Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday January 20, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
January 20 2021
Good morning from Washington, where Joe Biden will be sworn in at noon as the nation’s 46th president. He contemplates a flurry of executive actions to get started, reports Fred Lucas, who also has highlights of President Trump’s farewell video. On the podcast, scholars examine the repercussions of a disturbing trend: critical race theory. Plus: the left disparages a presidential panel‘s effort to restore patriotism in schools; who is celebrated in a garden of heroes; and holding China accountable for genocide. Forty years ago today, minutes after Ronald Reagan takes office as the 40th president of the United States, Iran frees 52 U.S. hostages held for 444 days at the American embassy in Tehran.
Biden’s incoming chief of staff says the new president will take immediate action on “the COVID-19 crisis, the resulting economic crisis, the climate crisis, and a racial equity crisis.”
“Shutting down free and open debate violates our core values and most enduring traditions,” says Trump. “In America, we don’t insist on absolute conformity or enforce rigid orthodoxies and punitive speech.”
Citing the recent toppling of statues of historical figures, President Donald Trump announces the names of the 244 people who will be honored in what he calls the “National Garden of American Heroes.”
The U.S. declaration of a genocide is an essential step toward ensuring justice for the more than 1 million Uighurs currently held in political reeducation facilities in China.
Henry Repeating Arms – Made in America, Or Not Made At All. Leading lever action manufacturer offering classic firearms, all backed by a Lifetime Warranty and a Satisfaction Guarantee.
Most American media has become no different from the state-controlled media in China.
In addition, major social media platforms are censoring peoples’ voices. And they are doing so almost exclusively to members of just one political party or viewpoint.
Now more than ever, it is essential to have access to news reported in Truth and Tradition.
Which is why we are offering a full access subscription to The Epoch Times for 2 months for just $1.
With over 200 different rifles and shotguns to choose from in a variety of different calibers and finishes, there is a Henry that’s right for everyone. Whether you are a collector, hunter, shooting range plinker, or in need of something to protect your family, Henry has you covered with a firearm that is built with pride on American soil. If you choose to spend your hard-earned money on a Henry, then you have our promise that we will do whatever it takes to make sure that you are 100% satisfied. Find your Henry by ordering our FREE catalog – Click here.
“So very relevant for this time. We must understand the tactics of our enemy in order to save ourselves as a free nation, for all people. Christian principlees of love, charity and equality, whether one believes in God or not must be our foundation in order to maintain freeedom for all” – Carolyn Millard, Subscriber of The Epoch Times
You are receiving this email because you opted in to receive newsletter communications from The Epoch Times.
The Epoch Times. 229 W. 28 St. Fl. 5 New York, NY 10001
We have communist China at our gates, ready to take over.
The CCP has carefully studied the U.S. system over the decades and now has successfully taken advantage of our open society and has infiltrated our country. Honest journalism has never been more important than right now.
We hope you enjoy our coverage, of course you can unsubscribe too
3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
Having trouble viewing this email? View the web version.
With the pandemic and security concerns spoiling the event (Fox News). Pence will attend, even if Trump will not (Fox News). President Trump revealed a farewell address (Red State).
2.
Biden Appoints Controversial Trans as Assistant Health Secretary
From the oh-isn’t-this-just-grand story: “Dr. Rachel Levine will bring the steady leadership and essential expertise we need to get people through this pandemic — no matter their zip code, race, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability — and meet the public health needs of our country in this critical moment and beyond,” Biden said in a statement. “She is a historic and deeply qualified choice to help lead our administration’s health efforts.” The story goes on to praise his efforts, ignore the real controversy, and disparage those who refuse to call a man a woman (Washington Post). A look at the controversy (National Review). From Ben Shapiro: Cons: Levine shipped covid-positive patients back into nursing homes, and removed mom from a nursing home at the same time Pros: Levine is a biological man who believes he is a woman (Twitter). From Jerry Bowyer: He has handled things abysmally here in Pa. A terrible leader. He has one and only one job qualification, he ticks a new box in the woke quota to do list for Biden (Facebook).
Advertisement
3.
Biden Signals a Lurch to the Left in Economic Policy
From the story: Biden is charting an economic policy that’s visibly to the left of Bill Clinton and Barack Obama. If he succeeds, it’s going to show up not only in taxes and spending, but also in regulation (Axios). Meanwhile, from the Wall Street Journal editorial board: Mr. Biden’s rhetoric in particular has been more condemning than unifying. He was right to blame Mr. Trump for contributing to the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, but comparing Sens. Josh Hawley and Ted Cruz to Joseph Goebbels is Trump-like excess. His speech writers seem infused with woke ideology, as they cast the riot and most other events in the language of identity politics. Mr. Biden’s early legislative priorities also seem odd given that he has no great election mandate and a narrowly divided Congress. Ron Klain, his new White House chief of staff, described the top priorities as addressing four “overlapping and compounding crises”—Covid, the economy, climate and racial justice. The rhetoric of “crisis” is the familiar progressive trope to scare the public into accepting radical change (WSJ).
4.
Pompeo Takes Parting Shot at China, Accuses Them of Genocide
The Secretary of State said in a statement “After careful examination of the available facts, I have determined that since at least March 2017, the People’s Republic of China, under the direction and control of the Chinese Communist Party, has committed crimes against humanity against the predominantly Muslim Uyghurs and other members of ethnic and religious minority groups in Xinjiang” (AP). The Trump administration announced it will block the importation of goods made with forced Uighur labor (Washington Examiner).
5.
Biden DHS Pick Says They Will Grant Citizenship to Most Illegals
From the story: Abolishing Immigration and Customs Enforcement is a nonstarter and the fate of the border wall is uncertain, but the Biden team does want to grant citizenship rights to most illegal immigrants and to pump money into Latin America as the way to discourage illegal immigration, Alejandro Mayorkas, the pick to lead the Department of Homeland Security, told senators Tuesday (Washington Times). From Senator Tom Cotton: “…it’s what you’d expect from the party of open borders: Total amnesty, no regard for the health or security of Americans, and zero enforcement” (Fox News).
Advertisement
6.
CNN Labels Trump Education Effort “Racist”
The story praises the 1619 Project and completely ignores the controversy, the retractions and the utter mess that story became (CNN). Rich Lowry wrote about the issues with the 1619 Project (National Review). The actual 1776 report (White House).
7.
Three Times as Many Citizens of San Francisco Died of Drug Overdose than Covid in 2020
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It is only sent to people who signed up from one of the Salem Media Group network of websites OR a friend might have forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy.
Unsubscribe from The Daybreak Insider
OR Send postal mail to:
The Daybreak Insider Unsubscribe
6400 N. Belt Line Rd., Suite 200, Irving, TX 75063
Breaking overnight — “With hours left in office, Donald Trump pardons Steve Bannon.” via Maggie Haberman of The New York Times — Trump has granted clemency to Bannon, the former White House chief strategist who was charged with defrauding people who supported building a border wall that Trump supported, White House officials said. The President made the decision after a day of frantic efforts to sway his thinking, including from Bannon, who spoke to him by phone. The pardon was described as a pre-emptive move that would effectively wipe away the charges against Bannon, should he be convicted.
—@DeFede: Among the flurry of pardons issued by President Trump in his final hours was a full pardon for Abel Holtz, who served 45 days in prison in 1995 after being convicted for lying to a grand jury about alleged bribes me to then Miami Beach Mayor Alex Daoud
—@CaliforniaPanda: Huge news for @KodakBlack1k as President Trump commutes his sentence. He was given an overly severe sentence (46 months in federal prison) for what amounted to lying on a document. Media outlets printed hearsay and innuendo which was unfairly used in court to sway the outcome.
Breaking overnight — “On last night in office, Trump suspends deportations of Venezuelans” via Michael Wilner of The Miami Herald — Trump signed an executive order deferring the removal of Venezuelans currently in the United States for 18 months, a move long advocated by his Florida Republican allies. … The order applies to all Venezuelan citizens in the U.S. with the exception of those who are subject to extradition, are inadmissible under the Immigration and Nationality Act or were deported, excluded, or removed prior to Jan. 20. It also authorizes their employment while in the United States.
___
Trump’s inaugural address four years ago was a call to arms, but not against other nations. It pitted U.S. citizens against their government and each other.
“For too many of our citizens, a different reality exists. Mothers and children trapped in poverty in our inner cities,” he said that day. “Rusted-out factories scattered like tombstones across the landscape of our nation. An education system, flush with cash, but which leaves our young and beautiful students deprived of knowledge.
“And the crime and gangs and drugs that have stolen too many lives and robbed our country of so much unrealized potential.”
Then he delivered the punch line.
“This American carnage stops right here and stops right now,” he said.
American carnage.
Trump supporters nearly wept with joy. Finally, someone in authority said out loud what many have long felt about a government they believe ignores them. They trusted he would be their champion, and, oh, how did he put it?
Drain the swamp.
Well, look at the scoreboard of unkept promises.
Donald Trump promised to end ‘American Carnage.’ In four years, it didn’t quite happen as planned. Image via AP.
For too many of our citizens, a different reality continues to exist. The rich got richer, while younger adults struggled to afford soaring apartment rents. Mothers and children remain trapped in poverty, a fact compounded by an inept federal response to COVID-19. Those rusted-out factories didn’t magically spring back to life.
In Florida, we have an education system that continues to fail its most vulnerable students.
Oh, and that education system “flush with cash” of which the soon-to-be-former President spoke? The Hillsborough County School District, the seventh-largest in the country, has a $72 million budget deficit. It may eliminate teaching positions and consolidate some schools to save money.
Let’s not be too quick to dismiss the tone of that speech, though. Many people would love it if Joe Biden borrowed some of those themes at his inauguration Wednesday — perhaps without the carnage part. We could use a little optimism.
“The establishment protected itself, but not the citizens of our country. Their victories have not been your victories,” Trump said in that speech. “Their triumphs have not been your triumphs. And while they celebrated in our nation’s capital, there was little to celebrate for struggling families all across our land.
“That all changes — starting right here, and right now, because this moment is your moment. It belongs to you.”
We talk a lot about unity, but we rarely see that happen. Perhaps the greatest of Trump’s many failings was ignoring anyone who didn’t vote for him. The pot of gold goes to any President or Governor who can bring a complex nation or state more toward the middle.
Gov. Ron DeSantis did that in the first year or so of his administration, and the result was soaring approval ratings. Support came from both sides of the aisle, and it was earned. That’s what happens when people feel respected. For most people, inclusiveness matters more than ideology.
Dismissiveness never works.
Oh, and tell the truth even when it hurts.
Trump’s reelection campaign sank because voters understood he wasn’t leveling with them about the virus. He argued with medical experts and poisoned many supporters’ minds by suggesting scientists were part of the Deep State out to control America.
Filter that against these words he said four years ago.
“We are one nation — and their pain is our pain. Their dreams are our dreams, and their success will be our success. We share one heart, one home, and one glorious destiny,” he said.
We know that’s not what happened, but I’d be fine if Biden echoes that theme when he takes over. That’s because we are one nation. We should care about the pain of those who work multiple jobs to make ends meet.
The nation cannot take four more years of Donald Trump’s American carnage. Image via AP.
It should bother everyone that millions of fellow citizens don’t have adequate health insurance or lack a decent home and schools for their kids. Or don’t feel valued.
They want a piece of the dream, too.
Four years ago, a con man made a promise he didn’t keep, but he got one thing right.
What happened really was an American carnage. That “different reality” of which Trump spoke still exists today.
We can’t take four more years of that. Biden’s task is to convince a skeptical nation that it really will be different this time. We’ll all be watching, fingers crossed.
“CNN’s Brianna Keilar delivers epitaph on the Trump years: Took office saying he’d stop ‘American carnage,’ but left behind a ‘war zone’” via Josh Feldman of Mediaite — With the Trump presidency coming to a close on Wednesday, CNN’s Keilar reflected on the past four years in the wake of the recent violent rioting at the Capitol. “The Trump presidency will likely be defined by its assault on truth, its damage to democracy, and its denial to science that experts say would have saved American lives from coronavirus,” Keilar said. Some of the “how it started/how it’s going” contrasts Keilar invoked included the President hosting prominent CEOs at the White House and now speaking with MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell and him nominating Supreme Court justices that ultimately did not give his baseless election claims the time of day.
Some quick hits about the inauguration and the outgoing president:
— How to watch the inauguration: Festivities kick off at 11:15 with Lady Gaga singing the national anthem, followed by an invocation. From there, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will be sworn into office at about 11:45, followed by Biden at noon. ABC begins its coverage at 7 a.m., with CBS following at 9, NBC at 10, PBS at 10:30, and Fox at 11. Online streams are available on PBS, Cheddar and Pluto TV. Amazon Prime, Microsoft Bing, Fox’s NewsNow, and Biden social media on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and Twitch will also carry livestreams.
— Inaugural A-listers: While Trump snubs Biden by skipping the inauguration, Biden has a snub of his own lined up with a star-studded cast for the day’s ceremonies — an A-list lineup Trump has failed to attract throughout his four years in office. In addition to Lady Gaga’s national anthem performance, Jennifer Lopez and Garth Brooks will both perform. Other appearances include an invocation from Father Leo J. O’Donovan, former president of Georgetown University, the Pledge of Allegiance by firefighter union President Andrea Hall, a poetry reading by Amanda Gorman, the first-ever Youth Poet Laureate in 2017, and a benediction from Rev. Sylvester Beaman, a longtime friend to the Bidens.
🤡 — Trump was the ringmaster in the demise of his own circus: Four biographers who worked closely with Trump before his ascension into national politics — Harry Hurt III, GwendaBlair, Tim O’Brien and Michael D’Antonio — sat down with POLITICO to discuss their experiences with Trump the businessman before he was Trump the President. The result is a riveting conversation about the many ways Trump’s own behavior foretold his chaotic presidency. His actions, the constant drama in his White House, might have been unprecedented, but for Trump, such was the norm long before he took up residence at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. Now they’re looking forward to what a post-presidency Trump might look like and predict revenge and stoked flames, in whatever way Trump can fuel them.
— All the President’s insults: Scum. Low life. Disgusting. Dumb. Jerk. Lazy. Those are just a few of the insults the outgoing President of the United States has lobbed at those he sees as adversaries over the course of his presidency on Twitter. As of noon, he’s out of office. And he already lost his beloved Twitter platform. Still, The New York Times compiled a complete list of Trump’s insults from 2015 until this year. Put the kettle on because it’s a LONG list. Of all the insults, Trump has directed the most to his political rivals, including HillaryClinton and incoming President Biden, as well as to the “Fake News” media.
Situational awareness
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@BillWeirCNN: After 8,000 trips on Amtrak, Biden takes over a nation too unsafe for him to ride by rail to his own inauguration.
—@Kathrynw5: Find someone who loves you as much as Joe Biden loves Delaware
—@JesseLTaylor: Everyone in this country better be ready for more Delaware tomorrow than their asses can handle
—@AlexanderBolton: Capitol Police is informing reporters that any member of the press trying to go through security screening with a bulletproof vest will be denied entry. Reporters told they cannot wear vests, gas masks, or helmets
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@AmandaCarpenter: Let’s see here. There’s a push to purge [Liz] Cheney from leadership. Fox News is axing Chris Stirewalt — who correctly called AZ — and elevating resident conspiracy theorist Maria Bartiromo. When are we turning the page on Trumpism, again?
Days until
Florida Chamber Economic Outlook and Job Solution Summit begins — 8; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 18; Daytona 500 — 25; “Nomadland” with Frances McDormand — 31; 2021 Legislative Session begins — 41; “Coming 2 America” premieres on Amazon Prime — 45; “The Many Saints of Newark” premieres — 51; 2021 Grammys — 53; ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ premieres — 65; “No Time to Die” premieres (rescheduled) — 72; Children’s Gasparilla — 80; Seminole Hard Rock Gasparilla Pirate Fest — 87; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 92; “Black Widow” rescheduled premiere — 107; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 163; Disney’s “Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings” premieres — 171; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 184; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 191; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 217; “Dune” premieres — 255; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 287; Disney’s “Eternals” premieres — 289; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 331; Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” premieres — 324; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 429; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 471; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 625.
Inauguration
“Inauguration explainer: Joe Biden’s event will be very different” via Ashraf Khalil of The Associated Press — Between the still-raging pandemic and suddenly very real threat of violence, the inauguration of Biden and Kamala Harris next Wednesday promises to be one of the most unusual in American history. D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser is flat-out telling people to stay home. Airbnb says it canceled all reservations to prevent people from coming to the capital. Local activists are calling for Bowser to close down all hotels, but she has declined to go that far. Downtown roads and metro stations will be closed, and authorities are so determined to keep people away, they’re considered closing all the bridges from Virginia.
Joe Biden’s inauguration will be like no other in history. Image via AP.
“Mike Pence won’t attend Trump’s presidential send-off” via The Associated Press — Vice President Pence is among those who will not be attending Trump’s send-off event at Joint Base Andrews. A person familiar with Pence’s schedule cited “logistical challenges” in getting from the air base to President-elect Biden’s inauguration ceremonies on Wednesday. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss scheduling decisions. Pence is expected to be returning to his southern Indiana hometown after the inauguration. The Indiana Republican Party says the former Indiana governor and his wife, Karen Pence, are expected to attend Biden’s inauguration on Wednesday and then fly to Columbus Municipal Airport, where supporters will greet them.
“Biden tears up during Delaware farewell speech, says son Beau Biden should be President” via Ebony Bowden of The New York Post — Biden became teary-eyed Tuesday afternoon as he delivered a speech thanking his staff and honoring his late son, Beau Biden, saying it should have been Beau who was about to be sworn in as the 46th President of the United States. At the Major Joseph R. “Beau” Biden III National Guard Center, named after his son who died of brain cancer in 2015 at the age of 46, the former veep’s voice broke, and he shed a tear as he told a crowd of supporters that Delaware was “written on his heart.” Beau Biden served as the 44th Attorney General of Delaware and was believed to hold higher political office ambitions before his untimely death.
“Biden, GOP leaders will attend church before inauguration” via MSN — Biden has invited top Republican and Democratic congressional leaders to a bipartisan prayer session at church early Wednesday hours before his inauguration, people familiar with the plans said. Two weeks after an unprecedented violent assault on the U.S. Capitol by supporters of outgoing President Trump, and with the nation bitterly divided politically, Biden intends to attend services at St. Matthews Cathedral in Washington with the top four leaders in Congress. “Yes, I can confirm” that top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell will join Biden, who was a longtime colleague in the U.S. Senate, at the church. McConnell was a firm Trump ally, but he broke with the President over his baseless claims of massive election fraud.
Mitch McConnell throws Donald Trump under the bus and will attend Joe Biden’s inauguration. Image via AP.
“QAnon adherents discussed posing as National Guard to try to infiltrate inauguration, according to FBI intelligence briefing” via Carol Leonnig and Mark Zapotosky of The Washington Post — The FBI privately warned law enforcement agencies Monday that far-right extremists have discussed posing as National Guard members in Washington and others have reviewed maps of vulnerable spots in the city — signs of potential efforts to disrupt Wednesday’s inauguration. The document, a summary of threats that the FBI identified in a Monday intelligence briefing, warned that both “lone wolves” and adherents of the QAnon extremist ideology, some of whom joined in the violent siege on the Capitol on Jan. 6, have indicated they plan to come to Washington for Biden’s swearing-in ceremony.
“America doesn’t need inaugural balls. But there’s something lost when they disappear.” via Roxanne Roberts of The Washington Post — There will be no official inaugural balls this year. No first dance with the President and First Lady. No giddy, half-drunk supporters cheering them on. No stories to tell grandchildren. In this dark moment, amid the pandemic and after the Capitol riot, the loss of inaugural balls seems the least of our concerns. But it is a loss. It was a night when thousands of people could run around the nation’s capital cheering their new President without fear, a chance to dress up, get down, and be part of a historic moment.
“They prepare the White House for a new President. They have 5 hours.” via Annie Karni of The New York Times — It’s the awkward pas de deux performed every four or eight years when one family moves in and another moves out, an undertaking carried out by the 90-person White House residence staff in about five hours. A complicated, highly choreographed process is done on a tight schedule that often requires boxing up whatever has been left unpacked — some outgoing Presidents are more prepared to leave the executive mansion than others. The Biden moving vans are not allowed to begin unloading until the new President has been sworn in. The residence is then supposed to be transformed into something resembling their home by the time they arrive later in the afternoon.
The new admin
“Biden has set sky-high expectations. Can he meet them?” via Will Weissert of The Associated Press — Back when the election was tightening, and just a week away, Biden went big. He flew to Warm Springs, the Georgia town whose thermal waters once brought Franklin Delano Roosevelt comfort from polio, and pledged a restitching of America’s economic and policy fabric unseen since FDR’s New Deal. Evoking some of the nation’s loftiest reforms helped Biden unseat Trump but left him with towering promises to keep. And he’ll be trying to deliver against the backdrop of searing national division and a pandemic that has killed nearly 400,000 Americans and upended the economy. Such change would be hard to imagine under any circumstances, much less now.
Joe Biden is making many promises. Hopefully, he will be able to keep them. Image via AP.
“Biden’s hefty to-do list starts with a flurry of orders” via Darlene Superville and Will Weissert of The Associated Press — Biden has given himself an imposing to-do list for his earliest days as President and many promises to keep over the longer haul. Overshadowing everything at the very start is Biden’s effort to win congressional approval of a $1.9 trillion plan to combat the coronavirus and the economic misery it has caused. But climate change, immigration, health care and more will be competing for attention — and dollars. Altogether Biden has laid out an ambitious if not always detailed set of plans and promises across the range of public policy.
“Biden won’t lift Europe, Brazil travel restrictions despite Trump order, spokeswoman says” via Leslie Josephs of CNBC — The incoming Biden administration on Monday said it won’t lift an entry ban on most visitors from Europe, the U.K. and Brazil, less than an hour after Trump ordered an end to the COVID-19 travel restrictions. “With the pandemic worsening, and more contagious variants emerging around the world, this is not the time to be lifting restrictions on international travel,” tweeted Biden’s spokeswoman Jen Psaki. Trump first put the rules in place in March to curb the spread of the virus, though COVID-19 was already circulating in the U.S. before then. On Monday evening, he issued a proclamation rescinding the restrictions, just two days before Biden’s inauguration.
“Biden plans to propose a sweeping immigration overhaul on his first day in office” via Michael D. Shear of The New York Times — Biden will propose far-reaching legislation on Wednesday to give millions of undocumented immigrants living in the United States a chance to become citizens in as little as eight years, part of an ambitious and politically perilous overhaul intended to wipe away Trump’s four-year assault on immigration. Under the proposal that Biden will send to Congress on his first day in office, current recipients of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, known as “Dreamers,” and others in temporary programs that were set up to shield some undocumented immigrants from deportation would be allowed to apply for permanent legal residency immediately, according to transition officials who were briefed on Biden’s plan.
“Biden’s narrow path to an infrastructure dream” via Tanya Snyder of POLITICO — Biden wants to enact a mammoth infrastructure plan that would juice the economy, boost hiring and fight climate change, an enormously ambitious effort he’s pitched as a cornerstone of his presidency. Achieving even a fraction of it will require Biden to secure new funding streams or expand debt-fueled spending, potentially upend the way infrastructure policy typically works and ensure hundreds of Democratic lawmakers in a closely divided Congress remain in lockstep, with no room for error. Biden’s progressive plan could find itself in the same graveyard as years of failed efforts to give infrastructure a massive cash injection. Biden wants to spend $2 trillion on infrastructure, including $50 billion on road and bridge repairs just in his first year in office, along with a significant focus on building out transit in high-poverty areas.
Joe Biden is going all-in on infrastructure, to the tune of $2 trillion. Image via AP.
“Biden to ban special bonuses for appointees, expand lobbying prohibitions in new ethics rules” via Michael Scherer of The Washington Post — President-elect Biden will ban his senior presidential appointees from accepting special bonuses akin to “golden parachutes” from former employers for joining the government while putting in place other expanded revolving-door restrictions in his first days in office. The new ethics rules, which were described by transition officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the draft executive order is not public, will in some ways go beyond the guidelines for senior appointees that were put in place by the Trump and Barack Obama administrations. The biggest shift is the new rule that will ban incoming officials from receiving compensation from their previous employer for taking a government job.
“Biden’s pick to lead FEMA signals urgency on pandemic and climate change” via Thomas Frank of Scientific American — Biden demonstrated his intent to give FEMA a major role in his administration by quickly nominating an agency leader and selecting a widely praised emergency manager who has dealt with hurricanes, wildfires and pandemics. Biden’s nomination Friday of New York City Emergency Management Commissioner Deanne Criswell marks the first time a woman has been selected to lead FEMA since its creation in 1979. Criswell has spoken openly about the threat of climate change and its role in exacerbating disasters, telling an interviewer last year that “sea rise is definitely a concern” in New York City. Criswell is the first nominee whom Biden has selected to run an agency that falls under a federal department.
“Kamala Harris prepares for central role in Biden’s White House” via Alexandra Jaffe of The Associated Press — Harris will make history on Wednesday when she becomes the nation’s first female Vice President — and the first Black woman and the first woman of South Asian descent to hold that office. But that’s only where her boundary-breaking role begins. With the confluence of crises confronting Biden’s administration — and an evenly divided Senate in which she would deliver the tiebreaking vote — Harris is shaping up to be a central player in addressing everything from the coronavirus pandemic to criminal justice reform. Symone Sanders, Harris’ chief spokeswoman, said that while the Vice President-elect’s portfolio hasn’t been fully defined yet, she has a hand in all aspects of Biden’s agenda.
Kamala Harris is ready to make history, playing a key role in the Biden administration. Image via AP.
“Dr. Jill Biden, often overshadowed, is quietly making history, too” via Robin Givhan of The Washington Post — Now that Jill Biden will soon be moving into the White House, there’s more history being made around her. The country is in such a historically divided, volatile, damaged state that almost all of the inaugural traditions and formalities have fallen away. And the symbolism long attached to the First Lady as healing and consoling has been tarnished. Biden is poised to transform how the presidential spouse is perceived in the midst of all of that hope and wreckage. She isn’t angling to be a partner in governing. She’s planning to be her own person, which for her includes continuing to pursue her career. It’s a simple but profound decision that strikes a blow for gender equity and barrier-breaking.
“Get ready for reality-grounded White House press briefings” via Karen Tumulty of The Washington Post — In retrospect, it has become clear that what set the course for Trump’s presidency was not the bleak “American carnage” rhetoric of his inaugural address. The pattern for so much that was to follow emerged the following day, when Trump dispatched his then-press secretary, Sean Spicer, to the White House briefing room to declare that the unexceptional size of Trump’s inauguration crowd exceeded the history-making gathering for Obama’s 2009 inauguration. What the country had seen with its own eyes, in other words, was an illusion. A succession of White House officials spewing falsehoods from the podium became symptoms of the larger corruption of the truth that was the hallmark of Trump’s four years in office.
“Pocket squares and pearls convey a stylish team’s message” via Robin Givhan of The Washington Post — From the very beginning, despite their differences, they looked like a team. Throughout the campaign and through the transition, Biden and Harris have told their individual stories through their attire while always remaining in harmony. They dress with care but not flash. He has his aviators; she has her Converse sneakers. He finishes his ensembles with a pocket square. She opts for pearls. Their clothes matter — equally — because they draw us in. Their clothes matter because they help to cement an image in our minds. The clothes matter because they encapsulate this moment in time.
Epilogue Trump
“Trump gives farewell address: ‘We did what we came here to do’” via Ursula Perano of Axios — Trump gave a farewell video address on Tuesday, saying that his administration “did what we came here to do and so much more.” The address is very different from the Trump we’ve seen in his final weeks as President, one who has refused to accept his loss, who peddled conspiracy theories that fueled the attack on the Capitol, and who is boycotting his successor’s inauguration. In prepared remarks released by the White House, Trump touted his administration’s Middle East peace deals and rallying nations to “stand up to China like never before.” He also condemned the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by his supporters.
“Trump talked out of pardoning kids and Republican lawmakers” via Kaitlan Collins, Kevin Liptak and Pamela Brown of CNN — Trump received an unsettling warning on his final Saturday night in the White House. Huddled for a lengthy meeting with his legal advisers, they warned Trump the pardons he once hoped to bestow upon his family, and even himself would place him in a legally perilous position, convey the appearance of guilt and potentially make him more vulnerable to reprisals. So, too, was Trump warned that pardons for Republican lawmakers who had sought them for their role in the Capitol insurrection would anger the very Senate Republicans who will determine his fate in an upcoming impeachment trial. Former Attorney General William Barr both warned Trump earlier this month they did not believe he should pardon himself.
“Trump authorizes DOJ to declassify Russia probe documents” via Kyle Cheney of POLITICO — Trump on Tuesday authorized the declassification of a set of documents connected to the investigation of his 2016 campaign’s contacts with Russia. Trump has long declared his intention to make public more of the sensitive materials underlying the probe, which he has maligned as a “witch hunt,” despite findings that his campaign sought and relied upon materials obtained by Russia to aid his campaign against Clinton. It’s unclear which documents Trump has ordered declassified less than 24 hours before he leaves office. He cited the decision based on the results of a Dec. 30 review he asked the Justice Department to perform. Trump said he asked for the documents to be declassified to “the maximum extent possible.”
“Trump reportedly to pardon Dr. Salomon Melgen, local Medicare fraudster” via Jane Musgrave of The Palm Beach Post — Dr. Melgen, who is serving a 17-year sentence for health care fraud, is said to be among the roughly 100 people who will be pardoned before Trump leaves office today. The 66-year-old retinologist, who operated wildly successful eye clinics from Delray Beach to Port St. Lucie, was convicted in 2018 in connection with what federal prosecutors described as the biggest Medicare fraud in the nation’s history. By falsely diagnosing and treating hundreds of elderly patients for macular degeneration, the politically connected Juno Beach area resident raked in some $75 million, prosecutors said. During a roughly two-month trial in U.S. District Court in West Palm Beach, some of the nation’s top eye doctors said they were appalled by Melgen’s tactics.
“Long shot? Capitol rioters hold out hope for a Trump pardon” via Jake Bleiberg and Jim Mustian of The Associated Press — In what could be the longest of legal long shots, several of those arrested for storming the U.S. Capitol are holding out hope that Trump will use some of his last hours in office to grant the rioters a full and complete pardon. Longtime advisers to Trump are urging him against such a move, but the rioters contend their argument is compelling: They went to the Capitol to support Trump, and now that they are facing charges carrying up to 20 years in prison, it’s time for Trump to support them. “I feel like I was basically following my President. I was following what we were called to do. He asked us to fly there. He asked us to be there. So I was doing what he asked us to do,” said Jenna Ryan, a Dallas-area real estate agent.
“The ‘deep state’ of loyalists Trump is leaving behind for Biden” via Alice Miranda Ollstein and Megan Cassella of POLITICO — A higher-than-usual number of Trump administration political appointees are currently “burrowing” into career positions throughout the federal government, moving from appointed positions into powerful career civil service roles, which come with job protections that will make it difficult for Biden to fire them. While this happens to some degree in every presidential transition, Biden aides, lawmakers, labor groups, and watchdog organizations are sounding the alarm, warning that in addition to standard burrowing, the Trump administration is leaning on a recent executive order to rush through dozens if not hundreds of these so-called “conversions.”
“Trump has discussed starting a new party” via Andrew Restuccia of The Wall Street Journal — Trump has talked in recent days with associates about forming a new political party, according to people familiar with the matter, an effort to exert continued influence after he leaves the White House. Trump discussed the matter with several aides and other people close to him last week, the people said. The President said he would want to call the new party the “Patriot Party.” It’s unclear how serious Trump is about starting a new party, which would require a significant investment of time and resources. The President has a large base of supporters, some of whom were not deeply involved in Republican politics before his 2016 campaign.
“‘They want to welcome him home.’ MAGA fans expect ‘a lot of emotion’ during Trump’s Palm Beach arrival” via Skyler Swisher and Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Trump’s presidency is ending, but a new chapter in his Florida story starts Wednesday. A moving truck is parked at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach. His White House residency expires at noon when Biden will be sworn in as the nation’s 46th President. Trump won’t be around to see it. Instead, he’s headed to Mar-a-Lago, which is expected to become his home base. Joe Budd, president of the Trump Club 45 USA fan club, expects a big crowd of flag-waving supporters to greet Trump when Air Force One lands at Palm Beach International. Some are planning to travel from other parts of the state, he said, including a woman from the Gulf Coast who called him in tears.
“Trump will find ‘both love and hate’ in Florida as he begins post-presidential life” via David Smiley and Francesca Chambers of The Miami Herald — When Trump leaves the White House for the final time Wednesday, he will board Air Force One and head for Palm Beach International Airport, where he’ll be greeted by the warm embrace of his South Florida loyalists as he heads into his post-presidential life. Trump’s strongest supporters are organizing crowds to greet his motorcade on its route to Mar-a-Lago, the private Palm Beach club he calls home. And when Biden is sworn in at noon as the nation’s 46th President, Trump should be firmly situated in a state where his allies occupy some of the most powerful government, media, and political positions.
“Donald Trump Jr., Guilfoyle moving in? Admirals Cove residents not thrilled with the idea” via Christine Stapleton and Alexandra Clough of The Palm Beach Post — Trump Jr. and his girlfriend Kimberly Guilfoyle are planning to spend millions of dollars on two luxurious waterfront homes in Admirals Cove, an exclusive gated community in Jupiter. But like Trump’s father is seeing in Palm Beach, some would-be neighbors in Admirals Cove also don’t want a Trump in their neighborhood. When word spread that the couple had contracts to purchase the two homes on adjacent lots in the community, about 30 residents contacted Peter Moore, general manager of the property owners association. “About half have concerns about safety,” Moore said. “The others have political concerns with what’s happened in the last couple of weeks.”
There goes the neighborhood: Donald Trump Jr. and Kimberly Guilfoyle are heading to Florida. Potential neighbors are not thrilled. Image via AP.
“The financial minefield awaiting an Ex-President Trump” via Russ Buettner and Susanne Craig of The New York Times — Not long after he strides across the White House grounds Wednesday morning for the last time as President, Trump will step into a financial minefield that appears to be unlike anything he has faced since his earlier brushes with collapse. Without a new lender or a new line of revenue that does not require a large investment of time and money, the soon-to-be-former President is likely to face hard choices, including possibly being pinched into selling underperforming golf courses or his hotel in the Old Post Office Building in Washington. In 2008, Trump defaulted on huge loans on his Chicago tower, much of his commercial space went empty, and his casinos neared another bankruptcy.
“Last Trump job approval 34%; Average is record-low 41%” via Jeffrey M. Jones of Gallup — As Trump prepares to leave the White House, 34% of Americans approve of the job he is doing as President, the worst evaluation of his presidency. Throughout his presidency, his 41% average approval rating is four points lower than for any of his predecessors in Gallup’s polling era. Trump’s ratings showed a record 81-percentage-point average gap between Republicans and Democrats — 11 points wider than the prior record. The 34% job approval rating for Trump in Gallup’s Jan. 4-15 poll is one point lower than his prior lowest single rating, registered on several occasions in late 2017. The first of these came in August 2017, as Trump was facing intense criticism over his unvarnished threats against North Korean aggression and his response to deadly violence by a White nationalist at a protest in Charlottesville, Virginia.
“As Trump’s presidency recedes into history, scholars seek to understand his reign — and what it says about American democracy” via David Nakamura of The Washington Post — More than 30,000 falsehoods and lies. Nearly 400,000 coronavirus deaths. Rising White nationalism. Financial self-dealing. A social media ban. Two impeachments. A deadly attack on the U.S. Capitol. Trump’s four years in office come to a close Wednesday after a reign defined by constant chaos, corruption and scandal, a tenure that numerous scholars predict is destined to rank him among America’s worst Presidents. Trump’s claims of policy victories — including a raft of conservative judges and steps toward Middle East peace — will be vastly overshadowed by his mismanagement of the pandemic and his unprecedented assault on the U.S. election results, they said.
“The Trump movement’s break with reality will outlive his presidency” via Rosie Gray of BuzzFeed — In December, I wrote that Trump supporters I spoke to were increasingly “comfortable with the idea of a bloody uprising against their fellow citizens.” Whipped up by Trump’s ceaseless torrent of lies about the election, Trump fans — not hardened militia members, but otherwise unremarkable and law-abiding private citizens — were talking about the potential for civil war and insurrection, convinced they were the victims of a seditious conspiracy to put Biden in the White House. If I could go back and rewrite that piece, I would take out the word “idea.” The mob that stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6 was no mere idea.
“The coming Republican amnesia” via McKay Coppins of The Atlantic — As Trump lurches through the disastrous final days of his presidency, Republicans are just beginning to survey the wreckage of his reign. Their party has been gutted, their leader is reviled, and after four years of excusing every presidential affront to “conservative values,” their credibility is shot. How will the GOP recover from the complicity and corruption of the Trump era? To many Republicans, the answer is simple: Pretend it never happened. “We’re about to see a whole political party do a large-scale version of ‘New phone, who dis?’” says Sarah Isgur, a former top spokesperson for the Trump Justice Department. “It will be like that boyfriend you should never have dated — the mistake that shall not be mentioned.”
“Yep, Trump only visited one D.C. restaurant in four years” via Jessica Sidman of The Washingtonian — Even before the heavy barricades and National Guard troops fortressed a sizable chunk of D.C., he never made any attempt to be part of the local community. Case in point: In his four years in office, Trump only visited a single District restaurant — the one in his own Pennsylvania Avenue hotel. To be fair, Trump was never going to be like Obama, who was known for hitting up trendy hot spots. And Republican presidents have historically ventured into mostly-blue D.C. less than their Democratic counterparts. Plus, Trump is a creature of habit. When he did venture out for a meal at the Trump hotel’s steakhouse, BLT Prime, he pretty much always ordered the same thing: shrimp cocktail, fries, and well-done steak.
In four years, Donald Trump only visited one D.C. restaurant — his own.
“Mitch McConnell just stuck a knife in Trump. But he left something out.” via Greg Sargent of The Washington Post — Speaking on the Senate floor on Tuesday, Senate Majority Leader McConnell seemed to hang the violent assault on the Capitol directly around the neck of Trump. “The mob was fed lies,” he said. “They were provoked by the President.” This is making big news. After all, McConnell is forthrightly declaring that Trump incited the assault, which many Republicans will not say. McConnell is knifing Trump in the back on the way out. What drama! But let’s get real. While McConnell’s words have the aura of blunt truth-telling, what he just offered is, at bottom, an effort to distance the GOP from any culpability for the mob attack.
Losers
“Lawmakers who objected to election results have been cut off from 20 of their 30 biggest corporate PAC donors” via Douglas MacMillan and Jena McGregor of The Washington Post — The 147 Republican lawmakers who opposed certification of the presidential election this month have lost the support of many of their largest corporate backers, but not all of them. The Washington Post contacted the 30 companies that gave the most money to election-objecting lawmakers’ campaigns through political action committees. Two-thirds, or 20 of the firms, said they have pledged to suspend some or all payments from their PACs. Meanwhile, 10 companies said only that they would review their political giving or did not commit to taking any action due to this month’s events.
“U.S. files conspiracy charge against Oath Keeper leader in alleged plot against the Capitol” via Spencer S. Hsu, Tom Jackman and Devlin Barrett of The Washington Post — U.S. authorities have leveled the first conspiracy charge against an apparent leader of an extremist group in the Jan. 6 storming of the U.S. Capitol, arresting an alleged Oath Keeper who is accused of plotting to disrupt the electoral vote confirmation of Biden’s victory and proposing further assaults on state capitols. Thomas Edward Caldwell of Clarke County, Virginia, was taken into custody on four federal counts, including conspiracy to commit an offense against the United States in the Capitol attack. The conspiracy charge is reserved for offenses interfering with or obstructing the lawful operation of government.
The leader of the Oath Keepers is charged with conspiracy for his role in The Capitol riots.
“Gabriel Garcia, Miami Proud Boys member, ex-GOP candidate, arrested for role in Capitol mob” via David Ovalle and Jay Weaver of The Miami Herald — A Miami member of the extremist Proud Boys group who once ran unsuccessfully for elected office was arrested early Tuesday on allegations he took part in the Jan. 6 storming of the U.S. Capitol. Garcia made his first appearance in federal court Tuesday as a criminal complaint against him was unsealed. He is being charged with engaging in acts of civil disorder, entering restricted grounds, violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds. Garcia recorded and uploaded a series of Facebook videos of himself inside the Capitol along with others in the mob. “We just went ahead and stormed the Capitol. It’s about to get ugly,” he says in the video.
“Polk deputy texted co-worker about plan to kill feds after U.S. Capitol riot, sheriff says” via Monivette Cordeiro of The Orlando Sentinel — A Polk County deputy sheriff was arrested Tuesday after he was accused of threatening a mass shooting against federal officials following the riot at the U.S. Capitol this month. Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd said Peter Heneen made the threats in text messages he sent to a fellow deputy the night of Jan. 6. Heneen, who worked with the Sheriff’s Office for more than six years, was suspended pending his termination. Heneen was texting his colleague about the riot when he said someone needed to “shoot the feds” and “make the streets of D.C. run red with blood of the tyrants,” Judd said.
Corona Florida
“Florida adds 9,816 COVID-19 cases, second-lowest reported this year, and 160-plus deaths” via Michelle Marchante and Carli Teproff of The Miami Herald — On Tuesday, Florida’s Department of Health confirmed 9,816 additional cases of COVID-19, bringing the state’s known total to 1,589,097. Also, 162 resident deaths were announced, bringing the resident death toll to 24,436. One new nonresident death was also announced, bringing the nonresident toll to 384. The total death count for the state is 24,820, the fourth-highest in the country after New York, California, and Texas. Tuesday’s single-day count is the second day in a row that the state reported fewer than 10,000 cases in one day this year.
“Gov.RonDeSantis criticizes Biden’s vaccine plan as ‘big mistake,’ ‘not necessary’” via Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — During a news conference in Cape Coral on Tuesday, DeSantis said Biden’s plan to use federal disaster agency and the National Guard to build COVID-19 vaccine clinics across the country would be a “big mistake.” “I saw some of this stuff Biden’s putting out, that he’s going to create these FEMA camps, I can tell you, that’s not necessary in Florida,” he said. “All we need is more vaccine. Just get us more vaccine.” The comments were the first he has made about the incoming administration’s vaccine plans. Unlike Trump’s approach of letting states distribute the vaccines, which has been slower than expected, Biden said last week he would speed the process by enlisting federal help.
“Publix stores in Palm Beach, Martin, Monroe counties to get COVID-19 vaccines” via Ana Ceballos of The Miami Herald — DeSantis announced all 67 Publix pharmacies in Palm Beach County, along with seven in Martin County and two in Monroe County, will soon offer the COVID-19 vaccine. The vaccines will be offered to Floridians 65 and older and will be available by appointment only, DeSantis told reporters at a news conference in Jupiter. “Rather than have them drive all over God’s creation, we understand that if you are 80 years old, it is easier to go to the supermarket than some of this other stuff,” DeSantis said. There is no timeline yet when Publix pharmacies in Miami-Dade, Broward or other populous counties, like Pinellas and Hillsborough, will get COVID-19 vaccines. Shots will begin to be administered on Thursday.
Ron DeSantis expands the Public vaccine efforts to all 67 pharmacies in Plam Beach County, among others.
“Scott Rivkees says state vaccine is ‘supply limited’” via Christine Sexton of the News Service of Florida — Surgeon General Rivkees said in the statewide phone call that he does not know when additional “first doses” of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines will be sent to the state or how many doses would be in a potential future delivery. The additional first-dose vaccines, Rivkees said, would be in addition to follow-up second dose vaccines delivered to hospitals late last week and early this week. Agency for Health Care Administration Acting Secretary Shevaun Harris, who joined Rivkees on the phone call, said some hospitals weren’t expected to get their second-dose deliveries until late Tuesday night due to a shipping delay.
Thank you, Dr. Obvious — “COVID-19 vaccine ‘is our path forward,’ Florida’s top health official tells lawmakers” via Jeffrey Schweers of The Tallahassee Democrat — Despite a chaotic rollout plagued by busy phone lines, crashing websites and a limited supply controlled by the federal government, Rivkees told a Senate panel last week that “the vaccine is our path forward” in fighting COVID-19. With an unpredictable number of doses coming into the state from week to week and a pent-up demand for the vaccine, it’s going to be a rocky path, officials speaking to state lawmakers last week admitted. “The Department of Health plan calls for a decentralized effort,” Division of Emergency Management director Jared Moskowitz said. “I know it seems chaotic, but public health is a decentralized effort.”
“Concern grows in Florida over more contagious COVID-19 strain” via Bobby Caina Calvan of The Associated Press — As Florida officials ramped up vaccinations against the coronavirus, concern spread Tuesday over a new, more contagious variant that could be gaining a foothold in the state. The federal CDC said Florida had 46 confirmed cases of the more transmissible strain of COVID-19 as of Sunday, eclipsing California with 40 confirmed cases at last count. The strain was first detected in the United Kingdom in December and has begun spreading globally. Early evidence seems to indicate the new strain is no more lethal than earlier strains that sickened nearly 24.2 million in the U.S. and killed more than 400,000. Florida is now approaching 1.6 million confirmed cases, with nearly 10,000 new cases and about 160 additional deaths reported Tuesday. To date, the state has reported more than 24,400 virus-related deaths.
Corona local
“Lenny Curry says vaccine scarcity could halt vaccinations at city-run sites after Thursday” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — Mayor Curry said Tuesday the city’s initial allotment of the COVID-19 vaccines for use at two city-run sites would run out by the end of the day Thursday and cause a halt to vaccines at those senior centers until the city can get more supplies. Curry said anyone who received a vaccination at the two senior centers will still return for the necessary second dose at the same sites. “It’s a fluid situation and we’re all going to have to adapt, which is what we’ve done as a community since March of last year,” he said, referring to the emergence of the pandemic in Jacksonville.
Lenny Curry says vaccines will run out quickly and the city will stop vaccinations as they wait for more supplies. Image via Jacksonville Daily Record.
“Amid statewide shortage, Baptist Health cancels scheduled first-dose COVID-19 vaccines” via Samantha J. Gross of The Miami Herald — Baptist Health announced Tuesday that due to restraints on the COVID-19 vaccine supply, all first-dose vaccinations booked for Jan. 20 and later are canceled. No new appointments will be taken. Second-dose appointments are not affected, as required by the vaccine’s emergency use authorization. “I could have blown the top of my head off with steam,” said Charlotte Reeve, of Davie, who had her appointment canceled. The cancellations come as top state health officials acknowledged that Florida is in a “supply-limited situation.” Rivkees told hospital officials that he does not know when additional first doses of the Pfizer BioNtech or Moderna vaccines will be sent to the state or how many doses would be in a future shipment.
“Marlins Park opening for COVID-19 vaccinations, with goal of 1,000 doses daily” via Joey Flechas and Ana Claudia Chacin of The Miami Herald — A COVID-19 vaccination site will open at Marlins Park on Wednesday with a goal of administering 1,000 doses a day. On Tuesday afternoon, Mayor Francis Suarez announced the opening of the state-run site with 7,000 doses supplied by the Florida Department of Health. Miami-Dade County handles the scheduling of appointments for Marlins Park through the same call center that books appointments for Hard Rock Stadium, 1-888-499-0840. The number for the hearing impaired is 1-888-256-8918. The Marlins Park vaccination site will open from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. for appointments only. The Mayor said testing will continue.
“Half of Miami’s COVID-19 front line passed on vaccines. Leaders should ask why, experts say” via Ben Conarck and Douglas Hanks of The Miami Herald — Large numbers of Miami-Dade hospital workers, firefighters and paramedics who were offered early vaccinations for COVID-19 declined. County leaders haven’t tried to figure out why. The lack of full acceptance by those key groups is likely to have implications when it comes to vaccine trust in the broader population. Less than a quarter of Miami-Dade Fire Rescue’s 2,000 firefighters and EMS squads have gotten the vaccine, 458 people in an agency of about 2,000 people, as of Friday. The paltry numbers of first responders wanting the vaccine doesn’t appear to have prompted a sense of urgency from Miami-Dade leaders.
“Tampa Bay school districts to get coronavirus vaccines for older staff” via Jeffrey S. Solochek of the Tampa Bay Times — Efforts to get the coronavirus vaccine to Florida school employees have begun to pay off. On Tuesday, the Pinellas County health department began providing first-round inoculations to all school district employees 65 years of age or older. The department has set aside appointment times for the district’s approximately 1,300 workers in that category at three sites — Clearwater, St. Petersburg and mid-county — through Jan. 25. More than 400 school staff signed up for a time on the first day, school superintendent Mike Grego said. As others register, he said, they will be able to attend even if their appointment conflicts with work. Registrations go through the district, to avoid getting caught up in the larger surge.
Corona nation
“American COVID-19 deaths surpass 400,000, with death rate accelerating, on final full day of Trump’s term” via Adam Geller and Janie Har of The Associated Press — As Trump entered the final year of his term last January, the U.S. recorded its first confirmed case of COVID-19. Not to worry, Trump insisted, his administration had the virus “totally under control.” Now, in his final hours in office, after a year of presidential denials of reality and responsibility, the pandemic’s U.S. death toll has eclipsed 400,000. And the loss of lives is accelerating. The 400,000-death toll is greater than the population of New Orleans, Cleveland or Tampa, Florida. It’s nearly equal to the number of American lives lost annually to strokes, Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, flu and pneumonia combined. The toll by week’s end will probably surpass the number of Americans killed in World War II.
On Donald Trump’s last day in office, COVID-19 deaths surpassed 400K, more than all the Americans who died in World War II. Image via AP.
“Trump’s administration fell far short of its own vaccine promises” via JM Rieger of The Washington Post — Four days after the first coronavirus vaccine received emergency use authorization in the United States, the head of the White House’s Operation Warp Speed vaccine effort appeared on MSNBC. “In the month of December, between the two vaccines — the Pfizer and the Moderna vaccine — we expect to have immunized 20 million of our American people,” Moncef Slaoui said on Dec. 15. But despite the Trump administration’s repeated promises to deliver tens or even hundreds of millions of coronavirus vaccine doses by the new year, Trump is set to leave office Wednesday, having delivered just over 31 million coronavirus vaccine doses nationwide. Fewer than half of those have been administered.
“New CDC Director pledges to speed vaccination, restore trust in agency” via Betsy McKay of The Wall Street Journal — Rochelle Walensky, the incoming director of the U.S. CDC, said she would start her new job with a big to-do list: helping states fix COVID-19 vaccination programs and persuading exhausted Americans to wear masks and take other precautions. In an interview, Dr. Walensky said the agency would try to help people overcome doubts about COVID-19 vaccines, and she vowed to increase public trust in the CDC. Dr. Walensky will take the CDC’s helm on Wednesday, as a highly transmissible mutant, or variant, of the novel coronavirus threatens to cause a new surge in infections in the next few weeks. Meanwhile, the vaccination campaign to stop the pandemic is off to a slow start, and surveys show many people in the U.S. are hesitant to get vaccinated.
“After months of trauma, vaccinated health care workers welcome a surprising emotion: Hope” via Karin Brulliard of The Washington Post — One month after a New York nurse received the first U.S. vaccination, the hope inspired by the vaccines’ swift development and approval has given way in many quarters nationally to the distressing reality of a slow and sometimes calamitous rollout. Many health care workers said the vaccine had renewed their optimism after months during which depression and burnout in their field soared, and the virus killed an estimated 3,000 people in their ranks.
After months of burnout, vaccines give health care workers a bit of hope. Image via AP.
“A new COVID-19 challenge: Mutations rise along with cases” via Marilynn Marchione of The Associated Press — The race against the virus that causes COVID-19 has taken a new turn: Mutations are rapidly popping up, and the longer it takes to vaccinate people, the more likely it is that a variant that can elude current tests, treatments and vaccines could emerge. The coronavirus is becoming more genetically diverse, and health officials say the high rate of new cases is the main reason. Each new infection gives the virus a chance to mutate as it makes copies of itself, threatening to undo the progress made so far to control the pandemic. On Friday, the World Health Organization urged more effort to detect new variants.
Corona economics
“U.S. economic recovery loses steam just as Biden takes office” via Reade Pickert, Yue Qiu and Alexander McIntyre of Bloomberg — Biden this week inherits an economic recovery that’s challenged by the raging pandemic and a still-suffering labor market. The latest data show how the untamed virus continues to constrain the U.S. rebound. Business restrictions to curb the spread helped drive a jump in initial jobless claims, while a weekly measure of retail sales has eased to a five-week low. The relief package approved in December and Biden’s request for $1.9 trillion in additional aid should help support businesses and workers during the wait for widespread vaccination. Even so, the recent deterioration in some high-frequency indicators shows just how far the U.S. is from a full recovery.
Just as Joe Biden takes office, the U.S. economy starts to dip. Image via AP.
“IRS delays start of tax filing season to Feb. 12” via Darla Mercado of CNBC — The IRS is delaying the start of the 2020 tax filing season to Feb. 12, according to an announcement Friday from the agency. On that date, the IRS will start accepting and processing last year’s tax returns. Normally, the agency opens tax season in late January. However, this year, the IRS will need more time to prepare after the COVID-19 relief act that took effect in late December. And yes, the tax filing deadline is still April 15. “If filing season were opened without the correct programming in place, then there could be a delay in issuing refunds to taxpayers,” the IRS said in its announcement.
More corona
“Biden rejects Trump’s move to lift coronavirus travel bans for Europe, Brazil” via Emma Anderson of POLITICO — Biden’s team rejected a move Monday by Trump to lift coronavirus restrictions for European and Brazilian travelers. Trump had announced he was rescinding the entry bans effective January 26 — six days after Biden takes office — because of new testing requirements for international flights set to kick in that day. Biden transition spokesperson Jen Psaki said on Twitter, however, that upon the advice of its medical team, the incoming administration “does not intend to lift these restrictions.” “In fact, we plan to strengthen public health measures around international travel in order to further mitigate the spread of COVID-19,” said Psaki.
Donald Trump plans to lift travel restrictions to Brazil, a move Joe Biden rejects. Image via Getty.
“Royal Caribbean Group is shrinking its fleet, selling Azamara to private equity firm” via Taylor Dolven of The Miami Herald — Royal Caribbean Group is selling one of its four cruise lines, Azamara, to a New York-based private equity firm. In a $201 million transaction, the second-largest cruise company in the world plans to hand over the Azamara brand and its three cruise ships to Sycamore Partners by the end of March. The company’s decision to shrink its fleet comes after 10 months of canceled cruises in the U.S. due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Royal Caribbean Group CEO Richard Fain said that the sale allows the company to put more resources into its three remaining cruise lines: Royal Caribbean International, Celebrity Cruises and Silversea.
“From ‘Alma’ to ‘Zuri,’ parents are looking for positive baby names” via Jancee Dunn of The New York Times — The coronavirus pandemic, stretching into another year, has left few corners of everyday life untouched. For the most recent crop of new parents, the pandemic has been the backdrop of their entire birth process for some; it’s even changed how they chose the names of their babies. Baby-naming experts are reporting decided shifts in the name selection process. Pamela Redmond, chief executive of the baby-naming website Nameberry, reported a jump in name searches on the site during the pandemic. Redmond found that names derived from optimistic meanings have been “trending upward since the beginning of the pandemic,” she said. Place names such as Cairo and Milan are also on the rise, Redmond said, perhaps reflecting a longing to travel during lockdown.
D.C. matters
“Georgia certifies Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock victories, paving way for Democratic control of Senate” via Amy Gardner and Erica Werner of The Washington Post — Georgia election officials on Tuesday certified the victories of Democrats Ossoff and Warnock, who won in the state’s hard-fought U.S. Senate runoff elections earlier this month, paving the way for them to take office as early as Wednesday. Ossoff and Warnock are expected to be sworn in Wednesday by newly inaugurated Vice President Harris in one of her first acts in presiding over the Senate, according to an individual with direct knowledge of the plan. She is also set to swear in Alex Padilla, the former California Secretary of State appointed by Gov. Gavin Newsom to fill Harris’s own Senate seat. Their arrivals will give Democrats a Senate majority, with Harris providing a tiebreaking vote.
“Marco Rubio signals support for key Biden intelligence pick” of The Associated Press — Biden’s nominee to lead the intelligence community, Avril Haines, promised to “speak truth to power” and keep politics out of intelligence agencies to ensure their work is trusted. Her words went over. Rubio and its ranking Democrat, Mark Warner of Virginia, both indicated they expect Haines to win confirmation. “When it comes to intelligence, there is simply no place for politics — ever,” she told the Senate Intelligence Committee. Haines would enter the job as director of national intelligence. Her hearing kicked off a series of Senate confirmation hearings Tuesday, including those for Biden’s picks to lead the State Department, the Pentagon, and the departments of Homeland Security and Treasury.
Marco Rubio is warming to Joe Biden’s intelligence pick. Image via CNN.
“Matt Gaetz won’t challenge Rubio in 2022” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Instead, the Panhandle Republican publicly expressed interest in a Florida Cabinet position. “I have no interest in running against Marco Rubio for the U.S. Senate,” Gaetz tweeted. “In 2022, the only statewide position I would consider running for in the current political climate is Commissioner of Agriculture.” Though Gaetz may be eyeing a bid for Florida’s Agriculture Commissioner gig, the 38-year-old suggested that nothing is set in stone. “But things can change. (Not the Senate thing though),” Gaetz said about 2022 speculation.
“Maria Elvira Salazar named assistant whip for House GOP” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Salazar has secured an assistant whip position just weeks after being sworn in as a member of Congress for the first time. House Republican Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana named Salazar to his team, per a Tuesday release. Salazar represents Florida’s 27th Congressional District in Miami-Dade County. She’ll be responsible for helping to push fellow Republicans to vote in line with the party during the 117th Congress. “I’m deeply humbled by the opportunity to serve as a leader among my Republican colleagues and look forward to doing my part to unite our party,” Salazar said. Her message that there is some equivalence between the American Democratic Party and violent, oppressive socialist regimes of South and Central America has been hammered home by Salazar and other Republican lawmakers in recent years.
Dateline Tallahassee
“Danny Burgess bill would repeal state’s motor vehicle no-fault law” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Sen. Burgess filed legislation Friday that would repeal Florida’s motor vehicle no-fault law. Florida’s No-Fault Law requires drivers to carry personal injury protection (PIP). Burgess’ proposal, SB 54, would instead require motorists to carry bodily injury liability coverage. SB 54 retains the existing $10,000 financial responsibly requirement for property damage. It also repeals the No-Fault Law’s recovery limitation on pain and suffering damages. Other provisions include named driver exclusions and a new framework to govern motor vehicle insurance bad faith claims. The Banking and Insurance Committee will discuss the bill at 3:30 p.m. Jan. 26 in Room 412 of the Knott Building.
Danny Burgess is seeking to end Florida’s no-fault auto insurance.
“Online sales tax collection goes to Senate committee” via News Service of Florida — A proposal that would require more online sellers to collect Florida sales taxes and turn the money over to the state will appear Monday before the Senate Commerce and Tourism Committee. SB 50, filed by Sen. Joe Gruters, has gained support as state revenue has taken a massive hit amid the coronavirus pandemic. Senate President Wilton Simpson has highlighted the issue as one way lawmakers can offset a projected $2.75 billion shortfall. Many out-of-state online retailers have not collected and remitted the taxes. Similar past proposals, dubbed “Wayfair” bills after the online purveyor, have died as Republican lawmakers have been leery of appearing to raise taxes.
“Tina Polsky joins Mike Grieco in proposal to ban conversion therapy for minors” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Rep. Grieco has refiled a bill to ban conversion therapy for children. The bill, Prohibited Counseling Services, would ban “therapy” with the goal of shaming and altering a minor’s gender identity or sexual orientation. The bill clarifies the ban does not apply to services that promote “acceptance, support and understanding.” For example, the bill does not prohibit counseling services to individuals actively undergoing gender transition or other supportive services that may provide information on safe-sex practices, as long as the goal of such services is not to change the person’s gender identity or sexual orientation. The bill also makes it a third-degree felony for those who continue to practice conversion therapy on minors.
“Senate staff encouraged to remain clear of Capitol to accommodate law enforcement presence” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Simpson encouraged lawmakers and staff on Tuesday to continue working from home amid lingering security concerns at the Florida Capitol Complex. In a memo sent Tuesday, Simpson said he is unaware of “planned acts of violence” at the Capitol, though law enforcement is anticipating demonstrations on Tuesday or Wednesday. The scale of the protests, the Trilby Republican noted, is unknown. Florida’s security tensions grew more acute on Saturday when federal authorities arrested an Army veteran who plotted to confront Capitol protesters with firearms. He encouraged others to join him via social media.
Legislative delegation meetings — The Martin County legislative delegation — Sen. Gayle Harrell; Reps. John Snyder and Rep. Toby Overdorf — meets to prepare for the 2021 Legislative Session, 9:30 a.m., Indian River State College, Chastain Campus, Wolf Technology Center, 2400 S.E. Salerno Road, Stuart. The Pasco County delegation — Simpson; Sens. Ed Hooper and Danny Burgess; Reps. Amber Mariano, Adrian Zika, and Randy Maggard — will meet, 2 p.m., West Pasco Government Center, 8731 Citizens Dr., New Port Richey. The Hamilton County delegation — Sen. Loranne Ausley and Rep. Chuck Brannan — will meet, 5 p.m., Hamilton County Courthouse, 207 N.E. First St., Jasper. The Okaloosa County delegation — Sens. Doug Broxson and George Gainer; Reps. Jayer Williamson and Patt Maney — will meet, 5:30 p.m. Central time, Okaloosa County Commission chamber, 1250 Eglin Parkway, Shalimar.
Statewide
“State grapples with property insurance woes” via Jim Turner of The News Service of Florida — Insurance Commissioner David Altmaier and Citizens Property Insurance President and CEO Barry Gilway went before House and Senate panels last week and painted a picture of a distressed market that, without changes, will continue to worsen. Altmaier cited 105 rate filings by property insurers during the first 10 months of 2020, with 55 resulting in approved rate increases of more than 10%. “I have not seen any evidence that the trends we are seeing now are going to reverse,” Altmaier told members of the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee. Citizens ballooned after the disastrous 2004 and 2005 hurricane seasons and had 1.47 million policies in 2011.
David Altmaier offers a disappointing outlook for Florida’s insurance market.
“Major punitive damages award upheld in tobacco case” via Jim Saunders of News Service of Florida — Pointing in part to “reprehensible” conduct, a federal appeals court Tuesday upheld a $20.7 million punitive damages award against Philip Morris USA in a Florida case filed by a woman who first tried cigarettes at age 13 and later suffered from a smoking-related illness. The ruling by a three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals came amid a series of high-stakes cases involving tobacco companies. The tobacco company argued in the appeal that the $20.7 million punitive damages award was unconstitutionally excessive. But the Atlanta-based appeals court upheld the award, pointing to a series of legal “guideposts” used in evaluating punitive damages, including whether the cigarette maker’s conduct had been reprehensible.
Local notes
“Central Florida officials ‘constantly monitoring’ ahead of inauguration, but no known threats” via Grace Toohey and Monivette Cordeiro of the Orlando Sentinel — No Central Florida law enforcement agencies reached by the Orlando Sentinel on Tuesday had any specific concerns for Inauguration Day, but all said officers remain ready if something does occur, and continue to monitor social media and other mediums for anything that could arise. Local FBI spokeswoman Andrea Aprea said the Tampa region has not received any “specific and substantiated threats” to government buildings in the region, but agents continue to monitor the situation. She asked for the public’s assistance, urging people to call the FBI’s Tampa office or visit tips.fbi.gov to relay any tips about potential violence.
“Sarasota police chief joked about using Taser on mentally ill homeless man” via Lee Williams of The Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Sarasota Police Chief Bernadette DiPino is under fire from city officials for joking about using a Taser on a mentally ill homeless man who heckled her officers during a special performance by the Sarasota Opera, according to people familiar with the incident. The performance was held on Nov. 18 on the west side of police headquarters. The audience consisted of officers and detectives as well as civilian police employees. The homeless man had reportedly not made any verbal or physical threats to anyone attending the performance. One of the officers who heard DiPino’s comments made a complaint to the city manager’s office via email.
Sarasota Police Chief Bernadette DiPino finds humor in Tasering a person with mental illness.
“Airbnb joins ‘It’s a Penalty’ to combat human trafficking ahead of Super Bowl” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Airbnb is partnering with the global anti-trafficking group “It’s a Penalty” to combat human trafficking in Tampa as it prepares for the 2021 Super Bowl. The partnership will prepare Airbnb hosts ahead of the Super Bowl with information and resources developed by It’s a Penalty on recognizing signs of trafficking and how to report it. Big sporting events like the Super Bowl can increase human trafficking due to an influx of visitors. And Florida has the third-highest rate of human trafficking cases reported by state, according to leading anti-trafficking organization Polaris. Ashley Moody recently joined It’s a Penalty to unveil educational signage and other displays at Tampa International Airport.
Top opinion
“Ron Matus: A school choice scholarship changed this LGBTQ student’s life — and may have saved it” via Florida Politics — In fourth and fifth grades, Marquavis Wilson was tormented because of his sexual identity. In public schools, he was taunted with repeated slurs, told he was going to hell. The bullying and battling took a toll. He told his mom, Lamisha Stephens, he wanted to kill himself. Stephens knew she had to make a change. First, she secured a Florida Tax Credit Scholarship. Then she enrolled Marquavis in West Park Preparatory School, a tiny, faith-based private school she concluded would be the safe haven he needed. It was. Marquavis is no longer fighting. He’s thinking about college and careers. He said the scholarship and the school changed his life. His mom said they saved his life.
Opinions
“Biden’s inaugural speech won’t unite the country. Here’s what could.” via John F. Harris of POLITICO — In his inaugural address Wednesday, Biden will surely issue an appeal for unity, a plea that all Americans raise our sights and lower our voices, that we work together to restore faith in government, and each other. And so on. The words will be heard as sensible by any sensible person. Unless he somehow sought help from the wrong speechwriter, some passages will be downright eloquent. And if history is any guide, the effective half-life of this rhetorical appeal will be measured in days or hours. It is not that exhortations for unity fall on deaf ears; it is that they fall on desensitized minds, even among people who say they want unity and may actually believe it. His policy agenda depends on reviving a functional political center. In broad historical terms, everyone else has an interest, too. The country’s long-term vitality depends on it.
“After the longest four years, America is going to have a President again — a real one” via Leonard Pitts, Jr. of The Miami Herald — And so we reach the end of an unpresidented era. The reference is, of course, to one of Trump’s many Twitter misspellings, this one found in his 2016 description of the seizure of a U.S. Navy drone. He meant to call it “unprecedented.” But Trump’s mistake gave us a coinage perfect for this moment. For four years, America has been an unpresidented nation, in some fundamental sense, a nation without a President. Today, as those bleak years finally wane, as Biden prepares to take office, an old maxim gleams like a newly minted coin: Truly, you never miss your water till your well runs dry. In other words, you never know what it means to have a president until you’ve gone without.
“Biden, Harris up to the challenge of fixing Trump’s many messes” via Stephanie Murphy of The Orlando Sentinel — Last week, as Congress met to certify Biden as the 46th president of the United States, pro-Trump insurrectionists provoked by our commander in chief stormed the Capitol, menacing police officers and threatening lawmakers. It was a day that will live in infamy. So far, five people have died as a result. While Trump will be remembered by history as the only President to be impeached twice, the impact of his failed leadership will be felt by Americans for years to come. In nearly every respect, Trump has trashed our country, leaving it to the new administration and the new Congress to clean up the mess. Trump leaves behind a country deeply divided.
“A fresh start for Republicans can come only if they abandon authoritarian populism” via Michael Gerson of The Washington Post — A new beginning is not a chance to wipe the slate clean. That would leave us impervious to learning. A new beginning is appropriately a time for reflection and rededication. And this requires recognition of previous misjudgment. Mine was to regard American political institutions as solid, objectively existing things — like the granite blocks of the Capitol or the marble floors of the Old Executive Office Building. I had worked in both the Senate and the White House. Unconsciously, I viewed the constitutional order as a vast machine, impervious to the faults and failures of individuals. But the Trump era has demonstrated the shocking fragility of democracy and the finely balanced contingency of history.
“DeSantis can’t mask reality of new COVID-19 threat” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — No wonder DeSantis didn’t want Floridians to know what’s in the weekly reports from the White House Coronavirus Task Force. According to the newest report, the state is in a “full-blown COVID-19 resurgence.” Florida can expect “significant fatalities” from this third wave. The report recommends that Florida do lots more — soon — to protect residents. It took a lawsuit to force DeSantis to release the reports. You can see why. The latest advice reveals how much he is to blame for the third wave of cases. In late September, the Governor issued an executive order that prohibited cities and counties from enforcing mask mandates. You can trace Florida’s spike in cases to that date and thus to that decision.
On today’s Sunrise
Sunrise takes a moment to honor the 400,000 Americans who died from COVID-19.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— The nation hit that grim milestone on Trump’s last full day in office. Despite a shortage of vaccines, DeSantis is expanding the number of places you can sign up for a shot using Publix pharmacies to administer vaccinations.
— DeSantis held news conferences in Jupiter, Rockledge and Cape Coral to announce the Publix expansion. He also vowed to limit shots to people who actually live in Florida while at the same time boasting that vaccine tourism only proves he’s doing something right.
— The environmental group One Thousand Friends of Florida reveals its agenda for the upcoming Legislative Session. They admit the budget shortfall created by the COVID-19 crisis will make it much harder to fund conservation programs.
— But the budget crisis could help environmentalists who are trying to derail M-CORES, the plan to build three new toll roads through some of the last undeveloped areas of Florida.
— On the Sunrise Soapbox, the Governor talks about one of his top priorities for the upcoming Session. DeSantis wants to take on the tech elites who slapped misinformation warnings on the President’s Twitter feed during the campaign and pulled the plug on his social media when he spread unfounded allegations of voter fraud. DeSantis says they interfered in the election by gagging conservatives.
— And finally, a Florida Man says he ignored the police officer chasing him because he had to get home to mom.
What Gus Corbella is reading — “Michelin France stars awarded in virtual ceremony” via Thomas Adamson of The Associated Press — France’s Michelin Guide, which has long served as a bible for foodies, is adapting its awards ceremony in Paris for the year that was like no other — 2020. It is handing out its stars for the shuttered industry at a virtual ceremony to a virtual public. From the panoramic splendor of the Jules Verne Restaurant on the Eiffel Tower’s second floor, judges are giving out this year’s stars for their 2021 France guide — based on reviews of eateries that have for large periods of time been completely closed nationwide. The country famed for its cuisine saw restaurants shut for large parts of last year during what was one of Europe’s harshest lockdowns, while strict curfews disrupted the dinner service.
Gwendal Poullennec, head of Le Guide Michelin, poses outside the Eiffel Tower with the 2021 edition, which will be announced virtually this year. Image via AP.
Speaking of France — “Disney fans inch into Epcot’s Ratatouille ride area” via Dewayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — Epcot now has fewer construction walls and more rats. Walt Disney World recently removed some of the barriers in the theme park’s France pavilion near the upcoming Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure ride. Visitors can now wander farther back into the plaza, formerly a backstage area normally off-limits to the general public; however, folks cannot get up to the ride’s actual entrance or the neighboring crepes restaurant yet. What Epcot visitors can see now: An archway with a banner saying the ride will open in 2021, elaborately painted walls, yet another construction wall, a new angle on the park’s faux Eiffel Tower, and several stylized rat images.
Speaking of Disney — “Trump’s wild ride puts Disney’s Hall of Presidents in a predicament” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — The Hall of Presidents has been a staple attraction since the park opened in 1971. Now the Trump-fueled insurrection at the U.S. Capitol has renewed calls for Disney to banish the 45th President. Should he stay, or should he go? Neither. It’s time for Disney to put this attraction out to pasture. After four years of saying he wanted to make America great again, Trump ended up making Americans revolt against their own government. That’s a damning distinction, but removing the animatronic Trump is a slippery slope. Is he worse than Andrew Johnson, who botched Reconstruction? Warren G. Harding’s scandals would have melted the internet. Woodrow Wilson said Black people were “an ignorant and inferior race” and constructed policy accordingly.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to the incredible Marva Johnson, our dear friend Jen Lux, as well as Jim Horne, Christine Knepper, Chris O’Donnell of the Tampa Bay Times, and Rick Oppenheim.
Unsubscribe Having trouble viewing this email? View in browser
Good morning. Today’s newsletter is dedicated to the great state of Delaware, which is home to the Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA, elite quarterbacks, more than 66% of the Fortune 500, and later today, the 46th president of the US.
MARKETS
NASDAQ
13,197.18
+ 1.53%
S&P
3,798.91
+ 0.81%
DOW
30,930.52
+ 0.38%
GOLD
1,839.30
+ 0.51%
10-YR
1.095%
+ 0.40 bps
OIL
53.01
+ 1.24%
*As of market close
Covid-19: The seven-day average of new cases in the US has fallen 16% from a week ago, and the declines are occurring across all regions. However, as of yesterday, the US death toll from Covid-19 hit 400,000.
Government: President Trump issued another big round of pardons, granting clemency to his former WH aide Steve Bannon and rapper Lil Wayne.
Markets: Stocks rose as investors prepared for a new era under a President Biden—one that may include a whole lot more stimulus to blunt the worst economic effects of the pandemic.
With just a few hours left in President Trump’s term, let’s crack open the scrapbook and review his administration’s influence on business and the economy.
Trade: Trump vowed to bring American jobs back from overseas by renegotiating free trade agreements. He immediately ditched the Trans-Pacific Partnership and, in 2018, launched an 18-month trade war with China that frustrated many American multinational companies. Hundreds of billions in tariffs later, the US trade deficit with China hit a 14-year high last August.
Trump successfully replaced NAFTA, a North American trade deal he’s called “the worst trade deal ever made,” with USMCA, an updated agreement for a modern, digital economy.
Markets: Supported by a red-hot economy, strong corporate earnings, and expansionary policy from the Fed, the US stock market soared over the last four years (the S&P is up about 67%). Not all sectors performed equally—tech shares have surged while energy stocks lost value.
Taxes: Trump and the GOP overhauled the US tax code with the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. This law significantly reduced the corporate income tax rate from 35% to 21% and lowered the rates on most individual income tax brackets.
Jobs: In February 2020, the US unemployment rate hit a 50-year low of 3.5%, which reflected a searingly hot job market during the first three years of Trump’s presidency. But the coronavirus crisis changed all that. In March and April of last year, the US lost more than 22 million jobs—and Trump will become the first president since Herbert Hoover (1929–1933) to leave the White House with fewer jobs than when he moved in.
Big picture
Because of his erratic approach to policymaking and his embrace of far-right extremists, President Trump’s once-cozy relationship with Corporate America deteriorated over his term. Any remaining goodwill was extinguished with the storming of the Capitol on January 6, after which social media companies banned Trump’s accounts and the National Association of Manufacturers pushed for his removal via the 25th Amendment.
Someone get Janet Yellen a permanent nameplate for the Senate Finance Committee. Yesterday, the former Fed chair had her fifthconfirmation hearing, this time for the US’ top fiscal policy job: Treasury secretary.
Yellen wants to “act big,” which means more…
Stimulus. She forcefully defended Biden’s proposed $1.9 trillion aid bill. She argued that failure to support workers and businesses risks “a longer, more painful recession now and longer-term scarring of the economy.”
Climate action. Yellen will establish a Treasury team to examine climate change’s threat to financial systems.
Corporate taxes: Eventually, Biden and Yellen want to raise the corporate rate to 28%. Yellen also called for coordination with the OECD (a group of wealthy nations) to set a minimum corporate rate to stop the “destructive, global race to the bottom.”
Yellenis also willing to consider reissuing 50-year Treasury bonds. She dismissed weakening the US dollar. And she said she’d use the Treasury’s arsenal to address China’s “abusive, unfair, and illegal practices.”
Looking ahead…Yellen is expected to receive quick confirmation, potentially this week.
The high-tide of funding for electric automakers isn’t going out just yet. Two big deals from yesterday:
GM’s autonomous division, Cruise, announced a meet-the-parents-level relationship with Microsoft, which—together with GM, Honda, and other investors—poured $2 billion into Cruise, bumping its valuation to $30 billion.
Electric auto startup Rivian is valued at $27+ billion after a $2.7 billion round from T. Rowe Price, Fidelity, and Amazon’s Climate Pledge Fund. Rivian will launch its first pickup and SUV this summer.
Picking up on some themes?
It’s getting harder to write about the auto industry without mentioning Big Tech. Amazon was already a Rivian investor, Alphabet’s Waymo subsidiary has begun self-driving commercial service in AZ, and Apple is working on an “Apple car” with Hyundai.
Hefty valuations for companies like Cruise that don’t even have customers yet highlight how bullish investors are about the next era of transportation.
For comparison: Ford’s market cap is ~$40 billion. Honda and Stellantis (aka the recently merged Fiat Chrysler + PSA Group) are worth almost $50 billion.
Bottom line: Tesla’s competition is getting big-money backup.
Want to know more? Subscribe to Emerging Tech Brew, which will go deeper into these investments in today’s edition.
Typeform’s quizzes take care of every touchpoint, from lead generation to product recommendations to (if you’re us) weekly news recaps.
So if you’re looking for some Q&As that can E&I (engage and intrigue) use Typeform to keep customers involved from the bottom of the funnel to the top.
Yesterday, Office Depot’s parent company ODP turned down an acquisition offer from rival Staples for more than $2 billion, a 60%+ premium over ODP’s average closing price in the 90 days leading up to the offer.
The backstory: stretches back to before “bitcoin” or “solo artist Beyoncé” meant anything. Staples first tried to buy its office supply competitor in 1997, then again five years ago, when it was blocked by a federal judge who cited concerns about limiting competition.
The nowstory: ODP Chairman Joseph Vassalluzzo said similar competition concerns that might invite regulatory attention made a tie-up untenable. He left the door open more than a crack, though, adding that he’d be open to 1) a partial sale of ODP’s retail and consumer-facing e-comm operations or 2) a joint venture with its retail segment.
Staples argued that, given recent shifts in the retail sector that rhyme with Bamazon, competition isn’t an issue anymore.
Looking ahead…Staples said that if it can’t reach an agreement, it’ll call up ODP shareholders to buy stock directly from them.
Yesterday, the London Metals Exchange (LME) kicked off a consultation on potentially closing its famous “Ring,” Europe’s last bastion of “open-outcry” trading. Yes, that’s exactly what it sounds like—in the Ring, traders swap metals via hand signals and yelling. The NYSE and Chicago’s Mercantile Exchange are among the remaining few that practice it.
Like most buildings in Europe, the Ring is even older than you’d anticipate at 144 years of age.
Whatever the British equivalent of “fratty” is, that’s the Ring’s rep. In 2019, the LME had to institute a no-day-drinking rule and crack down on meetings at strip clubs and casinos.
Zoom out: The LME plays a key role in the commodities market, and its prices are viewed as important benchmarks for metals.
But last March, lockdowns forced the four words you’re tired of reading—a shift to digital. And LME leadership thinks it’s gone well enough to consider scrapping the famous Ring altogether.
Looking ahead…the LME hopes to make a final decision in April.
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Netflix passed 200 million global subscribers last quarter and said it doesn’t need external financing to fund its operations. Its stock shot up 13% after hours.
Goldman Sachs’s investment banking and stock trading units powered the Wall Street firm to its highest quarterly profits in more than 10 years.
Mike Lindell, the CEO of MyPillow, said retailers including Kohl’s had stopped carrying the brand. Kohl’s cited flagging sales, not Lindell’s pushing of election-related misinformation, for dropping MyPillow products.
The US State Department officially declared the Chinese repression of Uighur Muslims in the Xinjiang region as “genocide.” The US recently imposed a ban on Xinjiang-made cotton and tomato products.
We’re banking on 2021. You’re probably finalizing your resolutions for the new year, and if you’ve got investing on your list, Fundrise can help. They bring diversification to just about any portfolio with real estate assets that are uncorrelated to the stock market. Right now, you can invest with Fundrise for as little as $500. Make this the year you diversify your portfolio. Get started with Fundrise.
(Here’s all the legal jargon we know you love reading.)
Overlooked, overhyped: Which 2020 trends (TikTok) did we not see coming? Which ones got more hype than they deserved? With help from top experts, we made a juicy list for both the retail and marketing industries.
The inaugural address is a time-honored tradition of a president trying to land a quote in a future history textbook as hundreds of thousands of Americans freeze their butts off on the National Mall.
Can you identify which presidents said the following famous lines in their inaugural addresses?
“We have called by different names brethren of the same principle. We are all Republicans, we are all Federalists.”
“Today we can declare: Government is not the problem, and government is not the solution. We—the American people—we are the solution.”
“Starting today, we must pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off, and begin again the work of remaking America.”
“Old truths have been relearned; untruths have been unlearned. We have always known that heedless self-interest was bad morals; we know now that it is bad economics.”
“With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation’s wounds…”
ANSWER
1. Thomas Jefferson
2. Ronald Reagan
3. Barack Obama
4. FDR
5. Abraham Lincoln
Trump’s nearly 20-minute speech, which was taped Monday, framed his departure from the White House as the natural conclusion of a job well done, rather than as the consequence of his election loss to Biden. “This week, we inaugurate a new administration and pray for its success in keeping America safe and prosperous. We extend our best wishes, and we also want them to have luck — a very important word,” Trump said.
…
“All Americans were horrified by the assault on our Capitol. Political violence is an attack on everything we cherish as Americans. It can never be tolerated,” Trump said in the speech. He has denied any responsibility for the invasion. But earlier Tuesday, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said that the mob was “provoked by the president and other powerful people.”
…
“Now, as I prepare to hand power over to a new administration at noon on Wednesday, I want you to know that the movement we started is only just beginning,” [Trump] said. But it’s unclear whether that movement will include Trump — at least as a candidate for elected office. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., vowed earlier Tuesday that if Trump is convicted after his impeachment trial “there will be a vote on barring him from running again.”
[President-elect Biden’s Department of Homeland Security secretary nominee Alejandro Mayorkas] appeared for his Senate confirmation hearing one day after reports surfaced that Biden intends to propose an eight-year path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants shortly after taking office Wednesday, signaling an immediate focus on a topic that has both consumed and paralyzed Congress for decades.
…
Republican lawmakers pressed Mayorkas on whether the Biden administration would spend $1.4 billion that Congress appropriated late last year to continue border wall construction, one of President Donald Trump’s top priorities that has been fiercely opposed by Democrats, including President-elect Joe Biden. Mayorkas said he would examine whether existing funds must be spent and underscored Biden’s opposition to further wall appropriations.
…
The hearing lasted more than two hours and featured repeated questions about Mayorkas’ role in the granting of U.S. visas to wealthy foreign investors when he served as director of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) during the former Obama administration. A 2015 DHS inspector general’s report concluded that Mayorkas intervened in the EB-5 investor program at the behest of some powerful Democrats in a way that “created an appearance of favoritism and special access.” Mayorkas noted that the report found no legal wrongdoing.
Officials said the determination of crimes against humanity was obvious, due to extensive public evidence showing the Chinese Communist Party has subjected Uighurs and other ethnic minorities in Xinjiang province to many atrocities. They include the arbitrary imprisonment of more than 1 million innocent civilians, forced sterilization, torture, forced labor and severe restrictions on freedom of religion, freedom of expression and freedom of movement.
…
The Chinese government also tipped its own hand when its embassy in the United States tweeted this month in defense of these very policies. The embassy was promoting a “study” published in its own propaganda outlets claiming that anti-extremism policies had “emancipated” the minds of Uighur women, promoted gender equality and reproductive health, “making them no longer baby-making machines.”
…
Internally, there was debate among the State Department’s lawyers over whether to add the additional determination of genocide. There’s no legal requirement for the new administration to do anything. The Biden administration would be hard-pressed not to call China’s atrocities a “genocide,” after doing so explicitly during the campaign.
Riots erupted after the Tunisian government imposed a nationwide lockdown on Thursday — the same day as it marked the 10th anniversary of dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali’s fall from power during the Arab Spring — to curb a surge in coronavirus infections. Interior ministry spokesman Khaled Hayouni said a total of 632 people were arrested, including “groups of people between the ages of 15, 20 and 25 who burned tires and bins in order to block movements by the security forces.”
…
The unrest comes at a time many Tunisians are already increasingly dissatisfied with the lack of change since the Arab Spring broke out at the end of 2010. The country is suffering from a weakening economy, with one third of young people unemployed. GDP contracted by nine percent in 2019 and consumer prices have skyrocketed. Citizens are also frustrated over poor public services.
…
The pandemic has exacerbated economic woes, decimating Tunisia’s tourism industry — also already crippled after a string of fatal jihadist attacks in 2015. Tunisia has recorded over 177,000 coronavirus infections with over 5,600 deaths since the pandemic erupted last year.
The commission’s report charges, in terms quickly derided by many mainstream historians, that Americans are being indoctrinated with a false critique of the nation’s founding and identity, including the role of slavery in its history. American universities, the report contends, “are often today hotbeds of anti-Americanism, libel, and censorship that combine to generate in students and in the broader culture at the very least disdain and at worst outright hatred for this country.”
…
The report drew intense criticism from historians, some of whom noted that the commission, while stocked with conservative educators, did not include a single professional historian of the United States. Some of the strongest criticism was for the report’s treatment of slavery, which the report suggests was an unfortunate reality throughout the world that was swept away in America by the forces unleashed by the American Revolution.
…
While billed by the White House as “definitive,” the report included no scholarly footnotes or citations, nor was it clear who its primary authors were. The commission and its report are in part a rebuke to The New York Times Magazine’s 1619 Project, which reframes American history around the consequences of slavery and the contributions of Black Americans.
As the Senate argues over the upcoming legislative agenda, Mitch McConnell took the opportunity to lambast President Trump, saying, “The mob was fed lies. They were provoked by the president and other powerful people.” This happened on the same day that court documents were unsealed, suggesting that a self-styled militia had made plans in advance to attack the Capitol. If plans were made in advance, then the president could not have “provoked” them.
For the last week, the activist media has debated whether Trump can legally pardon himself and his family in advance. Rather than asking if he would, the media hacks assumed it would be so and then set about trying to tear down his reasoning and the legality. Trump did not issue a “pre-emptive pardon,” nor did he need to. All this speculation was made without pointing to a single criminal act by a member of the first family.
Joe Biden will become the 46th president of the United States today amid little fanfare. Washington, D.C. will not be filled with inauguration parties, but rather National Guard troops and fences.
Liberty Nation is on the scene in Washington, D.C., ready to bring you live commentary and coverage. Check out our updates right here.
President Trump has granted clemency to 143 people in a late-night pardoning session. Included were his former campaign chief Steve Bannon and Elliott Broidy, a GOP megadonor.
In President Trump’s farewell address to the nation, he talked of his accomplishments, his worries about censorship and free speech, and insisted that the movement he helped create four years ago was only just beginning.
Something political to ponder as you enjoy your morning coffee.
Of the more than 20,000 National Guard troops due to be on duty in Washington, D.C. today, 12 have been removed from duty. After a screening process carried out by the Defense Department and the FBI, they were stood down for what is believed to be ties to possible extremism. With Democrats and the media pushing to classify any Trump supporter as a potential extremist, one wonders how long it will be before a disavowal becomes standard practice.
This email was sent to rickbulownewmedia@protonmail.com Why did I get this? Unsubscribe from this list. Update subscription preferences.
LibertyNation.com is a project of One Generation Away · 1629 K Street NW · Washington, DC 20006 · USA
8.) FOX NEWS
Having trouble viewing? View in Browser
Wednesday, January 20, 2021
Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …
Biden, Harris to be sworn in amid high security, coronavirus concerns
President-Elect Joe Biden and Vice President-Elect Kamala Harris are scheduled to be sworn in Wednesday in an extremely pared-down inaugural event, amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic and intensified concerns about security.
The inaugural committee was “strongly encouraging” people not to attend the event in person – and to instead tune in to the virtual livestream.
In addition, viewing stands will not be made available, while dinners and balls have also been canceled.
Official tickets to inauguration events are typically distributed by congressional offices, free of charge. During a typical year, members usually receive about 200,000 to give out to constituents, as reported by USA Today. The publication said this year members were limited to tickets for themselves and one guest, which means no tickets will be available for constituencies.
Overall, The Washington Post estimated that around 2,000 people will attend the event, including 200 “VIPs” – or families of the president-elect and vice president-elect, congressional leadership and several diplomats. CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.
In other developments:
– Biden inauguration: Everything you need to know
– Biden to sign 17 executive actions, orders to reverse Trump policies, restore Obama-era programs on first day
– Some schools won’t show inauguration in classrooms over concerns of potential violence
– How to watch Joe Biden and Kamala Harris’ inauguration
– Dem Rep. Cohen’s smearing of National Guard was ‘pretty outrageous’: Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp
– ‘No tolerance’ for Inauguration Day violence: acting attorney general
– National Guardsmen removed from U.S. Capitol ahead of inauguration
Trump pardons Steve Bannon, Lil Wayne, dozens of others; also commutes sentences
President Trump issued a long list of pardons and sentence commutations early Wednesday as he prepared to leave office.
The recipients including former White House adviser Steve Bannon and rappers Lil Wayne and Kodak Black — with a total of 73 people pardoned by the president.
Former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick had his 30-year sentence was commuted — one of 70 people to receive commutations just hours before President-elect Joe Biden takes the oath of office.
Trump was not expected to attempt to issue himself or family members a preemptive pardon, sources told Fox News. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Alice Marie Johnson calls for Trump to pardon nonviolent drug offenders, praises ‘unsung hero’ Ivanka
– Karl Rove on pardons: ‘Presidents should be very careful of exercising unlimited power’
– Pamela Anderson pleads with Trump to pardon ‘free speech hero’ Assange: ‘Do the right thing’
Pelosi brushes off concerns that her laptop may have been stolen
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said this week that she wasn’t worried about the contents of a laptop that was reportedly stolen from her office when rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.
“I’m not concerned about that particular laptop,” Pelosi told MSNBC reporter Joy Reid in an interview that aired Tuesday. “But that doesn’t matter. It could be any laptop and anytime … a constituent writes to a member of Congress it’s confidential … and for them to take that is a violation not only of my office but of my connection to my constituents.”
A Pennsylvania woman, Riley June Williams, 22, has been arrested for allegedly taking the speaker’s laptop, which she allegedly planned to sell to Russian intelligence.
Pelosi said that laptop was used mainly for Zoom meetings, but she wasn’t sure “what other information could be on there.” CLICK HERE FOR MORE.
In other developments:
– Pelosi urges Pentagon to block ‘Trump loyalist’ from national security role before Biden’s inauguration
– Clinton, Pelosi blasted by left for continuing to push ‘Russiagate’: ‘They’re never going to give up’
– Man accused of hanging from Senate balcony appears in court
– Capitol photos, videos lead to California doctor’s arrest
TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– VP Mike Pence expected to skip Trump send-off to Florida – Loeffler rips cancel culture and ‘dangerous narratives’ in farewell address
– MSNBC contributor compares Biden to God, suggests Trump voters should be blamed for COVID deaths
– California boy, 12, missing after being swept into the Pacific Ocean, search suspended: report
– Mega Millions numbers drawn for massive $865M jackpot
THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Trump pardons former Google engineer Anthony Levandowski
– Alibaba’s Jack Ma makes first live appearance in three months in online meet
– Over $5B in US small business relief loans approved in first week – SBA
– Feds reject Ford and Mazda request on recalls
– Customs seizes $8 million in counterfeit Cartier bracelets, rings
– Netflix subscribers cross 200M as viewers escape world’s woes
#The Flashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
“The Democrats are being very sore winners,” Cotton told Carlson. “The Democrats have narrow majorities in the Congress, yet they seem so angry and aggressive towards the 74 million people who voted for [President Trump]. … They know their agenda is massively unpopular. The American people don’t want to open our borders or defund our police and they know politics and government is the one place where those 74 million people have something like an equal voice.”
Not signed up yet for Fox News First? Click here to find out what you’re missing.
Fox News’ Go Watch page is now available, providing visitors with Pay TV provider options in their area carrying Fox News Channel & Fox Business Network.
Fox News First was compiled by Fox News’ Jack Durschlag. Thank you for making us your first choice in the morning! We’ll see you in your inbox first thing Thursday.
Joe Biden’s team faces a great challenge. To improve the government’s performance in its fight against the virus and draw lessons from the past year, they will need to aggressively take on the deeply rooted failures of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Joe Biden’s belief that Washington should directly help domestic manufacturing — through targeted spending plans, special tax subsidies, and trade policy — is popular among lawmakers. But the history of such efforts gives ample reason for skepticism.
Naomi Schaefer Riley et al. | American Enterprise Institute
COVID-19 and subsequent government responses introduced new barriers to detecting and responding to child maltreatment and achieving permanency for children in foster care.
Both sides agree that China’s actions amount to genocide and call for a strong response:
Secretary of State Michael Pompeo writes, “The facts are chilling. Since 2017, the Communist Party has forced more than a million people into internment camps in the Xinjiang region, on the pretext that they need ‘re-education.’ Arbitrary and indefinite detentions lasting months or years at a time are common inside this modern gulag. Survivors tell of torture, sexual abuse including rape, forced labor, the use of electric shock to extract false confessions, and unexplained deaths…
“Of particular repugnance… is the Communist Party’s efforts to stop Uighur women from giving birth via forced abortion and sterilization. Involuntary contraception measures, such as forced insertions of intrauterine devices, are also deployed. ‘They want to destroy us as a people,’ said one such victim. The party has coerced Uighur women to marry non-Uighur men, and separated Uighur children from their families. Birthrates in Xinjiang dropped roughly 24% from 2018 to 2019, compared with a 4.2% decline across China overall. Not every campaign of genocide involves gas chambers or firing squads.” Michael R. Pompeo, Wall Street Journal
“There’s no legal requirement for the new administration to do anything. But the Biden team will have a moral responsibility and a national security imperative to act. Ignoring a genocide would only lead to expanded repression, which will lead to more instability and more extremism by the victims. The Biden team should impose more sanctions on the perpetrators and initiate more international diplomacy to bring others on board…
“That will surely anger the Chinese Communist Party and further complicate efforts to have smooth relations, but Beijing is always angry and relations are going to be complicated anyway. The Biden administration won’t be able to ignore the ongoing genocide in China — so it might as well do the right thing and try to stop it.” Josh Rogin, Washington Post
“The Trump administration took several important steps that preceded the issuance of the determination, including the sanctioning of Chen Quanguo and other Chinese Communist Party leaders and entities responsible for carrying out these human rights violations. The administration has also prioritized stopping goods produced with forced labor in Xinjiang from entering the U.S. market. Last week, U.S. Customs and Border Protection expanded its withhold release orders to all cotton and tomatoes produced in Xinjiang, effectively banning them from U.S. markets…
“Next steps can and should include extending priority-2 refugee status to Uighurs, continuing to combat and upping the ante on efforts to combat forced labor, and identifying additional individuals and entities in the Chinese Communist Party ripe for sanctioning. Today’s atrocity determination should not be seen as an apex of policy achievements, but rather as a call to action for other countries to join the U.S. in responding to a crisis that will go down in history as among the worst.” Olivia Enos, Daily Signal
“State surveillance in Xinjiang is so pervasive that witnesses are unlikely to tell the truth even when they haven’t been actively intimidated out of speaking. Forced labor is deeply integrated in the local economy, and sometimes mixed with unforced labor. This is convenient for U.S. manufacturers who can boast of audits coming out clean — even as they’re aware that little produced in the region is actually untainted…
“The Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, which passed the House of Representatives 403 to 6 this fall and whose fate now lies with the Senate, would flip the burden of proof to line up with reality. Firms would have to demonstrate that their imports from Xinjiang are not made with forced labor…
“Companies whose products depend on inputs such as cotton, tomatoes and polysilicon, reportedly including Coca-Cola and Nike, are lobbying the Senate to dilute the measure: Providing proof of the absence of forced labor in a region riddled with it will prove costly in some cases and impossible in most others, they argue. These corporations may simply cease sourcing from Xinjiang altogether. But would that be such a bad thing? At best, the Chinese regime will feel the pain in time and alter its practices, especially if allied countries follow suit. At worst, this country’s companies won’t be complicit in crimes against humanity.” Editorial Board, Washington Post
Other opinions below.
From the Left
“Human rights activists and media outlets have been urging the international community to describe what’s happening in Xinjiang as ‘genocide’ for some time now…
“Still—it’s hard not to view Pompeo’s declaration with some cynicism. It’s true that the Trump administration has slapped harsh sanctions on Chinese officials and government entities for their involvement in abuses in Xinjiang in recent months and just last week banned imports of tomatoes and cotton from the region. But Trump has also been very open about the fact that he held off on such sanctions while he was negotiating a trade deal with China… And it’s not exactly a profile in courage for Pompeo to level this inflammatory charge at Beijing when he won’t have to deal with the fallout. This feels less like a principled stand than yet another last-minute effort to box Biden in.” Joshua Keating, Slate
“The fact that so many people seem to be turning a blind eye to what’s happening to the Uighurs, the fact that the Chinese government feels emboldened to crow about declining Uighur birth rates on social media, demonstrates the extent to which Muslims have been dehumanized by the ‘war on terror.’…
“The west must hold China to account for what is happening to the Uighurs but it must also hold itself accountable. After 9/11 you could infringe civil liberties with impunity in the name of combating extremism. Michael Bloomberg, for example, has never apologized for an unconstitutional mass surveillance program targeting Muslims after 9/11; indeed, he’s justified it. ‘Of course we’re supposed to do that,’ he said. Treat a huge group of people as if every single one of them is a potential terrorist? That’s what you’re supposed to do? Because that’s exactly what is happening in Xinjiang.” Arwa Mahdawi, The Guardian
“For all the talk by US politicians of promoting human rights and decoupling from China, they know that US companies profit from this race-to-the-bottom globalization and that separating the US economy from China’s will not happen anytime soon. From this perspective, the re-education camps implicate more than just the Chinese state… The ultimate agency, of course, lies with Chinese companies and institutions. But it is also impossible to understand why these problems are so endemic without looking at global economic dynamics.” A. Liu, The Nation
From the Right
“The barbaric conduct that Pompeo has now deemed crimes against humanity and genocide stems from the Communist Party’s desire to annihilate the Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims it has sought to supplant with Han Chinese settlers. As senior administration officials put it this afternoon, China’s actions aren’t at first blush the same as the mass killings at Srebrenica and in Rwanda. They are instead ‘a very patient evil,’ designed to erase the Uyghurs over time through methods both tried-and-true and experimental… [yesterday’s] decision is the world’s most significant step yet toward holding the CCP accountable for its actions.” Jimmy Quinn, National Review“Unfortunately, what China is doing to the Uighurs is just one example of how it approaches international trade. If Beijing is willing to turn its own people into slaves, we should have no delusions as to why it treats the rest of us so poorly. The evidence is clear. What China can make with slaves, it makes. What intellectual property China cannot access with legitimate contracts, it steals. What China cannot outcompete, it overwhelms with political pressure. When China is challenged on such actions, it feigns outrage…“We should not stand for China’s abuses at home and its arrogance abroad — especially when, as with the Uighurs, the consequence is destroyed lives, not simple economics. As it was right to end the domestic cotton slave trade in the 19th century, the U.S. is right to oppose the foreign slave trade in the 21st century. Let our democratic allies take example.” Editorial Board, Washington ExaminerFormer national security adviser H.R. McMaster writes, “[it is a misunderstanding to think] that the United States has eschewed international cooperation to counter CCP aggression in favor of an ‘America alone’ approach…“The [‘U.S. Strategic Framework for the Indo-Pacific’ from February 2018] cited alliances and partnerships as essential, with an emphasis on a ‘shared vision for a free and open Indo-Pacific.’ Cooperation has grown since 2017, as can be seen in the invigoration of ‘the Quad’ format (India, Japan, Australia and the United States), and growing law enforcement and intelligence cooperation against Chinese cyberwarfare and cyberespionage…
“The Chinese military in the past year has bludgeoned Indian soldiers to death along the Himalayan frontier, rammed and sunk a Vietnamese fishing boat in the South China Sea, and menaced Taiwan with its aircraft and naval vessels… The CCP is a threat to the free world: The choice for other nations is not between Washington and Beijing but between sovereignty and servitude.” H.R. McMaster, Washington Post
🇺🇸Good Wednesday morning, and welcome to Inauguration Day.
Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,357 words … 5 minutes.
📱Hit Axios.comall day for our constantly updated Speed Screen dashboard, with all the news and smarts you want while you watch.
1 big thing: 🔮 What to listen for in Biden’s address
Vice President-elect Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, and President-elect Biden and Dr. Jill Biden arrive in Washington yesterday. Photo: Tom Brenner/Reuters
Reflecting both the man and the times, President Joseph Robinette Biden Jr.’s inaugural address needs as much reality as poetry.
The president-elect will do both, sources tell me: Biden’s biography equips him not just to deliver a great speech, but also to start putting the public sector back in good working order.
That includes a federal mask mandate, vaccine mobilization and other practical steps that make up his 100-day plan to, as he put it in December, “change the course of the disease and change life in America for the better.”
A test for this unusual inaugural address is whether Biden can combine prose poetry with his “Here’s the deal” common touch.
The country wants both, his advisers believe — to be elevated as in presidencies of old, and to be reassured that Biden is grounded in the grim reality so many Americans are feeling, including his warning of the “dark winter” ahead.
Mike Barnicle writes in a Daily Beast column, “Why Joe Biden Will Be Our Most American President” (subscription):
“Joe Biden arrives now to tell America the truth.”
What’s next: After the festivities, Biden will take 15 “Day One Executive Actions,” getting a head start on reversing Trump policies.
President Trump on Jan. 28, 2017, with two aides he later pardoned — national security adviser Michael Flynn and strategist Steve Bannon. Photo: Drew Angerer/Getty Images
It was 12:50 a.m. on Inauguration Day when President Trump announced 143 pardons and commutations — including a pardon for Steve Bannon.
Seventeen minutes later, the White House released an executive order that said it all about his failure to “drain the Swamp,” as he’d promised in the ’16 campaign:
Trump revoked an executive order, signed eight days after he took office, that limits his appointees’ lobbying for five years after leaving the administration.
That’s a huge victory for Swamp creatures and — as Axios’ Alayna Treene points out — Trump’s final “screw you” to the criminal justice system that he thinks unfairly targeted him and his allies.
Among Trump’s final-hours pardons:
The Bannon pardon spared a longtime ally from a federal fraud prosecution over his alleged misappropriation of nonprofit funds for a privately financed border wall, Axios’ Lachlan Markay writes.
Elliott Broidy, former top Republican fundraiser who pleaded guilty to conspiring to violate foreign lobbying laws.
Photo illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios. Photos: Elijah Nouvelage, Alex Wong/Getty Images
Episode 7 of “Off the rails,” our fly-on-the-wall series by Jonathan Swan and Zachary Basu:
“The end is coming, Donald.” The male voice in the TV ad boomed through the White House residence during “Fox & Friends” commercial breaks.
Over and over and over. “The end is coming, Donald. … On Jan. 6, Mike Pence will put the nail in your political coffin.“
The Lincoln Project, the anti-Trump PAC dedicated to pissing off the president with viral commercials, was back in his head with their voodoo.
President Trump, furious, told his vice president to send the Lincoln Project gang a cease-and-desist letter. In reality, this would have only further delighted Trump’s tormentors and provided ammo for another ad.
Marc Short, Pence’s chief of staff, consulted officials on the Trump campaign.
Their advice: Just ignore it.
The idea for the ad had popped into Steve Schmidt’s head when he woke on the morning of Dec. 2. Schmidt was a former Republican strategist who had renounced the party and dedicated himself to its destruction after Trump’s ascent. Schmidt was also a co-founder of the Lincoln Project.
“There’s zero [effing] chance Trump knows what happens on Jan. 6,” Schmidt told ex-GOP strategist Rick Wilson and other Lincoln Project members on a team conference call later that morning.
By that afternoon, the Lincoln Project had finalized a 70-word script and shipped it to their lawyers. A cut of the commercial was ready early the next day, and by Dec. 10 the 38-second spot would hit the air. They made a cheap booking for Fox News shows running in the D.C. market.
Their target audience of one lived at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Trump called Pence late morning on Jan. 6 to take one last shot at bullying the vice president into objecting to the certification of Biden’s victory.
During the riot, Pence and family were evacuated from the Senate chamber and taken to a secure site, where the vice president remained for hours.
Trump, sequestered in his private dining room to watch the TV coverage, placed no calls to check on Pence’s safety.
After all the bullying, the abuse, the Twitter tirades, the calls to violence, Pence assessed his options. He’d stood with Trump — not complaining, not explaining — through four years.
On the eve of the transfer of power, Pence’s team made clear he’d not be able to attend Trump’s final sendoff at Joint Base Andrews, choosing instead to attend Biden’s swearing-in.
Many believe Pence intends to run for president in 2024. He’s likely to preserve his bridge to Trump beyond Jan. 20, at least long enough to understand whether it’s needed.
Go deeper: Read the full episode in the Axios stream.
🥇 It was the No. 1 podcast in the world yesterday, which PodBoard100 said is “the first time a debut episode has achieved this since Michelle Obama.”
Read the rest of the “Off the Rails” episodes here.
4. Pic du jour
Lights surround the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool during the Presidential Inaugural Committee’s memorial to the 400,000 American lives lost to COVID.
5. Right wing’s new conspiracy: “The silencing”
Via Fox News
A new right-wing conspiracy, sprouted by Fox News’ Tucker Carlson and Sean Hannity, is spreading fast on social media: Joe Biden and the federal government are systematically silencing half of America. And it will only get worse.
Why it matters … The new argument is simple and salient for pro-Trump Americans: federal troops are stationed in DC not for protection, but to scare and silence conservatives. At the same time, they are muzzling those same conservatives with corporate blacklisting and social media speech policing.
Zoom in: Hannity on Monday night accused Democrats of “a chilling, Orwellian effort … to silence, cancel, any opposition voices.”
Carlson said Democrats’ message is: “Do not question us. Men with guns enforce our decrees.”
The big picture: Look for this to be a unifying argument of the right as the Biden era begins.
🦊 Two Fox News executives involved in the controversial — but correct — Decision Desk call of Arizona for Joe Biden are out, AP reports:
Bill Sammon, managing editor at Fox’s Washington bureau, announced his retirement Monday. Politics editor Chris Stirewalt was let go yesterday as part of a restructuring of Fox’s digital operations.
Fox said in a statement to Axios: “As we conclude the 2020 election cycle, Fox News Digital has realigned its business and reporting structure to meet the demands of this new era.”
6. 🐦 1,462 days of President Trump
N.Y. Times Quotation of the Day, from a front-page, above-the-fold story, “It’s the Dawn of an Era. The Nation Is Exhausted” (subscription):
David Betras, former Democratic Party chairman in Mahoning County, Ohio, who likened the tweets and drama from the Trump White House to a car horn that won’t stop honking during dinner:
In the last four years, has there been a day when Trump wasn’t somewhere in your orbit? Every day, I couldn’t get him out. He was just everywhere. It was like an omnipresence.
7. Big Tech’s post-riot reckoning
Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photo: Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images
The Capitol insurrection means the anti-tech talk in Washington is more likely to lead to action, since it’s ever clearer that the attack was planned, at least in part, on social media, write Axios’ Margaret Harding McGill, Ashley Gold and Ina Fried.
Why it matters: The big platforms may have hoped they’d move to D.C.’s back burner, with the Hill focused on the Biden agenda and the out-of-control pandemic. But now, there’ll be no escaping harsh scrutiny.
8. Why domestic terrorists are so hard to police online
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
Domestic terrorism has proven to be more difficult for Big Tech companies to police online than foreign terrorism, largely because the debate is so politically charged, writes Axios’ Sara Fischer.
The big picture: There’s more unity around the need to go after foreign extremists than domestic ones — and less danger of overreaching into protected free speech and provoking a backlash.
One of the key differences between ISIS and today’s domestic extremists is that being part of ISIS, a group that designates its members, is effectively illegal, says Alex Stamos, director of the Stanford Internet Observatory and former Facebook Chief Security Officer.
Being a follower of a fringe-right group like QAnon or Proud Boys isn’t inherently illegal.
In his last full day in office, President Trump pardoned former adviser Stephen K. Bannon, GOP donor Elliott Broidy and a raft of well-connected celebrities, politicians and nonviolent drug offenders, but he did not preemptively pardon himself or his family members.
By Rosalind S. Helderman, Josh Dawsey and Beth Reinhard ● Read more »
Joe Biden will be sworn in as the 46th president on Wednesday in a closely guarded ceremony at the U.S. Capitol, cloaked by security and beamed out online.
President-elect Joe Biden’s nominee to be the nation’s spy chief acknowledged the U.S. stance toward China must “evolve” from her time during the Obama administration to “meet the reality” of an aggressive Chinese Communist Party.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell wants Democrats to preserve the legislative filibuster as part of a larger deal on organizing the new 50-50 Senate.
Over the past few years, Walmart has made significant investments in associates’ pay, benefits, training and career opportunities. Learn how Walmart is helping associates build their own roads to success.
President Trump revoked an executive order in the final hours of his administration that banned Executive Branch employees from lobbying the agency in which they served until five years after leaving government.
Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Stephen Hahn said he was “disgusted” by the violence on Jan. 6 on Capitol Hill and revealed that he even considered resigning from the agency.
Amid a pandemic that’s left many confined to their living quarters, 200 million streamers signed up for Netflix subscriptions, the company announced Tuesday. Netflix reached the number as 37 million new subscribers joined in 2020, according to the California-based streaming service’s earnings report.
Former Vice President Dan Quayle said he regrets President Trump’s decision not to attend President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration on Wednesday, making him the fourth president in history to snub a successor on his inauguration day.
President Trump ordered the declassification of Justice Department documents related to the FBI’s Crossfire Hurricane investigation into allegations of Trump-Russia collusion as one of his final acts in office.
President-elect Joe Biden sought to start soothing a nation that has suffered 400,000 coronavirus-related deaths during a sunset ceremony on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial just hours before he will be sworn in as President Trump’s successor.
The Society of Professional Journalists, the country’s oldest journalism organization, requested that the Biden administration loosen restrictions on federal employees and agencies that prohibit them from speaking directly to the press.
You received this email because you are subscribed to Examiner Today from The Washington Examiner.
Update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive.We respect your right to privacy – View our Policy
Unsubscribe
18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jan 20, 2021
View in Browser
AP MORNING WIRE
Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
Inauguration Day: Facing crush of crises, Biden takes helm as president.
US virus deaths top 400,000 under Trump’s watch as he leaves office.
Trump pardons ex-strategist Bannon, dozens of others in final flurry.
Vaccinations in Brazil’s Amazon; China has new cases, defends response.
AP-NORC poll: Virus, economy swamp other priorities for US.
TAMER FAKAHANY DEPUTY DIRECTOR – GLOBAL NEWS COORDINATION, LONDON
The Rundown
AP PHOTO/ALEX BRANDON
Facing a crush of crises, Joe Biden will take helm as president; US virus deaths surpass 400,000 under Trump’s watch; Analysis: For Biden, chance to turn crisis into opportunity
With much of America and the world watching, Joe Biden swears the oath of office at noon today to become the 46th president of the United States in one of its most troubled eras over nearly 245 years.
The very inaugural ceremony in which presidential power is transferred will be a jarring reminder of the challenges Biden faces. It will unfold at a U.S. Capitol battered by an insurrectionist siege just two weeks ago, encircled by security forces evocative of those where armed conflict is prevalent and devoid of crowds because of the pandemic.
Hours away from his inauguration, Biden paused on what might have been his triumphal entrance to Washington to mark instead the national coronavirus tragedy. At the Lincoln Memorial last night, he declared that “to heal, we must remember,” and he called the nation to mourn in collective grief for all the Americans lost, Bill Barrow and Amer Madhani report. Hours earlier, the nation reached the bleak milestone of 400,000 COVID-19 victims.
US Virus Deaths: The death toll from has surpassed 400,000 under Donald Trump’s watch, providing a grim coda to his presidency. The milestone comes almost exactly a year after health officials diagnosed the nation’s first case, and after months of efforts by Trump to downplay the threat and his administration’s responsibility to confront it. The number of dead is greater than the population of New Orleans, Cleveland or Tampa. By week’s end, the toll is likely to staggeringly surpass the number of Americans killed in World War II. Adam Geller and Janie Har report.
Analysis: Biden will be sworn in facing a historic collision of crises: the pandemic, economic uncertainty and deep political divisions that erupted in a violent insurrection.
Historians have put the challenges he faces on par with, or even beyond, what confronted Abraham Lincoln when he was inaugurated in 1861 to lead a nation splintering into civil war or Franklin Delano Roosevelt as he was sworn in during the depths of the Great Depression in 1933. But Lincoln and Roosevelt’s presidencies are also a blueprint for the the ways American leaders have turned crises into opportunities, pulling people past the partisan divisions or ideological forces that can halt progress, AP Washington Bureau Chief Julie Pace writes.
Day One Executive Orders: In his first hours as president, Biden will aim to strike at the heart of Trump’s policy legacy, signing a series of executive actions that reverse his predecessor’s orders on immigration, climate change and handling of the pandemic. You can follow all that coverage here.
Inauguration Security: The ceremony will take place in a Washington on edge, after the deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol unleashed a wave of fear and unmatched security concerns. And law enforcement officials are contending not only with the potential for outside threats but also with rising concerns about an insider attack by troops. There have been no specific threats made against Biden, but the nation’s capital is essentially on lockdown. More than 25,000 troops and police have been called to duty. The U.S. Secret Service is in charge of the event and says it is prepared, James LaPorta, Lolita C. Baldor and Michael Balsamo report.
Biden-Where He Stands: The president-elect is pledging a new path for the nation after Trump’s four years in office. That starts with confronting the pandemic and extends to sweeping plans on health care, education, immigration and more. It’s an unapologetically liberal program reflecting Biden’s argument that the federal government exists to help solve big problems. Persuading enough voters and Congress to go along will test another core Biden belief: that he can unify the country into a consensus, Bill Barrow reports.
Kamala Harris: Her inauguration as vice president will mark an expansion of what’s possible in American politics. When Harris takes the oath of office, she will be the first female vice president in the nation’s history, as well as the first Black woman and first person of South Asian descent to hold the role. She’s expected to deliver remarks late Wednesday at the Lincoln Memorial, a symbolic choice during a deeply divided period in U.S. history. She’ll be sworn in by Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. Kathleen Ronayne and Alexandra Jaffe report.
India Harris: A tiny, lush-green Indian village surrounded by rice paddy fields is beaming with joy hours before its descendant, Kamala Harris, takes her oath of office as U.S. vice president. People are jubilant in her maternal grandfather’s hometown, 215 miles from the southern coastal city of Chennai, Rishi Lekhi and Aijaz Rahi report.
AP PHOTO/DAVID PHILLIP
Trump’s exit: One-term divisive president leaves office with legacy of chaos; Trump pardons ex-strategist Steve Bannon, dozens of others in final flurry
The hallowed passing-of-the-torch traditions that have been the American touchstones of the peaceful democratic transition of power from one administration to the next will be absent in a few hours when President-elect Joe Biden takes the oath to become the crises-wracked nation’s 46th president.
Donald Trump, a one-term president fueled by baseless grievances over an election he decisively lost, is boycotting Biden’s inauguration.
His fury and falsehoods led to a second, and unprecedented, impeachment, for inciting the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol two weeks ago as states’ Electoral College votes were being tallied for the final certification of Biden’s victory.
After standing on stage at his own inauguration in 2017 and painting a dire picture of “American carnage,” Trump will depart the office twice impeached, with millions of people out of work and 400,000 others dead from the coronavirus.
He will be forever remembered for the final major act of his presidency: inciting an insurrection at the U.S. Capitol that left five dead, including a Capitol Police officer, and horrified the nation.
AP FACT CHECK: Trump’s farewell falsehoods. In his farewell remarks, Trump claimed credit for things he didn’t do and twisted his record on jobs, taxes, the pandemic and much more. Hope Yen, Christopher Rugaber and Calvin Woodward report.
Trump Pardons: He pardoned former chief strategist Steve Bannon as part of a late flurry of clemency action, including rap stars and former members of Congress. The pardons and commutations for 143 people, including Bannon, were announced after midnight in the final hours of Trump’s White House term.
Although other presidents have issued controversial pardons, perhaps none has so enjoyed using the authority to benefit not only friends and acquaintances but also celebrity defendants and those championed by allies. Critics say such decisions result in far more deserving applicants being passed over.
“Steve Bannon is getting a pardon from Trump after defrauding Trump’s own supporters into paying for a wall that Trump promised Mexico would pay for,” Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff said. “Thank God we have only 12 more hours of this den of thieves.”
Trump Impeachment: Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell explicitly blames Trump for the deadly riot at the Capitol, saying the mob was “fed lies” and the president and others “provoked” those intent on overturning Biden’s election. Ahead of Trump’s historic second impeachment trial, McConnell’s remarks were his most severe, public rebuke of Trump. The GOP leader set a tone as Republicans weigh whether to convict Trump on the impeachment charge that will soon be sent over from the House: “incitement of insurrection.” Lisa Mascaro and Mary Clare Jalonick report.
Oxygen-starved city in Brazil’s Amazon starts immunization; China records dozens of new virus cases, defends response
The oxygen-starved Amazonian city of Manaus in Brazil began administering vaccines, providing a ray of hope for the rainforest’s biggest city whose health system is collapsing amid an increase in virus infections and dwindling oxygen supplies.
Amazonas has recorded at least 232,000 infections since the start of the pandemic, according to official figures. The state is in the midst of a devastating resurgence of infections and lacks enough oxygen to keep struggling virus patients alive.
Hospitals in Manaus have admitted few new COVID-19 patients, causing many to suffer at home and some to die. And many doctors in Manaus have had to choose which COVID-19 patients can breathe while desperate family members searched for oxygen tanks for their loved ones.
Mexico Oxygen: Thefts of oxygen are mounting as the country posted a record one-day confirmed virus death toll of 1,584. Thefts of oxygen occurred in central and northern Mexico, while the Defense Department says four doses of vaccine were stolen at a public hospital in Cuernavaca, south of Mexico City, probably by a hospital employee. Mexico has received only about 750,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine, and people have been caught cutting lines to get doses reserved for front-line medical personnel.
China Infections: Beijing recorded another seven coronavirus cases amid a lingering outbreak in the country’s north. Dozens of other cases were reported in northern provinces and around Beijing. China is hoping to vaccinate 50 million people against the virus by mid-February and is also releasing schools early and telling citizens to stay put during the Lunar New Year travel rush that begins in the coming days.
Containing the relentless coronavirus outbreak and repairing the severe economic devastation it has wrought are the top priorities for Americans as Joe Biden prepares to take office.
Overall, 53% of Americans name COVID-19 as one of the top five issues they want the government to tackle this year, and 68% mention in some way the economy, which is still reeling.
In an open-ended question, those priorities far outpace others, like foreign affairs, immigration, climate change or racial inequality, Nicholas Riccardi and Hannah Fingerhut report. The findings suggest Biden’s political fate is riding on his administration’s response to pandemic.
Forty-three percent of Black Americans mention racism and racial inequality as a priority for 2021, compared with 22% of white Americans and 21% of Hispanics. Still, even that issue takes a backseat to COVID-19.
“There’s no point reforming police and racism if we’re all dead,” says one Black construction worker in Texas who lost his job last year after the virus stuck and has been making do with temporary work.
One Detroit college student captured a prevalent mood: “I just want to be through it,” he said . He had move back home when the pandemic shuttered his campus and lost his grandfather to the disease.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has spent much of his long career casting Israel’s Arab minority as a potential fifth column led by terrorist sympathizers. Now, he’s openly courting their support as he seeks reelection. Few Arabs are likely to heed his call. But the relative absence of incitement against the community in this campaign and the potential breakup of an Arab party alliance could dampen turnout. At the same time, given the complexities of Israel’s coalition system, a breakaway Arab party could gain outsized influence if it were willing to work with Netanyahu or other traditionally hostile leaders.
Migrant smugglers in the Western Sahara recently pulled out a boat that was buried in the Sahara sand. It was a made-to-order vessel built to carry migrants from the North African coast to Spain’s Canary Islands. That’s a journey the European Union calls “the most dangerous migratory route in the world.” The AP witnessed the recent boat handover, a crucial but little-seen piece of the migrant smuggling business. The smuggling business thrived last year as the pandemic plunged many Africans into poverty, causing migration to the Canary Islands to jump to its highest-ever rate.
Grocery stores, gas stations and other shops are reopening in a quake-hit Indonesian city where debris still covers the streets and searchers still dig in the rubble for more victims. Disaster officials say immediate food and water needs have been met and the local government has started to function again in the hardest-hit city of Mamuju and the neighboring district of Majene on Sulawesi island. But thousands are living in shelters or sleeping outdoors, fearing aftershocks. Security officers in a van with a loudspeaker urged people to observe COVID-19 health protocols as reopened markets attracted large crowds.
China’s highest-profile entrepreneur, e-commerce billionaire Jack Ma, has appeared in a video posted online, ending a 2 1/2-month disappearance from public view that prompted speculation about his status and his business empire’s future. In the 50-second video, Ma congratulated teachers supported by his charitable foundation and made no mention of his absence from public view and the scrutiny of his Alibaba Group and Ant Group by Chinese regulators. The normally voluble, press-friendly Ma was last seen in public after criticizing financial regulators in a speech in October.
Meanwhile, as Chicago loosens its COVID-19 restrictions, two major cultural institutions — Shedd Aquarium and the Field Museum — announced their reopening plans. Here’s what we know.
Chicago will join the rest of Illinois in advancing to the next phase of the state’s COVID-19 vaccination program on Monday, opening up inoculations for residents age 65 or older and front-line essential workers, including teachers, the city said Tuesday.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot, meanwhile, said she hopes indoor dining “soon” will be allowed at restaurants across Chicago after Gov. J.B. Pritzker eased other COVID-19 restrictions on the city.
Growing up in the Auburn Gresham neighborhood, William J. Walker longed to be a soldier like the ones he saw on “Combat!” a 1960s television drama about American troops fighting in France during World War II. But even in his wildest boyhood dreams, Walker — now a two-star general — acknowledges he could not have imagined his current reality.
As commander of the D.C. National Guard, the major general is overseeing more than 25,000 troops providing security for President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration in the wake of a domestic terrorist attack on the U.S. Capitol two weeks ago. It’s the largest military presence for a swearing-in ceremony in modern history, far surpassing the 9,500 Guard members mobilized for Barack Obama’s first inauguration in 2009.
Inauguration Day: The 46th president will take helm of a divided nation facing multiple crises. Watch live here.
Amid a slew of pardons in his final hours at the White House, President Donald Trump pardoned Casey Urlacher, a suburban mayor and the brother of Bears Hall of Fame linebacker Brian Urlacher.
The Chicago Teachers Union’s governing body is expected to convene Wednesday and could send a vote to members as soon as Thursday to strike or take other collective action as early as next week, several sources told the Tribune. With that looming threat, Chicago Public Schools CEO Janice Jackson said the district is “incredibly interested” in coming to a resolution and the parties are continuing to meet regularly.
The summer derecho that rattled windows and ripped down trees across Illinois andthe Midwest caused an estimated $11 billion in damage, becoming the costliest storm event to occur in less than 24 hours in at least four decades.
Nearly a year ago, Casey Urlacher found himself caught up with nine others in a sports gambling indictment that could have put him in federal prison.
That prison threat still looms over most of his co-defendants. But late Tuesday, President Donald Trump granted a full pardon to Urlacher, mayor of north suburban Mettawa and brother of Chicago Bears great Brian Urlacher. Lynn Sweet and Jon Seidel have the story…
Chicago joined the nation’s capital in remembering the victims of the COVID-19 pandemic. Some buildings across the city arranged their window lights to look like candles.
The mayor of north suburban Mettawa had been accused of tracking down gambling debts while helping run a multimillion-dollar illegal gambling operation.
The controversy over Vogue magazine’s February cover of Vice President-elect Kamala Harris in casual garb and Converse shoes seems a small thing. But it foreshadows a battle to be treated with the earned respect and dignity her office demands.
It includes the coverup of an elaborate scheme to certify several firefighters to operate sophisticated rigs at O’Hare and Midway airports. Records were falsified and a signature forged to hide the violation of federal safety protocols.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Wednesday! Inauguration Day! 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. 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, 397,600; Tuesday, 399,003; Wednesday, 401,730.
The U.S. death toll is about to exceed World War II fatalities. By comparison, the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic killed 675,000 Americans.
In a few hours, President-elect Joe Biden will ask Americans, Congress and U.S. allies to band together to end a pandemic, restore prosperity and protect the peace while conquering intolerance, inequality and bigotry. Joined by Vice President-elect Kamala Harris and a new administration, Biden will try to shift America’s ambitions beyond President Trump during one of the most strained transfers of power in history.
That eagerness to turn the page is not shared by millions of Trump supporters, but Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on Tuesday indicated he is more than ready to move away from the 45th president, whom he accused of provoking a mob to attack the Capitol on Jan. 6. Trump will be in Florida before lawmakers, Vice President Pence and three former presidents sit in the noon sunshine at the Capitol to listen as Biden recites a 35-word oath of office familiar since 1884.
The Hill’s editor-in-chief, Bob Cusack, writes that Biden, leaning on lengthy relationships with key Republicans on Capitol Hill, believes he can defy history to enact major legislation in his first year with bipartisan support. His recent predecessors in the Oval Office struggled to fulfill similar ambitions.
The 46th president will begin his term with a 50-50 Senate and the smallest House majority Democrats have experienced in nearly a century and a half (221-211). Just 65,009 votes in Arizona, Georgia, Wisconsin and Nebraska’s 2nd Congressional District made Biden the Electoral College winner, even with 81 million votes overall, or 51.3 percent of the total popular vote.
Biden arrived in Washington on Tuesday afternoon after a misty-eyed departure from Delaware, which he represented as a senator for 36 years (The Associated Press). In the evening, he presided over a somber inaugural event Tuesday (pictured below) at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool to honor the more than 400,000 Americans who have died after contracting COVID-19. Other iconic landmarks, cities and communities joined the event simultaneously (The Washington Post).
Meanwhile, Trump executed some of the final actions of his presidency on Tuesday and issued a farewell video message to Americans in which he touted his accomplishments and wished the incoming administration luck without mentioning Biden by name.
“We did what we came here to do and so much more,” Trump said in the 20-minute address, which was recorded Monday and released by the White House on Tuesday afternoon. “This week, we inaugurate a new administration and pray for its success in keeping America safe and prosperous. We extend our best wishes and we also want them to have luck — a very important word” (The Hill).
Trump also issued 143 pardons and commutations overnight, lashing out at the criminal justice system to benefit a collection of officials and business associates ensnared in corruption cases ahead of his own Senate impeachment trial.
The president had not pardoned himself or his family members as part of his wave of overnight mercy. He has until noon today to use the powers of his office (Reuters).
The Washington Post: Trump pardons former White House adviser Stephen Bannon, who was indicted for misusing money he helped raise for a group backing Trump’s border wall. He has pleaded not guilty.
The New York Times: Trump uses his power to grant clemency to supporters, including Bannon, and one of his top 2016 fundraisers, Elliott Broidy, who pleaded guilty to charges he violated lobbying laws. Both received full pardons. (The Times has a list of some of Trump’s clemency actions HERE.)
As The Hill’s Brett Samuels details, Trump and his administration also have issued a wave of executive orders and proclamations hours before he departs Washington. Among the ones the incoming administration will have a difficult time reversing: the State Department’s addition of Cuba to the State Sponsors of Terrorism list and designating the Houthis in Yemen as a terrorist group. Adding to the list, the Environmental Protection Agency issued a last-minute rule limiting the types of studies the agency can weigh when forming policies, while the Department of Labor released a rule that affects tip pooling for restaurant workers.
> Drain the Swamp?: Trump on Wednesday night also revoked a rule barring administration officials and staffers from lobbying for five years. The ban was part of an ethics pledge Trump put into effect from the outset of his administration, which also included a provision banning political appointees from officially registering as a foreign agent following their time in government (The Associated Press).
Niall Stanage: The Memo: Trump leaves changed nation in his wake.
Reuters: YouTube bans Trump for another week “in light of concerns about the ongoing potential for violence.”
NBC News: Facebook has no plans to lift Trump ban, sources say.
The Wall Street Journal: The “Patriot Party”? Trump has talked to associates recently about starting a new political party.
On the eve of his presidential departure, Trump continued to face criticism for his role in inciting the mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol two weeks ago. McConnell said in a floor speech on Tuesday that the rioters were “fed lies” about the push to overturn the election and that the fault lies at the feet of the president and other “powerful people,” marking the first time the Kentucky Republican has blamed Trump directly for what happened. Notably, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) presided over the Senate as McConnell spoke (The Hill).
The comments come as the upper chamber prepares for the looming second impeachment trial of Trump, which McConnell will play a central role in as questions swirl about whether the Senate will convict him and ultimately bar him from running for president again. As The Hill’s Jordain Carney reports, the GOP leader told at least one GOP senator that a vote on Trump’s conviction will be a matter of conscience, a potential sign that he won’t lean on Republican members to vote one way or another as he keeps his strategy close to the vest.
Across the aisle, Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) told reporters that the Senate has three priorities in the immediate future: nominations, COVID-19 and the trial, indicating that it will not be a drawn-out affair featuring witnesses and testimony like last year’s Senate trial (NBC News).
The Washington Post: Uncertainty reigns in Senate as Schumer pushes fast agenda and McConnell calls out Trump.
The Hill: More than half of House GOP commits to vote for resolution calling for Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) to step down from leadership.
NBC News: Georgia certifies victories for Democratic Sens.-elect Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock.
HuffPost: Sen. Gary Peters (D-Mich.) emerges as a key prospect to run Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.
> More Capitol siege repercussions: The 147 Republican lawmakers who opposed certification of the presidential election this month have lost the support of many of their largest corporate backers — but not all of them (The Washington Post).
> More Congress: McConnell accepted Biden’s invitation to attend church with the president-elect and other congressional leaders from both parties at St. Matthew’s Cathedral in Washington today before the swearing-in ceremony. Other attendees for the worship service will include House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and Schumer, who will become Senate majority leader today.
> Investigations: Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) said in a statement that he has been cleared of wrongdoing by the Justice Department after allegations of insider trading. The North Carolina Republican was accused of receiving information at a classified briefing on COVID-19 last January and using it to make a series of transactions to benefit him financially before the stock market tanked.
“Tonight, the Department of Justice informed me that it has concluded its review of my personal financial transactions conducted early last year,” Burr said. “The case is now closed. I’m glad to hear it” (The Hill).
NEW ADMINISTRATION: During a period in which the United States is recovering from a massive cyber-attack believed to be launched from Russia, is beseeched by other nations to show leadership during the pandemic, and is worried about numerous threats abroad and domestically, most of Biden’s Cabinet picks will not be in place for weeks. Why the delays? Trump’s refusal to concede the election, some Republican senators’ opposition to the certified Electoral College results, an attack on the Capitol and Trump’s second impeachment, to name a few.
Between 5 p.m. – 6 p.m. tonight, Biden is expected to sign executive orders and other documents and participate in a virtual swearing-in of appointees to his administration. At 9:55 p.m., the president and first lady Jill Biden will appear on the Blue Room balcony.
Marking a changing of the guard with the press corps, White House press secretary Jen Psaki will hold a briefing at 7 p.m.
> Treasury Department: Janet Yellen, Biden’s choice as Treasury secretary, said Tuesday that the incoming administration would focus on winning quick passage of its $1.9 trillion pandemic relief plan, rejecting Republican arguments that the measure is too big given the size of U.S. budget deficits. “More must be done,” Yellen told the Senate Finance Committee during her confirmation hearing. “Without further action, we risk a longer, more painful recession now — and long-term scarring of the economy later.” Democrats voiced support for the Biden proposal, while Republicans questioned spending nearly $2 trillion more on top of nearly $3 trillion that Congress passed in various packages last year (The Associated Press and The Hill). Soon-to-be Senate Finance Committee Chairman Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) said he hopes Yellen’s nomination can receive a floor vote on Thursday.
The New York Times Dealbook: CEOs, former officials make a case for a post-Trump “reset” and call for the business community to engage with policymakers “from the point-of-view of the public interest, not simply narrow business interests.”
> DHS: Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) on Tuesday placed a delaying hold on what Democrats had hoped would be the quick confirmation of Alejandro Mayorkas, Biden’s nominee to lead the Department of Homeland Security. The Senate will require days of floor time to overcome the maneuver Hawley made just hours after the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee wrapped up its questioning of the nominee. The Missouri senator, who is under fire for his effort to object to electoral tallies of Biden’s victories in Arizona and Pennsylvania, said he needs more information from Mayorkas about how he would enforce federal law and secure the southern border in light of Biden’s promise to halt Trump’s border wall construction and to overhaul Trump’s immigration policies (The Hill).
> ODNI: Avril Haines, Biden’s nominee to lead U.S. national intelligence, joined Mayorkas in warning of a need to secure the federal government against cyber threats following the recently discovered Russian hack of IT group SolarWinds, which compromised many key federal agencies and potentially thousands of businesses. Haines also told senators she would work with the FBI and Department of Homeland Security to produce a public report about extremist conspiracy group QAnon and any foreign influence behind its activities if confirmed (The Hill). Haines pledged to keep politics out of the job (The Hill) and said she would order the release of an unclassified report about the 2018 killing of Washington Post columnist and Saudi dissident Jamal Khashoggi if confirmed (The Hill).
> Defense Department: Retired Gen. Lloyd Austin, Biden’s nominee to lead the Pentagon, told senators on Tuesday that if confirmed he would “fight hard to stamp out sexual assault, to rid our ranks of racists and extremists, and to create a climate where everyone fit and willing has the opportunity to serve this country with dignity. The job of the Department of Defense is to keep America safe from our enemies. But we can’t do that if some of those enemies lie within our own ranks.” Military Times reported that Austin, who requires a waiver from Congress to lead the Pentagon because he has been out of uniform for only four years rather than the required seven, offered scant details about how he would root out racism, extremism and sexism in the armed forces.
> State Department: Antony Blinken, a longtime Biden aide, said if he is confirmed to be the nation’s top diplomat he wants to help restore American leadership on the world stage and work for the “greater good” (NPR). Blinken told senators during his confirmation hearing on Tuesday that it remains important to approach China — which “poses the most significant challenge of any nation state to the United States” — “from a position of strength, not weakness.” Trump was right in taking “a tougher approach to China,” he added, although he disagreed with the outgoing president’s approach. “But the basic principle was the right one.”
> Nominations: Biden selected RachelLevine, a pediatrician, professor and transgender official from Pennsylvania, to be deputy secretary at the Health and Human Services Department (The Hill).
The Hill’s Cristina Marcos outlines everything you need to know about today’s inaugural events, which will be carried live by ABC, CBS, CNN, NBC, MSNBC and PBS. The program will be streamed at https://BidenInaugural.org/watch; PIC social media channels, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and Twitch; and Amazon Prime Video, Microsoft Bing, NewsNOW from Fox and AT&T U-verse (Channel 212/1212 in SD/HD) and DIRECTV (Channel 201).
CBS News video: Sens. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) spoke with anchor Norah O’Donnell about security and precautions planned by the inaugural committee for today’s events and the rapid repairs made at the Capitol following the mob siege on Jan. 6. “I think the president should have been here and I’m disappointed,” Blunt said.
Today’s program includes:
✓ For young Americans, live stream special entertainment and presentations, 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
✓ Oath of office, inaugural address from the West Front of the Capitol, noon ET.
✓ Pass in review ceremony in which the new president reviews the readiness of military troops. Every branch of the military will be represented at the East Front of the Capitol.
✓ Arlington National Cemetery wreath laying at 2:25 p.m.: Biden and his wife, the first lady, and Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, will visit the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier to honor America’s war dead. They will be joined by former President Obama and Michelle Obama, former President George W. Bush and Laura Bush, and former President Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
✓ Presidential escort at 3:15 p.m.: The Bidens and Harris and Emhoff will walk one long block to the White House escorted by representatives of every branch of the military, including the U.S. Army Band, a Joint Service Honor Guard and the Commander-in-Chief’s Guard and Fife and Drum Corps.
✓ Parade Across America: The program features Americans coast to coast for pre recorded performances and tributes.
✓ “Celebrating America” will be a primetime TV special from 8:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. ET. It will include remarks by Biden and Harris. Tom Hanks hosts appearances by celebrities, entertainers and renowned musical artists. ( ♬ If music has the power to unite and heal, there’s plenty on tap today, according to Variety.)
👏👏 The inaugural program will celebrate a number of everyday Americans who have earned applause during the pandemic for doing their jobs and serving their communities, including Anthony Gaskin, a UPS driver from Chester County, Va., (heralded by residents on his route for his kindness and dedication, according to ABC News), and Mackenzie Adams, a kindergarten teacher from Washington state whose teaching prowess during the pandemic appeared on TikTok (Bellevue Reporter), went viral and landed her on NBC’s “Today Show.”
The New York Times: Biden, fit at 78, is bringing his posh Peloton bike to the White House. Believe it or not, cyber security is an issue. The camera and the microphone in the bike’s tablet should be removed, said Richard Ledgett, a former deputy director of the National Security Agency, who offered some other suggestions as a Peloton user himself.
****
SECURITY: Twelve members of the U.S. Army National Guard have been removed from the thousands-strong security team brought into Washington for the inauguration after they were found to have ties to right-wing militia groups or exhibited extremist views on social media.
Officials told The Associated Press that the dozen Guard members were removed due to “security liabilities.”
In total, 25,000 National Guard members have descended on the nation’s capital for today’s event — roughly two and a half times as many as have been on site for previous inaugurations, which have attracted hundreds of thousands of people.
The changes come as another individual involved in the Jan. 6 riot on the U.S. Capitol was arrested. Thomas Edward Caldwell of Virginia was arrested on Tuesday with the first federal charge of conspiracy against the United States, allegedly tied to the Jan. 6 Capitol attack. Caldwell is a leader of the extremist group Oath Keepers, which claims 35,000 members.
A charging affidavit says he helped organize a group of eight to 10 individuals, including self-styled Ohio militia members apprehended Sunday, who wore helmets and military-style gear and were seen moving purposefully toward the top of the Capitol steps and leading the move against police lines (The Washington Post).
The New York Times: ‘This kettle is set to boil’: New evidence points to riot conspiracy.
> Terrorism: In Georgia, U.S. Army soldier Cole Bridges of Ohio was also arrested and faces terrorism charges on Tuesday for supporting plans to blow up the 9/11 Memorial in New York City and other high-profile U.S. locales. Nicholas Biase, a spokesperson for Manhattan federal prosecutors, told The Associated Press that Bridges was in custody on charges of attempted material support of a terrorist organization, the Islamic State.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CORONAVIRUS: Stephen Hahn, the head of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) revealed that he considered resigning and was “disgusted” after rioters overtook the Capitol on Jan. 6 but held off due to the ongoing pandemic.
Hahn told Bloomberg News in an interview published Tuesday that he thought about “making a statement with a resignation” but ultimately decided against it. A number of other top administration officials, including Cabinet members, resigned due to what took place and the president’s lack of reaction.
“Now, with respect to January 6 — I was horrified and I was disgusted by what happened. We live in a democracy. There is no place for what we saw and those who are responsible for the actions that took place on the physical grounds of the Capitol should be held accountable,” Hahn said.
Hahn’s comments come amid grim times for the nation on the COVID-19 front, headlined by the more than 400,000 deaths attributed to the virus. However, there are positive indicators that the spread could be dropping following the holiday travel season. On Monday and Tuesday, the U.S. posted the two lowest daily COVID-19 case totals since late November (151,000 and 149,000, respectively), with vaccine distribution and use starting to pick up. According to The Washington Post, more than 14.2 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine have been administered, while more than 1.7 million people have received both doses.
On Capitol Hill, at least 19 Capitol Police officers have tested positive for COVID-19 dating back to Jan. 8 and in the aftermath of the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol (Roll Call).
> States: Doses of COVID-19 vaccines will run out by Friday in New York City, forcing cancellations of appointments already scheduled by eligible front-line workers and residents 65 and older, Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) said on Tuesday. He and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) are both complaining about what they see as slow federal distribution of COVID-19 vaccine doses. The governor said on Monday he was seeking to learn whether New York could buy doses directly from manufacturer Pfizer (NewYork1). … Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) on Tuesday proposed a $5.6 billion plan to combat and recover from the coronavirus pandemic, including the use of billions in federal relief and $575 million in surplus state funds. A major facet of the governor’s proposal would allocate $2 billion — $300 million of state dollars — to help K-12 schools offer the option of in-person instruction by March 1 and to address pandemic-related learning loss (The Associated Press).
> Masks: U.S. airlines have banned 2,000 passengers from traveling because of their refusal to wear masks (CNBC).
OPINION
Joe Biden may have only two years to get things done. Democrats must kill the filibuster and make the Senate great again, by Adam Jentleson, opinion contributor, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/3sFRnx6
COVID-19 control will make or break Biden, by William A. Galston, columnist, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/3p3VW1W
Trump turned Republicans into losers, by Ramesh Ponnuru, columnist, Bloomberg Opinion. https://bloom.bg/3qz4lL7
WHERE AND WHEN
The House and the Senate will focus today on the inauguration of the 46th president. Leaders from both chambers and both parties will attend a morning worship service at St. Matthews Cathedral in Washington at Biden’s invitation before the swearing-in ceremonies at the Capitol.
The president and first lady Melania Trump will depart the White House at 8 a.m. to begin their post-White House lives in Florida, landing in West Palm Beach at 11 a.m. At Joint Base Andrews in Maryland ahead of his final flight aboard Air Force One, Trump will be feted by outgoing staff and admirers.
Vice President Pence and second lady Karen Pence will attend Biden’s inauguration at noon.
➔ CLIMATE REGULATION: A federal court on Tuesday struck down the Trump administration’s scaled-down replacement of the Obama administration’s signature climate change regulation for power plants, a final blow to its environmental deregulatory agenda on Trump’s last day in office. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit decided unanimously to toss the Environmental Protection Agency’s Affordable Clean Energy rule, which constrained how carbon emissions from power plants are regulated, and remanded it to the agency, which will prioritize climate change under the incoming Biden administration (Reuters).
➔ INTERNATIONAL: Calls are growing for Biden to reverse the eleventh hour decision by the Trump administration to label Yemen’s Iranian-backed Houthis a terrorist organization, with Republican and Democratic lawmakers, experts and aid groups warning of mass starvation on top of the already deadly humanitarian crisis. The designation took effect on Tuesday, but the calls for opposition say a quick reversal by Biden could avert a mass crisis (The Hill).
THE CLOSER
And finally … A first! Sarah Thomas was named on Tuesday to the Super Bowl LV officiating crew, becoming the first woman in NFL history to officiate a Super Bowl. Thomas will serve as the down judge during the Feb. 7 championship, with Carl Cheffers as the crew’s referee. In 2015, Thomas became the first full-time female official in league history (ESPN).
The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!
TO VIEW PAST EDITIONS OF THE HILL’S MORNING REPORT CLICK HERE
TO RECEIVE THE HILL’S MORNING REPORT IN YOUR INBOX SIGN UP HERE
Joe Biden will be sworn in as president Wednesday, with significant changes to the ceremonies and celebrations due to two separate threats: COVID-19 and homegrown insurrectionists convinced that outgoing President Donald Trump should remain in power despite his election loss. Read More…
President-elect Joe Biden’s first day agenda has a pretty clear subtext: We’ve got this. The incoming administration released a fact sheet hours ahead of Wednesday’s inauguration ceremony detailing immediate steps that it will take to tackle the coronavirus pandemic and other “converging crises” facing the country. Read More…
After he is sworn in, President-elect Joe Biden will set the U.S. on track to rejoin the 2015 Paris climate accords and revoke the permit for the Keystone XL Pipeline, early steps in the process of restoring environmental protections rolled back by the Trump administration. Read More…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
U.S. Capitol Police officers are continuing to contract COVID-19, and rank-and-file officers are frustrated they have not been briefed on when they can get vaccinated. Nineteen officers have tested positive since Jan. 8, the most recent accounting since a violent mob invaded the Capitol, according to a House aide. Read More…
Advocates for District of Columbia statehood have worked through a lot this month, from the emotional whiplash of Jan. 6 to the surreal experience of seeing much of political Washington fenced off from the rest of the city ahead of the inauguration. More than anything, though, they feel a sense of urgency. Read More…
The need for better communication and consultation between Foggy Bottom and Capitol Hill was the theme of the day on Tuesday as President-elect Joe Biden’s nominee to lead the State Department, Antony Blinken, pledged to seek input from lawmakers on U.S. foreign policy. Read More…
Retired Gen. Lloyd Austin, President-elect Joe Biden’s pick for Defense secretary, told senators Tuesday that the most immediate challenges facing the military are the coronavirus pandemic, extremism and maintaining civilian control of the department. Read More…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2021 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
1201 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Suite 600
Washington, DC 20004
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: The day Biden’s campaign promises meet reality
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
JOSEPH R. BIDEN started his first campaign for the White House on June 9, 1987 — 12,279 days ago.
At noon today he’ll be sworn in as America’s 46th president in front of the smallest crowd in modern presidential history. Between those two poles lies a great deal of grief and loss, 36 years as a senator, two more presidential runs and eight years as the right hand to the first Black president.
As Biden told his boss in 2010, today is a “big f—ing deal.”
After all the festivities (virtual and otherwise), Biden has promised to get straight to work, signing executive orders and taking other actions that don’t require congressional approval to make good on a host of campaign promises.
On a call with the Biden transition last night, senior aides laid out his first-day plans. Biden will sign 15 executive orders addressing, among other things, the pandemic, economic relief, immigration, climate change and racial equity. As Laura Barrón-López and Alice Miranda Ollstein put it in their piece this morning, “Today marks the start of the new administration’s expansive effort to undo the last four years under Donald Trump.”
Biden will also sign orders fora nationwide mask and social distancing mandate on federal property. He’s scuttling Trump’s Muslim ban, revoking the Keystone XL pipeline permit and ending the Trump administration’s harsh immigration enforcement regime. And while he’s at it, Biden will halt construction of the border wall, rejoin the Paris climate accords, extend the federal eviction notice moratorium and pause interest and payments on student loans.
This flurry of unilateral action will provide some comfort to supporters that the page has turned from the Trump era. But let’s be real: He’s inheriting a gigantic mess. A pandemic that’s killed more than 400,000 people in the U.S.; an economy in tatters for tens of millions of people; and a guttural scream for racial justice by Black Americans that has exposed white Americans to systemic racism in a new and more visceral way. Not to mention the climate crisis, a badly strained health care system and a widening wealth gap.
Each of those challenges alone would be enough to overtake and even derail a presidency. Arguably, they just did. But Biden just spent almost two years saying he was the one Democrat truly ready to do the job “on Day One.” And here we are.
On his actual first day, the rhetoric of the campaign trail will run headlong into reality. Biden needs some wins — quickly — to establish that the experience and know-how he touted as a candidate can actually produce something tangible.
Today is also the day that women of color will see someone who looks like them put their hand on two Bibles (one from Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, the other from a woman she calls “her second mother”) and take the oath of office. Right before noon, KAMALA DEVI HARRIS will break the first executive office glass ceiling.
I explored what she faces as the first with my colleague Christopher Cadelago. In part: Harris will confront a pressure that the white men she’s joining in the exclusive vice presidential club never felt. With that comes a mission — as Harris, the daughter of immigrants from Jamaica and India, puts it — to “make sure you’re not the last.”
And as the tie-breaking vote in the Senate, she’ll preside over a chamber that, with her departure from it, no longer has any Black women serving.
A senior veep-elect aide told me Harris is hoping she won’t have to spend a lot of her time at the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue. Which means either Biden is really going to have to compromise with Republicans or push to …
FILIBUSTER FIGHT BLOWS WIDE OPEN: MITCH MCCONNELL’S demand Tuesday that CHUCK SCHUMER promise to protect the filibuster has catapulted the contentious debate over the Senate’s 60-vote threshold to the fore — and possibly created a serious roadblock for Biden’s agenda.
But Schumer, we predict, won’t go there for two main reasons:
First, he needs the leverage: Taking the so-called nuclear option off the table would mean he couldn’t hold it over McConnell’s head in future negotiations.
The more compelling reason, though, is Schumer’s own political future: The New York Democrat is up for reelection in 2022, and progressives eager to nix the filibuster to get their wish list enacted have their eyes on him. AOC lurks as a potential primary challenger.
Progressives sent up a flare as soon as news of McConnell’s request hit the Twitters.“Republicans would never negotiate their way out of governing power, why are we doing this?” warned Squad member/Rep. ILHAN OMAR (D-Minn.).
Even House Majority Whip JIM CLYBURN (D-S.C.) backed the idea of chucking the filibuster, noting it was once used to stymie civil rights legislation. “We need to get rid of a lot of these things we’ve been holding onto,” he told us at a Playbook Live event.
THE UPSHOT:Advantage McConnell, at least in the short run. If Schumer doesn’t meet McConnell’s demand, the Republican can gum up Biden’s agenda — starting with his $1.9 trillion coronavirus package — in the critical first 100 days. More here from our master of the Senate, Burgess Everett.
ANOTHER GRAVE MILESTONE— “‘Shameful’: U.S. virus deaths top 400K as Trump leaves office,”AP: “The 400,000-death toll, reported Tuesday by Johns Hopkins University, is greater than the population of New Orleans, Cleveland or Tampa, Florida. It’s nearly equal to the number of American lives lost annually to strokes, Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, flu and pneumonia combined.”
TRUMP’S WEDNESDAY — The president and first lady will depart the White House for Palm Beach, Fla., at 8 a.m.
BIDEN’S WEDNESDAY — The incoming president will attend church at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle at 8:45 a.m. with Jill Biden, Kamala Harris and Doug Emhoff. They’ll arrive at the Capitol at 10:30 a.m., and Biden and Harris will be sworn in at noon. They’ll visit the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery at 2:25 p.m. Biden will sign executive orders at 5:15 p.m. and then swear in presidential appointees virtually. In the evening, they’ll attend the “Celebrating America” inaugural program.
— JEN PSAKI, the incoming White House press secretary, will brief at 7 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
BREAKING OVERNIGHT: “Trump pardons dozens, including Steve Bannon, as he exits White House,”by Josh Gerstein and Kyle Cheney: “The last-minute clemency grant to Bannon, a right-wing firebrand and former Trump strategist facing trial on charges of swindling donors to a private group raising money for border wall construction, may prove to be the most controversial of the 73 pardons and 70 commutations Trump granted late Tuesday.” Also on the list: LIL WAYNE, plus “the man whose relationship with Russian spy Maria Butina ignited a Washington firestorm,” and “the wealthy doctor accused of paying bribes to Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.).”
THE TEAM TALKS TO RICHMOND: The new Playbook crew will sit down with incoming White House senior adviser and director of the Office of Public Engagement CEDRIC RICHMOND on Thursday at 1:30 p.m. We’ll discuss Biden’s top legislative priorities and news of the day with Richmond. Register here
CORONAVIRUS TRACKER: The U.S. reported 1,381 Covid-19 deaths and 137,885 new coronavirus cases Tuesday.
THE BIDEN ERA BEGINS …
NATASHA KORECKI: “Biden is about to give ‘the most important inaugural speech since Lincoln’”: “Joe Biden paces as he dictates long portions of his speeches to aides, spinning out thoughts that quickly pile into six, seven or eight paragraphs of copy, only to later be scrapped. On the 2020 campaign trail, he’d keep groups of supporters waiting inside while he’d hole up in a black car with aides, refining lines of his prepared remarks. …
“Longtime aides and advisers expect the inaugural address to traverse territory that Biden has covered over the course of his nearly 50-year public career, while highlighting an agenda that offers up hope to a country ravaged by disease, economic struggles, and violent political insurrection.”
LESS CONFIRMATION COMMOTION:“Republicans take on Biden’s Cabinet, but without the Trumpian fury,”by Marianne LeVine and Andrew Desiderio: “Throughout a series of five back-to-back Cabinet confirmation hearings on Tuesday, Senate Republicans displayed a return-to-normal posture — staking out traditional conservative arguments and outlining their disagreements with the incoming Biden administration, but largely through a respectful back-and-forth with nominees. … It’s a stark departure from the tumultuous, free-wheeling Cabinet fights that defined the Trump era.”
NOT COTTONING TO HIS PREVIOUS POSITION: Sen. TOM COTTON (R-Ark.), who supported a waiver to confirm Trump’s first Defense secretary, has reversed course when it comes to Biden’s. “I supported the waiver for Gen. Mattis with reservations four years ago, which I quickly came to view as a mistake and have since regretted,” he said yesterday during Gen. LLOYD AUSTIN’S confirmation hearing. “For that matter, upon further reading of the historical record, I now believe the waiver for Gen. Marshall in 1950 was also a mistake. Under no foreseeable circumstances can I imagine supporting such a waiver again.”
THE GOP’S LIBERTARIAN TURN: The last two Democratic presidents followed Republicans who racked up record levels of debt. Each time, Republicans out of power quickly shifted from budget profligacy to austerity and pilloried Democrats as big spenders. As we watched JANET YELLEN’S confirmation hearing yesterday, when she made the case for a large stimulus package, we couldn’t help notice that, as predicted, this pattern is repeating itself.
Republicans who were relatively silent as Trump increased the national debt to historic levels are returning to their small-government talking points. “We’re looking at another spending blowout,” said Sen. PAT TOOMEY (R-Pa.). “The only organizing principle I can understand, it seems, is to spend as much money as possible, seemingly for the sake of spending it.” Toomey’s comment points to one reason we are deeply skeptical that the current divide in the GOP over Trumpism will translate into support for key aspects of the Biden agenda. Toomey has turned sharply anti-Trump since Election Day while simultaneously becoming sharply critical of the cost of Biden’s legislative agenda.
ENOUGH TO WONDER IF THIS WAS ALL WORTH IT: Like other recent presidents, Biden can have his favorite tech obsessions in the White House, but they will be stripped of all the cool features that spies can exploit. In the Obama era, it was his BlackBerry and iPad. This time, it’s Biden’s Peloton.
A BIDEN HONEYMOON? — Some interesting nuggets from the latest POLITICO/Morning Consult poll, released this morning for Inauguration Day… 39% of respondents said Trump definitely or probably made America great again, vs. 57% who thought he definitely or probably did not. … 21% said he was one of the best presidents ever,46% one of the worst. … 35% rated Trump’s performance on the coronavirus as excellent or good vs. 51% who gave top marks to Biden for his handling of the pandemic. …
… On the question of whether Biden should be an intentional one-term president,31% said he should definitely or probably pledge he won’t run for reelection in 2024, while 50% said he should not. Biden also enters the White House with a very healthy 57 to 39 favorable/unfavorable rating — suggesting he’ll benefit from at least a mini-honeymoon that Trump never enjoyed. Check out the toplines and crosstabs … And more here from our polling guru Steve Shepard: “Poll: Biden gets modest ‘honeymoon’ ahead of inauguration”
DEM STRATEGIST TO TEAM BIDEN: DELETE YOUR ACCOUNTS — Longtime Dem speechwriter Kenny Baer writes in The Washington Monthly: “The Biden Administration — every Cabinet member and senior official — should follow the President-elect’s lead here and turn off Twitter. Take it off your phone. Block it on your laptop. Rely on your communications’ staff to tell you when there’s breaking news. That delay may actually lead to a better response. Put into perspective what a Twitter firestorm about your latest initiative actually means in the real world —almost always, nothing. Ignore it. So, too, the incoming administration should follow Biden’s lead and make Twitter boring again.”
TRUMP FLOATS CREATION OF NEW POLITICAL PARTY: Like most Trump ideas, it’s difficult to know how serious to take the news, reported by the WSJ, that Trump has been discussing the creation of a new political party that he wants to dub the Patriot Party, which recalls the famous choice he offered VP MIKE PENCE before Jan. 6. But it’s certainly a bad time to be floating it. McConnell said yesterday that Trump “provoked” the Jan. 6 mob, and Senate Republicans are carefully weighing whether it’s safe to jump on the conviction bandwagon when the impeachment trial begins. Many of them no doubt want to ban Trump from being able to hold office again but are still too scared of his voters to go public. By formally breaking with the GOP, Trump would make it a lot easier.
An alternative view is that the threat of a new party will help keep Republicans in line. Trump adviser Jason Miller tells Ryan, “Republican senators need to think long and hard about what an impeachment vote would do to the party.”
TRUMPOLOGY … MICHAEL KRUSE for POLITICO Magazine: “‘He Was the Ringmaster in the Demise of His Own Circus’: On the eve of Donald Trump’s exit from power, four biographers who studied him up close reflect on what he wrought on the country. And what he’ll do next.”
WEDNESDAY LISTENS — Streets are deserted. Stores are boarded up. Troops line the perimeter of the Capitol. This is the backdrop of Biden’s inauguration — and as Tara reports on the latest episode of “Dispatch,” it could be the backdrop of a new Washington for weeks to come. Listen and subscribe
— How can countries ensure people have what they need to get good, lasting employment? In the season finale of POLITICO’s “Global Translations” podcast, hosts Ryan Heath and Luiza Savage talk with leaders about the structural changes needed to help workers.Listen and subscribe
PLAYBOOKERS
TRUMP’S FIRST DAY IN PALM BEACH: When Trump arrives in Palm Beach, he will land in a small town unsure of how to deal with the former president and his entourage. A senior county official tells Tara he expects fireworks at a town council meeting Thursday, when members will debate whether to enforce a long-standing agreement that no Mar-a-Lago guest or member stay at the club for more than seven days at a time or 21 days per year — including its owner.
“It’s like a civil war down here,” the official said. “Some Trumpers are trying to get on the board to protect the president.” One of Trump’s longtime friends pointed out that before he won the election, Trump stayed at the beach club every winter weekend for at least four months — clearly violating the existing agreement. The Palm Beach “Shiny Sheet” reports that Trump has still not told the town administrator where he plans to live.
Meanwhile,DONALD TRUMP JR.andKIMBERLY GUILFOYLE are eyeing a home in the exclusive Admirals Cove in Jupiter, Fla. Sources in Florida tell Tara the two may close on a home in the exclusive community in a matter of weeks. A website for the country club community states: “Residents are brought together through their own, personal resort, which offers everything from ‘happy life’ essentials (like an early morning yoga class and a chef-designed, health-conscious lunch) to grand leisures (such as tying up your yacht at a fully-serviced dock, then heading over to play 18 holes on some of Florida’s best golf courses).”
‘SMALLEST CROWD EVER’: Those are fighting words for Trump, but Deputy D.C. Mayor JOHN FALCICCHIO tells Tara that’s the goal for Biden’s inauguration. With the threat of riots gripping the city, it’s deploying the same level of resources and law enforcement personnel it had to secure the largest inauguration ever, Barack Obama’s in 2009. Falcicchio’s advice to Playbookers: Stay home.See more from Falcicchio here:
FOX PURGE — The Daily Beast: “Fox laid off at least 16 staffers, including [political editor] CHRIS STIREWALT, who defended the election-night call that pissed off Trump. Insiders say the firings are part of an ideological purge. … While the network’s pro-Trump opinion hosts openly undermined the decision desk and political team’s Arizona call, parroting the Trump campaign’s complaints, Stirewalt refused to reverse course while also throwing cold water on the president’s bogus claims of widespread voter fraud.”
A Fox News spox says: “As we conclude the 2020 election cycle, FOX News Digital has realigned its business and reporting structure to meet the demands of this new era. We are confident these changes will ensure the platform continues to deliver breakthrough reporting and insightful analysis surrounding major issues, both stateside and abroad.”
Notable: Newsmax was the only network to cover Trump’s farewell address Tuesday.
REUTERS’ @JanNWolfe: “Katie Miller, a Pence aide and the wife of Trump aide Stephen Miller, said in a farewell email to reporters: ‘Going forward if you need anything from Vice President Pence, please feel free to reach out as I’ll be staying with Team Pence.’”
TRANSITIONS — Raul Alvillar is now EVP at Resolute Public Affairs. He previously was New Mexico state director for the Biden campaign. … Matthew Ramirez will be a content policy manager at Facebook. He previously was an outreach adviser in Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Adam Wren, contributing editor at POLITICO Magazine and Indianapolis Monthly, and Alison Wren, teacher at Forest Dale Elementary School, welcomed Clive Evanston Wren on Tuesday in Carmel, Ind. He arrived on the birthday of Transportation Secretary-designate Pete Buttigieg, whom Adam covered in the primary. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Kellyanne Conway … likely 2024 aspirant Nikki Haley … former Kamala spox Ian Sams, who was born on Inauguration Day 1989 when his mom was told by a Tennessee nurse to “push for Bush”… Rep. Dean Phillips … the un-cancelable Bill Maher … Diane Ruggiero … forever in the loop Al Kamen (h/t Jon Haber) … POLITICO’s Gavin Bade and Megan Erickson … WSJ’s James V. Grimaldi … former Reps. Bill Owens and Shelley Berkley … Natan Sharansky … Kevin Parker
General MacArthur “Our threat is from the insidious forces working from within … infiltrated into positions of public trust … into journalism, the press, the radio & the school” – American Minute with Bill Federer
“Our threat is from the insidious forces working from within which have already so drastically altered the character of our free institutions,” stated General Douglas MacArthur in Lansing, Michigan, May 15, 1952.
General Douglas MacArthur addressed Massachusetts State Legislature in Boston, July 25, 1951:
“I have seen since my return to my native land after an absence of many years … our material progress has been little short of phenomenal.
It has established an eminence in material strength so far in advance of any other nation … that talk of an imminent threat to our national security through … external force is pure nonsense.
It is not of any external threat that I concern myself but rather of insidious forces working from within which have already so drastically altered the character of our free institutions — these institutions which formerly we hailed as something beyond question of challenge — those institutions we proudly called the American way of life.
… Foremost of these forces is that directly, or even more frequently indirectly, allied with the scourge of imperialistic Communism.
It has infiltrated into positions of public trust and responsibility — into journalism, the press, the radio and the school.
It seeks through covert manipulation of the civil power and the media of public information and education to pervert the truth, impair respect for moral values, suppress human freedom and representative government, and in the end destroy our faith in our religious teachings.
… This evil force, with neither spiritual base nor moral standard, rallies the abnormal and subnormal elements among our citizenry
and applies internal pressure against all things we hold descent and all things that we hold right — the type of pressure which has caused many Christian nations abroad to fall and and their own cherished freedoms to languish in the shackles of complete suppression.
As it has happened there it can happen here. Our need for patriotic fervor and religious devotion was never more impelling.
There can be no compromise with atheistic Communism, no half way in the preservation of freedom and religion. It must be all or nothing.”
MacArthur warned in his Farewell Address to Congress, April 19. 1951:
“The Communist threat is a global one …
Under no circumstances must Formosa (Taiwan) fall under Communist control …
… One must understand the changes in Chinese character and culture … China, up to 50 years ago … followed the tenets of the Confucian ideal of pacifist culture.
At the turn of the century, under the regime of Chang Tso Lin, efforts … produced the start of a nationalist urge.
… This was further … developed under the leadership of Chiang Kai-Shek,
but has been brought to its greatest fruition under the present regime to the point that it has now taken on the character of a united nationalism of increasingly dominant, aggressive tendencies.
… Through these past 50 years the Chinese people have thus become militarized … They now constitute excellent soldiers, with competent staffs and commanders.
… This has produced a new and dominant power in Asia, which, for its own purposes, is allied with Soviet Russia but which in its own concepts and methods has become aggressively imperialistic, with a lust for expansion and increased power …
Chinese Communists’ support of the North Koreans was the dominant one. Their interests are … parallel with those of the Soviet.
… But I believe that the aggressiveness recently displayed not only in Korea but also in Indo-China and Tibet and pointing potentially toward the South reflects predominantly the same lust for the expansion of power which has animated every would-be conqueror since the beginning of time.”
MacArthur concluded:
“There are some who, for varying reasons, would appease Red China.
They are blind to history’s clear lesson … that appeasement but begets new and bloodier war …
… Like blackmail, it lays the basis for new and successively greater demands until, as in blackmail, violence becomes the only other alternative …
China is already engaging with the maximum power it can commit … Like a cobra … more likely strike whenever it feels … (it) is in its favor on a world-wide basis.”
Douglas MacArthur was born January 26, 1880.
The lineage of both parents were military and Episcopalian Christian.
Home-schooled as child, he attended high school at the Episcopal West Texas Military Academy, founded in 1893, whose mission statement, “to provide an excellent educational community, with values based on the teachings of Jesus Christ.”
The school was similar to D.L. Moody’s “Moody Bible Institute” founded seven years earlier.
Every day, MacArthur and his 48 classmates walked several blocks, no matter the weather, to attend morning chapel at St. Paul’s Memorial Church.
He explained:
“Biblical lessons began to open the spiritual portals of a growing faith.”
He graduated valedictorian of West Texas Military Academy, and in 1898, became a cadet at West Point Military Academy, where he graduated top of his class in 1903.
MacArthur conducted a reconnaissance mission during the 1914 U.S. occupation of Veracruz, for which he was nominated for the Medal of Honor.
He served as an officer in France during World War I.
He was superintendent of West Point, 1919-1922.
In 1930, at age 50, MacArthur became the youngest Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army.
On July 14, 1935, he addressed the 42nd Infantry (Rainbow) Division:
“The springs of human conflict cannot be eradicated through institutions, but only through the reform of the individual human being …
We all dream of the day when human conduct will be governed by the Decalogue (Ten Commandments) and the Sermon on the Mount.”
A four-star general, he retired in 1939, but returned in 1941 to defend the Philippines.
When Japan invaded the Philippines, President Roosevelt ordered MacArthur to withdraw to Australia.
MacArthur left the Philippines, but not before he promising “I shall return.”
When General MacArthur heard that 10,000 Filipino and American prisoners died on the Bataan Death March, he stated, April 9, 1942:
“To the weeping mothers of its dead, I can only say that the sacrifice and halo of Jesus of Nazareth has descended upon their sons, and that God will take them unto Himself.”
On October 20, 1944, General MacArthur returned with an American army to free the Philippines, stating:
“People of the Philippines: I have returned. By the grace of Almighty God our forces stand again on Philippine soil — soil consecrated in the blood of our two peoples.
We have come, dedicated and committed to the task of destroying every vestige of enemy control … The hour of your redemption is here … Let the indomitable spirit of Bataan and Corregidor lead on.”
In a radio speech broadcast from the invasion beach on returning to the Philippines, General Douglas MacArthur stated, October 20, 1944:
“Strike at every favorable opportunity. For your homes and hearths, strike! For future generations of your sons and daughters, strike! In the name of your sacred dead, strike!
Let no heart be faint. Let every arm be steeled. The guidance of Divine God points the way. Follow in His name to the Holy Grail of righteous victory!”
General Douglas MacArthur stated:
“In war, when a commander becomes so bereft of reason and perspective that he fails to understand the dependence of arms on Divine guidance, he no longer deserves victory.”
Promoted to Supreme Commander of Allied Forces in the Southwest Pacific, he received Japan’s surrender on the USS Missouri in Tokyo Harbor.
He stated:
“Men since the beginning of time have sought peace … military alliances, balances of powers, leagues of nations, all in turn failed, leaving the only path to be by way of the crucible of war.
The utter destructiveness of war now blots out this alternative. We have had our last chance.
If we will not devise some greater and equitable system, our Armageddon will be at our door.
The problem basically is theological and involves a spiritual recrudescence (renewal), an improvement of human character that will synchronize with our almost matchless advances in science, art, literature and all material and cultural developments of the past two thousand years.
It must be of the spirit if we are to save the flesh.”
After the surrender, Japan was under direct control of the U.S. Occupation Army led by Douglas MacArthur, Supreme Commander of Allied Forces Pacific (SCAP).
This was different than post-war Europe, in which Germany was divided into four zones controlled the allied powers.
President Truman sent a message to MacArthur, September 6, 1945:
“The authority of the Emperor and the Japanese Government to rule the State is subordinate to you as Supreme Commander for the Allied powers. You will exercise your authority as you deem proper to carry out your mission.”
Japanese investigative journalist Eiichiro Tokumoto wrote in Under the Shadow of the Occupation: The Ashlar and The Cross (1945):
“There was a complete collapse of faith in Japan in 1945 — in our invincible military, in the emperor, in the religion that had become known as ‘state Shinto.'”
Shinto beliefs were taught in the public schools and permeated Japanese society, exciting the militaristic fervor of an ancient samurai warrior code known as Bushido, fighting to the death, similar to Islamic jihad martyrs.
MacArthur warned:
“Japan is a spiritual vacuum … If you do not fill it with Christianity, it will be filled with communism.”
He pleaded that Youth for Christ and other ministries send 10,000 missionaries to Japan:
“Send missionaries and Bibles.”
While in Tokyo, MacArthur daily read the American Standard Version of the Bible and helped distribute 43 million Bibles, resulting in it becoming a best-seller in Japan.
He served as Honorary Chairman of Japan’s first post-war Christian University, and advocated for the spread of Christianity:
“(In order to) provide the surest foundation for the firm establishment of democracy”;
“Democracy and Christianity have much in common, as practice of the former is impossible without giving faithful (service) to the fundamental concepts underlying the latter.”
MacArthur wrote in 1948:
“I am absolutely convinced that true democracy can exist only on a spiritual foundation. It will endure when it rests firmly on the Christian conception of the individual and society.”
These views were held by Franklin D. Roosevelt, who stated November 1, 1940:
“Those forces hate democracy and Christianity … They oppose democracy because it is Christian. They oppose Christianity because it preaches democracy.”
MacArthur’s call for missionaries and Bibles was documented in:
The Riddle of MacArthur, by John Gunther, (1951);
Japan’s American Interlude, by Kazuo Kawai (1960);
The MacArthur Controversy and American Foreign Policy, by Arthur Schlesinger (1965).
Journalist Eiichiro Tokumoto gave the account of a 1946 conversation between MacArthur and two U.S. Catholic Bishops John F. O’Hara and Michael J. Ready:
“General MacArthur asked us to urge the sending of thousands of Catholic missionaries — at once … that they had a year to help fill the ‘spiritual vacuum’ created by the defeat.”
Emperor Hirohito offered to have the government convert all of Japan to Christianity.
Amherst College professor of Japanese history, Ray Moore, recorded the General told evangelist Billy Graham: “the Emperor had offered to make Christianity the official religion of Japan.”
MacArthur made the fateful decision to decline the offer, believing that it could potentially create conflict between Protestants and Catholics, and that conversion should be only by a free choice:
“This most sacred of human rights – to worship freely in accordance with individual conscience – is fundamental to all reforms.”
In the article “Bringing the Bible to Japan,” MacArthur told U.S. News and World Report, February 4, 1955:
“No phase of the occupation has left me with a greater sense of personal satisfaction than my spiritual stewardship.”
As recorded in Revitalizing a Nation: A Statement of Beliefs, Opinions, and Policies Embodied in the Public Pronouncements of General of the Army, Douglas MacArthur (Chicago: Heritage Foundation, 1952), he explained how his policies in Japan:
“Discarded is the traditional intolerance of human rights, the restrictions upon human liberties, the callousness to human life, and in their place have been accepted and fused into the Japanese heart many of the Christian virtues.”
Among the first Church of Christ missionaries returning to Japan were Emily Cunningham, and Owen and Shirley Still. Beliefnet.com published:
“Owen Still had been a missionary in pre-war Japan.
He got his family out of Tokyo on one of the last ships before Pearl Harbor, then spent much of World War II in Japanese internment camps in California and Arizona, serving as a volunteer chaplain to Japanese-Americans forced to spend the war behind barbed wire.
After the Japanese surrender, he was one of the first civilians allowed back into Tokyo since he spoke fluent Japanese.
The firebombing of the city had been so devastating that it was difficult to identify neighborhoods much less streets or buildings — which had been constructed mostly of wood with interior walls made of paper.
He had trouble even finding the Yotsuya Mission where he had preached for a decade — so complete was the destruction.
In the city of Osaka, Hiromu Sugano, a devout Christian and retired Army captain, had built a shack on the church property there so that the land was occupied until the missionaries returned.
If he had not done so, the property could have been lost.
In Tokyo, Owen Still was gratified to find that many of the native pastors, including Stephen Ijima, had survived the war — and their congregations were going strong …”
Beliefnet.com continued:
“MacArthur saw that Rev. Still received a temporary military commission, allowing him to move freely … He got the mission’s churches and Bible college back up and running — knowing that the permanence of the Gospel in Japan depended on native-born pastors.”
Another person who decided to return to Japan as a missionary was Jake DeShazer, which changed the life of a Japanese pilot, Mitsuo Fuchida.
Fuchida wrote in his biography From Pearl Harbor to Calvary (1953):
“With the end of the war, my military career was over, since all Japanese forces were disbanded … Though I was never accused, Gen. Douglas MacArthur summoned me to testify …
As I got off the train one day in Tokyo’s Shibuya Station, I saw an American distributing literature … He handed me a pamphlet entitled “I Was a Prisoner of Japan” (published by Bible Literature International) …
What I read was the fascinating episode which eventually changed my life …
Jake DeShazer … volunteered for a secret mission with the Jimmy Doolittle Squadron – a surprise raid on Tokyo from the carrier Hornet … After the bombing raid … DeShazer found himself a prisoner of Japan …”
Mitsuo Fuchida explained that after the war:
“DeShazer … returned to Japan as a missionary. And his story, printed in pamphlet form, was something I could not explain …
I decided to purchase (a Bible) myself, despite my traditionally Buddhist heritage … In the ensuing weeks, I read this book eagerly.
I came to the climactic drama – the Crucifixion. I read in Luke 23:34 the prayer of Jesus Christ at His death: ‘Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do’ …
I was certainly one of those for whom He had prayed. The many men I had killed had been slaughtered in the name of patriotism, for I did not understand the love which Christ wishes to implant within every heart.
Right at that moment, I seemed to meet Jesus for the first time. I understood the meaning of His death as a substitute for my wickedness, and so in prayer, I requested Him to forgive my sins and change me from a bitter, disillusioned ex-pilot into a well-balanced Christian with purpose in living …”
Fuchida added:
“I became a new person. My complete view on life was changed by the intervention of the Christ I had always hated and ignored before .I have traveled across Japan and the Orient introducing others to the One Who changed my life.
I believe with all my heart that those who will direct Japan – and all other nations – in the decades to come must not ignore the message of Jesus Christ.”
Kiyoko Takeda Cho, a prominent intellectual in Tokyo described the missionaries:
“They were young and idealistic, and identified with Japan … They represented not the ruling country, but came for reconciliation. That attitude was very much appreciated, not only by Christians but also non-Christians.”
To MacArthur’s credit, no other military occupation in history matched the peace and reconciliation he achieved in the aftermath of WWII.
As recorded in “The Faith of MacArthur: Binding Up the Wounds of a Broken Nation,” by Joseff J. B. Smith, (College at Brockport, SUNY, 05/10/2013), MacArthur stated:
“If the historian of the future should deem my service worthy of some slight reference, it would be my hope that he mention me not as a commander engaged in campaigns and battles, even though victorious to American arms,
but rather as that one whose sacred duty it became, once the guns were silenced, to carry to the land of our vanquished foe the solace and hope and faith of Christian morals …
An occupation not conceived in a spirit of vengeance or mastery of victor over vanquished, but committed to the Christian purpose of helping a defeated, bewildered and despairing people.”
When U.S. occupation of Japan ended in 1952, it was apparent that relatively few Christian missionaries responded to MacArthur’s call to come to Japan, and an enormous opportunity was missed.
This is significantly different to the outcome after the Korean War, with the vibrant growth of Christianity in South Korea, which is now sending missionaries throughout the world.
Douglas MacArthur received the Medal of Honor, as did his father, Arthur MacArthur, who served during the Civil War.
The only other father and son to receive the Medal of Honor were Theodore Roosevelt, for leading the charge up Cuba’s San Juan Hill during the Spanish-American War, and his son, Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt Jr., for leading the first wave of troops ashore at Normandy during World War II.
Promoted to five-star general, MacArthur was Supreme U.N. Commander during the beginning of the Korean War, making a daring landing of troops deep behind enemy lines at Inchon and recapturing Seoul.
MacArthur became at odds with President Truman who did not want to confront the Communist Chinese.
Truman instead introduced the “containment” strategy which sentenced millions to live under communist totalitarianism.
MacArthur disagreed, stating:
“It is fatal to enter a war without the will to win it”; and “In war there is no substitute for victory.”
Truman made the stunningly unpopular decision to remove MacArthur.
On April 19, 1951, following his tour of Korea, General Douglas MacArthur spoke to a Joint Session of Congress to announce his retirement:
“I am closing my fifty-two years of military service. When I joined the Army, even before the turn of the century, it was the fulfillment of all my boyish hopes and dreams.
… The world has turned over many times since I took the oath on the Plain at West Point, and the hopes and dreams have all since vanished, but I still remember the refrain of one of the most popular barracks ballads of that day, which proclaimed most proudly that old soldiers never die; they just fade away.
And, like the old soldier of that ballad, I now close my military career and just fade away, an old soldier who has tried to do his duty as God gave him the light to see that duty. Good-by.”
“The soldier, above all other men, is required to practice the greatest act of religious training — sacrifice.
In battle and in the face of danger and death, he discloses those Divine attributes which his Maker gave when He created man in His own image …
No physical courage and no brute instinct can take the place of Divine help which alone can sustain him.
However horrible the incidents of war may be, the soldier who is called upon to offer and to give his life for his country is the noblest development of mankind.”
Warning of the deep-state, he addressed the Michigan legislature in Lansing, Michigan, May 15, 1952, (Edward T. Imparato, General MacArthur Speeches and Reports 1908-1964, published in 2000, p. 206):
“Talk of imminent threat to our national security through … external force is pure nonsense.
Our threat is from the insidious forces working from within which have already so drastically altered the character of our free institutions — those institutions we proudly called the American way of life.”
On January 18, 1955, a monument was dedicated to General Douglas MacArthur at the occasion of his seventy-fifth birthday, which had inscribed his statement:
“Battles are not won by arms alone. There must exist above all else a spiritual impulse — a will to victory. In war there can be no substitute for victory.”
On July 25, 1951, General Douglas MacArthur told the Massachusetts Legislature:
“It was the adventurous spirit of Americans which despite risks and hazards carved a great nation from an almost impenetrable wilderness …
which built our own almost unbelievable material progress … which raised the standard of living of the American people beyond that ever before known …
This adventurous spirit is now threatened as it was in the days of the Boston Tea Party by an unconscionable burden of taxation.
This is sapping the initiative and energies of the people and leaves little incentive for the assumption of those risks which are inherent and unescapable in the forging of progress under the system of free enterprise.
Worst of all, it is throwing its tentacles around the low income bracket sector of our society, from whom is now exacted the major share of the cost of government. This renders its paper income largely illusory …”
He continued:
“The so-called forgotten man of the early thirties now is indeed no longer forgotten as the Government levies upon his income as the main remaining source to defray reckless spendthrift policies.
More and more we work not for ourselves but for the State. In time, if permitted to continue, this trend cannot fail to be destructive.
For no nation may survive in freedom once its people become servants of the State, a condition to which we are now pointed with dreadful certainty …”
MacArthur added:
“Nothing is heard from those in the supreme executive authority concerning the possibility of a reduction or even a limitation upon these mounting costs.
No suggestion deals with the restoration of some semblance of a healthy balance. No plan is advanced for easing the crushing burdens already resting upon the people.
To the contrary, all that we hear are the plans by which such costs progressively may be increased … for greater call upon the taxable potential as though the resources available were inexhaustable.”
In 1942, General MacArthur was named Father of the Year. He stated:
“By profession I am a soldier and take pride in that fact. But I am prouder — infinitely prouder — to be a father.
A soldier destroys in order to build; the father only builds, never destroys. The one has the potentiality of death; the other embodies creation and life.
And while the hordes of death are mighty, the battalions of life are mightier still.
It is my hope that my son, when I am gone, will remember me not from the battle but in the home repeating with him our simple daily prayer, ‘Our Father Who Art in Heaven.'”
He composed “A Father’s Prayer” in the early days of World War II while in the Pacific:
“Build me a son, O Lord, who will be strong enough to know when he is weak, brave enough to face himself when he is afraid, one who will be proud and unbending in honest defeat, and humble and gentle in victory.
Build me a son whose wishes will not take the place of deeds; a son who will know Thee — and that to know himself is the foundation stone of knowledge.
Lead him, I pray, not in the path of ease and comfort, but under the stress and spur of difficulties and challenge. Here let him learn to stand up in the storm; here let him learn compassion for those who fail …”
MacArthur continued:
“Build me a son whose heart will be clear, whose goal will be high; a son who will master himself before he seeks to master other men; one who will reach into the future, yet never forget the past.
And after all these things are his, add, I pray, enough of sense of humor, so that he may always be serious, yet never take himself too seriously.
Give him humility, so that he may always remember the simplicity of true greatness, the open mind of true wisdom, and the meekness of true strength.
Then, I, his father, will dare to whisper, ‘I have not lived in vain.'”
MacArthur warned in a speech to the Salvation Army, December 12, 1951, stating:
“History fails to record a single precedent in which nations subject to moral decay have not passed into political and economic decline.
There has been either a spiritual awakening to overcome the moral lapse, or a progressive deterioration leading to ultimate national disaster.”
MacArthur, who considered himself “a soldier of God as well as of the republic,” concluded his address to the Massachusetts State Legislature in Boston, July 25, 1951:
“We must unite in the high purpose that the liberties etched upon the design of our life by our forefathers be unimpaired and that we maintain the moral courage and spiritual leadership to preserve inviolate that mighty bulwark of all freedom, our Christian faith.”
“Peace be to the brothers, and love with faith, from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. Grace be with all who love our Lord Jesus Christ with love incorruptible,” (Ephesians 6:23-24, ESV).
By Pat Nicklaus on Jan 19, 2021 06:48 pm
Tuesday was a historic day for Camden County, Missouri, as they became the first county in the state to pass a substantive Gun Rights Sanctuary County Ordinance. The ordinance, proposed by Commissioner James Gohagan, passed at approximately 11:15 am and was met with resounding cheers by the room full of concerned citizens.
The ordinance comes one day before the presidential inauguration of Joe Biden. A man with lofty anti-gun goals and ambitions, fueled by extensive donations from notoriously anti 2nd Amendment groups like Mom’s Demand Action and Everytown for Gun Safety.
His laundry list of anti-gun proposals includes bans on modern-day sporting rifles, such as the AR-15, universal background checks on private sales, and limiting the number of firearms a person can purchase to one per month.
President-Elect Biden, you may as well wad that list up and throw it away when it comes to Camden County, Missouri. Because today, thanks to newly elected Commissioner James Gohagan’s proposed county ordinance and the cooperation from our other two Commissioners, Greg Hasty and Don Williams, the county has reaffirmed the citizens’ rights well as the limitations of the government. You may not commandeer the resources of our local government to enforce your federal gun laws. Period.
The 10th Amendment states that the powers not delegated to the government by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the People. Nowhere in the Constitution, is the power delegated to the Federal Government to commandeer the resources of a locality for the enforcement of federal gun laws. The Supreme Court has ruled multiple times in favor of anti-commandeering laws, most notably, Printz v United States in 1997, affirming that counties can not be forced to use their own resources to comply with a federal background check program, and more recently, Chicago v Barr which affirmed that the federal government can not threaten to withhold federal grant money to sanctuary cities.
The left has been using sanctuary laws for years to protect illegal immigrants. It’s time conservatives and Constitutionalists borrowed a play from their playbook and used the same anti-commandeering protections to reaffirm Constitutionally protected rights.
I would strongly encourage anyone reading this to get to work now. Follow Camden County’s lead and work locally to protect your community against the potentially overreaching federal gun legislation that’s sure to come our way in the not too distant future.
Don’t know where to start? I can help with that. Below, you will find the text of the Ordinance from Camden County, should you decide to use it as a template for your county or State.
Now get out there and fight.
Camden County Second Amendment Preservation Act:
All federal acts, laws, orders, rules, and regulations, whether past, present, or future, which infringe on the people’s right to keep and bear arms as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 23 of the Missouri Constitution shall be invalid in this county, shall not be recognized by this county, are specifically rejected by this county, and shall be considered null and void and of no effect in this county.
(1) Such federal acts, laws, orders, rules, and regulations include, but are not limited to:
(a) The provisions of the federal Gun Control Act of 1934;
(b) The provisions of the federal Gun Control Act of 1968;
(c) Any tax, levy, fee, or stamp imposed on firearms, firearm accessories, or ammunition not common to all other goods and services which could have a chilling effect on the purchase or ownership of those items by law-abiding citizens;
(d) Any registering or tracking of firearms, firearm accessories, or ammunition which could have a chilling effect on the purchase or ownership of those items by law-abiding citizens;
(e) Any registering or tracking of the owners of firearms, firearm accessories, or ammunition which could have a chilling effect on the purchase or ownership of those items by law-abiding citizens;
(f) Any act forbidding the possession, ownership, or use or transfer of any type of firearm, firearm accessory, or ammunition by law-abiding citizens;
(g) Any act ordering the confiscation of firearms, firearm accessories, or ammunition from law-abiding citizens
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.
The ideas I’ve heard for Donald Trump’s post-White House days run the gamut from ‘do radio’ or ‘start a media network’ to ‘create a better Twitter/Facebook’, but I believe there is a more effective way for a leader like Trump to impact the political landscape for decades to come. Since November 5th, I have spent …
President Donald Trump will leave the White House to attend a departure ceremony prior to taking Air Force One for the last time as commander-in-chief. He will then travel to Mar-a-Lago where he will write the next chapter in American politics. Thank you for your hard work Mr. President. Farewell and don’t be a stranger. …
President Joe Biden will be sworn-in as president at 12:00 p.m. EST then he will attend a military parade, participate in a wreath-laying ceremony, sign some executive orders, swear-in some appointees, and make an appearance on the Blue Room Balcony. President-elect Biden has a few activities scheduled prior to his swearing-in, but those are before …
Remember the theme behind the hymn, “Out of the Ivory Palaces”? “Out of the ivory palaces into a world of woe only His great eternal love made my Savior go.” Think of it! As One of the three Persons of the Godhead, He created the entire universe. Out of love, He left the majesty of …
President Donald Trump ordered the Department of Justice, the Director of National Intelligence and the CIA on Tuesday to declassify and release materials related to the FBI’s Crossfire Hurricane (Spygate). Full Text of the Order to Declassify and Release Crossfire Hurricane Materials MEMORANDUM FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERALTHE DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCETHE DIRECTOR OF THE CENTRAL …
The Justice Department, along with the New York City Police Department (NYPD) and U.S. Army Counterintelligence, announced today the arrest of a private first class in the U.S. Army, on federal terrorism charges based on Bridges’ alleged efforts to assist ISIS to attack and kill U.S. soldiers in the Middle East. Cole James Bridges, aka …
In a statement on Tuesday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo made a bold proclamation that China was an ‘existential’ threat to the United States and that Joe Biden must deal with them. It’s a sharp contrast to the statements of Joe Biden’s pick for Secretary of State Anthony Blinken. In his confirmation hearing, he said …
President-elect Joe Biden has proposed another stimulus package. His package totals $1.9 trillion. This is added to the nearly $3 trillion package passed last May and the $900 billion package passed last month. That means the government will have spent nearly $6 trillion to stimulate the economy. Biden says he is not done. Next month he plans to …
Chinese state-run media condemned Twitter and Facebook’s censorship of President Donald Trump last week, suggesting that the U.S., which is generally thought to represent democracy, isn’t democratic, according to a New York Times report. “The banning of the US president’s social media account for ‘risks of further incitement of violence’ shows that freedom of speech …
Democratic Delaware Sen. Chris Coons said Tuesday that Republicans must repent before there can be unity. Coons said on CNN’s “New Day With Alisyn Camerota and John Berman” that he “believes in the possibility of reconciliation” in reference to whether collaborating with Republican Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas and Josh Hawley is a part of …
Lawyer Sidney Powell voluntarily dropped a lawsuit she previously described as “biblical,” alleging votes cast for President Donald Trump in Georgia were illegally switched to Joe Biden. Sidney Powell, a President Donald Trump ally, abruptly dropped the lawsuit Wednesday without any warning one day before President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration, Politico’ Kyle Cheney reported. Powell had …
The White House released a pre-recorded video Tuesday of President Donald Trump’s farewell address to the nation. Full Transcript of President Donald Trump’s Farewell Address – 01/19/21 THE PRESIDENT: My fellow Americans: Four years ago, we launched a great national effort to rebuild our country, to renew its spirit, and to restore the allegiance of …
Democrats in the House of Representatives have impeached Donald Trump, making him the first president in U.S. history to be impeached twice. They accused the president of encouraging his supporters to attack Congress on Jan. 6. Ten congressional Republicans voted to impeach Trump this time around. But the Senate is not likely to begin Trump’s …
CNN opinion host Don Lemon denounced Republicans who praised GOP member Martin Luther King Jr. yesterday after supporting a “racist” man like President Trump during his show which airs weeknights from 10:00 p.m. to 12:00 a.m. “One Republican after another apparently hoping that you’ll forget their support for a president who used race to pit …
Two Army National Guard members were removed from their posts as part of the mission to secure President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration on Wednesday after they were found to have ties to far-right fringe groups, two top officials said, according to the Associated Press. The Army official and intelligence official said that no plot against Biden …
Bed Bath and Beyond, Kohl’s and Wayfair have all stopped selling MyPillow products after the company’s CEO continued alleging mass voter fraud occurred during the presidential election. Bed Bath and Beyond and Kohl’s called MyPillow CEO and Founder Mike Lindell this week informing them of their decision, he told Right Side Broadcasting Network (RSBN) in …
Daily Caller chief video editor Richie McGinniss entered the “green zone” in Washington, D.C., which has been set-up ahead of President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration, to provide you a tour of the area. “I have entered what’s aptly being called the ‘green zone,’” McGinniss said. “You can see we have these checkpoints here. [There are] metal …
Unless you have been hiding under a rock, you are well aware of actions taken against conservatives and Trump supporters in recent times. From President Donald Trump being banned on Twitter, Parler coming under attack, and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) saying that we must reprogram conservatives, things are starting to get out of hand. More …
Hungarian Justice Minister Judit Varga said Monday that Hungary is considering sanctions against big tech firms over alleged “systemic abuses” of free speech, Reuters reported. Varga plans to meet with the Hungarian Competition Authority this week to discuss possible penalties for what he says are unfair commercial practices utilized by social media firms including Facebook …
Happy Wednesday, stalwart travelers on the Kruiser Morning Briefing Way. So…anything interesting happening today?
OK, we all know what the big news story will be today. I will be blissfully tuned out from most of it. At the time that Grandpa Gropes is slurring his way through the oath of office (and the media is insisting that he sounds sharp as ever) I will probably be on a nice, long bike ride. Then I’ve promised myself that I am going to finally get a haircut. There’s been a bit of a “hygiene and grooming optional” approach with me in COVID times and my hair has grown to a length that makes me look like I’m trying to achieve a “pervy professor” vibe. I’m starting to creep even myself out now. If I don’t get it cut I’m going to be sitting around here in boxer shorts and a sport coat with elbow patches and talking to my cat.
Nobody wants that.
Barring an intergalactic alien invasion or a much-prayed-for appearance by the Sweet Meteor O’ Death today, Joe Biden should be the president of the United States when we go to sleep tonight. He may not know that, but the rest of us will.
When I asked in the headline if America will survive it wasn’t a question that was entirely related to our new chief executive. I think the Republic has been in decline for a while. Trump’s presidency gave us a four-year reprieve. All that did was energize those who have been endeavoring to hasten the decline and they’re now back in power. I’m not saying we’ll be toast in a year or two but we are definitely not on the side of the nation’s historical timeline that we’d like to be.
That doesn’t mean we can’t have some fun while it’s all falling apart.
Those of you who have been reading my stuff for a while know that I’m pretty comfortable in the curmudgeonly contrarian role. Writing from the opposition is something I’ve done before and rather enjoyed. I got a real laugh yesterday when someone in the comments said I was probably “seething with rage” these days.
If I get any more chill someone is going to need to break out a defibrillator.
Four years ago today, I began a new gig as an editor at a then high-traffic conservative site. I hated every minute I worked for them. I was immensely enjoying Trump’s inauguration but the job was horrible. I was politically fulfilled and professionally miserable.
Today, I’m the opposite. This is better. So the politics aren’t going my way. I’m going to have fun writing about this clown car that’s about to empty out into the Oval Office.
We’re going to have fun while I do this.
This may seem like an oddly cavalier attitude while conservative media is under assault from the Democrats and their flying monkeys in the mainstream media. Worry not, we here at PJ Media and the Townhall Media Mothership aren’t going to roll over and play dead.
Paula wrote yesterday about one of the most effective ways we have of combating the current attacks on conservative media. Our VIP program shields us from a lot of the Big Tech shenanigans. Here’s a synopsis of the benefits from Paula’s post:
And this is where you come in.You can help us fight back against the left’s lies and censorship by becoming a VIP member. Your membership entitles you to a host of benefits, including an ad-free experience and exclusive articles, newsletters, and podcasts. VIP GOLD members get all these benefits, PLUS access to the VIP content at all the Townhall Media sites—Townhall, RedState, HotAir, Twitchy, Bearing Arms, and, of course, PJ Media. In addition, you’ll be invited to join exclusive VIP Gold live chats with writers and personalities across the Townhall Media network.
I know, I know, a lot of people are just opposed to paying for content. And I am not insensitive to the fact that a lot of people are having a rough financial time because of the Bat Flu shutdowns. I only mention this because I know that there are a lot of people asking what we can do to fight back. This is one way. The program has been a wild success for us since we launched it in October of 2019 and we want our subscribers to know how much we appreciate them and to let everyone else know we’re having fun over there.
I find it interesting every time I bring up VIP that so many in the comments section are aghast that a conservative writing for a conservative site would be acting like a capitalist. This is both a labor of love and a business here, after all. We’re a public, for-profit company and damn proud of it.
But it’s the internet, and complainers will complain.
Just to be clear: the Briefing will never be behind a paywall. In fact, most of our content won’t be. The stuff that is behind the paywall is free from the prying eyes and de-platforming fingers of Facebook, Twitter, and their ilk though, and that’s what makes it fun. I do two podcasts and several columns every week over in VIP Land. In just the last ten days I’ve written about stuffed burgers, the psychotic joy of the Nextdoor app, and what an effective tool self-fat-shaming is for me to motivate myself to workout.
Stephen Green, Bryan Preston, and I do a two-hour live chat every Thursday for our VIP Gold members that goes all over the place. We talk about politics, movies, booze, music, video games, and whatever our friends watching live want to ask us. It’s wild. We went for three hours a couple of weeks ago.
Anyway, we’ll all still be lobbing verbal bombs at the new administration on both sides of the paywall. Don’t hate on me because I made the VIP pitch. I’m just having a lot of fun over there and wanted to remind everyone that that’s kind of our bunker in case Team Biden decides to unleash its Big Tech monsters on us. Anybody who is interested can use the promo code AMERICAFIRST for a 25% discount.
Anyone who doesn’t, that’s cool too. On this side of the paywall I’ve got plenty of plans for the Briefing and I’m going to write more Culture stuff.
And I’m going to pay attention to hygiene and grooming again.
Biden set to be inaugurated as 46th president under tight security . . . Joe Biden is set to become the 46th president of the U.S., assuming charge of a nation ravaged by a pandemic and shaken by the recent storming of the U.S. Capitol, where he plans to take his oath of office. The midday inauguration ceremony Wednesday will lack much of the customary pomp and circumstance due to the health and safety concerns surrounding the day. There will neither be giant crowds nor an in-person parade or inaugural balls. Under heavy security, Mr. Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will be sworn in on the west side of the Capitol during an event that will also feature Lady Gaga singing the national anthem and other musical performances. The inauguration will also mark a shift to Democratic control in Washington, with the party holding the White House and narrow majorities in the House and the Senate Wall Street Journal
Can’t think of a more effective way to heal the country than have Lady Gaga sing the national anthem.
Biden is set to reverse Trump policies, restore Obama-era programs on first day . . . President-elect Joe Biden will sign 17 executive actions and orders in the first hours of his presidency on Wednesday. The moves are expected to restore a number of Obama-era policies and reverse some of what the Biden team calls “the gravest damages” of the Trump administration. Biden is expected to sign the executive actions from the Oval Office on Wednesday afternoon after the inauguration. Fox News
Full transcript of President Trump’s farewell address to the nation. Epoch Times
Coronavirus
US passes 400,000 coronavirus deaths . . . The United States on Tuesday passed 400,000 deaths from COVID-19, a stunning total that is only climbing as the crisis deepens. The country is now averaging more than 3,000 coronavirus deaths every day, according to Johns Hopkins University data, more than the number of people killed in the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, and the daily death toll has been rising. The effects of a surge in gatherings and travel over the holidays are now coming into focus.
The grim milestone of 400,000 deaths came on the last full day in office for President Trump, who has long rejected criticism of his handling of the pandemic. The Hill
Politics
Biden’s first-100-days agenda targets executive orders . . . President-elect Joe Biden takes office this week with a far-reaching set of plans for his first 100 days as he seeks to roll back some of his Republican predecessor’s policies. Mr. Biden is planning a rush of executive actions for his first 10 days. On Inauguration Day, that includes rejoining the Paris climate accord; reversing a travel ban from several majority-Muslim and African countries; requiring masks to be worn on federal property and during interstate travel on airlines, trains and transit systems; and extending restrictions on evictions and foreclosures. Wall Street Journal
Pence skipping Trump’s farewell event to be with Biden . . . Vice President Mike Pence is not expected to attend President Trump’s send-off event on Inauguration Day. Pence is planning to attend Mass with President-elect Joe Biden in the morning before they head to Biden’s inauguration ceremony at the Capitol. The same is expected of congressional leaders Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy. Trump is set to fly out of the White House early on Inauguration Day before attending the military send-off at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland and leaving aboard Air Force One for Florida some time after 8 a.m. In a break with tradition, Trump said he will not attend the inauguration of his successor. Washington Examiner
While the Vice President is an honorable man, having served our country well, Mike Pence is as much of a Washington establishment creature as it gets.
Kamala may preside over Trump impeachment trial . . . One of Vice President-elect Kamala Harris’ first tasks in her new job could be to preside over an impeachment trial of President Trump. Chief Justice John Roberts reportedly “wants no further part” in overseeing the politically charged situation after he presided over the first impeachment trial of Trump less than one year ago. White House Dossier
Biden DHS pick says Biden wants to grant US citizenship wo most illegals . . . The Biden team wants to grant citizenship rights to most illegal immigrants and to pump money into Latin America as the way to discourage illegal immigration, Alejandro Mayorkas, the pick to lead the Department of Homeland Security, told senators Tuesday. Appearing for his confirmation hearing, Mr. Mayorkas cast himself as a boundary-breaking leader ready to shake up a department that has lacked a confirmed secretary for nearly two years. He promised an aggressive effort to overturn Trump policies focused on turning back illegal immigrants at the border and said the solution lies farther south, where nation-building in Latin America will try to keep people from leaving home in the first place. Washington Times
Making sure the Democratic Party has a steady stream of new voters.
Biden taps transgender Pennsylvania official for assistant secretary of health . . . President-elect Joe Biden has tapped Pennsylvania Health Secretary Rachel Levine to be his assistant secretary of health, leaving her poised to become the first openly transgender federal official to be confirmed by the U.S. Senate.
A pediatrician and former Pennsylvania physician general, Levine was appointed to her current post by Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf in 2017, making her one of the few transgender people serving in elected or appointed positions nationwide. She won past confirmation by the Republican-majority Pennsylvania Senate and has emerged as the public face of the state’s response to the coronavirus pandemic. Washington Times
My kids will stick to our current pediatrician.
Biden Health pick forced nursing homes to accept COVID patients . . . Biden health nominee Rachel Levine directed Pennsylvania nursing homes to accept COVID-positive patients—even as she pulled her own mother out of a longterm-care facility over pandemic concerns. Last March, she issued a directive requiring nursing homes to take in COVID-positive patients. Trade groups warned the decision could prove costly. The American Health Care Association said it would put “frail and older adults who reside in nursing homes at risk” and “result in more people going to the hospital and more deaths.” Nearly two months after instituting the policy, Levine confirmed that she had moved her 95-year-old mother out of a longterm-care facility and into a hotel. At the time, more than two-thirds of Pennsylvania’s coronavirus deaths had occurred in such facilities. Washington Free Beacon
Trump wants to create new “Patriot Party” . . . President Trump has talked in recent days with associates about forming a new political party, according to people familiar with the matter, an effort to exert continued influence after he leaves the White House.
Mr. Trump discussed the matter with several aides and other people close to him last week, the people said. The president said he would want to call the new party the “Patriot Party,” the people said. Mr. Trump has feuded in recent days with several Republican leaders including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.), who on Tuesday said Mr. Trump deserved blame for provoking the deadly Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol. Polls show Mr. Trump retains strong support among rank-and-file GOP voters. Wall Street Journal
Trump declassifies Russiagate probe documents . . . President Donald Trump on Tuesday ordered the declassification of a binder of FBI documents related to the bureau’s investigation of the Trump campaign and Russia. Trump said that he accommodated requests from the FBI to keep some of the information classified. It is unclear exactly when the documents will be released to the public. Trump said that the Justice Department provided him with a binder full of documents on Dec. 30, 2020 that had not been previously released to Congress or the public. He said that the FBI issued a letter on Jan. 17 stating its “continued objection to any further declassification of the materials in the binder.” Daily Caller
Trump pardons Steve Bannon, nearly 150 others . . . President Trump on Tuesday night pardoned former top campaign aide and White House strategist Steve Bannon, who was arrested for an alleged scam involving private donations to build a border wall with Mexico. Bannon was among nearly 150 people who were granted clemency in the final hours of Trump’s presidency. Bannon, the nationalist firebrand who was formerly the executive chairman of Breitbart News, had been facing a May trial on fraud and money laundering charges in Manhattan federal court. Bannon was accused of scamming $1 million from donors to the “We Build the Wall” GoFundMe campaign launched by US Air Force veteran Brian Kolfage, who lost three limbs during a 2004 bomb blast in Iraq. New York Post
National Security
Iran’s Rouhani says “ball in U.S. court” over nuclear dispute . . . Iranian President Hassan Rouhani urged the incoming U.S. administration on Wednesday to return to a 2015 nuclear agreement and lift sanctions on Tehran, while welcoming the end of “tyrant” President Donald Trump’s era. U.S. President-elect Joe Biden, who takes office on Wednesday, has said the United States will rejoin the pact, which includes restrictions on Iran’s nuclear work, if Tehran resumes strict compliance. “The ball is in the U.S. court now. If Washington returns to Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal, we will also fully respect our commitments under the pact,” Rouhani said in a televised cabinet meeting. Reuters
International
Jailed Putin’s critic releases investigation into Russian President’s billion dollar palace . . . He may be behind bars, but the Kremlin has not succeeded in silencing Alexei Navalny. On his first full day in Moscow’s Matrosskaya-Tishina prison, Mr Navalny’s team have released a huge video investigation into the construction and alleged slush fund behind what is known as “Putin’s palace”, a £1bn private residence on Russia’s Black Sea coast. Calling it “Putin’s biggest secret”, Mr Navalny and his team reveal new details about the sprawling complex near the resort town of Gelendzhik which has long been rumoured to belong to the Russian president. Sky News
Macron calls on Biden to increase US military presence in Middle East . . . French President Emmanuel Macron echoed calls from other world leaders imploring President-elect Biden to increase the military presence of the United States on the world stage. Macron shared his hope that the president-elect will send additional troops to the Middle East to help in the fight against terrorism. Washington Examiner
Maybe the French could cut down on their consumption of Fois Gras and Dom Perignons and chip in some more towards their own security.
Money
Paycheck protection program reopens for second round of small-business loans . . . The Paycheck Protection Program, a vital lifeline that helped keep pandemic-ravaged small businesses afloat, fully reopened to all participating lenders on Tuesday after initially limiting who was eligible. In an attempt to rectify past criticisms that the program favored larger borrowers, the rescue fund – which provides forgivable loans to businesses if they maintain their payroll – had initially only been available to first-time borrowers. The federal government also gave priority to minority-owned businesses in the program’s first two days by only accepting loan applications from certain lenders that focus on underserved communities. Fox Business
Yellen-backed policies set to aid risk assets, raise longer-term worries . . . Treasury Secretary nominee Janet Yellen’s unequivocal support for a pandemic rescue plan cuts both ways for investors, fueling optimism that the rally in risk assets will continue while bolstering concerns over a massive runup in government debt. In her Senate confirmation hearing on Tuesday, the former Federal Reserve chair urged lawmakers to “act big” on the next coronavirus relief package after Biden last week outlined a $1.9 trillion stimulus proposal as part of a domestic policy agenda heavy on government spending. While the plan is expected to provide a critical boost for the coronavirus-hit economy, investors said the massive stimulus also could widen already huge deficits and drive up bond yields, while feeding a rally that some worry has already inflated bubbles in various assets. Reuters
US finance chiefs weigh how to spend vast corporate cash piles . . . US companies are sitting on trillions of dollars in cash that they borrowed to survive the coronavirus shock of 2020. The question now is what they do with all that money, especially if an economic recovery takes hold. Corporate America borrowed a record $2.5tn in the bond markets last year. Pandemic-stricken companies such as airlines and cinemas operators are still burning through cash, hoping for a return to normal when people start travelling and socialising again. But others are in better shape. Companies in the US S&P 500 index built up an additional $1.3tn of cash on their balance sheets last year, according to data from S&P Capital IQ. Many businesses are having to decide what to do with their borrowed fortune. Financial Times
Don’t we wish we had their problems?
Tysons Foods reaches more settlements in chicken price-fixing litigation . . . Tyson Foods Inc agreed to settle price-fixing litigation with two more groups of plaintiffs accusing it of illegally conspiring to inflate prices in the $65 billion chicken industry. The settlements with so-called “end-user” consumers and with more than 30 commercial purchasers were disclosed in filings on Tuesday in federal court in Chicago. Eight days ago, Tyson agreed to settle related antitrust claims by purchasers who bought chickens directly from the Springdale, Arkansas-based company.
Tyson has also faced price-fixing claims by large restaurant and supermarket operators such as Chick-fil-A, Kroger Co and Walmart Inc. Fox Business
Trump supporter and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell says Kohl’s, other retailers to stop selling his brand . . . MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who has pushed claims of voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election, says several retailers will stop selling his brand’s products. Lindell said he spoke to Bed Bath & Beyond and Kohl’s representatives and that both said they would discontinue selling the pillows. ” … These guys don’t understand,” Lindell said in an interview to Right Side Broadcasting Monday night. “They were good partners. In fact, I told them, ‘You guys come back anytime you want.’” Lindell also told Fox 9 that Wayfair and H-E-B have severed ties with the company. USA Today
Kohl’s leadership and other corporate chiefs have no idea who their customers are.
You should also know
Fox News revamps digital unit ahead of Biden presidency . . . Fox News Digital is laying off some of its staffers in what’s being described as a post-election restructuring. The layoffs are impacting less than 20 people at Fox News digital, according to a source familiar with the situation. Politics editor Chris Stirewalt, who sat on the network’s decision desk, is reportedly one of the people being laid off, Washington Post staff writer Sarah Ellison tweeted. Fox News’ decision desk received backlash from President Donald Trump after calling Arizona for President-elect Joe Biden during the 2020 election. As for the other layoffs, Fox News said that it is making changes “to meet the demands of his new era.” Daily Caller
Pro-gun rally proceeds peacefully despite predictions of gloom . . . A caravan demonstration held by one of Virginia’s leading Second Amendment groups went off without a hitch despite dire safety warnings from opponents and targeted suspensions by tech companies. On Monday, the Virginia Citizens Defense League (VCDL) peacefully rode through the streets of Richmond to oppose Democrats’ new gun-control legislation. Joe Macenka, a spokesman for the Virginia Capitol Police, told the Washington Free Beacon the VCDL event was “nice and quiet,” and there were “no issues whatsoever.” The peaceful protest undercuts a narrative advanced by Democratic politicians, reporters, and gun-control advocates that Second Amendment events present an elevated risk to public safety as the country deals with the aftermath of the Capitol riot. Washington Free Beacon
US first country to declare China engaged in genocide agains Uighurs . . . US government on Tuesday declared China’s communist government guilty of carrying out a policy of genocide and crimes against humanity for its mass repression campaign against Uighur minorities in western China. The announcement by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was part of a string of moves by the Trump administration in its final days in power. The department also announced penalties on international shippers accused of helping Venezuela’s socialist government avoid U.S. oil sanctions, and the Treasury Department targeted a Russian construction firm helping lay the Nord Stream 2 oil pipeline to Germany. The China declaration is likely to have the biggest foreign policy impact. Washington Times
University of Wisconsin publishes reading list on ‘disrupting whiteness’ . . . The University of Wisconsin’s library system published a reading list for students on “disrupting whiteness and white supremacy in libraries.” Among the suggested readings are Ibram X. Kendi’s bestseller How to Be an Antiracist and Layla F. Saad’s Me and White Supremacy, as well as several books on “decolonizing research and knowledge.” The list, created by the school’s “Gender and Women’s Studies Library,” also includes a small subsection arguing in favor of “critical librarianship,” which asks librarians to analyze how they support systems of oppression. One of the suggested readings claims that white people use the concept of cuteness to make whiteness appear “harmless and universal.” Another argues that libraries should not be neutral or apolitical spaces. Washington Free Beacon
No wonder more and more young, brainwashed Americans join the ranks of Trotskyites.
Guilty Pleasures
Man spends $400 to find out limping dog was imitating owner . . . A British man said he spent about $400 to have a veterinarian examine his dog’s limp, but it turned out the canine was just imitating his owner, who had a broken ankle. Russell Jones of London said he noticed after his ankle was broken that his dog, Billy, was keeping one of his front paws raised while walking. Jones posted a video to Facebook showing the dog hopping next to him as he walks with the use of crutches. Jones said he spent about $400 to have a veterinarian examine Billy and take X-rays of his apparently injured leg, but the medical professional was unable to find anything wrong. The veterinarian told Jones his dog was imitating the way he walks with his broken ankle. Jones said Billy had been limping since the day after his ankle injury. UPI
Do you love Cut to the News? Let your family and friends know about it! They’ll thank you for it. Spread the word . . .
By Email – use the message that pops up or write your own.
Happy Wednesday! Day 1,461 of Donald Trump’s presidency; Day 1 of Joe Biden’s.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
President Trump—who plans to depart the White House at 8:00 a.m.—released a 20-minute farewell address Tuesday afternoon, thanking the American people for the “extraordinary privilege” of serving them and wishing the Biden administration luck. “We inaugurate a new administration and pray for its success in keeping America safe and prosperous,” he said.
In one of his final executive actions as president, Trump pardoned or commuted the sentences of 143 people at around 1 a.m. ET last night, including his former campaign strategist Steve Bannon, former deputy RNC finance chair Elliott Broidy, rapper Lil Wayne, and former Detroit mayor Kwame Kilpatrick.
Trump also revoked the Executive Order he issued in January 2017 that prohibited executive branch employees from lobbying within five years of leaving the government.
On his last full day in office, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said he has determined that the People’s Republic of China is committing “genocide” against the Uyghur population and other ethnic and religious minority groups in Xinjiang. “The United States calls upon the PRC immediately to release all arbitrarily detained persons and abolish its system of internment, detention camps, house arrest and forced labor,” Pompeo wrote. Asked about Pompeo’s genocide determination on Tuesday, President-elect Biden’s nominee for secretary of state, Antony Blinken, said “that would be my judgment as well.”
In his confirmation hearing Tuesday, Blinken said Biden plans to enter the United States into the World Health Organization’s COVAX initiative that looks to ensure every country can access COVID-19 vaccines. Russia and the U.S. are currently the only two major world powers that haven’t joined the effort.
Sen. Mitch McConnell on Tuesday blamed President Trump for the siege of the Capitol on January 6. “This mob was fed lies,” he said. “They were provoked by the President and other powerful people. And they tried to use fear and violence to stop a specific proceeding of the first branch of the federal government which they did not like.” McConnell has not yet announced how he will vote in Trump’s upcoming impeachment trial.
Joe Biden tapped Pennsylvania health secretary Rachel Levine to serve as his assistant secretary for health at the Department of Health and Human Services. If confirmed, Levine will be the first openly transgender official to serve in a Senate-confirmed role.
The Justice Department informed Sen. Richard Burr on Tuesday that it was ending its months-long investigation into some of his stock trades early in the pandemic, and it will not be pursuing insider trading charges.
Hall of Fame pitcher Don Sutton, who won 324 games, primarily with the Los Angeles Dodgers, died Monday night at the age of 75.
The United States confirmed 172,675 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 10 percent of the 1,724,921 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 2,576 deaths were attributed to the virus on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 401,553. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 123,820 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 31,161,075 COVID-19 vaccine doses have been distributed nationwide, and 12,279,180 have been administered.
Out With the Old, in With the New
Well, we’re here: It’s Inauguration Day. About six hours after this email hits your inbox, President-elect Joe Biden will become the 46th President of the United States. Despite all the sound and fury of the last few months—and despite Trump himself not sticking around for the inauguration (he’s heading home to Florida later this morning instead)—the transition will occur as scheduled. After Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris are sworn in, Biden will assume command of the nation’s armed forces, taking control of the nuclear football while, at the same moment, Trump’s will go offline.
While most of the action is happening today, yesterday was thick with activity as well. Both the outgoing president and the incoming one gave speeches: Trump in a prerecorded message from the White House’s Blue Room, Biden in live remarks from Delaware in the afternoon and the National Mall in the evening.
In his farewell address to the nation, Trump struck a more magnanimous tone than he had during his “stop the steal” post-election campaign, extending the incoming administration his “best wishes” and prayers “for its success in keeping America safe and prosperous” (all, however, without mentioning Biden by name). And he condemned in strong terms the January 6 attack on the Capitol that he helped incite. “Political violence is an attack on everything we cherish as Americans. It can never be tolerated,” he said. “Now more than ever, we must unify around our shared values and rise above the partisan rancor, and forge our common destiny.”
Biden is set to formally take office in a couple of hours, and key members of his national security team are expected to join him shortly thereafter. “Votes are possible Wednesday afternoon on cabinet nominees,” outgoing Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell—who will become minority leader later today, after the two Democrats elected from Georgia are sworn in—wrote in an email to his colleagues earlier this week and obtained by National Review.
The Senate, in its advice and consent role, is understandably prioritizing Biden’s national security team, several members of which testified before various committees on Tuesday. Secretary of Homeland Security nominee Alejandro Mayorkas appeared before the Homeland Security Committee, and Director of National Intelligence nominee Avril Haines testified before the Intelligence Committee. Janet Yellen, Biden’s pick to lead the Treasury Department, testified before the Senate Finance Committee as well.
President-elect Biden’s pick for defense secretary, retired Gen. Lloyd Austin, was the subject of one of the more interesting hearings of the day. Testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee, Austin assured senators he will preserve civilian control of the military despite only having left service in 2016.
“I was a general and a soldier, and I’m proud of that. But today, I appear before you as a citizen—the son of a postal worker and a homemaker from Thomasville, Georgia—and I’m proud of that too,” Austin said. “If you confirm me, I am prepared to serve now as a civilian, fully acknowledging the importance of this distinction.”
If confirmed, Austin, an Army four-star, would be the nation’s first Black defense secretary. On Tuesday, he pledged to fight racism, sexual assault, and extremism within the military, and he emphasized that combatting the coronavirus pandemic will be one of his top priorities.
Before he can be confirmed, Congress will have to waive a statutory requirement that stipulates secretaries of defense must have been out of active military service for at least the past seven years.
One of our favorite (non-TMD) morning newsletters the past several years has been James Hohmann’s ‘Daily 202’ for the Washington Post. Yesterday was his last time at the helm, as he moves on to the Post’s opinion section. In his final edition, Hohmann noted that former President Trump will not be able to maintain the iron grip on the news cycle that President Trump did for the last five years. “Even after leaving office, Trump will continue to be a top story because of his impending Senate trial,” he writes. “If history is any guide, though, attention will eventually fade. The country will probably move on sooner than many people suspect. Twitter banning the outgoing president has had a dramatic impact that might be a harbinger of what’s to come. … Newspapers will no longer have a journalistic duty to cover every pronouncement from a former president. Neither will cable television, especially if Trump does not generate the ratings he once did.”
The U.S. presidential transition of power that takes place every four or eight years is truly an awesome process, in the traditional sense of the word. When John Adams left Washington in 1801 as Thomas Jefferson was set to take power, observers across the country—and the world—were stunned. Peacefully handing over power to a political rival was all but unheard of in the modern world. With that process set to take place again later today, take a moment to read this collection of letters, compiled by Alex Kalman, that recent outgoing presidents wrote to their successors. “When I walked into this office just now I felt the same sense of wonder and respect that I felt four years ago. I know you will feel that, too,” George H.W. Bush wrote to Bill Clinton in 1993. “You will be our President when you read this note. I wish you well. I wish your family well. Your success now is our country’s success. I am rooting hard for you.”
Joe Biden will be sworn in later today to lead an incredibly divided country. But it’s a less divided one than President Abraham Lincoln was addressing in his Second Inaugural Address in 1865, delivered just weeks before his eventual assassination. “Neither party expected for the war the magnitude or the duration which it has already attained,” Lincoln said. “Each looked for an easier triumph and a result less fundamental and astounding. Both read the same Bible and pray to the same God and each invokes His aid against the other.” It would have been easy to give in to despair, but Lincoln remained steadfast: “With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in to bind up the nation’s wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.”
On Tuesday’s inauguration eve episode of the Advisory Opinions podcast, Sarah and David dive into Trump’s forthcoming impeachment trial as well as the latest updates on social media regulation. Stick around for David’s take on the South’s honor culture, and Sarah’s review of the five best chicken sandwich chains in America.
If you thought things are slowing down in the campaign world as Biden gets sworn in, think again. In yesterday’s edition of The Sweep, Sarah tracks some early 2024 movement, analyzes what GOP voters are saying they want from their leaders, and takes a closer look at the NYC mayoral and New Jersey gubernatorial races. “The candidates who most often win are the ones who can appeal to voters where they are,” she laments, “not where they wish they were.”
In yesterday’sUphill, Haley looks at how Republicans are contemplating the future of their party as President Donald Trump prepares to leave office—noting that Trump and his allies aren’t simply going to fade into the background with the end of his presidency. “Don’t expect a unified repudiation of the Trump years from elected Republicans now that he’s leaving office,” she writes. “There will be fierce battles over the direction of the party, especially as lawmakers and officials begin jockeying ahead of the 2024 presidential race.”
William Jacobson: “TODAY IS THE HIGHPOINT of the Biden administration. Take it to the bank.”
Kemberlee Kaye:“Exodus 14:13-14.”
Mary Chastain: “Please. I am begging you. Please learn about Janet Yellen and focus on her. She will be the Treasury Secretary. She will screw it up like she did the Federal Reserve. Yellen actually said Congress and the American people need to put aside concerns about rising debt. Can we please care about the debt no matter who is in office? It skyrocketed under Trump. It’s going to skyrocket more under Biden. Can we please stop spending? Money machine go bbbbrrrrrrr.”
Leslie Eastman: “Biden administration: The only science followed is political and the only power it wishes to generate is its own.”
Stacey Matthews: “Just in time for Joe Biden’s inauguration, the Associated Press sees ‘hints of an economic renewal.’ What a surprise.”
David Gerstman: “Political violence of the Left seems not to get liberals upset. Like riots from four years ago at the time of President Trump’s inauguration, or this past summer.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s government is considering sanctions against Facebook, Twitter, and other social media giants for silencing free speech. Hungarian Justice Minister Judit Varga approached the country’s competition watchdog and the national digital freedom committee to discuss action against big social media platforms biased towards conservative content, Reuters reported on Monday. She is looking at “possibilities of sanctioning unfair trading practices,” the new website HungaryTimes confirmed. On Monday, the Hungarian minister blasted Facebook and other social media companies for limiting the “visibility of Christian, conservative, right-wing opinions.” They were violating “all those fundamental democratic legal norms that form the basis of Western-type culture,” she added.”
Legal Insurrection Foundation is a Rhode Island tax-exempt corporation established exclusively for charitable purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to educate and inform the public on legal, historical, economic, academic, and cultural issues related to the Constitution, liberty, and world events.
For more information about the Foundation, CLICK HERE.
The End of the Trump Presidency
This is it: the final BRIGHT of the Trump presidency.
It will not, however, at least in this writer’s opinion, be the final anything of the Trump era.
The question that confronts us on the eve of Joe Biden accepting the heavy burden of the presidency today is: how can the right can come back stronger and better-equipped to confront the perils of the age?
Donald Trump has been the decidedly imperfect battering ram that broke open calcified conventional wisdom on both sides of the aisle, from foreign policy to trade to immigration. He was the first Republican president since Ronald Reagan to effectively fight the culture war. And it’s easy to forget that despite all of Trump’s flaws, for the first three years, these things were popular. As late as February 2019, and sailing on the winds of not just an economic boom, but the most equitably-distributed economic boom in recent memory, many were certain that he would be re-elected.
But during a once-in-a-century pandemic, and its attendant economic and cultural collapse, the rottenness of our institutions was laid completely bare. Parents realized that public schools placed the wants of the adults in the system above the needs of their children. Americans watched as public health officials curtailed even such intimately important events as weddings and funerals only to reverse themselves for the correct political cause. Riots and burned businesses were tolerated for over 100 days across the country, finally to be capped off with one of the most symbolic and extreme episodes of political violence in our history, during which LARPy-looking losers seized the floor of the United States House of Representatives after murdering one police officer and injuring others.
And we endured one of the messiest, mail-in elections in recent memory, which concluded days later with a narrow win – at least in key swing states – for our incoming President, Joe Biden.
Biden takes office with little joyousness, in the midst of thousands of U.S. troops that now occupy the nation’s capital. The task ahead of him is unenviable. Our trust in virtually all the institutions of American life – government, mega-corporations, our educational institutions, the media, Hollywood, and more – is shredded to bits with good reason, after their gatekeepers abused that trust for decades for political and ideological purposes. Biden will now govern a country in which millions do not believe him to be fairly elected. It is a troubled nation over which he now sits in its highest office.
While what I expect from the Biden administration is more along the lines of “woke neoliberalism,” I fervently hope that he will put meaningful action behind his thus-far empty calls for “unity.” The country is at a crossroads, and the decisions he makes now will echo for a long time after he is gone.
Some more thoughts (I can’t promise they’re uplifting) on the Radio Hour with Emily Jashinsky here. More importantly, you can hear the President’s Farewell Address here.
1776 Commission Releases Fantastic Report (Immediately Tarred by MSM as “Racist”)
If there’s anything that can save us now, it’s a return to an understanding of our common history, and the principles that built the United States into a shining city on a hill that has attracted millions all over the world yearning to breathe free. It is fitting that among President Trump’s last acts was the release of his 1776 Commission’s report on American history and the destructive narrative replacing it in our nation’s op-ed pages, and, more importantly, classrooms. Naturally, this straightforward praise of American founding principles and rigorous scholarly standards of historical truth was immediately tarred as racist by many in the media.
“The 45-page report released on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, two days before President Donald Trump leaves Washington, celebrates the nation’s founding while condemning the ‘destructive scholarship’ emanating from the progressive left on university campuses that suppress dissent, breed extremism, and serve as ‘hotbeds of anti-Americanism.’…
The commission, which contains eminently credentialed Americans of a variety of ethnicities, was created last fall to restore “patriotic education” one year after The New York Times launched its anti-American, ahistorical, and characteristically Pulitzer-prize winning “1619 Project” that its editors admitted as historically inaccurate last spring. The White House report took direct aim at the 1619 Project already imposed on some 4,500 U.S. classrooms as emblematic of “the decline in American education” where students are taught a distorted view of their nation’s history, and grow up to hate their own country.
‘States and school districts should reject any curriculum that promotes one-sided partisan opinions, activist propaganda, or factional ideologies that demean America’s heritage, dishonor our heroes, or deny our principles,’ the report reads.”
The report is worth reading in full here.
Wednesday Links
In important last-minute move, the US has formerly declared that the CCP is committing genocide against Uighurs. (The Federalist)
Biden plans to give Big Tech free rein. (The Federalist)
The common carrier argument as applied to social media companies. (WSJ)
“Anti-racist” education is not what it sounds like. (American Mind)
Biden’s stated immigration policy risks terrible consequences at the border. (Newsweek)
The important (real) case for election security reform. (City Journal)
Hillary still can’t accept that American voters just didn’t like her very much. (The Federalist)
Inez Feltscher Stepman is a senior policy analyst at the Independent Women’s Forum and a senior contributor to The Federalist. She is a San Francisco Bay Area native with a BA in Philosophy from UCSD and a JD from the University of Virginia. She lives in Washington, D.C. with her husband, Jarrett Stepman, her puggle Thor, and her cat Thaddeus Kosciuszko. You can follow her on Twitter at @inezfeltscher and on Instagram (for #ootd, obvi) under the same handle. Opinions expressed on this website are her own and not those of her employers. Or her husband.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list
Note: By using some of the links above, Bright may be compensated through the Amazon Affiliate program and Magic Links. However, none of this content is sponsored and all opinions are our own.
Jan 20, 2021 01:00 am
Although the left’s endless agitation obscured it, Trump should go down in history as one of America’s greatest presidents. Read More…
Jan 20, 2021 01:00 am
As the Civil War had redefined the American political landscape for the next hundred years, so will the events of January 6 reshape, realign and possibly destroy the existing political status quo. Read More…
Jan 20, 2021 01:00 am
Why be a real leader when you get maximum popularity emulating someone else who is pretending to be a leader? Read More…
Recent Blog Posts
Joe Biden’s defining moment may come today
Jan 20, 2021 01:00 am
Depending on what he does or doesn’t say after being inaugurated as the 46th President of the United States, Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. may enter the history books as a healer, or as a toxic avenger of political grudges that escalate and turn against him. Read more…
Unity! Healing! (Probably not going to happen)
Jan 20, 2021 01:00 am
Their hatred, jealousy and fear of Trump’s popularity and success in office has transformed them from merely viciously intolerant into rabid dogs of venality. Read more…
Giving Twitter the bird
Jan 20, 2021 01:00 am
Two satisfactions are to drop one’s Twitter account, and to thank President Trump for his achievements. Read more…
Biden education transition team leader big fan of CCP
Jan 20, 2021 01:00 am
It appears that the Biden administration and the New Democratic-Socialist Party are committed to replicating the “magical work” the Chicoms have done with their education system. Read more…
The lifeblood of democracy
Jan 20, 2021 01:00 am
Unlike systems such as the one-party Chinese government, democracy embraces the messy way that people like to disagree with each other. Read more…
Communities and national healing
Jan 20, 2021 01:00 am
Our country was fabricated by good men, and those that live their lives within her borders are good people. Read more…
Democrats’ Favorite Year
Jan 20, 2021 01:00 am
Sometimes you just get on a roll. The Democrats certainly are on one now. They achieved their 2020 vision…and then some. Read more…
American Thinker is a daily internet publication devoted to the thoughtful exploration of issues of importance to Americans.
This email was sent to <<Email Address>> why did I get this? unsubscribe from this list update subscription preferences
AmericanThinker · 3060 El Cerrito Plaza, #306 · El Cerrito, CA 94530 · USA
By Kyle Kondik
Managing Editor, Sabato’s Crystal Ball
KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE
— Even as a new president is inaugurated today, the outgoing president looms large.
— As Senate Republicans ponder how to vote in the Trump impeachment trial, they may be incentivized to move the party past Trump as they seek to recapture power in Washington next year.
Trump’s shadow
Given Donald Trump’s ability to dominate the news both before and during his presidency, it is perhaps not surprising that he remains the subject of the most immediately pressing political question in Washington: Should Senate Republicans use the pending impeachment trial in the Senate to forbid the outgoing president from holding public office again?
Practically speaking, that’s what the stakes of the looming impeachment trial are, which will begin sometime in the coming days (after Democratic Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi passes the article of impeachment to the Senate). Trump will no longer be president at noon Wednesday, and thus he cannot be removed from office. But if Trump is convicted by a two-thirds vote in the upper chamber, the Senate can then ban Trump from holding office in the future through a simple majority vote.
The decision may largely be up to one man: the Republican Senate leader, Mitch McConnell (R-KY). The conventional wisdom, which strikes us as sensible, is that if McConnell backs impeachment, he will be able to find 16 other Republicans to come along with him. That, along with all 50 Senate Democrats, is what it would take to convict the president in the impeachment trial, opening the door to the vote banning Trump from holding public office. If McConnell balks at conviction, this impeachment trial likely will end the same way last year’s did, with Trump acquitted.
Speaking on the Senate floor Tuesday, McConnell said the Jan. 6 pro-Trump mob that stormed the Capitol “was fed lies. They were provoked by the president and other powerful people.”
Some of those who would benefit the most from Trump being disqualified from running again — those who want the GOP presidential nomination for themselves in 2024 — have been some of the president’s biggest defenders in recent weeks. Sens. Josh Hawley (R-MO) and Ted Cruz (R-TX) were two of the ringleaders of the effort to question election results from Arizona and Pennsylvania in the Electoral College certification, which was interrupted by the Capitol sacking. Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL), another possible presidential candidate and the chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, voted in favor of the objection to the Pennsylvania results. Non-Trump Republican presidential contenders logically should want Trump out of the way for 2024, but they likely feel that if they are seen as anti-Trump, they won’t be able to win the nomination.
In other words, those with future presidential aspirations in the GOP likely will stick with the president, leaving it up to Republican members of the Senate whose aspirations do not go beyond that chamber to block Trump from seeking the Republican nomination in 2024.
One also wonders if there may be some sort of de facto barrier erected against Trump running again even if he is not convicted in a Senate trial and subsequently disqualified. One possibility, as suggested by Sen. Tim Kaine (D-VA) in a revelatory interview last week with Center for Politics Director Larry Sabato, would be if Congress enacted a requirement that any presidential nominee publicly release 10 years of tax returns, something Kaine suggests Trump would not do.
Trump’s approval with Republicans remains strong, but among the broader populace, the president is limping to the finish line. A raft of national polling on Trump’s approval has been released over the last several days, and Trump’s approval rating has sagged to an average of 39% approve/57% disapprove in the FiveThirtyEight average. The spread was 45% approve/53% disapprove on Election Day.
It’s reasonable to believe that Trump’s real level of approval may be higher than conventional polls suggest. The first bit of evidence comes from the election results themselves: Trump lost the national popular vote 51%-47%, so he ran a little ahead of his approval. The national exit poll conducted by Edison Research for many major media outlets found that Trump’s approval with the electorate was 50% approve/49% disapprove; another poll of the electorate, the VoteCast, conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago for the Associated Press and Fox News, found Trump’s approval with the electorate as 47% approve/53% disapprove. So the pre-election polling probably understated Trump’s approval rating.
However, whatever Trump’s “real” approval number is, it’s likely lower now than it was at the time of the election.
As McConnell and other Senate Republicans ponder what they should do about Trump, they also have to consider what impact their actions might have on Trump’s position within the party. Part of what has sustained Trump, arguably, is that Republicans have generally stayed in lockstep with him. Trump had no presidential primary challenge of note, and Republicans almost uniformly backed him in the impeachment process in late 2019 and early 2020: No House Republican backed impeachment, and only Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT) voted to convict Trump in the Senate trial.
This time, 10 House Republicans voted in favor of impeachment, and, in all likelihood, more than just Romney will vote to convict in the Senate. Could a public break with Trump from some leading Republicans create more of a so-called “permission structure” for Republican voters to break with Trump, too? Or will Republicans who vote against Trump be punished by voters? Would Trump hurt Republicans in other ways, such as by creating a third party, which he reportedly has discussed according to the Wall Street Journal? These questions are what Senate Republicans have to ponder, and it’s hard to know the answers in advance of whatever decision they make in the Senate trial.
We suspect that the full story of the Jan. 6 Capitol disgrace has yet to be told. The Senate trial may help to fill out the story and determine how culpable Trump, his allies, and other elected officials were in what happened. That could move public opinion, too.
This leads to yet another important, unanswerable question: How long will the events of Jan. 6 linger in the broader political consciousness?
To us, the scene represented the most alarming sight on American soil since 9/11. But we also cannot assume that others will feel the same way. The 2022 midterm is still well in the future, and the issues that will animate that election are a mystery.
From a historical perspective, just an average midterm performance by Republicans would be more than enough to flip both chambers of Congress next year. Republicans will need to net just a single seat in the Senate and a half-dozen or so in the House. Since World War II, the president’s party has lost an average of 27 House seats and 3.5 Senate seats in midterms, although individual yearly results have varied widely.
Joe Biden, as president, could end up presiding over a strong economic recovery as the nation (we hope) eventually leaves COVID-19 in the rearview mirror. A divided GOP with Trump remaining a major and divisive figure could lead to outcomes like we saw in the Georgia Senate runoffs, with an engaged, united Democratic Party fending off a slightly less engaged and united GOP. That is one midterm possibility; there are others that would be better for the GOP.
On this, the day of Biden’s inauguration, we find ourselves still fixated on the man leaving office, Trump. This is much as it was during the campaign, when Trump and his allies sought to make the election about Biden, to insufficient avail. The best midterm results for the presidential out-party typically come when they can make the election a negative referendum on the president and/or the president’s party.
The first order of business for Republicans in 2021, thus, probably should be working toward making sure the midterm isn’t a referendum on the final days of the Trump presidency.
Read the fine print
Learn more about the Crystal Ball and find out how to contact us here.
Sign up to receive Crystal Ball e-mails like this one delivered straight to your inbox.
Use caution with Sabato’s Crystal Ball, and remember: “He who lives by the Crystal Ball ends up eating ground glass!”
NBC political director and MSNBC host Chuck Todd was excoriated by many on the left on social media for asking if President-elect Joe Biden would be able to keep his promise on the coronavirus pandemic. Todd made the comments Tuesday on “Meet the Press” after noting poll results that showed many Americans believed the country was divided and wo … Read more
Unable to convince his deputies to clamp down on disorder while in power, Donald Trump now leaves a city occupied to cheers in honor of his successor (and his successor’s army).
Democrats have moved swiftly to use the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol mayhem to push for a frightening expansion of federal surveillance and police powers, openly smearing anyone who voted for Donald Trump as a potential terrorist.
The Georgia runoffs would’ve gone the other way had any number of factors turned out differently, but Trump’s bad behavior and overreaction to it among others in his party was the central theme.
After the Capitol riot, Dems and the media breathlessly reported that state capitols all over the nation would face a similar fate — but they didn’t. Why?
Britain and India’s vaccine cooperation are part of the continuation of strengthening ties between America, Australia, Japan, India, and the United Kingdom.
Now is the time to let prudence and cool deliberation dictate how to move forward as we roll up our sleeves and get to work. Now is the time for courage.
‘They obviously don’t want to hear perspectives of 73 million Americans who voted for President Trump,’ Stefanik expressed. ‘And the tens of millions of Americans who have concerns about election integrity.’
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
“You must read The Transom. With brilliant political analysis and insight into the news that matters most, it is essential to understanding this incredible moment in history. I read it every day!” – Newt Gingrich
Sent to: rickbulownewmedia@protonmail.com
Unsubscribe
The Federalist, 611 Pennsylvania Ave SE, #247, Washington, DC 20003, United States
The sundown commemoration came hours before President Donald Trump was due to leave the White House for the last time and hand over a country racked by the greatest public health crisis in a century, economic devastation and violent political upheaval.
Ceremonies spearheaded by Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris from the base of the Lincoln Memorial marked the federal government’s first official nod to the staggering death toll from the pandemic.
The United Kingdom’s official death toll is 91,470 – Europe’s worst figure and the world’s fifth worst after the United States, Brazil, India and Mexico. Deaths rose by a record on Tuesday.
As hospital admissions soared, the British government’s chief scientific adviser, Patrick Vallance, said there was enormous pressure on the National Health Service with doctors and nurses battling to give people sufficient care.
“This is very, very bad at the moment with enormous pressure and in some cases it looks like a war zone in terms of the things that people are having to deal with,” Vallance told Sky.
The encouraging results from an analysis of blood of participants in trials are based on more extensive analysis than those released by the U.S. drugmaker last week.
The curfew would allow only people with pressing needs to leave their homes between 8:30 p.m. and 4:30 a.m. local time as of Friday night, RTL said, citing government sources.
Schools and non-essential shops have already been closed since mid-December, following the shutdown of bars and restaurants two months earlier.
This lockdown will remain in place until at least Feb. 9, Prime Minister Mark Rutte said last week.
India, ‘pharmacy of the world,’ starts COVID vaccine shipments India started delivering coronavirus vaccines to its neighbors, the foreign ministry said, flagging off a drive to garner goodwill in an often fractious region with the first shipment sent to the tiny Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan.
Bangladesh and Nepal said they expected deliveries on Thursday. The only neighbor absent from India’s list apart from China, is regional rival Pakistan, which had not requested assistance, according to an Indian government official.
Many low and middle-income countries are relying on India, the world’s biggest vaccine maker, for supplies to start COVID-19 immunization programs and bring an end to their outbreaks.
We need your help to tell these stories. Our news organization wants to capture the full scope of what’s happening and how we got here by drawing on a wide variety of sources.
Are you a government employee or contractor involved in coronavirus testing or the wider public health response? Are you a doctor, nurse or health worker caring for patients? Have you worked on similar outbreaks in the past? Has the disease known as COVID-19 personally affected you or your family? Are you aware of new problems that are about to emerge, such as critical supply shortages?
We need your tips, firsthand accounts, relevant documents or expert knowledge. Please contact us at coronavirus@reuters.com.
We prefer tips from named sources, but if you’d rather remain anonymous, you can submit a confidential news tip. Here’s how.
Daimler AG’s Mercedes-Benz unveiled the EQA, a new electric compact SUV as part of plans to take on rival Tesla and offer more emission-free vehicles to consumers to meet targets in Europe and China.
It’s Inauguration Day, which means unless a miracle drops on us immediately, Joe Biden is the 46th President of the United States. Once he’s inaugurated, it’s essentially over for any hopes that President Trump can continue into a second term, right? Hold your horses. There’s another avenue to expose voter fraud that only became available AFTER Biden’s inauguration.
This play is called a writ of quo warranto. Before I talk about that, let’s make something perfectly clear. For the past several weeks I’ve talked about the “MOAB”—the Mother Of All Bombshells—as being the way for a miracle to manifest and finally force mainstream media, Big Tech, Democrats, Establishment Republicans, and the judiciary to pay full attention to the voter fraud that stole the election on behalf of Joe Biden. In retrospect, I was too limiting in how I described God’s sovereignty. If He wills that President Trump is to win, who am I to declare how I believe it will come about?
A writ of quo warranto isn’t necessarily a MOAB because it doesn’t require a new piece of bombshell evidence. It takes the accumulated bombshells, affidavits, videos, and other pieces of evidence and consolidates them into one legal case. There are a few things that make this play completely different from what Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell, and others have attempted through our corrupt judiciary. With a writ of quo warranto, the clock starts AFTER inauguration because it challenges a sitting government official’s authority to be in office based on actions, such as voter fraud, that aided in that situation.
Leo Donofrio, who I admittedly know very little about, has been talking about this maneuver for a month. On his site, he has been calling on President Trump and his team to prepare to file this writ. He has also laid out the groundwork on which they can challenge the election and “show the receipts,” as he declared on his latest post:
See my previous reports for case law and analysis of the federal quo warranto statute. The bottom line is that SCOTUS has held that an election of any United States official can be challenged based on fraud or error by a writ of quo warranto. And the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals recently held that the proper venue to challenge the election of a sitting President is the D.C. District Court. We have a statute. We have a venue. Bring the receipts, President Trump.
If you don’t bring the receipts by quo warranto, then you will have quit. It’s all in or all out. There’s no other options left. This must be done. You have to give the proper law in the proper venue a chance. If you quit now, it will be broadcast as an admission that there was no fraud, error, or lawlessness by election officials.
As soon as Biden is sworn in, you can file the complaint. The gaslighting of America will only end by counter-punching with a verified complaint showing all of the evidence. Then comes a jury trial.
Furthermore, because of the widespread persecution of politicians who supported an investigation of the election, such as Georgia State Senators Brandon Beach and Burt Jones, alternative standing as interested persons under the quo warranto statute has been created for them to bring quo warranto actions too.
Beach and Jones were both stripped of their committee chairs. Therefore, they now have standing to petition the D.C. District Court to try the case before a jury, because that is the only way they can now prove their innocence and justification.
Simply put, the anti-MAGA conspirators have overplayed their hand in persecuting stop the steal politicians and patriotic citizens. In doing so, they caused very real injuries that need adjudication. These parties now have an interest in quo warranto which is unique and particular to them as opposed to the general public at large. Such particular injuries create unique standing.
Nobody right now is talking about quo warranto other than at this blog. That will change soon. We are a nation of laws. And we have an established means of testing elections. Those means, laws, cases, etc. have existed from the very start of our nation.
On the latest episode of NOQ Report, I broke down my takeaways from Donofrio’s assertions, explored what this could mean if it’s initiated by President Trump or others, and engaged in speculation of how this could all be the proper play we’ve been seeking all along. We’ve watched in utter frustration as mainstream media ignored evidence of voter fraud while Big Tech suppressed it. We’ve seen the expected attacks from Democrats and the semi-shocking betrayals from the Republican Establishment.
Over the last few weeks, I’ve held back on talking about the majority of theories, strategies, and observations that have come my way. It’s not because I ignored them, but most simply didn’t pass the “smell test” of credibility and likelihood. What Donofrio is proposing does pass this smell test. That’s not to say I consider it likely, and I hate to be perceived as a peddler of false hope, but the potential here is actually higher than any of the lawsuits I discussed prior. Those seemed doomed to fail. A writ of quo warranto is as close to ironclad as we’ve seen presented.
It’s conspicuous that practically nobody has talked about this play. A writ of quo warranto appears to have all of the legs necessary for President Trump and his supporters to be vindicated. Will his team act on this? Are they quietly acting on it already?
Kudos to “Linda” for bringing this to my attention.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking 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 resurgence of lockdowns 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 $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, 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. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
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.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. 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.
President Donald Trump has granted pardons to 73 individuals and commuted the sentences of an additional 70 individuals in the final hours of his presidency. The full list of presidential pardons and commutations published on the White House’s website includes former White House chief strategist and ex-Breitbart editor-in-chief Stephen Bannon, 67, as well as rappers Lil Wayne and Kodak Black, ex-Detroit mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, and former Trump fundraiser Elliott Broidy.
Article by Mimi Nguyen Ly originally published at The Epoch Times.
Trump granted Bannon a full pardon. Bannon earlier this year pleaded not guilty to fraud charges relating to fundraising for a private border wall project. He was released on bail in August 2020 and was scheduled to stand trial in May 2021 prior to the pardon.
The release from the White House said of Bannon, “Prosecutors pursued Mr. Bannon with charges related to fraud stemming from his involvement in a political project. Mr. Bannon has been an important leader in the conservative movement and is known for his political acumen.”
Bannon in August 2020 described his arrest as a “political hit job” to “stop and intimidate people” from supporting a U.S.-Mexico border wall. Trump said at the time of Bannon’s arrest that he felt “very badly.”
“I feel very badly. I haven’t been dealing with him for a very long period of time,” Trump told reporters. “I don’t like that project. I thought it was being done for showboating reasons.”
Rapper Lil Wayne, also known as Dwayne Michael Carter Jr., was granted a full pardon. Carter was prosecuted on federal weapons charges, and “pled guilty to possession of a firearm and ammunition by a convicted felon, owing to a conviction over 10 years ago,” according to the White House announcement. The announcement notes that Carter has since “exhibited this generosity through commitment to a variety of charities, including donations to research hospitals and a host of foodbanks.” His pardon is supported by football coach Deion Sanders and businessman Brett Berish.
Rapper Kodak Black, also known as Bill Kapri, was sentenced to 46 months in prison for making a false statement on a federal document and has served nearly half of his sentence. The White House announcement noted that Kapri’s commutation is supported by many religious and community leaders, and that he was involved in “numerous philanthropic efforts” prior to his conviction.
Former Mayor of Detroit, Kilpatrick, has served about seven years of a 28-year prison term for his role in a racketeering and bribery scheme while in office. Prominent members of the Detroit community, including Alice Johnson, Diamond and Silk, and Pastor Paula White, support his commutation.
Broidy, a former top fundraiser for Trump during the 2016 campaign, pleaded guilty in October 2020 to violating lobbying laws by attempting to influence the administration on behalf of Chinese and Malaysian interests.
Trump also granted full pardons to Todd Farha, Thaddeus Bereday, William Kale, Paul Behrens, Peter Clay, figures who are “Widely cited as a case study in overcriminalization” and have attracted broad support for their pardon, according to the White House announcement.
“In 2008, Messrs. Farha, Bereday, Kale, Behrens, and Clay were criminally prosecuted for a state regulatory matter involving the reporting of expenditures to a state health agency,” the announcement of their pardon reads. “The expenditures reported were based on actual monies spent, and the reporting methodology was reviewed and endorsed by those with expertise in the state regulatory scheme. Notably, there was no evidence that any of the individuals were motivated by greed. And in fact, the sentencing judge called the likelihood that there was any personal financial motivation ‘infinitesimal.’
It continues, “The judge imposed a range of sentences from probation to 3 years’ imprisonment, reflecting the conduct as an aberration from these individuals’ otherwise law-abiding lives. Messrs. Farha, Bereday, Kale, Behrens, and Clay are described as devoted to their family and their communities, and have weathered their convictions without complaint.”
The pardon power applies to federal crimes and is one of the broadest powers available to a president. The decision to pardon is not reviewable by other branches of government and the president does not have to provide a reason for issuing a pardon.
Trump in his last week in office did not hold any public events. The president has instead been issuing a number of memorandums and executive orders, including ordering the declassification of previously confidential documents related to “Crossfire Hurricane,” the FBI’s investigation of his 2016 campaign.
Trump and First Lady Melania Trump are not attending the planned inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden, and instead will leave Washington on Wednesday morning at 8 a.m. for Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida.
Individuals not on the list of pardons and commutations—but were frequently discussed on social media prior to the White House announcement—include WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, former CIA employee and whistleblower Edward Snowden, and Joe Exotic, a former zoo operator who was convicted on charges of animal abuse and an attempted murder for hire plot.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking 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 resurgence of lockdowns 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 $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, 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. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
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.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. 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.
Today, The Two Mikes hosted political writer Jack Kerwick for the first time. On the inauguration’s eve, Kerwick explained his idea that the Republican Party, as it has been known for decades, is probably is finished.
Kerwick agreed with the Two Mikes that the Republicans are day-dreaming if they think the people who voted for Trump in 2020, will come out in the same numbers for the midterms in 2022 as they did for Trump. The 2020 Republican voter cast his vote for Trump and his policy, not for the Republican party.
There is every chance that the combination of the hatred of Trump voters for the Republicans anti-Trump actions after the election, and the Democrats ability to rig the midterm election in the same way they did the 2020 election, will yield stronger Democratic control of both houses.
Jack Kerwick’s writings are well worth reading and can be found at the following sites: Front Page and American Greatness.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking 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 resurgence of lockdowns 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 $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, 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. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
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.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. 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.
After 4 years in office (during which no new foreign entanglements were initiated) President Trump is releasing his farewell remarks on Tuesday, as he prepares to hand power over to Joe Biden.
Trump has opted not to participate in the inauguration ceremony, and instead of the usual pageantry, Joe Biden is reportedly planning to deliver an address roughly 20-30 minutes in length, focusing on the theme of unity.
As for President Trump, his team has leaked a short excerpt from his planned remarks to the press. He’s expected to point out that he’s the first president in “decades” who didn’t start any new wars, while also proclaiming that the “America First” movement he started is only just beginning.
But as Bloomberg’s report pointed out in the headline, Trump is also expected to say he is praying for Biden’s success, what BBG described as “a rare gesture of goodwill” toward his successor.
“This week, we inaugurate a new administration and pray for its success in keeping America safe and prosperous,” Trump will say, according to excerpts released by the White House.
He’s also expected to denounce the outbreak of violence at the Capitol earlier this month, which has been used to justify a massive pre-inauguration quasi-lockdown in Washington DC.
“All Americans were horrified by the assault on our Capitol,” he will say, according to the excerpts. “Political violence is an attack on everything we cherish as Americans. It can never be tolerated.”
The prepared remarks were leaked first on twitter by reporters for Bloomberg and the Washington Post, among other MSM news outlets.
Biden’s inauguration speech will last 20 to 30 minutes. Theme is “unity,” his aides say.
These scripted words are what some advisers had been urging an irritable Trump to say all along: a new president is coming in Jan. 20 but the Trump movement isn’t over.
Excerpt from Trump’s farewell speech, as released by the White House:
“Now, as I prepare to hand power over to a new administration at Noon on Wednesday, I want you to know that the movement we started is only just beginning.”
INBOX: Excerpts from Trump’s farewell address to the nation, per today’s pooler @mchalfant16 — the video (recorded Monday) is expected to be released at 4pm today pic.twitter.com/LmhbjaZl88
Reports are claiming VP Pence has joined the growing list of turncoat Republicans who won’t be attending Trump’s farewell shindig at Joint Base Andrews.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking 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 resurgence of lockdowns 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 $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, 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. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
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.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. 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.
Ever since the election, I was exceedingly confident that President Trump would prevail in the end. Mountains of evidence of widespread voter fraud was available within a week after the election and only grew with every passing day. But invariably, it was ignored by mainstream media and suppressed by Big Tech.
This didn’t shake my confidence because I made a false assumption. Between the state legislatures and the judicial branch, I assumed there was enough support for exposing the facts to circumvent the propaganda and false narratives. My assumption was there were honorable people intermingled among The Swamp to make sure the truth not only came to light but resulted in action. Call me a fool, but I had no idea how pervasive The Swamp really is. It isn’t comprised of a handful of powerful people. It’s not just a majority of them. What we learned with this election is that The Swamp is represented by the vast majority of people in government.
“Representation” of The Swamp does not necessarily mean everyone is a direct part of it. Many are compliant with the edicts out of fear or for the sake of career advancement. These are the people who justify actions they know to be wrong by either throwing their hands up and saying they can’t stop it or because they have the delusional notion that the only way they can ever fix it is to work their way up. They play the game in hopes of someday changing the game… at least that’s what they’ve convinced themselves they can do.
Some are bullied. Others are outright blackmailed. But most who help The Swamp to rule in perpetuity do so simply because they’re weak. They’ve seen what happens to people who speak out. Political expediency overrules any notions of honor or righteousness. As the Pink Floyd song Wish You Were Here asks, “Did you exchange a walk-on part in the war for a lead role in a cage?”
But this isn’t a post-mortem on what may be the last full day of President Trump’s term. I’m still holding out hope for a miracle from God to correct this election, even as the clock ticks down. In case it doesn’t, I wanted to makes sure our readers know that the narrative was never a false one. We’re in the process of being gaslighted by media, Big Tech, Democrats, and even most Republican lawmakers into thinking the election was legitimate. It’s a powerful attempt to rewrite history before our eyes. Don’t back down. Don’t start questioning what you know in your heart and mind. This election was stolen, period.
How can this nation move forward knowing nefarious forces have more control than We the People? With the progressive policies of Joe Biden and the Democrats on the verge of becoming realities, the scariest part for many of us is knowing that we do not have a voice. If we did, Biden would not be president, the Senate would be controlled by the GOP, and even the House may have been flipped. But there’s a silver lining. Had all of these things happened, many would never have become aware of what we now know to be true. The GOP is, at best, a slightly less offensive alternative to the Democrats. There are as many if not more Republicans representing The Swamp than there are Democrats.
We have a daunting task moving forward. Is the system broken? Yes. Is the GOP able to fix it? No. It would appear there is nobody to turn to, right? Wrong. We have to turn to ourselves. Nobody’s going to save us. America was intended to be a nation governed by the people through representatives of our constitutional republic. We’ve grown complacent over the decades and reliant on “leaders” to fix things. This election is a wake-up call.
The reason it’s important to counter the gaslighting about election fraud is because the propaganda is so strong, we’re already witnessing people doubt what they saw. This is key for The Swamp. They must make us question our own reality for us to become compliant with their decrees. They have suppressed the truth and they will continue to suppress the truth until enough of us stand up and demand that the truth comes to light.
If Joe Biden is, indeed, inaugurated tomorrow, the fight to expose voter fraud must continue. This isn’t about vindication. It isn’t even about reversing the travesty and usurping a Biden administration. It’s about protecting the sanctity of this nation by not allowing it to be ruled by lies. They’ve had a taste of victory in pulling off the biggest con job in the history of this nation. We cannot allow them to think this is the status quo. If they do, they will continue to expand their lies and thereby expand their control over the people.
It’s a sad testament to the state of our nation that sharing this article will likely result in deplatforming. Big Tech will “fact-check” it with liars and scoundrels. But the truth must be preserved despite their attempts to suppress it.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking 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 resurgence of lockdowns 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 $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, 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. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
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.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
A Monday article at the Children’s Health Defense website provides a rundown on some of the latest regarding worries that experimental coronavirus vaccine shots may be causing deaths and injuries across America and the world.
One major development related in the article is that in Norway “health officials said last week they were investigating the deaths of 23 elderly people who died shortly after receiving the vaccine, and had confirmed 13 of those were directly related to the vaccine.” Further, the troubles in Norway have helped lead to changes in vaccination policy. The article relates that “[t]he Norwegian Institute of Public Health, which had originally prioritized the elderly for the vaccine, has since revised its advice to urge more caution when vaccinating the elderly, especially those with underlying conditions.”
Further, United States government agencies, the article notes, are investigating death and injury of some people who have received coronavirus vaccine shots in America.
The Children’s Health Defense article also provides updates regarding two matters about which I have written.
In a January 10 article, I wrote about 24 residents, described as coronavirus-infected, dying at an Auburn, New York, nursing home. The deaths started occurring on December 29. The nursing home that had previously had no coronavirus deaths had started giving coronavirus vaccinations to residents on December 22. The Children’s Health Defense article notes that the number of deaths has risen to 29 elderly people and that “[s]o far, there’s no word of any investigation into the deaths.”
In a Friday article, I wrote about a coronavirus vaccine lot being pulled from use at a new “Vaccination Super Station” in San Diego, California, because, in a short time period, six people had allergic reactions after being vaccinated with experimental coronavirus vaccine. The Children’s Health Defense article provides this update:
Sunday night, California health officials called for a pause on the use of a huge batch of Moderna’s COVID vaccine due to its “higher-than-usual number of possible allergic reactions.” As The Defender reported this morning, California’s top epidemiologist Dr. Erica S. Pan is recommending providers pause the administration of lot ‘041L20A’ of the Moderna COVID vaccine.
Read the complete Children’s Health Defense article here.
To further examine potential dangers from experimental coronavirus vaccines being promoted by governments in America and abroad, consider also reading Children’s Health Defense Founder and Chairman Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s in-depth January 14 article “Death by Coincidence?”.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking 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 resurgence of lockdowns 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 $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, 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. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
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.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. 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.
Failed Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, on his final day leading the upper chamber, chose to use his time to make a statement about the Capitol riots that will upset Trump-supporters and further divide the nation.
“The mob was fed lies,” McConnell said, referring to the Capitol riots on January 6th. “They were provoked by the president and other powerful people, and they tried to use fear and violence to stop a specific proceeding of the first branch of the federal government which they did not like.”
.@senatemajldr on the U.S. Capitol Attack: “The mob was fed lies. They were provoked by the president and other powerful people.” pic.twitter.com/QIeviyHkl3
This is a lie that has been propagated by mainstream media and pushed by Democrats. Even the Christian Broadcasting Network used a doctored video that supported McConnell’s narrative until NOQ Report pointed out their deception/error. This duplicity from Republican Establishment leadership must not be swept under the rug.
They’re biting off the hand that has been feeding them, and for some reason, they just don’t care. As a matter of fact, the GOP is now double and tripling down on chewing off the hands of every MAGA patriot.
And trust me — McConnell’s latest move will be the final nail in the GOP political coffin. He’s now publicly blaming President Trump for the incident at the Capitol and claims that Trump “provoked” it all.
This all seems to confirm what has been assumed for a week, that McConnell will be among Republican Senators who vote to impeach President Trump when the article of impeachment is brought to the Senate. Reactions from conservatives on Twitter were swift and harsh:
Trump Supporters will never quit on President Trump. Democrats will try to “cancel” us!! Will not work!!! 75 millions Trump’s supporters stand with the President. Do you hear me Mitch McConnell, Liz Cheney, Adam Kinzinger and Alyssa Farah
As Mitch McConnell tries to destroy President Trump’s legacy, he’s solidifying his own legacy of failure, deceit, and commitment to The Swamp. He and anyone in the GOP who supports him must be removed.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking 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 resurgence of lockdowns 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 $17,300 to stay afloat through March when we hope the economy will be more open, 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. In November, 2020, we hit 1.2 million visitors.
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.
As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. 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.
For Collectivist Leftists, a New World means a new opportunity to pretend the laws of human nature don’t apply to humans.
Collectivist Leftists like to think that what’s theirs is theirs – and what’s yours is theirs.
And they like to pretend their incessant thieving will have no long-term human nature-related ramifications. In fact, they ridiculously attempt to assert exactly the opposite.
IP and its protection is of enormous import. And always has been.
Our Founding Fathers certainly thought so. They ensconced IP and its protection in the Constitution:
“[the United States Congress shall have power] To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.”
Abraham Lincoln certainly thought so. And not just because he is thus far our only president to hold a patent. Lincoln wasn’t fooling around:“(Lincoln) called the introduction of patent laws one of the three most important developments ‘in the world’s history,’ along with the discovery of America and the perfection of printing.”Well that’s pretty important. And in the New Internet World – it’s even more so.
Because more and more stuff is digital – i.e. intellectual. Rather than physical.
Unfortunately, Collectivist Leftists built the Internet. And have pretended from its inception that this New World would be “free.” Free from the shackles of the physical world. Shackles…like human nature. Shackles…like basic economics. Shackles…like private property protection.
“The Open Internet (OI) is a fundamental network (net) neutrality concept in which information across the World Wide Web (WWW) is equally free and available without variables that depend on…financial motives.”Rather than protecting property on behalf of its owners, the Internet would “liberate” it from its owners. Because they bizarrely claim “information wants to be free”:“‘Information wants to be free’ is an expression that means all people should be able to access information freely.
“It is often used by technology activists to criticize laws that limit…general access to information.
“People who criticize intellectual property law say the system of such government-granted monopolies conflicts with the development of a public domain of information.
“The expression is often credited to Stewart Brand, who was recorded saying it at a hackers conference in 1984.”
The New World was founded by Collective Leftists – to the benefit of Collective Leftists. Little wonder they adopted hacker – thief – principles. Little wonder – because they share them.
But information doesn’t want to be free. The Internet’s Collectivist Leftists want it to be free – for them.
The Internet’s Collectivist Leftists realized before everyone else that the coin of the realm they had created is digital data. We the Users certainly did not.
As a result, the Internet’s Collectivist Leftists became digital data monopolists. And became Big Tech trillion-dollar oligarchs.
Collectivist-Leftist godfather Vladimir Lenin noted:
“The Capitalists will sell us the rope with which we will hang them.”We the Users gave Big Tech the rope for free.
Big Tech is used to freely getting Big Data. And/so they never, ever want to pay for anything. Up to and including IP.
“Big data, by its very nature, depends upon access to huge quantities of information in order to grow, to thrive, and to continue wielding its power….
“In layman’s terms, big data is all about uninterrupted, unfettered, and fully attainable access to information; something completely at odds with traditional IP protections and rights, many of which pre-date the digital age by centuries….
“This, unsurprisingly, creates a number of conflicts. Creators deserve and withhold the right of intellectual property protection. The digital age and the world of big data present challenges to these rights which were hitherto unimaginable.”
Unfortunately, Big Tech doesn’t view this as a “conflict” or a “challenge.” They simply revert to type: What’s theirs is theirs – and what’s yours is theirs.
Tags:Seton Motley, President of Less Government, Big Tech, and Big Data, vs Private PropertyTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Dennis Prager: Let us begin with this fact: The left always suppresses speech. Since Vladimir Lenin and the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia in 1917, there has been no example of the left in control and not crushing dissent.
That is one of the important differences between liberal and left: Liberalism and liberals believe in free speech.
(The present leftist threat to freedom in America, the greatest threat to freedom in American history, is made possible because liberals think they have more to fear from conservatives than from the left. Liberals do not understand that the left regards liberals as their useful idiots.)
The left controls universities. There is little or no dissent allowed at universities.
The left controls nearly every “news” medium. There is little or no dissent in the mainstream media—not in the “news” sections and not in the opinion sections.
The left controls Hollywood. No dissent is allowed in Hollywood.
That is why we have “cancel culture”—the silencing and firing of anyone who publicly dissents from the left, and even “publicly” is no longer necessary.
The National Association of Realtors has just announced that if you express dissenting views (on race, especially) in private, you may be fined and lose your membership in the organization—which effectively ends your career as a realtor.
So, we return to the opening question: Why does the left need to crush all dissent? This is a question made all the more stark because there is no parallel on the right: Conservatives do not shut down dissent or debate.
The answer, though the left will not acknowledge it, is the left fears dissent. And it does so for good reason. Leftism is essentially a giant balloon filled with nothing but hot air. Therefore, no matter how big the balloon—the Democratic Party, The New York Times, Yale University—all it takes is a mere pin to burst it.
Leftism is venerated by intellectuals. But there is little intellectual substance to leftism. It is a combination of doctrine and emotion. The proof? Those with intellectual depth do not stifle dissent; they welcome it.
That is why universities are so opposed to conservatives coming to speak on campus. One articulate conservative can undo years of left-wing indoctrination in a one-hour talk or Q&A. I know this from personal experience on campuses. You can, too.
Watch the speeches given by any conservatives allowed to speak on a campus—many of these talks are still on YouTube—and you will see large halls filled with students yearning to hear something other than left-wing pablum. Look at their faces, filled with rapt attention to ideas they never heard that are clearly having an impact.
Universities are entirely right to fear our coming to speak. We come with the pin that bursts their $50,000-a-year balloon.
That is also why it is so hard to get any of them to debate any of us. In 35 years of radio, I have never mistreated or bullied a guest. I was unfailingly polite to an icon of the left, Howard Zinn, the America-hating author of the America-hating “A People’s History of the United States.”
I even invited a UCLA political science professor and violinist, one of seven members of the Santa Monica Symphony Orchestra who refused to play when I conducted the orchestra in a Joseph Haydn symphony in the Disney Concert Hall—solely because I’m a conservative.
Despite his public letter, in which he accused me of holding “horribly bigoted positions” and wrote, “Please urge your friends to not attend this concert, which helps normalize bigotry in our community,” I nevertheless invited him on my national radio show. He agreed.
I had him in studio for an entire hour and treated him and his wife (who accompanied him) with great respect, despite my contempt for his false accusations and his advocacy of the cancel culture. Every American should hear that hour.
Unfortunately for the emotional and intellectual health of our society, he, Zinn, and a few others were anomalies. Of the 100 or so left-wing authors, professors, and columnists invited to appear on my show, almost none has responded in the affirmative. They prefer NPR, where they are never challenged.
The opposite, however, is not true: Every conservative intellectual I know says yes to every one of the (very few) left-wing invitations we receive. Of course, we are almost never invited. We regularly invite leftists. Leftists almost never invite us.
They claim it’s because we are not up to their intellectual level and they have no desire to waste their time. One would think that the opportunity to publicly show how vapid we conservatives really are would be too good to pass up.
Leftists do not debate us or appear as guests on our shows and prevent us from speaking whenever possible, because they (correctly) fear conservatives.
Race-baiters such as Ibram X. Kendi or Ta-Nehisi Coates or “White Fragility” author Robin DiAngelo would never debate Larry Elder, for example.
Why won’t they? Because they would be shown to be the intellectually shallow purveyors of hate they are. Deep down, they know it. Elder is one of many conservative black intellectuals who left-wing blacks (and whites) refuse to debate.
Now you know why the left suppresses free speech: because it has to. If there is free speech, there is dissent. And if there is dissent, there is no more left.
————————– Dennis Prager (@DennisPrager) is a conservative best-selling author, radio talk show host, columnist and public speaker. He appears regularly on conservative TV shows. He is President of Prager University which offers on-line free five-minute videos on various subjects addressed by noted conservatives.
Tags:Dennis Prager, why the left, has to suppress, free speechTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Gary Bauer: For Such A Time As This
This is a time of great danger for our nation. The radical left is taking power in Washington, and as you will read below, an unprecedented assault on our values is about to take place. We must be ready to resist.
My friends, I am hesitant to ask for your support again, but we must rebuild our war chest and prepare for the future. There will be many challenges and opportunities ahead. We must be ready to confront those challenges and be able to take full advantage of every opportunity.
I want to be absolutely clear: I am 100% committed to President Trump’s America First agenda. I will support only conservative candidates who support that agenda.
And I will work to defeat candidates who oppose that agenda, beginning with the Republicans who sided with Nancy Pelosi to impeach President Trump and the millions of conservative Americans who support him.
Occupied Washington
The incursion into the Capitol Building two weeks ago was awful. It was wrong. The people responsible not only smeared all those who came to Washington to demonstrate peacefully, but they empowered the left to cast aspersions on all 75 million Americans who voted for Donald Trump and Mike Pence.
But I also don’t like what I am seeing in the nation’s capital today.
While every inauguration is a high security event, at least 25,000 troops have been deployed to Washington, D.C., with the explanation being the fear of violence. But what they have effectively done is to shut down free speech and the right of assembly.
Washington, D.C., looks like an occupied war zone. Entire blocks of the capital have been locked down and closed off. Just two areas, limited to 100 people, have been designated as “First Amendment zones,” an Orwellian term if there ever was one.
What a contrast to Donald Trump’s inauguration four years ago, which my wife and I experienced first-hand. The chaos on the streets was not pretty.
For weeks leading up to the inauguration, left-wing groups vowed major disruptions and protests. On the day itself, many entrances to the parade route were deliberately blocked and thousands of conservatives were blocked from attending the parade.
Throughout the day, there was violence in the streets of Washington, D.C., as hundreds of leftists rioted. People leaving the inaugural balls were physically attacked. Few of the rioters were prosecuted.
I don’t like the apparent enthusiasm coming from the Pentagon for this unprecedented troop deployment in our capital, especially when there was a mini-revolt at the Pentagon when President Trump wanted to send troops to our border to stop people from illegally entering the country.
And, of course, just a few months ago, leftists laid siege to the White House and injured dozens of Secret Service agents as they attempted to breach the White House perimeter. It was difficult to get National Guard troops deployed then to defend the White House.
When Sen. Tom Cotton wrote a column in the New York Times suggesting more aggressive measures were necessary to save lives and livelihoods amid last summer’s rioting, the snowflakes at the Times revolted. His article was pulled, and at least two editors were forced to resign.
Yesterday, the country celebrated the life and legacy of Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. After King was assassinated in April 1968, rioting broke out in virtually every major city, including Washington, D.C. More than a thousand people were injured, and more than a dozen were killed in Washington. Whole sections of the city were burned down and not rebuilt for many years.
During all of that chaos, fewer than 14,000 federal and National Guard troops were deployed to Washington.
Cohen’s Bigotry
Rep. Steve Cohenused the occasion of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday to undercut everything King stood for. King’s dream was for every American to be judged based on the content of their character rather than the color of their skin. But Cohen did the exact opposite.
Cohen expressed his concern that large portions of the National Guard could not be trusted to keep Joe Biden and Kamala Harris safe. Why? Because the National Guard is mostly white and mostly male.
And because white men voted overwhelmingly for Donald Trump, Cohen asserts that as a group the National Guard is more likely to have among their members people who may want to harm the president-elect and vice president-elect.
This kind of racist and sexist poison will destroy our Republic. But it is increasingly the mindset of the left. And it is happening at a time when multiple commentators are demanding that Trump supporters be deprogrammed, reeducated and cleansed.
In a nation that was functioning properly, Cohen would have to announce his resignation for his racism or deliver an abject apology for his stupidity. But neither will happen.
Biden’s Border Battles
A migrant caravan from Honduras, estimated to be at least 9,000 strong, crashed through the Guatemalan border this weekend on its way to the United States. Why? Because of Joe Biden’s repeated vows to undo President Trump’s border security policies and to grant amnesty to millions of illegal aliens.
You don’t have to take my word for it. That’s exactly what the migrant marchers are telling reporters.
Follow The Science?
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is a mammoth bureaucracy with the largest budget of any federal agency and tremendous power over healthcare policy. It is about to come under the direction of ideological extremists.
As we have previously noted, Joe Biden has nominated California Attorney General Xavier Becerra to be HHS secretary. For the record, Becerra has no medical background. But this staunchly pro-abortion politician is about to take charge of our nation’s healthcare policy.
Assisting Becerra will be far-left transgender activist Dr. Rachel Levin, whom Biden has nominated to be the assistant secretary at HHS. While Levin may have a medical background, the doctor’s decisions during the COVID pandemic resulted in a major scandal that should be disqualifying.
But these appointments aren’t about following the science. They are about identity politics and forcing reality to bend to the left’s ideological demands.
Confronting Communist China
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is using every last moment of time he has to confront communist China and to call attention to the regime’s brutality.
Late Friday, the State Department released a fact sheet outlining some of the evidence for China’s culpability for the COVID-19 pandemic.
Today, Secretary Pompeo issued a statement declaring that communist China’s oppression of Uyghur Muslims amounted to “crimes against humanity” and “genocide.”
Along with my fellow commissioner Nury Turkel, I have fought on the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom to ensure that such a declaration against communist China’s atrocities was made public. I commend Secretary Pompeo for this important statement.
Now, members of Congress, corporate America and the incoming Biden Administration must come to grips with the shocking reality of what is taking place in China. We must never return to “business as usual” with communist China.
Stand With Me
My friends, I cannot overstate the urgency of this moment. You know the stakes for our nation. Surrender is not an option. We must defend our values from the radical left. Please stand with me as we fight the good fight for faith, family and freedom!
————————- Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
Tags:Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Occupied Washington, Cohen’s Bigotry, Biden’s Border BattlesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Patrick J. Buchanan: In anticipation of Wednesday’s inauguration, 25,000 National Guard have been deployed in and around D.C. to defend against right-wing mobs or would-be assassins. Three or four times as many troops are here in D.C. as there are U.S. troops in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria combined.
That mob that split off from the Donald Trump rally of Jan. 6 to invade the Capitol has proven a godsend to the left.
The death of a Capitol cop has enabled the left — which spent the summer after George Floyd’s death trashing “racist cops” and shouting, “Defund the Police!” — to posture as fighting allies of the men in blue.
Liberals who implored us to understand the grievances of the rioters, looters and arsonists last summer have become sudden converts to the church of law and order.
Elites who had condoned the smashing of statues and monuments to Columbus, Washington, Jefferson and Jackson as a needed cleansing of our hateful history have declared themselves sickened that Trumpists would desecrate the temple of democracy.
Had it been antifa or BLM that carried out the invasion, not one statue would have been left standing in Statuary Hall, and we would have been instructed that it was slaves who had, after all, built the Capitol building.
The media is airing endless footage of the mob marauding inside the Capitol. Purpose: to plant indelibly in the public mind the fiction that this was the deliberate work of Donald Trump and his people, and our elites are the real adversaries of violent protest.
Indeed, to protect the nation from rightist uprisings in state capitals, this weekend saw the widespread deployment of the National Guard.
Sunday was to be the day the murderous violence of the right would manifest itself.
What happened? As The Washington Post reported Monday:
“Authorities in cities from coast to coast mobilized a military-style defense of state capitol complexes on Sunday, rolling out Humvees, concertina wire and thousands of National Guard troops clad in battlefield helmets to defend against a possible onslaught of rioters whipped up by the baseless claims of the American president.
“The assault never came. Despite warnings from the FBI and boasts from armed, far-right extremist groups, security forces in every instance outnumbered scattered groups of demonstrators, and there were no reports of violence.”
In anticipation of Wednesday’s inauguration, 25,000 National Guard have been deployed in and around D.C. to defend against right-wing mobs or would-be assassins. Three or four times as many troops are here in D.C. as there are U.S. troops in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria combined.
Now, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. And better too much security than not enough. But even given the Jan. 6 outrage, to arm our capital city as though Stonewall Jackson’s Confederates were going to march up Manassas Road and capture Abe Lincoln after the Union defeat at Bull Run seems a bit excessive.
Yet, Wednesday is a historic day. Trump will be gone from the White House and national power and responsibility will pass to the Democratic Party.
Democrats take over the House, Senate and White House. Virtually all major media will be in their camp. They will be welcomed in a city that has never elected a Republican mayor and has no Republicans on the city council, a city that voted for Joe Biden 18-1 over Trump. The 30,000 registered Republicans in D.C. are outnumbered 12-1 by Democrats.
The government bureaucracies here are as deeply Democratic as the “deep state” that bedeviled Trump for four years. Biden’s Cabinet is the most racially and ethnically diverse ever; the majority of its members are women and people of color. Obama administration holdovers dominate the national security team.
Most of America’s major cities — New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Atlanta, D.C., Baltimore, Detroit, St. Louis — are run by liberal Democrats, and, coincidentally, all experienced surges in shootings and killings in 2020.
While the figures on the criminal perpetrators are rarely reported, it appears that not a great many of the violent and lethal crimes were the work of rogue cops or white supremacists in MAGA hats.
Other problems Trump failed to solve — the pandemic now killing 3,000 to 4,000 Americans a day, the failure to get vaccines into the arms of millions of more Americans — are now Joe’s problems.
Calling Trump names will no longer cut it.
Now, Democrats must decide whether to proceed with the impeachment trial of Trump for inciting a riot that began on the Capitol steps as he was speaking a mile away, a riot planned long before the rally on the Mall.
Now, Democrats can choose whether they will forego extracting their pound of flesh as the first order of business in the Senate and let Nancy Pelosi sit a while on her impeachment resolution.
Now, Democrats have it all. If they wish, they can abolish the filibuster, pack the Supreme Court, make D.C. and Puerto Rico states, forgive all student debt, and vote for slavery reparations.
One reads that a caravan of thousands is forming up in Honduras to pass through Guatemala in the hope of reaching and crossing the U.S. border when Biden becomes president.
That, too, is Joe’s party’s problem now.
—————————– Patrick Buchanan (@PatrickBuchanan) is currently a blogger, conservative columnist, political analyst, chairman of The American Cause foundation and an editor of The American Conservative. He has been a senior adviser to three Presidents, a two-time candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, and was the presidential nominee of the Reform Party in 2000.
Tags:Patrick Buchanan, conservative, commentary, Now the Left, Owns It AllTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
America’s adversaries can’t wait for this massive betrayal. by Michael Cutler: Not unlike Donald Trump, during the Presidential campaign, Joe Biden turned immigration into a major issue. However, unlike President Trump who promised to secure our nation’s borders against illegal entry and ramp up immigration law enforcement to protect innocent people from criminal aliens and international terrorists, Joe Biden has promised to do the polar opposite within the first 100 days of taking office- but no one is questioning why he would do this or how this would be beneficial to America or Americans.
As disconcerting as all of the issues raised in the American Thinker article are, the article fails to make several other points that must be considered.
First of all, the number of 11 million is far, far smaller than would be the actual number of aliens who would benefit from such a massive amnesty program.
Using mathematical modeling on a range of demographic and immigration operations data, the researchers estimate there are 22.1 million undocumented immigrants in the United States.
It is likely that the actual number of illegal aliens currently present in the United States is significantly higher than the Yale study’s 22.1 million. Furthermore with extravagant promises being made to illegal aliens by the incoming Biden administration, that includes a virtual end to immigration law enforcement, the floodgates will be flung open and God knows how many more millions of illegal aliens will stream across our borders.
When dealing with the number of illegal aliens who would be rewarded for violating our borders and our laws, virtually all estimates ignore the biggest factor- all legalized aliens would have the immediate and absolute right to have their spouses and every one of their minor children be lawfully admitted to join them permanently in the United States.
If, for example each illegal alien has, on average four minor children, a wildly optimistic estimate, and if 25 million illegal aliens apply for lawful status, more than 100 million immigrants who are not yet here would be permitted to enter the United States!
Imagine the impact and consequences of the massive influx of immigrants would have on our economy, on critical infrastructure, on inflation as 100 million new immigrants need such basics as food, clothing and housing.
These children would be enrolled in our already crumbling schools systems and the majority would likely not be proficient in the English language.
Today because of the COVID-19 pandemic many hospitals around the United States are overwhelmed. Imagine the impact on our already overwhelmed healthcare system that would result from adding tens of millions of more immigrants to our population.
There would be no way for USCIS (United States Citizenship and Immigration Services) to interview tens of millions of immigrants and absolutely no way to conduct field investigations.
Adding to this is the Biden administration’s pick for the pivotal position of Director of Homeland Security, Alejandro Mayorkas who had been a high-rating official at DHS during the Obama administration. He had been investigated by the Office of Inspector General for improperly approving applications for EB-5 visas because of apparent political purposes. He was also notorious for ordering the approval of applications for a wide variety fo applications for immigration benefits at USCIS ordering that these hapless adjudications officers “Get to yes!”
The above-noted report was preceded by two ABC News reports that were published on February 3, 2015 which illustrate a clear nexus between these visas and national security
Officials overseeing a federal program that offers an immigration short-cut to wealthy foreign investors have ignored pointed warnings from federal agents and approved visas for some immigrants suspected of having committed fraud, money laundering, and even one applicant with alleged ties to a child porn website, an ABC News investigation has found. The shortcomings prompted concerns within the Department of Homeland Security that the boutique immigration program would be exploited by terrorists, according to internal documents obtained by ABC News.It is irrefutable that Biden’s massive amnesty program for tens of millions of illegal aliens would have catastrophic and irrevocable implications for national security and that the appointment of Mayorkas would exacerbate this threat to our nation.
To amplify this point, consider this unequivocal statement from the report that was prepared by the 9/11 Commission staff, 9/11 and Terrorist Travel that incorporated specific examples of the way that the World Trade Center was bombed in 1993 that killed six and injured more than one thousand victims.
Once terrorists had entered the United States, their next challenge was to find a way to remain here. Their primary method was immigration fraud. For example, Yousef and Ajaj concocted bogus political asylum stories when they arrived in the United States. Mahmoud Abouhalima, involved in both the World Trade Center and landmarks plots, received temporary residence under the Seasonal Agricultural Workers (SAW) program, after falsely claiming that he picked beans in Florida.” Mohammed Salameh, who rented the truck used in the bombing, overstayed his tourist visa. He then applied for permanent residency under the agricultural workers program, but was rejected. Eyad Mahmoud Ismail, who drove the van containing the bomb, took English-language classes at Wichita State University in Kansas on a student visa; after he dropped out, he remained in the United States out of status.The Britannica website furnished additional information about the World Trade Center bombing of 1993.
This is how this ominous report from Reuters began:
LONDON (Reuters) – China will overtake the United States to become the world’s biggest economy in 2028, five years earlier than previously estimated due to the contrasting recoveries of the two countries from the COVID-19 pandemic, a think tank said.
“For some time, an overarching theme of global economics has been the economic and soft power struggle between the United States and China,” the Centre for Economics and Business Research said in an annual report published on Saturday.
That assessment did not include the impact that a massive onslaught of immigrants would have on the U.S. economy. It must be presumed that the Biden Administration’s immigration policies would hasten the day when the economy of China would surpass that of the United States.
Undoubtedly the leaders of the communist regime in China would be delighted if Mr. Biden gets his way, as would the leaders of Russia, Iran, North Korea and other adversaries of the United States.
The one question that should be asked by the reporters who will cover the White House once Joe Biden is sworn in is, “Why, why would you do this to America and Americans?”
Given the state of politics and supposed journalism today, I am not holding my breath to hear that question being asked of Joe Biden or his Presidential heir apparent, Kamala Harris.
——————————- Michael Cutler writes for FrontPage Mag.
Tags:Michael Cutler, FrontPag, Mag, Biden’s Immigration Policies, Would Do To AmericaTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
The list is so long we can’t recount it all, but he did largely Make America Great Again. by Nate Jackson: Before the Christmas break, we began work on a project to summarize President Donald Trump’s legacy. First, we noted his work to draw in more voters, especially black, Hispanic, and blue-collar workers, to the Republican tent. Then we praised his myriad achievements in foreign policy, from combatting terrorism to Middle East deals to taking on China. Coming into the new year, we were all set to tackle a third and final installment: his domestic policy work, which has largely been excellent and praiseworthy. He is one of the most consequential one-term presidents in U.S. history, and his myriad accomplishments indeed largely Make America Great Again.
Then the first two weeks of January happened, and this became a somewhat different story, with another likely to follow.
Sadly, it’s unlikely that much of President Trump’s agenda survives the next four years. He’s now been impeached twice and leaves under a cloud of division, including in his own party. His successor, Joe Biden, has pledged to undo everything he can.
In some ways, it seems that no matter how good his agenda has been, the greatest risk to Donald Trump’s legacy is and always has been Donald Trump. His Achilles heel cost him the election, got him impeached a second time, and eroded his legacy — or at least the perception of it — over the final two months on his way out of office. During that time, he has done a lot less governing than complaining and failing to prove his election-theft legal case, stirring up strife and bringing bipartisan condemnation on himself. When he was governing, it was throwing a monkey wrench in a bipartisan compromise to the advantage of Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer before ultimately violating his 2018 promise to not sign anymore gargantuan and wasteful omnibus bills.
That leads us to argue that his greatest failure is government spending. Despite promising to eliminate the federal debt in eight years, Trump is leaving office having added an appalling $8 trillion (30%) to the national debt, almost as much as the $9 trillion Barack Obama added in two terms. He and a Republican Congress also failed to repeal ObamaCare. The Tea Party suddenly seems so very long ago.
Alas. Such is the complicated mess that is Trump’s legacy. Nevertheless, many of his domestic policies deserve praise, and we’ll do so here, though we can’t possibly do justice to a complete list.
Let’s start with the judiciary, which was the primary reason our own Mark Alexander gave for endorsing him in 2016. Together with the steadfast and courageous leadership of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, and outsized input from good conservative organizations like The Federalist Society and The Heritage Foundation, Trump revitalized the judiciary with 220 constitutionalists, or roughly a quarter of the entire judiciary. This includes 53 circuit judges and three new justices on the Supreme Court — Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett. We expect that this work to defend Rule of Law and uphold the Constitution will pay dividends long after Trump is gone.
Next, let’s consider the economy. When Trump took office in January 2017, there were fears of another recession because Obama’s “recovery” was just that swell. By the end of 2017, Trump and the GOP Congress cut taxes for most Americans — without a single Democrat vote. Contrary to the Left’s rhetoric fomenting class warfare and instituting tax policies based on envy, the White House says of the GOP legislation, “A typical family of four earning $75,000 received an income tax cut of more than $2,000 — slashing their tax bill in half.”
Trump largely carried through on his promise of deregulation over the course of his presidency. Regulation is a form of taxation, and removing onerous burdens from businesses helps produce more commerce, which in turn provides real benefits for American families. The Trump administration says it “eliminated 8 old regulations for every 1 new regulation adopted,” which then “provided the average American household an extra $3,100 every year.”
Cutting taxes and regulation removed major impediments and set the economy on a growth trajectory that saw tangible gains for millions. Incomes, wages, and net worth rose for American families across the board. The stock market regularly set new records, helping the retirement accounts of millions of Americans. Unemployment hit a 50-year low. Nearly seven million Americans no longer needed food stamps. In particular, those left behind by the Obama “recovery” were doing well, namely the aforementioned blacks, Hispanics, and blue-collar workers.
As presidential biographer Conrad Black noted, “His is the first government in any important jurisdiction where the lowest 20 percent of income-earners were progressing more quickly in percentage terms than the top 10 percent — the closest that the advanced world has come to dealing with the income-disparity problem.”
Remember that just before the election, 56% of Americans said they were “better off now” than four years ago.
Trump also orchestrated major trade deals like the USMCA, and he took on unfair Chinese trade practices, even if he did so with tariffs that didn’t make that a cost-free battle. He fought for American jobs with a vigor that his predecessors never did, arguing essentially that fair trade is better than free trade. America First, as he put it. American manufacturing and jobs returned from overseas in part because of this work, but also because our corporate income tax, once among the world’s most punitive, was reduced to compete once again for those jobs.
Energy independence was something American presidents had talked about for 50 years, all while achieving nothing to make it happen — and often obstructing it. In roughly two years, Trump changed all that. The U.S. is, for the first time in 70 years, a net exporter of energy, as well as being the world’s leading producer of oil and natural gas. This brings economic benefit to Americans up and down the supply line. It also yielded good things for national security, because we’re far less dependent on foreign nations — some of them hostile — for our economic lifeblood.
Trump was certainly exaggerating in his 2020 State of the Union Address when he said that “our economy is the best it has ever been,” but it most certainly was incredibly strong, due in large measure to his policy agenda.
Then came the coronavirus pandemic. The lockdowns in March and April created a veritable bloodbath of jobs lost and economic upheaval. Yet the epidemic of misery would have been far worse under the Obama economy because we wouldn’t have been hit while in a position of such strength.
Much of the stunted economic growth since May has been because many states, led by Democrats, have remained largely locked down. Low-income workers have been hit hardest by this ill-advised and ineffective strategy, though Democrats clearly managed to turn it into a political benefit by blaming the guy “in charge.”
The truth is the Trump administration’s response to COVID was laudable, including the travel restrictions for which he was falsely accused (again) of being racist. Particularly notable is the stunning success of Operation Warp Speed in bringing not one but two vaccines to market in record time. The lack of trust in that vaccine is the predictable result of deliberate division sowed by the Left and general distrust of government on the Right. But we expect time will prove the vaccine effective, and Trump deserves credit for that leadership.
He also deserves immense credit for not using COVID to justify trying to be the dictator leftists both feared and demanded he be.
Unfortunately, Trump’s daily rambling press conferences in the early days, and a concerted effort by the Left to demonize him, made the president the poster child for COVID misery. Thus he unfairly bore extensive and intense blame, yielding a large portion of the 81 million votes against him in November.
Trump’s support among evangelicals has been an enigma to many, but his defense of religious liberty amidst the cultural battles being waged against Christians goes a long way toward explaining it. He worked like no other president to protect religious liberty not just here but abroad. He stood for science on the transgender issue, which is the next great front in the Left’s assault on Christianity.
While Trump and the Republican Congress failed to defund Planned Parenthood — the nation’s biggest abortion mill receives $500 million in tax dollars annually — Trump did make progress around the margins by blocking some of its funding and restoring the Mexico City Policy, which prohibits funding for abortions abroad. He also became the first president to attend the annual March for Life.
Another cultural and political fad for which Trump bears mostly unjustified blame is the racial animosity ravishing the nation, particularly over the last eight months. We’ll grant that Trump is not a unifier, but much of the culpability for the division lies with Democrats. They and their allies in the mainstream media spent every day sowing division while blaming Trump. Too many Americans fell for those lies.
Trump’s actual record shows the lies for what they are. That’s true even of his immigration policies, which the Left falsely insists by definition are racist. When Trump came into office, the nation was beset by a porous border that allowed any and all comers to find permanent residence here, meaning Americans were competing against cheap labor for jobs and paying for lavish benefits for others.
Immigration policy should have nothing to do with race and everything to do with merit, law, and order. In the face of stiff resistance and a few defeats, Trump tried to achieve just that. The spectacle of separating families at the border was not his finest moment, but there are big caveats there too. It was the continuation of Obama policy, it often was separating children from trafficking adults who aren’t their parents, and it was overblown by the adversarial press. From doubling the 354 miles of border barrier to asylum rules to fighting human trafficking, he made significant progress, and we no longer routinely hear about an immigration crisis.
Trump also worked to achieve criminal justice reform, helping blacks and undoing much of the legacy of Joe Biden’s 1980s- and ‘90s-era crime legislation. That bipartisan achievement gets far too little play, because it undercuts the “Trump is a racist” narrative.
Another one for the counter narrative: Trump fought racism in the government by eliminating Critical Race Theory in training for federal employees and contractors.
It shouldn’t go left unsaid that much of Trump’s success was brought about by surrounding himself with the right people. That didn’t always happen, of course, and many of his self-inflicted wounds were because of foolish spats with folks (formerly) in his employ who found themselves on the wrong side of his Twitter account. But in most cases, Trump’s people were good people.
It starts, of course, with Mike Pence. It’s outrageous that Trump put his loyal vice president in such a predicament early this month with the Electoral College spectacle, causing Trump’s most devoted supporters to turn on the VP as a “traitor” rather than acknowledge him as the unsung patriotic hero of the administration. For four years, Pence was a steady hand amid an often chaotic White House.
There was Mike Pompeo as secretary of state, of course, but Trump’s domestic policy was run by great people like Betsy DeVos at Education, Larry Kudlow on the economic team, and Ajit Pai at the Federal Communications Commission. And let’s not forget the stellar work done by William Barr at the Justice Department. We name far too few of the people at the forefront enacting Trump’s policies, but, contrary to media characterization, his team was patriotic, honest, and hardworking.
In sum, we haven’t by any means given a comprehensive narrative of all that President Donald Trump and his team accomplished in just four years. His work outshines many a two-term president, and we wish more Americans had been willing to let good and even great policy outweigh personality considerations. If they had done so, the Democrats’ nefarious election strategy would have failed. Even so, Republicans should find Trump’s record of achievement to be the inspiration for a winning policy agenda in future years.
————————— Nate Jackson writes for The Patriot Post.
Tags:Nate Jackson, The Patriot Post, Trump’s Legacy, Domestic Policy AchievementTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:AF Branco, Editorial Cartoon, Parting WordsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by John Cooper: The radical left, which is now setting the agenda for the White House and at least one chamber of Congress, is intent on imposing a government takeover of the health care system, implementing the job-killing Green New Deal and packing the Supreme Court.
And that’s just for starters.
There is, however, one thing preventing the left from getting its way and fundamentally reshaping America: the Senate filibuster.
The filibuster is a central part of Senate tradition that’s been around for centuries. It’s a rule that ultimately requires 60 votes in order to pass legislation, and was designed to encourage moderation and counter the House of Representative’s majoritarian impulses.
Now, however, many on the left are openly calling to eliminate the filibuster so they can ram their partisan, quasi-socialist agenda through Congress.
This agenda is extreme enough in itself, but what’s just as jarring about this push to change centuries of tradition is the hypocrisy of so many who once viewed the filibuster as sacred now calling to eliminate it—or refusing to rule out doing so.
That includes Joe Biden himself.
In 2005 on the Senate floor, Biden railed against the possible death of the filibuster for judicial nominees, calling any effort to eliminate it “an example of the arrogance of power,” and a “fundamental power grab.”
Fast-forward to a 2020 interview with The New York Times, in which Biden struck quite a different tone, saying his support for eliminating the filibuster would “depend on how obstreperous (GOP senators) become.”
Call me old-fashioned, but I thought the people’s representatives were elected to be “obstreperous,” not kneel to every whim of the other party.
But Biden is not alone in this hypocrisy. During the recent confirmation hearings for Justice Amy Coney Barrett, Sen. Cory Booker said her confirmation “is another moment where we are as an institution eroding our norms.” However, as a presidential candidate, Booker refused to take both court-packing and eliminating the filibuster off the table.
The ultimate act of “eroding our norms” would be to abolish the last safeguard of minority rights in our federal government. And while it’s true both parties have undone the filibuster for judicial and other executive appointments, starting with Democratic Sen. Harry Reid in 2013, the legislative filibuster has long been viewed as untouchable by both parties.
There’s an important reason for this. The Senate exists to check the rash and radical impulses of the majority, regardless of party, to prevent the “tyranny of the majority” our founders rightly feared.
Eliminating the filibuster is far more than just changing some arcane procedural rule—it turns the Senate into another version of the House, where raw majorities rule, where compromises are unnecessary, and where the passions and prejudices of the moment often overcome reason and sound judgment.
In practice, it is nothing short of an assault on the rights of the millions of Americans represented by the Senate minority—an assault that will have devastating consequences for our republic and our system of constitutional norms, including our most fundamental rights.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer recently said of eliminating the filibuster, “Once we win the majority, God willing, everything is on the table.” That’s a scary proposition for any American not onboard with the left’s definition of “everything.”
The Green New Deal, for instance, represents not just a fundamental restructuring of the American economy, but massive cost increases in heating your home or filling up your gas tank. In September 2019, Kamala Harris called for eliminating the filibuster to pass this legislation. And, notably, Harris has shown she would implement a socialist platform in a filibuster-free world if given the chance.
Court-packing is another radical concept endorsed by a growing number of liberal politicians, who want to increase the number of seats on the Supreme Court and lower federal courts as a judicial backstop to implement their agenda through judicial fiat.
They can’t do so without eliminating the filibuster. Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey has called for just that, tweeting in October, “If Republicans confirm Judge Barrett, end the filibuster and expand the Supreme Court.”
Packing the courts would not only forever politicize the judiciary, but would turn judges into unelected policymakers and jeopardize many of the fundamental rights we enjoy.
Extreme new gun control measures, massive tax hikes and a new national, government-run health care program (euphemistically termed a “public option”) are all on the table—and all would be possible if the filibuster is eliminated.
Instead of promising to blow up centuries of tradition, the left should focus on building consensus and crafting legislation that appeals to the broad spectrum of Americans.
That they’re more focused on the former should tell us everything we need to know about their plans to reshape the country.
———————— John Cooper is Associate Director for Institute Communications at The Heritage Foundation.
Tags:John Cooper, The Heritage Foundation, Defending the Filibuster, the Last Safeguard of Minority RightsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Wayne LaPierre: Today, the NRA announced a restructuring plan that positions us for the long-term and ensures our continued success as the nation’s leading advocate for constitutional freedom – free from the toxic political environment of New York.
The plan can be summed up quite simply: We are DUMPING New York, and we are pursuing plans to reincorporate the NRA in Texas.
To facilitate the strategic plan and restructuring, the NRA and one of its subsidiaries have filed voluntary chapter 11 petitions in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division. As you may know, chapter 11 proceedings are often utilized by businesses, nonprofits and organizations of all kinds to streamline legal and financial affairs.
Under the plan, the NRA will continue what we’ve always done – confronting anti-gun, anti-self-defense and anti-hunting activities and promoting constitutional advocacy that helps law-abiding Americans. Our work will continue as it always has. No major changes are expected to the NRA’s operations or workforce.
Importantly, our plans do not impact your membership at any level.
NRA supporters will continue to enjoy all their full member benefits – from new members to Life Members to Benefactor Members. We will continue to publish and deliver your magazines. We will continue to train Americans and teach them firearm safety. We will continue to teach hunter safety. But most importantly, we will continue to fight for your freedom and the freedom of all Americans – as we have for all these years. In fact, we are expanding our national platform.
The plan aims to streamline costs and expenses, proceed with pending litigation in a coordinated and structured manner, and realize many financial and strategic advantages.
You know that our opponents will try to seize upon this news and distort the truth. Don’t believe what you read from our enemies. The NRA is not “bankrupt” or “going out of business.” The NRA is not insolvent. We are as financially strong as we have been in years.
But they know today’s announcement makes us bigger, stronger and more prepared for the fight for freedom.
We are leaving the state of an attorney general who, just a few months ago, vowed to put us out of business through an abuse of legal and regulatory power. In fact, the gross overreach of the New York Attorney General and New York Governor has been resoundingly criticized by powerful national groups like the ACLU and a host of prominent legal scholars.
Subject to court approval, the NRA is pursuing plans to reincorporate in the State of Texas. The Lone Star State is home to more than 400,000 NRA Members and the site of our 2021 Annual Meeting being held in Houston.
Texas values the contributions of the NRA, celebrates our law-abiding members, and joins us as a partner in upholding constitutional freedom.
Under this plan, we seek protection from New York officials who illegally abused and weaponized the powers they wield against the NRA and its members. You can be assured the Association will continue the fight to protect your interests in New York – and all forums where the NRA is unlawfully singled out for its Second Amendment advocacy.
This plan represents a pathway to opportunity, growth and progress.
This is the most transformational moment in the history of the NRA. And it involves all of you.
The NRA will continue to promote its Second Amendment advocacy, sponsor firearms training, and work with its network of instructors and volunteers in furtherance of its mission. This plan actually streamlines all of the NRA’s activities and improves our operational processes.
I know we have welcomed many of you to our headquarters in Fairfax, Virginia. We have no immediate plans to relocate, but we are forming a special committee to explore our strategic options in this regard. We want to determine if there are advantages to relocating our HQ operations to another state. I have asked our leadership team to explore all options that benefit the NRA and its members.
What’s most important is leading the fight for Second Amendment freedom and serving our members. We will do that from anywhere that works best for you and for our cause.
All membership dues and financial donations will be fully dedicated to supporting our operations and public advocacy. This plan actually improves our business. It protects us from costly, distracting and unprincipled attacks from anti-2A politicians aimed at attacking the NRA because we are a potent political force. We know that the gun ban lobby will never stop – fueled by a hatred of your freedoms and by wealthy benefactors. Our plan is the best way to confront them.
We are now prepared for a better future. In fact, to me, it feels like the dawn of a new day.
We are revitalized, well-positioned, and steadfast in our commitment to fight for you. To learn more, please visit www.nra.org/forward.
Thank you for your unwavering spirit and being part of the NRA’s future. Both hold incredible promise for our country – and the freedoms in which it believes.
———————— Wayne Robert LaPierre, Jr. is an American gun rights activist serving as the executive vice president of the National Rifle Association since 1991
Tags:NRA, dumps, New York, reincorporate, Texas, new strategic planTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Bill Donohue: How African American youth are being upended by their so-called allies:
There is no racial or ethnic group in American history that has made significant socio-economic success without first believing in their ability to do so. Most of them faced bias and discrimination at one time or another—some more than others—but all of them overcame adversity by plugging away, refusing to let the forces of bigotry get the best of them.
That is why it is obscene to see the so-called allies of African Americans sell them a narrative that effectively immobilizes them, leaving them wallowing in victimhood.
Ben & Jerry’s has paired with Colin Kaepernick to promote the most destructive environment imaginable for African Americans to negotiate. If they intentionally sought to disable blacks, they could not do a better job than their recently launched endeavor. I stumbled upon their effort quite by accident.
While walking to work the other day, I noticed a huge billboard sponsored by Ben & Jerry’s outside Penn Station. It sported a big portrait of Kaepernick with his fist clenched featuring the inscription “I Know My Rights” in large letters. This is a marketing strategy for a new Ben & Jerry’s dessert, one that feeds into Kaepernick’s Know Your Rights Camp project; the latter makes available online for purchase such items as “I Know My Rights” t-shirts, socks, hoodies, wind jackets, track pants and handbags.
For many years, I taught African American students, both at the elementary and collegiate level, and was personally involved with them in after-school programs and athletic events. I know the hardships that many of these students endured and how they struggled to overcome them. I also saw them succeed in Catholic schools. They succeeded in large part because they were not coddled, not indoctrinated into a cult of victimhood. Indeed, much was demanded of them, and most rose to the occasion.
The worst thing we can do to black students is to convince them of their inefficacy, or their inability to take command of their lives. It is psychologically debilitating. That is what Ben & Jerry’s and Kaepernick are doing. By instructing black youth to focus exclusively on their rights, saying not a word about responsibilities—either to themselves or society—they are enfeebling them, rendering them hopeless.
Beating up on whitey may yield ephemeral pleasure, but it is no prescription for success. When George Floyd was killed, the ice cream makers and the retired athlete jumped on the bandwagon, arguing that what happened was the result of systemic racism and white supremacy. Both called for the police to be defunded; Kaepernick called for the prisons to be emptied as well.
It is not easy to see how Kaepernick’s Know Your Rights Camp is to succeed by adopting these proposals. Included in his “10-Point System” are such goals as “You Have the Right to be Safe” and “You Have the Right to be Alive.” He needs to go into Chicago on a weekend night, bullhorn in hand, and tell the black community that these outcomes can best be achieved by getting rid of cops and jails.
Ian Rowe is a black scholar at the American Enterprise Institute who for the last decade ran a network of public charter schools in the South Bronx and the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Last month he wrote an article that nicely sums up why minority students succeed or fail.
“The American dream is premised on the idea that a young person can become an agent of her or his own destiny. This can only happen if vital mediating institutions like strong families, schools and faith-based organizations demand excellence, and shape the character of this rising generation to build self-sufficiency and resilience.”
Furthermore, Rowe notes that “a growing number of young people are being led to believe that structural barriers around race, class and gender have rigged the system against them, and that they are powerless to compete at the highest level because of immutable characteristics like their race.”
He is absolutely right. And for this outrageous condition we can thank the likes of Ben & Jerry’s and Colin Kaepernick. Ultimately, they and their ilk are doing far more damage to African Americans than the Klan could ever hope for.
————————— Bill Donohue (@CatholicLeague) is a sociologist and president of the Catholic League.
Tags:Bill Donohue, Catholic League, Ben & Jerry’s, Kaepernick, Are Disabling, BlacksTo 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: In this frightening time marked by actual violence — five dead in the attack on the U.S. capitol and many more killed during last summer’s unrest* — last week’s very scariest news was this admission by Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY):Several members of Congress, in some of my discussions, have brought up media literacy because that is a part of what happened here [the capitol attack] and we’re going to have to figure out how we rein in our media environment so that you can’t just spew disinformation and misinformation.Two things immediately came to mind.
First, AOC has herself “shown a tendency to exaggerate or misstate basic facts,” as a year-old Washington Postreport noted.
“I think that there’s a lot of people more concerned about being precisely, factually, and semantically correct,” the progressive pol explained, “than about being morally right.”
Second, I recall taking President Trump to task in 2017 after he asked in a tweet: “With all of the Fake News coming out of NBC and the Networks, at what point is it appropriate to challenge their License?”
“The answer to his question is,” I wrote, “never.”
But when Twitter blocked Trump for life, many pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong and Taiwan replaced their profile pictures with a photo of their ally, Trump.
“People in China use VPN [a Virtual Private Network] because they crave uncensored information,” explained Taiwanese media commentator Sang Pu, “but now when they climb over the Great Firewall what they’ll find is more partisan, more censored, more narrow speech rather than an open arena for debate.”
Sad. Tragic. For America is free speech. It is our gift to the world.
Or was?
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
* Be skeptical of these numbers. Of the five deaths at the capitol, one was due to stroke and another a heart attack, both occurring outside the capitol and away from the violence. Three deaths are, of course, three too many. Likewise, the deaths linked to the summer riots include violence by both police and civilians with the details and motivations not always known.
————————– 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, America Is SpeechTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Richard McCarty: In the 1970s, America saw what happens when a country is dependent upon unfriendly countries for oil. Prices skyrocketed, gas was rationed, and drivers still had to sit in long lines to get gas. Consequently, energy independence has long been a stated goal of U.S. leaders, but it remained stubbornly elusive. Under President Trump’s leadership, the U.S. finally achieved energy independence.
Unlike Obama, Trump understands the power of the market and the need for affordable energy. You may recall that when gas prices were high under Obama, we were told to check the air in our tires, that there was little we could do to bring down the cost of oil because America had so little of it, and that we could not drill our way out of high prices. Obama was wrong. Perhaps he did not think it was possible for us to produce enough oil of our own, or perhaps he just opposed more drilling, but, either way, he was wrong. Under Trump, we have drilled more, and prices have remained reasonable throughout his presidency – unlike the huge swings that we saw in gas prices under Obama.
As expected, Trump reversed a number of Obama’s policies that were detrimental to energy production and distribution. For example, Trump killed Obama’s “Clean Power Plan,” which was a key part of Obama’s War on Coal. Trump also approved the Dakota Access Pipeline, which was completed over the violent and bitter opposition of the Left.
Trump’s policies have paid off. Since January of 2017, both domestic natural gas and oil production have increased by roughly 25 percent. (Of course, these numbers were even higher prior to the pandemic and economic shutdowns.) Due to these gains, the U.S. became the world’s largest producer of oil, surpassing both Saudi Arabia and Russia. Furthermore, we also became a net energy exporter for the first time in nearly seven decades.
Due in part to our increased oil production, Trump was able to take a hard line with the Iranian regime knowing that we did not need their oil. Although Iranian general Qasem Soleimani was responsible for the deaths of many of our soldiers, previous presidents never dared to take him out, but Trump could and did. Because we stood up to Iran, other Middle Eastern countries were more willing to stand with us – and Israel – against Iran.
As the U.S. moved closer to energy independence, it was easier to improve our relations with Israel. For example, previous presidents had declined to relocate the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, where it belonged; but Trump moved the embassy in his first year in office. Furthermore, Trump’s predecessors had long leaned on Israel to make concessions to the Palestinians and mollify neighboring countries. By contrast, Trump recognized that the Palestinians were a major impediment to peace and stopped coddling them.
With a freer hand, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu planned to formally annex more settlements – theoretically located on Palestinian land – into Israel. The United Arab Emirates saw this and decided to cut a peace deal in exchange for Israel not annexing additional land – and for the U.S. not recognizing any such annexation for the next several years. After brokering this Israeli peace deal, Trump quickly brokered three more. It should be noted that these four Israeli peace deals were the first in a quarter of a century.
President Trump ran on unleashing America’s energy potential, and that is exactly what he has done. If Joe Biden were smart, he would keep Trump’s very successful energy policies, which have helped create good jobs, kept energy costs down for consumers, and enabled our leaders to pursue foreign policies of our own choosing. Unfortunately, Biden will likely remain under the spell of the global warming alarmists and pursue policies that kill jobs, drive up energy costs, and make America more dependent upon foreign countries – and more dependent upon unreliable energy sources, such as wind and solar.
—————————– Richard McCarty is Director of Research for Americans for Limited Government Foundation.
Tags:Richard McCarty, Americans for Limited Government, Energy Independence, Mission AccomplishedTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
About Who Is Really Committing ‘Sedition & Insurrection’
Four Star General Mark A. Milley,
the 20th Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
by Steve Jalsevac: Joe Biden has given strong indications that he will ‘with speed’ give the United States of America over to the Great Reset of the World Economic Forum.
The Jan. 12 letter from the Joint Chiefs of staff of the U.S. military to all U.S. service members after last week’s Capital riot, warning them against “sedition and insurrection,” must have caused most loyal Americans to question who the military should really be focusing their attention on during this time of grave crisis for the United States.
The Joint Chiefs are aware that a majority of US military service members admire President Trump for all that he has done for them and for the nation over the past four years to protect the United States from both internal and external threats to the nation. On December 12, Navy and Army cadets greeted President Trump with roaring cheers and chants of “USA! USA!”” as he came out into the stadium at West Point for the 121st annual Army-Navy football game. There was obviously overwhelming support from the assembled military recruits for Trump.
The generals are aware that Trump has been the president who finally woke up the nation to the threat that Communist China has been to the US and the world for decades while all past presidents ignored that alarming situation and even facilitated the growth of the power and influence of the CCP that has become by far the greatest military and economic threat to the United States.
Trump greatly reduced the number of violent criminals, illicit drug suppliers, Islamist and political radicals and other questionable persons who were blithely allowed to come into the US by previous Democrat and Republican administrations through his tightening up of immigration policies and building the southern border wall which has led to a dramatic drop in illegal incursions into the country.
They are also well aware that civil authorities in many states were severely negligent for not taking the strong actions required to stop the devastating violent riots that were allowed to carry on across the nation throughout the summer and caused over a billion dollars of property damage in mostly poorer neighborhoods, thousands of injuries to police officers and civilians and 35 deaths.
In most cases, police had their hands tied by their civic leaders and, incredibly, Nancy Pelosi, many other Democrats and the mainstream media, constantly downplayed the violence as being “mostly peaceful”. Pelosi actually excused the violence when she stated in response to a question about it, “Oh, people will do what they do.”
The violence took place overwhelmingly in Democrat states whose political leaders refused to charge, convict and imprison most of the rioters who were repeatedly let go or given bail money so they could continue their terror. Law enforcement resources were actually decreased in response to leftist terrorists’ demands to “defund the police”.
In most cases Democrat governors refused to call in their National Guard to put down the riots that were far beyond the abilities of local police to control. That resulted in hundreds, possibly thousands, of police quitting their jobs because of the constant criticism and lack of support for their dangerous tasks from their civic leaders.
Trump repeatedly urged the governors and mayors of those states to do their jobs to protect the constitutional rights of their citizens and exercise their constitutional duties in this respect.
Most ignored the president’s pleas that were made in response to desperate communications from citizens asking the president to do something to help stop what appeared to be a national revolution to destroy America and replace it with a Communist, or otherwise leftist, violent dictatorship, or just plain anarchy. The violence only stopped as the election was approaching, and it became obvious that the violence was harming Democrat chances of victory at the polls.
As for the Capital riot that the Joint Chiefs referred to in their letter, video and other evidence is now available proving what most of the entirely peaceful participants in the Washington Stop the Steal rally suspected. Antifa/BLM types and possibly also some far-right agitators who cannot be considered genuine Trump supporters, initiated the incursions into the Capital, violence against Capital police and property damage well before Trump had even finished his speech a 45-minute walking distance from the captial building.
The timing of when the rioting started makes it clearly impossible that Trump could have “incited” the violence, as the Democrats, the media and even some Republicans are accusing him of doing. And of course, the text of his speech contains nothing that would have “incited” what took place at the Capital and was obviously planned well before Jan. 6.
What took place there was clearly intended to derail the joint session from hearing the speeches from over 100 Members of Congress and a dozen Senators who intended to ask for further examination of all the evidence of unconstitutional election fraud that took place during the November election.
It has now also become obvious that another intent of the rioting was to give a revolutionary pretext to remove the constitutional rights of freedom of speech, due process and many other rights and freedoms from all those who sincerely believed there was election fraud and/or any who are Trump supporters or conservatives. This was a many days pre-planned, well-coordinated action by professional leftist rioters.
This astoundingly rapid removal of constitutional rights and mass suppression of freedom of speech, that is still carrying on, presents a great danger to the Constitutional Republic nature of the United States.
All of the federal law enforcement agencies that have been missing in action for the past several months as the nation has been under assault from Communist and other leftist agencies, somehow seem to have been complicit in what went on during the summer and also complicit in the purge of patriots that is being allowed to carry on at this time in violation of many constitutional principles.
The current situation appears to be one of a complete suspension of the Constitution to permit what is essentially mob rule by leftist agitators and their Democrat, media and numerous leftist corporate allies.
Individuals, organizations and companies, such as Parler and many other free speech alternatives, are being accused, judged and convicted without any due process. 20 years ago or less, most of the actions being taken against conservatives at this time would have been subjected to swift legal condemnation, lawsuits and charges of illicit, discriminatory actions.
The Joint Chiefs’ Greatest concern should be this.
In their letter, the Joint Chiefs stated the following:
The American people have trusted the Armed Forces of the United States to protect them and our Constitution for almost 250 years. As we have done throughout our history, the U.S. military will obey lawful orders from civilian leadership, support civil authorities to protect lives and property, ensure public safety in accordance with the law, and remain fully committed to protecting and defending the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic?
We witnessed actions inside the Capital building that were inconsistent with the rule of law. The rights and freedoms of speech and assembly do not give anyone the right to resort to violence, sedition and insurrection.
….. We support and defend the Constitution. Any action to disrupt the Constitutional process is not only against our traditions, values and oath; it is against the law.I have explained above many very serious violations of the Constitution that have been taking place this year and which are going on right now. In addition, I should add that we are seeing a form of corporate governance of the nation taking place as the big tech giants and many other large corporations are implementing punishing unconstitutional restrictions on large numbers of elected officials and citizens related to either their political or social views or in response to health authority requests to supposedly lessen the spread of the Wuhan virus.
This has been developing into a major tyranny against the American public and totally violates constitutional protections, which courts at all levels are permitting to continue in violation of their responsibility to defend the American public against such lawlessness.
However, if the Joint Chiefs truly mean what they say in their letter then they should above all be deeply concerned about what a “President Biden” and his Democrat Party have promised to do once they are in control of the government.
Joe Biden has given strong indications that he will “with speed” give the United States of America over to the Great Reset of the World Economic Forum. See the list of related articles at the end of this article that explain many aspects of the Great Reset world revolution. This is an extremely serious promise by Biden that poses the greatest threat imagineable to America and the rest of world society.
Among may other things, the Great Reset will destroy capitalism and will also end the concept of self-governing sovereign nations with leaders elected by the people to serve the people.
It is no exaggeration to warn that if Biden is permitted to do this, he will destroy the Constitutional government and sovereignty of the United States and place all American citizens, companies and organizations, and eventually all government entities, including the US military, under the tyrannical authority and control of powerful, evil, anti-American, anti-freedom globalist elites.
This Great Reset also depends on the forced vaccination of the entire world’s population with poorly tested vaccines of a totally new type that actually do not prevent viral spread and require yearly vaccinations, forced masking and social distancing to continue “forever” after vaccination. We are being warned now that this “vaccine” cannot really be called a vaccine because it does not meet the definition of a real vaccine.
It is still unclear what is really in the vaccine, what it really does to the human body and we are seeing numerous deaths and other dangerous reactions to the “vaccine”. There are warnings from credible scientists and others that the vaccine may permanently change the DNA of recipients and that it may contain human sterilizing agents because of an item that is including in the vaccines that is known to negatively affect fertility.
Proof of vaccination is already being required by various airlines in order to board their planes and increasing numbers of corporations and institutions are requiring employees or users of their services to be vaccinated with this false and dangerous “vaccine”.
All of this is being demanded while simple, very effective and long available treatment and preventative medications for the Wuhan virus are being suppressed and massive disinformation campaigns about the safety and effectiveness of these proven-in-practice medications are constantly being generated.
This is obviously happening to convince the public that the “vaccine” is the only solution to the virus. In reality, there is no real need for these Covid vaccines. Hundreds of physicians who have been using the medications that effectively treat the virus insist that herd immunity and the end of the pandemic could have been achieved months ago if these medication were not prohibited from being used.
These manipulators are responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths from the virus that could have easily been prevented.
Compentent, leading physicians and scientists and elected officials who criticize government lockdowns and other devastating, ineffective measures to contain the virus are suffering retribution of various types, including loss of jobs and harsh denunciations from health and other authorities with a totalitarian mindset.
The virus has been weaponized for political purposes to force massive social and political change, totally disregarding the catastrophic impact of these bad decisions on the entire nation.
I bring the virus, vaccine and proof of vaccination into this article because it is a genuine matter of national security and poses a major threat to the economic and social well-being of the nation that is being orchestrated by persons and groups related to the Great Reset revolution.
Americans should all be terrified by the prospect of what the Democrats have openly stated that they will be doing regarding the Great Reset.
How can any U.S. military leaders genuinely concerned about obeying lawful orders from civilian leadership, supporting civil authorities to protect lives and property, ensuring public safety in accordance with the law, and remaining fully committed to protecting and defending the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic, not see that a Biden administration presents the greatest threat to the United States in its history?
The Great Reset will eventually, in the not-too-distant future, transform the mighty U.S. military into an instrument to impose tyranny on the world – or – it will lead to the rapid dissolution of the U.S. military that began under the previous Obama administration which had Joe Biden as its vice-president.
And let us not forget the close ties of Joe Biden, his son Hunter and his entire family, with the Chinese Communist Party.
If the Joint Chiefs of staff are sincere about the letter that they wrote to military personnel, should they not possibly above all be required to protect Americans from an administration that is obviously determined to quickly destroy their nation?
It is curious to note that Catholic Church and political leftists played a large role in installing Jorge Bergoglio, an admirer of Joe Biden and Barak Obama, into the papacy of the Catholic Church. Since ascending into that role Borgoglio, under the name of Pope Francis, has undertaken many actions that have caused enormous damage to not only the Church in general, but also to the papacy itself. Pope Francis is also a supporter of the Great Reset.
I believe that Joe Biden is not remotely his own master, and given what he has promised to quickly implement once he is in the most powerful political office in the world, his top priority will be to cripple and destroy the influence and power of the United States, because the U.S. is the only obstacle in the way of implementing the Great Reset slavery of the world’s population and its determination to greatly decrease world population for the benefit of “Mother Earth.”
Will the U.S. military actually go along with this and facilitate the demise of its own existence, the end of U.S. constitutional government and the end of the United States as a sovereign nation?
I am just asking the obvious questions. I have no answers.
————————– Steve Jalsevac is the co-founder and managing director of LifeSiteNews.com.
Tags:Steve Jalsevac, LifeSiteNews, Letter, by Senior, US Military, Raises QuestionsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
A man wears a double mask as he visits NY Times Square.
by Doug Badger & Norbert Michel: COVID-19 cases and deaths continue to surge. The seven-day moving average of daily confirmed new cases eclipsed 260,000 on Jan. 9, the highest rate yet recorded. The U.S. is expected to reach the grim milestone of 400,000 COVID-related deaths later this month, around the anniversary of its first confirmed case.
These numbers suggest that the strategy of relying predominantly on social distancing, lockdowns, and mask-wearing is not working. We need better interventions.
Some have called for national mask mandates. We recently examined the effects of mask mandates in the U.S. and Italy, and our findings are not encouraging.
Of the 25 U.S. counties reporting the highest number of new cases during the current surge, 21 had mask mandates in place before August. Looking at the 100 counties with the most confirmed cases during this period, 97 had either a county-level mask mandate, a state-level mandate, or both. Of these 97 counties, 87 instituted their mandates prior to October.
Mask mandates failed to prevent a surge in cases in other countries as well. Italy enforces a national mask mandate, imposing fines of up to 1,000 euros. That mandate did not prevent a surge of cases that began in October and peaked in mid-November. As of early January, Italy was still recording new infections at four times the early October rate.
Our findings do not deny the efficacy of mask-wearing. Nor should they discourage the practice. Public health authorities in the U.S. and throughout the world cite studies showing that mask-wearing slows the pathogen’s rate of spread.
Although mask-wearing may reduce transmission rate, it has not prevented cases from spiking either here or abroad.
Governments should pursue additional strategies. These include adopting better measures to protect nursing home residents and enabling nationwide screening through the widespread use of rapid self-tests.
The U.S. and other governments have done an abysmal job at protecting nursing home patients. As of Jan. 7, U.S. nursing home residents accounted for less than 0.5% of COVID-19 cases but 37% of COVID-related deaths.
Cases and deaths continue to mount even as the process of vaccinating residents and staff has begun. The current federal policy of requiring weekly tests of staff and temporal thermometer screenings of visitors is inadequate. Government should require daily testing of staff, at least until all residents and staff have been immunized. Visitors should be tested before entering the facility.
Government should also take steps to protect the general population. The distribution of rapid, at-home tests that don’t require a prescription or laboratory analysis would inform people of their COVID-19 status and limit the disease’s transmission.
The technology exists to produce low-cost, rapid home tests in sufficient volume for tens of millions of Americans to test themselves daily. Unfortunately, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has not approved these tests. The agency’s concern is that self-administered, in-home tests are less sensitive than laboratory-analyzed tests used for clinical diagnosis. This view allows the perfect to be the enemy of the good.
Acknowledging this, Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, recently embraced the notion of “flooding the system with tests, getting a home test that you could do yourself, that’s highly sensitive and highly specific.”
Rapid tests are marginally less accurate, but that is more than offset by their volume (testing tens of millions of people daily, as opposed to 2 million), frequency (people can test themselves often), and immediacy (results within minutes, rather than days).
Unlike mask-wearing and lockdown edicts, widespread self-testing is neither culturally nor politically divisive, making it more likely to gain population-wide acceptance. It combats the contagion by empowering and informing people, not confining them, restricting their activities and suggesting that they are to blame for the spread of a contagious pathogen.
Equipping people to make the best decisions for themselves, their families, and their fellow citizens offers a promising new approach to combating the pandemic.
———————– Doug Badger is a former White House and Senate policy adviser and is currently a senior fellow at the Galen Institute and a visiting fellow at The Heritage Foundation. Norbert Michel studies and writes about housing finance, including the reform of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, as The Heritage Foundation’s research fellow in financial regulations. Article shared by The Daily Signal & previously posted in The Washinton Times.
Tags:Doug Badger, Norbert Michel, The Daily Signal, Relying on Lockdowns, Social Distancing, and Masks Isn’t Working to Curb COVID-19To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by I & I Editorial Board: Joe Biden’s promised stimulus is meant to boost an economy devastated by the Democrats’ national shutdown by handing out more checks and imposing a $15 national minimum wage. Sorry, it won’t work.
“We must act now, and we must act decisively,” Biden said.
Sounds good, but do we really? What he and Congress have proposed is an incoherent mess that will do the precise opposite of what he says it will. Even worse, it’s premised on the long-discredited idea that the government can stimulate the economy by spending more.
From false premises come bad policies that will hurt many low-income people and possibly end the Trump recovery now under way. And, make no mistake, Biden’s $1.9 trillion stimulus plan unveiled late last week contained a panoply of bad policies.
An additional $1,400 in “stimulus” checks sent to most Americans, raising the recently passed $600 payouts to $2,000.
Renewal and increase of the expanded unemployment benefits that extend payouts to many new classes of workers through September 2021. Biden’s proposal would add $400 a week in federal payouts on top of existing state-level benefits.
Expansion of the child tax credit and the Earned Income Tax Credit.
An increase in food stamp benefits.
A nationwide $15 minimum wage.
Extension of the federal government’s eviction moratorium.
$350 billion for local, state, and tribal governments.
$160 billion for vaccine distribution and other COVID-19 health measures.
Paid leave for millions of workers, much of which would be funded by taxpayers.
And let’s be clear: The economy didn’t just suddenly go into recession for no reason; it did so because federal and state governments forced businesses to lock down in order to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, unnecessarily throwing millions out of work.
Most of Biden’s proposed stimulus agenda would kill economic growth, reduce job opportunities and shrink business investment — the engine of future growth and innovation.
For example, take the $15 an hour minimum wage. It’s the worst idea of all for making those at lower incomes better off. In fact, studies show it uniquely punishes minority and low-skill workers by pricing them out of the hourly labor market before they even get a chance to work, improve their skills and build experience.
That’s not stimulus.
Nor are one-time checks of $1,400, sent out indiscriminately. This is the kind of unfocused Keynesian stimulus that Democrats most like: Politicians harvest the votes of grateful check recipients, but you get handed the bill.
In a study released in August, “How Did U.S. Consumers Use Their Stimulus Payments,” the results were unequivocal:
“Most respondents report that they primarily saved or paid down debts with their transfers, with only about 15% reporting that they mostly spent it,” the study said. On average, recipients saved about 40% of their checks.
“Since the mid-1970s, one-time cash payments to individuals to stimulate economic growth have been tried on at least five separate occasions,” they wrote in the Wall Street Journal. “Presidents Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter promised that their stimulus checks would restore economic growth by inducing higher consumption. Yet in both instances the payments failed to deliver the promised results. Their impact on economic output was at best negligible and only temporary.”
More recently, one-time payments under President George W. Bush in 2008 and President Barack Obama in 2009 had little effect: “Their impact on economic output was at best negligible and only temporary.”
Meanwhile, the $2.8 trillion in new debt to pay for this largess will only add gasoline to an already roaring debt-and-spending fire.
The danger is, with nearly $30 trillion in debt and an estimated $4.8 trillion more expected over the next decade, “even a 1% increase in interest rates … would increase debt by more than $3 trillion over the next decade and almost 70% of GDP by 2050,” according to the non-partisan Committee for a Responsible Budget.
That will drain money from the highly productive private sector into the non-productive public sector, damaging America’s economic prospects for decades to come. And you’ll face much higher taxes to pay for it all. Better get ready.
As we noted recently, the good news is that the economy had already come roaring back under Trump, with record 33% third-quarter growth and 4.3% expected in the fourth quarter.
To keep it going, all Biden and the Democratic Congress need to do is get out of the way. That’s it. Just competently run the COVID-19 vaccine program, quickly reopen the nation’s stores, restaurants and shops, and send kids back to school. The economy would boom.
But they won’t do that. They believe in the long-since-debunked leftist fantasy that government spending drives economic growth. Sadly, their decisions will continue to be driven by class-warfare politics and neo-socialist policies, not real-world economics.
——————– Written by I & I Editorial Board.
Tags:I & I Editorial Board, Don’t Call Biden’s Plan, Stimulus,— It’s, Keynesian FantasyTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
You are subscribed to email updates from ARRA News Service.
To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now.
Email delivery powered by Google
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the RedState.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions
NOT GETTING OUR MAIL, YET?SIGN UP HERE FOR BPR DAILY EMAILS
Your input is critical to us and to the future of conservatism in America. We refuse to be silenced, and we hope you do too. Sign up for daily emails and never miss a story.
For the latest BPR videos subscribe to our Rumble page.
Our mailing address is:
BizPac Review
Post Office Box 1713
West Palm Beach, FL 33402-1713
You may unsubscribe or change your contact details at any time.
47.) ABC
January 20, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Biden to take oath of office, bids emotional farewell to Delaware: President-elect Joe Biden is slated to take the oath of office today in Washington, D.C., and ahead of his departure to the nation’s capital, Biden delivered an emotional farewell in Wilmington, Delaware, his adopted state, which first elected him to the U.S. Senate at the age of 29. “When I die, Delaware will be written on my heart,” said Biden. Then, the president-elect and future first lady Jill Biden headed to Joint Base Andrews. Biden’s inauguration will be unlike any other. Amid the backdrop of a global pandemic that has killed 400,000 Americans, and in the wake of the violent and deadly breach of the U.S. Capitol by a mob of President Donald Trump supporters earlier this month, Biden’s inauguration will forgo the traditional celebrations of large crowds, galas and a parade, and instead be a smaller ceremony where Biden will take the oath of office before former presidents and congressional leaders, and includes A-list performers. The event will also be under tight security. In his first 10 days in office, Biden plans to immediately begin a sweeping transformation of U.S. policy through dozens of executive orders. The impact and scope of Biden’s early moves as president would exceed those undertaken by his three most recent predecessors. Watch ABC News’ coverage of Inauguration Day starting at 7 a.m. ET on the ABC News App, Hulu, Apple TV, Android TV, Fire TV and Roku TV.
Trump pardons Bannon, other allies on final night in office: President Donald Trump late Tuesday issued a final batch of pardons and commutations to a group that included former White House strategist Steve Bannon. Bannon, who was a part of Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, was indicted last August on charges tied to an alleged conspiracy to commit wire fraud and money laundering related to a crowdfunding effort to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. The latest batch of names, released by the White House on Trump’s final night as president, granted 73 pardons and commuted all or part of the sentence of 70 additional individuals, including longtime allies Elliott Broidy and Paul Erickson. Broidy, a California financier who emerged as a top Trump fundraiser in 2016, agreed to plead guilty in October to illegal lobbying for foreign interests as part of a massive federal investigation into the embezzlement of a Malaysian sovereign wealth fund. Erickson, a seasoned Republican operative from South Dakota, had begun serving an 84-month sentence last year after he had pleaded guilty last year to defrauding investors in an oil venture after being indicted on a range of fraud charges. In the final months of his presidency, Trump had already issued pardons or commutations to dozens of members of his inner circle, including his former national security adviser Michael Flynn, his longtime friend Roger Stone, his former campaign chairman Paul Manafort, and his former campaign adviser George Papadopoulos. Trump’s use of the pardon has garnered backlash from critics, but past presidents have also taken advantage of sweeping powers to pardon friends and associates in their final weeks in office.
Biden, Harris hold memorial for Americans lost to COVID-19: On the eve of President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration, he and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris participated in a national memorial at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., to honor the more than 400,000 Americans who have died from COVID-19. “For many months we have grieved by ourselves,” said Harris. “Tonight, we grieve and begin healing together. Though we may be physically separated, we, the American people, are united in spirit.” On Tuesday, the U.S. surpassed 400,000 deaths to COVID-19. And now, according to a newly released report from the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association, over 211,000 COVID-19 cases were found among children — the highest number since the pandemic began. The number of American lives lost to the coronavirus is more people than the number of U.S. soldiers who died in battle during World War I, World War II and the Vietnam War combined, according to a data estimate compiled by the Department of Veterans Affairs. Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the incoming Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director anticipates that number will climb to half a million deaths by mid-February. At Tuesday’s tribute to COVID-19 victims, Biden ended the ceremony by thanking the country’s nurses and echoed the call for unity during these challenging times. “To heal we must remember, and it’s hard sometimes to remember, but that’s how we heal,” he said.
22-year-old poet to make history at 59th presidential inauguration: When Kamala Harris makes history today as the country’s first woman vice president, and the first Black and Asian American to serve in that position, another young woman will also make history as the youngest poet to read her work at a presidential inauguration. Twenty-two-year-old Amanda Gorman — the poet behind the poem titled “The Hill We Climb” — is slated to follow in the footsteps of esteemed poets like Maya Angelou and Robert Frost who each have read poems at a presidential inauguration. In “The Hill We Climb,” which was written the night rioters took part in a siege on Capitol Hill, Gorman highlights the divisiveness in the country following the 2020 election. “We’ve seen a force that would shatter our nation than share it,” she writes. “But while democracy can be periodically delayed, it can never be permanently defeated.” Sharing the stage with President-elect Joe Biden will also be a special moment for Gorman, who revealed she overcame a speech impediment like he did. “I think there is a real history of orators who have had to struggle, a type of imposed voicelessness, you know, having that stage at inauguration,” Gorman told NPR. “So it’s really special for me.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning, we have a special edition of “GMA” for Inauguration Day. Kids across the country shared their letters to President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris about their hopes for the future of our country. And ABC News contributors Rahm Emanuel and Chris Christie join us to discuss Biden’s administration and what will change over the next four years. Plus, we profile the new pets of the White House, as Champ and Major, a rescue dog, move in. All this and more on “GMA.”
Today marks the start of a new chapter for America.
President Donald Trump will leave the White House this morning and Joe Biden will be sworn in as the 46th president of the United States at noon.
Here is what we’re watching this Wednesday in January.
Inauguration Day: Biden and Harris to take office
Joe Biden will take the oath of officetoday in a ceremony that will keep with tradition while being unlike any other inauguration in U.S. history.
There will be pomp, ceremony, former presidents, congressional leaders, A-list performers, parades and tributes to the troops — but it will all happen before a small, socially distanced audience in a city that has been locked down because of the dual threats of the coronavirus pandemic and possible domestic terrorism after the deadly violence at the U.S. Capitol.
After Biden is sworn in, he plans to spend his first hours as president undoing many of the hallmarksof President Donald Trump’s tenure, NBC News’ senior White House reporter Shannon Pettypiece writes.
Biden will sign more than a dozen executive actions Wednesday when he arrives at the White House, including measures to rejoin the Paris Agreement on climate change, repeal Trump’s restrictions on travel from several Muslim-majority countries, stop construction of the Southern border wall and mandate wearing masks on federal property.
He will also use his first day in office to propose a sweeping immigration reform bill, a lofty legislative task his administration has decided to take on from the start.
“We’re not going to wait weeks. We’re going to come in and hit the ground running,” said senior adviser Cedric Richmond, the incoming director of the White House Office of Public Engagement.
“No choice but to be hopeful”: Biden voters, in their own words, tell us what they are thinking ahead of Inauguration Day.
From Lady Gaga singing the national anthem to Tom Hanks “Celebrating America” in a star-studded event tonight: Here’s everything you need to knowabout today’s festivities.
Follow ourlive blog throughout the day for all the latest developments.
Watch NBC News, MSNBC and NBC News Now for live coverage all day.
President-elect Joe Biden with his wife, Jill Biden, and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris with her husband, Doug Emhoff at a Covid-19 memorial event in Washington on Tuesday. (Photo: Evan Vucci / AP)
Trump pardons Bannon and dozens of others in final hours of presidency
President Donald Trumpissued a wave of pardonsTuesday night, using the final hours of his presidency to grant clemency to 143 people, according to a list made public by the White House early Wednesday morning.
The list included former White House adviser Steve Bannon, major GOP donor Elliott Broidy, rapper Lil Wayne, as well as other politicians and nonviolent drug offenders, but it did not include preemptive pardons for Trump or his family members.
Trump, who did not hold any public events in his last week in office, has spent the final days of his presidency fixated on his power to issue pardons, meeting with advisors to hash out who should be on his list.
Trump, his family members and personal lawyer, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, were not on the list of pardons released by the White House, although there has been speculation he was considering that.
Trump can make additional pardons up until Biden is sworn in and names are required to be made public.
In his farewell address to the nation Tuesday, Trump attempted to highlight his administration’s successes amid the backdrop of an impending impeachment trial, while also calling on Americans to “pray” for the new administration.
While a conviction in his second impeachment trial could bar him from ever holding public office again, he said in his speech that his “Make America Great Again” movement is “only just beginning.”
Trump has made it clear that he will not attend Biden’s inauguration, making him the first president to skip his successor’s inauguration since Andrew Johnsonin 1869.
Since he won’t be there, he can’t hand Biden thenuclear football, the oddly shaped 45-pound briefcase that is always at the president’s side to command and control the country’s massive nuclear arsenal. But rest assured, here’s how the handoff is expected to happen.
Trump is scheduled to leave the White House on Wednesday morning, taking a final trip on Air Force One down to his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.
News Analysis: Donald Trump promised to end “American carnage” and “Make America Great Again.” Four years later, he leaves with those goals far from reach, writes NBC News’ senior political analyst Jonathan Allen.
Even if you’re a Dry January dropout, experts say that’s OK. It’s still a chance to reset and self-monitor your alcohol consumption.
Shopping
Cannondale, Specialized, VanMoof: Cycling experts explain how to choose the right electric bike for you.
Quote of the day
“Between sundown and dusk, let us shine lights in the darkness along this sacred pool of reflection to remember all who we lost.”
— President-elect Joe Biden at a memorial to honor Covid-19 victims held at the Lincoln Memorial’s reflecting pool on Tuesday evening.
One fun thing
When Biden takes the oath of office at noon today, he will lay his hand on top of his 127-year-old, 5-inch-thick family Bible, held by his wife, Jill Biden.
“Have you been working out?” “Late Show” host Stephen Colbert quipped during an interview last month.
Biden was first seen with the Bible when he was sworn in as a senator in Delaware in 1973 at 30 years old.
The family heirloom has made an appearance at every one of his subsequent swearing-in ceremonies as senator, vice president and today as president.
The Bible, which is adorned with a Celtic cross on its cover, has been in Biden’s family since 1893. (Photo illustration: TODAY Illustration / AP / Getty)
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com
If you’re a fan, please forward it to your family and friends. They can sign-up here.
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: How Joe Biden met the 2020 moment
Over the last two years, it was easy to see how today’s moment – Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. being sworn in as the nation’s 46th president – wasn’t going to happen.
Biden, the thinking went, was too old. He wasn’t inspirational or exciting enough as a former vice president. He was prone to gaffes. He wasn’t great on the stump. And he often stumbled in debates.
But what Biden achieved was meeting – and understanding – the moment that presented itself during a presidential campaign unlike any other.
AP Photo/David J. Phillip
After Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada, Democratic primary voters decided that defeating Trump was more important than in achieving revolutionary or big structural change.
After the start of a pandemic that’s now killed more than 400,000 Americans, experience (as well as empathy) became a selling point instead of a liability.
After the pandemic, campaigning on the stump became less important, and it also became unnecessary for Biden to introduce himself to the public (which wouldn’t have been true for any other lesser-known Democratic candidate).
After winning the Democratic nomination, many of Biden’s weaknesses and faults – age, verbal gaffes, shaky debate performances, nepotism – got canceled out by Trump’s equal or greater problems on these same issues.
And now after a violent insurrection at the U.S. Capitol just two weeks ago, Biden’s call for unity that was foundational to his presidential bid – which many Dem critics and pundits snickered at during the primary season – seems more important than ever, no matter how difficult (or impossible) it will be to achieve.
It was always easy to underestimate Biden.
But after a MUCH closer race than all of the polling suggested, Biden MIGHT have won a race that no other Democrat in the 2020 field could have carried.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Remembering the final question at the last debate
A long — and damaging — two months for Trump
Two months ago, you could say that Donald Trump was a failed one-term president, but still the leader of a successful political movement that will dominate the Republican Party for years to come.
But today, it’s less certain that you can say that about his political movement.
That’s what has changed after the last two months – Trump’s refusal to concede an election he lost, his unsuccessful attempts to overturn the results, the controversial pardons, the violent attack on the Capitol, and Trump’s second impeachment.
Trump is still a force inside the GOP. It’s just not clear that force is going to be as big as we thought on Nov. 4.
The last two months might have been that damaging to the outgoing 45th president.
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
143: The number of pardons and grants of clemency issued by Trump overnight, including for former campaign strategist Steve Bannon and rapper Lil Wayne
Up to 35 mph: How high winds in D.C. could be during the inauguration ceremony
1.22 percentage points and 54,944 votes: Jon Ossoff’s final margin of victory over David Perdue. (Ossoff and Warnock will be sworn in today)
2.08 percentage points and 93,272 votes: Raphael Warnock’s margin of victory over Kelly Loeffler.
0.24 percentage points and 11,779 votes: Joe Biden’s 2020 margin of victory over Donald Trump.
Exactly one year ago: The date when Covid “Patient Zero” in the U.S. was admitted to a hospital in Everett, Wash.
24,372,305: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 194,731 more than yesterday morning.)
402,914: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 2,811 more than yesterday morning.)
123,820: The number of people currently hospitalized with coronavirus
285.73 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
What happened at yesterday’s hearings
Five of President-elect Biden’s secretary-designees testified at their Senate confirmation hearings on Tuesday. And their testimonies gave us a sense on how they viewed their confirmation challenges, Biden’s campaign promises and their Trump-appointed predecessors.
Janet Yellen, Treasury: When testifying, Yellen said this about Biden’s $1.9 trillion Covid recovery package: “Neither the president-elect, nor I, propose this relief package without an appreciation for the country’s debt burden. But right now, with interest rates at historic lows, the smartest thing we can do is act big.”
Avril Haines, DNI: Haines took a thinly veiled swipe at the current DNI, John Ratcliffe, during her testimony: “The DNI must insist that when it comes to intelligence there is simply no place for politics, ever, the DNI must prioritize transparency.” Haines also said she aimed to restore “trust and confidence both within the intelligence community and among those we serve and protect.”
Lloyd Austin, Defense: Austin’s biggest confirmation challenge lies in getting a waiver since he hasn’t been in civilian life for at least seven years. Austin said he understood the concerns: “The safety and security of our democracy demands competent civilian control of our armed forces. The subordination of military power to the civil.”
Alejandro Mayorkas, DHS: While some senators advocated for Mayorkas’ nomination to be held for a Senate floor vote on Wednesday in the wake of the Jan. 6 insurrection (Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley will block the quick consideration process from occurring), Mayorkas’ marked the riot during his opening statement: “If I should have the honor of being confirmed, I will do everything I can to ensure that the tragic loss of life, the assault on law enforcement, the desecration of the building that stands as one of the three pillars of our democracy, and the terror felt by you, your colleagues, staff, and everyone present, will not happen again.
Antony Blinken, State: While Blinken drew distinctions between himself and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo during his testimony, he made clear he also believed that overseas involvements should be to the benefit of Americans at home – something the Trump administration has made their main foreign policy goal with “America First”: “We can revitalize our core alliances – force multipliers of our influence around the world,” Blinken said. He later added, “And in everything we do around the world, we can and we must ensure that our foreign policy delivers for American working families here at home.”
THE LID: White House Downer
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at how pessimistic the electorate is as Biden takes office.
Plus: Pelosi wants 9/11-style commission to investigate Capitol attack, MyPillow drama, and more…
Trump manages to do a little good on his way out. In his last few weeks in office, outgoing President Donald Trump went on an execution spree and spawned a riot at the U.S. Capitol. So, it’s no surprise that he spent his last full day in the White House yesterday further sullying his legacy, taking back an order issued at the start of his presidency—back when he still pretended to care about “draining the swamp”—that bans administration officials from private lobbying within five years of leaving office while (for the second time) pardoning a former campaign chief. This time, the pardon went to Steve Bannon, the architect of some of the worst anti-immigrant policies and alt-right tones in Trump’s campaign and early presidential days.
Meanwhile, Trump failed to pardon or commute the sentences of government whistleblowers like Julian Assange, Edward Snowden, and Reality Winner or Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht, as many had been urging him to.
Oh my goodness, Chris Young got a commutation. I wrote about his case in 2018. The judge who sentenced him quit a lifetime appointment to the bench and became an advocate for his release https://t.co/okAjGpjxDPpic.twitter.com/cijrXldpN6
Also among those granted commutations were “Michael Pelletier, who went to prison in 2007 for importing marijuana; Craig Cesal, a first-time offender who was imprisoned in 2003 for repairing trucks that were used to distribute marijuana; and Darrell Frazier, who was sentenced in 1991 for his role in a cocaine trafficking operation,” notes Jacob Sullum, who makes a case for celebrating pardons even of Trump cronies. (“The focus on Trump’s motivation obscures the crucial question of whether the recipients of commutations received sentences that were grossly disproportionate in light of the conduct that sent them to prison,” he writes.)
Sullum points out that while Trump’s commutation total doesn’t “come near Obama’s, which surpassed those of his 13 most recent predecessors combined,” Trump “did end up issuing nearly 100 times as many commutations as Obama did in his first term (just one).”
Now it’s time for incoming President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris to prove they’ve actually changed their crime panic and cop ways by keeping this up. As Matt Welch comments, “Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, who both campaigned on criminal justice reform after having not governed that way in the past, can demonstrate their seriousness by commuting sentences every damned day, not just the last one.”
FREE MINDS
Stores are dropping MyPillow products over the CEO’s ongoing promotion of 2020 election fraud conspiracies.
Are we going to hear about how this is censorship now? And how Congress needs to pass “pillow neutrality” laws?
Or can we just admit that sometimes “consequences” of your speech means no one wants to do business with you? https://t.co/PN4BA4LxsQ
BREAKING: Long Beach files 4 criminal misdemeanors against owner of Restauration – for defying #COVID19 orders. City prosecutor: city tried multiple times to get owner to comply. Says restaurant was serving ppl sitting close together w/o masks. Each charge = 6 mos jail. @KFIAM640pic.twitter.com/wmxHMX1WL9
Just in: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says on MSNBC tonight that she would support the creation of a 9/11-style commission — with subpoena power — to investigate the Capitol attack.
I’m leading the call for national security powers to not be expanded in light of the attack on our nation’s Capitol that occurred two weeks ago, as such measures often lead to the erosion of Americans’ civil liberties. pic.twitter.com/K6IHTPQzne
• “Seven cases of COVID-19 in Michigan are now associated with a Washtenaw County woman who traveled to the United Kingdom and brought back with her a new variation of the coronavirus known as B.1.1.7, or the U.K. variant,” reports the Detroit Free Press.
• The Michigan strain is different from the COVID-19 variant making its way around California. That variant is known CAL.20C. “In Southern California, B.1.1.7 has been found in scattered coronavirus cases in Los Angeles, San Diego and San Bernardino counties. In contrast, the CAL.20C strain was identified in 36.4% of cases” in a new Cedars-Sinai study, the hospital announced Monday.
• “The UK will introduce a new visa at the end of January that will give 5.4 million Hong Kong residents—a staggering 70% of the territory’s population—the right to come and live in the UK, and eventually become citizens,” reports the BBC.
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.
Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Playboy, Fox News, Politico, The Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.
Reason is the magazine of “free minds and free markets,” offering a refreshing alternative to the left-wing and right-wing echo chambers for independent-minded readers who love liberty.
The left will try to convince the new president he has a mandate for progressive change. He doesn’t.
Jason L. Riley The Wall Street Journal January 19, 2021
A Missouri middle school forces teachers to locate themselves on an “oppression matrix” and watch a video of “George Floyd’s last words.” This article is part of an ongoing series on critical race theory in American schools.
Christopher F. Rufo
City Journal Online January 19, 2021
“Each year, Martin Luther King Jr. Day encourages an upsurge in volunteer work and charitable giving. Unfortunately, it tends to be just a one-day commitment.”
Eloise Samuels The Washington Examiner January 18, 2021
On January 26, join Michael Hendrix for a panel discussion on the promises and goals of Opportunity Zones, their efficacy thus far, and what the future will look like under a new administration.
On January 27, join City Journal editor Brian Anderson as he moderates a panel of longtime City Journal contributors—Nicole Gelinas, Heather Mac Donald, Steven Malanga, and Fred Siegel—commemorating the magazine’s 30th anniversary and taking a look at what the future might hold.
Manhattan Institute is a think tank whose mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice and individual responsibility.
52 Vanderbilt Ave. New York, NY 10017
(212) 599-7000
The spread of “fake news” and “hateful rhetoric” on social media has been in the news. Alex Stamos is a former chief security officer for Facebook. He sat down with Brian “Stop Calling Me a Potato … MORE
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the Townhall.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions
You can unsubscribe by clicking here.
Or Send postal mail to:
Townhall Daily Unsubscribe
P.O. Box 9660, Arlington, VA 22219
* Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.
55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
01/20/2021
Share:
Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
DHS Delay; Dear Stevie; Breaking With Tradition
By Carl M. Cannon on Jan 20, 2021 08:39 am
Good morning, it’s Wednesday, Jan. 20, 2021. Inauguration Day is here at last. Four years ago today, Barack and Michelle Obama hosted Donald and Melania Trump at the White House. The outgoing president, following a modern tradition, left an encouraging note for his successor in the Oval Office. Mrs. Trump, following her own instincts, and not first lady custom, handed her predecessor a Tiffany’s box containing, as Mrs. Obama would later reveal, a “lovely” picture frame. At the time, Michelle seemed to not know what to do with it. Microphones picked up her husband saying, “I’ll take care of the protocol here.”
What made the awkward scene touching is that, despite all the pomp and circumstance, it was a normal little social faux pas. It reminded viewers, regardless of who they voted for in 2016, that the participants in America’s celebrated transfer of political power are only human. And on that day, one of them — an immigrant to this country — was trying to be gracious.
Nothing like that will happen today. It turns out that Melania Trump did not start a new tradition. She is not preparing to greet Jill Biden at the White House this morning, let alone accept a gift from her. Donald Trump will not ride in a limousine with Joe Biden to the Capitol, a solemn ritual that even Herbert Hoover and Franklin D. Roosevelt managed to pull off. Their transition was fraught, too, and although the two men only managed small talk, they sat in the back seat together on their way to the swearing-in ceremonies. More than that, actually: It was a chilly day, like today, so Hoover and FDR shared a blanket for warmth.
In contrast, as I write these words the Trumps are traveling via Marine helicopter over a barricaded capital city that looks like a fortress en route to Joint Base Andrews where Air Force One awaits. That iconic presidential carriage turns into a pumpkin at noon when Joe Biden takes the oath of office. By then, Trump and his wife plan to be ensconced at Mar-a-Lago. If the schedule holds, crews at Palm Beach International Airport will be refueling the big jet as Joe Biden becomes the 46th U.S. president. I imagine Biden is okay with that. Like FDR, he prefers riding in trains anyway.
Joe and Jill Biden will engage with a Republican ex-president today, however. The 78-year-old incoming commander-in-chief, who ends his political speeches by saying, “God Bless our troops,” will lay a wreath at Arlington National Cemetery. He and the first lady are to be joined by George W. and Laura Bush, Bill and Hillary Clinton, and Barack and Michelle Obama.
With that I’d point you to RCP’s front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters, columnists, and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Republicans Block Swift Approval of Biden’s DHS Pick. Susan Crabtree has the story from Alejandro Mayorkas’ initial Senate hearing.
Trump’s Twitter Signature: A 12-Year Timeline. Kalev Leetaru has this analysis of the president’s preferred (and prolific) mode of communication — until his ban earlier this month.
An Open Letter to Stevie Wonder. Tom Bevan responds to the singer’s assertion that there hasn’t been “one iota” of progress for African Americans since Martin Luther King Day was established in the 1980s.
5 Ways Hospitals Can Help Fix the Vaccine Rollout Debacle. Marty Makary and Kavita K. Patel argue that complicated or incomplete guidance from federal, state and local health entities should be disregarded in favor quick, pragmatic steps.
The Vaccine Ad Void: What We Have Is a Failure to Communicate. The lack of advertising campaigns informing people how and where they can receive shots is creating potentially life-threatening confusion, Steve Miller reports for RealClearInvestigations.
Reforms to Earned Income Tax Credit Will Aid Families. At RealClearPolicy, Angela Rachidi and Robert Cherry explain how EITC expansion would further benefit working-class couples with children.
Investors, Expect a Quiet 2021 But Be Vigilant at Its End. At RealClearMarkets, Ken Fisher predicts political calm in the months ahead.
Why Canceling Keystone Pipeline Is a Gift to China and Russia. At RealClearEnergy, Daniel Turner warns Joe Biden that making good on his vow will have severe ramifications.
Can We Save the Planet, Live Comfortably, and Have Children Too? Also at RCE, Joel Kotkin and Wendell Cox explore how climate change can be addressed without profound effects on families, the economy, and community.
This email is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this email on the Twitchy.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions
You can unsubscribe by clicking here.
Or Send postal mail to:
Twitchy Unsubscribe
P.O. Box 9660, Arlington, VA 22219
* Copyright Twitchy and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.
WERE YOU FORWARDED THIS EDITION OF THE HOT AIR DAILY?
You can get your own free subscription to the #1 blog delivered to your email inbox early each morning by visiting: http://www.hotair.com
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on Hot Air OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
President-elect Joe Biden will be formally sworn in today, becoming the 46th president of the United States. For Biden, it marks the culmination of a five-decade-long political career in Washington, DC, that began with an upstart Senate campaign in 1972. His running mate, Kamala Harris, becomes the highest-ranking woman to hold elected office in the US, as well as the country’s first Black or Indian American vice president.
Unlike previous ceremonies, the inauguration will be absent large crowds, with the 300-acre National Mall closed amid security threats. More than 25,000 National Guard members are stationed in the capital to help support security efforts; two were removed yesterday from service due to alleged ties with militia groups (no specific plot was uncovered). The traditional inaugural parade will be shifted largely online and involve almost 1,400 people from all 50 states and several territories.
Most of Congress and the Supreme Court will attend in person, as will former Presidents Barack Obama, George W. Bush, and Bill Clinton. Vice President Mike Pence will attend, while President Trump will skip the ceremony, opting to hold a send-off at Joint Base Andrews before heading to Florida. Watch the president’s farewell remarks, in which he highlighted accomplishments of the past four years and wished the incoming administration luck.
The event is expected to start around 11am ET, with Chief Justice John Roberts administering the oath of office (read here) just after 12pm ET. Watch the event live here.
Federal prosecutors unveiled the first conspiracy charges yesterday related to the Jan. 6 storming of the US Capitol building. The complaint alleges three members of a loosely knit group of nationwide militias known as the Oath Keepers organized and coordinated a premeditated plan to breach the Capitol building and possibly harm lawmakers. To date, more than 90 people have been arrested on federal charges related to the incident (track here)
In related news, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) accused President Trump of provoking the crowd (w/video) that stormed the building, his first public comments directly linking the president to the events. The remarks precede an upcoming Senate impeachment trial over the president’s role in the Jan. 6 events, which begins once House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D, CA-12) delivers the article of impeachment to the Senate.
Uighur Genocide
The US State Department officially accused China of crimes against humanity and genocide in its treatment of its Muslim minority Uighur population. The determination, the harshest international criticism of Chinese policies toward ethnic minorities to date, has little immediate impact but may open the door to new punitive measures.
More than 12 million Uighurs live in China’s western Xinjiang province, whose Turkic ethnicity is more closely aligned with Central Asia. Critics say Beijing has long exerted repressive measures over the group in an attempt to force adherence to Communist Party doctrine—efforts officials frame as combating terrorism. Since 2017, reports have emerged of forced sterilization, forced labor, torture, and reeducation camps where up to 1 million people may be indefinitely detained. Population control measures have caused Uighur birth rates to drop by more than a third since 2010.
See a history of China’s discrimination against the group here.
Enjoy reading? Share 1440 with your three closest friends.
If you’re like a majority of people who made New Year’s resolutions, odds are yours had something to do with exercising more, eating healthy foods, or losing weight. And chances are, by now your goals are starting to slip (if even just a bit).
Noom is here to help. But they don’t give you a strict set of rules to follow, and they know not every day can be a massive success toward your goals. Instead, Noom focuses on longer-term lifestyle changes to drive real results. Combining the power of AI, mobile tech, psychology, and over 1,000 personal coaches, Noom helps people live healthier lives by starting with small habit changes. Enjoy access coaching professionals trained not only in nutrition, but also in cognitive behavior therapy, to help you dive deeper and discover personal barriers, actual goals, and areas where you have the most opportunity for growth.
But don’t just take it from Noom’s marketing materials: Members of 1440’s team have tried and succeeded with Noom as well. Ashley, our copy editor and style guide extraordinaire lost 20 lbs. (the rest of her baby weight) in four months while using Noom. She’s a huge fan, and you can be too. For just $0.50, new users have seven days to try Noom and take a big step toward 2021 goals.
>ViacomCBS to launch streaming service Paramount+ March 4; the service is an expansion and replacement for CBS All Access(More)
> Harry Brant, son of supermodel Stephanie Seymour and publisher Peter Brant, dies at 24 of accidental overdose (More) | Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Don Sutton dies at 75(More)
>SAT drops optional essay and subject tests in an effort to ease demands on prospective college students during the pandemic(More) | France’s ONA becomes first vegan restaurant to be awarded a coveted Michelin Star(More)
>High-resolution images reveal the difference in antibiotic-resistant bacteria may be a single water molecule; drug-resistant bugs have different ribosome structures that prevent water from acting as a binder for antibiotics (More)
>Research suggests wasps are capable of recognizing individual faces using “holistic” recognition, the first time the capability—similar to how human brains recognize faces—has been observed in insects (More)
>In rare find, paleontologists recover a nearly perfectly preserved, 50-million-year-old assassin bug captured in amber; sample includes the reproductive organs, revealing a new species (More)
Business & Markets
>GM, Honda, and Microsoft invest $2B in autonomous vehicle startup Cruise at $30B valuation (More) | Rivian raises $2.65B at $27B valuation to begin producing electric truck (More)
>Janet Yellen, Biden administration’s nominee for Treasury secretary, urges lawmakers to “act big” to save economy in confirmation hearing testimony (More)
>Netflix shares up over 10% in after-hours trading as company passes 200 million worldwide paying subscribers (More) | Alibaba founder Jack Ma emerges on Chinese social media after months of laying low following speech critical of Chinese government (More)
Politics & World Affairs
>President Trump pardons 73 people, commutes the sentences of 70 others, including former adviser Steve Bannon, rapper Lil Wayne, former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, and more; see full list (More)
>The US surpasses 400,000 COVID-19 deaths; see rolling averages (cases, deaths) | More than 31 million vaccine doses distributed in the US, with more than 12 million doses administered (More)
>Senate committees hold five confirmation hearings for Biden administration nominees, including defense secretary pick Gen. Lloyd Austin; see full schedule (More) | Dr. Rachel Levine nominated as assistant secretary of health; Levine would be the first openly transgender nominee confirmed by the Senate (More)
Weight loss is hard. It’s hard to start, and even harder to maintain. Eighty percent of Noom users had lost weight with other programs, only to gain it back again.
Historybook: HBD astronaut Buzz Aldrin (1930); Iran hostage crisis ends as 52 Americans are released after 444 days (1981); Martin Luther King Jr. Day is observed for first time (1986); RIP actress Audrey Hepburn (1993); Barack Obama becomes first Black president of the US (2009).
“Failure is not a sign of weakness. It is a sign that you are alive and growing.”
– Buzz Aldrin
Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.
Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com.
Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here!
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
SHARE:
Join Our Email List
View as Webpage
January 20, 2021
The Case for Decentralizing Monetary Policy
By Ethan Yang | “Wood’s book was published in the year 2000 and cites history dating back hundreds of years, yet today those lessons are as timely as ever. Policy makers should heed the lessons of history and the principles of sound money to…
By Barry Brownstein | Many consider Vasily Grossman’s Life and Fate to be the greatest Russian novel of the 20 th century. A searing portrait of Stalinist Russia, Life and Fate on its very first page exposes the bitter truth about…
The Empirical Case for a Mask Mandate Lacks Scientific…
By Phillip W. Magness | “Americans rapidly adopted masks last summer and have continued to use them at consistently high rates ever since. Adding a new national mask mandate on top of this practice will bring little if any additional benefit to…
By Donald J. Boudreaux | “The chief condition for such competition to remain real and effective is that government not obstruct it. As long as government itself remains neutral and nondiscriminatory, the best protection for consumers and for the…
The Economic Policy Failures of the Trump Administration
By Jeffrey A. Tucker | “The economic policies of the Trump administration constitute one of the greatest lost opportunities of the postwar period. We’ll be paying the price for decades. The fundamental problem traces most fundamentally to an…
By Alan Reynolds | To explain why the economy collapsed in March and April before recovering vigorously, demand-side economic theorists emphasize excess savings as the cause of the downturn with federal stimulus spending as the driving engine of…
Edward C. Harwood fought for sound money when few Americans seemed to care. He was the original gold standard man before that became cool. Now he is honored in this beautiful sewn silk tie in the richest possible color and greatest detail.
The red is not just red; it is darker and deeper, more distinctive and suggestive of seriousness of purpose.
The Harwood coin is carefully sewn (not stamped). Sporting this, others might miss that you are secretly supporting the revolution for freedom and sound money, but you will know, and that is what matters.
This work should be in the hands (or the eReaders) of an entire generation, so that we can relearn what we once knew and get back to making the world a better place, rather than tearing down what it took centuries to build. There is no such thing as shutting down an economy or ignoring economic principles. Galles has proven that. ~Jeffrey Tucker
On the menu today: Donald Trump has left the White House for the last time as president. His last public address to a large live audience turned out to be the “Save America Rally.” He leaves the nation’s capital facing an impeachment trial in the Senate, having pardoned his old crony Steve Bannon, and thinking of starting his own political party. Joe Biden will take office at noon today, and the cabinet nomination fights will start quickly.
The Strange Quiet of President Trump’s Final Weeks
“U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams resigned at President-elect Joe Biden’s request on Wednesday, as the incoming president sought to make a symbolic break with his predecessor’s covid-19 response,” the Washington Post reports.
Politico: “Joe Biden paces as he dictates long portions of his speeches to aides, spinning out thoughts that quickly pile into six, seven or eight paragraphs of copy, only to later be scrapped. On the 2020 campaign trail, he’d keep groups of supporters waiting inside while he’d hole up in a black car with aides, refining lines of his prepared remarks.”
“Longtime aides and advisers expect the inaugural address to traverse territory that Biden has covered over the course of his nearly 50-year public career, while highlighting an agenda that offers up hope to a country ravaged by disease, economic struggles, and violent political insurrection.”
Politico: “Throughout a series of five back-to-back Cabinet confirmation hearings on Tuesday, Senate Republicans displayed a return-to-normal posture — staking out traditional conservative arguments and outlining their disagreements with the incoming Biden administration, but largely through a respectful back-and-forth with nominees. … It’s a stark departure from the tumultuous, free-wheeling Cabinet fights that defined the Trump era.”
John Avlon: “Not all inaugural addresses are created equal — many are too long and consequently forgettable. Others make the mistake of laying out a specific policy agenda, rather than setting a broad direction toward a new horizon.”
“But an inaugural is preeminently a speech about the new president’s values — about how he sees the world and America’s role in it. At best it offers a unifying vision and the promise of new beginnings.”
“Most are remembered — if at all — for a single phrase that becomes shorthand for the entire speech. And if you listen closely, these lines often share a similar structure. This is the one of the secrets to what makes a great inaugural address.”
“President Trump departed the White House on Wednesday morning for the last time as the commander in chief after four tumultuous years that shook the nation, choosing to leave town rather than face the reality that he lost re-election to President-elect Joe Biden,” the New York Times reports.
“The Marine One helicopter took off from the South Lawn of the White House at about 8:18 a.m. for the short flight to Joint Base Andrews in suburban Maryland, where the president planned to hold a farewell event with administration veterans and other supporters. After that, he and Melania Trump were to board Air Force One for the journey to Florida, where they will reside.”
“President Trump has pardoned Stephen K. Bannon, the firebrand architect of his 2016 campaign who was charged last year with defrauding donors to a private fundraising effort for construction of a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border,” the Washington Post reports.
“Trump approved Bannon’s pardon late Tuesday, after days of frantic deliberations. Some aides said as recently as Monday night that the move appeared unlikely. Trump vacillated throughout the day Tuesday, and even after he said he was going to sign off on the pardon, it remained unclear for some time that he would actually do so.”
New York Times: “Mr. Trump also was set to grant clemency to Elliott Broidy, a fund-raiser for the president who pleaded guilty last year to conspiring to violate foreign lobbying laws as part of a covert campaign to influence the administration on behalf of Chinese and Malaysian interests.”
Thousands of National Guard troops are deployed in Washington, D.C., to protect Joe Biden as he is sworn in today as the 46th President of the United States. Most voters say they are concerned for Biden’s safety, but fewer plan to watch the entire inauguration ceremony.
President Trump formally declassified a large trove of Russiagate documents Tuesday evening over objections from the FBI. The declassified documents are expected to be released… Read more…
By Jacob Engels, first published in The Rogue Review Anthony Sabatini, one of the most patriotic and pro-America state legislators in the nation, has officially… Read more…
Good riddance from the GOP! You can really tell who your friends are sometimes and the GOP leadership are no friend to President Trump. Despite… Read more…
President Trump delivered a farewell address to the nation on Tuesday. “Now, as I prepare to hand power over to a new administration at Noon… Read more…
President Donald Trump and our elegant First Lady Melania Trump left the White House for the last time, as the United States’ 45th Commander in… Read more…
How many millions of Americans are crying right now? How many hearts are broken hearing America’s greatest modern day president deliver his farewell speech? President… Read more…
President Trump late last night announced that he was pardoning 73 individuals and commuting the sentence of another 70 individuals. Former Trump Chief Strategist Steve… Read more…
President Donald Trump and our elegant First Lady Melania Trump left the White House for the last time, as the United States’ 45th Commander in… Read more…
This post was updated after former Trump official said the request came from Nancy Pelosi and not Mayor Bowser Democrats are preparing the US Capitol… Read more…
This email was sent to rickbulow1974@gmail.com. You are receiving this email because you asked to receive information from The Gateway Pundit. We take your privacy and your liberty very seriously and will keep your information in the strictest confidence. Your name will not be sold to or shared with third parties. We will email you from time to time with relevant news and updates, but you can stop receiving information from us at any time by following very simple instructions that will be included at the bottom of any correspondence you should receive from us.
Our mailing address is: 16024 Manchester Rd. | St. Louis, MO 63011
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo Says China is Committing Genocide On Muslim Population
On Tuesday, January 19, 2021, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said China is committing genocide against Uighur Muslims. Pompeo tweeted, “I have determined that the People’s Republic of China is committing genocide and crimes against humanity in Xinjiang, China, targeting Uyghur Muslims and members of other ethnic and religious minority groups.”
“These acts are an affront to the Chinese people and to civilized nations everywhere. The People’s Republic of China and the CCP must be held to account.”
Pompeo’s tweets drew immediate criticism from Chen Weihua, a China Daily’s EU Bureau Chief. In response, Weihua tweeted, “Less than 24 hours before Secretary of Disinformation Mike Pompeo is gone for good. Time to celebrate.”
In an official State Department determination, Pompeo shared details on how China greatly oppresses Uighur Muslims.
The declaration reads, in part, “Our exhaustive documentation of the PRC’s actions in Xinjiang confirms that since at least March 2017, local authorities dramatically escalated their decades-long campaign of repression against Uyghur Muslims and members of other ethnic and religious minority groups, including ethnic Kazakhs and ethnic Kyrgyz. Their morally repugnant, wholesale policies, practices, and abuses are designed systematically to discriminate against and surveil ethnic Uyghurs as a unique demographic and ethnic group, restrict their freedom to travel, emigrate, and attend schools, and deny other basic human rights of assembly, speech, and worship. PRC authorities have conducted forced sterilizations and abortions on Uyghur women, coerced them to marry non-Uyghurs, and separated Uyghur children from their families.”
President Donald Trump Gives Brief Farewell Address Prior to Biden Inauguration
His remarks read, in part, “My fellow Americans: Four years ago, we launched a great national effort to rebuild our country, to renew its spirit, and to restore the allegiance of this government to its citizens. In short, we embarked on a mission to make America great again — for all Americans. As I conclude my term as the 45th President of the United States, I stand before you truly proud of what we have achieved together. We did what we came here to do — and so much more.”
“This week, we inaugurate a new administration and pray for its success in keeping America safe and prosperous. We extend our best wishes, and we also want them to have luck — a very important word.”
“I’d like to begin by thanking just a few of the amazing people who made our remarkable journey possible.”
Additionally, President Trump also said, “We restored the principle that a nation exists to serve its citizens. Our agenda was not about right or left, it wasn’t about Republican or Democrat, but about the good of a nation, and that means the whole nation. With the support and prayers of the American people, we achieved more than anyone thought possible. Nobody thought we could even come close.”
DAILY RUMOR:
Did President Obama Get Arrested?
A rumor has been circulating that former President Barack Obama was arrested before President-Elect Biden’s inauguration. The rumor includes a video of Obama in a jail cell. However, the jail cell is former South African President Nelson Mandela’s cell. In 2013, then-President Obama toured Mandela’s cell.
DAILY PERSPECTIVE ON COVID-19
Since the Outbreak Started
As of Tuesday, January 19, 2021, 14,786,852 people in the U.S. have recovered from coronavirus. Also, the U.S. reports 24,806,964 COVID-19 cases, with 411,486 deaths.
Daily Numbers
For Tuesday, January 19, 2021, the U.S. reports 171,525 COVID-19 cases, with 2.768 deaths.
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR US AS AMERICANS
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s determination that China is engaging in genocide on the Uighur Muslims shows that the CCP is committing crimes against humanity. With the incoming Biden Administration, it remains to be determined if his cabinet holds as strong a stance against China as the Trump Administration. However, Biden’s nominee for CIA Director Tony Blinken did say he thinks President Trump was right to be stronger on China. Additionally, consistent with previous patterns, the CCP is likely to push back against claims of genocide with propaganda and disinformation campaigns.
With President Trump’s term ending, the Biden Administration will likely reverse many of the policies of the last four years. At this time, it’s unclear what Trump plans to do after leaving office.
The Daily Intelligence Brief, The DIB as we call it, is curated by a hard working team with a diverse background of experience including government intelligence, investigative journalism, high-risk missionary work and marketing.
This team has more than 68 years of combined experience in the intelligence community, 35 years of combined experience in combat and high-risk areas, and have visited more than 65 countries. We have more than 22 years of investigative reporting and marketing experience. Daily, we scour and verify more than 600 social media sites using more than 200 analytic tools in the process. Leveraging the tools and methods available to us, we uncover facts and provide analysis that would take an average person years of networking and research to uncover. We are doing it for you every 24 hours.
From All Things Possible, the Victor Marx Group and Echo Analytics Group, we aim to provide you with a daily intelligence brief collected from trusted sources and analysts.
Sources for the DIB include local and national media outlets, state and government websites, proprietary sources, in addition to social media networks. State reporting of COVID-19 deaths includes probable cases and probable deaths from COVID-19, in accordance with each state’s guidelines.
Thank you for joining us today. Be safe, be healthy and