Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday March 2, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
March 2 2021
Good morning from Washington, where President Biden is pushing new restrictions on gun ownership. Amy Swearer targets some big problems. A California pastor has a passionate message for the governor about getting back to worship. Blayne Clegg-Swan has the story. The podcast welcomes back Sen. Mike Lee, who discusses his fight for parental rights and legislation to cut social media giants down to size. Plus: a radical change at HHS; turning sexual orientation into foreign policy; and a growing log of voter fraud. On this date in 1807, Congress passes legislation prohibiting importation of slaves “into any port or place” within U.S. jurisdiction “from any foreign kingdom, place, or country.”
“Neither Gov. Newsom nor any other state representative has the authority to dictate what is … ‘essential’ to Christian worship. That prerogative belongs to Christ,” says Rev. Steve Meister.
California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, nominated as U.S. Health and Human Services secretary, vowed to make sure pro-life centers use lobby walls to promote abortion.
President Biden issues an executive order on “Advancing the Human Rights of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, and Intersex Persons Around the World.”
Michigan resident Paul Parana pleaded guilty to impersonating someone else to vote in the 2020 election. Parana filled out and signed an absentee ballot on behalf of his daughter.
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“People ignore the fact that social problems are caused by unleashing the evil side of man. As they create more and more laws, ignoring the crux of the matter, a vicious cycle is formed, and society begins its step-by-step march toward totalitarianism.”
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3.) DAYBREAK
Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
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Biden Calls for “Independent Review” of Cuomo Sexual Harassment Claims
Something this Fox News story points out “Tara Reade never got” (Fox News). There is now a third woman on the list (Fox News). The dogpile continues as Nancy Pelosi called the claims “credible” (NY Post). Suddenly CNN’s Chris Cuomo says he won’t cover news of his brother (Twitter). From Meghan McCain: So you interviewed your brother a thousand times with giant q-tips joking about his sex life during covid but now that he’s an accused predator, it’s a conflict? Give me an absolute break. Hypocrites. This is ground zero of why the American public doesn’t trust ANY of the media (Twitter). Back in June Chris Cuomo called his brother “the Luv Guv” (Twitter). From Byron York: Why is it that Chris Cuomo cannot cover his brother the governor now, when he could cover his brother the governor last year at a time when some in media were pretending the governor was doing a good job handling the pandemic? (Twitter).
2.
DHS Secretary Claims No Crisis at Border
From The Federalist: President Joe Biden’s Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas told reporters in a Monday press briefing that there is not a crisis at the border, despite the hundreds of illegal and unaccompanied migrant children flooding into the United States from Central America (The Federalist). From Fox News: Mayorkas claimed that under the previous administration, “no planning had been done to protect frontline personnel of U.S. Customs and Border Protection” among others, including “individuals coming to our border. It takes time to build out of the depths of cruelty that the administration before us established” (Fox News). Even fellow Democrats are starting to worry about the administration’s immigration policy (RedState).
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3.
Leftists Push Harris to Use Her Power to Pass $15 Minimum Wage
They refuse to give this one up. From Townhall.com: Twenty-three progressives on Monday sent a letter to President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris demanding that Harris use her power to force the $15 minimum wage increase to stay in the latest pork-filled COVID relief bill. Senate Parliamentarian previously ruled that including the minimum wage increase violated the budget reconciliation process. House progressives, however, believe Harris can overrule the decision. They cited prior precedent that where two former vice presidents ignored the Senate Parliamentarian rulings.
Or stimulus, for that matter. From Senator Mitch McConnell: Only 1% of the Democrats’ partisan bill goes to vaccines. Less than 9% to the entire health effort. It backs the Big Labor myth that schools can’t reopen safely right now — yet only a small fraction of its K-12 money would go out this year. Liberal ideology, not families’ needs (Twitter). From National Review: President Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief clunker is full of items with perverse incentives (long-term unemployment top-offs and blue-state pension-fund bailouts) and others that are just obviously injurious (a federal minimum-wage hike which the Congressional Budget Office says would cost 1.4 million jobs). But nothing quite compares to its “Emergency Federal Employee Leave Fund” for the righteous indignation it should arouse in most Americans. The provision sets aside money for a leave program that would allow any federal worker not working for the military to take up to 15 weeks of paid leave and collect up to $21,000 ($1,400 a week) between whenever the bill is passed and September 30, 2021, if the pandemic has had certain deleterious effects on their lives (National Review). From Byron York: Democratic COVID bill would kill Clinton-era welfare reform. Should be a big deal, but nobody seems to care. These days $120 billion just doesn’t seem big enough to worry about, apparently… (Twitter).
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6.
Berkeley Teachers’ Union Boss Puts Own Kids in Private School
All while keeping public schools closed (PJ Media). From Daily Wire: A GOP House Representative slammed a California teacher union president for taking his daughter to in-person preschool while advocating for public schools to remain closed. Rep. Bob Good from Virginia said, “This is a typical Democrat mentality of ‘rules for thee, but not for me.’ The rules don’t apply to them,” Good said. “Not everybody has the option [the teacher union leader] has. Not everybody has the ability, the wherewithal, the financial ability to put their kids in private schools, so it’s really disappointing to see those in power making rules for the masses and then they find a way that it doesn’t apply to them” (Daily Wire).
7.
Bethany Christian Services Now Agrees to Provide Children to Gay Couples
The story notes “the 77-year-old organization, which is the largest Protestant adoption and foster agency in the United States. Bethany facilitated 3,406 foster placements and 1,123 adoptions in 2019, and has offices in 32 states. (The organization also works in refugee placement, and offers other services related to child and family welfare.) Previously, openly gay prospective foster and adoptive parents in most states were referred to other agencies.”
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The Legislative Session is here, and Florida Influencers believe that come April 30, Gov. Ron DeSantis will be the big winner.
Florida Politics asked the state’s top consultants, lobbyists and political minds who stands to have the best Legislative Session and 43% picked the Governor. His believers include more than half of Republican Influencers, with just 27% of Democrats saying he’s their early favorite.
For the minority party, that honor goes to Senate President Wilton Simpson, albeit by a narrow margin. Three in 10 Democrats say he’ll be the clear winner when the hankie drops. More than half of independents believe the same while just 21% of Republicans agree.
Still, his 28% odds are double that of his counterpart, House Speaker Chris Sprowls.
Florida Influencers say Ron DeSantis and (to a lesser degree) Chris Sprowls are likely winners in the 2021 Legislative Session.
About one in seven Influencers predict he’ll have the most triumphant Session. At 27%, his support was strongest among NPAs. Republicans followed at 16% and Democrats brought up the rear at 3%.
The astute reader will notice the numbers don’t add up to 100% — that’s because some Influencers think none of the three GOP elected will be the outright winner at the end of next month.
Some think the Triumvirate will share success equally, while others chose to write in another option. They ranged from the nihilistic (no one) to the humorous (Governor’s Club Lounge).
The only write-in to draw more than a single vote was “The Three Horsemen.” We assume this is another name for DeSantis, Simpson and Sprowls. If not, it appears a small contingent of Influencers envision an apocalyptic end to Session.
While Influencers weren’t asked to predict the arrival of The Three Horsemen, they were asked an equally unscientific question — will Session end on time?
It’s normally a coin flip, but Influencers say the coin is weighted heavily toward “Yes” this year — 87% forecast a punctual Sine Die despite a couple of overtimes in recent years. Party affiliation had little impact, with 87% of Democrats and the same number of Republicans casting a yea vote.
Situational awareness
—@JamesHamblin: It’s honestly beyond my wildest expectations that we’d have three extremely effective vaccines a year into the pandemic.
—@ERicKlinenberg: Extraordinary. The Trumps got vaccinated in January, in the White House, but did it privately, away from cameras and out of view, missing their last best chance to promote public health among their followers.
—@FiveThirtyEight: With some exceptions (Germany, though even they have a slow vaccine rollout), the EU’s pandemic handling has been worse than the US’s on balance.
—@RepTedDeutch: Today marks 1 year since 1st confirmed COVID-19 case in FL. Now 2 million positive, 30,852 dead, 79,384 hospitalized. Gov DeSantis downplayed the threat, muddled public health messaging, twisted the facts, and put politics above public health. We deserved better.
—@SteveScalise: Now Dems want Congress to investigate @GovRonDeSantis— who handled the pandemic and vaccine distribution better than any blue state governor. THIS is their focus? Not investigating Cuomo’s handling of nursing homes or vaccine distribution? What a joke.
—@SteveLemongello: Every last pod in a senior community has gotten a news conference and photo op from DeSantis. But the order allowing those under 65 with serious conditions to get vaccines was quietly posted on a Friday night, and not emailed.
—@JaredEMoskowitz: Happy to be vaccinating teachers and law enforcement and firefighters next. They have been on the front lines since day 1
—@AnnaForFlorida: We should absolutely modernize the unemployment system AND implement accountability measures, update the weekly benefit amount & increase weeks available to reflect national averages.
Tweet, tweet:
—@CHeathWFTV: Lego, like the rest of us, chooses to pretend the current Capitol doesn’t exist.
—@AngieNixon: I’m soliciting prayers, good vibes, good thoughts, etc. Tomorrow I embark on Florida’s Legislative Session. 60 whole days in Tallahassee where we will be for working-class families.
—@BrandonM_FL: In an alternate universe, I’m waiting in a long line for finger food talking with someone about how stressful Session will be and then casually and semi awkwardly waving at someone across AIF’s courtyard. Ah I miss that
—@SunSentinelKeith: I didn’t watch the Golden Globes or the Trump CPAC speech, and … I don’t really feel as if I missed anything.
Days until
Florida TaxWatch 2021 State of the Taxpayer virtual event — 2; ‘Coming 2 America’ premieres on Amazon Prime — 3; the NBA All-Star Game — 5; municipal elections in Broward and south Palm Beach County — 7; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres — 10; 2021 Grammys — 12; Zack Snyder’s ‘Justice League’ premieres on HBO Max — 16; ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ premieres — 24; 2021 Florida Virtual Hemp Conference — 24; 2021 Florida Derby — 25; MLB Opening Day — 30; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 31; RNC spring donor summit — 38; ‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 66; Florida Chamber Safety Council’s inaugural Southeastern Leadership Conference on Safety, Health and Sustainability — 69; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 122; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 131; MLB All-Star Game in Atlanta — 133; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 143; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 151; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 175; ‘A Quiet Place Part II’ rescheduled premiere — 199; ‘Dune’ premieres — 213; MLB regular season ends — 215; World Series Game 1 — 238; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 245; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 248; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 283; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 290; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 388; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 430; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 584.
Dateline Tallahassee
“Ron DeSantis joins GOP Governors, says $16 billion in federal relief to Florida is unfair” via Mary Ellen Klas and Alex Daugherty of the Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald — The $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package pending before the U.S. Senate would give Florida state and local governments $16 billion in one-time aid, more than enough to wipe out the state’s $2 billion shortfall, but DeSantis on Monday said the funding formula is unfair to Florida because it is tied to unemployment. “You shouldn’t be penalizing states for doing a good job, which is exactly what this bill does,” DeSantis said, adding his voice to a chorus of GOP officials opposed to Joe Biden’s first legislative initiative. “Instead of using the share of the population, they are using the number of unemployed in the state, which means states like Florida that have lower unemployment are getting penalized.”
Ron DeSantis says $16 billion from the feds is ‘punishment’ for doing a good job. Image via Colin Hackley.
“DeSantis and Florida GOP target China after CPAC” via Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO — DeSantis and top GOP lawmakers unveiled legislation on Monday to create new guidelines for universities, state agencies and even local governments working with foreign governments like China as part of a push to thwart the theft of intellectual property. DeSantis’ move to back policies aimed at China is part of a broader pattern of endorsing legislation sparked by conservatives and Trump that plays well with the base. The Republican Governor, seen as a potential 2024 contender for President, has also called on legislators to crack down on tech companies, revamp the state’s election laws and approve a contentious bill to increase criminal penalties against violent protesters.
“Chris Sprowls: Tough choices ahead to close state budget gap” via Steve Newborn of WUSF Public Media — Closing a budget gap that’s around $2.7 billion could eat up a lot of time in Tallahassee when the annual Legislative Session begins Tuesday. During a visit to the University of South Florida’s St. Petersburg campus, Sprowls says lawmakers will have to separate pet projects from legislation that is urgently needed. “You have so many priorities, and so I think it’s most important that we take the most vulnerable, that we protect them, that we protect the most vulnerable parts of our community,” he said, “which we’re doing in things like the environment, like we’re doing in COVID-19 liability to make sure that businesses reopen and engage in commerce.”
“Lauren Book focusing on Florida students during 2021 Session” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Sen. Book is backing a series of bills aiming to update state law in several areas affecting Florida’s school-aged children. Book is looking at a potential statewide run in 2022. She’ll enter the 2021 Session with outsized influence for a Democrat, as she was one of just a handful of Democrats to earn a committee chair spot under Senate President Simpson’s tenure. Book will lead the Children, Families, and Elder Affairs Committee. Perhaps it’s no surprise then that children are at the top of Book’s priorities this Session. She’s backing a measure seeking to add feminine hygiene products to public school bathrooms. The “Learning with Dignity Act,” would require those products be made available at no cost of students.
“With time running out, Jeff Brandes’ legislative agenda is as aggressive as ever” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Sen. Brandes is entering his second to last Legislative Session this year with a bold agenda and one that comes with plenty of controversy. Brandes has long-established himself as a libertarian-minded Republican, with a long track record of pursuing criminal justice reform that often puts him at odds with members of his own party. This year, Brandes has added some more controversial proposals to his agenda, including a bill that would allow businesses to pay certain employees less than the state-mandated minimum wage. The joint resolution drew immediate controversy.
Jeff Brandes gets (even more) aggressive. Image via Colin Hackley.
“House set to target social media companies” via Jim Saunders of News Service of Florida — In a politically charged issue that has become a rallying cry for DeSantis and many other Republicans, a House committee Tuesday will take up a proposal that targets large social-media companies that block users from their platforms. The bill (PCB COM 21-01), which will go before the House Commerce Committee, stems in part from decisions by Twitter and Facebook to block Trump from their platforms in January. DeSantis and Republican legislative leaders last month announced they would set new requirements for social-media companies, including clearing the way for lawsuits and financial penalties against platforms that violate the requirements.
“Critics fired up over proposed pot caps” via Dara Kam of News Service of Florida — The bills, filed by Rep. Spencer Roach and Sen. Ray Rodrigues, would place a 10% THC cap on smokable marijuana and limit THC levels to 16% in other medical-marijuana products, excluding edibles. They would also impose advertising restrictions on doctors who order cannabis for their patients. Medical marijuana advocates fiercely criticized the bills (HB 1455 and SB 1958). Roach’s proposal “continues to encroach on the practice of medicine between a physician and their patients using outdated, random and scientifically unsubstantiated information,” Apollo Beach physician Sasha Noe said adding that the proposed THC caps “are unnecessary and not scientifically based and only serve to create more barriers.”
“Lawmakers will decide Florida Retirement System’s fate during Legislative Session” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — The Legislature this Session will mull whether to reconstruct the Florida Retirement System under a new Republican proposal. Republican Sen. Ray Rodrigues‘ bill would require new government employees to enroll in an investment-style plan rather than the FRS. Rodrigues’ proposal, in part, seeks to ensure the pension’s long-term stability by barring future enrollment. The proposal comes as Florida faces $36 billion in unfunded actuarial liabilities, according to a Senate staff analysis. Unfunded actuarial liabilities are a measure used to determine if the state will have enough funds to satisfy future needs.
Tally 2
“Christine Hunschofsky’s first Session will be a busy one” via Florida Politics staff reports — As Rep. Hunschofsky enters her first Legislative Session, she notes that her time serving Parkland as a City Commissioner and subsequently its Vice Mayor and Mayor taught her the importance of being singularly focused on serving constituents. Presently, the constituents of Hunschofsky’s HD 96 are telling her their biggest concerns center on the ramifications of the COVID-19 pandemic. “Our big challenge this year is going to be the budget,” she said. Additionally, Hunschofsky is focused on bills relating to the environment, gun safety, bicyclist and pedestrian safety, mental illness, law enforcement and background checks on athletic coaches.
Christine Hunschofsky is hitting 2021 running. Image via AP.
“Manny Diaz bill would set up stand-alone fund for emergency cash from feds” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Sen. Diaz filed legislation (SB 1892) setting up a new money pot to manage federal reimbursement cash for state emergencies. The Emergency Preparedness and Response Fund would be created under the Governor’s office, giving the Governor more access to those funds during an emergency. “What this is doing is really creating a fund the Governor can use during the state of emergency, and then those moneys are reimbursed,” Diaz told Florida Politics. “It makes it easier for the Governor, it makes it easier for them to keep track when moneys have been used or the reimbursement has come back. It gives us good transparency on what the cost of the emergency is and what funds are being reimbursed.”
“House bill targeting COVID-19 vaccine fraudsters flies through final committee” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — House legislation that would crack down on COVID-19 vaccine fraudsters passed through its final committee Monday afternoon. Pasco County Rep. Ardian Zika filed the proposal, which Sprowls named priority legislation. The legislation’s final committee, the Senate Judiciary Committee, approved the bill unanimously, mirroring the votes of its prior two committees. The bill heads next to the House floor. The bill would stiffen penalties against fake websites and fraudulent COVID-19 ploys. In many instances, swindlers offer vaccine access in exchange for money. It also would prohibit the dissemination of false or misleading vaccine or PPE information with intent to defraud.
“Bipartisan bills call for $100 million annual Florida Forever funding floor” via John Haughey of The Center Square — Companion bills sponsored by a Senate Democrat and a House Republican seek to mandate the Legislature annually dedicate at least $100 million to Florida Forever, the state’s environmentally sensitive land acquisition trust fund. Senate Bill 1510, sponsored by Sen. Linda Stewart, an Orlando Democrat, and House Bill 1211, sponsored by Rep. Thad Altman, an Indialantic Republican, were both filed Feb. 22. Neither has been assigned committees. “It is time the Legislature honors the will of Floridians and establishes recurring funds for the purpose of conservation,” Stewart said. “While Florida continues to grow, we must be mindful of the need to preserve the state’s environment for the well-being and enjoyment of future generations.”
“Lawmakers aim to clean up waterways through PACE modernization” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Several massive environmental proposals are up for consideration in the 2021 Legislative Session. DeSantis is again asking lawmakers for $625 million for water quality projects and he’s also pitching a new bonding program that would help local governments address sea-level rise. Sprowls last week unveiled legislation that would put $100 million a year into flood mitigation and give tax breaks to homeowners who elevate their property. And Senate President Simpson is backing a measure that would refocus Everglades restoration efforts on northern water storage rather than the southern reservoir projects preferred by his predecessors.
“Lawmakers mull police, drone relationship” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Drones may become a regular tool in law enforcement’s toolbox under a new proposal by Republican Sen. Tom Wright. Florida state law permits police to use drones under limited circumstances. According to statute, use is restricted to search warrants, prisoner escapes and “imminent loss of life” situations. Wright’s proposal, however, would expand usage. The measure, SB 44, would broaden police powers to include traffic management and evidence collection. Fire departments could also utilize drones to survey fire, flood and natural disaster damage under the proposal. Proponents contend drones are safer, faster and more efficient than manned helicopters.
Tom Wright wants a closer relationship between drones and police. Image via Colin Hackley.
Not this again — “Alimony revamps filed in Senate, House” via The News Service of Florida — Proposals to revamp the state’s alimony laws have reemerged for the 2021 Legislative Session. Sen. Joe Gruters and Rep. Anthony Rodriguez filed bills (SB 1922 and HB 1559) that would include eliminating the award of what is known as “permanent” alimony. Lawmakers have repeatedly considered alimony overhauls in recent years, with proposals dying during the 2020 Session. Former Gov. Rick Scott twice vetoed alimony proposals. In his second veto in 2016, Scott blamed an even more-contentious child custody component included in that year’s version of the bill. In 2013, Scott vetoed a different version, objecting that alimony changes could have applied retroactively.
“With several booze bills on draft, front-runners emerge for 2021 Session” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Lawmakers have prepared a jungle juice cocktail of bills re-imagining Florida’s beverage laws, including proposals allowing customers to order drinks to go. The Department of Business and Professional Regulation cleared restaurants and bars to sell drinks to-go and for delivery in March, shortly after businesses began closing their doors. However, that green light only lasts through the end of Florida’s COVID-19 state of emergency. But some lawmakers on both sides of the aisle see the current policy as a positive trial run for permanent legislation. DeSantis even threw his support behind the idea in September. Sen. Jennifer Bradley and Rep. Josie Tomkow‘s bills allowing cocktails-to-go have already both cleared their first panels unanimously.
Assignment editors — Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried will hold an informal media availability following the Governor’s annual State of the State remarks, right after DeSantis’ speech, outside the House Chamber.
Nikki Fried will have something to say about the State of the State. Image via Colin Hackley.
‘Everyday Floridians’ to respond to DeSantis State of the State address — A group of “everyday Floridians” with Progress Florida, Florida Watch, and various lawmakers from around the state are releasing a “people’s response” to DeSantis’s State of the State address, which opens the 2021 Legislative Session. The video introduces agenda items to take on the state’s health and economic crises with an eye toward building a Florida “for the people,” and not just “campaign donors, lobbyists, and special interests.” The video premieres at noon on
Cap reax
TechFreedom calls ‘Big Tech’ legislation a ‘brazen assault’ on free speech — TechFreedom, a think tank that designs tech policy frameworks, says DeSantis’ “Big Tech” bills run counter to Republican constitutional principles. Corbin Barthold of TechFreedom’s Internet Policy Counsel said while the privacy bill is “pretty standard,” the Transparency in Technology package “is extreme.” … It’s a brazen assault on the First Amendment. DeSantis wants to compel websites to speak. He can’t. He wants those sites to be subject to campaign-finance law. They aren’t. He wants consumer-protection law to erase free-speech rights. It won’t. DeSantis is attacking the very constitutional principles Republicans just spent four years putting conservatives on the courts to protect,” he said.
Ron DeSantis’ move against Big Tech is a ‘brazen’ attack on the First Amendment, says TechFreedom’s Corbin Barthold.
“Environmental Defense Fund focused on resiliency, electric cars” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — For all the progress with investing in water quality projects in Florida, ongoing threats to the environment remain. The state, for example, remains third in the nation in carbon emissions, with some counties producing more pollution than others. “It makes sense one of the most at-risk should be taking the lead on this issue,” said Dawn Shirreffs, Florida director of the Environmental Defend Fund. “We don’t just have to adapt to climate change. It’s not all about preparing for sea level rise.” The EDF, a player in national environmental policy since 1967, this year will turn its eye on Florida during the Legislative Session.
FEA urges lawmakers to ‘focus on what matters’ this Session — On the eve of the 2021 Legislative Session, the state’s largest teacher union urged the Governor and Legislature to shelve partisanship and advance policies that will help students, teachers and public schools. “This is not a normal year, and it’s certainly not the time to abandon or lessen our commitments to students,” said Andrew Spar, president of the Florida Education Association. “The pandemic made it abundantly clear that our classrooms are the best places for kids to learn. It demonstrated that public schools are essential to their communities and to the state’s economy. After a year of incredible disruption and stress, we need to lift up and support public schools. Lawmakers must continue to invest in our students, teachers and all school employees. Public schools need the resources to help kids get past this pandemic and succeed.”
Florida Association of Counties blasts ports proposal — Florida Association of Counties President Melissa McKinlay slammed a seaport regulation bill (SB 426/HB 267) over a provision that would supersede any local ordinances that “limit commerce” at seaports. “This potential legislation should be a concern for every county surrounding our state’s 15 seaports. If our ports cannot make decisions locally about the size of vessels and type of cargo allowed to enter their area, then our ports cannot protect the economic and environmental interests of their communities,” McKinlay said. The House bill is set to go before the Tourism, Infrastructure & Energy Subcommittee on Wednesday. The Senate bill is awaiting a hearing in the Transportation committee.
Leg. sked
Assignment editors — Sen. Randolph Bracy to host a media conference on an update on legislation changing the minimum age of arrest after six-year-old Kaia Rolle was arrested at school by Orlando police officers for what was described as a “tantrum.” The event begins 4 p.m., outside of Senate Chamber.
The Senate convenes for the 2021 Legislative Session, 9:30 a.m., Senate chamber.
The House convenes for the 2021 Legislative Session, 10 a.m., House chamber.
Gov. DeSantis will give the State of the State, the traditional opening of the 60-day legislative Session, 11 a.m., House chamber.
The House Finance & Facilities Subcommittee meets to consider HB 701, from Rep. Cyndi Stevenson, to establish a system to track complaints about insurance coverage for behavioral health, 1 p.m., Reed Hall, House Office Building.
The House Government Operations Subcommittee meets to consider HB 327, from Rep. Bob Rommel, to create a public-records exemption for people receiving shelter or assistance from agencies during emergencies., 1 p.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building.
The House PreK-12 Appropriations Subcommittee meets consider HB 3, from Rep. Dana Trabulsy, in part to create a program to deliver free books to elementary-school students identified as struggling readers, 1 p.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
The House Regulatory Reform Subcommittee meets to consider HB 735, from Rep. Joe Harding, to preempt occupational licensing by local governments, 1 p.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
Senate President Simpson will hold a media availability, 1 p.m., Room 401, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Commerce and Tourism Committee meets to consider SB 72, from Sen. Brandes, to provide COVID-19 legal protections to businesses, 1:30 p.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Environment and Natural Resources Committee meets to consider SB 94, from Sen. Jason Brodeur, to move forward with water storage north of Lake Okeechobee, 1:30 p.m., Room 37, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Judiciary Committee and the House Health & Human Services Committee meets to consider SB 582 and HB 241, from Sen.Rodrigues and Rep. Erin Grall, to detail a series of parental rights on issues such as education and health care., Senate committee meets 1:30 p.m., Room 412, Knott Building. House committee meets 4 p.m., Room 212, Knott Building.
House Speaker Sprowls holds a media availability., 3:15 p.m., Room 333.
The Senate Children, Families and Elder Affairs Committee meets to consider SB 626, from Sen. Randolph Bracy, to prevent children under the age of 7 from being arrested, 4 p.m., Room 37, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Criminal Justice Committee meets to consider SB 980, from Sen. Keith Perry, to increase criminal penalties those who assault public transit workers., 4 p.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Education Committee meets to consider SB 886, from Sen. Perry Thurston, to study the effects of COVID-19 on schools and students, 4 p.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The House Commerce Committee meets to consider PCB COM 21-01 to make changes to crack down on technology companies, including barring social-media companies from blocking political candidates, 4 p.m., Morris Hall, House Office Building.
The House Pandemics & Public Emergencies Committee meets to consider HB 7005, from Rep. Colleen Burton, to shield health care providers from coronavirus-related lawsuits., 4 p.m., Room 404. House Office Building.
Lobby regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Virgil Batcher, Cotney Construction Lobbying: Florida RACCA
Laura Boehmer, David Browning, Clark Smith, Monte Stevens, Sheela VanHoose, The Southern Group: Certification Partners, Connecting Everyone with Second Chances, Glasswrx US, Marine Resources Development Foundation
Christopher Carmody, GrayRobinson, Boy Scouts of America Greater Tampa Bay Area Council
Charles Cluburn, New Capitol IT: salesforce.com
Mark Flanagan, Strategic Policy Partners: Citrus County Hospital Board
Nicole Kelly, The Southern Group: Connecting Everyone with Second Chances
Lori Killinger, Kasey Lewis, Martin Lyon, Lewis Longman & Walker: HCA Healthcare
Paul Lowell, Converge Government Affairs of Florida: Zillow Group
James Spratt, CAS Governmental Services: City of Bartow, City of Belle Glade, City of Moore Haven, City of Okeechobee, City of Wauchula, Florida Federation of Fairs, Glades County Board of Commissioners, Hardee County Board of County Commissioners, Okeechobee County Board of County Commissioners, Town of Pembroke Park
The Legislative Session has arrived, and that means Ron Pierce is turning on his pedometer.
The CEO of RSA Consulting announced last month that he would walk 556 miles over the next 60 days aims to raise money for Southeastern Guide Dogs, a charitable organization that provides service dogs for visually impaired individuals, veterans, and children who suffered a loss of a parent in the military.
RSA is calling it the “Steps for Session Challenge.”
Session is here, so Ron Pierce straps on his walking shoes.
The rules are simple: He walks the equivalent of a Tampa-to-Tally round trip. You open your checkbook (or type in your card number, really).
The event was inspired by his love of animals and Sammi, the puppy Pierce recently adopted and named the “Chief Treat Officer” at his firm — she comes to the office daily and delivers a daily dose of “aww” via her own Twitter account, @RSAPup.
“Florida officials seek to replace jobless benefits system” via Bobby Caina Calvan of The Associated Press — The Department of Economic Opportunity, which oversees the state’s unemployment system, is asking lawmakers for $73 million over the next two years to modernize the unemployment system that left hundreds of thousands of jobless Floridians without unemployment checks for weeks and sometimes months. DEO launched a review of the system and presented it Monday to the legislative select committee on pandemic preparedness and response. The report makes clear that the system was neither prepared nor responsive at a time of crisis, when some 1.3 million Floridians, at the peak of unemployment in April, tried to access benefits through online portals that continually crashed or phone systems that only added to frustrations.
“Teachers union poll finds educators enormously unhappy with DeSantis” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Teachers aren’t giving Gov. DeSantis high marks this year. A new poll from the Florida Education Association of its membership finds disappointment in the state’s priorities — and in how they personally have been treated amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The Clearview Research poll found 76% of teachers in Florida disapprove of his job performance, and just 21% approve. That net -45 rating marks a dramatic shift from two years ago, when the then-newly inaugurated Governor had a 40% approve, 30% disapprove rating among FEA members. Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran also has a net -36 percentage point approval rating, with 17% giving a favorable mark and 67% grading him unfavorably.
“Ron DeSantis appoints three to Enterprise Florida’s Board of Directors” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis made three appointments Monday to the Enterprise Florida Board of Directors. DeSantis reappointed Sonya Deen Hartley while making new appointments for Scott Ross and Cody Khan. Deen Hartley, of Tallahassee, is vice president of government relations for JM Family Enterprises. Previously, she was a senior director with Diageo. The EFI board of directors has 59 voting members from across the public and private sectors. The Governor, who is also a board member, is responsible for appointing six members.
Appointed — John Weatherford to the Tampa Hillsborough Expressway Authority Board of Directors, Dr. Paul Hsu, Lewis Bear, Jr. and Robert Jones to the University of West Florida Board of Trustees and Craig Mateer to the Greater Orlando Aviation Authority.
“Impact Florida helps close student achievement gaps, drive fair education” via Peter Schorsch of Floria Politics — As the arduous work of a COVID-19-infused Session begins, the Legislature is looking for ways to support education without breaking the already-squeezed. There’s one organization, just celebrating its second anniversary, that’s making a quiet impact to drive progress for our schools and achievement for all students, without the Legislature having to budget a penny for it. Impact Florida, headed by veteran educator Mandy Clark, is cultivating real, meaningful change by sharing best practices at the district level. The organization uses a “Districts for Impact” initiative to identify what’s working in one school district and sharing it with other districts around the state.
Just off embargo
DeSantis has the advantage over two of his potential rivals in 2022, new polling shows.
A Mason-Dixon poll showed DeSantis, a Republican, would hold a 51%-42% edge over Agriculture Commissioner Fried, the lone Democrat holding statewide office in Florida.
His lead grows to double digits if Democratic U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist, a former Governor, is his Election Day challenger. The incumbent would win that matchup 52% to 41%.
Charlie Crist does not fare well in a hypothetical matchup with incumbent Ron DeSantis.
The poll was conducted Feb. 24-25 via live telephone interview. It has a sample size of 625 registered Florida voters. The margin of error is plus or minus 4 percentage points.
Though regional samples were smaller, they show DeSantis ahead in every corner of the state except South Florida, where both Democrats lead by more than 20 points.
Fried and Crist hold a sizable lead among Black voters and a narrow one among Hispanics, but DeSantis appears to have White voters locked down. Against Crist, DeSantis wins the demo 63%-31%. The gap would only tighten by two points if Fried were the nominee.
Neither Fried nor Crist have formally launched a campaign for Governor, though both have been making moves they are considering a run.
Meanwhile, the polling indicates DeSantis would have the upper hand no matter who wins the nomination — his job approval rating registered at plus-11, with 53% behind him and 42% disapproving.
2022
First on #FlaPol — “Adam Brandon launches bid to succeed Clay Yarborough in HD 12” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — A Rogers Towers lawyer, recently returned from a tour of duty serving at Guantánamo Bay as a legal team commander in the Navy Reserve, is turning from fighting terrorism to fighting for conservative values. On Monday, Brandon launched his bid for the state House. He hopes to replace Rep. Yarborough in HD 12, as Yarborough sets his sights on an open Senate seat. Before formally launching, Brandon told Florida Politics earlier this year what his campaign might look like. Brandon, should he be elected, would be the second Rogers Towers firm member to represent Jacksonville, joining Rep. Wyman Duggan of HD 15.
For your radar
The LIBRE Initiative-Florida announced Monday that it has hired Daniel Martinez as its Florida coalitions director.
In his new role, Martinez will work with LIBRE activists, volunteers and staff members across the state to advance the organization’s priorities.
Martinez comes to LIBRE with 10 years of professional experience working in state government, political campaigning, grassroots coalition building and most recently as a legislative aide to Hialeah Republican Sen. Manny Diaz Jr.
Former Senate staffer Daniel Martinez is moving to the LIBRE Institute.
The LIBRE Initiative is an interest group aimed at building support for libertarian views on limited government, property rights, school choice and the economy within Hispanic communities. It is backed by Americans for Prosperity, part of the Koch family network.
“As the son of Cuban immigrants who fled to this country seeking opportunity and liberty, Daniel understands how important it is to break down barriers that are preventing people — including Florida’s Latino community — from living out their version of the American dream. I am excited to see how Daniel will help LIBRE expand its footprint in the Sunshine State,” LIBRE Initiative executive director David Velazquez said.
AFP-FL state director Skylar Zander added, “I couldn’t be happier to welcome Daniel to the Florida team. Over the years, Daniel and I have worked on issues of mutual importance and have seen Daniel’s enthusiasm, energy and passion to help expand opportunity and freedom for all. I am confident that Daniel will bring this same passion in his new role as coalitions director.”
Corona Florida
“Florida reports 1,700 new coronavirus cases, a steep decline one year after first case reported” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of The South Florida Sun-Sentinel — As vaccination continues in Florida, the state reported a steep decline in new COVID-19 cases Monday. Florida reported 1,700 new coronavirus cases on Monday and another 147 new resident deaths linked to COVID-19. The state has now reported 1,910,921 cases since the pandemic began. The seven-day average for new cases has been declining since Jan. 8 when it hit 17,991 new cases in a single day. Monday tends to be a day that fewer new cases are reported. However, the first day of March seems to have brought the lowest number of new cases since before the summer peak.
“Florida’s COVID-19 vaccine plan for people under 65 creates confusion” via David Fleshler and Cindy Krischer Goodman of The South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Vaccines for COVID-19 just became available to a lot more people in Florida, creating confusion as doctors, pharmacies and health officials try to figure out what it will take to get a shot. Publix said Monday no documentation would be required for vaccination under Friday’s executive order by DeSantis that extended eligibility to anyone under 65, provided their doctor determined they were “extremely vulnerable” to the disease.
When lowering the age for vaccines, Ron DeSantis creates confusion about the new rules. Image via Colin Hackley.
“Walgreens soon will be the next to offer vaccine in Florida” via Lisa J. Huriash of The South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Walgreens soon will be the next pharmacy chain to begin offering the COVID-19 vaccine in Florida, joining a growing list of companies that have expanded the distribution of doses, the federal government confirmed Monday. Walgreens hasn’t yet said which stores or counties will have the vaccine, and a spokesperson for Walgreens did not respond to emails and phone calls that requested more details. But “Walgreens has been added in Florida,” said Katherina Grusich, a spokeswoman for the CDC. Walgreens’ vaccine participation in Florida “may depend on when vaccine is ordered and delivered, and pharmacy partners are still placing orders for this week,” Grusich said.
“‘Pathetic failure of leadership’: DeSantis blasts Joe Biden’s school reopening plan” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — . DeSantis made a rare direct attack against Biden, accusing the President of a “pathetic failure of leadership” on reopening schools. During an interview airing Sunday with Mark Levin on Fox News, the Governor said the evidence is clear that in-person education hasn’t caused COVID-19 outbreaks. Democrats, including Biden, are listening more to teachers’ unions than the science, DeSantis leveled. “This is just purely being subservient to a special interest, and Biden has been one of the worst in it, because when he says, ‘My goal is to get 50% of the schools in person in 100 days,’ we’ve already had that,” DeSantis said.
“As Governor cherry-picked data, the pandemic took a toll on Florida sunshine laws” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — For months, Thomas Hladish, a research scientist at the University of Florida’s Emerging Pathogens Institute, asked the Florida Department of Health to let him use information from thousands of contact tracers the state had hired to interview Floridians who tested positive for COVID-19. He and his colleagues wanted to better understand where transmission was occurring in Florida so officials could put more effective policies in place. But Hladish, who was on FDOH’s payroll for part of last year building statistical forecasting models about the disease, was stonewalled. He was then told not to even acknowledge the state had a set of data that showed when and where people tested negative for COVID-19 in Florida.
“Nikki Fried wants Vanessa Baugh gone” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Nikki Fried, in a letter to DeSantis, asked him to take action against Manatee County Commissioner Vanessa Baugh days after the commission declined to strip her of her board chair position. That came after emails revealed Baugh asked to be put on a VIP list to receive a COVID-19 vaccine. DeSantis has, in the past, removed both Democrats and Republicans from office. But the Baugh scandal has been closely tied to criticism of DeSantis himself. Fried simultaneously called for an investigation by Congress into how Florida has distributed its federal allotments of vaccines. She wrote a letter to the chair of the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis asking for scrutiny of alleged political corruption, particularly at the Lakewood Ranch event.
Nikki Fried wants Vanessa Baugh gone. It probably won’t happen.
“Fearing COVID-19 surge, Florida officials crackdown on spring breakers” via Arian Campo-Flores of The Wall Street Journal — Nearly a year after some Florida spring breakers refused to let the coronavirus interrupt their parties and helped trigger a wave of lockdowns, this city is bracing for a fresh crop of revelers. Though many colleges have canceled spring break to prevent students from congregating in vacation spots, officials here are expecting a large influx over the coming weeks. Flights and hotels are cheap. Brutal winter storms in much of the country left people yearning for an escape. And Florida’s pandemic rules on bars and nightclubs are more lenient than those in many states.
Corona local
“Some Jacksonville teachers under 65 received COVID-19 vaccine earlier than expected” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — Educators that are too young to get the COVID-19 vaccine according to DeSantis’ prioritization standards were able to receive their first dose earlier than expected. On Sunday, several teachers posted on social media channels about getting their first dose of the vaccine from Jacksonville’s Regency Square site, but they weren’t supposed to get it yet. According to an executive order published by DeSantis, state-run sites are only able to start vaccinating K-12 school personnel that are at least 50 years old starting Wednesday.
“Orange leaders express optimism in bout with coronavirus as positivity rates, hospitalizations drop” via Stephen Hudak and Ryan Gillespie of the Orlando Sentinel — Amid steady declines in rates of positive COVID-19 tests, hospitalizations, cases in assisted living facilities and other key metrics, Orange leaders expressed optimism the county was in good shape after a spike in previous weeks. Also, the county has vaccinated about half its senior population with at least one dose of the vaccine to prevent further infections. But restrictions shouldn’t be loosened, said Dr. Raul Pino, the local state health officer, or the region could again slip. “I have to say, the county is in very good shape,” he said. “That doesn’t mean we have to in any form or shape, relax what we’re doing.”
Orange County COVID-19 hospitalizations drop, but Raul Pino warns about loosening restrictions.
“USF researchers keeping a close eye on COVID-19 variants in Tampa Bay” via Divya Kumar of the Tampa Bay Times — A new study at the University of South Florida will try to better understand variant strains of the coronavirus circulating in the Tampa Bay area. By studying the genetic makeup of virus samples collected at Tampa General Hospital and the USF Tampa campus, researchers are hoping to provide data that will help local officials make more informed decisions. So far, the data has been consistent with state records — thevariantfirst reported in theUnited Kingdom shows up in about 5% of samples, while those from South Africa and Brazil have not yet appeared here. “I prefer (the results) stay boring,” said researcher Tom Unnasch, a professor of epidemiology.
Corona nation
“The coronavirus is finally starting to run out of new people to infect” via Caitlin Rivers for The Washington Post — Coronavirus trends have improved markedly in the past six weeks. Average daily reported cases in the United States have fallen from 250,000 in early January to 70,000 now. Is the drop in cases the result of more cautious behavior after the holiday spikes or of tighter restrictions put in place by state and local governments? Those public health measures work, and they’re still helping. But a year into the pandemic, with a horrific number of deaths, another explanation might be emerging: After millions of infections and the start of a vaccination campaign, the virus is finally, slowly, starting to run out of new people to infect.
COVID-19 is running out of people to infect. Image via Reuters.
“The number of hospitals reporting full ICUs has fallen by nearly 50% since early January” via Aleszu Bajak of USA Today — Detailed data released this week by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services illustrates the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the nation’s hospitals. From Olympic Medical Center in Port Angeles, Washington, to Sibley Memorial Center in Washington, D.C., USA TODAY found 175 hospitals reporting full intensive care units as of Feb. 25. A total of 302 hospitals reported more COVID-19 patients in the ICU compared with the previous week, and 493 had more COVID-19 patients overall. The number of hospitals reporting full intensive care units has fallen by nearly 50% since early January.
“Johnson & Johnson vaccine deepens concerns over racial and geographic inequities” via Isaac Stanley-Becker of The Washington Post — The nation has a third weapon to wield against the coronavirus, and this one doesn’t need to be kept frozen or followed by a booster shot. Those attributes of Johnson & Johnson’s coronavirus vaccine, which gained regulatory clearance on Saturday, promise to help state and local officials quell the pandemic. First, however, they will need to determine its place in an expanding antivirus arsenal, where it joins vaccines with sky-high efficacy rates that are still in short supply. Decisions to send the shots to harder-to-reach communities make practical sense, because Johnson & Johnson’s single-shot vaccine is easier to store and use.
“States easing virus restrictions despite experts’ warnings” via Heather Hollingsworth and Tammy Webber of The Associated Press — States eager to reopen for business are easing coronavirus restrictions despite warnings from health experts that the outbreak is far from over and that moving too quickly could prolong the misery. The push to reopen comes as COVID-19 vaccine shipments to the states are ramping up. Nearly 20% of the nation’s adults — or over 50 million people — have received at least one dose of vaccine, and 10% have been fully inoculated. On Monday, CDC head Rochelle Walensky, urgently warned state officials and ordinary Americans not to let down their guard, saying she is “really worried about reports that more states are rolling back the exact public health measures that we have recommended.”
Now that vaccines are arriving, states are starting to open up — against the advice of experts. Image via AP.
“5 pandemic mistakes we keep repeating” via Zeynep Tufecki of The Atlantic — The steady drumbeat of good news about the vaccines has been met with a chorus of relentless pessimism. This pessimism is sapping people of energy to get through the winter, and the rest of this pandemic. Anti-vaccination groups and those opposing the current public-health measures have been vigorously amplifying the pessimistic messages — especially the idea that getting vaccinated doesn’t mean being able to do more — telling their audiences that there is no point in compliance, or in eventual vaccination, because it will not lead to any positive changes. Five key fallacies and pitfalls have affected public-health messaging, as well as media coverage, and have played an outsize role in derailing an effective pandemic response.
Corona economics
“Minimum wage hike all but dead in big COVID-19 relief bill” via Alan Fram of The Associated Press —. Four days after the chamber’s parliamentarian said Senate rules forbid the inclusion of a straight-out minimum wage increase in the relief measure, Democrats seemed to have exhausted their most realistic options for quickly salvaging the pay hike. “At this moment, we may not have path, but I hope we can find one” for pushing the federal pay floor to $15 an hour, said No. 2 Senate Democratic leader Richard Durbin of Illinois. Senate Democrats hope to unveil their version of the broad relief package and begin debate as early as Wednesday. Congressional leaders want to send Biden the legislation combating the pandemic and bolstering the economy by March 14, the date emergency jobless benefits that lawmakers approved in December expire.
The fight for $15 takes a loss in the latest COVID-19 funding bill. Image via AP.
“Biden’s bubble risk: A reckoning in markets as the economy recovers” via Ben White of POLITICO — Giant bubbles are once again inflating all over the financial world — creating a potential problem for Washington in the coming months. From meme stocks to cryptocurrencies, tech stocks and the rage for “Special Purpose Acquisition Companies,” or SPACs, risks are clearly rising. Wall Street pros and Washington policymakers know that some or all of these bubbles could explode in spectacular ways. But nobody really knows what to do about it. The COVID-19-wracked economy still needs infusions of stimulus cash to keep millions of Americans afloat, and around $2 trillion in additional aid is likely to clear Congress in the coming weeks. The Federal Reserve also continues to press its foot firmly on the gas.
“Apple says all U.S. stores open for the first time since start of pandemic” via Maria Arias of Axios — All Apple stores in the U.S. are open for the first time since businesses began widespread closures due to the coronavirus last spring, the company confirmed to CNBC. The milestone is a sign that the pandemic is winding down in the U.S. The stores closed nearly a year ago as COVID-19 first began to spread rapidly across the country. After two stores in Mexico reopen on Tuesday, there will only be 12 Apple stores in France and two stores in Brazil that are still closed, per CNBC.
More corona
“COVID-19 virus studies yield new clues on pandemic’s origin” via Betsy McKay of The Wall Street Journal — As a World Health Organization team digs into the origin of the COVID-19 pandemic, other scientists are unearthing tantalizing new clues suggesting that the virus behind it evolved naturally to infect humans. At least four recent studies have identified coronaviruses closely related to the pandemic strain in bats and pangolins in Southeast Asia and Japan, a sign that these pathogens are more widespread than previously known and that there was ample opportunity for the virus to evolve. Another new study suggests that a change in a single amino acid in a key component of the virus enabled or at least helped the virus become infectious in humans. Amino acids are organic compounds that form proteins.
We are getting closer to knowing where COVID-19 began. Image via Reuters.
“COVID-19 vaccines yield breakthroughs in long-term fight against infectious disease” via Peter Loftus of The Wall Street Journal — The pandemic has opened a new era for vaccines developed with gene-based technologies, techniques that have long stumped scientists and pharmaceutical companies, suggesting the possibility of future protection against a range of infectious disease. Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine is at the vanguard of a class of shots designed to mobilize a person’s immune defenses against the disease. It will be the first COVID-19 vaccine administered in the U.S. that uses viral-vector technology, which employs an engineered cold virus to ferry coronavirus-fighting genetic code to the body’s cells.
“One AstraZeneca dose substantially reduced the risk of getting sick with COVID-19 for the elderly, a new study shows.” via Benjamin Mueller of The New York Times — A first dose of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine substantially reduced the risk of older people becoming ill with COVID-19, scientists in Britain reported on Monday, the strongest sign yet that a shot that much of the world is relying on to end the pandemic will protect the elderly. Four weeks after the first dose, the vaccine was roughly 60% effective in preventing COVID-19 among people at least 70 years old in England, the scientists wrote in a paper that was posted online on Monday but not yet published in a journal or vetted by other researchers. That figure appeared to rise in the following week, though there was a high level of statistical uncertainty in the subsequent number.
“Israel’s ahead-of-the-world vaccine rollout offers hope for countries lagging behind” via Steve Hendrix, Shira Rubin and Karin Brulliard of The Washington Post — Israel’s fastest-in-the world vaccine campaign, which reached half its citizens as of Sunday, is offering other countries the first real-life look at how mass inoculation can bend the trajectory of the coronavirus pandemic. And the vaccine has proved so good at protecting the elderly, who are especially vulnerable, that hospital administrators here say it has all but eliminated the risk that COVID-19 cases would collapse their critical care systems. Almost 90% of Israelis over 50 have been fully vaccinated.
“Round-the-world cruises are selling out more than a year in advance” via Fran Golden of Bloomberg — After a year of isolation and lockdowns, four months on a ship is looking pretty good tocruise super fans. The COVID-19 pandemic was raging in July when Viking Ocean Cruises opened reservation books for a 136-day world cruise itinerary. The Christmas 2021 departure sold out in weeks. In December, in the midst of a second wave, the company opened a second cruise for the same period. It, too, quickly sold out. The company had no trouble filling two of its nearly identical 930-passenger ships, Viking Star and Viking Neptune, even though the borders of many of the two dozen countries the plan to visit remain largely closed to international visitors.
Presidential
“Joe Biden admin will let migrant families separated under Donald Trump reunite inside U.S.” via Jacob Soboroff, Julia Ainsley and Geoff Bennett of NBC News — The Biden administration’s task force for reuniting migrant families separated by the Trump administration will allow separated families the option of being reunified either in the U.S. or their county of origin, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said. Mayorkas called the separation of thousands of migrant families under the Trump administration “the most powerful and heartbreaking example of the cruelty that preceded this administration,” in a White House briefing. Lawyers representing the families in a federal lawsuit had called on the Biden administration to make such a move to allow parents who were separated from their children and then deported without them to come back to the United States to reunify.
Separated immigrant families will be possibly reunited in the U.S. Image via AP.
“Biden won’t release White House virtual visitor logs” via Anita Kumar of POLITICO — Few bars have been set lower than the one Biden has had to clear when it comes to bringing transparency back to the White House. Trump has been an easy act to follow. But five weeks into office, Biden has fallen short of his former boss, Barack Obama, in several areas, and is under pressure to do more to restore confidence in the federal government following Trump’s chaotic term in the White House. The White House has committed to releasing visitor logs. But it doesn’t plan to divulge the names of attendees of virtual meetings, which are the primary mode of interaction until the coronavirus pandemic eases.
“When will Biden hold a solo news conference?” via Brian Stelter of CNN — Brian Stelter asks The New York Times White House correspondent Katie Rogers about Biden’s accessibility, noting that the new President has yet to hold a solo news conference. Rogers cites Biden’s ‘tightly constricted messaging’ and his focus on the COVID-19 relief package.
“Senate confirms Miguel Cardona as education secretary” via Shawna Chen of Axios — The Senate voted 64-33 to confirm Cardona as Biden’s education secretary. Cardona will play a key role in the Biden administration’s efforts to safely reopen schools currently closed to in-person learning due to the coronavirus pandemic. Biden has pledged to reopen schools within his first 100 days, but some are skeptical he will be able to meet this goal. In new guidance released last month, the CDC said school reopenings should be contingent on community transmission rates and should be a priority over restaurants and other nonessential businesses.
Tweet, tweet:
Epilogue: Trump
“Trump received COVID-19 vaccine at White House in January” via Alayna Treene of Axios — Trump and former First Lady Melania Trump were both vaccinated at the White House in January, a Trump adviser tells Axios. Trump declared at CPAC on Sunday that “everybody” should get the coronavirus vaccine, the first time he’s encouraged his supporters, who have been more skeptical of getting vaccinated, to do so. It’s unclear which vaccine they received. Vaccine hesitancy is higher among white Republicans than any other demographic group, and it hasn’t been improving as the vaccination effort continues, according to polling.
Donald Trump got his vaccination in January but kept it a secret.
“Trumpism will endure in the GOP. Trump may not.” via Philip Bump of The Washington Post — When CPAC bothers to have a presidential straw poll, it tends to offer more insight into the conference’s attendees than the likely outcome of the election. In 2014 and 2015, for example, Sen. Rand Paul won the most support. In 2016, Sen. Ted Cruz did. Trump has been out of office for only about six weeks, meaning that American politics still largely operates in his shadow. That’s why the CPAC straw-polls results from Sunday are so interesting: among the group which should be expected to be most fervently pro-Trump, just over half would support him in the primary in three years. DeSantis, who won his election by embracing Trump and Trumpism at the height of its power, got 1-in-5 votes.
D.C. matters
“Senators urge White House to use second vaccine doses as first doses instead” via Dan Diamond of The Washington Post — Two Democratic Senators are calling on the White House to consider a “new strategy” to distribute coronavirus vaccines, arguing that deploying doses of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines intended as second shots would maximize the number of Americans who get some protection against the pandemic. “Based on conversations with health officials, we believe this approach is worthy of serious consideration,” Sens. Chris Van Hollen and Martin Heinrich wrote to Jeff Zients, the White House coronavirus coordinator in a letter shared with The Washington Post.
Chris Van Hollen calls on Joe Biden to rethink his vaccine strategy.
“Elizabeth Warren revives wealth tax, citing pandemic inequalities” via Jim Tankersley of The New York Times — U.S. Sen. Warren introduced legislation on Monday that would tax the net worth of the wealthiest people in America, a proposal aimed at persuading Biden and other Democrats to fund sweeping new federal spending programs by taxing the richest Americans. Warren’s wealth tax would apply a 2% tax to individual net worth — including the value of stocks, houses, boats and anything else a person owns, after subtracting out any debts — above $50 million. It would add an additional 1% surcharge for a net worth above $1 billion. The proposal, which mirrors the plan she unveiled during her presidential campaign, is not among the top revenue-raisers Democrats are considering to help offset Biden’s spending plans.
“Rewriting January 6: Republicans push false and misleading accounts of Capitol riot” via Mike DeBonis and Jeremy Barr of The Washington Post — A legion of conservative activists, media personalities and elected officials are seeking to rewrite the story of what happened at the Capitol on Jan. 6, hoping to undermine the clear picture of the attack that has emerged from video and photo evidence. The effort comes as federal authorities begin prosecuting scores of alleged marauders, congressional committees seek to plug obvious security failures, and lawmakers consider establishing an outside commission to examine the matter. The campaign to minimize or deny the events of Jan. 6 has been weeks in the making, with the efforts to muddy the waters about what happened taking shape while rioters were still on the grounds of the Capitol.
“Prosecutors fill in details of Proud Boys assault on Capitol” via Kyle Cheney and Josh Gerstein of POLITICO — The Proud Boys gathered at the Washington Monument at 10 a.m. on Jan. 6 dressed “incognito” to avoid detection, and then fanned out across the Capitol to prevent law enforcement from identifying them en masse, prosecutors alleged Monday in a legal filing that provides the most detail yet about the group’s actions on the day of the insurrection. In one of the most detailed filings describing the violent nationalist group’s activities, prosecutors say the Proud Boys turned to new leaders, including Ethan Nordean, a Seattle-based Proud Boys leader, who helped orchestrate the group’s role in the assault.
Assignment editors — Rep. Kathy Castor, Florida Director of Emergency Management Jared Moskowitz, FEMA representatives and local health experts provide a Zoom update ahead of the opening of the Tampa COVID-19 community vaccination site, 1 p.m. Email Rikki.Miller@mail.house.gov for the Zoom link.
Local notes
“Orange clerk failed to adequately monitor guardianship cases before Rebecca Fierle scandal, audit finds” via Monivette Cordeiro of the Orlando Sentinel — Orange County Clerk of Courts Tiffany Moore Russell’s office failed to alert judges of financial discrepancies in guardianship cases and let some go unmonitored for years, including one in which a ward’s death went unnoticed for nearly three years, according to an audit released Monday. In an 86-page report, Orange County Comptroller Phil Diamond’s office outlined numerous issues with how guardianship was overseen between January 2015 and July 2017. More than 3,300 guardianship cases were initiated from 2007 to 2017, but neither the clerk nor the court knew how many of those cases were active. Auditors found 29 cases that had gone unmonitored for up to nine years, with guardians still in charge but not filing required paperwork.
“Hilton Orlando hosted secret AFPAC conference, where organizers spouted White nationalist rhetoric” via Steven Lemongello of The Orlando Sentinel — A secret gathering of far-right activists whose organizer spouted White nationalist rhetoric and defended the U.S. Capitol riot was held this past weekend at the Hilton Orlando. Despite the organizer’s boasting of not wearing masks, a spokesperson for the hotel says all proper coronavirus policies were followed. Officials with Hilton would not say if the hotel would host such an event again. The America First Political Action Conference, or AFPAC, was organized by Nick Fuentes as an alternative to the Conservative Political Action Conference held just down the road at the Hyatt Regency Orlando.
Paul Gosar appeared at a White nationalist political conference before heading down the road to CPAC,
“Francis Suarez visiting Elon Musk’s tunnels this month. Here’s what Lauderdale’s Mayor thought” via Rob Wile and Joey Flechas of the Miami Herald — Following a February gabfest with the then-world’s richest man, Miami Mayor Suarez will visit Musk’s Boring Co. tunnels in Las Vegas on March 18 to explore the viability of building one under the Brickell Avenue bridge. Meanwhile, Boring Co. officials are expected to visit Fort Lauderdale this week. There, they will explore the feasibility of building a train tunnel beneath the New River. Their visit follows on the heels of one out West last month by Fort Lauderdale Mayor Dean Trantalis. In an interview Monday, Trantalis said he came away impressed with Boring Co.’s technology. “Everyone walked away feeling this was very doable and excited about the opportunity to bring that technology here to South Florida,” he said.
“Video captures what appears to be Miami police punching, kicking man” via Terrell Forney and Michelle Solomon of Local 10 — Top brass at the Miami Police Department said they are looking into an incident that a woman caught on cellphone video. The video captured a man being punched in the face from a city of Miami police officer while physically restrained during a traffic stop. Miami-Dade police were also on the scene, but it was the same city of Miami police officer who put the man in a headlock apparently while struggling to get handcuffs on him. The video showed another city of Miami officer kicked the man. It is clear that police had a tough time in their attempts to restrain the man whose face was left bloody. What is unclear is why police pulled the man over or what brought on the tense confrontation.
“Former Miami-Dade Commissioner Steve Bovo files to run for Hialeah Mayor” via Aaron Liebowitz of The Miami Herald — Bovo, a former Miami-Dade County Commissioner who ran unsuccessfully for county Mayor in November, filed to run Monday for Mayor of Hialeah, where he got his start in politics. Bovo announced his long-rumored campaign during a news conference outside Hialeah City Hall at 11:45 a.m. and then went inside the building to fill out the paperwork to run. “I’ve raised my family here. I care deeply about what goes on in my community,” Bovo said at the news conference, calling Hialeah a “blue-collar” community that cares about “family values.” Bovo will become the fourth person to file in the mayoral race.
“Miami receives $3M from Little Haiti developers who sparked gentrification fears” via Joey Flechas of The Miami Herald — Developers planning a towering $1 billion complex on 18 acres in Little Haiti said they have cut a $3 million check to the city, the first of multiple payments under an agreement that allows bigger, denser construction in exchange for investment in local businesses and affordable housing. The money comes from the team behind the Magic City Innovation District, a controversial commercial and residential mega-development that two years ago stirred debate among activist groups over how to deal with gentrification in Little Haiti. Miami commissioners approved the terms of the deal, which included $31 million in payments to a fund that will be managed by a newly created municipal agency that, as of today, does not yet have a board of trustees.
“$161 million reservoir in PBC to buoy water supply, ecosystem repair” via Kimberly Miller of The Palm Beach Post — A $161 million reservoir carved from an ancient inland sea in western Palm Beach County will soon fill like a swimming pool as South Florida seeks unique solutions in its struggle to balance increasing water demands and environmental restoration. The much-anticipated C-51 reservoir, which began as an idea in 2006, broke ground with dozens of key supporters in attendance. While no Palm Beach County utility will draw from the reservoir’s largess, it is expected to have a small impact in reducing harmful discharges to the Lake Worth Lagoon by collecting Lake Okeechobee water that otherwise would flow to the 21-mile-long estuary. Palm Beach County utilities could sign on to be part of the water supply project if a proposed second phase of the reservoir is finalized.
More local
Tweet, tweet:
“Delray Beach voters, beware of last-minute lies in Mayor’s race” via The South Florida Sun-Sentinel staff reports — We’re in the frantic final days of a very rough race for Mayor of Delray Beach between Mayor Shelly Petrolia and challenger Tracy Caruso, so voters need to be especially skeptical of what they find in their mailboxes and see on social media. The Delray Beach election is March 9, when voters also will elect two city commissioners to new four-year terms. Considering Caruso’s well-established past ties to Trump her last-minute smears against Petrolia should probably not come as a surprise. But we’re here to point out the lies and smears anyway.
“Beach businesses looking to hire more staff as spring break begins in Tampa Bay” via Megan Gannon of WFLA — The Tampa Bay Beaches Chamber of Commerce is seeing an overwhelming need to hire staff in the hospitality industry. Businesses are looking to fill every position from housekeeping, desk personnel, cooks, bar staff, and more. This is very different from what these businesses were experiencing last year. “Some of the businesses are even offering incentives and this is the first time that I have heard that incentives are being offered for applicants to come, be hired and stay employed,” said Robin Miller, president of the Tampa Bay Beaches Chamber of Commerce. With all of the job openings, the local Chamber is in the process of finalizing a job fair that will take place sometime next week.
“Disappearing sea grass hurting beloved manatees in Florida” via The Associated Press — Since 2009, 58% of the sea grass in the Indian River Lagoon system has disappeared, choked off from sunlight as a result of an oversaturation of nutrients in the water, according to the St. Johns River Water Management District. The nutrients are a result of fertilizer, septic tank and road runoff into the lagoon. Sea grass is food for hundreds of thousands of animals, and home to even more. The loss of sea grass has been especially hard on the manatees that graze on it. An expert who has spent 40 years studying manatees in Central Florida said dead manatees are being found with nearly nothing in their stomachs.
Top opinion
“A party of ideas, not a cult of personality” via Francis Rooney for The Hill — Whether it was the Republican Party led by Abraham Lincoln in the fight to abolish slavery or the party led by Ronald Reagan in the fight to lead our allies in ending the Cold War, the bold ideas have mattered, not the individual, and shaped a successful and valuable vision. Unfortunately, and quite distressingly, over the last four years our party has veered away from core values and big visions, to devolve into a fiefdom of one person. To ensure the Republican Party is successful, we must turn away from protectionism, nativism and isolationism — which is to turn away from the message espoused by Trump.
Opinions
“America didn’t need sports after all” via Jemele Hill of The Atlantic — The night that sports began shutting down was the night that the United States began shutting down. Although the NBA eventually resumed its season by creating a playoff bubble, and other professional and college leagues figured out a way to return in some form, the sports world is still struggling for normalcy nearly a year after widespread shutdowns began and fans turned their attention to matters of life and death. But the ratings for some of the biggest sporting events in the past year show that the public’s emotional connection to sports during a tumultuous time has been grossly overestimated. Plenty of evidence suggests that sports broadcasts aren’t resonating as well with Generation Z. The pandemic has made sports unusually tough to follow.
“The 5 worst ideas Florida lawmakers want to put into law in 2021” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Every year, the Miami Herald Editorial Board writes a wish list of bills and proposals we believe should be enacted during Florida’s two-month-long Legislative Session. After looking at some of the priorities of the House and Senate Republican leadership and DeSantis, we were compelled to also create a “do not” list. Here are the worst proposals in front of lawmakers: Attacks on vote-by-mail, protest crackdowns, attacks on a local rule, suppressing the public’s right to know, and choosing who’s worthy of financial aid.
“Dental therapists can help expand access to care” via Carlos Piedra for The Gainesville Sun — I’m a dentist, and I provide care at the general private practice I own in Gainesville. But I also provide care through my mobile practice. There, I provide care to patients who may not be able to see me in my office. Most dentists don’t have the time, means or patience to travel and see more patients. In fact, we have a severe shortage of dentists here in Florida. There’s a measure being considered by the Florida Legislature this year that can help address this shortage, expand access to dental care and cut overall costs of dental care. SB 604, sponsored by Sen. Brandes, establishes licensure for dental therapists to provide care to residents across the Sunshine State.
“Baseball’s spring training is always a time of hope, but this year is in a whole different category” via Hugh Hewitt of The Washington Post — Though every spring training brings fans across the country hope, this year it is particularly special. Last year I wrote about a home opener postponed. We were all naive then, even folks like me who had been ringing the fire bell about the virus from early January 2020 on. I thought we’d pass through a fire and then figure it out. I was a year off. A very long year. Now it isn’t just Israel that is on the verge of reopening, but vast swaths of America. What a great year 2021 will be. A half-million won’t be here to enjoy it. Tens of millions across the planet will miss their games. So savor ours.
On today’s Sunrise
It’s Day One of the 60-day Legislative Session. The House Speaker and the Senate President start the show by laying out their agendas, followed by a joint Session where DeSantis delivers the traditional State of the State address.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— The saber-rattling begins. On the eve of the Session, the Governor joined Republican leaders to announce bills to crack down on China for interfering in Florida.
— Democrats say this is just a part of the campaign to “own the libs” this year. GOP leaders are also refusing to schedule any of the bills for social justice and police reform filed by Dems.
— Now that the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine was approved, the Governor signed an executive order allowing people aged 50 and older to be vaccinated — but only certain people. It all depends on your job.
— But the Governor’s executive order also changed the policy for vaccinating people under age 65 with severe medical conditions. A note from the doctor is not enough. The new order says the doctor must certify that the patient meets “defined eligibility criteria” that have not been made public yet.
— DeSantis is complaining about the new COVID-19 rescue bill in Washington. He says Florida is being shortchanged because its economy is improving and he doesn’t want states still suffering to get any more than Florida.
— The Sierra Club of Florida just issued its 2020 report card for the Governor; their top concern is the climate crisis.
— DeSantis ended up with a grade of D-minus. State Agriculture Commissioner Fried — who may run against DeSantis next year — didn’t do much better. Sierra gave her a C-minus.
— And finally, a Florida Man gets 20 years in prison for cutting off another man’s penis.
“Disney: Epcot’s ‘Harmonious’ literally has a ring to it now” via DeWayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — Walt Disney World is making visible progress on “Harmonious,” the nighttime spectacular in the works for Epcot. A recent development that theme-park visitors can see is the placement of a large upright ring upon a floating platform. The ring currently is flanked by two other barges, and there eventually will be five floating platforms, permanently moored and positioned like a compass, said Imagineer Zach Riddley, Walt Disney World site portfolio executive. Signs posted around the edge of the lagoon note that “by day, a dazzling fountain will sparkle. At night, iconic Disney music and images — re-imagined by artists around the world — will inspire with the stories we share.”
‘Harmonious,’ Epcot’s nighttime spectacular has a giant ring to it.
“Las Vegas pool season is here but will look different this year” via Ed Komenda of USA Today — Vacationers and spring breakers will soon be splashing into pools along The Strip and downtown. But swim season will look a little different this year. Starting Monday, pool clubs in Las Vegas can open at 35% capacity. State officials anticipate capacity limits will rise to 50% on March 15. Guests can expect the health and safety guidelines that have been commonplace in the age of COVID-19. Lounge chairs will be spaced 6 feet apart. Masks will be required at all times unless in the water or actively eating, drinking or smoking. Companies like MGM Resorts are encouraging guests to book lounge chairs, cabanas and pool access ahead of time.
Happy birthday
Celebrating today are Sen. Manny Diaz, Karen Diebel, and James Miller of the Florida League of Cities.
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Markets: Ok, it’s safe to look at your portfolio again. The S&P posted its best day since last June as investors eye the vaccine rollout and upcoming stimulus package.
Covid: Despite Wall Street’s optimism, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky warned of a too-hasty reopening. “I’m really worried about reports that more states are rolling back the exact public health measures we have recommended to protect people from Covid-19,” she said yesterday.
Klarna, the Swedish fintech giant that offers consumers buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) shopping options, announced yesterday it had raised another $1 billion at a $31 billion valuation.
One of the earliest companies to the BNPL game, Klarna offers consumers the option to pay for an item online in installments rather than all at once. Klarna’s closest American equivalent is Affirm, which went public in January and is currently worth ~$24 billion.
Why the BNPL hype?
Klarna’s style of financing is especially popular with younger consumers who don’t have a credit card and appreciate the opportunity to spread out their spending. Roughly 20% of millennials used a BNPL service in 2020, nearly double the rate of Gen X, according to the WSJ.
Department stores are taking notice. Last October, Macy’s agreed to take a stake in Klarna in exchange for offering its BNPL service as an option at checkout.
But BNPL has put retail giants in a pickle. Companies like Macy’s and Neiman Marcus still rely heavily on store- and co-branded credit card fees to pad their bottom lines, offerings that compete with BNPL options.
The Macy’s deal shows that old-school retailers are willing to sacrifice some of those dollars if BNPL gets more young people through the door.
To regulators, BNPL is kinda like tequila
It’s fine in moderation. In Britain, where BNPL usage almost quadrupled last year, regulators are scrambling to draft rules to cover this unique form of credit lending. The target of their angst? Late fees.
If someone misses two payments, Klarna charges a penalty fee of up to $7, capped at 25% of the total purchase price.
That concerns regulators, since more than than 10% of customers at one bank that had used BNPL were already behind on their payments, according to the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority.
Bottom line: Klarna’s BNPL business is already active in 17 countries and has over 250,000 retail partners, but the company is looking to evolve into an all-in-one banking app. The startup offers a range of licensed banking services and recently rolled out consumer bank accounts in Germany.
A $15 federal minimum wage continues to divide lawmakers like mayo on fries. This past weekend, the House passed President Biden’s $1.9 trillion stimulus package, which included a minimum wage hike.
As soon as Wednesday, the Senate will vote on its version. It also includes $1,400 direct payments, $400/week in unemployment benefits, $350 billion for state and local governments, and funding for vaccine distribution and schools…but the $15/hour will be missing.
It’s a win for centrists
Like their House colleagues, Senate Republicans will likely unanimously oppose the bill. With the chamber split 50–50, Democrats can’t lose a single vote.
Now that the wage increase is out, a handful of moderate Democrats who were skeptical of it are more likely to support the bill. If it passes, the House will need to vote again on a matching version.
Big picture: Pandemic containment and relief are Biden’s top priority. This bill is a “test of his ability to unite Democrats in the Senate…and risks lasting damage to his influence should he fail,” the AP writes.
SPACs, or special purpose acquisition companies, did a record $109 billion in transactions globally in February, according to the FT. And through two months this year, SPAC activity (in terms of count) is already at 75% of last year’s total, says Capital Markets Gateway.
Quick refresher: A SPAC is a shell company that goes public, raises money, then uses those funds to acquire a private company and, in doing so, take them public.
Everyone from Paul Ryan to Shaquille O’Neal to Serena Williams is involved in one.
The latest SPAC deal is Rocket Lab, a leader in launching small satellites into space. Tired of only being known for small rockets, the company said yesterday it’s merging with a SPAC to raise funds and develop a rocket for heavier payloads, called Neutron.
Zoom out: SPACs have been around for decades, but only in the last few months have they exploded in popularity as an alternative means to go public.
+ Further reading: Anyone who’s anyone has a SPAC right now. (NYT)
As proprietors of a daily e-newsletter, we’ve become masters at meeting deadlines. But if you aren’t (no judgment), we think it’s semi-urgent to remind you that tax season is well underway.
Luckily, are here to help—so allow us to drop their immense wealth of knowledge on you guys. (Seriously, Block guarantees your max refund—or your money back.)
With Block, you can do your taxes on your own terms.
Visit an office: Walk in, make an appointment, or just drop off your docs and go.
Keep it remote: Send ’em a pic of your docs, and they’ll do the work. Just sign and approve online.
Do it yourself: Block has tax pros ready to help, if you need it.
So if you’ve been really, really putting off your taxes, rest assured Block has some really, really good resources for you.
One penny more and you would be facing an extra 2% tax under a new proposal from Dems including Sen. Elizabeth Warren. Billionaires would be hit with 3%.
Warren’s wealth tax proposal, a carryover from her run for president, would affect ~100,000 households and raise an estimated $2.8 trillion over 10 years, money its sponsors say could support child care, early education, and infrastructure.
Wealth taxes are distinct from the income taxes you’re probably filing right now. They apply to net worth, i.e., your physical assets (houses, cars, grandma’s sapphire collection) plus intangible assets (stocks, grandma’s new SPAC collection) minus debts (loans, mortgages, etc.).
While many politicians agree the ultra-wealthy should pay more, some disagree about whether wealth taxes are the way to go.
Last week, Treasury Sec. Janet Yellen said a wealth tax has been discussed, but given “very difficult implementation problems,” the Biden administration would rather look into increased corporate or capital gains taxes.
Bottom line: The bill isn’t expected to pass, even with Democratic control of Congress and the White House. But don’t expect the party’s progressive wing to stop trying.
Quote: “We’re sending a clear message to the entire industry that you either play by the rules or we will shut you down.”—New York Attorney General Letitia James blasted the crypto sector, arguing it was ripe for “con artists and cheats.”
Stat: Yesterday, Apple said all 270 of its US stores were open simultaneously for the first time since the start of the pandemic.
Read: If aliens exist, here’s how we’ll find them. (Nautilus)
WHAT ELSE IS BREWING
Zoom stock shot up about 10% after hours following better-than-expected Q4 earnings. It posted 369% year-over-year revenue growth last quarter.
Texas energy update: The state attorney general is suing Griddy, the electricity provider whose customers reported extravagant bills. And the state’s oldest and largest power cooperative, Brazos, filed for bankruptcy.
California lawmakers reached a deal to fund school reopening for students up to the second grade.
Comfort that knows no bounds.Bombas makes ultra-comfy socks, tees, and undies that support you—and others in the process. For every item purchased, Bombas donates one to someone in need. Get 20% off your first order with code BREW.*
We’ve all dealt with it: Imposter syndrome. Morning Brew CEO Alex Lieberman shares some techniques he’s used to cope in this podcast episode.
Tech Tip Tuesday: A list ofPhotoshop hacks that will save your life.
Remember WordArt? ’90s kids can recreate their most over-the-top book reports right here.
The US supreme court will hear a case on Tuesday that could allow the court’s conservative majority to deal a major blow to the most powerful remaining provision of the Voting Rights Act, the 1965 law designed to prevent racial discrimination in voting. The case, Brnovich v Democratic National Committee, involves a dispute over two Arizona measures.
…
One is a 2016 law that bans anyone other than a close family member or caregiver from collecting absentee ballots, sometimes called ballot harvesting. The second is a measure that requires officials to reject ballots cast in the wrong precinct, even if the voter has cast a vote in statewide races.
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Arizona rejected more than 38,335 ballots cast in the wrong precinct between 2008 and 2016 and minority voters were twice as likely as white voters to have their ballots rejected, the DNC noted in its brief. Losing the full power of section 2 would also make it harder for litigants, including the justice department, to challenge the wave of restrictive bills bubbling in Georgia and other state legislatures that would make it harder to vote.
A press release said the bill would create a fairer economy without raising taxes on the 99.95% of households with net worths below $50 million by creating a 2% tax on households with net worths between $50 million and $1 billion, along with a 1% annual surtax — or 3% overall tax — on households with net worths over $1 billion.
…
The ultramillionaire tax also has anti-evasion measures, according to a bill summary, which include: a $100 billion investment to strengthen the IRS; a 30% minimum audit rate for taxpayers subject to the tax; a 40% exit tax on US citizens with net worths over $50 million who renounce their citizenships; third-party reporting for existing tax information exchange agreements, along with penalties for underpayment.
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As an alternative to the wealth tax, Rep. Ro Khanna of California introduced a bill on February 17 to hold the ultrarich accountable by requiring more aggressive auditing from the IRS, rather than imposing additional taxes. “Right now, the wealthiest 1% are responsible for roughly 70% of the ‘tax gap’ — the difference between taxes owed and taxes paid,” Khanna said in a statement.
All votes are anonymous. This poll closes at: 9:00 PST
YESTERDAY’S POLLDo you support legalization of recreational marijuana?
Yes
77%
No
19%
Unsure
4%
654 votes, 270 comments
BEST COMMENTS“Yes – I work in youth substance abuse prevention. Marijuana is one of the most difficult drugs to target our prevention strategies because all weed transactions are in the dark, where we can’t see them and implement community wide changes. Ample studies show that (while not perfectly safe) it is safer than alcohol. De-criminalization would drastically relieve pressure on our criminal justice system and make it easier for folks like me to prevent youth substance abuse.”
“No – I’m a retired addiction counselor witnessing the effects of drugs on our community. Marijuana is not an innocent drug, but we encourage binge drinking and now top it off with some pot. Watch out.”
“No – Do we think that more people using it would make our civilization better? Legalizing drugs is like putting a governmental stamp of approval on it and will encourage more people to try it. Reducing the penalties on it is a better way to go. No one needs to go to prison for it, but that doesn’t mean you should legalize it and make it seem mainstream or acceptable or good for our society.”
The vehicle-carrier MV Helios Ray was hit [in the Gulf of Oman] between Thursday night and Friday morning by a blast above the water line that a U.S official said ripped holes in both sides of its hull. An Israeli official said limpet mines were used. Pictures of the Helios Ray showed each hole resulted from “a mine affixed to the exterior, apparently in a nighttime navy commando operation.”
…
Asked if Israel would retaliate, [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu] said: “You know my policy. Iran is Israel’s biggest enemy. I am determined to fend it off. We are striking at it all over the region.” [Kan radio] said the Netanyahu interview was pre-recorded on Sunday night, before Syria accused Israel of carrying out missile strikes around southern Damascus.
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Israel did not confirm carrying out those strikes, but has previously said it was launching frequent military actions against Iranian deployment or arms handovers within Syria. Iran said in November it would make a “calculated” response to the killing of its top nuclear scientist, which it blamed on Israel. Israel has not responded to that accusation.
[Mr. Sarkozy, who led France from 2007 to 2012] was found guilty of trying to illegally obtain information on another case against him from a judge in return for promises to use his influence to secure a prestigious job for the judge. [He] also became the first French president to be found guilty on the specific charge of corruption.
…
While the court handed down a three-year prison sentence, two of those years were suspended. Mr. Sarkozy can request that his one-year term be served outside prison, for instance at home with an electronic bracelet. But Mr. Sarkozy’s appeal places the entire sentence on hold. The conviction does not bar Mr. Sarkozy from running for office, although he has not publicly expressed any such desire.
…
He still holds considerable sway among French conservatives, but the conviction could undermine his broader standing in French politics and dash any hopes of mounting yet another comeback ahead of the 2022 presidential elections — especially for a politician who has fashioned himself as particularly tough on crime.
Jeff Zients, the White House’s COVID-19 response coordinator, said at a briefing Monday that 3.9 million doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine will be distributed to states, tribes, territories, pharmacies and community health centers this week, starting as early as Tuesday. It’s the first single-dose vaccine to receive the blessing of U.S. authorities and the only one that does not require ultracold storage.
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He said the company expects to deliver some 16 million additional doses by the end of March, “predominantly in the back half of the month.” Company officials expect to scale up production in the coming months. [Johnson & Johnson’s CEO Alex Gorsky] said the company is committed to delivering 100 million doses by June and “up to a billion” by the end of 2021.
…
An international study found Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine to be 66% effective in preventing moderate to severe cases of COVID-19, in contrast to Pfizer’s and Moderna’s higher figures of 95% and 94%. But it also determined the vaccine prevented COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths after 28 days, which officials say is equally important.
Congressional Democrats’ willingness to bail out private-sector multiemployer pensions signals they would do the same for state and local employee plans.
In Minnesota, various bureaucrats, “experts,” and politicians propose to emulate the California “zero-emissions vehicles” requirement. Is there a reason Minnesota has to be a follower?
Scott Winship et al. | American Enterprise Institute
This conversation explores some elements that should be central to a conservative opportunity agenda — elements about which center-right policymakers have failed to think sufficiently hard.
“The United States carried out air strikes [authorized] by President Joe Biden against facilities belonging to Iranian-backed militia in eastern Syria [last] Thursday, in response to rocket attacks against U.S. targets in Iraq, the Pentagon said.” Reuters
“The Biden administration said Sunday it remains open to talks with Iran over the 2015 nuclear deal [JCPOA] despite Tehran’s rejection of an EU invitation to join a meeting with the U.S. and the other original participants in the agreement… The official said the U.S. would be consulting with the other participants — Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the European Union — on the way forward.” AP News
From the Left
The left is divided between those who support the airstrike and those who are skeptical of the administration’s justification.
“If Biden did nothing in response to the latest Iranian provocations, he would have risked sending a message of weakness that would have further emboldened Tehran — and played into unfair Republican accusations that he is appeasing the mullahs. On Thursday, Biden ordered the right response… Notably, and mercifully, absent was any of Donald Trump’s bloodthirsty rhetoric or juvenile taunts. Instead the White House left it to the Pentagon to announce the airstrike…
“This is exactly the right tone to strike. Biden is laying down important red lines by telling Tehran that it cannot attack the United States or its allies with impunity, and it certainly cannot kill U.S. personnel. But Biden is also signaling that he does not want war, and he wants to resume nuclear negotiations.” Max Boot, Washington Post
“The air strikes in Syria were carefully considered and executed, apparently in consultation with allies — in other words, nothing at all like the Trump-ordered attack that killed Soleimani at the start of last year. They came after Biden had spoken with Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi, and both men agreed that the militias behind the rocket attacks must be held to account. In all, seven 500-pound bombs were dropped on buildings used by the militias close to Syria’s border with Iraq. Biden was offered larger targets but demurred…
“Biden has now demonstrated that he can walk and chew gum at the same time. Tehran and the other signatories of the JCPOA cannot question his sincerity in seeking a return to negotiations: The president has already pulled the U.S. back from the aggressive posture Trump adopted toward the Islamic Republic. But they can no longer believe that Biden will be as [complacent] as Obama.” Bobby Ghosh, Bloomberg
Critics, however, argue that “The administration rather unnecessarily decided to create a public feud over whether Iran or the US would have to take the first step towards reviving the JCPOA. Instead of carefully working with the Europeans to design a choreography that would enable both sides to move simultaneously, and by that, avoid a conflict over chronology altogether, Biden officials repeatedly made public demands that Iran had to take the first step before any of Trump’s JCPOA-violating sanctions could be lifted – even though it was the US that left the agreement.” Trita Parsi, The Guardian
“Biden is now the third president to order attacks in Syria without congressional approval since the start of that country’s civil war almost exactly a decade ago… The Obama administration proceeded to claim the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF), which launched the Afghanistan War and the ‘War on Terror’ writ large, and the 2002 AUMF for the Iraq War, as its legal justifications for intervention in Syria…
“The Trump administration also relied on the 2001 AUMF and the Article II theory of self-defense as justification for its airstrikes on Syria, as well as the more novel theory that it didn’t need Congress’s permission because the strikes simply didn’t rise to the level of ‘war.’…
“[Biden] attempted to make an argument on the basis of self-defense, and perhaps the threat the target posed was more imminent than we know. But most likely, the administration proceeded with the strike without asking Congress’s permission simply because the defense and national security brass knew they almost certainly wouldn’t get it and wouldn’t face any real consequences for acting without it.” Jonah Shepp, New York Magazine
From the Right
The right supports the airstrike but is skeptical about Biden’s overall approach to Iran.
“Iran was hoping Biden would respond with the verbal condemnation and perhaps some warnings about crossing red lines. Had they gotten that, turn the other cheek response, they would have undertaken another more severe attack to see just how far they could push the new president… [Instead] Biden took the correct peace through strength action, by striking at Iranian-backed militias, even if they were in Syria. It shows that the U.S. will not turn the other cheek and that we still intend to use force when appropriate. And we will always defend our interests.” Michael Busler, Townhall“In these early months, the Biden administration seems to be trying to chart a course between those chosen by its two predecessors. It is willing to drop Mr. Trump’s maximum-pressure campaign against Tehran but wants both a ‘stronger and longer’ nuclear agreement and more restraints on Iran’s regional aggression than anything the Obama administration managed to produce…“Knowing that the Biden administration has no appetite for another American war in the Middle East, Tehran seems convinced that Washington’s only two real choices are the nuclear deal on Iranian terms, or an Iranian bomb. If the resulting tensions damage Washington’s relations with either Europe or Middle East allies, so much the better… The question going forward is whether the administration can impose its vision on Iran while keeping European and Middle East allies onside.” Walter Russell Mead, Wall Street Journal“The very least that can be said about President Biden’s second month in power is that we are seeing any dreams of a quick return to the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, also known as the JCPOA, and a quick resolution to U.S.-Iranian confrontations dissolve before our eyes. The president’s refusal, thus far, to lift any sanctions and his willingness to use force against Iranian proxies suggest a more realistic assessment of Iran than many feared…“Down the road the administration faces an even greater challenge than what to do about attacks on Americans in Iraq. President Biden has already decided that they will be met with force, and one must assume that if the attacks continue and escalate, the counter-attacks will as well. But what about Iran’s expulsion of nuclear inspectors, which violates the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, and the ‘Additional Protocol’ to the JCPOA (that allowed snap inspections)? What about enrichment to 60 percent, if that indeed occurs? How far down the road toward building a nuclear weapon will the administration be willing to let Iran go?” Elliott Abrams, National Review“Maybe I’m missing something here, but how is the current policy towards Iran any different than what Trump was doing? Sure, there’s probably going to be a bit less harsh rhetoric, but Iran has basically just told us to go pound sand until the sanctions are lifted…“Iran has long since entered into some sort of unofficial cabal with Russia, China, and North Korea. If we’re not careful, Turkey will be joining them sooner or later. And much the same as with North Korea, sanctions are never going to be as fully effective as we might wish as long as some of the bigger players like Russia and China are helping Iran get around them…
“So what’s the answer to this puzzle outside of what would likely be a disastrous, direct military intervention against Tehran’s nuclear facilities? Don’t ask me. The entire situation is a mess. But, for the umpteenth time, that mess is on Joe Biden’s plate now. He wanted the job and he needs to tell us how he plans to fix it.” Jazz Shaw, Hot Air
A Military Perspective
“[Since 2015] the Middle East has changed. The Abraham Accords brokered between Israel and multiple Sunni Arab states formalized a longstanding, if unstated, truism that the Israeli-Arab divide was no longer the region’s primary cleavage. Instead, the primary rift is between Iran and everyone else. This dynamic, in turn, could place any Iranian nuclear deal in a new regional context. While Israel and the Sunni Arab states have long viewed Iranian nuclear weapons as an existential threat and are skeptical of the JCPOA’s ability to stop an Iranian bomb, none of them were party to the original agreement. These countries were left to express their concerns individually…“Today, there is an increasingly vocal, unified coalition of Gulf states and Israel opposing the JCPOA… There is an oft-cited maxim about not ‘fighting the last war,’ but the same is arguably true for negotiating the last treaty. At some level, it is understandable that the Biden administration would want to turn back the clock and return to the JCPOA. But even if the deal was the right solution to the Iran nuclear problem when it was negotiated six years ago, any agreement would likely need to look different — not just because the Iranian nuclear program has evolved, but because the world has as well.” Raphael S. Cohen, The Hill
☕ Good Tuesday morning. Smart Brevity™ count: 985 words … < 4 minutes.
1 big thing: China, Russia make moves on vaccine diplomacy
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
While the U.S. and Europe vaccinate their own populations, China and Russia are sending millions of COVID vaccine doses to countries around the world, Axios China author Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian reports.
Why it matters: China’s double success in controlling its domestic outbreak and producing several viable vaccines has allowed it to build global power by providing doses abroad.
China has provided vaccines to 20 countries, including across South America and Africa, and has plans to send doses to at least 40 more, according to a Chinese foreign ministry statement sent to The Wall Street Journal (subscription).
Chinese companies and government officials have worked with local partners to create cold-chain infrastructure in Ethiopia to help transport and distribute vaccines.
Six Dr. Seuss books — including “And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street” and “If I Ran the Zoo” — will stop being published because of racist and insensitive imagery, AP’s Mark Pratt reports.
“These books portray people in ways that are hurtful and wrong,” Dr. Seuss Enterprises said in a statement that coincided with the 117th anniversary of the birth of the late author and illustrator.
Dr. Seuss books include environmentalism and tolerance. But there has been increasing criticism of the way Asian people, Black people and others are drawn in some of his books.
The other books affected are “McElligot’s Pool,” “On Beyond Zebra!,” “Scrambled Eggs Super!,” and “The Cat’s Quizzer.”
3. Axios interview: Eric Schmidt on the tech America needs next
Photo illustration: Axios Visuals. Photo: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidttells Axios’ Ina Fried that the U.S., which once had a dominant head start in artificial intelligence, now risks dire consequences if it fails to invest more in rapidly evolving technology, and fully integrate AI into the military.
“We don’t have to go to war with China,” Schmidt said. “We don’t have to have a cold war. We do need to be competitive.”
Among the technologies that need more U.S. investment: quantum computing, robotics, 3D printing and 5G.
“China possesses the might, talent, and ambition to surpass the United States as the world’s leader in AI in the next decade if current trends do not change,” the report states.
The bottom line: Schmidt said competition can be good for innovation, pointing to PCs vs. Macs, and iOS vs. Android.
The percentage of respondents who said “stressed/worried” or “frustrated” best described their mood plummeted from 41% over the past year to 20% in the latest survey.
5. Cuomo’s “Can I kiss you?” increases calls to quit
After the N.Y. Times revealed last night that Gov. Andrew Cuomo had asked a stranger, “Can I kiss you?” at a wedding, Rep. Kathleen Rice (D-N.Y.), a former Nassau County D.A., had seen enough.
“The time has come,” she tweeted with a link to the story. “The Governor must resign.”
Anna Ruch, now 33, had never met Cuomo before encountering him at a crowded New York City wedding reception in 2019, The Times’ Matt Flegenheimer and Jesse McKinley report (subscription):
Cuomo put his hand on Ms. Ruch’s bare lower back, she said in an interview … “I promptly removed his hand with my hand, which I would have thought was a clear enough indicator that I was not wanting him to touch me,” she said.
Instead, Ms. Ruch said, Mr. Cuomo called her “aggressive” and placed his hands on her cheeks.”
He said, ‘Can I kiss you?'” Ms. Ruch said. “I felt so uncomfortable and embarrassed when really he is the one who should have been embarrassed.” (A friend captured the exchange in a series of photographs taken on Ms. Ruch’s cellphone.)
6. More in common than we think
Many Americans assume the rest of the country doesn’t share their political and policy priorities — but they’re often wrong, Axios’ Stef Kight reports from new polling by Populace.
Addressing climate change and preserving clean air and water landed in respondents’ top 5 personal priorities for the future of the U.S. — but they believe those issues rank closer to the bottom for “most others.”
Rep. John Lewis stands on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma on Feb. 14, 2015. Photo: Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call
Civil rights advocates are preparing to mark the anniversary of Selma’s “Bloody Sunday” — Mar 7, 1965 — without the late Rep. John Lewis, and as the first anniversary of George Floyd’s death approaches, Axios race and justice reporter Russell Contreras writes.
Why it matters: Rep. Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) told Axios he hopes the virtual events “rekindle the flame and legacy of John Lewis” for a new generation of advocates, and called for Congress to pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act.
Advancements in policy and science are expected to lead to space weather being treated in much the same way weather forecasting is treated on Earth, Axios Space author Miriam Kramer writes.
Why it matters: The most extreme solar events can overload satellites, harm astronauts in space and bring down electrical grids around the world.
Kal Penn, the actor and Obama White House official, will be out Nov. 2 with a memoir, “You Can’t Be Serious,” which he says is “for anyone who has ever wondered if it’s possible to have more than one calling.”
Gallery Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, says the book is “about growing up as a skinny kid with a funny name and later helping another skinny kid with a funny name become President of the United States”:
“Mostly, it’s a story about how your life can have more than one story, and knowing you have many more choices than those presented to you.”
10. 1 📺 thing: Award shows cool off
The pandemic has sped up the trend of ratings declines for award shows, Axios Media Trends expert Sara Fischer writes.
Ratings for the Golden Globes on NBC likely fell to a record low Sunday, according to preliminary ratings from Nielsen.
Why it matters: The Golden Globes typically serves as a litmus test for how ratings will fare for the remainder of the year. The 2021 ratings are a bad indicator for the Oscars, set to air in March, with the Emmys and Grammys later this year.
Part of the problem could be bigger than the shows themselves. The pandemic upended the production schedules of Hollywood’s biggest studios, reducing the number of hits to debut last year.
The bottom line: The coveted award shows that networks used to rely on to sell lucrative ad sponsorships are less appealing in the digital age.
📡Sign up for Sara Fischer’s weekly Axios Media Trends, out later today.
The initial lineup of witnesses did not include any senior military officers, effectively shielding the military’s brass from scrutiny during a two-part joint Senate hearing.
DHS secretary blames Trump for new border surgeHomeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, watching the U.S.-Mexico border situation spiral downward, blamed his Trump predecessors Monday for leaving him … more
Lingering bitterness over the 2020 election is making debate over Democrats’ massive H.R. 1 election overhaul bill particularly heated as they push forward the “For the People Act,” with a House vote on the legislation expected this week.
Former President Donald Trump bashed President Biden, railed against Big Tech companies, and hinted that he would run for reelection in 2024. For 90 minutes, he delivered the sort of speech his supporters hope can power him back to the White House.
Democrats face what could be their biggest #MeToo test to date as sexual harassment allegations swirl around New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who agreed over the weekend to allow an independent investigation into the claims.
CNN anchor Chris Cuomo acknowledged the scandal embroiling his brother, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, in explaining to his evening audience how he now is the one person at the network who can’t report on it.
A third woman is now accusing New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo of unwanted sexual advances, alleging that he touched her in a way that made her feel uncomfortable.
Former CIA Director John Brennan said he is “increasingly embarrassed to be a white male” while discussing supporters of former President Donald Trump.
The United States is focused on Saudi Arabia’s “future conduct” after rejecting sanctions against Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman for the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, according to a State Department spokesman.
While the COVID-19 nursing home scandal that has plagued the Cuomo administration drew a lot of attention at Thursday’s legislative budget hearing, New York state lawmakers still had time to pepper administration officials on what’s being proposed for the year ahead. And a proposed 1 percent cut in the Medicaid budget certainly caught the eye of some legislators as well as other advocates.
Utah Republican Sen. Mitt Romney has a black eye and multiple stitches after suffering a fall that knocked him unconscious and sent him to the hospital.
The confirmation of Xavier Becerra as head of the most sweeping federal health agency will mean “culture wars” driven by divisive liberal policies, Senate Republicans say.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
March 02, 2021
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AP Morning Wire
Beginning next week, we offer something new: As dawn approaches in the United States, some of The Associated Press’ top journalists across Europe will be alternating each weekday to create your Morning Wire. They’ll scour our global news report for the most significant and most relevant stories and imagery – and a few unexpected things as well.
Until then, please enjoy this selection of stories from the AP’s global news report. And thank you for reading.
TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — The plane laden with vaccines had just rolled to a stop at Santiago’s airport in late January, and Chile’s president, Sebastián Piñera, was beaming. “Today,” he said, “is a……Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — FBI Director Chris Wray is set to testify for the first time since the deadly Jan. 6 deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol, with lawmakers likely to press him on whether the bureau… …Read More
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — When she first arrived in Albany to work as a legislative aide in 2013, New York Assembly Member Yuh-Line Niou had lawmakers grab her buttocks, suggest she and her boss were “a….Read More
WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrats’ hopes of including a minimum wage increase in their $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill seemed all but dead as the Senate prepared to debate its own version of the… …Read More
As a presidential candidate, Joe Biden promised to make a pariah out of Saudi Arabia over the 2018 killing of dissident Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi. But when it came time to actually punish Saudi….Read More
Nearly a year after they were almost stabbed to death inside a Midland, Texas, Sam’s Club, Bawi Cung and his two sons all have visible scars. It’s the unseen ones though …Read More
Two Nigerian nurses were attacked by the family of a deceased COVID-19 patient. One nurse had her hair ripped out and suffered a fracture. The second was beaten into a co…Read More
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — When frantic messages started trickling in that a tornado had hit a beloved music venue in Nashville, Mike Grimes told himself it couldn’t possibl…Read More
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — The Medical Board of California said it would investigate a plastic surgeon who appeared in a videoconference for his traffic violation trial wh…Read More
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The catch is that local hospitals and their physician practices are waiting to learn how many doses will be allocated for people 65 and younger, and there may not be a shipment this week.
Good morning, Chicago. Illinois on Monday recorded 1,143 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 — the lowest case count since late July — as well as 20 additional fatalities. The state administered 50,897 coronavirus vaccine doses Sunday. Meanwhile, the Tribune talked to Laurie Zoloth, a bioethicist at the University of Chicago, about the ethical questions around getting the COVID-19 vaccine. If you missed the Facebook Live, you can watch it here.
Also Monday, Chicago’s new 6 mph speeding ticket rules started. Wondering if there are speed cameras near you? Search our map of camera locations.
And, with spring training underway, White Sox pitcher Lucas Giolito weighs in on whether his team can rule Chicago, and Cubs manager David Ross is optimistic fans will be allowed at Wrigley Field on opening day. Read more in the Tribune’s daily Cactus League report.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.
The saliva-based COVID-19 test developed by University of Illinois researchers has obtained federal emergency use authorization, a highly anticipated stamp of approval that confirms its accuracy and enables broader distribution across the state.
The test, known as covidSHIELD, appeared on the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s online list of approved molecular diagnostic tests on Monday. U. of I. has relied on the test to keep its three campuses open for in-person learning since the fall, garnering national attention for the innovation and running more than 1.5 million samples to date.
After multiple delays and a prolonged battle with the teachers union, Chicago Public Schools reopened its doors Monday to tens of thousands of kindergarten through fifth graders. Preschoolers and some special education pupils had already begun in-person classes weeks earlier, but Monday saw the largest number of CPS students inside classrooms since the pandemic shut schools in March of last year.
It’s not just one thing restaurant workers are grappling with these days. It’s customers who don’t wear masks. Bosses who prioritize the bottom line above safety. And of course, there’s the endless specter of exposure to COVID-19.
The Tribune spoke with the cooks, bussers and servers who make up the backbone of the city’s restaurants. Here’s what they had to say, one year into a life-threatening pandemic.
Doctors have often suffered in a workplace culture that celebrates stamina at the expense of self-care. Now, with COVID-19 adding to their stress, doctors are increasingly fighting back. They are pushing for an end to probing mental health questions from state regulators, and they’re speaking out about their own therapy and counseling, in the hope of breaking down stigma.
ABC News’ Byron Pitts visited the city in late January to interview Black family members; Evanston Ald. Robin Rue Simmons, who led the effort for the reparations commitment; and Morris “Dino” Robinson Jr., the Shorefront Legacy Center founder who researched Evanston’s history of discrimination and segregation.
The race for the reins of the Democratic Party of Illinois heated up on Monday with the release of a legal opinion contending that U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly may be ineligible to serve in the top state party post.
Every Chicago Public Schools student is eligible and will automatically receive the benefits in the mail. Hundreds of thousands of students in other district will qualify as well.
The race between Ald. Michelle Harris and U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly for chair of the Democratic Party of Illinois heated up with the release of dueling legal memos and concerns from some committee members.
In addition to the decal, Democrats’ condemnation of their state Rep. Chris Miller alleges that his actions on Jan. 6 helped to incite the violent mob that attacked the Capitol.
“We will put it to work as soon as we get it,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Monday. “And it gives us obviously another tool to use to get people vaccinated. So we’re excited for that opportunity.”
Black Men United, World Vision and J. Prince helped organize 2,400 boxes of food, 27 pallets of bottled water and more essentials for Houston residents impacted by record freezing temperatures in Texas.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Today is Tuesday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 513,091; Tuesday, 514,657.
The U.S. is set to begin administering doses of Johnson & Johnson’s one-shot COVID-19 vaccine today, marking a momentous milestone in the national effort to combat the pandemic as health officials warn that variants could wipe away all progress made over the past month.
Johnson & Johnson’s began shipping nearly 4 million doses across the country on Monday, the first batch of the expected 20 million doses the pharmaceutical giant is slated to distribute by the end of March. Johnson & Johnson CEO Alex Gorsky said in interviews on Monday morning that the first shots will take place within 24 to 48 hours (NPR) and touted the effectiveness of the new vaccine, which was approved more than two months after Pfizer’s and Moderna’s shots.
“For the last 13 months our physicians, our scientists, our engineers have been working around the clock to make this day possible. We couldn’t be more excited,” Gorsky told “Good Morning America.”
“It’s important to remember about the Johnson & Johnson vaccine is we did the clinical trials roughly from October 2020 to January of this year and it was really during the peak of the incidence rate of this virus,” Gorsky added.
As The Hill’s Peter Sullivan and Nathanial Weixel note, the 3.9 million doses being doled out this week are the entire stockpile held by the company, and there will be no additional shipments next week, according to administration officials. Governors have been informed about the “uneven” distribution and are expecting most of the vaccine to be delivered in the back end of the month.
Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine is the first one-shot variety to be approved for emergency use. In all, the U.S. is expected to receive 100 million doses of the shot by the end of June.
NBC News: Johnson & Johnson vaccine could be a “game changer.” Here’s why a third option matters.
The Hill: 41 percent say they are not willing to receive coronavirus vaccine.
The Associated Press: Tensions over vaccine equity pit rural against urban America.
The vaccine’s rollout also comes at a tenuous moment for the nation as variants continue to spread, with experts warning that the precipitous downturn in cases could be reversed if the pace of vaccinations does not pick up and if American’s let down their guard. The U.S.’s seven-day average of cases sits at 67,000.
“Our recent declines appear to be stalling, stalling at over 70,000 cases a day,”Rochelle Walensky (pictured below), director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said at a White House press briefing. “With these new statistics, I am really worried about reports that more states are rolling back the exact public health measures we have recommended to protect people from COVID-19” (The Hill).
“Please hear me clearly: At this level of cases with variants spreading, we stand to completely lose the hard-earned ground we have gained,” Walensky added (CNN).
According to USA Today, the U.S. is recording record numbers of variant COVID-19 cases by the day, with the majority of case growth taking place across Florida, Texas and Michigan.
Bloomberg News reports in detail with charts: COVID-19’s death toll can be compared with other things that kill us. One selected fact drawn from data: If you compare COVID-19 deaths with deaths from all causes in recent years, what stands out is that the relative risk increase imposed by the novel coronavirus seems to have been highest not for the very oldest Americans, but for those aged 65 through 84. Those 65 and older account for 81 percent of the deaths from COVID-19.
> House relief bill now in the Senate… President Biden will lobby by virtual hookup for support from Senate Democrats on Tuesday during their weekly lunch. The Senate could begin consideration of the stimulus measure as soon as Wednesday — with final votes as soon as late Thursday — pending full Democratic support and sign-off from the parliamentarian (Bloomberg News). In the meantime, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and other senators began talking about potential modifications to shrink the $1.9 trillion relief bill. Manchin called it “targeting” (The Hill).
POLITICS: A third woman on Monday alleged an unwanted advance by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D), claiming he asked to kiss her at a 2019 reception while placing both of his hands on her cheeks. She said she felt “uncomfortable and embarrassed.”
The New York Times reported that Cuomo met Anna Ruch, 33, at a wedding 17 months ago. After Ruch thanked the governor for toasting the newlyweds, Cuomo reportedly put his hand on her bare lower back. Ruch said she removed his hand. Subsequently, Cuomo said she seemed “aggressive” and proceeded to place his hands on her cheeks and inquire if he could kiss her. The Times published a photo of the encounter.
A spokesman for the governor did not directly address Ruch’s account, referring to a general statement that Cuomo released on Sunday in which he acknowledged that some things he has said “have been misinterpreted as an unwanted flirtation.”
“To the extent anyone felt that way, I am truly sorry about that. … To be clear I never inappropriately touched anybody and I never propositioned anybody,” the statement said.
As The Hill’s Reid Wilson reports, Empire State Democrats are critical of the governor as he deals with allegations of inappropriate personal and professional conduct with former female aides.
New York Attorney General Letitia James (D) said Monday she has received authorization to investigate multiple allegations of sexual harassment leveled against the longtime governor last week by two female former employees. She said that she will make her findings public.
Rep. Kathleen Rice (D-N.Y.) became the first member of the state’s congressional delegation to call for Cuomo’s resignation on Monday night following the latest allegation of impropriety.
The Associated Press: Cuomo allegations leave Democrats grappling with response.
The fury is also raining down from state legislators over Cuomo’s handling of nursing home patients treated for the coronavirus in the early weeks and months of the pandemic. Adding to the problems, a number of legislators and journalists have reported that Cuomo frequently used bullying tactics, including angry tirades shouted down a phone line at all hours.
“There’s an ongoing pattern here of abuse of power. It’s making the working relationship with the governor a real distraction from the work we have to do for the people,” said Assemblyman Angelo Santabarbara (D), who represents Schenectady. “I firmly believe that the governor’s resignation is for the good of the state at this point” (The Hill).
The Hill: Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.): Sexual harassment allegations against Cuomo are “credible.”
White House press secretary Jen Psaki on Monday reiterated Biden’s support for an independent investigation into sexual harassment allegations against Cuomo but wouldn’t directly say at what point Biden views such allegations as warranting the governor’s ouster (New York Post).
> Trump time: Fresh off his appearance at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Sunday, former President Trump said that he “can’t imagine” that any Republican would defeat him if he ran for the party nomination in 2024 (The New York Times).
“Based on the job performance, I’m not sure anybody else should be able to win,” Trump told Newsmax in an interview following the speech. “I’m going to do what’s right for our country.”
As The Hill’s Brett Samuels and Morgan Chalfant write, Trump’s reemergence in the spotlight in Orlando, Fla., which featured a number of false and misleading statements, signified that he remains the leader of the party and will carry his platform through the 2024 cycle.
However, his tendency to fan the flames of xenophobia and undermine confidence in the country’s institutions, which was on display during the 90-minute speech, shows the potential risks of the former president returning to the fold. Trump is expected to form a super PAC as part of his burgeoning future political endeavor and is already getting involved in races to prop up allies and disrupt campaigns run by individuals who supported his second impeachment. While allies expect that he ultimately will not run for president again in 2024, Trump made clear on Sunday that he will continue to openly mull and tease the possibility.
The Hill: GOP Ohio Senate candidate Jane Timken called for Rep. Anthony Gonzalez (R-Ohio) to resign over his vote to impeach Trump. One month earlier, Timken said that Gonzalez had “a rational reason” and was an “effective legislator.”
The New York Times: Trumpism grips a post-policy GOP as traditional conservatism fades.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CONGRESS: Nearly two dozen House progressives on Monday called on Biden and Vice President Harris to overturn the parliamentarian’s decision that a $15 minimum wage cannot be included in Democrats’ sweeping $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package in the Senate this week, The Hill’s Scott Wong reports.
“Eighty-one million people cast their ballots to elect you on a platform that called for a $15 minimum wage,” they said in a letter spearheaded by Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), a leader with the Congressional Progressive Caucus.
“We urge you to keep that promise and call on the Presiding Officer of the Senate to refute the Senate Parliamentarian’s advice … and maintain the $15 minimum wage provision in the American Rescue Plan,” the letter said.
The bottom line: Any Senate-passed relief bill will differ from the House-passed measure, meaning it must return to the House, where Democrats last week had just a seven-vote cushion for passage of provisions that included a hike in the minimum wage. Progressives are furious about what the Senate may do to alter the bill this week.
“Really, our options right now, at least our immediate options on this specific issue, is to do something about this parliamentary obstacle or abolish the filibuster,” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) said on Friday.
The Washington Post reported on Monday that Senate progressives who sought to save the House-passed $15 per hour federal minimum wage briefly considered and then abandoned a backup strategy to try to increase the wage floor through a corporate tax penalty. Too complicated, not enough time, not enough support, they decided over the weekend.
The Hill’s Alexander Bolton reports that Senate Budget Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) on Monday said he wants to force a vote this week on an amendment backing the $15 wage. Sanders urged Senate Democrats to “ignore” the parliamentarian’s ruling.
The Hill: Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate, shot down the idea proposed by progressives of trying to overrule the parliamentarian, suggesting that proponents work on separate legislation.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) on Monday introduced the Ultra-Millionaire Wealth Tax Act, embodying a centerpiece of her 2020 presidential campaign, reports The Hill’s Naomi Jagoda. Warren said her bill could help offset some of the $1.9 trillion relief spending to address the pandemic, now under consideration by the Senate. The Warren measure would create an annual tax of 2 percent on the net worth of households and trusts between $50 million and $1 billion and a tax of 3 percent on net worth above $1 billion. The rate for net worth above $1 billion would increase to 6 percent if a “Medicare for All” health care plan is enacted.
> Balancing a budget choice: Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), whose vote on Office of Management and Budget nominee Neera Tanden could make or break Tanden’s opportunity to join the president’s Cabinet, said on Monday after meeting privately with the president of the Center for American Progress that she remains undecided about how she would vote. Tanden has not yet cleared key committees (The Hill).
> Capitol security: Parts of the ominous razor wire-topped fencing near the Capitol complex began to be dismantled for reuse elsewhere on Monday. The security readjustment came after Capitol Police began to reopen Washington’s 3rd Street on the National Mall to vehicles. Because the roadway will be accessible to traffic, the prison-esque razor wire moved closer to the Capitol building (WUSA).
ADMINISTRATION: The president and his advisers decided they will allow families separated at the southern border by the Trump administration to reunite and remain in this country, the White House announced Monday. “We are hoping to reunite the families, either here or in their country of origin. We hope to be in a position to give them the election. And if, in fact, they seek to reunite here in the United States, we will explore lawful pathways for them to remain in the United States,” Department of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas said.
Some 2,800 migrant families were separated in 2018 under the Trump administration and parents were in most cases deported. While some parents and offspring were reunited under court order, 550 children were not reconnected with their parents under the previous administration. Mayorkas, head of the family reunification task force established by Biden, said another 105 families have been reunited since Jan. 20 (The Hill).
Progressives in Congress are unhappy with administration officials for reopening a housing facility for young migrants at the southern border, declaring such facilities inhumane after being used briefly during Trump’s term. Conservatives in Congress say Biden’s approach has encouraged increased migration to the United States border. The new administration and immigration advocates urge patience, arguing for the time required to make meaningful changes to a system that was upended (The Hill).
> U.S. to punish Russia: As early as today, the United States is expected to impose sanctions on the Kremlin and Russian officials for the poisoning of lawyer and critic Alexei Navalny (Reuters). The sanctions are expected to be imposed under two existing executive orders. The first provides broad authorities to target Russian officials, and the second covers proliferation of weapons of mass destruction under the Chemical and Biological Weapons Control and Warfare Elimination Act of 1991. Navalny recovered in Germany from poisoning thought by experts to be a Novichok nerve agent and opted to return to Moscow in January, where he was arrested and is now imprisoned in a notoriously harsh penal colony (The New York Times).
> FBI: Director Christopher Wray, held over by Biden from the Trump administration, is perched on thin ice with some Democratic senators, reports The Hill’s Rebecca Beitsch. Today, Wray makes his first appearance on Capitol Hill since the Jan. 6 siege, testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Senators will try to press the FBI to explain what the bureau knew leading up to the deadly riots, which have been described as domestic terrorism.
OPINION
“Say it ain’t so, Joe,” by Fred Ryan, publisher of The Washington Post, opinion column. https://wapo.st/3sEq5Xg
Mohammed bin Salman is guilty of murder. Biden should not give him a pass, by The Washington Post editorial board. https://wapo.st/3r9VS1L
Biden betrayed his promise to defend human rights and Jamal Khashoggi, by Robin Wright, The New Yorker. https://bit.ly/3rjPncE
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
Internet regulations need an update
It’s been 25 years since comprehensive internet regulations were passed.
But a lot has changed since 1996. We support updated regulations to set clear guidelines for protecting people’s privacy, enabling safe and easy data portability between platforms and more.
TheSenate convenes at 10:30 a.m. and resumes consideration of the nomination of Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo (D) to be secretary of Commerce. The Banking Committee holds a hearing on the nominations of Gary Gensler to be chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission and Rohit Chopra to be director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau at 10 a.m. (The Hill). The Budget Committee hears from Shalanda Young, nominated to be deputy director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, at 11 a.m.
The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 10:15 a.m. along with the vice president. Biden will speak to Senate Democrats by phone at 1:10 p.m. The president will make remarks at 4:15 p.m. in the State Dining Room about the pandemic with Harris in attendance. The vice president will swear in Education Secretary Miguel Cardona at 6 p.m. Harris will speak to the House Democratic Issues Conference by virtual hookup at 8:15 p.m. from the South Court Auditorium in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building.
The White House press briefing is scheduled at 12:30 p.m.
👉 The Hill’s senior correspondent Amie Parnes and co-author Jonathan Allen of NBC News have written a political book to follow their 2017 best-seller, “Shattered.” Biden’s roller-coaster 2020 campaign and nail-biting victory against a crowded primary field and then former President Trump are revealed with deep reporting, analysis and new anecdotes in “Lucky,” which is in bookstores TODAY and available for order with Penguin Random House HERE and on Amazon HERE.
➔ COURTS: The Supreme Court will hear arguments today in a potentially landmark case over Arizona voting laws that Democratic challengers say discriminate on the basis of race. The dispute asks the 6-3 conservative court to define the sweep of a key Voting Rights Act provision that was designed to protect minority voter rights. The court’s ruling, expected this summer, could determine whether a suite of voting restrictions working their way through GOP state legislatures will survive legal scrutiny (The Hill).
➔ INTERNATIONAL: In the United Kingdom, 99-year-old Prince Philip was moved on Monday to a different hospital for treatment of an infection and a cardiac condition (CNN). Because the Duke of Edinburgh remains hospitalized, Prince Harry and wife Meghan Markle are under pressure in the United Kingdom to postpone broadcast of an interview already completed and scheduled for broadcast in the United States on CBS this week with Oprah Winfrey (Metro). … In Myanmar, a court filed new charges against imprisoned leader Aung San Suu Kyi, 75, who was seen for the first time since a coup. Two additional charges include allegations of violating prohibition against publication of information that may “cause fear or alarm,” and a telecommunications law stipulating licenses for equipment (Reuters). … In France, former President Nicolas Sarkozy on Monday was sentenced to three years in prison, with two years suspended, after a court found him guilty on corruption and influence-peddling charges. The court agreed with prosecutors that the former president formed a “corruption pact” with Thierry Herzog, his lawyer, and a senior magistrate to secure a job for the magistrate in exchange for providing information on an investigation into Sarkozy (The Hill).
➔ CHERRY BLOSSOM FESTIVAL:The National Park Service on Monday said “peak bloom” for the trees around Washington’s Tidal Basin is expected between April 2 and April 5. There are many magical spring days ahead for gazing at the white and pink blossoms, but “peak” is the day when 70 percent of the Yoshino buds are open in a magnificent cloud. Not to be missed this year of all years!
And finally … How did Women’s History Month come into being, and why is it in March? Let’s review: The observance began as a single day and has taken place in the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia in March (and in Canada in the month of October). International Women’s Day has been around since 1911 and now takes place on March 8. Former President Jimmy Carter in 1980 designated the first official (and popular) National Women’s History Week. Seven years later, Congress declared the first official Women’s History Month (CNN). Shattered glass ceilings and strides among women definitely enliven — at the very least — 31 days.
“Too often, the women were unsung and sometimes their contributions went unnoticed. But the achievements, leadership, courage, strength, and love of the women who built America was as vital as that of the men whose names we know so well.” — Carter, Feb. 28, 1980.
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While testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee this morning, FBI Director Christopher Wray said that officials have classified the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol as “domestic terrorism.” https://bit.ly/3bRI31y
Wow, good work, fellow Americans!: “Wray said the FBI has received more than 270,000 tips from Americans that have helped the bureau identify the numerous people who allegedly participated in the attack.”
^ This couldn’t have been easy: “Some have even taken the painful step of turning in their friends or their family members,” said Wray.
OTHER NEWS FROM THE HEARING:
On whether ‘fake’ Trump supporters were involved with the insurrection: Wray said he has seen no evidence that fake Trump supporters organized the attack. Watch Wray’s full response: https://bit.ly/3b6g3bg
How many people have been arrested so far: At least 280 people
It’s Tuesday! I’m Cate Martel with a quick recap of the morning and what’s coming up. Send comments, story ideas and events for our radar to cmartel@thehill.com — and follow along on Twitter @CateMartel and Facebook.
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A MESSAGE FROM EXXONMOBIL
ExxonMobil sets emission reduction plans for 2025
We’ve announced plans to reduce the intensity of our emissions, which we expect to reduce our absolute upstream greenhouse gas emissions by an estimated 30%, compared to 2016 levels.
Via The Hill’s Alexander Bolton, “Liberal senators and outside pressure groups are steaming over the Senate’s seeming failure to move a COVID-19 relief package with a provision hiking the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour.” https://bit.ly/3bVjyRe
How that happened: The Senate parliamentarian ruled that Democrats can’t use budget reconciliation, a loophole to bypass the filibuster and pass the bill with just a simple majority, to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour.
Reaction from liberals: “That is leading to calls to overrule or fire the parliamentarian, or to get rid of the filibuster, which essentially requires legislation to secure 60 votes to proceed through the Senate.”
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) called on Democrats to ignore the parliamentarian’s ruling: “My personal view is that the idea that we have a Senate staffer, a high-ranking staffer, deciding whether 30 million Americans get a pay raise or not is nonsensical,” Sanders said. “We have got to make that decision, not a staffer who’s unelected, so my own view is that we should ignore the rulings, the decision of the parliamentarian.”
^ Errrr, there’s a problem though — and of course that involves Joe Manchin: Democrats don’t appear to even have the votes for a simple majority. Leading moderate Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin (W.V.) and Kyrsten Sinema (Ariz.) oppose the $15 minimum wage.
I.e.: Democrats may only have 48 votes when they need 50.
TIDBIT — JOE MANCHIN IS GETTING A LITTLE TESTY:
Manchin was asked by a reporter whether he might change his mind and support a $15 minimum wage. He turned around and yelled at reporters, “Never!” He then added: “Jesus Christ! What don’t you understand about never?”
Via The Hill’s Brett Samuels and Morgan Chalfant, “Former President Trump‘s reentry into public life at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) on Sunday exacerbates challenges for political leaders in both parties, as well as the media.” https://bit.ly/3e0Upr1
Keep in mind: For the first 40 days of Biden’s term, we didn’t hear much from Trump. Trump’s Twitter ban exacerbated that.
Via CNN’s Jim Acosta and Caroline Kelly, former President Trump and former first lady Melania Trump received a COVID-19 vaccine in January but did not publicize it. https://cnn.it/382yhss
Which vaccine?: We don’t know.
KEEP IN MIND — LAST WEEKEND, TRUMP TOLD HIS SUPPORTERS TO GET VACCINATED:
During his speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Sunday, former President Trump told the crowd, “How unpainful that vaccine shot is, so everybody go get your shot.” https://cnn.it/382yhss
HOW THE J&J VACCINE COULD BE A ‘TOTAL GAME CHANGER’:
We’ve announced plans to reduce the intensity of our emissions, which we expect to reduce our absolute upstream greenhouse gas emissions by an estimated 30%, compared to 2016 levels.
Via The New York Times’s Matt Flegenheimer and Jesse McKinley, a third woman has come forward with allegations against New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D). The full story: https://nyti.ms/3uL2h5K
The woman’s story: 33-year-old Anna Ruch said she met Cuomo at a wedding in 2019 and walked over to thank him for his wedding toast.
“Mr. Cuomo put his hand on Ms. Ruch’s bare lower back, she said in an interview on Monday. When she removed his hand with her own, Ms. Ruch recalled, the governor remarked that she seemed ‘aggressive’ and placed his hands on her cheeks. He asked if he could kiss her, loudly enough for a friend standing nearby to hear. Ms. Ruch was bewildered by the entreaty, she said, and pulled away as the governor drew closer.”
The House and Senate are in. President Biden and Vice President Harris are in Washington, D.C.
10:15 a.m. EST: President Biden and Vice President Harris received the President’s Daily Brief.
11:30 a.m. EST: First votes in the House.
1:10 p.m. EST: President Biden speaks with Senate Democrats by phone.
2:15 p.m. EST: Two roll call votes in the Senate. The Senate’s full agenda today: https://bit.ly/37YEg19
6 p.m. EST: Vice President Harris will ceremonially swear in Miguel Cardona as Secretary of Education.
6 p.m. EST: Last votes in the House. The House’s full agenda today: https://bit.ly/3e0A7h7
Thursday: The Hill is hosting a virtual event on “Trust and Communication” with the COVID-19 vaccine. Details, speakers and how to RSVP: https://bit.ly/382lxlH
WHAT TO WATCH:
This morning: FBI Director Christopher Wray testified on the Jan. 6 attack at the U.S. Capitol. Livestream: https://bit.ly/382MmWO
12:30 p.m. EST: White House press secretary Jen Psaki holds a press briefing. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3sAWJc6
4:15 p.m. EST: President Biden delivers remarks on the COVID-19 pandemic. Livestream: https://bit.ly/37YEwNF
8:15 p.m. EST: Vice President Harris virtually joins a meeting with the House Democratic Issues Conference. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3bQfcuI
NOW FOR THE FUN STUFF…:
Today is National Banana Cream Day.
And because you made it this far, here’s a dog celebrating its birthday with a rubber duck-themed party: https://bit.ly/302Pygv
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Senate Democrats won two procedural battles Monday on a $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package they hope to pass by week’s end. The Senate parliamentarian said funding to shore up failing union pension plans and to subsidize health insurance for jobless workers don’t violate the “Byrd rule,” according to Finance Chair Ron Wyden. Read more…
ANALYSIS — Democratic unity has increased since last year on the issue of coronavirus relief. Whatever House Democrats’ disappointment in the 2020 election results, the party’s success in consolidating power on both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue is keeping their restive caucus together. Read more…
President Joe Biden has promised a more compassionate approach to immigration than his predecessor. But high numbers of children and families fleeing deteriorating conditions in Central America and strict U.S. protocols to prevent the spread of COVID-19 have put that promise to an early test. Read more…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
OPINION — Instead of erecting new barriers to voting, we should be working to build a democracy that is truly of, by and for the people. That’s why Congress must pass, and President Joe Biden must sign into law, the For the People Act and the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Act. Read more…
Senate President Pro Tempore Patrick J. Leahy swore in Sonceria “Ann” Berry to be the new secretary of the Senate on Monday, marking a historic first. Berry is the first Black woman to assume the role, which was created in 1789. Read more…
Lawmakers are vowing to keep pressure on Robinhood Markets Inc. after what they say are unsatisfactory answers from the online investment app’s CEO, Vlad Tenev, during a hearing last month examining the GameStop Corp. trading volatility. Read more…
After more than a year of investigating, the House Ethics Committee is still working to determine whether Guam Del. Michael F.Q. San Nicolas misused campaign funds, accepted improper contributions and engaged in an inappropriate sexual relationship with a member of his congressional staff. Read more…
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25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Biden campaign promises head for the Senate graveyard
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
For years Speaker NANCY PELOSI has bemoaned MITCH MCCONNELL’S “legislative graveyard” — the place where bills she shepherded through the Democratic House would “go to die.”
Now, CHUCK SCHUMER is about to become the cemetery caretaker.
Democrats are looking at a serious hangover once they celebrate getting Covid relief signed into law — courtesy of the Senate filibuster.
During a private meeting with her leadership team Monday night, Pelosi laid out plans to turn her chamber the next two weeks into a factory for Democratic priorities. They’ll move everything from election reform to a policing overhaul to gun control, plus women’s and union rights and a pathway to citizenship for Dreamers. (h/t Heather Caygle)
They’re all things President JOE BIDEN campaigned for, and they’re all DOA in the Senate. Some may not garner even a single Republican vote, let alone the 10 needed to break a filibuster.
Schumer, the Senate Democratic leader, appeared to hint at that reality last week when a reporter asked him when his chamber would clear the Equality Act, another top priority the House passed last week. “At the exact right time,” was his cheeky response. Translation: at half-past-never, probably, because of Senate rules.
Pressure on Democrats from progressives to kill the filibuster is sure to mount as the party’s unfulfilled promises pile up. But lest we need a reminder, Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.), when asked Monday whether he’d ever change his mind on changing the supermajority rule, barked “NEVER!” in response. “JESUS CHRIST! What don’t you understand about NEVER?!”
Against that backdrop, here’s Playbook’s handicapping of a few Democratic proposals coming down the pike.
1) H.R. 1, the For the People Act — Last Congress, not a single Republican voted for the election reform measure that would expand voting rights, limit dark money in politics and curb gerrymandering. And that was before everyone at CPAC unloaded on it. Even DONALD TRUMP mentioned H.R. 1 in his speech Sunday night. And Fox News is reporting on GOP outside groups attacking vulnerable Democrats for backing parts of the bill.
Schumer has promised to put the Senate companion bill on the floor. But with Republicans around the nation looking to curb access to voting, don’t hold your breath.
House passage: Coming this week, after a last-minute compromise with moderates first reported by our Congress team.
Senate prospects: Don’t bet on it.
2) Police reform — Senior Democrats hope Rep. KAREN BASS (D-Calif.) and Sen. TIM SCOTT (R-S.C.) can strike a deal at some point to overhaul how police treat unarmed Black men in their custody. But the two parties remain at loggerheads over qualified immunity, or legal protections for cops, which Scott called a “red line.” Also problematic for passage: There’s no deadline, and without a deadline, let’s face it, Congress is just about useless.
House passage: Expect this week.
Senate prospects: Not imminent, but a future deal is conceivable.
3) $15 minimum wage — This one is interesting. Yes, it’s about to get axed from the Covid bill. And no, it’s not going to pass if Schumer puts in on the floor for a stand-alone vote. But on Monday night, there were a bunch of GOP senators, including Maine’s SUSAN COLLINS and Iowa’s JONI ERNST, expressing support for some minimum wage increase, though lower than $15.
Our colleagues Burgess Everett and Marianne LeVinereport today that Sen. CHRIS COONS (D-Del.) is starting bipartisan talks to see if there is a compromise.
House passage: Happened last week.
Senate prospects: Bleak at the moment but could reemerge.
4) Also coming down the pipeline — Next week, the House will pass a pair of gun control measures, including expanded background checks and closing the so-called Charleston loophole, as well as a pro-labor bill protecting the right of unions to organize. The following week, they’ll move the long-stalled Equal Rights Amendment, the Violence Against Women Act and a series of immigration bills that will likely include a pathway to citizenship for Dreamers and help for ag workers. (h/t Heather x2)
House passage: When, not if.
Senate prospects: Range from unlikely to not happening.
BUT, BUT, BUT … For all this pessimism, the prospects for a big infrastructure package remain good. The reason? It can pass with 51 votes via reconciliation.
IS TANDEN STILL ALIVE? — Sen. LISA MURKOWSKI (R-Alaska) may be the last best hope for NEERA TANDEN’S sputtering nomination to head the OMB. The two met Monday, and when reporters caught up with Murkowski afterward, she sounded open-minded. “I’ve got some more follow-up questions, but we had a good conversation,” she said. “I’m still doing my assessment.”
When told of the comment, one source close to the White House exclaimed, “That’s a positive development!”
Based on a range of conversations Monday night, we would raise the odds of Murkowski supporting Tanden. We wouldn’t bet our nest egg on it, but don’t be shocked if it happens. A few reasons why:
— Murkowski has long made it clear that she believes presidents should have wide latitude to select their own people, especially when it comes to presidential personnel. (OMB is part of the Executive Office of the President.)
— Murkowski has told others she was genuinely open-minded about Tanden going into their meeting. Democrats consider Murkowski one of the more straightforward Republican senators and not inclined to playing games about her positions.
— Saving the White House from an embarrassing defeat would provide Murkowski with a pretty big chit going forward when centrists like her will continue to be the key players in the Senate.
— The fact that Murkowski met with her at all is good news for Tanden. The source close to the White House recounted a story that explained why that gave him hope. In 1980, then-Sen. CHESTER CULVER (D-Iowa) faced a tough reelection and decided to oppose one of JIMMY CARTER’S Federal Reserve nominees as a political stunt. He was asked if he would still meet with the nominee and he refused. “If I meet with him I might like him,” the senator said, “and the only way I can oppose him is if I have no idea what he’s like.”
A big caveat … There are still two Democrats who have remained mum on how they will vote: KYRSTEN SINEMA (D-Ariz.) and BERNIE SANDERS (I-Vt.).
BIDEN’S TUESDAY — The president and VP KAMALA HARRIS will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 10:15 a.m. At 1:10 p.m., Biden will participate in a meeting with Senate Democrats by phone. He’ll deliver remarks on the pandemic at 4:15 p.m. in the State Dining Room, with Harris attending. Harris will swear in MIGUEL CARDONA as Education secretary at 6 p.m. and take part virtually in the House Democratic Issues Conference at 8:15 p.m.
— Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m.
THE SENATE meets at 10:30 a.m. to resume consideration of GINA RAIMONDO’S nomination as Commerce secretary. At 2:15 p.m., the Senate will vote on confirmation of the Raimondo nomination and on a motion to invoke cloture on the nomination of CECILIA ROUSE to be CEA chair. FBI Director CHRISTOPHER WRAY will testify before the Judiciary Committee at a 10 a.m. hearing on the bureau’s response to various threats after the Jan. 6 insurrection. The Budget Committee will hold a hearing at 11 a.m. on SHALANDA YOUNG’S nomination to be deputy OMB director. (She’s one of the top contenders to replace Tandenfor OMB director if that nomination flames out.)
PLAYBOOK READS
POLITICS ROUNDUP
ANOTHER CPAC TAKEAWAY — “Trumpism Grips a Post-Policy G.O.P. as Traditional Conservatism Fades,” by NYT’s Jonathan Martin: “Just as striking was what wasn’t said at the event. There was vanishingly little discussion of why Republicans lost the presidency, the House and the Senate over the last four years, nor much debate about what agenda they should pursue to rebuild the party.
“The absence of soul-searching owes in part to the Republicans’ surprise gains in the House and the denialism of many activists that they lost the White House at all, a false claim perpetuated with trollish gusto by former President Donald J. Trump himself on Sunday, to the delight of the crowd.”
2022 WATCH — “House Freedom Caucus chair weighs Arizona Senate bid,” The HIll: “Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) — one of former President Trump’s most vocal supporters in Congress and chairman of the House Freedom Caucus — is weighing a run for Senate in Arizona in 2022. …
“His decision to explore a bid for the upper chamber comes as Trump and his allies have vowed to help boost candidates who have staunchly supported the former president and target GOP lawmakers who have rebuked him following the insurrection at the Capitol on Jan. 6.”
A 3RD ALLEGATION — “Cuomo Accused of Unwanted Advance at a Wedding: ‘Can I Kiss You?’”NYT: “The governor was working the room after toasting the newlyweds, and when he came upon Ms. Ruch, now 33, she thanked him for his kind words about her friends. But what happened next instantly unsettled her: Mr. Cuomo put his hand on Ms. Ruch’s bare lower back, she said in an interview on Monday.
“When she removed his hand with her own, Ms. Ruch recalled, the governor remarked that she seemed ‘aggressive’ and placed his hands on her cheeks. He asked if he could kiss her, loudly enough for a friend standing nearby to hear. Ms. Ruch was bewildered by the entreaty, she said, and pulled away as the governor drew closer.”
WHEN ‘DEMOCRAT’ IS AN INSULT — “What’s in an adjective? ‘Democrat Party’ label on the rise,” AP: “Amid bipartisan calls to dial back extreme partisanship following the insurrection, the intentional misuse of ‘Democrat’ as an adjective remains in nearly universal use among Republicans. Propelled by conservative media, it also has caught on with far-right elements that were energized by the Trump presidency.
“Academics and partisans disagree on the significance of the word play. Is it a harmless political tactic intended to annoy Republicans’ opponents, or a maliciously subtle vilification of one of America’s two major political parties that further divides the nation?”
CONGRESS
BLACK EYE — Sen. MITT ROMNEY (R-Utah) told reporters he got a black eye and stitches after “taking a fall” playing with his grandkids over the weekend in Boston. He joked that he sustained the injuries at CPAC. (Romney didn’t attend the conference.)
PLEA FOR AID — A group of 10 senators, led by RON WYDEN (D-Ore.), Sanders and SHERROD BROWN (D-Ohio), is sending a letter to Biden this morning urging him to include “recurring direct payments and automatic unemployment insurance extensions tied to economic conditions” as part of his upcoming infrastructure and economic relief package, aka Build Back Better.
In other words, a Democratic aide told us, if there’s a prolonged downturn people wouldn’t have to wait for Congress to get its act together again before government aid kicks in. The assistance would phase out as the unemployment rate declines.
The letter is being circulated to Democratic senators and aides are expecting more to sign on. Read it here
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
BEHIND THE SCENES — “Inside the Biden team’s deliberations over punishing the Saudi crown prince,”WaPo: “For senior Biden administration officials, criticism over the administration’s actions was perhaps inevitable but hasn’t always taken into account how rapidly the U.S. posture with the monarchy has changed since Biden’s inauguration, said several U.S. officials …
“Most shocking to the monarchy, it was made clear that Biden would take his time accepting a congratulatory call from King Salman and would not speak with Mohammed. … The Saudis, long unable to find a way out of the unwinnable war in Yemen, agreed to try harder … and to lift blockades that were preventing humanitarian assistance from reaching starving Yemenis. … Administration officials were pleased, for the most part, with the Saudi response to private communications conveying its early decisions.”
PANDEMIC
TRACKER: The U.S. reported 1,241 Covid-19 deaths and 48,000 new coronavirus cases Monday.
THE PANDEMIC’S FINANCIAL IMPACT — “Virus Did Not Bring Financial Rout That Many States Feared,”NYT: “As it turns out, new data shows that a year after the pandemic wrought economic devastation around the country, forcing states to revise their revenue forecasts and prepare for the worst, for many the worst didn’t come. One big reason: $600-a-week federal supplements that allowed people to keep spending — and states to keep collecting sales tax revenue — even when they were jobless, along with the usual state unemployment benefits.
“By some measures, the states ended up collecting nearly as much revenue in 2020 as they did in 2019. A J.P. Morgan survey called 2020 ‘virtually flat’ with 2019, based on the 47 states that report their tax revenues every month, or all except Alaska, Oregon and Wyoming.”
“But Fox not only permitted Bongino and Hegseth to address CPAC this week — the network was directly involved in financing the conference. The network spent $250,000 through its Fox Nation streaming service to become a leading CPAC sponsor, according to the Daily Beast. (Fox contributed to CPAC’s organizer last year as well, but at a much lower rate: $28,000 in sponsorship fees.)”
TRUMP CARDS
BLAME GAME — “Navarro penned 15-page memo falsely accusing Coates of being ‘Anonymous,’” by Daniel Lippman: “Trump trade adviser Peter Navarro penned a 15-page dossier falsely accusing his colleague Victoria Coates of being ‘Anonymous,’ according to a copy of the document that was obtained by POLITICO and captures the backbiting that was rife in the Trump White House.
“The December 2019 memo goes into great detail to make the case that Coates — who was then a deputy national security adviser — was the author of both the New York Times op-ed and a tell-all book that described a resistance force within the administration aiming to undermine President Donald Trump. Coates, who is not named in the memo but is clearly identified through specific information, was transferred out of the White House to the Department of Energy in February, just weeks after Navarro wrote and circulated the document.”
ABOUT THE CFO — “Prosecutors Investigating Trump Focus on His Finance Chief,”NYT: “State prosecutors in Manhattan who are investigating former President Donald J. Trump and his family business are sharpening their focus on the company’s long-serving chief financial officer, asking witnesses questions about his dealings at the company, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
“The increased focus on the executive, Allen H. Weisselberg, could step up pressure on him to cooperate with the investigation if the prosecutors unearth evidence of wrongdoing on his part. He has served as the Trump Organization’s financial gatekeeper for more than two decades and could be a vital source of information for the government about the inner workings of the company.”
MELANIA’S MARK — “Melania Trump is out of the White House, but she left her mark on its public spaces,”WaPo: “Every departing first family who has lived in the 132-room mansion leaves something of themselves behind. And while Melania Trump did not make refurbishing a major focus, there were some significant additions and improvements during her tenure. They included a bronze statue by Isamu Noguchi, a restoration of the East Room and new fabrics to replace sun-damaged upholstery and walls in the Red Room. There were also practical projects, such as the modernization of the subbasement curatorial storage room and restoration of historical wooden doors that had been dinged by presidential dogs over the decades.”
PLAYBOOKERS
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — WaPo’s Dana Milbank has signed a deal with Doubleday to write a book detailing “the quarter-century crackup of the GOP, from the Contract With America to the attack on the Capitol. An eyewitness account of how the party of Lincoln and of Reagan lost touch with the truth, decency and democracy itself.” Kris Puopolo will serve as editor, and Milbank was repped by Rafe Sagalyn. The yet-to-be-titled book is aiming for a fall 2022 release.
SPOTTED:Mike Pompeo at the Colony Hotel in Palm Beach on Monday, with a security detail. … Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.) on a jog Saturday (the day the Nebraska GOP rebuked him) with a shirt that reads “Nebraska, quite a judicial thinking place.” Pic
LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION — “Trump Family Mansion Next to Mar-a-Lago on Sale for $49 Million,” Bloomberg: “The eight-bedroom ‘Beachouse’ is ‘a well known and very important oceanfront estate,’ broker Lawrence Moens said in a full-page ad in Sunday’s Palm Beach Daily News. The ‘exclusive’ listing doesn’t mention Trump, but says the house comes with a Mar-A-Lago club membership.”
FOLLOWING THE FIRST LADY — “Where Jill Biden drops by for a cup of coffee can make quite a statement,” WaPo: “Unscheduled stops like the one in Richmond are selected a couple of hours or maybe a day before she goes there, said a person familiar with the first lady’s routine who was not authorized to speak publicly about it. And they happen because she has expressed wanting to buy a certain thing on her way to get somewhere else, like Camp David or back to her plane.
“Unlike announced visits that more sharply delineate a first lady’s agenda — supporting education, cancer research and military families — no press pool is present for the semi-stealth visits. The only photos usually come from shocked customers, owners and employees (who immediately make up for the lack of press by posting them on social media), or from the first lady’s photographer, who is almost always with her.”
CROSSWISE WITH CROSSFIT — “CrossFit Is Finally Fed Up With Marjorie Taylor Greene,”BuzzFeed: “With every pull-up, power snatch, and hotel-room burpee, Marjorie Taylor Greene used CrossFit to build her brand, from gym owner to the House of Representatives’ most visible far-right conspiracy theorist. Before and during her political rise, CrossFit’s headquarters ignored Greene’s existence and her praise of the company’s workout programs — until now. CrossFit for the first time disavowed Greene.”
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — TRUMP ALUMNI: Brad Smith has launched Russell Street Ventures, a Nashville-based health care firm focused on launching and scaling companies that serve vulnerable patient populations. He most recently was director of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation and deputy director of the White House Domestic Policy Council. Announcement
MEDIAWATCH — Democratic pollster Zac McCrary is launching “The Pro Politics Podcast,” interviewing people from both sides of the aisle who have been successful in politics. The first episode of the weekly podcast is live with Paul Begala. Future guests include Charlie Cook, Glen Bolger, David Dixon, Saul Shorr and Ali Lapp.
— Nancy San Martín and Bijal Trivedi are joining National Geographic. San Martín will be deputy managing editor of history and culture and previously was a managing editor at El Nuevo Herald. Trivedi will be senior science editor and previously was a science and technology editor at The Conversation.
TRANSITIONS — Taylor Weeks Armentrout is now senior manager of government affairs for Virgin Galactic. She most recently was a senior adviser at NASA, and is a John Cornyn alum. … Tola Thompson is joining Ballard Partners’ Washington office. He most recently was chief of staff for Rep. Al Lawson (D-Fla.), and is a Carrie Meek alum. … Conn Carroll is now comms director for Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.). He previously was comms director for Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah). …
… Tucker Middleton is now an executive producer and principal at McKenna Media. She previously was a producer at Putnam Partners. … CR Wooters is now director of federal affairs for Uber. He previously was co-founder of FIO360. … Marcie Smith will be an associate director for the Bipartisan Policy Center Action. She most recently was a professional staff member for the House Climate Crisis Select Committee GOP, and is a John Kennedy alum.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Chuck Nadd, a major in the U.S. Army and a student at Harvard Business School, and Shannon Nadd recently welcomed John Henry Scott Nadd, who joins Mary Margaret (4) and Peter (3). Pic … Another pic
— Rachel Jacobs, counsel in the political law group at Perkins Coie, and Billy Jacobs, counsel at Weisbrod Matteis & Copley, welcomed Max Henry on Feb. 23. He joins big brother Eli. Pic… Another pic
BIRTHDAYS: Reps. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) and Ami Bera (D-Calif.) … Joe Brettell … former Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.) … Ken Salazar … Kevin Madden … Liz Oberg … Jason Boxt … Brookings’ Robin Lewis … Laurie van Hall, co-founder of Bee Compliance … Emily Miller (5-0) … Rachel Geffner … Ashley Chang … Joe Scannell … Sally Rosen … Javelin’s Dylan Colligan … Mikhail Gorbachev (9-0) … Levi Russell … Yuri Beckelman … Ven Neralla … Syd Terry … Michael Hutton … Caitlin McFall … NYT’s Dave Itzkoff and Katherine Rosman … Joe Garofoli … James Purnell … Sam Lane
Christian settlers in Pennsylvania, being Quakers, Pietist Lutherans and Mennonites, went on record as being the first to oppose slavery in America with their Germantown Petition of 1688, just 6 years after William Penn founded the colony.
Submitted by Francis Daniel Pastorius and three others, the Germantown Quaker Petition Against Slavery was the first American document protesting slavery:
It stated:
“How fearful and fainthearted are many on sea, when they see a strange vessel, –being afraid it should be a Turk, and they should be taken, and sold for slaves into Turkey.
… Now what is this better done, as Turks do?
Yea, rather it is worse for them, which say they are Christians; for we hear that ye most part of such negroes are brought hither against their will and consent, and that many of them are stolen …
There is a saying that we shall do to all men like as we will be done ourselves; making no difference of what generation, descent or color they are.
And those who steal or rob men, and those who buy or purchase them, are they not all alike?
Here is liberty of conscience which is right and reasonable; here ought to be liberty of ye body … But to bring men hither, or to rob and sell them against their will, we stand against.
… In Europe there are many oppressed for conscience sake; and here there are those oppressed which are of a black color … This makes an ill report in all those countries of Europe, where they hear of, that ye Quakers do here handle men as they handle there ye cattle …
We … are against this traffic of men-body. And we who profess that is is not lawful to steal, must, likewise, avoid to purchase such things as are stolen … Then is Pennsylvania to have a good report … in what manner ye Quakers do rule in their province.”
In the early 1700s, many colonies tried ending slavery but Queen Anne would not allow it, as she was part owner in the Royal African Company, which since its founding in 1660, shipped more slaves to the Americas than any other entity.
Anthony Benezet, a Protestant Christian Huguenot, fled persecution in France to England, then migrated with his family to Philadelphia at age 17.
He joined the Quakers and worked as a teacher.
Beginning in 1750, after school hours, Anthony Benezet began bringing slave children into his home where he taught them to read.
He also advocated for Indian Natives and started the first school for girls in America in 1754.
In 1758, at the yearly Quaker Meeting in Philadelphia, Anthony Benezet and Quaker John Woolman, convinced Quakers to publicly go on record as being officially against slavery.
In 1764, James Otis wrote in “The Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved”:
“The grant of GOD Almighty … has given to all men a natural right to be free …
Colonists … are men, the common children of the same Creator …
Nature has placed all such in a state of equality and perfect freedom … Colonists are by the law of nature freeborn, as indeed all men are, white or black.
No better reasons can be given for enslaving those of any color than such as Baron Montesquieu has humorously given as the foundation of that cruel slavery exercised over the poor Ethiopians, which threatens one day to reduce both Europe and America to the ignorance and barbarity of the darkest ages.
… Does it follow that tis right to enslave a man because he is black?
Will short, curled hair like wool … help the argument?
Can any logical inference in favor of slavery be drawn from a flat nose, a long or a short face? …
(Slave) trade … is the most shocking violation of the law of nature … and makes every dealer in it a tyrant, from the director of an African company to the petty chapman (merchant) in needles and pins on the unhappy coast.
It is a clear truth that those who everyday barter away other men’s liberty will soon care little for their own …
… In the province of the Massachusetts Bay … colonists, black and white, born here are freeborn British subjects, and entitled to all the essential civil rights …
Has this whole continent of … millions of good, loyal, and useful subjects, white and black … the election of one member of the House of Commons? …
No man can take my property from me without my consent: if he does, he deprives me of my liberty and makes me a slave.”
In 1766, Anthony Benezet wrote in “Warning to Great Britain … of the Calamitous State of the Enslaved Negroes” that:
“Slavery … contradicted the precepts and example of Christ? …
Bondage … imposed on the Africans, is absolutely repugnant to justice … shocking to humanity, violative of every generous sentiment, abhorrent utterly from the Christian religion.”
In 1770, Benezet led Quakers to found the Negro School at Philadelphia, being encouraged by both Methodist founder John Wesley and Benjamin Franklin.
In 1770, free black John Marrant heard evangelist George Whitefield during the Great Awakening Revival.
He converted, but was soon rejected by his family, so he wandered to live in the woods, being befriended by the Cherokee and learned their language.
As Revolutionary tensions grew, British incited the Cherokee chief who arrested Marrant and almost executed him.
Marrant preached to Gospel to the chief, who converted, and set him free to preach among the Cherokee, as well as the Creek, Catawba and Housaw.
John Marrant returned to South Carolina to preach among slaves when the British impressed him into their navy. He was taken to England where he preached for years and later in Nova Scotia.
His life story was written in A Narrative of the Lord’s Wonderful Dealings with John Marrant-A Black, which went through 17 editions.
In 1772, Benezet condemned slavery in his tract “Account of Guinea … An Inquiry into the Rise & Progress of the Slave Trade, Its Nature & Lamentable Effects.”
After reading it, Patrick Henry came under conviction, writing to Robert Pleasants in 1773:
“I take this opportunity to acknowledge ye receipt of Anthony Benezet’s book against the slave trade. I thank you for it. Would any one believe that I am a master of slaves of my own purchase?
I am drawn along by ye general inconvenience of living without them; I will not, I cannot justify it.”
Patrick Henry became one of the most out-spoken Virginia founding fathers in actively condemning slavery, as being “inconsistent with the Bible, and destructive to morality.”
In 1778, Henry successful lobbied the Virginia Legislature to cease the importation of slaves.
Jefferson wrote that Henry was “even more determined in his opposition to slavery then the rest of us.”
Jefferson’s original rough draft of the Declaration of Independence contained a line condemning the slave trade of King George’s Royal African Company:
“He has waged cruel war against human nature itself … in the persons of a distant people who never offended him, captivating and carrying them into slavery in another hemisphere, or to incur miserable death in their transportation thither …
suppressing every legislative attempt to prohibit or to restrain this execrable commerce determining to keep open a market where MEN should be bought and sold.”
Unfortunately, the delegates from South Carolina and Georgia objected.
Since the Declaration needed to be unanimous, and at the same time news arrived causing panic that the British were preparing to attack New York, the lines against slavery were deleted from the Declaration.
In 1775, Anthony Benezet helped found the Society for the Relief of Free Negroes Unlawfully Held in Bondage, with 17 of the 24 founders being Quakers.
It was the first society in America dedicated to abolishing slavery.
In 1784, its name was changed to Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery & the Relief of Free Negroes Unlawfully Held in Bondage.
In 1787, Ben Franklin became its president.
Pennsylvania passed a law in 1780 ending slavery:
“Negroes, and mulattos, as others … after the passing of this Act, shall not be … slaves.”
Anthony Benezet’s English anti-slavery associate was Thomas Clarkson, a student at Cambridge University who was honored with first prize for writing “An Essay on the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species,” 1785, in which he wrote:
“Slavery is … a crime, which being both of individuals and the nation, must sometime draw down upon us the heaviest judgment of Almighty God, who made of one blood all the sons of men, and who gave to all equally a natural right to liberty.”
In 1773, freed slaves George Liele and David George organized the Silver Bluff Baptist Church in Beach Island, South Carolina, considered one of the first black congregations in America.
When the Revolutionary War threatened, Liele began a church in Savannah, Georgia, meeting in Jonathan Bryan’s barn.
One of Bryan’s slaves, Andrew Bryan, converted, was freed, and became the pastor of the congregation –– First Bryan Baptist Church –– one of the first black Baptist churches in North America.
Another early black congregation met in 1774 on the plantation of Colonel William Byrd III. It grew into the First Baptist Church of Petersburg, Virginia, where, in 1865, Virginia’s first Republican convention was held.
As the Revolution grew more intense, George Liele, in 1783, evacuated with his wife, and his four children to Jamaica. He baptized hundreds, and by 1814 had organized over 8,000 members into numerous Baptist churches.
In 1787, the Northwest Ordinance outlawed slavery in the territory which would become Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin.
“Black Harry” Hosier preached to crowds in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Boston, Connecticut, Philadelphia, Delaware, Baltimore and New York, and was described by historians as: “… a renowned camp meeting exhorter, the most widely known black preacher of his time, and arguably the greatest circuit rider of his day.”
Dr. Benjamin Rush, a signer of the Declaration, described Hosier’s preaching as the greatest he had ever heard. His sermon “The Barren Fig Tree,” in 1781, became the first sermon by a black preacher that was printed.
“Black Harry” Hosier and another famous black preacher, Richard Allen, were at the winter meeting of 1784, where the Methodist Church officially separated from the Church of England to form its own denomination.
Richard Allen, a freed slave, became a licensed exhorter in 1783, and preached in Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Maryland.
He formed a church in 1794, known as Mother Bethel, with the dedication being preached by circuit-riding Methodist Bishop Francis Asbury. It is the oldest parcel of real estate in the United States owned continuously by African Americans. George Washington and Dr. Benjamin Rush contributed to Allen’s church.
In 1816, Allen led in the forming of an entirely new denomination, the African Methodist Episcopal Church, which was the first African–American denomination organized in the United States.
Allen gave his approval for Jarena Lee to become the first woman to receive “authorization” to preach. He supported missionary Rev. Scipio Beanes in Haiti, 1827, and other missionaries from San Domingo to Africa.
Richard Bassett, a Signer of the Constitution from Delaware, converted to Methodism, freed all his slaves and paid them as hired labor.
On February 3, 1790, less than three months before he died, Franklin petitioned Congress to ban slavery:
“For promoting the Abolition of Slavery, the relief of free Negroes unlawfully held in bondage, & the Improvement of the Condition of the African Races … an Association was formed … in this state by a number of her citizens of various religious denominations for promoting the abolition of Slavery …
A just and accurate conception of the true principles of liberty … by the blessing of Divine Providence, have been successfully directed to the relieving from bondage a large number of their fellow Creatures of the African Race …
.. That mankind are all formed by the same Almighty Being, alike objects of His care and equally designed for the enjoyment of happiness the Christian Religion teaches us to believe and the political creed of America fully coincides … that these blessings ought rightfully to be administered, without distinction of Color, to all descriptions of People … that equal liberty … is still the birthright of all men …
They earnestly entreat your serious attention to the subject of Slavery … restoration of liberty to those unhappy Men, who alone, in this land of Freedom, are degraded into perpetual Bondage … groaning in servile subjection, that you will devise means for removing this … promote mercy and justice towards this distressed Race, and … for discouraging every species of traffick in the Persons of Our Fellow Men.
In 1807, Congress passed the Slave Importation Act, signed by Jefferson, which prohibited further importation of slaves.
The U.S. Coast captured numerous slave trading ships.
Francis Scott Key fought a seven year legal battle to free the African slaves from the captured ship Antelope.
With the help of Francis Scott Key, Congressman and former President John Quincy Adams fought the legal battle to free African slaves from the ship Amistad.
Adams worked to end slavery by removing Congress’ Gag Rule.
Prior to the Civil War, 19 of the 34 States outlawed slavery:
In 1850, the Democrat-controlled Congress passed the infamous Fugitive Slave Act.
A historical marker in Wisconsin reads:
“Joshua Glover was a runaway slave who sought freedom in Racine. In 1854, his Missouri owner used the Fugitive Slave Act to apprehend him. This 1850 law permitted slave catchers to cross state lines to capture escaped slaves. Glover was taken to Milwaukee and imprisoned.
Word spread about Glover’s incarceration and a great crowd (5,000) gathered around the jail demanding his release. They beat down the jail door and released Joshua Glover. He was eventually escorted to Canada and safety.
The Glover incident helped galvanize abolitionist sentiment in Wisconsin. This case eventually led the state supreme court to defy the federal government by declaring the Fugitive Slave Act unconstitutional.”
Shorty afterwards, in 1854, Wisconsin citizens met in a schoolhouse in Ripon, Wisconsin, to form what would become the Republican Party.
The original 1856 Republican platform was:
“Resolved … it is both the right and the imperative duty of Congress to prohibit in the Territories those twin relics of barbarism — Polygamy and Slavery.”
The territories, after the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, were flooded with Democrat slaveholders who wanted to bring additional slave states into the Union. This led to years of violence, called “Bleeding Kansas.”
One of the founders of the Republican Party was U.S. Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts.
In 1841, he argued before the Massachusetts Supreme Court, Roberts v. Boston, to end racial segregation in schools.
His efforts eventually led the Massachusetts Legislature to integrate schools in 1855.
When the Democrat Party pushed through the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act, Senator Sumner gave a three hour speech condemning it.
When the Kansas-Nebraska Act, promoted by Democrat Senator Stephen Douglas and Democrat Congressman Andrew Butler, passed in 1856, Sumner denounced it, accusing Democrats of having a “mistress … the harlot, Slavery.”
On May 22, 1856, Andrew Butler’s cousin, Democrat Congressman Preston Brooks approached Charles Sumner as he sat at his desk in the Senate chamber and struck him with a thick gutta-percha cane with a gold head.
Brooks continued to beat Charles Sumner till his desk, which had been bolted to the floor, was knocked over.
Blinded by his own blood, Sumner attempted to get up and stagger away down the aisle, but Brooks kept striking him.
When other Senators tried to rescue Sumner, Democrat Congressman Laurence Keitt brandished a pistol.
Finally, Brook’s gutta-percha cane broke and Sumner lay motionless on the floor.
William Cullen Bryant, editor of the New York Evening Post, wrote of the Democrat South:
“The South cannot tolerate free speech anywhere, and would stifle it in Washington with the bludgeon and the bowie-knife, as they are now trying to stifle it in Kansas by massacre, rapine, and murder …
Are we to be chastised as they chastise their slaves … a target for their brutal blows?”
After the Civil War, slavery was ended when Republicans pushed through the 13th Amendment, but Southern Democrat continued to discriminate against freed slaves.
Republicans passed the 14th Amendment in 1868 to force States to give rights to freed slaves.
In 1870, Republicans passed the 15th Amendment in 1870, to prohibit Democrats from intimidating blacks at polling places.
In the 1960s, under LBJ, Democrats did the big switch from “intimidation” to “entitlement,” as a way to control minority voters through the Great Society Welfare State entitlement programs.
Charles Sumner died MARCH 11, 1874, having never fully recovered from his injuries.
Condemning slavery in all its forms, Charles Sumner wrote In 1853 the book White Slavery in the Barbary States.
In it, he documented that throughout the Middle Ages, Muslim Barbary pirates raided coastal towns from the eastern Mediterranean to the Netherlands, and as far north as Iceland, carrying away white Europeans as slaves.
They then sold them throughout the Ottoman Empire and the North African Barbary states of Morocco, Algiers, Salee, Oran, Tunis, Tripoli and Bacra, not stopping until forced to by the Barbary Pirate War of 1816.
Charles Sumner wrote:
“The Saracens, with the Koran and the sword, potent ministers of conversion, next broke from Arabia, as the messengers of a new religion, and pouring along these shores, diffused the faith and doctrines of Mohammed … even … entered Spain, and … at Roncesvalles … overthrew the embattled chivalry of the Christian world led by Charlemange. (The Song of Roland) …
Algiers, for a long time the most obnoxious place in the Barbary States of Africa, the chief seat of Christian slavery … the wall of the barbarian world …”
Sumner continued:
“And Cervantes, in the story of Don Quixote … give(s) the narrative of a Spanish captive who had escaped from Algiers …
The author is supposed to have drawn from his own experience; for during five and a half years he endured the horrors of Algerine slavery, from which he was finally liberated by a ransom of about six hundred dollars.”
Sumner stated:
“Familiarity with that great story of redemption, when God raised up the slave-born Moses to deliver His chosen people from bondage,
and with that sublimer story where our Saviour died a cruel death that all men, without distinction of race, might be saved, makes slavery impossible …”
Sumner continued:
“There is no reason for renouncing Christianity, or for surrendering to the false religions; nor do I doubt that Christianity will yet prevail over the earth as the waters cover the sea.”
Summary: President Joe Biden will receive his daily briefing Tuesday then have a phone call with Senate Democrats and talk about the pandemic. President Biden’s Itinerary for 3/2/21: All Times EST 10:15 AM Receive daily briefing – Oval Office1:10 PM Call Democrat Senators on the phone – Oval Office4:15 PM Deliver prepared remarks on the …
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While Kruiser is away, Stephen Green and I will play, and the playground is the Morning Briefing. Green ably led the line yesterday. I’ll do my best today.
Today is March 2. Outside Texas this is just another day but in Texas it’s Texas Independence Day. On March 2, 1836, while the 189-odd Texians, Tejanos, and European rebels (and a bunch from Tennessee, however you choose to classify them) were under Santa Anna’s brutal siege at the Alamo, Sam Houston, Lorenzo de Zavala, and other Texas leaders were holed up at Washington-on-the-Brazos. They were hashing out what to do, as one of the largest armies in the Americas, under the command of the self-styled “Napoleon of the West,” would soon bear down on them. The name of the town they met in ought to strongly hint to us today what the Texas revolution was all about. It would, but the cancelers have gone after George Washington.
The kids and grandkids of the American Revolution and their Tejano allies were fighting for individual liberty and federalism; Santa Anna was a dictator who had abrogated the republican constitution, betrayed the federalists, and would soon prove to be as bloody-minded as any warlord in history. Signing a declaration of independence against him was no small choice. In 1836 Texas it got you marked for death. Zavala was an experienced rebel by 1836, since he supported Mexico’s independence from Spain before signing on for Texas’ independence from Mexico. He’d help write the Texas constitution and become the Republic of Texas’ first vice president.
As we hit the 185th anniversary of Texas Independence and the fall of the Alamo, then the rise of Texas, we have a problem. Some are revising the story to put slavery front and center, when it was not. It was an issue, but not the primary issue. The Texas State Historical Association’s chief historian wants us to forget the Alamo and view its defenders — and their supporters now — as racists. Walter Buenger, Ph.D. and TSHA chief historian, recently slammed the Alamo as an insignificant battle then and a monument to white supremacy now. The facts don’t support that at all.
I reached out to the TSHA at the time Buenger made those comments and asked if it stands by his statement. TSHA provided a “no comment,” which as flacking goes, isn’t a rousing defense. Members protested by canceling and letting TSHA know why. I’ve heard from insiders that Buenger is woke and leading TSHA in that direction, which is well outside Texas’ mainstream.
Another problematic quote of his has recently come to light. In August 2020, Buenger said the following about the Alamo in an interview with HistoryNet:
Have you ever caught flak for your viewpoints? I always catch flak. One example: I often say that in 1836 the Alamo had a flat roof. That fancy top was added a decade later, and that’s a metaphor for understanding the Texas Revolution and much of Texas history: It’s been added on after the fact. The average student’s or average non-historian’s knowledge of Texas and U.S. history is heavily influenced by what someone wants to believe or what their ideology, status, or uncritical reading encourages them to believe. I take students and all who will listen back to 1836, and alert them to the dangers of listening to what was added on after the fact.
Somebody sure is adding something to history that wasn’t originally there. The Alamo church didn’t have a roof in 1836, as anyone who knows the Alamo much should know. The flat part he’s talking about is atop the façade above the main door, not the roof, and he’s right that the iconic hump was added in the 1840s. The U.S. Army added it to cover the gabled roof it had installed because there was no roof prior. So Buenger is bungling the facts a bit here to make his misleading political point and add his spin to Texas history long after the fact. Some of the greatest heroes of that war are the Tejanos, such as Damacio Ximenez, Juan Seguin, Jose Toribio Losoya (one of his descendants is currently on the city council), and Antonio Menchaca. We need to learn more about them and why they fought, and why several other Mexican states also rebelled against Santa Anna at the same time, which was not for “whiteness” or slavery as Buenger and some others allege.
Buenger wasn’t done.
Do some topics lend themselves more to interpretation than others? Capitalism, say, can be viewed from very different angles. Yes, of course. Many in the profession do argue about capitalism. I find the argument that enslaved labor was an extreme form of capitalism and a tool to reduce the cost of production to be a compelling one. Still, if you assume capitalism to have been built upon wage labor, elements of slavery are pre-capitalist.
One need not be a historian to know that slavery pre-dates the invention of capitalism by thousands of years. Buenger may be parroting some other social historians and ignoring a great deal of other scholarship. Slavery can be traced to ancient China, Mesopotamia, Greece, the Americas (the Aztecs and Mayans both practiced it, as did many other peoples of pre-Columbian America), Egypt, Rome, India, Europe, Africa, and nearly everywhere else people and cultures came into contact with one another. The Vikings took slaves. Biblical and other ancient texts speak of slavery’s existence throughout human history. Slavery long predates industrial production and predates the colonial period, long before anyone ever even thought of such a thing as America. Capitalism doesn’t even come along until the 16th through 18th centuries. Don’t take my word for it; look it up.
Buenger has no authority over the Alamo itself, and is not a specialist in the Alamo or the Texas Revolution. He’s a 20th-century social historian. None of his books are about the Alamo or the revolution, yet he offers much comment on it all and media provide him a platform. TSHA’s Handbook of Texas is considered authoritative and used by media and researchers any time Texas history is a topic. Buenger strongly influences that as its chief editor, and TSHA influences what is taught in Texas public schools.
So this is important. Cancel culture is real, as even Bill Maher recently admitted. Academic freedom is dying at the hands of critical race theory and cancel culture, which views history through a very narrow, modern Marxist lens that condemns capitalism but overlooks communism’s true, current slavery (in China, for instance), and ignores its ghastly historic body count. Academics, believing their own careers will be canceled, fear taking a stand against woke cancel culture. Buenger seems to be on the cancel side of ideological history, and thus should be of concern to Texans and anyone else who doesn’t want to see the Alamo canceled. It could be, by diminishing the battle and the revolutionaries who fell there and smearing them and Texas itself as irredeemably evil. Slapping it all with the “white supremacy” label is a step toward cancellation.
And then what? Statues of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, U.S. Grant, and others have been pulled down all over the country over the past year. The New York Times is still chipping away at America’s founding via its 1619 Project (which was debunked by the Smithsonian Magazine even before its publication) by pushing it into public schools. To believe that the Alamo is somehow immune from these cultural forces is deeply naïve. The cancel-minded would like nothing better than to cancel one of the world’s most potent symbols of the fight for freedom. Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and a few others are standing up for the Alamo. More leaders and academics must, or they will have no one else to blame when the Alamo falls again.
Notice I didn’t say “if.” I said “when.”
He’s an alien, a shapeshifting alien…
If you’re not watching Resident Alien, starring Alan Tudyk as a not-nice space alien trying to solve a murder mystery while trapped in Colorado, you should be. It’s delightfully subversive of current culture in ways similar to Community. Tudyk is good in everything and he has a great supporting cast here. Plus he’s from Texas.
Let the musicians play
The other day I was deep-diving live music clips on YouTube, vibing to Dennis Chambers — the best drummer alive — blowing the roof off some joint with Carlos Santana, and being sad that the COVID pandemic killed concerts. I went to my last concert a year ago this month, of course having no idea that concerts would just go away. It was 90 minutes of metal. My ears rang for days and I loved every second of it. Then it was gone.
To get a sense of what’s happened to the music industry over the past year, here’s Chambers in a live Guitar Center drum-off from long before the plague. Live music — dead or driven online. Guitar Center — bankrupt. Venues and festivals — hammered to dust. 2020 won, so far.
But after defeat, victory. Live music may be coming back to Austin this fall — ACL is apparently on. Music is good for the soul and live music, more so. We need to #SaveOurStages and let musicians work again.
NASA is still doing amazing things. Last week it landed a rover on a dime on Mars and we saw the action in HD. This week it’s doing final prep for the James Webb Space Telescope. That’s Hubble’s successor. None of this is possible with woke math. It’s doable with real math.
Postscript: Santa Anna isn’t popular in Mexico today, despite the fact that he was president/dictator off and on for decades. He did lose Texas, so there’s that. His legs are in Illinois, by the way. His prosthetic ones, that is. He had his real one buried with full military honors. Sorry, King of the Hill fans. The prosthetics were never kidnapped.
Dennis Chambers has no formal drum training. He played his first gigs at age six.
Biden cancels Dr. Suess . . . President Biden appears to have erased Dr. Seuss from “Read Across America Day”, the annual celebration of reading in honor of the legendary children’s author, whose birthday falls on March 2. While Biden followed presidential tradition in proclaiming Tuesday “Read Across America Day,” he bucked his predecessors by leaving out any mention of Dr. Seuss from the proclamation. White House Dossier
6 Dr. Seuss books to stop being published because of racist imagery . . . The sales of six Dr. Seuss books will cease over racist and insensitive imagery, according to the business that preserves and protects the author’s legacy. The news comes Thursday on National Read Across America Day, when schools across the U.S. celebrate reading on Dr. Seuss’s March 2 birthday to commemorate the popular children’s author, who died in 1991. “These books portray people in ways that are hurtful and wrong,” Dr. Seuss Enterprises told The Associated Press in a statement. Fox News
The country has officially ‘transitioned’ from Democracy into Idiocracy.
Could the attacks on Dr. Seuss be the tipping point? . . . The same boneheads who claim that the “mister” in Mr. Potato Head is overly “exclusive,” that Aunt Jemima syrup encouraged racial stereotyping, that math is a vestige of White supremacy and that gender reveal parties are “transphobic,” want you to find racism in the pages of “Hop on Pop.” The Loudoun County Public Schools, which spend over $1 billion annually to educate more than 80,000 students in northern Virginia, has canceled its annual celebration of the beloved author Dr. Seuss’s birthday. They justified their action by citing recent research that supposedly “revealed strong racial undertones in many books written/illustrated by Dr. Seuss.” This year, the Loudoun County schools folded, persuaded by a 2019 study that analyzed 50 books and more than 2,200 characters created by Dr. Seuss and concluded that “of the 2,240 (identified) human characters, there are 45 characters of color representing 2% of the total number of human characters.” “Of the 45 characters, 43 exhibited behaviors and appearances that align with harmful and stereotypical Orientalist tropes.” Opinion/ AnalysisFox News
Rep. Jordan calls for House Judiciary Committee hearing on ‘cancel culture’ . . . House Judiciary Committee ranking member Jim Jordan in a letter to chairman Jerrold Nadler called for the committee to devote its first full hearing for the 117th Congress to the issue of “cancel culture,” warning that it poses a threat to freedom of speech. “The wave of cancel culture spreading the nation is a serious threat to fundamental free speech rights in the United States,” the Ohio Republican wrote to Rep. Nadler, a New York Democrat. “From newsrooms to college campuses to social media giants, we have seen a dangerous trend toward silencing and censoring certain political speech. Just the News
Coronavirus
41 percent say they are not willing to receive COVID vaccine . . . Forty-one percent of voters said they are not willing to get the coronavirus vaccine, according to a new Harvard CAPS-Harris poll released exclusively to The Hill on Monday.
The same survey found that 59 percent of respondents said they were willing to receive the vaccine. Among those who said they were unwilling to get the vaccine, 66 percent said they were concerned about side effects, while another 33 percent said they did not believe it was effective. Twenty-seven percent said they were not concerned about the virus, 23 percent said it should go to more at-risk individuals and 17 percent said they had health concerns. The Hill
Officials downplay lower efficacy rating of J&J vaccine . . . The White House and governors worked overtime Monday to boost confidence in Johnson & Johnson’s newly approved vaccine, saying it is just as good as the others in preventing hospitalization or death from COVID-19 and is more convenient to boot. In press events across the country, officials implored people not to get hung up on trial data showing the J&J vaccine was 66% effective against all forms of disease, compared with 95% demonstrated by the messenger-RNA vaccines approved in December. Washington Times
WHO investigators deeply skeptical of China’s Covid origin theory . . . World Health Organization investigators have downplayed a Chinese theory that coronavirus was brought to Wuhan through frozen food, underlining the charged geopolitics surrounding the roots of Covid-19. Two members of the WHO Wuhan team told the Financial Times that it was extremely unlikely the first cases of Sars-Cov-2 identified in Wuhan in 2019 entered the city on frozen or refrigerated goods. The claim that virus entered city on frozen food has been pushed hard by China’s government and state media. Financial Times
Trump, Melania got COVID-19 vaccine before leaving White House . . . Former President Donald Trump and former first lady Melania Trump were vaccinated for COVID-19 in January, The Post has confirmed. The shots were administered privately at the White House before President Biden took office, a person with knowledge of the inoculations said. Trump, 74, publicly battled the virus in October and was hospitalized for three nights at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. The former first lady, 50, also tested positive for the virus in October but was not taken to the hospital for treatment. New York Post
Politics
Mexico pressing Biden to accept up to 800,000 immigrants a year . . . President Biden is set to meet with Mexican President Manuel López Obrador Monday afternoon amid the migrant crisis and as the new administration has taken steps to roll back Trump-era immigration policies. López Obrador is reportedly expected to propose a new Bracero-style immigrant labor program to Biden, which could bring 600,000 to 800,000 Mexican and Central American immigrants a year to work legally in the United States. White House Dossier
The White House knows it is the equivalent of the Democratic Party Expansion Program.
The state of the Bernie-Biden relationship remains strong . . . The president and the Senate’s most recognizable progressive have made sure to work constructively together, even under stressful policy battles.The state of the Bernie-Biden relationship remains strong. With Democrats navigating battles over labor rights and wage policy, the two have back-channeled, applauded each other, and crafted carefully worded statements designed to project peace and the aura of collaboration. It is a recognition that each side needs the other in order to be successful. The Vermont independent spent a good portion of the Obama years as a progressive-minded critic of the Democratic Party and its agenda, even as he cast critical votes to pass those policies. Politico
Didn’t the liberals admit that the goal was always to first elect Biden President and then push country all the way to the Left?
Biden HHS nominee has supported socialized medicine for more than a quarter century . . . President Biden’s HHS nominee Xavier Becerra is a big backer of “Medicare for all,” which of course is government-run health care. In this 2017 interview, he acknowledged proudly that he has backed it for a couple dozen years, way before it seemed such a serious thing. You think he’ll have no influence in the Biden administration? Becerra is a veteran Washington operator who knows how to get stuff done. They’ll start with the “public option,” a government health plan, for Obamacare and go from there. Or just try to pass socialized medicine in Congress. White House Dossier
Biden Proposes to Expand Obamacare . . . The American Recovery Act, the Biden administration’s $1.9 trillion response to the COVID-19 pandemic, includes a $40 billion down payment on the president’s plan to “build on Obamacare.” The bill’s expansion of Obamacare—also known as the Affordable Care Act—has nothing to do with the pandemic, would do little to increase health insurance coverage, and may create disincentives for unemployed people to return to work. Most of the new spending will benefit those who already have heavily subsidized Obamacare coverage. Daily Signal
White House dodges on why it refuses to reveal virtual meeting attendees . . . The Biden administration won’t answer questions on a recent decision to not publish the White House’s virtual visitor logs. The issue was first raised in a Monday piece from Politico noting that despite multiple pledges from President Joe Biden and other top administration officials to reinstate the practice of publishing the full White House visitor logs, the White House would not be doing the same for the president’s virtual meetings. White House press secretary Jen Psaki also dodged a question on the subject at Monday’s briefing. Real Clear Politics’ Philip Wegmann asked Psaki directly why that decision had been made. “He’s meeting with members of the Senate virtually today,” Psaki responded. “There, I’ve released it for you. What else would you like to know?” White House Dossier
Transparency Administration.
Supreme Court Deals Another Blow to Embattled California governor . . . The effort to recall California governor Gavin Newsom got a boost from the Supreme Court, which struck down the Democrat’s ban on indoor church services. The decision, handed down Friday night, ruled in favor of several churches that had sought government protection from bans on in-person, indoor religious services instituted because of the coronavirus crisis. The decision cited the Supreme Court’s previous ruling in favor of churches that established the High Court’s position that religious services could not be treated differently than secular essential services. Kevin Faulconer, a former San Diego mayor and leading Republican gubernatorial candidate, said the Court has repeatedly defeated Newsom’s attempts to restrict constitutionally protected actions. Washington Free Beacon
Mike Pence missing in action as Trump makes triumphant return . . . As former President Donald Trump teased his political comeback to conservatives this weekend, his one-time wingman, ex-Vice President Mike Pence, was nowhere to be found. While Mr. Trump was accepting the adulation of attendees at the CPAC, his speech lacked any mention of Mr. Pence. Mr. Pence didn’t attend the gathering, reportedly declining an invitation to speak. And activists didn’t seem to miss him very much, relegating him to a 1% showing in The Washington Times-CPAC’s straw poll test of potential 2024 presidential candidates. A month after the vice president left office, CPAC suggests there is, at best, a ho-hum feeling about Mr. Pence’s future in GOP politics. Washington Times
National Security
Israeli Military Officials Warn Biden Against Rejoining Iran Nuke Deal . . . A group of nearly 2,000 Israeli generals, military officials, and Mossad operatives warned the Biden administration on Monday against rejoining the Iran nuclear deal, saying the effort “represents an existential threat to the Jewish State” and will “ignite a massive nuclear arms race” across Middle East. The high-ranking military officials outlined their concerns in a letter sent Monday to President Biden and Secretary of State Blinken. It was signed by 24 Israeli generals and comes as the administration pursues direct talks with Iran as part of an effort to secure a revamped nuclear agreement.. Washington Free Beacon
International
Gorbachev to ‘Zoom’ his 90th birthday party as Putin lauds him . . . Mikhail Gorbachev, the last Soviet leader, was expected to throw a Zoom party on Tuesday to celebrate his 90th birthday as President Vladimir Putin lauded him as an outstanding statesman who influenced the course of world history. Gorbachev, who championed arms control and democracy-oriented reforms as Soviet leader in the 1980s, is widely credited with helping end the Cold War. His critics in Russia blame him however, for what they regard as the unnecessary and painful breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991. Reuters
Chinese COVID vaccines sweep much of the world, despite concerns . . . The plane laden with vaccines had just rolled to a stop at Santiago’s airport in late January, and Chile’s president, Sebastián Piñera, was beaming. “Today,” he said, “is a day of joy, emotion and hope.” The source of that hope: China – a country that Chile and dozens of other nations are depending on to help rescue them from the COVID-19 pandemic. China’s vaccine diplomacy campaign has been a surprising success: It has pledged roughly half a billion doses of its vaccines to more than 45 countries, according to a country-by-country tally by The Associated Press.
Money
US wasted billions on Afghan construction projects: IG . . . American taxpayers funded billions of dollars worth of reconstruction projects in Afghanistan that were destroyed or abandoned during the two decades of fighting in the war-torn country, according to a new watchdog report. Of the nearly $8 billion in U.S. capital assistance projects in Afghanistan — construction, building purchases and motor vehicles — more than $2 billion was wasted, according to the latest critical report issued Monday by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR.) Washington Times
Walmart dropping $35 minimum requirement for Express Delivery service . . . Walmart is dropping the minimum order requirement for its Express Delivery service as it races to gain a competitive edge over rival Amazon Prime in the fast-growing e-commerce sector. Effective immediately, customers will no longer have to pay a $35 minimum in order to receive food and merchandise in under two hours, the Arkansas-based retailer announced Monday. Service gives Walmart shoppers access to over 160,000 items. Fox Business
CVS, Walgreens Look to Profit from Big Data Collected From Recipients of Covid-19 Vaccinations . . . Administering Covid-19 vaccines comes with a valuable perk for retail pharmacies: access to troves of consumer data. Chains such as CVS Health Corp., Walmart Inc. and Walgreens-Boots Alliance, Inc. are collecting data from millions of customers as they sign up for shots, enrolling them in patient systems and having recipients register customer profiles.
The retailers say they are using the information to promote their stores and services, tailor marketing and keep in touch with consumers. Wall Street Journal
You should also know
Chinese-American Author on Race Equality: ‘Nobody Is Saying We Want 6 Percent Asians in the NBA’ . . . Amid wide-ranging efforts, from the White House to America’s top universities, to progress social equality, American-Chinese author Kenny Xu said he believes the NFL and NBA are prime examples of why artificially inflating racial equality doesn’t work in the best interests of any group. He pointed to the two sports as representing segments of American society that have not been pressured to fill race quotas like some educational institutions. “I mean, in the NBA, it’s 75 percent black. Nobody is saying we want 15 percent Asians, we want 6 percent Asians in the NBA. It doesn’t work like that,” Xu told The Epoch Times on Saturday at the CPAC in Orlando. “You are chosen based on how you perform. We shouldn’t be advocating for equity there necessarily. It’s a performance-based system; that’s what makes it work. And that’s what makes it fair too,” he added. Epoch Times
Yeah, but it’s way too common sense for the Leftists. He must be a racist to think that way.
FBI Received Tip Deemed ‘Not Plausible’ Days Before Opening Flynn Probe . . . The FBI opened its investigation of Michael Flynn days after receiving information from a paid confidential source in August 2016 that an agent later determined to be “not plausible,” according to a newly declassified document. The FBI opened its Crossfire Hurricane counterintelligence investigation of Flynn nearly a week after beginning a probe of three other Trump campaign advisors: George Papadopoulos, Carter Page and Paul Manafort. Flynn was the fourth aide targeted in the probe. The FBI would use Halper, who had served in four Republican presidential administrations, to meet with and secretly record both Page and Papadopoulos. He was paid an undisclosed sum of money for his work, according to a Justice Department inspector general’s report released in 2019 . Daily Caller
Former pope uneasy with Catholic Biden’s adherence to Democratic Party line . . . Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, better known as emeritus Pope Benedict XVI, expressed misgivings in a Monday interview about President Biden for falling in line with the Democratic Party’s political platform. Cardinal Ratzinger, who became the first pope in more than 600 years to retire when he stepped down in 2013, had “some reservations on a religious level” with Mr. Biden, according to the Italian publication Corriere della Sera. “It’s true, he’s Catholic and observant. And personally he is against abortion,” Cardinal Ratzinger told the newspaper. “But as president, he tends to present himself in continuity with the line of the Democratic Party. … And on gender politics we have not yet understood what his position is.” Washington Times
Third Woman Accuses Cuomo Of Sexual Misconduct . . . Anna Ruch, 33, is a third woman who has come forward and accused Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo of sexual misconduct. It reportedly took place at a September 2019 New York City wedding reception. Daily Caller
Guilty Pleasures
Can You Find All 17 Instances Of Racism On This Page From A Dr. Seuss Book? . . . Racism is everywhere. But nowhere is racism more blatant than in the books of well-known racist Dr. Seuss. His pages were literally dripping with racism, or maybe that was just the barbecue sauce for our chicken nuggies. Even so, barbecue sauce might be racist too, now that we think of it. Take this Dr. Seuss page out of Oh, the Thinks You Can Think!. It looks harmless, yeah? Well, you’re just showing your internalized racism, because there are literally 17 different examples of racism packed into this illustration. Come on a journey with us as we explore them all. 1. The giant orange beast is obviously a reference to Donald Trump. This glorifies white supremacy and Nazism, as Seuss was alluding to his allegiance to the bad orange man. See the rest of Seuss’s racist rants and doodles on Babylon Bee
This is satire.
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Happy Tuesday! The Chicago Cubs are on pace never to lose a game in 2021. It’s just statistics.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
A study found that China permeated regional rival India’s power grid using malware, causing mass blackouts last year after territorial disputes in the Galwan Valley.
Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy was hit with a three-year sentence yesterday after a court found him guilty of corruption and influence peddling. Sarkozy plans to appeal the conviction, which stems from his attempt to illegally obtain information from a senior magistrate in exchange for a position in Monaco.
The Senate voted 64-33 on Monday to confirm Miguel Cardona as Secretary of Education.
A handful of Democratic lawmakers have begun calling on Gov. Andrew Cuomo to resign after a third woman came forward on Monday with an allegation of sexual harassment against the governor.
The United States confirmed 54,257 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 4.4 percent of the 1,248,669 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,242 deaths were attributed to the virus on Monday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 514,333. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 46,738 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 1,663,984 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, bringing the nationwide total to 76,899,987.
Vaccine Availability Is About to Boom
The Food & Drug Administration issued an emergency use authorization for Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine over the weekend, meaning a United States itching to return to normal will soon have a third arrow in its quiver in the push to bring the coronavirus pandemic to an end.
The latest entry into the vaccine game brings with it several unique advantages. First and foremost, the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which doesn’t use the same mRNA technology as its Moderna and Pfizer counterparts, requires only a single shot, rather than two spaced out over several weeks. Not only does this remove the clerical headaches that come with getting people to show up for two appointments, it also means manufactured vaccines go twice as far: 100 million doses of Johnson & Johnson will fully vaccinate 100 million people, not 50 million.
The Johnson & Johnson vaccine also doesn’t need to be kept in sub-zero temperatures like Moderna and Pfizer’s. It will remain potent for up to three months at a comparatively balmy 36 to 46 degrees Fahrenheit. This will have huge logistical implications for vaccine distribution, particularly in rural areas.
“The special handling of Pfizer and Moderna meant that we had to bring people to the vaccines,” Vanderbilt University School of Medicine infectious disease expert Dr. William Schaffner told The Dispatch. “But with Johnson & Johnson, we can bring the vaccine to the people.”
Spike in Bond Yields Shows Faith In Economic Recovery
Most U.S. government bond yields fell sharply on Monday, stabilizing the stock market after a volatile week driven in large part by such yields reaching their highest point in a year. The 10-year Treasury yield clocked in at 1.444 percent at Monday’s close, down from 1.525 percent last Thursday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average clawed back 600 points on Monday, allowing investors to recover from last week’s big losses.
The Federal Reserve’s low interest rates have fueled this year’s stock market rally, as bonds have lost their appeal and investors have poured their assets into equities. Last week’s spike in bond yields threatened that trend because rising long-term interest rates tend to make tech stocks less appealing to investors.
But Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has made clear in recent weeks that the central bank has no plans to deviate from its easy-money policies—near-zero interest rates and large-scale bond purchases—until the Fed notches more gains toward its unemployment and inflation goals. “It’s a statement of confidence on the part of markets that we will have a robust and complete recovery,” Powell said last week when pressed on the rise in yields.
An America United—a political advocacy organization supporting Maryland’s Republican Gov. Larry Hogan—is releasing a new advertisement this morning that looks a lot like something you’d see in a presidential campaign.
The four-minute spot—supported by an Avengers-style score—highlights Hogan’s leadership throughout the pandemic and touts his bipartisan approach to politics.
“In this environment, when people usually don’t work together in a bipartisan way, we really did put aside all the politics. We didn’t have red and blue uniforms on,” Hogan says in a voiceover. “We’ve got to decide if we’re going to head in this direction of continuing to practice this kind of crazy, fringe politics on the far right or the far left, or whether we’re going to actually go back to a more traditional Republican party and an America where we can bring people together with a positive, hopeful vision.”
Hogan, reelected easily to a second four-year term in 2018, has not shied away from speculation about a 2024 presidential bid. A longtime critic of former President Donald Trump, he told Bloomberg in December that, while he wasn’t “ready to launch any campaigns,” he wouldn’t rule one out, either. He expanded on his future in the GOP during an interview with TMD’s Declan Garvey in late January.
“I think we’re going to have a four-year battle for the soul of the Republican Party,” Hogan said. “I’m not going to be one of those ones that’s abandoning the party or giving up. … Whether we win this fight or not, time will tell. But it’s worth fighting for, because it’s the party that I believe in—that I’ve spent my whole life fighting for. And I’m not going to let brand new crazy people try to take it over.”
In Matthew Yglesias’ latest Slow Boring newsletter, he lays out just how shortchanged American students have been throughout this pandemic. It’s a complicated issue: While teachers unions bear significant blame for the continued closure of schools, parents haven’t been overwhelmingly in favor of reopening, either—even as study after study finds schools not to be vectors of high transmission. Whatever the reason, our current mishmash of pandemic restrictions doesn’t make much sense, Yglesias argues. “In a world where they’re still giving people snacks on airplanes, letting Ted Cruz jet off for a weekend in Cancún, etc., having schools closed represents an irrational social response to the pandemic,” he writes. “Either the schools should be closed because we’re being super-cautious (in which case indoor dining should be closed), or else the restaurants should be open because we’re not being cautious (in which case schools should be open too).”
Unfounded conspiracy theories peddled by right-wing influencers fueled January 6’s violent storming of the Capitol. Now, those influencers are trying to retcon the former president’s role—and that of his supporters—in the incident. In a thoroughly reported piece for the Washington Post, Mike DeBonis and Jeremy Barr chronicle the revisionist history that has taken over the far right and provide ample evidence for why these narratives, however enticing to Trump apologists, contain no substance. “A legion of conservative activists, media personalities and elected officials are seeking to rewrite the story of what happened at the Capitol on Jan. 6, hoping to undermine the clear picture of the attack that has emerged from video and photo evidence, law enforcement officials, journalistic accounts and the testimonials of the rioters themselves,” DeBonis and Barr write. “That a pro-Trump mob, mobilized by the former president’s false claims of a stolen election, stormed the seat of American government to keep Trump in power through violent means.”
Mary Chastain: “The Cubs played today! My Cubs are my everything. I have a one-track mind and it’s baseball. Baseball is normalcy for me. I spent Sunday cleaning, folding laundry, and cooking with baseball on the TV (muted) and streaming radio broadcasts on my computer. It felt fantastic. “
Fuzzy Slippers: “The rank hypocrisy of leftists was on display again as a Cali teacher’s union head is caught on video dropping his own child off at an open private school. So again we are faced with the absolute reality that open schools are not the hotbed of WuFlu death the left insists they are . . . after all, would this parent really put his own child at risk of certain death in an open school? Of course not. These draconian lockdowns are not about safety or health or a deadly pandemic, and we know this because leftist/Democrat leaders are constantly caught demonstrating that dining, going to school, traveling, and etc. are perfectly safe. We all know they would never put their own privileged, elitist lives at risk . . . if there were a real risk. “
Leslie Eastman: “The real epidemic spreading through California is recall fever.”
Vijeta Uniyal: “A recent report published by the Israel-based Alma Research and Education Center reveals that the Iran-backed Hezbollah is erecting more missile launch sites in the Lebanese capital Beirut. The missiles aimed at Israel are located in the city’s crowded neighborhoods, a tactic to deter the Israeli military from targeting the sites in case of an armed conflict. Hezbollah plans to launch these weapons toward civilian targets and population concentrations in Israel from within or adjacent to residential buildings. Hezbollah believes that this tactic will grant it immunity against IDF’s attacks,” the report concluded.”
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The Beginning of the End for Gov. Cuomo
Over the last year, the media glowingly labeled New York Governor Andrew Cuomo “America’s Governor.” He won an Emmy for his daily COVID briefings, and there was buzz about a presidential run in his future. Democrats and the media assured us he was a hero. But in just a few short weeks, Cuomo has seen the legacy he was carefully constructing, with the help of his left-wing allies, come crashing down. A second woman has now accused the governor of sexual misconduct, which has spurred responses from furious New York lawmakers. Even Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez weighed in, stating on Sunday that the “detailed accounts of sexual harassment by Gov. Cuomo are extremely serious and painful to read. There must be an independent investigation – not one led by an individual selected by the Governor, but by the office of the Attorney General.”
According to the New York Times, the latest accuser was an executive assistant and health policy adviser to Cuomo until last fall. She claims she endured regular sexual harassmentfrom the governor including inappropriate questions about her “sex life, whether she was monogamous in her relationships and if she had ever had sex with older men.” From the Times:
“Ms. Bennett said the most unsettling episode occurred on June 5, when she was alone with Mr. Cuomo in his State Capitol office. In a series of interviews this week, she said the governor had asked her numerous questions about her personal life, including whether she thought age made a difference in romantic relationships, and had said that he was open to relationships with women in their 20s — comments she interpreted as clear overtures to a sexual relationship.”
The same media that gave Cuomo unending, glowing coverage for the last year is now forced to cover the growing allegations against him. The governor’s hypocrisy, inappropriate behavior, and recklessness have become too flagrant to ignore. For example, he fundraised off the #MeToo movement in 2018 – the same year another former adviser resigned due to sexual harassment and unwanted touching by the governor, which she claims began in 2016.
And Cuomo’s hypocrisy doesn’t end with his alleged treatment of women. This is the man who wrote a book praising himself for his handling of COVID as thousands of elderly New Yorkers were dying after his disastrous nursing home policy; Cuomo then lied about the true nursing home death toll in his state for nearly a year. At the same time, he appeared on cable networks – including his own brother’s CNN show – where he engaged in lighthearted banter as New Yorkers saw their businesses, life savings, and jobs destroyed due to draconian lockdowns in New York that crushed private commerce.
It has become increasingly clear that Cuomo is nothing more than a power-hungry politician, who doesn’t care who he hurts in his efforts to bolster his own public platform. Cuomo only cares about Cuomo. If New York lawmakers won’t hold him accountable legally, then voters in his state likely will. The governor is up for reelection in 2022.
Federal Reserve Flirts with ‘Digital Dollar’, Raising Privacy Concerns
Jerome Powell, the chair of the US Federal Reserve, said in a recent Congressional hearing that the Fed will engage the public in a digital dollar this year. There has been wide speculation about if and when the U.S. might develop a centralized digital currency, as the demand for cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin has skyrocketed in the last year. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has repeatedly disparaged cryptocurrencies, calling them dangerous and implying that they need to be regulated; a centralized digital dollar has been proposed by federal regulators as though it will satisfy the demand for cryptocurrencies while allowing the federal government to maintain widespread currency control. What Yellen and her ilk either don’t understand, or pretend not to understand, is that people are not buying cryptos like Bitcoin simply because they want a digital currency – they are doing so because they have lost faith in the U.S. dollar and believe it will continue to lose value amidst out-of-control federal spending.
A cashless society could also come with some serious privacy concerns, allowing the feds to track transactions on an unprecedented level. The central bank would be given extraordinary access into every single financial activity of its users, potentially including the most granular information. In China, significant progress has been made towards a national digital currency. While regulators have promised users their information will be kept private from other users as well as transaction platforms, the central bank has access to details and identities associated with every transaction.
Is This What Mass Psychosis Looks Like?
When I first saw the above image on Twitter, I didn’t think it was real; surely this was a joke from the Babylon Bee or some other satirical site, I assumed. I was wrong.
Wenatchee High School in Washington has come under fire after images emerged showing school band members in tiny green tents to isolate them from peers, in an apparent effort to protect against COVID-19. The photos were first published by Wenatchee World. One shows a tuba player who had to crane his neck to play his tuba inside the tiny enclosure.
The disturbing photos caused a firestorm on Twitter, and prompted blowback from several lawmakers. The photos emerged as many schools around the nation remain closed, even though data has shown that in-person learning does not lead to a significant spread of COVID-19 to students, staff, or teachers. Inferior virtual learning has increased the achievement gap between poor and rich students, and led to a significant uptick in mental conditions among students including depression. Our students are being failed.Other Headlines That Should Be on Your Radar
Kristin Tate is an author and columnist focused on taxation and government spending. Her latest book, The Liberal Invasion of Red State America, was published by Regnery Publishing in 2020. She is a Robert Novak Journalism Fellow at the Fund for American Studies, examining the size, scope, and cost of the federal workforce. Kristin also serves as analyst for the nonprofit group Young Americans for Liberty, aiding the organization in its mission to promote limited government and fiscal responsibility. You can follow her on Twitter at @KristinBTate.
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Mar 02, 2021 01:00 am
The three top issues of concern to Democrats really aren’t crazy-cakes; they make complete sense, if you are a ruling-class upper-class liberal. Read More…
Mar 02, 2021 01:00 am
Old Guard Republicans can either become part of the change that is transforming the Republican Party or get steamrolled on their way to irrelevancy. Read More…
Mar 02, 2021 01:00 am
Biden’s lifting the sanctions on Iran will not lift the Iranian people out of poverty. It’s corruption, not sanctions, that keeps them down. Read More…
Photos: What I saw at CPAC 2021
Mar 02, 2021 01:00 am
At CPAC, they love themselves some President Trump. And, the left, which also turned up, behaved predictably piggishly. Read more…
Transgenderism: a dangerous new fad
Mar 02, 2021 01:00 am
There is enormous pressure on young people to declare that they are transgender, even as data show the serious dangers associated with so-called transgenderism. Read more…
Trump knows he won the election
Mar 01, 2021 01:00 am
He spoke of massive chicanery in 2020; shamed the Supreme Court; and warned that unless people act now, the Democrats will legislate election fraud. Read more…
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Far-left actor Mark Ruffalo was ripped on social media after his Golden Globes award acceptance speech, during which he decried the “cruel past of this nation” and warned of our “dying … Mother Earth.” What are the details? Ruffalo is well known for his left-wing activism and virtue-signaling, as he once blasted Ellen DeGeneres’ call for “kind … Read more
What’s most striking is that de Blasio’s call to ‘revoke the governor’s emergency powers’ comes after nearly an entire year of Cuomo publicly wielding his power to destroy his own state.
In contrast to the rising hopes of most Americans, Dr. Anthony Fauci is preaching more caution, more isolation, and more of the same even as millions of Americans are now vaccinated.
We have just the perfect solution for American kids’ deep ignorance about their nation’s founding principles, system of government, and history. It’s making them into political activists!
Detroit would not be the first city to have its sanctuary status come under scrutiny due to the actions of a criminal illegal migrant. Authorities sometimes respond by hiding migration status.
The new data tell us people are simply becoming more elastic in how they view their sexuality and gender. And if sexuality is elastic, that has huge implications.
A provision in Democrats’ $1.9 trillion COVID bill could give subsidies to households making $300,000 or more. Biden wants to make these subsidies permanent.
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U.S. Supreme Court justices will today consider whether to uphold two Republican-backed voting restrictions in Arizona in a case that could further weaken the Voting Rights Act, a landmark 1965 federal law that barred racial discrimination in voting.
The case comes before the justices at a time when Republicans in numerous states are pursuing new restrictions after former President Donald Trump made false claims of widespread election fraud.
President Joe Biden’s administration has backed Democrats’ efforts to overhaul voting rules and turn over the process of drawing congressional districts to independent commissions, saying the United States is facing an “an unprecedented assault on our democracy.”
The United States has reported a 3% decline in new cases of COVID-19 last week, a much smaller drop than in the previous six weeks, and health officials have warned that progress against the global pandemic is stalling.
↑ The first boxes of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine are ceremoniously transported to shipping at the McKesson facility in Shepherdsville, U.S., March 1, 2021
WORLD
↑ A girl who was kidnapped from a boarding school in the northwest Nigerian state of Zamfara shows her injured foot after her release, March 2, 2021
Gunmen have freed all 279 girls kidnapped from a boarding school in northwest Nigeria, as one of the victims told Reuters how their abductors had beaten her and her schoolmates with their weapons.
As Pope Francis prepares to visit Iraq, we look at how the clergy are leading a rare Christian revival in a town due to welcome him.
Mikhail Gorbachev, the last Soviet leader, is expected to throw a Zoom party today to celebrate his 90th birthday as President Vladimir Putin lauds him as an outstanding statesman who influenced the course of world history.
Sophisticated scanning technology is revealing intriguing secrets about Little Foot, the remarkable fossil of an early human forerunner that inhabited South Africa 3.67 million years ago during a critical point in our evolutionary history.
BUSINESS
Alibaba and Ant Group founder Jack Ma has lost the title of China’s richest man, as his peers prosper while his empire is put under heavy scrutiny by Chinese regulators.
A manager at Amazon.com has sued the online retailer for discrimination, saying it hires Black people for lower positions and promotes them more slowly than white workers. Charlotte Newman, a business development head, accused a male supervisor of using racial tropes by calling her “aggressive,” “too direct” and “just scary.”
In the tenth century, Erik the Red, a Viking from Iceland, was so impressed with the vegetation on another Arctic island he had found he called it “the green land.” Today, it’s Greenland’s rocks that are attracting outsiders – superpowers riding a green revolution.
To go electric, America needs more mines – but can it build them? We look at the political quandary for Biden’s administration.
by Tony Perkins: It’s a battle, Pastor Mike McClure said, that he “never wanted to be in.” But it’s a battle that God called him to fight — and he knows it. Keeping his church open hasn’t been easy, but then being obedient in the face of controversy usually isn’t. Still, Pastor Mike pointed out, it’s amazing when you do what’s right how “the Lord just shows up.” And late Friday, He wasn’t the only one. The Supreme Court decided to weigh in too — and the Christians of Santa Clara County couldn’t be happier.
It’s been more than three weeks since the Supreme Court ripped up Governor Gavin Newsom’s (D-Calif.) worship ban. And even then, some liberal officials wouldn’t comply. Santa Clara County decided that “indoor gatherings of all kinds remain very risky” and took it upon themselves to keep the churches closed despite what the justices had ordered. If people wanted to visit their churches to pray or take confession, that was one thing — but actual worship services, the county argued, would have to wait.
Fortunately, that all changed this weekend, when six Supreme Court justices directed the last remaining holdout to fall in line. After the ruling in February, the attorneys at Pacific Justice Institute had argued, every house of worship from the Mexican border to Oregon were open at 25 percent capacity — except for Santa Clara County. There, they sit “as an island of tyranny with zero capacity for indoor worship services.” How is that fair, the churches asked? It isn’t, Justices John Roberts, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and rookie Amy Coney Barrett agreed. In their short, unsigned order, they granted the pastors’ requests and pointed out, not so subtly, that the issue should have already been settled. “This outcome is clearly dictated by this court’s decision in the South Bay United Pentecostal Church v. Newsom,” they wrote.
Local pastors celebrated. “My clients — the churches — are grateful to be able to open their doors again this Sunday after having been locked for most of the last 12 months,” the Institute’s Kevin Snider said with relief. “The Supreme Court has once again held that the right to freely exercise ones religion cannot be suppressed by government officials that care to stamp out religion during a pandemic,” FRC’s Legal Research Fellow Katherine Beck Johnson cheered.
At least for now, Pastor McClure and others in the county have seen their courageous stand pay off. As hard as things have been, Mike explained on last week’s “Pray, Vote, Stand,” by choosing to stay open and fight for others to do the same, he’s had the best opportunity ever to share the gospel. “Many people have been coming to Christ… We’ve even had some great conversations with the prosecuting attorneys,” he said. “We’ve just seen [God] at work in the midst of all that’s going on…”
Even in the midst of the churches’ persecution and millions of dollars in fines, he’s watched people’s lives undergo a miraculous transformation. He told the story of a county official, heading up suicide prevention, who was so depressed and discouraged that he was considering suicide. He wandered into Calvary Chapel San Jose one Sunday and not only received Christ — but brought another friend the following Sunday who became a Christian too! “He was actually a part of our court brief saying that this is the best thing that ever happened in his life. And so as much as the church is being [oppressed] this is exactly where God wants us to be — defining His love for a hopeless culture.”
“I just think everywhere we go, when we open the doors, I see people blessed every week. And I told [the court], ‘I can’t think of one person who’s died coming to church, but I can fill this courtroom 10 times over with personal testimonies of people who said they would be in a desperate place [without it]. The fruit of that, the blessing God has brought is evidence of that. Every pastor who’s opened up can… testify of these exact same things. So, I’m telling you: God’s at work — and… if you open your church like we have, you will see it.”——————————— Tony Perkins writes for Family Research Center.
Tags:Tony Perkins, Family Research Center, SCOTUS, Supreme Court, Reiterates, Its Open-Door Policy, on ChurchesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
If Biden and his team get what they wish—a neo-socialist, big government transformation—we will enter tough times. But not yet and perhaps not until after 2022.
Victor Davis Hanson
by Victor Davis Hanson: In the 1970s and 1980s, furor arose over our possible use of the “neutron bomb” that macabrely would “kill people, but not destroy property.” The logic of the perverse weapon was that on allied and friendly European ground, outnumbered defensive NATO troops might radiate and destroy invading masses of Soviet armored troops by periodic detonations of low-yield thermonuclear shells, rockets, and bombs.
The ensuing blasts of heat would sear flesh but would lack commensurate repercussion power to destroy most structures and buildings, and leave far smaller toxic radiation trails. In eerie Strangelovian terms, once the enemy was finished off, returning friendly troops and populations could sort their way among the mass dead to find their infrastructure intact—without “collateral” damage or fear of serious radiation sickness.
In some ways, COVID-19 was our neutron bomb. When we reach the now politically incorrect, taboo term “herd immunity” through vaccinations and antibodies, and when the virus ceases to be a pandemic, the lethal tally may have exceeded 600,000 Americans.
If so, the nation will have lost more countrymen than were killed in World War I and World War II combined—with thousands more suffering disabilities, from “long haul Covid” to stress and psychological impairment from losing livelihoods and lockdown cabin fever.
Americans have additionally suffered likely over $15 trillion or so in economic damage from the lockdowns, lost labor, soaring healthcare costs, and the silent killers of substance, familial, and spousal abuse, along with missed medical procedures and surgeries, aborted K-12 schooling, depression, and suicides. It will take years and millions of hours of scholarship to tally all the losses and damage.
Normally, such a huge human toll would be accompanied by a devastated infrastructure analogous to war-torn Europe in 1945 that took years of investment and labor to reach prewar levels of output. But instead, the virus bomb wafted in, killed hundreds of thousands, destroyed the economy, and now may be waning.
Human Rather Than Inanimate Destruction
Yet to the naked eye, other than the economic destruction of millions of small businesses, whole industries, and enormous psychological trauma that will last for decades, physical America at least looks roughly the same after as before the virus—again, as if neutron bombs were dropped in thousands of sites that killed tens of thousands of us while sparing homes and hospitals.
The virus devastated the aged. About eight in 10 Americans who perished from COVID-19 were over 65. Many were retired. Most suffered from comorbidities. In that regard, it was unlike our two world wars that fell heavily upon 18-30-year-olds in the prime of life, robbing the economy of millions of years of future robust productivity.
In amoral considerations of depriving a nation of productive labor and fertility, COVID’s lethal rampage through our long-term healthcare facilities was not comparable to the Meuse-Argonne or the Battle of the Bulge or Okinawa. Yet in moral terms of the preciousness of life, the virus was as bad as war, given the way thousands of unique people simply perished, many in silence and alone, many perhaps unnecessarily, as they were trapped in rest homes that admitted actively infected transfer patients, and others suffocated by a virus that for months no one knew much about. And that tragedy, too, will one day be the source of historical inquiry, as Emmy Award-winning Governor Andrew Cuomo must now fear.
The surreal economic ramifications of this viral radiation will likely have considerable but underappreciated consequences.
The Way Forward?
Take the likely waning of the virus. Given known positive cases of infection, those modeled to have antibodies but who were never tested when infected, and those vaccinated with at least one shot, upwards of 250 million Americans may soon have immunity. And with vaccinations slated to increase to 2 million per day with the arrival of new brands, the nation could see even more radical drops in infectiousness by mid-April.
Warmer spring and summer weather might slow down what’s left of the virus and fuel outdoor economic recovery. Amid all the professionals’ caveats, there remains good reason for hope. Such speculations, of course, are contingent on expectations that there will be no long-term serious side effects from these radically new types of vaccination, and more infectious and perhaps lethal COVID-19 mutants will be treatable with new drugs or preventable by adaptations in existing vaccinations.
We also hope that in the near future there will not be more groundhog day rumors, even if unsubstantiated, of a mysterious gain-of-function, Level-4 lab, neutron bomb viruses. We now fear all rumors of future plagues, in a serial fashion devastating our most vulnerable, and yet declared by our experts to be an accidental freak of nature—supposedly birthed in a bat cave or a wet market in China, and thus the fault of no one at all other than our own bad luck.
The strangest thing about the origins of the virus was its Wuhan birthplace—both next to an experimental viral laboratory engaged in dangerous research and a “wet” market that allegedly served as a petri dish for exotic new viruses. Or perhaps stranger was the second phase of the Chinese Communist Party’s exegeses of the pandemic: they transmogrified from momentary contrition to braggadocio about the superior reaction to the pandemic by totalitarians to a defiant “shut up—and what are you going to do about it anyway?”
At home, we find similar paradoxes. Joe Biden has only begun to interrupt the deregulation and tax policies that sparked the historic Trump economic boom of 2017-19 prompting unemployment to reach near-record peacetime lows.
It will take time for new taxes, regulations, and elements of the New Green Deal to undermine the foundations of a robust economy.
In addition, the country is currently awash in trillions of dollars in stimulus “funny money,” both allocated and unspent. After nearly a year of a large population spent in confinement, the public’s pent-up demand will be unleashed. A record level of consumer spending will likely follow by the summer. Indeed, the birthing of a recovery boom was already in progress when Donald Trump left office.
Americans for months have put off big-ticket purchases, afraid to go out to car showrooms and appliance stores—much less to book cruises and vacations. They are eager to update, improve — and spend on —their new offices and businesses at home. When they emerge from their cocoons, they will find everything from amusement parks to vacation spots wide-open and eager for discounted business from eager consumers.
Nearly all of our productive capacity — food, fuel, and manufacturing has survived the virus — if not improved, and become more efficient in extremis, as companies like Zoom and Amazon found new ways to increase productivity.
Given its rapid vaccination rate, and large percentages of those with likely antibodies, the United States may be among the first of the larger industrial nations to return to full production and employment.
In other words, despite the tragic mass deaths unleashed by the virus, the effort to regain pre-viral levels of economic growth and production will likely become rapid—in contrast for a while to the more stagnant European Union that will take months to catch up to U.S. vaccination rates.
Some economists have compared the likely trajectory of 2021 post-viral America to the second half of 1945 and 1946 when an intact America — in contrast to devastated Europe, the Soviet Union, and Japan — experienced an economic surge. Civilians and soldiers reemerged from wartime conditions in a country untouched by war, but awash in vast deficit spending, pent-up demand, and new factories and services ready to be recalibrated to serve consumer demand and population growth.
What are the political consequences of the likely slow waning of COVID-19 and a projected return to near normality?
Known Unknowns
Shutting down the Keystone XL pipeline, opening up the border in a time of pandemic to illegal immigration, nominating a number of big-government zealots, and institutionalizing unproductive, commissar-like wokism do not promote economic growth.
Yet natural processes are underway that Joe Biden likely will be unable to thwart immediately by his redistributionist policies. So we should imagine that the now labeled “Trump virus” will at some point sooner than later grow dormant. The “Trump quarantine” will then lift, and with it the “Trump recession.” The “Biden vaccination” will help to end the pandemic, along with the number of those previously infected with “Trump antibodies,” as the “Biden recovery” will take off, at least for a few months.
All sorts of known unknowns follow. When will Biden’s tax hikes, new regulations, subsidized green add-ons, gas and oil curtailment, and massive accumulating debt begin to slow things down?
Will a near $30 trillion debt growing at $2 trillion a year, with a progressive laundry list of ever more “essential” entitlements, finally lead to inflation, or stagflation, or permanent zero interest rates—or an abrupt recession, or worse?
No one knows.
But in the political sense, Republicans might wish to prepare for an artificially inflated but robust economy that could last until late in the midterm year 2022. It will do no good to argue that Operation Warp Speed, an end to the failed New York-California blue-state lockdown model, and the remnants of the Trump economic package mostly account for the upswing. The president in power when economies tank or roar gets commensurate blame or credit.
All the talk of a dismal Trump response to the virus will soon and reluctantly wane, as our vaccination rate, our prior national leadership in creating vaccines, and our earlier end to the pandemic will be positively compared with other nations, especially those in Europe. As a result, Biden will transmogrify from a shrill critic of what he inherited to a plagiarist of that recovery.
If Biden and his team get what they wish—a neo-socialist, big government transformation—we will enter tough times. But not yet and perhaps not until after 2022.
——————————- Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution where many of his articles are found; his focus is classics and military history. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush.
Tags:Victor Davis Hanson, was covid-19, our neutron bombTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Judicial Watch: A huge surge in illegal immigrant minors is prompting a health emergency on the southern border and surrounding communities, igniting “grave concern” among federal lawmakers who are calling on the Biden administration to “prevent the impeding catastrophe.” In a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas more than a dozen members of congress who sit on various House committees—including civil rights, national security, and the environment—say they are particularly concerned that the influx could soon lead to a health crisis that may cause widespread COVID-19 infections and fatalities. Additionally, a Latino congressman from south Texas is urging the administration to “prevent further devastation of border communities” by addressing the “influx of Central American migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border.”The government classifies the young migrants as Unaccompanied Alien Children (UAC) and in January there was a 64% increase over the same one-month period last year, according to Border Patrol figures. The data shows that two busy Texas sectors—Big Bend and Del Rio—saw the biggest increase in UAC traffic over the same one-month period in 2020, 141% and 122% respectively. Under federal law the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) takes custody of UAC, identified as illegal immigrants under the age of 18, and must provide care for them. HHS funds and oversees around 170 state-licensed care facilities to house the minors when they arrive from foreign countries south of the border.There are approximately 4,020 illegal alien minors in HHS care, according to recent agency figures. American taxpayers provide them with an array of services including classroom education, mental and medical health care, legal counsel, and a variety of recreational activities. The overwhelming majority of the migrants—72%—are not children but rather young adults or adolescents 15 to 17 years old, government records show. Most of the youths are from Guatemala and Honduras and 68% are male, which has tremendously boosted gang recruitment in this country. Federal authorities have for years confirmed that the nation’s most violent street gangs—including the Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13)—recruit new members at U.S. shelters housing UAC.Health issues have also been a serious concern long before COVID-19, when the Obama administration allowed tens of thousands of UAC to enter the U.S. Back in 2014, Judicial Watch reported that the hordes of illegal immigrant minors brought in serious diseases, including swine flu, dengue fever and possibly Ebola. At the time, a congressman who is also a medical doctor alerted the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that the UAC were importing infectious diseases considered to be largely eradicated in this country. Four years later, the infamous Central American caravan posed an equally serious public health threat, bringing dangerous diseases such as extremely drug resistant strands of tuberculosis, dengue, and chikungunya. By 2019, the Border Patrol admitted it was getting slammed with illegal immigrants plagued by “serious illnesses,” including tuberculosis, influenza, and pneumonia. Federal agents disclosed at the time that they were referring 50 illegal aliens a day for urgent medical care.
COVID-19 only adds to the already dire situation. In their letter to Mayorkas the congressional delegation points out that the increasing number of UAC illegally crossing the border will soon overwhelm facilities in the middle of a global pandemic, forcing Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to release unlawfully present individuals into the U.S. “This surge also has the capability to cause a COVID-19 outbreak at ports of entry and other CBP facilities, which threatens the health of CBP personnel and could result in the temporary closures of ports of entry,” the legislators write. “Such closures would greatly impact commerce and hamper the United States’ economic recovery. The increase in illegal immigration at the southern border presents a risk not only to Border Patrol agents apprehending migrants who illegally cross the border, but also to those communities into which those individuals will relocate—likely leading to widespread COVID-19 infection and fatalities.”
In his plea to the administration, the Latino congressman from south Texas, Democrat Vicente Gonzalez, writes that migrant caravans approaching the southern border will “overwhelm our many unvaccinated” federal agents and “put our frontline workers at greater risk during the COVID-19 pandemic.” The lawmaker, in his second term, reminds the Biden administration that border communities in south Texas districts like the one he represents, continue to be devastated by the COVID-10 pandemic. “A disorderly rushing of our border is not acceptable,” Gonzalez writes.
—————————– Judicial Watch Corruption Chronicles
Trump Rocks CPAC The former president’s CPAC address yesterday was vintage Donald Trump. The thousands of conservative activists gathered in Orlando loved every word. Millions watched at home on Fox News.
Predictably, MSNBC and CNN did not televise the president’s speech, as part of their ongoing efforts to prevent conservatives from talking to anyone other than ourselves. If you missed Trump’s speech, you can watch it here.
It is not traditional for a former president to speak up so soon after leaving office. But while Obama may not have been vocal, he was working feverishly behind the scenes in the early weeks of Trump’s presidency to bring him down.
Meanwhile, a lot of damage has been done in five weeks, and Trump laid it all out.
A nation that was fighting the cultural left is now led by a president who amplifies the left’s message. Often when Biden talks about America, he says we have never lived up to our founding values.
But to the delight of the CPAC crowd, Donald Trump gave a full-throated defense of America and our founding heroes.
Trump continued to assert, as he should in my view, that he was robbed on Election Day, and that means we were robbed on Election Day. He suggested that he might run in 2024, adding, “I may even decide to beat them a third time,” which is another way of saying he won in November.
He zeroed in on the importance of conservatives fighting at the state level to clean up election laws, such as returning to an Election Day, instead of an election month. We need voter ID laws, along with citizenship and signature verification.
By the way, all the bad things that Biden has already done and will continue to do rest squarely on the back of the Never Trump crowd, which is led by a number of neo-cons and financed by Hollywoodand the left. They own the disaster that is the Biden/Harris/Sanders agenda. Thanks for nothing!
To School Or Not To School
Donald Trump once again did what Joe Biden refuses to do. He demanded that schools all across America follow the science and open up now. But Trump noted that Biden won’t do that because he is controlled by the teachers’ unions, and it’s harming our children. Trump added that the Biden Administration “is actually bragging about the classroom education they are providing to migrant children on the border,” while it refuses to open the schools so your children can get an education. He also said that illegal aliens are walking across the border more easily than Americans can walk into restaurants. (Two lines the president may have read in this daily report in recent weeks.)
Iran
When Donald Trump and Mike Pence left the White House, we had Iran on the ropes. We, along with Israel, the Saudis and other nations that signed on to the Abraham Accords, were isolating Iran in the Middle East.
But in five weeks, Joe Biden and his appeasement crew have done their best to undermine all of that. Now Iran is making demands. It attacked an Israeli ship. One of their proxies killed a U.S. military contractor recently, forcing Biden to respond with an airstrike in Syria.
Trump said that if the election had not been stolen, Iran would have returned to the negotiating table because the regime could not survive another four years of crippling sanctions.
Warmonger Liz
A lot of people were hoping that the former president would not go after Liz Cheney because the party needs to be unified. (Well, someone needs to tell Liz Cheney that!)
Trump did go after Cheney because of her constant attacks against him, which is what separates Trump from so many milquetoast Republicans. He fights back!
And in going after Cheney, Trump did something very important. In my view, Cheney and other prominent neo-cons never liked Trump, and did their best to help the Democrats defeat him, because he has no inclination to get America into protracted foreign wars we can’t win because we don’t fight to win. That’s why we’re still in Afghanistan 20 years after 9/11.
So, Trump referred to Cheney as “the warmonger Liz Cheney.” The Republican Party, under Bush and McCain, was well on its way to becoming known as “the War Party” when Donald Trump and Mike Pence took office.
In this regard, Donald Trump is much closer to President Ronald Reagan than any Republican leader has been since the Reagan years. Both Reagan and Trump rebuilt our military. They took a tough stance against our adversaries.
But Ronald Reagan was very reluctant to put boots on the ground in quagmires, just as Trump is reluctant to do so now. On the horrible day our Marines were attacked in Lebanon, Reagan didn’t send 15,000 more Marines into the country. He got our Marines out of Lebanon.
Going forward, the Republican Party needs to be tough on national defense, and tough on countries like communist China and Iran. But it must also resist the temptation to fight ground wars in places where it is virtually impossible to determine who our friends are, who our enemies are, who is a civilian and who is a jihadist.
Speaking of Going Forward. . .
President Trump also made it clear how important 2022 will be. He vowed to help conservatives prevail in the primaries against weak Republicans, and in the general election against left-wing Democrats. And Trump again insisted that he is not starting a new party, calling such rumors “fake news.”
By the way, the only people talking about third parties are the same Never Trumpers who guaranteed our loss last time. They seem determined to help guarantee Democrat victories in 2022 and 2024.
Trump On Top CPAC held a straw poll and asked attendees a series of questions about the GOP and the 2024 contest. Their responses made it clear that Donald Trump is the leader of the Republican Party. For example:
97% approved of Trump’s job performance as president.
95% said the Republican Party should continue to embrace Trump’s agenda.
68% said Trump should run for president again.
If the 2024 primary were held today, 55% indicated they would vote for President Trump, while 21% chose Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.
Without Trump in the race, DeSantis finished first with 43%, followed by South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem at 11%.
Stand With Me Donald Trump made it clear yesterday that he’s staying in the battle for the heart and soul of America. And so are we!
My staff and I have been licking our wounds, just as I know you have. But there are only two choices: Surrender or fight back.
We have a lot of strengths, but our greatest weakness is finances. The left has been able to tap tremendous resources, which is the lifeblood of American politics and public policy.
I know we don’t have to match the left dollar-for-dollar, but we do have to make sure that our message is heard.
Please let me know that you are still in this battle for faith, family and freedom. Stand with me now!
————————- Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
Tags:Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, Trump Rocks CPAC, Going ForwardTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Seton Motley: The House of Representatives just passed the $1.9 trillion omni-directionally-awful monstrosity they have disingenuously mis-named a “Covid relief bill.”
We will be adding this fake “Covid relief” bill to our already inconceivably titanic tab.
Oh: And government borrowing the money for its idiocy – means the private sector can’t borrow it for actual, you know, productive stuff.
Government getting inexorably larger – means less and less room for the private sector to do anything, you know, actually productive.
What Is the Crowding Out Effect?:“One of the most common forms of crowding out takes place when a large government, such as that of the U.S., increases its borrowing and sets in motion a chain of events that results in the curtailing of private sector spending.
“The sheer scale of this type of borrowing can lead to substantial rises in the real interest rate, which has the effect of absorbing the economy’s lending capacity and of discouraging businesses from making capital investments.
“Companies often fund such projects in part or entirely through financing, and are now discouraged from doing so because the opportunity cost of borrowing money has risen, making traditionally profitable projects funded through loans cost-prohibitive.”So what will the government’s centrally-planned spending and expansion do to our already government-hobbled Covid economy?
Let us now compare and contrast this government-planned mess – with but a portion of the private sector success 330+ million private Americans making their own decisions for their own selves will be generating in the very near future.
Behold the private sector Internet. And all the jobs it creates – rather than destroys. And all the wealth it creates – rather than destroys. On both the wireless and wired Internet sides.
“5G has the potential to create or transform up to 16 million jobs across all sectors of the economy, which includes full-time, part-time and temporary jobs.
“U.S. economy will drive up to $2.7 trillion in additional gross output (sales) growth.
“5G will add up to $1.5 trillion to the U.S. GDP, larger than the annual GDP of 94% of world economies.
“Multiplier effects will be felt in every industry. For example, every job created by 5G within the Information and Communications Technologies (ICT) sector will create an estimated 1.8 additional jobs for a total of up to 2.8 total jobs throughout the economy.”Wired:
Assessing the Economic Potential of 10G Networks:“(T)he broader economic benefits associated with this next evolution of cable broadband platforms, which we estimate to total at least $330 billion in economic output and create more than 676,000 new jobs over 7 years….
“The evolution of networks to 10G will generate $71.5 billion in consumer surplus.
“Additional economic value may be realized by regulatory changes that will speed and increase incentives for private network investment.”Catch that private sector Internet word “surplus?” That’s a word government hasn’t seen or heard in many decades.
The wired and wireless Internet will mean trillions of private sector dollars – and tens of millions of private sector jobs. And even more – if we can get the government to stop “helping.”
We need “regulatory changes that will speed and increase incentives for private network investment.”
What we’re instead getting – is government expanding its wasteful and disastrous self. Taking more and more room away from the explosively productive private sector.
Which is the antithesis of what we need.
—————————- Seton Motley is the President of Less Government and he to ARRA News Service.
Tags:Seton Motley, The ‘Covid Bill’, Government Deficit Spending, Is Worse Than, Private Sector InvestmentTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Star Parker: The issue of reparations to black Americans as payment for damage done as a result of years of legal slavery and subsequent discrimination is back on the table.
The House Judiciary Committee just held hearings on H.R. 40, which would establish a commission to look into ways in which African Americans could be compensated, including possible payments of trillions of dollars to individuals.
The commission would examine the role of government in supporting the institution of slavery, “discrimination in the public and private sectors against freed African slaves and their descendants,” and “lingering negative effects of the institution of slavery … on living African Americans and on society.”
My ancestors were slaves. And my life as a young woman was a mess.
Was my life a mess because my ancestors were slaves? I don’t think so.
My life was a mess because I lived a wanton, irresponsible existence, defined by promiscuity, petty crimes, and scamming the nation’s well-meaning but totally confused welfare system to the greatest extent of my ability.
Did I need reparations to turn things around for me? Certainly not. I needed a wake-up call, which, to my great gratitude, I got from a few church-going black Christians who told me the way I was living was unacceptable.
I went to church, took back responsibility for my life, and turned my circumstances around.
The problem with the idea of reparations is it redirects attention away from exactly where attention is needed: on individuals’ personal responsibility for their own unique lives.
And it redirects attention in such a way to encourage individuals to believe that some abstract, collective entity from the past is the cause of all their individual problems in the present.
Compensation for damages is a basic legal principle.
It’s about personal responsibility. Individual A sues individual B for damages caused. Exactly what the damages were and exactly how B injured A must be shown in a court of law.
Today, only a small fraction of our population has ancestors who were around before 1865 when slavery was legal. The idea of collective guilt, with no specific individual identified as causing the damage and no specific individual showing how he or she was damaged, doesn’t fly.
If there is any legitimate claim of collective guilt, it is the guilt of original sin, which we learn in the book of Genesis. Every man and woman is imperfect and responsible for fixing themselves—and, by doing so, helping to fix the world.
There is no word more frequently used in political discussions than “freedom.” But rarely discussed is what gives meaning to the word “freedom,” and that is understanding that individuals have free choice—the power and responsibility to choose how to live.
Only when we understand that there is good and evil, that there is sin, does free choice have meaning. It means individuals have the power and responsibility to choose how to live—that their individual choices matter.
Driving the push for reparations are policies on race that obliterate this key idea that every individual, regardless of circumstance and history, is unique and has free choice. The political idea of freedom becomes irrelevant because free choice becomes irrelevant.
So-called critical race theory says everything is about culture. Because, per their claim, the USA is about what they defines as white culture, the cultural script needs to be rewritten to make things fair for those who are not white. Put politicians in charge of making things fair.
No, I am sorry; I always thought the problem with racism is it denies the uniqueness, dignity, and personal responsibility of each individual.
If the ideal we seek is a free country with free citizens, then commissions such as that proposed in H.R. 40, which pretend to be about justice but are really about a left-wing agenda to put government in charge of our lives, are not the way to go.
—————————— Star Parker founded and runs the Center for Urban Renewal and Education as a non-profit think tank based in Washington, DC. Shared article at The Daily Signal.
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by Tony Perkins: When it comes to censorship, one editorial board said, “it’s about as subtle as carpet bombing.” Liberals, who used to at least pretend to have some use for free speech, have dropped all pretense now. The war against a thinking culture is out in the open now, as shameless and determined as ever. To them, it’s no longer enough to yank books off shelves, ban conservatives from the public square, and slap warning labels on thousands of years of proven science. They want to totally control the airwaves too. And they’ll stop at nothing to force the carriers to do their bidding.
It started as a letter from two Democrats. Insisting they were concerned about the latest scourge of “misinformation,” Reps. Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.) and Jerry McNerney (D-Calif.) fired a volley of threats to 12 cable, satellite, and streaming companies, accusing them of spreading lies and conspiracy theories just by carrying channels like Fox, Newsmax, and One America News Network (OAN). Pull the plug, they demanded. Or at least make it hurt.
FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr looked on in horror. Are Democrats actually suggesting that these companies will “pay a price if the targeted newsrooms do not conform to Democrats’ preferred political narratives?” he asked. If so, he warned, Americans are in for a dangerous new chapter — one that looks a lot more like Communist China than the home of the First Amendment.
“From the perspective of free speech and the free press,” law professor Jonathan Turley argued, “the letter is not just chilling, it’s positively glacial.” Still, radical Democrats pressed on, insisting Wednesday at their House hearing, “Fanning the Flames: Disinformation and Extremism in the Media” that the best way to combat misinformation is to shut conservative newscasts down completely.
Like most Republicans on the committee, Rep. Cathy McMorris-Rodgers (R-Wash.) was outraged at the suggestion. If you want to talk about misinformation and lies, she fired back, how about CNN, MSNBC, CBS, NBC, and ABC, who spent the last five years broadcasting complete and utter fiction on everything from the Russia collusion to Governor Andrew Cuomo’s (D-N.Y.) nursing home killing field. “In all my time on this committee,” McMorris-Rodgers fumed, “there’s never been a more obvious direct attack on the First Amendment.”
“So today, the media is the target — but where does it end? We’ve already seen liberal ideology pushed in our schools where we work, the books we read, who we communicate with, how we practice our faith. It’s frightening. And you know what the worst part is? People are afraid of a work. An authoritarian system that is getting them fired, canceled, and shamed. And so they’re being silent. They have no voice. They can’t trust the broken institutions to protect them. This culture of fear is unjust, and this committee should not be using fear to force everyone to be the same or be destroyed. It’s abuse of power, and it’s a force of a state religion of liberal ideology.”Congressman Steve Scalise (R-La.), who nearly lost his life because of hyper-charged liberal rhetoric, warned Democrats against heaping all the blame on the Right. “For anyone to just try to suggest that discourse started getting out of control on January 6th would be disingenuous when you look at where we’ve gotten and how are this has come. I want to take you back to June 14th, 2017. A day that a gunman walked onto a baseball field and shot at a dozen members of congress including myself… Let’s be consistent,” he insisted and stop suggesting disingenuously that this toxic language only comes “from one side of the political spectrum.”
That message was lost on the corporate bullies at Amazon and Target, whose virtual book burnings — Ryan Anderson warns — are the stuff of 1930s dictators. Anderson, the new president of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, waited three days for an explanation on why his book about responding to the transgender movement, When Harry Became Sally, was pulled from the online store. Despite more than three years on Amazon’s shelves — as a best-seller in two categories — “They told us late yesterday that it violates their ‘content policy,” Ryan explained on “Washington Watch.” “But they won’t tell us what aspect of the policy it violated. and they won’t tell us what passage, what page, what sentence is the offending passage.” Obviously, he said, “anyone who’s telling the truth, anyone who believes that we’re created male and female, whether from a faith-based perspective or from a science-based perspective, is going [to be banned].”
What’s next? Bouncing every biology book that’s ever been printed? The Bible? Where does the mob draw the line? Abigail Shrier’s book, the very powerful Irreversible Damage, was stripped from Target’s website again Wednesday. Obviously, Ryan said, liberals are scared that someone will stumble on the truth about this lethal ideology. “If they could defeat [conservatives’ arguments], they would just argue on the merits. This is why lawyers say, ‘Where you can argue the facts, argue the facts. Where you can argue the law, argue the law. When you can’t argue either, bang the table.’ And I think that’s what we’re seeing here. They can’t argue based on the science. They can’t argue based on the medicine. They can’t argue based on the philosophy. They can’t argue based on the theology. So what’s left? Just don’t have the argument. Use our market power to shut it down.”
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On Saturday, the House of Representatives voted 219-212 to pass Biden and Pelosi’s COVID Exploitation Bill, including the massive “bureaucrat bailout” of up to $21,000 per federal employee to watch kids at home doing virtual school – instead of just opening the schools everywhere.
No Republicans voted in favor of this bill, but all but two House Democrats voted for it.1
The fight has moved to the Senate. Tell Congress to STOP Pelosi’s Bureaucrat Bailout!
There is so much wrong with this bill – from the blue state bailout to the ransom to teachers unions to Nancy Pelosi’s subway train. But the worst aspect is that it gives federal employees up to 15 weeks of paid leave at $1400 per week. You get one $1400 check – maybe – but federal employees can get FIFTEEN $1400 checks paid for by your tax dollars.2
If you have already signed your letter, please forward this email to a friend, or post our petition page to your blog, Twitter or to Facebook.
Thanks to your support we have already sent over 30,000 letters to Congress in opposition to the bill. However, if we are going to stop its most insane provisions from being enacted, we still need to mobilize thousands more patriotic Americans like you.
It’s pathetic that only two House Democrats voted no – but remember if even one Senate Democrat does the same, we can stop this thing. Please do all you can.
Tags:Phil Kerpen, disgraced House, passes, Pelosi’s, $21000, Paid Leave, Government EmployeesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Only those black Americans espousing leftist ideology are deemed worthy of celebrating.(NOT!)
by Thomas Gallatin: Of Black History Month, actor Morgan Freeman famously said it was “ridiculous.” In a 2005 interview with Mike Wallace of “60 Minutes,” Freeman contended, “You’re going to relegate my history to a month? … Which is White History Month? Come on, tell me. … I don’t want a Black History Month. Black history is American history.”A clearly flummoxed Wallace wondered, “How are we going to get rid of racism?” Freeman shot back, “Stop talking about it.”Well, the mainstream media led the charge in doing the exact opposite, elevating the Left’s insistence of identity politics above all else. In truth, Black History Month is really not about celebrating the accomplishments of black Americans. Instead, it is yet another instrument cultural leftists have used to further their political agenda of identitarianism.A demonstration of this reality comes from tech giant Amazon, which suddenly removed the highly acclaimed and popular 2019 PBS documentary “Created Equal: Clarence Thomas in His Own Words” from its Prime streaming service — during Black History Month. This action was taken despite the fact that Amazon’s streaming service actively promoted an entire section titled “Amplify Black Voices,” which it advertised as “a curated collection of titles to honor Black History Month across four weekly themes (Black Love, Black Joy, Black History Makers, and Black Girl Magic).” Why isn’t the nation’s lone living black Supreme Court justice worthy of a slot? (That’s rhetorical.)
Making matters worse, Amazon’s “Amplify Black Voices” featured two films celebrating Anita Hill, the woman who famously and falsely accused Thomas of sexual harassment during the confirmation hearings he called a “high-tech lynching.” Meanwhile, the only other black American to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court, the late Justice Thurgood Marshall, is highlighted in two docudramas and two documentaries. This, of course, has everything to do with the fact that Marshall is an icon of the Left, whereas Thomas, a brilliant conservative thinker, serves to undercut the racial identitarianism of the Left.
The “Created Equal” DVD is still technically for sale but is no longer available on Amazon (sold out?). This is similar to Amazon’s recent move to suddenly, without notice or explanation, scrub Ryan T. Anderson’s bookWhen Harry Became Sally: Responding to the Transgender Moment from its site.
The Left uses race as a cudgel to promote and popularize stereotypes onto groups in order to divide Americans along identity and ideology lines. By conflating identity with ideology, the Left aims to deflect legitimate criticism of its bankrupt ideology. Since identifies are intrinsically personal and therefore emotive, and ideologies are not, to criticize an identity is to attack an individual’s personhood, whereas criticizing an ideology is to contend with a person’s ideas.
That’s ultimately the reason Amazon black-holed Justice Clarence Thomas during Black History Month, lest any black American identify with someone other than those espousing the Left’s ideology.
—————————- Thomas Gallatin writes for The Patriot Post.
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by Dr. Ron Paul: Last Thursday President Biden continued what has sadly become a Washington tradition: bombing Syria. The President ordered a military strike near the Iraqi-Syrian border that killed at least 22 people. The Administration claims it struck an “Iranian-backed” militia in retaliation for recent rocket attacks on US installations in Iraq.
As with Presidents Obama and Trump before him, however, Biden’s justification for the US strike and its targets is not credible. And his claim that the US attack would result in a “de-escalation” in the region is laughable. You cannot bomb your way toward de-escalation.
Biden thus joins a shameful club of US leaders whose interventions in the Middle East, and Syria specifically, have achieved nothing in the US interest but have contributed to the deaths of many thousands of civilians.
President Trump attacked Syria in 2018 in what he claimed was retaliation for the Assad government’s use of chemical weapons against its own citizens. The Trump Administration never proved its claim. Logic itself suggests how ridiculous it would have been for the Syrian president to have used chemical weapons in that situation, where they achieved no military purpose and would almost certainly guarantee further outside attacks against his government.
Trump’s 2018 attack only added to the misery of the Syrian people, who suffered under US sanctions and then suffered President Obama’s “Assad must go” intervention that trained and armed al-Qaeda affiliated groups to overthrow the government.
Trump’s airstrike on Syria did nothing to further real American interests in the region. But sending in 100 Tomahawk missiles to blow up a few empty buildings did a great deal to further the bottom line of missile-maker Raytheon.
Interestingly, Biden’s Secretary of Defense came to the Administration straight from his previous position on the board of, you guessed it, Raytheon. Libertarian educator Tom Woods once quipped that no matter who you vote for you get John McCain. Perhaps it’s also fair to say that no matter who you vote for you get to enrich Raytheon.
The Democrats wasted four years trying to remove Trump from office under the bogus “Russiagate” lie and then the equally ridiculous and discredited claim that Trump led an insurrection against the government on January 6th. Yet when Trump started raining bombs down on Syria with no Congressional declaration of war or even authorization, most Democrats stood up and cheered. Left-wing CNN talking head Fareed Zakaria swooned, “I think Donald Trump became president of the United States last night.”
In fact, initiating a war against a country that did not attack and does not threaten the United States without Congressional authority is an impeachable offense. But both parties – with a few exceptions – are war parties.
President Biden should be impeached for his attack on Syria, as should have Trump and Obama before him. But no one in Washington is going to pursue impeachment charges against a president who recklessly takes the United States to war. War greases Washington’s wheels.
Isn’t it strange how we’ve heard nothing about ISIS for the past couple of years, but suddenly the mainstream media tells us the ISIS is back and on the march? When President Biden says “America is back,” what he really means is “the war party is back.” As if they ever left.
—————————– Dr. Ron Paul (@ronpaul), Chairman of the Ron Paul Institute for Peace and Prosperity, is a former U.S.Congressman (R-TX). He twice sought the Republican nomination for President. As a MD, he was an Air Force flight surgeon and has delivered over 4000 babies. Paul writes on numerous topics but focuses on monetary policies, the military-industrial complex, the Federal Reserve, and compliance with the U.S. Constitution.
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by Gary Bauer: Cruz Fires Up CPAC
In the past, I have told you that I am not giving up and going away. Well, neither is Senator Ted Cruz, who fired up the audience on the first day of the Conservative Political Action Conference. Speaking about the future of the Republican Party, Cruz said this:
“[The left looks] at Donald Trump and the millions of people who went to battle fighting alongside of him and they’re terrified. They want him to go away. Let me tell you this right now: Donald J. Trump ain’t going anywhere!”
“The Republican Party is not the party just of the country clubs. The Republican Party is the party of steelworkers and construction workers and pipeline workers and taxi cab drivers and cops and firefighters, and waiters and waitresses and the men and women with callouses on their hands who are working for this country. That is our party and these deplorables are here to stay!”
House Passes Anti-Feminist BillAs expected, the so-called “Equality Act” passed the House of Representatives yesterday. The vote was largely along party lines, with only three Republicans voting for it. But it is worth noting that not one Democrat had a problem with this anti-woman legislation.
The so-called “Equality Act” essentially legally abolishes biological sex. It effectively repeals Title IX, and guts portions of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
Is it really possible that the thousands of women who came to Washington in 2017 to march against Donald Trump think it is just and fair for their daughters to compete in athletics against boys who claim they are girls?
Is it really possible that all those women believe their daughters should be forced to share locker rooms and showers with boys who claim they are girls?
Do all those women really think women’s shelters should be forced to include men who claim to be women? Do they really think women’s prisons should be forced to include men who claim to be women?
Is that what they marched for? Is that why they voted for Joe Biden? Is that really modern feminism?
It’s hard for me to believe that is the case. But if it isn’t, where are the voices of dissent outraged over what happened on the floor of the House yesterday by a unanimous Democrat vote?
If you think I’m exaggerating the role of Democrats in pushing this radical science denial, consider this: Three female athletes in Connecticut who were tired of biological boys stealing their college dreams sued to stop the state’s trans sports policy.
The Trump Administration stood with the biological girls in court. But the Biden Justice Department abandoned them and withdrew from the suit this week.
It’s been said that a conservative is a liberal who got mugged. Perhaps it will soon come to be that a conservative woman is one whose progressive daughter came home and told her that she was forced to shower with a boy in the name of equality.
Meanwhile, I am pleased to report that conservative state legislators are pushing back, doing what they can to preserve some semblance of common sense in their states.
And kudos, once again, to Sen. Rand Paul, who had the courage to challenge Dr. Rachel Levine’s support for the chemical castration of children. Who is Dr. Levine again? Levine is Joe Biden’s nominee to be the assistant secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, and is also a man who claims to be a woman.
Failing Our Children
There’s not much that liberal New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof and I would agree on. But when it comes to the issue of school closures, Kristof now gets it. His latest column highlights just how devastating the left’s shutdown of our nation’s public schools has been for millions of children. Here are some facts he presents:
According to one estimate, as many as three million children in the United States have missed all formal education for almost a year.
The San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank estimates that educational disruptions during this pandemic may increase the number of high school dropouts by nearly four percent.
Applications for federal student loans among high school seniors have fallen 10%, a sign that some may be giving up on college.
Fifth graders in mostly minority schools mastered only 37% of the math that usually would be expected.
And to his credit, Kristof is clear where the blame for this outrageous failure lies:
“The educational losses are disproportionately the fault of Democratic governors and mayors who too often let schools stay closed even as bars opened. The blunt fact is that it is Democrats . . . who have presided over one of the worst blows to the education of disadvantaged Americans in history. The result: more dropouts, less literacy and numeracy, widening race gaps, and long-term harm to some of our most marginalized youth.”
Knowing the intolerant culture that now prevails at the Times, I hope Kristof doesn’t get canceled for daring to speak the truth!
Emergency Relief Delayed?
Among the many items on the left’s wish list that Democrats stuffed into the “emergency” COVID relief bill is a doubling of the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour. While it would obviously help some workers, as many as 1.4 million jobs would likely be lost as a result of this increase, which would devastate struggling small businesses right now.
Yesterday afternoon, Senate Democrats suffered a setback to their progressive dreams. The parliamentarian ruled that the minimum wage hike did not pass muster with the strict rules that govern the budget reconciliation process Democrats are using to ram through this massive $1.9 trillion bill.
Progressives aren’t happy. Many are demanding that Vice President Harris overrule the parliamentarian, which she could do. But the White House is signaling that it won’t “go nuclear” and break even more Senate rules.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi is digging in, however, insisting that the minimum wage hike will stay in the House bill, which is expected to pass today.
But if Senate Democrats don’t overrule the parliamentarian, then two different bills will be passed, and the “emergency” relief will be delayed as the House and Senate will have to iron out their differences in a conference committee sometime later.
As we have noted in the past, this really isn’t much of a COVID relief bill. Only 1% of the money is dedicated to faster vaccine distribution.
Here’s another problem: Much of the money meant to help hurting Americans is going to those who haven’t lost their jobs or suffered steep declines in income.
We know that because stock trading surged last year as the stimulus checks went out. There were lots of articles like this one, advising people how to invest their stimulus checks. And downloads of the popular new Robinhood stock trading app surged as the stimulus checks went out.
Yes, many people are hurting. They should be helped. But those using the stimulus money to open stock accounts are not going to bed hungry. They are not having problems making their mortgage or car payments or keeping their lights on or paying off their student loans.
But when Democrats are giving away money, they don’t even bother to determine whether it is going to those who truly need it.
Hypocrisy Check
The border facility that Joe Biden has been forced to reopen to accommodate the growing number of children crossing the border is the same facility that Kamala Harris vowed to close if she made it to the White House.
After multiple attacks by Iranian-backed militias in recent days, Joe Biden authorized the dropping of a few bombs in Syria. When Donald Trump did the same thing in 2017, Biden Press Secretary Jen Psaki tweeted, “Also what is the legal authority for strikes? Assad is a brutal dictator. But Syria is a sovereign country.”
Governor Andrew Cuomo and his henchmen continue to do everything they can to ruin the woman who has accused him of sexual harassment. In the middle of the Kavanaugh confirmation controversy when he was wrongly accused of sexual assault, Cuomo demanded that Judge Kavanaugh take a lie detector test. Now the governor is refusing to say whether he will follow his own advice.
As the saying goes, if the left didn’t have double standards it wouldn’t have any standards at all!
————————– Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
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by Penna Dexter, Point of View: A fifteen-dollar per hour minimum wage has been a dream of the Left for a while now. Such an arbitrary number. Why not $50? Why not $100? If the goal is to “lift people out of poverty”, the higher the better, right?
Not really. This kind of mandate would result in more people earning $0 an hour. Heritage Foundation President Kay James says, “Government-imposed minimum wages are a bad idea to begin with.”
COVID-19 concerns and restrictions have resulted in tremendous economic devastation. Mrs. James warns: “A minimum wage increase could push many hard-hit businesses out of business.”
The federal minimum wage is now $7.25 an hour. A proposal to get it to $15 is part of the massive coronavirus relief bill being debated in Congress. The president really wants this but he’s facing opposition from key Senate moderates from his own party.
These lawmakers don’t want to further burden constituents already struggling to save their businesses and keep their jobs.
No industry has been hit harder by COVID restrictions than the restaurant business. Business Insider reports that, since the onset of the pandemic, 17% of US restaurants have permanently shut down — about 110,000 establishments. And many more are struggling.
The Heritage Foundation recently held an online forum for restaurant owners to explain their unique concerns about a federally-mandated minimum-wage increase.
They explained that, because servers and bartenders currently earn a very low minimum wage, employers are required to supply a tip credit in the event that tips don’t get the employee to the minimum wage. The president’s proposal eliminates that system, requiring that all employees be paid the federal minimum. Many establishments could not survive that. Servers would lose, as many customers would tip less or not at all.
Restaurants operate on low margins. Owners say, “There’s only so much you can raise your prices before you price yourself out of the market.”
Raising the minimum wage would harm those it’s supposed to help.
———————– Penna Dexter is an author, lecturer, and radio host and contributor on nationally syndicated Point of View and the “Probe” radio programs.
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“We will take action to end our epidemic of gun violence and make
our schools and communities safer,” says President Joe Biden,
by Armstrong Williams : For the duration of his 2020 presidential campaign—which at first appeared to be a long shot, especially given the far left’s vocal disdain for “old, white men”—Joe Biden ran on the promise that he would unite the country.
He repeatedly spoke about the importance of America’s institutions and norms, and to the many who ultimately voted for him, those were the halcyon days of this country that they longed for and that Biden promised them.
Unfortunately, it seems that more and more of his supporters are still patiently waiting for him to make good on his campaign promise.
It was, without a doubt, a noble promise. Even if you didn’t agree with Biden or support his policies, Americans of all stripes would agree that a call for national unity amid years of division and political strife is necessary at this point.
However, despite his lofty goals and plans, Biden has, unsurprisingly, returned to Washington as a creature of habit. As a result, instead of uniting the country, Biden is about to divide it even further and in a deeply profound, potentially irreparable way.
In a recent statement from the White House in which he commemorated those who were killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, Biden called for significant gun legislation.
In his statement, Biden declared:
This Administration will not wait for the next mass shooting to heed that call. We will take action to end our epidemic of gun violence and make our schools and communities safer. Today, I am calling on Congress to enact commonsense gun law reforms, including requiring background checks on all gun sales, banning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, and eliminating immunity for gun manufacturers who knowingly put weapons of war on our streets. We owe it to all those we’ve lost and to all those left behind to grieve to make a change. The time to act is now.With a step that will undoubtedly cause millions of Americans to resist Biden and his agenda even more aggressively, the new president has effectively put a nail in his own coffin. He’s lost any remaining benefit of the doubt that conservatives and Republicans were willing to give him based on his repeated calls for national unity.
Throughout his remarks, Biden mentioned the word violence five times, but not once did he attempt to identify or speculate on the root of the violence within America, nor did he offer any tangible solutions.
Instead, he immediately pivoted to banning certain magazines and weapons while blatantly ignoring the fact that millions of Americans own AR-15s, the semi-automatic weapon that Biden is going after.
Keep in mind that most of America’s gun owners are decent and law-abiding citizens who pose absolutely no threat to their peers, regardless of what type of weapon they own.
By moving down this path, Biden is essentially asking us to ignore the real root of the problems that result in mass shootings, all the while punishing gun owners who don’t break the law or commit crimes. There is a small, disgusting fraction of people who commit heinous acts, and yet the millions of law-abiding citizens are being targeted.
Let’s also not forget that thousands of young men have been killed in urban cities across the country using pistols. Yet, we’re not talking about a ban on pistols. Instead, we argue that those young men need better resources, education, mentorship, and other pathways that will help elevate them from poverty.
There are very serious issues when anyone harms another person for no reason other than to cause mass destruction, and there is not a single gun owner who would support such acts. In fact, many condemn these acts because they give the majority a bad rap.
If Biden really wanted to address the issues he mentioned in his White House statement, he would focus on mental health, particularly the mental health of America’s youth.
He would focus on building stronger families so that families know what to look for if their child is going through depression or other mental illness.
He would focus on making sure urban cities have better education and trade centers; he would focus on working with the private sector to create job opportunities and to improve access to transportation and housing in those areas.
These things would have a profound impact on urban communities and would help end gun violence. On the other hand, I can assure you that banning AR-15s will not.
Biden’s priorities are misplaced, and the steps he’s preparing to take will only cause further division in a nation that’s already struggling to hang on by a thread. He should focus on the root of the problems, because that is how we can solve them.
Banning certain guns won’t make a difference, because the underlying problems will persist. These are problems that are so pervasive that focusing on guns instead of realistic solutions is seemingly the only political answer to complex problems.
Democrats such as Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee of Texas are proposing far-reaching bills to make it more difficult to purchase firearms.
In addition to extending the waiting period, Lee’s bill would create a national registry of all firearm owners and require various new licenses specific to certain types of weapons. It would also ban certain types of ammunition.
This is funny coming from Lee because from what I hear, she herself enjoys going to the range, but we’ll save that for a future column.
However, there are states that are pushing back, such as Indiana, which recently eliminated the requirement to have a license to carry a handgun—certainly a victory for Second Amendment supporters, but also a sign that many states will begin to take things into their own hands in preparation for what’s to come from the Biden White House.
If Biden is serious about healing America and bringing this nation together, this isn’t the way to do it. Instead, focusing on mental illness, the importance of family structure, education, trade schools, economic opportunities, and better housing is what will help our inner cities.
When people are mentally and spiritually sound and are comfortable in life with a good job, fair pay, and a great home, violence will inevitably go down without infringing on the rights of other American citizens.
————————– Armstrong Williams is a columnist for The Daily Signal and host of “The Armstrong Williams Show,” a nationally syndicated TV program.
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Welcome to the business boom for smugglers of illegal migrant children. by Joseph Klein: Joe Biden, the open borders president, is proposing amnesty legislation to provide the 11 million plus illegal aliens in this country a pathway to citizenship. During his CNN-hosted town hall meeting on February 17, Biden confirmed that such a pathway for citizenship must be included in any immigration bill that he would consider signing. The term “alien” would no longer be used in U.S. immigration law. Until the illegal aliens successfully complete the path to U.S. citizenship under Biden’s “reform” legislation, they are to be referred to as “noncitizen,” which is defined as “any person not a citizen or national of the United States.”In the meantime, through executive action, Biden is handcuffing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers in arresting and detaining illegal immigrants in the United States for eventual deportation. U.S. District Judge Drew Tipton at least managed to slow things down a bit. He issued a nationwide preliminary injunction on February 23rd against moving ahead with implementation of Biden’s 100 day pause on most deportations. But Biden’s political appointees at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) are undoubtedly searching for any loophole they can find.Biden is allowing some migrants seeking asylum, who have waited in Mexico for months under the Trump administration’s “Remain in Mexico” policy, to enter and remain in the United States pending adjudication of their asylum applications. The catch and release policy is back as the aliens melt into communities across the country, where they can compete for jobs with unemployed U.S. citizens and increase the risk of further coronavirus spread.Biden’s immigration policies are a disaster in the making, and he is just getting started. Biden’s welcome mat is encouraging thousands more migrants from Central America to join caravans making their way to the United States for easy entry. The number of illegal aliens have already increased since Biden took office. “When you send the message that you are not serious about immigration enforcement, you can’t act surprised when you see a massive influx of people that you have to manage,” said Jon Feere, a senior adviser to ICE during the Trump administration.
The overflow has forced the Biden administration to reopen border detention facilities to house unaccompanied migrant minors who have entered the country illegally, often with the assistance of smugglers. One reopened facility with bars in its windows will house up to 700 migrants, aged 13 to 17. This facility was used by the Trump administration for just a month back in 2019. When Trump was in the White House, such facilities were called “cages” by Trump haters. Biden himself said, “Under Trump, there have been horrifying scenes…at the border of kids being kept in cages.”
Now, with Biden in the White House, the same facility used during the Trump administration has been rechristened by Biden’s lapdogs in the media as an “overflow facility” or “emergency facility.” There is no end to the left’s hypocrisy.
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki declared at her press briefing on February 24th that the Biden administration’s policy “is not to expel unaccompanied children who arrive at the border.” What a boost for the smugglers’ business prospects! Then Psaki gave excuses when asked about the Biden administration’s detention of children. The reopening of the detention facility is only “a temporary reopening,” Psaki said. It’s all because of the COVID-19 pandemic, she explained. “There needs to be spacing,” according to Biden’s mouthpiece. “To ensure the health and safety of these kids, HHS 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.”
Instead of encouraging smugglers to transport more and more illegal migrant children to the U.S. border, how about taking steps that will dry up the demand for their services? Just put the kids the smugglers have already brought here on planes taking the kids back to the countries they came from. The middle seats can be kept empty, with masking required during the entire flight to guard against spread of the coronavirus. Why should U.S. taxpayers have to pay for testing, vaccinations, and general care of illegal alien minors who were no doubt smuggled into the country? The smugglers surely don’t do any testing for the coronavirus before they dump the children over the border in the United States.
Some Democrats in the border states are getting queasy. “The way we’re doing it right now is catastrophic and is a recipe for disaster in the middle of a pandemic,” said Texas Rep. Vicente Gonzalez. Texas Rep. Henry Cuellar observed that “we gotta be careful that we don’t give the impression that we have open borders because otherwise the numbers are going to start going up. And surely enough, we’re starting to see numbers go up.”
Of course, progressives do not think Biden has gone far enough yet. Democratic-Socialist Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, mistakenly believing that Biden has been in office for two months, tweeted the following: “It’s only 2 mos into this admin & our fraught, unjust immigration system will not transform in that time. That’s why bold reimagination is so impt. DHS shouldn’t exist, agencies should be reorganized, ICE gotta go, ban for-profit detention, create climate refugee status & more.” She also condemned the Biden administration’s decision to temporarily house unaccompanied children in detention facilities. “This is not okay, never has been okay, never will be okay – no matter the administration or party,” AOC tweeted. At least she is consistent in her extremist pro-illegal alien advocacy.
So far, Joe Biden has used his presidential powers to kill the Keystone XL pipeline, ending employment of at least 11,000 Americans, while expanding the pipeline for more illegal aliens to enter the country and take jobs away from Americans. He is also maneuvering to move the illegal aliens already in this country through the citizenship pipeline. Something is very rotten in Biden’s vision of America.
———————— Joseph Klein writes for FrontPage Mag.
Tags:Joseph Klein, FrontPage Mag, Biden Invites, Tidal Wave of Illegals, into the U.S.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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by AFP: “We want anything that the government does at this point to be timely and targeted, and really helping of folks in need. Too much in this legislation doesn’t reach this goal.”
That’s the message Americans for Prosperity President Tim Phillips delivered on C-SPAN’s Washington Journal on Wednesday morning. He went on the program to discuss Democrats’ $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill, which is packed with unnecessary spending for longstanding partisan priorities and would do nothing to end the pandemic or help the U.S. economy recover stronger.
“At this point, though, the government has appropriated $3.7 trillion to the pandemic. That’s more than anything ever in American history,” Phillips said. “And the kicker is this: $1 trillion of that money has still not been spent.
Phillips urged lawmakers to use the money that’s already been appropriated and put it toward increasing vaccinations, and getting relief to those who need it most, as Americans for Prosperity has emphasized in its Save Lives. Save Livelihoods campaign.
“Let’s get that money out the door and into individual hands rather than throwing another $1.9 trillion at it.”
Describing the bill as a “partisan, ideological wish list,” Phillips described ways in which the proposal focuses on the wrong priorities.
“So much of the money is not related to the pandemic at all. $350 billion of it goes to bail out big-spending cities and states that have been fiscally irresponsible for decades,” he said. “That is not fair and it is not helping with the pandemic.”
“There is money in this bill that also bails out insurance companies,” he continued. “That is not a good use of supposed pandemic relief that will simply go into the pockets of very wealthy insurance companies.”
Phillips then proposed an alternative approach to COVID relief: reopening the economy and getting people back to work through increased vaccinations.
Put the funding into expanding and rapidly getting shots in the arms of more Americans and let them live their lives. This pandemic has hurt people struggling socioeconomically. There is no question about that. So, simply dribbling out government subsidies is not the answer. … Let’s actually put the money where it can do the most good. Let’s get the vaccinations done. … Let’s get life back to normal again.Phillips offered Florida as an example of a state that has done well walking the line between protecting its citizens and getting the economy reopened so people can make a living to support their families. “They have been as good or better as states with more draconian shutdowns … that have hurt a lot of people, especially at the margins.”
He then admonished lawmakers to roll up their sleeves and do the hard work of making sure any pandemic relief is timely, temporary, and targeted.
“We would urge the administration, the various government agencies, and, frankly, Congress, because they have oversight of this money, to get it out there,” he said. “In the meantime, let’s take steps that are targeted like a laser beam to letting folks get their normal life back.”
Tell lawmakers to oppose Congress’ $1.9 trillion spending proposal and reject bailouts and other bad deals.
————————— Americans for Prosperity (AFP) engages in broad-based grassroots outreach to advocate long-term solutions to the country’s biggest problems that prevent people from realizing their incredible potential — unsustainable government spending and debt, a broken immigration system, a rigged economy, and a host of other issues you can explore.
Tags:Americans for Prosperity, AFP, Tim Phillips, Why Congress’ $1.9 Trillion plan, won’t bring the targeted relief, Americans deserveTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by I & I Editorial Board: The just-passed Equality Act no doubt sounds wonderful to many. Who, after all, can disagree with a bill to “prohibit discrimination on the basis of sex, gender identity, and sexual orientation”? But it’s a wretched bill, one that would have many terrible consequences.
Passed Thursday by a 224-206 vote, with only three Republicans in support, the legislation now goes to the Senate, where it’s expected (but not guaranteed) to fail. After all, the same bill also passed the House early last year, only to die in the Senate, where it needs 60 votes to get beyond that chamber’s filibuster. With a 50-50 party split in the Senate, that makes it unlikely to pass this time, too.
But, like a bad meal, the Equality Act is likely to come up again.
As we said, there’s nothing wrong with “equality” for anyone under the law. Our Constitution, indeed, guarantees that under the 14th Amendment. It’s a bedrock of American jurisprudence.
But the Equality Act of today has nothing to do with “equal rights,” at least as most Americans would understand them.
In principle, the law bars employment and other discrimination against LGBTQ workers. In reality, it disenfranchises large swaths of American society, from religious institutions and women’s rights groups to small businesses and nonprofits.
Legal legerdemain is key here. The proposed law erases biologically based sex definitions and protections under the 1964 Civil Rights Act and replaces them with the phrase “sexual orientation and gender identity,” a legal definition so broad as to be almost meaningless.
So if you believe in traditional marriage and sex roles, or don’t agree there are 64 different genders (or even 112, as some assert), you now officially and legally become a bigot, for all that implies.
It’s all made possible by massively expanding the government’s definition of bigotry, as well as the definition of public gathering places to include any place that ‘provides exhibition, entertainment, recreation, exercise, amusement, public gathering or public display.’ When you add the above to ‘any establishment that provides a good, service, or program,’ you’ve put nearly the entirety of American civic life under the thumb of radical activists.That’s right. Anyone, anywhere, who dissents from the most radical redefinition of gender and the family in history can be sued, harassed and made a pariah, with little recourse.
Feminists are waking up to what this means to them. Women’s sports already feature biological men who “identify” as women. From powerlifting to track and field and martial arts, men identifying as women have already won at least 15 “women’s” championships. Women’s locker rooms and showers are next, as are public restrooms.
Worse still, shelters for battered women and children could soon include biological males who call themselves women. Other current “women’s only” facilities will soon be forced to do the same.
The law is so bad that last year it brought together the radical left Women’s Liberation Front and the conservative Concerned Women for America to “oppose the misnamed and insidious Equality Act.”
Meanwhile, Christian, Muslim and Jewish groups worry that religious schools, hospitals and charities will have to do things that violate their beliefs. For example, staff members at religious-based clinics, doctors and nurses who refuse to abort unborn children would be in legal jeopardy. And faith-based adoption agencies that place children into traditional families with a married mother and father might have to close.
So might private schools that now hire staff and create curricula to support their goals. In particular, religious schools fear being required to teach ideas of marriage and the family that are antithetical to their deeply held beliefs. Those that don’t might lose accreditation or access to federal student loans.
This is a straight-up violation of the First Amendment, which protects both speech and religious belief: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”
But so what? “Woke” theology has already infected much of corporate America, which has tax breaks, lobbying clout and ties to far-left Democrats to protect. And it’s now the official creed of the Democrats.
Meanwhile, many if not most small businesses, charities and nonprofits oppose the legislation, knowing they’re always just one specious lawsuit away from going under. Just ask any women’s nail or hair salon, or your local women’s clothing store.
The bottom line is, this radical, divisive bill won’t unite us, but further divide us. And it’s a sad reminder that we’re only ever one election away from truly crazy things emerging from Congress. The Equality Act is one of them. What’s next?
———————— Issues & Insights, Editorial Board.
Tags:The Democrats’ ‘Woke’ Equality Act, Another Awful Idea, Radically Change America, Issues & Insights, editorial boardTo 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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47.) ABC
March 2, 2021 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
Democrats, Republicans can’t agree on school funding in newest COVID aid package: Getting children back to school amid the pandemic is a top priority for Democrats and Republicans, but both sides are having trouble agreeing on how much funding schools should receive. In the coming days, the Senate is expected to take up President Joe Biden’s major COVID-19 relief legislation, which includes nearly $130 billion for schools to ensure a safe return to the classroom. These funds can go toward improving ventilation systems or buying personal protective equipment, and at least 20% of the money would go toward learning loss. But Republicans have argued that $130 billion dollars is steep since money has already been distributed. In response, several education groups sent a letter to members of Congress addressing this and said money that was already issued has been “budgeted,” and are anticipating significant costs they will be unable to meet without additional federal funds. The debate over funding comes as teachers in Los Angeles County have been approved for the COVID-19 vaccine, as part of a wave of essential workers who are newly eligible to get vaccinated.
CDC director urges states not to reopen too soon as cases plateau: In recent weeks, the daily number of COVID-19 cases and deaths has plateaued with about 67,000 cases per day and 2,000 American lives lost — nearly a third of what the U.S. was seeing during its holiday surge. But as the number of cases and deaths start to level off, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is warning state leaders not to let their guard down by easing restrictions. “With these new statistics, I am really worried about reports that more states are rolling back the exact public health measures we have recommended to protect people from COVID-19,” Walensky said during a White House press briefing Monday. “I understand the temptation to do this … but we cannot be resigned to 70,000 cases a day, 2,000 daily deaths.” Across the country, some states are reverting to the loosest rules since the pandemic began, with governors in Montana and Iowa lifting mask mandates and rolling back restrictions on businesses. Arkansas and Texas are also considering a repeal of their mask mandates in the coming weeks. But Walensky implored Americans to continue practicing COVID-19 safety measures. “We have the ability to stop a potential fourth surge of cases,” she said.
Prince Harry tells Oprah Winfrey he was afraid of ‘history repeating itself’: The world got its first look over the weekend at Prince Harry’s and Meghan’s interview with Oprah Winfrey, in which Harry and Meghan give more insights as to why they stepped down from their royal roles. In one of the clips released Sunday by CBS, Winfrey says there was “no subject that was off limits” and asks Meghan if she was “silent or silenced.” Meghan remains silent as Winfrey interjects, “Almost unsurvivable — sounds like there was a breaking point.” Harry, whose mother, Princess Diana, died in 1997 after being injured in a Paris car crash while being pursued by paparazzi, also opened up about his concerns over “history repeating itself.” “I can’t begin to imagine what it must have been like for her going through this process by herself all those years ago,” Harry said. “Because it has been unbelievably tough for the two of us but at least we had each other.” The interview airs on March 7 as part of a two-hour primetime special.
Teen awarded over $1 million in scholarships from 18 colleges: A high school senior who applied to over 20 colleges has been offered more than $1 million in scholarship money. Shanya Robinson-Owens of Philadelphia has been accepted into 18 schools and has received $1,074,260 in total scholarships. “I was pretty excited, I wasn’t really expecting it,” said Robinson-Owens, who attends George Washington Carver High School of Engineering and Science, where she currently has a 3.2 grade point average. Her favorite subject in school is chemistry. Among the schools she was accepted to include Moravian College in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, La Salle University in Philadelphia and Temple University in Philadelphia, among others. Her advice to other students is to “take your time” with your work and try not to second guess yourself. “You really have to be patient,” said Robinson-Owens, who will graduate high school in June. “Stay focused. If you need to have some time away, it’s OK.”
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” author Stephen King joins us to talk about his new novel, “Later.” And we are revealing our March “GMA” Book Club pick, so you can read along with us all month long. Plus, we’ll break down all the highlights of “The Bachelor – Women Tell All,” and Serena P. speaks exclusively to “GMA” about the reunion and how she felt seeing Matt again for the first time since leaving the show. All this and more only on “GMA.”
FBI Director Christopher Wray is expected to make his first extensive remarks about the Jan. 6 Capitol riot before a Senate panel, the “worst” states for children during the pandemic revealed, plus scientists discover sharks that glow in the dark.
Here’s what we’re watching this Tuesday morning.
FBI Director Wray expected to face grilling from Senators over Capitol riot, domestic terrorism
FBI Director Christopher Wray is expected to face questions from Congress on Tuesday about whether his intelligence analysts missed warning signs before the riot at the U.S. Capitol and how the bureau plans to confront the rising threat of domestic terrorism.
Wray’s appearance before the Senate Judiciary Committee will be his first public testimony since September and the first formal statement from the FBI about the status of the wide-ranging riot investigation.
It will also be his first opportunity to discuss why the FBI did not detect in advance what it now says in court documents was extensive plotting and planning by known extremist groups that attacked the Capitol in coordinated fashion.
The study, by George Washington University’s Program on Extremism, analyzed arrest information and other court documents from 257 cases filed in federal court as of late February.
It found that while only about three dozen of those charged were part of extremist groups, their participation “was likely a necessary precondition for the escalation of violence from an angry riot into a breach of Capitol security.”
The coronavirus pandemic has disrupted childhood in every state, but particularly in the South. The global nonprofit Save the Children ranked Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, New Mexico and Alabama as the “worst” states for children during the pandemic. “This pandemic has lasted about a year for us, but I think the impact will be 10 years long for children,” said one relief worker.
New York Attorney General Letitia James announced Monday that her office is formally proceeding with an investigation into sexual harassment allegations against Gov. Andrew Cuomo. The move comes as a third woman said she felt “uncomfortable and embarrassed” when the governor asked her “Can I kiss you?” at a 2019 wedding.
“Ted Lasso,” with its small stake and big heart, is a reminder that one doesn’t need to be over-the-top to be a winner. Sometimes, the decent underdog can win.
An apple a day may keep the doctor away, but bumping that up to two fruits and three veggies a day could help you live a longer life, a a new study suggests.
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Andrew Cuomo’s situation is getting less and less tenable for Democrats
One allegation of sexual harassment is a big problem for a politician.
A second allegation turns into a full-blown crisis.
And a third – in less than a week – becomes unsustainable for the politician and his political party, because no one knows when a fourth or fifth allegation might surface.
Photo by Johannes EISELE / AFP
This is the untenable political situation for Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who saw a third woman accuse him of harassment as New York’s attorney general has begun proceeding with an investigation of the governor.
And it’s not too dissimilar from the circumstance that Al Franken faced when he ultimately resigned his Senate seat.
Now there are some key differences between the Franken and Cuomo situations.
For one thing, there hasn’t been a cascade of calls for Cuomo to resign; so far, just one New York congresswoman, Kathleen Rice, has called for Cuomo’s resignation. (Notably, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, N.Y., wants the matter investigated first.)
In addition, unlike with Franken in 2017, Democrats are under less pressure to claim the political high ground and make an obvious contrast against a current congressional candidate (Roy Moore in Alabama) or a current president (Donald Trump).
And Cuomo has never been someone willing to walk away, even when facing a crisis that’s become impossible to control.
But Democrats need to be asked this question after the latest allegation against Cuomo: How could you call for – or accept – Al Franken’s resignation, but not do the same for Cuomo?
Especially when you don’t know when the next allegation is going to surface?
And especially when the governor is already facing a separate damaging crisis (over the counting of nursing-home deaths in his state)?
Where’s the GOP policy?
Yesterday, we wrote that Donald Trump – as well as the other Republican speakers – barely commented on Biden’s $1.9 trillion relief package at CPAC over the weekend.
The New York Times’ Jonathan Martin takes it one step further: There was almost no discussion of POLICY at CPAC.
“There was vanishingly little discussion of why Republicans lost the presidency, the House and the Senate over the last four years, nor much debate about what agenda they should pursue to rebuild the party,” Martin writes.
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
53 percent: Florida GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis’s approval rating in Florida, up eight points since July, according to a new Mason-Dixon poll.
Over half: The share of people charged in connection with the Jan. 6 Capitol riot who are not connected to specific extremist groups or to one another, per a new study by George Washington University’s Program on Extremism.
64-33: The vote on Biden’s newly-confirmed Secretary of Education, Miguel Cardona
28,763,455: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 57,286 more than yesterday morning.)
516,978: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That’s 1,434 more than yesterday morning.)
46,738: The number of people currently hospitalized with coronavirus in the United States.
355.7 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
76,899,987: Number of vaccine doses administered in the U.S.
25,466,405: People fully vaccinated in the U.S.
58: The number of days left for Biden to reach his 100-day vaccination goal.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Stepping into the Wray
Senate set to take up Covid relief bill
After a day of voting in the Senate that concluded with President Biden’s Education Secretary nominee, Miguel Cardona, being confirmed by a 64-33 margin, the Senate will now turn to Covid-19 relief.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer confirmed on Monday that the Senate will begin work on the House’s version of the American Rescue Plan. While the plan will likely be stripped of the minimum wage amendment – which the Senate parliamentarian ruled could not passed through budget reconciliation – other parts of the bill will be kept intact like pensions and COBRA assistance.
“This week, the Senate will take up the measure. Let me say that again – the Senate will take up the American rescue plan this week. I expect a hardy debate and some late nights, but the American people sent us here with a job to do, to help the country through this moment of extraordinary challenge, to end through action the greatest health crisis our country has faced in a century,” Schumer said.
Democrats are hoping to pass the legislation and have it signed into law before March 14, when unemployment insurance is set to expire.
And the Number of the Week is … 84
The latest pod over at The Chuck Toddcast will introduce you to one of the most interesting characters in the history of American political scandals, who died earlier this month.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Now we find out: Former president Donald Trump and the then-first lady received their vaccines without fanfare back in January.
Latino groups are unhappy with the CEO of Goya Foods, who continues to claim that Trump is the “actual president.”
Plus: More Cuomo allegations, the “cult of now,” the state budget apocalypse that wasn’t, and more…
Half of Americans reject both Republicans and Democrats. Recent polling from Gallup finds 50 percent of respondents identifying as independents, rather than aligning themselves with either Democrats or the GOP.
Gallup’s latest political identification poll, conducted January 20 through February 2, saw just 25 percent of respondents identifying as Democrats and 25 percent identifying as Republicans. Among independents, 41 percent said they lean more Republican and 50 percent said they lean more Democrat. This is quite a change from November 2020 (when the Democrat/Republican/Independent divide was 31 percent, 30 percent, and 38 percent), and from February 2020 (when it was 26 percent, 33 percent, 39 percent). Gallup has been asking this same question myriad times per year since 2004. Party identification numbers tend to fluctuate quite a bit between surveys, but Gallup reports this is the first time the share of independents has reached 50 percent.
In addition, more poll respondents than ever before—62 percent—say that Republicans and Democrats “do such a poor job representing the American people that a third party is needed.” Agreement with this statement is up from 57 percent in September 2020, and a previous record high of 61 percent in 2017.
The first time Gallup asked the question, back in October 2003, only 40 percent agreed. “In several election years—2006, 2008 and 2012—Americans were divided as to whether a third party was needed, but since 2012, Americans have consistently favored the idea,” notes Gallup.
The results should give both parties and their members pause, but belonging to one of America’s two ruling tribes seems to mean never having to engage in self-reflection. Why should they? In cities and states across the U.S., professional Democrats and Republicans have successfully worked the system to keep third parties off ballots and out of office, while fighting electoral innovations—like ranked choice voting—that allow people to vote their actual preferences rather than simply pick the proverbial lesser of two evils.
And when legal machinations fail, the two parties resort to shaming: Don’t third-party voters know they’re destroying democracy?
That attitude is on full display in some reactions to the recent Gallup polling results. Take Lee Drutman, a senior fellow at the New America Foundation and political science lecturer at Johns Hopkins University, who shared the poll results yesterday with a warning that “this disaffiliation from the two major parties is very dangerous for democracy.”
People labeling themselves and voting according to their own preferences and beliefs instead of whatever hogwash they’ve been force-fed is not dangerous to democracy—many functional democracies in the world have third and fourth and fifth parties, who govern in coalitions thanks to proportional representation. But this disaffiliation trend is dangerous to establishment politicians and staid political institutions who think they’re too big to fail and thus immune from having to actually act like democratic leaders. To which I say:
And according to Gallup, a whole lot of Americans feel similarly.
FOLLOWUP
A picture is worth… After two former staffers of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo accused him of sexual harassment, another woman has come forward saying that Cuomo made unwanted sexual advances:
A third woman has accused Governor Cuomo of unwanted touching and sexual attention, saying he placed his hands on her face and asked if he could kiss her at her friend’s wedding. A friend took a series of pictures of the incident as it occurred. https://t.co/bgvzBK4vK0pic.twitter.com/hXvgTvSntQ
Liberalism is not inevitable. Canadian political scientist Jacob T. Levy, author of The Multiculturalism of Fear and Rationalism, Pluralism, and Freedom, talked to The Signal‘s Phoebe Maltz Bovy about “the cult of now”:
Phoebe Maltz Bovy: In your Vox article on the idea of moral progress, you wrote, “Before we attribute magical moral powers to the passage of the next 50 years, we should look backward in 50-year increments and ask: How many old moral errors keep coming back? How many new ones get introduced?”
I want to ask specifically about the “new ones” part. Because if I understand you correctly, you’re arguing that it’s not just that progress can be slow, in a two-steps-forward, one-step-backwards sense. It’s also that things are not necessarily getting better, or as you quote Martin Luther King, Jr., “‘time itself is neutral.'” Are there ways this moment is less enlightened than, say, ten years ago?
Jacob T. Levy: I think there’s been what’s referred to as liberal-democratic backsliding, compared with certainly before the 2008 financial crisis. Broadly speaking, the stability of liberal and constitutional democracy looks less clear and less entrenched. That’s what comes to mind most obviously.
Bovy: Are you referring to Trump, and to Trump-like leaders worldwide?
Levy: I mean the rise of generally nationalist, populist authoritarianism, with associated challenges to the separation of powers, minority rights, and federalism. This precedes Trump. The standard exemplar from before that was Viktor Orbán, Erdoğan in Turkey, Modi in India, and Netanyahu in important ways in Israel. The time horizon for the decay of Venezuelan democracy is somewhat longer than that, but you’re still seeing instances around the world in different kinds of political systems, different regions, the Philippines, Brazil, where what had looked like relatively stable, relatively entrenched, liberal, constitutional democracy, starts to look a lot less so, and in some cases, I’d argue both Hungary and Turkey, falling out of the category altogether.
The state budget apocalypse that wasn’t. “Throughout the debate over stimulus, one question has produced repeated deadlock in Washington: Should the states get no-strings federal aid?” notesThe New York Times. Over the course of the pandemic, Democrats have continually argued yes, and still are saying as much, arguing that this is absolutely essential to keep states—and their residents—financially afloat. But evidence suggests otherwise. More from the Times:
State aid could well be a stumbling block for President Biden’s $1.9 trillion federal stimulus bill, which contains $350 billion in relief for state and local governments and narrowly passed the House this past weekend. It faces a much tougher fight in the Senate.
As it turns out, new data shows that a year after the pandemic wrought economic devastation around the country, forcing states to revise their revenue forecasts and prepare for the worst, for many the worst didn’t come.
[…] By some measures, the states ended up collecting nearly as much revenue in 2020 as they did in 2019. A J.P. Morgan survey called 2020 “virtually flat” with 2019, based on the 47 states that report their tax revenues every month, or all except Alaska, Oregon and Wyoming.
QUICK HITS
• The U.S. Marshals Service, a wing of the Department of Justice, “have been acting like local police—only with more violence and less accountability, according to an investigation by The Marshall Project and the USA TODAY Network.” The investigation found that “on average, from 2015 to late 2020, they shot 31 people a year, killing 22 of them.”
• Refugees are being turned away from the U.S. due to President Joe Biden’s inaction. “Three weeks after announcing that this year’s refugee cap would be modified, Biden has yet to sign the determination making it official, leaving refugees abroad in limbo,” reports CNN. “Last week, 60 refugees were unbooked from their flights and this week, more than 200 refugees have had their trips postponed, according to a source with knowledge of the matter.”
• A good thread out of Sweden on how the Nordic Model of criminalizing customers of sex workers but not the selling of sex—a model that some U.S. groups and celebrities have been trying to misleadingly label as the “equality model,” or even simply as decriminalization—still leads to really bad outcomes for sex workers:
Read the whole thread. It’s a good example of how the failure of client criminalisation to actually “end demand” leads police to simply increase their harassment of sex workers (who are breaking no law themselves). https://t.co/sKahZJLEjE
The Minnesota State Senate introduced a bill—has not been passed yet— that would bar any charitable organization from paying the bail of any felony bail or bail set at 2,000$ or higher. This includes @MFFUnion, @MNFreedomFund 🧵/1 pic.twitter.com/ovskJa3bPp
Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason, where she writes regularly on the intersections of sex, speech, tech, crime, politics, panic, and civil liberties. She is also co-founder of the libertarian feminist group Feminists for Liberty.
Since starting at Reason in 2014, Brown has won multiple awards for her writing on the U.S. government’s war on sex. Brown’s writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, Buzzfeed, Playboy, Fox News, Politico, The Week, and numerous other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @ENBrown.
Reason is the magazine of “free minds and free markets,” offering a refreshing alternative to the left-wing and right-wing echo chambers for independent-minded readers who love liberty.
“While I certainly agree that families play an essential role in society and that our policy agenda should reflect that fact, there is sound reasoning behind American conservatives’ traditional hesitation to use the federal government too prominently in this area.”
By Andy Smarick American Compass
March 1, 2021
To allocate new infrastructure spending wisely, legislators need to understand how Americans’ habits have changed.
By Diana Furchtgott-Roth City Journal Online
March 1, 2021
Last week, Scott Winship and Samuel Hammond joined Reihan Salam for a conversation on the merits of the Family Security Act, the long legacy of the 1990s welfare reform debates, and the political economy of social conservatism.
Manhattan Institute is a think tank whose mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice and individual responsibility.
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You haven’t heard a lot of Gina Carano’s now-former “The Mandalorian” costars speaking out in her defense. Scratch that. You haven’t heard any of them speak out. Bill Burr is the first and addressed t … MORE
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55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
03/02/2021
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Infrastructure; Becerra Concerns; Marvin K. Mooney Redux
By Carl M. Cannon on Mar 02, 2021 08:21 am
Good morning, it’s Tuesday, March 2, 2021. Today is the 117th birthday of Dr. Seuss, real name Theodor Geisel, who made a career out of making children laugh and adults think. And sometimes the other way around.
He certainly got political satirist Art Buchwald chuckling, and thinking, in 1974 as the Watergate scandal consumed Washington. Ted Geisel sent the liberal columnist a Dr. Seuss book he’d written two years earlier titled “Marvin K. Mooney Will You Please Go Now!”
In the copy the author sent to Buchwald, he exchanged Marvin Mooney’s name for Richard Nixon’s (which is how some people read it in 1972). Buchwald, naturally, turned it into a column. Although Geisel was a loyal Democrat, today I suspect he’d send the book to Liz Cheney or Adam Kinzinger. Certainly, to Mitt Romney; perhaps even to Mitch McConnell.
Dr. Seuss and Art Buchwald are gone now, however, so in a moment I’ll render the updated version, channeling the presumed desires of the aforementioned Republicans.
First, I’d direct you to our front page, which aggregates, as it does each day, an array of columns and stories spanning the political spectrum. This morning’s lineup includes Heather Mac Donald on the recent wave in violent crime (City Journal); Juan Williams on Republicans twisting themselves into ethical pretzels over a certain ex-president (The Hill); Karen House on the Biden administration’s handling of Saudi Arabia (New York Sun); and Donald McNeil tells his side of the N-word story (Medium). We also offer a complement of original material from RCP’s reporters and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Infrastructure Spending Would Shape U.S. Society for Generations. Henry Cisneros and William Fulton offer advice for the new administration (and Congress).
Becerra as HHS Chief Would Undo Conscience Protections. Grazie Pozo Christie argues that Xavier Becerra, if confirmed, would impose policies on health care workers that he enforced as attorney general in California.
The Economy Isn’t a Pizza, But Small Business Cost Is. “Papa John” Schnatter asserts that boosting the minimum wage to $15 an hour would harm the very people it is intended to help.
Biden’s Immigration Changes Will Improve Safety. At RealClearPolicy, Jonathan Haggerty hails the president’s decision to prioritize border resources for public safety threats, such as pursuing human traffickers or cartel members smuggling weapons and drugs.
Returning to Iran Agreement Will Not Be Easy. At RealClearWorld, Stephen Rademaker warns that the administration hands are tied by a nearly forgotten law enacted by Congress in 2015.
Firefighters’ “Fill the Boot” Charity Fills Union Coffers. At RealClearInvestigations, Bill McMorris reports that the wildly successful fundraiser to fight muscular dystrophy has diverted millions of dollars to the International Association of Fire Fighters.
Student Loan Forgiveness Shifts Burden to Working Class. At RealClearEducation, Teri Christoph writes that Biden’s plan means low-income Americans will be stuck paying for the educations of the better off.
Blocking Gas Pipelines Blocks Consumers’ Access to Heat/Cooking Sources. At RealClearEnergy, Benjamin R. Dierker explains the downstream impact of political decisions.
Republicans, Don’t Deify “the Average.” RealClearMarkets editor John Tamny takes a dim view of messaging that ignores a truism: blue-collar work is a consequence of economic activity conducted by the white-collar worker.
Why Is “the Gut” So Emotional? RealClearScience editor Ross Pomeroy spotlights the enteric nervous system, home to at least 100 million neurons, by far the most outside of the brain.
* * *
Donald J. Trump, will you please go now!
The time has come.
The time has come.
The time is now.
Just go.
Go.
GO!
I don’t care how.
You can go by foot.
You can go by cow.
Donald J. Trump, will you please go now!
You can go on skates.
You can go on skis.
You can go in a hat.
But please go.
Please!
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62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
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Good morning. It’s Tuesday, March 2, and we’re covering a conviction in France, a pivotal voting rights case, and the fate of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com.
Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy was convicted yesterday on charges of corruption. Two years of the three-year sentence will be suspended, with the remaining year spent under house arrest. The decision makes Sarkozy the second French president to be convicted after leaving office in the past decade—Jacques Chirac was found guilty of embezzlement in 2012, though the entire sentence was suspended.
The charges stem from a 2014 attempt by Sarkozy to exchange a prestigious position for a judge in return for information on a separate probe into whether Sarkozy manipulated L’Oreal heiress Liliane Bettencourt into financing his 2007 campaign. He also faces an upcoming trial over whether he exceeded legal limits on campaign spending during the same election. The most sensational of Sarkozy’s legal woes involves claims he funneled roughly $60M from former Libyan dictator Muammar al-Qaddafi to his campaign. A trial has not yet been set for the latter charges.
Sarkozy will remain free pending appeal.
Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee
The US Supreme Court will hear oral arguments today in two cases with potentially wide-ranging impact on election law. The consolidated cases, both from Arizona, question the scope of Section 2 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which prohibits voting procedures that discriminate on the basis of race, color, or language.
At issue is whether Arizona’s ballot collection law—which prohibits third parties, with certain exceptions, from delivering someone else’s completed ballot—unfairly targets minorities. The justices will also consider a rule that requires ballots cast outside of a voter’s precinct to be discarded; a law critics say unfairly burdens Hispanic and Native American residents. However, because the laws are designed as race-neutral, the cases will test what qualifies as a Section 2 violation, an outcome likely to impact election law in all 50 states. A decision is expected by early summer.
Separately, the House will consider a nearly 800-page overhaul to federal election law. If passed, the package would still need to clear the 60-vote threshold in the Senate.
Penal Colony No. 2
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny will spend at least the first part of his two-and-a-half-year sentence at one of the country’s most notorious prisons, according to reports yesterday. Known as Penal Colony No. 2, observers say the site, located 60 miles east of Moscow, was chosen to “psychologically break” Navalny, who has been one of the most outspoken critics of President Vladimir Putin.
Navalny was arrested after voluntarily returning from Berlin in January. Prosecutors argue he violated the terms of his probation—referring to Navalny’s emergency medical transport after being poisoned en route to Moscow and slipping into a coma. His case has sparked ongoing protests, mostly youth-driven, across the country, with more than 10,000 people being arrested.
Read descriptions of the prison from former inmates here.
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You know what’s better than a one-size-fits-all health plan? One that’s tailored exactly for you. Start inside.
InsideTracker is a personalized health and wellness platform like no other. Using their patented algorithm, they analyze your body’s biomarker data gathered from blood, DNA, and fitness trackers to provide a clear picture of what’s going on inside you. Then—using science-backed recommendations—they create an action plan for positive diet and lifestyle changes. With InsideTracker, you can track your progress day by day, every step of the way.
>San Diego’s Comic-Con, the world’s largest comic book convention, will be held virtually in 2021 for the second straight year; an in-person convention is planned for November(More)
>The 2021 Golden Globes pull in an estimated 5.4 million viewers, down 60% from last year; would be the lowest-rated broadcast for the awards since 1995(More)
>J.J. Watt, three-time NFL Defensive Player of the Year, departs Houston Texans after 10 seasons and signs two-year, $31M contract with Arizona Cardinals(More) | Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers donates $1M to California small businesses affected by COVID-19(More)
Science & Technology
> Rocket Lab and satellite operator Spire Global to separately go public via special purpose acquisition companies as SPAC-craze hits the space industry (More) | How do SPACs work? (More)
>Archeologists in Pompeii recover almost fully intact ceremonial chariot; discovery is the latest find following an investigation into an illegal dig (More)
>Researchers develop potential vaccine strategy to prevent urinary tract infections; drug regimen showed success in mouse studies (More)
>US stock markets surge (S&P 500 +2.4%, Dow +2.0%, Nasdaq +3.0%) on vaccine optimism; S&P 500 sees best trading day since June 2020 (More) | Videoconferencing giant Zoom surpasses earnings expectations on 369% annual revenue growth; shares up more than 10% in after-hours trading (More)
>All US Apple stores are open to customers for the first time since the pandemic led to store closures (More)
>Texas’ oldest power cooperative files for bankruptcy protection due to $1.8B grid debt stemming from February winter storms (More)
>First Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccines expected to be administered today (More) | US reports a total of 514,647 COVID-19 deaths, up 1,567 from yesterday; see averages here (More) | Almost 51 million people (15% of US population) have received at least one vaccine dose; see how your state is doing here (More)
>Deposed Myanmar (Burma) leader Aung San Suu Kyi appears in hearing, faces two new charges (More) | Gunmen release hundreds of kidnapped schoolgirls in Nigeria (More)
>Senate confirms Miguel Cardona as secretary of education in 64-33 vote (More) | Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT) released from hospital after getting knocked unconscious from an accidental fall over the weekend (More) | Third woman accuses New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) of unwanted advances (More)
IN-DEPTH
Inside Xinjiang’s Prison State
New Yorker | Ben Mauk. One of the most detailed looks to date at China’s vast network of detention facilities where Muslim minorities in the country’s Xinjiang province are held—with rare accounts from survivors. (Read, $$)
Footlong of Discontent
The Hustle | Zachary Crockett. The story of Subway’s famous $5 footlong deal, a promotion that was wildly popular—except with franchise owners squeezed by its terrible unit economics. (Read)
Historybook: Children’s author Dr. Seuss born (1904); Oscar-winning actress Jennifer Jones born (1919); Former Soviet Union president Mikhail Gorbachev born (1931); Wilt Chamberlain sets all-time NBA record with 100 points in a single game (1962).
“Everybody pulls for David, nobody roots for Goliath.”
– Wilt Chamberlain
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63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
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March 2, 2021
Texas Electricity Prices Are Lower Due to Deregulation
By Thomas L. Hogan | “Contrary to McGinty and Patterson, a close look at the evidence reveals that deregulation and competition have, in fact, reduced electricity prices in Texas. Prices in competitive markets have fallen, while those of…
By James Bovard | “Unfortunately, New Yorkers apparently retain faith in central planning of their lives despite the dismal failures at both the mayoral and gubernatorial level. The political profits of demagoguery will perennially trump the…
Post-Covid Policy Advice from Ludwig von Mises for…
By Richard M. Ebeling | “Mises’ warnings about misguided government policies remain just as relevant if not more so today, as we see in our own time a new push for increased interventionism, expanded welfare statism, and renewed calls for…
By Art Carden | “It is not exploitation; rather, profit is a reward you earn for helping strangers in ways that waste no resources and leave them available for other strangers. Are firms earning ‘exorbitant’ profit selling natural gas and…
There Are Libertarians In A Pandemic, And For Good Reason
By Art Carden | “If nothing else, the Covid pandemic will create dissertation topics for generations of Ph.D. students across the humanities and social sciences. Someone looking to write the definitive history of the pandemic could get a head…
By Robert Hughes | The Institute for Supply Management’s Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index rose in February, registering a 60.8 percent reading for the month, the highest since May 2004. The February result is a gain of 2.1 points over the…
By Donald J. Boudreaux | “Although self-imprisoned, alone and forever, in her apartment with literally not a friend left in the world, Vicky never wavered in knowing that she had her priorities ordered correctly, sensibly, and scientifically.”
By Phillip W. Magness | “In both the supply of vaccine doses and the ability to secure an appointment, the primary obstacle facing most Americans is not a lack of interest in vaccination or the fringe anti-vaxx groups that the media dwells upon.
Edward C. Harwood fought for sound money when few Americans seemed to care. He was the original gold standard man before that became cool. Now he is honored in this beautiful sewn silk bow tie in the richest possible color and greatest detail. The tie is adjustable to all sizes. Sporting this, others might miss that you are secretly supporting the revolution for freedom and sound money, but you will know, and that is what matters.
Jeffrey Tucker is well known as the author of many informative and beloved articles and books on the subject of human freedom. Now he’s turned his attention to the most shocking and widespread violation of human freedom in our times: the authoritarian lockdown of society on the pretense that it is necessary in the face of a novel virus.
Learning from the experts, Jeffrey Tucker has researched this subject from every angle. In this book, Tucker lays out the history, politics, economics, and science relevant to the coronavirus response. The result is clear: there is no justification for the lockdowns.
On the menu today: We’re past the 40-day mark of the Biden presidency, and already some things are clear. First, as many of us warned, Biden really isn’t much of a “centrist,” despite what much of the media claimed throughout 2019 and 2020. Second, he and his team are not exactly the wise, experienced, old Washington hands that they like to think of themselves as — remember that passing a COVID-relief bill was supposed to be the easy part of their agenda. Finally, Biden isn’t exactly moving with great speed to fill up the lower ranks of the executive branch.
Team Biden: Farther to the Left, and Less Competent, Than Promised
Six weeks into the Biden administration, the bad news is that Joe Biden and his team are way farther to the left than the candidate promised on the campaign trail in 2020. But this is somewhat offset by the fact that he and his team are much less competent than promised.
The essential companion to the bestselling book 12 Rules For Life is here
Jordan Peterson is back with twelve more lifechanging principles and strategies for overcoming the cultural, scientific and psychological forces causing us to tend toward tyranny. In Beyond Order, Peterson teaches us how to rely on instinct to find meaning and purpose, even – and especially – when we find ourselves powerless.
Jerusalem Post: “Israel, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain have discussed expanding cooperation in facing common enemies.”
“All four believe a nuclear Iran would be a major threat and have been eyeing the Biden administration’s plan to rejoin the 2015 nuclear deal with concern.”
Associated Press: “With the U.S. vaccination drive picking up speed and a third formula on the way, states eager to reopen for business are easing coronavirus restrictions despite warnings from health experts that the outbreak is far from over and that moving too quickly could prolong the misery.”
Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) asked FBI Director Christopher Wray whether there was any evidence of antifa involvement in the Capitol insurrection, NBC News reports.
Responded Wray: “We have not to date seen any evidence of anarchist violent extremists or people subscribing to antifa in connection with the 6th.”
Wray later said that white supremacists make up “the biggest chunk of our domestic terrorism portfolio overall.”
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CNBC: “In the latest stimulus package making its way through Congress, there’s no extension of the national ban on evictions that is set to expire this month, meaning millions of Americans could be at risk of losing their homes as the Covid-19 pandemic still rages.”
“President Joe Biden had called on Congress to keep the eviction moratorium in effect through September. However, because Democrats have decided to pass the legislation through a process called budget reconciliation, they can’t include the eviction ban in the relief bill.”
“House Democrats are pursuing an ambitious agenda to approve several progressive bills supported by President Biden in the coming weeks, but these measures face an uncertain future in the evenly divided Senate, where most legislation will require support from Republicans to advance,” CBS News reports.
“Several of these measures have previously passed in the House but stalled in the Senate, as then-Majority Leader Mitch McConnell refused to bring them to the floor for consideration. Speaker Nancy Pelosi had referred to McConnell as the ‘grim reaper,’ overseeing the ‘legislative graveyard’ of the Senate. However, even with Democrats now nominally in control of the Senate, many of these bills still face an uncertain future.”
“More than 20,000 North Carolina voters have left the Republican Party to become unaffiliated since Election Day, and nearly 60% of them are from suburban areas,” Axios Charlotte reports.
Rep. Beth Van Duyne (R-TX) “has lost her chief of staff, communications director and legislative director already. And she’s only been in Congress for 57 days,” Punchbowl News reports.
“Van Duyne fired chief of staff Brendan Belair and legislative director Erica Barker. Van Duyne’s spokeswoman Amanda Gonzalez Thompson also quit last week.”
“Turnover isn’t uncommon on Capitol Hill, especially for a new lawmaker, but this level of churn this early in a congressional career is quite notable, and it’s very strange.”
But this is even stranger: “On Feb. 10, Christian Dillard, the former spokesperson for Van Dyune’s campaign and a longtime acquaintance of the congresswoman, shot and killed himself outside Van Duyne’s home. Van Duyne was home at the time of the incident.”
First Read: “For one thing, there hasn’t been a cascade of calls for Cuomo to resign; so far, just one New York congresswoman, Kathleen Rice, has called for Cuomo’s resignation. (Notably, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand wants the matter investigated first.)”
“In addition, unlike with Franken in 2017, Democrats are under less pressure to claim the political high ground and make an obvious contrast against a current congressional candidate (Roy Moore in Alabama) or a current president (Donald Trump).”
“And Cuomo has never been someone willing to walk away, even when facing a crisis that’s become impossible to control.”
“But Democrats need to be asked this question after the latest allegation against Cuomo: How could you call for — or accept — Al Franken’s resignation, but not do the same for Cuomo?”
Former Trump trade adviser Peter Navarro penned a 15-page dossier falsely accusing his colleague Victoria Coates of being Anonymous, Politico reports.
“The December 2019 memo goes into great detail to make the case that Coates — who was then a deputy national security adviser — was the author of both the New York Times op-ed and a tell-all book that described a resistance force within the administration aiming to undermine President Donald Trump.”
“Coates, who is not named in the memo but is clearly identified through specific information, was transferred out of the White House to the Department of Energy in February, just weeks after Navarro wrote and circulated the document.”
Jonathan Bernstein: “I’ve seen a number of perfectly fine articles about why and how former President Donald Trump still wields influence over the Republican Party, but c’mon! The main reason that Republican politicians feel stuck with Trump is that they know that he’s capable of turning against their party at the drop of a hat.”
“Yes, Trump is good at tapping into resentment, but plenty of Republican politicians are good at that. Yes, he’s popular among Republican voters, but most politicians are popular among their own party’s voters. Yes, he’s willing to take sides in primaries, but he doesn’t actually have a particularly impressive record of swaying primary voters.”
“No, what’s different about Trump is that unlike any other former president — really, any former nominee — in living memory, it’s that easy to picture him telling his voters to stay home and handing elections to the other party. And that’s why he’s been an impossible dilemma for Republican politicians ever since he emerged as a major candidate in 2015.”
New York Times: “Unless the parties can agree on how to fund an infrastructure plan, Mr. Biden might have to try to push through another sprawling spending package with only Democratic votes. The task could prove exceptionally difficult given the competing pressures the president will face from centrists and progressives in his party — and the absence of a pandemic emergency to help fuse those factions in support of the bill.”
“Biden administration officials have not decided whether to push infrastructure as a stand-alone bill or as part of a broader package. But any hopes of bringing Democrats and Republicans together on a program are almost sure to be undermined by the same disagreements that have felled previous attempts.”
“New satellite imagery obtained by CNN reveals North Korea has recently taken steps to conceal a facility US intelligence agencies believe is being used to store nuclear weapons, a move that could add to the growing sense of urgency from critics who argue the Biden administration needs to articulate a clear strategy on how it will deal with Kim Jong Un going forward.”
Washington Post: “Only a few months ago, Fox cracked down on appearances by its hosts and journalists at partisan events, deeming them a breach of the line distinguishing a news organization from a political-advocacy outfit.”
“But Fox not only permitted Bongino and Hegseth to address CPAC this week — the network was directly involved in financing the conference.
New York Times: “As it turns out, new data shows that a year after the pandemic wrought economic devastation around the country, forcing states to revise their revenue forecasts and prepare for the worst, for many the worst didn’t come. One big reason: $600-a-week federal supplements that allowed people to keep spending — and states to keep collecting sales tax revenue — even when they were jobless, along with the usual state unemployment benefits.”
“By some measures, the states ended up collecting nearly as much revenue in 2020 as they did in 2019.”
New York Times: “Just as striking was what wasn’t said at the event. There was vanishingly little discussion of why Republicans lost the presidency, the House and the Senate over the last four years, nor much debate about what agenda they should pursue to rebuild the party.”
“The absence of soul-searching owes in part to the Republicans’ surprise gains in the House and the denialism of many activists that they lost the White House at all, a false claim perpetuated with trollish gusto by former President Donald Trump himself on Sunday, to the delight of the crowd.”
“House Republicans will reclaim their majority in 2022 by offering candidates who are women, minorities or veterans,” a memo obtained by Axios says.
From the document: “In 2020, all 15 of the seats Republicans flipped were won by a woman, a minority or a veteran. Continuing to recruit similar candidates is a foundational building block to the majority in 2022.”
However, the memo sounds the alarm about insufficient Republican candidate fundraising, calling it the “single biggest threat to Republicans taking back the majority.”
“The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee will release 10 new digital ads targeting vulnerable Republicans who voted against President Biden’s $1.9 trillion COVID relief package,” Axios reports.
The president earned a monthly job approval of 50% in February, his first full month in office. Forty-seven percent (47%) disapproved of his job performance last month.
President Biden sparked controversy by signing an executive order mandating that transgender athletes be allowed to compete in girl’s and women’s sports, a move that most Americans oppose.
Update (0820ET): While several New York State Democratic lawmakers have called on Cuomo to resign amid his multiple scandals, Rep. Kathleen Rice (D-NY) is now the first Democratic member of Congress to call for the governor to leave office.
Less than two weeks ago, we reported on the fact that The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is bankrolling an activist educational group that believes math is racist and that arriving at an objective answer is an example of “white supremacy…
Although fewer people have been able to grab a beer at the pub during this pandemic, Visual Capitalist’s Iman Ghosh note that the global desire for beer prevails. For example, sales of the Corona beer actually shot up in the past year…
A new video montage of recent interviews with former NSA contractor and whistleblower Edward Snowden exposes how the global COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns – which have been particularly severe and far-reaching in Western countries like the…
Authored by Yves Smith via NakedCapitalism.com, We are running this post for one reason: as this article stresses, the testing of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines was conducted much earlier, when fewer variants were out and about. Therefore…
Authored by Ryan Ledendecker via The Federalist Papers (emphasis ours) The fight for the return of millions of schoolchildren to in-person learning continues to rage on, with various teachers unions wielding their political power to seemingly…
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Senior White House adviser Cedric Richmond told Axios that the Biden White House will move on slavery reparations without Congress. “We have to start breaking… Read more…
James Rickards first called it a “Monetary Earthquake”. Now, this New Global Currency is poised to cripple the USD… Here’s How Americans Are Preparing Read more…
Former CIA Director and architect of Spygate John Brennan went all in with the anti-white message being pushed by the left during an appearance on… Read more…
California Governor Gavin Newsom was caught eating indoors at a closed restaurant in Fresno over the weekend even though indoor dining is not allowed. Fresno… Read more…
On Saturday a second former aide stepped forward and accused New York Governor Andrew Cuomo of sexual harassment. This prompted calls from fellow Democrats for… Read more…
Last Monday the United States Supreme Court refused to review the Pennsylvania 2020 Election cases. The court made the announcement on Monday morning. Justices Alito,… Read more…
As The Gateway Pundit reported back in 2010 Pigford v. Glickman was a class action lawsuit against the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), alleging… Read more…
According to an earlier report in February, neoconservative anti-Trumper Nikki Haley reached out to former President Trump to request a sit-down at Mar-a-Lago — but… Read more…
The state of Nevada updated its voter roll last week after bogus individuals and addresses were uncovered by Steve Crowder and his team. The updates… Read more…
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In this conversation, Senior Fellow Justin Grimmer talks about his new research paper that analyzes and challenges allegations of voter fraud during the 2020 presidential election. Grimmer addresses allegations such as the improbability of Joe Biden’s victory on the basis that he won fewer counties than Donald Trump, including “bellwether” counties that have accurately predicted every presidential election winner since 1980.
interview with Niall Ferguson via George W. Bush Presidential Center
Hoover Institution fellow Niall Ferguson discusses his own process in becoming a dual citizen, the meaning of the American identity, and how a dynamic market economy can assimilate immigrants.
After circulating two widely criticized drafts of an ethnic studies curriculum, the California Department of Education must now determine whether to accept a third widely criticized draft this month. The common denominator across all three drafts is that they are based on “critical ethnic studies,” which holds that capitalism is a form of power and oppression and is related to imperialism, White supremacy, and racism.
It was said of the Roman generalissimo Sulla that there was no better friend or worse enemy than he. This maxim of foreign policy––support and help your loyal allies, and damage and punish your enemies––was proven common sense for millennia. Then came the age of moralizing internationalism, the belief that a “new world order” had made that realist truth anachronistic and primitive, a reflection of our benighted past.
Last fall I argued with a friend that we don’t have much systemic racism in this country. My friend said we do and defined “systemic racism” as policies that aren’t necessarily intended to hurt black people disproportionately but do hurt them disproportionately.
interview with Timothy Garton Ash via George W. Bush Presidential Center
Hoover Institution fellow Timothy Garton Ash explains why democracies thrive when they have a sense of community, identity, and belonging that are open to all, provided that all live by the society’s rules, laws, and values.
Since I entered the Foreign Service three decades ago, I have heard the constant refrain that State’s influence in foreign policy is eroding due to the entry of other players, mistrust by political leaders, its own institutional weaknesses and its failure to keep up with the accelerating pace of information.
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
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71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Daily Intelligence Brief:
Good morning, it’s March 2, 2021.
TOP STORIES:
Some Virginia Schools Cancel Dr. Seuss for ‘Read Across America Day’
Dr. Seuss’s books typically play a significant role on “Read Across America Day.” the day the U.S. celebrates reading. However, Loudon County Schools in Virginia will not be supporting Dr. Seuss on “Read Across America Day.”
The New York Post reports, “Loudoun County Public Schools ordered its teachers to avoid “connecting Read Across America Day with Dr. Seuss,” after a study said the author’s work is filled with “orientalism, anti-Blackness and White supremacy,” the outlet reported, quoting the announcement it said the district sent out with the directive.”
“The under-fire district later said in a statement on Facebook, “Dr. Seuss books have not been banned in Loudoun County Public Schools” — although it did add, “Research in recent years has revealed strong racial undertones in many books written/illustrated by Dr. Seuss.”
China Pushes Back Against Uyghur Women Claims of Abuse with Personal Attacks
In early February 2021, Uyghur women who survived China’s concentration camps claimed the CCP uses rape as a torture tactic.
Concentration camp survivor, Tursunay Ziyawudun, told Voice of America. “On four different occasions, I was taken to an interrogation room, where I was beaten, my private part was electrocuted unbearably by an electric baton, and I was gang raped.”
The Chinese government offered its rebuttal to claims from Ziyawudun and others this week. According to Reuters, China responded by attacking the women, saying they had infertility issues, were unfaithful to their spouses, and have sexually transmitted diseases.
Fraud is a Major Issue with Unemployment Programs Related to COVID-19 Relief
With the second COVID-19 relief bill possibly passing some time this month, some state systems are already struggling with fraudulent unemployment claims. The claims come from countries like Nigeria, China, Russia, where fraudsters have purchased peoples’ social security numbers on the dark web. The fraudster then takes the SSN and files for false unemployment. Billions in false unemployment claims were filed with the first COVID-19 relief bill.
DAILY RUMOR:
Did Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi Call Sexual Harassment Allegations Against New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’ Credible’?
TRUE or FALSE: TRUE
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo is in the spotlight, following sexual harassment allegations by Lindsey Boylan and Charlotte Bennett, both former aides to the Governor. Boylan accused Cuomo of kissing her and said he asked her to play “strip poker, while Bennett said the Governor wanted to sleep with her. Cuomo has denied allegations against him, claiming not to have sexually harassed anyone.
In response to Boylan and Bennett’s claims, Speaker of the House of Nancy Pelosi said, “The women who have come forward with serious and credible charges against Gov. Cuomo deserve to be heard and to be treated with dignity. The independent investigation must have due process and respect for everyone involved.”
DAILY PERSPECTIVE ON COVID-19
Since the Outbreak Started
As of Monday, March 1, 2021, 19,817,532 people in the U.S. have recovered from coronavirus. Also, the U.S. reports 29,314,254 COVID-19 cases, with 527,226 deaths.
Daily Numbers
For Monday, March 1, 2021, the U.S. reports 56,672 cases, with 1,425 deaths.
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR US AS AMERICANS
Loudon County Schools’ decision not to associate Dr. Seuss with “Read Across America Day” shows how “cancel culture” doesn’t consider the historical context of the time. When Dr. Seuss published And to Think I Saw It On Mulberry Street, showing a yellow Asian character with chopsticks, it was December of 1937. In 1937, the Empire of Japan launched a full-scale war with China, bombed the USS Panay, and invaded Nanjing, China, engaging in crimes against humanity, resulting in the deaths of 200,000-300,000 people.
Additionally, during World War II, the United States government depicted both the Japanese and Germans as inhuman and grossly exaggerated their appearances. “Cancel culture” will continue to grow, with the movement’s supporters refusing to consider all sides of a story, removing the opportunity to discuss historical events and the human reactions to those events.
China’s response about Uyghur women who claimed to have been raped or abused by the CCP in their concentration camps shows how the Chinese government refuses to acknowledge its horrific acts. Further, countries that are indebted to China through its Belt and Road Initiative, which the DIB has reported on previously, will likely ignore the Uyghur stories all together or claim they are propaganda, to maintain good standing with the CCP.
In the United States, the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, a foreign policy think tank ran by Trita Parsi, who was a key lobbyist for the JCPOA, recently pushed the idea that genocide against the Uyghurs was right-wing propaganda, saying, “Pompeo’s and Blinken’s accusation of China ‘genocide’ relied on data abuse by far-right ideologue. Between 2010 & 2018, the Uyghur population in Xinjiang grew by a 25%, faster than the growth of the Han Chinese.”
The $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill, which just passed in the House, will likely pass in the Senate, but not without concessions. The Senate Democrats have already removed the $15 per hour wage increase. As previously reported by DIB analysts, Senate Democrats plan to use reconciliation with the bill, which would prevent it from needing a majority vote if no Republicans support the legislation. However, Senate Democrats still have to vote together, with no dissenting votes. As of right now, Senator Joe Manchin (D-VA) says he will vote no on the relief bill, which suggests the bill will need more alterations before receiving Manchin’s support.
With personal information readily available on the dark web, there will be many more fraudulent unemployment claims with the new bill. Also, as hackers continue to breach significant government and private company databases and put them on the dark web, there will be more issues with fraud and identity theft relating to any U.S. government bills that offer payouts to Americans.
The Daily Intelligence Brief, The DIB as we call it, is curated by a hard working team with a diverse background of experience including government intelligence, investigative journalism, high-risk missionary work and marketing.
This team has more than 68 years of combined experience in the intelligence community, 35 years of combined experience in combat and high-risk areas, and have visited more than 65 countries. We have more than 22 years of investigative reporting and marketing experience. Daily, we scour and verify more than 600 social media sites using more than 200 analytic tools in the process. Leveraging the tools and methods available to us, we uncover facts and provide analysis that would take an average person years of networking and research to uncover. We are doing it for you every 24 hours.
From All Things Possible, the Victor Marx Group and Echo Analytics Group, we aim to provide you with a daily intelligence brief collected from trusted sources and analysts.
Sources for the DIB include local and national media outlets, state and government websites, proprietary sources, in addition to social media networks. State reporting of COVID-19 deaths includes probable cases and probable deaths from COVID-19, in accordance with each state’s guidelines.
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Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders Formally Introduce a ‘Wealth Tax’
Support for a “wealth tax” levied on the assets of well-off Americans has grown in progressive circles in recent years. Senators Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders took these dreams one step closer to legislative reality yesterday, formally unveiling their “wealth tax” proposal.
“A slew of Democrats on Capitol Hill — including progressives Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. — on Monday proposed a 3% total annual tax on wealth exceeding $1 billion,” CNBC reports. “They also called for a lesser, 2% annual wealth tax on the net worth of households and trusts ranging from $50 million to $1 billion. The Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act aims at reining in a widening U.S. wealth gap, which has been exacerbated by the Covid pandemic.”
New taxes on “Ultra-Millionaires” are, understandably, the kind of thing many average Americans might look at and shrug. Doesn’t affect me. I’m sure they can afford to pay a bit more.
“Proponents of wealth taxes seem to think that the wealth of rich folks is gold bars hidden under their beds,” Cato Institute economist Chris Edwards told me. “In fact, looking at billionaires, only 2 percent of their wealth is accounted for by their personal assets such as homes, yachts, and airplanes. The vast majority of their wealth is in productive business assets that generate output for the economy. So the wealth at the top represents active investment that generates jobs and incomes for all of us.”
“Why punish and penalize investment with a wealth tax?” he asked. “It’s much better for the rest of us if the rich invest their wealth into business growth rather than to consume it. A wealth tax would encourage consumption, which would be counterproductive for the economy.”
Read more about what the three economists I interviewed had to say about the failings of “wealth tax” schemes here.
Wow: California Set to Run a Budget… Surplus?
As part of their $1.9 trillion “COVID” spending package, Democrats in Congress are pushing an astounding $350 billion in federal taxpayer money to “bail out” state and local governments. The argument goes like this: We need to shore up state and local governments because they’ve suffered huge revenue losses due to COVID and without help will be unable to pay our heroic first responders and public servants.
If true, this would be somewhat compelling. But it’s simply false, and new reporting only further confirms as much.
“California managed to collect $10.5 billion more in taxes than predicted, putting the state on track for a $19 billion surplus to spend by the end of the fiscal year on July 1,” Fox Business reports.
Hmm… that doesn’t sound like a state in dire need of a federal taxpayer handout to me.
Data of the Day: The federal debt-to-GDP ratio is now at an astounding 127%. In English, this means that we owe more than we produce as a nation in an entire year—and then some.
You don’t always have time to read a full in-depth article. Thankfully, FEE Fellow Patrick Carroll is here to give you the key takeaways from one highlighted article each day.
In recent years, many have grown uncomfortable with the way large tech companies collect and use data. These concerns are perhaps best encapsulated in The Social Dilemma, a Netflix documentary warning about how Big Tech “exploits” our data.
But while privacy is certainly something that should be taken seriously, we should be careful not to demonize these companies so quickly and ask for regulation. As Donovan Choy explains in his latest article for FEE.org, Big Tech has actually created a lot of value for consumers by using their data, and there’s good reason to allow this process to continue.
“Rather than thinking of our data as being ‘stolen,’ the more appropriate economic explanation is that tech companies have successfully engineered a way to make use of previously-unused resources to create value,” Choy writes.
Of course, it’s easy to focus on the costs of giving up our data, and it’s true that these companies aren’t always trustworthy. But we also need to consider the benefits. YouTube and Google, for example, have ridiculously optimized search features precisely because they have leveraged our data to this end.
What’s more, using data collection to improve consumer experiences is hardly new. In the old days companies used surveys and polls to find out what kind of content people wanted, and then tailored their processes to meet those demands. To be sure, the internet has rapidly sped up that process, but that doesn’t mean privacy rights are necessarily being violated, and it certainly doesn’t mean that these companies “owe” people for their data.
If anything, a crackdown on “data privacy rights” may very well backfire, because the regulations would hamper the innovation of tech companies, which would ultimately hamper consumer welfare.
Social Isolation Is Damaging an Entire Generation of Kids
by Kerry McDonald
By keeping healthy children under quarantine, we are cruelly depriving them of the in-person free play and social interaction that are critical to their development and emotional well-being.
As I avoided the potholes, ignored the sound of guns, and passed numerous people begging on the street, I could not help but be reminded of my travels in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. With their mass poverty and crumbling infrastructure, the two cities differ in one key area: Phnom Penh is in a developing country and the other, New Orleans, is in a developed country.
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A Paris court has found former French President Nicolas Sarkozy guilty of corruption – which is only the second time in modern history that a French head of state has gone down on such a charge – for which he’s been issued a sentence of three years in prison, two of which have been suspended.
Britain plans to use its presidency of the Group of Seven economic powers to push for an internationally recognized system of vaccine passports that could allow world travel to resume, though Prime Minister Boris Johnson acknowledged Tuesday that the idea raises “complex” ethical issues.
A group of Swiss scientists developed a wearable microchip which sits on the skin throughout the day and records hormone levels via sweat. The microchip measures levels of cortisol in the body and tells the wearer when they are experiencing too much stress, say the researchers.
As the number of reported injuries and deaths following COVID vaccines continues to climb in VAERS, the CDC’s official vaccine adverse event reporting system, social media users also point to Facebook posts by people who enthusiastically got the vaccine, but have since died.
Welcome to the Tuesday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect tech and politics news unfolding online. Today:
California can enforce its ‘gold standard’ net neutrality law
Progressives want Joe Biden to go big for FCC chair. Does Joe Biden?
Ted Cruz screaming ‘FREEDOM’ highlights CPAC memes
BREAK THE INTERNET
California can enforce its ‘gold standard’ net neutrality law
A federal judge denied a request by groups representing internet service providers (ISPs) to issue a preliminary injunction against California’s net neutrality law.
Lawyers for both California and the trade groups went back-and-forth before Judge John A. Mendez last week, arguing both for and against the state’s law, which has been hailed as the “gold standard” for states to follow because it goes further than the FCC’s 2015 Open Internet Order, which established net neutrality rules.
On Thursday, Mendez ruled that the telecom industry was unlikely to prevail on the merits of its preemption arguments, and, because of that, he didn’t need to make a “detailed finding” on the question of irreparable harm.
The decision by Mendez was cheered by California State Sen. Scott Wiener, who authored SB822.
“MAJOR WIN FOR NET NEUTRALITY! The federal court just rejected the effort by telecom & cable companies to block enforcement of the net neutrality law I authored, #SB822! The court ruled that California has the authority to protect net neutrality. SB 822 can now be enforced!” Wiener tweeted.
Ever go to the grocery store and notice people wearing masks that fit loosely on their faces? While it’s admirable to consistently wear them in public, you may not be aware that those gaps on the sides could put you in major danger. The CDC recommends that your mask creates a tight seal around your nose and mouth for this very reason. If it drives you nuts to see this everywhere you go, put your energy to a good purpose by joining the #MaskUp project. It’s a non-profit organization with two major goals: Get the word out about how to wear a mask safely, and get masks to people in need of them. If you’d like to be a part of our movement, visit MaskUp.org.
Progressives want Joe Biden to go big for FCC chair. Does Joe Biden?
Without the fear of Senate Republican obstruction, tech and public interest advocates have begun pushing for President Joe Biden to act quickly to fill out the FCC. They say the president has come at a “critical opportunity” to pick a “bold” choice.
While Biden named Jessica Rosenworcel as the acting chair of the agency, she already part of the FCC, meaning a fifth spot is still open. That final spot would give Democrats a majority, and is critical for 3-2 votes that will go down party lines.
Biden can go one of two ways to fill out the FCC. He could elevate Rosenworcel to become the permeant chair of the agency, or he could nominate someone who would come in with the expectation that they would become the chair.
But regardless of who Biden ultimately picks—and whether it is a commissioner or the chair—advocacy groups stressed that the president has a “critical opportunity” to pick a public interest advocate.
“That fifth commissioner has to be somebody who has the public’s interest in mind,” Mark Stanley, director of communications and operations at Demand Progress, told the Daily Dot. “I think getting a third [Democratic] commissioner in there who is going to be unequivocal … and is not going to come from a corporate background where they might waver or might not do the right thing … is just not going to be what’s really necessary for this unique moment.”
Almost immediately, people began using the “FREEDOM’ clip to mock his ill-fated trip to Cancun last month. “Was he screaming like that all the way to Cancun?” one Twitter used joked.
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A new, conservative Methodist denomination is splintering off of the United Methodist Church – and while the painful dividing process will likely spell death for some local congregations, a Methodist activist is expressing hope for conservatives in the church.
WASHINGTON (March 2, 2021) — Democrats’ hopes of including a minimum wage increase in their $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill seemed all but dead as the Senate prepared to debate its own version of the House-passed aid package.
PHILADELPHIA (March 2, 2021) — When she first arrived in Albany to work as a legislative aide in 2013, New York Assembly Member Yuh-Line Niou had lawmakers grab her buttocks, suggest she and her boss were “a hot duo” who should have sex, and peer into her office to check her out for a “hot or not” list.
NEW ORLEANS (March 2, 2021) — The Archdiocese of New Orleans is advising Roman Catholics that the Covid 19 vaccine from Johnson & Johnson is “morally compromised” because it is produced using cell lines derived from aborted babies.