where Rep. Max Rose is looking for a re-election win in a district President Trump won by 10 points.
“Bill de Blasio is the worst mayor in the history of New York City. That’s it guys. Seriously, that’s the whole ad,” Rose says in a new digital ad.
Rose has made a name for himself as one of the more unfiltered members of Congress, befitting of the congressman representing Staten Island. But this is still one of the more blunt ads we’ve seen in a while.
For their part, Team de Blasio questioned whether Rose’s analysis ranks de Blasio below Fernando Wood, who mused about secession in order to keep trading with the Confederacy during the Civil War.
THE LID: Burb appeal
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at how Biden’s lead in Pennsylvania is built on his support in the suburbs.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Bill Barr is defending the DOJ’s involvement in a lawsuit against President Trump alleging sexual assault.
VP Mike Pence and other Trump administration officials are set to attend a fundraiser hosted by a couple who have circulated QAnon posts.
Here’s who’s on Trump’s new list of potential Supreme Court justices.
Without guidance from Washington, states are facing a hard choice: Keep bars and restaurants shuttered, or risk spreading the virus in them?
Trump is resuming something that looks like his favorite form of campaigning: Political rallies. But it’s not always going smoothly.
POLITICO reports that Medicaid chief Seema Verma billed more than $3.5 million in taxpayer dollars on Republican-aligned consultants to boost her profile.
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Chuck, Mark, Carrie and Melissa
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Eye Opener
Recordings from an interview with journalist Bob Woodward reveal that President Trump knew the severity of the coronavirus in early 2020, while he was downplaying it to the public. Also, a Homeland Security whistleblower says he was demoted for refusing to change intelligence reports to fit the president’s agenda. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Watch Video +
Recordings show Trump knowingly downplayed COVID-19 to public
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Adam Schiff vows probe of new whistleblower complaint of Russian meddling; DHS responds, bring it
‘Why?’ Tucker puts Lindsey Graham in the hot seat as initiator for Trump interviews with Bob Woodward
Incognito independent journo brutally beaten in Portland after he’s identified
Tucker exposes CNN ‘frauds’, plays audio of Cuomo appearing to coach Michael Cohen ahead of interview
Joe Biden grossly inflates military cases and deaths from coronavirus; gets fact-checked from CNN
Trump announces list of 20 potential US Supreme Court nominees, challenges Biden to do the same
AG Barr says there could be more criminal charges coming in Durham probe
Fauci early on praised Trump admin’s COVID response as ‘impressive’, does not believe Trump ‘distorted’ pandemic
President Trump defends projecting calm amid strong Covid-19 response: ‘I don’t want to see panic’
Larry Elder: A tale of two white, bigoted team owners
DOJ awards $16 million to advance community policing, a top demand of police reform advocates
Univ of Michigan-Dearborn apologizes after promoting student events based on skin color
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Covid-19 has shed light on the shortcomings of America’s nursing homes—but their quality issues predate the current pandemic and are likely to deteriorate further in the coming years without reform. A new report from Chris Pope suggests that many of these limitations derive from an overreliance on Medicaid to fund long-term care (LTC), and proposes tightening limits on Medicaid LTC eligibility to encourage the middle class to purchase LTC insurance and reward nursing homes for improvement
Join Heather Mac Donald and Brian Andersonlater today for a conversation about Mac Donald’s recent work, her experience with the new social-media speech codes, and more.
On Monday, September 14, join the Manhattan Institute for a virtual discussion on the state of our storefronts, how key players are adapting to changes, and what innovative solutions are arising out of this challenging time.
“Nearly seven years later, economic inequality under Hizzoner hasn’t changed. But the unequal distribution of serious violent crimes has worsened. There remain two distinct New Yorks, and as crime ticks up, the difference between them is growing more pronounced.”
By Rafael A. Mangual New York Post
September 10, 2020
Adapted from City Journal
Amid resident complaints, the city moves to shut down its three largest homeless encampments—but will Mayor Jim Kenney follow through?
By Thom Nickels City Journal Online
September 9, 2020
Rafael Mangual interviewed NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea to discuss how recent legislative and policy shifts in New York present new challenges for police in America’s biggest city.
Audio for this episode is excerpted and edited from a Manhattan Institute eventcast, “The New Challenge of Policing New York.” Find out more and register for future events by visiting our website, and subscribe to MI’s YouTube channel to view previous discussions.
On September 9, Manhattan Institute president Reihan Salam and author David Goodhart held a discussion on the politics of meritocracy, the future of populism, and the prerequisites for social cohesion.
On September 8, Coleman Hughes and Jamil Jivani, the author of Why Young Men, held an important conversation on 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.
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
09/10/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Judicial Shortlist; Black Governors; Captains Courageous
By Carl M. Cannon on Sep 10, 2020 09:33 am
Good morning, it’s Thursday, Sept. 10, 2020, the anniversary of one of the most memorable events in U.S. naval history. On this date in 1813, Oliver H. Perry, commanding a small American squadron, faced a formidable Royal Navy force of six warships on Lake Erie led by Cmdr. Robert Barclay.
The battle would determine control of the Great Lakes, as Oliver Perry knew. On the eve of the battle he told his superiors, “If a victory is to be gained, I will gain it.” There was, and he did, as we’ll see in a moment.
First, I’d point you to RealClearPolitics’ front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Biden Remains Mum on SCOTUS/Judicial Shortlist. Susan Crabtree reports on the nominee’s silence, and that of liberal advocacy groups, after the president expanded his list of possible high court appointees.
ABiden Presidency May Mean More Black Governors. Bruce DuMont and Patrick Reddy spotlight the potential for African American lieutenant governors being elevated should Biden’s Cabinet appointments create vacant gubernatorial seats.
What Can We Learn From Trump’s Half-Baked China Trade Deal? The president’s tariffs worked, but his vow to reduce America’s trade deficit and bring back manufacturing has been hot air, Scott Paul argues.
No, Trump Has Not Made 20,000 “False or Misleading” Claims. Media fact-checkers often take extraordinary license in declaring a statement untrue, Mark Hemingway asserts.
Media Bury Biden’s Sins to Cast Him as a Saint. J. Peder Zane lays out the candidate’s long history of falsehoods and racist statements.
Nursing Home Scandal Undercuts Cuomo’s COVID Boasts. Andrew Stein and Fred Siegel write that the governor’s new book paints a different picture of his performance during the pandemic than the record justifies.
Supposedly Reliable Steele Acted “Crazy,” FBI Agent Testified. Despite warnings about Christopher Steele’s behavior, the bureau described him differently to America’s surveillance court, testimony buried in a new Senate report shows. Eric Felten has the story at RealClearInvestigations.
On Indian Reservations, Storm Clouds Over Policing. Also in RCI, Naomi Schaefer Riley reports on demands by tribes for greater sovereignty over law enforcement despite lax approaches to foster care abuses and other crimes.
Post-Pandemic National Security. In RealClearDefense, a half-dozen experts peer into the future.
Evaluating Biden’s “Building Back Better” Plan. In RealClearEnergy, Rupert Darwall examines the Democratic nominee’s net-zero climate proposals.
Google vs. Oracle: A RealClearHealth Symposium. The fair-use software dispute prompted this discussion about the most crucial elements of the case: medical progress, innovation, and intellectual property.
* * *
Although he’s known as “Commodore Perry” and he was promoted to captain in the successful aftermath, Oliver Perry’s official rank on the eve of the Battle of Lake Erie was “master commandant.” Today he’d be called “Commander Perry.” The term “commodore” was akin to the distinction of a “flag ship,” meaning that he was the senior officer among the American warship personnel on the scene.
But the important thing isn’t what Perry was called, it’s what he said, and did, 207 years ago today that placed him among the immortals in U.S. military history. Earlier that year, a young U.S. Navy captain named James Lawrence sailed his frigate, the USS Chesapeake, out of Boston Harbor where she was attacked by the British frigate HMS Shannon. Wounded by small arms fire and his ship severely damaged, Capt. Lawrence beseeched his men as they carried him below decks, “Don’t give up the ship!”
The crew members fought valiantly, but were overwhelmed. The ship was taken and Lawrence died of his wounds three days later. But his exhortation became a rallying cry among American seamen. Cmdr. Perry had the words emblazoned on a blue battle flag he flew on the USSLawrence, named after the fallen hero. In the Battle of Lake Erie, that ship was also rendered inoperable by British guns. Perry was forced to give up his ship, but only temporarily. In a brave gambit, he ferried himself via rowboat to another American ship, the USS Niagara. From her decks, Perry rallied a flotilla of American gunboats into the fray, routing the enemy and ultimately capturing the entire British squadron.
Although the victory was hardly foreordained, it was made possible by preparation. Earlier that year, Perry had been put in charge of assembling the U.S. fleet then being built on the shores of Lake Erie. What ensued that spring and summer was nothing less than an arms race between Perry and his British counterpart, Barclay. Working feverishly through the summer, Perry and his boatbuilders won that competition. On Sept. 10, 1813, the Royal Navy sent forth a fleet six vessels. But the Americans had nine, an advantage that helped turn the tide.
To this day, Perry is remembered for the terse and eloquent words he used to announce his victory. In a note to Gen. William Henry Harrison, a future U.S. president, Perry wrote, “We have met the enemy and they are ours.”
It’s a great line, far more memorable than it would have been had he chosen to emphasize another, less glamorous reason for his success, which was that hard work and good planning pay off.
As part of Center for Security Policy’s Voter Education Webinar Series, David Wurmser, Director of the Center’s Program on Global Anti-Semitism and the US-Israel Relationship hosted panelists Juliana Pilon, Senior Fellow of the Alexander Hamilton Institute for the Study of Western Civilization, and Joel Griffith, Research Fellow at the Heritage Foundation Roe Institute.
Following the murders of three prominent anti-corruption activists in Iraq, frustrated demonstrators once again take to the streets.
Thousands of mourners congregated in Iraq’s southern provinces on September 1 to mark Muharram, the first month in the Islamic calendar. This seminal event which commemorates the Prophet Mohammed’s slain grandson is observed by Shiites around the world. This year, Iraqis used this gathering to express their frustration and concern regarding the continued violent suppression of protestors in the country. A number of mourners carried enlarged portraits of some of the nearly 600 activists and protesters murdered since anti-corruption demonstrations emerged last year.
The Trump administration is reportedly preparing to block the importing of Chinese cotton and fabric and tomatoes and tomato paste on the grounds that their manufacture involves slave labor. That’s the good news.
The bad news is that U.S. financiers may still be investing unwitting Americans’ money in companies that exploit Uighur Muslims or others enslaved by the Chinese Communist Party. They are also underwriting and, thereby, enabling corporations that: support the CCP’s oppressive surveillance state; are sanctioned for engaging in proliferation; and/or that build weapons designed to kill Americans for the People’s Liberation Army’s military-industrial complex.
President Trump and his subordinates have, to their credit, warned against investing in such Chinese companies in our own capital markets. Now, however, Wall Street is helping the CCP sell Americans problematic stocks on exchanges in China.
That’s wrong and must be actively opposed, too.
This is Frank Gaffney.
BEN WEINGARTEN, Founder and CEO of ChangeUp Media LLC, Senior Contributor at The Federalist, Senior Fellow at the London Center for Policy Research:
What is the U.S. Agency for Global Media?
Michael Pack’s role in this agency
Is Ilhan Omar’s ideology the future of the Democratic party?
DIANA WEST, Nationally syndicated columnist, Blogs at Dianawest.net, Author of Death of the Grown Up, American Betrayal, and Red Thread: A Search for Ideological Drivers Inside the Anti-Trump Conspiracy:
The recent attack piece on President Trump in The Atlantic
President Trump’s track record with the US military
BRAD THAYER, Professor of International Security Studies a Tallinn University, Has worked for the U.S. Department of Defense, the Rand Corporation and served as a senior analyst for the National Institute for Public Policy:
Defining the Trump-China policy approach
Are we in a new era of international politics?
TODD BENSMAN, Senior Fellow at the Center for Immigration Studies, Writing Fellow, Middle East Forum, Author, the Federalist:
Has the President’s immigration policy been consistent with initial campaign promises?
Biden promises to prohibit deportations for 100 days if elected
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By Ethan Yang | “The rights guaranteed in the Constitution are not there merely for decoration and warm feelings, nor can we expect the very entity they serve to limit, the state, to protect them for us. Rather they are upheld by a free, educated…
By Caroline Breashears | Is it time for The Hate? It’s a question that we, like the protagonist of George Orwell’s dystopian 1984, may be asking ourselves now as we tune into a news program or click on our favorite website. For Orwell’s Winston…
The Resilience and Brilliance of the World’s Poorest:…
By Art Carden | Global poverty has been falling dramatically over the last few decades, but a lot of people in the world still live in conditions that are absolutely appalling by the standards of the developed world.
By Robert Hughes | The latest Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows the number of open positions in the private sector rose to 5.947 million in July. Total job openings increased to 6.618 million.
The Clearest and Best Video Explanation of the Virus, the…
By Jeffrey A. Tucker | “Those of us who have been reading and writing on lockdowns and the Covid-19 virus have been frustrated in competition with media frenzy and disinformation. Many times since February or so, I imagined that the latest study…
Meet the New Fed, Same as the Old Fed: Jerome Powell’s…
By Phillip W. Magness & Alexander William Salter | “If it’s serious about a 2% inflation target, the Fed will have to do better than a pep rally. We were promised meaningful change; what we got was the same old song and dance.”
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.
When it comes to investing, it’s best to stay ahead of the pack. Sometimes, that’s not so easy, especially for those wanting to jump on the Trump train, or the Biden train. Whichever side of the aisle you choose, here are some of the top stocks that could run. Click Here to Download the FREE Report…
By Michael Every of Rabobank Today is like one of those rare occasions when the Broadway understudy for a leading role finds out that the star has the ‘flu (not Covid-19) and so they get to go in front of the audience for once. Yes, Europe…
Authored by Paul Joseph Watson via Summit News, A video out of Spain shows citizens preventing police from arresting a woman for not wearing a face mask. The clip shows officers attempting to pull the older woman away from the crowd…
Eerie, dark orange clouds enveloped San Francisco and the Bay Area on Wednesday as a result of nearby wildfire smoke entering the atmosphere. Stunning photos were posted by SF Gate on Wednesday showing what looks like a Martian sky…
The COVID-19 pandemic hasn’t stopped the world’s wealthiest families from growing their fortunes. As Visual Capitalist’s Carmen Ang notes, over the past year, the richest family – the Waltons – grew their wealth by $25 billion , or almost…
Authored by Bruce Wilds via Advancing Time blog, Variety is the spice of life but when does it go too far? When does a person move from being a nonconformist to where they are just plain weird? This is not a question that is easily answered.
Authored by Ron Ross via AmericanThinker.com, A curious but fortunate characteristic of virus epidemics is their limited lifespans. No one knows why, but guesses include herd immunity and mutations of the virus. The following graph from…
During these unprecedented times, there’s one thing you can do to safeguard your hard-earned retirement assets – invest in physical gold or silver. Regardless of the stock market’s performance, a tangible precious metals investment can balance your portfolio and protect your retirement assets during the COVID crisis and beyond. Learn how you can Thrive in Retirement During Uncertain Times…
On the menu today: Trump’s statements to Bob Woodward aren’t all that different from what he’s said at his rallies and in other public events, a couple of ways that the rest of America’s leadership class isn’t providing the sharp contrast to Trump that they think they do, and a quick preview of what is likely to be one of the strangest seasons in NFL history.
You Know Trump Already Said All This Stuff Publicly, Right?
“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
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77-year-old Sleepy Joe left his Delaware basement bunker on Wednesday and traveled to Michigan. Joe Biden arrived in Warren, Michigan to a crowd of Trump… Read more…
Another US Government Abuse of Power! Two weeks ago war hero and triple amputee Brian Kolfage was arrested along with former Trump Chief Strategist Steve… Read more…
Investigative reporter Catherine Herridge at CBS News broke news on Wednesday night on the ongoing Durham investigation. Attorney General Bill Barr sat with NBC News’s… Read more…
Joe Biden falsely claimed on Wednesday during his Michigan speech that more than 6,000 members of the US military died from Coronavirus. “Every one of… Read more…
77-year-old Joe Biden spoke gibberish and slurred his words in his Michigan speech on Wednesday. Biden attacked President Trump with lies from Bob Woodward’s latest… Read more…
77-year-old Sleepy Joe left his Delaware basement bunker on Wednesday and traveled to Michigan. Biden spoke to a handful of media sycophants sitting in social… Read more…
President Trump on Wednesday announced 20 new additions to his Supreme Court list. GOP Senators Josh Hawley (MO), Ted Cruz (TX) and Tom Cotton (AR)… Read more…
Last night independent journalist Taylor Hansen infiltrated the Antifa terrorist mobs in Portland. Unfortunately, one of the antifa members recognized Taylor and spread the word… Read more…
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Nobody is talking about schools resuming completely to normal this fall, but the economic problems caused by the pandemic would not be solved even if they did. In an analysis that we authored and that was discussed last weekend by education ministers of the G-20, we find the cohort of K-12 students hit by the spring closures has been seriously harmed and already faces a loss of lifetime income of 3 percent or more. The nation also faces a bleaker future.
In Choose Economic Freedom, a book George Shultz and I published this year, we explained why one must choose a path that opposes socialism. Economic freedom, or free market capitalism, the term of art used in the Hoover Institution’s important Human Prosperity Project, means a rule of law, predictable policies, reliance on markets, attention to incentives, and limitations on government. Socialism, on the other hand, means arbitrary government actions replace the rule of law, policy predictability is no virtue, central decrees can replace market prices, incentives matter little, and government does not need to be restrained.
The American public has grown war weary, with no enthusiasm to return to a grand agenda for the Middle East. This reluctance is the major constraint on future policy, and it has multiple causes.
The Hoover Institution is hosting A Conversation with Representative Bi-khim Hsiao and Hoover Senior Fellow Larry Diamond on Friday, September 11, 2020 from 1:00 p.m. – 2:00 p.m. PDT.
I was driving in Northern California on Labor Day, contemplating the 1-2 mile visibility in thick smoke through the Central Valley, and listening to NPR, when an enticing story came along.
After a recently concluded bill-drafting session considered remarkable only in the remarkable job that lawmakers did in avoiding a host of weighty matters, what could California’s State Legislature do for an encore?
Scott Horton is a well-informed foreign policy analyst who interviews people mainly about foreign policy. Because of the potential foreign-policy implications of my recent Defining Ideas article on China, Scott interviewed me last week. His interview is titled, “David Henderson on the Supposed Economic Threat from China.” It goes about 42 minutes.
Hoover Institution fellow Lanhee Chen talks about children engaging in online learning during the COVID-19 pandemic. Chen discusses the social, emotional, and economic toll that is problematic for families in our country, as children are beginning the school year – many of them at home.
Eric A. Hanushek, the Paul and Jean Hanna Senior Fellow in Education and Distinguished Visiting Fellow Ludger Woessmann at Stanford’s Hoover Institution released an Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) analysis on The Economic Impacts of Learning Lossesincurred during the COVID-19 pandemic. This groundbreaking OECD analysis was presented at the G20 Education Ministers virtual meeting on September 5, 2020. While not addressing when or how schools re-open, it points to the long-run harm to students and to the nation of the accumulating learning losses.
“President Donald Trump isn’t an isolationist, but a realist,” Victor Davis Hanson said in a speech at Hillsdale College on September 3. Hanson, an author and historian whose latest book is “The Case for Trump,” spoke about foreign policy under the Trump administration at Plaster Auditorium Sept. 2 at 8 p.m.
H.R. McMaster is one of the most celebrated modern military leaders in America. His achievements include serving as a captain during the Gulf War, being responsible for fighting the Iraqi insurgency during the war in Iraq, writing the widely-read book Dereliction of Duty, and most recently serving as national security advisor under President Donald Trump.
The Trump administration has helped broker a deal between Serbia and Kosovo, two former arch-enemies that were part of the former Yugoslavia. The agreement is receiving scant attention from the mainstream media for reasons I’ll address below.
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
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This email was sent to: rickbulow1974@gmail.com
So I won’t (again) vote for either major candidate (can’t by my lights).
Maybe it’s sports, but I can’t help but feel my rooting for either Biden or Trump matters – root for Biden as a nicer, more normal guy, with bad policies, or root for Trump (whom I truly can’t stand to listen to), but with significantly better policies (in most areas) – lots of the normal caveats in there, etc.
Not voting for one of them, but can’t decide which one to root for – weird?
I am Canadian and Ted Cruz was born in Canada, so I would support him to be nominated to the Supreme Court.