Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday September 18, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
September 18 2020
Happy Friday from Washington, where President Trump vows to return “patriotic” lessons on history and civics to public schools. Fred Lucas reports. The Justice Department should probe China’s role in the unrest gripping American cities, Lora Ries and Mike Gonzalez write. On the podcast, a black former congresswoman assesses racial tensions and the Black LIves Matter organization. Plus: Trump and prison reform; a history curriculum that inspires rather than complains; and the strange case of voters who say they live at NPR. On this date in 1793, President George Washington lays the cornerstone to the U.S. Capitol building, the home of Congress, which will not be completed for nearly a century.
“[Most] black Americans, that I know of at least, they don’t want to defund police,” says the former lawmaker. “They need police in their neighborhoods.”
The First Step Act, which President Trump signed into law, was based on state-level criminal justice reforms that have resulted in reduced costs and improved outcomes.
The 1776 Unites movement, founded by Bob Woodson, has just released a school curriculum to tell the stories of black success throughout American history.
Journalists rage-tweeted at Trump for hours, but did not commemorate the 1,500 brave Cuban volunteers who signed up to liberate Cuba from Fidel Castro’s communist revolutionaries.
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A month ago, Christopher Rufo reported that a major U.S. nuclear lab—the Sandia National Laboratories—had forced all its white male executives to attend a “white men’s caucus” to educate them on their “white privilege.”
Biden Blames Trump for “All” Those Who Died from COVID-19
In his CNN townhall (Twitter) where he was lobbed a series of big, fat softballs (Fox News). From Sean Spicer: If fact checkers actually checked facts tonight’s #CNNTownHall with @JoeBiden is a gold mine. Unfortunately they all support Biden and are taking the night off (Twitter). From another story: “Biden interrupted a questioner who suggested his climate plan embraces the Green New Deal to insist, ‘No, it doesn’t,’ but when asked by the moderator if he supports the proposal, he said, ‘I don’t think it’s too much.’” (CBS Philadelphia). From Hugh Hewitt: Flip-flop record time (Twitter)
2.
Poll: Voters See Law and Order as a Major Problem
The Monmouth poll fins 65 percent of Americans see it as a major problem, another 25 percent see it as a minor problem (Monmouth). From Daniel Henninger: Here’s the election’s ticking time-bomb: Among “non-Republican” blacks and other minorities, more than 60% agree that civil disorder has become a big issue, while just 46% of white non-Republicans see it as a problem. Looks like where one lives explains a lot about the Democratic worldview (WSJ). This helps explain why Nancy Pelosi, after all this time, finally came out against “looting, starting fires, or rioting” (Daily Wire). Trey Gowdy complained it took “10,000 arrests, $2 billion in property damage and a couple of cops fighting for their lives to finally figure out that the numbers weren’t on her side” (Fox News).
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3.
Emails Show Nashville Mayor’s Office Hid Good News on COVID Cases
They didn’t want the public to know that cases weren’t coming from bars and restaurants. The mayor, John Cooper, is a Democrat. But you knew that already.
As Democrats have ruined the state (Deadline). From Ben Shapiro: I’ve lived my entire life in California. Within weeks, we’ll be taking our 75 jobs and leaving. We’re not the first. And we certainly won’t be the last. Terrible governance has consequences (Twitter). From the Washington Examiner: It’s not just conservative media outlets such as the Daily Wire, which just announced it is leaving Los Angeles for Nashville. Financial services firm Charles Schwab announced it was moving its headquarters from San Francisco to Dallas last November. Schwab was joined in Dallas by Jamba Juice, Kubota Tractor Corporation, and Toyota Motor North America (Washington Examiner).
8.
Shooters Fire on Home of Two Police Officers in New Jersey
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Sen. Lauren Book led the charge on a bill to ensure Florida kids learn about the Holocaust in school.
The proposal earned broad bipartisan support after a Palm Beach County high school principal was terminated after entertaining Holocaust denialism as a valid point of view.
Six months later, a new survey shows Holocaust education may be needed more now than at any time in the post-WWII era.
The survey, commissioned by the Claims Conference, found more than three-fifths of young Americans don’t know that six million Jews were killed in the Holocaust and nearly half of the respondents were unable to name a single concentration camp.
Lauren Book has been pushing for more education about the Holocaust in schools. The lack of knowledge is becoming a problem. Image via Colin Hackley.
As disconcerting as the national results are, Book noted that Florida’s are worse.
Nearly a third of Sunshine State millennials and zoomers believe the Holocaust’s death toll was fewer than 2 million, and half of them never heard of Auschwitz, the most infamous of Nazi Germany’s concentration camps.
Most disturbing of all, 13% of young Floridians believe the Jews caused the Holocaust.
Book, who is Jewish, said the findings proved Holocaust education is of urgent need in Florida schools.
“Younger Floridians’ lack of basic Holocaust knowledge underscores the need to ensure proper education in our school system,” Book said. “Ignoring the history of ethnic and racial persecution leaves us vulnerable to racism, anti-Semitism, revisionist history, and evils similar to those of the past.”
The legislation went into effect July 1, and the Commissioner of Education’s Task Force on Holocaust Education will provide an update on their work to the State Board of Education on Sept. 23.
___
The fallout from the Florida Democratic Party’s Paycheck Protection Program loan has been eating away at the party’s Senate chances, and it’s threatening to metastasize.
After using the scandal to thrash Democratic Senate candidates across the state, the Florida Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee is trying to pin some blame on Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried.
FRSCC was set to run a full-page ad in the Tallahassee Democrat this morning, but the paper’s lawyers nixed it at the last minute.
Here’s the ad the Tallahassee Democrat’s lawyers won’t let you see.
“Someone at the Florida Democratic Party lied on this application to get a $780,000 PPP loan that was meant to protect jobs,” the front side of the ad states.
The reverse features a close-up of Fried, the only statewide elected Democrat in Florida, and says the buck stops with her — going so far as to insinuate she runs the state party.
“As head of the Florida Democratic Party, Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried should stop covering for whoever is responsible for looting a program intended to help the American people,” the mailer says before asking voters to call Fried and “ask her to release the loan application so that those who did this can be held responsible.”
Though the FRSCC ad remains on the cutting room floor, for now, it’s one of several released in the past month hitting Democrats over the PPP scandal.
While FDP has paid back the loan, it’s been mum on how managed to get the loan, leaving Republicans an opening to land body blow after body blow in competitive Senate races.
Days until
Rescheduled date for the French Open — 2; First presidential debate in Indiana — 11; Preakness Stakes rescheduled — 15; Ashley Moody’s 2020 Human Trafficking Summit — 18; First vice presidential debate at the University of Utah — 19; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 25; Second presidential debate scheduled in Miami — 27; NBA draft — 28; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 28; NBA free agency — 30; Florida Chamber’s Future of Florida Forum — 32; Third presidential debate at Belmont — 345; 2020 General Election — 46; “Black Widow” premieres — 49; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 54; The Masters begins — 55; “No Time to Die” premieres — 63; Pixar’s “Soul” premieres — 63; College basketball season slated to begin — 68; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 75; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 75; “Wonder Woman 1984” rescheduled premiere — 98; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 142; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 155; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 287; New start date for 2021 Olympics — 308; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 316; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 416; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 512; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 565; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 746.
Aftermath
“‘All hands on deck’: Gov. Ron DeSantis identifies power restoration, reconstruction as next priority” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Gov. DeSantis on Thursday identified power restoration and reconstruction as the next priority in the wake of Hurricane Sally. The shift from rescue to reconstruction comes after DeSantis spent most of Thursday assessing storm damage aboard a U.S. Coast Guard plane alongside state and local leaders. “Power is a major, major initiative and priority at this point,” he told reporters from a Pensacola airfield shortly after landing. The Governor said more than 7,000 linemen are working around the clock to service the roughly 250,000 Panhandle homes without power. Since Sally’s overnight departure, power has been restored to 40,000 of those homes.
“DeSantis says ‘boots on the ground’ needed to assess damage” via Jim Turner of The News Service of Florida — After an aerial tour of the storm-drenched western Panhandle, DeSantis said he expects the impacts to be more severe than what he could see from above as much of the anticipated damage is from water. “I think you’re going to have to really just get boots on the ground to get the full impact of what happened,” DeSantis said. “Clearly, there were definitely still some areas where it was obvious that you had some major flooding. There are other areas which, from the bird’s eye view, I don’t think probably did full justice to the actual damage that we saw inside the homes.” Additional federal help is anticipated to arrive in the next couple of days, DeSantis said.
CFO Jimmy Patronis joined Gov. Ron DeSantis, First Lady Casey DeSantis, Lt. Gov. Jeanette Núñez, Florida Division of Emergency Management Director Jared Moskowitz, and Congressman Matt Gaetz on an aerial survey of Hurricane Sally damage. Image via the CFO Office.
“Gulf Power: No estimate yet for when power will be back in Escambia, Santa Rosa” via Colin Warren-Hicks of the Pensacola News Journal — Hurricane Sally’s wrath throughout Northwest Florida was so intense that Gulf Power officials said they would not be able to give an estimate on when they will begin to make significant progress in restoring power until Friday. “Our initial focus has been to restore power to what we call our critical infrastructure,” said Gulf Power President Marlene Santos at a 3 p.m. Thursday news conference. “So those are the hospitals, the emergency responders, the water pumps, those types of customers that need power in order for this community to, you know, come back again. So we’ve been doing that.”
“Bay County cities report millions of gallons of sewage overflow after flooding” via Jacqueline Bostick of The Panama City News Herald — Local municipalities have reported millions of gallons of sanitary sewer overflows after Hurricane Sally unloaded continuous rains this week. The city of Lynn Haven reported 1.5 million gallons of overflow Wednesday, prompting the Florida Department of Health to issue an advisory. “DOH-Bay advises against swimming in Lynn Haven Bayou and Anderson Bayou until further notice,” the advisory stated. “The city of Lynn Haven will test the water and share results with the Florida Department of Environmental Protection and the Bay County Health Department. Once levels are safe, the advisory will be lifted.”
“Walton County assessing damage from ally” via Jim Thompson of the Northwest Florida Daily News — With skies clearing, but floodwaters remaining a problem, Walton County officials on Thursday began assessing how the heavy rains and winds from the edge of Hurricane Sally have impacted the county. As of Thursday morning, county emergency personnel with help from the National Guard, were crisscrossing the county looking for flooding, downed trees, debris and other problems, according to Louis Svehla, the county’s public information manager. Four National Guard personnel were in the county’s emergency operations center while another 24 Guard personnel were working in the field, Svehla said. Also assisting in the assessment was a UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle, or drone) team from Florida State University’s Center for Disaster and Risk Policy.
“West Pensacola residents left to pick up the pieces in Sally’s aftermath” via Jake Newby of the Pensacola News Journal — Residents at Warrington’s Forest Creek Apartments know that even a mild storm could — and has — resulted in several feet of standing water and extensive property damage. So when a storm the magnitude of Hurricane Sally barreled through Pensacola, the renters at the flood-prone apartments on Patton Drive knew it would be a life-changing affair. “In 2015, I lost everything and now I’m about to lose everything again,” said 55-year-old Karen Robinson, who said she’s experienced at least four floods at the Forest Creek complex since 2012. Robinson stayed at a relative’s house Tuesday, just ahead of Sally’s landfall. When she returned Wednesday, she came home to chest-high waters outside of her front door.
“A distressing rescue and a shocked community. Perdido Key stunned by Sally’s strength” via Kirsten Fiscus of the Pensacola News Journal — In five years aboard the Tropical Hideaway Too, Jerry Ash has ridden out some bad storms before, but Hurricane Sally was different. Anchored at the Perdido Key RV Resort and Marina, Ash and his compatriots in their similarly tied up sailboats, hunkered down for the night before the winds picked up. None of them were expecting it to get as bad as it did Wednesday. “I’ve been through some bad ones before, but I know better,” Ash said about riding through a hurricane on the boat. “No one thought it would be like this.” The man stuck on the pillar under the Theo Baars Bridge certainly wasn’t expecting it either.
CFO Jimmy Patronis surveys the damage to the Florida Panhandle from Hurricane Sally. Image via the CFO Office.
“Rescuers save people trapped in flooded homes along Blackwater River as waters rise” via Annie Blanks of the Pensacola News Journal — Hundreds of people were still stuck in their flooded homes Thursday, the day after Hurricane Sally lashed the Florida Panhandle and sent local rivers into major flood stage. Some people were hellbent on staying in their homes even as the floodwaters rose, while others were in desperate need of rescue. Reid and Jodi Walker stood on the porch of their home on the Blackwater River in East Milton, waving down a water rescue team that was boating by on the street in front of their house. The couple was stranded in their home on stilts as the floodwater rose, two of hundreds of people who needed rescue throughout Wednesday and Thursday after Hurricane Sally lashed the Florida Panhandle.
“Districts throughout Panhandle to keep schools closed Friday after Sally’s flooding” via Ryan Daily of WFSU — A number of western Panhandle counties will keep schools closed Friday after Hurricane Sally caused catastrophic flooding throughout the region. That includes the state’s furthest-west counties of Escambia, Santa Rosa, Okaloosa, and Walton. Gadsden County, further east, in the Big Bend, faced significant flooding and will keep schools closed Friday as well. After the flooding of local roads caused by Hurricane Sally, Bay County Schools will be closed for students and teachers for the remainder of this week. Bill Husfelt, the district’s superintendent, says buildings and facilities fared well during the storm, but not everyone is able to move about on the roads. “The structural problems we were dealing with are still part of the hurricane from two years ago. It’s still leaking where it leaked because of the hurricane, and a little bit like that,” Husfelt said.
“Destin’s charter boats ride out Sally in harbor” via Tina Harbuck of The Destin Log — Some untied and pulled off extra ropes, others unloaded hurricane anchors and chains, while some sat and waited for the power to come back on. Either way, Destin charter boat captains and deckhands were thankful they survived Hurricane Sally mostly unscathed. “We lucked out,” said Capt. Scott Robson of the charter boat Phoenix at HarborWalk Marina. Usually, when a hurricane threatens in the Gulf of Mexico, Destin’s charter fleet takes cover in Choctawhatchee Bay or the bayous, or even over in Freeport or up the Intracoastal Waterway. But with the initial track for Sally not a threat, captains decided to leave their boats in their slips along the Destin harbor.
“Citizens likely to avoid major impact from storm” via The News Service of Florida — Hurricane Sally, which caused heavy flooding and other damage in Northwest Florida, likely will not have a major financial impact on the state-backed Citizens Property Insurance Corp., officials said. The insurer has about 3,500 policies that were within the hurricane’s wind field. Jay Adams, chief of claims for Citizens, said about 1,000 of the policies are for mobile homes, most of which are older and could have sustained “significant” damage. “Our goal will be to get this adjusted as quickly as possible,” Adams said during a conference call of the Citizens Market Accountability Advisory Committee.
“Heart after the hurricane … except for Skanska” via Andy Marlette of the Pensacola News Journal — If Hurricane Sally taught me one thing, it’s don’t bet on the forecasts. If Hurricane Sally taught me two things, it’s how to change a poopy baby diaper by candlelight. Such are the abundance of life lessons learned in the days following Hurricane Sally’s romp through Pensacola. This is a tough town full of hurricane-hardened folks. Some are even descendants of the colonial settlers who learned the hard way about the joys of hurricane season while they were still unpacking their toiletries over yonder in East Pensacola Heights in 1559. But props to all you storm-season baby-raisers out there.
Tweet, tweet:
Models
To get a fair idea of how the presidential race is playing out, state polling is the way to go — particularly in battleground states like Florida. There are outlets that offer a poll of polls, gauging how President Donald Trump or former Vice President Joe Biden are doing in select areas, then averaging the polls to get a general idea of who leads nationwide. Sunburn will be updating these forecasts as they come in:
CNN: As of Sept. 13, the CNN average gives Biden the lead at 51% compared to 43% for Trump. The CNN Poll of Polls tracks the national average in the race for president. They include the most recent national telephone polls which meet CNN’s standards for reporting and which measure the views of registered or likely voters. The poll of polls does not have a margin of sampling error.
FiveThirtyEight.com: As of Thursday, Biden has stayed steady with a 76 in 100 chance of winning compared to Trump, who has a 23 in 100 shot. FiveThirtyEight also ranked individual states by the likelihood of delivering a decisive vote for the winning candidate in the Electoral College: Pennsylvania leads with 33.2%, while Florida comes in second with 13.8 %. Other states include Wisconsin (9%), Arizona (6.3%), Michigan (6.2%), North Carolina (5.1 %), Nevada (3.7%) and Minnesota (3.4%).
Polling averages show Joe Biden holds a slight lead over Donald Trump.
PredictIt: As of Thursday, the PredictIt trading market has Biden in the lead, at $0.59 a share, with Trump moving up slightly to $0.45.
Real Clear Politics: As of Thursday, the RCP average of polling top battleground states gives Biden a 49% likelihood of winning, with Trump getting 43.2%. Nearly every poll used in the RCP model has Biden up from anywhere between 2 and 12 points.
Sabato’s Crystal Ball: Trump has proved a hundred times that his base will stick with him through thick and thin, and so will other Republicans and GOP-leaning independents in this highly partisan and polarized era. Is Trump more than a few points shy of the 46% he received in 2016? If he is not, an effective get-out-the-vote effort targeting Trump supporters who weren’t registered or didn’t vote four years ago could do the trick. On the other hand, as we have argued for months, the lack of prominent third-party candidates this time means Trump will need more than the 46% he garnered before.
The Economist: As of Thursday, their model thinks Biden is very likely to be Trump in the Electoral College. The model is updated every day and combines state and national polls with economic indicators to predict a range of outcomes. The midpoint is the estimate of the electoral-college vote for each party on Election Day. According to The Economist, Biden’s chances of winning the electoral college around 6 in 7 or 86%; Trump’s chances are around 1 in 7 or 14%. They also give Biden a 97% chance of winning the most votes.
Presidential
“Senate Republicans renounce Donald Trump’s claim that election results ‘may never be’ determined” via Andrew Desiderio and Marianne Levine of POLITICO — Senate Republicans forcefully rejected Trump’s suggestion that the 2020 election results might not be accurately determined, but largely declined to address previous bipartisan conclusions that such rhetoric aids foreign adversaries. Trump, who has frequently made comments that undermine confidence in the electoral process and once suggested delaying the election, tweeted on Thursday morning that the “result may never be accurately determined, which is what some want.” The President’s assertions have been based on unsubstantiated claims about mail-in voting, which is expected to be widespread this year because of the coronavirus pandemic. U.S. intelligence officials have also warned that foreign actors, including the Russian government, have amplified similar claims in order to instill doubt in the process.
“Poll: Trump faces deep pessimism as election nears” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Less than seven weeks before Election Day, most Americans are deeply pessimistic about the direction of the country and skeptical of Trump’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic. Roughly 7 in 10 Americans think the nation is on the wrong track, according to a new poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. It’s an assessment that poses a challenge for Trump as he urges voters to stay the course and reward him with four more years in office instead of handing the reins of government to Democrat Biden. Trump’s argument to voters hinges in part on persuading Americans that the pandemic, which has killed nearly 200,000 people in the U.S., is receding. Yet just 39% of Americans approve of how Trump is handling the outbreak. “Clearly it has been mishandled,” said Don Smith of Kannapolis, North Carolina. Smith, an independent who plans to vote for Biden in November, said he’s been particularly troubled by what he sees as Trump’s efforts to sideline public health experts and scientists.
Donald Trump faces a pessimistic electorate.
“’It’s gonna be Florida times 10.’ Legal insiders envision nightmare scenarios that might eclipse the 2000 election fiasco as Joe Biden and Trump battle over votes in November” via Robin Bravender, Darren Samuelsohn, and Dave Levinthal of Business Insider — Insider interviewed 15 election law experts and veteran political operatives who were involved in the Florida recount battle about the worst-case scenarios they’re predicting for this fall. Some are already having election nightmares. “It’s gonna be Florida times 10,” said Sylvia Albert, director of voting and elections at the watchdog group Common Cause. Trump and she Biden both have high-powered lawyers working preemptively to secure their side a legal edge heading into November and to stand ready to fight the election’s outcome in court if things don’t go their way.
“Trump and his campaign try to allay concerns about trailing Biden in television ads” via Michael Scherer and Josh Dawsey of The Washington Post — Trump spent last weekend complaining privately about Biden’s dominance in television advertising, according to three people familiar with the comments, only to tweet upon his return to Washington from a campaign swing that the “fake news” was exaggerating the disparity. The zigzagging messages reflected a desire by Trump and his campaign to move beyond growing Republican concern about his relatively scant advertising budget and doubts about whether he now has enough money in the bank to close the race in a strong position. “We have much more money than we had at the same time in 2016,” Trump tweeted this week. “Also spending on other, and different, elements of the campaign.”
“Trump campaign plots winning maps without Florida (but insists they won’t be needed)” via Francesca Chambers and David Smiley of the Miami Herald —Trump’s campaign a year ago envisionedan election scenario where the incumbent President expanded the boundaries of modern electoral politics bywinning every state he won four years ago and adding half a dozen others. Their ideal election now a distant dream, Trump’s advisers in the final weeks of the campaign, mapped out more dire possibilities. One scenario has Trump losing Florida and Arizona but still receiving 270 electoral votes, the minimum needed to win. The other shows Trump losing North Carolina and Florida and receiving 272 electoral votes.
“Florida takes another election-eve hurricane hit. How Trump responds will matter.” via David Smiley and Alex Daugherty of the Tampa Bay Times — On the eve of the 2018 elections, Trump took the stage at a Pensacola rally and marveled at the damage wrought to Florida’s Forgotten Coast only weeks earlier by Category 5 Hurricane Michael. “That wasn’t a hurricane. That was like a 50-mile wide tornado,” Trump said, noting how the storm had wiped homes in coastal towns clean off their foundations. “Nobody’s ever seen anything like that. But you are great people and we are with you 1,000%.” Two years later, as protracted Michael recovery efforts continue in a deep-red region of the President’s home state, Trump has another chance to prove that he will be there for the storm-weary people of the Florida Panhandle.
“Does Trump own the ocean?” via Christopher Spata and Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times — On a recent Friday afternoon, Shawn Feeley cruised sun-sparkled Clearwater Harbor alone in his Yamaha center console, a wind-worn Trump flag flapping overhead. When he goes home to Palm Harbor, Feeley always leaves it flying prominently in the driveway. It’s been there for two years. Trumptillas, or Trump-themed flotillas, have cruised the nation’s waterways in force for months, earning wide attention. But it’s not just the organized parades. There’s a sense in Tampa Bay that Trump owns the ocean. Boats with Trump flags are A Thing. Boat flags for former Vice President Biden, say those who spend a lot of time on the water, not so much.
Assignment editors — Mercedes Schlapp, Trump 2020 Senior Adviser for Strategic Communications, will attend the Bay of Pigs Brigade 2506 Association’s endorsement presentation as part of the Women for Trump Bus Tour, and will accept the Association’s endorsement on Trump’s behalf, 9:45 a.m. Eastern time, Bay of Pigs Museum, 806 SW 13th Ave., Miami.
“Does Biden need a higher gear? Some Democrats think so” via Sydney Ember, Katie Glueck and Thomas Kaplan of The New York Times — In July, as the coronavirus pandemic raged, Biden made one trip to a battleground state. In August, he again visited just one swing state. And on the second weekend in September, less than eight weeks before Election Day, Biden’s only activity was going to church near his Delaware home. Biden’s restraint has spilled over into his campaign operation, which was late to appoint top leaders in key states and embraced a far more cautious approach to in-person engagement than Trump, and even some other Democratic candidates. While the Trump campaign claims it is knocking on a million doors a week, the Biden team is relying heavily on TV ads and contacting voters largely through phone calls, text messaging programs and other digital outreach. Biden has begun to accelerate the pace of his travel, and this week is one of the busiest he has had in months.
Does Joe Biden need to kick it up a notch? Image via AP.
“Michael Bloomberg makes initial ad buy in Florida, targets Trump’s pandemic response” via Alex Roarty of McClatchy DC — Aides to the Democratic billionaire said Bloomberg will spend $5.4 million on a weeklong TV ad campaign in Florida, part of his pledge to help Biden win the all-important presidential battleground state. The ads will begin airing this weekend on broadcast TV in all 10 of the state’s media markets, aides said. The aides expect the former Mayor of New York City will announce new campaigns in the state each week, from now until Election Day.
Here are the ads:
and
“Betsy DeVos’ former top aide joins anti-Trump group” via Daniel Lippman and Michael Stratford of POLITICO — Josh Venable, the former chief of staff to Education Secretary Devos, has joined another former Trump administration official’s group opposing the President. Venable is lending his name as an adviser to the Republican Political Alliance for Integrity and Reform, a group former Department of Homeland Security official Miles Taylor launched on Thursday of current and former Trump administration officials and other Republican leaders who want to see Trump defeated in November. Taylor, who was chief of staff at DHS, and Elizabeth Neumann, another former senior Trump DHS official, started the group, which includes 26 Republicans, including Anthony Scaramucci, who served briefly as White House communications director.
New ads
New ad slams Biden for ‘coddling China’ — Another fresh ad from Trump’s reelection campaign highlights a business owner claiming the President’s policies helped his company prosper and denouncing Biden for “coddling China” and alleging he used public office for personal financial gain. “We started with 20 employees and under President Trump we’ve exploded to over 250. I credit President Trump for every one of those jobs,” a business owner identified only as “Chad” says. He then says Joe Biden “hasn’t done anything but cozy up to the Chinese,” “ship our jobs overseas” and “enrich our own family.” Chad’s closer: “Our future’s brighter thanks to President Trump.” The ad will air in Florida and other battleground states, Trump’s campaign said.
Trump campaign ad says Joe Biden will sink economy — Trump’s reelection campaign is hitting Biden on the economy in a new ad set to air in Florida and other battleground states. The ad, “Economic Roundtable,” features Americans expounding on their fears that a Biden presidency would lead to higher taxes and fewer jobs. “The only barrier between us and socialism is President Trump,” one voter says. A news release announcing the ad throws another punch, saying that as Vice President, “Biden oversaw the worst economic recovery since the Great Depression and today proposes to raise taxes by $4 trillion, killing the economic comeback underway.” The campaign said the ad will be backed by an eight-figure media buy.
“Florida’s direct mail voter outreach is too little, too late, critics say” via Jeffrey Schweers of the Tallahassee Democrat — With less than three weeks to go before the books are closed on who can vote Nov. 3, the Florida Division of Elections is just now mailing postcards to nearly 2.24 million Floridians who are potentially eligible but not registered. Secretary of State Laurel Lee touted it as an “unprecedented outreach” that was a sign of commitment from Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Legislature to expand voter participation. “This bipartisan effort is focused on enhancing the voices of all of Florida’s citizens by providing accurate and timely information about voter registration and voting options in Florida,” Lee said in a news release last Friday.
“More than 35,000 mail-in ballots were rejected in Florida primary” via Marc Caputo and Gary Fineout of POLITICO — The rejections, which accounted for about 1.5% of the total vote, came as the battleground state prepares for what could be record voter turnout in the too-close-to-call November presidential election. Nearly 66% of the rejected absentee ballots were disqualified because they arrived after Florida’s 7 p.m. Election Day deadline. The rest didn’t meet signature match requirements used by county election supervisors to verify voters’ identities, the analysis from the University of Florida political science professor Dan Smith showed. “This could be a huge problem in November,” Smith said. “We could exceed 100,000 vote-by-mail ballots that don’t count.”
Internal poll: Scott Franklin, Alan Cohn are in a dead heat in CD 15 — The race for Florida’s 15th Congressional District could go either way, according to a new poll from GQR. The survey of 400 likely voters found Republican Scott Franklin leading Democratic nominee Alan Cohn 49%-42%. However, Franklin’s seven-point advantage evaporated after voters were presented with “balanced positive profiles” of the candidates. After the exposition dump, voters favor Cohn 48%-47%. GQR postulates the gap stems from Franklin’s heavy spending during the Republican primary, which saw him defeat U.S. Rep. Ross Spano in a tight race. GQR also asked voters who they favored at the top of the ticket and found Biden and Trump tied with 48% support each.
Scott Franklin and Alan Cohn are in a virtual dead heat.
“Sarasota Republicans demand Margaret Good return donations from child porn defense attorneys” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — The Republican Party of Sarasota slammed Democrat Good over campaign donations from attorneys with dubious clientele. Now, they want her to return any money that can be traced to those defending child pornography. “In light of reports that congressional candidate Margaret Good has received thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from defenders of child pornography, the Republican Party of Sarasota County is calling on Rep. Good to immediately return the dirty money,” reads a statement from Jack Brill, acting chair for the RPOS. The call comes after Florida Politics reported on attorneys who had a history of defending people facing child porn charges and who donated to Good’s campaign.
Leg. campaigns
“Jason Brodeur and his wife claimed homestead exemptions on two homes” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel —GOP candidate Brodeur and his wife, Christina Daly Brodeur, each claimed a separate homestead exemption on their homes during the first years of their marriage from 2016 to 2018, taking advantage of a provision that the head of the state property appraisers organization said should only apply to separated or estranged couples. Brodeur and his attorney said their interpretation of state law was that married couples can take separate exemptions as long as their finances are also completely separate. Seminole Property Appraiser David Johnson, whose office approved the dual exemption for Brodeur’s former Sanford home, agrees with that interpretation.
Jason Brodeur and his wife claim homestead exemptions on two homes.
“Bipartisan group of mayors backs José Javier Rodríguez reelection to SD 37” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Several city mayors inside Miami-Dade County say they’re backing Democratic Sen. Rodríguez in his Senate District 37 reelection bid. That group of mayors includes Republicans such as Miami Mayor Francis Suarez and Palmetto Bay Mayor Karyn Cunningham. “Sen. Rodríguez has always prioritized our constituents here in Miami during his time in public service,” Suarez said Thursday. “I’m proud to endorse the reelection of Jose Javier Rodriguez and look forward to continuing working with him to look out for Miami’s residents in the Florida Senate.” Sen. Rodríguez won the SD 37 seat in 2016 by just over 3 percentage points to succeed GOP Sen. Miguel Diaz De la Portilla. The district spans portions of Miami-Dade County including Coral Gables, Key Biscayne, and Palmetto Bay.
Corona Florida
“Testing data question resolved” via The News Service of Florida — State versus federal? Agency for Health Care Administration Secretary Mary Mayhew gave Florida long-term care officials the answer when she said that after negotiations with the federal government, nursing homes should rely on state data. Federal rules require nursing homes to conduct tests based on weekly coronavirus infection levels in the counties where they are located. Under a Sept. 2 interim federal rule, nursing homes in counties with positivity rates greater than 10% are required to test staff members twice a week; facilities located in counties with positivity rates between 5% and 10% are required to test weekly; facilities located in counties with lower than 5% positivity rates are required to test monthly.
Mary Mayhew puts to rest whether state or federal rules take precedence in COVID-19 testing for nursing homes. Image via WUSF.
“After coronavirus cases soared, prison chief says state response was ‘effective’” via Ana Ceballos of the Miami Herald — Florida Corrections Secretary Mark Inch said the state’s response to the coronavirus pandemic was “effective,” even after the virus sickened roughly 20% of inmates and killed 120 in prisons. Inch, who recently recovered from his own battle with COVID-19, downplayed initial fears that the virus would spread “like wildfire” inside prisons during the outset of the pandemic. “It probably would have if we had done nothing, but that’s not actually what happened,” Inch said during a Sept. 10 interview with The Florida Channel, which aired Monday. Inch’s remarks, made to the state-funded news outlet after declining to interview with the Miami Herald, did not jibe with the description of chaotic conditions that leaked out early on in the pandemic.
Back to school?
‘Lives are going to be lost’: Dade, Broward teacher unions demand safety precautions” via Colleen Wright of the Miami Herald — Ahead of a possible reopening of schools for in-person learning on Oct. 5 or earlier, the teachers’ unions of Miami-Dade and Broward school districts are asking for safety precautions in the classroom. Broward Teachers Union President Anna Fusco joined United Teachers of Dade President Karla Hernandez-Mats at a news conference at UTD’s new Miami Springs headquarters Thursday to share similar concerns before returning to the classroom, particularly about cleanliness and social distance protocols amid the coronavirus pandemic. Broward Schools Superintendent Robert Runcie said he would like to have schools reopen to in-person learning on Oct. 5. He said he plans to recommend that date and present a reopening plan to School Board members Sept. 22.
Broward School Superintendent Robert Runcie would like schools to reopen Oct. 5.
“In Sarasota County schools, stress over COVID-19 desk shields that cost almost $700,000” via Ryan McKinnon of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — The week before schools reopened in Sarasota County, district officials showcased one of the COVID-19 safety measures they had put in place: New tri-fold desk shields for students to sit behind. In back-to-school preparations, the shields sat neatly on desks with books stacked behind them, an additional layer of protection to ease parents’ minds as their children returned to school. The shields look like large menu holders and are made of soft and transparent plastic. However, once those classrooms were filled with students, the dividers frequently got knocked off the desks. Then the state nixed the district’s cleaning protocol, and the district has had to spend more money on clips to hold the shields in place. Like nearly everything related to COVID-19 and reopening schools, the desk shields have become an expensive experiment, with district officials learning as they go.
Corona local
“State bars new patients from small Homestead ALF citing COVID infections, other issues” via the News Service of Florida — Saying the facility failed to ensure the safety, health and welfare of its residents, state regulators issued an emergency moratorium barring a Homestead assisted living facility from accepting new residents or readmitting old ones. According to the emergency order filed by the Agency for Health Care Administration, Llina’s ALF, LLC, in Homestead failed to provide its staff members with competent isolation and contagion training during the COVID-19 pandemic, and, as a result, “has not provided residents with qualified staff to meet their needs.” According to the order, a staff member at the six-bed facility tested positive for COVID-19 on July 9.
A Homestead ALF is banned from accepting new patients due to COVID-19 infections.
“West Palm strip club fined $7,000 for violating county COVID-19 orders” via Mike Diamond of The Palm Beach Post — The county’s crackdown on businesses violating COVID-19 emergency orders continued Wednesday with an adult strip club in West Palm Beach fined $7,000 for allowing patrons to party late into the night last month. The owner of Playhouse 2 agreed to pay the fine Tuesday night rather than contest the violations before Magistrate Richard Gendler. The $7,000 fine is the highest fine imposed as a result of citations issued by Palm Beach County’s compliance team, which includes code enforcement officers, sheriff’s deputies, city police officers, fire rescue personnel and county staff members. The team found more than 100 patrons crowded into the strip bar on Aug. 4. Very few were wearing facial coverings. Pictures show them on top of one another. Bars and strip clubs are prohibited from even operating in Palm Beach County.
More local
“COVID-19 may surge in Hillsborough, Southwest Florida, thermometer data indicates” via Langston Taylor of the Tampa Bay Times — Hillsborough County and Southwest Florida could be on the verge of another rise in cases of the novel coronavirus, warns a company that tracks fevers to spot early signs of spreading disease. Kinsa Health relies on more than one million internet-connected thermometers across the country to try to detect outbreaks before people can get tested or go to the doctor. Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, the company’s data has shown spikes in certain regions two or three weeks before a similar jump in confirmed cases. More Hillsborough residents have reported fevers than expected for this time of year, according to the company. That spells the potential for a resurgence of the virus, or an abnormal flu outbreak, soon.
Kinsa Bluetooth enabled thermometers are helping to predict possible COVID-19 hotspots.
“Two Hillsborough commissioners seek to relax face mask order” via C.T. Bowen of the Tampa Bay Times — Two Hillsborough County commissioners want to consider revoking the county’s face mask rule that’s been in place since June. Commissioner Sandy Murman and Stacy White said they want to schedule that discussion for Oct. 1 in light of data showing a declining rate of positive test results for the coronavirus in the county. “Our first meeting in October I think we should have a serious discussion about the mask mandate. And if our numbers do continue to go down, I’ve always said, I wouldn’t do it until positivity rate (reached) 5 percent and we’re still not there yet, but hopefully we will be in October,” Murman told other commissioners Thursday afternoon.
“Pinellas Commission opts to not schedule vote on whether to repeal mask ordinance” via Tracey McManus of the Tampa Bay Times — While renewing the weekly state of emergency on Thursday amid the coronavirus pandemic, the Pinellas County Commission did not schedule a vote on whether to repeal the ordinance requiring masks in most indoor public places. Commissioners last week said they would review updated infection data at Thursday’s meeting and decide whether to advertise a future vote on the mask mandate, a step required to repeal the ordinance. With heads of local hospitals scheduled to address the board on Oct. 1, and the mayors of St. Petersburg and Tampa urging the county stay the course, commissioners said they were not ready to take the step of discussing a repeal. Commissioners have been inundated over the past few weeks by residents for and against the mask requirement, which was enacted June 23.
“Clay County Sheriff’s Office sergeant dies in ‘line of duty, COVID-19-related’” via The Florida Times-Union — The death of a Clay County sergeant is being treated as COVID-19-related and in the line of duty, according to the Clay County Sheriff’s Office. Sgt. Eric Twisdale was serving as the supervisor of the Crime Scene Unit at the time of his death, according to a statement from the Sheriff’s Office. “He will be missed by all of us,” the agency said. Sheriff Michelle Cook called him “A great deputy and an even better man,” while the Florida Sheriff’s Association stated it was saddened to report that the Sheriff’s Office said goodbye to a great sergeant.
Corona nation
“Ten days: After an early coronavirus warning, Trump is distracted as he downplays threat” via Ashley Parker, Josh Dawsey and Yasmeen Abutaleb of The Washington Post — In explaining why he repeatedly misled the American public about the early dangers posed by the novel coronavirus, Trump has argued that he did not want to engender panic — and suggested that his actions showed he took the looming pandemic seriously. But a detailed review of the 10-day period from late January, when Trump was first warned about the scale of the threat, and early February — when he acknowledged to author Bob Woodward the extent of the danger the virus posed — reveals a President who took relatively few serious measures to ready the nation for its arrival.
Donald Trump insists he did not want to start a panic over coronavirus. Image via AP.
“CDC testing guidance was published against scientists’ objections” via Apoorva Mandavilli of The New York Times — A heavily criticized recommendation from the CDC last month about who should be tested for the coronavirus was not written by CDC scientists and was posted to the agency’s website despite their serious objections, according to several people familiar with the matter as well as internal documents obtained by The New York Times. The guidance said it was not necessary to test people without symptoms of Covid-19 even if they had been exposed to the virus. But officials told The Times this week that the health department did the rewriting itself and then “dropped” it into the CDC’s public website, flouting the agency’s strict scientific review process.
“NYC school delay sows doubt on Mayor’s bid for in-person classes” via Danielle Moran, Cristin Flanagan and Stacie Sherman of Bloomberg — Mayor Bill de Blasio’s decision Thursday to further delay in-person learning raised questions about whether New York will join other large school districts in reverting to all-remote learning, for at least the start of the year. Four days before New York City schools were to reopen for in-person instruction, the Mayor delayed classes for elementary schoolers until Sept. 29 and for middle- and high school students until Oct. 1. Learning will begin remotely Sept. 21 for all but prekindergarten pupils and those with severe developmental disabilities. “We’re giving schools more staff, more time and more support,” Education Chancellor Richard Carranza said at a press briefing Thursday.
Corona economics
“Six months, and a grim milestone: 26th-straight week of record-level unemployment claims” via Eli Rosenberg of The Washington Post — Another 860,000 people applied for unemployment insurance claims last week — the 26th-straight week that unemployment claims remained above a pre-pandemic record dating to the 1960s. And 659,000 people had claims processed for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, the program for self-employed and gig workers, a drop of about 200,000 after those numbers had risen for weeks. The total number of people claiming unemployment insurance went up by about 100,000, to 29.7 million, as of Aug. 29, the most recent week available for this statistic. The number of new unemployment claims has come down gradually over the last few months, but claims remain above the historical levels from before the pandemic, a sign of the continued economic headwinds the country is facing.
More corona
“Europe begins to lock down again as a WHO official warns of a ‘very serious’ resurgence.” via The New York Times — The World Health Organization on Thursday warned of a “very serious” resurgence of the coronavirus across Europe but said that transmission could be contained by local rather than national measures. “We have a very serious situation unfolding before us,” Hans Kluge, the WHO’s regional director for Europe, told reporters. “Weekly cases have now exceeded those reported when the pandemic first peaked in Europe in March.” The number of virus cases has increased by more than 10 percent in the past two weeks in over half the countries of Europe, Dr. Kluge said. He noted that in seven countries the number of cases has doubled. “Although these numbers reflect more comprehensive testing, they also show alarming rates of transmission,” he said. The region has recorded at least 220,000 deaths from the virus.
World Health Organization’s Regional Director for Europe Hans Kluge says Europe is in for a substantial resurgence in COVID-19.
“United expanding air service” via Timothy O’Hara of Florida Keys News — Key West International Airport is beginning to see some signs of recovery, as United Airlines plans to not only soon resume daily service to Chicago and Newark, New Jersey but also will start weekend and daily service to Washington, D.C.
“Growing number of airlines offer ‘flights to nowhere’ as international travel remains stalled” via Antonia Noori Farzan and Adam Taylor of The Washington Post — With international travel in much of the world still disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic, some airlines are resorting to “flights to nowhere” that target passengers who long for air travel — and some are willing to shell out plenty of money for the tickets. Qantas, among the latest to advertise a flight that departs and arrives at the same airport, told Reuters that the trip sold out less than 10 minutes after going on sale on Thursday. “It’s probably the fastest-selling flight in Qantas history,” a spokeswoman for the airline said. The Australian carrier is following other Asian airlines that have offered similar options. Such flights have already taken place in Taiwan and Japan.
Statewide
“No consequences after Florida officers admit to sexually abusing inmates, lawsuit says” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — Within a month of arriving in federal prison, Lauren Reynolds says she was targeted by an officer. He told her he’d protect her if she gave him what he wanted. He wanted sex. After the first time Officer Daniel Kuilan forced himself on Reynolds, she said he told her not to tell anyone or she’d be in trouble and sent to another facility with fewer work and education privileges, according to a lawsuit filed in December in federal court by Reynolds and 14 other female inmates. Reynolds said she was raped by Kuilan for six months — every Wednesday at a warehouse before her work shift began.
“Dane Eagle moves from fiscal watchdog to funding advocate” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Eagle has officially moved out of the House Majority Office and into the Department of Economic Opportunity this week. The Cape Coral Republican knows he’s taking the Executive Director post at a time of extreme scrutiny upon the agency. When the coronavirus pandemic sparked an instant recession, a beleaguered DEO-run unemployment system crumbled under a record number of claims. Failure to rapidly address problems led to the sidelining of former Executive Director Ken Lawson in April and ultimately his resignation last month. As Eagle seizes the reins, he doesn’t want to be measured against his predecessor, but he does plan to bring change. Information must flow quickly and freely, something that hasn’t always happened. “I don’t want to compare and contrast leadership, but one thing I saw that was apparent, we need to expand our communications,” Eagle said.
As he moves to the DEO, Dane Eagle is looking to expand communications.
“Grandmother of slain Jordan Belliveau sues child welfare agencies that ‘failed’ her grandson” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Jessica Belliveau, the grandmother of Belliveau, is suing two social services agencies over her grandson’s death. Belliveau died from head trauma inflicted by his biological mother in September 2018. Child welfare workers missed several opportunities to protect the child whose death officials believe could have been avoided. The lawsuit names Eckerd Youth Alternatives and Directions for Living. Eckerd provides child welfare services in Pinellas and Pasco counties under the Florida Department of Children and Families. Directions for Living works on child welfare services under a contract with Eckerd. The lawsuit also names Belliveau’s mother, Charisse Stinson, is also named in the lawsuit. She’s currently in Pinellas County Jail under charges related to her son’s murder. Jessica Belliveau claims in the lawsuit that her grandson might still be alive today had it not been for several missed signs and critical errors within Directions for Living.
“New law will shrink Medicaid waiting list” via The News Service of Florida — Nearly 60,000 poor, disabled and elderly residents are on a waiting list for placement in Florida’s Medicaid managed long-term care program. But the number of people on the list will be drastically reduced in the coming months. The Legislature this year passed a law to ensure that the list only includes the names of residents who are most at risk of nursing home placement and that people with “low priority” scores will not go on the list. Of the 59,259 people on the list, only about 1,562 are considered in the high-risk category, according to Rebecca Roberts, a spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Elder Affairs.
“Major Florida rooftop solar incentive won’t change yet” via Malena Carollo of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida’s primary incentive for installing rooftop solar panels won’t be in for major changes for at least a year. The Florida Public Service Commission held a workshop Thursday to understand the current landscape of a program that credits customers for extra renewable energy they produce. Regulators were flooded with more than 16,000 emails as of the workshop, many of which were form letters, urging the commission not to alter the program. “That’s not what we’re doing here today,” Commissioner Julie Brown said. The workshop was meant to be informational, as “the commission has not had a chance to look at our rule since it was passed in 2009.”
“Florida changing rules to allow philosophy majors to teach social sciences in public schools” via Hannah Phillips of WUFT — Florida is changing its state rules to allow philosophy majors, for decades the targets of ruthless jokes about the usefulness of their college degrees, to teach social sciences in public schools. Philosophy majors have included Supreme Court Justice David Souter and former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina. The change is long overdue, said experts in the field. They describe misconceptions by critics who fail to understand that philosophy majors consider questions more broadly and creatively. “They imagine people sitting on mountains and uttering cryptic sayings or something,” said Gene Witmer, undergraduate coordinator for philosophy students at the University of Florida.
D.C. matters
“House Whip James Clyburn calls William Barr’s slavery comment the most ‘God-awful thing I’ve ever heard’” via William Cummings of USA Today — House Majority Whip Clyburn reacted sharply to Attorney General Barr‘s comment that evoked slavery while decrying government overreach with coronavirus restrictions, calling it “the most ridiculous, tone-deaf, God-awful thing I’ve ever heard.” Clyburn, the highest-ranking African American member of Congress, told CNN Thursday it was “incredible” the “chief law enforcement officer in this country would equate human bondage to expert advice to save lives. Slavery was not about saving lives, it was about devaluing lives.” Barr’s remark came during a Wednesday question and answer session at Hillsdale College after Barr delivered an address. That speech sparked its own reaction when Barr defended his personal involvement in recent high-profile criminal cases by likening some federal prosecutors to “headhunters.”
House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn calls William Barr’s slavery comments ‘ridiculous, tone-deaf and God-awful.’
Local notes
“Superintendent Alberto Carvalho’s nonprofit investigated over donation for teachers” via Colleen Wright of the Miami Herald — Superintendent Carvalho’s nonprofit foundation is under investigation by the Office of the Inspector General for Miami-Dade County Public Schools regarding a solicited donation from K12, the company that provided the district with an online platform that bombed and was ultimately scrapped during a tumultuous first two weeks of virtual schooling. Inspector General Mary Cagle, who works on the third floor of the school district’s downtown headquarters, notified School Board members of the investigation in a memo late Wednesday. Cagle is looking into a $1.57 million donation made to the Foundation for New Education Initiatives, a nonprofit created at the beginning of Carvalho’s tenure as superintendent in 2008. Carvalho chairs the nonprofit.
Alberto Carvalho is under the microscope over questionable donations for teachers.
“Miami Herald editor blames ‘internal failures’ after publishing an anti-Semitic, racist insert” via Jaclyn Peiser of The Washington Post — Subscribers to el Nuevo Herald, the Spanish-language sister publication of the Miami Herald, opened their papers on Friday to find a paid insert called “LIBRE.” In a column headlined, “American Jews and Israeli Jews” in the insert, an author claimed American Jews support “thieves and arsonists” and equated Black Lives Matter protesters with Nazis. “What kind of people are these Jews? They’re always talking about the Holocaust, but have they already forgotten Kristallnacht, when Nazi thugs rampaged through Jewish shops all over Germany? So do the BLM and antifa, only the Nazis didn’t steal; they only destroyed,” author Roberto Luque Escalona wrote. After an onslaught of backlash, the Herald apologized this week and promised to never again run the insert, which the paper’s editors now say had actually included anti-Semitic and racist articles for months.
“Jacksonville’s sports and entertainment chief suspended due to misconduct investigation” via Christopher Hong of The Florida Times-Union — The chief of the city’s sports and entertainment department was suspended this week due to an inspector general’s investigation into workplace misconduct. Mayor Lenny Curry‘s office notified Ryan Ali on Wednesday that he was the subject of an active investigation and was on paid administrative leave. The letter didn’t provide any additional details about why he is being investigated. Curry hired Ali last July to be the manager of the department, which coordinates major city-sponsored events, like the Jacksonville Jazz Festival and the Florida-Georgia football game. A few months later, Curry appointed him to lead the department, a position that paid an annual salary of $115,000. Before coming to City Hall, Ali worked for Baptist Health between 2017 and 2019 and the Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville between 2014 and 2017.
“Ethics Commission finds probable cause against Fort Myers Police Chief” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Accusations that Fort Myers Police Chief Derrick Diggs misused city credits cards warrant further investigation, according to the Florida Ethics Commission. State officials found probable cause to believe Diggs “misused his position or official resources by using his City purchasing card to purchase meals, boots, and satellite radio for himself or others, contrary to purchasing card policy,” reads a release from the Commission. That comes after Fort Myers City Council candidate Anthony Thomas submitted a complaint to the state. According to the Fort Myers News-Press, Thomas accused the police chief in writing of “extravagant dining outings” including the purchase of alcohol, all done on the city dime. Thomas said he raised the issue at City Council hearings but was unsatisfied with inaction on the part of city officials. Diggs maintains he did nothing wrong. Through a department spokesperson, the chief welcomed further scrutiny.
Smoldering
“Federal officials stockpiled munitions, sought ‘heat ray’ device before clearing Lafayette Square, whistleblower says” via Marissa J. Lang of The Washington Post — Hours before law enforcement forcibly cleared protesters from Lafayette Square in early June amid protests over the police killing of George Floyd, federal officials began to stockpile ammunition and seek devices that could emit deafening sounds and make anyone within range feel like their skin is on fire, according to an Army National Guard major who was there. D.C. National Guard Maj. Adam D. DeMarco told lawmakers that defense officials were searching for crowd control technology deemed too unpredictable to use in war zones and had authorized the transfer of about 7,000 rounds of ammunition to the D.C. Armory as protests against police use of force and racial injustice roiled Washington. In sworn testimony, shared this week with The Washington Post, DeMarco provided his account as part of an ongoing investigation into law enforcement and military officers’ use of force against D.C. protesters.
Opinion
“Trump shattered his promise to ‘drain the swamp.’ The self-dealing would be epic in a second term.” via The Washington Post editorial board — “Drain the swamp” was a signature promise of Trump’s first campaign: He would uproot corruption from the capital and install a government that served ordinary Americans, not the special interests. That pledge has not merely gone unmet, like most of his campaign promises. It has been shattered by a President and an administration unprecedented and unapologetic in their mingling of public and private interests. In an unfettered second term, the self-dealing would be epic. Trump promised to completely isolate himself from his businesses. “I may never see these places again,” he famously said during a rally in August 2016. “Because I’m going to be working for you, I’m not going to have time to go play golf.” The reality, as Noah Bookbinder, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, points out, has proved to be “quite the opposite,’’ with his businesses “a constant presence in his presidency.”
“Lee Hinkle: keep politics out of moving military families” via Florida Politics — Our federal government recently contracted to move military families worldwide through a new single point of accountability. This can produce real efficiencies and improve the move experience, and it’s vital to America’s security — to efficiently relocate 400,000 military families annually is key to our military’s readiness. It also maintains a nimble, well-functioning defense posture. The U.S. Transportation Command (TRANSCOM) called the system ‘fundamentally flawed.’ This old system struggled with timely delivery and strained to meet demand during peak seasons. Communication with families has been inadequate. But TRANSCOM boldly decided to consolidate the management of household goods relocations to create a unified system and improve service and accountability. Members of Congress should let the process continue, without political interference.
Sunrise
Florida’s begun adding up the cost of Hurricane Sally. Gov. DeSantis was in Pensacola to check out the damage.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— DeSantis says no storm-related fatalities have been reported yet, but there plenty from the pandemic. The Florida Department of Health reports another 147 fatalities from COVID-19. The death toll has reached 13,247. Florida also added 3,255 coronavirus cases Thursday, pushing the statewide total to almost 675,000.
— First Daughter Ivanka Trump travels to Florida for a fireside chat with her buddy Pam Bondi … who knows how to ask the tough questions.
— Democrats in Washington are trying to get the Senate to pass another COVID-19 compensation package called the HEROES Act and they gave a Florida congresswoman the chance to pile on.
— On Sunrise in-depth, we will hear from some professional do-gooders who want to make it easier for you vote during the COVID crisis.
— And finally, a Florida Woman with a glorious name … no ifs, ands or … well, you will hear soon enough.
Facing South Florida with Jim DeFedeon CBS 4 in Miami: The Sunday show provides viewers with an in-depth look at politics in South Florida, along with other issues affecting the region.
Florida This Week on Tampa Bay’s WEDU: Moderator Rob Lorei hosts a roundtable featuring Marissa Levine, professor of Public Health and Family Medicine at the Morsani College of Medicine/ USF-Tampa; Eduardo Gamarra, professor of Political Science for Florida International University; Tampa Bay Times political editor Steve Contorno and Ashley Lowery, president and CEO of the Homeless Empowerment Program.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete: Ivanka Trump campaign stops in Tampa; and interviews with T.J. Ducklo, Biden campaign’s national press secretary, and Hogan Gidley, Trump campaign’s national press secretary.
Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: Host Ybeth Bruzual will speak with Florida’s 15th Congressional District candidates Scott Franklin and Alan Cohn about coronavirus repose and relief, education, initiatives they will each pursue if elected, and why voters wanted change from incumbent Ross Spano’s and his reelection bid loss.
This Week in Jacksonville with Kent Justiceon Channel 4 WJXT: Trump for President campaign adviser Lara Trump; Agriculture Commissioner Fried and former U.S. Sen. Connie Mack.
This Week in South Florida on WPLG-Local10 News (ABC): Broward Teachers Union (BTU) President Anna Fusco; United Teachers of Dade (UTD) President Karla Hernandez-Mats; Carla Spalding, a Republican candidate for Florida’s 23rd Congressional District and former Lt. Gov. Carlos Lopez-Cantera.
Listen up
Battleground Florida with Christopher Heath: Kevin Cate, the founder of media production company CATECOMM, has been involved in several Democratic campaigns in Florida. He knows firsthand what an influx of money can do to a race and where campaigns must go to win. They talk 2020 and the one Florida county he says he’ll be watching on election night to know if Biden is winning the state.
podcastED: Stand Up for Students President Doug Tuthill speaks with East Carolina University’s Kevin Currie-Knight, a teaching assistant professor and leading thinker on “unschooling,” or self-directed learning. Tuthill and Currie-Knight discuss the public education marketplace and the dichotomy between choice opponents’ growing concern about monopolies from companies such as Google and Amazon while ignoring the lack of innovation that occurs in public education, a monopoly of its own capturing 90% of America’s students.
REGULATED from hosts Christian Bax and Tony Glover: Jarrett Dieterle (@JarretDieterle) talks weird alcohol laws, policy shifts during the pandemic and his new book, Give Me Liberty and Give Me a Drink! The book is a rollicking, recipe-packed tour of America’s most insane and laughable booze laws.
Tallahassee Business Podcast from the Tallahassee Chamber presented by 223 Agency: Jay Smith, vice president of Ajax Building Company joins Chamber President, Sue Dick for a candid conversation on the construction industry, talent needs, and upcoming projects. Smith shares the history of Ajax and a variety of projects they are working on in the community, including the upcoming Tallahassee Police Department project.
The New Abnormal from host Rick Wilson and Molly Jong-Fast: Dems say that the Russians hacked into our political system to help Trump win. Trump and associates blame former President Barack Obama for the interference. But the truth is, both sides have it wrong. Filmmaker Alex Gibney (known for documentary films like “Enron and “Taxi to the Dark Side”) has been immersed in the world of foreign hacking, troll farms, and most importantly, what happened in 2016 for his upcoming docuseries “Agents of Chaos.” “It wasn’t a ‘flip votes in order to give Trump the election’” kind of thing. It was all about Hillary Clinton. (“It’s that kind of ruthless delegitimizing of the rule of law and democracy that I think is ultimately the larger agenda here, both for [Vladimir] Putin and for Trump.)
The Yard Sign with host Jonathan Torres: Hosts Anibal Cabrera, Joe Wicker, Chris VerKuilen, and Torres discuss police ambushes, Bloomberg’s millions, Middle East peace in Florida reopening.
Instagram of the day
Aloe
“‘The Batman’ resumes UK production after positive COVID case” via Lindsey Bahr of The Associated Press — The U.K. production of “The Batman” is starting up again after being shut down earlier this month when an individual tested positive for COVID-19. A spokesperson for Warner Bros. said Thursday that filming had resumed after a hiatus for quarantine precautions. The studio has not identified the person who had the virus. Robert Pattinson stars in the film from director Matt Reeves which had been on hiatus for almost six months because of the coronavirus pandemic. The positive case came just three days after “The Batman” had initially resumed shooting. “The Batman” was originally supposed to hit theaters in June 2021 but was pushed back to October 2021 because of the delays.
‘
The Batman’ starring Robert Pattinson, is starting up again after being shut down earlier this month when an individual tested positive for COVID-19.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to Anthony Close, publisher of the essential St. Pete Rising, former Rep. Bob Cortes, Reggie Garcia, Jack Harris, top GOP consultant Steve Marin, Jennifer Mikosky, and Corinne Mixon of Rutledge Ecenia.
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Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
Biden town hall on CNN blasted for too many ‘softball’ questions
CNN hosted a Joe Biden town hall event at a Pennsylvania baseball stadium Thursday night, but critics said many of the questions made it seem the night’s game was softball instead.
The evening differed sharply from the grilling President Trump took during ABC News’ town hall program two nights earlier, they said.
“In the first moments, the contrast between what Trump was asked and what Biden is being asked is striking,” Politico columnist Jeff Greenfield tweeted, later writing, “Biden is doing very well, yes. But this is not exactly getting him ready to face tough questions from a Chris Wallace or Jake Tapper (should he decide to do so).”
The remark referred to the first presidential debate, scheduled for Sept. 29, which will be moderated by “Fox News Sunday” anchor Chris Wallace.
According to analysis from NewsBusters managing editor Curtis Houck, of the 16 participants who asked Biden questions, 13 of them — or more than 80 percent — were identified as Democrats. Only three were identified as Republicans.
That figure contrasted sharply to the town hall attendees Trump faced on ABC News. That group featured four Trump voters, three Hillary Clinton voters, one Jill Stein voter, three non-voters, and one unidentified. CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Biden says if Trump acted sooner on coronavirus ‘all the people would still be alive’
– Mollie Hemingway compares media treatment of Trump vs. Biden: ‘It is beyond propaganda’
– Biden bungles Dem ticket, refers to ‘Harris-Biden administration’ in campaign speech
– Twitter’s public policy director leaves to join Biden transition team: report
Hannity admonishes Kamala Harris for ‘out of touch’ joke about kids returning to school
Sean Hannity on Thursday called Democratic vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris a “fake, out-of-touch, far-left swamp politician,” after she joked about children returning to classrooms amid the coronavirus pandemic.
The incident happened Thursday at a campaign event in Pennsylvania.
“One of the biggest dilemmas for any of us as a parent is what to do about our kids in school – K-12, college, all of that,” Harris said. “And we all want them to go back to school.”
Harris then laughed, in an apparent attempt to relate to parents needing a break from managing their children after months of home confinement. She added that parents want kids to go back to school “safely.” But Hannity wasn’t buying it.
“I don’t know what’s so funny,” he said in his “Hannity” monologue. “Kids returning to school to get an education that they really can’t get in most big cities run by liberal Democrats for decades? Allowing parents to get back to work? I don’t see the funniness here.”
He suggested maybe Harris just doesn’t “know what it’s like to be on lockdown under one roof with kids unable to go to school and parents unable to go to work and Democrats withholding funding and playing politics with relief money.” He added maybe Harris is just a politician who will “do and say anything for power.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Bail fund backed by Kamala Harris and Joe Biden staffers bailed out alleged child abuser, docs indicate
– Media praises Kamala Harris’ Timberland boots after trashing same look on Melania Trump
– Washington Post report praises Kamala Harris for ‘shoe choice,’ gets slammed on Twitter
– California family accuses Newsom, Harris of trespassing on property for wildfire photo-op
Voters want ‘Blue Lives Matter’ laws against attacks on police: poll
A majority of likely U.S. voters believes the country is experiencing a war on police and politicians should enact policies classifying attacks on cops as hate crimes, according to a new poll.
Thursday’s Rasmussen poll was released amid a wave of calls to defund police and a swell in anti-police sentiment. Since 2018, the percentage of likely voters believing there’s a war on cops has increased from 43% to 59%.
The latest data represented a slight uptick from the 58% high reported in 2015. Meanwhile, 29% disagreed with that view and 12% reported as undecided. The poll has a 3% margin of error.
Rasmussen conducted the poll with 1,000 likely voters on Sept. 15-16, as news surfaced that police officers were attacked in Compton, Calif., and other cities. Last weekend, footage emerged in which an assailant walked up to a Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department patrol car and wounded two deputies who were inside. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Blue Lives Matter NYC founder slams de Blasio, Cuomo after report suggesting cops enforce indoor dining
– Colorado protesters charged in July ‘occupation’ of police precinct: reports
– Reward in LA County deputies’ ‘ambush’ shooting hits $675G as manhunt continues: report
– Anti-cop ‘mob’ swarms Back the Blue event in Denver, bloodying several before shutting things down: reports
– Dispute over pro-police ‘Blue Lives Matter’ flag results in $100G settlement for county employee who sued
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– Chris Rock: Obama presidency marked ‘progress for White people,’ not Black people
– Scientists may know where coronavirus originated, study says
– Joe Buck, voice of NFL on Fox, learns he’ll join dad in Pro Football Hall of Fame
– Tesla driver, 20, charged after found asleep at wheel of self-driving car traveling over 90 mph: cops
– Country star John Rich slams Nashville mayor as ‘de Blasio of the South’ over COVID controversy
– Browns’ Baker Mayfield, Nick Chubb help team to first win of 2020 season
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Trump announces $13B worth of new relief funding for US farmers
– Half a million petition Trump to cancel student loan debt
– Pfizer vaccine bets on early win vs coronavirus, documents show
#TheFlashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
SOME PARTING WORDS
Tucker Carlson praised President Trump’s new Patriotic Education Commission, designed to “combat Critical Race Theory,” which Carlson labeled as a “lunatic lie that teaches children some people are inherently worse than others” because of their skin color.
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“Democrat Joe Biden courted Hispanic voters on Tuesday on his first campaign visit of the year to Florida… Polls show Biden with a slight lead or essentially tied with Trump in the state, although the former vice president lags behind Democrat Hillary Clinton’s level of support with Florida Hispanics in 2016.” Reuters
The left urges Biden not to take Latino voters for granted.
“At the Democratic National Convention, Hispanic speakers were noticeably absent from the proceedings, with one wit noting that there were more Republicans slotted on day one alone than Latinos the entire week. Considering the fact that Joe Biden lost the Hispanic primary vote badly to Bernie Sanders, the failure to even engage in the typical prime-time pandering is difficult to fathom… If the presidential race tightens down the home stretch, as history suggests it will, and if the Biden campaign continues to shed Latino votes in its obsessive courting of suburbia, this attitude could prove particularly damaging in some very swing states.” Kurt Hackbarth, Jacobin Magazine“Compared to all non-Hispanics, Latinos have been responsible for 100 percent of the growth among young voters ages 18 to 34 since 2008, according to Census data. These young Latinos now make up one-third of voters in their age bracket in the key states of Texas, California, Florida, Arizona, New Mexico and Nevada… [But] When asked to name a political candidate who has gone out of her or his way to support Latino communities, a third of young Latinos could not name a single person. That’s where the opportunity lies for all political parties and groups seeking to tap this precious resource.” Monica Gil, The HillA Democratic pollster states that “We tend to look at Latino voters in Florida in a very binary way: If we’re not talking about Cubans, then we’re talking about Puerto Ricans. But only a third of the Latino electorate in Florida is actually Cuban-American — it’s very important, but it is only a third. More than one-third is actually not Cuban or Puerto Rican. They’re Mexican. They’re Colombian. They’re Peruvian. They’re Ecuadorian…“As the Latino population grows in size and its share of the electorate, how Latinos relate to their identity — being ‘Latino’ — and how that relates to politics and building power as a group is going to be interesting. We don’t necessarily share the same language. We don’t necessarily have a shared immigrant experience. We don’t have a shared country of origin. We are all shades of the rainbow. And so there is an interesting question we will have to grapple with: On the one hand, we say we’re not a monolith; on the other hand, we try to categorize ourselves as a monolith as one way to build political power.” Stephanie Valencia, Politico
Chuck Rocha, head of Nuestro PAC and a former Bernie Sanders campaign adviser, states that “If you treat a Latino voter like a white, persuadable voter, giving them information early and often and with culturally competent consultants, you can get a dramatic amount of them to show up for you. People are always shocked when I say we did not have a Latino outreach department at the Bernie Sanders headquarters. They’re like, ‘Well, then how did you do all of this work?’ Because we integrated it into everything we were doing. We had 200 Latinos on staff…
“Every department head, every office, every state had a Latino in a leadership position to run the overall campaign. They were making sure that Latinos weren’t left out there. You couple that with us starting six months early talking to Latinos in every state, spending millions of dollars, and then having a candidate who was rock-solid on an economic issue that most Latinos could relate with—that’s nirvana. That’s the perfect storm. That’s how we got 73 percent of the Latino vote in the Nevada caucuses.” Chuck Rocha, Slate
“At a policy level, Biden’s association with Obama put him at odds with a significant number of voters, particularly in the area of immigration. Many Latinos associate Obama with the deportation of more than three million undocumented people and the failure to secure comprehensive immigration reform. Early on in the campaign, Biden tried to justify Obama’s policies, quarrelled with protesters, and alienated immigration-rights activists with a number of gaffes. During the second Democratic debate, he suggested that undocumented immigrants should ‘get in line,’ obviating the fact that there is no clear pathway to citizenship for them…
“[But] Early last month, Biden… embraced the recommendations of a task force he convened with Sanders supporters, high-level government officials, and policy experts. Biden promised to create a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, reinstate the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (daca) program, and completely overhaul Trump’s executive orders on immigration. Marielena Hincapié, who co-chaired the task force’s immigration group and is the executive director of the National Immigration Law Center, said that she had found the Biden campaign’s openness to change encouraging.” Stephania Taladrid, The New Yorker
From the Right
The right is optimistic about Trump’s prospects with Latino voters.
“Either Trump, or the Democratic Party’s increasingly open embrace of the ‘socialist’ label, or both are bringing Florida’s Cuban Americans back to the Republican Party… 38 percent of Cuban Americans voted for Obama over John McCain, even though Obama had called for greater engagement with Cuba and that Obama said he was willing to meet with Raul Castro. Four years later, Obama won an even greater share of the Cuban-American vote in the state…
“Perhaps Hillary Clinton was a less likable candidate, perhaps her campaign was in denial about their level of support in Florida, perhaps Obama’s trip to Cuba in May 2016 alienated Florida’s Cuban Americans, or perhaps Cuban-American small businessmen saw Trump as a better choice for the economy. Whatever the reason, Trump won Cuban Americans in Florida 54 percent to 41 percent in 2016…
“And in the 2018 gubernatorial election, Cuban Americans broke 2 to 1 in favor of Republican Ron DeSantis over Democrat Andrew Gillum. And if the numbers in the latest NBC survey are accurate… then his odds of winning the key state of Florida look particularly strong.” Jim Geraghty, National Review
“GOP operatives often say that Hispanics are natural GOP constituents because we are hard-working, family-centric, and pro-life. This is all true, but we also resist the left’s cultural edicts. Much of the president’s broader policy agenda — yes, including on immigration — is popular with Hispanics…
“Instead of moving to the center, Democrats are rendering themselves culturally incompatible with Hispanics with their embrace of ‘cancel culture’ and other extreme forms of political correctness. As a 2018 study found, Hispanics were more likely than whites to note that political correctness is a problem in the country… There is no better example of the Democrats’ cultural incompetence than the insistence of liberals such as Biden and Elizabeth Warren on imposing the atrocious ‘Latinx’ ethnic label on our communities, a term that virtually no one uses and is unpronounceable in Spanish.” Giancarlo Sopo, The Federalist
“The fact that Trump is doing well with Hispanic voters in Florida highlights an important point: Hispanics aren’t a monolithic group. Cuban-Americans are very different from Mexican-Americans and Mexican-Americans are very different from Puerto Ricans…
“Much of the intensity around the immigration issue in recent years has stemmed from the belief that Democrats want ‘open borders’ so they can import evermore Democratic voters. There are thoughtful and non-racist versions of this argument and there are dumb and very racist versions of it as well. But it’s gotten to the point where it’s mostly just a lazy talking point… if Hispanics voted for [Trump] in large numbers despite [his] rhetoric and despite his immigration policies (or even because of them), it would deal a mortal wound to the claim that wanting to enforce immigration laws or making our immigration system slightly more restrictive is racist.” Jonah Goldberg, The Dispatch
“A paradox of this election is that it’s typically viewed as a battle of the bases. Can Democrats turn out more Trump-hating lefties than Republicans turn out Trump-loving righties? But the hidden story of the race is that each candidate is poaching key groups from the other party. Typically senior citizens are a Republican group. In Florida four years ago, Trump crushed Hillary 57/40 among them — the difference in his narrow win statewide. This year Biden has been surprisingly competitive among seniors…
“Similarly, Four years ago [Trump] lost Latinos in Florida to Clinton by 27 points. Today? He’s up four. A 31-point turnaround!… [and] Latinos aren’t the only minority that are a bit more open to Trump than they were four years ago. Trump’s cutting into Democrats’ margins among blacks and younger voters while Biden’s cutting into Republicans’ margins with whites and seniors. Whoever carves off more of the other guy’s base is likely the next president.” Allahpundit, Hot Air
Regarding Mike Bloomberg’s pledge to spend $100 million in Florida supporting Biden, “It’s all perfectly legal so long as Mr. Bloomberg doesn’t coordinate with the Biden campaign. By announcing the $100 million campaign publicly, Mr. Bloomberg is letting the Biden campaign know it can take millions it might have otherwise spent in Florida and redirect them to other battleground states… We don’t begrudge Mr. Bloomberg’s spending on causes and candidates he believes in. But Democrats and the political left say big money corrupts politics. Now that the big money will be used against President Trump, we’re not hearing complaints about spending.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
Photo illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios. Getty Images photos: Mark Reinstein
When he talks about Russia, Joe Biden sounds like Ronald Reagan, setting up a potential Day 1 confrontation with Vladimir Putin if Biden wins.
Why it matters: Biden has promised a forceful response against Russia for both election interference and alleged bounty payments to target American troops in Afghanistan. But being tougher than President Trump could be the easy part. The risk is overdoing it and making diplomacy impossible.
If Biden wins, his challenge will be to punish Putin while also preserving his ability to work with him on arms control and China.
“I believe Russia is an opponent — I really do,” Biden said at a CNN town hall last night. “I view China as a competitor, a serious competitor.”
The big picture: Other voices in Biden’s party, and the foreign policy establishment, call for a more cautious approach.
What’s next: The New START treaty, which limits the number of deployed strategic warheads and delivery systems for the U.S. and Russia, expires on Feb. 5 — 16 days into a potential Biden presidency.
The latest: Biden has seized upon Russian headlines — most recently the poisoning of opposition leader Alexei Navalny — to sharpen contrasts with Trump, and has repeatedly warned Russia not to meddle in the 2020 election.
President Trump holds a “Great American Comeback” rally in Mosinee, Wisc., last night. Photo: Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images
The day after President Trump slapped down his CDC director, we had two stunning new cases of administration officials being undermined from the top:
On the Hill, FBI Director Christopher Wray testified about “very active” efforts by Russia to denigrate Joe Biden and sow discord ahead of the election.
Trump later tweeted: “But Chris, you don’t see any activity from China, even though it is a FAR greater threat than Russia, Russia, Russia. They will both, plus others, be able to interfere in our 2020 Election with our totally vulnerable Unsolicited (Counterfeit?) Ballot Scam. Check it out!”
At the CDC, it turns out that a heavily criticized recommendation about who should be tested for the coronavirus wasn’t written by scientists, but “was posted to the agency’s website despite their serious objection,” the N.Y. Times’ Apoorva Mandavilli scoops (subscription).
A federal official told The Times the wording came from HHS and the White House coronavirus task force and “does not reflect what many people at the C.D.C. feel should be the policy.”
3. Scoop: Mike Bloomberg’s anti-chaos theory
CNN’s Anderson Cooper questions Joe Biden last night at a drive-in town hall in Moosic, Pa., outside Scranton. Photo: CNN
Mike Bloomberg’s $100 million Florida blitz begins today and will continue “wall to wall” in all 10 TV markets through Election Day, advisers tell me.
Why it matters: Bloomberg thinks that Joe Biden putting away Florida is the most feasible way to head off the national chaos we could have if the outcome of Trump v. Biden remained uncertain long after Election Day.
“If Biden wins Florida, it’s much harder for Trump to falsely claim victory on election night,” a Bloomberg adviser told me. “Florida is a toss-up, but winnable.”
But many Democrats complain this is a fraction of what he suggested he’d spend.
While Trump could win without what is now his home state, it’d be incredibly hard. If Biden were to pair a decisive Florida victory with a win up the coast in swing state North Carolina, we could know the new president quickly.
See “Responsibility,” from Priorities USA Action, the ad that begins the Bloomberg blitz.
4. Pic du jour
Jupiter and its enticing moon Europa shine in a new photo by the Hubble Space Telescope, AP reports.
Hubble snapped the picture last month when the planet was 406 million miles away, and the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore released it yesterday.
Europa, which is smaller than our own moon, appears as a pale dot alongside its giant, color-streaked gas planet.
Jupiter’s Great Red Spot is unusually red.
5. Scoop: How the Oracle-TikTok deal would work
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
An agreement between TikTok’s Chinese owner ByteDance and Oracle includes a variety of concessions in an effort to make the deal palatable to the Trump administration and security hawks in Congress, Axios’ Ina Fried reports.
The deal, in the form of a 20-page term sheet agreed to in principle by the companies, would give Oracle unprecedented access and control over user data as well as other measures designed to ensure that Americans’ data is protected, according to the source.
Why it matters: President Trump and U.S. leaders have been calling for a complete sale of the business. While this isn’t that, it does create several layers of oversight, including a continuous third-party audit and an independent board approved by the U.S. government.
TikTok in the U.S. will have its own board, approved by the U.S. government.
A separate entity, TikTok Global, will have its own board and be based in the U.S. It’s that entity in which Oracle, as well as Walmart, will have an ownership stake.
TikTok Global will own TikTok’s operations around the world, including the U.S. operation, which will have the extra security measures and its own governance.
6. What might have been: Massive mask drop called off
In April, the Postal Service “drafted a news release announcing plans to distribute 650 million masks nationwide, enough to offer five face coverings to every American household,” the WashPost reports, based on documents obtained by American Oversight, a watchdog group that requested them under FOIA.
The idea originated at HHS, “which suggested a pack of five reusable masks be sent to every residential address in the country, with the first shipments going to the hardest-hit areas,” per The Post.
Why it matters: Imagine if five months ago, Americans not only got a signal from their government that they should wear masks, but even had them handed to them. Incalculable loss — human and economic — could have been avoided.
7. First look: Biden’s searing “Knock on the Door” ad
Joe Biden, believing President Trump is suddenly vulnerable with military voters, goes up today with an ad called “Knock On The Door,” featuring retired Air force Brigadier General John Douglass, a former casualty notification officer.
Douglass — who grew up in Florida, and now splits time between Virginia and Florida — used to deliver the dreaded “knock on the door” to military families, letting them know their loved one had made the ultimate sacrifice.
Douglass, referring to accusations Trump disputes in a widely covered article by The Atlantic, says in the ad: “These military families suffer, and those spouses are not suckers. And those children are not losers.”
The ad will air on TV and digital platforms in Arizona, Florida, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and Wisconsin — targeting media markets and areas with a high number of military households and veterans.
The other side: Trump has denied the accusations by The Atlantic, as have many current and former aides.
Trump campaign communications director Tim Murtaugh told me: “Servicemen and women know that President Trump restored the military to its rightful strength and fixed the scandalous problems at VA hospitals.”
8. 1 million mortgage-holders fall through safety net
“About one million homeowners have fallen through the safety net Congress set up … to protect borrowers from losing their homes, according to industry data, potentially leaving them vulnerable to foreclosure and eviction,” The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
What’s happening: “Homeowners with federally guaranteed mortgages can skip monthly payments for as long as a year without penalty and make them up later,” The Journal reports.
“Many people have instead fallen behind on their payments, digging themselves into a deepening financial hole through accumulated missed payments and late fees.”
9. Michael Schmidt: Private eye rummaged Bolton’s trash
Here’s a juicy nugget near the end of the new book by N.Y. Times scoop machine Michael Schmidt, “Donald Trump v. The United States.”
It’s about the scramble during impeachment to learn what was in former national security adviser John Bolton’s manuscript of his White House memoir, “The Room Where It Happened.” Schmidt writes:
I received a call from a man I had never heard of. He said that several years earlier he had sat next to my father on a train and he had followed my work. The man said that he worked as a private investigator of sorts in the Washington area and he had been trying to figure out what Bolton had written in his book. A friend had told him at a Rotary Club meeting that Bolton was taking sections of his book and sending them out to friends to review and comment on.
The friends were then mailing them back to him, and he was throwing them in his trash. Bolton had apparently done this because he did not want to create an electronic record of his correspondences. The man said that he had been scouting Bolton’s wife’s office and their house on the nights he put his trash out.
After Bolton moved the trash onto the street, he went through it. …[H]e said … Thursday morning was trash pickup day in Bolton’s neighborhood. I made sure not to tell him whether he should go through the trash again. I knew that what he wanted to do was likely legal, but the idea of the Times aligning ourselves with a private eye was potentially troublesome.
On Sept. 30, Le Bernardin, one of the world’s seminal seafood restaurants, will become New York’s first Michelin three-star dining room to reopen indoors since March, Bloomberg’s Kate Krader reports. Chef-owner Eric Ripert told her he’s spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on updates:
One of Ripert’s biggest investments has been the installation of the Needlepoint BiPolar Ionization system, [which] eliminates more than 99% of any Covid-19 particles in the air within 30 minutes …
“Right away, we say yes when it was proposed to us. The system was just installed in the United Nations,” according to Ripert. …
[T]he lounge has been turned into a “welcoming center” for temperature checks and to allow for distance between incoming parties. The restaurant’s exit is the former entrance to the private dining room, allowing a flow through the dining area.
Mike Allen
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The decision by a federal judge could cast the Postal Service into more tumult just as states have begun to send out mail ballots for the Nov. 3 election.
The White House is worried about opposition from Senate Republicans to Judy Shelton, President Trump’s nominee for a spot on the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors, according to people familiar with the matter.
The Department of Education has informed Princeton University that it is under investigation following the school president’s declaration that racism was “embedded” in the institution.
FBI Director Christopher Wray warned that the Russian government is “very active” in efforts to influence the 2020 presidential election by harming Democratic nominee Joe Biden.
President Trump and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden are scheduled to hold three debates, while Vice President Mike Pence and California Sen. Kamala Harris, the Democratic vice presidential nominee, have one scheduled debate.
CNN anchor Anderson Cooper challenged Joe Biden on his position on fracking at a televised town hall on Thursday, accusing the Democratic presidential nominee of trying to play to multiple sides of the debate on the issue.
Scholar Shelby Steele used to be one of the few black conservatives who openly shared his views, but in today’s cultural landscape, he said that is quickly changing.
MSNBC host Rachel Maddow aired photographs shot during the Obama administration to criticize a “zero tolerance” immigration policy of the Trump administration.
2020 Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden offered little clarity on whether he could and would introduce a national mask mandate should he win the White House on Nov. 3.
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AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
Biden blasts Trump’s ‘criminal’ pandemic response in town hall.
Trump pushes cultural issues in appeal to older, white voters.
South Africa to know true virus toll in weeks, set to reopen economy.
How the US wildfires got so bad: Lightning storm, easterly wind.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI
Biden blasts Trump’s ‘criminal’ virus response; Trump stirs culture war in appeal to white voters
The presidential candidates are on the stump, appealing to voters in battleground states, and driving home their polar opposite campaign messages and visions for America.
Joe Biden slammed Donald Trump repeatedly over his handling of the coronavirus, calling Trump’s downplaying of the pandemic “criminal” and his administration “totally irresponsible.”
Zeroing in on Trump’s admission that he publicly played down the impact of the virus while aware of its severity, Biden declared: “He knew it and did nothing. It’s close to criminal.”
Masks: The gulf between Trump and public health experts over wearing face masks keeps getting wider. Trump has gone back and forth on face masks in the roughly six months since the coronavirus took root in the U.S., muddying the message from doctors and health officials who say masks are crucial to slowing the spread of the virus. White House officials insist Trump has always supported mask wearing. But the president’s own words and actions tell a very different and, to some, a very puzzling story.
Infection rates soar in American college towns as students return
College towns across the U.S. have emerged as virus hot spots in recent weeks as schools struggle to contain the virus. In many cases, surges have been blamed on off-campus parties.
In those 20 counties, weekly infection rates have been three times as high as their states’ overall rates, report Casey Smith, Irena Hwang and Colin Binkley.
Some worry that colleges could overwhelm hospitals already bracing for increasing cases of COVID-19 and flu this fall and winter. “There’s this waiting game. Does it stay on college campuses or will it escape?” said the chief quality officer at the University of Wisconsin.
U.S. Unemployment Benefits:The number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits fell slightly last week to 860,000, a historically high figure that reflects acute economic damage from the outbreak that is causing pain to families across the nation. Before the pandemic hit the economy, the number signing up for jobless aid had never exceeded 700,000 in a week, even in the depths of the 2007-2009 Great Recession.
NYC Schools: New York City has again delayed the start of in-person learning for most of the more than 1 million students in its public school system. Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that most elementary school students would do remote-learning only until Sept. 29. Middle and high schools would stay remote through Oct. 1.
Texas Restrictions: Republican Gov. Greg Abbott says bars will remain closed indefinitely in the state following a massive outbreak this summer that became one of the deadliest in the U.S. But Abbott said that improving trends in Texas, including a sharp drop in hospitalized COVID-19 patients, will allow restaurants and gyms to expand to nearly full capacity starting next week.
AP PHOTO/JEROME DELAY
S. Africa set to almost fully reopen economy; India’s surge continues, 96k new cases
South Africa should know its true toll from the pandemic within a few weeks, the government’s chief medical adviser has told the AP, as the country prepares to almost fully reopen its economy after bringing the first surge in cases under control.
South Africa makes up roughly half the confirmed virus cases on the African continent with more than 650,000.
India’s Unrelenting Spike: Cases have jumped by more than 96,000, showing little sign of leveling. The new figures sent India’s total past 5.21 million people infected. The Health Ministry said 1,174 more people have died. Experts say India’s reported death toll of more than 84,000 may be a vast undercount. India is expected to pass the U.S. within weeks as the nation with the highest total number of confirmed infections.
The worldwide count of known infections climbed past 30 million, with more than half of them from just three countries: the U.S., India and Brazil, according to the tally kept by Johns Hopkins University.
Europe Universities: Overcrowded French universities — including lecture halls so full at Paris’ Sorbonne University that students are sitting on floors — have seen the emergence of at least a dozen virus clusters since campuses and classrooms opened this month. It’s an alarming sign for countries elsewhere in Europe, where most universities are preparing to resume teaching in coming weeks.
France’s experience stands in contrast to what’s happening in Britain, where a raft of new public health precautions mean studying will look a lot different this term. Germany and Italy are also adapting their higher education to the pandemic, Sylvia Corbet in Paris and Taryn Siegel in London report.
Israel Lockdown: The country is set to go back into one to try to contain a virus outbreak that has steadily worsened for months as its government has been plagued by infighting. The three-week lockdown, beginning at 2 p.m. today, will include the closure of many businesses and strict limits on public gatherings, and will largely confine people to within 0.6 miles of their homes. The closures coincide with the Jewish High Holidays, when people typically visit their families and gather for large prayer services.
Two unusual weather phenomena combined to create some of the most destructive wildfires the West Coast states have seen in modern times. First was a dramatic lightning storm over Northern and Central California. Thousands of bolts ignited hundreds of fires in parched grasslands and vineyards. Then, warm, dry winds blew toward the West Coast — not the usual direction.
One month after the lightning storm set the stage, firefighters are still battling the blazes. At least 34 people have died. Andrew Selsky has this special step-back report from Oregon.
The Justice Department has sent a memo to U.S. attorneys emphasizing that federal prosecutors should aggressively go after demonstrators who cause violence — and even sedition charges could potentially apply. The memo, obtained by the AP, says the sedition statute doesn’t require proof of a plot to overthrow the government. Instead, it could be used when a defendant tries to oppose the government’s authority by force. Attorney General William Barr has been pushing U.S. attorneys to bring federal charges in protest-related violence whenever they can. Federal convictions often result in longer prison sentences.
Hurricane Sally left some people on the Gulf Coast cut off by floodwaters until they could be rescued by teams in boats and high-water vehicles. Crews were pulling people out of flooded areas Thursday near Pensacola, Florida, while Alabama National Guard troops helped people evacuate near Mobile Bay. Homeowners and businesses along the soggy Gulf Coast were cleaning up, even as a second round of flooding took shape along rivers and creeks swollen by the storm’s heavy rains.
Beleaguered by six weeks of large protests calling for his resignation, Belarus’ president says he is putting troops on alert and closing the country’s borders with Poland and Lithuania. President Alexander Lukashenko’s decision underlines his repeated claim that the massive wave of protests is driven by the West and comes amid increasing criticism from the U.S. and the EU. Protests began after the August presidential election that official results say gave the authoritarian leader a sixth term in office; opponents say the results were manipulated.
Winston Groom, the writer whose novel “Forrest Gump” was made into an Oscar-winning 1994 movie that became an enduring cultural phenomenon, has died. “Forrest Gump” was the improbable tale of a slow-witted man who was a participant or witness to key points of 20th century history — from Alabama segregationist Gov. George Wallace’s “stand at the schoolhouse door” to meetings with presidents and the war in Vietnam.
Good morning, Chicago. Health officials reported 2,056 new known COVID-19 cases and 25 more deaths in Illinois on Thursday. The statewide seven-day rolling positivity rate stands at 3.6%.
Meanwhile, a growing life expectancy gap between Black and white Chicagoans has a stark and clear cause, city health officials said in releasing a report on the issue Thursday: decades of segregation and systemic racism.
Also, the Lightfoot administration said it may consider leaving some Chicago police jobs unfilled next year as the city tries to fill a huge pandemic-induced budget shortfall.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
More than 100 lives of professionals working in the health care field have been lost in Illinois this past six months since COVID-19 began its deadly march through the state. The Tribune has identified and interviewed the families of nearly 50 deceased health care workers in Illinois to chronicle the devastating loss of life and acts of heroism.
Chicago-area native Jerry Harris rocketed to fame earlier this year as the breakout star of the docuseries “Cheer” on Netflix. But the young star’s image was shattered Thursday when FBI agents arrested him on child pornography charges.
Southport Lanes has lasted nearly a century by evolving, at various times serving as a tavern, bowling alley, speak-easy, brothel and illegal off-track horse betting venue. But the Lakeview mainstay, which opened not long after another pandemic, couldn’t survive COVID-19.
Here’s our running list of Chicago restaurants and bars to close permanently due to the pandemic’s economic toll
The White Sox are headed to the postseason for the first time since 2008 after beating the Twins 4-3 on Thursday at Guaranteed Rate Field. “This moment is really special,” said Eloy Jimenez, who drove in the winning run.
Column: No champagne spraying for the White Sox after clinching their 1st playoff berth in 12 years, but they deserve to take a bow, says Paul Sullivan
As with any “best of” lists, arguments are bound to ensue from the rankings and “The 101 Best Pizzas in America” list for 2020 is sure to do the same. Chicago nabbed six spots out of the 101 selections, compiled by our colleagues at The Daily Meal.
See The Daily Meal’s full list of the best pizzas in America here
A Chicago doctor is suing his business partner, accusing her of “looting” more than $3.7 million from their business to finance an “extravagant lifestyle” and to lavish Ald. George Cardenas with luxurious trips, an expensive watch and a monthly stipend for consulting services.
Cardenas had been hired to drum up business for Omni Medical Student Training, which places students from Caribbean medical schools in residency programs with Chicago hospitals. The alderman wasn’t very successful in getting hospitals to sign up, though, according to the suit. Tim Novak has the story…
After city tests in 2019, EPA confirmed high manganese levels at Babe Ruth Field in Hegewisch and said the chemical must be removed, but Illinois officials gave a youth league the go-ahead to play.
The Chicago lobbyist or one of his firms has come onto federal authorities’ radar in two cases they’re investigating. He has business and personal ties to others under scrutiny.
Ald. George Cardenas was a consultant for a Chicago business where one partner is suing another, accusing her of misusing company funds — in part to benefit Cardenas.
The police are taking pickpockets seriously, building felony cases. “For 60-year-old guys, they move pretty well,” the police mass-transit unit boss says of the crew. “It’s like they’re hunting.”
Ron Safer — a former federal prosecutor now advising House Republican Leader Jim Durkin — called the letter a “green light to pursue all avenues of the investigation.”
Mayor Lori Lightfoot has, so far, resisted the movement to de-fund the police But that doesn’t mean the Chicago Police Department’s $1.7 billion budget will be spared.
For 18 months, the revered art restorer brightened and touched up the 16th century work ‘The Assumption of the Virgin.’ He worked on the frame for another six months.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Thankfully, it is Friday. We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators, and readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 194,081; Tuesday, 194,536; Wednesday, 195,942; Thursday, 196,802; Friday, 197,643.
Global cases of COVID-19 now exceed 30 million.
Washington’s debate about enacting additional help for Americans suffering during a pandemic and economic downturn has become a bit like Groundhog Day. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), after many weeks and 45 days before the presidential election, says she’s holding out for $2.2 trillion, while Republicans in Congress balk at spending more than about $800 billion because they think some of the trillions of dollars they already enacted have not been spent.
President Trump is seesawing this week, much to his GOP colleagues’ dismay, by cheerleading for a more generous bipartisan approach while ruling nothing out. Or in.
On the sidelines, at least 11 million Americans are unemployed. The coronavirus crisis continues. Small business and large ones, including major U.S. airlines, are beseeching the White House and lawmakers for additional assistance. Economists, investors and monetary policy stewards, most notably at the Federal Reserve, warn that the economic rebound experienced this summer is losing steam and more fiscal stimulus from Congress would be wise.
“The needs have only grown – some of the needs for small businesses, needs for restaurants, needs for transportation and the rest,” Pelosi said in the Capitol on Thursday while Republicans accused her of playing politics
The Hill: Pelosi: “Hard to see” Democrats supporting less than $2.2 trillion in coronavirus relief.
In recent days, the White House signaled it was prepared to try to rekindle talks with congressional leaders after the bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus released a $1.5 trillion coronavirus relief proposal, which was received warmly by the president and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows.
However, Democratic leaders have stuck to their guns in hopes of a larger deal despite Senate Republicans renewed support for a “skinny” $650 billion bill, which was supported by 52 of 53 conference members in a vote that failed last week. But they have pulled one ally to their side: the president, who advocated on Wednesday for Republicans to push for a “larger” bill. However, some Senate Republicans have warned the White House to back off that push as it will not be well received with the group.
“The White House has been making some statements here recently that would never get hardly any Republicans in the United States Senate,” Senate Finance Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) told Bloomberg TV’s David Westin. “This used to be the White House versus Pelosi up until about now. Now the president’s coming in and saying ‘we can maybe go to $1.5 trillion.’ He better be careful of that because I don’t think that bill could get through the United States Senate.”
Speaking with reporters at the White House, Meadows indicated that he does not see the Problem Solvers Caucus proposal moving the needle to restart talks with Democrats, especially if Pelosi is unwilling to move off of her current price tag.
“Based on conversations with some Democrat House members yesterday, I’m not optimistic Speaker Pelosi is going to see this as an opportunity to actually have meaningful conversations,” Meadows said. “That’s not a negotiation, that’s an ultimatum.”
Reuters: Airline CEOs plead with White House to avert looming U.S. job cuts.
The New York Times: Unemployment claims dip, but layoffs remain a worry.
CNN: Bipartisan negotiations over a stopgap spending bill to keep the government open beyond Sept. 30 are not finished yet but moving in the right direction.
Late Thursday night, the president took aim at Pelosi aboard Air Force One following his rally in Wisconsin. After speaking with the White House travel pool for 23 minutes, he put one quote on the record criticizing the Speaker for what he described as her desire to strip $30 billion in agricultural funding sought by Republicans from a coronavirus relief package.
“She doesn’t want to give farm aid to the farmers. She doesn’t want to give farmers any help,” the president said hours after he committed $13 billion for farmers in relief aid during the Wisconsin event (The Hill).
More in Congress: Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) is in quarantine after being exposed to COVID-19, according to his spokesman. Johnson is the second Republican senator in a week, following Sen. Shelly Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), to choose precautionary isolation. Capito tested negative for the virus (The Hill).
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
2020 POLITICS: Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden will spend today on the ground in Minnesota, a longtime Democratic stronghold where Republicans are itching to make gains despite recent polls showing the state may be an uphill climb for the GOP.
The president, who lost Minnesota to Hillary Clinton in 2016 by 1.5 points, will rally supporters in Bemidji in the northern part of the state, while Biden will appear at a union training center and speak in Duluth to a crowd limited in size because of COVID-19 concerns (Newsweek).
According to the latest RealClearPolitics average of polls, Biden leads in Minnesota by 10.2 points despite the Trump campaign’s continued effort to turn the tide in their direction in a state that has supported the Democratic nominee in every election since 1972. Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) told Gray Television’s Greta Van Susteren this week that Republicans continue to push for the Land of 10,000 Lakes so they can go on offense somewhere. She predicted the GOP is chasing a mirage.
“I think one of the reasons that Republicans keep saying this, despite the polls, I get why they said it. I would, too, if I were them early on. They want to play offense somewhere,” Klobuchar told the host. “So they’re like, ‘Oh, look at the bright, shiny objects of Minnesota and New Hampshire.’ But in fact, the polls keep telling the truth. And I think by the end, you’re going to see the focus on some other states.”
The Hill: During a CNN town hall held in Scranton, Pa., on Thursday, Biden said he has benefited from white privilege.
The Associated Press: Biden blasts Trump’s “criminal” virus response during town hall.
The Washington Post: Biden takes questions and criticizes Trump in drive-in town hall; Trump holds rally in Wis.
> The U.S. Postal Service is now barred from making operational changes that have been blamed for a slowdown in mail delivery after a federal judge on Thursday ruled in favor of 14 states that sought a temporary injunction. The Washington State judge said Trump and Postmaster General Louis DeJoy are “involved in a politically motivated attack on the efficiency of the Postal Service” that could disrupt the 2020 election (The Washington Post). The judge’s order is HERE.
>FBI Director Christopher Wray testified on Thursday to the House Homeland Security Committee that Russia is interfering through social media in the U.S. election to “denigrate” Biden and favor Trump (CNN).
> Twitter on Thursday placed a warning label on a Trump tweet, saying his post included potentially misleading information about the mail-in voting process. “Because of the new and unprecedented massive amount of unsolicited ballots which will be sent to “voters”, or wherever, this year, the Nov 3rd Election result may NEVER BE ACCURATELY DETERMINED, which is what some want. Another election disaster yesterday. Stop Ballot Madness!,” Trump tweeted (Reuters).
>Campaign ad spending: Trump and his campaign are trying to allay concerns about trailing Biden in television ads, reports The Washington Post. Trump allies continue to tell campaign advisers that they are being outspent on the air in key states. The president’s campaign must report its cash on hand for the end of August by Sunday’s regulatory deadline.
> Trump vs. CDC: The president’s latest public brouhaha with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Robert Redfield has renewed the spotlight on the president’s distrust of experts and put the health agency in a compromising position.
One day after Trump threw Redfield under the bus for testifying to Congress about vaccine distribution and masks and told the press that the CDC director was “confused” and mistaken, Meadows piled on, saying the director, who is a physician and virologist, was not familiar with federal planning for vaccine development and distribution (The Hill). As Brett Samuels and Nathaniel Weixel write, the episode marked another instance of the president undercutting public health professionals and officials in his own administration, and took place shortly after Biden said that while vaccines are to be trusted, the president cannot be.
The Hill: House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) says he trusts Trump over the CDC director on vaccine timing.
> Debates: Biden has one major goal when it comes to the upcoming presidential debates, according to The Hill’s Amie Parnes: He can’t let Trump get away with a single thing while they’re onstage.
“Not one f—— thing,” said one longtime Biden aide. “He has to continue to build the contrast while holding Trump accountable for everything that has happened over the last few years. Voters, the aide said, want to see a fiery Biden calling out all the bullshit. … He needs to fire and not just fire back.” The first debate is scheduled Sept. 29.
Biden has said he will debate Trump as if he is a “fact-checker on the stage” but has also said he doesn’t want to get drawn into a “brawl” with the president (The Associated Press).
The Hill: Biden’s team says he views the contest against Trump as “Park Avenue vs. Scranton.”
The Hill: Biden leads Trump by 4 points in a new Arizona poll.
The Hill: Biden promises Democratic senators he will help in battleground states.
CNN: During a call with Senate Democrats on Thursday, Biden vowed to keep an aggressive campaign schedule.
Politico: Trump says a Harris vice presidency is “no way for a woman” to become president.
The New York Times: “A Promised Land,” former President Obama’s memoir about his presidency (actually just the first volume at 768 pages), comes out after the election on Nov. 17. The first U.S. printing will be 3 million copies. The 44th president along with former first lady Michelle Obama secured a joint book deal for their respective memoirs reported in 2017 to come with a $65 million advance from Penguin Random House. Michelle Obama’s blockbuster 2018 memoir, “Becoming,” sold more than 10 million copies within months of publication and this year was adapted as a Netflix documentary.
ADMINISTRATION: The government’s law and order crackdown on urban protests, including through the Justice Department, has led to more than 300 arrests of demonstrators on suspicion of federal crimes since the death of George Floyd in May, according to an exclusive Associated Press analysis of data.
The reporting shows that while many people have been accused of violent crimes such as arson for hurling Molotov cocktails, burning police cars and assault for injuring law enforcement, the accusations are not uniformly applied among those present at the time. That has contributed to criticism that at least some arrests are a politically motivated effort to stymie demonstrations around the country.
During a private call last week with federal prosecutors across the country, according to AP, Attorney General William Barr pushed prosecutors to bring federal charges whenever possible against protesters, keeping cases in federal jurisdiction instead of in state court. During the call, Barr raised the prospect that prosecutors could bring a number of potential charges in urban unrest cases, including the rarely used sedition statute, according to the officials familiar with the call. Charges of sedition are difficult to prove in court, according to legal experts.
Barr has focused on protest-related violence that appears targeted at law enforcement. He has publicly argued that the government seldom has reason to open sweeping investigations into the practices of police departments. Barr has said he does not believe there is systemic racism in police departments (The Associated Press).
The Washington Post reported last week that Homeland Security tactical teams were dispatched this summer to quell protests in Washington. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement dodged rules against using charter flights to move personnel by stocking aircraft with immigrant detainees from Arizona and Florida on the pretext that tactical personnel had to relocate detainees from overcrowded facilities to Virginia, near Washington. The mobilization and use of “ICE Air” transfers came to light after dozens of detainees tested positive for COVID-19 once they were in Virginia and one person died.
Also in June, as protesters gathered in Washington’s Lafayette Square north of the White House, federal officials began to stockpile ammunition and seek devices that could emit deafening sounds and make anyone within close range feel as if their skin was on fire. D.C. National Guard Maj. Adam D. DeMarco told lawmakers in sworn testimony shared with The Washington Post this week that Defense Department officials sought crowd control technology deemed too unpredictable to use in war zones and had authorized the transfer of about 7,000 rounds of ammunition to the D.C. Armory as protests roiled Washington.
DeMarco’s information contradicts administration assertions that protesters on June 1 were violent, that the government did not use tear gas against demonstrators and that ample warning was given to the protesters to disperse, which is a requirement before police may lawfully act to clear a crowd.
A deal for coronavirus fiscal relief, by Alex Brill, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3myZ9Gb
New Fed approach takes inflation targeting more seriously, by Scott Sumner, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3iJhSMJ
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 noon for a pro forma session. Pelosi will hold her weekly press conference at 10:45 a.m., and will be interviewed at midday on Bloomberg TV’s “Balance of Power” with David Westin.
The Senate will meet on Monday at 3 p.m. to resume consideration of the nomination of Edward Meyers to be a judge with the U.S. Court of Federal Claims.
The president speaks at a campaign rally in Bemidji, Minn., at 6 p.m. CDT.
The Vice President will campaign at 1 p.m. in Litchfield Park, Ariz. He is scheduled to participate in Phoenix in a LIBRE Initiative policy roundtable along with the group’s president, Daniel Garza, as part of Hispanic Heritage Month. Pence will also speak with military veterans. Pence will return to Washington this evening.
➔ PUERTO RICO: The administration today is expected to announce $10 billion in Federal Emergency Management Agency assistance to the island territory of Puerto Rico to rebuild its electrical grid three years after Hurricane Maria’s destruction, according to Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Rep. Nydia Velázquez. “While I certainly hope to see this money put to good use making Puerto Rico’s electrical system more resilient, these delays are unacceptable, and it is insulting to Puerto Ricans everywhere that the administration is so blatantly playing politics with this aid,” said Velázquez. She referred to the importance to Trump’s presidential bid of Latino votes in states such as Florida (New York Daily News).
➔ CORONAVIRUS: New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced on Thursday a delay of schools resuming in-person teaching at New York City public schools. Instead of schools reopening on Monday, elementary schools are set to resume on Sept. 29, with middle and high schools doing so on Oct. 1 (The New York Times). … World Health Organization’s Director for EuropeHans Kluge said that spiking rates of COVID-19 transmission should “serve as a wake-up call” across the European continent as the number of weekly recorded cases eclipsed 300,000 for the first time. “We have a very serious situation unfolding before us,” Kluge said on Thursday. “Weekly cases have now exceeded those reported when the pandemic first peaked in Europe in March” (Politico Europe).
> MORE Coronavirus: Pharmaceutical companies Moderna and Pfizer released reports of their vaccine trials. Moderna suggested it may need continued research in March and May before knowing if a potential vaccine is effective against COVID-19 (The New York Times). … The NFL revealed that all tests of players, coaches and team personnel from last Thursday’s Kansas City Chiefs-Houston Texans game came back negative (ESPN). However, the Kansas City Health Department reported that a fan who attended the game tested positive for COVID-19 the following day. The department directed 10 people seated nearby to quarantine after potential exposure to the virus (CNN). … The CDC says it needs an additional $6 billion to distribute a coronavirus vaccine once approved. The agency publicly asked Congress on Wednesday for the “urgent” funds (The Hill). … Trump will not attend the United Nations General Assembly in person in New York next week. Because of the coronavirus, leaders will meet virtually or submit prerecorded addresses (The Hill).
➔ HEALTH & ENVIRONMENT: Wildfires in California and other western states have left behind the worst air quality in the world, greatly increasing the danger for people who suffer from asthma and other underlying health conditions. “At the levels of air pollution we’re seeing in the Northwest now, it’s a matter of concern for everyone,” said David Hill, a physician and volunteer medical spokesperson for the American Lung Association. “By itself, we’d be concerned, but with COVID circulating, having worse air quality might make it more likely for them to get infected” (The Hill). Wildfires have burned 5 million acres across the West and scientists are running out of names for Atlantic hurricanes. Nonetheless, while climate change is back in the headlines, voters and lawmakers may remain focused on numerous other worries (The Hill).
➔STATE WATCH: New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy (D) announced a deal with legislative leaders on Thursday to increase state taxes on income over $1 million by nearly 2 percentage points, giving New Jersey one of the highest state tax rates on wealthy people in the country. The agreement also includes an annual rebate of as much as $500 for families making less than $150,000. Murphy said the tax increase is needed to plug a hole in state revenues hit hard by the pandemic (The New York Times). At least eight other states — including California, Massachusetts and New York — have considered proposals to increase taxes on high-income residents, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
THE CLOSER
And finally … 👏👏👏 Bravo to the winners of the Morning Report Quiz! Smart readers and savvy Googlers had no trouble spotting this week’s headlines related to climate change.
Sweeping the contest’s four questions were: Donna Minter, Mitch Adams, Daniel Bachhuber, Mary Anne McEnery, J. Patrick White, Linda Banning, Cynthia Whittlesey, Chuck Schoenenberger, Patrick Kavanagh, Ki Harvey, Candi Cee, Gary Kalian, Robert Nordmeyer, John Donato, Mary Ellen Krohner, Robert Hanley, Pam Manges and Luther Berg.
They knew that when Trump flew to California on Monday to speak with state officials about ongoing wildfires, his hosts spoke about climate change while the president recommended improved forest management.
Hurricane Sally, which made U.S. landfall on Wednesday, matched a record this week as one of five hurricanes swirling at the same time in the Atlantic Ocean. Many scientists believe extreme weather is evidence of climate change.
Scientists also pointed to signs of global warming in the Arctic this week when a chunk of Greenland’s ice cap measuring 42 square miles broke off because of rapid melting.
Describing changes in the Earth’s climate as scientifically “unambiguous,” Facebook this week announced it will create an information hub on its platform to provide “science-based information” about climate change.
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POLITICO PLAYBOOK
How a Covid deal could come together
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
POLITICAL DONATIONS are a bit like financial investments. Sometimes they’re a sign of confidence, sometimes they indicate desperation, and sometimes they’re a hedge.
GET A LOAD OF THIS: The SENATE LEADERSHIP FUND — the Senate GOP super PAC — raised $37.3 MILLION in August. For a point of comparison: They raised $3 million in August 2018 — that’s a 12x increase. They have $126 MILLION on hand, which is more than 3x what they had on hand at this point in 2018 ($40.5 million).
OF COURSE, the battle for the Senate is far more competitive this time around. But when you compare this level of enthusiasm with the TRUMP fundraising, you’ll find a bit of a disconnect. ALEX ISENSTADT:“Cash-strapped Trump campaign awaits a bailout from big donors”
SCOOP: JAIME HARRISON raised another $1 million-plus Thursday — his second consecutive day raising north of a million dollars after a Quinnipiac poll had the Democratic challenger tied with Sen. LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-S.C.). The DSCC is getting involved in the race.
NEW … DAVE WASSERMAN at the COOK POLITICAL REPORT will change the rating of three House seats: Colorado-3 is going from likely Republican to lean Republican. This is the GOP-held seat where Republicans nominated QAnon-curious LAUREN BOEBERT. … Rep. JARED GOLDEN’S (D-Maine) seat is going from toss-up to lean Democrat. … Virginia-5 — where GOP Rep. DENVER RIGGLEMAN lost the nomination — is going from lean Republican to toss-up.
ON COVID RELIEF … AS YOU’VE READ HERE many times, we’ve been quite bearish on the prospects of a Covid relief deal before the November election — and for good reason, as the two sides have made zero progress in the last several months.
BUT IF YOU HEAR BOTH SIDES TALK BEHIND THE SCENES, the White House and Democrats want to find their way back to the negotiating table, but neither side knows how to do it. When you’re this deep into finger pointing, it’s tough to concede that you want back in. (Speaker NANCY PELOSI, you call us, we’ll three-way call chief of staff MARK MEADOWS and Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN. )
WE MADE A QUICK LAP AROUND WITH OUR SOURCES Thursday night, and the contours of what could become a deal became a bit clearer. All sides say these represent a possible deal — should they ever get back to the table.
— THE BIG, GIGANTIC STICKING POINT has been state and local money. DEMOCRATS are at $900 billion over two years, and REPUBLICANS are at something like $100 billion, and $100 billion-ish in repurposed money over two years.
— SO, LET’S SAYDEMOCRATS cut their ask to one year — so that would be $450 billion. And REPUBLICANS went up to $300 billion. Both of those do not include the $150 billion that would be repurposed. So the total would be $450 billion — $300 billion in new money, plus the $150 billion repurposed. DEMOCRATS could explain this by saying they got $450 billion over one year, and will ask for more if JOE BIDEN is elected. (This construct isn’t being pulled out of thin air.)
NOW WE’RE GETTING CLOSE …
— THERE ARE OTHER big issues. Dems want $300 billion for schools, and Republicans were at $105 billion. This is immediate money. The two sides were relatively close on other issues when the talks broke down earlier this summer.
— IF THEY EVER GET BACK TO THE TABLE, this bill could be loaded up like a Christmas tree. Everyone will want their priorities on, and the leadership and the White House will have to manage that process and the expectations around it.
SO, WHO CALLS FIRST? … PELOSI is the only leader to have passed something. MEADOWS isn’t a PELOSI fav — but, remember, a deal is not likely to come together without him. Could MNUCHIN be the peacemaker? Maybe he can get everyone to the table — he and PELOSI have been talking — but the distrust for the Treasury secretary is high among Republicans, so MEADOWS needs to be in the room, the White House says.
THIS IS NEW … THERE IS NOW SOME RISK around the corner for the House Democratic leadership.
— DISCHARGE PETITION ALERT … REP. JAIME HERRERA BEUTLER (R-Wash.) filed a petition to force a vote on a stand-alone extension of the Paycheck Protection Program until the end of the year. The petition — called a discharge petition — is a tool of the House minority to force a vote on a bill that’s been languishing in committee. It will be up for signatures Sept. 25, and if every Republican signs, only 20 Democrats need to sign it to force a vote. IF REPUBLICANS SUCCEED, this will be a defeat for House Democratic leadership — it temporarily hands over the floor to Republicans.
THIS COULD BE AN ADDED INCENTIVE FOR PELOSI to get a deal.
BTW: LEADERS ARE LIKELY TO RELEASE a stopgap spending bill today that would avert a Sept. 30 shutdown.
Good Friday morning.
SPOTTED: Chris LaCivita, head of the new anti-Biden Preserve America Super PAC, and Linda McMahon, who runs Trump’s America First Super PAC, dining at Cafe Milano on Thursday evening.
INTERESTING NUGGET, via PETER BAKER’SNews Analysis on the front page of today’s NYT: “Not counting Maryland, where Air Force One is based, or states where he has properties (New York, New Jersey, Florida and Virginia), Mr. Trump has spent about four times as many days visiting states that supported him in 2016 as he has in those that voted against him, according to data compiled by Factba.se, a service that tracks the president’s statements and actions.”
ABOUT LAST NIGHT — “‘Talk about losers’: The top moments from CNN’s kid-gloves town hall with Biden,”by Christopher Cadelago: “For the second time this week, a presidential candidate fielded questions from voters in a town hall setting. But if ABC’s event with President Donald Trump was an icy grilling, CNN’s drive-in conversation with Joe Biden Thursday was more like an affable reunion of old acquaintances.
“‘Chief, didn’t I meet you when you were chief?’ Biden said through a half-smile, pointing at the man preparing to ask him a question. Bill Barrett, a retired police chief who is in his fifth term on city council, wanted to know how Biden will address growing violence in cities and the lack of respect for police and the military. Barrett confirmed that, yes, they’d met when he was chief. And so it went with several other questioners and Biden during a 75-minute homecoming close by to where the candidate spent his youth.
“Trump had few such comfortable moments in his brutal town hall: For his first time as president, regular people got the chance to call him out on his boasting and exaggerations. Biden, by comparison, got a ‘total pass,’ the Trump campaign complained afterward, in a typical lashing of the media. The Democratic nominee made the most of the friendly confines, relaying feel-your-pain anecdotes in mostly grammatical syntax and, until the last half-hour, with high-energy.”
AND ON THE OTHER SIDE — “Trump heats up culture war in appeal to Wisconsin voters,”by AP’s Zeke Miller in Mosinee, Wis.: “President Donald Trump stepped up his rhetoric Thursday on cultural issues, aiming to boost enthusiasm among rural Wisconsin voters as he tries to repeat his path to victory four years ago.
“Making his fifth visit to the pivotal battleground state this year, Trump views success in the state’s less-populated counties as critical to another term. He held a rally Thursday evening in Mosinee, in central Wisconsin, an area of the state that shifted dramatically toward Republicans in 2016, enabling Trump to overcome even greater deficits in urban and suburban parts of the state.
“Trump has increasingly used his public appearances to elevate cultural issues important to his generally whiter and older base, as he hinges his campaign on turning out his core supporters rather than focusing on winning over a narrow slice of undecided voters. In Mosinee, he called for a statute to ban burning the American flag in protest — a freedom protected by the Supreme Court — and criticized sports players and leagues for allowing demonstrations against racial inequality.”
THE NEW YORKER’S SUSAN GLASSER: “‘It Was All About the Election’: The Ex-White House Aide Olivia Troye on Trump’s Narcissistic Mishandling of COVID-19”: “When I spoke with Olivia Troye on Thursday afternoon, she sounded more than a little scared. She was about to go public with a scorching video, in which she would denounce President Donald Trump and his stewardship of the country during the coronavirus pandemic. Troye, who served as Vice-President Mike Pence’s adviser for homeland security until late July, has witnessed the Administration’s response to the crisis, as Pence’s top aide on the White House coronavirus task force.
“She had seen Trump rant in private about Fox News coverage as his public-health advisers desperately tried to get him to focus on a disease that has now killed some two hundred thousand Americans. She had decided that Trump was lying to the American public about the disease, and that ‘words matter, especially when you’re the President of the United States,’ and that it was time to speak out. She was nervous and scared and worried for her family and her career. But she plunged ahead anyway.
“I asked about her firsthand observation of the President during the crisis. She said that Trump was ‘disruptive.’ That he could not ‘focus.’ That he was consumed by himself and his prospects in November. ‘For him, it was all about the election,’ Troye told me. ‘He just can’t seem to care about anyone else besides himself.’” New Yorker
USPS IN THE CROSSHAIRS — “Federal judge temporarily blocks USPS operational changes amid concerns about mail slowdowns, election,” by WaPo’s Elise Viebeck and Jacob Bogage: “A federal judge in Washington state on Thursday granted a request from 14 states to temporarily block operational changes within the U.S. Postal Service that have been blamed for a slowdown in mail delivery, saying President Trump and Postmaster General Louis DeJoy are ‘involved in a politically motivated attack’ on the agency that could disrupt the 2020 election.
“Stanley A. Bastian, chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Washington, said policies put in place under DeJoy ‘likely will slow down delivery of ballots’ this fall, creating a ‘substantial possibility that many voters will be disenfranchised and the states may not be able to effectively, timely, accurately determine election outcomes.’” WaPo
VACCINE UPDATE — “Moderna and Pfizer Reveal Secret Blueprints for Coronavirus Vaccine Trials,” by NYT’s Denise Grady and Katie Thomas: “Two drug companies that are leading the race to develop coronavirus vaccines bowed to public pressure on Thursday, abandoning their traditional secrecy and releasing comprehensive road maps of how they are evaluating their vaccines.
“The companies, Moderna and Pfizer, revealed details about how participants are being selected and monitored, the conditions under which the trials could be stopped early if there were problems, and the evidence researchers will use to determine whether people who got the vaccines were protected from Covid-19. Moderna’s study will involve 30,000 participants, and Pfizer’s 44,000.
“Companies typically share these documents after their studies are complete. The disclosures while the trials are still underway, a rare move, are aimed at addressing growing suspicion among Americans that President Trump’s drive to produce a vaccine before the election on Nov. 3 could result in a product that was unsafe.” NYT
BIDEN’S LATEST HEADACHE — “Biden’s weakness with Black and Latino men creates an opening for Trump,” by Laura Barrón-López, Marc Caputo and Elena Schneider: “It was a huddle to marshal the faithful, featuring dozens of Black luminaries, from hip hop mogul Jay-Z to radio personality Charlamagne tha God to civil rights attorney Ben Crump. Vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris presided over the virtual meeting, which grappled with a nagging question for Joe Biden’s campaign: How to woo more Black men?
“Last week’s call was the second in as many weeks focusing on Biden’s appeals to Black male voters. The mood, Crump said, was upbeat. But callers were frank about their concerns, urging Biden to deliver a positive message, so ‘it’s not just about anti-Trump but what we’re going to do on our side.’ ‘We know Black women are the backbone of the party,’ said one participant, who asked not to be identified. ‘But Black men are going to have to overperform.’
“But right now, they’re underperforming. And, according to a spate of recent polling, so are Latino men, a subject Harris tackled recently in Zoom meetings with Hispanic influencers. Black and Latino men still need to be convinced that Biden represents their interests, Crump said. Black men want to hear more about opportunities to build businesses and fixes for the economy, in addition to talk about criminal justice and policing reform.” POLITICO
TRUMP’S FRIDAY — The president receives his intel briefing at noon in the Oval Office. He will leave the White House at 3:45 p.m. to travel to Bemidji, Minn. The president will arrive at the Bemidji Regional Airport at 5:55 p.m CDT and give a campaign speech at 6 p.m. The president will depart at 7:25 p.m. and return to Washington. He will arrive at the White House at 11:15 p.m.
ON THE TRAIL — BIDEN will travel to Duluth, Minn. He will tour a union training center and deliver remarks. … Sen. KAMALA HARRIS (D-Calif.) will speak at the CBC PAC’s “Turn Up and Turn Out the Vote Virtual Bus Tour.”
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week” with Bob Costa: Bob Woodward, who will share previously unreleased audio of Trump; Margaret Brennan; and Alexi McCammond.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
Gray TV
“Full Court Press with Greta Van Susteren”: President Donald Trump … Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.).
FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Bill Gates … Tom Frieden. Panel: Karl Rove, Catherine Lucey and Mo Elleithee.
NBC
“Meet the Press”: Bob Woodward. Panel: Peter Alexander, Lanhee Chen and María Teresa Kumar.
ABC
“This Week”: Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Panel: Chris Christie, Rahm Emanuel, Rachel Scott and Julie Pace.
CBS
“Face the Nation”: National security adviser Robert O’Brien … Adam Schechter … Scott Gottlieb … Jeh Johnson … new battleground tracker.
Sinclair
“America This Week with Eric Bolling”: Larry Kudlow … Sarah Huckabee Sanders … Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) … Michael Knowles … Jack Brewer … Ed Norris.
PLAYBOOK READS
MARIANNE LEVINE and JOHN BRESNAHAN: “‘Everyone’s got leverage’: Dreading a 50-50 Senate split”: “An evenly split Senate would make life grueling for whoever is president next year. Any one senator could determine the fate of critical nominations or key pieces of the party’s legislative agenda. And in an era of already deep polarization, it could lead to even worse gridlock, as inconceivable as that sounds.”
HMM — “C.D.C. Testing Guidance Was Published Against Scientists’ Objections,” by NYT’s Apoorva Mandavilli: “A heavily criticized recommendation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last month about who should be tested for the coronavirus was not written by C.D.C. scientists and was posted to the agency’s website despite their serious objections, according to several people familiar with the matter as well as internal documents obtained by The New York Times.
“The guidance said it was not necessary to test people without symptoms of Covid-19 even if they had been exposed to the virus. It came at a time when public health experts were pushing for more testing rather than less, and administration officials told The Times that the document was a C.D.C. product and had been revised with input from the agency’s director, Dr. Robert Redfield.
“But officials told The Times this week that the Department of Health and Human Services did the rewriting and then ‘dropped’ it into the C.D.C.’s public website, flouting the agency’s strict scientific review process.” NYT
ACROSS THE POND … BBC: “WHO warns Europe over ‘very serious’ Covid surge”: “Speaking in Copenhagen on Thursday, [WHO regional director Hans] Kluge said 300,000 new infections were reported across Europe last week alone and weekly cases had exceeded those reported during the first peak in March. ‘Although these numbers reflect more comprehensive testing, it also shows alarming rates of transmission across the region,’ he told reporters. Mr Kluge said the figures ‘should serve as a wake-up call for all of us’.”
BUSINESS BURST — “Oracle, Walmart Aim for Big Stakes in TikTok,” by WSJ’s Sarah Nassauer, Michael C. Bender and Andrew Restuccia: “Backers of a proposed new group to take over Chinese-owned video-sharing app TikTok are working to create an ownership structure that would give U.S. interests a majority stake, in an effort to ease the Trump administration’s security concerns.
“Under the latest plan for TikTok, Oracle Corp. and Walmart Inc. could together own a significant stake, according to people familiar with the situation. That move, if combined with existing American investors, could put majority ownership in U.S. hands, the people said. Walmart Chief Executive Doug McMillon is expected to get a board seat if the deal goes through, said some of the people familiar with the matter. As part of the current plan, TikTok would file for a U.S. initial public offering in about a year, said one of these people.
“Walmart, which previously looked to join with Microsoft Corp. on a TikTok deal, has been looking to ramp up its online presence to generate new revenue streams.” WSJ
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Safiya Ghori-Ahmad, South Asia director at McLarty Associates. A trend she thinks doesn’t get enough attention: “I don’t think we’re paying enough attention to the fact that most of the world’s consumers are outside of the U.S., and American businesses — particularly small- and medium-sized enterprises — are unable to compete for them because the world is largely shut off to Americans due to Covid restrictions. As of this month, very few countries are allowing Americans in without restriction, while China and the EU allow citizens to travel freely within each other’s countries. This means the world is doing business without us, and American businesses are losing out.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: HUD Secretary Ben Carson is 69 … Ric Grenell is 54 … Rep. Steve Watkins (R-Kan.) is 44 … Rep. Anthony Gonzalez (R-Ohio) is 36 … Corey Lewandowski is 47 … WaPo’s Griff Witte, Darryl Fears and Desmond Butler … Sara Haines … Jeff Sadosky, partner at Forbes Tate Partners … Liz Natonski … Trevor Houser, partner at Rhodium Group, is 4-0 (h/t Hannah Hess) … Katrina Bishop … Chris Lucas of BNYMellon’s D.C. office (h/t wife Jane) … Nicole Duran … Christina Hartman (h/t Mark Meier) … Eric Terrell … Joan Walsh,producer of Peacock’s “The Sit In,”writer for The Nation and a CNN political contributor … Phil Lago … Tina Stoll, president of Campaign Finance Consultants (h/t Jon Haber) … Jackie Calmes, White House editor of L.A. Times’ D.C. bureau … Luis Navarro … Gilberto Ocañas … Karl Struble … Cyndi Pederson … Monica Mills … Cathy Jury … Kristen Crowell (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) …
… Jess Morales Rocketto … Rachel Irwin, Senate Majority PAC comms director (h/t Matt Corridoni) … Dayna Cade … Daniel Burnett, assistant director of comms for the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, is 32 … Laura Plack … Joseph Costello … Erin Buechel Wieczorek, director of legislative affairs at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, is 42 (h/t Scott McConnell) … Adam Keiper (h/t Alice Lloyd) … Monica Pampell … former Rep. John Tierney (D-Mass.), now executive director of the Council for a Livable World (h/t Ben Chang) … Erin Madigan White … Isabelle Taylor Kenyon … POLITICO’s Ian Bent … Mark Walsh … Bundestag President Wolfgang Schäuble … Kacy Hutchison … Chuck Supple … Will Tienken … Edelman’s Andrew Church … The Guardian’s Chris Taylor … Ben Dye … Scott MacFarlane … Angela Flood, principal at Cove Strategies … Joe Davis … Devika Koppikar
John Langdon: A Courageous Founding Father You Miay Not Know
John Langdon was born in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, in 1741 and grew up as a member of the North Congregational Church, where his distant relative, future Harvard President Rev. Samuel Langdon was pastor from 1747-1774.
Other notable individuals who had worshiped at the North Congregational Church include:
-William Whipple – Signer of Declaration of Independence;
-Daniel Webster – Secretary of State;
-John Paul Jones – Navy hero; and
-George Washington – first President.
At the age of 22, John Langdon became a sea captain, like his older brother Woodbury Langdon.
They sailed back and forth to the West Indies for trade.
Then the British imposed trade restrictions with the Revenue Act of 1764 and the Stamp Act of 1765.
John Langdon sailed back into Portsmouth harbor, the British seized his cargo of sugar and rum, similar to how the British in Boston’s harbor seized John Hancock’s ship Liberty.
By this time, tea from India and China was the most popular drink in the British Empire, out-selling coffee and chocolate, as tea was purported to have health benefits.
Portugal was the first European country to trade in India, till it was pushed out by the Dutch and French, who were then pushed out by the British.
After the Anglo-Mughal Wars, Anglo-Dutch Wars, and the Carnatic War, the British East India Company began to dominate Bengal and most of India.
The Bengal Famine of 1770 killed an estimated 10 million people – a third of Bengal’s population. This brought the British East India Company to the verge of bankruptcy.
Company expenses skyrocketed while Bengal’s labor productivity plummeted, all occurring at a time when an economic downturn dried up trade in Europe.
To avoid bankruptcy, the directors of the British East India Company appealed to Parliament, which responded by giving it a competitive advantage over colonial American tea importers.
The British East India Company also began to grow opium in India and drug-traffick it into China.
American colonists boycotted British tea and instead bought 85 percent of their tea from supplies smuggled in by Dutch merchants, estimated at 900,000 lbs a year.
The Townsend Acts of 1767 bailed out the debt-ridden British East India Company by allowing it to sell its tea directly to consumers at a cheaper price, but even more troublesome, it would legitimize Britain’s ability to directly tax the colonies.
This was a hotly contested issue since the colonies had no representation in the British Parliament.
To compound the issue even further, the British Parliament passed the Tea Act of 1773 , which provoked the Boston Tea Party, December 16, 1773.
It also provoked the Annapolis Tea Party and the burning of the ship Peggy Stewart.
New Hampshire citizens refused to allow any British ship carrying tea from landing in the Portsmouth harbor.
King George III then issued a royal order, October 19, 1774, banning the export of gunpowder and arms to America.
When word reached Portsmouth, John Langdon led 400 men to capture British Fort William and Mary in New Castle, seizing arms and 100 barrels of gunpowder.
In 1775, John Langdon was elected a delegate to the Continental Congress, as was later his brother, Woodbury Langdon.
In 1776, John Langdon oversaw the building of American warships, including the Ranger, which he recommended be captained by John Paul Jones.
John Langdon was elected Speaker of the New Hampshire House, 1776-1782, where he championed fiscal responsibility, recommending the use of silver and gold instead of paper currency.
When the British recaptured Fort Ticonderoga, Speaker John Langdon reportedly told the Legislature:
“I have 3,000 dollars in hard money. I will pledge the plate in my house for 3,000 more, and I have 70 hogsheads of Tobago rum which shall be disposed of for what it will bring.
These and the avails of these are at the service of the state. If we defend our homes and our firesides, I may get my pay; if we do not defend them, the property will be of no value to me.”
John Langdon built seven ships with which he raided British ships.
As a colonel, John Langdon led a voluntary company of soldiers to fight at Saratoga where they witnessed the surrender of British General Burgoyne.
John Langdon commanded soldiers in 1778 with John Sullivan’s army in Rhode Island.
In 1784, John Langdon was a State Senator, and in 1785 he was elected President (Governor) of New Hampshire.
As President of New Hampshire, John Langdon issued A Proclamation for a Day of Public Fasting and Prayer. February 21, 1786:
“That the citizens of this State may with one heart and voice, penitently confess their manifold sins and transgressions, and fervently implore the Divine benediction,
that a true spirit of repentance and humiliation may be poured out upon all orders and degrees of men, and a compleat and universal reformation take place …
that He would be pleased to bless the great Council of the United States of America, and direct their deliberations to the wise and best determinations …
and above all, that He would rain down righteousness upon the earth, revive religion,
and spread abroad the knowledge of the true GOD, the Saviour of man, throughout the world.”
In 1787, John Langdon was a delegate to the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia where he signed the U.S. Constitution.
On February 13, 1788, New Hampshire convened a convention to ratify the U.S. Constitution, but disagreements almost caused the State to vote against it.
Many states had annual days of fasting.
Governor John Langdon decided to temporarily postpone the convention and schedule New Hampshire’s annual Fasting Day, a date fixed by the Governor, to be observed April 10, 1788:
“to be … kept as a day of fasting of humiliation and prayer.”
After the Day of Fasting, New Hampshire reconvened its ratifying convention on June 18, 1788.
After hearing Harvard President Rev. Samuel Langdon’s address “The Republic of the Israelites an example to the American States” the New Hampshire delegates voted to ratify the U.S. Constitution, June 21, 1788.
New Hampshire was the 9th State to ratify the U.S. Constitution. This fulfilled the necessary requirement of 2/3’s of the States, and thus the Constitution officially went into effect.
After ratifying the U.S. Constitution, the Delegates of New Hampshire thanked God:
“Acknowledging with grateful hearts the goodness of the Supreme Ruler of the Universe in affording the People of the United States in the Course of his Providence an Opportunity, deliberately & peaceably without fraud or surprise of entering into an explicit and solemn compact with each other
by assenting to & ratifying a new Constitution, in order to form a more perfect Union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare and secure the Blessings of Liberty to themselves & their Posterity-
Do In the Name & behalf of the People of the State of New-Hampshire assent to & ratify the said Constitution for the United States of America …”
The Delegates of New Hampshire continued, recommending that the new Federal Government should be restricted:
“And as it is the Opinion of this Convention that certain amendments & alterations in the said Constitution would remove the fears & quiet the apprehensions of many of the good People of this State & more Effectually guard against an undue Administration of the Federal Government …
That all Powers not expressly & particularly Delegated by the aforesaid Constitution are reserved to the several States to be, by them Exercised …
That there shall be one Representative to every 30,000 persons …
Nor shall Congress in any Case make regulations contrary to a free and equal Representation …
That Congress do not lay direct Taxes …
That no standing Army shall be Kept up in time of Peace … nor shall Soldiers in Time of Peace be quartered upon private Houses without the consent-of the Owners …
Congress shall make no Laws touching Religion, or to infringe the rights of Conscience …
Congress shall never disarm any Citizen …”
Governor John Langdon wrote to George Washington:
“I have the great pleasure of informing your Excellency that this State has this day adopted the Federal Constitution … thereby placing the Key Stone in the great arch.”
In 1788, John Langdon was elected New Hampshire’s first U.S. Senator where he traveled to the U.S. Capital in New York City.
The U.S. Senate elected him President of the Senate, where he counted the votes of the electoral college where George Washington was elected the first President.
Langdon wrote the letter informing George Washington that he had been elected.
On April 30, 1789, John Langdon administered the oath of office to the nation’s first Chief Executive, George Washington, and Vice-President John Adams.
Returning to New Hampshire, John Langdon was elected Governor, where he issued a Proclamation, October 10, 1805, acknowledging the nation’s victory over the Muslim Barbary Pirates of North Africa:
“It has been customary … to set apart a certain day … for … publicly recognizing their dependence upon Almighty God for protection,
and that they might express their gratitude to Him for all blessings and mercies received and implore a continuance of them;-
I therefore … appoint Thursday, the 28th day of November … as a day of public Thanksgiving and Prayer … in praising and adoring Almighty God, and in offering up our thanks to Him as the great author of every good and perfect gift …
For the termination of our contest with one of the African powers; the liberation of our fellow-citizens from bondage …”
Governor Langdon continued:
“But above all, for the inestimable blessings of the Gospel of Peace and Salvation, the means of grace and hopes of future glory, through the merits of a crucified Savior …
That He would bless the means used for the promulgation of His word, and make pure religion and morality more and more abound.”
In 1797, John Langdon helped save an escaped slave, Oney Judge, from being taken by slave-catchers.
Oney Judge learned to read and became a Christian.
Four years before the American Bible Society was founded, John Langdon founded the New Hampshire Bible Society in 1812, and served as its first President.
The Bible Society’s goal was to put a Bible in every New Hampshire home.
In retirement, John Langdon was visited in 1817 by President James Monroe, as the newspaper reported:
“While at Portsmouth, the President spent that part of the Sabbath which was not devoted to public divine service, with that eminent patriot and Christian, John Langdon.
His tarry … was probably longer than the time devoted to any individual in New England.”
John Langdon died SEPTEMBER 18, 1819.
While Governor, John Langdon had issued a Proclamation, October 21, 1785:
“It therefore becomes our indispensable Duty, not only to acknowledge, in general with the rest of Mankind, our dependence on the Supreme Ruler of the Universe,
but as a People peculiarly favoured, to testify our Gratitude to the Author of all our Mercies, in the most solemn and public manner …
To celebrate the Praises of our divine Benefactor; to acknowledge our own Unworthiness, confess our manifold Transgressions, implore his Forgiveness,
and intreat the continuance of those Favours which he had been graciously pleaded to bestow upon us;
That he would … bless our Seminaries of Learning, and spread the Gospel of his Grace over all the Earth.”
By Brian Myers on Sep 18, 2020 12:29 am
I know that I’m supposed to be “anti-science” and all, but once in awhile, I look at data. I apologize in advance; I simply couldn’t help myself.
In the case of the wildfires currently raging in the Western states allegedly being “unprecedented” (a dubious description given that the earth is supposed to be 4.543 billion years old- Ha!) and a result of climate change, it doesn’t take long to see that the data gets in the way of the assertion.
First, there is the fact that the area burned in U.S. wildfires is down dramatically over the last century:
This fact is dismissed by alarmists by suggesting that the data is flawed and unreliable before 1960, and wasn’t highly accurate prior to 1983. A rather convenient postulation for them, given the numbers as illustrated in this graph.
I would think it harder for the alarmists to dismiss this data as flawed, although for the last 15 years or so they have made it clear that they generally don’t like satellite data where climate change is concerned. I happen to agree with meteorologist Anthony Watts that this data is “irrefutable,” but a good alarmist can attempt to refute almost anything.
Finally, at the same time wildfires are down dramatically, CO2 emission levels are up dramatically:
If CO2 emissions are resulting in global temperature increases, and those temperature increases result in increased wildfires, then it makes zero sense that one rises as the other falls.
In short, it seems that the data simply doesn’t support the notion that wildfires are worse, let alone unprecedented, nor does it support the claim that these fires are the result of climate change.
But California Governor Gavin Newsom is desperately attempting to find someone or something to blame for the wildfires which have ravaged his state recently. He seems to think he has found it. According to ABC News, he said this:
“I quite literally have no patience for climate change deniers. You may not believe it intellectually, but your own eyes tell a different story, particularly here in the state of California. Never have I felt more of a sense of obligation and purpose to maintain California’s status in terms of addressing climate change head on.“
Danish environmentalist Bjorn Lomborg responded to Newsom’s position earlier this week in the New York Post:
“Newsom is right that climate plays a part. It does create a more favorable fire environment by increasing hot and dry conditions. But experts estimate this plays a minor role. The much more important factor is the way we manage forest lands and develop our landscape. When we keep suppressing fire, we ask for bigger and more terrible future fires. And we know how to fix this. We simply have to make many more prescribed burns that eliminate the built-up fuel. This is doable and smart. It would help reduce fire risks in just a few years. Unfortunately, it is also unpopular…“
But, like nearly everything else related to the climate change debate, the data isn’t popular. Truthful conclusions aren’t either.
This is Brian Myers with your Caffeinated Thought of the Week.
By Michelle Crawford on Sep 17, 2020 04:50 pm
When the chaos surrounding COVID-19 began in early March, it caught everyone by surprise. When we found out our spring break would be longer than expected our family embraced a little more time together. Fifteen days to slow the spread is what we were told. Our family was willing to do our part, and we took the social distancing recommendation seriously.
Fifteen days came and went. The return to school date kept getting delayed. Our sons’ soccer season was delayed and finally canceled. Graduation for our senior was up in the air and eventually dramatically altered.
We love our school district and our teachers. They did the best they could in crisis mode adjusting to online education. But it is not the same. I witnessed my cheerful, easy-going sons retreat, lose their motivation, and have emotional moments throughout the uncertainty.
During this time, we were fortunate to be home with our family, helping our children as best we could, but I frequently thought of the children across this nation who didn’t have the safe, encouraging environment for effective learning.
If my children—who had never had any type of mental health challenges and were in a loving, encouraging environment—were struggling, I can’t imagine the challenges for kids who had much tougher circumstances.
Fifteen days turned into four weeks, 8 weeks, and now 160+ days later “slow the spread” has become “eradicate a virus.” While Democrat-run cities are fighting to keep our children locked away, we have a president fighting every day for our kids. I appreciate that President Trump is unapologetically standing up for the well-being of American children who need to get back in the classroom.
COVID-19 is real. There is no argument there. That being said, children are extremely low risk for a severe illness or death from coronavirus. The “cure” for our nation cannot be worse than the virus itself. The repercussions of the decisions to close schools, cancel youth sports, and extracurricular activities is not in the best interest of our nation’s children. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) has called for the safe reopening of schools this fall and for in-person classes to resume, citing how schools reduce children’s risk of abuse, drug addiction, and suicide. The unintended consequences of keeping schools closed could damage our children’s education for years to come and hinder our country’s economic comeback.
We are fortunate to live in a district that made the decision to go back to school in person, every day. I have never seen my children so excited for the first day of school. It is what the kids want. It is without a doubt what our nation’s children need.
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Sep 17, 2020 12:10 pm
MARION, Iowa – State Rep. Ashley Hinson, R-Marion, the Republican nominee for Congress in Iowa’s 1st Congressional District, released her fifth television ad titled “Nightmare.” The ad will air across the district.
In the Iowa State House, Hinson wrote the law that holds bad teachers accountable for misconduct. House File 637 gives schools 30 days to report abuse allegations to the Board of Educational Examiners. Previously, there was no deadline to report misconduct, and therefore, there wasn’t a mechanism to force schools into following the law.
“As a mother of two school-aged boys, I know how important it is to make sure our children are learning in a safe environment. Unfortunately, this is just one of the many instances where a child’s innocence was stripped away from them. In the Iowa State House, I built consensus and worked across the aisle to ensure that these predators would be held accountable. In Congress, I will fight every day for our kids to learn in a safe and positive learning environment,” Hinson said in a released statement.
Transcript:
It’s mom’s first nightmare.
My daughter was sexually abused by her teacher at school.
This is my daughter we’re talking about, and I didn’t know.
The entire system just looked the other way.
But Ashley Hinson wrote a law to hold the schools accountable to keep predators away from our kids.
Ashley brought both parties together to do what’s right.
By John Hendrickson on Sep 17, 2020 11:42 am
President Calvin Coolidge stated that “to live under the American Constitution is the greatest political privilege that was ever accorded to the human race.” The Constitution is not only “the oldest written national constitution in the world,” but it is a document rooted in liberty. The Constitution, which was created out of the Philadelphia or Constitutional Convention in 1787, is the bedrock of the American system. The Founding Fathers who created the Constitution knew they were not creating a perfect system of government. As the late James McClellan, a noted constitutional scholar, wrote in Liberty, Order, and Justice:
The Founders of the American republic did not suddenly invent the American Constitution overnight. Learning from the mistakes of the past, they revised and applied constitutional concepts deeply rooted in America’s colonial past, the history of Great Britain, and the chronicles of the ancient world. By understanding the mistakes of the past, of course, we improve our chances of not repeating them in the future.
During colonial America, the original thirteen colonies, because of geographic distance and other issues, were left by England to largely govern their own affairs. The American colonists, governed by their colonial charters, quickly got used to the idea of self-government. In addition, “local self-government, based on counties or townships, became firmly established in the colonial period, and helped to prepare the nation for the concept of federalism that triumphed in the Constitutional Convention of 1787.” By the time of the American Revolution, the states were developing their own written constitutions. The idea of a written constitution was and is important because it states the powers, responsibilities, and limits on government.
At first more attention was given to writing state constitutions than considering a national government. John Adams, for example, is considered to be the Father of American constitutionalism because of his work on the Massachusetts Constitution. Efforts to form a continental union often fell short of anything close to a national government. The American colonies and later states did work together in cooperation in regard to the Stamp Act Congress, the First and Second Continental Congress, and finally the establishment of a confederal government under the Articles of Confederation.
More attention was given to the political development of the states because of the deep belief in self-government and because people identified with their states and local government. Also, they saw a centralized government as a threat to tyranny — the example being the unconstitutional taxation by the British Parliament and King George III. A central or unitary government could not only rule by force, but also through coercion by using such things as a large standing army.
With the American victory in the Revolutionary War, the young nation faced several problems. One of the immediate problems was the economy and the debts resulting from the war. The Articles of Confederation, which established a “league of friendship” among the states, was responsible for administrating “national” policy through the Confederation Congress. Under the Articles of Confederation, each state had one vote in Congress and it was almost impossible to revise the Articles. Under this confederacy, the individual states held the majority of sovereignty. It was soon apparent that the Confederation Congress was dependent upon the states for revenues and for security.
The states themselves were also struggling internally with economic problems and also fighting with each over trade barriers or territorial boundaries. In Massachusetts, a Revolutionary War veteran, Daniel Shays, led a group of angry farmers in revolt against the state for foreclosing on farms because of debt payments. Shays’ Rebellion was eventually put down, but it demonstrated the weakness of the Articles of Confederation, because the Confederation Congress could not respond.
In response, a group of nationalists led by James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and George Washington decided that the Articles of Confederation had to be either reformed or replaced. The result was a resolution passed at the Annapolis Convention, which called for a convention of the states to meet in Philadelphia in the summer of 1787 to consider revising the Articles of Confederation. The Philadelphia or Constitutional Convention was not welcomed by everyone. Patrick Henry, a leading voice of liberty during the Revolution, refused to attend because he “smelt a rat,” and Rhode Island did not send a delegation.
In Philadelphia, the delegates that met to revise the Articles ended up replacing them completely. This is partly the result of the Nationalists or Federalists led by James Madison, who is considered the Father of the Constitution. The Constitution, which emerged from the Philadelphia Convention, was a document based on compromise. The Founding Fathers who attended the Convention drafted a written constitution that created a republican form of government that was limited in power.
The Founding Fathers understood the dangers of not only unitary government, but also the weaknesses of the confederal system and pure democracies. They were students of history and the gathering in Philadelphia contained some of the best political minds in Western Civilization. Last, the Founders understood that no system of government would be perfect, because human nature is corrupted by original sin.
The Constitution of 1787 was drafted by the wisdom of the Founding Fathers, who created a republican form of government based on representation, the rule of law, enumerated powers, separation of powers, checks and balances, and federalism. These were the constitutional principles behind the Constitution. The Founders understood the important role that the states had and that the Constitution would be limited to specific enumerated powers listed in Article I, Section 8.
Madison, in Federalist Paper No. 45, tried to reassure critics of the Constitution who thought it created a powerful central government, that the Constitution limited the powers of the national government, while reserving everything else to the states or the people. Federalism would divide power between the federal and state governments. Madison’s compound republic or federalism was instrumental to the Constitution. Later this was reinforced with the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution, which is sometimes referred to as the federalism amendment.
Under federalism the national/federal government and the state governments would each be sovereign in their respective constitutional spheres. The states would also be protected in the Constitution, not only because of enumerated powers, but also because members of the United States Senate would be elected by state legislatures (this would later be changed by the 17th Amendment). States also played a role in electing the President through the system of the Electoral College.
Federalism is a cornerstone of American constitutionalism and it also is a major part of the nation’s constitutional and political history. During the 19th century American government followed dual federalism, which meant that the national and state governments were equally sovereign in their respective policy spheres. It was not until the 20th century and the Progressive Era, which resulted in a constitutional revolution, that federalism was transformed. Starting in the early 20th century, and especially during the 1930s, the states began to fall under the dependence of the federal government as Washington started to control more and more policy areas that were originally left to the states.
This new form of federalism, cooperative federalism, started to turn the states into administrative districts of the federal government as constitutional limited government was replaced by an all-intrusive federal government. As Cal Thomas recently wrote that “because the federal government is doing things the founders never intended for it to do and instead of putting itself back within the constitutional boundaries established for it, too many politicians claim government should get even bigger and do more.”
Since the ratification of the Constitution our history has been filled with debates over the scope and power of the federal government, what rights are protected by the Bill of Rights, among other issues. The current debate over the confirmation of Supreme Court nominee Judge Brent Kavanaugh is just one example of how divided we are as a nation over constitutional interpretation. In addition to the political division we are also confronted with a national crisis over civic education. Our educational system has failed to properly teach American history and the principles of the American founding. “One can’t have a country if citizens are ignorant of its origins and purpose,” noted Cal Thomas.
President Herbert Hoover referred to the Constitution as the “greatest of all charters of government.” Today is a day for all Americans to reflect and seriously think about the Constitution. Our goal should be that of President Calvin Coolidge when he stated: “The more I study it [Constitution], the more I have come to admire it, realizing that no other document devised by the hand of man ever brought so much progress and happiness to humanity. The good it has wrought can never be measured.”
Launched in 2006, Caffeinated Thoughts reports news and shares commentary about culture, current events, faith and state and national politics from a Christian and conservative point of view.
President Donald Trump visits Mosinee, Wisconsin, Thursday to hold a Great American Comeback rally. The president is scheduled to speak at 8:00 p.m. CDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for …
Confirmed coronavirus cases from Nashville’s bars and restaurants were so low that the Tennessee city’s Metro Health Department decided to withhold the data from the public, emails from the mayor’s office show. The emails discuss the low amount of coronavirus cases traced to restaurants and bars and how to hide …
Former FBI Director James Comey has agreed to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Sept. 30, according to South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham. Graham, the Republican chairman of the Senate panel, said in an interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity that former special counsel Robert Mueller has declined a …
President Donald Trump delivers remarks Thursday at the White House Conference on American History. The president is scheduled to speak at 2:30 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit our syndication page for …
President Donald Trump will participate in a credentialing ceremony, deliver remarks at the White House Conference on American history, and hold a Great American Comeback rally. Keep up with Trump on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 9/17/20 – note: this page will be updated during the day …
Happy Friday, Kruiser Morning Briefing friends and countrymen. Countrywomen. Countrypersons. I’ll try not to make things weird.
Kidding. It’s sort of my brand.
Another on-brand topic here is the thorough awfulness of the American mainstream political media. Wanted in all fifty states for the murder of ethical journalism, the MSM is once again working overtime to help get a Democratic presidential candidate elected despite said candidate’s myriad flaws.
At the beginning of the month I wrote that I didn’t think that the media could prop up Joe Biden until the election.
I may have underestimated the hacks who pollute the MSM.
An integral part of propping up Grandpa Gropes is attacking President Trump, of course. On Tuesday night¸ President Trump subjected himself to a town hall on ABC that was hosted by former Clinton administration flack, George Stephanopoulos. My HotAir colleague Karen Towsend watched and had some observations:
I confess, I watched. Going into it, my expectations were low. I was not disappointed. The event was even worse than I thought it would be. The participants were allegedly uncommitted voters though, after listening to their questions, that description is impossible to believe. It was easy to assume that all but possibly two of the very small audience are Biden voters. The voters were identified by name and for whom they voted in 2016 if they voted at all.
The question that kept popping up for me was whether or not the people had been coached by ABC staffers before the town hall began. I say that because the overt hostility and aggressive line of questioning were unusual, even for Trump opponents. This is 2020, though, and clearly any form of civil behavior is to be set aside if political points can be made, especially against the president. For example, I have never seen a person stand up and ask a question of any president at a town hall and while doing so, rudely not allow him to respond until she permitted it. Ellesia Blaque, an assistant professor from Philadelphia with preexisting conditions, asked a question about Obamacare. As she did so, Trump began to respond but she shut him down. “Please stop and let me finish my question, sir,” she said. She voted for Hillary in 2016.
My mom called me as soon as it was over to go on about how awful Stephanopoulos was.
I felt it was important to pass along my mother’s opinion. It’s Friday, we can free-form a little. Also, I’m a good son.
Last night, CNN — aka The Official Broadcast Wing of the Democratic National Committee — hosted Joe Biden for an hour-long forum. This affair was a bit more cuddly than the president’s time with ABC. Even so, Slurry Joe struggled with things like English and his own policies.
Joe Biden praised the idea of incorporating fact-checkers into the presidential debates, but those desperately needed fact-checkers were nowhere to be found at CNN’s town hall event with Biden on Thursday.
In stark contrast to President Trump’s town hall event with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos earlier this week, CNN’s Anderson Cooper and a crowd of mostly friendly supporters took turns asking the 77-year-old candidate softball questions.
Biden told all sorts of lies during the one-hour event on CNN, a fitting location for such fake news. Biden lied when he accused President Trump of not mentioning the coronavirus in his State of the Union Address.
“My administration will take all necessary steps to safeguard our citizens from this threat,” Trump said in his State of the Union Address, which Nancy Pelosi ripped up in anger.
There were a couple of Kabuki theater moments that CNN staged to try and make things seem legit. Host Anderson Cooper briefly pressed Biden on the fact that he’s been all over the place on the fracking issue, for example. Biden gave a barely-coherent answer and Cooper let it go. That’s a classic MSM ruse with Democrats. The interviewer will hit the Dem with the “hard question,” then accept virtually any answer and leave it at that.
A real low point came when the declining Biden couldn’t remember what to call the place where the mail goes:
Biden was not pressed by Cooper for repeating that debunked conspiracy theory, by the way.
They’re going to do everything but give him neck rubs while he relaxes in a recliner with his Metamucil for the rest of the race. I still maintain that even TDS-fueled media bias won’t be enough to help Biden fake his way through a debate but I don’t doubt for a moment that they are now working feverishly to figure out a way to do it.
Biden weakness with black and Latino men creates opening for Trump . . . It was a huddle to marshal the faithful, featuring dozens of Black luminaries, from hip hop mogul Jay-Z to radio personality Charlamagne tha God to civil rights attorney Ben Crump. Vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris presided over the virtual meeting, which grappled with a nagging question for Joe Biden’s campaign: How to woo more Black men? “We know Black women are the backbone of the party,” said one participant, who asked not to be identified. “But Black men are going to have to overperform.”
But right now, they’re underperforming. And, according to a spate of recent polling, so are Latino men, a subject Harris tackled recently in Zoom meetings with Hispanic influencers. Black and Latino men still need to be convinced that Biden represents their interests, Crump said. Black men want to hear more about opportunities to build businesses and fixes for the economy, in addition to talk about criminal justice and policing reform. Over the years, the Democratic Party has not always prioritized Latino men, which has left some disillusioned about politics altogether, Democrats said.Some Hispanic men with roots in Latin American countriesthat have along history of strongmen leaders are drawn to Donald Trump’s braggadocio, particularly in Florida. Politico
The Trump campaign has been reaching out aggressively to minority communities, a very positive development since those groups would benefit from conservative policies.
Coronavirus
Nashville mayor under fire for hiding info about low transmission rates in restaurants . . . Nashville Mayor John Cooper’s office was put on the defensive with local Fox-17 reporter Dennis Ferrier on Thursday over the apparent suppression of COVID-19 data showing low risk of transmission of the disease in bar and restaurant settings. Earlier this week Mr. Ferrier reported on a series of emails between the Democratic mayor’s senior staff and the Metro Health Department that revealed that contact tracing attributed only 80 cases of the virus to bars and restaurants out of roughly 20,000 for the area. One email from late June shows a staffer in the mayor’s office instructing a health department official that the data was “not for public consumption” when told there had been just 22 coronavirus cases linked to bars and restaurants at that time. Washington Times
Coronavirus whistleblower praised pandemic response before leaving White House . . . A former White House coronavirus official praised the “unwavering” work of the president’s COVID-19 task force in her departure letter, before accusing President Trump of having a “flat out disregard for human life” and saying the “ongoing response” was “a failure.” In an interview with the Washington Post published on Thursday, Olivia Troye became the first official who worked extensively on the pandemic response to speak out against Trump, saying that his actions cost lives. “The president’s rhetoric and his own attacks against people in his administration trying to do the work, as well as the promulgation of false narratives and incorrect information of the virus, have made this ongoing response a failure,” she said. However, White House officials familiar with her work say she did not raise concerns during her time as an adviser and delivered glowing praise when she left. Washington Examiner
Politics
Trump demands schools provide a “patriotic education” . . . President Trump announced Thursday that he was working to restore “patriotic education” to schools with a national commission to encourage schools to teach children a positive version of American history as he railed against what he said were liberal attacks on the country’s legacy. His speech at the White House Conference on American History included passages denouncing critical race theory — and its inclusion in federal diversity training programs — and the New York Times’s 1619 Project on slavery as “toxic propaganda.” Instead, he announced, he was establishing the 1776 Commission to redress the balance. Washington Examiner
Changing the leftist culture in the schools is one of the most critical challenges facing us. This president is willing to take it on and brave the charges of racism.
CNN panned for softball questions for Biden . . . While Biden’s performance has received praise for his ability to display empathy toward Pennsylvania voters selected to ask questions, what has been described as the “softball” treatment of the former vice president by CNN was widely panned on Thursday night, especially following the grilling President Trump faced at the ABC News town hall just two days before. “In the first moments, the contrast between what Trump was asked and what Biden is being asked is striking,” Politico columnist Jeff Greenfield tweeted. Fox News
AOC believes she can push Joe Biden to the Left after he is elected . . . I agree with Alexandria Ocasio Cortez. “I think overall, we can likely push Vice President Biden in a more progressive direction,” she said. Yes, they certainly will. But she makes clear now is not the time, because those policies won’t get him elected. “We will hash those out,” she said. “Our main priority is to make sure that the vice president is successful and victorious in November, so that we can have those kind of conversations from a more effective stance with him in the White House.” White House Dossier
Trump won’t attend UN opening . . . President Donald Trump will not attend the United Nations General Assembly in person next week, a White House official said Thursday – the latest display of how the coronavirus pandemic is upending U.S. diplomacy. The annual meeting usually draws world leaders to New York for several days and Trump has often used his address to frame his foreign policy in domestic terms. Last year, for instance, Trump asserted that the “future does not belong to globalists.” But this year, because of COVID-19, many world leaders are sending recorded messages instead. USA Today
Twitter public policy director goes to work for Biden . . . Twitter’s public policy director, Carlos Monje, has left the social media company’s Washington office to join the transition team for Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, a person familiar with the move said Thursday. Monje’s exact position on the transition team was not immediately clear and Biden’s transition team declined to comment. Requests for comment sent to Monje were not immediately returned. But he serves as co-chair of Biden’s infrastructure policy committee and helped host a fundraiser for the former vice president this week. Politico
Not much of a surprise, since Twitter is already working for Biden.
California family accuses Kamala Harris of trespassing . . . A California family has accused Democratic vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris and Gov. Gavin Newsom of trespassing on their fire-ravaged property for a photo opportunity. The lawmakers visited Fresno County on Tuesday to survey areas that have suffered the most damage during the Creek Fire, as dozens of other wildfires continue to rage across the West Coast. Daily Mail
Ma’am, get your Timberlands off my damn lawn please.
Media praise Kamala’s shoes while panning Melania’s . . . Democratic vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris received praise for sporting Timberland boots on Wednesday, but the media wasn’t nearly as kind to First Lady Melania Trump when displaying a similar look. Upon her visit in her home state, Harris was seen wearing the iconic boots while surveying the devastation left behind by the California wildfires, sparking plenty of compliments on Twitter and glowing headlines from the media. However, Women For Trump co-founder Amy Kremer pointed out that the media was rather hostile towards the first lady on multiple occasions when she wore Timberlands. Fox News
Trump accused of sexual assault again . . . Former model Amy Dorris alleged in a new interview that President Donald Trump sexually assaulted her at the U.S. Open tennis tournament in New York in 1997 by forcing his tongue down her throat and groping her body. “He just shoved his tongue down my throat and I was pushing him off. And then that’s when his grip became tighter and his hands were very gropey and all over my butt, my breasts, my back, everything,” Dorris said in an interview published Thursday in The Guardian newspaper. “I was in his grip, and I couldn’t get out of it,” she said, adding: The Guardian reported that through his lawyers Trump denied in the strongest possible terms having ever harassed, abused or behaved improperly toward Dorris. Trump’s lawyers noted that Dorris didn’t report it to police at the time and suggested the timing of her coming forward now, less than two months before the election, could be politically motivated. NBC News
Judge blocks “politically motivated” changes to the postal service . . . A federal judge on Thursday blocked controversial changes to the United States postal service, saying they were “a politically motivated attack” that had slowed the nation’s mail and likely would slow the delivery of ballots in the upcoming presidential election. U.S. District Judge Stanley Bastian in Yakima, Washington, said he was issuing a nationwide injunction sought by 14 states in a case against U.S. President Donald Trump, Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, and the U.S. Postal Service over July changes to the service. The 14 states, led by Washington, had filed a motion for a preliminary injunction asking the court to immediately halt a “leave mail behind” policy that required postal trucks to leave at certain times, regardless of whether mail was loaded. Reuters
National Security
China holds military drill as US envoy visits Taiwan . . . China says it is conducting military exercises near the Taiwan Strait to “protect its sovereignty” as a top US official visits Taiwan.The live-fire drills take place as relations between Beijing and Washington sour and the US shores up its support of Taiwan. China regards self-ruled Taiwan as a breakaway province. Keith Krach is the highest-level official from the US State Department to visit the island in decades. On Friday, China’s defence ministry spokesman Ren Guoqiang accused the US and Taiwan of “stepping up collusion, frequently causing disturbances”, although he did not make any reference to the visit. BBC
China desperately wants to retake Taiwan. I’d be careful about needling them too much right now.
International
UK coronavirus hospitalizations soaring . . . Britain’s health minister said on Friday that the novel coronavirus was accelerating across the country, with hospital admissions doubling every eight days, but refused to say if another national lockdown would be imposed next month. The United Kingdom has reported the fifth largest number of deaths from COVID-19 in the world, after the United States, Brazil, India and Mexico, according to data collected by Johns Hopkins University of Medicine. Reuters
White House says five more countries considering deals with Israel . . . White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows said on Thursday that five more countries are seriously considering striking a normalization deal with Israel after the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain signed accords this week. Meadows, speaking to reporters on Air Force One on the flight that carried President Donald Trump to a campaign rally in Wisconsin, would not identify the five nations. But he said three were in the region. He would not comment further. Reuters
Money
Trump administration to ban WeChat . . . The Trump administration said Friday that it will ban the use of popular messaging and electronic payment app WeChat after Sunday night over national security and data privacy concerns. In an interview on Fox Business Network, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said he made the decision after President Trump ordered his department to review the Chinese-owned app for national security concerns last month. “China has been taking all kinds of data…that’s what we’re trying to squelch,” he said. Wall Street Journal
Sorry, for now, WeDontChat.
You should also know
Black Lives Matter linked to 91% of riots . . . The Black Lives Matter movement is linked to more than nine-in-ten riots across the country, according to a recent study. The U.S. experienced 637 riots between May 26 and Sept. 12, and 91% of those riots were linked to the Black Lives Matter movement, according to the US Crisis Monitor, a joint project of the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project and the Bridging Divides Initiative at Princeton University. Forty-nine states, not counting Washington, D.C., experienced riots during that time period, the study found. Daily Caller
New York City murder rate soars by 27% . . . New York City’s murder rate has soared by 27 percent and gang violence has risen by more than 50 percent in 2020 as the Big Apple continues to be rocked by a growing crime wave. Harrowing new NYPD data published in the 2020 Mayor’s Management Report Thursday night revealed a staggering 352 New Yorkers were murdered in the 2020 fiscal year – an extra 74 deaths compared to 2019. The biggest crime spike was for gang-motivated incidents which skyrocketed 52 percent compared to the previous year. Daily Mail
Thank God de Blasio has armed protection. He’s not done destroying the city yet.
Princeton faces federal probe for saying racism is “embedded” there . . . Princeton University could be forced to pay back millions of dollars in federal funding — and also be fined — over its president’s recent admission that racism persists at the Ivy League institution.
In a letter to Princeton President Christopher Eisgruber, the US Department of Education said it was opening an investigation into a Sept. 2 letter in which he outlined the school’s “efforts to combat systemic racism.” “Among other things, you said ‘[r]acism and the damage it does to people of color persist at Princeton…’ and ‘[r]acist assumption…remain embedded in structures of the University itself,” Assistant Secretary Robert King of the Office of Postsecondary Education wrote. New York Post
What could be more delicious? They’re trying so hard to be politically correct, and now they have a legal problem.
Michigan invaded by deadly mosquitos . . . Michigan health officials suspect a resident has contracted the rare and life-threatening disease Eastern equine encephalitis (EEE) after being bitten by a mosquito, they announced Tuesday. It’s the first human case of EEE in the state so far this year, and the sixth in the US.
Last year, the US saw an unusual spike in the number of people bitten by infected mosquitoes. By early October 2019, at least 30 people had been infected with the disease, which kills about 30 percent of people who catch it. Daily Mail
Eeek!
Guilty Pleasures
Tesla driver asleep at wheel of care traveling over 90 mph . . . A Canadian man has been charged after he was found asleep at the wheel of a self-driving Tesla traveling over 93 mph down a highway in the province of Alberta, authorities said on Thursday. The July 9 incident occurred after authorities received a complaint that a Model S Tesla was speeding on a highway near the town of Ponoka, located about 60 miles south of Edmonton, according to the Alberta Royal Canadian Mounted police (RCMP). “The car appeared to be self-driving, traveling over 140km/h, with both front seats completely reclined and both occupants appearing to be asleep,” the RCMP said in a statement. Fox News
Shouldn’t the car actually be getting the ticket?
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Stimulus Stalemate Saga Continues
The United States confirmed 44,713 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 5.4 percent of the 835,868 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 883 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 197,615.
Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe partially reversed course on his August decision to brief Congress on election security matters in writing only, saying Wednesday that members of the House and Senate Intelligence committees will continue receiving in-person briefings.
FBI Director Christopher Wray warned Congress of “very active efforts” by Russian operatives to undermine the campaign of Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden through social media, online journals, and state media. “The intelligence community consensus is that Russia continues to try to influence our elections,” Wray said. He also noted that “racially motivated violent extremism” is the largest “bucket” of domestic terrorism in the FBI’s eyes, with white supremacist violence being the most prevalent.
President Trump said he is creating a new “1776 Commission” to counter more critical historical narratives of the American founding like the one popularized by the New York Times’ 1619 Project. The 1776 Commission will “restore patriotic education to our schools,” Trump said.
Amid bipartisan calls to reduce American dependence on Chinese manufacturing, Senate Democrats rolled out legislation that would devote $350 billion over 10 years to expand the United States’ industrial capacity and manufacturing capabilities.
Amy Dorris, a former model, accused President Trump of sexually assaulting her at the U.S. Open tennis tournament in 1997, when Dorris was 24 and Trump was 51. Nearly two dozen women have accused Trump of assault or unwanted touching; the president denies all the charges.
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio delayed in-person public school openings for the second time—three days before classes were set to resume—after conferring with teachers’ union leaders who expressed reluctance to reopen classrooms. In-person schooling in the city is now set to begin on September 29 for K-8 schools, and October 1 for middle and high schools.
The Stimulus Stalemate Saga Continues
The president on Wednesday urged Republicans to “go for the much higher numbers” on the next coronavirus relief bill, upending the congressional GOP’s more restrained approach to stimulus negotiations in recent months. Despite Trump’s eagerness to pass another bill, Congress remains at a stalemate on stimulus negotiations as millions of Americans remain out of work.
The Labor Department reported on Thursday that 860,000 Americans filed initial jobless claims in the week ending September 12—a decrease of 33,000 from the week before. Though unemployment insurance claims remain at recessionary levels and the unemployment rate is hovering above 8.5 percent, the economy is faring much better than economists projected during the first few months of the pandemic. “We have already recovered a notable portion of the lost jobs from the trough of the recession,” says Manhattan Institute senior fellow Brian Riedl.
With the country moving closer to Election Day (46 days, people!) and voting already underway in many states, concerns over foreign interference continue to reverberate through Washington and across the country.
In a piece for the New York Times on Thursday, President Trump’s former hand-picked Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats wrote that this year, voters “face the question of whether the American democratic experiment, one of the boldest political innovations in human history, will survive.” Coats argued “democracy’s enemies, foreign and domestic,” are attempting to undermine faith in American political institutions and threatening to make Americans conclude, one way or another, that the electoral process is rigged or fraudulent.
FBI Director Christopher Wray seemed to validate Coats’ concerns on Thursday, testifying before the House Homeland Security Committee that Russia had engaged in “very active” efforts to undermine the 2020 elections, primarily by attacking the Biden campaign. While noting that the intelligence community had seen no evidence that Russia was targeting election infrastructure, he said they are utilizing social media, state media, and online journals to interfere in American elections.
Look into the future of operating rooms with this 3-D graphic from Laura Cooper, Merrill Sherman, Kevin Hand, and Kyle Kim at the Wall Street Journal. With cutting-edge technology like computer-assisted decision making, 3-D printers, and augmented reality, the medical field is already striving toward better patient outcomes and more efficient procedures for surgeons. But as technology advances, researchers from hospitals, medical centers, and universities move closer to outsourcing most of the surgical process to robotic assistants. “A fully autonomous robot surgeon is the Holy Grail—and many years off—but experts are developing devices that can perform surgical tasks with minimal human oversight.”
Olivia Troye, a top homeland security adviser to Vice President Mike Pence and a member of the coronavirus task force, announced Thursday that she’ll be supporting Joe Biden for president. In an interview with Susan Glasser of The New Yorker shortly before she went public with her criticism, Troye said she was nervous about the consequences of her decision but resolved to speak out anyway. “For him, it was all about the election,” Troye said of Trump. “He just can’t seem to care about anyone else besides himself.” She says she is most worried about what might Trump could do between now and November. “What I’m really concerned about is if they rush this vaccine and pressure people and get something out because they want to save the election.”
“Universities are punishing kids for partying—after cashing their tuition checks, of course,” Robby Soave writes in his latest for Reason. When Andy—a college senior at New York University—attended an outdoor gathering consistent with his city’s COVID-19 guidelines, he never anticipated that it would derail his chance of graduation and job security. Unfortunately, similar scenarios are unfolding across the country. Purdue suspended 36 students for partying, St. Olaf College removed 17, and Syracuse University kicked out 23. Amid a deadly and economically crippling pandemic, certain measures can and should be taken to stop the spread. But are college students on the receiving end of unfair heightened scrutiny? “The social gatherings are entirely unsurprising. But that’s not because students are uniquely incautious,” Soave writes. “On the contrary, students are just like the rest of us—trying to manage risk while still living life, months beyond the point where most people expected they would be able to go back to normal.”
“We need to agree that the Senate doesn’t work,” Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse told Jonah on yesterday’s episode of The Remnant. “The Founders had this great idea that you separate power vertically and horizontally if you believe in universal human dignity, and the Senate is kind of the most unique single institution that the Founders created in the Constitution.” Tune in to hear the two run down Sasse’s suggested Senate reforms—including modified term limits, repealing the 17th amendment, and ending C-SPAN.
David’s latest French Press (🔒) argues it’s time to “put ‘pandemic law’ back on the shelf” and end what he sees as excessive deference to governmental bodies on coronavirus restrictions, requiring more justification for prohibitions. “When the crisis is unfolding—and confusion and uncertainty are at their greatest—deference is defensible,” he writes. “But as the confusion eases and we gain more knowledge, that deference should fade.”
Over at the site today, Andrew has a piece breaking down public health experts’ fight to get Americans to get vaccinated against the flu to help keep hospitals from getting overcrowded this winter. Most years, that’s a fight they lose: Will this year be different?
What’s it like to be teaching virtually this fall? Ryan Hooper is a social studies teacher in Baltimore, and he’s greatly concerned for his students. Attendance has been at about 40 percent, and those students who do login are beset by issues with technology or even find themselves caring for siblings while trying to be in class. “In Baltimore, where low-income students have historically been offered unequal educational opportunities, it is time to offer them the same in-person instruction that their more affluent peers receive.”
Sarah and David kick off Thursday’s episode of Advisory Opinionsby commemorating Constitution Day, and then dive deep on Attorney General Bill Barr’s … interesting speech at Hillsdale College this week. Stick around until the end for a discussion of Lochner v. New York and coronavirus lockdowns, and some Electoral College math.
William Jacobson: “L’SHANA TOVA – Happy New Year to our readers. 2020 is so bad, the Jews decided to end it early.“
Kemberlee Kaye: “‘We have successfully survived our first week of homeschooling. Completely new world and a learning experience, but it’s such a privilege and a blessing to watch our daughter learn and grow.”
Mary Chastain: “Hidin’ Biden exists. Thing is, debates start soon. Can’t stay in the basement forever.”
Leslie Eastman: “I was in good company this week. Not only did Facebook give a ‘false information” flag to my arson-connected wildfire post, the “platform” also did the same thing to FNC’s Tucker Carlson for his segment with the Chinese virologist and coronavirus whistle-blower, Dr. Li-Meng Yan.”
Stacey Matthews: “NeverTrump’ grifter Jennifer Rubin makes it official and drops the word ‘conservative’ from her Twitter profile. Long overdue.”
David Gerstman: “Hamas commemorated peace agreements finalized by Israel and both the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain by doing what it does best: launching rockets into Israel. The Palestinians are unhappy that Israel made peace with two Arab nations without their consent. How did that happen? Writing in the National Review, Rich Lowry reported, “Then, the administration made the Palestinians good-faith offers on economic development and peace that ended up underlining Palestinian rejectionism and opening up a different path forward.” The Palestinians got left behind because they chose to stay behind.”
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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“On Aug. 23, 29-year-old Jacob Blake, a black man, was shot seven times in the back by a white police officer. The original video, which only included the last moments of the incident, gave…”
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1776 Project Promotes Patriotism in History Classes
Yesterday, President Trump announced his intention to sign an executive order implementing the 1776 Commission, which would promote patriotic teaching of history and combat the 1619 Project. The announcement came during a speech given at the National Archives during a celebration honoring the signing of the Constitution.
“By viewing every issue through the lens of race, they want to impose a new segregation and we must not allow that to happen. Critical Race Theory, the 1619 Project, and the crusade against American history is toxic propaganda. Ideological poison, that if not removed will dissolve the civic bonds that tie us together, will destroy our country. That is why I recently banned trainings in this prejudiced ideology from the federal government and banned it in the strongest manner possible…
Today, I’m also pleased to announce that I was soon sign an executive order establishing a national commission to promote patriotic education. It will be called the 1776 Commission. It will encourage our educators to teach our children about the miracle of American history and make plans to honor the 250th anniversary of our founding.”
During the speech, he tore into critical race theory as racist, specifically pointing to a controversial chart published by Smithsonian Institute’s National Museum of African American History. The now-deletedgraphic detailed aspects of “white culture,” including “the nuclear family,” “objective, rational linear thinking,” “[being] polite,” “[protecting] property,” “decision making,” “intent counts,” “respect for authority,” “delayed gratification,” and “[planning] for the future,” amongst other innocuous or positive aspects of society. The president had a point when he questioned how is it not extremely racist to attribute many positive qualities of rational thought, individualism, and work ethic to be the sole purview of one race?
Congress Combatting Ahistorical 1619 Project
President Trump was not the only politician who used the Constitution’s anniversary to take aim at the 1619 project. House Republicans Ken Buck and Rick Allen introduced a bill to Congress which would bar schools from teaching the 1619 Project or lose federal funding. Senator Tom Cotton introduced similar legislation in July, in order to keep the Pulitzer-winning but debunked revisionist history from entering classrooms.
What to Watch – The History Boys
Politicians and activists have been playing fast and loose with history, shifting intentions and sometimes outright lying in order to suit a political agenda. The History Boys shows the same techniques utilized by politicians for a far less sinister end – getting into college. The film, adapted from the play of the same name (and featuring the original Broadway cast) follows a group of seniors at a British prep school whose test scores were impressive enough that they have a shot at getting into Oxford or Cambridge to study history; as such, the school brings in a guest teacher to prepare them for their college applications.
The clever, results-oriented teacher instructs the students to find a new angle on the history they’ve learned, everything from recontextualizing to suit a contrarian point to outright lying in order to make a clever and original argument. He clashes with their general studies teacher, a Robin-Williams-from-Dead-Poets-Society type who believes in knowledge for its own sake, and a purely fact-based history teacher. A lesser film would take a clear moral side between the pair, this film shows them each to have value for the boys’ education, and flaws both academically and personally.
Aside from the odd political resonance, a highlight of the play is how history is used as euphemism or allegory to the occurrences in the students (and occasionally teachers’ lives). One student describes his girlfriend’s desire to take the physical side of their relationship slow as a Western Front, engaging in a long and specific monologue in which he details their courtship like a battle or a political treaty. He and another character later flirt through discussions of ceding territory in war in thinly veiled subtext.
The film goes darker than expected for what looks like a British knock-off of Dead Poets Society with history replacing poetry, but those willing to sit through realistically crude teenage dialogue and some quietly disturbing moments will be fascinated by a story about coming of age, history, self-discovery, and the love of learning.
Paulina Enck is an intern at the Federalist and current student at Georgetown University in the School of Foreign Service. Follow her on Twitter at @itspaulinaenck
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Sep 18, 2020 01:00 am
Disrespecting the flag and the National Anthem drives a knife into the hearts of Americans who have lost loved ones fighting for both. Read More…
Sit, stay, and roll over, America
Sep 18, 2020 01:00 am
There’s been a method to the madness this year and it involves training Americans away from liberty and into obedience. Read more…
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Three brothers in their 30s stand accused of raping a 10-year-old girl in Louisiana. Two of the suspects are in custody at the time of this reporting, while one remains on the loose.What are the details? According to … Read more
Joe Biden is not the first person in his family to attend college. But he has a lengthy history of claiming otherwise, no matter how much the lie gets him in trouble.
MOSINEE, Wis. — Unlike career politicians pandering to the radical left, Trump doesn’t talk at his supporters. He talks to them. The Federalist covered last night’s Trump rally in flyover country.
After controlling for demographics, the study found, ‘young adults who attended Protestant schools are about 70% more likely than their peers who attended public schools to be in an intact marriage.’
With critical race theory seeping its way into government agencies and all levels of society, the state of the nation could turn dire if it isn’t stopped.
Tech outlets like Facebook rely increasingly on third-party fact-checkers to determine what content is allowed on their platforms. Here’s a look at how those fact-checkers do business.
Former Army Ranger sniper Ryan Cleckner, Carlson’s guest for the segment, said Democratic mega-donor George Soros and Democratic officials created the circumstances for a Minneapolis crime wave to bloom.
PBS White House correspondent Yamiche Alcindor praised the architect of The New York Times’ anti-American 1619 Project as a ‘national treasure’ Thursday.
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There’s an important set of optics for both the Democratic Party and CNN. They have been pushing so hard to force the nation into a state of panic over COVID-19 that they must religiously practice mask-wearing and social distancing any time the cameras are rolling. When they’re not rolling, the rules change, as Joe Biden and Anderson Cooper demonstrated at last night’s CNN townhall.
LOL! @CNN, @AC360, and @JoeBiden are pretend practicing social distancing at tonight’s #CNNTownHall, but watch what happens when they think the cameras are off and you can’t see them anymore!
It’s not the first time they fake their compliance to coronavirus rules. There are numerous examples of both Democrats and mainstream media nannies pretending to be concerned about social distancing and mask wearing, only to change tunes the moment they believe the cameras were off. It just happened the day before to CNN White House Correspondent Kaitlan Collins.
Democrats and their mainstream media lapdogs are putting on a show. It’s nothing more. Every time they think the cameras are not rolling, they’re fast to revert to normal activities. Their supposed coronavirus fear is intended to make YOU afraid.
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.
Words like “sexism” and “misogyny” are tossed around in modern American society far too often. It’s not that sexism doesn’t exist, but the way the term is used today belies the notion that we’re improving as a society. Women are more empowered now than ever before.
In today’s episode of Conservative Black Cowboy, Rob is joined again by three-time TedX speaker Joshua Spodek to discuss this issue. It’s an enthralling conversation, one that becomes contentious at times as they work through the ways sexism has manifested, why masculinity is on the decline, and why this is a bad thing across the board.
Are there sexists? Yes. But is sexism being used to promote agendas much more than it was ever used in the past? Absolutely. This talk between Rob and Joshua is well worth a watch.
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.
This is a no-brainer. Republicans who have a chance of flipping blue seats to red, such as retired Lt. Col Buzz Patterson in CA-07, need the support of congressional leadership. Patterson is currently up in most polls in the purple district in Sacramento that had a Republican in the seat as recently as 2012. But he is getting little to no support from people like House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy who is essentially the gatekeeper of congressional donations.
Patterson isn’t bitter, though. He’s ready to not only work with McCarthy but to endorse him for Speaker of the House should Republicans retake control of the lower chamber. In the latest episode of NOQ Report, I was able to sit down (virtually) with the Sacramento Republican and find out what it’s going to take for him to defeat his opponent, Ami Bera. Despite the great news in the polls, Patterson is not sitting back in his hammock hoping for a win. He’s out there talking to people, knocking on doors, and making commitments he intends to keep with the people of Sacramento. But he needs our help and he needs the help of congressional leaders like McCarthy in order to bring the seat back to the GOP.
Bera has been embroiled in controversies every since winning the seat. He has survived politically, barely winning some of his previous elections with the help of ballot harvesting. But this year, he’s facing a challenger who knows how to fight and knows how to win. Patterson’s career, which included a stint in the White House carrying the “nuclear football” for President Clinton, has always been filled with success.
If the GOP is going to take back control of the House, it’s incumbent on Kevin McCarthy to step up and help people like Buzz Patterson, who is in a very tight race. Otherwise, we’ll be stuck with at least two more years of Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
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.
Two things have been painfully obvious about Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden the past few weeks. One that he’s in decline and the other that he’s become a radical socialist as he termed it. Perhaps there is a connection between the two, but the later is the biggest threat.
Many of the nation’s socialist media have noted his moves to the far left and it doesn’t help that fashion socialista Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez let the cat out of the bag, stating in the video that even if he’s not far enough left, he can be ‘pushed’ in that direction.
While Beijing Biden pretends to be a moderate, there are several reasons why this is not the case. The second video reveals one of these in that multiple sources have detailed Joe Biden’s moves to the left and we will cite some of these for future reference, but other reasons are just as pertinent.
Projecting on all cylinders like every other authoritarian socialist
In an effort to score political points with those who have seen the danger of socialism close up, Beijing Biden recently tried to make the absurd point – without evidence – that President Trump is like Fidel Castro.
As is usually the case, there are no facts for these assertions, instead it’s based on nebulous emotional appeals:
“Trump has more in common with Castro than with Churchill,” Biden said, adding, “Look who he admires. He admires Putin, he admires Xi, he admires everyone who behaves in an authoritarian way. I am the exact opposite. I have faith in the democratic system.”
Apparently in Biden’s world supposed admiration means more than having the same socialist national agenda that includes the suppression of basic human rights.
But we only need to look at his words to see where he stands:
We’re going to beat Donald Trump. And when we do, we won’t just rebuild this nation — we’ll transform it.
Fidel Castro’s early claims that he was not a communist and only wanted democracy and the rule of law, while at the same time secretly plotting a communist takeover of Cuba sound eerily familiar today.
Even the national socialist media has admitted the truth – Biden has moved far left
A recent video from Glenn Beck details what the left is saying about Biden’s far-left moves while still pretending that he’s a moderate.
Find out why even DEMOCRATS say Joe Biden is more progressive than Bernie Sanders
For reference, these are just some of the publications that have admitted the obvious:
Biden Goes Big Without Sounding Like It
…
The incident illustrates one of the reasons that Biden has proved such an elusive target. Despite embracing an agenda that is further to the left than that of any Democratic nominee in decades, he’s avoided the specific policy proposals and catchphrases that Republicans find easiest to attack. As a result, he appears more centrist than he actually is. In Biden, Democrats have a nominee who is promising FDR-style change, yet is avoiding the political backlash that an ambitious progressive agenda often brings.
The bottom line: The Socialist far-left has already embraced Biden
This should be damning evidence in its own right. Consider where we were a few months ago, with admitted socialist Bernie Sanders at the top of the heap. The left was on the verge of nominating someone who is an admitted socialist. Then cooler heads prevailed and the left pulled back from the brink.
It wasn’t that they hadn’t already embraced the precepts of collectivism years ago. It was that this wasn’t the time to be open about it. The compromise was to substitute a Trojan Horse candidate that has a chance but still will implement the left’s authoritarian agenda.
Does anyone think that Biden would be acceptable to the far left if he hadn’t adopted it’s socialist national agenda?
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
It is very difficult to ask the country to put politics aside during a presidential election season, but it is crucial that we do so now regarding the expected approval of vaccines for Covid-19.
Pharmaceutical researchers are laboring for thousands of hours and investing billions of dollars to develop treatments and vaccines desperately needed to save lives and unlock economies around the planet.
Yet the political knives already are out, with Sen. and Vice-Presidential nominee Kamala Harris repeatedly expressing distrust for the vaccine, saying, “I think that we have learned … that there’s very little that we can trust that can comes out of Donald Trump’s mouth.” She went on to also question the objectivity of the FDA.
That is reckless and potentially deadly. Just as Americans avoided going to the hospital this spring, even when they were having strokes and heart attacks, for fear of contracting the virus, people who avoid a vaccine for political reasons could also be putting themselves at risk.
Leading authorities issued two separate statements this week to reassure the American people that no treatment or vaccine will be released until it is deemed safe and effective—nine pharmaceutical company executives and eight senior career scientists at the Food and Drug Administration.
Senior FDA career executives co-signed an op-ed in USA Today about following the science to protect public health in pandemic. They are concerned that “The integrity and independence of the agency have been called into question.” The eight FDA officials have more than 100 years of experience and assured the American people they are committed to making decisions guided by science. They said their approach to approval has been and will “remain the gold standard that all can rely on.”
The chief executives of nine pharmaceutical companies released a pledge on Tuesday saying they won’t submit their coronavirus vaccines for regulatory approval unless large clinical trials prove they are safe and effective.They “want to make clear our on-going commitment to developing and testing potential vaccines for COVID-19 in accordance with high ethical standards and sound scientific principles.” The statement said the companies will “always make the safety and well-being of vaccinated individuals our top priority.”
On Wednesday, HHS Secretary Alex Azar led a bipartisan call with the chief executives of 50 states, territories, the District of Columbia, and the White House Coronavirus Task Force to discuss local, state, and federal COVID-19 response and recovery. HHS is working with the Task Force to coordinate efforts to distribute the vaccines when they are approved as part of the massive all-of-government response to the pandemic.
More than 100 vaccines are in clinical trials around the world as a result of a near-wartime effort by the companies to respond to urgent need for vaccines and treatments. Yet, according to a September 6 CBS News/YouGov poll, 65% of Americans said they would be skeptical of a coronavirus vaccine if it was made available this year, fearing possible safety shortcuts.
It’s vital to put politics aside so scare tactics do not compromise the urgent interests of public health and the imperative for economic recovery.
A note about us: Galen Institute scholars were recognized in a recent Business Insider article by reporter Kimberly Leonard as among the top 24 leaders advising the Trump administration on health policy.
Galen Senior Fellows Brian Blase, Doug Badger, and I were in good company on this list, with Sens. Cassidy, Cotton, Graham, and Paul, Sec. Azar, Administrator Verma, top White House advisers, and other leaders inside and outside the administration.
The Galen team is a policy powerhouse, and I’m very proud of our work in fighting for patient-centered health policies to renew and refresh our health sector from the bottom up after decades Washington’s failed top-down solutions. Kudos to Brian and Doug and all of the others on the list in your tireless work for patients and freedom.
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.
Nick Searcy is a Hollywood actor and star of many movies and television shows, including The Shape of Water, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, Justified and Fried Green Tomatoes. While he’s seen great success as an actor, he’s also seen the Hollywood system of censorship and Cancel Culture up close.
During this interview from the livestream event from Cancelled: Enough is Enough!, Jeff Dornik and Nick dive deep into exposing the fact that Hollywood is nothing more than a propaganda machine, controlling the narratives and storylines in film and music to fit with their globalist, Marxist and anti-American views. Conservatives that seek to create content are silenced or completely cancelled from being able to work.
Fortunately, Nick is working with Creado Studios to create a system that allows filmmakers, musicians and creators to completely bypassing the Hollywood system, bringing back true storytelling without censorship. We need conservatives to get back into the entertainment game, beginning to use film, television shows, music and creativity to influence future generations with conservative and pro-American values.
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.
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Today is Constitution Day. On this day in 1787, the delegates to the Constitutional Convention signed the document that would become the “owner’s manual” of the American Republic. In 2004, Congress passed a law recognizing September 17th as a day to celebrate that great document and the vision of our Founding Fathers.
Sadly, our educational institutions are failing to teach the basics of the Constitution. According to a recent survey, 19% of Americans cannot name even one of the five rights guaranteed by the First Amendment. And only a bare majority of Americans can name the three branches of government. (We have an election coming up in which all three are at stake!)
Meanwhile, Attorney General William Barr is warning that the COVID lockdowns are the greatest intrusion on our civil rights since slavery. Thankfully, one federal judge just overturned Pennsylvania’s lockdown order, ruling that the Constitution still applies during emergencies.
Please take a moment today to talk to your children and grandchildren about the Constitution. Tell them what they are not learning in school — that America is unique because we believe our rights come from God, not government, and that government was meant to be limited so that we could be free.
Trump Defends America
Today, President Trump addressed a conference on American history held at the National Archives. He said:
“Our mission is to defend the legacy of America’s founding, the virtues of America’s heroes and the nobility of the American character. We must clear away the twisted web of lies in our schools and classrooms, and teach our children the magnificent truth about our country. We want our sons and daughters to know that they are citizens of the most exceptional nation in the history of the world.”
The president described the Constitution as the fulfillment of “a thousand years of Western Civilization,” adding that “no political document has done more to advance the human condition or propel the engine of progress.”
Trump warned that a “left-wing cultural revolution” was attempting to “overthrow the American Revolution.” And the president declared, “We will never submit to tyranny.”
During his remarks, the president denounced the teaching of critical race theory in our schools as a form of child abuse. He warned that the left was trying to destroy the “beautiful vision” of Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., and impose “a new segregation.” He denounced the 1619 Project as “toxic propaganda” and “ideological poison.”
The president said that the only path to national unity is “through our shared identity as Americans,” adding it was urgent that we restore patriotic education to our schools that “celebrates the truth about our nation’s great history.” Trump announced that he will be signing an executive order to promote patriotic education under a new “1776 Commission.”
This is something I have advocated for years, and I am tremendously encouraged by the president’s announcement today. We must teach our children that America is so much more than the sins of our past. It is, as Abraham Lincoln declared, “the last best hope of earth.”
Left-wing Lunacy
In the aftermath of the protests and riots triggered by George Floyd’s death, the Minneapolis City Council led the nation in the left’s latest fad – defunding the police. According to ABC News, the so-called “progressives” on the city council voted to advance a plan “to eliminate the police department.”
You might think that’s crazy. But City Council President Lisa Bender went on CNN and said that calling the police if your house is broken into “comes from a place of privilege.”
Given that government’s primary obligation is to defend public safety, I doubt most taxpayers consider police services a “privilege.”
Not surprisingly, hundreds of Minneapolis police officers quit and submitted paperwork to retire early. One estimate this summer suggested as much as 20% of the entire Minneapolis police force would quit in the weeks and months ahead.
Then news broke that Minneapolis taxpayers were paying tens of thousands of dollars to provide private security to city council members who voted to abolish the police. Talk about “progressive privilege!”
So after the city council went on a jihad against the police and successfully cut the police budget, crime predictably surged. Now these same city council members have the audacity to complain that police are not being tough enough on crime!
It’s too bad that there isn’t a requirement that all city council members must work with police officers once a week. Maybe if they stood in their shoes for once, they might have more appreciation for what law enforcement officers do for us every day.
Tragic News Two volunteers for Lacy Johnson, the Republican candidate challenging Ilhan Omar, were shot this week. One of them, Andre Conley, a 17 year-old black high school senior, was killed. No word yet on whether the shootings were politically motivated.
If two of Ilhan Omar’s staffers had been shot, every media outlet would be claiming that Trump’s “anti-Islam and anti-immigrant” rhetoric was responsible. But there’s hardly any mention of this lost black life.
Nevertheless, the left does bear some responsibility, if for no other reason than Conley’s death is the 55th murder in Minneapolis this year as the city descended into anarchy, thanks to the city council’s efforts to defund and demoralize the police
. Ignorance Is NOT Bliss
Yet another survey is highlighting the gross and disturbing ignorance of America’s younger generations when it comes to the Holocaust. For example, the survey found that:
48% of those aged 18 to 39 could not name a single concentration camp.
56% had no idea what Auschwitz was.
63% could not correctly identify how many Jews were killed in the Holocaust.
36% believe that two million or fewer were killed. The real figure is six million.
Incredibly, 11% thought that Jews were responsible for the Holocaust.
Clearly, our schools are failing to educate our children about one of the most important events in modern history. Perhaps if they spent less time teaching them anti-American history, like the 1619 Project, they could find more time for Holocaust education.
Polling As Propaganda
If you see a disturbing poll, don’t assume it’s accurate. Case in point: Minnesota.
The Trump campaign believes Minnesota is competitive, and it is concentrating resources in the state. Well, if you believe the latest ABC News/Washington Post poll, which shows Biden leading Trump by 16 points, that would seem like a total waste of resources.
But the poll was total garbage. It grossly oversampled young voters by nearly twice the rate at which they voted in the 2016 election! There is no reasonable scenario in which that demographic is more than a third of the vote.
No self-respecting pollster would have published these figures. But that’s the problem. So many of these media polls are manipulated to serve as little more than Democrat propaganda and to demoralize conservative voters.
Tags:Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Constitution Day, Trump Defends America, Left-wing LunacyTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
. . . The Republican senator aims to hold Beijing accountable for its many lies.
by Harold Hutchison: While most of Washington was focused on the phony impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, one senator was sounding an alarm while being denounced and dismissed by the Beltway elites. Months later, though, it looks like Arkansas Republican Tom Cotton was right and a whole lot of experts were wrong about the Wuhan coronavirus.
As our comprehensive timeline shows, Cotton was out front urging decisive action — including travel bans — while being assailed by the Left. Some even painted the Chinese communist regime as the victim of racism. Weeks later, the same Washington Post that mocked Cotton pretty much reported what he was saying, albeit with no apologies for the earlier smears and no credit for his having gotten it right.
Now, Senator Cotton wants to make China pay for its lethal and catastrophic cover-up. The costs Cotton wants to recoup aren’t just from the virus, though; they also include the collateral damage such as tens of millions of Americans out of work and thousands upon thousands of businesses shuttered, many permanently. Science shows that “deaths of despair” can kill, too, although this science is inconvenient for leftists.
One of the first steps Cotton is pursuing is an end to China’s “most favored nation” status. It’s an open question whether that status should have been granted at all, much less made permanent, given what we knew back then. Given what we know now, however, revoking it should be an easy call on the forced-labor issue alone. At the very least, an end to MFN would hasten the “walk away” from China movement.
As a first step, this would reduce our dependence on China. But we have some additional suggestions, including a military buildup to not only reduce China’s standing in the world but also worsen its position. We should also address China’s infiltration of and influence over Hollywood and international agencies, if only to preempt the propaganda that China will no doubt churn out in response to these measures.
Unfortunately, the pushback won’t come from China alone. It’s no coincidence, for example, that the same establishment types who for years have told us that we shouldn’t push China too hard are now backing the Trump-hating Lincoln Project, which has targeted not just the president but also Senator Cottonz. Of course, if these two men are taking fire, they must be over the target.
——————————
Harold Hutchison has 15 years of experience covering military issues for a number of outlets, and two decades of professional involvement with Second Amendment issues. He writes for the Patriot Post.
Tags: Senator Tom Cotton, Demands Reckoning, From China, Harold Hutchison, Patriot PostTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:Editorial Cartoon, AF Branco, Holy CrapTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Happy Thursday morning to all my friends in Kruiser Morning Briefing Land. I’m working on some drink specials for everyone.
We’re going to take a slight departure today from the usual plague, riot, and election fare to focus on my favorite member of Team Trump these past few years: Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos.
DeVos’s every move since 2017 has been relentlessly criticized by the media. She’s a big fan of the Constitution, which has fallen out of favor with modern American leftists. DeVos has not only been a reassuring constant in the Trump administration, she’s done her best work undoing or redoing some God-awful policies from the Obama administration.
That’s the kind of two-fer I like.
DeVos recently announced the finishing touches on the campus reforms that she has been working on this year. She’s been trying to restore some semblance of sanity to college campuses that have become due process-free hotbeds of intolerance.
Rick wrote about it yesterday:
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos announced that a final rule “Improving Free Inquiry, Transparency, and Accountability at Colleges and Universities” will go into effect immediately. Any institution that fails to uphold the First Amendment will not receive any grants from the federal government. The rule will also protect student religious groups from discrimination.This is some of the most import work that has been done by this administration, if not the most glamorous. Much — if not all — of what is ailing the United States right now has to do with the leftist lunacy that has been allowed to take root with impunity on college campuses. Conservative and religious voices have been marginalized for decades. That marginalization has led to what pretty much amounts to the extinction of non-leftist voices in American college life.
The rioting we see going on, as well as the embrace of socialism can be directly traced to the intolerance that is now part of a college education.
Conservative groups are routinely harassed and any speakers they invite often end up being canceled by the universities because the brainwashed progressive students pose a security risk.
On more than one occasion, the security risk erupts into actual violence.
The work DeVos has been doing obviously won’t change that overnight, but something had to be done to at least begin moving the needle in the other direction again.
All that DeVos has been doing is attempt to restore some basic constitutional rights on college campuses that have been cavalierly stripped away over the years by commie academics. Universities should be encouraging the free exchange of ideas. That’s difficult to do when First Amendment rights have been tossed out of the window by the bitter totalitarian shrews in academia.
If you want a really clear picture of just how far left the leftists have gone, just look at their reaction to what DeVos has been doing for students. She’s portrayed as a monster for merely ensuring that college kids are protected by fundamental constitutional rights. They’ve lost it over there, and what DeVos has done to trigger them has been wonderful to watch.
As I’ve written before, one of my favorite things about Sec. DeVos is that she consistently annoys all of the right people.
Let’s hope she gets to stick around for a while longer and keep it up.
Tags:Pj Media, Stephen Kruiser, Secretary of Education, Betsy DeVosTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Kerby Anderson: Less than two months before a national election, lawsuits are being filed to change election laws. In Georgia, the law used to require that absentee ballots that arrived after Election Day were to be set aside and eventually destroyed. A federal judge now has ordered Georgia officials to count all ballots postmarked by Election Day even if they arrive days later. A similar injunction has been filed in Pennsylvania.
A lawsuit in Ohio is challenging the need for verifying a signature. Minnesota waived a rule that absentee ballots must be signed by a witness. Lawyers for the Trump campaign have challenged that decision.
All of this legal activity is due to the fact that we may see a major amount of absentee ballot rejections. The Associated Press estimated that if states reject these ballots at the same rate as the 2020 primaries, up to three times as many voters in battleground states could have their votes discarded.
A survey by NPR discovered that 558,032 absentee votes were tossed out during the 2020 primaries. For example, Wisconsin had 23,196 ballots discarded. In 2016, Donald Trump won Wisconsin by 22,748 votes.
It is easy to see where this will lead if we have a close election. The loser will challenge the fact that thousands of ballots were rejected and call for the state “to count every vote.” The debate will surely end up in the courts. That is why the editors of the Wall Street Journal asked, “Will Courts Pick the Next President?”
If you want your vote to count in this election, the best solution is to vote in-person. Second best is to get a ballot early, fill it out carefully, and mail it early.
———————— Kerby Anderson@KerbyAnderson) is an author, lecturer, visiting professor and radio host and contributor on nationally syndicated Point of View and the “Probe” radio programs.
Tags:Kerby Anderson, Viewpoints, Point of View, Discarded Ballots, votingTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Robert Romano: In May, the Department of Labor Inspector General warned that the new pandemic unemployment assistance program passed by Congress in the $3.3 trillion CARES Act earlier this year, because of a flimsy self-certification requirement for individuals to receive benefits immediately, “will lead to increased improper payments and fraud.”
Now, between July 25 and Aug. 22, continued claims to this program in the state of California skyrocketed more than 4.4 million before dropping 592,000 to its current 6.4 million level the week of Aug. 29 , according to the latest data compiled by the Department of Labor. Many of the claims covering several weeks as the benefits are being applied retroactively.
The surge in claims in California comes as the New York Times reported fraudulent claims in the state where unemployment benefits debit cards were being sent to unattended mailboxes, and Politico similarly reported that genuine recipients were seeing their debit cards drained of benefits before they had the opportunity to use them.
“We do suspect that a big part of the unusual recent rise in P.U.A. claims is linked to fraud,” said Loree Levy, a spokeswoman for the California Employment Development Department in an interview with the New York Times published Sept. 11.
A Department of Labor spokesperson told me that California is reporting the claims on a backdated basis: “California indicated there were a large number of continued claims reported for backdated weeks of PUA. PUA was implemented retroactively for weeks beginning on or after January 27, 2020. In addition, further need to backdate claims occurred due to the difficulties in implementing the new program combined with the extreme claims volumes in both the regular and PUA programs. As a result, individuals that were unable to file for PUA earlier in the period of eligibility and were eligible for backdated claims were filed and reported in bulk by the state as they were taken because CA’s current reporting system is unable to assign the claims to the week to which they applied. This caused continuing claims to appear to be higher than initial claims.”
But as the Department of Labor Inspector General warned in May, these claims are not being verified: “To establish eligibility, the CARES Act requires individuals to self-certify that they have lost employment income due to a COVID-19 related reason specified within the statute. This self-certification renders the individual eligible to receive payments immediately.”
This differs from regular unemployment benefits, which requires states to verify that a person worked before dispensing benefits. Now, with the likely fraud ongoing in California, this critical flaw exposed by the Inspector General is now coming to fruition.
Fortunately, legislation by Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), S. 4318, the “American Workers, Families, and Employers Assistance Act,” would rein this provision in and provide for work verification, aligning the program with the same requirements used in the long-standing Disaster Unemployment Assistance.
According to a summary of this provision provided by the Senate Finance Committee, which Grassley chairs, “The CARES Act created the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) program, modeled after the long-standing Disaster Unemployment Assistance (DUA) program, to provide support to those not traditionally eligible for state unemployment benefits. Under DUA, applicants can receive benefits immediately, but must provide documentation within 21 days of applying to substantiate prior employment or self-employment (or the planned commencement of employment or self-employment).”
The problem is that documentation requirement for disaster unemployment was not applied by Congress to the pandemic unemployment assistance program: “The Department of Labor has determined this DUA provision does not apply to the PUA program, and this provision requires states to follow the same procedures for verifying eligibility for both programs. This provision would also specify that only those who have lost their principal source of income are eligible for the program, following the same requirement currently in place for the disaster unemployment assistance program.” analysis that under the legislation “PUA claimants would be expected to provide proof of prior work and thus their eligibility for PUA benefits within three weeks, or else their benefits would end.”
That would certainly be a step in the right direction, as it would at least create some means for states to limit the possibility of fraud. A legitimate question going forward, given the potential widespread fraud already being seen, is whether the legislation should be strengthened to make the employment documentation requirement a prerequisite.
In the meantime, the Justice Department should work with the Department of Labor to investigate the surge of claims coming out of California that its own state agency responsible for administering the benefits suspects are fraudulent.
For now, the Grassley legislation has been folded into a series of bills being offered by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), and this is one provision Republican leaders and the White House need to prioritize in negotiations with the House — or else the California fraud could begin proliferating nationwide.
——————————— Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.
Tags:Robert Romano, Americans for Limited Government, Grassley Bill, Would Rein In, Pandemic Unemployment Claims, fraudTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: When Hillary Clinton talked about carrying hot sauce around in her handbag, on the popular Breakfast Club show featuring the annoyingly monickered Charlemagne Tha God, did anyone believe her? It was such an obvious and shameless ploy to get African-Americans to see her as “relatable.” For Mrs. Clinton, however, that was ‘a bridge too far.
Now Joe Biden provides the cringe.
“I just have one thing to say,” Biden informed his audience at an event celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month. Looking down at his phone, he struggled for a moment. “Hang on here.”
And then he played a song. “Despacito,” which means “Slowly.”
Try not to think too much about this, for the song is a little sexually suggestive. The Daily Wirereprints a translation of the lyrics, for your disgust or delectation.
First element of cringe: It was an obvious play for Latino sympathy. The song itself had nothing to do with anything other than that it was a popular song from “the community” When you are this pandering, this patronizing, this transparent about your play to the cliché, what kind of respect do you hope to get?
Second element: It’s such a desperation move — with the Florida Spanish-speaking vote in jeopardy. Cuban-Americans, especially, are turned off by the Democrats’ move further left, having themselves left Cuba to come to American freedom. And the generally woke-socialist mindset of the Biden-Harris team (or is it Harris-Biden?) is a bit hard to take for the generally culturally conservative folks hailing from the south.
When will Democrats try authenticity again?
Third element: Assuming riots and conflagrations aren’t precisely that.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
————————— Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
Tags:Paul Jacob, Common Sense, “Despacito” DesperationTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Daniel Greenfield: After an arson attempt at The Way Christian Church church in Berkeley, the pastor and the media blamed it on a racist who was lashing out at the church’s Black Lives Matter banner.
“McBride is now considering whether his decades long work challenging police brutality, registering people of faith to vote, or speaking out against white supremacy irritated the suspected arsonist, or whether they were angered by the Black Lives Matter sign hanging from the church,” a press release from The Way Christian Church announced “As our nation continues to confront our dark history of racism, I am glad that the parishioners of The Way and Pastor Mike McBride, who have been at the forefront of social justice and the Black Lives Matter movement, are safe,” Mayor Jesse Arreguín declared.”Anti-Black hate, and all forms of racism, has no place in Berkeley.
A week later, Shameka Latoya Adams was arrested for a similar arson attempt against the Congregation Netivot Shalom synagogue on the same block. It’s unknown if Shameka had also tried to set the fire at The Way Christian Church, but the synagogue fire received far less attention. Nor did anyone suggest that trying to set fire to a synagogue might be antisemitic.
The Berkeley synagogue arson was another incident in a violent year, but not an isolated one.
In August, that same month, the Chabad Jewish Center in Portland suffered two arson attempts in 5 days. The first fire had been dismissed as an electrical issue, but afterward, the gas and power had been shut off, and the building had been boarded up with no one inside.
The second fire was deemed suspicious and led to an FBI investigation.
This was not the first time Chabad centers had been targeted. Last year, 3 Synagogue Arsons in 1 Month in the Most Progressive US Cities 3 Synagogue Arsons in 1 Month in the Most Progressive US Cities two fires were set at the Chabad Center for Jewish Life in Arlington, Massachusetts, and a third fire at the Chabad Jewish Center in Needham.
The third synagogue arson in August took place at the University of Delaware Chabad’s Center for Jewish Life. After firefighters battled the blaze for three hours, the estimated damage stood at around $200,000. The fire marshall deemed it a case of arson and launched an investigation.
Three synagogue arsons in one month are as notable as the lack of interest in the pattern.
Berkeley and Portland are notorious incubators of leftist radicalism, and the University of Delaware takes pride in being both diverse and progressive.
There’s an understandable discomfort when talking about why attacks against Jews keep happening in some of the most “progressive” parts of the country. And there’s often just as much discomfort when confronting the perpetrators of some of the attacks on synagogues.
Shameka Latoya Adams has been described as a black woman, but the booking report lists Shameka as male. In May of last year, a man was caught on video hurling molotov cocktails at Congregation Anshe Sholom B’nai Israel in Chicago. The arson attempt failed and the suspect was apparently never caught, but the police were looking for a black male.
Last March, Andrew Costas, a Satanist, and his girlfriend, had plotted attacks on 13 churches and synagogues in Maryland. Costas was caught after he firebombed a Catholic church and defaced a synagogue with Nazi swastikas as part of a ritual to prove he was the antichrist.
While white supremacists have carried out the deadliest attacks on synagogues in recent years with mass shootings at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh and an attack in Poway, California, the ongoing drumbeat of violence often comes from the blight of a failed society.
In March 2020, a homeless woman was arrested after starting a fire at Temple Emanuel in Pueblo, Colorado. The temple had been previously targeted in a white supremacist bomb plot in November of last year.
A homeless man had previously started a fire that destroyed the 119-year old Adas Israel Synagogue in Duluth, Minnesota, in the fall of last year. Also in the fall, a man had set fire to a backpack on the steps of the Park Slope Jewish Center in Brooklyn, New York on Yom Kippur.
While targeted anti-semitic violence is very much a reality, the collapse of law and order, the political philosophy that turned over public spaces to mentally unstable vagrants and junkies has a heavy ongoing cost. The idea that there is a firm dividing line between racist violence and social instability, between hate and dysfunction, is politically appealing to liberals, but not true.Social collapse hurts everyone. Especially those who are vulnerable and have a lot to lose.
An unstable society is more likely to spawn violent fanatics, white and black nationalists seeking meaning and purpose in a world that no longer seems to offer them one, not to mention criminals and crazies who will follow their impulses, instincts, and the voices in their heads.
The wave of Black Lives Matter violence already resulted in multiple attacks on synagogues. But, even further out of the spotlight, the rising extremism and instability is taking its toll.
And that’s one reason why the media and liberal organizations don’t want to talk about it.When California Jewish organizations thought that a black church had been attacked because it had flown a Black Lives Matter banner, they issued outraged statements blasting racism.
But when the nearby Congregation Netivot Shalom suffered through an arson attempt and the alleged perpetrator inconveniently proved to be a black transgender person, the JCRC and the other organizations that had rushed out statements earlier maintained an uncomfortable silence.
This double game is being played after the fires in Portland and at the University of Delaware as the federations and their local papers wait to find out who the perpetrators of the arson are.Not all burning synagogues are created equal. Some are condemned, many are ignored.
A white supremacist planting a bomb is firmly condemned, but a black man throwing molotov cocktails at a synagogue is carefully not discussed. The rising tide of homeless violence, and its spillover into synagogue robberies and arson is not a fit subject for social justice temples.
The country’s “progressive” cities are becoming wastelands of violence. And leaders who care more about social justice and the buzzwords of the political moment can’t afford to notice it.
But meanwhile, synagogues are burning.
—————————-
Daniel Greenfield (@Sultanknish) is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the Freedom Center, is an investigative journalist and writer focusing on the radical Left and Islamic terrorism.
Tags:Daniel Greenfield, 3 Synagogue Arsons, in 1 Month, in the Most Progressive, US CitiesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Angela Sailor: Constitution Day is a time to bolster our confidence in our great republic. Through the Constitution, America has continuously strengthened our union by expanding rights for the disenfranchised to participate in our democracy.
And with an election swiftly approaching, we should reflect on how it was only recently when the right to vote was granted to young Americans.
Just 50 years ago, citizens under 21 did not have the right to vote. Then, in the spring of 1971, the 26th Amendment passed the House and Senate, and was ratified by the states on July 1, 1971, lowering the voting age to 18 as part of the Voting Rights Act of 1970.
Today, the 18- to- 21-year-old age group includes members of Generation Z. As many Americans fight to preserve our freedom and protect the American identity from being “canceled,” Gen Z may very well safeguard us from the nightmare of anarchy and tyranny.
Gen Z’s Importance to This ElectionAccording to federal census data, in the United States there are 15 million citizens ages 18 to 21 who have turned 18 since the last presidential election.
The Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement says that Gen Z made history for having the highest voter turnout ever seen in a midterm election for the 18-to-21 age group. The center goes on to explain that this group will potentially be a significant voting bloc in the 2020 elections.
A recent study, “How 2020 is Impacting Gen Z’s Worldview,” reveals a majority of Gen Zers are confident that they can impact social change and are politically active. The COVID-19 pandemic has made them realize that political leaders’ decisions impact their daily lives, and 62% consider themselves part of a movement that will vote to express its views.
As we celebrate Constitution Day, we must take time to listen to new voters and the next generation of national leaders. According to the Center for Information and Research, young voters are voicing their uncertainty about state online voter registration systems and lack of information on mail-in ballots.
Generation Z is raising its hand to be an informed and energized people willing to protect freedom and opportunity. James Madison’s words resonate with this generation, “Knowledge will forever govern ignorance: And a people who mean to be their own Governors, must arm themselves with the power which knowledge gives.”
Vital Role of Voting in Our Republic
On Constitution Day, why should we pause to appreciate the expansion of the right to vote to young Americans? Because voting is the cornerstone of freedom and a measure of governmental vigor and validity
In his famous text, “Democracy in America,” Alexis de Tocqueville asserted that: “The health of a democratic society may be measured by the quality of functions performed by private citizens.” Voting is one of the most important ways in which private citizens participate in our democracy.
For over two years, the Constitution has maintained its authority because its Framers prudently established the separation of power to preserve the interests of majority rule and minority rights.
In 1787, “in order to form a more perfect union,” we adopted a new Constitution. The new Constitution was ratified not by state legislatures, but by conventions whose delegates were elected specifically for that purpose by “we the People of the United States.”
But while legitimacy rested on popular consent, crude majoritarianism was never the design or intent of the people. Our constitutional system aims not merely at majority rule, but at creating ruling majorities that are respectful of minority interests and values, of liberty and equality, and the federal and state governments.
In 2020, the electorate needs to play the vital role of participating in the democratic process—young voters included. With the elections just 47 days away, The Heritage Foundation is working with leaders and youth organizations to ensure that young voters understand the Electoral College and how to exercise their right to vote.
Our newly released e-book, “The Essential Electoral College,” seeks to inform the public and elected officials about the often-underappreciated genius of the Framers’ design of the Electoral College. This e-book walks readers through the merits of the Electoral College, covering the purpose, structure, and its numerous benefits.
This new generation of voters is poised to make great contributions to our society and should be equipped to be knowledgeable citizens. More than most, Gen Z believes that the American idea of equality is the supposition that individuals with different talents and opportunities are ensured equal treatment under the law in their quest for life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
Like John Quincy Adams, Generation Z would say, “Her glory is not dominion, but liberty. Her march is the march of mind. She has a spear and a shield, but the motto upon her shield is Freedom, Independence, Peace.”
——————–
Angela Sailor serves as vice president of The Feulner Institute at The Heritage Foundation and Contributes to The Daily Signal.
Tags:Angela Sailor, The Heritage Foundation, The Daily Signal. On Constitution Day, We Should Reflect on the Right to Vote, Which Generation Z Now SharesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Turning Point USA: This is one of the most concise narratives of what this Covid-19 pandemic is all about. It is written by Bill O’Reilly. Please don’t refuse to read just because you may not like him. He is a true student of history and a rabid researcher. He gets the facts before he speaks. He is not a big fan of President Trump, so this is not written in support of him, but an attempt to get the truth out to all of us.
Bill O’Reilly
by Bill O’Reilly: My wife Angie will tell you that I study history and world events fluently every day. I have studied China for many years. To get answers I need to question, I call many I know in Washington on Capitol Hill (from my tenure on two Presidential campaigns and Presidential talks) and I ask them for straight-up answers to better understand what affects us as a nation.
Well, in 2016 America elected a new Sheriff: Donald J Trump. For decades the Chinese walked all over America but the new President said: “not anymore”. Trump literally strangled China’s economy to the point their economy was in its worst free fall ever. Trump negotiated a new 50 billion trade agreement. He had Xi by the proverbial balls.
America’s economy was on fire and unstoppable. President Xi Jinping knew he could not beat the USA militarily and he knew any domesticated economic attack would fail as our economy was too strong. He had to act. But how? Enter the USA democrats led by Pelosi and Schiff.
Impeachment. A hoax. A distraction for our people and President. Xi Jinping and his thugs see this. They aren’t stupid. They have very intelligent intellectual thinkers in their government. Now you must understand, the Chinese regime is truly Barbarians. Notice I did not say ALL CHINESE. Chinese people are good people. I enjoy my interactions with them.
The communist regime has millions of its own citizens slaving in gulags simply for speaking against the government or openly practicing Christianity. Knowing they could not attack us openly they needed to be coy, like a deceptive fox. In my opinion, I believe the regime released a biological weapon upon the world that doesn’t kill everyone but kills “enough,” especially the elderly and in-firmed. Back in WW2, Hitler thought the same way. He got rid of what he considered the useless and rejects of society.
Trump’s task force uses models to figure things out. Xi used and uses “models” too. China’s president figured that if he killed a few of his own (a few hundred thousand to them would be a few out of 1.4 billion people) and spread the virus to other nations (especially to the USA) they would “level the economic playing field” and not have fired a shot. Losses of his own people were acceptable costs of a new war.
When China’s own doctors attempted to sound the warning, they were immediately silenced. In fact, one died and another has simply disappeared. Trump and the other allied leaders indeed KNOW this is what happened. They have under-reported their own deaths. Trump knows he cannot outrightly seek retribution. His news conference today showed me this when he balked publicly about no outright retribution over Xi’s handling of this and he immediately brought up the “trade deal”. However, Trump wasn’t being weak, he too was now being coy. We know this was a biological weapon. The food market story is bullshit.
Xi knows we know it. Trump also today announced he sent two battle groups of destroyers and other ships to sea several days ago to fight drugs and rogue actors like Iran should they try anything.
I say he did this to show Xi he knows what has transpired (we have the greatest intelligence assets) and that they (the Chinese) should rethink further action. Politics is premier. We cannot overtly attack China for what they have done as we would also suffer greatly. We all know this.
But China has temporarily achieved its goal. America was literally consumed by Trump’s phony impeachment brought by the ultra-left democrats (supported by democrat rank and file and one Republican Mitt Romney) and Xi Jinping saw an opening. He took it. Xi did what Trump usually does..he walked onto the world stage and threw a grenade into the “room” and left. It exploded in the form of this worldwide pandemic. It brought the USA and the rest of the world to its knees and leveled the economic playing field.Our economy is now near depression. Xi didn’t fire one bullet. Trump needed to up his game of chess and putting our Naval ships to sea was his next move He said he is a “war” President. He is.
But now on not one but two fronts. One front is the virus and the other front is the Chinese. While the Saudi’s and Russians are screwing with oil prices they aren’t overtly doing what this pandemic is doing. The drug smuggling story for dispatching the Naval Force is bullshit and the world knows it. I am of the opinion Trump can indeed bring us back from this catastrophe albeit with a changed playing field.
But Trump is a genius in chess and financial matters. He’s become a champ at international politics too. I am sure Trump can once again lead the economy to even stronger strength and greatness that it was. He can do it quickly, I’m sure of it. He has proved it. Xi Jinping needs to be sent a message loud and clear. NEVER AGAIN. We need to bring all of our critical manufacturing back from China beginning with our medicines they were recently threatening to withhold. We can do it immediately. Again, another reason for Trump putting to sea such a sizable Naval Force. Sending a clear message.
We all must ride out the next few weeks. Then we and the world pick up the pieces and move on. The democrats who have given Xi this opening wrapped in a bow must pay a heavy price in November as they (the democrats) truly have cost and continue to cost America precious lives by the phony scandals. Nancy Pelosi continues to help the Chinese by her daily shameless attacks upon the President and meddling in stimulus packages as she did this last weekend. Yesterday’s statements she made were truly appalling and the lowest of low. I didn’t think she could go any lower. What a disgrace she is to our nation.
But, Pelosi aside, make no mistake, China must and will be taught a lesson the likes they have never seen before and Trump is the man to pull the trigger.
We the people must teach the democrats the same lesson at the polls. They (the radical wing of the party) are the enemy of a free America. I am certain of it. The entire democrat party of our forefathers is dead. Remember people, Trump indeed tried to warn us all of the Coronavirus in his State of the Union Speech. He spoke of it. He said he was on top of it. After he spoke, Nancy Pelosi ripped up the speech calling Trump’s words “a manifesto of lies”. She disgraced the country and all of our fellow honored citizens present in the House Chamber. Well, she now has American blood on her hands. She is very majorly responsible for these needless deaths as well as the Chinese. Her and Adam Schiff.
The left and democrats laughed as she tore up his speech. Well, as they laughed the disease he just spoke of in that speech came to our shores. Republicans and Democrats alike are now dying. Your family members and mine. Our grandparents and middle-aged citizens alike. Our liberty is for the most part suspended. As we bury our dead (without proper funerals) from this calamity let’s drive the nails into the coffin of the Democrat party as well in November.
It’s time people. Stand up for your rights and your country! Our Liberty and survival are at stake!
I am praying for God’s blessing on our nation. But, God also gave us the ability to think for ourselves and it’s time we placed blame for all this death where it belongs: on the doorsteps of Nancy Pelosi, Adam Schiff, and Xi Jinping directly.
Wake Up America. WAKE UP!
———————–
William James O’Reilly Jr. (Bill O’Reilly) is an American journalist, author, and former television host. Article shared by TurningPoint USA. H/T McIntosh Enterprises.
Tags:Bill O’Reilly, China’s Bioweapon, Pelosi, Schiff aDemocratic Party, TurningPoin USATo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by PL Booth: How to be marked as a conservative vs socialist.2020 will go down in history for a number of reasons.It is the election year that decides whether or not the US remains a free Republic or becomes a socialist nation run by the new communist party masquerading as American Democrats. It is the year the Chinese Communists released their first global endemic, the COVID-19 virus. It is the year the entire west closed up and sequestered themselves over fear of a virus proved no more dangerous than the common flu. It is the years that BLM/ANTIFA, Marxist organizations, gained sufficient power as to dictate to state governments and cities the terms of their own surrender.It is the year that the federal government came out of hiding as a democrat run criminal organization that teaches critical race theory, that all whites are evil compared to people of color, tries to expand its own power in every way possible, and the military arm showed the Obama executive order 13583 and purge left only those officers and senior non-coms who are liberals in agreement with socialist theory.
Prominent liberals like JF Kerry and Michelle Obama are predicting a war if Trump wins. Many of the dem leadership say they will not accept a Trump win and Biden has hired hundreds of lawyers to contest the election should he NOT win outright. When one of the two major political parties predicts a war over an election if they lose, then they became pawns to the worldwide communist movement which is financed by the CHICOMS and other socialistic groups and can be expected to disrupt, destroy, contest in court, and try to influence the military and citizens to remove a duly elected President. The person who apparently is the architect of not only this effort but numerous lawsuits and the failed impeachment efforts of the new communist party is one Norman Irvin.
The Department of Homeland Security proved itself a sellout to the left when it recently released a report saying White Supremacist’s are the most dangerous group in America, despite the facts that it isn’t WHITE SUPREMACIST’S but MARXISTS of the BLM/ANTIFA movements that is killing, destroying, attacking police, civil structures, and causing violent riots throughout the nation. Obama tried to purge sufficient military to insure the possible overthrow of the government would not be hindered but supported by military elements. The orchestration of the failed impeachment effort was assisted by a LT COL Hindman who was part of the “Intelligence” establishment but who had no qualms about lying to congress. .
Lest you think the communists are not serious about a complete overthrow of the USA, consider that they also are supporting and promoting every form of immorality and anti-Christian behaviors that their allies in this effort can imagine. NETFLIX has a movie out which promotes pedophilia (the Obamas are on their board of directors), “CUTIES”. Identity politics of “transgenderism, gender nonconformity, abolishing family structures, homosexuality, and pedophilia, and reproductive justice (including abortion on demand regardless of age)” are being pushed and promoted to disrupt and “reorganize” society into their socialist utopia.They have adopted the “Green New Deal” which is based upon false science and will bankrupt the nation. Our total destruction so that they can rebuild us into a socialist structure wherein they will be the sole power and can tell us how, what, who, when, and how much. Personal liberty will disappear entirely along with most if not all our Constitutional rights, most assuredly the 1st amendment of free speech and religious liberty and the 2nd amendment of legal firearm ownership.Communist hate GOD and would have us worship only government like the CHICOMS do now. Communists hate free speech because they do not want anyone to disagree with the government tenets. Communists hate personal firearm ownership for the very obvious reason they do not want anyone to be able to defend nor oppose them physically, much less politically. NO communist government anywhere allows any political dissent and this is a basic goal of Political Correctness and the Cancel Movements. Canceling is an old Marxist concept of alienation wherein they seek to create a new form of belonging and, in the process, a way to alienate us from our own society. I do and have known people who already are throwing themselves into this new society because they do not know nor understand the actual history of their own nation and Christian Society. They may not be stupid but are surely ignorant.
What intentions of the new marxists do they have for dissenters like me and most of middle America? Some advocate “re-education camps” shades of soviet russia and the chicoms. Others say they are ready to guillotine the rich (meaning middle classes unwilling to conform) and send Republicans to reeducation camps.. I will not conform and will fight to remain free. People like me are to be hunted down and executed.
The alternatives left us are to win these elections and assist Trump and the conservatives to purge our government, schools, military, and institutions of socialist influences and the openly Marxists (send them to the socialist country of their choice.) Or we will be forced to fight with arms and kill our adversaries just like we did in our first Civil War. THAT is NOT an alternative I want my children to face but it may come to that, not because of White Supremacists but MARXIST criminals. This is not a decision I would have foisted upon our nation but is being forced upon us. We can remain free and enjoy personal liberty or we can lay down and become chattel for our Marxist overlords.
Tags:PL Booth, The View From Blue Eye, The Ultimate Danger of Socialism in AmericaTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
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Today, like yesterday and tomorrow, news outlets will announce the number of new COVID-19 cases. “Cases,” in this case, will be the number of people who tested positive for COVID-19 since yesterday’s announcement. In the spirit of accentuate the negative and eliminate the positive, the number of people who tested negative for COVID-19 will not be announced.
When E. F. Hutton speaks, people listen. When William Barr speaks, call an electrician.
Mental circuits trip and temperament fuses blow. The attorney general, bucking the behavior of attorneys generally, displays all the emotion of a mortician, approaches an audience with the calm detachment of a psychiatrist, and speaks in the reading-room volume of a librarian. His bearing rarely proves contagious.
The story on Tucker Carlson Tonight was startling.
Chinese virologist Dr. Li-Meng Yan, as Fox reported, “claimed to have evidence showing China ‘intentionally’ released COVID-19 onto the general population.”
President Trump has never shied away from making tough decisions. The criterion he says he is guided by is, what will help America and its people the most? This winning formula, in a fair ballot, should win him more four years in the White House — maybe even the Nobel Peace Prize.
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ABC
September 18, 2020 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Biden shares support for Fauci and science during town hall: Just days after President Trump ABC News town hall in Philadelphia, former Vice President Joe Biden took part in a town hall for CNN on Thursday night just outside his hometown of Scranton, Pennsylvania. Early in the discussion, Biden declared, “I don’t trust the president on vaccines. I trust Dr. [Anthony] Fauci. If Fauci says a vaccine is safe, I would take the vaccine.” He added, “We should listen to the scientists, not to the president.” Biden added that as president, he would lay out “broad strokes” of what should be done to keep schools and workplaces safe amid the coronavirus pandemic. Biden also addressed Attorney General William Barr’s recent comments, in which he compared a national lockdown and stay-at-home orders to slavery, which Biden called “outrageous.” He further spoke on the topic of race, saying he had “benefited” from white privilege because “I don’t have to go through what my Black brothers and sisters have had to go through.” Biden also weighed in on relations with Russia and China, which he said he considered “competitors” on the world stage, and further defended military service members after a recent report alleged President Trump had referred to them as “losers.” Trump and Biden will face off in the first presidential debate of this election cycle on Sept. 29.
Smoke from West Coast wildfires travels to Europe: Heavy smoke from the dozens of wildfires blazing up and down the West Coast has traveled nearly 5,000 miles east to Europe, satellite images show. Images released by the European Union’s Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) show the smoke moving across the Atlantic Ocean, into Europe, which illustrates the magnitude of the fires and the resulting environmental impact. In addition, the aerosol optical depth, which is the measure of how much sunlight is blocked by aerosol particles in the atmosphere, has reached levels of seven or above, according to CAMS. A level one AOD measurement already implies poor air quality and hazy conditions. “The fact that these fires are emitting so much pollution into the atmosphere that we can still see thick smoke over 8,000 kilometers away reflects just how devastating they have been in their magnitude and duration,” CAMS’ Senior Scientist Mark Parrington said in a statement. Earlier this week, Democratic governors of states impacted by wildfires said that fires represent the latest piece of hard evidence that global warming is a scientific reality impacting their communities, and evidence shows that wildfires have become larger and more destructive due to climate change. Dozens of fires are still burning, and millions of acres in California and Oregon have been scorched.
‘Cheer’ star Jerry Harris arrested, charged with production of child pornography:“Cheer” star Jerry Harris was arrested Thursday and charged with one count of producing child pornography, the United States District Attorney’s Office in the Northern District of Illinois announced. Harris, 21, has been accused of enticing an underage boy to send sexually explicit videos and photographs of himself, according to a criminal complaint filed in the U.S. District Court in Chicago. The complaint also states that the alleged victim, who said that he was first contacted by Harris in December 2018, informed Harris that he was 13 years old at the time. Harris was also accused of making similar requests to the alleged victim’s twin brother. The arrest comes days after USA Today reported that the FBI had executed a search warrant at Harris’ home in Naperville, Illinois, amid allegations that he’d solicited sex and sexually explicit photographs from minors. At the time Harris’ spokesperson denied the claims. Harris is scheduled to appear in court for a detention hearing on Monday. If convicted, he could face 15 to 30 years in prison.
4th grade teacher builds her own outdoor classroom amid COVID-19: Lindsey Earle, a fourth grade teacher from Pewaukee, Wisconsin, has built an outdoor classroom for her 13 students as they return to in-person learning during the COVID-19 pandemic. “As we were discussing plans for returning and things looked a little doomsday-ish, I proposed an idea that we build our own classroom,” Earle told “Good Morning America.” “Because what we know about coronavirus is it spreads less effectively outdoors.” The classroom, which sits on school property, is a 12-sided figure with a tented roof. Desks are also socially distanced based on guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and children must wear their masks during one-on-one instruction or when out of their seats. “We were hopeful that putting this in place would allow us to come back and stay safe and healthy,” Earle said, adding that she and her school administration met with health and safety experts before resuming classes. For now, while weather permits, every class at the school will be held in an outdoor classroom.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Keith Urban performs his song “Say Something.” Plus, don’t miss businessman Gary Vaynerchuk offer aspiring entrepreneurs some encouraging and inspiring advice. And we’ll hear from hair stylists on how to fix at-home hair fails that people may have attempted during quarantine. All this and more only on “GMA.”
President Donald Trump and Joe Biden hit the campaign trail with divergent events, Mississippi voters are challenging vote-by-mail restrictions, and Yosemite closes as toxic air reaches off-the-charts levels.
Here’s what we’re watching this Friday morning.
Dueling Trump, Biden events in battleground states sets tone for upcoming debates
President Donald Trump and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden held dueling prime-time events Thursday night in two major battleground states reflecting their divergent views on American life during the coronavirus pandemic.
Biden’s event was so socially-distanced that it was a drive-in town hall meeting in Scranton, Pennsylvania. While Trump’s was a crowded outdoor rally in Mosinee, Wisconsin, where few were seen wearing masks, despite a state mandaterequiring them.
The former vice president was asked an array of policy questions from voters across the political spectrum, moderated by CNN’s Anderson Cooper. He sharply attacked the president — at one point saying Trump “should step down” over his response to Covid-19.
The president spoke for over an hour and half, at times reading from a teleprompter but mostly going off-script. He hammered his political rivals with familiar attacks, called Biden a puppet of the progressive wing of the Democratic party and said his administration was doing a “great job” addressing the coronavirus pandemic.
The two presidential candidates are set to square off in person at the first debate on Sept. 29 in Cleveland on Fox News.
Biden speaks during a CNN drive-in Town Hall meeting in Scranton, Pa., on Thursday. (Photo: Jim Watson / AFP – Getty Images)
‘Scared,’ ‘frustrated’ Mississippians fear they won’t be able to vote by mail
Mississippi and four other states — Indiana, Texas, Louisiana and Tennessee — continue to limit vote-by-mail access and don’t consider the pandemic to be a valid reason for absentee voting.
Each state faces numerous legal challenges to the stymied access. With less than two months until Election Day, many voters remain confused about whether and how they can vote by mail.
“I just thought surely this would all be figured out and I wouldn’t be sitting here in September not knowing if every member of my family is going to be able to vote safely without putting us at extreme risk,” said Mary Harwell, one of six plaintiffs, along with the American Civil Liberties Union and the Mississippi Center for Justice, to sue the state to expand absentee voting in Mississippi.
People wait in line to vote early in Ridgeland, Miss., on Nov. 8, 2016. (Photo: Rogelio V. Solis / AP)
Yosemite National Park closes as air quality reaches off-the-charts levels
One of America’s most popular national parks, Yosemite, was closed Thursday as wildfires continued to scorch the West Coast and fill the air with toxic smoke.
The federal government-run air quality monitor, Airnow.gov, showed that pollutant levels in the park were so high that they exceeded the site’s index.
Dangerous air quality is expected in the park, which is spread across nearly 1,200 square miles in the Sierra Nevadas, for the next several days, the National Park Service said.
A record 3.4 million acres have burned in California this year, a staggering number that officials and experts have attributed to climate change and a buildup of dried vegetation.
With the pollutant levels in the air at Yosemite literally off the charts, its unclear when the mecca for outdoor enthusiasts will reopen. (Photo: Brian van der Brug/ Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Trump administration scrapped plan to send every American a mask in April, email shows
The White House scrapped an effort to send hundreds of millions of cloth masks to every U.S. household in April, choosing instead to distribute the masks to nonprofit organizations and state and federal agencies, according to an internal email from a senior Trump administration official obtained by NBC News.
A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services told NBC News that 600 million masks have been distributed around the country to nonprofits and state and federal agencies.
However, public health experts said sending masks directly to Americans’ homes in the early days of the global pandemic would have sent a stronger message encouraging Americans to wear masks.
A former GOP aide to Vice President Mike Pence who served as his adviser on the Coronavirus Task Force, publicly denounced Trump’s pandemic responsein an ad released Thursday and said she plans to vote for Biden.
“They are depressed, they are disappointed,” Rabbi Yuval Cherlow said, adding that he was also trying to cheer up his community.
President Donald Trump wears a mask as he visits Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Md., on July 11. (Photo: Alex Edelman / AFP – Getty Images file)
‘More than just a job’: As layoffs loom, pilots face a tricky future
Thousands of pilots across the country are facing pink slips in a matter of weeks unless the airline industry receives more financial aid from the federal government. Airline executives met with White House officials on Thursday in a last-minute attempt to secure additional funding.
For many pilots, flying has been their dream since they were kids, and the crisis in the industry has left pilots young and old stuck in a holding pattern —either hoping for a miracle or eyeing the exit.
As a condition of $25 billion in federal payroll support, airlines agreed not to institute any involuntary layoffs or furloughs until Oct. 1. Now that deadline is looming. (Photo: Andrew Harrer / Bloomberg via Getty Images)
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Federal prosecutors have broughtnew charges against Lev Parnas, a former associate of Rudy Giuliani, accusing him of duping investors in a company called Fraud Guarantee.
Jerry Harris, a breakout star of Netflix’s docuseries “Cheer,” was arrested on a child pornography charge.
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: Biden has a stable lead, but there’s still lots of uncertainty about the vote
Another day, another round of strong polls for Joe Biden and the Democrats.
Biden and Senate Democratic candidates are ahead in Arizona, Maine and North Carolina, according to a trio of New York Times/Siena polls, though Biden is up by just a single point in Toss Up North Carolina.
Biden’s even up by 2 points in ME-2, which awards one electoral vote.
But for as stable as Biden’s lead has been, it’s worth emphasizing the uncertainties of conducting a presidential election during a pandemic.
AP Photo/Audrey McAvoy
For example, with more Democrats expressing interest to vote by mail than Republicans, FiveThirtyEight reports that ballots already turned in by North Carolina Black voters are being rejected at a higher rate (4.7 percent) than white voters’ ballots (1.1 percent) – likely due to mistakes in filling out the ballot.
Now we’re talking about just a sliver of votes so far (some 70,000), and North Carolina allows voters to fix their ballots. But this COULD be a problem for Democrats, especially if the race in the Tar Heel State is close.
Similarly, the Cook Political Report’s Dave Wasserman says that while Democrats were mostly victorious in the Pennsylvania’sSupreme Court ruling Thursday on its voting procedures, there were two big exceptions.
One, the court ruled that ballots that are NOT submitted in outer envelopes won’t be counted.
And two, it said election boards don’t have to notify voters if they made a mistake.
That COULD be a problem for Dems, Wasserman argues, if they’re the ones sending in more mail-in ballots and if these voters don’t have experience when it comes to voting by mail.
Meanwhile, in Florida, Politico reports this morning that more than 35,000 ballots in the state’s August primary were rejected for a variety of reasons, which COULD end up mattering in November given how close Florida elections always are.
Add them all up, and you see why the polls could very well be spot-on about where the Biden-vs.-Trump race stands, and why they could end up looking wrong on (or after) Election Day.
For a race that’s been incredibly stable, maybe the biggest uncertainty of all is how the votes get counted.
Dueling Biden-Trump events in battleground states
President Trump and Joe Biden held dueling events in battlegrounds on Thursday evening, and their remarks on how to hold events could not be more different.
Here was President Trump on Biden’s town hall in Pennsylvania:
“They’ve got cars, like car that are parking. It’s the weirdest thing I’ve ever seen. And CNN is going “Oh this is so beautiful. They have cars in a parking lot.” What a deal.”
And here was Biden on Trump’s:
“The president continues to think that masks don’t matter very much, although he says it and has these large gatherings with everybody around with no masks on. And it’s extremely dangerous. And so there’s a lot of people, a lot of people hurt.”
According to NBC’s Josh Lederman, nearly everyone at Trump’s Wisconsin rally was not wearing a mask, or adhering to social distancing guidelines. The Trump campaign did hand out masks at the entrance to the event, but did not require attendees to wear them.
Also, one striking message that Biden delivered in his town hall was portraying Trump as the candidate of “Park Avenue.”
“I really do view this campaign as a campaign between Scranton and Park Avenue,” he said.
More Biden: “Grow up here in Scranton – we’re used to guys who look down their nose at us, or look to people who look at us and think that we’re suckers… If you didn’t have a college degree, you must be stupid, if, in fact, you didn’t get to go to an Ivy school.”
TWEET OF THE DAY: The non-Ivy League way
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
6,707,888: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 44,424 more than yesterday morning.)
198,886: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 839 more than yesterday morning.)
91.55 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
2020 VISION: When Dems wet the bed, Team Biden races to replace the sheets
Four years ago, Hillary Clinton’s campaign mostly ignored warnings from the Democratic chattering class, as well as TV pundits.
A problem brewing in Wisconsin? Situation under control, the campaign said and acted. Trouble in Michigan? No travel there until the very end.
Four years later, the Biden camp is running almost the anti-Hillary campaign when it comes to Washington bed-wetters: You spot a problem – whether it’s perceived or very real – and the campaign will run to fix it.
“Joe needs to go to Kenosha.” Well, he went to Kenosha. “Joe has a Latino problem in Florida.” Biden headed to Florida. “And is anyone else worried about Minnesota?” Well, Biden today campaigns in Minnesota, despite the public polls showing him ahead there in the high single or even double digits.
Dem strategists looking at the polling data say that while worries about Minnesota are way overblown, Biden has plenty of work to do with Florida Latinos if he wants to win the Sunshine State.
But with a scaled-back travel schedule and all the money Team Biden is now raising, whenever a Dem or pundit wets the bed, they can afford to replace the sheets.
On the campaign trail today: President Trump speaks in Bemidji, Minn., at 7:00 pm ET… Joe Biden also stumps in Minnesota, hitting the Duluth area… And Vice President Pence travels to Arizona.
Ad Watch from Ben Kamisar
Today’s Ad Watch takes a look at the shifting Senate map, as both parties are making new, seven-figure investments in states that aren’t typically on the battleground.
NBC News has learned that Senate Leadership Fund (the super PAC backing Senate GOP candidates) is making its first ad investment in Alaska — $1.6 million on TV, radio and digital, an 18-day campaign that starts Wednesday as GOP Sen. Dan Sullivan looks to win another term.
There’s been a recent influx of money there aimed at boosting independent Al Gross (who is backed by the Democrats), so the SLF investment will help to narrow that gap. In a statement to NBC, SLF President Steven Law sought to frame Gross as an independent-in-name-only, a dynamic we told you about yesterday.
On the other side of the aisle, the DSCC announced it’ll spend “seven-figures” in South Carolina to boost Democrat Jaime Harrison in his bid against Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, money it says it’ll use on TV ads but also on field organizing, polling, data and more.
THE LID: You’re only young once
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we broke down all the finding from our NBC/Quibi analysis of younger voters.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
The president says he’s issuing an executive order soon that will direct funding for “patriotic education” in schools.
Some Mississippi voters are frustrated with the state’s vote-by-mail rules.
A former Pence Covid taskforce aide says she’s voting for Biden.
FBI Director Christopher Wray warned in congressional testimony about Russian election interference and white nationalism.
President Trump held a campaign rally in Wisconsin while Joe Biden faced voters in a Pennsylvania town hall. Also, a former senior adviser on the president’s coronavirus task force has endorsed Joe Biden. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Watch Video +
Trump, Biden face voters in battleground states
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REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
09/18/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
‘Bounty’ Collusion? Trump’s Path; Quote of the Week
By Carl M. Cannon on Sep 18, 2020 10:05 am
Good morning, it’s Friday, Sept. 18, 2020, the day of the week when I reprise an instructive or inspirational quotation. Today’s quote comes from a battlefield in the Netherlands on this date in 1944, and from U.S. Army lieutenant named Ralph A. Watson.
Lt. Watson’s communication, sent by messenger, was to another 101st Airborne division officer, Maj. John P. Stopka. It was brief and to the point: “You are in command of the Battalion.” But there was much more to it than that, as I’ll recount in moment.
First, I’ll point you to RealClearPolitics’ front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer an array original material from our own reporters, columnists, and contributors this morning, including the following:
* * *
On “Russian Bounties,” Media Amplify Biden Talking Points. Mark Hemingway spotlights seemingly coordinated press attacks against the president the same week Joe Biden revisited a three-month-old story.
Does Trump Have a Path to Victory? Sean Trende reexamines the factors that led to 2016’s surprise outcome to determine which might apply in 2020.
Religious Voters Aren’t Flocking to Biden, Poll Critics Argue. Susan Crabtree explores how faith-based voters are responding in a campaign teeming with vitriol.
How the Hispanic Vote Is Growing in Power. Myra Adams lays out the demographic and polling numbers, which carry special concern for the Republican Party.
The Totalitarian Tendencies of the Woke. Karl Zinsmeister argues that Orwellian impulses underpin the movement.
You Don’t Solve Slow Growth With More Government. RealClearMarkets editor John Tamny asserts that increased federal spending will delay recovery.
Defend Religious Liberty at Home and Abroad. In RealClearReligion, Andrea Picciotti-Bayer and Fr. Benedict Kieley warn that demand for ideological conformity is spreading throughout the U.S. and elsewhere.
* * *
Starting today, Sept. 18, 2020, the public is finally able to visit the long-overdue Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial in Washington, D.C. Last night’s opening ceremonies were a perfect metaphor for 2020: The small, socially distance crowd wore masks at an event marred by lousy weather.
Not that “Ike” would have worried about the remnants of Hurricane Sally soaking the participants. In 1954, while serving as president, Eisenhower was invited to give the commencement address at Penn State, where his brother Milton was university president. When inclement weather threatened to force the ceremonies indoors, Ike calmly smoked while his younger brother fretted. Putting things in perspective, Dwight Eisenhower told his sibling, “Milton, since June 6, 1944, I’ve never worried about the rain.”
Outwardly, Ike exuded decisiveness and composure even in the face of the terrible English Channel weather that nearly derailed the D-Day invasion of Normandy. Like a 20th century Henry V, he walked among the troops on the eve of battle. Iconic photographs of these visits circulated at the time, and still do today. Frank Gehry, the memorial architect, used them as inspirations for his statue.
In one of those photographs, Eisenhower is talking to Lt. Col. Robert G. Cole of San Antonio. Bob Cole, the son of a colonel and a member of the West Point class of 1939, was previously acquainted with Eisenhower, not that Ike would have recognized him: On this day, Cole wore camouflage paint on his face. The commander of the 3rd Battalion, 502nd Parachute Infantry, 101st Airborne Division, Cole was getting ready to parachute into Normandy behind enemy lines with his fellow “Screaming Eagles.” Once there, he would command from the front. Late on the afternoon of June 10, Cole led a bold and victorious bayonet charge across a causeway being defended by German machine gunners.
Cole’s bravery under fire would be later cited in an Army study of the psychological makeup of successful airborne officers. “A complex personality, he was physically fit but besought by inner fears that he might someday fail his men as a leader,” said the report. Military historian S.L.A. Marshall described Cole as a demanding officer who sometimes gave his men a “hard ride,” but who earned their loyalty because of both his bravery and his fierce desire to protect them even while waging war aggressively.
Before storming the enemy stronghold on June 10, for instance, Cole demanded artillery support before advancing. Told that it hadn’t been authorized, he barked, “God damn it! We need artillery and we can’t wait for any general!” The artillery barrage began in less than 15 minutes.
Only then did Bob Cole, joined by John Stopka, lead the Screaming Eagles — who literally lived up to their name by yelling as they rushed forward.
Lt. Col. Cole, only 29 years old, was awarded the Medal of Honor for his feats that day. Twenty-eight-year-old John Stopka, who hailed from Sheridan, Wyo., earned a Silver Star. Cole didn’t live long enough to receive his medal, or to meet his 18-month-old son, Robert Bruce Cole. He was killed on this date in 1944 by a sniper in a field in Holland. Once again, Cole had insisted on artillery support to protect his troops, this time from the air. The first P-47 fighters to arrive had strafed Cole’s position. So he radioed that they would mark their position with orange parachute covers, which he went out in the field to place himself. He was felled by a bullet as he shielded his eyes from the sun while looking into the sky.
His death was such a shock to his men that they could barely process what had happened. S.L.A. Marshall wrote that Lt. Ralph Watson, who saw Cole fall, couldn’t even say the words “Cole is dead.” By messenger he conveyed the news to Maj. Stopka this way, “You are in command of the Battalion.”
And that’s our quote of the week, although it comes with a postscript, and brief observation.
The postscript is that four months later, John Stopka, by then a lieutenant colonel, was killed by friendly fire in Belgium — from a P-47. My observation is that, yes, we erect a memorial to Dwight Eisenhower, as we should. He was a great man. But Ike’s success in World War II, and the success of all generals and commanders-in-chief, depends on men like Bob Cole and John Stopka and those willing, in the words of another wartime president, to give the last full measure of their devotion.
Attorney General William Barr is pushing for strong action to curtail the ongoing BLM/Antifa insurrection underway across America, while struggling against the bureaucracy within his own department which seems intent on minimizing and undercharging criminal activity.
Of the 10 main issues the Center for Security Policy has identified for its 2020 National Security Voter Guide, commitment to the Constitution ranks #1.
This piece marks the first of 10 articles to explain how the Center evaluated the national security records of President Donald Trump and his challenger, former vice president Joe Biden.
“Support and defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic” is part of the oath of office for every federal official. Article VI of the Constitution requires an oath.
In the modern history of the United States, there’s never been a presidential election like this one.
One candidate for the presidency has hardly been seen for months. He’s held few public events. Those he has attended have typically been highly scripted and strictly constrained. His off-the-cuff comments are often unsettling, but generally uncriticized by a media that is, with very few exceptions, fawningly supportive.
The most extraordinary development in this unprecedented campaign, however, is the fact that the running mate on the Democratic ticket actually referred to the presidency on offer as “the Harris administration.” In the wake of that, presumably inadvertent – and Freudian – slip, though, the Democratic candidate for president’s teleprompter actually had him mention “the Harris-Biden administration.”
It remains to be seen what the voters will make of all this. And whether unprecedented electoral fraud will make it irrelevant.
This is Frank Gaffney.
DAVID GOLDMAN, Author of How Civilizations Die, Best known for his series of essays in the Asia Times under the pseudonym Spengler:
The current state of TikTok in the United States
The lack of privacy rules in China
GORDON CHANG, The Daily Beast contributor, Author of The Coming Collapse of China and Nuclear Showdown: North Korea Takes on the World, Latest book: Losing South Korea (2019):
Should President Trump accept the deal with Oracle over TikTok?
Should Americans invest in Ant Group Financial?
The military relationship between India and China
JEFF NYQUIST, Has written for Newsmax, WorldNetDaily, SierraTimes, Financial Sense and Epoch Times, Author of the book Origins of the Fourth World War and The New Tactics of Global War:
Comparing the French Revolution to the protests throughout the United States
When can US citizens expect these riots to end?
ROBERT CHARLES, Former Assistant Secretary of State at the State Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs in the Bush Administration, Author of Eagles and Evergreens:
Analyzing President Trump’s interview with Bob Woodward
The recent peace agreement between the UAE, Israel and Bahrain
Below is a sneak peek of this content! Welcome to this week’s Premium Q&A session for Premium Interactive members. I appreciate you all signing up and joining me. Thank you. Editor’s note: If you enjoy these sessions (along with the weekly columns and audio commentaries), please use the Facebook and… 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 18, 2020
A Comment on the New History of Capitalism
By Phillip W. Magness | “Much of the current debate revolves around an emergent historiographical school. Usually referred to as the ‘New History of Capitalism’ (NHC), this school has produced a sizable body of research contending that the…
By Max Gulker | “Just like in markets, truly revolutionary technologies never destroy the old order–they usually accomplish more through adoption, changing established players from within. Goodacre’s efforts, especially as a hub where traditional…
By Peter C. Earle | New Jersey is presently facing a multi-billion dollar budget shortfall. And with tax receipts falling far short of the spending aspirations of state lawmakers, Trenton is hurtling toward incorporating a slate of new taxes in…
Single-Family Housing Permits Hit a Multi-Year High
By Robert Hughes | Housing activity – starts and permits – posted mixed results in August as declines in the multifamily segment offset gains in the single-family segment. Within the single-family area, there were gains in starts and permits with…
Total Unemployment Benefits Recipients Remain Near 30…
By Robert Hughes | Initial claims for regular state unemployment insurance totaled 860,000 for the week ending September 12, down 33,000 from the previous week’s upwardly revised tally of 893,000. The latest week is the lowest level since the…
What’s the Right Mix of Money and Drugs for Your Employees?
By Art Carden | A startling realization hit me after a sip of coffee during class the other day. I had just told students a maybe-apocryphal and likely-misremembered story about a pizza delivery driver whose employer paid with cash wages and drugs…
It’s the small things that we use daily in life that reveal our loyalties. This is precisely why we made an AIER coffee mug. It suggests stability, dignity, and determination. It has personalized a matte-finish exterior with a shiny lip and interior. It has a 17-oz capacity. It says everything it needs to say!
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.
With most investors focused on big tech, a frenzy is quietly erupting in one tiny sector, with gains like 500% in two months and 104% in a single day. Click here to access the details, including the stock name and ticker symbol…
Authored by Newt Gingrich, op-ed via The American Mind, Americans can’t let Twitter noise overwhelm political reality… I have been watching a truly curious phenomenon over the past few days. It seems there is suddenly a movement in…
After a handful of employees quit so they could speak out about Facebook’s insufficient internal ‘woke’-ness, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has finally decided how he’s going to handle what has been described as an internal rebellion.
Authored by Brandon Smith via Alt-Market.com, After studying and exposing the agendas of establishment elites for the past 14 years, I can say with some authority that by watching these people you quickly begin to understand the reality…
Donald Trump Jr. has weighed in over Nashville officials concealing the low number of COVID-19 cases in bars and restaurants . In a Thursday tweet, the president’s son said “The Dem Mayor of Nashville KNOWINGLY LIED ABOUT COVID DATA to…
Authored by Doug Casey via InternationalMan.com, The upcoming election may be the most important in US history. At least as important as that of 1860, which led directly to the War Between the States. In 2016 I believed Trump would win…
Three Black Lives Matter protesters in Pittsburgh are now facing charges from police after they were identified as people involved in viral videos that showed them cursing out diners at an outdoor restaurant. One protester even chugged…
The key to being consistently profitable as a trader is to focus on high-probability trades. And in this powerful eBook by Dave Acquino, titled The Ultimate Income Trading System, you’ll see exactly how Dave and so many of his students do just that. They make 4%, 5% or 6% on each trade and they’re in the trade for just 11 hours. CLICK HERE for instant access…
On the menu today: a long, long list of Democrats warning that the Biden campaign may not be as strong as it looks in key states and among key demographics; another former White House staffer comes out and denounces the president, offering a hard lesson about how personnel is policy; and a long look at the consequences of a Biden presidency.
A Long List of Democrats Offering Ominous Warnings to the Biden Campaign
One of the lessons of 2016 was that the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign had all kinds of internal reports of problems, signs of insufficient support and enthusiasm in key states, and ominous indicators that they were nowhere nearly as strong and effective as most of the coverage suggested.
The problem was that only a few reporters knew about those, and the ones that did had pledged to keep what they were seeing and hearing secret until after the election for their campaign narrative books. Jonathan Allen and Amie Parnes wrote in Shattered: Inside Hillary Clinton’s Doomed Campaign, “over the course of a year and a half, in interviews with more than one hundred subjects, … READ MORE
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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.
“Makes an original and compelling case for nationalism . . . A fascinating, erudite—and much-needed—defense of a hallowed idea unfairly under current attack.” — Victor Davis Hanson
77-year-old Joe Biden participated in a CNN town hall Thursday evening with host Anderson Cooper. Anderson Cooper began by asking Joe Biden a question about… Read more…
77-year-old Joe Biden on Thursday got confused again and spoke gibberish during a Rosh Hashanah virtual event with his wife Jill. Biden got confused and… Read more…
A 33-year-old man, later identified as Alvin Gary Shaw, was arrested after he beat at least two seniors including an 84-year-old woman at the Pro-Trump… Read more…
Judge Bruce Roth set bail this week at $1 million each for Lancaster, Pennsylvania far left rioters. On Tuesday, Judge Roth hit several protesters in… Read more…
In late August hundreds of Trump supporters held a vehicle parade through downtown Portland. Many of the vehicles were attacked by leftists on their way… Read more…
77-year-old Joe Biden participated in a CNN town hall Thursday evening with host Anderson Cooper. It’s a total joke. Anderson Cooper began by asking Joe… Read more…
President Trump is holding a rally Thursday night at 8 PM local time in Mosinee, Wisconsin, a small town northwest of Green Bay. Hundreds of… Read more…
Truth is the new hate speech. The FOX News panel on Outnumbered melted down on Wednesday after former Speaker Newt Gingrich accused George Soros of… Read more…
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