Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday September 14, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
September 14 2020
Good morning from Washington, where conservatives defend America from the left’s often-ignorant calumny. Jarrett Stepman has one scholar’s take on the “historian” largely responsible for today’s anti-Americanism. On the podcast, a Vietnam-era communist sympathizer draws parallels between his beliefs then and those of today’s left. Plus: the rise of a “dark money” machine; the Trump administration vs. the green energy mirage; Ted Cruz targets an abortion pill; and the progress of race relations in America. On this date in 1814, Francis Scott Key writes a poem that will be set to music and, in 1931, become America’s national anthem under the title “The Star-Spangled Banner.”
Howard Zinn distorted sources to fit his narrative, took subject matter out of context, and frequently outright lifted material from others, scholar Mary Grabar says.
Arabella Advisors, the left’s best-kept secret, proves something that money-in-politics reporters have failed to notice: Nonprofits, not the parties, drive our politics.
“There was no counter to what the communists were putting out about the war in Vietnam,” Tony Salinski recalls. “I got convinced that it was illegal and immoral. And … one thing led to another.”
The Texas Republican’s comments are accurate and persuasive. Abortion advocates should reconsider supporting not just abortion but their effusive praise for this particular drug.
The Trump administration has taken productive steps to open access to energy development and reduce regulatory burdens that drove up energy costs while producing minimal to no environmental benefits.
When some Americans know they can have children out of wedlock, drop out of school, and refuse employment yet suffer little consequence, one should not be surprised to see more of such behavior.
A “legally armed citizen” intervened during an instance of domestic violence in a convenience store parking lot, police said, possibly saving a woman’s life.
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THE RESURGENT
THE EPOCH TIMES
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Goldman Sachs has identified one asset class that deems virus resistant: Gold. Gold dramatically outperforms other safe havens in 2020 and has officially become, “the currency of last resort.”
White House official Ja’Ron Smith grew up in a low-income family in Cleveland, Ohio. His father shoveled snow and paved roads, while his mother worked at a gas station after struggling for years from an opioid addiction.
Protestors Chant “We Hope They Die” as Ambushed Officers Fight for Their Lives
A look at how demented some in this movement have become (WMAR). The head of the NAACP of Springfield Massachusetts said “There’s no such thing as BLUE LIVES” (Red State). From the Wall Street Journal: Democratic mayor Eric Garcetti called the chants and protests at the hospital “unacceptable” and “abhorrent,” but he and other Democrats need to do more to condemn and ostracize these protesters. Democrats may fear the wrath of Black Lives Matter, but the backlash elsewhere in America will be far greater if pleasure at cop killing becomes common on the left” (WSJ). A $100,000 reward is offered for information leading to the capture of the shooter (ABC News). From another story: Trump, who was speaking at a roundtable campaign event in Las Vegas, used Saturday’s gruesome shooting to highlight his campaign’s “law and order” message, while also calling out Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden as weak on crime. “He’s not strong for law and order and everybody knows that,” Trump said of Biden during at a “Latinos for Trump” event. “When you see a scene like happened just last night in California with the two police people – a woman, a man – shot at stone cold short range.” The president added: “We’re looking for him…and when we find that person, we’ve got to get much faster with our courts and we’ve got to get much tougher with our sentencing” (Fox News). Meanwhile, a poll finds most Americans see BLM demonstrations as riots more than protests (Washington Examiner). Of Oregon residents, two thirds disapprove of the protests and even 48 percent of black Portland residents see them as harmful (DHM Research). From Guy Benson: Arson, destruction & looting = rioting. The fact that only a small plurality attributes more of the violence to left-wing agitators vs right-wingers demonstrates how successful the Dem/media gaslighting campaign has been (Twitter). BLM continues their terror across the country (Biz Pac Review).
2.
#CancelNetflix Hits Number One Trending Topic on Twitter After “Cuties” Airs
And many did cancel, though the numbers are hard to find. The film that sexualized pre-teens shocked viewers. Netflix argued the disgusting movie is justified because, they claim, they are making the overall point that what they are promoting is bad (Variety). But people remember a few weeks before when Netflix promoted the sexual side of “Cuties” not the moral condemnation (CBS News). Netflix, quite naturally, wants you to see the entire film before you judge (NY Post). If everyone did that, they Netflix would boast how popular the movie is.
Advertisement
3.
Gallup: Sports See Massive Decline in Image
From 45 percent positive to just 30 in one year. They are now at the bottom of the long list of industries, below the movie and legal industry and tied with the federal government. The slide is among Republicans and Independents. Democrats’ views have not changed much – so they didn’t even gain from the group they are working to appease.
You’d have no idea if you watch the major networks, outside of Fox. From David Limbaugh: While Trump’s opponents cast him as an inveterate liar, he has kept his campaign promises perhaps more than any modern president. He has produced: on the economy, rebuilding the military, defending life and religious liberty, his stellar judicial appointments, his restoration of America’s energy independence (which Biden wants to reverse through his quixotically reckless promise to eliminate fossil fuels) and his decisive rejection of the Democrats’ nationally suicidal Green New Deal agenda. Indeed, Trump has vigorously resisted enormous pressure from radical environmentalists to surrender our sovereignty to international bodies guided by pseudo-science and a Marxist worldview, hellbent on returning us to the horse and buggy (Townhall). Hugh Hewitt notes “the media all but ignored the immense significance of the Kosovo-Serbia agreement — two countries whose enmity has required tens of thousands of Americans over two decades to spend years away from their families to prevent savage killing. Astonishing” (Washington Post). From Axios: Israel and Bahrain had a secret relationship for over two decades, meaning neither country had diplomatic relations and most of their contacts were through covert talks behind the scenes. However the talks which led to the joint statement on establishing full diplomatic relations took just 29 days (Axios). Fox News has Biden up five with registered voters, the closest Trump has been in a Fox poll since May (Fox News).
5.
California Governor Signs Bill Lowering Penalty for Raping a Child
Because, California Democrats argued, the law wasn’t fair to gays.
YouTube Takes Down Video for Contradicting World Health Organization
It was an interview Scott Atlas did with Stanford’s Hoover Institution (Hoover). The transcript is still available (Hoover). From Mollie Hemingway: Big Tech is utterly terrifying right now. The World Health Organization is not our master and they are dangerously wrong with alarming frequency. Even if that weren’t true, free people must be free to counter them (Twitter).
7.
New York Tells Restaurants They Can Now Go to 25 Percent Capacity
But that’s not nearly enough to save many restaurants.
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First in Sunburn — Carlecia Collins joins GrayRobinson — GrayRobinson is bringing on Carlecia Collins as a lobbyist. Collins is currently working in the Senate President’s office, where she was in charge of all appointments to boards, commissions, and task forces. Before serving in the Senate President’s office, she worked in the House Speaker’s office during the term of Dean Cannon, who is now president of GrayRobinson. She also worked for former Sen. Jack Latvala when he chaired the Senate Appropriations Committee and has served under multiple presiding officers. She is a double alumna of Florida State University, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in interdisciplinary social science and a master’s in applied American politics and policy.
Collins starts at GrayRobinson later this month.
Situational awareness
—@TheHill: President @realDonaldTrump: “52 days we’re going to win Nevada and we’re going to win 4 more years in the White House — and then after that we’ll negotiate. Based on the way we were treated, we’re probably entitled to another 4 after that.”
—@LASDHQ: To the protesters blocking the entrance & exit of the HOSPITAL EMERGENCY ROOM yelling ‘We hope they die’ referring to 2 LA Sheriff’s ambushed today in #Compton: DO NOT BLOCK EMERGENCY ENTRIES & EXITS TO THE HOSPITAL. People’s lives are at stake when ambulances can’t get through.
—@AGAshleyMoody: Disgusted by continuing reports of brutal attacks on LEOs across our country. I again call for increased penalties for those who maliciously attack those who bravely serve.
—@SVDate: 1) If you are blocking access to the ambulance driveway at a hospital, you are endangering people’s lives. 2) If you are chanting “let them die” about people who have been shot, then there is something damaged in your soul.
Tweet, tweet:
Honored to have been invited by President @realDonaldTrump to attend the signing of the Abraham Accords on Tuesday. Thanks to President Trump’s leadership, the Middle East is normalizing relations w/ our ally #Israel & the region is becoming more stable & secure! #jaxpol#flapolpic.twitter.com/DamATz7w12
—@ida_v_e: Hypothetical for Floridians: If a Governor knew a Category 5 hurricane was headed to Florida, but told everyone it was a tropical storm to “avoid a panic,” and as a result of that lie, thousands of people who could have evacuated instead died, should that Governor be re-elected?
—@ALixabeth: Is someone recording the “18-21 yr olds executive functions aren’t fully developed so it is not their fault if they spread COVID at college parties” takes so that, in 10 yrs when they are struggling w the consequences of $ decisions they made when 18-21 yrs old, they get a break?
—@CovHousePrez: In nearly 30 years, I’ve never seen this level of child hunger. At @CovenantHouse we’ve served over 1 million meals since 3/1 & it’s not enough. We don’t need meaningless campaign slogans about children. We need a war on child poverty, hunger & homelessness. And we need it now.
Tweet, tweet:
I’d like to nominate cardboard humans watching baseball in a dystopian hell scape for photo of the year, thanks. pic.twitter.com/DeQmFjuM45
Apple announces new iPhone — 1; Walmart Amazon Prime competitor, Walmart+, will launch nationwide — 2; Rescheduled date for the French Open — 7; First presidential debate in Indiana — 15; “Wonder Woman 1984” premieres — 18; Preakness Stakes rescheduled — 19; Ashley Moody’s 2020 Human Trafficking Summit — 22; First vice presidential debate at the University of Utah — 23; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 29; Second presidential debate scheduled in Miami — 31; NBA draft — 32; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 32; NBA free agency — 34; Florida Chamber’s Future of Florida Forum — 36; Third presidential debate at Belmont — 38; 2020 General Election — 50; “Black Widow” premieres — 53; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 58; The Masters begins — 59; College basketball season slated to begin — 66; “No Time to Die” premieres — 68; Pixar’s “Soul” premieres — 68; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 79; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 79; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 146; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 159; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 291; New start date for 2021 Olympics — 312; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 320; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 420; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 516; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 569; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 750.
Presidential
“Joe Biden-Donald Trump a 5-point race in post-convention poll” via Dana Blanton of Fox News — The Biden–Kamala Harris ticket is ahead of the Trump–Mike Pence ticket by a 51-46 percent margin. That 5 percentage-point advantage sits right at the margin of sampling error of the latest Fox News survey, taken after the Democratic and Republican national conventions. Majorities of likely voters have a positive opinion of Biden and trust him over Trump on coronavirus, Supreme Court nominations, and uniting the country and that nudges the former vice president just over 50 percent in the presidential race. The national survey, released Sunday, is the first Fox News has conducted among likely voters this year, and the first time it included running mates in the vote preference question. Both tickets have secured the backing of their key voting blocs. Biden leads among women, suburban voters, seniors, millennials, Blacks, and Hispanics. Trump is ahead among men, Whites, rural voters, veterans, White Catholics, and Gen Xers.
“Mike Bloomberg to spend at least $100 million in Florida to benefit Biden” via Michael Scherer of The Washington Post — Bloomberg plans to spend at least $100 million in Florida to help elect JoeBiden, a massive late-stage infusion of cash that could reshape the presidential contest in a costly toss-up state central to President Donald Trump’s reelection hopes. Bloomberg decided to focus his final election spending on Florida last week, after news reports that Trump had considered spending as much as $100 million of his own money in the final weeks of the campaign, Bloomberg’s advisers said. Presented with several options on how to make good on an earlier promise to help elect Biden, Bloomberg decided that a narrow focus on Florida was the best use of his money. The president’s campaign has long treated the state, which Trump now calls home, as a top priority, and his advisers remain confident in his chances given strong turnout in 2016 and 2018 that gave Republicans narrow winning margins in statewide contests.
“Biden campaign launches new Spanish language ads in Florida” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Biden is launching a new Spanish language ad campaign in Florida. The television and digital ad, called “Dicen Mucho / They Say A lot” will target Latino families. It criticizesTrump’s response to the coronavirus and economic downturn. The ad also boasts Biden’s role in the economic recovery of 2008 and his plan proposed tax plan. The Democratic nominee’s campaign will also launch two radio ads to run in Florida, called “Arroz / Rice,” and “Corazón de la Economía / Heart of the Economy.” The “Arroz / Rice” ad will target Puerto Ricans — honing in on Trump’s poor response to the devastation caused by Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico and criticizing the President’s advertisements in the U.S. territory. The radio ad will also hit on Florida’s coronavirus death toll, which just reached 12,600 residents and 156 non-residents on Friday.
Watch the ad here:
Assignment editors — Biden will be in Florida Tuesday afternoon for a roundtable with veterans in Tampa at 1:30 p.m. He will also attend a Hispanic Heritage Month event in Kissimmee at 6:30 p.m. Registration information for the events is available here.
“Trump’s policy agenda gets Florida focus in election year” via Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times — It’s not normal for a president to announce new policies on the road in front of a sea of supporters chanting “FOUR MORE YEARS” and encouraging him to take more shots at his political foes. But that was the scene in Jupiter last week as President Trump took the extraordinary step of extending a drilling ban off Florida’s coast to 2032. Billed as an official presidential visit, the event started with familiar campaign music and ended with Ron DeSantis tossing Trump’s pens into a pit of outstretched hands like they were guitar picks at a rock concert. Facing a difficult road to another term, Trump’s election-year agenda has frequently shined a spotlight on Florida. The offshore drilling ban follows another high-profile announcement earlier this summer to allow the importation of prescription drugs from Canada, a DeSantis priority.
“Trump fumes over Biden ad, media coverage at Nevada rally” via Gabby Orr of POLITICO — President Trump set the tone early on at his rally in northern Nevada Saturday night, warning that he was prepared to “be really vicious” in the final weeks of the presidential campaign. Fuming over a new ad about his alleged disparagement of U.S. military personnel, Trump arrived here with a torrent of insults ready to go. ‘Pathetic Joe. He’s a pathetic human being to allow that to happen,’ Trump said of Democratic presidential nominee Biden and the ad Biden’s campaign released last week, which seized on comments Trump reportedly made about America’s fallen soldiers. “But you know the good part?’ Trump continued. “Now I can be really vicious. Once I saw that ad, I don’t have to be nice anymore.’ The president also claimed Biden, “doesn’t know he’s alive.” “Sleepy Joe Biden. You know where he is now? He’s in his damn basement again,” Trump told the crowd.
Donald Trump arrives on stage for a campaign rally in Minden, NV. Photo via Doug Mills.
From POLITICO’s quoted source in its recent table-setter of the presidential election in Florida — “Roger Stone calls for Trump to seize total power if he loses the election” via Timothy Johnson of Media Matters — Roger Stone is making baseless accusations of widespread voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election and is urging Trump to consider several draconian measures to stay in power, including having federal authorities seize ballots in Nevada, having FBI agents and Republican state officials “physically” block voting under the pretext of preventing voter fraud, using martial law or the Insurrection Act to carry out widespread arrests, and nationalizing state police forces. Stone’s efforts are now underway, and his aim appears to be to spread conspiracy theories about voter fraud and call for actions that would likely intimidate potential Biden voters.
“Daytona Trump boat rally draws hundreds of vessels to Halifax River on Saturday” via Jewell Tomazin of The Daytona Beach News-Journal — Looking down the Halifax River on Saturday morning, there were “Trump flags as far as the eye could see.” That’s according to Vic Baker, Communications Director for the Volusia County Republican Party and a State Committeeman for the Republican Party of Florida. He was one of the hundreds who participated in the Daytona/NSB Trump Boat Rally. Baker didn’t have a part in organizing the parade, but he knew exactly why boaters came together. “The purpose is very simple: Supporting the reelection of Donald J. Trump. It was a pure and simple rally to express grassroots support. Everybody showed up spontaneously to do that,” he said. Participants met at the brand new Orange Avenue bridge in Daytona Beach at 10 a.m. and traveled south along the Intracoastal Waterway to Disappearing Island in New Smyrna Beach.
“They voted for him and now regret it. Why White women are turning away from Trump.” via Jenna Johnson of The Washington Post — There are a group of White women, especially those who are middle- or working-class, who didn’t vote for Hillary Clinton in the last election but are determined to vote for Biden this year. Those women, who have been targeted by both campaigns, loom large in a presidential race that could, like 2016’s, be decided by shifts among a few sets of voters in the highly polarized nation. Although Clinton won the majority of votes from women in 2016, she lost to Trump among White women. Since then, however, polls have shown Trump weakening among those voters. Even slight changes in November among White women could play a deciding role in several states that Trump won in 2016 by a razor-thin margin, especially Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.
“Biden courts Black farmers to dent Donald Trump’s lead among rural voters” via Ximena Bustillo of POLITICO Pro — The Biden campaign has spent the summer criticizing discrimination in agriculture, organizing roundtable discussions and tapping former Black government officials in an aggressive push to attract Black farmers, a small but potentially significant slice of the rural vote. Farmers of color, numbering more than 260,000 nationally, make up between 10 and 65 percent of farmers in almost a dozen states, including swing states of Arizona, Florida and Nevada. Many say the focus from Biden is the first time in years a presidential nominee has paid attention to their needs. “I think the Biden campaign is trying to mobilize resources to address each key segment of agriculture. And I didn’t see that before,” said Dewayne Goldmon, executive director of the National Black Growers Council, one of the organizations the campaign has courted.
“‘It’s a lack of respect.’ Why Haitians felt spurned by Kamala Harris’ Miami visit” via Jacqueline Charles and David Smiley of the Miami Herald — Harris courted Venezuelan, African-American and Jewish voters during her first visit to Miami on behalf of her running mate, Democratic presidential nominee Biden. But other than a “Sa k pase ” by Harris — Creole for “what’s happening” — Haitian American representation was mostly absent from Thursday’s campaign stop, reinforcing feelings of neglect by a large contingent of the South Florida Black community that has long felt overlooked by Democratic politicians. “When I turn on my TV, you hear everything in the Hispanic community about [President] Trump or Biden. Biden’s team is always in the Hispanic community but they forget about the Haitian community,” said Christie Chenier, a community organizer and voter who lives in the heavily Haitian city of North Miami. “We feel left out.”
“Sorry, Biden backers. Trump actually has more campaign cash now than 4 years ago” via Dave Levinthal for Business Insider — The Trump campaign ended July with more than $120 million, compared with about $99 million for Biden. For Trump, that’s about three times more than the roughly $39 million his campaign reported at this point in 2016, an Insider review of Federal Election Commission records indicates. Similarly, the Republican National Committee ended July with about $110 million in reserve, compared with about $33 million for the Democratic National Committee. The RNC’s stash is more than three times the $34.5 million it reported at the same point in August 2016. And while Biden’s strong August fundraising has indeed diminished the Trump campaign’s long-standing financial lead, neither campaign appears in jeopardy of running out of money, no matter how aggressive its 11th-hour spending gets, prominent Democrats and Republicans both acknowledged in interviews this week.
“Biden’s transition team, wary of Trump and COVID-19, sets massive fundraising goal” via Elena Schneider and Alex Thompson of POLITICO — Biden’s transition team has expanded its fundraising goal far beyond what Hillary Clinton raised in 2016, anticipating that, should they prevail in November, the Trump administration could actively work against their efforts and that the coronavirus pandemic will make a presidential changeover more difficult than ever. The Biden transition team is aiming to raise at least $7 million by Election Day and build a staff of at least 350 people by Inauguration Day, according to a person familiar with the transition’s planning, while another person said the total fundraising goal is $7 million to $10 million. The budget far exceeds the $2.1 million that Clinton raised for her transition planning by Election Day 2016, or the $6.5 million Trump’s transition raised before he assumed the presidency. Mitt Romney in 2012 raised $8.9 million for what is considered the most robust prior effort to plan a transition hand-off between two different parties.
“Bernie Sanders expresses concerns about Biden campaign” via Sean Sullivan of The Washington Post — Sanders is privately expressing concerns about Biden’s presidential campaign, according to three people with knowledge of the conversations, and is urging Biden’s team to intensify its focus on pocketbook issues and appeals to liberal voters. Sanders, the runner-up to Biden in the Democratic primaries, has told associates that Biden is at serious risk of coming up short in the November election if he continues his vaguer, more centrist approach, according to the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe sensitive talks. The senator has identified several specific changes he’d like to see, saying Biden should talk more about health care and about his economic plans and should campaign more with figures popular among young liberals, such as Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
Apropos of something — “Study finds ‘hurricane skepticism’ among Trump voters” via Axios — A new study finds that conservative media led to “hurricane skepticism” among Trump voters before Hurricane Irma hit Florida in 2017, discouraging evacuations. In a study published Friday in the journal Science Advances, researchers from UCLA examined evacuation patterns for the hurricane. They used GPS phone location data from each affected voting precinct, which allowed them to compare the behaviors of likely Clinton and Trump voters living as closely as 500 ft. apart. They found Florida residents who voted for Trump were between 10% and 11% less likely than residents who voted for Clinton to obey evacuation orders. That partisan gap wasn’t present during Hurricane Harvey in August 2017 or Hurricane Matthew in October 2016.
2020
“Florida Democrats grow mail ballot enrollment edge to more than 700,000” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — More than 700,000 Democrats in Florida requested mail ballots than Republicans ahead of the presidential election. The Florida Democratic Party announced Friday that more than 2.22 million Democrats registered to vote by mail. That expands their enrollment advantage to 717,000 over Republicans. “Our volunteers, partner organizations and the coordinated campaign team have worked tirelessly to educate Democrats about vote-by-mail, and with 43 days until the vote-by-mail enrollment deadline we are excited to see this margin continue to grow,” said Terrie Rizzo, Florida Democratic Party chair. The gap between Democrat and Republican requests grew substantially in August. The state party announced at the end of July it enjoyed an edge of half a million voter enrollments. The gap over Republicans has grown roughly 40% in the intervening weeks.
“Darren Soto sees big to-do list in third term representing CD 9” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Soto sees the next term as a chance to push things forward that are making a little progress here and there in across-aisle and across-chamber negotiations. There is so much in the hopper and so much yet to do for Florida’s 9th Congressional District, Soto said. He sees promising movement on issues like immigration reform for Dreamers and refugees needing secured status, law enforcement reforms, national status for the planned Pulse Memorial and Museum, environmental protection for the Kissimmee River and Florida reefs, infrastructure improvements for Central Florida roads and railroads, economic incentives for NASA and commercial space, Lake Nona’s Medical City, Osceola County’s NeoCity, and rising manufacturing in Polk County. “That’s the long term plan. I know that’s a lot. But we have a lot of needs. That’s why I got on the Energy and Commerce Committee, to focus on a more higher-paying high-tech manufacturing job culture here in the district so we are able to withstand recessions,” Soto said. Congress should be doing less, not more, counters his Republican opponent, Bill Olson.
“Trump, GOP leaders embrace Scott Franklin after primary upset” via Gary White of The Lakeland Ledger — Franklin received irrefutable confirmation that he had shed his status as an outsider political candidate when his phone rang the evening of Aug. 19. President Trump then came on the line and congratulated Franklin on his victory. Though the Republican Party’s state and national establishment had supported Ross Spano’s bid for reelection, Franklin suddenly had the attention of the man who defines the party. Franklin said he and Trump talked for more than five minutes. That phone call and subsequent expressions of support from national Republican leaders reflect the significance of the district, a longtime GOP stronghold along the crucial Interstate 4 corridor in a state crucial to Trump’s hopes of reelection.
“Supervisor of Elections says she was unaware St. Lucie County was targeted by Russians” via Joshua Solomon of TC Palm — Gertrude Walker, the county supervisor of elections now embroiled in the national debate over election security, said she never was informed by any level of government that her voting systems may have been hacked by Russian malware in 2016. “I can only assure you that if classified information exists evidencing a hacking attempt on our voting systems, my office has never been informed of such an operation,” Walker said in a news release Thursday. Her admission to not knowing about the reported hacking marked her first public comment since the news broke, some 24 hours prior. On Wednesday, CNN reported that two Florida counties hacked by Russians were Washington, which was previously known, and St. Lucie.
What Kevin Sweeny is reading — “Despite social media, political lawn signs remain relevant to many” via John A. Torres of Florida Today — Everyone has an opinion on everything and thanks to social media (sarcastic) we get to see and hear exactly what our friends on Facebook, strangers on Twitter and everyone else in between on Reddit, Instagram and in the comments section of just about any story, think and feel. And despite the plethora of venues to share one’s viewpoint, one political season staple seems bent on surviving technology: the lawn sign. With the presidential election less than two months away, the signs, flags, posters and displays are popping up all over showing support for presidential hopefulBiden or President Trump. There are even the occasional signs for local races. Most residents are content with the simple wire-frame signs expressing support for either Trump or Biden.
Leg. campaigns
“José Javier Rodríguez tops Ileana Garcia in latest SD 37 fundraising as he begins massive ad spending spree” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Javier Rodríguez‘s campaign added more than $38,000 as he looks to defend his Senate District 37 seat against Republican candidate Ileana Garcia. Rodríguez pulled in more than $33,000 through his campaign account in the most recent fundraising period, covering Aug. 22-Sept. 4. Initiative for Florida’s Future, a political committee associated with his campaign, added another $5,000 from Aug. 22-28. The committee’s report covering Aug. 29-Sept. 4 was not available as of this posting. Either way, that $38,000 total is enough to top his Republican challenger. Garcia raised just over $26,000 in the latest report. That’s her best fundraising period since she entered the race in early June, but still short of the haul from her Democratic incumbent. Garcia’s political committee, No More Socialism, showed $0 in new contributions during the most recent fundraising period. Non-party affiliated Alex Rodriguez raised no new money, according to the freshly-filed reports, and holds less than $800 total.
“Ana Maria Rodriguez posts big fundraising haul in SD 39” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — The latest campaign finance reports are an ominous sign for Democrats hoping Rep. Javier Fernandez can flip South Florida’s Senate District 39. In the most recent reporting periods, Republican Rep. Ana Maria Rodriguez raised more than four times as much as Fernandez, with nearly $180,000 added to her campaign and political committee to his $40,369. The most recent figures leave Rodriguez with more than $672,000 cash on hand, and Fernandez just $252,000. The fundraising totals are the latest in a series of bad news for Democrats in South Florida.
First in Sunburn — “New video highlights Anna Eskamani’s leadership during pandemic” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Democratic Rep. Anna Eskamani on Monday released a video highlighting what she’s done to help constituents during the COVID-19 pandemic. The video, dubbed “We’re Ready,” begins with a focus on her office’s work following the collapse of the state unemployment system. “People are looking for compassion, they’re looking for a little help to get back on their feet, and leadership in a time of crisis. And Governor … This isn’t it,” she says in the ad. Eskamani is running for a second term in House District 47, which covers part of Orange County. She will face Republican nominee Jeremy Sisson in November.
Watch the ad here:
“Fiona McFarland, Drake Buckman turn on fundraising spigots in HD 72” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — McFarland is rapidly replenishing her campaign account after an expensive House District 72 primary. But Buckman also just reported his most successful fundraising period to date. McFarland reported $28,510 raised between Aug. 22 and Sept. 4. That’s after she spent $243,479 from her campaign account to beat primary opponent, Donna Barcomb, by just 263 votes. Now, she’s reporting $20,119 in cash on hand. If nothing else, the successful period means she’s recovered enough in contributions to cover a $20,000 candidate loan consumed during the pricey primary. As for Buckman, he raised $13,608 during the fundraising period, pulling in more in two weeks that he raised any prior month since entering the race. That ensures he still holds a cash on hand advantage with $44,339 in the bank. He avoided any primary in the open seat, but that means he also must play catch-up on a quarter-million dollars worth of name recognition in the district.
Corona Florida
“Florida reports 2,423 new COVID-19 cases and the fewest deaths since June” via David J. Neal of the Miami Herald — The state of Florida’s daily COVID-19 dashboard reported eight deaths, the fewest since June 15, while also reporting 2,423 new, confirmed cases. While Sunday’s reported case numbers show a gentle downward Sunday slope — Aug. 30 was 2,583, Sept. 6 was 2,564 — Sunday’s death count appears to be even more of an anomaly as the corresponding numbers on June 14 and 15 were. Tuesday through Saturday, 144.6 deaths per day were reported and three of those days were over 100. In the five days before Sunday, June 14 (six deaths) and Monday, June 15 (seven deaths), an average of 42.6 deaths were reported per day. In the five days after, 41.2 deaths per day were reported.
“Hospital visits for flu-like illnesses increase for first time in two months” via Florida Politics staff reports — Hospital visits for flu-like illnesses, a leading indicator for COVID-19 spread, increased last week for the first time since peaking in early July.DeSantis and the Department of Health have recently been highlighting emergency department visits for illnesses like influenza or COVID-19 as the best method to track the novel coronavirus. Both metrics have declined each week since July 5. However, DOH reported 2,101 visits for flu-like illnesses last week, the most since mid-August. Meanwhile, visits for illnesses like COVID-19 dropped a ninth consecutive week to 4,058. According to the C.D.C., flu season typically begins in October. The latest weekly confirmed flu report, which covers the week before the recent reversal, shows laboratory-confirmed flu at a low. DeSantis began underscoring emergency department visits over testing positivity rates in early August after raising questions about the reliability of complete and timely reporting from private laboratories.
“Florida’s health system among the worst in the nation, according to new analysis” via Christine Sexton of the News Service of Florida — We’re No. 41. A new Commonwealth Fund analysis ranks Florida’s health system among the worst in the nation, finding, among other things, that the state spends $19 a person on public health, or about 51 percent of the national average, and has more children without a “medical home” than any other state. Also, the report released Friday shows that Florida is one of 17 states that in 2018 had more than a 5 percent disparity in uninsured rates between white adults and Black and Hispanic adults The report shows that 15 percent of white Floridians were uninsured, according to 2018 census data, compared to 21 percent of Black residents and 26 percent of Hispanic residents. David Blumenthal, a physician and president of The Commonwealth Fund, said the Scorecard on State Health System Performance report was generally based on 2018 data and that the COVID-19 pandemic will likely put added stress on systems that were already struggling.
“Florida to resume visitation soon, despite highest monthly COVID-19 death toll among prisoners” via Grace Toohey of the Orlando Sentinel — After Florida’s prison system in August reported the most deaths in one month from COVID-19 since the pandemic began, corrections Secretary Mark Inch announced Friday he is planning to soon re-open some institutions for visitation. The agency plans to allow for modified visitation with “numerous safety measures” starting Oct. 2 “at institutions where it is safe and appropriate to do so,” Inch said Friday in a video shared on social media. Facilities have been closed to visitors for almost six months. In an interview with the Florida Channel that aired Friday, Inch said the agency plans to make the visits “non-contact” and explained they have prepared plexiglass shields to go on visitor tables. He also said children under 13 would not be allowed to visit.
“Many Canadian snowbirds are delaying Florida visits until COVID-19 eases” via David Lyons of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — As if COVID-19 hasn’t done enough damage to South Florida’s tourism industry, many Canadians who for years have wintered in the Sunshine State are having second thoughts about migrating south unless the pandemic shows signs of abating. “There are hundreds of thousands of Canadians who are on the sidelines planning not to visit Florida this year due to COVID,” said Alain Forget, who heads sales and business development at RBC Bank, a subsidiary of Royal Bank of Canada. Their decision, he said, is contingent on how much longer the U.S.-Canadian border remains shut or if Florida’s COVID-19 cases rise in the next few months.
Back to school?
“Teacher departures leave schools scrambling for substitutes” via The Associated Press — With many teachers opting out of returning to the classroom because of the coronavirus, schools around the U.S. are scrambling to find replacements and in some places lowering certification requirements to help get substitutes in the door. Several states have seen surges in educators filing for retirement or taking leaves of absence. The departures are straining staff in places that were dealing with shortages of teachers and substitutes even before the pandemic created an education crisis. Teachers in at least three states have died after bouts with the coronavirus since the start of the new school year. It’s unclear how many teachers in the U.S. have become ill with COVID-19, but Mississippi alone reported 604 cases among teachers and staff.
“Hesitations come with new transition to daily in-person classes at Duval Schools” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — Starting Monday, the school district will launch the next phase of its “bridge to reopening” program, transitioning students attending classes in-person from part-time to full time, five-days-per-week. The move comes as a result of a “compromise” between the school district and the Florida Department of Education, a spokesman said. The process is starting with sixth-graders, who previously attended in-person classes three days a week. The following week, seventh- and eighth-graders will transition to daily classes and the week after, high school students, who were only taking in-person classes two days a week, are expected to attend daily.
“Sarasota teachers face COVID-19 challenges” via Ryan McKinnon of The Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Mackenzie Altman was trying to get her Booker High School students excited about the role of government last Thursday afternoon. It was a standard “bell work” activity for her American Government class, geared to get students interested in the day’s lesson and spark conversations. She leads this type of discussion every day, but with COVID-19 restrictions in place, nearly everything about it was different. Everyone was wearing masks, except for a group of students in a Zoom meeting box projected on a large monitor at the front of the class. Most of these “remote learners” seemed to be sitting in their bedrooms, and many had angled their laptops so that just the tops of their foreheads were visible. The in-person students tried to keep their binders and textbooks on their desk without knocking off the new trifold divider shield they are required to sit behind. Like most teachers across Sarasota County School District, Altman is still figuring out how to teach “concurrently,” meaning she has a group of students physically present in her classroom and another group watching from home via a live stream.
Assignment editors — Rep. Geraldine Thompson, House District 64 candidate Jessica Harrington, Hillsborough County School Board candidate Nadia Combs and Teaching for the Culture founder Bianca Goolsby will host a virtual press conference to “highlight the failures of Republican leadership” regarding school reopenings. It begins at 11 a.m. Monday. Registration is available here.
Corona local
“DeSantis announces Phase 2 reopening for Broward, Miami-Dade counties” via Tiffini Theisen of the Orlando Sentinel — DeSantis announced Friday that Broward and Miami-Dade counties enter into Phase 2 of reopening on Monday after months of coronavirus closures. Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez said his county reopen more outdoor venues such as zoos, in consultation with experts to ensure safety. The county will not allow bars to reopen at this time. “I’m very pleased that our community is taking this virus very seriously,” Gimenez said. South Florida has been the epicenter of the pandemic in the state, accounting for about 43% of cases despite having 29% of the population. The governor is holding a press conference with Lieutenant Governor Jeanette Nuñez and Superintendent of Miami-Dade County Public Schools Alberto Carvalho also on hand. Miami-Dade schools will make an announcement soon about school reopenings, Carvalho said, citing “downward trends” in coronavirus statistics that are encouraging.
“Overdoses rise in South Florida as people struggle with isolation from pandemic” via Andrew Boryga of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — More people who are out of work and isolated at home are dying of drug overdoses in South Florida, becoming overlooked victims of the COVID-19 pandemic. Florida reported 5,621 overdose deaths, a 14% increase from January 2019 to January 2020, according to figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And in parts of South Florida, early numbers suggest 2020 could be even worse. In Palm Beach County, overdose deaths are already 49% higher from January to August of this year than they were for the same period last year, according to records. At the current rate, the county could see nearly 200 more deaths in 2020 than there were in 2019.
“6 months of COVID: Central Florida endures deep divisions over pandemic” via Kevin Spear of the Orlando Sentinel — Along State Road 50 from the dry, sandy hills of Clermont to the congested squeeze through Orlando and down to the flat, moist pinelands of Christmas, six months of coronavirus has revealed a deeply divided region. What stands out from the 50-mile stretch of the road, examined because of its wide range of demographics and as a representative cross-section of Central Florida, is the surprising variety and frank passion of opinions about the pandemic. In conversations with 20 people, it was often apparent that beliefs shaped by information silos are hardening further in pandemic-sheltering bubbles and that discussing COVID-19 also means talking about the recession and the presidential race.
FRLA hosts mask giveaways in Northeast Florida — The Florida Restaurant and Lodging Association’s Northeast Chapter will host events this week to distribute washable, reusable cloth masks to local hospitality employees. The events will be held at St. Augustine Distillery from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Monday, followed by an event at Sight & Sound Productions in Jacksonville from 9:30 a.m. to noon Tuesday, and a third at the FRLA Fernandina Beach Main Street office from noon to 3 p.m. Wednesday. The events are part of FRLA’s joint initiative with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to distribute masks to Florida hospitality workers. To date, FRLA has donated nearly 1 million masks.
“America is trapped in a pandemic spiral” via Ed Yong of The Atlantic — The U.S. enters the ninth month of the pandemic with more than 6.3 million confirmed cases and more than 189,000 confirmed deaths. The toll has been enormous because the country presented the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus with a smorgasbord of vulnerabilities to exploit. But the toll continues to be enormous—every day, the case count rises by around 40,000 and the death toll by around 800—because the country has consistently thought about the pandemic in the same unproductive ways. Many Americans trusted intuition to help guide them through this disaster. “The grand challenge now is, how can we adjust our thinking to match the problem before us?” says Lori Peek, a sociologist at the University of Colorado at Boulder who studies disasters.
Tweet, tweet:
Overall U.S. Covid cases and hospitalizations continue to fall, driven by sharp declines in the sunbelt states. Key question: Is this the nadir before we see a fall and winter resurgence of a pathogen that typically spreads in the winter; or can we hopefully hold onto these gains pic.twitter.com/oSG532EFeb
“Trump’s virus debate: Project strength or level with public” via Zeke Miller of The Associated Press — In times of crisis effective leaders strike a balance between inspirational rhetoric and leveling with the public about the tough times ahead. Historians say Trump missed the important lessons about how other world leaders have navigated crises. Facing the coronavirus, Trump chose a different path, acknowledging that from early on he was intentionally “playing down” the threat from an outbreak that has gone on to kill more than 190,000 Americans. His rosy assessment of the peril confronting the nation spotlights the struggles he has faced in trying to steer the United States through the challenge of a pandemic. Trump on Thursday placed himself in the august company of Roosevelt and Churchill for the way he has handled this crisis, adding that he had low-balled the threat to prevent “panic.”
“Trump team says history will vindicate him on coronavirus” via Nolan D. McCaskill of POLITICO — Trump’s allies on Sunday blamed anybody but him for his handling of the deadly virus that has killed more than 193,000 Americans. In interviews across the morning political talk shows, Trump officials portrayed the president as a calm leader throughout the pandemic and singled out China, corporate media and Democrats for what they asserted were lying and politicizing the coronavirus. RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said the President had been calm, steady and methodical throughout this crisis, comparing his leadership throughout the pandemic to that of President George W. Bush after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
“Trump officials interfered with CDC reports on COVID-19” via Dan Diamond of POLITICO — The health department’s politically appointed communications aides have demanded the right to review and seek changes to the C.D.C.’s weekly scientific reports charting the progress of the coronavirus pandemic, in what officials characterized as an attempt to intimidate the reports’ authors and water down their communications to health professionals. In some cases, emails from communications aides to CDC Director Robert Redfield and other senior officials openly complained that the agency’s reports would undermine Trump’s optimistic messages about the outbreak, according to emails reviewed by POLITICO and three people familiar with the situation. CDC officials have fought back against the most sweeping changes, but have increasingly agreed to allow the political officials to review the reports and, in a few cases, compromised on the wording, according to three people familiar with the exchanges.
“Trump officials race against time to build massive new vaccine tracking system” via POLITICO Pro — The Trump administration is betting it can get millions of coronavirus shots to the Americans who need them most using a new, unproven data system that threatens to bypass state trackers that have long been mainstays in public immunization programs. The effort, funded by an almost $16 million sole-source contract, would help public health officials schedule COVID-19 immunizations, and manage vaccine supplies. States already have information systems, called vaccine registries, that perform the same basic functions and can help doctors see what shots patients already have. But the Trump administration, which has left critical questions about the COVID-19 recovery unanswered while urging states to take the lead, believes that the scope of the pandemic requires new infrastructure to cover all the providers who might be involved in the response.
Corona economics
“Bankers are leading the way back to our offices — for good or ill” via Megan McArdle of The Washington Post — This week, JPMorgan Chase reportedly requested that 50 percent of its dealmakers be in the office on a given workday, up from 25 percent. Goldman Sachs quickly announced it was following suit. That will put pressure on other banks to signal to clients that they, too, love nothing more than the job. I can make an argument that this is good. Bankers may carry it to ridiculous extremes, but in-person contact matters; it is how institutional loyalty is built, corporate culture transmitted, a disparate group of strangers forged into a cohesive group. Besides, New York City’s economy, and its tax base, depend heavily on the well-paid employees of the securities industry; both will be devastated as long as bankers are working from suburbs and second homes. It seems rather dangerous to shove more immunologically naive people back into the office just in time for flu season.
“More workers hit with pay cuts than in last recession, and stagnant wages could linger” via Paul Davidson of USA TODAY — The layoffs and furloughs of more than 25 million U.S. workers have understandably fueled most of the nation’s anguish over the coronavirus recession. But that’s not the only economic setback for workers: Many companies are trimming employees’ hours or wages to reduce costs – either instead of, or in addition to, the job cuts. For workers, a smaller paycheck may be a welcome alternative to losing a job, but economists say it still could hurt consumer spending and the economy, and represent an even more enduring legacy of the downturn than the layoffs. Nearly half of the nation’s net job losses in early spring have been recouped, though recovering the rest could take a few years, economists say.
“Florida Power & Light offers aid as disconnections loom” via News Service of Florida — Florida Power & Light said Friday it will offer aid to customers who are behind on their electric bills, as the company prepares to begin disconnections that have been put on hold during the coronavirus pandemic. FPL said, in part, it will provide bill credits of up to $200 to some residential and small-business customers. To qualify, customers would have to pay outstanding balance amounts minus the bill credits. For example, a customer who owed $600 would have to pay $400, with a $200 bill credit making up the remainder, according to FPL. The utility plans to write off the credit amounts as bad debt. Separately, FPL plans to speed up refunds of customer deposits.
“Amazon doubles holiday hiring to 200,000 temporary workers” via Spencer Soper of Bloomberg — Amazon.com Inc. will hire 200,000 seasonal workers in the U.S. to fetch products in its warehouses, pack boxes and make deliveries, doubling the number of temporary workers it hired last year and signaling the world’s biggest online retailer expects a strong fourth quarter. In an emailed statement, Amazon attributed the hiring growth to the increasing breadth of its logistics operations, which include stowing, packing and sorting products and shipping them to customers’ homes from facilities specifically designed for e-commerce, rather than sending goods to retail stores. The Seattle-based company also said it promoted 19,000 employees in its logistics operations to supervisory roles this year. The AP earlier reported Amazon’s hiring plans. The company said it had 750,000 full- and part-time workers globally as of Sept 30.
More corona
“Hospitals prepare for ‘nightmare’ scenario of flu and coronavirus striking at same time” via Frances Stead Sellers of The Washington Post — In the past six months, the 25-bed Ward Memorial Hospital in desert-like West Texas has made countless adjustments to combat the novel coronavirus: It has updated its testing equipment and stocked up on masks and gowns. It created an interdisciplinary team to tackle the virus’s multipronged attacks and traded tips and resources with other regional rural hospitals. But as fall approaches, it is an old foe that is causing sleepless nights — the possibility that flu could upend this careful planning, diminishing resources and putting further stress on overworked staffers. Infectious-disease experts have warned of a new and potentially calamitous wave of coronavirus cases this fall, possibly cresting in winter when the flu and other respiratory viruses take hold.
“U.S. offering breaks on immigration deadlines due to pandemic — but higher fees await” via Daniel Shoer Roth of the Miami Herald — After immigrants apply for immigration benefits and submit their forms with the all the requirements, it is common for immigration authorities to ask for more evidence to establish eligibility in support of their visa, green card, asylum and citizenship through naturalization petitions. These Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) requests and notifications allow applicants to intervene by providing more documentation or correcting mistakes before adjudicators close or denied their cases. As the pandemic has slowed the agency’s work pace since it normalized operations on June 4, immigration authorities again extended more flexibility in the delivery deadlines to assist immigrants and foreigners responding to some requests. This relief measure was set to expire on Sept. 11.
Statewide
“DeSantis’ Supreme Court fight reveals division among Black legislators” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Tampa Bay Times — The decision by DeSantis to go to Broward County this week and have Democrats join him to complain about his derailed Supreme Court pick not only proved fruitless, as the court rejected his argument Friday, but it also created tensions among members of Florida’s Legislative Black Caucus. “The governor is stoking division in our community,” said Sen. Perry Thurston, a Fort Lauderdale Democrat, who was not invited to join the governor at his press conference in Miramar Wednesday. “We don’t need a Republican governor sowing division between the Caribbean community and African-American community.” The furor began when state Rep. Thompson, a Democrat from Windemere, filed a lawsuit in July accusing the governor of violating the Constitution by appointing Palm Beach County Judge Renatha Francis to the state’s highest court when she wasn’t yet eligible.
Must-watch TV today — “Florida Democrat Andrew Gillum, 41, reveals he has cried ‘every day’ and dreams of getting over his ‘shame’” via James Gordon of The Daily Mail — Former gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum has told of the shame he felt after being found ‘inebriated’ in a South Beach hotel room in March, along with a male escort who overdosed on crystal meth. Gillum opened up in his first television interview since he was pictured unconscious and naked together with photos that depicted a slew of drugs, both prescription and illegal, found inside a swanky $220-per-night hotel room. The 41-year-old father-of-three entered a rehab facility to deal with alcohol abuse shortly after the incident and revealed to Tamron Hall that he has ‘cried every day’ since his sudden fall from grace. In a tearful interview to be shown in full on Monday morning, Gillum spoke candidly about the incident.
FTA celebrates National Truck Driver Appreciation Week — The Florida Trucking Association is recognizing National Truck Driver Appreciation Week, which runs from Sept. 13 through Sept. 19 this year. FTA says this year’s #NTDAW has taken on a special significance considering the crucial role Florida’s 500,000 CDL holders have played during the COVID-19 pandemic, especially now that they are facing the threat of hurricane season. “This week we celebrate the 3.5 million professional men and women who are committed to safety and dependability to ensure our quality of life remains intact,” FTA President and CEO Ken Armstrong said. “Our professional drivers are the heart of the industry, and trucking is the backbone of our economy.”
Local notes
“Tropical Storm Sally brings foot of rain to Florida Keys, several inches to Miami-Dade” via Aaron Leibowitz and Gwen Filosa of Florida Keys News — Tropical Storm Sally drenched much of South Florida this weekend, causing flooding as it dropped about a foot of rain on parts of Key West and several inches in much of Miami-Dade and Broward counties. Just before 1 p.m. Sunday, the National Weather Service said that while southwest Florida saw the heaviest rainfall since Saturday, parts of the Miami metro area got about five inches of rain overnight. In Homestead, water seeped into people’s homes, WSVN reported. Downtown Miami saw about three inches of rain Saturday into Sunday, leaving parts of Biscayne Blvd. underwater.
“Jacksonville prosecutors will seek longer sentences for felony gun charges. Will it stop crime?” via Andrew Pantazi of The Florida Times-Union — With homicides continuing to climb in Jacksonville, State Attorney Melissa Nelson this month began requiring her line prosecutors seek longer prison sentences for felons arrested for illegally carrying guns. Nelson, who would not grant an interview or answer questions for this story, announced the new policy to her staff on Aug. 31. The policy requires that based on defendants’ criminal backgrounds, prosecutors must seek 10 years, five years, or three years in prison. To waive a mandatory minimum sentence, prosecutors must get approval from a director who will have to write a paper deciding if it’s worth reducing the sentence. The memo, which the Times-Union obtained this we also announced a new diversion program for those who carry a concealed gun without a license, but it was short on details. Last year, State Attorney’s Office records show, there were 212 cases of someone carrying a concealed gun without a license; 46 of them were sentenced to prison or jail time.
“At a luxury resort, a crucial meeting of JEA minds” via Nate Monroe of The Florida times-Union — In early July 2019, then-JEA CEO Aaron Zahn convened a battalion of lawyers, investment bankers, consultants and utility officials for a three-day series of meetings at Club Continental in Orange Park, a luxury hotel on the banks of the St. Johns River about a 20-minute drive outside Jacksonville. In one of the hotel’s private meeting rooms, and over three catered meals, including mid-afternoon snacks and iced tea, services that cost JEA more than $11,000, the gathered officials talked about a plan that would consume many of their lives for the next year, though not for the reasons they could have imagined at the time. This would not be the first time Zahn and his lieutenants talked about the controversial idea of privatizing the city-owned utility, but it was nonetheless a remarkable series of meetings.
“Ocala man threatens to blow up state building over child support calls” via Jim Cheesman of Ocala News — Michael Warren Smith was charged with making a false threat to plant a bomb on a property owned by the state of Florida and use of a two-way communications device to facilitate a felony. An employee with the Florida Department of Revenue Child Support Services reported that another employee with the agency called Smith’s phone at around 6 p.m. to speak about his next child support payment. During that conversation, Smith became irate and said he was going to blow them up if the child support office didn’t leave him alone, according to the sheriff’s office report.
“The party’s over: Airbnb suspends listings in Okaloosa, Walton, won’t ‘tolerate’ partying” vis Savannah Evanoff of Northwest Florida Daily News — The party is over – at least at your next Airbnb. The vacation rental marketplace suspended a listing in Okaloosa County and one in Walton County, after announcing a “crackdown on party houses throughout Florida,” in a press release sent out Thursday. These were among more than 40 listings across the state that have received complaints or violated its policies on parties and events and were suspended from the platform, according to the release. “This is an issue in Florida and elsewhere we’ve been trying to combat since well before the pandemic era,” said Ben Breit, the head of trust and safety communications. “There’s no question that in this current environment, combating and stopping any irresponsible parties is more important than ever.”
D.C. matters
“Mandela, Gorbachev, Trump? A disruptive President plays peacemaker” via Michael Crowley of The New York Times — Even before Trump announced a diplomatic breakthrough between Israel and Bahrain on Friday, he had been nominated twice this week alone for the Nobel Peace Prize. The nominations, each from a right-wing Scandinavian politician, were met around the world with a mixture of amusement and dismissal: Much like submitting art or writing for a prize, such a designation doesn’t mean much in itself. But the White House rejoiced all the same. After the first nomination on Wednesday, by a Norwegian parliamentarian who cited a similar agreement Mr. Trump’s administration brokered last month between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, the White House press secretary, Kayleigh McEnany, opened her briefing that day by calling it “a hard-earned and well-deserved honor for this president.”
“Marco Rubio to Disney: Xinjiang? Seriously?” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — Republican U.S. Sens. Rubio and Rick Scott and a bipartisan group in Congress are demanding Walt Disney Co. explain why and how it filmed its new movie “Mulan” in a region of China reported for human rights abuses bordering on genocide. “Disney’s apparent cooperation with officials of the People’s Republic of China who are most responsible for committing atrocities — or for covering up those crimes — is profoundly disturbing,” their letter declares. Rubio, Scott, and 17 other members of the Senate and House sent the letter Friday to Walt Disney Chief Executive Officer Bob Chapek. They want him to provide information about the company’s cooperation with Chinese security and propaganda authorities to film parts of “Mulan” in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.
“ICE flew detainees to Virginia so the planes could transport agents to D.C. protests. A huge coronavirus outbreak followed.” via Antonio Olivo and Nick Miroff of The Washington Post — The Trump administration flew immigrant detainees to Virginia this summer to facilitate the rapid deployment of Homeland Security tactical teams to quell protests in Washington, circumventing restrictions on the use of charter flights for employee travel, according to a current and a former U.S. official. After the transfer, dozens of the new arrivals tested positive for the novel coronavirus, fueling an outbreak at the Farmville, Va., immigration jail that infected more than 300 inmates, one of whom died. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said the agency moved the detainees on “ICE Air” charter flights to avoid overcrowding at detention facilities in Arizona and Florida, a precaution they said was taken because of the pandemic.
Smoldering
“2 California deputies shot in apparent ambush in patrol car” via The Associated Press — Authorities were searching Sunday for a gunman who shot and wounded two Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies who were sitting in their squad car, an apparent ambush that drew an angry response from the president and sparked an anti-police protest outside the hospital where the deputies were being treated. The 31-year-old female deputy and 24-year-old male deputy underwent surgery Saturday evening, Sheriff Alex Villanueva said in a late-night news conference. Both graduated from the academy 14 months ago, he said. The deputies were shot while sitting in their patrol car at a Metro rail station and were able to radio for help, the sheriff said. Villanueva, whose department has come under fire during recent protests over racial unrest, expressed frustration over anti-police sentiment as he urged people to pray for the deputies.
“Protesters block buses outside NBA campus at Disney World, asking for help” via Tim Reynolds of The Associated Press — A small number of protesters carrying signs and shouting into megaphones blocked at least two buses chartered by the NBA from briefly from entering the Walt Disney World campus on Saturday night, with the group saying it wanted LeBron James, Russell Westbrook and other top players to take notice. The group blocked charter buses carrying members of the news media and some NBA staff, but no players or team personnel. The protesters assembled near one of the entrances and were not inside the so-called bubble, where teams, NBA staff and others have been for more than two months in some cases for the resumption of the season.
“Dozens rally for ‘blue lives’ at Seminole courthouse in event linked to hate-group supporter” via Cristobal Reyes and Grace Toohey of the Orlando Sentinel — More than 100 people gathered Saturday at the Seminole County courthouse in Sanford to support police officers at a “Back the Blue” rally — an event from which one elected official scheduled to speak dropped out after concerns were raised about an organizer’s connections with a designated hate group. Participants carried American flags and Blue Lives Matter banners in front of the courthouse, with a lineup of speakers voicing support for law enforcement in the wake of nationwide protests against police brutality. The event was hosted a day after the 19th anniversary of the 9-11 terrorist attacks, and attendees took a moment to mourn the 412 emergency workers killed that day, including 60 police officers and 343 firefighters.
“Confederate statue near site of white nationalist rally in Charlottesville is removed” via Derrick Bryson Taylor of The New York Times — With yellow bands and rope wrapped around its legs, waist and ankles, a Confederate statue in Charlottesville, Va., the site of a violent white supremacist rally in 2017, was removed on Saturday morning from its pedestal at the Albemarle County courthouse after 111 years. The removal of the monument, “At Ready,” which depicts a Confederate soldier holding a rifle in his hands, along with two cannons and several cannonballs on either side of it, was live-streamed on the Albemarle County’s official Facebook account. At the start of the removal process at 6:30 a.m., Ned Gallaway, chairman of the county board of supervisors, read a brief history of how the statue was erected in 1909 using taxpayer money and how supervisors voted last month to remove it. The county will pay the $63,700 to remove the statue and other items, Emily Kilroy, a county spokeswoman, said on Saturday. The statue itself weighs 900 pounds, Ms. Kilroy said, and the cannons each weigh 2,800 pounds. The stack of cannonballs weighs 400 pounds.
“Stadiums quiet but college football, shows of unity go on” via Eric Olson of The Associated Press — The first big weekend of college football was mostly stripped of the pageantry that is at the heart of the game. The stands were empty, or attendance was limited, because of a pandemic that has disrupted the season. That didn’t stop shows of support for the fight against racial injustice. Players for Kansas State and Arkansas State locked arms on the sidelines with their teammates before the game in Manhattan, Kansas. K-State players spoke in a video calling for unity and equality, and there were cheers and applause following a moment of reflection. A similar scene played out in Morgantown, West Virginia, before West Virginia’s game against Eastern Kentucky. Notre Dame played a video promoting racial equality before its game against Duke in South Bend, Indiana. Several teams’ uniforms called attention to social injustice.
Top opinion
“Wilton Simpson and Chris Sprowls: Florida must address sea-level rise” via Wilton Simpson and Chris Sprowls for Florida Politics — Throughout our history, Floridians have reveled in our state’s natural resources. With our miles of beautiful beaches, gorgeous coastline, and ample sunshine, it is no wonder our state is home to over 21 million and a destination for people from across the globe. As we celebrate the many reasons Florida is the best place to live, work, start a business, raise a family, and retire, there is also a great paradox associated with being a Floridian: our state’s greatest asset is also a significant liability. What exactly can our state government do? Quite a bit as it turns out. Unlike the overpriced and entirely unrealistic “Green New Deal,” Florida remains focused on finding solutions that actually work.
Opinions
“Why Biden has edge over Trump as November election approaches” via Karl Rove for Fox News — Everything is a little off about this election, even its traditional fall kickoff. It isn’t only because coronavirus wiped out gigantic Labor Day celebrations for candidates to attend. Labor Day, the first Monday in September, fell on the latest possible date, Sept. 7, while Election Day, the Tuesday after the first Monday in November, will be on the second-earliest possible date, Nov. 3. So even the campaign’s final stretch will be truncated. Still, it’s a good time to take stock of the race. Trump partisans don’t believe it, but national polls show former Vice President Biden continues to be ahead. The race has tightened, though, especially in battleground states. Anxious Democrats are wondering if this could be the sixth contest in history and second in a row in which the Electoral College winner loses the national popular vote.
“DeSantis gets hauled to the woodshed for violating Florida’s Constitution” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — The governor who promised to appoint “solid constitutionalists” to the Florida Supreme Court has found to his chagrin that the justices already there pay more respect to the state Constitution than he does. On Friday, the court told DeSantis that the Constitution means precisely what he ignored when he appointed an unqualified person to the court after waiting two months too long to do it. The court gave him until noon Monday to choose one of seven other nominees to replace Renatha Francis, the Palm Beach circuit judge whom he had insisted on appointing even though she was short of the time a new justice must have been a member of the Florida Bar. “The constitution’s ten-year Bar membership requirement and sixty-day appointment deadline are bright-line textual mandates that impose rules rather than standards and prioritize certainty over discretion,” said the order signed by all five participating justices.
“Infectious disease outbreak concerns rise as immunization records drop” via Cathy Mayfield with Florida Politics — At the beginning of March, the United States declared a state of emergency due to the outbreak of COVID-19. For the past three months, most of the country has been practicing self-quarantining, social distancing, and limiting their exposure to public places. Unfortunately, for many people, this also includes limiting visits to the doctor’s office. Immunization records have dropped significantly since March according to the Florida Department of Health. So far, there was a 15% reduction in the number of vaccinations administered in March 2020 compared to March 2019. In April, that number jumped to a 40% reduction compared to the year before. As the United States begins to slowly reopen, now would be the perfect time for the Florida Department of Health and Surgeon General Scott Rivkees to be a leader in this space and make meningitis ACWY vaccination a requirement.
Instagram of the day
Aloe
“Fred Guttenberg, Parkland dad, writes uplifting book about coping after tragedy” via Lisa J. Huriash of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Countless acts of generosity and support helped Fred Guttenberg survive the unbearable loss of his only daughter in Parkland’s high school massacre in 2018. A who’s who of political heavyweights contacted him: the Democratic presidential candidate, the speaker of the House, a congressman from Florida, the governors of Ohio and New Jersey. But the kindness of friends and strangers also propelled him through his darkest days, including a famous Hollywood actor who pledged his support, and a group of Broward fire cadets who went to the funeral. These helpers are part of Guttenberg’s uplifting story, which he’s sharing in his new autobiographical book, “Find the Helpers: What 9/11 and Parkland Taught Me About Recovery, Purpose, and Hope.” It will be released this week.
“Harshmallow: Virus prompts pause for Peeps holiday treats” via The Associated Press — Peeps treats are going on hiatus for several months — another consequence of the coronavirus pandemic. Just Born Quality Confections said it won’t be producing the popular marshmallow sweets for Halloween, Christmas or Valentine’s Day as the Bethlehem, Pennsylvania-based company prepares for next Easter, PennLive.com reports. Production of the holiday-shaped candies was suspended in the spring as the coronavirus spread across the state. Limited production resumed in mid-May with protocols in place to protect employees, Just Born said. “This situation resulted in us having to make the difficult decision to forego production of our seasonal candies for Halloween, Christmas and Valentine’s Day to focus on meeting the expected overwhelming demand for Peeps for next Easter season, as well as our everyday candies,” the company said.
“Louis Vuitton unveils full face shield with gold studs that reportedly will cost nearly $1,000” via Kelly Tyko of USA TODAY — Louis Vuitton plans to sell a face shield with its signature LV monogrammed pattern. The French fashion house unveiled the full face shield as part of its 2021 Cruise Collection, and it will reportedly go on sale in late October for $961, according to multiple media reports. A news release describes it as “an eye-catching headpiece, both stylish and protective.” It will be photochromatic and can transition from clear to dark when it comes into contact with direct sunlight. The shield can also turn into a hat when the visor is flipped up. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says it does not recommend the use of face shields as a substitute for masks amid the coronavirus pandemic.
What Michelle Todd Schorsch is reading — “‘The West Wing’s’ idealism looks even better 20 years after its first Emmy” via Brian Lowry — “The West Wing” cast will reunite before the election for an HBO Max special, benefiting the voter-participation group When We All Vote. Watching the series again 20 years after its first of four consecutive best-drama Emmys, it’s remarkable how well Aaron Sorkin‘s creation holds up, and how much of the Bartlet presidency still echoes through our current politics. Revisiting the NBC series (which is available on Netflix and was produced by Warner Bros. Television, like CNN and HBO Max, part of WarnerMedia) underscores the patriotism and idealism, as well as intelligence and humor, the show embodied. In “The West Wing,” the dialogue came in rapid-fire bursts as people executed those famous walk-and-talk sequences through the halls, while the simple phrase “I serve at the pleasure of the president” could put a lump in your throat.
Happy birthday
Happy birthday to state Rep. Mike Caruso, Danny Martinez, and the one and only Brian Pitts.
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“Bahrain joined the United Arab Emirates in agreeing to normalize relations with Israel on Friday… A month ago, the UAE agreed to normalize ties with Israel under a U.S.-brokered deal scheduled to be signed at a White House ceremony on Tuesday hosted by Trump.” Reuters
“Mr. Trump’s cultivation of Saudi Arabia and its gulf neighbors was an important ingredient, as was his desire to sell these countries advanced weaponry. But it was serendipity, as much as spadework, that set the stage for the White House ceremony Tuesday at which the Israelis and Emiratis will formalize their new relationship.” Mark Landler, New York Times
“Before the UAE-Israel agreement was announced in August, the last peace deal Israel struck with an Arab country was with Jordan in 1994 (it signed one with Egypt in 1979). Now Israel can claim it has more friends in the region, possibly reducing the pressure on it regarding its relations with Palestinians…
“The significance of Bahrain’s action is partly that it wouldn’t have happened without the blessing of Saudi Arabia, which is joined by a causeway to the small Persian Gulf state. The Saudis have historically exercised what amounts to a veto over Bahraini policy. In this case, the Saudis silently endorsed their tiny neighbor’s decision, rather than vetoing it… The Saudis [also] gave tacit approval to the UAE’s decision last month by publicly announcing they would allow commercial jets traveling between Israel and the Emirates to fly over Saudi territory…
“The decision by two wealthy Gulf countries to recognize Israel doesn’t help the shattered nations of the Middle East, such as Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and Libya. And it doesn’t represent Middle East peace, whatever may be said at the White House next week. But for a region that sometimes seems to be in slow-motion collapse, it’s a building block for a better future.” David Ignatius, Washington Post
“Saudi Arabia is without a doubt the ultimate prize in Israel’s decades-long quest for recognition from the Arab states around it. With vast oil reserves and revered Islamic pilgrimage sites, the kingdom is the most influential state in the Arab world. Its warming ties with Israel are also a uniquely grave blow to Palestinians in their struggle with Israel. Over the last 75 years, Saudi Arabia has been the most important advocate among the Arab states for Palestinians, said Khaled Elgindy, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute and a former adviser to Palestinian leaders…
“‘If the Saudis go to normalization without anything meaningful for the Palestinians, then we can safely assume that there will be no incentive for Israel to move toward [Palestinian] statehood or end its occupation,’ Mr. Elgindy said. ‘There will be no more leverage. Everybody else will normalize.’” David D. Kirkpatrick, New York Times
Others, however, argue that “History and common sense both show that Arab states that maintain diplomatic relations with Israel play a more active role in supporting Palestinian aspirations than those who do not…
“Egypt and Israel have worked closely together quietly to keep a truce between Israel and Gaza going for the past year and a half. Jordan has, in the past, partnered with the United States to shape Israeli-Palestinian diplomatic discussions. Most recently, a warning by Jordan’s King Abdullah II against Israel annexing portions of the West Bank played an important role in taking that option off the table. Israel had something to lose with Jordan and did not want to incur the risk… Conversely, there is little evidence that blocking ties between the Arab world and Israel would succeed in obtaining Israeli concessions.” David Makovsky and Daniel B. Shapiro, Washington Post
From the Right
The right celebrates the deal as a foreign policy success for the Trump administration.
“By pulling back from direct military engagement in the Middle East while he promoted hardline opposition to Iran, Donald Trump has forced all Arab-Muslim states in the region to choose between appeasing the mullahs [in Iran] or making a common front against them. The Bahrain and UAE agreements with Israel show that they are choosing the latter option. It was Trump’s White House, not the State Department, behind those deals…
“[This is an] important step in assembling a Washington-led coalition against a major strategic threat. It parallels Trump’s strategy in the Indo-Pacific region, where he is assembling a coalition against an even bigger enemy [China], reinforced by economic sanctions and military deterrence. These coalitions, Trump’s reluctance to put American troops in harm’s way, and his public denunciation of Nato partners for free riding on the common defense represent the biggest changes in American foreign policy since the end of the Cold War.” Charles Lipson, Spectator USA
“Thankfully, the UAE, Bahrain — and hopefully more nations in the future — have come to realize that it makes no sense to allow rejectionist Palestinian leadership to hold regional peace hostage to their unreasonable demands and refusal to acknowledge that both sides need to make concessions to achieve peace. President Trump and Kushner deserve the credit for getting the ball rolling to at long last accelerate the movement toward peace between Israel and its neighbors.” Rabbi Abraham Cooper, Fox News
“These agreements fly in the face of a decades-long diplomatic consensus that Israel could only be welcomed in its neighborhood if it conceded to Palestinian demands. Yet Israel is winning recognition not because of political concessions but because of its regional economic and military strength. The U.A.E. insisted Israel forswear annexation of the Palestinian territories, but the main draw of normalization is economic development and shared opposition to Iranian imperialism…
“The Biden campaign has opposed almost all of Mr. Trump’s foreign policy but to its credit has not opposed the recent moves toward normalization. One question, though, is whether it has learned the main lesson from them: That peace is created by power and persistence, not simply diplomacy and lofty ideals.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“It is no small feat to convince Arab Muslim nations to normalize ties with Israel, let alone get them to mandate kosher foods in an Arab capital. Yet Trump’s accomplishments also include convincing Muslim-majority Kosovo to open an embassy in Jerusalem, recognizing Israel’s historic capital as the capital of a modern Jewish state. President Barack Obama received a Nobel Peace Prize for his ‘extraordinary efforts to strengthen diplomacy and cooperation between people.’ President Donald Trump should receive a Nobel Peace Prize for his extraordinary results at establishing historic diplomacy in the Middle East.” Tyler O’Neil, PJ Media
“Israeli technology combined with UAE financial clout is likely to carve new routes through the Middle East’s old blockades. The routes will run in both directions: the UAE benefiting from Israel’s world-class tech, and Israel gaining access to the UAE’s expertise not only in banking and finance but also in nuclear and other clean energy…
“Trump, assisted by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, senior adviser Jared Kushner and national security adviser Robert C. O’Brien, has fundamentally reworked the alliances and conflicts of the Middle East in less than four years… That core group of negotiators — led primarily by Kushner, dismissed a few years ago by Washington ‘old hands’ as in over his head — has engineered an enormous reset in the region, one that will be counted as a milestone along with the Camp David Accords of 1978 and the Jordan-Israel peace treaty of 1994.” Hugh Hewitt, Washington Post
🗳️ Good Monday morning. It’s 50 days to Election Day … 15 days to the first debate.
🎬 On tonight’s “Axios on HBO”: Dion Rabouin goes on a virtual date with Match Group CEO Shar Dubey, who talks about finding love in lockdown … 🚨 Exclusive! Ina Fried talks to Melinda Gates about global setbacks from the virus (See a clip)… and we take you to Lake of the Ozarks to see the Trump lifestyle — the flags, the boats, the trucks, the signs.
Join us at 11 p.m. ET/PT on all HBO platforms.
1 big thing: 6 months that changed everything
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
This week marks six months since President Trump declared a national emergency over the coronavirus.
If those six months feel like a blur, you’re not alone.
The big picture: The sheer scale of what the U.S. has been through since March can not only be hard to process, but even to keep track of, Sam Baker notes:
A death toll equivalent to 65 Sept. 11 attacks, millions out of work, everyday life upended, with roiling protests and a presidential election to top it all off.
Here, from the Axios Visuals team’s Danielle Alberti, Sarah Grillo and Andrew Witherspoon, is a (partial) timeline to help make sense of these past six months, correlated to the rising death toll (orange):
2. Harris poll: Gen Z willing to make virus sacrifices
Members of Gen Z say they’re willing to make short-term sacrifices in order to help safely resume some parts of pre-pandemic life, health care editor Sam Baker writes from a Harris poll shared with Axios.
Why it matters: These findings are a stark contrast with the college-town outbreaks and scenes of crowded bars that have helped create a narrative of careless young people spreading the virus.
“We’ve dramatically underestimated this generation’s anxiety and resolve,” Harris Poll CEO John Gerzema said.
Joe Biden is pushing by far the most aggressive plan to address climate change in U.S. presidential history, Amy Harder writes in her “Harder Line” column.
His path reflects the convergence of science, energy and activism trends.
Why it matters: This culmination shows the new permanence the problem has gained on the campaign trail despite President Trump’s dismissal of climate science.
Biden has embraced aggressive goals also pushed by the progressive side of his party, including a $2 trillion spending plan. But when it comes to specific technologies, he has actually staked out a more centrist position.
On “60 Minutes,” Scott Pelley narrated the remarkable story of Bob Woodward’s last conversation with President Trump for “Rage,” out tomorrow:
The president’s final call came too late. He asked Woodward to include the August peace agreement between Israel and the United Arab Emirates. But “Rage” was already off to the press. Woodward took the opportunity to level with the president.
Bob Woodward: “And I said, ‘It’s a tough book. There are going to be things that you are not gonna like, judgments that I made.'”
Audio of President Trump during Aug. 14 call with Woodward: “[I]t looks like I don’t have it on this book, but we’ll get you sometime later, I guess.”
Audio of Woodward: “It’s tough, sir. Thank you very much.”
Woodward: “An hour and a half later, he tweeted out that the Bob Woodward book is gonna be fake.”
Beijing-based ByteDance abandoned the sale of TikTok in the U.S. “to pursue a partnership with Oracle Corp. that it hopes will spare it a U.S. ban while appeasing China,” Reuters reports.
Shortly before the Oracle news broke last night, Microsoft announced that ByteDance had rejected its offer, Axios’ Dan Primack reports.
The context: Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison is unusual among tech executives for his public support for President Trump, AP notes.
6. 📦 Amazon to hire 100,000, open 100 buildings
Amazon announced today that it will hire 100,000 new full- and part-time operations employees in the U.S. and Canada, and will open 100 new buildings this month, including fulfillment centers, delivery stations and sorting centers.
Trump fans drove pickups, Mustangs and motorcycles in a classic-car cruise in Frankenmuth, Mich., yesterday.
🎥 We go inside the Trump-paraphernalia phenomenon tonight on “Axios on HBO” (11 p.m. ET/PT), when Jim VandeHei asks Margaret Talev: “In your lifetime, do you ever remember a Ronald Reagan flag as big as the American flag in somebody’s front yard?” Then we go on a field trip.
Defying Nevada regulations, President Trump yesterday hosted his first indoor rally since June, telling a packed, nearly mask-less crowd in a warehouse in Henderson that the nation is “making the last turn” in defeating the virus. — AP
“The law is coming” whenever President Trump leaves office, Jonathan Chait writes in the cover story of the forthcoming New York magazine:
Trump is reportedly the subject of three investigations. Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance Jr., New York State attorney general Letitia James, and Southern District of New York acting U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss are all probing reported crimes by the Trump administration, ranging from tax fraud to embezzling funds at his suspiciously expensive inauguration.
The New Yorker’s Evan Osnos will be out Oct. 27 (maybe sooner for preorders) with “Joe Biden,” drawing on big profiles Evan wrote in 2014 and last month + shorter online pieces, all in this inviting frame from the prologue:
The circumstances of a life in full and a country in peril conspired to put Joe Biden at the center of an American reckoning …
At the very moment that his country was lying spread-eagled before the eyes of the world, Biden had arrived at his season of history.
I asked Evan — a perceptive, mischievous writer — how it came together:
I first wrote about him when he visited Beijing in 2011. … Biden made a point to eat at a local working-class restaurant near my house, throwing shade at Chinese leaders who were dealing with scandals about official privilege and corruption. As soon as Biden left town, Xi Jinping scrambled to go to a local dumpling place to show he was a man of the people.
That episode really piqued my interest, because Biden took an unusually personal approach to foreign affairs, as he does to domestic politics; he’s always talking about trying to hear how the other side really thinks, not out of some gauzy belief that he can charm them, but out of a pragmatic desire to calculate their interests.
Osnos says he kept returning to Biden “simply because of the range and intensity of his experiences. I interviewed him four times between April 2014 and July 2020 — on Air Force Two, in the White House, and at his home during the pandemic.”
10. America’s winning sports day
Sunday in the parks: The playoffs, NFL, a no-hitter and more …
In a year when good days are in short supply, sports had a little something for everyone yesterday, AP’s Tim Reynolds writes:
The NFL roared back to life — even if the roar was recorded, from fans who weren’t in the stadiums. Baseball saw a no-hitter. (Alec Mills for the Chicago Cubs in Milwaukee, blanking the Brewers 12-0).
The NBA and NHL playoffs continued. Men’s tennis and women’s golf got first-time major champions. And one school (the Louisiana-Lafayette Ragin’ Cajuns) reached the AP Top 25 for the first time since 1943.
There were 12 NFL games, including a winning debut for the now-Vegas Raiders.
For the first time since Jan. 1, 2000 — when he was a senior at Michigan — Tom Brady played a football game in something other than a New England Patriots helmet, debuting for Tampa Bay. Drew Brees and the New Orleans Saints prevailed 34-23 in the GOAT matchup of over-40s.
The reigning WNBA champion Washington Mystics got a last-day-of-the-season win to clinch the last remaining playoff spot in their league, meaning they’ll have the chance at back-to-back titles.
Mike Allen
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Air quality across Oregon was listed as “hazardous” or “very unhealthy,” and a dense smoke advisory remained in effect for much of the state. Similar warnings were issued for Washington state.
By Derek Hawkins, Samantha Schmidt and Steven Mufson ● Read more »
Latino leaders say Joe Biden’s outreach falls short and he is risking his chance to win Florida. A Biden visit to Miami on Tuesday — and a cash infusion from Mike Bloomberg — reflect a scramble to catch up.
About 1.3 million state and local government employees have lost their jobs since March, and economists project that number will more than double in the next 18 months without help from Congress and the White House.
The tropical storm, expected to bring dangerous surge and flooding, threatens southeast Louisiana, including New Orleans, and coastal Mississippi. It is forecast to make landfall Tuesday and may rapidly intensify to a Category 2 storm before doing so.
By Matthew Cappucci and Jason Samenow ● Read more »
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden disavowed two separate officer shootings as the issue of police brutality roils the country and the election.
A couple dozen protesters gathered outside of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s office in Manhattan to demand he take responsibility for the thousands of nursing home deaths during the height of the coronavirus.
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
Winds could fan wildfires as deaths reach 35 in US West.
Trump holds indoor rally in defiance of Nevada governor.
Virus America after six months: Disarray, dismay, disconnect.
Israel to reimpose nationwide lockdown as cases surge.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/JOHN LOCHER
Wildfires: Death toll reaches 35 on West Coast; Fight over climate change before Trump’s California visit
Warnings of strong winds that could fan the wildfires on the West Coast have added urgency to firefighters’ efforts. The alerts stretch from hard-hit southern Oregon to Northern California.
The flames have turned homes into rubble, forced tens of thousands to flee and shrouded the region with smoke so thick that air quality was some of the worst in the world.
And those who already lost their homes now fear having to evacuate a second time.
Ahead of Trump’s visit today to California for a fire briefing, the governors of California, Oregon and Washington state have said the fires are a consequence of climate change. Trump has blamed poor forest management for the flames.
Fleeing the Flames: A fast-moving fire in Northern California quickly overwhelmed tiny mountain communities in the Sierra Nevada foothills. One woman hooked a fire hose to a hydrant in a desperate attempt to defend her house and her boyfriend’s businesses. She and others later fled to a muddy sandbar to escape the flames. The fire surprised firefighters by how quickly it spread. They rushed to rescue more than 100 people on Tuesday and Wednesday, but they couldn’t save everyone. Daisy Nguyen and Adam Beam have that story.
AP PHOTO/ANDREW HARNIK
Trump defies Nevada governor, holds indoor rally; Biden faces worries that Latino support slipping in Florida
In clear and open defiance of Nevada state regulations and his own administration’s pandemic health guidelines, President Trump hosted his first indoor rally since June, claiming to a packed, nearly mask-less crowd that the nation was “making the last turn” in defeating the virus.
The pandemic had killed nearly 200,000 in the U.S., is still claiming 1,000 lives a day, and has infected more than 6.5 million.
By wide margins, Americans have disapproved of Trump’s leadership, as the nation has suffered more virus deaths than any other. The president’s campaign believes it needs to change the subject and project the sense, despite evidence otherwise, that the pandemic is winding down and that a vaccine is on the horizon, Jonathan Lemire and Ken Ritter report.
Earlier Sunday, Trump aimed for further inroads with Latinos who could prove vital in closely contested states that could determine the White House race, promoting economic gains they made before the coronavirus struck.
Biden Florida: It’s the nation’s leading presidential battleground, and there’s mounting anxiety among Democrats that Joe Biden’s standing among Latinos in the state is slipping. That could give Trump a crucial opening in Florida, a must-win for Republicans. Biden’s campaign and its allies are shoring up its coalition of older voters, suburbanites and African Americans to make up for potential shortcomings elsewhere, Steve Peoples and Will Weissert report.
Trump’s Mideast Deals: Trump is hailing Tuesday’s signing ceremony between Israel and the United Arab Emirates as an “historic breakthrough” in Mideast peacemaking just weeks before the U.S. election. But unlike the peace treaties Israel reached decades ago with Egypt and Jordan, the latest deal and a similar one announced with the Gulf nation of Bahrain are between already-friendly countries that have never gone to war, Joseph Krauss writes.
AP PHOTO/MARK LENNIHAN
Virus America, 6 months in: disarray, dismay, disconnect; Israel to set nationwide lockdown after surge
On Friday, March 13, 2020, a COVID curtain descended upon the United States. A season of pandemic was born.
And, as the most contentious of elections approaches, the very notion of what it means to be an American is perhaps the biggest contention point of all. This nuanced story from AP National Writer Ted Anthony is worth of your time.
U.S. School Choice: Millions of children are starting the school year online because of the pandemic. The Trump administration is hoping to convert their parents’ frustration and anger into newfound support for school choice policies that Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has long championed but struggled to advance nationally, Colin Binkley reports.
Israel Lockdown: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced a new countrywide lockdown will be imposed amid a stubborn surge in coronavirus cases, with schools and parts of the economy expected to shut down in a bid to bring down infection rates. Beginning Friday, the start of the Jewish High Holiday season, schools, restaurants, malls and hotels will shut down, among other businesses, and Israelis will face restrictions on movement and on gatherings.
Israel has had more than 150,000 confirmed cases and more than 1,100 deaths. Given its population of 9 million, it now has one of the world’s worst outbreaks, with more than 4,000 daily cases of the virus. Much of the criticism has been directed at Netanyahu, who has faced public outcry for his handling of the crisis, report Tia Goldenberg and Aron Heller.
Syria Schools: State media say more than 3 million students have started school in government-held areas nationwide. Students will be required to wear a mask, and seats in classrooms are to be set at a safe distance apart. Syria has registered 3,506 virus cases and 152 deaths in government-held areas. The figures are believed to be much higher due to the low number of tests in the country.
Central American Refugees: Only about 338 of the 2,700 Central Americans approved to come to the U.S. through a small refugee program have been able to travel because of the pandemic. President Trump has shut down the program, but a judge said those already cleared could travel. After years of waiting, the refugees have faced more delays as the virus grounded flights, canceled interviews and closed clinics that conduct needed medical exams, report Gisela Salomon and Claudia Torrens.
Antarctic First Flight: The first U.S. flight into Antarctica following months of winter darkness has arrived, with crews taking extra precautions to keep out the coronavirus. Antarctica is the only continent without the virus, and there is a global effort to make sure incoming scientists and workers don’t bring it with them, Nick Perry reports.
AP FACT CHECK
Trump’s torrent of falsehoods, Biden missteps
As the rhetoric flew during the past week, both Trump and Biden exaggerated accomplishments — Trump about himself and Biden about his son, Beau — as well as their own influence in reviving the auto industry.
Storm-weary Gulf Coast residents are preparing for a new weather onslaught as Tropical Storm Sally churns northward. Forecasters from the National Hurricane Center in Miami said Sally is expected to become a hurricane today and reach shore by early Tuesday, bringing dangerous weather conditions including risk of flooding to a region stretching from Morgan City, Louisiana, to Ocean Springs, Mississippi.
Rescuers are searching for people missing since a deadly landslide struck three villages in Nepal’s mountains. A government administrator says 11 bodies have been pulled from the debris and rescuers are looking for at least 15 more believed to be buried by the landslide. Continuous rainfall had made it difficult for rescuers on Sunday. But improving weather has allowed them to access higher ground in the landslide area.
TikTok’s owner has chosen Oracle over Microsoft as the tech partner that could help keep the popular video-sharing app running in the U.S., according to a source familiar with the deal. The choice came a week before President Trump’s deadline to ban it in the U.S. The administration has threatened to ban TikTok by mid-September, claiming national-security risks due to its Chinese ownership.
Dominic Thiem has become the first man in 71 years to win the U.S. Open after dropping the first two sets of the final. Thiem earned his first Grand Slam title with a 2-6, 4-6, 6-4, 6-3, 7-6 (6) comeback victory against Alexander Zverev. It’s the first time the U.S. Open final ended with a fifth-set tiebreaker. In a nearly empty Arthur Ashe Stadium — fans were banned because of the pandemic — Thiem slowly but surely turned things around.
We’ll leave you with this …
Rooftop alphorns power virus-safe concert in Germany
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On Sunday, Illinois officials announced 1,462 new known cases of COVID-19 and 14 additional fatalities, as the positivity for Chicago ticked up to 5.3%.
Meanwhile, as we hit the six month mark in dealing with the pandemic, the city’s essential workers are still working. They’re still healthy. But they’re also still afraid. This is what the last half a year has been like for them.
Six months after he first issued a disaster proclamation tied to the coronavirus pandemic, followed quickly by a stay-at-home order that shut down businesses and kept people inside for months, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said he wouldn’t hesitate to act in similar fashion if COVID-19 cases bloom exponentially this fall.
“We were the second state in the United States by a few hours, I think, to put a stay-at-home order in and if we needed to do that, the answer is, it worked,” Pritzker told the Tribune in an interview earlier this month about the state’s response to the pandemic at its six-month mark. “It works, and so if we had to do that, and again we’re not there, but if we had to do that, I would not hesitate.
A local woman was the first patient in Illinois and the second in the nation to test positive for the novel coronavirus. Her husband’s illness marked the first documented case of person-to-person transmission in the United States. What medical experts learned from that local couple — through lengthy interviews, rigorous coronavirus testing and analysis of so many of their specimens — helped shape much of the nation’s earliest knowledge of the virus, which would later be called COVID-19.
To understand the devastation of the last six months on Chicago’s most vulnerable communities, take a drive along Roosevelt Road on the West Side. The 3½-mile stretch of North Lawndale provides a vivid picture of an impoverished neighborhood long neglected by local government. COVID-19, recent social unrest and looting have only made things worse.
The number of children in Illinois Department of Children and Family Services’ care who have remained in psychiatric hospitals after being medically cleared for release continues to grow, even as Gov. J.B. Pritzker has vowed to address the many problems facing the long-troubled agency, according to a new report from the Cook County public guardian.
With no Lions fans in the stands to boo, Bears players’ shouts rose up to the Ford Field roof as Matthew Stafford’s pass fell incomplete in the final seconds Sunday.
With that incompletion, the Bears had completed an improbable comeback from 17 points down to earn a 27-23 victory over the Lions.
A historic Far South Side home designed by world-renowned architect Frank Lloyd Wright was sold earlier this month for less than $200,000 after spending more than three years on the market.
James Glover, a Chicago native, wasn’t necessarily looking to buy a house when he stumbled on the iconic West Pullman property while watching TV one Sunday afternoon. But the electrician was drawn to the large lot and low price point. Madeline Kenney has the story…
Wins are great, and the Bears desperately need them during this segment of their season, but the effort they gave Sunday won’t get the job done against the tough teams they’ll face down the road.
A historic West Pullman house designed by world renowned architect Frank Lloyd Wright was sold earlier this month after spending more than three years on the market.
“Ms. Calderon has no voice,” O’Brien said of the victim of last week’s fatal stabbing. “She won’t be able to go back to her children. She won’t be able to raise them. And that’s on Ms. Foxx.”
“As we suspect you have heard from many others, virtually no one is happy with how this is unfolding,” state Reps. La Shawn Ford and Kathleen Willis wrote in a letter to Pritzker on Sunday.
Students at Instituto Justice and Leadership Academy created an advisory committee for the exhibit, which could take three years before it opens to the public.
The former Acme property, a remnant of Chicago’s steel-making past, is a public health hazard and needs a massive cleanup, according to a community organization.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Monday. 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 as of Monday morning: 194,081.
Worldwide confirmed cases of COVID-19 infection now exceed 29 million, of which more than 6.5 million are tallied in the United States.
President Trump made a renewed pitch to woo Latino voters in Nevada on Sunday as part of a West Coast swing, criticizing former Vice President Joe Biden throughout as polling shows that he continues to trail his Democratic opponent with less than 50 days until Election Day.
Trump made a number of stops in Nevada over the weekend, including a “Latinos for Trump” event in Las Vegas as he made a pitch for the key constituency in a state his campaign continues to make a play for despite its leftward shift in past cycles. Throughout the weekend, Trump took aim at his general election opponent, deriding him as “shot” during a Saturday night rally, adding that Biden “doesn’t know what’s happening.”
“The Hispanics get it. And that’s why we’re leading with the Hispanic community. That’s because you had the lowest job numbers in the history of our country. … Every statistic was the best, and now we’re doing it again,” Trump told a jam-packed, indoor crowd of supporters in Henderson, Nev., that eschewed social distancing and mask-wearing guidelines. “Joe Biden would be a disaster for all communities, not just the Hispanic community. … He would hand your country over to the socialists.”
The Hill: Trump campaign defends first all-indoor rally in months.
The Hill: Nevada governor: Trump ‘taking reckless and selfish actions’ in holding rally.
The president also tweeted that the former vice president has been “terrible to Hispanics” throughout his political career. The tweet underscored a problem the Biden campaign is facing: Lagging support among Latino voters, which the Biden campaign acknowledged on Sunday.
“We know that we have work to do,” campaign spokeswoman Symone Sanders told ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday morning. “And we have said from the beginning — and Vice President Biden has been very clear about this, as has Sen. [Kamala] Harris [D-Calif.] — that we are really working to earn every single vote in this country, and we want to earn the votes of the Latino, Hispanic community.”
Sanders added that the Biden campaign is “doing the work” to earn Latino voters, pointing to Harris’s events in Florida and virtual events in Arizona last week, with Biden set to travel to the Sunshine State this week.
“We’re committed to doing the work,” she said.
A recent Quinnipiac University poll of Florida set off alarm bells among some Democrats, as it showed that Biden trails Trump among Hispanics in the key battleground state 45 percent to 43 percent. The Latino outreach firm Equis Research found that while Biden leads among Latino voters, he does so by smaller margins than Hillary Clinton did four years ago when she defeated Trump in Nevada by 5 points and won the Latino vote by 66 percent (The Hill).
However, new polls released on Sunday still show Biden with an advantage nationally. According to Fox News’s latest survey, Biden leads Trump by five points (51 percent to 46 percent) among likely voters, while a new CBS-YouGov poll shows Biden leading in Arizona by three points (47 percent to 44 percent) (The Hill).
The Associated Press: On Western swing, Trump aims to court pivotal Latino voters.
The New York Times: Trump to visit California after criticism over silence on wildfires.
The Washington Post: Trump holds Nevada rally, Biden gets $100 million boost from Michael Bloomberg in Florida.
With just more than seven weeks until Election Day, the Trump campaign has ramped up its digital ad spending as it seeks to neutralize the former vice president’s massive advantage on the television airwaves and recent fundraising boon.
As The Hill’s Jonathan Easley reports, the Trump campaign has invested heavily in ads on Facebook and Google since the start of the year, surpassing the $170 million mark in the first week of September, compared with $90 million for Biden’s campaign. Biden was engaged in a competitive primary for the first three months of the year, with the former VP’s campaign gradually building up its investments in digital ads since July. Nevertheless, the Trump campaign still has a $40 million spending advantage in digital ads over the past two months.
Meanwhile, the Biden campaign is set to expand its presence on the airwaves with ads hitting the New Hampshire markets on Tuesday. The campaign also has massive buys set for early October in key states, including Georgia, Ohio and Texas (Medium Buying).
The Hill: QAnon spreads across globe, shadowing COVID-19.
The New Yorker: How the Trump campaign’s mobile app is collecting massive amounts of voter data.
MarketWatch: Journalist Bob Woodward, appearing on CBS’s “60 Minutes” on Sunday, said Trump “failed” by not being honest with Americans about the pandemic at its early stage. The president told the author in August that “nothing more could have been done” about the coronavirus, according to Woodward. Program HERE.
The Hill: What are the consequences of voting twice in an election?
More news in politics: Republican Rep. Steve Chabot of Ohio, who lost his seat in 2006 and won it back in 2010, faces a competitive race again this fall, according to polls (The Hill). … With farmers and biofuel producers in mind in the Midwest, Trumpannounced on Saturday via Twitter that the Environmental Protection Agency will allow higher ethanol gasoline to be sold at existing pumps (MarketWatch). …The Associated Press published a helpful interactive guide to advance voting this year in all 50 states.
Unions and airlines agree – a clean extension of the CARES Act Payroll Support Program will position the industry to support economic recovery and save hundreds of thousands of aviation jobs. Learn how.
LEADING THE DAY
CONGRESS: Negotiations on another massive coronavirus relief package have been dormant for more than a month, but Senate Republicans believe they’ve found a potential key to getting a deal: Building pressure on Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.).
According to The Hill’s Alexander Bolton, Senate Republicans are keeping a watchful eye on vulnerable House Democrats, some of whom have grown anxious and are pushing for lawmakers to strike a deal. Last week, the Senate GOP’s push to advance a $650 billion “skinny” relief bill failed, but part of the plan surrounding the bill was to give cover to the party’s vulnerable incumbents, all the while directing attention in Pelosi’s direction rather than Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer’s (D-N.Y.).
“The question is, does this force Pelosi to listen to her 20 members in districts where the Chamber of Commerce has endorsed the Democrat?” said one GOP senator.
“Schumer’s not pressured at all. This is all on Pelosi. Pelosi’s running the show,” the senator added, pointing out that 117 House Democrats signed a letter to Pelosi last month calling on her to take up the Worker Relief and Security Act.
The bill would extend $600-a-week federal unemployment assistance for the duration of the coronavirus pandemic and adjust the weekly federal unemployment compensation amount and available benefit weeks on state unemployment rates.
Elsewhere, The Hill’s Alex Gangitano reports that business groups are throwing their support behind a pandemic insurance bill, which is modeled after a post-Sept. 11 law that created a federal backstop for claims related to acts of terrorism.
The Pandemic Risk Insurance Act, much like the 2002 Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (TRIA), would provide compensation for losses resulting from pandemics or public health emergencies. But unlike TRIA, which had broad bipartisan support and was reauthorized as recently as 2015, the pandemic measure — introduced by House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) [seen below] — is backed almost exclusively by Democrats, with little to no GOP support for the measure despite widespread backing from the business community.
> Government funding: The effort to extend funding for the government is being impacted by the election as Democrats debate how long of a clean government spending package they should support in the coming weeks.
Funding for the government expires at the end of the month, and while both the White House and Democratic lawmakers have voiced support for a clean continuing resolution, it remains to be seen how long funding will be extended for, as Democrats have yet to voice support for a timeline.
The White House and GOP lawmakers are pushing for a funding bill to run until shortly before Christmas, while Democrats are weighing whether to back a stopgap bill that would run into 2021 as they grow bullish over their chances to win back the Senate.
“We’ve gone back and forth. It’s a split decision in the caucus. If you can tell us what happens Nov. 3, it is a lot easier. … The uncertainty about the presidential election is an element,” Sen. Dick Durbin (Ill.), the No. 2 Senate Democrat, said when asked about the length of a bill (The Hill).
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
NATURAL DISASTERS: During a wretched summer of woe, at least 35 people have been killed in the United States from wildfires, which continue to rage in three states on the West Coast, leaving behind blackened vistas, homeless evacuees and smoky, ash-filled air that Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) called “apocalyptic.” At least 10 people are dead in Oregon (devastation pictured below).
Reuters: Search crews are scouring the Oregon landscape as residents return to rubble.
The land mass affected is approximately the size of New Jersey, and experts predict relief in California, Oregon and Washington is only possible with the arrival of cooler, wetter weather with less wind. The so-called red flag warnings stretch from hard-hit southern Oregon to Northern California and extend through this evening.
The New York Times: Southern Oregon has been devastated but there may be more fires yet to come. “I drove 600 miles up and down the state, and I never escaped the smoke. We have thousands of people who have lost their homes. I could have never envisioned this,” Merkley said Sunday on the ABC’s “This Week.”
Tens of thousands of people have fled the flames, scenes of charred rubble and burned-out cars. Firefighters on the ground and in the air are exhausted. And a shroud of smoke has given Seattle, San Francisco and Portland, Ore., some of the worst air quality in the world.
The Democratic governors of all three states maintain that the fires are a consequence of climate change, taking aim at Trump ahead of his visit to California today for a fire briefing. The president on Sunday blamed the disaster on poor “forest management” during a campaign swing in Nevada.
The Washington Post: Because of hazardous air quality, officials and health experts tell people in affected regions to remain indoors with windows and doors closed and air conditioners and fans running.
The coronavirus pandemic has exacerbated the wildfire situation. COVID-19 contributed to interruption of spring efforts with volunteers to clear undergrowth and now firefighters are experiencing manpower shortages as some become infected with the coronavirus, forcing mandatory quarantines (The Hill).
In Oregon, officials have been challenged to designate and staff evacuation centers for tens of thousands of people fleeing the deadly wildfires. COVID-19 requires socially distanced and specially prepared centers where people can congregate in appropriate numbers and with safety in mind during an emergency. Public health officials also believe the poor air quality resulting from the fires worsens recovery for those affected by the coronavirus (OPB).
Meanwhile, the Gulf Coast is poised for Sally, a tropical storm expected late today to gain strength off the coast of South Florida and become a hurricane, according to the National Hurricane Center. New Orleans and surrounding areas, along with a stretch of the coast from Grand Isle, La., to the Alabama-Florida line, were placed under a hurricane watch and expect heavy rain (The Associated Press and The Miami Herald).
OPINION
All the president’s insecurities, by Maureen Dowd, columnist, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/3mcr929
Good-bye, readers, and good luck. You’ll need it: What 50 years of writing about economics has taught me, by Robert J. Samuelson, opinion columnist, The Washington Post, who is retiring. https://wapo.st/2FsG8UT
SPONSORED CONTENT — ALPA
The CARES Act: Good for workers, good for America
Unions and airlines agree – a clean extension of the CARES Act Payroll Support Program will position the industry to support economic recovery and save hundreds of thousands of aviation jobs. Learn how.
WHERE AND WHEN
The House meets at 2 p.m.
The Senate will meet at 3 p.m. to resume consideration of the nomination of Mark Scarsi to be a judge with the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California.
The president, who campaigned over the weekend in Nevada, will visit McClellan Park, Calif., today to get a briefing from emergency and other officials about ongoing wildfires on the West Coast at 11 a.m. and deliver remarks at 12:05 p.m. PDT (The New York Times). Trump will travel this afternoon to Phoenix to host a campaign roundtable event focused on Latino voters at 3 p.m. MDT at the Arizona Grand Resort hotel. The president will return to the White House tonight.
Vice President Pence will headline a campaign event at noon EDT in Janesville, Wis., at the Holiday Inn Conference Center. Pence, Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.) and the other Republican candidates are scheduled to hold a campaign rally this afternoon in Belgrade, Mont., near Bozeman.
👉 INVITATION: The Hill Virtually Live hosts two newsmaker events this week:
On Tuesday, “The Venture Economy: America’s Hidden Resilience Factor” begins at 1 p.m. Guests include Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot (D); Larry Irving, co-founder of the Mobile Alliance for Global Good and president and CEO of the Irving Group; Neela Mollgaard, executive director of Launch Minnesota; and Jaqi Wright and Nikki Howard, co-founders of Furlough Cheesecake. Register HERE.
On Wednesday, the topic is “Powering America’s Economy with AI” at 1 p.m., featuring Chabot, ranking member of the House Small Business Committee; Rep. Brenda Lawrence (D-Mich.); Rep. Jerry McNerney (D-Calif.), co-chairman of the Artificial Intelligence Caucus; Lorena Camargo, CEO and founder of Pearl Transportation and Logistics; John Dearie, founder and president of the Center for American Entrepreneurship; and Heather Spalding, founder and CEO of Cambrian Technology. Register HERE.
➔ International: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on Sunday that a new nationwide lockdown will go into effect on Friday after a spike in new cases of COVID-19. Schools, restaurants and other businesses in Israel will be forced to shut down, with movement limited for at least three weeks starting on the eve of the Jewish New Year (The Associated Press). … In Japan, Yoshihide Suga, 71, will be the new prime minister this week, succeeding Shinzo Abe, who is stepping down for what he says are health reasons (The New York Times).
➔ Sports: The NFL started its season facing not only the coronavirus pandemic, but also a resurgent Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement of which the league has reluctantly found itself at the forefront. During the Week 1 slate of games on Sunday, six teams stayed in the locker room while the national anthems were being played, with players wearing pre-game apparel wearing messages in support of the BLM movement. Notably, New England Patriots quarterback Cam Newton featured cleats that were emblazoned with the phrases “7 Shots” and “No Justice No Peace” (The Hill).
➔ Administration: Trump on Sunday signed an anticipated new executive order aimed at lowering drug prices (The Hill). … TikTok chooses Oracle rather than Microsoft for sale of U.S. operations amid a tech clash between the United States and China (NBC News). … Without explanation, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo indicated early today that U.S. Ambassador to China Terry Branstad, 73, will be leaving his post (Reuters). … During the pandemic, Pompeo plans today to resume his controversial, taxpayer-funded “Madison Dinners,” which are under investigation by congressional Democrats (NBC News). (NBC obtained a photograph of guests who attended a June 2019 dinner with the secretary.) … On Tuesday, Trump will host representatives from Israel, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates for a ceremony establishing diplomatic relations among the countries. Trump tells voters his administration has kept its promises on foreign policy, pointing to the Middle East peace deal and a reduction of U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan to withdraw from what the president calls “forever wars.” But foreign policy does not override a deadly pandemic and high unemployment in voters’ minds, according to polls (The Hill).
➔ Supreme Court: Trump recently listed six of Associate Justice Clarence Thomas’s former clerks as potential Supreme Court nominees, should the president win a second term. Legal experts say this reflects Thomas’s growing influence during the Trump era (The Hill).
➔ Ukraine, Russia and Trump: Army Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman (ret.), a key witness during Trump’s impeachment inquiry who was fired by the president in February as the top Ukraine expert on the White House National Security Council and offered a lower-level transfer (CNN), on Monday will speak with NBC’s Lester Holt on the “Nightly News” at 6:30 p.m. EDT. Trump blocked Vindman’s promotion to colonel before his retirement after 21 years in the service. … Former FBI agent Peter Strzok, author of “Compromised: Counterintelligence and the Threat of Donald J. Trump,” told NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday, “I believe Donald Trump is compromised by the Russians.” With no specifics, Strzok said he believes the leverage may be financial entanglements with the Russians that Trump has publicly denied (NBC News). … Former Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats (R) is described in Bob Woodward’s book “Rage” as continuing “to harbor the secret belief, one that had grown rather than lessened, although unsupported by intelligence proof, that [Russian President Vladimir] Putin had something on Trump.” Woodward describes Coats’s thought process, writing “How else to explain the president’s behavior? Coats could see no other explanation” (CNN and The Washington Post).
THE CLOSER
And finally …James Blaesing, the grandson of former President Harding and Harding’s mistress Nan Britton, went to court in Ohio in an effort to get the Republican’s remains exhumed from his 1927 gravesite. Blaesing says he’s seeking Harding’s disinterment as a way “to establish with scientific certainty” that he is the 29th president’s blood relation, even though the Harding family has conceded that he is the former president’s grandson.
A branch of the Harding family told the court that relatives already accepted as fact DNA evidence that Blaesing’s mother, Elizabeth Ann Blaesing, was the daughter of Harding and Britton, who was a secretary during an affair when Harding was a senator. Harding had no other children.
The centennial of Harding’s 1920 election and unveiling of a new presidential center in Marion, the Ohio city near which he was born in 1865, are entangled in coronavirus precautions. The opening of the Warren G. Harding Presidential Center has been postponed, while a Sept. 26 symposium will take place virtually (Marion Star).
Blaesing says he deserves to “have his story, his mother’s story and his grandmother’s story included within the hallowed halls and museums in this town” (The Associated Press).
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POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: The two numbers driving the angst on Capitol Hill
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
50 DAYS until Election Day … 16 DAYS until the government runs out of money.
THOSE ARE TWO VERY IMPORTANT NUMBERS this Monday morning.
WASHINGTON needs to balance two concerns in the coming weeks: It has to put together a package to fund the government to avoid an election-season shutdown Sept. 30, and it needs to also mollify a growing clutch of anxious House Democrats who are agitating for further votes on Covid relief.
LET’S GET THIS OUT OF THE WAY: Most people involved in legislating do not expect a government shutdown. Nor do they expect anything resembling a Covid relief bill to reach President DONALD TRUMP’S desk before Election Day.
BUT HOW CONGRESS WRAPS UP ITS WORK for the fall is far from clear.
A GROWING NUMBER OF HOUSE DEMOCRATS are communicating to their leadership that they are awfully frustrated. They don’t like that Covid relief talks have broken down — the two sides aren’t talking at all. The House passed the Heroes Act four months ago, and these Democrats are suggesting to their party’s brass that they need something new to talk about on the campaign trail — blaming Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL isn’t enough. They simply can’t go home for the election without additional votes. Our colleagues HEATHER CAYGLE and SARAH FERRIS expertly catalogued some of this angst last week, which surfaced on a House Democratic Caucus call.
THERE ARE THREE GENERAL DIRECTIONS the House Democrats can go in: 1) They can do nothing, which doesn’t really appear to be much of an option at the moment. 2) They can vote on an altered version of the Heroes Act. This will be difficult for the Dems to pass. The price tag is high, and everyone will push for their policies to be included in the bill. 3) This option seems to make the most sense: The leadership could put up some votes on individual policies: enhanced unemployment, a bulked-up testing program and an extension of the Paycheck Protection Program.
THE HOUSE PROBLEM SOLVERS CAUCUS — which we’ve been skeptical of, because it hasn’t solved as many problems as its name seems to indicate — has quietly been working on a plan that has attracted some interest from both sides of the aisle. The group — co-chaired by Reps. JOSH GOTTHEIMER (D-N.J.) and TOM REED (R-N.Y.) — has also been in touch with the White House.
THE PROBLEM SOLVERS SAY they plan to release some sort of Covid relief bill with the support of several dozen lawmakers from both parties. We keep hearing that they will negotiate against Speaker NANCY PELOSI and drop the Dems’ state-and-local offer — PELOSI was at $900 billion. This could be a nice way for lawmakers to support a new plan, though it’s tough to see enough Democrats and Republicans jumping on with this to move the needle — to say nothing of the Senate, which doesn’t like to take its cues from junior House members.
WE’RE GOING TO GET A FULL WEEK OF BACK AND FORTH ON Covid relief and government funding. If Covid relief talks ever restart, remember: The sticking point is that state-and-local money. Dems want nearly $1 trillion, and the White House wants something in the range of $100 billion to $200 billion. Dems can’t abandon this because a) they think it’s the right policy and b) unions are gung-ho about the cash.
GOVERNMENT FUNDING is far from figured out, too. Republicans are already complaining that Democrats want a “clean” bill — a simple extension of funding without extraneous policies — but are privately pushing for some Covid relief in the bill. PELOSI has been clear: Clean means clean.
SO ANYWAY, WE’LL keep you up to date on all of this in the coming two weeks. These things tend to get messy real quick.
TV ALERT: Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN will be on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” at 8:15 a.m.
BREAKING OVERNIGHT … SECRETARY OF STATE MIKE POMPEO announced on Twitter that TERRY BRANSTAD, the former governor of Iowa, will step down as ambassador to China.
Good Monday morning. SPOTTED: House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy boarding United flight 5590 from O’Hare to DCA on Sunday morning. Pic… Another pic … Mnuchin at Cafe Milano on Sunday.
REPUBLICANS ON THE HOUSE ADMIN COMMITTEE have penned a letter to the majority suggesting Congress needs to be better prepared to resume its business. Their letter
FOR YOUR RADAR … WEATHER CHANNEL: “Tropical Storm Sally Expected to Strengthen and Could Strike Louisiana and Mississippi as a Hurricane”: “Tropical Storm Sally is expected to strengthen into a hurricane and bring an extremely dangerous storm surge, flooding rainfall and damaging winds to the northern Gulf Coast beginning on Monday. Sally could produce the deadly duo of human-height storm surge and a foot or more of rainfall in parts of Louisiana and Mississippi.”
WILD STORY … NAHAL TOOSI and NATASHA BERTRAND: “Officials: Iran weighs plot to kill U.S. ambassador to South Africa”: “The Iranian government is weighing an assassination attempt against the American ambassador to South Africa, U.S. intelligence reports say, according to a U.S. government official familiar with the issue and another official who has seen the intelligence.
“News of the plot comes as Iran continues to seek ways to retaliate for President Donald Trump’s decision to kill a powerful Iranian general earlier this year, the officials said. If carried out, it could dramatically ratchet up already serious tensions between the U.S. and Iran and create enormous pressure on Trump to strike back — possibly in the middle of a tense election season.
“U.S. officials have been aware of a general threat against the ambassador, Lana Marks, since the spring, the officials said. But the intelligence about the threat to the ambassador has become more specific in recent weeks. The Iranian embassy in Pretoria is involved in the plot, the U.S. government official said. …
“An intelligence community directive known as ‘Duty to Warn’ requires U.S. spy agencies to notify a potential victim if intelligence indicates their life could be in danger; in the case of U.S. government officials, credible threats would be included in briefings and security planning. Marks has been made aware of the threat, the U.S. government official said. The intelligence also has been included in the CIA World Intelligence Review, known as the WIRe, a classified product that is accessible to senior policy and security officials across the U.S. government, as well as certain lawmakers and their staff.”
ISRAELI PM BENJAMIN NETANYAHU has arrived at Andrews on an El Al 777 jet. He will attend a White House ceremony Tuesday in honor of the normalization of diplomatic relations between Israel and the UAE, and Israel and Bahrain. Israel will begin a three-week shutdown Friday, forcing residents to stay within 500 yards from their homes during the High Holidays of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.
SHOT … TRUMP on Sunday night in Henderson, Nev.: “It’s very interesting. Some say call us Latino, others say call us Hispanic, others say call us whatever the hell you want. We love you, we love you.”
“Recent polls showing President Trump’s inroads with Latinos have set off a fresh round of frustration and finger-pointing among Democrats, confirming problems some say have simmered for months. Many Latino activists and officials said Biden is now playing catch-up, particularly in the pivotal state of Florida, where he will campaign Tuesday — the start of National Hispanic Heritage Month — for the first time as the presidential nominee. Reaching out to Latino voters will be a key focus on the visit, according to a person with knowledge of the trip. Biden’s campaign said he will be in Tampa and Kissimmee, two areas with large Puerto Rican populations.
“‘Within the last two weeks, they’ve been making an effort to put all the pieces in place,’ said José Parra, who served as a senior adviser to Harry M. Reid when he was Senate majority leader and lives in Miami. ‘What worries me is how late in the game they are trying to put those pieces into place.’”
BIG PICTURE … GABBY ORR in Las Vegas:“Trump’s campaign is caught between 2 worlds, with 2 months to go”: “Past presidents running for reelection have built entire campaigns around their incumbency: Events in the Rose Garden. Signing ceremonies in the Oval Office. Cross-country campaign swings on Air Force One.
“President Donald Trump has used this tactic to his advantage in recent weeks — parking the iconic presidential jet behind the stage at his rallies, turning the executive complex into a high-production venue for the Republican National Convention and unveiling an updated list of potential Supreme Court nominees against the elegant backdrop of the White House Diplomatic Reception Room.
“But for the wildly unpredictable president, it’s not enough. As Trump sprints toward the finish line in his race against Joe Biden, the Democratic presidential nominee, he is waging a campaign with dual personalities. There is the concerned commander in chief, who will spend Monday assessing the wildfires that have devastated California — a state that is bound to hand all 55 of its electoral votes to Biden on Election Day — and who recently initiated a drawdown of American troops in the Middle East and took unilateral action on Sunday to lower drug prices.
“And there is Trump the perpetual outsider — combative and vicious as ever — who spent the weekend baselessly accusing his opponent of drug abuse, praising the fatal shooting of a murder suspect with antifa ties as ‘retribution,’ and assuring voters that the coronavirus pandemic had ‘rounded a corner’ even as the U.S. death toll from Covid-19 creeps toward 200,000.”
MEANWHILE — “Inside Joe’s bubble: How Biden’s campaign is trying to avoid the virus,” by Chris Cadelago and Natasha Korecki in Wilmington, Del.: “Joe Biden’s chartered airplanes and SUVs are meticulously sprayed with disinfectant and scrubbed. The microphones, lecterns and folders he uses are wiped down in the moments before his arrival. News reporters covering the campaign have their temperature taken. People he meets are scanned in advance with thermometer wands and guests at his events are cordoned off in precise locations mapped out with a tape measure.
“The former vice president is seldom without a mask when in public or around anyone other than his wife, Dr. Jill Biden. Access to their home is limited to only a few staffers — and when they’re inside, each wears a mask, including Biden. The level of discipline is such that at times when someone stops to take a drink of water, that person will turn their head away from the others to reduce the chances of scattering droplets, according to campaign aides.
“With more than 6 million people infected and nearly 200,000 dead from the coronavirus, the former vice president is taking no chances with his safety. He operates in a sanitizer-saturated bubble within the traditional presidential campaign bubble, an environment designed and obsessively cultivated by staff in an attempt to protect him from a possible encounter with the virus.
“The rationale behind the painstaking attention to safety is both personal and political. For months, aides have privately acknowledged being concerned about his health. At 77, Biden is more susceptible to the virus that causes Covid-19 and his advanced age alone puts him at higher risk of serious complications from the illness.” POLITICO
THE CORONAVIRUS CONTINUES TO RAGE … 6.5 MILLION Americans have tested positive for Covid-19. … 194,081 AMERICANS have died.
HMM — “Vaccine Makers Keep Safety Details Quiet, Alarming Scientists,”by NYT’s Katie Thomas: “It’s standard for drug companies to withhold details of clinical trials until after they are completed, tenaciously guarding their intellectual property and competitive edge. But these are extraordinary times, and now there is a growing outcry among independent scientists and public health experts who are pushing the companies to be far more open with the public in the midst of a pandemic that has already killed more than 193,000 people in the United States.
“These experts say American taxpayers are entitled to know more since the federal government has committed billions of dollars to vaccine research and to buying the vaccines once they’re approved. And greater transparency could also help bolster faltering public confidence in vaccines at a time when a growing number of Americans fear President Trump will pressure federal regulators to approve a vaccine before it is proved safe and effective.
— FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: AFSCME and the NAACP are launching a seven-figure radio ad buy targeting black voters in Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. The two ads hit TRUMP for his handling of Covid-19 and its disproportionate impact: “While Trump lied, Black people died.” They also encourage people to request a ballot and make a plan to vote. They’ll run through Election Day on African American radio stations in the Milwaukee, Philadelphia, Detroit, Flint, Raleigh, Charlotte and Greensboro markets. The NAACP ad… The AFSCME ad
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — PENN’S ANNENBERG PUBLIC POLICY CENTER todayis releasing a new survey finding that Americans’ civic knowledge has increased in recent years. 51% of Americans surveyed could name all three branches of government — up from 39% last year. And since 2017, the percentage of Americans who named freedom of speech as a right guaranteed by the First Amendment has jumped from 48% to 73%. The results
TRUMP’S MONDAY — The president will leave Las Vegas at 9:20 a.m. Pacific time en route to McClellan Park, Calif., for a wildfire briefing at 11 a.m. The president will deliver remarks and participate in a ceremony recognizing the California National Guard at 12:05 p.m. He will depart at 12:40 p.m. en route to Phoenix, Ariz., where he will participate in a Latinos for Trump coalition roundtable at 3 p.m. Trump will depart for the airport at 4 p.m. and travel back to Washington, arriving at the White House at 11:35 p.m.
ON THE TRAIL — JOE BIDEN and JILL BIDEN will vote in Delaware’s primary elections this morning. He will deliver remarks in Wilmington about the wildfires and climate crisis, and attend virtual fundraisers. In the evening, BIDEN also will deliver remarks at the “Poor People’s Campaign” virtual event.
— SEN. KAMALA HARRIS (D-Calif.)will join a Unite Here virtual roundtable. She will also attend virtual fundraisers. In the evening, she will travel to California.
PLAYBOOK READS
BIG SWING … WAPO: “How former Trump adviser Steve Bannon joined forces with a Chinese billionaire who has divided the president’s allies,”by Ros Helderman, Josh Dawsey, Gary Shih and Matt Zapotosky: “Bannon’s partnership with Chinese businessman Guo Wengui, on whose yacht Bannon had told friends he had been living in recent months, that has come to dominate his post-White House career — a partnership that is now also under scrutiny. A company linked to both is a focus of a separate federal investigation, according to multiple people familiar with the probe. …
“In the past several years, a company linked to the billionaire, who also goes by Miles Kwok and Miles Guo, has given Bannon a consulting contract. Guo has also publicly pledged to donate $100 million to a Bannon-led charity. Most recently, the month before Bannon’s arrest, Guo announced that Bannon would serve as chairman of a new social media company he was launching.
“Bannon, in turn, has emerged as one of the biggest champions of Guo, who casts himself as an anti-communist dissident in dozens of fiery videos posted online. Even as other critics of the Chinese government have grown skeptical of Guo’s claims that he is a political victim of Beijing, Bannon has said Guo has valuable insider information that could help take down China’s Communist Party, or CCP, and says he has been prescient about China’s crackdown on Hong Kong and its handling of the novel coronavirus.”
AP: “Yoshihide Suga wins party vote for Japan prime minister,”by Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo: “Yoshihide Suga was elected as the new head of Japan’s ruling party on Monday, virtually guaranteeing him parliamentary election as the country’s next prime minister.
“Suga received 377 votes in the ruling Liberal Democratic Party election to pick a successor to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who announced last month that he would resign due to health problems. Former Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida, one of the other two contenders, received 89 votes, while former Defense Minister Shigeru Ishiba got 68.
“The victory by Suga, currently the chief Cabinet secretary of Abe’s government, all but guarantees his election in a parliamentary vote Wednesday because of the majority held by the Liberal Democrats’ ruling coalition.”
BUSINESS BURST — “Oracle Wins Bid for TikTok in U.S.; Microsoft Proposal Is Rejected,” by WSJ’s Georgia Wells and Aaron Tilley: “Oracle Corp. won the bidding for the U.S. operations of the video-sharing app TikTok, people familiar with the matter said, beating out Microsoft Corp. in a high-profile deal to salvage a social-media sensation that has been caught in the middle of a geopolitical standoff.
“Oracle is set to be announced as TikTok’s ‘trusted tech partner’ in the U.S., and the deal is likely not to be structured as an outright sale, the people said. The next step is for the White House and the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. to approve the deal, said one of the people, adding that the participants believe it satisfies the concerns around data security that have been previously raised by the U.S. government.” WSJ
MEDIAWATCH … NYT’S BEN SMITH column: “The Intercept Promised to Reveal Everything. Then Its Own Scandal Hit”: “The recent history of the news business has been about what happens when your traditional business is disrupted by the internet and your revenues dry up. But at The Intercept and First Look, the story is of a different destabilizing force: gushers of money.”
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Schmidt Futures, the philanthropic initiative founded by Eric and Wendy Schmidt, has named its new class of international strategy fellows and counselors. Fellows include Ben Taub, Maggie Goodlander, Joe Kristol, Jon Bateman, Virginia Boney, Quinn Lorenz, Megan Reiss and Daniel Koh. Counselors include Jake Sullivan, Meghan O’Sullivan and Josh Geltzer.The full list
TREASURY DEPARTURE LOUNGE — Michael DiRoma and Andrew Eck are launching DiRoma Eck & Co. They were most recently deputy assistant Treasury secretaries. DiRoma previously worked for Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), and Eck previously worked for the House Financial Services Committee.
TRANSITIONS — Kevin Hartley is now assistant director of government relations at the American Veterinary Medical Association. He previously was senior legislative assistant for Rep. Pete Olson (R-Texas). … Hannah Muldavin is now press secretary for the Democratic Party of Virginia. She previously was comms director for Rep. David Trone (D-Md.). … Annie Clark has transitioned from Sen. Susan Collins’ (R-Maine) Senate office to her campaign, both as comms director.
WEEKEND WEDDING — Laura Nahmias, a New York Daily News editorial board member, and Matt Mittenthal, senior director of comms at BuzzFeed News, were married Saturday by former NYC Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum at Wave Hill in the Bronx. They met in 2014, when he was press secretary and chief spokesperson for the New York A.G. and she was a POLITICO reporter in Albany. They fought, politely, over the phone about her coverage on a semi-regular basis. They’d originally planned a large Memorial Day wedding in her hometown of Memphis but postponed twice. Pic
BIRTHWEEK (was Friday): Matt Johnson of the Klein/Johnson Group (h/t Izzy Klein)
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Sandeep Prasanna, subcommittee director for intelligence and counterterrorism on the House Homeland Security Committee. What he’s been reading: “I recently finished ‘Survival of the Friendliest: Understanding Our Origins and Rediscovering Our Common Humanity,’ written by Duke scientists Brian Hare (my thesis adviser!) and Vanessa Woods. They walk us through the research that shows that humans may often be cruel to one another, but we’re also uniquely cooperative — and that’s what has made us successful as a species. Survival of the friendliest. It’s a science-based call to action for us to reimagine and expand who ‘belongs’ in our communities in order to harness the better angels that are built into our very DNA. I’m a little biased, but we need this book now more than ever.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is 42 … Bloomberg’s Jennifer Jacobs … NYT’s Matt Flegenheimer and Tim Arango … Alex Korson, executive producer at MSNBC … Russell Berman, staff writer at The Atlantic … Rachel Bissex, deputy chief of staff and counselor to A.G. Bill Barr (h/t Camellia Assefi Delaplane) … Victoria Esser, managing director at the Glover Park Group … Angela Grossfeld … CAP’s Ryan Collins … Jonathan Dimock … Nick Magallanes … Richard Strauss, president of Strauss Media Strategies … Elliot Berke, managing partner of Berke Farah (h/t Tim Burger) … Jolyn Cikanek, government relations and PAC manager at Genworth Financial … Courtney Flantzer … NBC’s Scott Foster … Axios’ Hans Nichols, the pride of Cornell (h/t Ben Chang) … Abigail Collazo … Luke Bolar … Julia Savel … Jay Preciado, celebrating with Erin (h/t Jon Haber) … Rey Benitez … Jillian Hughes,broadcast producer for CBS’ “Face the Nation” … Ofirah Yheskel … Josh Gordon … Brittany Parker …
… Paula Dobriansky (h/t Matthew Swift) … Trent Duffy … Eden Gordon-Hill … John Ladd … Ben Merkel … Katie Boyce, executive editor for digital at Bloomberg … Dave Dogan … Just the News’ Sophie Mann is 25 (h/t boyfriend Brent Perrin) … Brian Greer, Klein/Johnson Group principal (h/t Izzy Klein) … GAO’s Sarah Wilson … Amy Kauffman (h/t husband Ken Weinstein) … Naomi Karavani … Margaret Figley (h/t Mark Meier) … Howlie Davis … Joyce Brayboy (h/t Howlie Davis) … Ethan Stackpole … Carey Kluttz … Paul McCarthy … Julia Cohen … Jim Angle is 74 … Christy Ubieta … Joel Contreras … former Russian PM Dmitry Medvedev is 55 … Clay Chandler … Melina Delkic … Larry Mizel, CEO of MDC Holdings, is 78 … Rachel Ryan McKell … Jacob Bell … Christina Gennet … Kirstin Mende … Kelly Scott Hoffmann … Molly Fluet … Kari Scott Abitbol … Maria Dorfner … Amy Wren … Dan Morris … Ted Gup is 7-0 … Hope Warschaw … Ken Strasma … Dan Langer … Pam Porter (h/ts Teresa Vilmain)
President Donald Trump will travel to California Monday to participate in a briefing on California’s wildfire situation. Later, the president will participate in a ceremony recognizing the California National Guard for their efforts to control the fires. Keep up with Trump on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for …
A sensible person would have to wonder why other “sensible” people would ever, even in jest, suggest that we get rid of our cities’ police forces. Then the light comes on, and we realize that those who propose such a stupid thing are themselves the criminals that the police are …
Rep. Adam Schiff, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, is touting a whistleblower complaint from a Department of Homeland Security official who he accused just last month of potentially lying to Congress about the agency’s intelligence-gathering activities. On Wednesday, Schiff released a whistleblower complaint filed by Brian Murphy, the acting …
President Donald Trump holds a Great American Comeback rally in Las Vegas, Nevada, on Sunday. The live stream is scheduled to start at 10:00 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 …
President Donald Trump participates in a Latinos for Trump roundtable in Las Vegas, Nevada Sunday. The live stream is scheduled to start at 1:00 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our …
Barack Obama’s Cop-Hating Ways Are Putting Lives At Risk
We begin another week here at the Kruiser Morning Briefing my friends, and I thank you for being along for the ride. I hope your Monday isn’t being too Monday-ish.
As you may or may not have noticed, I’ve recently been referring to the civil unrest in the United States of America as the “Barack Obama Legacy Riots.” Sure, I’m flippant and sarcastic about a lot of things, but this one is a little more serious.
Barack Obama is the beating heart of the Black Lives Matter movement. Obama’s embrace of the false narrative about Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri helped birth BLM.
Obama began throwing law enforcement under the bus in the first year of his presidency when he blamed Cambridge police for a confrontation with a Harvard professor despite — as he admitted himself — having not seen all the facts.
Gates was arrested for allegedly disorderly conduct — a charge that was quickly dropped — after a confrontation with a police officer inside his own home. Though some facts of the case are still in dispute, Obama showed little doubt about who had been wronged.
“I don’t know – not having been there and not seeing all the facts – what role race played in that, but I think it’s fair to say, number one, any of us would be pretty angry; number two that he Cambridge police acted stupidly in arresting somebody when there was already proof that they were in their own home,” Obama said in response to a question from the Chicago Sun-Times’s Lynn Sweet.
Gates, Obama allowed, “is a friend, so I may be a little biased here. I don’t know all the facts.”
Facts. Who needs ’em?
By the time that attitude rolled around to Ferguson Obama all but lit the match for the first riot fire.
The Barack Obama-inspired Black Lives Matter movement is all about hating law enforcement. It always was, despite its adherents’ protestations to the contrary. This isn’t a human rights movement that seeks justice to right some wrongs. It’s a virulent mob that wants to act out against police.
Black Lives Matter protesters made it clear that to them the deputies’ lives do not matter, nor do the lives of anyone in the hospital where the deputies are being cared for. They aligned with the cowardly gunman, celebrating the shooting.
The BLM protesters gathered at the hospital and chanted “We hope they die!”
They also blocked entrances to the hospital emergency room, according to the LA County Sheriffs’ social media.
Democrats up and down the line have been emboldened by Obama’s very public disparagement of law enforcement while in office. What we are seeing in the Democrat-run “defund the police” cities is the anti-cop Obama Doctrine coming to full bloom.
Obama’s village idiot Joe Biden is pretending to be outraged by the recent violence against law enforcement officers but he’s also been beating the “institutional racism” drum per his handlers’ instructions.
When the Obama-loving, swooning fan historians pass from this Earth and real history can be written, Barack Obama will have the blood of many law enforcement officers on his hands.
More than 35 dead in western wildfires . . . Lindsie and Brittany Cline didn’t wait for an evacuation notice before fleeing their home just outside Blue River, Oregon. The Clines lost power. Then they saw an ominous orange glow in the sky. “I knew pulling out of the driveway I wasn’t ever going to see anything in that house again,” Brittany Cline said. The Holiday Farm Fire essentially destroyed the town of Blue River while damaging nearby communities. The blaze is one of almost 100 raging through 12 Western states, driven by gusting winds that by Sunday had swept deadly flames across an area almost the size of New Jersey. At least 35 people have died — 24 in California, 10 in Oregon and one in Washington state — since a rash of fires began burning in drought conditions a month ago. No one knows yet how many homes have been destroyed. USA Today
Coronavirus
Pfizer may seek vaccine approval next month . . . The CEO of America’s largest pharmaceutical company has said he believes vaccine for COVID-19 could be ready for approval as soon as next month, and for distribution by the end of the year. Albert Bourla, CEO of New York-based Pfizer said he was optimistic.
He said there was a 60 per cent chance that his scientists will know by the end of October whether their vaccine was effective, and that once the green light was given, doses could be produced quickly. Daily Mail
Googling for gut symptoms reveals coronavirus hot spots . . . Internet searches on gastrointestinal symptoms predicted a rise in Covid-19 cases weeks later, researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital found, demonstrating a novel early warning system for hot spots of the pandemic disease. Researchers at the top-ranked hospital in Boston compared search interest in loss of taste and appetite, and diarrhea with the reported incidence of Covid-19 in 15 U.S. states from Jan. 20 to April 20. Using Google Trends online tool, they found the volume of searches correlated most strongly with cases in New York, New Jersey, California, Massachusetts and Illinois — states with high disease burden — three to four weeks later. Bloomberg
Politics
Nevada governor accused Trump of recklessness with indoor rally . . . President Donald Trump hosted a crowded indoor political rally Sunday in Nevada, ignoring objections by the governor and others that he might have spread COVID-19 to unknown numbers of people. “Tonight, President Donald Trump is taking reckless and selfish actions that are putting countless lives in danger here in Nevada,” said Gov. Steve Sisolak, a Democrat. “The president appears to have forgotten that this country is still in the middle of a global pandemic.” “Tell your governor to open up your state,” Trump told hundreds of supporters – most of them packed together on a factory floor, many of them not wearing masks given out by the Trump campaign. USA Today
Bloomberg to spend $100M to help Biden in Florida . . . Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg is committing at least $100 million to help Joe Biden’s presidential campaign in the crucial battleground state of Florida. Bloomberg’s late stage infusion of cash reflects Democrats’ concerns about the tight race in a state that is a priority for President Donald Trump. A victory for Biden in Florida, the largest of the perennial battleground states, would significantly complicate Trump’s path to reaching the 270 Electoral College votes needed to secure a second term. Daily Mail
Biden proposing massive new spending . . . Joe Biden won the Democratic presidential nomination running as a moderate, rejecting the big-government plans of progressive rivals as unaffordable. In the general election campaign, he has rolled out his own multi-trillion-dollar platform that a new study finds would push long-term Washington spending to its highest level in decades. The former vice president has proposed a total of $5.4 trillion in new spending over the next 10 years. That includes historically high allocations for sectors from education and health to child-care and housing. Wall Street Journal
Trump is moving forward with executive action to lower drug costs . . . President Trump on Sunday announced his intention to move forward with an executive order he signed in July that intends to lower the price of prescription drugs. Trump said that the order seeks to have the government purchase drugs at the same prices given to countries designated as “favored nations” because they have a competitive disadvantage on a specific product. “My Most Favored Nation order will ensure that our Country gets the same low price Big Pharma gives to other countries,” Trump wrote. New York Post
Justin Fairfax declares run for Virginia governor despite two sexual assault allegations . . . Virginia Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax declared his candidacy for governor following a scandalous term as the state’s second in command. Fairfax, a Democrat, announced on Saturday that he would be running for governor less than two years after he was accused of sexual assault by two women. Fairfax has denied the allegations and told the Associated Press that he would not let a “smear campaign” stop his gubernatorial dreams. Washington Examiner
National Security
Iran plotting to kill US ambassador to South Africa . . . The Iranian government is weighing an assassination attempt against the American ambassador to South Africa, U.S. intelligence reports say, according to a U.S. government official familiar with the issue and another official who has seen the intelligence. News of the plot comes as Iran continues to seek ways to retaliate for President Donald Trump’s decision to kill a powerful Iranian general earlier this year, the officials said. U.S. officials have been aware of a general threat against the ambassador, Lana Marks, since the spring. Politico
International
Israel to go into lockdown . . . Israel will reinstate a strict countrywide lockdown this week amid a surge in coronavirus cases. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made the announcement in a televised speech last night. Beginning on Friday, the eve of the Jewish New Year, schools, restaurants, shopping centres and hotels among other businesses will shut down and restrictions on movement will be imposed. Members of the public will be ordered to stay within 500 yards of their homes. Press Association
Money
Amazon to hire another 100,000 workers . . . Amazon on Monday said it is recruiting 100,000 more workers – the fourth hiring spree it has announced for the United States this year – to keep pace with e-commerce demand that jumped during the pandemic. The world’s biggest online retailer said the positions are for full and part-time work in its home country and Canada, and these will include roles at 100 new warehouse and operations sites it is opening this month. The Seattle-based company employed 876,800 people as of June 30, excluding contractors and temporary personnel. Reuters
You should also know
LA deputies who were shot in ambush expected to survive . . . Two Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies shot in what authorities described as an ambush attack are expected to survive amid an intense manhunt for the gunman captured on video firing inside their patrol car and as the violence became a new flashpoint in the political debate about policing and crime. Both deputies were shot in the head near the Compton Metro station but went through surgery and are now listed in stable condition. Los Angeles Times
Two lives destroyed. Are liberals ashamed yet for supporting a movement demonizing cops?
Biden calls for gun control . . . Joe Biden called for gun control less than 24 hours after two LA County deputies were shot in the head and wounded during an ambush in Compton. ‘Weapons of war have no place in our communities,’ the former Vice President tweeted. ‘We need to ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines.’ Donald Trump’s comments were in stark contrast to Biden’s, calling for a ‘fast trial’ and the death penalty for the ‘animal’ who carried out the attack. Daily Mail
Does he actually think this shooting had anything to do with legally acquired guns?
Georgia deputy fired after beating black man at a traffic stop . . . A sheriff’s deputy in Georgia has been fired after being captured on video repeatedly punching a Black man during a traffic stop, authorities said Sunday. Roderick Walker, 26, was arrested and beaten after Clayton County sheriff’s deputies pulled over the vehicle he was riding in Friday with his girlfriend, their 5-month-old child and his stepson for an alleged broken taillight, said his attorney. The deputies asked for Walker’s identification and got upset and demanded he get out of the vehicle when he questioned why they needed it since he wasn’t driving, Williams said. USA Today
Protests erupt after police shoot knife-wielding man . . . Police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at demonstrators in Pennsylvania as protests over the fatal police shooting of a man during a domestic disturbance call turned violent early Monday. Hundreds of protesters took to the streets of Lancaster following the death of Ricardo Munoz, 27, on Sunday afternoon. The protests erupted after an officer with the Lancaster City Bureau of Police responded to a call of domestic disturbance at 4:15 p.m. Sunday, when Munoz rushed out with a large knife, according to body cam footage released by the police department. New York Post
Fans angered by politicization of NFL . . . Fans of the NFL have been expressing their dismay at how the NFL has become ‘politicized’ in the wake of recent Black Lives Matter protests. Teams opening their seasons in empty stadiums on Sunday knelt, locked arms, raised fists in protest or stayed off the field entirely for the ‘Star-Spangled Banner’ and the Black anthem ‘Lift Every Voice and Sing’ as the once-reluctant league brought racial injustice to the forefront on the NFL’s first full slate of games. But the gesture has provoked strong feelings among a segment of fans. Daily Mail
New York school under fire for cartoon comparing police to KKK, slave owners . . . A Westchester County high-school teacher kicked off his first day of classes by handing out an image on the Black Lives Matter movement — comparing modern-day cops to slave owners and the Ku Klux Klan. Westlake HS educator Christoper Moreno gave his 11th-graders a handout Sept. 8 which included a five-frame cartoon panel. The first three frames show slave owners and a member of the KKK with their knees on the backs of black men in shackles. The last two panels depict a sheriff and a police officer each with their knees on the neck of a black man in handcuffs. New York Post
Gulf Coast braces for another hurricane . . . Mississippi Coast residents were seen filling sandbags and people in New Orleans were topping up their cars with gas on Sunday as it was announced Tropical Storm Sally is expected to become a Category 2 hurricane with 100-mile-per-hour winds by the time it makes landfall in southeast Louisiana on Tuesday. The storm will move slowly across southeast Louisiana, possibly bringing flooding rains to New Orleans, which lies below sea level, the National Weather Service office in New Orleans warned. Daily Mail
Guilty Pleasures
YouTuber livestreams himself taking poop on Pelosi’s driveway . . . A YouTube star appeared to relieve himself on the driveway of Rep. Nancy Pelosi’s San Francisco residence during a livestream on Saturday, calling the act a “peaceful protest.” The video, titled “Poopalosi,” had garnered more than 19,000 views Sunday night. In the footage, a man who identifies himself as “Armando” walks through the streets of San Francisco in search of the Speaker’s house. Once there, he sets up a camera across the street and stands on what appears to be Pelosi’s driveway for several minutes, eventually saluting his viewers before squatting down to poop on the pavement. After walking out of the frame he says, “That was for President Trump.” New York Post
United accused of packing NFL charter flights with young, blond crews . . . United Airlines packs its charter flights for sports teams with young, blond crews and bars older flight attendants from working the plum routes, according to a new lawsuit. In so doing, the airline bases the value of workers “entirely on their racial and physical attributes, and stereotypical notions of sexual allure,” according to two veteran flight attendants who sued Friday in California. The attendants — a Black woman who has worked for the airline for 28 years and a Jewish woman with 34 years of tenure — say that they both tried repeatedly and unsuccessfully to get assigned to work the charter flights. Bloomberg
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Wildfires Continue to Rage Out West
Plus, two Los Angeles sheriff deputies are ambushed.
Happy Monday! Who has two thumbs and led the Chicago Bears to a come-from-behind win yesterday down 17 points in the fourth quarter? Mitch Trubisky, that’s who.
A reminder: This is the version of TMD available to non-paying readers. We’re happy you’ve made The Dispatch part of your morning routine, and we hope you’re enjoying The Morning Dispatch and the rest of our free editorial offerings. If you do, we hope you’ll consider joining us as a paying member. In addition to the full version of TMD each day, you’ll get extra editions of French Press, the G-File, Vital Interests, our campaign newsletter The Sweep, and our other paid products. Now is a great time to join: We’re offering a 30-day free trial. You can cancel at any time, so it’s risk-free. And if you sign up today or tomorrow, you’ll be able to enjoy our members-only Dispatch Live event, scheduled for Tuesday, September 15 at 8:30 p.m. Join us for a virtual chat as Jonah, Steve, David, and Sarah discuss the news of the day and take your questions. New members will receive emailed instructions on how to RSVP.
The United States confirmed 36,618 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday, with 4.8 percent of the 771,475 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 371 deaths were attributed to the virus on Sunday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 194,041.
Oracle reportedly beat out Microsoft for the right to the U.S. operations of TikTok, the Chinese-owned video sharing app. The proposed deal—which President Trump had mandated be done by September 15—will now go through a review by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. (CFIUS).
Bahrain became the latest Arab country to normalize relations with Israel, with President Trump, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and Bahrain’s King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa announcing the deal—“a historic breakthrough to further peace in the Middle East”—on Friday.
Pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca announced the resumption of clinical trials in the United Kingdom for its COVID-19 vaccine, four days after the studies were paused following a suspected adverse reaction from a participant in the U.K. The clinical trials for the AstraZeneca vaccine remain suspended in the United States, Brazil, and South Africa. Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla told CBS News yesterday there is a “good chance” the company will know if its COVID-19 vaccine works by the end of October.
Large swaths of the western United States remain on fire, and even larger areas were covered with smoke and ash over the weekend.
While some of the larger blazes—especially in California—are now at least partly contained, the combination of wind gusts and dry weather expected over the next few days has given state fire agencies reason to worry. More than 3 million acres have burned in California, and flames have scorched 1 million more in Oregon, causing 40,000 to flee their homes. Thirty-three people are dead across California, Oregon, and Washington.
Portland had the worst air quality index (AQI) score—423—of any major city in the world as of Monday morning; anything higher than 300 receives a “hazardous” classification, where staying indoors at all times is recommended. Vancouver and Seattle follow Portland in the world rankings, with San Francisco placing fifth and Los Angeles 11th. Ash has rendered the sky in much of California and Oregon an eerie orange hue.
Two Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department deputies who were shot in Compton on Saturday night—a 24-year-old male and a 31-year-old female—are out of surgery and expected to recover, according to Sheriff Alex Villanueva. Video footage of the shooting tweeted by the Sheriff’s Department shows an individual slowly approaching the passenger window of a stopped police car, firing a weapon inside, and running away. The perpetrator remains at large.
“This is just a somber reminder that this is a dangerous job, and actions, words have consequences,” Villanueva said at a press conference. “Our job does not get any easier because people don’t like law enforcement.”
Both major-party presidential candidates were quick to condemn the senseless shooting. “If they die, fast trial death penalty for the killer,” President Trump tweeted Sunday morning. “Only way to stop this!”
“Jill and I were devastated to learn of the cold-blooded shooting of two Los Angeles County deputies yesterday,” Joe Biden said in a statement yesterday. “Acts of lawlessness and violence directed against police officers are unacceptable, outrageous, and entirely counterproductive to the pursuit of greater peace and justice in America — as are the actions of those who cheer such attacks on. Those who perpetrate these crimes must be brought to justice, and, if convicted, face the full brunt of the law.”
When Chris Nocco became Pasco County sheriff in 2011, he hoped to create a system not unlike PreCrime from the movie, Minority Report: A “cutting-edge intelligence program that could stop crime before it happened.” The results, per a Tampa Bay Times investigation by Kathleen McGrory and Neil Bedi, were disastrous. “The Sheriff’s Office generates lists of people it considers likely to break the law, based on arrest histories, unspecified intelligence and arbitrary decisions by police analysts,” the pair write. “Then it sends deputies to find and interrogate anyone whose name appears, often without probable cause, a search warrant or evidence of a specific crime.”
“There is now a real risk of military conflict between India and China,” Devesh Kapur, director of Asia programs at Johns Hopkins University, writes in his latest for the Financial Times. “While the world remains preoccupied with the Covid-19 pandemic, and the US distracted by domestic politics, India and China are involved in an unprecedented military build-up along their long-disputed border.” Check out the rest of Kapur’s analysis of why “It is no longer possible to dismiss the conflict between India and China as a skirmish.”
David’s French Press yesterday delved into critical race theory (CRT)—the notion that “racism is engrained in the fabric and system of the American society” and the “individual racist need not exist to note that institutional racism is pervasive in the dominant culture.” David bucks conservative orthodoxy in concluding CRT can be useful in a limited way, by helping one “understand the reason for persistent disparities.” Still, he cautions, the racialization of nearly everything, as critical race theory assumes, means it “falters and ultimately fails.”
Jonah’s Friday G-File looks at the new centrists: People who, despite their ideological differences, are not “apocalyptic, conspiratorial, or in a constant state of panic.” Elites, Jonah argues, are often the most susceptible to this form of extremism. “National elites, senators, talk show hosts, pundits, authors, movie stars, and others think that the rebuilding effort must be led from above, usually from Washington.” He discusses all this and more in Saturday’s Ruminant.
Thomas Joscelyn joined Steve and Sarah on the Dispatch Podcast on the 19th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks to discuss the state of the war on terror nearly two decades later. “Al-Qaeda is still very much alive,” Joscelyn argued, despite the happy talk from both major political parties. Stick around for a discussion on the lasting influence of the attacks on American society, and an assessment of the state of foreign election interference.
Kemberlee Kaye: “Lots of awesome things in the works here at the LIF. Stay tuned for more information soon!”
Mary Chastain: “I am back in OKC. I spent 6 weeks in Chicago, but Mom is doing so much better. Thank you, LI team, for helping out as I took care of my mom and my dad to an extent. I’m glad to be back, though, and get back to normal.”
Fuzzy Slippers: “Two LA County Sheriff Deputies were shot while sitting in their patrol car in Compton. As if that was not appalling enough, watching the behavior of the “protesters” outside was so disgusting and vile that my hands were literally shaking as I wrote the piece. I cannot imagine being so inflamed by hate and victimhood and twisted privilege that I would ever in a million years behave so carelessly about the lives of other human beings. How can they live with such hate in their hearts, with such stains on their souls? They seemed so proud of themselves, completely thrilled with their own misplaced sense of power over the officers they are verbally abusing outside the hospital, over the officers inside the hospital that they “hope will die.” Truly an appalling display of inhumanity.”
Leslie Eastman: “A Chinese virologist plans to release proof that the Wuhan Cornavirus was made in a Wuhan government laboratory. Hopefully, she won’t be given the “Jeffery Epstein” treatment before she is able to share her documentation.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Saturday accused the European Union of threatening a food blockade if the country failed to agree to the ‘divorce’ terms imposed by Brussels. “We are now hearing that, unless we agree to the EU’s terms, the EU will use an extreme interpretation of the Northern Ireland protocol to impose a full-scale trade border down the Irish Sea,” British prime minister wrote in an op-ed for the Daily Telegraph.”
Legal Insurrection Foundation is a Rhode Island tax-exempt corporation established exclusively for charitable purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to educate and inform the public on legal, historical, economic, academic, and cultural issues related to the Constitution, liberty, and world events.
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“Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden was finally forced to confront the left-wing violence that has been plaguing America’s major cities for months on end…”
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The War on the Police Over the weekend, shocking video of two LA County sheriff’s deputies ambushed and shot in cold blood spread throughout social media and the news. Both officers, one a 31-year-old woman and the other a 24-year-old man, had multiple gunshot wounds.
On Sunday evening, LA County Sheriff Alex Villanueva announced a $100,000 award for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the shooter. Both deputies made it through surgery, remain in critical condition, and are expected to survive, according to the Los Angeles Times. The Times also reported, “Sheriff Alex Villanueva on Sunday called the condition of the deputies a ‘double miracle.’ Law enforcement sources told the Los Angeles Times that at least one of the deputies was shot in the face and the other in the head.”
BLM protestors gathered outside nearby St. Francis Hospital, blocking the entrance and attempting to get into the hospital. The LA County Sheriff’s Office tweeted, “To the protesters blocking the entrance & exit of the HOSPITAL EMERGENCY ROOM yelling “We hope they die” referring to 2 LA Sheriff’s ambushed today in #Compton: DO NOT BLOCK EMERGENCY ENTRIES & EXITS TO THE HOSPITAL. People’s lives are at stake when ambulances can’t get through.”
One man involved in the protest taunted, “Y’all gonna die one by one.”
More from the BBC:“Los Angeles Sheriff Alex Villanueva called the act ‘cowardly.’ The suspect remains at large.
Protesters shouted anti-police slogans and blocked the entrance to the emergency room where the two officers are being treated, police and witnesses said.”
Arrests Made in Connection with West Coast Fires
I can’t wait to see how Gov. Gavin Newsom connects this to climate change. Four people were arrested for arson connected to fires that are ravaging several states on the West Coast that have caused at least 20 deaths. Fox News reported that two of the suspects haven’t been identified and prosecutors are denying “potential political affiliations.”
Katya Sedgwick writes about “What Life Is Like In California’s Post-Apocalyptic Landscape” at The Federalist:“What is this nuclear winter? Under the morning twilight sky, fully concealed faces are moving past BLM logos and raised fists painted by children. It’s a total triumph of the political over the personal.
A few hours later, after checking social media for the annual Bay Area fire season pictures, I noticed the crows flying in large formations. Probably heading south. Something in their brains told them the summer is over. Time to leave California.”
“Sarah Huckabee Sanders served as White House Press Secretary for President Donald J. Trump from 2017 to 2019. A trusted confidante of the President, Sanders advised him on everything from press and communications strategy to personnel and policy. She was at the President’s side for two and a half years, battling with the media, working with lawmakers and CEOs, and accompanying the President on every international trip, including dozens of meetings with foreign leaders―all while unfailingly exhibiting grace under pressure. Upon her departure from the administration, President Trump described Sarah as “irreplaceable,” a “warrior” and “very special person with extraordinary talents, who has done an incredible job.”
Now, in Speaking for Myself, Sarah Huckabee Sanders describes what it was like on the front lines and inside the White House, discussing her faith, the challenges of being a working mother at the highest level of American politics, her relationship with the press, and her unique role in the historic fight raging between the Trump administration and its critics for the future of our country.
This frank, revealing, and engaging memoir will offer a truly unique perspective on the most important issues and events of the era, and unprecedented access to both public and behind-the-scenes conversations within the Trump White House.”
Where Do I Pick-up My Free Lululemons? The popular and pricey brand Lululemon is getting criticism for sharing a social media influencer’s campaign that tells followers to “resist capitalism” 🙄
As BRIGHT readers might know, Lululemon leggings range from $88 to $300. On the plus side, the post managed to bring together conservative and liberal women who were aghast at this particular company promoting the message to resist capitalism. Lululemon issued a statement distancing itself from the campaign, saying, “We recently shared on our social channels an upcoming event organized by one of our ambassadors. This is not a Lululemon forum and it does not represent the company’s views.”
A Case of the Mondays Hero Dog of the Week: Meet Zeus, TBI’s K-9 trained to sniff out electronics holding child exploitation evidence (ABC)
Incredible Artist “Disneyfies” Peoples’ Dogs & The Results Are Amazing (Woof)
Paralyzed 6-Year-Old Meets Her Future Golden Retriever Service Dog and Bonds with Pup Instantly (People)
“Serve God, And Be Nice To People”: Oldest Living U.S. World War II Veteran Turns 111 (The Daily Wire)
As loyal readers know, we love discussing the First Lady’s style and fashion. Since we also like to highlight her Be Best campaign and other activities, we didn’t take it personally when Stephaie Grisham, the White House Chief of Staff and the First Lady’s spokeswoman said that the media should focus more on her work and not her fashion. From Just The News:
“She doesn’t compare herself to her predecessors,” Grisham said in a video interview. “It’s something I really admire. She doesn’t feel the need to be front and center. I don’t know if that’s because she was a fashion model and was front and center all the time. Again, she just wants to do her work; to use her words, ‘I want people to focus on what I’m doing rather than what I’m wearing.’ As you know, fashion is what they seem to talk about the most.” While Mrs. Trump has never received the fawning lifestyle coverage lavished on some of her predecessors by glossy women’s magazines, that’s fine with the first lady, according to Grisham, who said Trump prefers the media to focus on her work to help children through her “Be Best” initiative, prevent opioid addiction, serve military families, and other priorities. However, Grisham said Trump is routinely treated unfairly by the media compared to previous first ladies.
“She never talks about that,” said Grisham, who doubles as the first lady’s chief of staff. “I do, because I get very, very angry about it. It doesn’t bother her at all. It is what it is. I don’t want to do a blanket statement that they’re all biased against her. But I mean, it is very obvious that her predecessors have been on many, many covers of magazines, and she has not. I guess the difference is she’s been on covers as a supermodel. So we’ve got that going for us.”
Mondays with Melania is a weekly feature that highlights what the First Lady is doing and wearing.
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Sep 14, 2020 01:00 am
Chief James Craig had no patience for BLM’s “untruthful” message, calling the group’s local leaders “misguided radicals.” Read More…
Sep 14, 2020 01:00 am
Obama’s election was supposed to herald the end of racism and the beginning of a new era. It didn’t work out that way. Read More…
Colin Kaepernick does it again
Sep 14, 2020 01:00 am
Kaepernick’s attempt to return to his self-appointed leadership position at the NFL’s expense offers a valuable lesson for corporations, teams, and individuals forced to deal with SJWs. Read more…
Capitalism is moral
Sep 14, 2020 01:00 am
Defending capitalism must be done on a moral level because most people want to be ethical and decent. Read more…
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BlazeTV host and reporter Elijah Schaffer covered the Black Lives Matter protest in Rochester on Saturday night. While covering the protests that escalated into civil … Read more
Anthony Fauci is always the harbinger of additional suffering to be inflicted by state and local governments. Count on governors parroting the new expectation.
It’s come to this, and won’t end this weekend. Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden condemned the shooting Sunday, but still refused to name the organization behind the violence on our streets.
Many would have us believe that the riots and violence sweeping across America’s cities this year are spontaneous. But history and current evidence tell us otherwise.
The argument is that we should suspend moral judgment, that the film is a work of art with a complicated meaning, and the real problem is one of interpretation.
No one should doubt the considerable power former first lady Michelle Obama wields within Netflix or the unrivaled cultural influence she has to speak out in defense of preserving girlhood and innocence.
To The Atlantic, the mere chance of President Trump holding the golden medal bearing the visage of Alfred Nobel was too much. ‘Better to shut it down.’
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If there was ever an instance where a corporation tried in every conceivable way to put out a bad product and then message in a way where the public was unwilling to buy said bad product to the extent that Murphy’s law permits, it would be Disney’s Mulan remake. From the announcement, I initially was rather hopeful about a Mulan remake. If we take out the grade A musical numbers from the original animated version, we are left with a rather mediocre film with its terrible messaging, inconsistent artwork, and abundant historical inaccuracies. But the writers needed the villains to be Huns instead of Mongols because it rhymes with “sons.” For this reason, the original was received in China about as well as Taco Bell was in Mexico. Therefore, a serious remake that was faithful to the source material where the legend of Mulan originates would be a worthwhile endeavor.
But that is not what Disney would end up creating. Instead, Disney kept much of the basic plot elements of the original such as Mulan taking the place of her father and her pretending to be a male. But once following the basic storyline of the original, the remake departs to embrace what every other crappy action movie or show is doing these days. In the original version, we see Mulan struggle because she had no prior training because she was very feminine. She has to work hard in order to keep up with the others and eventually does. This is character development. Instead, remake Mulan is a Mary Sue. She has an excess amount of chi which is Chinese for midi-chlorians and everyone has to basically come to grips with how awesome she is. Welcome to 2020 where Hollywood forgot how to write (strong female characters).
But the issues with the Mulan failure were public first when the lead actress voiced her support for the CCP and their actions in Hong Kong. This safe action on her part created much distaste in the American public which has since become increasingly hostile towards the Chinese government. Disney would ultimately compound this bad PR by filming in locations where the Chinese operate concentration camps on the Uighur population. This was enough to make Americans not see the movie on principle, and perhaps enough to not allow the movie to recuperate the $200 Million spent on production.
However with global box offices, it could have still netted a profit, and that’s where Disney really refused to act in its unified best interest. But rather than salvage box office revenues, Disney decided to scare the general public in to a never-ending lockdown over a virus that is ultimately less threatening than the seasonal flu when you take into account the 94% of deaths have multiple co-morbitities and testing yields an extraordinary amount of false positives.
Will corporate America learn from this compounded disaster Disney sought upon itself? Probably not. The largest corporations are the greatest benefactors of COVID-1984 policies. Disney and other corporations have more funds to play with while the government radiates small businesses like a cancer. So while the Mulan money pit is a lesson about fiduciary corporate consistency, it is unlikely one that will be heeded, and ultimately it will take many more such lessons in order to sink in or sink Disney.
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.
Accusations of suspicious and potentially illegal donor schemes associated with the Democrats’ fundraising portal, ActBlue, surfaced yesterday from a report by Action Fund President John Pudner.
“We found it took other vendors only a matter of hours to switch their system to allow verification of donations and thus prevent the possibility of illegal foreign money being moved into campaigns. Choosing to use an untraceable system has a higher cost in terms of the risk of credit card fraud and also tends to incur higher bank fees. And this untraceable system allows someone with a gift card to make donations in anyone’s name, even if that person never actually made that donation, or even if that person doesn’t exist at all.”
48.4% of the Democrats’ ActBlue donors last year were allegedly unemployed. By comparison, Republican-affiliated WinRed only listed 4%, which happened to be the national unemployment rate at the time, of their donors as unemployed.
While everyone seems focused on the risk of foreign donations, I pointed out in the latest Rucker Report that it’s really the rich domestic donors who should be concerning us the most. Regardless of whether it’s foreign or domestic entities piling in donations under fake names, it’s illegal.
Democrats have two choices: Cheat or lose. They’re opting for the former to prevent the latter and they’re willing to do so from every possible angle. Hundreds of millions of dollars mysteriously headed their way. Where did it come from?
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.
Following the attempted murder of two Los Angeles County deputies during an ambush-style attack yesterday, #BlueLivesMatter started trending. This perturbed Black Lives Matter “activists” nearly as much as the presence of law enforcement in general.
Two deputies with the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department were shot Saturday as they sat in their patrol vehicle near a metro station in Compton, California, the department said Saturday evening.
The deputies, one male and one female, were both shot “multiple times” and are currently in critical condition and undergoing surgery, according to the department.
“Moments ago, 2 of our Sheriff Deputies were shot in Compton and were transported to a local hospital. They are both still fighting for their lives, so please keep them in your thoughts and prayers. We will update this thread with information as it becomes available,” said the department Saturday evening.
Half an hour later, the department provided an update: “Update: One male deputy and one female deputy were ambushed as they sat in their patrol vehicle. Both sustained multiple gunshot wounds and are in critical condition. They are both currently undergoing surgery. The suspect is still at large.”
That’s bad enough, but the fact that Black Lives Matter “activists” tried to storm the hospital where the officers were being treated is even more hideous. But to top it all off, various leftists took to Twitter to take over the #BlueLivesMatter hashtag with the worst vitriol imaginable.
#BlueLivesMatter The fact that liberals are taking this hashtag and making fun of it proves they don’t really care about lives at all. Unlike the criminals they glorify, these police officers were actually innocent. Liberals are disgusting pieces of shit.
The radicals in Black Lives Matter, Antifa, mainstream media, and the Democratic Party are so desperate to harm law enforcement, they’ll say the most hideous things in public. It’s disgusting. #BlueLivesMatter
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Joe Biden uses a teleprompter. It’s clear despite non-answers to questions about the practice. This is bad for Establishment Democrats and even worse for Democratic-Socialists. The Establishment types should be embarrassed they nominated the guy knowing his election would be a disaster. Meanwhile, radical progressives should be concerned that if he wins, their movement will essentially be over. That’s what happens when the predicate for your existence, namely a failure by the Establishment, is reversed by electing someone from the Establishment.
But they’re both still in major pickles over the election. If Establishment Democrats win by getting Biden elected, that “win” will help to destroy the party over the next four years, and that’s assuming the nation is able o survive a Biden-Harris presidency for that long. If we do, then it will still be a debacle that cripples their party for the foreseeable future. On the other hand, another loss with their chosen candidate to Donald Trump could keep ushering in the leftist lurch that’s been happening in the party ever since the nomination was first robbed from Bernie Sanders in 2016.
Some may wonder why I would give advice to Democrats. In reality, I’m not. I just want them to understand their predicament knowing there’s no real solution other than for President Trump to win. At least then they can have internal battles over which wing of the party is right and wrong. If they elect Biden, there will be no internal conflict as the nation itself will be in a state of turmoil.
In the latest episode of Conservative Playbook, I laid out exactly what their conundrum looks like, and while I don’t necessarily offer advice, at least I offered condolences.
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.
Those who missed us canceling our Netflix account can see it here.
We’re done, and anyone who does not support child sexual exploitation should be done with Netflix as well. The “Cuties” debacle is a clear indicator that the entertainment giant knows what it’s doing and simply doesn’t care. That’s why multiple politicians, including Senators Josh Hawley and Ted Cruz, have called on Netflix to deliver explanations for their actions.
.@Netflix should explain to the public why it is distributing a film, “Cuties,” that appears to sexually exploit children and endanger child welfare pic.twitter.com/OZH4HCLy0Y
Another group fighting against the child exploitation in the Netflix film is image board 4chan. The notorious website is known for internet trolls and risque content, but weeks before the furor over “Cuties” hit social media, 4chan had banned screenshots of the movie. They did not censor discussion but recognized the degenerate nature of posted images from the trailer alone.
As The Blaze reported, even IMDB is getting in on the defense of “Cuties.”
Earlier Thursday, IMDB’s film page for “Cuties” described a moment in the film as “lawfully defined as pedophilia.”
One of the parental warnings on the film read, “During one of the many highly sexualized & erotic dance scenes that purposefully exploit & objectify numerous scantily clad under age [sic] girls, one of the female child dancers lifts up her cropped top to fully display her bare breast. This is lawfully defined as pedophilia and can be extremely distressing to many viewers.”
Further, another warning noted, “An 11 year old [sic] girl watches a female rap music video where naked women role play through dance, both heterosexual & lesbian sex acts. An 11 year old [sic] female dance group then mimics these sexual moves on themselves and on each other while the camera zooms in on their sexual body parts as they erotically writher [sic]. This can be highly distressing to many viewers.”
“Female breast nudity of a minor during an erotic dance scene and lengthy & excessive closeup shots of breasts, bums, and spread crotches of scantily clad 11 year old [sic] girls during numerous sexualized dance routines,” another warning added.
…
Less than an hour later, the page appeared significantly different, and warned only that the movie “consists of 11 year old [sic] girls dancing very suggestively.”
It also adds, “A girl watches a female rap music video where naked women role play through dance.”
4chan has been known to have some of the most risque content on the internet, but even they wouldn’t stoop as low as the child sexual exploitation of Netflix’ “Cuties.” #CancelNetflix and make sure others do as well.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
We hear two things every presidential election year. The first thing is that it’s “the election of our lifetimes.” The second thing is, “it’s the economy, stupid.” The first one is more true than it’s ever been in modern history. The second one is actually incorrect for the first time in modern history. Yes, the economy is important as it always is, but more Americans this year will be deciding their votes based on a completely different perspective. This year, many will be deciding based on their perspective of control.
This manifests in different ways. The Black Lives Matter and Antifa riots are about control. These “activists” want to control the narrative and shift the conversation, any conversation, to always be about their demands. Some Americans truly desire the types of controls these “activists” are demanding. They want to be told what to do in an effort to maintain their social justice credibility. Others want the freedom to drive down a highway with a reasonable expectation that “protesters” aren’t causing mayhem and affecting people’s lives by blocking the roads.
Another obvious element of control pertains to the coronavirus. Some people want everyone else to be mandated to wear face masks and social distance at all times and in all situations (other than Black Lives Matter protests, of course). Others want the freedom to open up the economy, send our kids to school, and live without face diapers.
On September 11, President Trump marked the day by retweeting a video by Samantha Marika. In the video, which we discussed thoroughly in the latest episode of the NOQ Report podcast, Marika makes a plea to people to open their eyes and stop buying into the mainstream media narratives about President Trump. She also called out Democrats and NeverTrump Republicans for making predictions that never came true through the President’s first term.
“Cuties” is so blatantly perverse, even 4chan censored screenshots from the movie
Those who missed us canceling our Netflix account can see it here.
We’re done, and anyone who does not support child sexual exploitation should be done with Netflix as well. The “Cuties” debacle is a clear indicator that the entertainment giant knows what it’s doing and simply doesn’t care. That’s why multiple politicians, including Senators Josh Hawley and Ted Cruz, have called on Netflix to deliver explanations for their actions.
.@Netflix should explain to the public why it is distributing a film, “Cuties,” that appears to sexually exploit children and endanger child welfare pic.twitter.com/OZH4HCLy0Y
As The Blaze reported, even IMDB is getting in on the defense of “Cuties.”
It should tell you something that troll image board 4chan banned screenshots from the TRAILER of the movie because they were so sexually explicit, but Netflix has chosen to air the whole movie.
What everyone’s missing from the ActBlue ‘unemployed’ donor scandal
Action Fund President John Pudner: “We found it took other vendors only a matter of hours to switch their system to allow verification of donations and thus prevent the possibility of illegal foreign money being moved into campaigns. Choosing to use an untraceable system has a higher cost in terms of the risk of credit card fraud and also tends to incur higher bank fees. And this untraceable system allows someone with a gift card to make donations in anyone’s name, even if that person never actually made that donation, or even if that person doesn’t exist at all.”
48.4% of the Democrats’ ActBlue donors last year were allegedly unemployed. By comparison, Republican-affiliated WinRed only listed 4%, which happened to be the national unemployment rate at the time, of their donors as unemployed.
While everyone seems focused on the risk of foreign donations, I pointed out that it’s really the rich domestic donors who should be concerning us the most. Regardless of whether it’s foreign or domestic entities piling in donations under fake names, it’s illegal.
#BlueLivesMatter hashtag following LA ambush gets desecrated by radical leftists
That’s bad enough, but the fact that Black Lives Matter “activists” tried to storm the hospital where the officers were being treated is even more hideous. But to top it all off, various leftists took to Twitter to take over the #BlueLivesMatter hashtag with the worst vitriol imaginable.
#BlueLivesMatter The fact that liberals are taking this hashtag and making fun of it proves they don’t really care about lives at all. Unlike the criminals they glorify, these police officers were actually innocent. Liberals are disgusting pieces of shit.
Democrats must abandon Teleprompter Joe for their own party’s sake
Joe Biden uses a teleprompter. It’s clear despite non-answers to questions about the practice. This bad for Establishment Democrats and even worse for Democratic-Socialists. The Establishment types should be embarrassed they nominated the guy knowing his election would be a disaster. Meanwhile, radical progressives should be concerned that if he wins, their movement will essentially be over. That’s what happens when the predicate for your existence, namely a failure by the Establishment, is reversed by electing someone from the Establishment.
This is the most important election in over a century-and-a-half. There are so many issues on the table, but they all come down to one important questions. Do we want freedom or do we want to be controlled?
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.
Eric, Bob, and guest cohost Rampage discuss the massive firestorm that has mysteriously broken out throughout the Western United States. Democrats cry climate change but the three hosts suspect more nefarious causes (arson).
They also tackle the ongoing scandal with The Atlantic and the plague of fake news. And just recently, once famed reporter Bob Woodward has released a phone interview with President Trump, accusing him of purposefully downplaying the seriousness of COVID-19 for political gain. But honestly, how well would the American people handle a panicked leader? We stocked up on toilet paper for a respiratory infection, for goodness sake.
Calm and measured leadership is much more effective. Special guests include Congressional Candidate and 20-year law enforcement veteran Sgt. Tre Pennie, and Twitter sensation Chiz!
Thank you for tuning in!
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.
Peace between Israel and the United Arab Emirates. Peace between Israel and Bahrain. Peace between Serbia and Kosovo. And that was all in the last month. Nancy Pelosi may think these latest diplomatic breakthroughs deserve mockery, but then again, like Obama, she thought empowering Iran at Israel’s expense was the path to Middle East peace.
Maybe the ruthless real estate developer from Queens has sharper instincts for creating deals between former enemies than the refined experts among the Foggy Bottom crowd are willing to acknowledge. Just a thought. I mean, if you prefer dumping a couple billion dollars in unmarked bills on Iran’s doorstep in the dead of night and setting that theocratic dictatorship on a glide path toward becoming a nuclear superpower in control of the Middle East, then definitely go with the community organizing commander in chief. “Death to America,” after all, sounds exactly the same when chanted by either the Ayatollah’s executioners in Iran or Antifa’s arsonists in Oakland and Minneapolis. But if you’re looking to achieve real peace between bitter foes, then at some point, you throw out the laughably ineffective diplomatic playbook and bring in a real “ringer.” And that’s just what America did in 2016.
Wake up, Washington! This is what winning looks like! It must all be pretty confusing for an establishment class that prefers talking about solutions but never actually achieving any and bending so far backwards for our geopolitical enemies that our normal M.O. is to pay them for the pleasure of kicking ourselves in the ass. “Peace through strength” is more than a slogan; it’s good policy. It’s just that the Obama administration foolishly believed fake American strength would somehow secure real and enduring peace.
Remember how Iran ran roughshod over Obama, routinely threatening our naval vessels while the American president begged for a nuclear deal that would justify his Nobel Prize? I know the press corps found it enchanting that both John Kerry and Iran’s Foreign Minister Javad Zarif could sip tea like gentlemen while Iran was busy taking American sailors hostage, smuggling heroine into the United States, and threatening Israel’s genocide, but sometimes you throw etiquette out the window, smash the china on the ground, toss the table upside down, and set new terms for negotiation.
Obama was determined to lead from behind, and bad actors around the world were happy to exploit his weakness. Out of naiveté, ideological sympathy, and spinelessness, he managed to hand Russia power in Syria and a foothold in the Middle East for the first time since the end of the Cold War, open up a Shiite Crescent for the Iranians to exert control from the Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean Sea, and reconcile with Cuba’s murderous communists in our own backyard. If bowing down to Putin, Khamenei, and Castro seemed downright brilliant, then Obama was your guy. The problem is Obama was also Russia’s guy, Iran’s guy, and Cuba’s guy, too.
How strange and refreshing it is to know that President Trump is just America’s guy! How satisfying it is to have an American president who doesn’t feel the need to beg Iran, Hamas, and Hezbollah to stop killing our friends. When terrorists kill our friends these days, they end up dead.
Americans have watched “experts” at the U.N. and the U.S. State Department justify Islamic terrorism against Israel as a negotiating tactic for border disputes that have been raging since 1948. President Trump looked at a hundred years of failure in securing the peace between Israel and her neighbors and decided the insiders were playing a game that couldn’t be won. So he changed the game.
Some problems must be made bigger before they can be fixed. He stopped pretending that the conflict was between Jews and Muslims in the West Bank and started focusing on the real Arab power brokers holding up a deal for peace. And he stopped trying to create one deal that would appeal to every country with an opinion and instead concentrated on bilateral deals that pinpointed the particular interests of each party in the region. There’s no point in insisting on one splashy deal with all the bells and whistles in the world if the negotiation takes decades to complete. Sometimes, a hundred little deals can get you past the finish line to peace.
This is what it’s like to have an American president actually interested in the art of the deal. It turns out that breakthroughs once thought impossible are actually quite possible. But not if your negotiation team consists of a bunch of Peace Corps veterans with masters in international diplomacy and your chief weapon is to unpack James Taylor when the going gets tough. No, if you’re sitting across the table from sharks, you better have razor-sharp teeth, too. It’s amazing that it took so long for a real businessman to come along, shake his head at the State Department, and say, “That’s not how you get to ‘yes.’”
Three peace deals in a matter of weeks are just the beginning. One trade deal at a time, one defense deal at a time, one peace deal at a time, the Trump Era will one day be remembered as the period during which America’s foreign policy re-structured the world. And peace is the prize.
No wonder China says it strongly prefers a Biden presidency because President Trump is too unpredictable at the negotiating table. In the past, China simply paid off America’s liberal political elites before robbing her blind. Now they’ve got an American adversary who not only can’t be bought off but who actually enjoys the fight. During the Obama-Biden years, China faced a poodle; with President Trump, they must fend off a tiger. And just as these most recent peace deal triumphs prove, tigers get results.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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The Middle East may be beginning a historic realignment more significant than the “Arab spring” or anything else that has happened in the region since World War II. That beginning came about because two Sunni Muslim nations — the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain — were willing to admit that whatever theoretical danger Israel poses to Islamic dominance of the Middle East pales in comparison with the threat of Shiite Iran.
On September 13, 1971, Lin Biao, China’s defense minister died in an airplane crash. What made his last flight memorable was that he was fleeing to the Soviet Union after he was discovered plotting a coup against party General Secretary Mao Zedong. Lin’s plane ran out of fuel. Or so goes the official story advanced by the Chinese Communist Party.
I defer to no one in my contempt for Joe Biden, perhaps the most clueless candidate to ever seek the highest office, and as politically amoral as they come. Over the years I’ve had some fun in print at his expense. (Only the most humor-deficient political scribbler has not.) But I wish commentators would lay off his age. And not just because I’m a month older than he is.
Free market capitalism is under siege from the Right these days, perhaps more even than by the Left. Not to pick on any one in particular but consider David Azerrad. He writes against even using the term “conservative” after years as a conservative think-tank theorist and now prefers the amorphous concept Right because today’s free marketers “actively side with our enemies,” by supporting the “barren” libertarianism of “atomized individuals and global markets.”
Mikheil Saakashvili says if Georgia doesn’t overthrow its pro-Russia government in 100 days, the country no longer will exist. He says it is in the interest of Ukraine that the “pro-Russian government of Georgia” be removed and that the world has “an unimaginable chance and responsibility” to act now to address the situation.
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‘Eyewitness to ambush’ laughs as LA deputies bleed, celebratory selfie mocks wounded cops struggling
Body cam shows man charging at cop with a knife getting fatally shot; now he’s the latest BLM martyr
Candace Owens takes on ‘pea-brained’ LeBron James after LA cop shootings: ‘Racist, anti-police, BLM LIE is to blame’
Investigation underway after New York school compares police to kkk with infuriating graphics
Democrat Justin Fairfax is running for VA Governor. Two women have accused him of sexual assault.
Peter Navarro cut after testy Tapper interview goes off the rails: ‘CNN’s not honest… you wanna go there?’
Lancaster explodes into riots over justified shooting; ‘jump the shark’ moment for Black Lives Matter
‘Whatever force is necessary’: Police union bosses discuss what needs to be done to quell riots
NAACP chapter president: ‘There’s no such thing as blue lives … stop comparing your job with my life’
Madison Cawthorn declares from football field: ‘I will never kneel
‘There’s possibly drugs involved’ with Biden, Trump claims
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‘Coffee with a Cop’ initiative presents ray of hope in difficult days
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ABC
September 14, 2020 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
New poll finds skepticism for Trump’s coronavirus response: As the number of coronavirus cases reaches more than 6.5 million in the U.S., a new ABC News/Ipsos poll released Sunday found that most Americans are skeptical of President Donald Trump’s performance during the coronavirus pandemic. Trump’s approval for his handling of COVID-19 lands at 35% the same level seen in late August, compared to 65% who disapprove. Roughly two-thirds of the country thinks that he acted too slowly in responding to the outbreak and about 68% also distrust what he has said about the coronavirus. The survey showed that Americans are more split on trusting Joe Biden on the pandemic (51% trust a great deal vs 49% trust not so much/not at all). An ABC News review of the Trump administration’s promises and predictions — on testing, nursing homes and death rates, among other things — found that nearly all have either fallen short or are drastically behind. Read more here.
Gulf Coast on alert as Tropical Storm Sally is predicted to make landfall: Flood watches have been issued for a large part of the Southeast U.S. as Tropical Storm Sally is expected to strike the Gulf Coast as a strong Category 1 or possibly low-end Category 2 hurricane tonight. As of Sunday night, the storm was about 185 miles east-southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi River with sustained winds of 60 mph. Although Sally is expected to be a very slow-moving storm, up to 20 inches of rain are expected along the coast and could cause major flash flooding. In New Orleans, Mayor LaToya Cantrell has issued a state of emergency, and Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said in a statement that the storm poses a “very significant threat to the people of Southeast Louisiana.” A mandatory evacuation has been issued for Grand Isle, Louisiana. Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey said the state is also “keeping a close eye” on the storm and that “it is likely that this storm will be impacting Alabama’s Gulf Coast.” Parts of Mississippi and Florida are also expected to be hit.
Naomi Osaka wins 2nd US Open and rallies for racial justice:Naomi Osaka won her second U.S. Open title over the weekend, beating Victoria Azarenka in a comeback victory for her third Grand Slam title overall. Beyond clinching the championship, the 22-year-old tennis star was focused on calling attention to racial injustice throughout the two-week tournament. Osaka wore face masks with the names of seven Black Americans who died in encounters with police or due to racial injustice. She honored Breonna Taylor, Elijah McClain, Ahmaud Arbery, Trayvon Martin, George Floyd, Philando Castile and Tamir Rice. “I’m aware that tennis is watched all over the world and maybe there is someone that doesn’t know Breonna Taylor’s story,” Osaka said after winning her first U.S. Open match this year. “The point is to make people start talking.”
Meet the 1st traveler in a wheelchair visits all 7 continents: For Cory Lee, visiting all seven continents was “a life-long goal,” and now that he’s accomplished it, having recently visited Antarctica, he’s hoping to inspire others to do the same. Lee, who was diagnosed with spinal muscular atrophy as a child, has used a wheelchair since the age of 4, which means his trips require extensive planning and research. His voyage to Antarctica had been in the works for about two years. “We were on the last cruise to Antarctica [before borders closed],” Lee told “GMA.” “It was surreal. There were icebergs, mountains of ice, penguins. It was everything you would imagine and more. I was moved to tears.” Because information on accessible travel can be hard to come by, he started a blog to share his knowledge with the world: Curb Free with Cory Lee. Now, he wants to inspire young travelers with his new children’s book about a boy who travels the world in his wheelchair. “Traveling to all seven continents wasn’t something I was sure was going to be possible,” he said. “But if you stay determined and keep a positive attitude, the opportunities are limitless.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” country star Reba McEntire joins us live to talk about the 30th anniversary of her landmark album “Rumor Has It,” and to perform! Plus, Janelle Monae joins us to talk about her new horror film “Antebellum.” And with many people working from home or helping kids learn from home, Becky Worley brings us quick tips on how to boost your Wi-Fi. All this and more only on “GMA.”
Americans on the West Coast are grappling with dangerous air quality miles from the wildfires, Oracle appears to have won the Tik Tok contest and a 100-year-old postcard.
Here’s what we’re watching this Monday morning.
Dangerous smoke smothers Pacific Northwest
Wildfires in California, Oregon and Washington have created hazardous air conditionsthroughout the Western United States as smoke from the devastating blazes stretches for thousands of miles.
Air quality in major cities up and down the West Coast is severely suffering from the haze of dense smoke. Los Angeles is facing the worst smog it has seen in over 25 years, the Los Angeles Times reported.
In the San Francisco Bay Area, stores have sold out of air purifiers as residents seek refuge from the blazes, which have burned since August. The fires have charred over 3.2 million acres and destroyed about 4,000 structures in California, killing at least 22 people.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom said the air quality in wildfire zones “is equivalent to smoking 20 packs of cigarettes.”
In Washington, Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee was blunt about what he believes is behind the devastating fires, saying they shouldn’t be called wildfires, but “climate fires.”
“This is not an act of God,” Inslee said on Friday. “This has happened because we have changed the climate.”
President Donald Trump is scheduled to visit California’s Sacramento County and meet with officials about the fires later today.
Margi Wyatt reacts after returning to find her mobile home destroyed by wildfire in Estacada, Ore., on Saturday. See more photos of the wildfires raging on the West Coast. (Photo: Robyn Beck / AFP – Getty Images)
Why celebs, corporations and Barack Obama want you to be a poll worker
Given the fact that America’s poll workers are traditionally older — 56 percent are over 60 — and therefore more at risk of contracting COVID-19, election officials are already warning that there could be a serious shortage in their ranks this fall.
When election officials don’t have enough volunteers, polling sites shutter and lines get longer — disenfranchising voters who cannot travel farther or wait longer to vote.
Promoting the cause on “The Daily Show” in July, host Trevor Noah said: “This is your chance to save Granny, protect your democracy and get paid.”
Many are starting to heed the call.
“Since I’m still sort of young — at least in a less vulnerable group — I thought this is a way I can get out there and actually help, instead of feeling helpless,” said John Taylor, a 36-year-old college professor in Greensboro, North Carolina. He said that he’s been encouraging friends and co-workers to volunteer, as well.
Absentee ballot election workers stuff ballot applications at the Mecklenburg County Board of Elections office in Charlotte, N.C., on Sept. 4. (Photo: Logan Cyrus / AFP – Getty Images)
Tik Tok reaches deal with Oracle, rejects Microsoft’s proposal
TikTok has reached an agreement to sell its U.S. operations to software giant Oracle in a landmark deal that could redefine how the U.S. and China square off over the reach of their homegrown technology companies.
The deal, confirmed Sunday by a source with direct knowledge, comes after the Trump administration pressured TikTok to sell its U.S. business over concerns about the threat to national security.
Microsoft had been considered a front-runner to buy the short-form video app company until this weekend.
TikTok’s parent company, ByteDance, and Oracle still face several regulatory hurdles before they can complete a deal. (Photo: Chris Delmas / AFP – Getty Images)
Pompeo is bringing back lavish ‘Madison Dinners’ mid-pandemic
Pompeo’s Madison Dinners, which an NBC News investigationrevealed in May, had been on pause since March, when the country shut down because of the coronavirus.
But now they’re back, with a dinner scheduled for Monday and at least three others on the calendar in September and October, two U.S. officials said.
The first photo to emerge publicly of a “Madison Dinner” shows Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito, second from right, Atlanta Falcons CEO Steve Cannon, fourth from right, Fox Business anchor Maria Bartiromo, second from left, and their spouses join Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and other guests at the State Department’s Harry S. Truman Building on June 12, 2019. (Photo obtained by NBC News)
‘Everyone up there got cancer’: Arizona residents fight for compensation for nuclear tests
Danielle Stephens remembers watching orange flashes from atomic bombs detonated less than 150 miles from her Arizona home at a government test site during the Cold War.
“I just think it’s a travesty, and the government should not be allowed to get away with it,” said Stephens, who was diagnosed with colon cancer in July.
Danielle Stephens, 81, has been fighting for lower Mohave County residents to be recognized as “downwinders” for more than a decade. (Photo Credit: Joe Buglewicz / for NBC News)
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Trump’s White House is racking up whistleblowers — and America’s flying blind, former FBI Assistant Director Frank Figliuzzi writes in an opinion piece.
Live BETTER
It’s time to break out the pomegranate! Here are six healthy foodsto add to your diet this fall.
One fun thing
A Michigan resident got a blast from the past last week.
Brittany Keech from Belding, Michigan, received a tattered postcard in the mail on Sept. 8 — and it was postmarked Oct. 29, 1920.
The 100-year-old letter, which arrived out of the blue, was addressed to a Roy McQueen and adorned with a sign of the times: a one-cent George Washington stamp.
Now Brittany Keech is looking for the postcard’s rightful owner. (Photo: Courtesy of Brittany Keech)
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
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 once again downplays coronavirus by holding indoor campaign rally
On Sunday morning, Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel defended President Trump’s handling of the coronavirus, saying on “Meet the Press” that the president “took decisive action early on” and that “he saved lives with the actions he has taken.”
On Sunday night, Trump held a political rally in Nevada. Indoors. With few who wore masks. Despite the state prohibiting indoor gatherings beyond 50 people. And despite the company that hosted the rally restricting gatherings and meetings to no more than 10 people.
Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images
“Tell your governor to open up your state,” he said last night.
As the coronavirus has infected at least 6.5 million Americans and killed at least 195,000, Trump’s rally underscored – just like that Tulsa one in June, or the GOP convention events last month – what he told journalist Bob Woodward.
“I wanted to always play [the coronavirus] down. I still like playing it down because I don’t want to create a panic.”
Nevada’s governor, Democrat Steve Sisolak, blasted the Trump rally as “reckless” and “selfish.”
“The president appears to have forgotten that this country is still in the middle of a global pandemic,” Sisolak tweeted.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Maybe that’s the whole point
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
6,544,234: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 117,167 more than Friday morning.)
195,172: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 1,986 more than Friday morning.)
86.82 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
$100 million: How much Mike Bloomberg says he’s committing to help Joe Biden in Florida.
Trump still stuck in the low 40s
See something familiar about the recent poll numbers in the presidential race?
They (mostly) have Trump’s numbers in the low 40s, particularly in the battleground states.
What would you say if you saw ANY OTHER incumbent – say, Democrat Heidi Heitkamp or Republican Dean Heller – with those types of numbers?
The one exception to the results above was a national Fox News poll (among likely voters) showing Biden at 51 percent and Trump at 46 percent.
2020 VISION: Bloomberg’s big bucks
Former New York City Mayor and presidential candidate Michael Bloomberg committed to spend $100 million in Florida to help Joe Biden win the state in November, per NBC’s Josh Lederman.
According to a Bloomberg spokesperson, the goal is to free up the Biden campaign to spend money in other states like Pennsylvania, while forcing Republicans to spend heavily to defend Florida (Trump won the state in 2016 by just about 1 percentage point).
The latest NBC News/Marist poll showed Biden and Trump tied in the state with 48 percent of likely voters saying they’d cast their votes for them, respectively.
President Trump responded to Bloomberg’s announcement on Twitter saying that he thought Bloomberg was “through with Democrat politics after spending almost 2 Billion Dollars” on his own run.
On the campaign trail today: Joe Biden, from Delaware, delivers remarks on climate change at 1:00 pm ET… President Trump, after receiving a briefing in California on the wildfires there, travels to Phoenix for a campaign roundtable with Latinos… And Mike Pence stumps in Wisconsin.
Ad Watch from Ben Kamisar
The Biden campaign dropped a series of Spanish-language TV ads over the weekend as Democrats continue to raise alarms about the campaign’s standing with Hispanic voters.
Those worries from Hispanic leaders and prominent politicians like Bernie Sanders have been prompted in part by a series of polls showing Biden underperforming particularly with Hispanics in Florida.
The new Biden spots hit on a variety of issues — they contrast the Democratic nominee’s handling of the coronavirus with Trump’s handling of the pandemic over the last six months and try to fact-check Trump’s claims about Biden’s economic record. The spots are airing so far in states with significant Hispanic populations like Florida, Nevada and Arizona.
Trump has been targeting Hispanic voters in recent days too — his campaign is holding another Latino’s for Trump event in Arizona after yesterday’s event in Nevada.
THE LID: Comey’s October surprise
Don’t miss the pod from Friday, when we looked back on the final two weeks of the 2016 presidential election – to help explain how Trump pulled off his upset win four years ago.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
There’s a push to recruit more young people to be poll workers.
Both Biden and Trump are condemning the shooting of two sheriff’s deputies in Los Angeles.
Trump is heading to California to see the state’s forest fires.
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Eye Opener
The death toll from massive wildfires on the West Coast continues to climb. Also, a tropical storm is churning off the Gulf Coast right now, getting stronger by the minute. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Watch Video +
Death toll from western wildfires climbs
Watch Video +
Oregon man “didn’t even recognize” badly burned wife after fire
Join the Manhattan Institute later today 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.
The Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent economic crisis have sent New York City—not to mention the country at large—into a recession, put millions out of work, and crippled public services, inviting questions about the city’s future. But Gotham will bounce back—and the Manhattan Institute, which this month launches its New York City: Reborn initiative, will be there to help spark its renaissance.
“With [Upper West Side] street traffic already down significantly, the warehousing of vulnerable men with no daytime supervision became a tipping point.”
By Nicole Gelinas New York Post
September 14, 2020
Even as Covid-19 keeps us apart, civil society organizations continue to bring people together to tackle local challenges.
By Annie Dwyer Philanthropy Daily
September 14, 2020
On Tuesday, September 15, join senior fellow James R. Copland and National Review senior writer Dan McLaughlin for a conversation about Copland’s new book—The Unelected—and the work that lies ahead to repair the rule of law and restore the constitutional design.
On Wednesday, September 16, Manhattan Institute president Reihan Salam will interview City Journal contributing editor Christopher Rufo on the disorder afflicting America’s cities and the negative consequences of sometimes well-intentioned progressive policies designed to address homelessness, opioid addiction, incarceration, and other urban problems.
On Thursday, September 17, Edward Glaeser will deliver the annual James Q. Wilson Lecture. In this year’s lecture, he will address the implications of the Covid-19 pandemic on city life in America, the connection between urban density and contagious disease, how to prepare for the threat of future outbreaks, and the economic-policy response of leaders in Washington.
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.
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 10, Heather Mac Donald and Brian Anderson held a conversation about Mac Donald’s recent work, her experience with the new social-media speech codes, and more.
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.
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
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
09/14/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Media ‘Berlin Wall’; Lessons From CovidMerica; Uncommon Valor
By Carl M. Cannon on Sep 14, 2020 08:30 am
Good morning, it’s Monday, Sept. 14, 2020. On this date in 1901, President William McKinley died after being shot by an unhinged gunman. It was the third time in 36 years, beginning with Abraham Lincoln’s murder, that a popular U.S. president had been assassinated.
Both McKinley and James A. Garfield had survived presumably more dangerous duty in the service of their country, namely as combat soldiers in the Civil War. They returned home from that crucible only to be shot in the streets of peacetime America.
I’ll have a further word on the 25th president of the United States, whom I’ve written about before, 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:
* * *
Under the Media’s Berlin Wall of Truth Suppression. Frank Miele offers a fresh example of reporting that bucks MSM orthodoxy.
Ranked Choice Voting: Best Plan for 2024 Presidential Primary. The system would eliminate wasted ballots and better reflect the people’s will, Vicki Hiatt and Stan Lockhart contend.
What I Learned About CovidMerica Across 8,550 Miles. Chuck Raasch shares his road-trip discoveries.
The Last Thing States and Cities Need Is a Taxpayer Bailout. Stephen Moore rips Democrats’ efforts to send nearly $1 trillion in pandemic aid to boost public-sector jobs.
Reforms That “Defund” and “Law and Order” Supporters Can Agree On. Geoff Holtzman’s prescription is in RealClearPolicy.
Warning From California. In RealClearBooks has this excerpt from Devin Nunes’ “Countdown to Socialism.”
How GE Has Become a Shadow of Its Once Great Self. In RealClearMarkets, Eric Grover reviews Thomas Gryta and Ted Mann’s “Lights Out: Pride, Delusion, and the Fall of General Electric.”
Five Takeaways From the New Air Force Chief’s Vision Statement. In RealClearDefense, Mackenzie Eaglen warns that Gen. Charles Brown’s “Accelerate Change, or Lose” sends up flares about the service branch’s deficiencies.
Constitution Day Is a Golden Opportunity. At RealClearEducation, Mike Sabo explains how the Bill of Rights Institute helps teachers and students better understand the principles underpinning America’s founding.
* * *
Seventeen-year-old William McKinley Jr. spent the first half of 1860, a presidential election year, as a freshman at Allegheny College in Pennsylvania. He went home to Poland, Ohio, that summer, but his family’s declining financial situation precluded him from returning to school. He took a job teaching locally and as a post office clerk.
But the country was roiling, and the McKinley clan were devout Methodists and committed abolitionists: When war came, 18-year-old William McKinley enlisted in Mr. Lincoln’s Army. After the war, he would rise up through Republican politics in his home state and win the presidency in 1896 by sweeping away the Republican Party’s traditional anti-Catholic bias, courting black voters, and telling working-class voters that GOP economic policies were good for them as well as business owners.
Considering the earlier presidential assassinations, the federal government’s cavalier attitude toward protecting the country’s chief executive was nothing short of scandalous and the American people were shocked by the loss of their president — just as they had been at the deaths of Lincoln and Garfield.
Like his two predecessors, McKinley had made his name during the Civil War: Lincoln as commander-in-chief and Garfield as a Union Army officer of noted skill. McKinley started at the bottom of the ladder, a teenager who looked so green that he was assigned to be a private in a commissary unit.
He didn’t stay a private for long. At Antietam, the young man, then a 19-year-old corporal, loaded up a wagon train with supplies including hot coffee and food, and braved Confederate musket and artillery fire to cross an open field to resupply starving fellow soldiers two miles away. One wagon was blown up, but McKinley made it safely to the men, who greeted him with “tremendous cheers,” according to eyewitnesses.
After the war, when McKinley began running for office, the “coffee incident” was mocked by one political opponent. To his comrades in arms, however, McKinley was a hero. There’s a statue commemorating his bravery at Antietam to this day.
He performed similar feats repeatedly, once crossing an open field in the Battle of Kernstown, near Winchester, Va., to deliver word to a cutoff regiment to fall back, saving hundreds of lives. He kept getting promoted, to sergeant, to lieutenant to captain — all by age 21. At Kernstown, the officer who sent him into harm’s way was overjoyed when he made it back alive. That officer was another future president, Rutherford B. Hayes.
Before the war was over McKinley was made a major. To the end of his days, this was the honorific he preferred.
“I earned that,” he’d say. “I’m not so sure about the rest.”
McKinley received that brevet commission only a month before President Lincoln was shot. That document was one of his most prized possessions. It stated matter-of-factly that he was being promoted for “gallant and meritorious services at the battles of Opequon, Cedar Creek, and Fisher’s Hill.”
In this third installment of the Center for Security Policy’s voter education webinar series, J. Michael Waller, the Center’s Senior Analyst for Strategy, and David Satter, senior fellow at the Hudson Institute will hold an in-depth discussion of crucial national and domestic security questions that Americans voter must consider when casting their votes this November. This webinar will preview a report on this subject Dr. Waller will soon publish for the Center.
Exactly 19 years and one day after the 9/11 attacks masterminded by Afghanistan-based Al Qaeda terrorists killed nearly 3,000 people in the U.S., Secretary of State Mike Pompeo joined representatives of the Taliban and the Afghan government in Qatar on Saturday to kick off peace talks.
The Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks that saw four hijacked planes turned into weapons of war precipitated the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan that deposed the Taliban government, which had provided safe haven to Usama bin Laden and his Al Qaeda followers.
The Trump administration in recent months has, to its credit, made clear that there are very real risks to investing in Chinese companies – financial risks, as well in some cases as risks to our human rights values and national security.
Unfortunately, some U.S. financiers are determined to continue to expose investors here to problematic Chinese companies by sending their pension funds and other monies over there – including via initial public offerings like that of China’s Ant Technology Group which will be launching shortly in Hong Kong and other Chinese markets.
There are real concerns about inadequately or undisclosed material risks with the Ant Group for investors and for America. There should be real concerns, as well, about U.S. investment banks that appear indifferent to such problems – and the prospect that the ultimate beneficiary of ignoring them is our mortal enemy: the Chinese Communist Party.
This is Frank Gaffney.
JAMES FANELL, Retired from US Navy in 2015 concluding 30 year career as a naval intelligence officer specializing in Indo-Asia Pacific security affairs with an emphasis on the Chinese Navy, Assignments included tours as the Assistant Chief of Staff for intelligence for the U.S. Seventh Fleet aboard the USS Blue Ridge, the Office of Naval Intelligence China Senior Intelligence Officer, etc., Former National Security Affairs Fellow at the Hoover Institute at Stanford University:
Below is a sneak peek of this content! According to a recent joint Gallup and Knight Foundation poll just about nobody trusts the news media these days. I realize that this is hardly breaking news. A lot of us figured out a long time ago that journalists had a political… CONTINUE Read More »
Bernard Goldberg, the television news reporter and author of Bias, a New York Times number one bestseller about how the media distort the news, is widely seen as one of the most original writers and thinkers in broadcast journalism. He has covered stories all over the world for CBS News and has won 13 Emmy awards for excellence in journalism. He won six Emmys at CBS, and seven at HBO, where he now reports for the widely acclaimed broadcast Real Sports. [Read More…]
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AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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September 14, 2020
YouTube Censors White House Health Advisor
By AIER Staff | In late August, the Hoover Institution filmed an in-depth interview with Dr. Scott Adams who serves as a top health advisor to the White House, more or less replacing Anthony Fauci in that role. Adams is an advocate for opening up…
Why Do Basketball Players Make More Than Teachers?
By Michael Munger | “As an educator myself, I am happy to grant that teachers produce value for students, and for society. But even the most marginal teacher, at the worst and least motivated public school, can’t-wait-for-retirement clock puncher,…
By Lyle D. Albaugh & Donald J. Boudreaux | The Nobel-laureate economist Ronald Coase was a font of pioneering ideas. Among the best are those that emerge from his recognition that any and all effects that one person’s actions have on the welfare…
By Jenin Younes | “We are not to ask certain questions, according to the politicians, the experts, our friends. It’s over when we say it’s over, they say. We must keep each other safe. So cover your nose and mouth. Stand six feet apart. Stay home.
In a War on Restaurants, Media Tout the Lockdown Narrative
By Jeffrey A. Tucker | “Lockdowns have become a conclusion in a desperate search for evidence. This is precisely where we’ve been for six solid months now. The media has become the handmaiden of lockdown tyranny, blasting out simplistic versions…
Should K-12 classrooms teach from the 1619 Project?
By Phillip W. Magness | “We need not indulge the bombastic posturing of Trump, or unlikely legislative efforts to strip funding from schools, to conclude that the 1619 Project is still ill-suited for K-12 education. That is a judgement we may make…
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.
On the menu today: a deep dive into how policy decisions have exacerbated the wildfires in the West, a farewell to Washington’s most sober-minded columnist, and apparently Peter Strzok has discovered how to travel forward in time.
Why the West Is Burning
If you’re following the news about the wildfires in California or other Western states, you’ve probably heard that the wildfires are exacerbated by climate change. Warmer, drier weather creates a lot of kindling-like dry vegetation that burns easily and spreads embers, and no amount of human firefighting efforts are as effective as rain. A lot of coverage of wildfires follows a simple formulaic theme: This is the wildfire. It is caused by climate change. Climate change is caused by electing Republicans.
We continue to take critical steps to improve our platforms such as tripling our safety and security teams, building privacy tools, and more. But we need updated regulations to hold all companies, including Facebook, accountable. Read why we support updated internet regulations
“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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The two Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department deputies who were shot in an ambush attack last night are both in stable condition. The 31-year-old mother… Read more…
The weekends are for Trump caravans and Trump boat parades! A massive Latinos for Trump caravan was underway in Miami, Florida on Sunday. The massive… Read more…
Aria DiMezzo, a transgender, ‘Satanic anarchist’ has won the GOP nomination for sheriff in Cheshire County New Hampshire. Incredibly, Republican voters where she was elected… Read more…
President Trump this weekend traveled to Nevada to meet with voters all over the Silver State, working around cancellations from venues in both cities due… Read more…
On Saturday night two Sheriff’s deputies including a 31-year-old mother of a six-year-old were ambushed and shot in their car in Los Angeles. Video shows… Read more…
Ricardo Munoz, the man fatally shot by Lancaster Police on Sunday, had a similar encounter with police in 2019 after he stabbed four people. Munoz… Read more…
Satan’s followers. Black Lives Matter marched in Charlotte last week chanting, “F**k your Jesus!” These are the same leftists destroying cities and terrorizing communities. This… Read more…
CNN and other networks will boycott President Trump’s rally in Henderson, Nevada Sunday night according to a report by CNN’s Brian Stelter who claimed concerns… Read more…
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With summer over and Americans (in theory, at least) returning to work, school, and familiar routines, what lies ahead for the remainder of 2020? Hoover Institution senior fellows Niall Ferguson. H. R. McMaster, and John Cochrane examine what might ensue in the way of pandemic, economics, geopolitics, and a contentious presidential election.
For now Joe Biden’s best hope is that some Emerald City media lackey does not play the role of the tiny dog Toto, rip away the curtain, and reveal the tiny man and his machinery behind the projection.
Once upon a time, a man had an idea for a documentary on free-market ideas. Then that man was introduced to Milton Friedman. The result of their collaboration was a wildly successful book and PBS series, Free to Choose, capturing Friedman’s view of the world, how markets work, and the role of individual liberty in free-market economies. The man behind that documentary, Robert Chitester, talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about how that documentary came about and Chitester’s long-time friendship and work with Milton and Rose Friedman.
I can’t say with certainty how the American presidential election will turn out, but this much I’m willing to wager: you won’t see President Trump in Norway, come December of next year, collecting a Nobel Peace Prize.
A Post Doctoral Researcher at the Harvard Kennedy School, M. Danish Shakeel, joins Paul E. Peterson to discuss their new study, which shows greater gains in student achievement by students in charter schools than their counterparts in traditional district schools.
As soon as children discover that the world isn’t nice, they want to make it nicer. And wouldn’t a world where everybody shares everything be nice? Aw … kids are so tender-hearted.
There’s one more problem with solar power: peak electricity use in California occurs in the late afternoon and early evening, when solar power is small or zero.
On the (almost) 10-year anniversary of 9/11, I gave a speech at Western Kentucky University. The speech was titled “Lessons Not Learned from 9/11: An Economic, Numerate, and Constitutional Perspective.”
Hoover Institution fellow Ayaan Hirsi Ali discusses the violence and rioters; which Hirsi Ali is vehemently against. Hirsi Ali believes in this country, and she believes that we need to stand up to the people attacking the US. Hirsi Ali said we need to work together to make things better instead of fighting and tearing things down.
If the coronavirus pandemic has proved anything it is that most Americans and their leaders are more concerned with their safety than with preserving their freedom.
The Hoover Institution at Stanford University is one of the most prominent think tanks in America, and its fellows are some the most accomplished in their respective fields. But that doesn’t matter to Big Tech. YouTube recently removed a June 23 interview its senior fellow Dr. Scott Atlas did with Hoover because it goes against the World Health Organization’s position on the Wuhan coronavirus.
Thunder shattered the evening quiet and lightning lit up the sky outside my office. I stayed at my computer feeling secure that the surge protector would manage the extra load.
Dr. Scott Atlas, an adviser to the White House on COVID-19, has tweeted “Truth will prevail. #FactsMatter” after dozens of his former colleagues signed a letter denouncing claims he made about the pandemic.
There are new stories every day on the ways zealous social-justice warriors who are ‘woke’ to all the world’s ills make life miserable for anyone who disagrees with them. There is, however, at least one apostate from the mob — former NYU professor Michael Rectenwald. For most of his life, he subscribed to leftist beliefs, but about five years ago turned away in revulsion.
The expression ‘confidence-building measures’ is magical; any mention of CBMs triggers immediate goodwill in our polity and leads to a sense of bonhomie. The five-point agreement between foreign ministers of India and China, S Jaishankar and Wang Yi, ends with the two sides deciding to ‘expedite work to conclude confidence-building measures to maintain and enhance peace and tranquillity in the border areas.’
This year’s school closures won’t just result in the loss of students’ academic skills; it could negatively impact the economy for the rest of the 21st century, new research predicts.
White House coronavirus adviser Dr. Scott Atlas says President Donald Trump has not minimized the impact and seriousness of the coronavirus pandemic – and has “no influence” on testing and COVID-19 vaccine development.
In The Soviet Tragedy, Martin Malia describes many Soviet citizens feeling great relief at the outbreak of World War II. These were people less than twenty years removed from devastating wars, so they were unlikely to be naïve to the horrors, yet many welcomed the news of war because, as Malia describes, war provided a coherent, tangible reality again, in contract to the schizophrenic insanity of communism.
Due to much of the western United States being naturally arid, high mountain scrub desert, grassland, and dry forest, wildfires are an unfortunate fact of life. They always have been and likely always will be.
Democrats and Republicans alike can agree on one thing — this election will determine what kind of future American citizens will endure. Trump promises to Make America Great Again. Biden promises to Build Back Better.
As schools worldwide have sent students home to protect against the spread of Covid-19, the impacts of the time spent out of the classroom have begun to come into focus.
In Oregon, wildfires have incinerated several communities this week, and thousands of people have evacuated their homes. In Washington State, a fire hit the town of Malden so quickly that deputies drove through the streets screaming for residents to leave. In Colorado, a 100,000-acre blaze was slowed only by a rare September snowstorm.
mentioning Eric Hanushek via The Wall Street Journal
Thank goodness President Trump resisted the most panicked authoritarian responses to Covid-19 imposed by some U.S. governors. But he’s now facing questions over a Feb. 7 interview, included in a new Bob Woodward book, in which Mr. Trump said that Covid was deadlier than the flu.
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