Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Thursday February 25, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
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Censorship is now rampant in the United States. It has become commonplace for big tech and large social media companies to push and agenda by silencing the opposing points of view. But this goes against the core of what it means to be American. It seems that too many Americans feel that there is nothing they can do to stop this. They feel that no one hears them. But remember: together we are strong. United we have a voice. We are asking you to join us and support us. We are asking you to help make our collective voice a thunderous roar so that we can continue to report the news in Truth and Tradition. Limited Time Offer “I do not know anyone who has gotten to the top without hard work. That is the recipe. It will not always get you to the top, but it will get you pretty near.” MARGARET THATCHER
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“People of faith do not consider physical demise to be one’s true death, since the soul goes to heaven or is born again in the cycle of reincarnation. The Communist Party uses killing as an instrument to plant the seeds of terror in the minds of the people, forcing them to accept its evil ideology. Through the destruction of morality, people’s souls are fated to damnation. The Communist Party aims not just to destroy man’s physical body, but also his soul.” Dear Lifestyle and Culture Enthusiasts: The Epoch Times is launching a magazine, vastly expanding our Life & Tradition coverage. If you would like to write as a columnist on subjects such as literature, history, book reviews, education, architecture and interiors, home and gardening fashion, food, farm life, health, movies, TV, …etc, we welcome new voices. 10+ years of experience in the related field is preferred. You are welcome to send writing samples to us. Payment for your articles will vary depending on quality, influence, and length. Please send inquiries to: mageditor@epochtimes.com Please send it to mageditor@epochtimes.com Copyright © 2021 The Epoch Times, All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted in to receive newsletter communications from The Epoch Times.
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
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5.) MORNING BREW
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6.) THE FACTUAL
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7.) LIBERTY NATION
8.) FOX NEWS
9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
10.) JUST THE NEWS
11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE
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12.) THE FLIP SIDE
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
☕ Happy Thursday! Smart Brevity™ count: 971 words … < 4 minutes.
Trump supporters rally near Mar-a-Lago on Feb. 15. Photo: Joe Raedle/Getty Images
President Trump didn’t have to punish his critics in Congress — his allies back in the states instantly and eagerly did the dirty work.
- Why it matters: Virtually every Republican who supported impeachment was censured back home, or threatened with a primary challenge.
- Today through Sunday, many will make the trek to a sold-out CPAC (“America Uncanceled”) in Orlando to kiss the ring — and trash the “traitors.”
We’re quickly seeing that Trump’s true power source is in the states, powered by 2020 success, Axios CEO Jim VandeHei writes:
- Republicans picked up 14 House seats, including a dozen they lost two years earlier. They need +6 in 2022.
- In 2021, Republicans will have full control of the legislative and executive branches in 24 states. Democrats will have full control of the legislative and executive branch in 15 states.
- “Republicans hold total control of redistricting in 18 states, including Florida, North Carolina and Texas, which are growing in population and expected to gain seats after the 2020 census is tabulated,” the N.Y. Times reports (subscription). “Some election experts believe the G.O.P. could retake the House in 2022 based solely on gains from newly drawn districts.”
- Democrats targeted nine states to flip control and failed in all.
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Closed-door selection processes for police chiefs have been replaced by highly public vetting of candidates — who need better community-relations skills than ever, Jennifer A. Kingson writes in Axios Cities.
- Why it matters: In the post-George-Floyd era, the choice of a police chief has become like an election, with the need to build consensus around a candidate.
- “This is a turning point for policing in America,” says Gary Peterson, CEO of Public Sector Search & Consulting, a boutique headhunting firm that exclusively handles police chief searches. “Communities are demanding … input.”
Following last summer’s protests, there has been high turnover among big-city chiefs, with many retiring or switching jobs. High-profile searches are under way in San Jose, Albuquerque, Miami and Memphis.
- The candidate pool has shrunk under the weight of all the demands, police recruiters say.
- 🏙️ Sign up for Jennifer A. Kingson’s weekly newsletter, Axios Cities.
Flu vaccine syringes. Photo: Damian Dovarganes/AP
Flu has virtually disappeared from the U.S., with reports coming in at far lower levels than anything seen in decades, AP’s Mike Stobbe reports.
- February is usually the peak of flu season, with doctors’ offices and hospitals packed. But this is the lowest flu season in at least 25 years.
What’s happening: Experts say that measures put in place to fend off the coronavirus — mask wearing, social distancing and virtual schooling — were a big factor in preventing a “twindemic” of flu and COVID.
- A push to get more people vaccinated against flu probably helped, too, as did fewer people traveling.
New coronavirus infections continued their sharp decline over the past week, and are now back down to pre-Thanksgiving levels, Axios’ Sam Baker and Andrew Witherspoon report.
- Why it matters: The U.S. really is doing something right. Cases are way down, vaccinations are way up, and that’s going to save a lot of lives.
Caseloads got worse over the past week in four states — Idaho, New Hampshire, Washington and Wyoming — and improved in 34 states.
The bottom line: If we can keep this up, some form of post-pandemic life is within reach.
In December, Gov. Gavin Newsom holds a vial of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID vaccine at Kaiser Permanente L.A. Medical Center. Photo: Jae C. Hong/AP
California Gov. Gavin Newsom is the target of a Republican campaign that increasingly looks like it will secure the 1.5 million signatures needed to trigger a recall election later this year, the N.Y. Times reports (subscription).
- Why it matters: Newsom was elected in 2018 by a record 24-point margin, and had a 70% approval rating as recently as April. “Across the country, pandemic-weary Americans are taking their rage and grief out on chief executives,” The Times writes.
The big picture: The recall campaign against Newsom is the most far-reaching and successful since 2003, when then-Gov. Gray Davis was replaced by Arnold Schwarzenegger, the L.A. Times reports (subscription).
This wind-carved rock — seen in a 360-degree panorama taken by the Mars Perseverance rover’s Mastcam-Z, and released yesterday by NASA — shows the amazing detail being captured by the mission.
Politicians of all stripes are coming together to address a severe chip shortage due to COVID disruptions — and the longer-term threat posed by reliance on China, Ina Fried and Scott Rosenberg write in Axios Login.
- President Biden yesterday signed an executive order to boost manufacturing jobs by strengthening U.S. supply chains for advanced batteries, pharmaceuticals, critical minerals and semiconductors.
The big picture: The chip shortage is having huge implications beyond tech, with carmakers having to cut production.
Flipping sneakers has been big business since 1985, when Nike dropped the culture-shifting Air Jordan 1. (Ask my entrepreneurial nephews in Oregon for tips on bot-gaming and drop-shipping.)
A new generation of speculator is treating footwear like an investment as worthy of informed valuation as any other commodity, Joshua Hunt writes in Bloomberg Businessweek’s cover story:
In the hours after siphoning up shoes from retailers, they essentially sell short-term futures based on street sentiment. By the time prices plateau, ultra-rare shoes such as the Air Jordan 1 OG Dior … have become “grails” worth $10,000 or more.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Move over, GameStop. The newest speculative game in town is NFTs — digital files that can be owned and traded on a plethora of new online platforms, Axios’ Felix Salmon writes.
- Most NFTs include some kind of still or moving image, which makes them similar to many physical art objects. Some of them, including a GIF of Nyan Cat flying through the sky with a Pop-Tart body and rainbow trail, can be worth more than your house.
Nyan Cat sold for 300 ETH (the Ethereum cryptocurrency), or about $580,000 at the time the bid was entered on Feb. 19.
- An artist going by “Beeple” sold 20 artworks for $3.5 million in December, and has consigned a major digital work to Christie’s for an online auction ending March 11.
Brewers are taking a page from Gatorade and putting electrolytes in “performance beers” to cut dehydration, Bloomberg’s Tony Rehagen writes:
The market is still small … but brewers say there are signs of growth. Some appeal to millennials who want to consume fewer calories and might put down their hard seltzer for a light beer.
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14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
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16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
Feb 25, 2021 View in Browser AP MORNING WIRE Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
TAMER FAKAHANY
The Rundown AP PHOTO/MARY ALTAFFER Pfizer vaccine works well in big ‘real world’ test; FDA says J&J 1-dose shot prevents severe COVID-19; California virus deaths pass 50,000
Good news on two vaccine fronts to start things off today.
A large real-world test of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine has confirmed that it’s very effective at preventing serious illness or death, even after one dose.The results come from a mass vaccination campaign in Israel, reports Marilynn Marchione.
They give strong reassurance that the benefits seen in smaller tests persisted when the vaccine was used in a general population. The vaccine was 92% effective at preventing severe disease after two shots and 62% after one. Its estimated effectiveness for preventing death was 72% two to three weeks after the first shot.
J&J Vaccine: An analysis by U.S. regulators says Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose vaccine provides strong protection against severe COVID-19 and is about 66% effective at preventing moderate to severe cases. On Friday, a panel of experts for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration will debate if the evidence is strong enough to recommend the vaccine. But even if the FDA clears the J&J shot for U.S. use, it won’t boost vaccine supplies significantly right away. Only a few million doses are expected in the first week, Lauran Neergaard and Matthew Perrone report.
Vaccine Tale of Two U.S. Cities: Two predominantly Latino cities in neighboring U.S. states have had diverging fates in their vaccine rollouts. Central Falls, Rhode Island, and Chelsea, Massachusetts, have been the states’ hardest-hit communities in the pandemic. But Rhode Island has opened up vaccinations to all Central Fall residents 18 or older. City officials say they’re on pace to inoculate most residents by the summer.
Massachusetts, meanwhile, hasn’t done the same for Chelsea or other hard-hit communities of color. Public health experts, civil rights groups and immigrant activists have complained for months that the state isn’t doing nearly enough to ensure that Black and Latino residents are inoculated. Philip Marcelo reports.
VIDEO: Vaccine Tale of Two U.S. Cities.
Vaccine Ad Campaign: A new public service ad campaign aims to convince Americans to get vaccinated, telling them “It’s Up to You.” The national campaign by the Ad Council and its partners aims to move people from being hesitant to being confident about the shots. The campaign, funded by $52 million in donations, includes English and Spanish ads for TV, billboards, social media and publications.
How would COVID-19 vaccine makers adapt to variants? The AP is answering Viral Questions in this series.
California’s Death Toll; Los Angeles County has reported more than 800 deaths during the winter coronavirus surge, updating its count using backlogged records, pushing California’s toll above 50,000, or about one-tenth of the U.S. total from the pandemic. The grim figure comes just days after the U.S. recorded a half-million deaths. While the nation’s most populous state has the highest number of COVID-19 deaths in the U.S., it is ranked 25th in the number of cases per capita because of its large population, Brian Melley reports.
Federal Relief Package: Republicans rallied solidly against Democrats’ proposed $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill. Lawmakers are also awaiting a decision by the Senate’s parliamentarian that could bolster or potentially kill a pivotal provision hiking the federal minimum wage. Democrats plan to push the sweeping package through the House on Friday. They were hoping the Senate would follow quickly enough to have legislation on President Joe Biden’s desk by mid-March. But the big suspense is over whether the nonpartisan parliamentarian will decide if the minimum wage plan can stay in the bill and enjoy its protection against a GOP filibuster, Alan Fram reports.
U.S. States Relief: In these economically-ravaged times, U.S. states are not willing to wait for more federal help and have been moving ahead with their own coronavirus relief packages. Maryland and California recently approved help for small businesses, the poor, the jobless and those needing child care. New Mexico and Pennsylvania are funneling grants directly to cash-starved businesses. The spending shows that many states have proved unexpectedly resilient during the pandemic, Brian Witte reports from Annapolis.
And it has provided fuel for critics who say they don’t need another massive infusion of cash from Congress. The Biden administration’s $1.9 trillion relief plan would send hundreds of billions of dollars to state and local governments.
BLM Survival Fund: The Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation is formally expanding a $3 million financial relief fund to help people struggling during the pandemic. It plans to make 3,000 microgrants of $1,000 each to people who it believes need it most. If approved, the money is deposited directly into recipients’ bank accounts or made available on prepaid debit cards, the foundation says — no strings attached. The Survival Fund launches today as the nation awaits Congress to take action on a nearly $2 trillion relief package that includes $1,400 direct stimulus payments to individuals who earn less than $75,000 in annual income. Aaron Morrison reports.
Flu Season: February is usually the peak of flu season in the U.S., but not this year. Health officials say flu cases and hospitalizations have been at their lowest levels in decades and credit measures put in place to fend off COVID-19. Some think it’s possible that the coronavirus has essentially muscled aside not only the flu, but also other bugs usually seen in the fall and winter, Mike Stobbe reports. AP PHOTO/MARTIN MEJIA Medical oxygen scarce in Africa, Latin America, leading to COVID-19 deaths; Ghana is 1st nation to receive vaccines from UN-backed COVAX; For Israel’s allies, road to vaccines runs through Jerusalem
The gap in medical oxygen availability “is one of the defining health equity issues, I think, of our age,” says the director of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, who said he survived a severe coronavirus infection thanks to the oxygen he received.
A crisis over the supply of medical oxygen for virus patients has struck in Africa and Latin America, where warnings went unheeded at the start of the pandemic and doctors say the shortage has led to unnecessary deaths, Carley Petesch in Dakar and Lori Hinnant in Paris report.
The head of the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said medical oxygen is a “huge critical need” across the continent and is a main reason that virus patients are more likely to die there than elsewhere.
Doctors in Nigeria anxiously monitor traffic as oxygen deliveries move through the gridlocked streets of Lagos. There and in other countries, desperate families of patients sometimes turn to the black market. Governments take action only after hospitals are overwhelmed and the infected die by the dozens.
In Brazil’s Amazonas state, swindlers were caught reselling fire extinguishers painted to look like medical oxygen tanks. In Peru, people camped out in lines to get cylinders for sick relatives.
Only after the lack of oxygen was blamed for the deaths of four people at an Egyptian hospital in January and six people at one in Pakistan did governments address the problems.
Ghana COVAX: The West African country has received the world’s first delivery of virus vaccines from the U.N.-backed COVAX initiative. It marks the long-awaited start for a program that has thus far fallen short of hopes that it would ensure shots were given quickly to the world’s most vulnerable people, Francis Kokutse and Carley Petesch report. The arrival of 600,000 AstraZeneca doses is part of the largest vaccine procurement operation in history, according to the World Health Organization and UNICEF.
But the COVAX initiative has been hampered by the severely limited global supply of doses. It already missed its own goal of beginning vaccinations in poor countries at the same time as immunizations were rolled out in rich ones. So far, global vaccinations have been extremely uneven: 80% of the 210 million doses given out have been in just 10 countries.
EXPLAINER: UN vaccine plan is underway, but problems remain.
Israel Vaccine Diplomacy: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has acknowledged sharing coronavirus vaccines with a number of friendly countries that have given favors to Israel in the past. His comments came at a time when Israel faces sharp international criticism for not sharing more of its vast stockpile of vaccines with the Palestinians. Netanyahu said he had personally decided to share a symbolic number of vaccines “in return for things we already received.” Netanyahu did not identify the countries. But a list obtained by an Israeli TV station included a number of countries that have supported Israel’s claim to Jerusalem from where Josef Federman reports.
More from Around the World:
PHOTOS: Hindu festival draws crowds of bathers to rivers. The festival is being held even though COVID-19 infections in parts of India are rising after months of steady decline. AP PHOTO/KEVIN HAGEN El Chapo’s wife goes from obscurity to celebrity to arrest on drug distribution charges
Until the trial, “Emma had remained anonymous like practically all of the partners of Sinaloa cartel capos,” said the executive editor of Mexico’s Sinaloa’s Noroeste newspaper. Then, “she begins to take on more of a celebrity attitude …This breaks a tradition of secrecy and a style specifically within the leadership of the Sinaloa cartel.”
Despite her status as the wife of the world’s most notorious drug cartel boss, Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, Emma Coronel Aispuro lived mostly in obscurity. That changed when her husband went to prison for life, Andres Villarreal, Claudia Torrens and Christopher Sherman report.
Then, suddenly, she was a presence on social media. There was talk of launching a fashion line. Even an appearance on a reality show dedicated to the families of drug traffickers.
Her actions did not go unnoticed.
In the wake of her arrest Monday as she arrived in the United States, on charges that she had conspired to distribute drugs, there were some who wondered: Had Coronel put a target on her own back?
Some saw Coronel’s behavior as that of a young woman who had lived a relatively sheltered life and was blowing off steam following a grueling trial that drew international attention. But her actions violated unwritten cartel rules about family members, especially wives, keeping a low profile. Israel’s Nuclear Program
Israel’s nuclear arsenal may have never been declared by the country but it’s a geopolitical fact bestowing military supremacy in the region, well-known by its allies and enemies alike.
A long-secretive Israeli nuclear facility that gave birth to its atomic weapons program is undergoing what appears to be its biggest construction project in decades. That’s according to satellite photos analyzed by the AP, reports Jon Gambrell.
A dig the size of a football field and likely several stories deep now sits just meters from the aging reactor at the Shimon Peres Negev Nuclear Research Center near the city of Dimona. What the construction is for, however, remains unclear. The Israeli government did not respond to requests for comment from the AP.
With French assistance, Israel began secretly building the nuclear site in the late 1950s in empty desert near Dimona, 55 miles south of Jerusalem. It hid the military purpose of the site for years from America, now Israel’s chief ally, even referring to it as a textile factory.
With plutonium from Dimona, Israel is widely believed to have become one of only nine nuclear-armed countries in the world.
Given the secrecy surrounding its program, it remains unclear how many weapons it possesses. Analysts estimate Israel has material for at least 80 bombs. Other Top Stories The acting head of the U.S. Capitol Police has acknowledged that the department had intelligence warning of a “significant likelihood for violence” on Jan. 6 but officers were not prepared for the massive armed insurrection that would follow. Acting Capitol Police Chief Yogananda Pittman is testifying to Congress today, and her statement was provided in advance. Her testimony provides the most detailed account yet of the intelligence and preparations by Capitol Police ahead of the siege. Intelligence collected ahead of the riot prompted the agency to take extraordinary measures, including arming agents assigned to guard congressional leaders with assault-style rifles. The brother of a Black man who died after being pinned to the street by police says he’s angry the officers won’t face criminal charges. New York’s attorney general announced this week that a grand jury had returned no charges against Rochester police officers in connection with the death of Daniel Prude. Prude’s brother Joe says videos of the encounter captured by officers’ body cameras are irrefutable proof that a crime was committed. He points to one recording in which his brother says “They’re trying to kill me.” Attorneys for the police officers say the videos show them doing their jobs correctly. Members of a group supporting Myanmar’s military junta have attacked and injured people protesting in Yangon against the army’s Feb. 1 seizure of power that ousted the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi. The chaos complicates an already intractable standoff between the military and a protest movement that has been staging daily large-scale demonstrations. Social media giant Facebook announced it was banning all accounts linked to the military following the army’s takeover, saying the ban was precipitated by events including “deadly violence.” Australia’s law forcing Google and Facebook to pay for news is ready to be implemented, although the law’s architect says it will take time for the digital giants to strike media deals. Parliament passed the final amendments to the News Media Bargaining Code agreed between Treasurer Josh Frydenberg and Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg. In return for the changes, Facebook agreed to lift a ban on Australians accessing and sharing news. GET THE APP
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
CPS open to improving remote learning as F’s increase, attendance drops
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22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
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24.) ROLL CALL
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
Out with Trump, in with the Senate parliamentarian
DRIVING THE DAY
Can we take a minute this morning to point out that Washington is totally preoccupied with a wonkish policy matter involving Senate procedure and the latest chatter surrounding a Cabinet nomination? What a change after four years of numbing scandals and Twitter name-calling (though some of those tweets are still making news, just not the departed president’s).
Here are the big stories driving today:
1) NEERA TANDEN’S nomination is still on life support. Democrats have delayed her confirmation vote, and Senate Minority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL is encouraging his members to hold the line against the OMB nominee. White House chief of staff RON KLAIN said on MSNBC on Wednesday night that “we’re fighting our guts out” to get her confirmed. More on Tanden’s fate below.
2) Will she or won’t she? Senate Parliamentarian ELIZABETH MACDONOUGH is expected to rule as soon as today on whether a $15 minimum wage can be tucked into President JOE BIDEN’S pandemic relief bill. But even if she rules it can, Democrats are hardly in the clear. Rep. ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ (D-N.Y.) told Sarah Ferris that she might vote against the entire relief bill if Democratic leaders cut the provision on their own. She also poured cold water on the idea of striking a deal with moderates for a smaller wage hike, say to $11 an hour: “It’s completely unacceptable — $15 is already a compromise.”
3) At the White House, Biden is set to speak with Saudi Arabia’s King Salman this week. According to the NYT’s David Sanger, “while the call will be full of diplomatic pleasantries, officials say, the real purpose is to warn him that the intelligence report [about the killing of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi] is going to be declassified and published. The White House would say little about the carefully sequenced set of events, other than that no conversation between the two men had yet been scheduled — though clearly one was in the works.” More here … Breaking overnight: Reuters scoops that the report is coming today and will single out MBS for approving the murder
IN WHICH MURKOWSKI READS TANDEN’S MEAN TWEET ABOUT HER IN REAL TIME — It’s LISA MURKOWSKI or bust for Tanden: Everyone knows it, including the Alaska GOP senator herself. What Murkowski was not aware of was that she, too, was a past target of Tanden’s biting Twitter feed. Well, leave it to WaPo’s Seung Min Kim to fill her in: When Murkowski stopped to chat with reporters in the Capitol on Wednesday, Kim showed her a Tanden tweet from November 2017. Murkowski had praised her party’s move to cut corporate taxes, tweeting that it would enable U.S. companies to better compete. To which Tanden responded: “No offense but this sounds like you’re high on your own supply. You know, we know, and everyone knows this is all garbage. Just stop.”
“High on my own supply? That’s interesting,” Murkowski said after reading the tweet, seeming almost amused. “Should I ask her? ‘My own supply of what?’” Kim asked for her reaction to Tanden’s putdown, but Murkowski, who hasn’t decided how she’ll vote on the OMB nominee, played it cool. “See, that goes to show how much homework I still have to do on her if I didn’t even know that she had sent out a tweet about me!”
Murkowski said she’s expecting to talk to Tanden soon.
WATCH: White House press secretary JEN PSAKI defends Tanden’s nomination
DCCC CHAIR: ‘I’M NOT WORKING ON AN AUTOPSY’ — We had a rather spirited conversation with DCCC Chair SEAN PATRICK MALONEY (D-N.Y.) on Wednesday for a Playbook Live event. Some takeaways:
1) Democrats lost a dozen members last year and face difficult odds in 2022, since the party that controls the White House typically loses seats in midterms. But Maloney flatly predicted Democrats will keep the House, no caveats or hedges. (Pin that; we’ll return to it in a few months.) Between the GOP’s ongoing civil war and the party’s move to reject Covid relief, Maloney was so confident that he practically scoffed at a question about the DCCC doing its own autopsy of 2020 losses.
“Democrats won the White House, the Senate and the House of Representatives, so if there’s one party that’s doing an autopsy, it should be the Republicans,” he said, later adding, “I’m not working on an autopsy.”
2) The leader of the campaign arm also insisted he isn’t worried about the GOP’s efforts to tag Democrats as the party of “defund the police” and “socialism” — and doesn’t see it as his job to combat those labels. “I don’t think anybody seriously disputes that when somebody lies, and caricatures your position, that that’s something you need to respond to or it can hurt you.” Really? We wonder what moderate Dems think of this.
Pressed on whether he needs to do more to create daylight between activists calling for “defund the police” and what the party’s pursuing in Congress — something centrist Democrats say the party absolutely needs to do — he added: “It is not my job to kind of chase my tail around, trying to explain what every activist or every caricature means.”
3) Maloney is standing behind new senior DCCC staffer DYJUAN TATRO, who has become something of a new obsession for the GOP over his now-deleted tweets supporting rioting as a form of social protest and equating Capitol Police to white supremacists around Jan. 6. (In one of his latest missives from last November floating around GOP operative inboxes this week, he suggested centrist Democrats blaming “defund the police” for 2020 losses “reinforce” white supremacy.)
But Maloney called questions about Tatro a distraction: “You’re talking about deleted tweets before we hired him.”
WATCH: Maloney weighs in on the “defund the police” debate
JOIN US! House Republicans mounted a comeback in November when they picked up a number of seats and defeated several Democratic freshmen who delivered the House majority in 2018. Then the Jan. 6 insurrection happened, setting off an internal war within the GOP. Join RACHAEL on Wednesday at 9 a.m. for a conversation with NRCC Chair TOM EMMER (R-Minn.) to discuss his strategy for the 2022 midterm elections, Donald Trump’s role in the party and continued fallout from Jan. 6. Register to watch
BIDEN’S THURSDAY — The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:50 a.m., have lunch together at 12:30 p.m. and get a Covid-19 briefing at 1:45 p.m. At 2:30 p.m., Biden will take part in an event marking the 50 millionth vaccine shot, with Harris attending. He’ll take part in the National Governors Association’s Winter Meeting at 4:30 p.m. Harris will also stop at a D.C. pharmacy participating in the federal program to administer vaccines at 9 a.m.
— PSAKI will brief at noon.
THE HOUSE returns at 10 a.m. and will begin debating the Equality Act at noon. Speaker NANCY PELOSI will have her weekly press conference at 10:45 a.m.
THE SENATE returns at 11 a.m. It will resume considering JENNIFER GRANHOLM’S nomination for Energy secretary at noon and vote to invoke cloture on MIGUEL CARDONA’S nomination for Education secretary at 1:30 p.m.
TV TODAY — Harris sat down with the Rev. AL SHARPTON for an interview on MSNBC, excerpts of which will air this morning on “Morning Joe.” The full interview will be on “PoliticsNation” on Saturday at 5 p.m.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE WHITE HOUSE
LITERALLY NO MARGIN FOR ERROR — Burgess Everett and Natasha Korecki explore the constant game of Whac-A-Mole the White House and Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER have to play in a 50-50 Senate: A single Democratic defection and Republicans are calling the shots. One nugget from the piece: “One potentially gettable moderate, Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), is icy toward Schumer after he tried to oust her in Maine’s 2020 Senate race. But her deference to Biden on some issues doesn’t mean she can be a reliable lifesaver when someone like Manchin or Sinema thrusts a nomination or floor vote into peril.
“[Collins is] a no on Tanden and said in an interview she’s undecided on [Deb] Haaland and [Xavier] Becerra, who has contacted her for a follow-up call. Asked if she has much of a relationship with Schumer these days, she replied flatly: ‘No.’”
NEW ADMINISTRATION, NEW SPEECH — “The Words That Are In and Out With the Biden Administration,” NYT: “At the Department of Homeland Security, the phrase ‘illegal alien’ is being replaced with ‘noncitizen.’ The Interior Department now makes sure that mentions of its stakeholders include ‘Tribal’ people (with a capital ‘T’ as preferred by Native Americans, it said). The most unpopular two words in the Trump lexicon — ‘climate change’ — are once again appearing on government websites and in documents; officials at the Environmental Protection Agency have even begun using the hashtag #climatecrisis on Twitter.
“And across the government, L.G.B.T.Q. references are popping up everywhere. Visitors to the White House website are now asked whether they want to provide their pronouns when they fill out a contact form: she/her, he/him or they/them.”
Playbook aside: Republicans struggling to slow down Biden’s Covid relief bill have a new phrase too: instead of “$15 minimum wage,” some House GOP members are test-driving “the $15 Washington mandate.”
ON CAPITOL HILL
X (EAR)MARKS THE SPOT — “House GOP opens fraught internal debate over earmarks,” by Melanie Zanona: “The conservative House Freedom Caucus has come out swinging against the idea, voting to formally oppose any form of congressionally directed spending, ‘whether in the 117th Congress or any future Congress.’ … The Republican Study Committee, the largest conservative caucus on Capitol Hill, will meet next week to discuss the issue.
“But the group started circulating a memo, obtained by POLITICO, warning that ‘capitulating to calls for reinstating earmarks will amplify the power’ of Democratic leaders and could ‘create a more hierarchical Congress.’ … While the practice is still formally prohibited under current House GOP conference rules, some Republicans have argued that allowing lawmakers to ensure money for specific projects restores power to the legislative branch and could help make the institution more functional.”
JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH
COMMISSION LATEST — “McConnell throws cold water on Dems’ proposed 1/6 Commission,” by Andrew Desiderio and Kyle Cheney: “McConnell rejected a draft version of Pelosi’s proposed commission that would give Democrats a 7-4 majority on the panel, and he said any large-scale review of the insurrection must also include an analysis of broader political violence — a nod to GOP complaints about a wave of riots across the country last summer that followed the death of George Floyd at the hands of police.”
SERIOUS DAMAGE — “Capitol Riot Costs Will Exceed $30 Million, Official Tells Congress,” NYT: “As staff members huddled inside, the inauguration platform they had been diligently assembling was wrecked: sound systems and photo equipment irreparably damaged or stolen, two lanterns designed and built by the eminent landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted in the late 19th century ripped from the ground, and blue paint tracked all over the stone balustrades and into the hallways. Inside, busts of former speakers of the House and a Chippewa statesman, a statue of Thomas Jefferson and paintings of James Madison and John Quincy Adams were coated in fire extinguisher and other chemicals, including yellow dye that could stain.
“Outside the physical damage, the officials detailed a substantial increase in demand for mental health counseling, with an office that typically handles about 3,000 calls per year surging to more than 1,150 interactions with employees, managers and members of Congress in six weeks.”
POLICY CORNER
IMMIGRATION FILES — “Exclusive: Hundreds of kids held in Border Patrol stations,” Axios: “More than 700 children who crossed from Mexico into the United States without their parents were in Border Patrol custody as of Sunday, according to an internal Customs and Border Protection document obtained by Axios.
“The current backup is yet another sign of a brewing crisis for President Biden — and a worsening dilemma for these vulnerable children. Biden is finding it’s easier to talk about preventing warehousing kids at the southern border than solving the problem.”
— GREEN CARD REVERSAL — “Biden lifts Trump-era ban blocking legal immigration to U.S.,” AP: “President Joe Biden on Wednesday lifted a freeze on green cards issued by his predecessor during the pandemic that lawyers said was blocking most legal immigration to the United States. Former President Donald Trump last spring halted the issuance of green cards until the end of 2020 in the name of protecting the coronavirus-wracked job market … [But] Biden stated in his proclamation Wednesday that shutting the door on legal immigrants ‘does not advance the interests of the United States.’”
MEANWHILE, ON CAPITOL HILL — “Stephen Miller tangles with Florida GOP freshman at House immigration meeting,” by Olivia Beavers and Mel Zanona: “Freshman GOP Rep. María Elvira Salazar got into a lively exchange over immigration with former Trump aide Stephen Miller… Miller, the architect of Donald Trump’s hard-line immigration policies such as the separation of migrant families at the border, addressed the group alongside another former Trump administration immigration official.
“Sources say the Floridian Salazar pushed for immigration policies that would broaden the GOP tent while challenging Miller on how Republicans can attract Latino voters given the ultra-conservative policies he is advocating.”
— Sources tell us Salazar, the daughter of Cuban exiles and a moderate Republican who flipped a heavily Latino Florida district, isn’t even a member of the Republican Study Committee, which hosted the meeting. But she showed up to the conservative group’s weekly gathering anyway. The talk was civil, but this won’t be the end of the debate.
POLITICS
NEW JOHN HARRIS COLUMN: “The way to fix the Lincoln Project: Shut it down for good: Flagrant profiteering and sexual impropriety have a way of slowing momentum.”
2022 WATCH — “Rep. Stephanie Murphy ‘seriously considering’ bid to unseat Rubio,” by Marc Caputo: “Florida Rep. Stephanie Murphy is seriously considering a bid to unseat Sen. Marco Rubio’s 2022 reelection, announcing Wednesday that she’s launching a statewide listening tour and has hired a top Democratic operative to manage the effort.
“Murphy, 42, has been elected three times to one of Florida’s most competitive congressional districts in Orlando, and first won the seat by knocking out 12-term incumbent GOP Rep. John Mica when few thought she could. It was a giant-killer act that Democrats hope she can repeat if she takes on Rubio, widely seen as a hard-to-beat incumbent.”
PANDEMIC
TRACKER: The U.S. reported 2,447 Covid-19 deaths and 73,000 new coronavirus cases Wednesday.
RECOVERY LAB — “How the Buffalo Bills could help reopen Broadway”: New York used aggressive Covid testing to let Buffalo Bills fans attend the playoffs. Now the state thinks the approach could hold the keys to reopening the New York we all know, from Madison Square Garden to the theaters on Broadway, Shannon Young reports. If successful, New York could offer a blueprint to other states for how to safely reintroduce large-scale events and reopen major entertainment venues even before the country is fully vaccinated. It’s a bridge, New York leaders say, to a post-Covid world. But it’s all a big if.
IN MEMORIAM — “D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser’s sister dies from Covid as city passes 1,000 deaths,” by Matthew Choi: “Mercia Bowser was the mayor’s only sister. She died just short of her 65th birthday. … Mercia Bowser had previously worked for Catholic Charities and the D.C. Office on Aging, focusing her work on children, the elderly and those with behavioral disorders, the mayor said in her statement.”
PLAYBOOKERS
SPOTTED: Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.) having pizza at Wiseguy on Wednesday. … Rep. Charlie Crist (D-Fla.) and former Biden campaign manager Greg Schultz grabbing coffee at the M Street Starbucks on Wednesday morning.
LIKE A BAD NEIGHBOR — Reps. Marie Newman (D-Ill.) and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), whose offices are across from one another in the Longworth Office Building, have taken their fight over transgender rights from the floor of the House to outside their office doors. Newman, who has a transgender daughter, placed the pink, blue and white flag outside her office after speaking in support of the Equality Act, which aims to protect LGBTQ people from discrimination.
Newman shared a video of her putting the flag up. Greene, who decried the bill, responded by putting up a sign outside her own office saying: “There are TWO genders: MALE & FEMALE” and “Trust The Science!”
Guess this is how Greene is going to spend some of the “free time on her hands” after getting booted from her House committee assignments.
NEW BILL CLINTON PODCAST DROPS TODAY: The former president talks to Magic Johnson about “how to design the next act of your life.”
SPEAKING OF FORMER PRESIDENTS AND PODCASTS: Barack Obama’s Spotify series with Bruce Springsteen has a lot of younger folks rolling their eyes and mocking the two superstars with “OK, boomer” derision. Vice called it “another empty appeal to unity.” But the second episode includes a discussion on race that is worth listening to for two reasons: Obama’s story about the time in his high school locker room in Hawaii when he punched someone who used a racial slur.
“I remember I popped him in the face and broke his nose,” the 44th president tells the Boss.
Obama also comes out in favor of reparations, though with a typically Obamian caveat about the political costs. HuffPost: “Obama said [reparations] were justified in his mind due to the fact that ‘the wealth of this country, the power of this country … not exclusively, maybe not even the majority of it … but a large portion of it, was built on the backs of slaves.’”
But he also warned that it was “perfectly understandable why working-class white folks, middle-class white folks, folks who are having trouble paying the bills or dealing with student loans … wouldn’t be thrilled with the idea of a massive program that is designed to deal with the past but isn’t speaking to their future. We can’t even get this country to provide decent schooling for inner-city kids …
“And what I saw during my presidency was the politics of white resistance and resentment. The talk of ‘welfare queens’ and the talk of the ‘undeserving’ poor. And the backlash against affirmative action. All that made the prospect of actually proposing any kind of coherent, meaningful reparations program … not only a non-starter but potentially counterproductive.”
I KNOW THAT VOICE FROM SOMEWHERE — Voting technology company Dominion, which has been at the center of scurrilous false conspiracy theories since Election Day, is not just suing the people who spread lies about the company. In Louisiana, where Dominion is competing for a state contract to provide voting equipment, the company is running ads to help rehabilitate its image. As Quint Forgey reported, one radio ad features “a deep-voiced, Southern-accented narrator defending Dominion’s services, which it states have ‘supported Louisiana elections honorably for more than 20 years.’”
Attentive listeners to the spot may have noticed the narrator’s voice sounded familiar. In fact, the deep-voiced, Southern-accented man is Washington’s own Michael Steel, known to many from his days working for John Boehner, Mitt Romney and Jeb Bush. What wasn’t so familiar was the Cajun twang. Steel’s firm, Hamilton Place Strategies, which made the ad, decided to use their own talent rather than hiring a voice actor from the Pelican State. When asked about his theatrical debut, Steel, a North Carolina native, said he was appropriately cast for the part because he was from the South. He added, “I’ve spent enough time in Louisiana to know that no one from elsewhere can sound like they’re from Louisiana, so I just tried to sound friendly.” Louisianans can listen here and judge how he did.
A FIRST FOR THE FIRST — Jill Biden, the first first lady to be divorced, opened up to pop star Kelly Clarkson about the pain she felt when her first marriage ended. In an interview that airs today on “The Kelly Clarkson Show,” Biden gives advice to Clarkson, who is going through her own divorce, on recovery and how she found her true love after divorce. It’s Biden’s first TV interview since she and her husband arrived at the White House.
RYAN GOES WALL STREET — “Paul Ryan to Join Solamere Capital,” WSJ: “Former House speaker Paul Ryan, who last year joined the rush of high-profile individuals launching special-purpose acquisition companies, is going to work at the private-equity firm he teamed up with in that effort. Mr. Ryan will join Solamere Capital, a private-equity firm founded by Utah Sen. Mitt Romney’s son Taggart, as well as Eric Scheuermann and Spencer Zwick, as a partner.”
MEDIAWATCH — Roger Sollenberger is joining The Daily Beast to cover money in politics. He’s currently a staff writer at Salon. … Travis Wolfe is joining Government Executive Media Group as senior producer. He previously was manager of events at Washingtonian. … Sarah Cammarata is joining Stars and Stripes to cover Congress. She most recently was a senior digital producer and defense reporter at POLITICO.
— Insider’s Steven Perlberg profiles Carolyn Ryan, “the most powerful woman in The New York Times newsroom.”
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The Atlantic’s Edward-Isaac Dovere’s new book, “Battle for the Soul: Inside the Democrats’ Campaigns to Defeat Trump,” goes on sale May 18. Pre-order for $30
— Halee Dobbins is now press secretary for Rep. Roger Williams (R-Texas). She was previously press aide for second lady Karen Pence.
STAFFING UP — Alicia O’Brien is now senior counsel and special assistant to the president in the White House counsel’s office. She most recently was with King & Spalding, and is an Obama DOJ alum.
TRANSITIONS — Democratic strategists Mindy Myers, Tracey Lewis and Sarah Callahan Zusi are launching a media consulting firm, MZL Media. Myers was the first female DSCC executive director, Lewis just worked on the Biden/runoff campaigns in Georgia, and Zusi was an ad-maker for the Biden campaign. More from CNN … Josh Jaye is now director of corporate relations at the Tax Foundation. He previously was director of corporate and nonprofit relations at the American Legislative Exchange Council.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Rep. Darren Soto (D-Fla.) … Tom Nides … Mona Charen … CNN’s Hadas Gold and Barbara Levin … Bob Schieffer … Andy Rosenthal (65) … U.S. Chamber’s Andrew Burk … Lauren Kapp … Tyler Houlton … NFL’s Jon Nabavi … Jessica Yellin … POLITICO’s Matt Dixon … Steve Gutow … Greg Crist … Gina Kolata … Bridgett Frey … Facebook’s Anne Kornblut … Tim Berry … Burlington, Vt., Mayor Miro Weinberger … Eric Wall … former Reps. Jim Gerlach (R-Pa.) and Bill Flores (R-Texas) … Madison Donzis … Xholina Nano … Chris Sarcone … Sally Jessy Raphael … Jack Burns
Got a document to share? A birthday coming up? What else does Murkowski not know that she probably should? Drop us a line at playbook@politico.com or individually: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Biden’s Creepy Mask Fetish Isn’t a Real Plan to Manage COVID
Joe Biden, Masked Pretender
Happy Thursday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Oh, to be a gentleman alpaca rancher.
I’m still having days where I wake up, see something about “President Biden,” then think, “All right, I’m not really awake yet. It’s a bad dream that’s just lasting longer than most. I then search for a cliff I can walk off to help facilitate the waking up but, alas, none is ever found.
Other than that, I’m all right.
I keep replaying a lot of that freak show of a presidential campaign from last year over and over in my head, remembering the incessant drumbeat of trite, canned lines from Biden about how he was going to be the caped crusader who finally took on the COVID-19 pandemic head-on and saved America.
I knew it was all crap while it was happening, and I certainly have had nothing but low expectations for the drooling moron that seventeen hundred kabillionty jillion people voted for, but Ol’ Gropes has been even more useless than I imagined he’d be.
I wouldn’t be revisiting this so much if his pandemic pitch hadn’t been such an integral part of getting him into office.
Thus far, Biden’s SUPER BIG PLAN to deal with the bat flu has involved lying about Trump’s vaccine plan, plagiarizing Trump’s vaccine plan, then hamstringing Trump’s vaccine plan with woke union politics, and finally, talking about masks a lot.
A lot.
Biden has already promised to mail masks to everyone in a country that’s already wearing them. I’m not a big fan of the COVID kabuki protocols and I own four of the damn things. Heck, I’ve got a more comfortable travel mask (with filters!) being delivered today. I’m not even sure they’re helping, but I’ll play along for a while.
I’m not saying that masks don’t work, I just don’t think they have the superpowers that Fauci and Co. tell us they do. Bryan had an interesting post yesterday about a different kind of mask that would actually be helpful. Sadly, the government doesn’t focus on things that work.
What the government is always good at, however, is wasting money while pretending to do good.
Tyler had a story yesterday that painfully illustrates that:
I do not often find myself admiring our betters in the legacy media, especially those at that most unscrupulous of Trump-hating and Andrew Cuomo-obsessed outlets, CNN. Yet on Wednesday, a CNN reporter asked the team of COVID-19 experts at the White House an extremely important question.
Why is the federal government
wasting— oh, sorry, I meant “investing” — $83 million in distributing cloth masks to community health centers and food pantries when masks are already widely available? How does this make sense?Jeffrey Zients, President Joe Biden’s White House coronavirus response coordinator, struggled to answer the question.
Before I get to the CNN question, a brief note on the policy.
During a press briefing on Wednesday, Zients announced that in March, the White House will “deliver millions of masks to food banks and community health centers around the country” as part of the administration’s push to “ensure an equitable response.”
I occasionally volunteer at a food bank near me and one thing that they haven’t been short of in the past year is masks. In fact, one of the four I have is a cloth one I got from them while helping out one day last summer.
The mask stuff is yet another case of the government spending a lot of money, just so the bureaucrats can appear to be doing something, even if that something isn’t the thing they probably should be doing. It’s always expensive. I’m sure that there a number of pandemic-related things that $83 million could be better spent on. Like food for food banks, for example.
Team Biden isn’t working any magic. Its biggest COVID progress has been because of the vaccine that Trump made happen while Biden and his ilk were not only saying it would be an impossible task, but shouldn’t be trusted were they able to come up with one that quickly.
Face it, kids, the commies got rid of the best president to deal with the pandemic.
Killing Nemo: COVID-19 Mask Pollution To Hit Oceans
Word.
N.W.A. was never the same for me after Betty White left. pic.twitter.com/2DP8SQVxPF
— Super 70s Sports (@Super70sSports) February 24, 2021
Everything Isn’t Awful
Barstool Fund time. You can contribute here.
PJM Linktank
Trump to Target Biden and Blaze a Future Path for the GOP in CPAC Speech
VodkaPundit: Insanity Wrap #153: Massive Increase in Carjackings Forces Chicago to… Ban a Videogame?
What?! Twitter Flags CPAC Website as ‘Unsafe’ Hours Before the Annual Meeting
Fry’s Is Gone, and Another Old Friend Passes Into the Night
California Bill Would Fine Stores $1,000 for Having Separate Boys and Girls Sections
5 Times Biden’s Interior Nominee Refused to Answer Basic Questions on Energy
Andrew Cuomo’s Week Just Got a Lot Worse: Former Aide Alleges, Details Sexual Harassment
U.S. Spent $787 Million On ‘Gender Equality’ Projects In Afghanistan
NXIVM Sex Cult Slaves Speak Out: ‘It Was New, It Was Edgy, and It Was Good’
V.D.H. In Rush Limbaugh, We Have Lost an American Genius
Elder. The Case Against Reparations: Part 1
Ablow. The Dark, Destructive, Murderous Psychological Forces of Cancel Culture
VIP
Kruiser’s (Almost) Daily Distraction: Death By Streaming Channels
Now We Can Criticize Cuomo, Can We Talk About the Other COVID-19 Nursing Home Scandals?
Treacher: What’s Up with All the Anti-Semitism at NBC?
Merrick Garland’s Confirmation Hearings Prove We Really Dodged a Bullet in 2016
I Used to Care About Corporate America
VIP Gold
LIVE AT 3:30PM EASTERN THURSDAY: ‘Five O’Clock Somewhere’ with Kruiser, Preston, VodkaPundit
GOP Rep Says Dems’ Equality Act Will Disrupt Doctors’ ‘Sound Medical Judgment’
From the Mothership and Beyond
It Took Just One Voice: Janice Dean’s Crusade for Truth
Schlichter: The Important Thing Is No Mean Tweets
Federal Bureaucrats Are Expected to Receive a Special COVID ‘Relief’ Benefit
Why Sen. Kennedy Is Comparing Biden’s Actions to That of a ‘Banked Catfish’
Fact Check: Biden’s HHS Nominee Claims He Never Sued Nuns Over Abortion Coverage
Pence speaks favorably of relationship with Trump during meeting with Republicans
One Week on, Some Hints Have Emerged About the Future of Rush Limbaugh’s Show
Lawmakers Call For Investigation Into ‘Secretive’ NIH Payments To Wuhan Lab
Ricky Gervais is right: fear of offence is killing TV
Researchers Want To Equip Smart Guns With “Ethical AI”
Fingers crossed…New Prosecutor In McCloskey Gun Case Says He’ll Start With “Blank Slate”
Arkansas Committee Approves Stand Your Ground Bill, Media Seemingly Displeased
Man survives 14 hours in Pacific Ocean ‘clinging to sea rubbish’
Say, Why Are House Dems Calling On Biden To Give Up Full Control Of Nuclear Weapons?
China Rewrites The History Of Hong Kong To Make Students More Patriotic
NY Times Covers The Real Story Of False Accusations And Identity Politics At Smith College
Could a Celebrity Candidate Roil the Newsom Recall Waters?
Susan Sarandon calls out Joe Biden for putting kids in ‘cages’
“Mine’s bigger.”~Animal House. Inside the Gently Competitive World of Giant Vegetable Growing
Bee Me
Report: Mansplaining Down But Woman Confusion Up https://t.co/i8SX95lZZw
— The Babylon Bee (@TheBabylonBee) February 24, 2021
The Kruiser Kabana
A Vincent van Gogh never before seen in public could fetch nearly $10 million at auction next month: https://t.co/qOjaAexGJ4 pic.twitter.com/TsEr8sloZq
— Artnet (@artnet) February 25, 2021
Ranch dressing serves no real purpose.
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PJ Media Senior Columnist and Associate Editor Stephen Kruiser is the author of “Don’t Let the Hippies Shower” and “Straight Outta Feelings: Political Zen in the Age of Outrage,” both of which address serious subjects in a humorous way. Monday through Friday he edits PJ Media’s “Morning Briefing.” His columns appear twice a week.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: The Minimum-Wage WarsPlus: Republican state legislatures try to crack down on absentee voting.
Happy Thursday! We’re sorry for doubling up in your inbox this morning—your a.m. editor accidentally stuck Danielle Pletka’s interview with Wang Xiyue, an American imprisoned in Iran for 40 months, in the wrong office pneumatic tube, sending it out as an email rather than simply posting it to the site. (The interview itself is terrific, by the way—and while that’s not why we sent it, it’s well worth your time.) Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The GOP Counteroffers to Biden’s $15 Minimum WageYou’ve probably never heard of Elizabeth MacDonough, but she’s one of the most powerful people in Washington this week. Appointed to the role of Senate parliamentarian by then-Sen. Harry Reid in 2012, MacDonough is in charge of interpreting the rules of Congress’s upper chamber and enforcing parliamentary procedure. Any day now, she will issue a ruling as to whether Democrats can use the budget reconciliation process—which requires only 50 votes (plus Vice President Kamala Harris as a tiebreaker)—to raise the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour by 2025 as part of their $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package. Democrats could technically overrule MacDonough if she comes down against them, but the White House has pledged not to do so. “That’s not something we would do,” Ron Klain, President Biden’s chief of staff, told MSNBC last night. “We’re going to honor the rules of the Senate and work within that system to get this bill passed.” “The only way that we are going to raise the minimum wage is through reconciliation or ending the filibuster,” Sen. Bernie Sanders said yesterday. It’s not clear a nationwide $15 minimum wage would pass the Senate in either circumstance—Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema have hinted they won’t support it—but there is a third path, even if it’s the one less traveled nowadays: Bipartisan compromise. To that end, a handful of Republicans have introduced proposals this week addressing the federal minimum wage, which has sat at $7.25 per hour since July 2009 (though about three in five states currently have minimum wages above that threshold). A plan from Sens. Mitt Romney and Tom Cotton would pair a gradual wage hike with a mandate that all employers use E-Verify—a Department of Homeland Security tool designed to confirm employment eligibility—to prevent the hiring of undocumented workers. A competing framework from Sen. Josh Hawley would provide low-wage workers with quarterly refundable tax credits in an effort to lessen the burden on small businesses. Why are these proposals coming now, rather than when Republicans controlled the Senate and the presidency? “Well, I think there’s recognition on both sides of the aisle that the minimum wage is probably going to go up,” Romney told The Dispatch Podcast this week. “Right now the Democrats are talking about a $15 minimum wage, which the [Congressional Budget Office] has estimated will cost about 1.3 million jobs. And I think they underestimate what the impact will be on small businesses that frankly can’t accommodate that kind of a leap, from $7.25 an hour to $15 an hour.” To lessen this burden, Romney and Cotton’s plan would raise the federal minimum wage to $10 an hour on a four-year timeline that kicks off after the pandemic ends, defined by President Biden revoking the current public health emergency. Small businesses with less than 20 employees would be granted a little more time to get to that $10 number, which eventually would be tethered to (chained-CPI) inflation. It would leave the tipped minimum wage as-is. Accompanying this increase would be stricter penalties for businesses that hire undocumented workers, mandating the use of E-Verify by all employers in the United States. The proposed legislation would also attempt to cut down on E-Verify fraud by requiring employees to provide photo identification to their employer, which could then be cross referenced with driver’s license information. “We’ve taken a look at two policies that don’t normally get talked about in the same discussion and put them in the same discussion,” a Romney aide told reporters. “By linking them together, we think that you can actually do a lot for the American worker by tightening the labor market by … putting some upward pressure on wages, but doing so in a responsible way.” Sen. Hawley’s proposal—unveiled one day after his colleagues’—takes a different approach to boosting the incomes of low-wage workers. Employees earning less than the median wage—currently $16.50 an hour—would receive a quarterly “Blue-Collar Bonus” tax credit worth half the difference between a worker’s actual hourly wage and the median. An example, from the Missouri Republican’s press release:
The plan is incredibly complex. But its proponents will point out that—because it is funded by taxpayers—it does not increase the direct burden on small businesses that are already reeling from the pandemic. If passed, therefore, it could go into effect immediately, rather than being phased in gradually. Hawley’s team estimates the plan—which would sunset after three years—would cost $200 billion. Raising the federal minimum wage is very popular—83 percent of respondents in a recent Harris poll believe $7.25 per hour is not “enough for an individual to live on”—which helps explain why politicians on both sides of the aisle are exploring ways to address the issue. But as Scott Lincicome wrote in a recent Capitolism newsletter (), there are tradeoffs. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office found earlier this month that the Democrats’ $15-per-hour plan would raise wages for 17 million people and lift 900,000 people above the poverty line. But it would also reduce employment by 1.4 million and add $54 billion to the deficit over ten years by raising the cost of goods and services. The more modest Republican plans haven’t been scored yet, but some conservative economists have expressed skepticism. “The federal government should have less of a role in setting the minimum wage. … It should be subject to local economic conditions,” said Brian Riedl, a Manhattan Institute fellow who has worked for several GOP senators and presidential campaigns, including Romney’s. “A minimum wage that is affordable in Manhattan or Seattle is not affordable in Biloxi or Puerto Rico.” New York City and Seattle both have minimum wages of at least $15 per hour. And most Democratic-run states have increased the floor from $7.25, while most Republican-led states have kept it as is. “If the voters of these states really prioritize a much higher minimum wage, they are free to elect people to state offices in order to increase it,” Riedl said. “At a certain point, we have to trust federalism and we have to trust the voters in each state to have a better idea of whether raising the minimum wage is a good idea in their state.” Caveats aside, Riedl preferred the Romney/Cotton plan—“the most realistic bipartisan coalition”—to the Hawley one. “If you’re going to do something on the minimum wage, combining a modest hike with E-Verify makes sense,” he said. “I think [the Hawley proposal] may be too complicated to be realistically implemented without some unforeseen side effects.” “You’re going to have high phase-out rates when you incorporate taxes,” Riedl said of Hawley’s plan. “If you’re losing 50 percent of your subsidy every time you get a dollar raise—and you’re paying taxes—you’re getting to the point where a dollar raise may only raise your take-home wages by 20 cents. In that case, it can actually depress wages, because workers in that range will become more indifferent to getting raises because it won’t increase their take-home pay as much.” Republican State Legislatures Push Voting RestrictionsThe months-long election disinformation campaign from former President Donald Trump and his media enablers was, in many ways, incredibly successful. Depending on which survey you believe (Fox News, Monmouth, CNN, Quinnipiac, Gallup), somewhere between 68 percent and 83 percent of Republicans believe the 2020 election was stolen from the incumbent. Rather than dispel these claims—which have been debunked time and again by a cornucopia of authorities, including both our own fact checking team and Trump’s own judicial appointees—many Republican-controlled state legislatures are harnessing voters’ distrust to justify implementing new voting restrictions heading into the 2022 midterms. “It’s not about disenfranchising voters,” said Georgia State Sen. Larry Walker after his bill requiring those applying for an absentee ballot provide a photocopy of their driver’s license passed mostly along party lines. “It’s not about overly burdening the electorate. It’s about efficiency, integrity, allowing the Georgia public to have confidence in the vote.” Some of these reforms—like Walker’s—are a reasonable response to the plethora of changes made by Republican and Democratic legislatures alike in the lead-up to last November’s pandemic election. Also on Tuesday, Georgia’s State Senate passed three other bills that would allow election officials to begin counting mail-in ballots eight days before the election, prohibit the release of election results until all ballots have been reported, and update voter records within 30 days of the election. The bills will move to the House for more debate. Georgia’s GOP-controlled House, however, has come under fire from Democrats and voting rights advocates for considering a far more restrictive omnibus election bill. It would limit the window for early voting—primarily to weekdays between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.—and reduce the number of absentee ballot drop boxes while restricting when those drop boxes can be accessed. It would also prohibit any early voting on Sundays, a move critics say explicitly targets black churches that routinely hold “Souls to the Polls” get-out-the-vote events following services. GOP Senate Majority Leader Mike Dugan went even further, proposing a bill that would eliminate no-excuse absentee voting for most Georgians. 1.3 million voters in the Peach State—including 450,000 Republicans—voted absentee in November. Democrats in the state are accusing their Republican colleagues of trying to change the rules at the first sign of Georgia trending purple. “The election didn’t turn out the way you want, and you want to perpetuate the lie that Trump told,” said State Sen. David Lucas, referencing the United States’ long history of restricting black voters’ access to the polls. “That’s what this bill is about, that’s what every election bill is about.” The Republicans’ case was not bolstered last month when Alice O’Lenick—a GOP member of the Gwinnett County Board of Registrations and Elections—said that “major parts” of Georgia’s election laws needed to be changed so “we at least have a shot at winning.” Georgia’s Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger—who former President Trump pressured to “find” enough votes for him to overcome Biden’s lead in the state—expressed hesitation about the bills. “We are reviewing bills,” he said Wednesday. “Once we see something that prioritizes the security and accessibility of elections, we’ll throw in support. At the end of the day, many of these bills are reactionary to a three month disinformation campaign that could have been prevented.” Georgia is far from alone. Republican-led election reforms are also being considered in several other states, including Tennessee, Arizona, Florida, Texas, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Just this week, both chambers of Iowa’s state legislature passed an election reform bill—entirely along party lines—that would shorten the early voting period by nine days, end Election Day voting an hour earlier, and reduce the window to request an absentee ballot by 50 days, from 120 to 70. It would require absentee ballots to arrive before polls close in order to be counted, even if they were placed in the mail and postmarked prior to election day. Rep. Bobby Kaufmann, the bill’s champion, brushed off Democratic accusations that the legislation—which Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds has said she will sign—is intended to suppress votes, or is rooted in Trump’s conspiracy theories. “It is really easy to vote absentee and early before this legislation,” he said. “It’s going to remain really easy to vote after this legislation is signed into law. This bill protects Iowans’ right to vote and it adds certainty and security to it. This bill does not suppress one single vote. … This bill has nothing to do with fraud.” But some of his colleagues didn’t get the memo. “Most of us in my caucus and the Republican caucus believe the election was stolen,” said GOP State Sen. Jim Carlin. Trump won Iowa in November by more than 100,000 votes, as did Republican Sen. Joni Ernst. Republicans won three of the four House races in the state as well. Dr. Emily Bacchus—an associate professor of comparative politics at the University of Kentucky—told The Dispatch back in September that “all political elites, Republican or Democrat, believe that making it harder to vote benefits Republicans and making it easier to vote benefits Democrats,” even if this isn’t empirically true. Iowa, for example, shattered voter turnout records last year, as did most states. Republicans flipped 13 House seats and came within about 90,000 votes of controlling the White House and both chambers of Congress. Higher turnout may actually be helping Republicans, particularly as the GOP gains ground with Hispanic and white working-class voters. “We are certainly picking up voters among the working-class population, and we need to be mindful of the fact that they may not have as much history voting or using alternative means to vote as some of the Democratic voters around the country,” GOP strategist David Kochel, who has long experience in Iowa, told The Dispatch. “So we’ve got to be careful not to legislate our way into making it more difficult [for] what is a pretty fast-growing part of our Republican base.” And separate from the actual mechanics of voting itself, the perception surrounding these bills—and the priorities they signal—could hamper GOP efforts to make inroads with new voters. “Every party should want as many voters attracted to it as possible,” Kochel said. “I think that we should not be sort of dancing around the idea that we’re trying to actually reduce the number of voters. And if that’s what’s happening, that’s not a good thing.” Worth Your Time
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February 24th 2021 4,126 Retweets16,831 Likes Toeing the Company Line
Let Us KnowHave you worked a minimum wage job? What was it, and what was the hourly rate? Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Haley Byrd Wilt (@byrdinator), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes). You’re on the free list for The Dispatch. For the full experience, join The Dispatch community by becoming a paid member. To update your newsletter preferences, go to your personal My Account page. |
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‘They Wasted Away Four Years of My Life’
Scholar Wang Xiyue talks about spending 40 months in an Iranian prison and what he learned about the regime.
Danielle Pletka | 5 min ago |
Wang Xiyue is a Jeane Kirkpatrick fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington and a Ph.D. candidate at Princeton University. An American citizen, he went to Iran in 2016 for historical research at the height of the Obama-era U.S.-Iran rapprochement. After some months there, he was detained, then arrested, charged, and finally sentenced to 10 years imprisonment for spying by Iran’s Revolutionary Court. He was freed in a prisoner swap in 2019. He spoke to Danielle Pletka on February 24, 2021.
Danielle Pletka: Tell me a little bit about your background and how you ended up in Iran.
Wang Xiyue: I was a Ph.D. candidate doing dissertation research in Iran, so my research topic was really comparative governance studies between Iran, later Qajar/early Pahlavi Iran, and then late-imperial Russia and early-Soviet period on frontier Turkmen nomads. I was curious because the nomads cross the border, and it’s a really interesting case study to see how Russia and Iran managed the same group of nomads who used to go back and forth between the two countries during this period of time.
DP: That’s a pretty recondite, recherché subject. How did you end up on this nomadic tribe on the Russian-Iranian border?
Wang: I was looking for a project. I had a hard time getting into the Iranian National Archive, so I could only go to the Iranian foreign ministry archive. The foreign ministry archive maintains a good record from frontier regions, because that’s where they deal with their neighbors.
I was then looking at things on the Afghan border, on the Russian border, and I realized that the Turkmen issue was actually very interesting. And I was looking for a cross-border governance project with Russia, and the Turkmen area was kind of perfect for that purpose because it was the last piece of land unclaimed in the late 19th century in Eurasia. Iran tried to conquer the Turkmen territory many times, but they failed. And then Russia eventually conquered in 1983 what is today Turkmenistan. So that period of history and that area fascinates me. Very little work has been done, partially because of the difficulties of getting into Iran and Turkmenistan. After the JCPOA, things looked positive. My academic adviser suggested I go to Iran to do this research [after I received a visa].
DP: That’s fantastic. This is what month?
Wang: It was January 2016.
Pletka: I would say these are the best days of the JCPOA, while Obama is still president and before there are questions raised about the deal. This is after they got the money, right? (Note: The Obama administration transferred $1.7 billion in non-U.S. currency notes to Iran in January 2016.)
Wang: Mid-January Iran released the hostages, so it looked even better. We didn’t know the true extent of the payment until August. It wasn’t really disclosed fully. We thought it was $400 million, but it turned out to be a full $1.7 billion.
Pletka: Right. But they should’ve been very happy. So, you arrive in Iran and what happens?
Wang: In the beginning, there were no problems. I was spending a lot of time in language school and then was looking for academic contacts and getting to know Iranian scholars, visiting archives and libraries for access, to get logistics done in the first six weeks. And then it was Iranian new year. Everything was closed down, so I returned home for a month and a half, and then I went again May 1. When I went again in May, I started intensive archival work. I was very anxious professionally, because I didn’t know what kind of material I would find. But it was a very hopeful period because I did find good material. Trouble started to show up a few days before I was supposed to leave Iran.
Pletka: When was that? What date was that around?
Wang: I believe mid-July 2016, because I was working with a local scholar who was trying to get some documents for me. The documents are all accessible for Iranians, nothing was confidential. It’s just that the national archive never officially said yes or no to my request. So, I asked my Iranian academic contact what I should do, and he suggested, “These materials are available to Iranians, so why don’t I just get these things for you?”
Pletka: And that was a historical document? It wasn’t anything modern.
Wang: Right. It’s a Qajar-Iranian historical document. He got half of them for me, and when he went to get the second half, the archive told him that he was getting documents for a foreigner, and they weren’t going to give him the documents. The archive knew that we submitted the same list.
That’s when I felt a bit troubled. A few hours before I was supposed to leave the country, I was called by the intelligence. They claimed to be Iranian police, wanted to ask me questions, and asked me to bring my passport and computer with me. So, I went to the designated diplomatic police station with my passport and computer. There were two people: one interpreter and one interrogator. The first thing the interrogator did was take my passport. He flipped through it and asked me, “Are you Chinese?” Why is that important? That is usually not the first thing that police will ask you when they look at your passport. I think they knew that they were going to take me hostage. So, knowing that I wasn’t Chinese, because he saw my Chinese visa, he decided that I could be taken. (Note: Wang Xiyue was born in the People’s Republic of China, but moved to the United States with his family and became a U.S. citizen.)
Pletka: If you had been a Chinese national, do you think they would’ve done that?
Wang: No. In fact, they made it very clear. They said, “Had you been Chinese, this would not have happened” during interrogation.
Pletka: So, were you ever released after that first interrogation?
Wang: Yes. They took my passport and computer and let me go. They kept me in limbo for 18 days. I reported it to Princeton. I was really naïve. I didn’t understand the dynamic. Actually, to be really fair, many Iran experts have not talked about what I am trying to talk about. So, there is a deep level of misinformation. I would say disinformation, but disinformation might be too strong. I think there is a tendency not to describe Iran and its relation with the United States in certain factual ways.
Pletka: Why do you think that is?
Wang: Well, you know, I think there are many reasons. For academics on our university campuses, they need access to sources in Iran. Like I can tell you the same people who strongly advised me to go, some Iranian-American scholars, their work is based on access to sources in Iran. Through what has happened to me … it should have become clear to them that the JCPOA could not work as Obama envisioned. But today, they are still proposing the very same line of policy advice that they gave in 2015 and 2016. I don’t think it’s a lack of understanding. There’s strong vested interest for their professional reasons.
Pletka: You see the same thing with China as well, with reporters in China who want to maintain their access, and are afraid, and are explicitly warned. That’s how authoritarian regimes act. So, 18 days, then you go back for your passport and what happens?
Wang: So, on August 4, I read Jay Solomon’s WSJ article on my smartphone about the true extent of the January 2016 exchange. (Note: The Solomon article broke the news that an airlift of cash from the U.S. to Iran coincided with a prisoner exchange between the two countries.) After reading that piece, I felt, “Oh shoot, they are going to arrest me, because clearly they want to take me for ransom.” I thought, “Okay, I will go to the Swiss embassy on Sunday for a consultation with this new information.”
Pletka: Why did Jay Solomon’s article make you think you were going to get arrested?
Wang: Jay Solomon exposed the full extent of the hostages-for-cash exchange.
Pletka: But shouldn’t that have made the Iranians happy, no? It was a ton of money.
Wang: No, because then, Donald Trump came out and said, “Obama has done wrong. Obama shouldn’t have done that, because it will encourage Iranians to arrest more Americans.”
Pletka: They saw it as a ransom payment.
Wang: Precisely. Iran saw it as a ransom payment, and they talk about it in the media in the open.
Pletka: This is a window into how Washington sees this—a good-faith effort to assist the Iranian economy—versus how the transactional Iranians see it.
Wang: Yes, exactly. That is repeatedly talked about in Iranian media, that this is a ransom. It really doesn’t matter how Obama and his administration saw it. It was perceived by Iran as ransom, clearly. It is not even an inference. It’s their explicit statement. The moral of this is make America pay.
Pletka: Why not? They understand how markets work. So, you went to the Swiss embassy, our protecting power.
Wang: I probably went to the Swiss embassy four times. They advised me not to escalate. Because if I escalate, the Iranians will think I’m important and may take drastic actions. I didn’t know at that time Siamak Namazi’s passport was taken two months before he was arrested. (Note: Siamak Namazi was arrested by Iranian authorities in 2015. A dual U.S.-Iranian national, he was charged with spying. Months later, his aged father was lured back to Iran and arrested. Both remain in Evin prison.) And then the State Department, having received the information, kept silent. My wife told me, “You should stay in the Swiss embassy.” I asked the Swiss embassy if I could stay and they told me no.
Pletka: In retrospect that was probably wrong. Although, we can understand why they might have thought that being more circumspect would’ve helped you. I think the decision was probably already made. So, you make the decision on Thursday to go to the Swiss embassy on Sunday, and what happens?
Wang: On Sunday, first thing in the morning, I got a call around 8:30, I remember, from the interpreter. He asked me to go to the Hotel Azadi. By the way, Azadi means “freedom,” it’s the direct opposite of prison.
Pletka: Nice. Ironic.
Wang: Ironic, yes. So, they asked me to go to Hotel Azadi. I went, and I later learned the entire third floor was theirs for interrogation. They told me, “We have investigated you. We don’t think you’ve done anything wrong. We will release you and take you to the airport. And then, I told them, “Well, I want the Swiss to do that. Thank you.” They said “No. We have to take you. You can tell the Swiss to go to the airport and wait for you.” So, I called the Swiss and told them that the Iranians have told me that they are going to release me and asked if they could meet me at the airport to process travel arrangements. The Iranians then took me back to my apartment, asked me to take my luggage, and then instead of taking me to the airport, they took me to prison.
Pletka: So, you weren’t expecting that?
Wang: No. When I came out to their car I sensed something was wrong, because the airport was in the south, but the prison was in the north. They were taking me up north, and I realized something was wrong. And then they took my cellphone from my hand, switched it off, and put it in their pocket.
Pletka: Always a good sign. And so were you taken immediately to Evin?
Wang: I was taken into an office in Evin, like an investigative court. And then, the investigative judge issued an arrest warrant, accusing me of espionage. I was taken directly to solitary confinement.
Pletka: That’s terrible.
Wang: There was literally nothing but a sink inside. Then there were scribbles on the wall. I was reading things on the wall just to get myself distracted. You know the Iranians don’t use the Arabic numerals we use? They use their own system. But, somebody wrote on the wall, in English, “364 days.”
Pletka: In solitary? With no bed? Just a sink? So how long were you kept there?
Wang: I was kept in solitary for 18 days. They fed me, and then they interrogated me every evening for a couple of hours. The longest probably for 5 hours, maybe longer.
It wasn’t actually clear what they were doing. To me, they were still suspicious of me and investigating me, because they asked very specific, but mundane questions. Stuff like where I was born, where I was educated, where I grew up, what I studied in college, my work experience, my opinion about politics, my knowledge about Iranian history, this sort of stuff. For a long time, they didn’t ask me what I had done. Of course they asked me who I know, the Iranian people I’ve gotten to know, and where I’ve gone to in Iran, things I’ve done in Iran, but nothing was really incriminating. And then, for the most part, I had wishful thoughts: Maybe they are still seriously investigating, and once they find that I am innocent, they will let me go. But then it became clear what they were doing. On the 18th day, they told me “We have finished the investigation, we think you have done nothing.” This is the second time they have said that. “I have written a positive report about you to my chief. I will take you to my chief tomorrow night, and then he will talk to you. If you convince him that you are innocent, he may release you or let you go on bail.” On the second day, they took me to hotel Istiqlal, also in Northern Tehran, third floor. And an old man came. He told me “I’m sorry you have to go through this. Had you been Chinese, this wouldn’t have happened.” And then he said, “We are going to ask you some questions and film you. We are going to analyze your facial expressions, and if you are telling the truth we will release you.” And then they started filming and asked me the same questions that they had time and time again during interrogation. I soon realized that this is not about analyzing my facial expressions on me telling the truth or not. It’s for propaganda, because they were asking me opinion questions that couldn’t be judged by a true or false.
Pletka: Like what?
Wang: “What do you think about U.S. policy towards the Middle East? What do you think about U.S. strategy towards Iran?” This kind of thing.
And then very late at night they took me back to Evin. And then on the third day, I was allowed to talk to my wife for the first time after 19 days. That was the first time I spoke to anyone outside.
Pletka: Wow.
Wang: And then they left me alone for 10 days. Then they restarted interrogation. This time, they changed interrogators. They did not allow me to remove my blindfold this time. I never saw the second interrogator. This time there was no interpreter, it was completely done in Farsi. He basically forced me into a confession. He said, “You collected information illegally because you are not on a research visa, but you are doing research.”
Pletka: What kind of visa were you on?
Wang: I was on a student language visa. I also made the research intention very clear to the Iranian interests section in my letter of introduction. But, the intelligence told me, “No, you have done illegal things by collecting information without permission.” And then I said, “Well usually you would deport people doing that. Why don’t you deport me?” Of course, they then said “You have broken our law, and you are a spy. You have to confess that you are a spy. Otherwise, you will never set your foot on American soil or see your wife and son again. You will go back to solitary confinement until you confess. We have a lot of time.” I think they were kind of lazy, and they told me, “We want a deal with the United States. If you confess, hopefully a deal will happen soon. If you don’t, you will suffer for nothing. One day you will confess. We want our money back. We want our prisoners back. You have to be a spy for us to have a case.”
Pletka: I see. So you confessed.
Wang: And so I confessed. One sentence, “I’m a spy for the United States.” One sentence. No details whatsoever. And I felt really disgusted by myself because it’s a self-betrayal.
Pletka: But there’s nothing you can do.
Wang: Right. There’s nothing I could do. There was no counsel from anybody, no one to give me advice. Although I was with other prisoners for a couple of days, I was already in that condition for almost a month. And that’s a very difficult condition. And they know certainly how to play mental games with you.
Pletka: And so there you are, and when did they sentence you?
Wang: April or May 2017.
Pletka: So, they sentence you to how long?
Wang: 10 years.
Pletka: 10 years, for spying. Stunning.
Wang: I can tell you, the craziest thing they told me. They said “Your adviser, Stephen Kotkin, single-handedly brought down the Soviet Union.”
Pletka: Really?
Wang: Oh, yeah. Steve Kotkin wrote a book on the collapse of the Soviet Union. And he publishes regularly for Foreign Affairs. So, the judge, Judge Salavati, said, “Your adviser single-handedly brought down the Soviet Union, so he sent you, his student, to bring down our regime.”
Pletka: Sorry, I shouldn’t laugh. And Judge Salavati, he’s an IRGC judge?
Wang: No, he’s the most ferocious judge in the Iranian system. He’s the judge of the Revolutionary Court. And he hands out most of the death sentences. So, he only gives out maximum sentences, that’s what he does.
Pletka: He’s a hanging judge, we say in English.
Wang: Yes, a hanging judge. And then I said, “I am a foreigner. I don’t know anybody here, and I don’t even speak Farsi fluently. And I came with $12,000, how can I bring down your regime?” And he said, “You couldn’t. Because before you could, our Supreme Leader, who’s so wise, and the intelligence voices, who are so capable, they called you before you could do it.”
Pletka: You ended up spending 40 months in prison. What did you learn? First of all, are you taken out of solitary?
Wang: Yes. So, my interactions were with Iranian officials and the judge and those enforcers of state violence, and with other prisoners who were really from all walks of life. They were really just fundamentalists, they were embezzlers, and corrupt officials, and they were smugglers and intellectuals, scholars. But also a lot of former officials. Some of them were senior, like the political counselor to the Iranian embassy in China. Counselor to Iranian embassy in Venezuela. The ambassador to the Iranian embassy in Turkmenistan. And the consular official, Iranian consulate in Quetta, Pakistan. And then I was with money launderers. People who circumvented sanctions, who were involved in multibillion-euro cases. So, I was with all kinds of different people and I learned a lot from communicating with them.
Pletka: What would you say were your most important lessons that you learned?
Wang: The most important lesson is that the way that they deal with us, their attitude toward us, is not reactive. It’s proactive. We tend to think if we do things right, they will come around and have good relations with us. That’s wishful thinking and that’s totally wrong. We have tried that since the very early days of the revolution. And then people criticize Trump for closing the door for diplomacy. But there’s not a single day where Trump said, “I don’t want to talk to them.”
Pletka: Right, no, that’s true. He, I think most people believed, wanted a better Iran deal. A Trump Iran deal. Not an Obama Iran deal.
Wang: Right. But he always kept the door of diplomacy open.
Pletka: Let me ask you about a story you told me. At a certain point you said to one of your interrogators that you believed that President Obama should visit Iran and that the United States should have a normal relationship with Iran. And what did he respond to you?
Wang: He said, “No way, we don’t want Americans.” He said, “American president is not welcomed in our country. We will never have American president to visit us. Never, ever.”
And that was used as evidence against me in court.
Pletka: Why was that evidence against you?
Wang: Because they said, “You want American president to visit Iran. So, you want regime change.” You see, this is how they perceive any goodwill gesture from the United States. It doesn’t really matter how much we give them, how much we are willing to compromise and reconcile with them, they will not see it positively. And then they will do everything against that.
Pletka: And so how did you get out?
Wang: That was 40 months later, that was really a surprise. I knew when Mohammed Javad Zarif and Hassan Rouhani came to the U.N. General Assembly in September they talked about exchange, prisoner exchange. And then they started a propaganda campaign about Dr. [Massoud] Soleimani, the scientist eventually exchanged for me. In Iran for like over a month, he’s on TV all the time. So I sense something positive may come out of it, but I wasn’t really sure.
Pletka: And how did you know about that? Did you have access to Iranian news?
Wang: Yeah, we had newspapers and we had a TV in prison.
Pletka: Interesting, okay.
Wang: Yes. And then of course many people were making efforts, the true extent to that was not known to me because the administration would not share information. The day when it happened, it was very strange. Prisoners knew who’s getting out, who’s being released, who’s going to furlough. And around that time, nobody was slated to go. And then I was having my French lesson with a francophone prisoner, we were talking about a novel I was reading, a French novel. And then they started playing this tune in a loudspeaker. When they play it once, it means somebody goes to furlough, when they play it twice it means somebody’s going to be released. So they played it twice and then somebody started reading a poem about God’s will or something like that. And I was asking the teacher, “Who’s going to be released?” And he said, “No one. We don’t know.” And then they read my name. He said, “Mr. Wang, you are released. You are released.” And then that was a shock to me. I totally didn’t expect that it would happen that way. And then they took me out of the general prison, and the warden told me, “As far as we’re concerned, you are released. But we cannot release you onto the street. We have to release you to the intelligence.” So they took me back to the intelligence, high security prison, a special ward inside Evin.
Pletka: Okay.
Wang: It was the first prison, where I stayed for nine and a half months. So, I was taken to a small cell identical to the one that I spent a long time in. I totally freaked out. I just couldn’t stop talking to other prisoners in the cell. I wasn’t allowed to call. I was uncertain whether they were playing a game, what’s going on. And then on Saturday morning, around 4:30, before the morning adhan, they took me out and then they said, “Do you know what will happen to you?” And I said, “No.” They said, “We’re taking you to the airport. You’re going home.”
Pletka: Wow.
Wang: Yeah. And in the airport, I saw the Swiss ambassador and some lady who introduced herself as the Swiss deputy foreign minister or something. And then we took a picture and she said, “We don’t have time, let’s go.” And then she grabbed my wrist and dragged me to the exit of the VIP lounge. And we saw this Swiss aircraft parked on the tarmac. But the gate of the lounge was locked. And then she asked the Iranians, “Where’s the key? Why is it locked?” And the Iranians said, “We don’t know where the key is.” Then the Swiss ambassador explained to her it was agreed that the American plane containing Soleimani and the Swiss plane containing me would arrive in Zurich at the same time. And [former Iran envoy] Brian Hook said, “If the Iranians don’t let you go, we will call the plane back and we’ll cancel the deal.” And that was very scary. So she actually told the Iranians, “If you don’t open the door right now, the Americans are going to cancel the deal.” And then, all of a sudden, they got the key and they let us go.
Pletka: I’ve never asked you this, and don’t tell me something you don’t want to share, but were you mistreated in prison? I worry people are going to think, “Oh, well, of course it’s bad to be in prison, but not too bad. It’s not like Guantanamo Bay or anything.” Were you treated decently in prison? You had French lessons with a French speaking prisoner. You learned Farsi from your colleagues. What would you say about that?
Wang: Well, you know, when I told my friends when I came back about my day-to-day life in prison, their first reaction is, “Wow, the Iranians are so humane.” And I think that’s the most offensive thing that they can say. I said, “There’s nothing humane about their behavior. If they’re really humane, they wouldn’t do this to me. They wasted away four years of my life. Caused immense personal suffering and suffering of my family. For their gain. And there’s nothing humane in that. But I do say that I could have been treated much worse, that is true. But, imagine a situation where Iranian prisoners mostly spend a month or two in the high security prison. I spent nine and a half months, mostly in a cell without a window. I could see sunlight twice a week for 20 minutes each. I had telephone calls for 10 minutes a week when I was in the high security prison. And I was under constant psychological pressure. Because I didn’t know what would happen to me. In the first 18 days of solitary confinement, I lost nine kilos. And that was really difficult because I couldn’t sleep, the floor was so hard. And then 24/7, the light was on. They used something called “white torture” for the most part.
Pletka: What does that mean?
Wang: White torture means no physical torture, but psychological torture. There are many ways to do that. And I later on read Solzhenitsyn in prison. You read the first three chapters, it corresponds exactly to what the Iranians are doing to us.
Pletka: Let’s talk a little about what you’ve learned and how you see current policy through the prism of your experience.
Wang: I think first of all the Iranian hostility against the United States has its own roots. And secondly, the regime is a very vicious, opportunistic, and suspicious regime that views its relations with the outside world as zero sum. So, if you don’t advance, they think you are weak. That’s why, I say, you can’t really engage it through goodwill. It will abuse your goodwill to the max it can. And they are doing that very thing right now. I tweeted yesterday, what do you gain by making all these concessions to Iran? Nothing, but so far, more hostages have been taken, Iran has restricted IAEA access for inspection, and they hijacked the Korean ship and all that. There’s nothing they have given us in return. And they’re going to keep doing that.
Pletka: So you feel like you were naïve. I look at these people who are accomplished, serious: Tony Blinken, Jake Sullivan. These are not babies. They’re not academics, these are people with experience in the world. Do you have a sense of why it is that in your view they are misinterpreting Iranian signals and intentions?
Wang: [Rep.] Ro Khanna wrote something very interesting. So he said, “Iran is a 0.44 percent of global GDP. US, 25 percent. China, 19 percent. Why are we wasting our time on 0.44 percent? And getting bogged down in the Middle East with Iran? We need to get out and focus on China.” And I told him, “Sorry, it doesn’t work that way. It costs you a million to build a nice house. But it doesn’t cost an arsonist so much to burn it down.” [Note: Xiyue Wang and Rep. Khanna have been debating the Iran issue on Twitter.]
Pletka: Well said.
Wang: And I think this reflects somehow their way of thinking: They believe we have to somehow set aside Iran conundrum. We cannot solve it. Let’s manage it. Set it aside. Focus on more important issues, be it China, Asia, or domestic issues of COVID or other things. But they don’t really understand the Iranian regime, or they’d prefer not to understand it. Because it is a time- and resource-consuming topic. When I was a school boy, it was Desert Storm. Iraq was shooting scud missiles to Kuwait and Israel, and America would launch missiles to intercept the scud missile. And I remember clearly in the Chinese news, they talked about missiles, and said the scud missile is a low technology missile and it doesn’t cost that much. The Patriot missile is much more expensive. I asked my father, “Why do they intercept the scud missile with a Patriot that is much more expensive?” And the answer was simple: You need to prevent the scud missile from causing much greater damage. And I think that’s the question we don’t want to really think carefully about.
Pletka: Iran is the scud missile.
Wang: Iran is the scud missile. It’s not like you give them a deal and they will abide by the deal and keep quiet. Iran has an offensive defense strategy. And the only way to deal with that is to counter its malicious behavior. You constrain it. And you contain it. You cannot do it by persuasion, appeasement.
Pletka: This is one of those lessons that unfortunately is very hard for some people to learn. And you learned it the most personally, very painful way. But I suspect that there are others who for political reasons and ideological reasons don’t wish to learn it.
Wang: Exactly, that’s the problem … We certainly don’t think Tony Blinken or Jake Sullivan are naïve, or they don’t understand. What I do fear though, is that they do understand, but they are cynical in the way that they don’t want to seriously deal with it. So, they want to set aside the problem so it’ll be a problem for others.
Pletka: Kick the can down the road.
Wang: I think that’s a dangerous idea to do that. In my Foreign Policy piece, I propose a way that the United States should deal with Iran in relation to China. You keep pressure on Iran because once you start showing an intention to take that pressure away, you will see China getting closer to Iran. It is already proven that China’s illicit purchases of Iranian oil skyrocketed since the election. Because they sense that Biden is going to open up with Iran, reengage with Iran, so there’s nothing to lose. And then the people who argued beforehand, “Trump has failed. We have pushed Iran and China closer, we need to undo that.” And that’s wrong because once you start reengaging, you will see that process unfolding exactly, like a self-fulfilling prophecy. So, I want to suggest, it’s impossible for the US to stop working with China in some regards. You need to constrict the Chinese influence but you don’t want head-on conflict with Chinese influence. You want to kind of work with it, coordinate policy when you can and then limit its influence. So, for example, you can allow China to buy more Iranian oil. But in return, you will tell China not to support Iran any further.
Pletka: We’re going to have an opportunity to see how strong-minded, how tough this administration is in the coming months. And I look forward to watching it with you and understanding better through your experience how they can do better. Wang Xiyue, thank you so much for taking the time to talk to me.
Wang: We have warned about this, and I think it’s important to keep my voice loud, for better future policy.
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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33.) THE DAILY WIRE
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34.) DESERET NEWS
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35.) BRIGHT
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36.) AMERICAN THINKER
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37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— While the 2020 presidential election saw a record volume of absentee votes cast, not all states made it equally accessible. — Eased absentee voting rules contributed to higher voter participation rates. — With higher turnout, President Joe Biden’s performance still tracked closely with Hillary Clinton’s state-by-state results in 2016 — he just performed slightly better across the board. — All told, the sharp increase in absentee voting in 2020 wasn’t disproportionately beneficial to either presidential candidate. Examining the electoral consequences of 2020’s absentee voteThe 2020 presidential election was remarkable in many respects. First and foremost, despite taking place in the midst of a deadly pandemic that would result in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Americans, the 2020 election resulted in the highest rate of turnout in over a century. According to Michael McDonald of the University of Florida, 159.7 million Americans cast ballots in 2020 — an increase of roughly 20 million over the 2016 presidential election. The estimated 66.7% turnout of eligible voters easily eclipsed the post-World War II record of 63.8% set in 1960. According to many observers, one of the key factors contributing to the record turnout in 2020 was a dramatic increase in the availability of absentee voting in many states. Liberalized absentee voting rules made it possible for millions of Americans to fill out their ballots at home and place them in a mailbox or a drop-box rather than risking exposure to the deadly coronavirus by voting in person. According to a survey of over 18,000 registered voters conducted by MIT political scientist Charles Stewart III, between 2016 and 2020, the percentage of votes cast by absentee ballot in the United States increased from 21% to 46%. Table 1: Percentage voting by absentee ballot by state absentee voting rulesNotes: Low = absentee voting requires valid excuse; Moderate = anyone can vote absentee but nothing mailed automatically to voters; High = anyone can vote absentee and absentee ballot application mailed automatically to all voters; Very High = anyone can vote absentee and absentee ballot mailed automatically to all voters. Sources: U.S. Elections Project and FiveThirtyEight. The data in Table 1 show that there was a strong relationship between the prevalence of absentee voting and the rules governing absentee voting in the states. I divided states into four categories based on how easy or difficult they made it for voters to cast absentee ballots. Despite the coronavirus pandemic, five states continued to require a valid excuse for absentee voting such as being over 70 or 75 years of age, temporary out-of-state residence, or a permanent disability. Fear of exposure to coronavirus was not considered a valid excuse in these states. As a result, an average of only 11% of voters cast absentee ballots in those states. In contrast, 10 states allowed no-excuses absentee voting and automatically mailed ballots to all voters. In those states, an average of 73% of voters cast absentee ballots. In this study, I address two questions about the impact of expanded absentee voting on the 2020 election. First, to what extent did it lead to higher turnout, as its proponents hoped? Second, did it benefit the Democratic presidential candidate, Joe Biden, as President Trump and other Republican critics of absentee voting frequently alleged? There is no evidence to support claims by Trump and his political allies that absentee voting resulted in widespread fraud. However, there is considerable evidence that Democratic voters were much more likely to take advantage of absentee voting in 2020 than Republican voters — in part, because President Trump frequently attacked the legitimacy of absentee voting, thereby discouraging its use by his supporters. Table 2: Correlations of absentee voting with change in turnout and change in Democratic vote margin in the statesTable 2 displays correlations between the prevalence of absentee voting in 2020 and changes in turnout and in Democratic vote margin between 2016 and 2020 across all 50 states and the District of Columbia. The results show that there was a strong and statistically significant correlation between the prevalence of absentee voting and increased voter turnout in 2020. States with higher rates of absentee voting generally experienced larger increases in turnout than those with lower rates of absentee voting. On the other hand, the results show that there was no relationship at all between the prevalence of absentee voting and changes in Democratic vote margin between 2016 and 2020. States with high rates of absentee voting did not see larger increases in Democratic vote margins between these two elections than states with low rates of absentee voting. In order to provide more definitive tests of the effects of absentee voting on turnout and Democratic vote margins, I conducted two regression analyses. The first regression analysis examined the impact of absentee voting on 2020 turnout while controlling for 2016 turnout and a dummy variable indicating whether a state was a swing state in 2020. This was based on the hypothesis that turnout would be higher in hotly contested states than in other states due to greater efforts by the campaigns to mobilize voters in those states. The states that are defined as “swing states” for Table 3 are Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Michigan, North Carolina, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Wisconsin. The second regression analysis examined the impact of absentee voting on the 2020 Biden vote margin while controlling for the 2016 Clinton vote margin. The results of these two regression analyses are presented in Tables 3 and 4. Table 3: Regression analysis of voter turnout in the statesTable 4: Regression analysis of Biden margin in the statesThe results displayed in Table 3 show that this simple regression model explains about 90% of the variation in 2020 turnout across all 50 states and the District of Columbia. By far the strongest predictor of 2020 turnout is 2016 turnout. There is a great deal of continuity in relative turnout among states over these four years — states with relatively high rates of turnout in 2016 tended to have relatively high rates of turnout in 2020 and states with relatively low rates of turnout in 2016 tended to have relatively low rates of turnout in 2020. However, after controlling for 2016 turnout and swing state status, the prevalence of absentee voting in 2020 had a moderately strong and statistically significant impact on turnout in 2020. According to these results, an increase of 10 percentage points in the prevalence of absentee voting in a state would have increased turnout by a little more than 0.7 percentage points. In contrast, the results displayed in Table 4 indicate that the prevalence of absentee voting had no effect on Joe Biden’s vote margin in 2020. The regression model explains almost 99% of the variance in Biden’s vote margin, but that is due entirely to the powerful effect of 2016 Clinton vote margin. Just adding three points to Clinton’s margin turned out to be an excellent predictor of Biden’s vote margin in the states. Whether a state had a relatively high or relatively low rate of absentee voting had no effect on Biden’s vote margin after controlling for Clinton’s vote margin. ConclusionsThe evidence presented in this study leads to two clear conclusions. First, the dramatic increase in absentee voting in 2020 contributed to increased voter turnout. Even after controlling for 2016 turnout and swing state status, the prevalence of absentee voting in a state was a significant predictor of turnout in 2020. Eased absentee voting rules were not the only reason for increased turnout in 2020, but they did make a difference. Second, increased absentee voting did not favor Joe Biden’s candidacy. After controlling for 2016 Democratic vote margin, the prevalence of absentee voting in a state had no effect at all on 2020 Democratic vote margin. These findings suggest that efforts by Republican legislators in a number of states to roll back eased absentee voting rules and make it more difficult for voters to take advantage of absentee voting in the future are unlikely to benefit GOP candidates. Not only is there no evidence that absentee voting leads to widespread fraud, there is also no evidence that it favors Democratic candidates.
Read the fine printLearn 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!” |
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© Copyright by the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia |
38.) THE BLAZE
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39.) THE FEDERALIST
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41.) NOQ REPORT
NOQ Report Daily |
- Was Biden just kidding about ‘kids in cages’?
- It’s a bad omen for the Second Amendment that Biden hasn’t made his gun move yet
- Seriously, stop using Google
- Award-winning scientist says coronavirus was created at Wuhan lab
- Lt. Gen. Tom McInerney: ‘We have a corrupt Supreme Court’ so it’s up to us to act
- Alleged President Joe Biden protects illegal alien sex offenders
Was Biden just kidding about ‘kids in cages’?
Posted: 25 Feb 2021 02:08 AM PST It seems that the Democrats didn’t care as much about the “kids in cages” as they led us to believe. Indeed, after President Joe Biden decided to reopen a Texas facility used to house migrants under the Trump administration, they didn’t so much as bat a fake teary eye. Article by Jeff Charles from Liberty Nation. All of a sudden, the “kids in cages” trope is no longer applicable when it involves a president who does not have an “R” next to his name. How much hypocrisy does the Biden administration expect the nation to stomach? White House Defends Restarting Trump Immigration PolicyOn Feb. 23, the White House defended its decision to reopen the housing facility located in Carrizo Springs, TX, that was used to hold up to 700 migrants between the ages of 13 and 17. The administration announced this move late on Feb. 22, and the first of the unaccompanied minors arrived the same day. While the activist media rose to defend the president, others on the left apparently valued their principles enough to take umbrage at the move. The Hill reported: “The decision rankled immigration advocates and sparked allegations of hypocrisy given President Joe Biden and administration officials have vigorously condemned the Trump administration’s treatment of migrant kids at the border and its immigration policies more broadly.” White House Press Secretary Jen “Circle Back” Psaki explained, “To ensure the health and safety of these kids, [the Department of Health and Human Services] took steps to open an emergency facility to add capacity where these kids can be provided the care they need before they are safely placed with families and sponsors.” When questioned about the apparent hypocrisy of such an action, Psaki went on defense, stating that “it’s a temporary reopening during COVID-19, our intention is very much to close it, but we want to make sure we can follow COVID protocols.” Psaki added that the Biden administration does not expel minors who come to the border without their parents. Instead, they are transferred to the Health and Human Services Office of Refugee Resettlement. “Our goal is for them to then be transferred to families or sponsors,” Psaki went on. “So, this is our effort to ensure that kids are not in close proximity and that we are abiding by the health and safety standards that the government has been set out.” She rejected the notion that placing children in this site was similar to holding “kids in cages.” The press secretary said: “That is never our intention of replicating the immigration policies of the past administration.” She continued:
Democrats Exposing ThemselvesAt this point, it seems clear that those on the left never cared about the migrant children who were being kept in cages under the Trump administration. As it turns out, these young people were political pawns utilized to attack the former president. But is this a surprise? Any disaffected group could be weaponized to score political points. How long can Biden get away with using the same policies he roundly criticized Trump for? The far-left progressive wing is sure to call the president out on this duplicity, but what position will the moderate faction in the Democratic Party and the rest of the nation take? While the activist media will continue to defend Biden as Johnnie Cochran defended O.J., even they might find it difficult to shield the president from a public already observing the blatant hypocrisy involved. This, along with other acts of duplicity that Biden will surely commit, might not impact him personally as he is committed to serving only one term. Nevertheless, they may dim the prospects of a Democratic victory in the 2022 midterms and beyond. ~ Read more from Jeff Charles. COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn
American Conservative MovementJoin 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 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Was Biden just kidding about ‘kids in cages’? appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
It’s a bad omen for the Second Amendment that Biden hasn’t made his gun move yet
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 10:09 PM PST
Day one of the Biden administration has come and gone. The following day, many gun-control activists started wondering where the promised gun control executive order was. Another day passed. A week. A month. Other than minor tweaks to policy, the Biden administration has not touched gun control. The same can be said about the Democrat-controlled House and Senate. Neither legislative body has lifted a finger against guns in a meaningful way. This, too, has gun-control activists scratching their head. In fact, these activists have started going public with their complaints towards the White House and Capitol Hill. For once, we actually agree with them. Sort of. We don’t want any more gun control laws added to the books or restrictions added to the code, but we do wish Democrats would hurry up and try. Today, we have the upper hand as the appetite for gun control is narrow. Democrats know this. As sickening as it sounds, they’re biding their time. They’re waiting for the next mass shooting event to take place. They know the facts don’t back their perspectives on firearms so they need the emotional push following a mass shooting in order to drive their narrative and push their agenda. And that should concern us because it’s the most effective strategy. It’s not the right strategy from the perspective of honor or fair play; an idea worth codifying should stand on its own whether there’s an emotional event surrounding it or not. According to Cam Edwards at Bearing Arms: The clock is ticking, in other words, and gun control groups as well as politicians like Blumenthal say they’re getting little to no guidance from the Biden administration.
I hate to say it, but I think that’s exactly what Biden is waiting for; a tragedy playing out on our television screens and social media that he hopes will have the effect of galvanizing voters, even temporarily, to back his gun control agenda in the name of public safety. There’s one more possible reason why Biden has been slow to act on his legislative gun control agenda; he knows it’s a political loser. Biden witnessed the political aftermath of his 1994 gun ban, and I’m sure he still has a few memories of his Democratic colleagues going down to defeat in the 94 midterms still rattling around his cobweb-filled brain. Imagine the political devastation that would come from using a 51-50 vote to enact a far broader ban on the American public, all while gun sales are at record highs, concealed carry applications are soaring, and millions of Americans are embracing their Second Amendment rights for the first time in their lives. In the latest episode of NOQ Report, JD and Tammy discussed this issue, but they spent even more time talking about the Texas situation and how nuclear power is the right solution instead of unpredictable wind or solar. They noted that a lot of blame is being put onto the fact that Texas is an isolated grid, but that’s not the reason for the cataclysmic collapse that left millions without power for days. And in an odd twist, the married duo described their “UFO experience.” Seriously. It was quite fun. Anyone rejoicing that Democrats haven’t made a move on gun control yet isn’t seeing the big picture. They’re waiting for the proper moment when emotion can drive their agenda. They’re waiting for a mass shooting. It’s hideous.
The post It’s a bad omen for the Second Amendment that Biden hasn’t made his gun move yet appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Seriously, stop using Google
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 09:36 PM PST For nearly a decade, I worked with and through Google. They were the hub for nearly everything in my business life; from digital marketing through their search platform to ads on their network to building up YouTube channels to promoting Android apps. I have no regrets about the time I spent helping my family and my clients because it allowed me to be where I am today, but I’ll admit I get a sense of dread every time I remember essentially advocating for them to dominate the various markets. I knew how to use them so I’m complicit, even if in an infinitesimal way, in their current success. Back then, they had a motto in their code of conduct: “Don’t be evil.” It didn’t get much fanfare when they decided to remove that statement from their code. At that point in 2018, they were converting into a “woke” company and trying to take their accumulated cushion of both goodwill and massive cash reserves to quietly isolate approximately half the country. Still stung from their loss in the 2016 election, they had decided to take a more active role in suppressing the truth. From their perspective as an advocate for the post-truth society, what they’re doing in suppressing opposing views is not a bad thing, nor is it untruthful. After all, if biology is no longer considered to be an absolute indicator of gender in their eyes, then who are we to say that the Antrim County voting machine audit indicates voter fraud? Unlike post-modernism, the tenets of a post-truth mentality dictate that truth is absolute and is determined by groupthink’s feelings rather than demonstrable facts. But I’m not here to whine about the anti-conservative bias within the company or the inherent bias that translates into their products and services. I’m here to say what some have noticed over the last year or two. Whether due to bias or simply the incumbrance of mass adoption, their products are failing. They’re falling behind at best or are being intentionally subverted from within at worst. The latter is more likely as the sheer bulk of cash behind their technology makes it unlikely that their products are suffering from lack of progress. It seems abundantly clear that their newfound wokeness is behind the shift to make their products suffer for the sake of social justice. They’re in the process of trying to switch back. With the election over and their mission accomplished, their search algorithm has reverted in many ways back to what it was before. I’ve been analyzing their search algorithm for over a decade, first professional and now by rote. What I’ve learned is that the shenanigans they pulled pre-election have changed to some extent. For example, before the election and shortly thereafter, the number one listing on searches for “NOQ Report” wasn’t noqreport.com as it clearly should be. Instead, they had the website listed in the middle of the page under “Media-Bias Fact Check” and the Wikipedia page for “List of fake news websites.” The latter was especially odd since NOQ Report is not on the list. Search today and things are back to normal with our website at the top and various listings for our podcast below. The same can be said about other conservative news sites like Breitbart, The Gateway Pundit, and 100 Percent Fed Up which all suffered from Google’s manipulated search results before the election but are now back to normal with Joe Biden in the White House. There are many companies that are willing to manipulate their own products and services to match their ideology. Generally, it’s not an issue. After all, this is still the United States of America which means we are free to express our views personally and through our own properties. But, Google presents itself as an unbiased observer and disinterested reporter of information through algorithms. That clearly wasn’t the case in the weeks and months leading up to the election. Can anyone, whether conservative or progressive, trust that their search results are going to deliver what’s best as it pertains to the search itself or should we treat them as a propagator of an agenda? Even those on the left who like their agenda should take issue with being manipulated. Do leftists need to be protected by Daddy Google or can they make their own decisions based on unbiased facts? Even though the election is over, there is still plenty of tilted results for certain topics on both Google’s search product as well as YouTube. Again, this is being done in the name of protecting us from false information. On the surface, such things may seem honorable. But if we stop to think about it, we’re being “protected” from information, even if we seek to learn it without concerns over being coerced. For example, a search on Google for “flat earth theory” reveals a long list of websites debunking it. Personally, I do not believe the earth is flat, but I would love to know why there is such a large movement that abides by the notion. I would never learn this through Google, though, because they believe we are too stupid to make choices on our own. They believe if we’re exposed to articles or videos discussing the theory and why they believe it, we’re going to end up believing them, joining a cult, and shooting up a mall or something. I use DuckDuckGo. The search results are far superior. I’ve been warned off from them via email in the past when I’ve mentioned them because allegedly they’re owned by leftists. I don’t care. I use search to get information and I want the best results based upon my searches. DuckDuckGo provides that. Now, if it turns out that DuckDuckGo is going woke or manipulating search results for the sake of ideology, I’d leave in a heartbeat. But as far as I can tell, they’re not. YouTube is a different issue. I like Rumble, Brighteon, and BitChute, but let’s face it. They don’t have the library that Google has. Should we still watch videos about 9/11 or climate change on YouTube and simply suffer through their “fact-check” disclaimers that invariably get slapped on the page? That’s a question for individuals to answer. Moreover, it’s a problem that needs to be solved by any of the aforementioned free-speech video sites or any new ones that pop up. I still use YouTube begrudgingly. I can’t wait until I no longer have to. Left or right, we should be very concerned that Google’s products are filtered through a lens of woke ideology. We should all want information providers to simply provide information instead of manipulating it in the name of social justice. COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn
American Conservative MovementJoin 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 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Seriously, stop using Google appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Award-winning scientist says coronavirus was created at Wuhan lab
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 08:09 PM PST New research out of the University of Hamburg in Germany found that the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) was, in fact, created in a Chinese lab. According to world-renowned researcher Roland Wiesendanger, the Wuhan Institute of Virology is the true “cause” of the Chinese virus, not bats at a Wuhan wet market as the world was originally told. Article by Ethan Huff from Natural News. The paper challenges the two prevailing narratives that the WuFlu either escaped a wet market or is the product of a laboratory “accident.” In Wiesendanger’s view, neither narrative holds water. “To date, there is no scientifically based rigorous evidence for either mentioned theories,” Wiesendanger, a three-time recipient of the prestigious European Research Council, is quoted as saying. Wiesendanger’s 105-page report goes on to ask questions about whether the current global crisis really is just a coincidence, or if it was plotted years ago by the likes of billionaire eugenicist Bill Gates to usher the planet into a new world order. “[I]s the current global crisis actually the result of a coincidence in nature – a coincidental mutation of a coronavirus a bat with the assistance of an intermediate host – or the result of a Scientist carelessness when carrying out the project is high-risk research with global pandemic potential?” the paper reads. In response to his own question, Wiesendanger cited 600 incontrovertible facts to prove his claim that “the number and the quality of evidence clearly indicate a laboratory accident at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. A summary outlining Wiesendanger’s key points highlights the fact that the host of COVID-19 still has not been identified, even though it “couple[s] surprisingly well to human cell receptors.” It also explains that the Wuhan lab: “… carried out genetic manipulations on coronaviruses for many years with the aim of making them more contagious, dangerous and deadly for humans.” There’s no further denying that coronavirus originated at Wuhan Institute of VirologyIn contrast to earlier coronavirus-related epidemics such as SARS and MERS, the origin of COVID-19 simply cannot be explained any other way than a laboratory creation. “The zoonosis theory as a possible explanation for the pandemic therefore has no sound scientific basis,” the paper explains. Chinese germs also contain special cell receptor binding domains that are connected to the novel furin cleavage sites of their spike proteins. “Both properties together were previously unknown in coronaviruses and indicate a non-natural origin of the SARS-CoV-2 pathogen,” the paper adds. People who read only mainstream “news” are probably also unaware of the fact that there is an entire research group in Wuhan that exists for the purpose of genetically modifying (GMO) coronaviruses to make them more contagious, dangerous and deadly for humans. “This is proven by numerous publications in the scientific specialist literature,” Wiesendanger reveals. There were also major safety problems at the Wuhan Institute of Virology at the time when COVID-19 emerged out of “nowhere.” Putting two and two together, it becomes clear that this lab was, in fact, responsible for releasing the virus. Interestingly enough, a young scientist who worked at the facility is said to be the first person ever infected with the WuFlu. This further bolsters Wiesendanger’s claim that the virus originated at this facility, which is China’s only level-4 biosafety lab. “There is ample independent evidence that a young researcher from the Wuhan Institute of Virology is the first to deal with the novel coronavirus and was thus at the beginning of the COVID-19 infection chain,” Wiesendanger concludes. “The entry on the website of the institute has been deleted and has been considered as disappeared.” To keep up with the latest news about COVID-19, be sure to check out Pandemic.news. Sources for this article include: COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn
American Conservative MovementJoin 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 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Award-winning scientist says coronavirus was created at Wuhan lab appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Lt. Gen. Tom McInerney: ‘We have a corrupt Supreme Court’ so it’s up to us to act
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 07:08 PM PST
Today, The Two Mikes again spoke with General Thomas McInerney. As always, the General had a great deal of important information to share. That information, and the realization that the Supreme Court sided with America’s domestic and foreign enemies, led to a conversation that concluded that America is at what the General called a “tipping point”. “All they had to do on the Pennsylvania case was hear the case. That’s all they had to do,” he said. “And then it would be quite obvious. If our position is wrong and they put out the logic, then we’re willing to accept that. But they know that this election is fraudulent. They have to in the Supreme Court.” The Pennsylvania case is the latest that the Supreme Court punted on. The four leftist Justices were joined by Amy Coney Barrett and Brett Kavanaugh in ruling against the opportunity for the American people to finally hear the truth about the rampant 2020 election fraud that installed Joe Biden into the White House. As a result, our options as Americans are being limited. “We are at this tipping point, Col. Mike, in which the American people are going to have take these issues because the institutions, the Supreme Court, has failed us,” he said. “That’s their role, to adjudicate on constitutional issues. They won’t even take it up and look at it because they know what the answer is, so we have a corrupt Supreme Court.” The republic’s most important institutions and Constitution are all but collapsed, and, under Biden, the national government is crafting a tyrannical regime for the United States. What to do? It seems there are only two options. Option one is for Trump, his advisers, and the U.S. military act to return the nation to constitutional government by completely eliminating its domestic and foreign enemies that are ensconced in the U.S. government, the media, the social media, and the business community, all of whom have cooperated with Democratic and Republican traitors and several foreign governments to destroy the republic. If this action is not undertaken, the American people will have to decide whether they will accept tyranny as their new way of life, or will use the Second Amendment precisely in the manner intended by the Founders; that is, too free themselves and their children from tyrants and restore republican government in the United States. The latter is gradually emerging as the republic’s last, best chance.
Watch the interview on Rumble: COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn
American Conservative MovementJoin 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 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Lt. Gen. Tom McInerney: ‘We have a corrupt Supreme Court’ so it’s up to us to act appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Alleged President Joe Biden protects illegal alien sex offenders
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 05:49 PM PST
Operation Talon was created under the Donald Trump administration that targeted sex offenders and pedophiles for deportation. During his first weeks in the White House, Alleged President Joe Biden cancelled this operation, providing cover for the worst of the worst among illegal immigrants, endangering the lives of every single American. Biden has essentially made America a safe haven for the scum that have abused and raped women and children. For years, the Democrats have demonized Conservatives for wanting to enforce our immigration laws. They would continually make it seem as if they were simply trying to protect the “innocent” illegal immigrants from deportation who wanted nothing more than to work and provide for their families. But when push comes to shove, Biden and the Democrats are making it a priority to protect the most violent criminals who have literally abused children and rape women. How can they justify this? One of the biggest theories going around Conservative circles was that there’s a secret cabal of sex trafficking and pedophiles within our government and among the elite. The mainstream media came hard after the Q movement for believing that this is true, calling them dangerous conspiracy theorists. However, looking at the evidence, Joe Biden’s decision to protect pedophiles does seem to validate this theory. Think about it… as soon as the “Sniffer in Chief” gets into office, he moves to keep violent criminals on our streets that are committing horrific crimes of rape and pedophilia… and we are supposed to believe that there’s not something sinister going on here? At what point will the American people understand just how depraved the Democrat platform truly is? Think about it, the Left is actively destroying our lives, refusing to allow us to work, forcing us to wear face masks which are actually dangerous to our health and taking away our Constitutional Rights. At the same time, they working to give felons the right to vote, decriminalizing pedophilia in California and now protecting illegal alien sex offenders. There’s no excuse, this should not be tolerated at all. So what are we, as Conservative Americans, going to about this? We cannot allow this to pass by and simply move onto the next story. We must hammer this horrific move by the Biden Administration every single day that we possibly can, finding every way that we can combat these horrific policies. Call on our states to ignore the Federal Government’s edicts that are endangering our lives. And then vote in pro-Constitution candidates that want to protect our lives and rights, not take them away.
COVID-19 lockdowns are taking down an independent news outletNobody 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. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn
American Conservative MovementJoin 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 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Alleged President Joe Biden protects illegal alien sex offenders appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
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42.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
ARRA News Service (in this message: 11 new items) |
- A Grim Milestone, Power Grabs & Policy Disasters, Redefining Equality, Confirmation Update, Good News
- Authoritarian Left on the March
- The Capitol Riot Hearing That No One Heard
- Rewriting Amendment Number One
- The Blue States Are Now the Beggar States
- Biden: No New Cold Wars or Democracy Crusades
- Even NPR Admits Florida Is A Success And California A Failure
- House Minority Whip, AFP President Team Up on COVID-19 Relief
- Daddy Knows Best
- The Minimum Wage – And Other Examples of Government Breaking the Laws of Economics
- Is the Biden Administration Stumbling Into War?
A Grim Milestone, Power Grabs & Policy Disasters, Redefining Equality, Confirmation Update, Good News
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 10:42 PM PST
by Gary Bauer: A Grim Milestone A few days ago, America hit the grim and undesired milestone of 500,000 COVID-19 related deaths. Our hearts and prayers are with all the families who lost loved ones. As is often the case, politicians rushed to exploit the suffering. The Biden Administration used the news as a cudgel to once again attack Donald Trump, while its social media allies have shut him down so he cannot respond. Sounds fair, right? No! A common theme in much of the left-wing and Big Media commentary was that nobody thought the death toll would be so bad, and it was all Donald Trump’s fault. Well, that’s not exactly true. A year ago, Dr. Anthony Fauci and other top medical experts asked to see the president. They told him about a novel virus that could potentially kill up to 2.2 million Americans unless he acted quickly. And Trump did act. He imposed travel bans on various nations, including China. He launched Operation Warp Speed to produce new vaccines in record time. He pressured drug companies to speed the development of other therapeutics. Those actions likely saved a million lives or more. Power Grabs & Policy Disasters Fauci and the CDC insisted that we had to shut down the economy to “flatten the curve,” meaning slow down the infection rate. The president reluctantly accepted their advice, but he thankfully left it up to the states to determine the extent of the shutdowns. Fifteen days to flatten the curve turned into 30 days. And 30 days has now become a year of left-wing mayors and governors crushing their economies, while putting out their hands for taxpayer bailouts. Florida and other states fought hard to remain as open as possible. Their results are the same, if not better, than New York, and their economies are much better off. Sadly, it is now easier for an illegal alien to walk into America than it is for a New Yorker to walk into a restaurant or for your child to walk into a school. The second decision disaster was not Trump’s fault or even the CDC’s, and that was the shutdown of our schools. The responsibility for that catastrophe lies with the media. Instead of bringing truth to the American people, they spread fear. The second culprit is the teacher unions, who are holding our children hostage with demands for billions of dollars in bailouts. Incalculable damage has been done to our children. Again, we know from states like Florida that the public schools didn’t have to close. We know from Catholic and other private schools around the country that the public schools didn’t have to close. It is a national scandal that half of our children are still not in school, and that Joe Biden is too afraid of the teacher unions that helped elect him to demand that they open! Suppressing Good News As nightmarish as this has been, the COVID news now is extraordinarily good. Every day, approximately 1.5 million Americans are being vaccinated, thanks to the Trump vaccines. New weekly cases are down 26%, hospitalizations are down 18% and deaths are down 21%. These declines have been occurring for several weeks. In fact, the consistently declining numbers are so good that some people (here and here) are suggesting we may be reaching herd immunity. Yet there seems to be a concerted effort by the left to suppress the good news. What could possibly explain that? Well, once we realize that the virus is essentially over, there will be no further justification for all the power seized by left-wing mayors, governors and the Biden Administration. (Even some liberals are warning that things have gone way too far.) But I fear there is an even more sinister political reason. If the left acknowledges how good things are now, it would be obvious that this great improvement has nothing to do with Joe Biden. He’s only been in office for 30 days. (By the way, 100,000 Americans have died in those 30 days. So 20% of the entire death toll has occurred during Biden’s short presidency.) They can’t share this good news because they can’t take credit for the good news. That’s why they keep saying we won’t be able to return to normal until the end of year or next year. Democrats want to be able to say that they defeated the virus in 2022, which conveniently just happens to be an election year. Redefining Equality The legislation is a direct attack on religious liberty. As one Catholic leader put it, the bill is “the most comprehensive assault on Christianity ever written into law.” Reverend Franklin Graham blasted the bill as “very dangerous,” adding that it will create lot of “inequality for all people of faith.” It specifically guts legal protections provided under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. So, churches, religious schools and other faith-based ministries will be subject to endless discrimination lawsuits from men claiming to be women. The “Equality Act” undermines the rights of parents and medical professionals, forcing them to deny reality. It also threatens to erase women by “making it illegal to distinguish ‘identity’ from biology and thereby [prioritizes] transgender people over women.” As Inez Stepman of the Independent Women’s Forum warns: “The Equality Act would threaten the existence of women’s prisons, public-school girls’ locker rooms, and women’s and girls’ sports teams. It would limit freedom of speech, freedom of association, accurate data collection, and scientific inquiry. . . The Equality Act isn’t about protecting people from discrimination; it’s about compelling adherence to gender ideology.” TAKE ACTION: Contact your representative now. Tell them to oppose the Equality Act. Confirmation Update Meanwhile, Xavier Becerra, Biden’s nominee to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, is running into growing opposition. For one thing, he’s a lawyer with no background in medicine. He is currently attorney general of California, and has spent decades in public office. Yesterday, several senators grilled Becerra about his pro-abortion extremism, noting that he even opposed the ban on partial-birth abortions. He also tried to force the Little Sisters of the Poor to pay for contraception and abortion-inducing drugs. It’s hard to imagine how any moderate senator could support such an extreme nominee. Here’s another example of Becerra’s extremism: He supports providing healthcare to illegal immigrants, something the public strongly rejects. But if he’s confirmed, Politico writes that Becerra “will have the power to make public benefits for undocumented workers a reality.” TAKE ACTION: Contact your senators, and urge them to oppose the confirmations of Neera Tanden and Xavier Becerra. Good News Federal Judge Drew Tipton issued a nationwide injunction last night blocking President Biden’s ban on illegal alien deportations. The Biden Administration will likely appeal Tipton’s order, but for now common sense has prevailed. Tags: Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, A Grim Milestone, Redefining Equality, Good NewsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Authoritarian Left on the March
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 10:06 PM PST
by Ben Shapiro: This week, Reps. Anna Eshoo, D-Calif., and Jerry McNerney, D-Calif., sent out a series of letters to America’s largest communications corporations: AT&T, Alphabet Inc., Cox Communications, Dish Network, Comcast, Apple, Amazon, and others. Their letters demanded answers from these corporations on one simple topic: Why would these platforms continue to allow the dissemination of “misinformation” from conservative outlets? “Our country’s public discourse is plagued by misinformation, disinformation, conspiracy theories, and lies,” the House Democrats wrote. “These phenomena undergird the radicalization of seditious individuals who committed acts of insurrection on January 6th, and it contributes to a growing distrust of public health measures necessary to crush the pandemic. … Are you planning to continue carrying Fox News, Newsmax, and OANN?” The overt move by members of the government to cudgel private corporations into silencing unpopular viewpoints was clearly violative of First Amendment principles. The Constitution clearly provides that Congress shall make no law abridging freedom of speech or the press; Democrats have now hit upon a convenient workaround where they bully private actors into doing their censorious bidding. This clever gambit is rooted in the conflation between “disinformation” and “misinformation” promulgated by the establishment media since 2016. After the 2016 election, the media went berserk with the theory that Hillary Clinton had lost the election thanks only to Russian interference. “Russian disinformation”—meaning false information promulgated by a foreign government for the purpose of interfering in domestic politics—had twisted the election. Now even disinformation promulgated on American soil is protected by the First Amendment. But it soon became clear that the authoritarian left wasn’t interested merely in active disinformation springing from foreign sources. It was troubled by any narrative or information that contradicted its point of view. This information could quickly and easily be labeled “misinformation.” And “misinformation,” it said, had to be policed. Why, precisely, wouldn’t the answer to misinformation be factual rebuttal? Because, the authoritarian left argued, misinformation led to “incitement.” Now, there is a legal standard for “incitement”—and it’s a high bar to reach. But the authoritarian left has broadened out the meaning of incitement to include any verbiage that elicits strong emotions … so long as conservatives are responsible for such verbiage. Thus, it’s possible incitement to call people by their biological pronouns but perfectly innocent fun to wink and nod at widespread looting and rioting. The answer to “misinformation” and “incitement,” however, can’t lie within government. So Democrats have turned toward hijacking the private instruments of informational dissemination, all in the name of reestablishing an informational monopoly the left lost with the death of the Fairness Doctrine in 1987, and with a monopoly that collapsed completely with the rise of the open internet. And corporations are going along with all of this. This week, Amazon banned a book on transgender people, “When Harry Became Sally,” presumably because it took a non-woke line on the subject. Coca-Cola is now apparently indoctrinating its employees into the cult of Robin DiAngelo “anti-racism.” Facebook and Twitter and Google are all preparing new measures aimed at cracking down on “misinformation”—opaque guidelines and nonrigorous standards that will surely cut in favor of the same establishment media now pushing censorship, and the Democrats they support. The establishment media are fond of saying that we’re experiencing a crisis of authoritarianism in America; they point to the criminal acts of Jan. 6 and suggest that right-wing authoritarianism threatens democracy itself. The far greater threat to democracy, however, lies with an authoritarian left that is now ascendant in virtually every powerful institution in America. Tags: Authoritarian Left on the March, Ben Shapiro, The Daily SignalTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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The Capitol Riot Hearing That No One Heard
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 09:50 PM PST There was plenty of finger-pointing at yesterday’s Senate hearing, which was mostly a preview of a coming attraction.
“These people came specifically with equipment,” said former U.S. Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund during a rare joint hearing with the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee and Rules Committee. “You’re bringing climbing gear to a demonstration, explosives, chemical spray — you’re coming prepared. The fact that the group attacked our West Front 20 minutes before the event at the Ellipse ended — they were planning on our agency not being at full strength at that time.” So the riot kicked off a full 20 minutes before President Trump had finished speaking? If nothing else, this sheds some light on the Democrats’ phony claim of same-day riot incitement by Trump. Remember what their impeachment article said: “Shortly before the Joint Session commenced, President Trump addressed a crowd at the Ellipse in Washington, DC. There, he reiterated false claims that ‘we won this election, and we won it by a landslide.’ Based on the facts, it’s hard to imagine a weaker, less serious article of impeachment than this. But what are we to expect from House Democrats? Perhaps the most maddening thing to come out of yesterday’s hearing, though, was former Chief Sund’s claim that he never got the aforementioned memo. As Axios reported, “Sund testified that he just learned in the past 24 hours that his department had received the report from the FBI on the evening of Jan. 5. Sund said a member of the intelligence division at USCP did review the memo — but that ‘it didn’t go any further than that’ and that Sund himself had not seen it.” That sounds like a pretty catastrophic failure to communicate. And it makes us wonder just what we’re paying “the intelligence division at USCP” to do. The hearing involved plenty of finger-pointing, with Sund and former House Sergeant at Arms Paul Irving and former Senate Sergeant at Arms Michael Stenger painting “a picture of poor intelligence, structural communication issues, and a lackluster response from Pentagon officials as driving reasons behind the botched response.” Oops. All this, though, is just a prelude. A preview of a coming attraction. The main event, the real bit of theater, will take place when House Speaker Nancy Pelosi establishes her “9/11-type” commission to examine the attack. That’s when she and her fellow Democrats will cry “White Supremacy!” and call for all manner of encroachments on our freedom, rather than getting to the bottom of what really happened and who was responsible for the security failures. That’s when she’ll conduct her one-sided investigation and get her predetermined outcome that says supporters of former President Donald Trump are entirely to blame. And that’s why she’s chosen the hopelessly and ridiculously partisan Russel Honoré to lead that investigation. Tags: Douglas Andrews, The Patriot Post, The Capitol Riot Hearing, That No One HeardTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Rewriting Amendment Number One
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 09:20 PM PST by Gary Bauer: People once wondered — perhaps not very seriously — whether falsely shouting “Fire!” in a theater and telling hit men “Here’s $50,000; you will get the rest when you finish the job” count as speech that should be protected as a matter of right. They do not. And it’s not so puzzling that freedom to exercise a legitimate right does not entail license to violate the rights of others. But some people are eager to prohibit us from uttering statements that don’t come within twenty parsecs of such alleged quandaries. These censorious ones include big-tech firms and big DC politicians like, for example, U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal, a bully urging social-media firms to crack down harder on the speech of “‘antivax’ groups.” Such persons seem to think that the First Amendment as presently worded, at least the part protecting freedom of speech, is a big dumb mistake. What would they like it to say instead? Maybe: “Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, unless a would-be speaker wishes to dispute government-endorsed or Google-Twitter-Facebook-Amazon-endorsed conclusions about medicine, vaccines, pandemics, masks, lockdowns, transgenderism, euthanasia, abortion, or election fraud; to spend ‘too much’ money on campaign speech; to utter ‘hate speech’ about chess pieces; to speak freely; etc.” But then the First Amendment would be about as valuable as yesterday’s toilet paper as a bulwark against tyranny. Don’t flush our freedom of speech. This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. Tags: Gary bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Rewriting, Amendment Number OneTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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The Blue States Are Now the Beggar States
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST by Stephen Moore: Last week, I visited South Florida for four days, and what a shock: Everything was open. The beaches, the hotels, the restaurants (with some sensible safety and social distancing restrictions). The classrooms are full. The other strange thing about being in Florida was that people were happy. They were playing tennis and golf. They were going to work and getting on with their lives. Florida is a Republican, can-do kind of place. Then, there is New York. Manhattan is a morose and deserted place to be. It’s as if it’s boarded up. People are living their lives afraid. They are depressed, which makes the whole place depressing. In Southern California, I experienced the same dreariness. And it wasn’t the weather, which was warm and sunny. Restaurants were closed or highly restricted. Stores were sparsely attended, and people were generally grimacing and standoffish. They yelp in horror if you take off your mask, even for a moment. Yet through it all, there is almost no evidence that lockdowns, business closures, stay-at-home orders and other strategies have reduced the infection rates or death rates from the virus. To take just one prominent example, open Florida has had a lower death rate (adjusted for the age distribution of the population) than closed-down California and New York. Even President Joe Biden’s crackerjack health officials can’t explain that one. Fifty states experimented with responses to the virus, and the verdict is in: The big blue states got crushed. The highest unemployment states are Hawaii, Nevada, California, Colorado, New York, New Mexico, Rhode Island and Connecticut. On average, the blue states have 2 percentage points lower unemployment, which means millions of more jobless citizens. Their revenues have collapsed with businesses closed down. Why New Yorkers put up with walking disasters such as Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio, or why Californians tolerate Gov. Gavin Newsom, is their own business. The “progressives” in these states voted for higher taxes, more regulations, high energy prices and economic lockdowns. That’s democracy in action. Now the latest census data and U-Haul trailer rental data confirm that productive people are “voting with their feet” and accelerating their race to get out of town. The New York Post reports about 1,000 Northeasterners every day are relocating to Florida, Texas and Tennessee. The biggest population losers last year were deep-blue New York, Illinois and California. Now, Biden wants to give some $400 billion to the failed blue states, mainly from the prospering red states, the ones that wisely didn’t shut down their economies or schools. The blue states get a bigger slice of the pie, which is Robin Hood in reverse because blue states generally have a higher per capita income than red states. The supposedly high-brow, highly educated, culturally refined elites in Beverly Hills, California, and Long Island, New York — the very same “progressives” who have generally thumbed their nose at the working class “deplorables” in Middle America — have fallen so far that they now have to beg people in West Virginia, Arkansas and Mississippi for money. You’d think liberals would be ashamed, but spending other people’s money is what they do best. Every liberal Democrat in Congress, from Sen. Elizabeth Warren to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, will vote for the blue-state bailout. Do they understand that in doing so, they are verifying the collapse of the very blue-state liberal model they want to impose on all of America? Tags: Stephen Moore, The Blue States, Are Now, the Beggar StatesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Biden: No New Cold Wars or Democracy Crusades
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 08:44 PM PST Biden’s remarks also reveal the dichotomy that exists between what is on the minds of his countrymen, and what is on the minds of so many among our foreign policy elites. by Patrick Buchanan: “What is America’s mission?” is a question that has been debated since George Washington’s Farewell Address in 1797.At last week’s Munich Security Conference, President Joe Biden laid out his vision as to what is America’s mission. And the contrast with the mission enunciated by George W. Bush in his second inaugural could not have been more defining or dramatic.Here is Bush, Jan. 20, 2005:“From the day of our Founding, we have proclaimed that every man and woman on this earth has rights, and dignity, and matchless value, because they bear the image of the Maker of Heaven and earth… “Advancing these ideals is the mission that created our Nation… Now it is… the calling of our time.” “So it is the policy of the United States to seek and support the growth of democratic movements and institutions in every nation and culture, with the ultimate goal of ending tyranny in our world.” America’s mission is “ending tyranny in our world,” said Bush. Biden’s declared mission is far less ambitious. “We are in the midst of a fundamental debate about the future and direction of our world. We’re at an inflection point between those who argue that… autocracy is the best way forward… and those who understand that democracy is essential.” “Historians are going to… write about this moment as an inflection point… And I believe that — every ounce of my being — that democracy will and must prevail. We must demonstrate that democracies can still deliver for our people in this changed world. “That, in my view, is our galvanizing mission. “Democracy doesn’t happen by accident. We have to defend it, fight for it, strengthen it, renew it. We have to prove that our model isn’t a relic of our history.” So, we have to “demonstrate that democracies can still deliver for our people,” and prove that our democracy is not “a relic”? Nothing here about the worldwide triumph of freedom or “ending tyranny in our world.” Intending no disrespect, this is scarcely “galvanizing,” like, say, JFK’s inaugural: “Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and the success of liberty. “This much we pledge — and more.” In his Munich speech, Biden reassured Moscow and Beijing that the last thing we want is a new Cold War like the one that ended in America’s victory over communism, the Soviet Empire and the USSR. Said Biden: Our mission is “not about pitting East against West. It’s not about we want a conflict. We want a future where all nations are able to freely determine their own path without a threat of violence or coercion. We cannot and must not return to the… rigid blocs of the Cold War. Competition must not lock out cooperation on issues that affect us all.” Biden seems to be calling for “peaceful existence” between the democracies and the autocrats, and detente with both a Russia ruled by Vladimir Putin and a China ruled by Communist Party chair Xi Jinping. Truth be told, Biden’s words are more in tune with the country today than are JFK’s (which led straight to Vietnam), or Bush 43’s neocon reveries, which vanished in the sands of Iraq. Biden’s remarks also reveal the dichotomy that exists between what is on the minds of his countrymen, and what is on the minds of so many among our foreign policy elites. Our Beltway elites want to “stand up” to Putin for Crimea and for prosecuting dissident Alexei Navalny. They want to stand up to autocrat Alexander Lukashenko for his fraudulent reelection. They want to stand up to China for its crackdown on Hong Kong and barbarous treatment of the Uighurs. They want the U.S. to lead a global campaign to force the Burmese generals to surrender power, which they just seized from the civilian leadership. What are the American people, most of whom could probably not find Belarus or Burma on a map, most concerned about? The half a million Americans dead in the COVID-19 pandemic. That so many of the schools have failed to reopen and the kids are locked up at home. They know about the economic consequences of sheltering in place. They know about delays in the distribution of vaccines. They remember the long hot summer of riot and race hatred that followed the death of George Floyd. Everyone has an opinion on Donald Trump’s challenge of the election results, and the mob invasion of the Capitol is burned into the national consciousness. They are aware of the crisis on the Southern border now that Biden has put out the welcome mat. And everyone knows about the loss of heat, light, power and water in Texas from the worst winter storm in decades. About new crusades for democracy, Americans don’t care much. They do care, deeply, about what is happening to their own country. Tags: Patrick Buchanan, conservative, commentary, Biden, No New Cold Wars. Democracy CrusadesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Even NPR Admits Florida Is A Success And California A Failure
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 08:17 PM PST by The Committee to Unleash Prosperity: We almost fell out of our chair last week listening to an NPR report, which for months had vilified Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for his refusal to lock down the state, while lionizing California Gov. Gavin Newsom for issuing stay-at-home But Greg Allen, an NPR reporter in Miami, recently reported on DeSantis’ success: “Florida has had fewer cases per capita than California. It’s had more deaths per capita than California. Florida ranks 28th nationally versus California, which is 34th, But Florida has a significantly older population.” (As we have reported many times.) As for the Florida economy: “Unemployment’s below the national average. Consumer spending, judged by sales tax collections, is nearly back. Tourism is, of course, still way down. But there are signs that even that’s ready to rebound.” When NPR then turned to reporter Eric Westervelt in the San Francisco Bay Area, we heard this report the mecca of progressivism: “California went from being something of a national model to being something of a mess.” He continued: “In late fall, we saw this horrible surge that grew even worse after Thanksgiving. …. this sustained, horrible surge of infections, the worst in the nation, for many weeks after the second lockdown was ordered. And the fact is, California’s deaths per capita numbers, which, you know, officials have used throughout the pandemic to defend these very tough restrictions, are in many cases either the same or worse than many states that have been far less restrictive.” Congrats to NPR for getting the story right. Perhaps it’s been reading the Hotline! Tags: Issues & Insights, NPR Admits, Florida Is A Success,California A FailureTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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House Minority Whip, AFP President Team Up on COVID-19 Relief
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 08:03 PM PST by AFP: House Minority Whip Steve Scalise and Americans for Prosperity President Tim Phillips worked together on an op-ed in the Washington Post to make the case that “big vs. small” is the wrong way to think about coronavirus relief legislation. “This is a false choice, and we shouldn’t let platitudes about ‘going big’ mask the need for smart and effective policy,” according to Phillips and Scalise, who is also the senior Republican member of the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis. More than $1 trillion of the money already provided over the past year remains unspent. People are still hurting, and legislation should be moved quickly to address those needs. But the $1.9 trillion package backed by the president and congressional leaders is filled with wasteful partisan wish list funding that has nothing to do with the pandemic. Scalise and Phillips write: Instead, they call for a bill that zeroes in on defeating the virus, accelerating economic recovery, and increasing vaccine production and distribution. You can read the whole thing at WashingtonPost.com. Then, email your lawmaker to tell them to reject President Biden’s $1.9 trillion response proposal. Tags: AFP, House Minority Whip, AFP President, Team Up on, COVID-19 ReliefTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Daddy Knows Best
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 07:49 PM PST The Media is outraged with Senator Cruz Cancun Trip while they all but ignore The Cuomo Covid scandal.
Editorial Cartoon by AF “Tony” Branco Tags: AF Branco, Editorial Cartoon, Daddy Knows BestTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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The Minimum Wage – And Other Examples of Government Breaking the Laws of Economics
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 07:39 PM PST by Seton Motley: Government officials (mostly Democrat) spend a lot of time breaking the laws they impose upon We the Rubes. That is, when they are not outright exempting themselves from the laws they impose upon We the Rubes. Hey, at least their self-exemptions are brazenly honest. Then there are the laws that exist with or without government. Like the laws of nature. Like Sir Isaac Newton’s law of gravity – and his three laws of motion. Then there are the ten natural laws of economics: “3. Production has costs. “4. Value is subjective. “5. Productivity determines the wage rate. “6. Expenditure is income and costs. “7. Money is not wealth. “8. Labor does not create value.” “9. Profit is the entrepreneurial bonus. “10. All genuine laws of economics are logical laws.”And the attending economic law of supply-and-demand: “Sooner or later everyone sits down to a banquet of consequences.” — Robert Louis StevensonLet’s eat: Our federal government is $28 trillion in debt – and that tally is skyrocketing rapidly. Our federal government is $100+ trillion short on anti-laws-of-economics Social Security and Medicare – and that tally too is skyrocketing. And…. Do our government officials learn anything from their many, MANY mistakes? Heavens no. Democrats Reintroduce $15 Minimum Wage Bill with Unified Control of Congress, White House The minimum wage breaks several laws of economics. Let’s examine just one. There are two main ways to rectify government’s minimum wage economic-law-breaking: Fire people – and/or have people work less. Oh – and when you combine a minimum wage hike with open borders? The law of supply-and-demand gets CRUSHED. A wage – is the price employers are willing to pay to purchase labor. If you flood the market with additional open-borders-labor – it becomes a labor-buyer’s market. Which under the law of supply and demand – means wages will massively decrease. A $15 minimum wage killing two million jobs – combined with millions of additional minimum wage workers flooding the market? Congratulations – you have instantaneously added an additional tens of millions of people to your unemployable underclass. As we said, government officials break the laws of economics – ALL the time. But wait: The vast majority of us never get anywhere close to any existing data caps. What government will actually be doing my outlawing caps – is forcing all of us to pay more for our connections to subsidize the Data Hogs. And who are the biggest Data Hogs of all? “Should we force them to be neutral (thus the ‘neutrality’ part) and treat all traffic exactly the same? Or should they be allowed to speed up some traffic, slow down other, in order to prioritize certain services over others?… “(C)ertain services require very much more of that bandwidth than others, further, require a much higher level of service, and it would be economically efficient to charge for that greater volume and quality…. “(W)hy are the content giants all arguing for net neutrality? What’s their reasoning? Here we need a modicum of economics: profits flow to whoever controls the scarce resource. As long, that is, as those who control that scarce resource are able to vary their prices so as to monetize that scarce resource…. “Move forward to the time when bandwidth providers are able to discriminate between different traffic and its providers. If bandwidth were unlimited then, it being not a scarce resource, net neutrality would be the normal order of things. If we all had 100 gigabit cables into our homes then there would be no possible argument about whether that Netflix movie should arrive faster, or less interrupted, than the email. However, that’s not the world we are in, bandwidth is, to some extent at least, a scarce resource. “Thus, if those who own that bandwidth were able to price discriminate then they would: and this would mean some portion of the revenues of those services would move over from the content providers to the bandwidth providers.” “Some part of your Hulu or Netflix subscription would be paid to the internet providers, some part of Google’s YouTube advertising revenue would move from Google’s coffers to, say, Comcast’s . And quite clearly this is something that those content providers would prefer did not happen: thus the arguments in favor of net neutrality.”Net Neutrality is government mandating We the Rubes mass-subsidize – via higher Internet costs – the trillion-dollar-market-cap Big Tech Data Hogs. Because Net Neutrality is government mandating the trillion-dollar-market-cap Big Tech Data Hogs – be charged NOTHING for ALL the bandwidth they use. Which breaks several laws of economics. And many levels of sanity. Tags: Seton Motley, Less Government, The Minimum Wage, And Other Examples of, Government Breaking ,the Laws of EconomicsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Is the Biden Administration Stumbling Into War?
Posted: 24 Feb 2021 07:34 PM PST Nothing is more dangerous than stronger powers, even inadvertently, sending signals that are interpreted as weakness by weaker powers.
Victor Davis Hanson: What causes wars? Innately aggressive cultures and governments, megalomania, the desire for power, resources, and empire prompt nations to bully or attack others. Less rational Thucydidean motives such as fear and honor and perceptions of self-interest are not to be discounted either. But what allows these preemptive or aggressive agendas to reify, take shape, and leave tens of thousands dead? The less culpable target (and wars are rarely a matter of 50/50 culpability) also has a say in what causes wars. The invaded and assaulted sometimes overlooked or contextualized serial and mounting aggression. They displayed real military weakness or simple political ineptness that eroded deterrence. They failed to make defensive alliances with stronger nations or slashed defense investments that made the use of deterrent force impossible. In sum, without deterrence and the clear potential in extremis to do an aggressor damage, there can be no meaningful peace negotiations, no “conflict resolution”—unless one believes a Hitler, Stalin, Mao, or Kim Il-sung can become a reasonable interlocutor across the peace table. Weakness as Strength, Strength as Weakness One catalyst for war is a lack of transparency about the relative strengths and will of potential enemies. If, even unwittingly, President Biden projects the image that the Pentagon is more concerned about ferreting out wayward internal enemies than in seeking unity by deterring aggressors, then belligerents such as China, North Korea, and Iran and others will likely—even if falsely and unwisely—wager that the United States will not or cannot react to provocations, as it has done in the past. And accordingly, they will be emboldened to provoke their neighbors with less worry about consequences. Hitler invaded the Soviet Union in 1941 on the false assumption that Stalin had been too busy purging his military elite, starving his own people, or executing both rivals and friends. He certainly did all that and more. Yet despite Soviet cannibalism, nonetheless, Hitler was apparently unaware that the chaotic Russians could still field an army twice the size of his own. Stalin’s tanks and artillery were just as or more deadly than Hitler’s—and soon far more numerous than the assets of Blitzkrieg. A spirited, defiant, and, yes, united populace was determined to protect Mother Russia from the invader. The British Empire and America were far more potent allies than Hitler’s Mussolini and Tojo. So wars are deterred when all the potential players know the relative strengths of each and the relative willingness to use such power in defense of a nation’s interests. Lack of such knowledge leads to dangerous misjudgments. And war then becomes a grotesque foreordained laboratory experiment to confirm what should have been known in advance. Wars begin when aggressive powers believe that their targets are weaker, or give the false impression that they are weaker, or at least stay inert in the face of provocation. What were Argentina’s generals or Saddam Hussein thinking when they provoked the United Kingdom or the United States during the Falkland War and First Gulf War? No doubt, they assumed that their more powerful targets were too busy elsewhere, played out, or insufficiently concerned to react. In aggregate, a lot of damage and death followed in those two respective brief wars of 1982 and 1991—and all to prove what should have been obvious. Perhaps Buenos Aires had one too many times read of British parliamentarians referencing the “Malvinas” rather than the Falkland Islands. Or Saddam remembered too well the United States Ambassador to Iraq naïvely voicing uninterest in 1990 “border” disputes between quarrelling Arab neighbors—perhaps in the manner of Dean Acheson’s controversial speech in January 1950 to the effect that South Korea was probably not inside the U.S. defensive orbit abroad and thus made a previously hesitant Stalin, Mao, and Kim Il-sung a little less hesitant. Both Argentina and Iraq wrongly equated diplomatic naiveté and laxity with military unreadiness and weakness and paid the price in inglorious defeat. The truth is that for the immediate future, the U.S. economy and military remain the strongest in the world. Provoking America is an especially unwise act, given the repercussions that could follow. What reassures our allies is not talk of new bipartisanship, internationalism, and tolerance, but quiet coupled with overwhelming power and a clear message to use it in defense of our interests. Some German and Japanese military grandees pointed out to the Hitler and Tojo regimes that it was insanity to de facto prompt a potential alliance between the British Empire, the United States, and the USSR, given their enemies’ aggregate populations, collective GDP, global reach, and military potential if mobilized. But too many in the deluded Nazi and Japanese militaries instead judged British appeasement in the mid-1930s, American isolationism during the 1930s, and Russian collaboration from 1939 to 1941 as proof of weakness and timidity. Nothing is more dangerous than stronger powers, even inadvertently, sending signals that are interpreted as weakness by weaker powers. Biden should not assume that Trump’s gratuitous rough talk abroad was as dangerous as loud laxity. His predecessor never committed the felony of suggesting to a weaker Iran or China that their aggression would be contextualized or ignored. And his unpredictability more likely bothered Beijing than the predictable acquiescence and reassurance of the Obama years. Peace For Our Time If proper attitudes, goodwill, and eagerness for negotiations on the part of democracies could ensure peace, then the 20th century could have skipped the over 150 million killed in conflicts, and the League of Nations and United Nations would now be deified for eliminating deadly wars. The story of intifadas and Middle East wars is often the aftermath of unrealistic new peace efforts to bridge differences that could not be bridged without the perceived humiliation of one or both parties. Thinking an enemy will give concessions that it simply will not or cannot only inflames an aggressor. The story of intifadas and Middle East wars is often the aftermath of unrealistic new peace efforts to bridge differences that could not be bridged without the perceived humiliation of one or both parties. Thinking an enemy will give concessions that it simply will not or cannot only inflames an aggressor. Neville Chamberlain’s felony was not just going to Munich with the intention of rewarding German aggression or believing he could trust a thug, but also returning waving a piece of paper with grand boasts of “peace for our time” that deluded his own countrymen. When the idiocy of Munich soon sorely woke up the formerly ecstatic British public and perhaps enraged the German people who felt Hitler’s enemy already earlier acquiesced to German dreams, both nations concluded that if a sure peace treaty had failed, then what was left but war? The so-called comprehensive Peace of Nicias (421 B.C.) was supposed to ensure not just peace to end the first decade of the Peloponnesian War, but a grand 50-year peace and a de facto alliance of Sparta and Athens to resume their partnered leadership of the Greek world. But after the prior five invasions of Attica, the plague, the chronic revolts of Athenian allies, the savagery at Plataea, Mytilene, and Torone, a mere modest armistice would have been a greater achievement. Instead, within months, both sides were scheming to use third parties to harm their respective “ally.” And the massacre at Melos, the disaster at Sicily, and a near-decade of brutal naval war in the Aegean lay ahead. Once grand, comprehensive, all-inclusive peace deals fail, both sides can see no alternative but war. “Comprehensive” peace talks often can be more dangerous than modest agreements to channel hatred in some way other than shooting. Biden should keep an eye on Iran and China, and avoid the fantasies of some wide-ranging settlement that will be neither thorough nor a settlement. We’re All Glad He’s Gone Barack Obama made a career about reassuring the world that George W. Bush and his preemptive wars were reckless and not to be repeated. He earned the murderous ISIS “Jayvee” caliphate as his reward along with misadventures with Syria and in Libya. If we wondered why Putin turned so ambitiously aggressive, it might have been that the foundations of Obama-Clinton reset were based on a false conclusion that Bush’s modest pushback against Russian aggression was too provocative and would be mitigated in a way that green-lighted Putin. When a government loudly and boastfully expresses a new reset, a new paradigm, a new arrogance about solving problems, it risks blaming its own country rather than the foreign belligerent, and thereby can only encourage adventurism. Joe Biden has billed his foreign policy team as a return of the “bipartisan” and “internationalist” breakthrough pros—in rebuke of his predecessor, in the manner that Trump himself sometimes publicly trashed Obama’s foreign policy, rather than just silently resetting and changing it. In all these cases, foreign powers, friendly and hostile, infer not just that U.S. foreign policy is mercurial, but that they can calibrate and massage it to find either assistance or exploit a weakness, that otherwise would be difficult or unwise. After all, if Biden sounds like he hates Trump more than the Iranians, why then would not the Iranians believe he is the enemy of their enemy and now a friend to be used? When a president tells the world that his predecessor did not vaccinate one American, and then enters office weeks after he and 17 million other Americans were already vaccinated, what is the world—and especially American enemies— to think? That irrational hatred of Trump and his policies is a way to win an exemption for their own behavior? If Biden promises to return to the Iran Deal to create peace in the Middle East, to bring back the Palestinians to the center of negotiations to “find a comprehensive peace” with Israel, he will not merely stumble, but fail after claiming he did everything right in failing. Despite the animus toward Trump, nothing is broken abroad. NATO is better funded, better armed, and more fairly contributory to the shared cause. In the Middle East, pro-Western Arab and Muslim nations are now aligned with the United States to contain Iran and its appendages like the Assads in Syria, Lebanese Hezbollah, and West Bank Hamas. Iran, the font of anti-Westernism and anti-Americanism in the Middle East has not merely been sanctioned and isolated, but broken and decimated by the pandemic and crashing oil prices. The reason that China despised the Trump Administration was not, as it claimed, xenophobia, racism, or China-bashing, but rather because Trump called out and exposed its decades of aggression, subversion, and its planned trajectory to global hegemony. When the Biden team talks of reentering the Iran Deal without the Trump baggage, or wants a new relationship with China, they may well instead be interpreted by our enemies as rejecting deterrence, forgetting why the Trump Administration held those two countries to account, and inviting them again to take risks they otherwise might not be willing to take. Our enemies may not see Biden just as elderly and frail, his congressional majorities thin, his animus directed more at the Trump movement than others abroad, but as unlikely to respond to their own aggression. Biden would do better to apprise quietly his friends and enemies of America’s force and determination. He should resist comprehensive deals with China and Iran that have unrealistic chances of success given their agendas. And he could claim Trump’s successes as his own and continue their current trajectories, rather than court favor abroad by distancing himself from a largely successful foreign policy guided by Secretary of State Pompeo. Otherwise, the alternatives will become increasingly dangerous. Tags: Victor Davis Hanson, Is the Biden Administration, Stumbling Into War?To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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43.) REDSTATE
One Week on, Some Hints Have Emerged About the Future of Rush Limbaugh’s Show
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
February 24, 2021
Good morning, NBC News readers.
We are changing the look of the Morning Rundown a little to make it more streamlined, but hopefully give you the same punchy take on everything you need to know as you start your day. As always, please send along your comments and let us know what you think.
Now to today’s news, with the Biden administration set to make a bold move to show there is a new sheriff in town when it comes to U.S.-Saudi relations.
Here’s the latest on that and everything else we’re watching this Thursday morning.
U.S. to release intel report that points finger squarely at Saudi crown prince for Khashoggi killing The Biden administration will release an intelligence report Thursday that concludes that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman approved the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, three U.S. officials familiar with the matter tell NBC News’ Andrea Mitchell and Ken Dilanian.
The intelligence assessment, based largely on work by the CIA, is not new. But its public release will mark a significant new chapter in U.S.-Saudi Arabia relations and a clear break by President Joe Biden with former President Donald Trump’s policy of equivocating about the Saudi state’s role in the brutal murder.
Khashoggi, 59, was a Saudi citizen working as a Washington Post columnist when he was lured to the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in October 2018, and killed by a team of intelligence operatives with close ties to the crown prince. His body was dismembered in part with a bone saw, American officials have said, and the remains have never been found.
During the 2020 election campaign, Biden promised to make the Saudis “pay the price“ for human rights abuses.
So far, Biden has ended American support for Saudi Arabia’s war in Yemen, but he has not moved to cut off military aid to the important Middle East ally and counterterrorism partner.
“The president’s intention, as is the intention of this government, is to recalibrate our engagement with Saudi Arabia,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Wednesday.
Thursday’s top stories California is first state to pass 50,000 Covid deaths By Phil Helsel and Colin Sheeley | Read more The most populous state in the nation is the first to reach the bleak milestone, surpassing New York and Texas.
‘Partisan by design’: Proposal for 9/11-style commission to probe Capitol attack mired in politics By Leigh Ann Caldwell |Read more Republicans object to the makeup and scope of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s proposed commission, while Democrats say they are open to changes.
Former Cuomo adviser says governor ‘kissed me on the lips’ By Dareh Gregorian | Read more A former aide to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo says he subjected her to “pervasive harassment” and inappropriate comments when she worked for him.
OPINION How to fight the far-right and Covid at the same time By Sen. Sherrod Brown | Read more The best chance for our democracy lies not with the vain hope that Republican leaders will grow spines, but with Democrats’ ability to show Americans that they do not have to settle, the senior U.S. senator from Ohio writes.
BETTER By Stephanie Mansour | Read more Jumping right out of bed and into the chaos of your life can be jarring. Ease into the day with these simple movements.
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Also in the news …
One fun thing Doorbell camera videos usually go viral for showing packages being stolen or critters running amok.
But a front porch video from Florida last week has been widely shared for capturing the heartwarming moment when a good Samaritan returned a lost wallet.
The owner of the wallet, Debra Crosby, was incredibly touched that a complete stranger would go out of his way to help her.
“I have three sons of my own, and I would hope that they do the exact same thing,” she said.
Here are the best snow boots to consider this winter, including highly-rated snow shoes and winter boots boasting some fashion sense.
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49.) NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Trump was once a CPAC pariah. Now he’s the confab’s king
Just five years ago, Donald Trump pulled out of speaking at the annual CPAC confab.
That decision came during the throes of the 2016 GOP nominating contest, when fellow Republicans were questioning Trump’s conservative credentials and when there was talk about a possible walk-out to protest Trump’s scheduled speech.
“Very disappointed @realDonaldTrump has decided at the last minute to drop out of #CPAC — his choice sends a clear message to conservatives,” CPAC tweeted at the time.
AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster
Now? Not only is Trump the featured Sunday speaker at this year’s upcoming CPAC conference in Orlando – coming after his defeat, after the GOP lost the Senate and after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol – he’s reshaped CPAC and the conservative movement in his image.
Look at the lineup of speakers at this year’s CPAC: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Sen. Ted Cruz, Sen. Josh Hawley, Rep. Mo Brooks (who spoke at that Trump rally on Jan. 6), Rep. Matt Gaetz, Rep. Devin Nunes, Rep. Lauren Boebert, Rep. Ronny Jackson (who was Trump’s presidential doctor), former Ambassador Ric Grenell and South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem.
Compare that with the CPAC lineup from 2013 – the last time the gathering took place after a GOP presidential loss: While you had Cruz and Trump, there also was Pat Toomey (who voted guilty in Trump’s impeachment trial), Paul Ryan, Mitt Romney, Bobby Jindal, Eric Cantor and Jeb Bush.
Eight years ago, ALL of those Republicans were considered prominent conservatives.
But in early 2021, conservatism has become synonymous with loyalty to Trump.
That’s the message that CPAC is sending five years after that 2016 gathering.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: No, the civil war hasn’t been cancelled
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Report concludes Saudi crown prince behind Khashoggi killing
The Biden administration will release an intelligence report Thursday that concludes that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman approved the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, three U.S. officials familiar with the matter said,” per NBC’s Andrea Mitchell and Ken Dilanian.
More: “The intelligence assessment, based largely on work by the CIA, is not new — NBC News was among the organizations that confirmed it in 2018. But its public release will mark a significant new chapter in the U.S.-Saudi relationship and a clear break by President Joe Biden with former President Donald Trump’s policy of equivocating about the Saudi state’s role in a brutal murder that was widely condemned by members of Congress, journalists and a U.N. investigator.”
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It’s been a rough few weeks for Andrew Cuomo
First came the controversy/scandal over how New York state counted its Covid nursing home deaths.
Now come a different damaging story for New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo: “A former aide to Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo published a lengthy essay on Wednesday morning accusing the governor of sexual harassment and outlining several unsettling episodes, including an unsolicited kiss in his Manhattan office,” the New York Times writes.
Can Cuomo, who’s up for a possible fourth term as governor next year, survive this moment?
What about the New York Democratic Party, especially with a NYC mayoral race this year?
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Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
65: The number of days until the May 1 special election in TX-6
59 percent: The share of Americans who say that say K-12 schools not currently conducting lessons in-person should “wait to reopen until all teachers who want the coronavirus vaccine have received it,” per a new Pew survey
5.6 percent: The number of American adults who now identify as LGBTQ, according to a new Gallup poll.
105: The number of migrant children who had been separated from their families whose parents have been found by a team of lawyers working on reunification
80 percent: The decrease in new Covid cases in nursing homes since the vaccine rollout began
28,438,049: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 80,199 more than yesterday morning.)
508,171: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 3,300 more than yesterday morning.)
54,118: The number of people currently hospitalized with coronavirus in the United States.
348 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
66,464,947: Number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
20,607,261: People fully vaccinated in the U.S.
63: The number of days left for Biden to reach his 100-day vaccination goal.
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Manchin clears Haaland’s path to confirmation
President Biden’s Interior secretary nominee, Deb Haaland, is on the path to Senate confirmation after Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., announced he’d support her nomination.
“With respect to Representative Haaland and her confirmation hearing, while we do not agree on every issue, she reaffirmed her strong commitment to bipartisanship, addressing the diverse needs of our country and maintaining our nation’s energy independence,” Manchin said on Wednesday.
Manchin signaled earlier this week that he wasn’t sure if he’d support Haaland because of her critical statements against developing federal lands for fossil fuels.
But the White House isn’t giving up on the other Cabinet nomination Manchin has opposed – OMB Director nominee Neera Tanden. Manchin announced last week that he wouldn’t support Tanden’s nomination, and several Republicans followed suit. White House press secretary Jen Psaki has consistently stated that Tanden is the only nominee for OMB that Biden is considering at this time.
Biden’s chief of staff, Ron Klain, made clear on Wednesday night that Tanden is getting into the executive branch one way or another.
“If Neera Tanden is not confirmed, she will not become the Budget Director. We will find some other place for her to serve the administration that doesn’t require Senate confirmation,” Klain said on MSNBC.
Today, the Senate is set to vote and confirm Energy secretary nominee Jennifer Granholm.
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SHAMELESS PLUG
NBC News’ Lester Holt will speak with Pfizer Chairman & CEO Albert Bourla in an exclusive interview airing tonight on NBC Nightly News. Tune in!
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Don’t miss the new effort to impeach the attorney general of South Dakota after charges that he lied about a fatal crash.
Chuck Grassley is punting until the fall on his reelection decision.
Florida Rep. Stephanie Murphy says she’s seriously considering a bid to unseat Marco Rubio.
Activists say they see a pattern with Biden’s nominees: The ones facing the most heat are people of color.
Biden has picked three people to serve on the USPS board of governors as fights over the postmaster continue.
The Biden administration is facing a squeeze on immigration issues.
The U.S. is set to release an intelligence report that will conclude that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman approved the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
Facebook is banning the Myanmar military from its platforms.
The sister of DC mayor Muriel Bowser has died from Covid.
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Download the NBC News Mobile App
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50.) CBS
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51.) REASON
52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
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53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Honestly, I forgot The Simpsons was even on. I grew up with it since … MORE
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54.) TOWNHALL
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
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56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
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57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
60.) TWITCHY
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61.) HOT AIR
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Thursday, Feb. 25, and the US is close to having its third available COVID-19 vaccine—and this one only requires one shot. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWJohnson & JohnsonA single-shot vaccine from pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson is safe for use and effective at preventing COVID-19, the US Food and Drug Administration concluded yesterday. The results come ahead of an advisory panel meeting tomorrow to decide whether to recommend emergency use authorization. If approved, the drug would become the third available vaccine in the US. Previous data showed the vaccine to be 72% effective at preventing moderate and severe cases (85% effective when considering just severe cases) of the disease in US trials. Most notably, no deaths were reported in a group of more than 44,000 participants. The vaccine also appears largely effective against the most prominent variants. The vaccine relies on an engineered adenovirus—a weakened form of a relatively harmless virus—to carry snippets of genetic code resembling the coronavirus into cells. Once in, the body’s immune system develops a response capable of fighting full-fledged COVID-19 infections. See a great visual breakdown here. The company has said it can deliver up to 20 million doses, which can be stored at standard refrigeration temperatures, by the end of March and 100 million doses by July. The US has reported a total of 505,890 COVID-19 deaths, up roughly 3,230 from yesterday. More than 45 million people have received at least one vaccine dose as of this morning. Cuomo Allegations Lindsey Boylan, an ex-aide to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D), accused her former boss yesterday of multiple instances of sexual harassment ranging over a period of almost three years. The allegations include a 2017 incident in which Boylan says Cuomo suggested playing strip poker aboard a flight, and a separate 2018 incident in which Cuomo kissed her without warning as she tried to leave his office following a one-on-one briefing. Boylan, who initially made the charges in December on Twitter but provided no further detail, laid out the accusations in a Medium post yesterday. Included in the post are emails from Cuomo’s senior staff that corroborate parts of Boylan’s story. Cuomo’s office called the claims false, and the governor previously denied the initial December allegations. The accusations come as Cuomo faces fallout for allegedly obscuring the number of COVID-19 nursing home deaths early in the pandemic. Landmark Syrian ConvictionA German court convicted a former Syrian intelligence officer to more than four years in prison for aiding crimes against humanity in a landmark ruling yesterday. Eyad al-Gharib, 44, was accused of involvement in the arresting of at least 30 anti-government protesters during the 2011 Arab Spring uprising, who were then subject to torture. Gharib fled Syria’s civil war and applied for asylum in Germany, claiming to have defected from President Bashar al-Assad’s government. In 2019, he was arrested along with another former officer, Anwar Raslan, under the principle of universal jurisdiction and went on trial in April 2020. The conviction marks the first time a foreign court has ruled on state-sponsored abuses by the Assad regime. Human-rights activists say at least 100,000 people have died from torture or harsh conditions since the conflict began almost 10 years ago. WHAT’S AN OPO?What do you get when you cross an investment opportunity typically reserved for private equity firms (investing in private companies) with one reserved for the ultrawealthy (real estate)? An OPO (Online Public Offering) in Caliber, of course. Think of it as funding a rapidly growing company, which in turn taps into the immense value of the American real estate market. Founded in 2008 by three young entrepreneurs who believed everyone deserves a better alternative to the stock market, Caliber has made the Inc. 5000 Fastest-Growing Companies in America list for seven consecutive years since 2014, thanks to their impressive real estate portfolio. And today, they’re asking 1440 readers, “want in?” Caliber’s OPO is now live, giving you the opportunity to own shares in their business and tap into potential future growth. Learn more about this investment opportunity today, and get in before the round closes tomorrow. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & Culture> Officials determine Tiger Woods’ car crash was an accident; Woods was not drinking and no criminal charges will be filed (More) | Here’s how surgeons describe Tiger’s challenging recovery ahead (More) > “Mission: Impossible 7,” “A Quiet Place Part II” among marquee films to be released on new streamer Paramount Plus 45 days after theatrical release (More) > Bruce Springsteen’s drunk and reckless driving charges stemming from November arrest are dropped; Springsteen pleaded guilty to drinking alcohol in a federal park (More) Science & Technology> MIT Technology Review releases its annual forecast of breakthrough technologies for 2021; notable mentions include mRNA vaccines, AI-powered GPT-3 language generator, and the TikTok recommendation algorithms (More) > Study finds exercise facilitates the generation of immune cells in bone marrow (More) > US Air Force demonstrates its Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile, hitting a target at a distance of 4,200 miles (More) Business & Markets> US stock markets up (S&P 500 +1.1%, Dow +1.4%, Nasdaq +1.0%); Dow closes at fresh record high after Fed Chairman Jerome Powell reiterates continued support of US economy (More) | Video game retailer GameStop surges 104%, other “meme stocks” also pop (More) > More than 150 CEOs from some of America’s leading companies urge Congress to pass $1.9T stimulus package (More) | House likely to vote tomorrow on Biden administration’s $1.9T stimulus package (More) > Joby Aviation—maker of electric, vertical takeoff aircraft—to go public via SPAC at $6.6B valuation (More) Politics & World Affairs> Senate committee delays vote on Neera Tanden’s nomination as budget office director; Tanden, the current head of the think tank Center for American Progress, has caught backlash over past tweets (More) > Australia passes scaled-back version of law requiring certain internet companies to pay per link for news articles shared by users on their platforms (More) > Four members of Texas’ electric utility board retire in wake of winter storms that paralyzed much of the state’s power grid last week (More) | What’s behind the $15K energy bills in Texas? (More) IN-DEPTHClown PrincesNYT | Dave Itzkoff. Legendary comedians Eddie Murphy and Arsenio Hall discuss what it was like to reunite for “Coming 2 America,” the upcoming sequel to their 1988 classic. (Read, $$) The Declassified Story of Juanita MoodySmithsonian | David Wolman. Despite a three-decade, award-winning career as an intelligence officer, Juanita Moody’s pivotal role in guiding the US through the Cuban Missile Crisis remained almost entirely unknown for years. (Read) A HIGH-CALIBER INVESTMENTIn partnership with Caliber Caliber’s 12-year track record is nothing to scoff at: 26% compounded annual growth rate since 2017; cash flow positive; seven consecutive features by Inc. 5000 Fastest-Growing Companies in America. All thanks to their investment in real estate, an asset class largely accessible only to the ultrawealthy. And Caliber’s Online Public Offering is now live for 1440 readers. Check out this opportunity today; there’s one day left to invest! Please support our sponsors! ETCETERAThe state of Black America in 1900—in historical charts. The secret NASA code on Perseverance’s parachute has been cracked. One animation captures two centuries of health and wealth. Witness the rare yellow king penguin. From our partners: This single tool has everything you need to build, host, and market your website or online store. Get started for free. #Ad LGBT identification in America rises to 5.6%. Ready to travel? Here are America’s 25 best beaches. Sicily’s Mount Etna won’t stop erupting. (w/photos) Finally, it’s your chance to name a Minnesota snowplow. Clickbait: You won’t believe what Chicago ranks No. 1 in. Historybook: Hiram Revels becomes first African American in US Congress (1870); Beatles guitarist George Harrison born (1943); Muhammad Ali, then known as Cassius Clay, defeats Sonny Liston to win his first world heavyweight title (1964); HBD actress Téa Leoni (1966); RIP playwright and poet Tennessee Williams (1983). “He who is not courageous enough to take risks will accomplish nothing in life.” – Muhammad Ali 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
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64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
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65.) POLITICAL WIRE
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66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
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67.) ZEROHEDGE
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68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
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69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
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70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
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71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
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72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
The real beneficiaries aren’t who she claims they are.
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73.) POPULIST PRESS
🚨TRUMP WAR🚨 7940 Front Beach Rd, Panama City Beach, FL 32407 |
74.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
BlackListed News Updates |
- Entire Federal Reserve Payment System CRASHES
- Censorship Gone Bonkers – ‘Be A Good Citizen!’
- Facebook Algorithm Accuses 81-Year-Old Grandmother of “Hate Speech” Over Knitted Pigs Comment
- We’ve temporarily limited some of your account features
- African governments are crushing opposition using Israeli spyware
- Google’s Eric Schmidt & The Artificial Intelligence Military-Industrial Complex
- Biden’s HHS Pick Rachel Levine Advocates Sex Changes For Children
- The U.S. Air Force Just Admitted The F-35 Stealth Fighter Has Failed
- Following Lawsuit, CDC Removes Claim “Vaccines Do Not Cause Autism” from its Website
- Biden Commits To Forever War On Afghanistan
- 10 Examples of Kickbacks & Waste in New ‘COVID’ Bill Showing It’s Not About COVID at All
- Arizona’s $24-Million Prison Management Software Is Keeping People Locked Up Past The End Of Their Sentences
- Saudi Arabia Sued By Families Of Pensacola Terror Attack Victims
- Traffic Noise Is a Silent Killer
Entire Federal Reserve Payment System CRASHES
Posted: 23 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST The United States Federal Reserve wire systems went down completely at around around 11:15 a.m ET, making it impossible for banks and other financial institutions to transfer money. |
Censorship Gone Bonkers – ‘Be A Good Citizen!’
Posted: 23 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST Yesterday the censorship department at Twitter went bonkers. |
Facebook Algorithm Accuses 81-Year-Old Grandmother of “Hate Speech” Over Knitted Pigs Comment
Posted: 23 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST Facebook’s algorithm flagged an 81-year-old grandmother’s comments about knitted pigs as an example of “hate speech” and threatened her with a permanent ban. |
We’ve temporarily limited some of your account features
Posted: 23 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST These days, this is not much of an event but… it finally happened to us here at Blacklisted News. We have been put in Twitter time out for being a bad user. We may be back, but it’s not trending in a good direction at the moment. |
African governments are crushing opposition using Israeli spyware
Posted: 23 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST As internet penetration and smartphone usage increases across Africa, digital spaces have become increasingly important for organising political uprisings and opposition movements. In response, several of the continent’s regimes have shut down the internet or blocked social media apps. To sidestep the economic costs and global criticism that these online shutdowns incur, governments have turned to digital surveillance technology as a shrewder way to crush all opposition. |
Google’s Eric Schmidt & The Artificial Intelligence Military-Industrial Complex
Posted: 23 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST The simple fact that the AI Commission is led by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt should trouble those who care for privacy, accountability, transparency, and individual liberty. |
Biden’s HHS Pick Rachel Levine Advocates Sex Changes For Children
Posted: 23 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST Joe Biden’s pick for Assistant Secretary of Health at the Department of Health and Human Services, Rachel Levine, is an advocate of sex changes for kids and the drugging of children with puberty blockers. |
The U.S. Air Force Just Admitted The F-35 Stealth Fighter Has Failed
Posted: 23 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST The U.S. Air Force’s top officer wants the service to develop an affordable, lightweight fighter to replace hundreds of Cold War-vintage F-16s and complement a small fleet of sophisticated—but costly and unreliable—stealth fighters. |
Following Lawsuit, CDC Removes Claim “Vaccines Do Not Cause Autism” from its Website
Posted: 23 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is facing a lawsuit from the Informed Consent Action Network (ICAN). Del Bigtree, the founder of ICAN has decided to urge the federal agency to remove the statement on its website claiming vaccination never causes autism in children. |
Biden Commits To Forever War On Afghanistan
Posted: 23 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST The forever war on Afghanistan will continue. |
10 Examples of Kickbacks & Waste in New ‘COVID’ Bill Showing It’s Not About COVID at All
Posted: 23 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST esident Biden has proposed $1.9 trillion in additional COVID-19 spending. He’s asking Congress to authorize another round of checks, more expanded unemployment benefits, a $15 minimum wage, and much, much more. Over the weekend, House Democrats finally released the text of the 600-page bill meant to make Biden’s broad COVID proposals a legislative reality. |
Arizona’s $24-Million Prison Management Software Is Keeping People Locked Up Past The End Of Their Sentences
Posted: 23 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST The Arizona Department of Corrections is depriving inmates of freedom they’ve earned. Its $24 million tracking software isn’t doing what it’s supposed to when it comes to calculating time served credits. That’s according to whistleblowers who’ve been ignored by the DOC and have taken their complaints to the press. Here’s Jimmy Jenkins of KJZZ, who was given access to documents showing the bug has been well-documented and remains unfixed, more than a year after it was discovered. |
Saudi Arabia Sued By Families Of Pensacola Terror Attack Victims
Posted: 23 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST Saudi Arabia is once again facing a major lawsuit in the US filed by the families of victims killed in a terror attack perpetrated by a Saudi citizen. |
Traffic Noise Is a Silent Killer
Posted: 23 Feb 2021 09:00 PM PST As researchers probe the physiology underlying noise’s cardiovascular consequences, they’re zeroing in on a culprit: dramatic changes to the endothelium, the inner lining of arteries and blood vessels. This lining can go from a healthy state to one that’s “activated,” and inflamed, with potentially serious ramifications. |
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76.) THE DAILY DOT
Welcome to the Thursday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect the most viral IRL stories. Today:
- ‘OnlyFans Mom’ says other parents got her kids thrown out of school
- Viral Tiktok shows woman shutting down man who uses racist slur ‘because I can’
- Self-care: I’m reading again
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BREAK THE INTERNET
‘OnlyFans Mom’ says other parents got her kids thrown out of school
A 44-year-old mother of three claims other parents bullied her at her children’s school because of her popular OnlyFans account. With her husband’s support, the “OnlyFans Mom” is defiant—but her three children were expelled from their Catholic school this week.
Northern California mom Crystal Jackson is known as “Mrs. Poindexter” on the OnlyFans platform. She claims her account pulls in roughly $150,000 a month by selling access to suggestive photos and videos, all captured by her husband. However, parents at her children’s former school weren’t pleased with her actions.
Per a New York Post report, Jackson said a group of naysaying parents pitched a “campaign to get her three kids kicked out of the school when her account was discovered last summer.”
“Some women from my area actually printed out pictures I posted on my OnlyFans and mailed them to the principal of my children’s school,” she said. “We were called a load of names; apparently it was ‘disturbing, disgusting, horrifying’ and ‘my children should be kicked out!'”
Jackson told KOVR on Tuesday that after initial news reports about her OnlyFans account, Sacred Heart Parish School expelled her three children.
An email sent Jackson and her husband reportedly said, “Your apparent quest for high profile controversy in support of your adult website is in direct conflict with what we hope to impart to our students.”
Contributing Writer
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SPONSORED
Does it drive you nuts to see so many people not wearing masks in public?
Want to do something to help slow the spread of COVID-19 but don’t know where to start? The MaskUp Project is a nonprofit initiative with a mission: educate the masses on masks and get them in the hands of those in need. There’s nothing more empowering than truly understanding the science behind why masks protect us and others.
If you’d like to join our cause or encourage your business or organization to match, take the #MaskUp pledge and make a donation to further the cause. The more masks we can get out into the world, the sooner we can all go back to work, share meals together, and watch our children hug their grandparents. But to get there, we have to take a stand—and we need your help.
RACE
Viral Tiktok shows woman shutting down man who uses racist slur ‘because I can’
A viral TikTok shows a woman confronting a man for using racist slurs, peppering him with questions until he admits he only used the racist language “because I can.”
The video, uploaded to Instagram and TikTok this week by Shannon Thurston (@mind_body_voice), begins after the unidentified man has already used offensive language.
Thurston, with her camera pointed at her face, offers the man advice: “Hey man, I heard your conversation, and you may want to have an outwardly racist conversation in a more private place.”
When the man responds confusedly, Thurston offers clarity: “I heard you say the N-word multiple times, and that’s just not cool, dude.”
After some back-and-forth, Thurston hits him with a question for which he has no answer: “So I’m curious, what names have white people been called as they’ve been hauled up trees and lynched?”
In a second TikTok, Thurston repeatedly asks the man why he needs to use the N-word. He dodges the question, instead calling Thurston “ignorant” multiple times and growing increasingly flustered. Finally, he admits the flimsy reason for using his racist language: “Because I can.”
By Bryan Rolli
Contributing Editor
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Curling up with a good read
I’m reading books again.
I was an avid reader as a kid, spending my allowance more often at Borders than Forever 21. I spent hours curled in bed with books, often staying up way past my bedtime to read the next chapter.
As I grew up, the energy I used to spend reading fun was spent on studying, on blogs, on my work as an editor. I definitely don’t discount news as reading—but I missed the world of books, especially fiction, that once propelled me to such homeostasis.
Plenty could be said about why reading habits declined as mediums changed, or why people picked up books again in quarantine. But my personal reading journey is not unique or even interesting; it’s simply fueled by my virtual book club, a library card, and my newly curated GoodReads shelf.
Though I love talking about books with my friends, it’s mostly a solitary pleasure—just like I like it.
By Kris Seavers
IRL Editor
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
79.) POLITICHICKS