Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday April 2, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
|
2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
SPRING INTO ACTION Do you know who influences The Epoch Times? YOU. We are driven by YOU to report the news in Truth and Tradition. Since we are a 503(c) non profit, we have absolutely no outside influences. Our mission is simple: to report the news in Truth and Tradition. We know that reporting the Truth helps to keep Americans informed and the specter of communism at bay. With the current state of affairs in society, having daily access to the Truth with a subscription to The Epoch Times is essential.
WORDS OF WISDOM “If you have good thoughts they will shine out of your face like sunbeams and you will always look lovely.” ROALD DAHL MORNING BRIEF TOP NEWS POSITIVE STORY EPOCH COLUMN A WORD FROM OUR SPONSOR Summer is coming! Join Northern Academy’s open house to learn more about our school and summer camp. We offer in-person, and online options for campers. Join us to experience dance, music, fine arts, outdoor adventures, and our award-winning STEM program! Register HERE for our Virtual Open House: Saturday, April 3 & Saturday, April 17 @ 1pm. Guiding students to excellence, emphasizing the qualities of character and virtue – that’s the Northern Experience. EPOCH PREMIUM VIDEOS PUZZLE CENTER Feedback: Let us know what you think by taking this survey. If this email has been forwarded to you and you would like to sign up, please click here. Copyright © 2021 The Epoch Times, All rights reserved. The Epoch Times, 229 W 28th St, Fl.5, New York, NY 10001
With social media censorship sidelining many important headlines, our Morning Brief email is how we make sure you get the latest developments that our reporters have curated from around the world. It’s our way of keeping you truly informed so that you can make the decisions that align with your values. We hope you enjoy our coverage. Manage your email preferences here.
|
3.) DAYBREAK
4.) THE SUNBURN
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.) MORNING BREW
|
BECOME SMARTER IN JUST 5 MINUTES
Get the daily email that makes reading the news actually enjoyable. Stay informed and entertained, for free.
6.) THE FACTUAL
|
7.) LIBERTY NATION
|
|
|
8.) FOX NEWS
|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||
|
9.) UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
|
APRIL 02, 2021 | |||||||
|
U.S. NEWS | |||||||||||||||
|
HEALTH NEWS | |||||||||||
|
WORLD NEWS | |||||||||||||||
|
SPORTS NEWS | |||||||||||
|
ENTERTAINMENT NEWS | |||||||||||||||
|
ON THIS DAY | |||||||||||||||
|
PHOTOS | ||||
|
||||
|
|
|
|
10.) JUST THE NEWS
11.) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE
|
12.) THE FLIP SIDE
- Subscribe
- Past Issues
- RSS
- Translate
|
13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
🕊️ Good morning. It’s Good Friday.
- Smart Brevity™ count: 1,168 words … 4½ minutes.
⚡ Breaking … Corporate criticism of GOP-led voting bills spreads to Texas: American Airlines, based in Fort Worth, came out against voting restrictions likely headed to Gov. Greg Abbott in coming weeks. —AP
A new analysis of U.S. voters suggests that the pandemic may have helped drive former President Donald Trump’s surprising increase in support from Latinos last November, Jonathan Swan reports.
- By shifting Trump’s rhetoric from immigration to fears around the economic impact of shutdowns, the virus gave conservative and low-information Latino voters space to back Trump even if they shunned him in 2016, according to preliminary findings by research firm Equis.
- Some feared economic damage from school and business closures more than getting sick.
Between the lines: Trump’s biggest gains were, surprisingly, among Hispanic women — a group that still overwhelmingly rejected the former president but softened on him in 2020.
- Trump’s “baseline shift” improvement among Latino voters was bigger and broader than shifts among African Americans, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.
The German national team prior to a FIFA World Cup 2022 Qatar qualifying match in Germany on March 25. Photo: Tobias Schwarz/Pool/Getty Images
The hosts of both of next year’s two biggest global sporting events are facing boycott threats, Axios’ Kendall Baker and David Lawler report.
When European qualifying for the 2022 World Cup kicked off in March, players from three countries seized the opportunity to protest the human rights conditions in host nation Qatar.
- Qatar has faced scrutiny over the poor conditions migrant workers are facing as they help build the infrastructure for the tournament.
- Norway donned shirts that said “Human rights on and off the pitch” … Germany spelled out “human rights” on their shirts … The Netherlands wore shirts that said: “Football supports change.”
There are also calls for a boycott of the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. That pressure is coming mainly from human rights groups and politicians, rather than athletes.
- It’s hard to envision stars with the profile of Germany’s top soccer players taking a similar stand against the mass detentions in Xinjiang, because so much money is at stake for the players and their clubs.
What to watch: Sponsors of the 2022 Olympics are under pressure to pull out, or at least to speak out.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
GOP aides tell Axios they’ll try to convince voters that infrastructure legislation is more of a wish list for progressives than about roads and bridges, Axios’ Lachlan Markay and Alayna Treene write.
- “Joe Biden’s ‘infrastructure’ plan is not really about infrastructure, it is another multi-trillion dollar far left wish list,” declared an RNC email.
- Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Biden’s proposal “would spend more money just on electric cars than on America’s roads, bridges, ports, airports, and waterways combined.”
- A new memo from House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy says: “Biden’s so-called infrastructure plan spends less than 6 percent to repair bridges, highways, and roads.”
Photo: Denis Poroy/AP
Fans sit in social-distance squares in San Diego for the Padres’ Opening Day win (8-7) against the Arizona Diamondbacks.
Spotted outside Wrigley Field.
The year that masks weren’t just for catchers.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
International shipping and supply chains are in rough shape, even without a container ship lodged in the Suez Canal, chief financial correspondent Felix Salmon writes.
- Why it matters: The pandemic threw a wrench into a global network that was already struggling with oversized ships. The stuck ship could reverberate for months.
Bottlenecks have built up, especially in Southern California, with ships waiting weeks to unload.
- Because the ships are so large, their maximum speed has been reduced to the point at which they cannot make up for lost time.
Prosecution exhibit shows surveillance cameras at intersection where George Floyd died. Photo: Court TV via AP
A Minneapolis supervising sergeant, who was on duty the night George Floyd died, testified that the officers who restrained Floyd could have ended it after he stopped resisting, AP reports.
- A paramedic, Derek Smith, testified that he checked for a pulse and couldn’t detect one: “In layman’s terms? I thought he was dead.”
Courteney Ross, Floyd’s former girlfriend, disclosed that his pet name for her in his phone was “Mama” — making it uncertain whether Floyd was crying out for his mother as he lay pinned.
This is the most vivid, specific reaction I have seen to President Biden’s $2 trillion infrastructure plan:
Amtrak released a proposed map of new and expanded service if it gets the $80 billion Biden proposed for his beloved rail service, per USA Today:
Amtrak’s vision calls for bringing new intercity rail service to up to 160 previously unserved communities over the next 15 years, including 30 potential new routes …
New service is identified for major cities that currently have no Amtrak service such as Las Vegas, Nashville, Columbus, Ohio, and Phoenix.
Go deeper: Detailed version of map above (below fact sheet).
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Michael Powell, CEO of the cable trade group NCTA, told Axios that President Biden’s $100 billion plan for high-speed internet relies too much on government-owned networks, Axios’ Margaret Harding McGill writes.
- “The idea that the private sector and profit incentives are intrinsically unsuited to do the job” is “surprisingly Soviet,” Powell said.
The broadband proposal has internet service providers up in arms:
- The plan prioritizes spending for government-run or nonprofit networks.
- The plan calls for making internet service more affordable by finding ways to bring prices down, instead of giving government subsidies to service providers so they can charge some consumers less.
Photo: Warner Bros. Entertainment via AP
“Godzilla vs. Kong,” one of the few tentpole movies to dare release in the time of virus, is expected to set a new high this weekend for ticket sales during the pandemic, AP’s Jake Coyle writes.
- Why it matters: Big-screen mayhem and mass destruction are back, reassuring theater executives.
- It won’t be the blockbuster business that’s typical for such a big-budget release. But opening-day ticket sales on Wednesday set a single-day pandemic record.
What’s happening: Since “Tenet” fizzled in August, most studios have postponed their biggest releases, or rerouted them to streaming.
- But about 60% of theaters will be open this weekend. On Monday, L.A. County will expand cinema capacity from 25% to 50%.
Archival photo from “Hemingway,” courtesy PBS
Exclusive first look for Axios AM readers: John McCain, just before his death in 2018, did an interview for Ken Burns’ upcoming PBS film about Ernest Hemingway, in which the senator talks about “For Whom The Bell Tolls” and his hero, Robert Jordan.
- “Hemingway” — a three-part, six-hour documentary film by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick — examines the visionary work and turbulent life of Ernest Hemingway, one of America’s iconic writers.
From “Hemingway” … John McCain: “I was 12 years old. I found a four-leaf clover and I [pressed] it in a book so I could preserve it. … That happened to be ‘For Whom the Bell Tolls,’ still the great American novel. And I started reading and I couldn’t stop until I finished.”
- Narrator: The story — published in 1940, with Europe and Asia engulfed in a world war — “is set in 1937, when the defeat of Franco’s forces had still seemed possible. Its hero is an idealistic young American college instructor named Robert Jordan, with some knowledge of explosives and no political affiliation other than hatred of fascism, who finds himself part of a guerrilla band that undertakes a doomed mission to dynamite a bridge.”
McCain: “My hero is Robert Jordan. Robert Jordan is as real to me as you are. He was working as a professor at the University of Montana. … But he heard about this struggle. He knew about fascism. He knew what Hitler and Mussolini were doing.”
- “And he decided to go and fight on behalf of people he had never met and he did not know. Even knowing that that cause was a flawed cause. … But he was willing to fight and do whatever he thought he could for the cause of justice and freedom. I always wanted to be Robert Jordan.”
🎞️ See an exclusive clip of Sen. John McCain on Hemingway.
- Go deeper: Watch trailers, preview videos. Premieres on PBS stations starting Monday at 8 p.m. ET, and will stream free. TV schedule.
💡 This newsletter is written in Smart Brevity®. Learn how your team can communicate in the same smart, clear style with Axios HQ.
Axios Thought Bubble
☕ Good morning. Axios’ Courtenay Brown and Felix Salmon here to unpack the March jobs report.
- Smart Brevity™ count: 280 words … 1½ minutes.
Wow: The U.S. economy added 916,000 jobs in this morning’s March jobs report — huge momentum for the pandemic-slammed labor market.
Why it matters: It’s the biggest hiring spree since last summer. Thank vaccinations and the broader economic reopening.
Plus: Job gains in both January and February were even higher (+156,000) than previously reported.
Details: The leisure and hospitality sector (think restaurants, bars, etc.) was the standout with 280,000 new jobs added. But there were broad gains across other industries — construction, manufacturing — too.
- The unemployment rate for workers without a high school degree dropped from 10.1% to 8.2% — a sharp decline.
- It also dropped for all racial and ethnic groups, except Asian Americans. Their unemployment rate jumped by nearly a full percentage point.
What to watch: Whether the millions of workers out of the labor force come off the sidelines.
- Roughly 347,000 came back last month — but there are still 3.8 million fewer people in the labor force compared to the beginning of last year.
The bottom line: These numbers show there’s still more than enough slack in the labor market to support extremely strong jobs growth through the rest of 2021 and beyond.
- Employment gains slowed down at the end of 2020, but with $1.9 trillion of new stimulus on the way, there’s no reason they can’t pick back up again with gusto.
- The road ahead: Eight or so more months like March would suffice to bring us back to pre-pandemic employment levels.
Thanks for reading, and see you next month!
14.) THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
15.) THE WASHINGTON POST MORNING HEADLINES
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
16.) THE WASHINGTON TIMES
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
17.) THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
|
Copyright © 2021 MEDIADC, All rights reserved.Washington Examiner | A MediaDC Publication 1152 15th Street NW Suite 200 | Washington, DC 20005 |
You received this email because you are subscribed to Examiner Today from The Washington Examiner. Update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive.We respect your right to privacy – View our Policy Unsubscribe |
18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
April 2, 2021 View in browser AP Morning Wire
Good morning from Rome. A train derailment in Taiwan has killed dozens of people. Rescuers are searching wrecked cars for survivors in the country’s deadliest railway disaster. Many Christians around the world mark Good Friday amid tight COVID-19 restrictions for the second consecutive year, but religious sites are open to a limited number of visitors in the Holy Land. While Italy may be in lockdown over Easter, a few miles offshore passengers are enjoying poolside cocktails aboard one of the few cruise ships operating globally.
Also this morning:
KARL RITTER Southern Europe News Director The Associated Press Rome
The Rundown TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — A train partially derailed in eastern Taiwan on Friday after being hit by an unmanned vehicle that had rolled down a hill, killing 48 people. With the train still partly in a tunnel, survivors climbed out of windows and walked along the train’s roof to reach safety after the country’s deadliest railway…Read More JERUSALEM (AP) — Christians in the Holy Land are marking Good Friday this year amid signs the coronavirus crisis is winding down, with religious sites open to limited numbers of faithful but none… …Read More SPRINGDALE, Ark. (AP) — Irma Chavez is a married mother of four who leads a business networking initiative in this small Arkansas city she calls home. It’s a long way from her life as a live-in… …Read More ABOARD THE MSC GRANDIOSA (AP) — Italy may be in a strict coronavirus lockdown this Easter with travel restricted between regions and new quarantines imposed. But a few miles offshore, guests… …Read More MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A Minneapolis police supervisory sergeant who was on duty the night George Floyd died testified that he believes the officers who restrained Floyd could have ended it after he… …Read More
OTHER TOP STORIES WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden is setting about convincing America it needs his $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan, deputizing a five-member “jobs Cabinet” to help in…Read More JERUSALEM (AP) — After spending much of the past year in lockdown, Tel Aviv makeup artist Artyom Kavnatsky was ready to get back to work. But when he showed up for a recent…Read More YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Myanmar’s wireless broadband internet services were shut down on Friday by order of the military, a local provider said, as protesters continued to d…Read More PHOENIX (AP) — A border wall. Smugglers. Small children being dropped into America in the darkness. A grainy video released Wednesday by authorities — its figures visible o…Read More
“There are only two forces that can carry light to all the corners of the globe … the sun in the heavens and The Associated Press down here.” Mark Twain
GET THE APP Download the AP News app to get breaking news alerts from AP on your phone, tablet or watch.
Unsubscribe | About us © 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. 200 Liberty St., New York, NY 10128 |
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
|
21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
After 13-year-old boy killed by Chicago cop, mayor, community call for release of video
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
|
23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
|
24.) ROLL CALL
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Boehner unloads
Presented by Facebook
DRIVING THE DAY
The absolute must-read of the day is POLITICO Mag’s 2,300-word exclusive excerpt of JOHN BOEHNER’S scorching new book, “ON THE HOUSE,” which will be out April 13 from St. Martin’s Press.
We knew this was going to be juicy ever since we saw the cover last month. It features the former speaker of the House looking very DON DRAPER as he relaxes with a suburban pour of red wine and a cigarette. Boehner, now a tobacco and marijuana lobbyist, appears like a guy beckoning the reader to a back room at the Jefferson Hotel where he’s finally going to tell you what he really thinks.
He doesn’t disappoint.
You’ll want to read the entire excerpt, which is a rollicking romp through the GOP in the years just before DONALD TRUMP. It was, in Boehner’s telling, the period in which fringe activists, right-wing media personalities and conspiracy theorists gradually took over the party and overthrew Boehner’s merlot-and-Camel establishment.
But to whet your appetite, here are some of our favorite parts of the piece, which is amusingly titled “Panic Rooms, Birth Certificates and the Birth of GOP Paranoia: How America’s center-right party started to lose its mind, as told by the man who tried to keep it sane.”
On the 2010 midterms: “You could be a total moron and get elected just by having an R next to your name—and that year, by the way, we did pick up a fair number in that category.”
On the BARACK OBAMA conspiracy theories: “In January 2011, as the new Republican House majority was settling in and I was getting adjusted to the Speakership, I was asked about the birth certificate business by Brian Williams of NBC News. My answer was simple: ‘The state of Hawaii has said that President Obama was born there. That’s good enough for me.’ It was a simple statement of fact. But you would have thought I’d called Ronald Reagan a communist. I got all kinds of shit for it—emails, letters, phone calls. It went on for a couple weeks. I knew we would hear from some of the crazies, but I was surprised at just how many there really were.
“All of this crap swirling around was going to make it tough for me to cut any deals with Obama as the new House Speaker. Of course, it has to be said that Obama didn’t help himself much either. He could come off as lecturing and haughty. He still wasn’t making Republican outreach a priority. But on the other hand—how do you find common cause with people who think you are a secret Kenyan Muslim traitor to America?”
On RUPERT MURDOCH: “He was a businessman, pure and simple. He cared about ratings and the bottom line. He also wanted to make sure he was ahead of any political or policy developments coming down the line. He was always asking who was up, who was down, what bills could pass and what couldn’t. If he entertained any of the kooky conspiracy theories that started to take over his network, he kept it a secret from me. But he clearly didn’t have a problem with them if they helped ratings.”
On ROGER AILES: “I once met him in New York during the Obama years to plead with him to put a leash on some of the crazies he was putting on the air. It was making my job trying to accomplish anything conservative that much harder. I didn’t expect this meeting to change anything, but I still thought it was bullshit, and I wanted Roger to know it.
“When I put it to him like that, he didn’t have much to say. But he did go on and on about the terrorist attack on the U.S. Embassy in Benghazi, which he thought was part of a grand conspiracy that led back to Hillary Clinton. Then he outlined elaborate plots by which George Soros and the Clintons and Obama (and whoever else came to mind) were trying to destroy him.
“‘They’re monitoring me,’ he assured me about the Obama White House.”
On SEAN HANNITY: “I’d known him for years, and we used to have a good relationship. But then he decided he felt like busting my ass every night on his show. So one day, in January of 2015, I finally called him and asked: ‘What the hell?’ I wanted to know why he kept bashing House Republicans when we were actually trying to stand up to Obama.
“‘Well, you guys don’t have a plan,’ he whined. “‘Look,’ I told him, ‘our plan is pretty simple: we’re just going to stand up for what we believe in as Republicans.’ I guess that wasn’t good enough for him. The conversation didn’t progress very far. At some point I called him a nut. Anyway, it’s safe to say our relationship never got any better.”
On Sen. TED CRUZ (R-Texas): “By 2013 the chaos caucus in the House had built up their own power base thanks to fawning right-wing media and outrage-driven fundraising cash. And now they had a new head lunatic leading the way, who wasn’t even a House member. There is nothing more dangerous than a reckless asshole who thinks he is smarter than everyone else. Ladies and gentlemen, meet Senator Ted Cruz.”
Happy Friday. What was your favorite part of the Boehner piece? Got a news tip? A document to share? Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
DO CALL IT A COMEBACK — “‘They thank me’: Jerry Falwell Jr. says Liberty community still embraces him,” by Maggie Severns: “Throughout the Liberty community, there’s an ongoing reckoning about the direction the school should take, as well as how to address accusations from last summer that Jerry and Becki Falwell had behaved inappropriately around young people, including one former Liberty student who detailed a sexual encounter he had with Becki Falwell at the family’s farm to POLITICO.” Severns interviews Falwell for the story
WATCH: Playbook Playback, ‘Trump was right, Biden is a Trojan horse for progressives’: As infrastructure week comes to a close, TARA and EUGENE look back at the week’s top news videos, starting with an awkward encounter between TUCKER CARLSON and Rep. MATT GAETZ (R-Fla.) during his first public response to allegations of sex trafficking a minor. They also discuss the likelihood of President JOE BIDEN’S infrastructure bill getting through Congress and if Trump was right about Biden being a Trojan horse for the progressive agenda.
BIDEN’S FRIDAY — The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 9:30 a.m. Biden will deliver remarks on the March jobs report at 11 a.m. in the State Dining Room. At noon, the president will depart the White House en route to Camp David.
— VP KAMALA HARRIS and second gentleman DOUG EMHOFF are in Los Angeles for the weekend.
— The White House Covid-19 response team and public health officials will brief at 11 a.m. Press secretary JEN PSAKI and Labor Secretary MARTY WALSH will brief at 12:30 p.m.
THE HOUSE and SENATE are not in session.
PLAYBOOK READS
THE BIDEN ADMINISTRATION
THE AMTRAK PRESIDENT — “Infrastructure plan calls for $80 billion for rail. It could transform passenger service,” WaPo: “The American Jobs Plan announced Wednesday calls for $80 billion for rail — money that could be crucial in taking passenger service to cities such as Las Vegas and Nashville, and expand operations across large metropolitan areas such as Atlanta and Houston. … Amtrak on Wednesday unveiled a plan to provide new intercity rail service to 160 communities and expand service in corridors with heightened demand for rail transportation. The passenger railroad also unveiled a map that highlights 30 possible new routes.
“The federal funding would help Amtrak accomplish long-needed upgrades to tracks, tunnels and bridges in the Northeast, the nation’s busiest rail corridor. Amtrak has a $45.2 billion backlog of projects that it says are needed to bring its assets to a state of good repair in the region.”
CONFRONTING RACIAL INEQUITIES — “Biden Seeks to Use Infrastructure Plan to Address Racial Inequities,” NYT: “In addition to dedicated funding for neighborhoods split or splintered by past infrastructure projects, the proposal also includes money for the replacement of lead water pipes that have harmed Black children in cities like Flint, Mich.; the cleanup of environmental hazards that have plagued Hispanic neighborhoods and tribal communities; worker training that would target underserved groups; and funds for home health aides, who are largely women of color.
“More traditional efforts to close racial opportunity gaps, like universal pre-K and more affordable higher education, are coming in the next phase of Mr. Biden’s plans.”
BIDEN EXCELS AT TRUMP’S FAVORITE METRIC OF SUCCESS — “S&P 500 climbs more than 1% to close above 4,000 for the first time,” CNBC
CONGRESS
LATEST ON GAETZ-GATE — “Justice Dept. Inquiry Into Matt Gaetz Said to Be Focused on Cash Paid to Women,” NYT: “The Times has reviewed receipts from Cash App, a mobile payments app, and Apple Pay that show payments from Mr. Gaetz and Mr. Greenberg to one of the women, and a payment from Mr. Greenberg to a second woman. The women told their friends that the payments were for sex with the two men, according to two people familiar with the conversations.
“In encounters during 2019 and 2020, Mr. Gaetz and Mr. Greenberg instructed the women to meet at certain times and places, often at hotels around Florida, and would tell them the amount of money they were willing to pay, according to the messages and interviews.”
CNN also reports that the feds are looking at whether he used campaign funds to pay for travel and expenses for the women.
AND THIS IS CREEPY — Also via CNN: “Gaetz allegedly showed off to other lawmakers photos and videos of nude women he said he had slept with, the sources told CNN, including while on the House floor. The sources, including two people directly shown the material, said Gaetz displayed the images of women on his phone and talked about having sex with them. One of the videos showed a naked woman with a hula hoop, according to one source.”
PANDEMIC
TOP-ED — “What if the former CDC director is right about the Wuhan labs?” by WaPo’s Josh Rogin: “Before [Robert] Redfield, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention during the coronavirus outbreak, endorsed it, the mere discussion of the still-unproven theory that the covid-19 outbreak might have been connected to human error at a research laboratory in the Chinese city of Wuhan was considered taboo. The issue of the virus’s origin has been horrendously politicized, by both the right and the left. The Chinese government and U.S. scientists who are close associates of the Wuhan scientists doing bat coronavirus research have tarred anyone who uttered it as conspiracy theorists, or worse (in their eyes), as pro-Trump.
“And although it’s true the Trump administration contributed to this politicization, it’s also true that the Biden administration has confirmed some of the Trump team’s factual claims about suspicious and still-undisclosed work at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which amounts to a direct challenge to the lab’s claim that it has been transparent and honest. … Redfield told CNN in an interview released last week that he believes the outbreak likely did originate from research in the Wuhan labs, based on how the virus acts. But though he is a trained virologist who saw the underlying intelligence, he was accused of spreading speculation and even fueling hate.”
JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH
YIKES — “Army probes missing rifle from National Guard unit deployed to the Capitol,” by Natasha Bertrand, Andrew Desiderio and Lara Seligman: “The Army has dispatched its in-house criminal investigative arm to probe the potential theft of a rifle from the D.C. National Guard while the unit was training in Virginia three weeks ago, an Army spokesperson confirmed on Thursday.
“The M4 rifle and its scope went missing around March 11, according to two people familiar with the investigation, as members of a quick reaction force that was formed to protect the U.S. Capitol were training at a weapons range at Fort A.P. Hill in Virginia. … A misplaced or unaccounted-for rifle is a major security risk, Guard members said, especially due to the current mission of securing the Capitol after a mob of insurrectionists breached the building on Jan. 6.”
POLITICS CORNER
2022 WATCH — “Dems pine to face Ron Johnson just one more time,” by James Arkin and Burgess Everett: “It’s not only that Democrats see Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) as finally ripe for defeat after closely aligning himself with former President Donald Trump’s penchant for incendiary rhetoric. They also want to make a point that Johnson’s confrontational style is no longer a fit in his perennial swing state.
“Officially, Senate Republicans want him to run again. But Johnson has a frigid relationship with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell … McConnell is eager for Johnson to make a decision soon, according to people familiar with the matter. Republicans want clarity because they are already defending an open seat in a state Joe Biden carried in last year’s presidential race, in Pennsylvania. With the Senate equally divided at 50 seats for each party, a single race in a swing state like Wisconsin could determine the majority in 2023.”
BIG BUSINESS TAKES SIDES IN VOTING RIGHTS FIGHT — “Corporate criticism of GOP-led voting bills spreads to Texas,” AP: “American Airlines, which is based in Fort Worth, came out against restrictive voting measures that have a favorable path to reaching Republican Gov. Greg Abbott’s desk in the coming weeks. Public opposition from the airline came after a package of sweeping elections changes cleared the GOP-controlled Senate and, notably, a day after some of Georgia’s most prominent corporate leaders came out publicly against a new election law after civil rights activists criticized their silence.
“Unlike in Georgia, the corporate criticism in Texas to the election bills comes before they have been signed into law. Corporate interests carry big clout in the Texas Capitol, but Abbott and other Republicans have given no indication of wavering in their pursuit of passing the measures before the session ends in May.”
AMERICA AND THE WORLD
U.S. INCHES BACK TOWARD IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL — “Biden admin lauds talks on readmitting US to Iran nuke deal,” AP: “The Biden administration on Thursday welcomed a European Union announcement that the participants in the Iran nuclear deal will meet this week to discuss a possible return of the United States to the 2015 accord.
“Friday’s virtual meeting of officials from Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and Iran comes as the U.S. is exploring ways to rejoin the deal that former President Donald Trump withdrew from in 2018. The State Department praised the meeting and said it would be watched closely by U.S. officials. … President Joe Biden has said the U.S. will return to the deal if Iran comes back into compliance with it. Thus far, Iran has refused to entertain the offer unless the U.S. rescinds sanctions that Trump imposed on it.”
POLITICO Playbook newsletter
Sign up today to receive the #1-rated newsletter in politics
MEDIAWATCH
BAIER’S BACK — “Fox News Signs Bret Baier to Long-Term Contract Extension,” The Hollywood Reporter: “The 6 p.m. Special Report anchor has signed a five-year contract extension with the cable news channel. He will also continue to serve as the channel’s chief political anchor, leading election nights and other political coverage.”
HEADING TO HULU — “‘The 1619 Project’ Docuseries to Debut on Hulu, Roger Ross Williams to Produce,” The Hollywood Reporter: “Hulu has landed the rights to the docuseries The 1619 Project, based on materials from Nikole Hannah-Jones’ acclaimed special issue of The New York Times Magazine which examines the impact of slavery on American history.
“The docuseries is the first screen project to come out of a production pact between Hannah-Jones, the Times, Oprah Winfrey’s Harpo Films and Lionsgate. Announced last July, the deal will see The 1619 Project developed for multiple feature films, TV series, documentaries and other cross-platform content for a global audience.”
DESSERT
LET THEM EAT (CHEESE)CAKE — “There’s a New Cheesecake Factory in DC, and the White House Press Corps Is Psyched,” Washingtonian, featuring hype from Brittany Shepherd, Liz Landers, Katie Watson and Ashley Parker (a former Cheesecake Factory employee!)
NYT’s @katierogers: “It’s not every day you can say you got pranked by the First Lady of the United States. @Emilylgoodin, pooler extraordinaire.” The full story
TV TONIGHT — PBS’ “Washington Week,” guest-moderated by Lisa Desjardins: Wesley Lowery, Jonathan Martin, Anna Palmer and Ayesha Rascoe.
WEEKEND PROGRAMMING — CNN’s Jim Acosta is starting his new role as anchor of CNN Newsroom’s weekend programming this weekend. His shows will air on Saturdays from 3-6 p.m. and Sundays from 4-6 p.m. Anthony Fauci will appear as one of the show’s first guests this Saturday at 5 p.m.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
-
ABC
“This Week”: Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg … Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.). Panel: Chris Christie, Rahm Emanuel, Sarah Isgur and Yvette Simpson.
-
FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: NEC Director Brian Deese … Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) … Michael Osterholm. Panel: Doug Heye, Kristin Soltis Anderson and Juan Williams. Power Player: Barry Black.
-
MSNBC
“The Sunday Show”: Oregon Gov. Kate Brown … Benjamin Crump … Martin Luther King III … Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-N.Y.) … Maya MacGuineas … Andrea Jenkins … David Henderson.
-
CBS
“Face the Nation”: CEA Chair Cecilia Rouse … Seth Berkley … Norma Pimentel … Ken Chenault … Kenneth Frazier.
-
CNN
“Inside Politics”: Ken Frazier … Ken Chenault … Kizzmekia Corbett.
-
NBC
“Meet The Press”: Panel: Yamiche Alcindor, María Teresa Kumar, Rich Lowry and Amy Walter.
-
Gray TV
“Full Court Press”: Gene Smith … Tom McMillen … Karen Weaver.
PLAYBOOKERS
MEDIAWATCH — Sarah Owermohle will be the new co-author of POLITICO Pulse, in addition to covering the Biden health department. She previously reported on the FDA and wrote POLITICO’s Prescription Pulse newsletter.
TRANSITIONS — Matthew Bartlett and Scott Merrick have launched Darby Field Advisors, a public affairs firm in D.C. and New Hampshire. Bartlett previously was director of public affairs and strategic comms for the State Department’s Bureau of Educational & Cultural Affairs and is a Kelly Ayotte alum. Merrick previously was a New Hampshire senior adviser for the Biden campaign and is an Amy for America and Jeanne Shaheen alum. …
… Katie Harbath has launched Anchor Change, a civic tech strategies firm, and is also joining the Bipartisan Policy Center as a fellow and the advisory council for the Rainey Center. She previously was public policy director at Facebook. … John O’Brien will be president and CEO of the National Pharmaceutical Council. He previously was a senior advisor to the HHS secretary and deputy assistant secretary of planning and evaluation for health policy, and is an Obama CMS alum.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Rep. Chellie Pingree (D-Maine) (66) … Tim Pataki of CGCN Group (36) … Chad Banghart of the Committee to Defeat the President … Meridith Webster … Caitlyn Morrison of Arnold Ventures … Dentons’ Sander Lurie … Naji Filali of Percipient Strategies … David Shwiff … Julia Roig of PartnersGlobal … 270 Strategies’ Lynda Tran, a CBS News contributor … Deloitte’s Kelsey Kilgore … Laura Hylden Henry of the National Stone, Sand, and Gravel Association, celebrating in New Orleans … Evan McMullin (45) … Joe Hack, COS for Sen. Deb Fischer (R-Neb.) … Commerce’s Patrick Zimet … Brian Austin … NBC’s Liz Brown-Kaiser … BBC’s Adam Fleming … Alex Rosenwald … Jennifer Morrow … former Rep. Lynn Westmoreland (R-Ga.) (71) … former Rep. Paul Kanjorski (D-Pa.) (84) … Josefa Velásquez … Robby Zirkelbach … Dan Sallick of Subject Matter … Edelman’s Ryan Kuntz … Sean Long … John McCauley … WNYC’s Jim O’Grady … Google’s Nikhil Joshi … Dan Reilly … Christy Agner … Tony Lake … USTR’s Brian Janovitz … Rachel Pankuch … former acting A.G. Jeff Rosen (63) … NYT’s Dana Rubinstein and Emily Steel … Stars and Stripes’ Sarah Cammarata … POLITICO’s Danielle Muoio and Katya Moukhina … Alicia Long … Princeton’s Brent Colburn
Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
Follow us on Twitter
26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
|
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
|
29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Biden and His Idiot Supporters Are Trying to Cancel Georgia
Top O’ the Briefing
The Biden Brigade Is Flexing Its Stupidity
A blessed Good Friday to you, my dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. I think a Bloody Mary truck could be a real money maker.
We’re wrapping up the week talking about the state of Georgia once again. It’s a lovely state. I have a few relatives there and I’ve always enjoyed myself every time I’ve visited them. I’ve done a few gigs there too and always had a great time.
It’s a shame that the Democrat woke scolds are now trying to cancel the Peach State.
As we were discussing on Monday, the Democrats have been engaging in one of their patented lie and smear campaigns while attacking Georgia’s new election integrity law. The leftist advocacy media has been repeatedly lying about the law, doing what they do and parroting the talking points issued by the Democratic National Committee. The depths of dishonesty are egregious even for the Dems.
The chief cheerleader of Team False Narrative is the drooling husk occupying the Oval Office. Biden has flat-out lied about the law on more than one occasion. When given a chance to retract and correct, Biden’s brain-dead press secretary kept doling out the mendacity.
The Panderer in Chief kept piling on with cancel lunacy on Major League Baseball’s opening day:
Major League Baseball is being urged to boycott Georgia by moving its midsummer classic, the All-Star Game, from Atlanta to some other state, presumably not one that’s even contemplating any election security bills. Naturally, Joe Biden has jumped into the fray, trying to top “over the top” by referring to the law as “Jim Crow on steroids.”
“I think today’s professional athletes are acting incredibly responsibly,” Biden told ESPN’s Sage Steele in an interview. “I would strongly support them doing that. People look to them. They’re leaders.”
The kicker here is that Atlanta is the Democratic stronghold in Georgia. The cancel animals are so rabid that they don’t care that they are advocating for the economic punishment of their political comrades. The woke scolds continue to redefine absurdity.
A key component to these mass cancel assaults lately has involved getting woke corporations on board. Atlanta-based Delta Airlines got in on the action right away and its neighbor Coca-Cola jumped on the bandwagon later in the week. These are thoughtless reactions from insulated corporate higher-ups who are getting really bad advice, probably from their twentysomething social media types. Whenever one of these corporations goes woke their CEOs seem to forget that they are running publicly traded companies and that everyone of their stockholders may not be caught up in the leftist frenzy.
Coca-Cola may be an iconic American brand but the stuff is pure poison. This might be a good time to cancel ingesting the stuff that my grandfather used to use to clean the rust off of antique gun parts.
In a move that was fun to see, the Georgia House of Representatives took a shot at Delta airlines yesterday:
On Thursday, the Georgia House fired a warning shot against woke capital. Legislators voted to start taxing jet fuel shortly after Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian repeated Democratic talking points condemning Georgia’s new voter integrity law in racial terms. The tax vote will not necessarily translate into policy, since the Georgia Senate has already gone out of session, but the move still sent a powerful message.
Given that Republicans are in charge of more state legislatures and governor’s offices than the Democrats this might be a good counter tactic against corporate wokeism going forward. Some state is going to have to make a threat stick, but rattling some stock prices and stockholders should help in the fight.
Shame on President Drools for attacking an American city’s economy. Shame on all of the cancel culture Democrats.
Shame on everybody else if we keep letting them get away with it.
Everything Isn’t Awful
Barstool Fund time. You can contribute here.
PJ Media
Marco Rubio’s Easter Week Bible Verse Triggers the Woke Mob
Georgia House Sends Woke Capital a Wake-up Call After False Attacks on Election Integrity Law
Court Throws Out Global Warming Suit by New York City Against Big Oil Companies
VodkaPundit: Insanity Wrap #178: Apple’s Siri Digital Assistant Goes Woke
IRONIC: Greenies’ 2007 Court Victory Comes Back to Bite Them in 2021
Pfizer Vaccine Shown to be 91.3 Percent Effective After Six Months
Finally. Arizona Senate Hires Team to Audit 2020 Presidential Election in Maricopa County
Knew it! Pete Buttigieg’s Mileage Tax Is White Supremacist
Rand Paul Humiliates Dr. Fauci AGAIN Over Double-Masking
Only commies hate baseball. Biden Is Unhappy That Baseball Fans Will Be Able to Enjoy Some Baseball
No, Jesus Did Not Survive the Horrors of Crucifixion, Then Escape to India
‘Recall Fever’ Hits California as San Francisco DA Now Under Recall Threat
The Latest Canceling at Vanderbilt Shows That Everyone Is Awful and We Are All Doomed
Townhall Mothership
Schlichter: Passivity Is a Choice, and We Made It
Critics Try to Oust Archbishop for Reminding President Biden of Catholic Teaching
When Barack Obama Is Canceled, You Know the Circus Is Truly in Town
Amtrak Releases New Proposed Map After Biden’s Infrastructure Speech. The Responses are Brutal.
Ron DeSantis Has a 2022 Competitor, and She’s Maximum Cringe
Morse: Murders and Crimes Surge In Cities that Defunded Police
Kristi Noem Defends Herself in a New Op-Ed, but I Don’t Think It Helped Matters
Biden Infrastructure Plan Includes Billions For ‘Gun Violence Prevention’
Boebert Describes Gun Control Laws As ‘Anti-Woman’
Dem Dominated Legislatures Take Aim At Legal Gun Owners
Amid Gun Control Push, March NICS Numbers Surge To All Time High
Chauvin Defense Docs: Floyd Had “Fatal Level” Of Fentanyl In His System — But Does It Matter?
YES. Are You Ready For … The Pro-Life Roe V Wade Hollywood Movie?
L.A. Officials: We’re On Track For Herd Immunity By Late June
Los Angeles Times columnist notes California forgot transgender people in its vaccine equity push
So damn DELICIOUS –> Mayor Lori Lightfoot gets a BIG round of BOOOOOOS from fans at Wrigley Field
VIP
Treacher: Transgender Neo-Nazi Gets Off With a Warning in Federal Cyberstalking Case
Politico Reveals Shocking Truth About January 6 Capitol Riot
GOLD ‘Five O’Clock Somewhere’ Live Chat with Kruiser, Preston, VodkaPundit – Replay
GOLD Will Biden Ban Assault Dogs?
Around the Interwebz
Australia: geologist beaten up by ‘angriest octopus’ on beach
Great flick. ‘Godzilla Vs. Kong’ Roars To Best Opening Day During The Pandemic With $9.6M
Duolingo adds Yiddish to the menu
Holy Thursday service held at fire-ravaged Notre Dame
The staying power of the stay-at-home economy
Feast on These Recipes From America’s National Parks
Bee Me
EXACTLY.
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Comedy
Jasmine Guy is a national treasure.
___
Kruiser on Gab
Kruiser on Parler
Kruiser on MeWe
Kruiser on Twitter
Kruiser on Facebook
PJ Media Senior Columnist and Associate Editor Stephen Kruiser is the author of “Don’t Let the Hippies Shower” and “Straight Outta Feelings: Political Zen in the Age of Outrage,” both of which address serious subjects in a humorous way. Monday through Friday he edits PJ Media’s “Morning Briefing.” His columns appear twice a week.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
|
Editor
8409 Lee Hwy
#3984
Merrifield VA 22116-9998
USA
Unsubscribe | Change Subscriber Options
31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Understanding Georgia’s New Elections Law
Plus: The Supreme Court considers a case over NCAA amateurism.
The Dispatch Staff | 7 min ago | 4 |
Happy Friday! Wishing a blessed Good Friday and happy Easter to all celebrating this weekend.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- Preliminary data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that fully-vaccinated people do not carry the virus that causes COVID-19, and therefore cannot transmit it. “Authorized mRNA COVID-19 vaccines are effective for preventing SARS-CoV-2 infection in real-world conditions,” the report concludes.
- Pfizer and BioNTech on Thursday released updated results from their COVID-19 vaccine’s Phase 3 study, showing that, after six months, it remained 100 percent effective at preventing severe disease and 91.3 percent effective against symptomatic disease. Researchers are still determining how long protection from the vaccines will last and whether booster shots will be necessary in the future.
- Prominent Hong Kong pro-democracy media figure Jimmy Lai was convicted on Thursday—along with six other activists—of unlawful assembly. The group is set to receive their sentences at a later date, but could face several years in prison.
- Detained Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny announced he is going on a hunger strike until prison authorities allow him access to medical care for severe leg and back pain.
- Contrary to many people’s expectations, preliminary CDC data showed that the number of suicides in the United States declined 5.6 percent from 2019 to 2020. It was the third consecutive year of decline.
- The United States confirmed 79,855 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 6.4 percent of the 1,248,262 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,101 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 553,120. According to the CDC, 33,748 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19, and 3,358,112 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday. 99,565,311 Americans have now received at least one dose.
Georgia on Everyone’s Mind
The elections process in Georgia has been the source of much partisan bickering in recent years, with politicians on both sides of the political aisle claiming foul play when certain races didn’t go their way.
In 2018, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams refused to concede to now-Gov. Brian Kemp—despite losing by more than 50,000 votes—because she claimed Kemp, as secretary of state, had purged hundreds of thousands from the voter rolls. Former President Trump lost the Peach State last year by just under 12,000 votes, but he never admitted it, claiming instead that tens of thousands of undocumented, dead, and/or out-of-state voters illegally cast ballots for Joe Biden.
It should therefore come as no surprise that when Kemp signed Senate Bill 202 (SB 202) last week, the omnibus elections legislation immediately became a partisan lightning rod. Within minutes, Abrams released a statement claiming the legislation “suppresses voters, criminalizes compassion & seizes election authority from local + state officials.” The following day, President Biden issued a statement decrying the law as “un-American” and “Jim Crow in the 21st Century.”
The accusation from Biden is a serious one. From the late 19th to the mid-20th century, states across the South passed Jim Crow laws to codify segregation and disenfranchise black voters. At a constitutional convention in 1877, lawmakers in Georgia implemented a cumulative poll tax, requiring would-be voters pay a fee before casting a ballot. In 1907, Georgia Gov. Hoke Smith signed a bill amending the state constitution to create a literacy test for voting—but anyone descended from a Confederate or Union soldier was exempt. A year later, Georgia’s Democratic Party joined other Southern states in establishing a “white primary” that explicitly prohibited black voters from participating. Jim Crow laws were real, and a dark stain on American history.
But attempts by prominent Democrats—including the president—to tie SB 202 to the Jim Crow era are incredibly disingenuous. For starters, the bill actually expands voting access for most Georgians, mandating precincts hold at least 17 days of early voting—including two Saturdays, with Sundays optional—leading up to the election. Voting locations during this period must be open for at least eight hours, and can operate between 7:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. Several states (including Biden’s home state of Delaware, which will not implement it until 2022) do not currently allow any in-person early voting, and plenty, like New Jersey, offer far fewer than 17 days.
Despite Biden saying the bill implements absentee voting restrictions that “effectively deny” the franchise to “countless” voters, SB 202 leaves in place no-excuse absentee voting with a few tweaks. It tightens the window to apply for an absentee ballot to “just” 67 days, and mandates applications—which can now be completed online—be received by election officials at least 11 days before an election to ensure a ballot can be mailed and returned by Election Day. The bill requires Georgia’s secretary of state to make a blank absentee ballot application available online, but prohibits government agencies from mailing one to voters unsolicited—and requires third-party groups doing so to include a variety of disclaimers.
Rather than signature matching—which is time-intensive for election officials—voters will verify their identity in absentee ballot applications by including a photocopy or digital picture of their driver’s license or voter identification card, which is free. If a Georgian has neither, he or she can, pursuant to Georgia Code Section 21-2-417, include a “current utility bill, bank statement, government check, paycheck, or other government document” that includes his or her name and address. When mailing back their ballots, voters must print their driver’s license number (or the last four digits of their social security number) on an inner envelope. (An August 2016 Gallup survey found photo ID requirements for voting were overwhelmingly popular: 80 percent of voters supported them, including 77 percent of nonwhite voters.) SB 202 also codifies ballot drop boxes into law; Georgia added them for the first time in 2020 as a pandemic measure, and the law now stipulates that there be one for every 100,000 registered voters or advance voting locations in a county, whichever is smaller.
Among other things (it’s a 95-page bill!), SB 202 allows election workers to begin processing absentee ballots two weeks before an election to avoid reporting delays, and requires them to announce the total number of ballots cast—in-person, absentee, early, and provisional—by 10:00 p.m. on election night so voters know how many outstanding votes remain to be counted. It also restructures the State Election Board, demoting the secretary of state from chair to a non-voting member.
One minor provision that’s received outsized attention is a prohibition on outside groups or people distributing money, gifts, food, or drinks to voters within 150 feet of a polling place or 25 feet of voters standing in line to vote. Polling places, however, can make self-service water receptacles available to voters waiting in line.
At some level, Democrats’ knee-jerk opposition to GOP-led election reforms makes sense after Donald Trump and his allies spent months campaigning to actually disenfranchise millions of voters across the country, often advancing far-fetched conspiracies as part of their efforts. In many ways, SB 202 was borne of Republican lawmakers in Georgia facing immense pressure from their voters to “do something” about the election fraud the former president insisted was rampant. And early in the drafting process, some proposals floating around in the state legislature were highly questionable. These included eliminating no-excuse absentee voting entirely and prohibiting early voting on Sundays (which critics decried as targeting “souls to the polls” drives at black churches). But even though those suggestions didn’t make it into the final package, some Democrats continue to pretend that they did.
Those provisions—says Gabriel Sterling, the Republican election official who came to prominence for speaking out against GOP election disinformation back in December—“were phantoms that the leadership in both the Senate and the House told their guys, ‘Hey, introduce whatever you need to to cover yourself with your people.’ Now, I think that’s a terrible idea. But one thing I don’t know if I could express to your readers enough … is in the Republican base, the level of anger, and fear, and sorrow, and despair.”
“I can’t put into words the level that these elected representatives are dealing with,” he continued. “And to a degree, we have a representative democracy for a reason: You respond to the fears and concerns of your voters.” Somewhere around 65 percent of Republican voters still don’t believe Joe Biden was “legitimately elected” last November.
Unfortunately, Democrats also appear to be engaging in election disinformation for their own political gain. Abrams’ Fair Fight voting rights group secured the JimCrow2.com domain on March 10, more than two weeks before Kemp signed SB 202 into law. Just yesterday, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki doubled down on Biden’s misleading claims about the bill, which the Washington Post fact checker had already deemed worthy of “Four Pinocchios.”
Sterling—who has been at war with his own party for months over this stuff—sounded exasperated on the phone yesterday. “Look, [Democrats] have found a wonderful fundraising and turnout model based on one particular thing,” he said. “Voter suppression, voter suppression, racist voter suppression. And it works! … It worked in Georgia in 2020, [and] it’s part of the rationale also behind H.R. 1.”
“This is not a bill I think is the best bill in the whole world,” Sterling added, noting there was plenty he would have written differently—particularly the State Election Board section, which he deemed “pure politics and payback” targeting his boss, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. “All I think is it’s not ‘Jim Crow 2.0.’”
A day after dozens of black business executives called on corporate America to vocally oppose the legislation, several major companies based in Georgia—which had until then remained above the fray—did exactly that. “The Coca-Cola Company does not support this legislation, as it makes it harder for people to vote, not easier,” CEO James Quincey said. Ed Bastian, chief executive at Delta Airlines, wrote that he “need[s] to make it crystal clear that the final bill is unacceptable and does not match Delta’s values.” Some progressive activists have gone further, calling for various economic boycotts of the state—and Biden himself joined them in an interview with ESPN earlier this week.
“I would strongly support them doing that,” Biden said when asked by Sage Steele about Major League Baseball considering moving its annual All-Star game out of Atlanta this summer. “This is Jim Crow on steroids, what they’re doing in Georgia.”
Sterling wasn’t pleased. “I think it’s morally reprehensible and disgusting that he’s perpetuating economic blackmail over a lie,” he told The Dispatch. “It’s a lie. This is no different than the lie of Trump saying there was voter fraud in this state. And the people who are going to be most hurt by [a boycott] are the workers in all of these places that are going to be impacted.”
Abrams seemed to acknowledge that latter point in a USA Today op-ed published Wednesday, agreeing with Biden’s overall assessment of SB 202, but pumping the brakes on further action. “I have no doubt that voters of color, particularly Black voters, are willing to endure the hardships of boycotts. But I don’t think that’s necessary—yet,” she wrote. “Leaving us behind won’t save us. So I ask you to bring your business to Georgia and, if you’re already here, stay and fight. Stay and vote.”
It may make financial sense for businesses to take this stance—their key advertising demographic skews younger and more liberal—but that doesn’t mean Republicans aren’t going to point out the hypocrisy. “Dear @Delta: You are business partners with the Communist Party of #China,” Sen. Marco Rubio tweeted yesterday. “When can we expect your letter saying that their ongoing genocide in #Xinjiang is ‘unacceptable and does not match Delta’s values’???”
March Madness Hits the High Court
As the Houston Cougars and Baylor Bears prepare for their Final Four matchup on Saturday in Indianapolis, legal-minded March Madness fans—including our very own David French and Sarah Isgur—are still reeling from college basketball’s trip to the Supreme Court earlier this week. On Wednesday, the nine justices heard oral arguments for National Collegiate Athletic Association v. Alston, a case that will determine whether the NCAA’s rules restricting fair market compensation for student athletes violate federal antitrust law.
For years, the NCAA has limited the direct compensation that student athletes can receive while they compete in college sports, nominally to preserve the demarcation between “amateur” college athletics and professional leagues.
But a federal district court in California recently said such an arrangement is no longer viable, arguing that the NCAA has failed to provide a procompetitive justification for such restrictive eligibility rules. Under the district court’s decision—upheld by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit—the NCAA cannot put limits on education-related compensation, nor can it prohibit schools from awarding Division 1 athletes $5,980 per year. But the court also ruled that the NCAA can continue to restrict compensation that is not directly linked to education-related benefits, meaning the decision was only a partial win for student athletes.
The NCAA’s attorney, Seth Waxman, hit the ground running on Wednesday with an opening statement explaining the NCAA’s long-standing amateurism principle. “For more than a hundred years, the distinct character of college sports has been that it’s played by students who are amateurs, which is to say that they are not paid for their play,” Waxman said. “Maintaining that distinct character is both procompetitive, because it differentiates the NCAA’s product from professional sports, and can be achieved only through agreement.”
According to Waxman, “antitrust courts lack the authority to redefine the central differentiating feature of the NCAA’s procompetitive product,” and the Ninth Circuit’s $5,980 per year rule is nothing more than pay for play.
The justices spent quite a bit of time pressing Waxman on the NCAA basketball and football programs, which bring in billions of dollars for coaches and schools while giving little to college recruits in return. “[Student athletes] face training requirements that leave little time or energy for study, constant pressure to put sports above study, pressure to drop out of hard majors and hard classes, really shockingly low graduation rates,” Justice Samuel Alito said. “Only a tiny percentage ever go on to make any money in professional sports.”
Another concern for the justices is that the NCAA could be considered a monopsony: A joint venture of schools which operate to fix prices within a particular labor market. It’s not just that the NCAA is a joint venture in the market of college sports, it’s that the NCAA is the only venture in the market, meaning student athletes have nowhere else to go if they believe they are being unfairly compensated. Per Justice Brett Kavanaugh: “It does seem … that schools are conspiring with competitors, agreeing with competitors, I’ll say that, to pay no salaries to the workers who are making the schools billions of dollars on the theory that consumers want the schools to pay their workers nothing.”
On the flip side, the justices pointed out both the arbitrariness of the $5,980-per-year rule, and the possibility that compensating student athletes may lead better funded schools to cherry-pick the best athletes. Also of concern is whether judges should be meddling with college athletics in the first place. “I worry a lot about judges getting into the business of deciding how amateur sports should be run,” said Justice Stephen Breyer.
According to Sarah and David, the Supreme Court is likely to uphold the 9th Circuit’s decision in holding that the NCAA’s eligibility and compensation rules are overly restrictive. “When you go in with a losing case—they lost at the trial, they lost at the circuit court—they’re gonna lose at the Supreme Court, they know that,” Sarah explains on the latest episode of Advisory Opinions. “You’re just trying to limit the blood loss.” The case won’t be decided for several months, probably sometime this summer.
Worth Your Time
- Among the many public health experts and politicians who have been categorically and perilously wrong about COVID-19 in the past year, Alex Berenson might stand out the most. Branding himself as a “former New York Times reporter,” Berenson gained credibility with right-wing audiences early on in the pandemic by downplaying the threat of the virus and railing against efforts to mitigate its spread. Now a regular guest on a variety of Fox News programs, Berenson’s contrarianism eventually evolved to encompass masks, and—most recently—vaccines. In The Atlantic yesterday, Derek Thompson delivered a thorough and full-scale debunking of the “Secretariat of being wrong.” “Usually, I would refrain from lavishing attention on someone so blatantly incorrect,” he writes. “But with vaccine resistance hovering around 30 percent of the general population, and with 40 percent of Republicans saying they won’t get a shot, debunking vaccine skepticism, particularly in right-wing circles, is a matter of life and death.”
- Willingness to believe faulty COVID-19 information is by no means just a Republican phenomenon, of course. In her latest Substack post, Zeynep Tufekci explores how political polarization has led many Democrats to dabble in conspiratorial thinking of their own. “Lots of people are angry, very angry with Florida, and willing to quickly believe the worst. In reality, it’s … middling. Compared with the rest of the country, Florida’s record is neither stellar nor terrible,” she writes. “The polarized climate means that Andrew Cuomo—who is implicated in a large number of terrible policies—can sell a book about his pandemic leadership for $4 million dollars (even before the pandemic was over!) while people are readily willing to believe that Florida—which, from what I can tell, actually has one of the better reporting systems—must be lying and covering up its terrible numbers.”
Presented Without Comment
Here’s something you don’t see every day: Democrats goading an incumbent Republican senator to run for reelection. But yes, they really want Ron Johnson to run again in Wisconsin “I would love to run against Ron Johnson,” says @NelsonforWI politico.com/news/2021/04/0…@JamesArkin
Toeing the Company Line
- On the site today: Another look at the flawed national debate around Georgia’s new elections law from Walter Olson.
- As the Chinese foreign ministry fumes over a U.S. ambassador’s recent visit to Taipei, Thomas Joscelyn’s latest Vital Interests (🔒) offers an important refresher on the U.S.’s tricky Taiwan policy as China claims the island nation as its own. “While the U.S. has ‘acknowledged’ the PRC’s claim of sovereignty over Taiwan (the ROC), it hasn’t ‘recognized’ the legitimacy of Beijing’s argument. Nor has the U.S. recognized Taiwan as an independent nation,” Joscelyn writes. “Instead, American policy has hinged on the idea that the cross-strait dispute can be settled ‘peacefully.’ That’s looking increasingly unlikely, which makes Taiwan a crucial flash point in the rivalry between China and the U.S.”
- Brookings Institute fellow and author Shadi Hamid joined Jonah on Thursday’s The Remnant to reflect on the role of religion in the American political system. As the culture war rages on, Hamid argues, Christians increasingly find themselves in a defensive crouch. “If you were a white Christian conservative, you stopped thinking about how to advance an affirmative agenda and you started thinking more about how to protect whatever you had left,” he says. “And that helps explain how Donald Trump became an unlikely vessel for the vast majority of white Evangelicals.”
- On top of covering the NCAA’s legal woes in the latest Advisory Opinions, David and Sarah also find time to discuss qualified immunity, nondisclosure agreements, and legal action against former President Donald Trump by two U.S. Capitol Police officers.
Let Us Know
Whether you agree with their concerns or not, American democracy depends on voters of all political parties accepting the vote—and our elections—as legitimate. If you were in a state legislature, what reforms would you advocate to ensure that is the case?
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Haley Byrd Wilt (@byrdinator), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
4 |
32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
|
33.) THE DAILY WIRE
|
34.) DESERET NEWS
35.) BRIGHT
|
36.) AMERICAN THINKER
|
|
37.) LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
38.) THE BLAZE
View this email in your browser
Listen live to Blaze Radio Tune in to the next generation of talk radio, featuring original content from hosts like Glenn Beck, Pat Gray, Stu Burguiere, Steve Deace and more!
One last thing … An Emmy Award-winning production designer reportedly known to be a hoarder was found dead under a pile of garbage in her New York City home this week.What are the details?New York City police told the Associated Press on Tuesday that Evelyn Sakash, 66, had been discovered on her kitchen floor buried underneath debris, her body partially decomposed. … Read more
You might like …
© 2021 Blaze Media LLC. All Rights Reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted in to receive emails from Blaze Media. Privacy Policy | Manage your preferences | Unsubscribe 8275 S. Eastern Ave, Ste 200-245 Las Vegas, Nevada, 89123, USA
|
39.) THE FEDERALIST
40.) REUTERS
|
|
41.) ARRA NEWS SERVICE
ARRA News Service (in this message: 17 new items) |
- The Totalitarian Left, Baseball & The Border, Biden’s Boondoggle
- The Defensive Firearm: An Absolute Necessity
- April Fool, History Repeats
- The Resegregation of America
- Radical New Rules for Post-America
- Will SCOTUS Eliminate the Fourth Amendment?
- Kamala’s Husband Hosts the Virtual Passover From Hell
- President Biden’s American Job Killing Tax Plan
- Three Ways The Pro Act Would Violate Workers’ Rights
- Shanghaied in Tallahassee
- Washington Should Steer Clear of Tax on Vehicle Miles Traveled
- The Photo Nobody Sees, Ignoring Root Causes, Killing King’s Dream
- The Left’s ‘Jim Crow’ Rhetoric Is Absurd, Insulting, and Dishonest
- A Bad Hand
- Democrats See Biden And Harris As Religious
- Time to play ball, not politics, on Georgia election law
- The Federal Behemoth and Your Rights
The Totalitarian Left, Baseball & The Border, Biden’s Boondoggle
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 09:06 PM PDT
by Gary Bauer: The Totalitarian Left But Rev. Mahoney’s permit to hold a Good Friday prayer vigil on Capitol Hill tomorrow was denied. So, he’s suing Speaker Pelosi and Vice President Harris in her capacity as president of the Senate. Why was his permit denied? The Capitol is not closed. Members of Congress have been showing up for work and casting votes regularly. You can make appointments to see members and visit the leadership in their Capitol Hill offices. Do they really think Rev. Mahoney is a security threat? There’s absolutely no security risk at all. Besides, Congress is out of session for two weeks! But using January 6th as the excuse, the only thing being banned is the First Amendment – the freedom of assembly and the freedom of religion. And that’s very telling. This is what the left does wherever it gets control. If you live in a left-wing state, you had a more difficult time practicing your faith and peaceably assembling during the entire pandemic. If you lived in a conservative state, you had greater opportunities to exercise your faith and express your views. The left has a totalitarian impulse, and we see it every time the left controls the levers of power. Here’s another example: The intolerant radicals pushing critical race theory in the Virginia public schools are demanding that every school teacher toe the line or be fired. So much for free speech and academic freedom! Baseball & The Border The president of the United States, who still has not found time to go to the southern border, insisted this week that the Texas Rangers were making “a mistake” by allowing full attendance at their opening baseball game. Biden even quoted Dr. Fauci, saying, “They should listen to Dr. Fauci, the scientists and the experts. But I think it’s not responsible.” Well, there’s no science to show that COVID spreads easily outdoors. Remember the Missouri pool party that caused a complete media meltdown last year? Cellphone data was used to track the attendees due to concerns about the party being a COVID superspreader event. It wasn’t because it was an outdoor event. But it’s telling that the really big thing happening in Texas right now isn’t opening day of baseball season, but the opening of our southern border. Dr. Fauci has commented on virtually everything, including the number of masks we should wear. But he can’t find his voice on the COVID superspreading venues Joe Biden is opening up all along the border as tens of thousands of people are entering the country. They’re not coming to watch a baseball game, but they’re being crammed into facilities with poor ventilation that are operating at 1,500% capacity. The American people deserve to know where these mostly illegal migrants are being delivered, and whether any COVID spikes develop in their communities. But I seriously doubt the Biden Administration is tracking that data. By the way, Joe Biden chose opening day to politicize baseball by joining calls to move the All-Star Game out of Georgia because officials there chose to protect the integrity of future elections. Biden’s Boondoggle As the Wall Street Journal notes, it’s mostly “subsidies for green energy and payouts to unions for the jobs his climate regulation will kill. This is really a plan to build government back bigger than it has ever been.” That said, this bill will be hard to stop. Democrats are also vowing to use the reconciliation process again to jam it through on a purely partisan vote. Moreover, the American people overwhelmingly want to improve infrastructure. Every poll shows that. They want good roads, safe bridges and modern airports. That’s what everybody means by “infrastructure.” And if that’s what Biden really wanted to do, he would get overwhelming support. Instead, he’s proposing a huge tax increase on American business, which set off celebrations in Beijing, Moscow and Tehran. As surely as night follows day, these tax increases will lead to job losses and send American businesses searching for more friendly places to invest. The corporate tax rate Joe Biden is proposing to pay for this putrid bill is higher than communist China’s! Booming Growth Unlike the left, which bemoaned and belittled every good economic report under Donald Trump, conservatives will celebrate this news because we love our country and we care about working men and women. But I want to be clear: There is nothing that Joe Biden did between January 20th and April 2nd that explains whatever job numbers are reported tomorrow. The reason we will likely see months of tremendous job growth is because we are finally beginning to reopen the economy. In response to COVID, the American left forced a complete shutdown in much of the country, tremendously suppressing economic activity. The more left-wing a state’s governor was, the more severe the shutdown was. They did it in the name of COVID, but it destroyed the Trump recovery. But the tremendous pent-up demand that was created over the course of the past year is now being unleashed because the Trump vaccines were developed in record time and American consumers are now being freed from their lockdowns. That unleashed demand is going to create an economic miracle. And, predictably, the media will rush to give Joe Biden all the credit. But we know the truth. Biden’s Gaffe Dr. Jill Biden was in California yesterday, addressing a group of farm workers on Cesar Chavez Day. For those who may not know, Chavez was a labor activist who founded the United Farm Workers of America. Dr. Biden attempted to repeat Chavez’s famous slogan, “Si se puede,” which means “Yes we can.” Unfortunately, she said something like, “Si se pwaud-way,” which doesn’t mean anything. Something else attracted some attention too. It appeared as though Dr. Biden was standing in front of a large flag featuring the Nazi eagle. Is Dr. Jill Biden a Nazi? Of course not. The flag is the symbol of the United Farm Workers of America, and Chavez’s brother, Richard, designed the flag using the Aztec eagle. But if Donald Trump or Mike Pence had spoken in front of a flag like that, every left-wing commentator would have set their hair on fire. Remember how USA Today’s factcheckers embarrassed themselves over some Trump T-shirts? By the way, in addition to Cesar Chavez’s slogan, there’s something else about him that Joe and Jill have seemingly forgotten: He was a staunch opponent of illegal immigration! Good News
————————– Tags: Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, The Totalitarian Left, Baseball, The Border, Biden’s BoondoggleTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
The Defensive Firearm: An Absolute Necessity
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 08:28 PM PDT
by Dr. Chuck Baldwin: I have said repeatedly that it is a fundamental necessity that the American people keep and bear arms. And to “bear arms” means carrying a firearm with you wherever you go. America’s most recent mass shootings serve as additional exclamation points behind that statement. As an author, columnist, radio talk show host and pastor who is outspoken in my support of the Second Amendment, I often receive inquiries from people asking for my personal preferences regarding firearms. This column is devoted to answering some of those inquiries. I’m sure this column will not provide anything new for the firearms aficionados out there. However, we are living in a violence-prone society, and more and more people (especially ladies) who never paid much attention to guns before are sensing the need to arm themselves but often don’t know where to start. I hope this column helps these folks. First, let me emphasize that I am not a firearms expert. And I strongly urge you to receive as much instruction and training from a firearms professional as possible. Second, when it comes to a discussion of which firearms are preferable, the suggestions are as varied as the people who proffer them. Most people who are armed nowadays are carrying concealed. Disgustingly, some states do not allow people to legally carry open. Fortunately, that is not true here in Montana where I live, and I often carry open—as do many people in this great State. However, most of the time, I am carrying concealed, as I think it better that the bad guy not know who among his intended victims is able to shoot back. If you are planning to carry a concealed firearm, you will need to carefully consider the kind of clothing you are wearing and how the firearm will fit in with your attire. For most people, concealed carry requires firearms that are—to one degree or another—somewhat diminutive. My personal preference for a self-defense handgun is a Glock pistol. Glock pistols are almost as simple as revolvers to operate, reliable and practically indestructible. Plus, they provide increased magazine capacity and are safe. They are also very easy to disassemble and clean. And most importantly, they go “bang” when you pull the trigger. Some ladies might find the Glock grips to be a little bulky for their hands—except for the Glock 42 and 43, which most ladies should find quite comfortable. But most women should be able to safely and confidently shoot the majority of Glock 9mm pistols. Popular options in Glock pistols include the Glock 42 in .380 ACP; Glock 17, 19, 19X, 26, 43 and 43X in 9mm Luger (also called 9mm Parabellum or 9×19); the Glock 22, 23 and 27 in .40 Smith & Wesson; the Glock 21, 30, 30S, 36 and 41 in .45 ACP; and the Glock 20 and 29 in 10mm Auto. When I am carrying concealed, I’m usually carrying the Glock 43X. (The older I’ve gotten the lighter my side arms have gotten. Ha. Ha.) But I also sometimes carry the Glock 19 or the Glock 30S. In my younger days, I carried the Colt Combat Commander in .45 ACP, and I still carry one (or a Kimber) when the mood strikes me. (Springfield Armory also makes good 1911s.) Who doesn’t love a 1911? However, I don’t recommend 1911 pistols for beginners. My wife prefers to carry a Smith & Wesson .38 Special revolver in the snub-nose, J-frame configuration. This is primarily due to the reduced weight and size of these weapons for carry purposes. Plus, she just prefers a revolver over a semi-auto. And, yes, I sometimes carry a snub-nose as well. Snub-nose revolvers generally have a poor reputation for accuracy due to their very short barrels. And the reduced 5-shot capacity turns off some people. However, 70% of self-defense fights take place at a distance of 2 yards. As such, a snub-nose is very adequate for the task. In addition, most self-defense fights are settled with 3 shots being fired, so, statistically speaking, 5 shots are normally enough to defend oneself. I sometimes carry a Glock 42 in .380 ACP (6 shots) as a backup. When I do carry a snub-nose revolver, it is usually a Smith & Wesson 340 M&P or a Ruger LCR, which are built for the .357 Magnum and .38 Special cartridges. And when carrying the snub-nose, I’m usually loaded with .38s. The .38 Special and 9mm Luger are comparable in power. But, honestly, the best snub-nose revolver on the market these days might be the Kimber K6s. The trigger is sweet (like Smith & Wesson triggers used to be), and it holds 6 rounds instead of 5. The K6s is an all-steel revolver and is, therefore, a little heavier than most snub-nose handguns (23 ounces empty). But the extra weight of the K6s makes shooting the .357 magnum round more comfortable than the lighter weight versions. And shooting the .38 round in the K6s is downright pleasant. And, yes, for some people, a revolver might still be the preferred handgun. It has no external magazine to worry about losing; it is very dependable and reliable; it is easy to clean; and it is simple to operate. NYPD expert Frank McGee says the typical police gunfight conforms to a “rule of three”: 3 rounds, 3 yards and 3 seconds. So in most real-life situations, the increased firepower of a high-capacity magazine doesn’t even come into play. Of course, if confronted with multiple attackers or a heavily armed would-be mass shooter, those extended magazines in Glock and similar pistols would be much appreciated. The most important factor in choosing a self-defense handgun is finding the one that you carry and shoot well. I shoot Glock pistols very well; and I find them comfortable to carry, which is why I usually carry them. Find the handgun that YOU shoot well. The caliber is not nearly as important as your ability to put the bullet where you want it to go. Since I live in dangerous game territory, I will mention the need to defend oneself against a brown bear. In dangerous game territory, you will need the power of a 10mm Auto, .357 Magnum, .44 Special, .44 Magnum, .45 ACP, .45 Long Colt or even a .454 Casull. These calibers are not for the limp-wristed, but when one is facing a brown bear, it is what one will need to survive. (Bear spray is a joke.) Plus, when your life’s on the line, you’ll never feel the recoil. When I’m in the woods hiking or hunting, I’m usually carrying a Glock 20 in 10mm or a Smith & Wesson 629 in .44 Magnum with a 3” barrel and the Kimber K6s in .357 Magnum as a backup. But, truthfully, I would hate to face a brown bear (which includes the Grizzly and Kodiak) with a handgun of any caliber. These creatures are the fiercest and most formidable animals on the North American Continent (along with the Polar Bear, of course). Against a brown bear, I would hope I had a .45-70 Government rifle or a 12-gauge shotgun handy. But I spoke with a man recently who, sadly, has had to kill several Grizzlies in his line of work, and he swears by the .357 Magnum. So there you go. But, folks, make no mistake about this: Except against brown bears, semi-automatic rifles are the most essential tool for self-defense, which is why totalitarians in government want to ban them. For a semiautomatic rifle, I suggest an AR-15 or Ruger Mini-14 in 5.56 NATO (they also fire the .223 Remington cartridge) or a Springfield M1A or AR-10 in .308 Winchester. My personal choice here is the AR-15. Daniel Defense makes some of the best AR rifles in the world, but they are quite pricey. Other good AR brands include Armalite, Bushmaster, Colt, Ruger, Smith & Wesson, Windham Weaponry and several others. Most ladies will find that the low recoil of an AR-15 or Mini-14 will make the rifle very pleasant to shoot. No home should be without one of these rifles. I repeat: NO HOME SHOULD BE WITHOUT ONE—OR MORE—OF THESE RIFLES. Of course, a 12-gauge shotgun is the premier close-range weapon. Nothing equals it. In a pump shotgun, I prefer a Winchester Model 1300, which is not made anymore. So, you’ll probably have to choose between Mossberg and Remington. In the semi-auto configuration, I prefer Mossberg shotguns. And don’t discount 20-gauge shotguns. The 20-gauge has less recoil than a 12-gauge, and at “bad breath” range (where a shotgun shines anyway), the 20-gauge is just as lethal as a 12-gauge. And for home defense, don’t overlook the double barrel shotgun. And while I often use a .410 gauge shotgun for hunting small game, I do not recommend it for self-defense. It is also critical that no matter which firearm you decide to purchase to be sure and practice with it. The firearm you purchase is no better or worse than your ability to handle it. And be sure to stock up on ammunition (when you can find it). A gun without ammo is reduced to being either an expensive club or a cumbersome paperweight. And always be sure to follow all of the safety rules for your firearm. The last thing any of us wants is an accidental discharge of a firearm that results in the injury or death of a loved one or friend. So, always remember that safety is job one. And rule number one is NEVER point a gun at anyone unless you are doing so in an act of self-defense. And rule number two is ALWAYS assume that a gun is loaded, which takes you back to rule number one. Plus, guns should always be kept away from children before they have been properly taught how to safely handle a firearm—which should be done as soon as possible. I realize that there are many pastors and Christians who try to impugn the necessity of owning a firearm. These people are famous for saying things such as “God will take care of you; no one needs a gun.” Of course, these same people quickly embrace the idea that police officers should carry guns for self-defense. And should these irresponsible pastors and Christians ever find themselves facing a violent predator, they would quickly call 911 (if they had the chance) and would expect an ARMED policeman to come protect them. I guess they never thought through the inconsistency of their belief that it’s wrong for them to provide for their own armed defense, but it’s not wrong to pay someone else (a policeman) to rush to their house and provide armed defense for them. And they are also doubtless unaware that under both Natural Law and U.S. jurisprudence, it is NOT the responsibility of policemen to protect the citizenry; it is the responsibility of the citizenry to protect itself. Plus, I never understood why it is that Christians who are not policemen are supposed to “trust God” to take care of them and not arm themselves, but Christian police officers are somehow exempt from this same spiritual notion. Beyond that, many pastors teach that Christians are obligated to obey civil authorities who demand that we surrender our firearms. They even try and quote Scripture to prove this preposterous position—Romans 13 most commonly. That would be like pastors and Christians submitting to a governing authority that would tell them to cancel their worship services. Oops! As you know, Joe Biden and his Stalinesque stooges in Congress are RIGHT NOW proposing legislation to outlaw hundreds of firearms. And this is only the beginning. Their real goal is to completely disarm the American people. For these reasons, my constitutional attorney son and I collaborated on a book that takes the Scriptures (Old and New Testaments) to prove that self-defense is not just a right under our Constitution; it is a moral obligation given us by our Creator. In the book, we show that Christians who are unwilling to defend themselves, their families and their communities have actually denied the Christian faith. We show that the Bible nowhere teaches God’s people to remain defenseless or to surrender their means of self-defense to any civil authority. In the book, we examine the Scriptures that the “no gun” preachers use to support their lunacy and show how unbiblical these positions are. We go through both Testaments and show that our Creator has given us the obligation to defend the life He has given us. We also put to rest many of the distortions of Scripture that anti-gun preachers use to turn Christian men and women—who are created to be providers and protectors—into sheepish slaves of the state and helpless prey for human predators. The title of our book is To Keep or Not To Keep: Why Christians Should Not Give Up Their Guns. It is not only important to be armed; it is even more important to understand the moral and spiritual underpinnings of WHY we should be armed. And that is exactly what our book attempts to explain. Christians need to know that keeping and bearing arms is a spiritual DUTY. We disobey Holy Scripture when we neglect our responsibility to be always prepared to defend ourselves, family and community. The Second Amendment does not grant us the right to keep and bear arms; it merely protects the right and duty to keep and bear arms that is given to us by the Natural laws of our Creator. Defending oneself, family and community is as spiritual as praying or reading the Bible or any other spiritual exercise. From the lives of Abraham and Moses to the Books of Judges and Esther to the lives of Samuel, David, Elijah and Elisha to the teaching of Christ in the New Testament, the Bible is replete with examples and admonitions that God’s people must NEVER surrender their means of self-defense, which in the modern world points to the AR-15 style-rifle and Glock-style handgun. Jesus considered keeping and bearing arms to be so important that one of the last things He told his disciples before going to the Cross was for them to sell their clothes if they had to and purchase those arms. (Luke 22:36) Yes, Jesus placed a higher priority on defensive arms than he did on clothing. So should we. Tags: Dr. Chuck Baldwin, The Defensive Firearm, An Absolute NecessityTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
April Fool, History Repeats
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 07:46 PM PDT Most of Biden’s infrastructure bill is going more towards Left-wing agenda programs than infrastructure.
Tags: AF Branco, editorial cartoon, April Fool, History RepeatsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
The Resegregation of America
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 07:36 PM PDT
by Jarrett Stepman: It’s becoming increasingly difficult to ignore a growing, insidious ethos overtaking America’s most powerful institutions. Individual merit and reasoned debate are out. “Lived experience” and the hierarchy of group grievance are now what matter most. Even truth is considered meaningless. Narratives are everything. The concept of fundamental human equality, derived from ideas at the heart of America’s founding and famously rearticulated by civil rights champion Martin Luther King Jr. in his “I Have a Dream” speech, is now being replaced by the enforced “equity” of the woke. The end result, ironically, is the resegregation of America. This new woke ideology, building on critical race theory, not only rejects the concept that people should be judged not by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character, it increasingly also embraces actual governmental race-based discrimination. The evidence of this shift is everywhere. To no one’s surprise, segregation is popular on modern college campuses, where these ideas originally bubbled up. Many schools, such as New York University, have been besieged with demands for racially segregated student housing, despite that being likely illegal. Columbia University is now offering segregated graduation ceremonies for various racial and gender identity groups. Columbia, an Ivy League school, insists that these segregated ceremonies are all voluntary and in addition to the larger, integrated ceremony, but who’s to say that will continue? By next year, would it be a surprise to see schools all over the country copy this practice? Such ideas are coming to corporate America, too. Proposition 16 in California, which would have officially brought back race-based affirmative action to the state, was rejected by voters. But it was widely supported by a gaggle of corporations, nonprofit groups, and well-connected billionaires. Voters may balk at race-based discrimination, but woke corporations are seemingly happy to inject racial categories in their business models. Open up an app for food-delivery services, such as Uber Eats, for instance, and you will likely see a section for “black-owned businesses.” Are we now going to start choosing our dinner by racial group rather than by cuisine? Such moves to create a more racialized society would be bad enough if they were only limited to college campuses and the practices of woke businesses, but they are disturbingly being incorporated into government policy, too. Two Democratic senators recently said that they would no longer vote to confirm “non-diversity” nominees for federal government posts. “I am a ‘no’ vote on the floor, on all non-diversity nominees,” said Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., “You know, I will vote for racial minorities, and I will vote for LGBTQ, but anybody else, I’m not voting for.” Sen. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii, concurred with Duckworth. “We’re not just calling for [Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders],” Hirono said. “This is not about pitting one diversity group against them. So, I’m happy to vote for a Hispanic or black person and LGBTQ person and AAPI person.” So, they’d vote to confirm any nominee—as long as he wasn’t straight and white. Duckworth and Hirono eventually backed down from that stance, but the threat was telling. Qualifications are irrelevant. Racial discrimination is good, as long as you discriminate against the right people. The efforts to place identity before all other considerations do not just stop at those who can serve in government. Several senators have floated legislation to create race-based programs that would direct funding toward specific racial groups. The Biden administration is backing the creation of a commission to investigate the possibility of reparations for slavery. Cities are experimenting with race-based laws, too. Libby Schaaf, the mayor of Oakland, California, announced that the city will be creating a universal basic income program in partnership with a nonprofit organization that will only give money to “black, indigenous, and other people of color,” according to KPIX-TV, the CBS affiliate in the Bay Area. The program, which will give $500 a month to 600 low-income families for 18 months, was justified by supporters as based on statistical poverty disparities among racial groups. The money for the program will come from Blue Meridian Partners, a philanthropic organization. That opens up a few questions, beyond just its legality. Will American citizens now need to take a genetic test to qualify for government services? After all, we live in an age where gender is supposedly “fluid,” but race and culture, we’re told, are absolute. Also, what exactly does a group disparity or statistic mean to anyone living in poverty who doesn’t qualify as a “person of color”? You won’t receive aid, but there’s good news: You’re helping the government create more equity by being poor. Congratulations! As my colleague Mike Gonzalez wrote for City Journal, many of these proposals are likely unconstitutional and illegal violations of the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause and Titles VI and VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. That clearly won’t stop the woke from pushing them on Americans anyway. “The woke Left understands that, as written and amended, the Constitution stands in the way of many of the things that it wants to do,” Gonzalez wrote. “This is why the Left has set about to cast the Constitution as illegitimate by, for example, purposely mischaracterizing the three-fifths compromise, pretending that the document perpetuated slavery, or calling it, as Kendi does, a ‘colorblind Constitution for a White-supremacist America.’” That’s a reference to Ibram X. Kendi, a so-called anti-racist intellectual who has become massively popular in media and in higher-education circles. Kendi aims to redefine racism as a collective, systemic act, rather than an individual one; denounces the concept of a colorblind society; and argues that racial discrimination can be good—as long as it’s pointed in the right direction. Whether you’ve heard of Kendi or not, his ideas are now everywhere and are being delivered in a steady and growing dose to Americans and other people throughout the West. America hasn’t always lived up to the promise of equality laid out in the Declaration of Independence. Slavery and segregation ran alongside our institutions and culture of liberty. But the founding generation designed our system to bend toward justice and the truth. In time, we have built upon our cornerstone of freedom and corrected our flaws as a nation. The intellectual vanguards of wokeness and critical race theory demand that the most fundamental aspects of self-government and preservation of individual rights be abandoned to serve the cause of destroying “systemic racism.” Arguing to the contrary may be racist and, if Kendi gets his way, practically illegal—at least illegal for anyone in a position of power. So, not only is America to be re-segregated, but unlike in our past—when the American people were persuaded and freely chose to abandon and prohibit race-based policies—this time we will have no choice, and will simply be at the whim of woke apparatchiks. Today, we may be debating whether our national origin is 1776 or 1619, but if our current course continues, our future will look more like 1917, the year of the communist Russian Revolution. For one group to rise, another must come down. Race will simply replace class as the prime motivator of the revolution and eventual tyranny. What we will end up with is misery, recriminations, and segregation now, tomorrow, and forever. Tags: Jarrett Stepman, The Daily Signal, Resegregation of AmericaTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Radical New Rules for Post-America
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 06:42 PM PDT
Americans privately fear these rules, while publicly appearing to accept them. 1) Money is a construct. It can be created from thin air. Annual deficits and aggregate national debt no longer matter much. Prior presidents ran up huge annual deficits. But at least there were some concessions that the money was real and had to be paid back. Not now. As we near $30 trillion in national debt and 110 percent of annual GDP, our elites either believe permanent zero interest rates make the cascading obligation irrelevant or the larger the debt, the more likely we will be forced to address needed income redistribution. 2) Laws are not necessarily binding anymore. Joe Biden took an oath to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.” But he has willfully rendered federal immigration laws null and void. Some rioters are prosecuted for violating federal laws, others not so much. Arrests, prosecutions, and trials are all fluid. Ideology governs when a law is still considered a law. Crime rates do not necessarily matter. If someone is carjacked, assaulted, or shot, it can be understood to be as much his fault as the perpetrator’s. Either the victim was too lax, uncaring, and insensitive, or he provoked his attacker. How useful the crime is to the larger agendas of the Left determines whether a victim is really a victim, and the victimizer really a victimized. 3) Racialism is now acceptable. We are defined first by our particular ethnic or religious tribe, only secondarily—if at all—by an American commonality. The unapologetic and explicit exclusion of whites from dorms, graduations, safe spaces, welfare, and federal aid programs is now noncontroversial. It is unspoken payback for perceived past sins, or a type of “good” racism. Falsely being called a racist makes one more guilty than falsely calling someone else a racist. 4) The immigrant is mostly preferable to the citizen. The newcomer, unlike the host, is not stained by the sins of America’s founding and history. Most citizens currently must follow quarantine rules, social distancing, stay out of school, and obey all the laws. Yet those entering the United States en masse and illegally need not follow such apparently superfluous COVID-19 rules. Their children should be immediately schooled without worry of quarantine. Immigrants need not worry about their illegal entry or residence in America. Our elites believe illegal entrants more resemble the “founders” than do legal citizens, about half of whom they consider irredeemable. 5) Most Americans should be treated as we would treat little children. They cannot be asked to provide an ID to vote. “Noble lies” by our elites about COVID-19 rules are necessary to protect “Neanderthals” from themselves. Americans deserve relief from the stress of grades, standardized testing, and normative rules of school behavior. They still are clueless about why it is good for them to pay far more for their gasoline, heating, and air conditioning. 6) Hypocrisy is passé. Virtue-signaling is alive. Climate change activists fly on private jets. Social justice warriors live in gated communities. Multibillionaire elitists pose as victims of sexism, racism, and homophobia. The elite need these exemptions to help the helpless. It is what you say to lesser others about how to live, not how you yourself live, that matters. 7) Ignoring or perpetuating homelessness is preferable to ending it. It is more humane for both the homeless and the public that thousands live, eat, defecate, and use drugs on public streets and sidewalks than it is to green-light affordable housing, mandate hospitalization for the mentally ill, and create sufficient public shelter areas. 8) McCarthyism is good. Destroying lives and careers for incorrect thoughts saves more lives and careers. Cancel culture and the Twitter Reign of Terror provide needed deterrence. Now that Americans know they are one wrong word, act, or look away from losing their jobs or livelihoods, they are more careful and will behave in a more enlightened fashion. The social media guillotine is the humane, scientific tool of the woke. 9) Ignorance is preferable to knowledge. Neither statue-toppling, name-changing, nor the “1619 Project” require any evidence or historical knowledge. Heroes of the past were simple constructs. Undergraduate, graduate and professional degrees reflect credentials, not knowledge. The brand, not what created it, is all that matters. 10) Wokeness is the new religion, growing faster and larger than Christianity itself. Its priesthood outnumbers the clergy, and exercises far more power. Silicon Valley is the new Vatican, and Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, and Twitter the new Gospels. Americans privately fear these rules, while publicly appearing to accept them. They still could be transitory and invite a reaction. Or they are already near-permanent and institutionalized. The answer determines whether a constitutional republic continues as once envisioned, or warps into something never imagined by those who created it. |
||
Will SCOTUS Eliminate the Fourth Amendment?
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 06:04 PM PDT A case before the High Court could either solidify or undermine our civil liberties. The First Circuit Court of Appeals sided with police, citing the “community care taking doctrine” that has already been recognized as an exception to the Fourth Amendment by the United States Supreme Court’s 1973 decision in Cady v. Dombrowski. In that case, the Court held that police officers did not violate the Fourth Amendment when they searched the trunk of a car that had been towed following an accident.The Court acknowledged that police cannot search private property without consent or a warrant, “except in certain carefully defined classes of cases.” Yet it further noted that “there is a constitutional difference between houses and cars.” A host of cases used that ruling to establish the doctrine of “community caretaking,” which Cady had defined as activities “totally divorced from the detection, investigation, or acquisition of evidence relating to the violation of a criminal statute.” In short, if a police officer might reasonably decide a warrantless search could prevent the community from being endangered, that search was constitutional. That kind of search was related to vehicles. Caniglia v. Strom is about whether or not it can be extended to homes. The First Circuit Court of Appeals certainly thought so. “At its core,” the court wrote, “the community caretaking doctrine is designed to give police elbow room to take appropriate action when unforeseen circumstances present some transient hazard that requires immediate attention. Understanding the core purpose of the doctrine leads inexorably to the conclusion that it should not be limited to the motor vehicle context. Threats to individual and community safety are not confined to the highways.” That giving cops such “elbow room” makes an utter mockery of the “right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects”? As Forbes columnist Evan Gerstmann points out, “The community caretaking exception is not limited to circumstances where there is no time to apply for a warrant.” In other words, “immediate attention” and “transient hazard” are extremely malleable terms. Police can simply decide — at their leisure — that an emergency has come into existence, thereby negating the need for a warrant. Thus, Gerstmann wonders, will police be able “to conduct warrantless searches of political protesters’ homes to make sure they aren’t planning on violent behavior at their next political rally?” Political protesters, or Americans who disagree with the policies of the Biden administration — or those who simply disagree with progressive dogma? As were are learning, courtesy of a ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, political considerations already motivate the U.S. Justice Department. According to the panel, the DOJ abused its power by denying bail to many of the protesters at the January 6 riot, even for misdemeanors, by alleging they were part of a vast conspiracy. As columnist Clarice Feldman so aptly explained, “Keeping in D.C. jails without bail some of the protestors who engaged in no specific violent acts at the Capitol until their cases can be heard was very obviously designed to compel them to plea bargain so they could return home to their families and jobs, and the three-judge panel wasn’t buying it.” It doesn’t take much of an imagination to envision a scenario where police conduct a warrantless search of someone’s home, find a gun, and subsequently allege that finding to be part of a conspiracy, precipitating the denial of bail — especially when they can conduct an ex post facto search of someone’s social media for what could be deemed “incendiary” statements. Statements that bring the First Amendment into play as well. Matt Agorist, an honorably discharged veteran of the USMC and former intelligence operator directly tasked by the NSA, sees the proverbial writing on the wall. “We have already seen tech giants like Facebook hand over the private messages of those who talked about the events of January 6,” he writes. “If [Caniglia v. Strom] is upheld, it could pave the way for cops to raid the home of those who engage in peaceful discourse based solely on the premise that violence might happen.” The 2002 movie “Minority Report” envisions a future where police have the legal authority to prevent crime before it happens. It was set in the year 2054, and much like George Orwell’s 1984, it was presented as a cautionary tale — not a how-to manual. Unsurprisingly, the Biden administration and attorneys general from nine states have sided with the police, and as Fox New host Tucker Carlson warns, “The Biden administration is asking the Supreme Court to approve of this and make it a precedent. They’re asking for permission to search any home they want, without a warrant and take what they want.” We used to call that “tyranny.” What an increasingly feckless Supreme Court will call it is anyone’s guess. Tags: Arnold Ahlert, Patriot Post, SCOTUS, Fourth Amendment, either solidify or undermine, our civil libertiesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
|
||
Kamala’s Husband Hosts the Virtual Passover From Hell
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 05:31 PM PDT The Biden administration is ruining everything. So it must ruin Passover.
by Daniel Greenfield: After twenty minutes of dead air, Biden’s Virtual Passover got underway. Biden, who can only be counted on to remain coherent for short stretches of time before launching into a random tirade, only showed up briefly. And that was the only good thing about Virtual Passover.Virtual Passover, like the Biden administration, makes no sense. But the Biden administration can’t be expected to ruin every aspect of our lives, without also ruining Passover.Kamala Harris had been delegated to take over the border crisis, and so her husband, Brentwood entertainment lawyer, Douglas Emhoff, took over the job of ruining Passover.Dubbed a “Virtual Passover Celebration”, it was not a celebration, it had nothing to do with Passover, but it was virtual. The one thing that the Biden administration can be relied on is to be virtual. And by being virtual, to offer nothing real. Passover wasn’t going to change that. Hosted by “Second Gentleman Douglas Emhoff”, also known as the father of Kamala’s obnoxious stepchildren, his scripted speeches proved that everything he knows about Judaism he learned from leftist anti-Israel radicals and late night reruns of The Nanny. Emhoff started out by touting Sharon Brous and IKAR. Brous is an anti-Israel leftist who heads up IKAR, dubbed by Variety as a “trendy, progressive congregation” whose members include Steven Spielberg. If your synagogue is profiled in Variety, it’s pretty bad: if it’s “trendy and progressive”, it’s even worse. That means IKAR is also exactly the kind of synagogue a Brentwood entertainment lawyer like Emhoff would promote. Then, Emhoff gave an insider’s wave to his own mention of IKAR. Brous had delivered the inauguration prayer for Obama and the inaugural prayer for Biden calling for “a justice driven, multiracial democracy.” Now she was back to ruin Passover. Sharon Brous is a member of the councils of J Street, and the New Israel Fund: because the only clergy with Jewish last names that are allowed at Biden events are anti-Israel. When Jews came out against the antisemitic and pro-Farrakhan leaders of the Women’s March, especially Linda Sarsour, Brous falsely claimed that the criticisms were, “a deliberate smear campaign from the far right to delegitimize the march itself.” “A much greater problem would be if the Jewish community stepped out of activism because we’re afraid that someone on the stage has a position on BDS different than our own,” she complained. To Brous, it would be a “much greater problem” to treat the efforts to destroy the Jewish State as more important than her extremist politics which align her with antisemites. When Rep. Ilhan Omar and Rep. Rashida Tlaib were barred from entry to Israel, Brous spewed a hateful unhinged rant, falsely claiming that American Jews “have spent years in hive mentality, pouncing on indications of anti-Semitism among Israel’s critics”, accused the Jewish State of a “52-year military occupation of millions of Palestinian people” and ranted that American Jews must “hear Palestinian voices and see what the Israeli government is so intent on members of Congress not seeing.” A terrorist spokesman couldn’t have said it any better than Brous. Having Brous attend a Passover celebration is like inviting a medieval blood libeler to a seder. Literally. Brous signed on to a letter attacking Israel for banning a JVP BDS activist, a hate group that provided space for antisemites, including activists associated with claims that Jews drink blood. It’s hard to think of anyone that belongs at a seder less than Brous: except maybe Pharaoh. But before Brous could spew all over the non-seder, Emhoff began by lecturing attendees at a virtual event about the importance of socially distancing and wearing masks. Nothing says freedom like telling people what to do. “Passover,” Emhoff then intoned with the dead smile and lifeless cadence of a late-night infomercial host making an unconvincing pitch for a supplement made out of dried kangaroos, “has always been one of my favorite holidays.” Then he relived memories from Nanny reruns of attending a seder in Brooklyn with “plastic cushion covers” and “gelatinous gefilte fish”. With the obligatory Jewish stuff out of the way, Emhoff shifted over to the “power of the Passover story” in the fight for justice. Naturally, not in the modern day Israelites trying to keep the aspiring killers of their sons from the Gazan vicinity of Egypt from getting to them. Emhoff insisted that Passover is about the “search for justice”. It’s not. If he had opened a Bible, or a Haggadah, the traditional text of the Passover seder, he would have noted a lack of calls for social justice, and a lot of praises of G-d for liberating the Jews from bondage through miracles. But attendees at IKAR can’t be expected to actually know anything about Judaism. In the theology of Tikkun Olam, every Jewish experience and holiday must be universalized, with the relentlessness of Marxist dogma, into class struggle and identity politics. Passover, like Purim, Chanukah, Yom Kippur, and Thursday must be about the search for justice. Emhoff, whose Judaism consists of distant memories of gefilte fish can’t be expected to know any better. In his opening address, Emhoff failed to mention G-d, but made Women’s History Month the focus of his talk. He complained that Judaism neglected the “midwives who saved Moses” by refusing to implement Pharaoh’s sex-selective post-partum abortion decree. Had those midwives been in California, Kamala Harris and Xavier Becerra would have locked them up. Margaret Sanger, the founder of Planned Parenthood, had made a special point of targeting Jewish families, had addressed the KKK and counted future Nazi eugenicists among her supporters, warning that if “the sickly and weak” are “allowed to propagate”, they will “produce a race of degenerates.” Pharaoh couldn’t have said it any better than Kamala’s favorite infanticide organization. But Emhoff was just reading from talking points prepared by the National Council of Jewish Women which, as I exposed in a previous article, has, like Brous, a history of supporting Sarsour, and other antisemitic leftists. His conclusion is that Passover is about “unsung heroes”, just like “the pandemic”. But there’s just one unsung hero in Emhoff’s speech. G-d. Douglas Emhoff may not believe in G-d. His daughter’s spokesman has insisted that, “Ella is not Jewish.” But then it might be nice if Doug would spare us all the tales of gefilte fish and plastic seat covers while mangling the beliefs of a religion he has no connection to beyond his last name, and using it to promote some of the worst enemies of the Jewish people. When Moses first confronts Pharaoh, the Egyptian tyrant declares that he does not know of a G-d. Emhoff doesn’t seem any more aware of the existence of a higher power than Pharaoh. Then Brous came on, all but screaming at the camera that the mission of the seder was to “imagine a more just and loving world”. But there wasn’t much love on the menu. Passover, the radical cleric insisted, was a “political story”. I doubt that Brous believes that there’s an apolitical story anywhere in the world and, like her ilk, can’t think of religion in other than political terms. Brous’ religion is politics, her deity is social justice, and her messiah is a community organizer. And so there followed an extended bout of yelling at the camera about justice and oppression, interspersed with meaningless New Age Obamaisms with an audience of one potted plant. Not Biden. He hadn’t joined the zoom seder yet. “We all belong to one another,” Brous declared. That’s the opposite of Passover which is instead the story of the birth of a particular nation through the belief, not in Emhoff’s “all faiths”, but the faith in a particular G-d. G-d doesn’t just take the Jews out of slavery, but to bring them to Israel. It’s understandable that Brous seems less interested in addressing that awkward part of the Passover story. But we can be thankful for one small Passover miracle, at least Brous didn’t repeat her Yom Kippur rant in which she falsely claimed that, “The treatment of the Palestinian people, the restriction of their rights, the daily humiliations and the stubborn expansion of settlements threatens to destroy not only Zionism, but to make a mockery of Judaism.” The only one making a mockery of Judaism is Brous and her extremist political agenda. The virtual celebration that celebrated nothing closed with Kamala Harris showing up to thank Brous for “all her work”. It was unclear if she meant her work supporting Sarsour or Omar. The Passover from Hell echoed everything that Jews had come to expect from Obama’s Jewish events, from the anti-Israel clergy to the exploitation and erasure of Jews from their own religion. From Emhoff to Brous, there’s only ever one message, which is that thousands of years of Jewish religion, history, and thought are reducible to the 19th century ideology of the Left. Pharaoh had set out to kill the Jews. The Left has done plenty of killing, but it also erases Jews. And, worse still, it makes Jews complicit in that erasure. Pharaoh did not allow the Jews to forget that they were slaves. Their modern enslavers convince many Jews that freedom is slavery, and that slavery is freedom, that survival is death, and that suicide is Jewish morality. Passover is the celebration of G-d’s redemption of the Jews from slavery to freedom. The Biden virtual seder is a call for the Jews and for all Americans to leave behind freedom for slavery. Tags: Daniel Greenfield, Front PageMag, Kamala’s Husband, Hosts the virtual, Passover From HellTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
President Biden’s American Job Killing Tax Plan
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 05:09 PM PDT by Newt Gingrich: There is a deep irony in President Joe Biden’s decision to start looking for support for his American Job Killing Tax Plan in Pittsburgh, Penn. And make no mistake: Biden’s so-called American Jobs Plan is a tax increase bill masquerading as an infrastructure bill – which is in turn masquerading as a jobs bill. It will not create jobs or ultimately improve our infrastructure. It will kill jobs and make infrastructure projects more expensive in time and money. Roughly 230 years ago, the same area was the central battlefield of the Whiskey Rebellion – in which Americans opposed (violently) an overreaching tax on whiskey imposed by the still new federal government. After the American Revolution, the states were broke and deeply in debt. Then-Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton concocted a plan for the federal government to take on the debt and to pay for it all via a by-the-gallon tax on whiskey production. President George Washington was skeptical at first, but the various state government leaders assured him this was a good idea. So, the Whiskey Tax was enacted in 1791. By September of that year, taxpayers in western Pennsylvania got so mad they started ambushing tax collectors, stripping them naked, tying them to trees, and stealing their horses. It was so bad, tax collectors started quitting. These kinds of things escalated over then next few years and by 1794, angry mobs had burned down the house of a pro-tax landowner in Allegheny County and assembled 7,000 men to march on Pittsburgh. Eventually President Washington had to assemble a 12,000-man federal militia to scare the mobs into submission. At the time, this was not just an issue for Pennsylvania. It was a serious threat to the stability of the new Union. So, today, we have President Biden, who is calling to immediately raise all domestic corporate taxes by one-third (from 21 percent to 28 percent), set a minimum 21 percent tax rate for multinational US corporations, raise taxes on oil and gas companies (which will cause the costs of gasoline, heating oil, and plastic to skyrocket), and levy a host of other new tax measures across the economy. I go into further detail about the plan on today’s episode of my Newt’s World podcast. All of these measures will mean that the companies that employ people will have to lay them off. Construction companies will have fewer workers to complete large infrastructure projects – and the projects themselves will have higher price tags because it will cost more to run the machines necessary to do the work. Only a true-believing leftwing Washington zealot could imagine a reality in which any of these measures will make America better or improve the lives of Americans. Raising taxes doesn’t create jobs – and it never has. If you need evidence, look at the unemployment rate after passage of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (which enacted much of the job-creating tax cuts President Biden is clumsily trying to destroy). Along with deep deregulation, the tax cuts led Americans to some of the lowest unemployment rates in modern US history (in fact, the lowest ever for Black and Latino Americans). Even some Democrats are recognizing that calling to raise taxes in the waning days of a global pandemic is just ridiculous. According to Axios, Rep. Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey warned “We need to be careful not to do anything that’s too big or too much in the middle of a pandemic and an economic crisis,” adding that “It’s got to be responsible and both parties need to be at the table. This can’t just be jammed through without input and consideration from the other side.” Meanwhile, Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-N.Y.) also told Axios he wouldn’t support the Biden Tax increases unless tax deductions for millionaires and billionaires in high-tax Democrat-run states (which President Trump capped) were reinstated, saying “I’m not voting for any changes in the tax code unless we reinstate SALT as part of the deal.” The US Chamber of Commerce – which has been calling for a sweeping infrastructure plan for years – called President Biden’s American Jobs Killing Tax Plan “dangerously misguided.” US Chamber Executive Vice President and Chief Policy Officer Neil Bradley said, “We strongly oppose the general tax increases proposed by the administration which will slow the economic recovery and make the U.S. less competitive globally – the exact opposite of the goals of the infrastructure plan.” Hamilton’s and Washington’s decision to levy new taxes on Americans who had just endured a war led to the Whiskey Rebellion. Why does President Biden think levying taxes on Americans who have just endured a pandemic will go over well? There’s something else President Biden could learn about the Whiskey Rebellion: It didn’t really end with Washington’s militia in Pittsburgh. The American people’s rejection of this enormous federal overreach – both the widespread tax and the federal response to the people in western Pennsylvania – gave rise to what is now the Republican Party. This ultimately led to the repeal of the Whiskey Tax in 1802 under Democratic-Republican President Thomas Jefferson. President Biden’s Jobs Killing Tax Plan is a terrible idea. He needs to stop and ask if anyone (outside of the Democratic Party’s extreme left flank) actually wants what he’s proposing. My guess is that after the COVID-19 crisis, Americans want to rebuild their businesses, get back to work, and recoup their savings – not pay more taxes. Tags: Newt Gingrich, President Biden’s, American Job Killing, Tax Plan, Gingtich360To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Three Ways The Pro Act Would Violate Workers’ Rights
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 04:33 PM PDT by AFP: Supporters of the Protecting the Right to Organize Act, or the PRO Act, claim that passing this legislation is necessary to protect the rights of Americans workers. They contend that independent contractors, including freelancers and gig workers, are suffering a crisis in the workforce and are being exploited by their clients. These contentions couldn’t be further from the truth. There is no crisis in independent contracting, but the PRO Act would create one. It would erode many of the rights of workers across the country — principally for the benefit of union leaders — including:
Here’s how the PRO Act would violate those rights. The PRO Act violates the right of workers to remain independent Like California’s Assembly Bill 5, which reclassified countless independent contractors and left many jobless, the PRO Act would use what is called an ABC test, a tool used by regulators to determine whether a worker should be pushed out of independent contracting and forced into a traditional employment arrangement. The PRO Act’s ABC test would be interpreted by the National Labor Relations Board, in largely arbitrary fashion. Here’s how it could work: An independent contractor approaches his client for a contract renewal. With the PRO Act now law, his client worries that, by misclassifying the worker as an independent contractor — a determination subject to the nebulous criteria of the ABC test — his business could incur a massive fine of $50,000 for each violation. The client would have two choices. He could either:
More than likely, the client will simply decide that the risk of violating federal law, and incurring a huge fine, is too high. He may also find that he can’t afford to place the worker on payroll. So, the client will likely decide to cut business with the worker entirely. Other companies could similarly blacklist independent contractors. This is precisely what happened in California. There is no reason to believe the PRO Act couldn’t replicate those results at a national level. The PRO Act violates the right to work, free of union coercion The PRO Act would upend every single right-to-work law, even those laws enshrined in state constitutions. Many workers would no longer have the freedom to join a union. Rather, they would have an obligation to join, and their refusal would mean that they couldn’t work at all. This is a contraction of workers’ rights. Moreover, it would hurt workers economically. Right-to-work states usually experience faster manufacturing and overall job growth and higher disposable and overall cost of living adjusted incomes. Only union leaders, who could then demand dues from their new members, stand to benefit from this policy. A violation of worker privacy and representation rights, union and non-union alike Most people would be hesitant hand out their private information to strangers, but the PRO Act would require it under federal law, exposing countless workers to harassment and intimidation. The bill wouldn’t be much kinder to union workers. It would strip them of their ability to vote on a union contract when binding arbitration is used and, for workers interested in unionizing, it would potentially rob them of the ability to vote by secret ballot and vote for a new union or non-union representation for an extended period of time. The PRO Act would harm countless American workers, union and non-union alike. Tell your lawmakers in Congress to reject this unfair bill. Tags: Americans For Prosperity, Three Ways, The Pro Act, Would Violate, Workers’ Rights To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Shanghaied in Tallahassee
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 04:07 PM PDT by Paul Jacob: How to prevent citizen control of government? The democracy-loathing Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is not merely wiping out Hong Kong’s civil liberties, but also aggressively undercutting the limited democratic input citizens previously had. You see, in December of 2019, in the last local elections before the pandemic proscribed the city’s protest movement, fledgling pro-democracy candidates won an incredible 87 percent of the seats. So the Chinazis postponed the next election, just to be safe.* Never a full-fledged one-person/one-vote democracy, Hongkongers only voted for 35 of the 70 Legislative Council seats. But now the CCP is increasing legislative seats to 90 while reducing to just 20 those that voters choose.** While tyranny may seem another growth industry where China outpaces us, don’t count out our politicians just yet. Last November, Florida voters decided four citizen initiatives, passing two and defeating two others — including one to make it tougher to pass constitutional amendments. Such “direct democracy” isn’t easy — almost 900,000 Sunshine State voters must sign. Then to pass, Florida amendments require a 60-percent vote. Yet for the third consecutive session the unfriendly Florida Legislature, dominated by Republicans, wants to make it even more difficult for regular people to communicate, associate, organize and petition an amendment onto the ballot, bypassing the pols: ♦ House Joint Resolution 61 would hike that 60-percent supermajority for passage to 66.7-percent. Should a measure that receives 66.5 percent of the vote lose? ♦ Senate Bill 1890 would outlaw contributions of greater than $3,000 to the petition phase of the campaign, which usually costs upwards of $5 million. It’s campaign finance “reform” specifically designed to silence citizens by blocking their ability to successfully place an issue before fellow voters. “[I]t should not be an impossible process,” offered Trish Neely with the League of Women Voters . . . . . . of Florida, that is. Not Hong Kong. This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. * Not to mention the police arresting aspiring pro-democracy candidates. Tags: Paul Jacob, Common Sense, Shanghaied in TallahasseeTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Washington Should Steer Clear of Tax on Vehicle Miles Traveled
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 03:43 PM PDT
by David Ditch: One of the most frequent claims from Joe Biden’s 2020 presidential campaign was that he would only seek tax increases on those earning more than $400,000 per year. That was always a dubious promise, given his expensive big-government agenda, and now we’re seeing examples of how a tax-and-spend approach can hit everyday Americans. Setting aside that the $400,000 goal post has been moved from individuals to households, which ropes in millions of additional families, a high-profile Cabinet member has touted a new tax that would necessarily hit anyone who drives a car (which is the vast majority of adults). Last Friday, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg praised the concept of imposing a nationwide vehicle miles traveled tax in an interview. He said that there likely would be several different tax increases as part of expected infrastructure legislation, which he claims is necessary because “it’s got to be transformative.” After Buttigieg’s comment went viral, a Transportation Department spokesman and Buttigieg himself stated that a mileage tax was not part of the upcoming infrastructure plan. Nonetheless, key members of Congress have been working to fund mileage tax pilot programs, which is the first step toward making the tax a reality. The concept of a mileage tax has been around for years. One of the main reasons why the idea has become more prominent is the increasing use of hybrid and electric vehicles, which pay little or nothing in gas taxes. As such, federal gas tax revenue has flattened. There are two ways of implementing the potential new tax. One would involve annual odometer readings. That would be vulnerable to rollback devices that can change a car’s mileage readout, and it would be a logistical nightmare to perform on all cars across the country every year. The other method would use GPS trackers to monitor the distance a car travels. That also has implementation concerns, such as whether older cars would have to have the devices retrofitted in and whether manufacturers would be forced to add them to new cars. In addition, there are serious privacy concerns regarding whether a vehicle’s GPS data could be used to monitor individual drivers. Any such system would need to have strict rules in place to safeguard civil liberties. That’s only the beginning of problems with imposing a nationwide mileage tax. Supporters of the tax regularly claim that it would replace the gas tax. There are good reasons to be skeptical of that promise. The astonishing size of current spending plans would require as much tax revenue as the federal government can get, meaning that any sort of tax cut is unlikely. Simply not paying for infrastructure spending by adding to the federal debt would be unwise, given the nation’s crumbling finances and growing deficits in the highway fund. Thus, a mileage tax would almost certainly be layered on top of the gas tax, meaning a tax increase for the vast majority of families. However, even if the gas tax were to be eventually phased out, supporters of a mileage tax are clear that the main goal of the tax is to bring in more revenue than the gas tax currently provides. Either way, that spells a tax increase, and one that will disproportionately hit blue-collar workers who can’t telecommute. Another reason to oppose the mileage tax is that it’s based on the idea that we need the federal government to meddle with infrastructure development more than it already does. The opposite is true. Federal involvement means that projects take longer to complete, cost more, and are less accountable and transparent than ones funded by the private sector or state and local governments. If a mileage tax becomes the law of the land, it would cement the federal government’s obsolete and counterproductive role in how we manage our transportation systems. It would also funnel more money to non-highway uses, such as bike paths or bloated compensation for transit workers. While local officials tend to support federal infrastructure spending because they too often see it as “free money,” this does not change the fact that more federal dollars will make state and local governments more dependent on Washington. An increasing centralization of political power and control in a single place goes against the founding principles that made America great, and it’s even less desirable as the nation becomes larger and more diverse. Cheerleaders for an ever-larger federal government should have to explain why it’s a good idea to make the nation more reliant on an increasingly dysfunctional Congress. A vehicle miles traveled tax would also be vulnerable to bureaucratic micromanagement, especially if it’s done with a GPS system. The federal government could charge different rates per mile, based on location, time of day, or traffic volume, and thus politicize the way we drive by playing favorites. Those who promote the new tax-and-spend mega-package will insist that the only choices are voting for their progressive grab bag or allowing our roads and bridges to fall apart. That’s a false choice. Rather than allowing the federal government to take over the funding of roads, bridges, trains, school construction, and water lines, we should reduce federal power and control. Getting rid of wasteful programs and red tape would mean we get more mileage per dollar spent, and devolving control from Washington would bring decision-making closer to home. That would be better for America’s roads and democracy alike than placing a new tax burden on hardworking families. Tags: David Ditch, The Heritage Foundation, Washington, Should Steer Clear, Tax, Vehicle Miles TraveledTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
The Photo Nobody Sees, Ignoring Root Causes, Killing King’s Dream
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 02:13 PM PDT
by Gary Bauer: The Photo Nobody Sees This chaos was completely avoidable. It did not exist last year. But it is a mess the Biden/Harris Administration intentionally created. This crisis is a small price to pay for their goal of importing new voters sympathetic to big government socialism and racial identity politics. (See below.) The photos of these children in their tinfoil wrappings, virtually on top of each other, spreading COVID among them, are heartbreaking. They also scream hypocrisy. Our government leaders are telling us that if we behave like good little boys and girls, and wear multiple masks to avoid the “impending doom,” we might be allowed to have a few people over for July 4th. Thank you, “Dear Leader.” But those same leaders are mocking us with these human COVID petri dishes at the border. What happened to six feet or even three feet of separation? What happened to wearing masks at all times? As revealing as the photos are, and as much as they pull on our heartstrings, there are plenty of other photos of children and the adults who love them that we are not seeing. It’s the photo of the working-class family in Cincinnati trying to figure out how to save enough money to put their kids through college. It’s the photo of a black child in Chicago who wonders if her mother will survive today’s trip to the grocery store. It’s the picture of the entrepreneur with three young kids wondering if his family business will ever be profitable again. It’s the military wife, whose husband is still in Iraq or Afghanistan, trying to hold it all together back here in the U.S. It’s the photo of a grieving mother or father “separated” from their child, who was murdered by an illegal alien. There isn’t a camera big enough to capture all the Americans born here or who came here legally who have no place to migrate. And the burden of paying for the expected one million-plus migrants who will cross our border this year will fall on their backs! Where is the compassion for these America taxpayers and their children? And why stop at one million? Why not two million migrants, as Joe Biden suggested? Why not more? Ignoring Root Causes So, I pointed out to them that some estimates suggest several hundred million people, who are legitimate refugees and victims of oppression around the world, would rather live somewhere else than where they currently are. About 150 million would like to come to the United States. I asked the witnesses if they were president for a day how many migrants would they accept into the U.S. Suddenly, these very forthcoming witnesses were having difficulty coming up with a number. When I asked them if our real goal should be addressing the root causes of what is driving people out of their home countries — redoubling our efforts to defeat socialism, communism and radical Islam — none of them wanted to have that conversation. Killing King’s Dream What they are teaching today – critical race theory – is killing King’s dream of a society where we are judged based on the content of our character rather than the color of our skin. Case in point: A video has emerged from Loudoun County, Virginia. In the video, a teacher shows a student a picture of two women and asks what he sees. The student says, “It’s just two people chillin.” The teacher asks, “There’s nothing more to that picture?” And so it goes until the teacher is harassing the student about the race of each woman. That’s critical race theory. It turns Martin Luther King’s legacy and teachings upside down. It is not striving for a racially blind society. It is striving for a society where the only thing you can see is race. This isn’t an isolated incident. This isn’t just one bad apple. When parents began organizing to fight back against this radical agenda, teachers and elected officials — public servants paid by the taxpayers — secretly plotted to hack, dox and smear them! I am pleased to report that there is now an active recall campaign against six Loudoun County school board members. I know there are some people who are skeptical of vaccines and don’t trust the government and medical elites. We can have that debate. But there is no debate about this: Critical race theory is a poison being injected into the brains of our children that will destroy this country more efficiently than any virus or vaccine developed to fight it. My friends, you must fight for your local schools! It will be unpleasant. You will be criticized. You may lose friends. But unless we’re willing to sit by and lose the country in one more generation, we must stop what is happening in our public schools. If you can, I urge you to consider Christian schools, homeschooling, creating pods or coops of like-minded parents who can take turns teaching your children. But we cannot allow this to continue in our public schools that we are all paying for, and where the vast majority of our children are being indoctrinated. CNN’s Alternate Reality I’ll let the quote stand on its own — as an indictment of anything else CNN has to say, especially its reporting on the Russia collusion hoax over the past four years. CNN clearly has a problem with basic facts. “Though the two executive orders signed by Noem do not explicitly mention transgender athletes, they reference the supposed harms of the participation of ‘males’ in women’s athletics — an echo of the transphobic claim . . . that transgender women are not women. The orders also reference ‘biological sex,’ a disputed term that refers to the sex as listed on students’ original birth certificates. “It’s not possible to know a person’s gender identity at birth, and there is no consensus criteria for assigning sex at birth.” CNN regularly chants the mantra, “Follow the science.” The paragraph above from its “news” report is sheer left-wing, idiotic ideology and a mockery of every fact of biological science. If you would like to share your thoughts with CNN about its reporting, click here. Tags: Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, The Photo Nobody Sees, Ignoring Root Causes, Killing King’s DreamTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
The Left’s ‘Jim Crow’ Rhetoric Is Absurd, Insulting, and Dishonest
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 11:02 AM PDT
by Hans von Spakovsky: The obnoxious—and patently false—attacks on Georgia’s new election reform bill, which compare it to the hideous Jim Crow laws of the long-gone “Old South,” are absurd. They are also insulting to those who actually were kept from registering and voting decades ago. The polemical taunts are directed toward two of the bill’s provisions, one that extends the state’s decade-old ID requirement to absentee ballots and another that attempts to prevent campaigns and party activists from trying to corruptly influence voters by providing them with money, gifts, food, and water in polling places. The critics don’t seem to have actually read the bill or understand that similar provisions already exist in federal law. Let’s take a look at the first provision, which requires voters to provide an ID to receive an absentee ballot. Georgia has had a law in place since the 2008 presidential election that requires a voter to show a government-issued photo ID when he or she votes in person. When a federal judge threw out the lawsuit against the law in 2007 (amid similar “Jim Crow” comparisons), he specifically noted that in two years of litigation, the challengers could not produce a single resident of the state who would be unable to vote because of the new ID requirement. Georgia provides a free photo ID to anyone who doesn’t already have one. We have more than a decade’s worth of Georgia’s turnout data in election after election that graphically shows that the ID provision does not prevent anyone—including minorities—from voting. Simply extending the ID requirement to absentee ballots is a much-needed, commonsense reform that voters support. But what does the provision actually say? Section 25 of the bill doesn’t even require voters to provide a photocopy of their ID. Instead, the voter can simply write “the number of his or her Georgia driver’s license or identification card” on the application for the absentee ballot. Moreover, if the voter doesn’t have such a Georgia ID card, she can “provide a copy of a form of identification listed” in another code section of Georgia law (§ 21-2-417(c)). And what does that code section say? That you can satisfy the ID requirement with a “copy of a current utility bill, bank statement, government check, paycheck, or other government document that shows the name and address of such elector.” Now, where do you think the Georgia Legislature got that language? It got it from federal law, the Help America Vote Act of 2002. Section 303(b) of this law (codified at 52 U.S.C. § 21083) requires an individual who registered to vote by mail and who is voting for the first time in a federal election (whether in person or by mail) to instead provide “a copy of a current utility bill, bank statement, government check, paycheck, or other government document that show the name and address of the voter” if he doesn’t have a “current and valid photo identification.” The language on voter IDs for absentee ballots in the new Georgia law is thus identical to the language in federal law, promulgated through the Help America Vote Act. And guess who voted to approve this federal law in 2002? Why, then-Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware. In fact, the vote was 92 to 2, and included in the “yes” votes were Sens. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.; Dick Durbin, D-Ill.; Harry Reid, D-Nev.; and Patrick Leahy, D-Vt. Were they all imposing “Jim Crow” on American voters? I don’t seem to recall the Major League Baseball Players Association boycotting any of the states of these senators—or any of the other senators who voted in favor of the Help America Vote Act. Or boycotting its own stadiums, which require IDs to pick up will call tickets. The second provision in question prevents food and water to be given to voters waiting at the polls. Like almost every state, Georgia prohibits electioneering inside or within 150 feet of a polling place or within 25 feet of any voters waiting in line to vote. The prior law prohibited the solicitation of “votes in any manner or by any means or method, nor shall any person distribute or display any campaign material” within such distances. Section 33 of the new bill simply added “nor shall any person give, offer to give, or participate in the giving of any money or gift, including, but not limited to, food and drink, to any elector” within such distances. In other words, a candidate and his campaign staffers can’t show up at a polling place with a truckload of pizzas and sodas and start giving them to voters standing in line. The clear intent here is to prevent campaigns, candidates, and political operatives from unduly influencing or bribing voters with money or gifts, including food and drink. Similarly, federal law (52 U.S.C. § 10307) also prohibits paying or offering to pay anyone to register to vote or to vote. In fact, this ban was part of the original Voting Rights Act of 1965. According to the U.S. Justice Department’s handbook on “Federal Prosecution of Election Offenses,” this statute has been broadly interpreted to apply to “anything having monetary value, including cash, liquor, lottery chances, and welfare benefits such as food stamps.” The idea that Georgia is somehow doing something nefarious by preventing gift-giving at the polls is bizarre and ignores the unfortunate, long history we have of this type of corruption and undue influence being used in our elections. By the way, unmentioned in the hysterical criticisms is new language making it OK for poll officials to make “self-service water from an unattended receptacle” available to “an elector waiting in line.” The Georgia bill that was just signed into law by Gov. Brian Kemp has many provisions intended to protect the security and integrity of the election process, not prevent eligible individuals from voting or from succumbing to thirst while waiting in line to vote. You have to have both access and security in elections and the criticisms of Georgia are intentionally misleading, shortsighted, and show remarkable ignorance of how voting and elections are actually conducted. Tags: The Left’s, ‘Jim Crow’ Rhetoric, Is Absurd, Insulting, DishonestTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
A Bad Hand
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 10:34 AM PDT Some are feeling tinges of “mark of the beast” in Biden’s call for vaccine Passports.
Tags: AF Branco, editorial cartoon, a bad handTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Democrats See Biden And Harris As Religious
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 09:38 AM PDT by Bill Donohue comments on the results of a new Pew Research Center survey: A survey by Pew Research Center on the public’s perception of how religious the president and vice president tells us a great deal about the way Republicans and Democrats respond to this issue. Virtually every poll has shown that Republicans score higher on measures of religiosity (beliefs and practices) than Democrats, and this indicator proves revealing when analyzing the Pew survey. Among all adults, 27% see President Joe Biden as being “very religious.” The difference is striking between Republicans and Democrats: only 7% of the former view Biden this way as compared to 45% of Democrats. If we combine “somewhat religious” with “very religious,” only 36% of Republicans see the president as religious as compared to 88% of Democrats. Most Americans, 65%, are not sure what Vice President Kamala Harris’ religion is; there is no difference between Republicans and Democrats on this score, each weighing in at 64%. When asked about her overall religiosity score—combining “very religious” with “somewhat religious”—less than half (46%) of Republicans see her as religious as compared to seven in ten Democrats (69%). Why do 9 in 10 Democrats see Biden as religious when only a little more than a third of Republicans do? Why do most Democrats see Harris as religious, even though they don’t know what her religious affiliation is? The findings suggest the more secular a person is, the more likely he is to see public figures as religious. Conversely, the more religious a person is, the more exacting he is in labeling public figures religious. In other words, our perceptions about how religious a public figure is, are guided by our own religiosity. Why do these data matter? We have seen from other studies that secularists are increasingly likely to see religion in a negative light. From this survey, we know it doesn’t take much for them to judge someone as religious. Together, the two perceptions are problematic. Even a whiff of religiosity is enough to make secularists wary. This explains why the more militant among them declare that those who say the Pledge of Allegiance are “Christian Nationalists.” Perception is not necessarily reality, but because it functions that way, the faithful are the ones who should be wary of secularists, not vice versa. Tags: Bill Donohue, Catholic League, Democrats, See Biden And Harris, As ReligiousTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
Time to play ball, not politics, on Georgia election law
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 09:16 AM PDT Moving the All-Star Game would put Major League Baseball at odds with basic constitutional principles but would also create a further chasm between the game and much of its fan base.
by Rick Manning: Major League Baseball is being pressured by the left to move its All Star Game from Atlanta, Georgia in retaliation for the state of Georgia’s passage of common sense voter integrity laws, including requiring voter identification. Led by the player’s union, this attempt to intimidate Georgia and indeed, every state with a major league baseball team into accepting voter fraud as the norm must be rejected.The American principle of “one person, one vote” is critical to the functioning of our system and the legitimacy of our government. The state of Georgia’s actions to increase voter integrity and election security will make certain that this fundamental element to our nation’s freedom is protected.It is befuddling why anyone would object to providing voter identification to cast a ballot. Yet, this is the crux of the Georgia law whether it be through mail or in-person voting. The Georgia law even allows, for the first time in law, the use of drop boxes for depositing one’s ballot. It merely makes certain that the drop boxes are in secure locations set up to receive ballots. And it expands Sunday voting to two Sundays prior to election-day rather than the previous one.This article by Rich Lowry in National Review outlines many of the deliberate misrepresentations about the Georgia legislation where opponents prefer to cast emotion-laden aspersions rather than speak to the common sense and public supported specifics of the law. Moving the All-Star Game — thereby punishing the city of Atlanta and the Atlanta Braves franchise for no good reason — would put Major League Baseball at odds with basic constitutional principles but would also create a further chasm between the game and much of its fan base. Last year did incredible damage to the game with the short season led off by tributes to radical, Marxist-led Black Lives Matter. After seeing the opening day ceremony at Nationals Park, I, personally, ended my MLB.TV subscription and as an Angels fan, only saw Mike Trout take one at bat while at a bar picking up a take-out order. I did not even know that the hated Dodgers had won the World Series until weeks after it was over as my sports boycott extended to all sports talk radio. While my story is just that, the voter integrity issue is much more important than pandering to the media through virtue signaling ceremonies. Elections must be honestly and fairly administered, in order to have the government enjoy legitimacy through the consent of the governed. Measures to make certain that each person’s vote counts equally should be universally supported and it would be detrimental to the country if Major League Baseball knelt to its union leadership on this fundamental issue. MLB headquarters in New York City should reject the MLBPA demands, and fans should contact each team’s union reps expressing concerns about their union getting involved in an issue that players rightfully should have differing perspectives on. In just a few days, umpires will be yelling “Play Ball” for real in the spring for the first time in two years. Let’s just let the boys of summer play and the fans enjoy, without unnecessarily fouling the air with the stench of partisan pandering. Tags: Rick Manning, Americans for Limited Government, Time to play ball, not politics, Georgia, election lawTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
||
The Federal Behemoth and Your Rights
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 09:03 AM PDT by Frank Miniter: When dealing with the federal government, experience doesn’t just add nuance to an understanding of the system. Often, interactions with the federal bureaucracy harden earned cynicism. While deep in the research for a book titled Spies in Congress, I once had a U.S. Attorney smirk at me in the back of a courtroom when I asked why a defendant had just been given a sweetheart deal, even though a lot of evidence showed this man had been spying on members of Congress and had broken multiple laws. The U.S. Attorney said, “If you don’t like it, you can call our media-relations department.” That U.S. Attorney had just been brought in, and another removed, to make a very big scandal go away. It worked. Another time, an official with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) who was giving me, and a reporter from Mother Jones, a tour of the National Tracing Center (NTC) in Martinsburg, W. Va., told me gun stores were supplying criminal gangs with guns. As the reporter for Mother Jones wrote that down, I asked, “If that’s the case, please show me the records in this facility from the gun stores the ATF shut down for illegal sales.” Though the facility was buried in records from Federal Firearms Licensees (FFL) that had, at some point, gone out of business (in which case, FFLs must send their records of sales over the past 20 years to the ATF), this official couldn’t point out a single file in the building that had come from a gun store busted for wrongdoing. As his fake narrative fell over like a Potemkin village in a wind storm, he winced and said, “Well, it is hard to catch them.” Now, as this was being written, and after we filed a complaint, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) finally responded to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request from America’s 1st Freedom. A similar request from the anti-gun, Michael Bloomberg-funded publication The Trace had been fulfilled weeks before. I know they got the information because The Trace went public with the documents they received. As this is being written, a second request got some documents out of them, but they still didn’t give us all the records they gave The Trace. This FOIA request had to do with Dr. John Lott’s short tenure at the DOJ’s Office of Justice Programs, an offshoot of the DOJ that doles out billions of dollars in grants annually, some to academics and groups that promote gun control. You’ll soon see more on what Lott was trying to accomplish in the DOJ and how so much of our tax money is funneled to research designed to give the mainstream media talking points to push for more restrictions on our Second Amendment rights. This political favoritism and gaming of the system is important to bring up now, as the Biden administration is beginning to use the bureaucracy to impact our rights in many ways. Still, though the system can be unfair and overtly political, it is nevertheless often responsive to sunlight. As so many in the mainstream media won’t do the honest reporting, or tell you the truth on topics related to our Second Amendment rights, it is especially important for us to do so. The truth does matter. This is especially true during a time of growing censorship and political spin from an administration that doesn’t respect our individual rights. Tags: Federal Behemoth, Your Rights, NRA, America’s 1st Freedom, Frank Miniter To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
You are subscribed to email updates from ARRA News Service. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. |
Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
42.) NOQ REPORT
NOQ Report Daily |
- Melissa Tate offers an antidote to Critical Race Theory
- Why young adults are the most frightened of Covid, even though they are the least at risk
- Eric Matheny: One year in and it’s only Day 8 of 15 to slow the spread of WuFlu
- Cuomo’s concentration camps: NY Senate passes bill allowing government to detain contagious people
- Wars and ‘following the science’ are sure paths to tyranny
Melissa Tate offers an antidote to Critical Race Theory
Posted: 02 Apr 2021 03:20 AM PDT The spread of Critical Race Theory has become a major problem in America. Its false doctrines are promoted by government, businesses, and schools. Condemning it for the radical leftist indoctrination that it is often yields gaslighting; anyone who opposes the tenets of Critical Race Theory must be racist according to the growing “woke” crowd. This has caused many, particularly on the right, to ignore it or change the subject in fear of being called out for inherent bigotry.
One conservative Christian activist won’t be silent on the subject. Melissa Tate often calls Critical Race Theory out for being the Marxist ideology that it is. She takes heat every time she does but she doesn’t back down. In fact, she’s written a book, a rebuttal if you will, that highlights the realities in America regarding race. “Choice Privilege: What’s Race Got To Do With It?” challenges the teachings of people like Robin DiAngelo and other Neo-Marxists who paint a picture that the only way to fight racism and segregation is through… wait for it… racism and segregation. Their cognitive dissonance is apparent, but far too many Americans refuse to acknowledge that separating people based on the color of their skin is taking steps backwards, not forward to a society in which racial differences are not considerations for success in America. “My destiny has never been pre-determined by my skin color, more than anything else, it is being shaped by the choices I make daily, good and bad,” she wrote. This book follows author Melissa Tate’s early life growing up in Africa and eventual migration to the United States. Tate contends that, in America, it is a person’s good choices, not their skin color, that determines the upward trajectory of his or her life. After migrating to the United States at age nineteen for college, her experience in America has been a living contradiction to the false “white privilege” narrative. In spite of being “black in America,” Tate has been able to achieve great success to which she credits to hard work, determination, good choices, and her faith in God. Her story, like many African immigrants, is at odds with propaganda peddled by the left. She lives a life of privilege as the fruit of hard work, doing things in the right order and prioritizing life in a way that places God first, then family, then her career. Tate discusses the cultural parallels between African culture vs neo-Black American culture as a means to explain the economic disparities seen between African immigrants (who tend to thrive in America) and Black Americans. The larger neo-Marxist agenda behind critical race theory ideology, as a plot to racially divide and conquer the America from within, is discussed extensively in this book. Tate exposes this dangerous and divisive ideology as a “false religion” that is antithetical to biblical principles and an assault on the teachings of Martin Luther King, Jr. Tate offers solutions on how America can overcome this agenda, heal the racial divide, and fulfil its God-given destiny as the beacon of light, freedom, and prosperity in the world. On the latest episode of NOQ Report, JD had an excellent conversation with Tate about her history and the forces that have driven her to success. Her life contradicts the narratives that come forth from Critical Race Theory which is why she is often the target of the fiercest attacks from the radical left. If there was an ounce of truth to Critical Race Theory, people like Melissa Tate would be struggling to survive. Instead, she thrives based on hard work and good choices, just as any American can. Her new book is a must read.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including usJust when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip. It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics. The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth. The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled. There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies. During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Melissa Tate offers an antidote to Critical Race Theory appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Why young adults are the most frightened of Covid, even though they are the least at risk
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 07:01 PM PDT Nearly 3 million Americans are being vaccinated against COVID-19 each day, but the “return to normal” may not be as close as many hope. Article by Jon Miltimore from FEE. A new survey shows many Americans have concerns about interacting with others once the pandemic is over. “A YouGov poll of more than 4,000 people finds that two in five (39%) Americans say they are very or fairly nervous about the idea of interacting with people socially again,” writes YouGov data journalist Jamie Ballard. While the high percentage of Americans expressing angst about socializing after the pandemic comes as a surprise, the breakdown along age groups is even more surprising. “Among 18-to 24-year-olds, 50% say they are nervous about it. A similar number of 25-to 34-year-olds (47%) feel the same way,” Ballard writes In other words, nearly half of Americans between 18 and 34 are concerned about returning to a normal social life after the pandemic. In contrast, just 31 percent of those over 55 responded that they are nervous about interacting with people again. The contrast is noteworthy because it’s widely understood that young people are far less likely to be hospitalized or die from COVID. But how less likely? Our World in Data has a chart breaking down the case fatality rates in South Korea, China, Italy, and Spain. The data show the case fatality rate is about 0.2 percent for people in their 20s and 30s, a tiny fraction compared to people over 60. Data from the US tell a similar story. “The death rate in New York City for adults aged 75 years and older was around 2,344 per 100,000 people as of March 28, 2021,” researcher John Elflein notes at Statista. That is about 500 times higher than the death rate (5 per 100,000) for people in the 18-24 age range. Nationwide, research from the Heritage Foundation shows that adults aged 25-34 account for less than three thousand of the official 565,000 COVID-related deaths in the US. (Many of these deaths, it should be noted, are linked to comorbidities.) This data should come as no surprise. Nearly a year ago, Stanford University’s Dr. John Ioannidis noted COVID’s infection fatality rate is “almost zero” for people under 45.
An Inverse RelationshipAll the official data point in the same direction: young people have the least to fear from COVID-19. Yet the YouGov poll also shows they are the most afraid. This is odd. As influencers noted on Twitter, the level of comfort people feel in returning to normal life is inversely correlated to their level of actual risk.
This invites an important question: why are young people more afraid? One obvious answer is young adults might simply be unaware their risk of serious illness is low. As I recently noted, Americans in general are wildly misinformed about the risk of hospitalization from COVID-19, with roughly a third of Americans believing the chances of being hospitalized with the virus are 50 percent. (In actuality, it’s closer to one percent.) The reasons for this are not hard to find. Studies have shown that US media essentially created a climate of fear by publishing a flood of negative news in 2020. Indeed, an Ivy League-led study concluded that 91 percent of US articles in major media were negative in tone, nearly double when compared to non-US media. The negative news, the researchers noted, continued even when the coronavirus was ebbing and when positive medical breakthroughs were being achieved. “Stories of increasing COVID-19 cases outnumber stories of decreasing cases by a factor of 5.5 even during periods when new cases are declining,” researchers noted. Media may only be one part of the equation, however. Digital technology may be another. ‘Young People Less Likely to Die From Covid’While writing this article, I had to find statistics on the risks of COVID for young adults. To find the information, I did what I normally do: I went to Google and typed in keywords for what I was looking to find—“young people less likely to die from Covid.” I was expecting to find on top a bunch of articles and research showing that young people have relatively little to fear from the coronavirus. That’s not what happened. Here are the top results I got:
This is a big deal. We live in a digital world, and Google is the biggest search engine on the planet, processing more than 3.5 billion searches every day. Millions of people probably use Google every day to find information about the coronavirus. But instead of finding articles that point out coronavirus is hundreds of times more deadly for people over 60 than people under 40, anyone who Googled about young people and risks from coronavirus would find a bunch of super-scary headlines. Again, this isn’t to say young people face no risk from COVID. But the medical reality is that children and young adults are more likely to die from the seasonal flu, pneumonia, or a car crash than COVID-19. Clearly most Americans aren’t aware of this. The Price of the DisconnectThe YouGov poll results show there is a disconnect between perception and reality when it comes to COVID-19. Unfortunately, this disconnect has real-world consequences. “Those who overestimate risks to young people or hold an exaggerated sense of risk upon infection are more likely to favor closing schools, restaurants, and other businesses,” the authors of a recent Franklin Templeton/Gallup study concluded. This is important because these restrictions are quite serious. Closing parts of the economy is no small matter. These actions are associated with numerous unintended consequences—job losses, mental health deterioration, increased global poverty, surging loneliness, health procedures deferred, and more. Meanwhile, the documented benefits of these restrictions remain elusive. In 2020, we witnessed unprecedented infringements on fundamental civil liberties. And it all stemmed from fear. Worse, despite the presence of numerous successful vaccines and crashing case numbers, the alarm bells keep sounding. CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky is warning of “impending doom,” while others warn we must begin planning for a “permanent pandemic.” The New York Times is using Florida, which lifted all pandemic restrictions last summer, as a cautionary tale by using rather tortured analysis.
Considering all this, it’s no surprise that many young people are terrified of the virus. But we’d do well to remember that fear is the pathway to subservience. “If you want to control someone, all you have to do is to make them feel afraid,” the author Paulo Coelho wrote in The Devil and Miss Prym. It’s time to stop being afraid. And the first step comes through understanding. ‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including usJust when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip. It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics. The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth. The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled. There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies. During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Why young adults are the most frightened of Covid, even though they are the least at risk appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Eric Matheny: One year in and it’s only Day 8 of 15 to slow the spread of WuFlu
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 06:52 PM PDT
Does anyone else remember when we were told that it was only going to be 15 days to slow the spread? I’m not going to lie it was a super weird experience for myself. Last March I was way sicker than I ever remember being for a long time in my life. Now, I have no idea if it was Wu-Flu or not, and I never went in to get tested because the virus was still only going on in the coasts as well as in China.
My wife was equally as ill the week before me, and sure enough, as soon as she got better I got hit with whatever it was like a ton of bricks. As soon as I started coughing my wife threw me in our spare bedroom where I slept for what seemed like an eternity, sleeping from sun up to sun down for almost a solid two weeks. Then the stupid happened, you know our sound guy Huey? Well, he texted me while I was starting to recover asking me if I needed anything from the store because they are getting absolutely wiped out. As I drove his way to the store, I got a phone call from my boss at the time stating that I’ll be working from home till this all blows over. I just woke up in a nightmare, “What in the world is going on?!” I got to the store and it was absolutely packed, I loaded up with as many dried goods and meat that I could fit in my pantry and freezer. All the toilet paper was practically gone, It was like I woke up to some sort of third world country where the bread lines ran out of bread. So, after getting back home, I had a moment to gather my thoughts, and do some reading up on what in the world I just woke up to, and my conclusion has changed a little since then, but not enough to be noteworthy. This virus was nothing more than just another over hyped flu. If the media would have just chilled out and told people to take some minor precautions, then I wouldn’t have had to beat an old lady with a stick to get my hands on some precious toilet paper. It was the start of a government takeover like we have never seen before within America. There was a reason for government officials to create a mass panic among the people. They used a disease that I believe was created by China to reset the markets and to analyze how the world reacted to a biological attack. The Left was not about to let a tragedy go to waste and disappoint their Chinese overlords. Due to the lack of information at hand and the mass hysteria, the borders were closed, and we were told to quarantine for 15 days to help slow the spread. It was all about ensuring the hospitals wouldn’t be overran with patience coming down with the virus, as well as running out of ventilators. We were told by Fauci not to wear masks and that they were useless and we should save them for the medical professionals that needed them. I can’t really blame anyone at this point, the virus was so new, and the information coming in was so vast and contradicting due to how young it was. What got me going though, was that this “lock-down” stretched past the 15 day point, way past the 15 day point. We were told to remain in our homes, when we were starting to understand that the fatality rate wasn’t all that high, and that herd immunity was on the table as a very viable option. Schools remained closed even though children being affected by this virus was so absolutely minimal it was almost zero. This turned into nothing more than the government attempting to see how much power they could take from the American people out of fear. Men and women lost their jobs, their livelihoods, their purpose, leading to suicide rates skyrocketing as people lost the ability to take care of their families. The saddest part of all this is that children began to kill themselves more and more after being isolated from the world and away from the schools and their friends. We began to dehumanize one another by wearing the oh so sacred masks that Fauci now deemed life altering in public. We began treating one another as infectious germ bags rather than the friendly neighbor down the street. If you didn’t wear a mask, you were an outcast ripe for the picking by the leftist mob, waiting eagerly to sink their claws into the next victim while drooling for acceptance from their “woke” brothers and sisters. The masks became not a symbol of help, but as a symbol of obedience to your government masters, and you will submit or you will not eat. So the story goes in some places. It’s now been over a year since we locked down, and it’s way past time to say enough is enough. A vaccine has come to light faster than ever recorded in history thanks to “Operation Warp Speed” from the Trump administration. Those most at risk to the virus now have the ability to lower their chances of contracting Wu-Flu dramatically. Myself being young and a bit skeptical of the vaccine will be totally fine contracting the Kung Flu, and fighting it off, if I haven’t already. The fact of the matter is, it’s time to get back to normal, we have nothing to be afraid of anymore. The more masks Fauci tells you to wear, the longer you have to quarantine after taking the vaccine, the longer you have to remain locked up inside your home is nothing more than a political ploy to force you to bow before your political masters. Enough is enough, we are social creatures meant for one another company, the divide this virus has caused has done nothing more but please China. It’s time that We The People take back our country and remind our political leaders that they work for us. We do not sacrifice our freedoms for someones false sense of safety, no, instead we take our freedoms and we push forward. We allow the innovation of our brothers and sisters to develop new vaccines and cures unhindered, we allow the creative minds of America to prosper, and the sweat and blood to flow from our working class so they may earn for their families with pride, knowing that they are the reason we live in warm sheltered homes. My fellow Americans, I plead with you to remember that we are not the descendants of fearful men.
‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including usJust when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip. It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics. The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth. The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled. There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies. During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Eric Matheny: One year in and it’s only Day 8 of 15 to slow the spread of WuFlu appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Cuomo’s concentration camps: NY Senate passes bill allowing government to detain contagious people
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 11:31 AM PDT The New York state senate just passed a bill that will allow government officials to apprehend and indefinitely detain people who are considered a threat to the public based on their health status. And it’s not just sick people, either. If the bill becomes law, they will be able to detain contacts of those who have been infected. As Daniel Horowitz from The Blaze noted, this is how American concentration camps get started.
Assembly Bill A416 “relates to the removal of cases, contacts and carriers of communicable diseases who are potentially dangerous to the public health.” I would say you can’t make this up but people like Aldous Huxley and George Orwell came close. Here’s how the opening of the bill reads with emphasis added: AN ACT to amend the public health law, in relation to the removal of cases, contacts and carriers of communicable diseases who are potentially dangerous to the public health THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND ASSEMBLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS: Section 1. The public health law is amended by adding a new section 2120-a to read as follows: 2. UPON DETERMINING BY CLEAR AND CONVINCING EVIDENCE THAT THE HEALTH OF OTHERS IS OR MAY BE ENDANGERED BY A CASE, CONTACT OR CARRIER, OR SUSPECTED CASE, CONTACT OR CARRIER OF A CONTAGIOUS DISEASE THAT, IN THE OPINION OF THE GOVERNOR, AFTER CONSULTATION WITH THE COMMISSIONER, MAY POSE AN IMMINENT AND SIGNIFICANT THREAT TO THE PUBLIC HEALTH RESULTING IN SEVERE MORBIDITY OR HIGH MORTALITY, THE GOVERNOR OR HIS OR HER DELEGEE, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE COMMISSIONER OR THE HEADS OF LOCAL HEALTH DEPARTMENTS, MAY ORDER THE REMOVAL AND/OR DETENTION OF SUCH A PERSON OR OF A GROUP OF SUCH PERSONS BY ISSUING A SINGLE ORDER, IDENTIFYING SUCH PERSONS EITHER BY NAME OR BY A REASONABLY SPECIFIC DESCRIPTION OF THE INDIVIDUALS OR GROUP BEING DETAINED. SUCH PERSON OR GROUP OF PERSONS SHALL BE DETAINED IN A MEDICAL FACILITY OR OTHER APPROPRIATE FACILITY OR PREMISES DESIGNATED BY THE GOVERNOR OR HIS OR HER DELEGEE AND COMPLYING WITH SUBDIVISION FIVE OF THIS SECTION. In essence, if the Governor or his designated health czars deem a person to be potentially infected with a disease that has an undisclosed fatality rate, that person can be detained in a facility of the official’s choosing. Any person who has had contact with the potentially infected person can also be detained in the same manner. But it gets worse. This bill isn’t specifically for those who are known to be potentially infected. It can also apply to groups who are designated as potentially infected. This bill grants the power to the Governor and his czars to declare a wide variety of circumstances to be worthy of indefinite detention, aka quarantine. For example, if someone is potentially infected with a dangerous disease and they went to a bar, the Governor could declare that anyone who was at the bar that night should be detained until they are cleared. There is supposed to be a 72-hour limit, but only applies to people who have been determined to be uninfected. If someone has been infected, they can be held until they are deemed to be clear. This opens the door to indefinite detention, particularly for diseases that remain in one’s system for extended periods of time. Covid-19, for example, has been shown to allow infections to persist for over a month after a person is first exposed. Mutated variants of the disease could hypothetically extend their contagious period for much longer. What we’re seeing with this bill is the birth of American concentration camps. That is not hyperbole. The discretion of the Governor is absolute in this bill. The fascism in this if it becomes law is unquestionable. ‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including usJust when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip. It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics. The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth. The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled. There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies. During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Cuomo’s concentration camps: NY Senate passes bill allowing government to detain contagious people appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Wars and ‘following the science’ are sure paths to tyranny
Posted: 01 Apr 2021 10:53 AM PDT In the first press conference of his presidency on March 25, 2021, Joe Biden announced that he had set a target of administering 200 million doses of the Covid-19 vaccine before the end of his first 100 days in office. In an earlier statement before the press, Biden said that it might be safe enough for the government to permit gatherings at people’s homes to celebrate the 4th of July. Listening to the man who occupies the White House, it seems that our lives and how we live all depend on Joe Biden. Article by Richard M. Ebeling from AIER. Some in the media have focused on the president’s recent stumbling up the stairway ramp while getting on to Air Force One, and wondered if at the age of 78 Biden can successfully put one foot in front of the other. Others have suggested that without the written scripts prepared by his White House staff and projected onto a teleprompter or the notes in front of him at a podium, the president seems unable to always articulately say a handful of words without a gaffe or getting lost and confused in his own thoughts. If anything goes wrong in the Biden administration’s policies for directing and planning our lives, no doubt a fallback position for some of our enlightened political paternalists likely will be that it is not the principle or practice of government-designed social engineering that is fundamentally flawed. No, it’s just that, unfortunately, a man too old with some cognitive disabilities wasn’t quite up to overseeing the national tasks to be done, and which are capable of repair and improvement when the “right hands” are at the helm of government. The EU Comedy of Confusions and ContradictionsAcross the Atlantic, the European Union (EU) is mired in contradictions, confusions, and member-nation conflicts about lockdowns, vaccine safety, and national distributions of existing and projected supplies of the vaccine. At first, the EU member governments declared that the AstraZeneca vaccine was safe and effective. Then, some of them announced that its use might cause serious side effects and halted inoculations. This was followed by new statements that any such side effects were less of a risk than not having the injection. EU governments have been bickering among themselves over the allocations of the vaccine supplies among the member nations, along with disagreements of how much of the vaccine should be shared with poorer and less developed countries in other parts of the world, and also whether AstraZeneca manufacturers have shortchanged the European Union compared to doses available to and taken by the British across the English Channel in the United Kingdom. Whipsawed by their governments about whether or not to trust taking the AstraZeneca vaccine, those same governments are “shocked” that a good number of their own citizens, particularly in places like France, for instance, have chosen not to have the vaccination. At the same time, large stores of the vaccine are “discovered” in warehouses as the very moment that various EU spokesmen appear before the press in near hysteria over the claimed short supplies of AstraZeneca being provided by the manufacturing facilities. Fearful of supposed “third waves” of Covid-19 cases, countries like France and Poland have imposed new partial lockdowns. The German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, declared that Germany would have to again tightly shut things down over the Easter weekend to prevent a new outbreak of the coronavirus. When German state governments and large crowds of demonstrators around the country adamantly opposed such renewed drastic steps, Merkel had to go on German television and reverse the severity of the announced lockdown, while at the same time publicly apologizing to the German people for so arrogantly presuming to tell them how to celebrate such a widely recognized and shared holiday. Classical Liberalism was an Inoculation Against CollectivismFor more than a year, now, we have been in the grip of a massive “new wave” of a dangerous and deadly ideological virus that has the names political paternalism and social engineering. It is often pointed out that the current coronavirus crisis is the first of this magnitude and global dimension since the infamous Spanish Flu from 1918 to 1920, during which estimates say that tens of millions of people, worldwide, may have died from that earlier virus. But it is less often highlighted that a political virus of government control, regulation, restriction and planning enveloped all the major countries of the world at about the same time, a little over 100 years ago during the First World War. After the 25-year European-wide war between, first, revolutionary and then Napoleonic France against Great Britain, Imperial Russia, Prussia, Spain, and some other minor countries that ended in 1815, a number of leading nations, of which Britain was preeminent, “inoculated” themselves against the all-dominating state through classical liberal reforms that recognized individual rights, personal and civil liberty, the sanctity of private property, the freedom of enterprise and mostly unrestricted international trade and investment, which were all bolstered by formal and informal institutional restrictions on government spending, taxing, borrowing, and the printing of paper money through introduction of constitutional limits and national gold standards. Several leading European countries along with the United States and Canada in North America seemed to be successfully “immune” from the virus of collectivism in its various permutations into the second half of the 19th century. But under the external appearance of political and economic “health” with widening liberty and growing prosperity, new variations of this dangerous ideological virus were infecting even the social bodies of the freest countries in the forms of increasingly aggressive nationalist and socialist ideas. Symptoms were noticed and warned about by a few, by such “social diagnosticians,” for instance, as Herbert Spencer (1820-1903) in Great Britain and William Graham Sumner (1840-1910) in America, and Paul Leroy-Beaulieu (1843-1916) in France, and some others who are less well-known but who were no less clear in their stated fears. (See my articles, “Herbert Spencer on Equal Liberty and the Free Society” and “Paul Leroy-Beaulieu: A Warning Voice About the Socialist Tragedy to Come”.) World War I Replaced Liberty with War and Welfare PlanningIf government planning only had been a wistful socialist dream before 1914, with the coming of the First World War every one of the major belligerent powers in Europe soon imposed price and wage controls, production restrictions and planning targets, regulations or prohibitions on almost all goods imported or exported, and ended the gold standard to turn the handles of the monetary printing presses to fund the huge costs of what became a long and destructive four years of war. Personal freedoms and civil liberties were restricted or denied in the name of winning the war. See my article, “The Lasting Legacies of World War I: Big Government, Paper Money, and Inflation”.) Looking back at the consequences of the First World War, the German liberal economist, Gustav Stolper (1888-1947), observed in 1931 in the pages of Foreign Affairs magazine: “Just as the war for the first time in history established the principle of universal military service, so for the first time in history it brought national economic life in all its branches and activities to the support and service of state politics – made it subordinate to the state . . . Not supply and demand, but the dictatorial fiat of the state determined economic relationships – production, consumption, wages, cost of living . . . At the same time, and for the first time, the state made itself responsible for the physical welfare of its citizens; it guaranteed food and clothing not only to the army in the field but to the civilian population as well . . . “Here is a fact pregnant with meaning; the state became for a time the absolute ruler of our economic life, and while subordinating the entire economic organization to its military purposes, also made itself responsible for the welfare of the humblest of its citizens, guaranteeing him a minimum of food, clothing, heating, and housing.” War is a Deadly Virus for Spreading Bigger GovernmentThe countries that were before 1914 still fairly and widely free in terms of economic liberty and personal freedom saw after World War I the collectivist virus’s residue remaining in the social and policy system of ideas, ready to reemerge with its virulent effects at any time. In his insightful, but seemingly neglected study of The British Political Tradition (1983), historian William H. Greenleaf (1927-2008) explained in volume one of this work, on, “The Rise of Collectivism,” that once infected with the bigger government virus, it is never fully expunged from the affected society: “It was the Great War which marked a sea-change . . . and which saw an alternation in respect of government control of a degree that beforehand would have seemed quite impossible and would have met with invincible opposition if suggested . . . The enduring impact of war on collectivist development is clearly indicated because the reversion is never to the status quo ante bellum . . . Although there is at the end of hostilities a decline from the extreme heights of government expenditures reached during the war itself, this fall stops at a level higher than that prevailing during the pre-war period. A substantial residue of the increased wartime activity remains . . . “This appears to result from the operation of three factors. First, there is an obvious and continuing impact in respect of debt commitments, payment of war pensions, and the like. Secondly, there are important fiscal effects of war concerning the level of taxation which is acceptable . . . New types of taxes are introduced and everyone gets used to the higher level of payment than was previously thought possible or desirable . . . “And thirdly, there is a general loosening of restrictions hitherto imposed on government activity . . . The state had come to control directly or indirectly a great part of the economic process; the enormous wealth and taxable capacity of modern industrial society now stood revealed. Why should these possibilities not be exploited to abolish poverty? . . . If tanks and bombers can be produced in many respects regardless of expense, why should not this later be the case for schools, hospitals, and houses?” “Following the Science” Leading to More Government ControlAnd if the current incantation of “follow the science” and the experts who claim to know what science requires and dictates in terms of the social conduct of the entire population seems a new twist on the required role of the state, Greenleaf referenced the growing presumption and insistence in the 19th century that only government and its specialized bureaucrats could manage various matters concerning health. Here, too, was the assertion that the individual’s freedom of choice concerning a vaccination could be legitimately abrogated in the name of a “common good” defined by those in political authority. Explained Greenleaf: “Once a scientific advance was made there was a growing pressure for government to act on this knowledge and use it as a basis for legislative regulation . . . A good example in the public health field is provided by the activity of the state in respect of smallpox vaccination as a major form of preventative medicine . . . The first formal state action was taken in 1808 when Parliament was induced to set up a National Vaccination Establishment to provide free vaccination at its London stations . . . “The moral and constitutional issues involved were revealed in the Parliamentary debate of 1872 about the legal enforcement of vaccination and the continual imposition of penalties for refusal to comply. Lyon Playfair, at the time perhaps the most influential MP with scientific knowledge, demolished an attempt to amend the Bill before the House [of Commons] saying that ‘individual disbelief in a remedy which science and experience had confirmed beyond all reasonable doubt was no justification for relieving the conscience of that individual at the expense of society’ . . . “There is indeed a kind of general pattern in this particular example. First there exists a social problem, in this case the major scourge of smallpox. A prophylactic treatment is discovered by scientific research. Then government intervened to make the treatment in turn available, compulsory, and more effective. Clearly more and more intervention and powers of coercion are involved . . . In sum, therefore, scientific knowledge could aid or even produce pressure for government action by seeming to give this pressure intellectual justification and provide practical means of implementation.” The Rise of Scientism as a Tool for Political PaternalismPart of the problem in all this, Greenleaf pointed out, drawing upon the frustrations and concerns of those inside and outside of the British government, already in the late 19th century, was to know what was really fact from fiction, what was a serious social matter or one that was only a minor social concern. Once the precedent was established that such things required governmental intrusion and imposition, it developed a momentum of its own in terms of more and more instances in which the claim was made for greater bureaucratic personnel and more authority to act. But how and who was to determine if these demands were reasonable and really necessary? Greenleaf explained the frustrations of one member of the British government at that time: “Sir John Simon was one of those administrators who . . . was preoccupied with the need for the national government to legislate according to the precepts of science . . . R. R. W. Lingen (who was a very economy-minded Permanent Secretary to the Treasury during the third quarter of the [19th] century) was once faced with a demand from Sir John Simon [in 1871] for another vaccination inspector and minuted, ‘I do not know who is to check the assertions of experts when the government has once undertaken a class of duties which none but such persons understand’.” Greenleaf went on to say that what this all reflected was the rise of “scientism,” the belief that the discoveries and methods of the natural sciences were not merely useful parts of human knowledge to assist individuals and associative groups to find better ways of achieving their respective goals and ends. No, it was the presumption that “science” should direct and dictate social action, and since some might not understand or not want to follow “the science,” government had to increasingly impose what that science said was good for them, whether or not such people wished to follow where science was leading in terms of asserted social and economic policy. Such a mindset about science easily and almost naturally manifested itself in an increasingly coercive political paternalism. New Waves of the Collectivist Virus in the 20th and 21st CenturiesAll of the 20th century was a battle against the viral assaults of collectivism by the waning spirit of 19th century liberalism, with insufficient intellectual and ideological “anti-bodies” of liberty to ward off the infections. Even when the collectivist “pandemics” of World War I, the interwar rise of communism, fascism, and Nazism, the Second World War, and the postwar growth in the interventionist-welfare state seemed to subside and degrees of freedom were restored or preserved, each time the assault has left less freedom in some corners of society, especially of economic liberty. But since the beginning of the 21st century, the threats to freedom and the free society have intensified. Following 9/11, and the subsequent wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the intrusive, spying, surveillance state has reduced the private aspects of our lives, with things we say, write or do being recorded, watched and classified as being either loyal or subversive – with those in elected or appointed political power determining what counts as being in one category or another. The newest attacks on the remnants of liberty now take two dangerous forms, one being the identity politics/cancel culture warriors who want to abolish the meaning of a free, autonomous, individual human being by demanding that each person’s personal and social sense of identity, “rights,” and deservedness be decided and dictated by the racial and gender group to which they are assigned by the “politically correct” new elite of “progressive” political paternalists. (See my articles, “Welcome to Word Tyranny and Cultural Balkanization” and “Save America from Cancel Culture” and “‘Systemic Racism’ Theory is the New Political Tribalism” and “The New Totalitarians”.) A Tyranny of Science Leading to More Political PaternalismBut this past year has added to this an equally serious threat: a tyranny of science. By saying this, it is not implied that science, rightly understood, is at fault or a threat to liberty. Science is composed of sets of systematic methods of determining the objective nature of the world around us. In the physical, or “natural,” sciences it is an attempt at (with admittedly the sometimes-controversial phrase of Karl Popper’s) “conjectures and refutations.” The “scientific method” has built bridges that do not fall down, enabled men to travel to the moon and back, and provided the capacity to disentangle the DNA of life. It has provided the ability to walk around with the smartphones that most of us have in our pockets, to design and use 3-D printers that carry unimaginable production possibilities and cost savings, and improved upon methods of farming and genetically engineered crops that have enabled hundreds of millions of people to have food to eat who otherwise might have starved. No, by a tyranny of science, I mean the dominant political mindset that was seen already in the 19th century, as William Greenleaf explained, with Sir John Simon who believed that government should legislate and regulate and command all that people do and what is to be done to them according to the presumed “evidence” of science. Listen to those declarations of Joe Biden referred to at the beginning of these words. He knows how many doses of a vaccine should be manufactured over what period of time, to inoculate which and how many people by a designated date. Clearly, he and his “scientific” advisors know how to direct and dictate that these goals and targets are reached. All relevant actors in the society, clearly, must conform to and fulfill “the plan.” Joe Biden and his scientific experts know when and for what purposes people should be allowed to meet and socialize for holiday occasions. If Biden and his science advisors decide it’s safe, well, they will allow us to gather with friends and relatives for a 4th of July celebration. While there have been noticeable and cogent criticisms of and demonstrations against the political and scientific presumptions behind all of these declarations and dictates of the government, tens of millions of others have been sufficiently infected with the collectivist virus that they take it for granted that if the scientific “experts” say such and such, then, “of course,” government has to initiate the mandatory or pressuring policies that confine people’s actions and choices to what “the science” says. The Corruptions and Crimes of Politicized ScienceBut what is the reality of politicized science? Rather than allowing the free and competitive market to peacefully and creatively find ways for people to meet and manage the challenge of what has been and is a serious health crisis due to the coronavirus, the entire social and economic makeup of the society has been turned upside down with catastrophic effects on the lives of hundreds of millions of people due to lockdowns, shutdowns, production prohibitions and restrictions and commands, along with governmental dictates about who and what might be permitted as solutions to the epidemic. The government has decided – not you or me – who is to be vaccinated according to their imposed planned rationing and allocation. (See my articles, “To Kill Markets is the Worst Possible Plan” and “Leaving People Alone is the Best Possible Way to Beat the Coronavirus” and “Lockdowns as a Political Tragedy of the Commons” and “Government Policies Have Worsened the Coronavirus Crisis”.) In New York, “the science” led the governor of the state to follow a nursing home policy that has caused the deaths of thousands who might otherwise have lived. And the same “science” convinced him, obviously, to hide from view what really was happening, while boasting about his leadership qualities as a politician who “follows the science.” The same “scientific” leadership is before our eyes, as was summarized earlier, in the European Union. Are entire populations to be once again locked up or are they to be let free from the restricting hands of government? Is a particular vaccine safe or significantly hazardous, and who is to decide? Do your own nation’s citizens get the prescribed vaccine or is a political decision made to “share it” with others inside or outside of the EU? Do you stand firm that since the science dictates . . .? Or do you go on television and apologize for your lockdown arrogance, even as you mutter at the same time, “But the science says . . .”? The United States and many other parts of the world are at a political crossroads. Do we succumb to the collectivist virus and liberty continues to perish? Or do the fallacies and follies of those in not just one country’s government, but of virtually all governments, everywhere, finally make a growing number of people doubt and discount the necessity and rightness of those in political power determining the course of human events? History has the habit of playing tricks on us and very often turning out in ways that many if not most of us could not even imagine. That is why, in spite of how things may look, it is never too late. But if history is to tell a story of liberty rather than collectivism for the remainder of this century, then it behooves as many of us as possible to point out to our fellow citizens that the political emperors who say they are “just following the science,” are really not wearing any clothes. ‘The Purge’ by Big Tech targets conservatives, including usJust when we thought the Covid-19 lockdowns were ending and our ability to stay afloat was improving, censorship reared its ugly head.For the last few months, NOQ Report has appealed to our readers for assistance in staying afloat through Covid-19 lockdowns. The downturn in the economy has limited our ability to generate proper ad revenue just as our traffic was skyrocketing. We had our first sustained stretch of three months with over a million visitors in November, December, and January, but February saw a dip. It wasn’t just the shortened month. We expected that. We also expected the continuation of dropping traffic from “woke” Big Tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter, but it has actually been much worse than anticipated. Our Twitter account was banned. One of our YouTube accounts was banned and another has been suspended. Facebook “fact-checks” everything we post. Spotify canceled us. Why? Because we believe in the truth prevailing, and that means we will continue to discuss “taboo” topics. The 2020 presidential election was stolen. You can’t say that on Big Tech platforms without risking cancelation, but we’d rather get cancelled for telling the truth rather than staying around to repeat mainstream media’s lies. They have been covering it up since before the election and they’ve convinced the vast majority of conservative news outlets that they will be harmed if they continue to discuss voter fraud. We refuse to back down. The truth is the truth. The lies associated with Covid-19 are only slightly more prevalent than the suppression of valid scientific information that runs counter to the prescribed narrative. We should be allowed to ask questions about the vaccines, for example, as there is ample evidence for concern. One does not have to be an “anti-vaxxer” in order to want answers about vaccines that are still considered experimental and that have a track record in a short period of time of having side-effects. These questions are not allowed on Big Tech which is just another reason we are getting cancelled. There are more topics that they refuse to allow. In turn, we refuse to stop discussing them. This is why we desperately need your help. The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We are on track to be short by about $5300 per month in order to maintain operations. The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. We had 5,657,724 sessions on our website from November, 2020, through February, 2021. Our intention is to elevate that to higher levels this year by focusing on a strategy that relies on free speech rather than being beholden to progressive Big Tech companies. During that four-month stretch, Twitter and Facebook accounted for about 20% of our traffic. We are actively working on operating as if that traffic is zero, replacing it with platforms that operate more freely such as Gab, Parler, and others. While we were never as dependent on Big Tech as most conservative sites, we’d like to be completely free from them. That doesn’t mean we will block them, but we refuse to be beholden to companies that absolutely despise us simply because of our political ideology. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above. As the world spirals towards radical progressivism, the need for truthful journalism has never been greater. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going. Bitcoin: 32SeW2Ajn86g4dATWtWreABhEkiqxsKUGn
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 11,000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.The post Wars and ‘following the science’ are sure paths to tyranny appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
You are subscribed to email updates from NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. |
Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
43.) REDSTATE
CNN Says the Quiet Part Out Loud About Lockdowns and Vaccinations, and It’s Pure Tyranny
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the RedState.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions |
44.) WORLD NET DAILY
|
45.) CONSERVATIVE REVIEW
Copyright © 2021 Conservative Review. All rights reserved.
This email was sent by: Conservative Review 8275 S. Eastern Ave, Ste 200-245 Las Vegas, Nevada 89123 USA
Privacy Policy | Manage Your Preferences | Unsubscribe
To view this email as a webpage, go here. |
46.) BIZPAC REVIEW
|
|
47.) ABC
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Friday, April 2, 2021
Good morning, NBC News readers.
Today we are taking a look at vaccine diplomacy, a tragic train accident and how First Lady Jill Biden managed to pull off an April Fool’s prank.
Here’s what we’re watching this Friday morning.
Although China and Russia deny it, experts say they are beginning to see how Beijing’s and Moscow’s strategy of selling or donating their vaccines abroad is greasing the wheels of their international relationships and allowing them to expand their influence throughout the world.
It’s a development that should cause grave concern for the United States and other democracies, according to former U.S. ambassadors and other ex-diplomats.
What rankles these observers is not that China and Russia are winning at vaccine diplomacy, it’s that the U.S. and others aren’t even in the game yet.
Washington and its allies have instead chosen to prioritize their domestic populations, keeping most doses at home.
“The United States, until recently, was the go-to country for any major health disaster,” said Thomas Shannon, the former U.S. undersecretary of state for political affairs, the third-highest-ranking role in the State Department. “So to pull itself off the playing field is very disconcerting.”
Friday’s top stories By Max Burman | Read more The island is facing its worst rail disaster in decades after the train apparently hit a truck and derailed. It was carrying hundreds from the capital Taipei to the country’s southeast, many believed to be tourists and people heading home for the start of a long holiday weekend.
By Hannah Rappleye | Read more The death of a 16-year-old foster child who was restrained led Michigan officials to re-evaluate the care that children receive in state facilities.
By Daniel Arkin | Read more The Emmy-winning documentarian said Thursday that he supports the goals of a group of filmmakers who criticized PBS over a lack of diversity and an “over-reliance” on his work. “Can we do better? Of course we can. Can PBS do better? Of course they can,” Burns said.
THINK By Rachel Greenblatt | Read more A humorist writes a field guide to understanding the people who seemingly rocked the pandemic with “lockdown success” stories.
By Salina Li and Erika Na | Read more Researchers at Osaka University compiled historical data using the diaries of emperors, aristocrats, governors and monks to show that this year’s peak bloom came earlier than ever before. Experts say the record-setting date is the result of climate change.
INTO AMERICA By Trymaine Lee | Listen here In the latest episode of our Into America podcast, host Trymaine Lee sits down with the daughters of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X to discuss what it means to inherit a legacy of activism
Want to receive the Morning Rundown in your inbox? Sign up here.
Also in the news …
One fun thing Who said the first lady can’t have fun?
Jill Biden played an April Fools’ prank on members of the media on a flight back to Washington from California, dressing up as a flight attendant who passed out ice cream bars. Biden, wearing a short black wig and a “Jasmine” name tag, went unnoticed during meal service.
“April Fools,” she said when she returned without the wig, according to a pool report.
The report says members of the media were fooled — but so were members of the first lady’s staff.
Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown. Happy Easter! If you are celebrating, I hope you have a lovely and safe weekend.
If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com
Thanks, Petra Cahill
|
49.) NBC FIRST READ
50.) CBS
|
|
|
|
|
|
51.) REASON
|
|
|
|
|
52.) MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
53.) LOUDER WITH CROWDER
I’m pro-vaccine and think you all should get your vaccine. Okay, Facebook?Because there’s being personally pro-vaccine and being grateful … MORE
8275 S. Eastern Ave, Ste 200-245 Las Vegas, Nevada 89123 USA
Privacy Policy | Unsubscribe | View in browser |
54.) TOWNHALL
|
||
FACEBOOK TWITTER |
ADVERTISEMENT | ||||||||
|
|
|
Visit the Townhall Media Preference Center to manage your subscriptions You can unsubscribe by clicking here. Or Send postal mail to: * Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers. |
55.) REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
|
||||||||||||
|
56.) REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY
|
57.) CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
58.) BERNARD GOLDBERG
59.) SARA A. CARTER
|
60.) TWITCHY
|
|
61.) HOT AIR
ADVERTISEMENT | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
62.) 1440 DAILY DIGEST
No images? Click here Good morning. It’s Friday, April 2, and we’re covering a global rise in COVID-19 cases, college basketball, and more. Have feedback? Let us know at hello@join1440.com. First time reading? Sign up here. NEED TO KNOWThe Race to VaccinateHealth officials in many of the world’s leading economies are warning of a fourth wave of the coronavirus, despite a global sprint toward vaccination. Worldwide, the seven-day rolling average of new cases has risen to nearly 580,000 per day, up roughly 35% since March 1. Daily deaths have risen by about 15% over the past three weeks, averaging around 10,250 per day. Officials say the drivers are relaxed mitigation measures combined with new, more transmissible variants. The European Union, which has seen a sluggish vaccine rollout, and South America are currently the world’s hot spots. France implemented a three-week lockdown yesterday, while Brazil is on track to break the US daily death tolls seen over the winter. Meanwhile, the United Kingdom, which has inoculated almost half its population, continues to see a steady decline in cases and deaths. New cases in the US have risen by 17% over the past week, now averaging almost 66,000 per day, with daily deaths hovering around 1,000. Caseloads increased in 25 states over the past week (see map). At the same time, the country leads the world in total vaccine doses administered. More than 153 million doses have been administered, with nearly 100 million people receiving at least one dose (38% of the adult population). That figure is almost double the next closest country (India, 53 million with at least one shot). A fourth wave is likely to look different than the preceding surges—roughly three-quarters of Americans 65 and older, the most vulnerable demographic, have received at least one vaccine dose. Final Fours College basketball is ready to crown its champions, with the final two rounds in both the men’s and women’s NCAA tournaments being held over the next four days. The women kick things off today, with a pair of No. 1 seeds in South Carolina and Stanford facing off (6 pm ET, ESPN), followed by No. 1 UConn taking on No. 3 Arizona (9:30 pm ET, ESPN). While Arizona is the Cinderella in the party—the first team below a two-seed to make the Final Four since 2016—UConn is the favorite not just to advance, but to win the title. UConn is led by phenom Paige Bueckers, who became the first freshman named AP Women’s Player of the Year. The women’s title game is set for Sunday (6 pm ET, ESPN). The men’s Final Four will be held Saturday, with No. 2 Houston taking on No. 1 Baylor (5:14 pm ET, CBS) and No. 11 UCLA attempting to take down No. 1 Gonzaga. Undefeated Gonzaga—whose namesake is coincidentally the patron saint of plague victims—is favored to win. The men’s tournament wraps Monday (9 pm ET, CBS). In non-tournament news, Hall of Fame coach Roy Williams retired yesterday from North Carolina, opening a spot at one of the nation’s most prestigious men’s programs. Water WarsThe state of Georgia secured a major victory yesterday, as the US Supreme Court ruled 9-0 to dismiss a water rights challenge brought by Florida. The long-running dispute focuses on the use of interstate water systems, fed by the Apalachicola River basin, which begin in Georgia and empty at Florida’s panhandle. An estimated 70% of metro Atlanta—the fourth fastest-growing metro area over the past decade—rely on the basin’s major rivers for water. Surface and groundwaters are also used to irrigate farms in southern Georgia. Florida officials say lower water levels have harmed its seafood industry, particularly oyster harvesting in the Apalachicola Bay, where large volumes of fresh water are needed to balance Gulf salt water. Dwindling oyster populations forced the state to suspend harvesting in the bay through 2025. Justices said Florida did not sufficiently prove the oyster population decline was linked to overconsumption upstream (read opinion). A DIVERSIFICATION OPPORTUNITYWe’ve all heard about the importance of diversifying our portfolios, but what is out there for retail investors beyond the standard fare of stocks and bonds? With Yieldstreet, you can find opportunities to help diversify your portfolio with investments in alternative asset classes and minimums starting at $1K. These investments—like art, real estate, supply chain financing, and legal finance—typically have low correlation with the stock market, and target annual yields up to 12%. Better yet, Yieldstreet offers fund solutions allowing you to invest in multiple asset classes with just one investment. Head to Yieldstreet today to find your next diversification opportunity. Please support our sponsors! IN THE KNOWSports, Entertainment, & CultureBrought to you by Picky Bars > Opening day: Washington Nationals, New York Mets game postponed due to COVID-19 (More) | Full scores from day one here (More) > “Godzilla vs. Kong” brings in $9.6M at the US box office, the most in a single day since the pandemic began (More) | Barry Jenkins, Oscar-winning director of “Moonlight,” signs two-year TV deal with HBO (More) > Nike wins restraining order against the maker of rapper Lil Nas X’s “Satan Shoes,” blocking sale of the modified Nike sneakers (More) From our partners: Fuel up for your next workout, adventure, or long workday. Picky Bars are made with real food ingredients, balanced for performance, and taste flat-out delicious. This week only, take 20% off all orders of $25+ OR join Picky Club for an additional 20% off your first order (+ free shipping & a free T-shirt). Use code 1440 at checkout. Science & Technology> Scientists use laser to slow down antihydrogen, the simplest atom made out of pure antimatter, allowing their study with unprecedented precision (More) | The mystery of antimatter (More) > Breakthrough study in mice reveals the neural circuits involved in hallucinations; results open up the possibility of using mice to study the biology of psychiatric disorders like schizophrenia (More) > Astronomers discover X-rays emanating from Uranus; specific source remains unknown, possibilities include charged particles interacting with the planet’s upper atmosphere or rings (More) Business & Markets> US stock markets up (S&P 500 +1.2%, Dow +0.5%, Nasdaq +1.8%) as S&P 500 closes above 4,000 for first time in history; S&P 500 index hit a pandemic low of 2,192 last March (More) > An estimated 719,000 Americans filed initial unemployment claims last week, up nearly 61,000 claims from the previous week; figure back above prepandemic record of 695,000 claims set in 1982 (More) > US Supreme Court allows Federal Communications Commission to soften restrictions around local media ownership; move could lead to more consolidation in media industry (More) Politics & World Affairs> Officials identify suspect involved in California office shooting that killed four, including a 9-year-old boy; police say suspect, who was taken into custody, knew the victims (More) > At least 48 dead and 66 people injured after train in Taiwan collides with a runaway truck (More) | Seven pro-democracy activists, including media tycoon Jimmy Lai, found guilty of unlawful assembly in Hong Kong (More) > Myanmar cuts wireless internet as protests over Feb. 1 military coup continue; more than 540 people reportedly killed and 2,500 arrested over the past two months (More) IN-DEPTHChokepointsGPF | George Friedman. The closure of one of the globe’s busiest trade lanes by a single sideways ship should force a rethinking about the world’s dependence on geographical chokepoints. (Read) My Father, the KillerBBC | Valeria Perasso. Children confront the legacy of parents who worked under Argentina’s brutal military junta decades ago, carrying out murders, kidnapping, and torture. (Read) Why Animals Don’t Get LostNew Yorker | Kathryn Schulz. It’s a lesson about the birds and the bees—and how they navigate better than humans, despite not having GPS. (Read, $$) The Truth About LyingKnowable | Jessica Seigel. You actually can’t spot a liar by looking at them—but psychologists are zeroing in on some methods that may work. (Read) LOW MINIMUM ALTERNATIVESIn partnership with Yieldstreet For far too long, alternative investing has often required heaps of cash to get started. Accessing investments in asset classes like Art, Real Estate, Legal, Marine, Aviation, Supply Chain Financing, and Short Term Notes is no small task. But Yieldstreet makes it possible for everyday investors to tap into these popular—and historically inaccessible—asset classes. Enjoy typically low correlation to the stock market, short investment duration, low minimums (investments start at $1K), and target annual yields of 7%-12%. Head on over to Yieldstreet today. Please support our sponsors! ETCETERA—THE BEST OF MARCHEditor’s note: More than 1 million monthly clicks can’t be wrong. Here are the most popular stories we ran in March. Enjoy! (3/31/21) Dad bods are back in style. (3/17/21) St. Patrick’s true story is better than the myth. (3/24/21) This Milky Way photo took 12 years to shoot. (3/10/21) A 134-year-old Van Gogh painting was unveiled for the first time. (3/18/21) Watch lions frolic after a historic snowstorm. (3/10/21) Ranking life’s biggest decisions. (3/22/21) Why you have to airlift rhinos upside down. (3/4/21) This Deep Nostalgia craze has gone way too far. (via YouTube) (3/3/21) Science says people really won’t shut up. (3/29/21) Amazing photos of Burning Man’s best vehicles. (3/23/21) Australia’s floods have created a spider nightmare. (3/24/21) The 20 strangest inventions of the past 20 years. (3/22/21) Yes, there’s an R-rated version of “Mrs. Doubtfire.” (3/19/21) Giant manta ray photobombs a surfer. (3/16/21) Discovering World War I’s infamous Winterberg tunnel. (3/26/21) Children’s ideas to get the Suez Canal unstuck. (3/11/21) Clickbait: It’s been quite a year; we all earned it—here’s a puppy dreaming. Historybook: Juan Ponce de León is first European in Florida (1513); Singer Marvin Gaye born (1939); HBD singer-songwriter Emmylou Harris (1947); Rita Johnston becomes first female premier of a Canadian province (1991); RIP Pope John Paul II (2005); RIP Winnie Mandela, activist and ex-wife of Nelson Mandela (2018). “It takes a certain amount of courage to let the field lie fallow until you have something to say.” – Emmylou Harris Enjoy reading? Forward this email to a friend.Why 1440? The printing press was invented in the year 1440, spreading knowledge to the masses and changing the course of history. Guess what else? There are 1,440 minutes in a day and every one is precious. That’s why we scour hundreds of sources every day to provide a concise, comprehensive, and objective view of what’s happening in the world. Reader feedback is a gift—shoot us a note at hello@join1440.com. Interested in advertising to smart readers like you? Apply here! |
63.) AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
64.) NATIONAL REVIEW
65.) POLITICAL WIRE
66.) RASMUSSEN REPORTS
67.) ZEROHEDGE
68.) GATEWAY PUNDIT
69.) FRONTPAGE MAG
70.) HOOVER INSTITUTE
71.) DAILY INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
72.) FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION
73.) POPULIST PRESS
He SCAMMED Everyone! What a clown!
ALERT: Big Tech censored our emails. That’s why you haven’t received our emails in a week…but we are back. Please note you can always visit our website directly at www.Populist.Press Our email system wont be back to full bore until next weekend so you may only get emailed once or twice this week.
|
TOP STORIES:
-
Pete Buttigieg BUSTED… In an Armored Suburban!?
- “Jack Dorsey is Going to Jail”
-
Trump Takes Brutal Shot At Biden’s Family…
- Hillary Says Republicans Are ‘Shameless,’ Have ‘Cult-Like Allegiance’ To Trump
-
LOCK HIM UP! Obama Admin Official Charged by DOJ
-
Ashli Babbitt’s Husband Releases First Statement
- Bloomberg Reporter Gets Photo of Joe’s Official Daily Schedule and Internet Goes Wild
- Democrats Plan to Immediately Give Illegal Migrants Checks of Over $20,000…
- Another State Passes Sweeping Voter Integrity Bill Making It ‘Hard To Cheat’
- Biden Cheat Sheet Accidentally Comes Out During ESPN interview…
|
IN DEPTH:
- Lawmakers Move To Rename Highway For Former President Trump 56 mins
- Andrew Yang Hospitalized With Abdominal Pains, NYC Campaign Events Cancelled 1 hour
- ‘Should Not Have Been Left Up To Her’: Kamala Harris Insults Black Leaders 2 hours
- Economy beat expectations in March with 916,000 new jobs 3 hours
- Former Trump Aide Raises $500k in First Month of Challenge Against GOP Rep. Gonzalez, Who Voted for Impeachment 3 hours
- Gabriella Hoffman: Hold VA’s Dem-Controlled Parole Board Accountable 3 hours
- Liberal Watchdog Group Files Lawsuit Over Promotion of Andrew Cuomo’s Book 3 hours
- Pro-Life Hollywood Movie on Roe V. Wade Debuts Today 3 hours
- Georgia Gov. Kemp Says He Will Not Bow to the Corporate Mob Over Common-Sense Voting Bill 3 hours
- Biden’s Infrastructure Bill the Green New Deal Wrapped In More Politically Acceptable Language 3 hours
- Jill Biden Mocked for Her Attempt to Speak Spanish and Flag Choice Used as Backdrop Called Into Question 3 hours
- The “Coronavirus Passport” Now Has Competition 4 hours
- Delta Airlines Now Selling Middle Seats Again 4 hours
- Biden Offering $500k in Contest for New Mask Designs 4 hours
- Pfizer/BioNTech Coronavirus Vaccine 91% Effective According to Updated Data, Protects Against South African Variant 4 hours
- After Six Months, Pfizer Coronavirus Vaccine Remains More Than 91 Percent Effective 4 hours
- Rep. Greene Introduces “Fire Fauci Act” 4 hours
- The GOP’s Missed Opportunity on Infrastructure Is Coming Back to Cost Us 4 hours
- Tucker Slams Lester Holt for Saying Fairness in Reporting Is Overrated 4 hours
- UFC Owner Endeavor Taps Elon Musk to Join Board Ahead of IPO 4 hours
- Saudi Arabia’s Energy Minister Cautious of Any Increase in Oil Production 4 hours
- U.S. Army Awards $50 Million Contract for New Special Operations Sniper Rifle 4 hours
- U.S. Automakers Report Strong Q1 Sales 4 hours
- The Pacific Deterrence Initiative Must Be Funded 4 hours
- Russia and China Look to Tie America’s Hands in Space 4 hours
|
|
Click here to unsubscribe
Populist Press
7940 Front Beach Rd.
Panama City Beach, FL. 32407
74.) INDEPENDENT SENTINEL
75.) BLACKLISTED NEWS
BlackListed News Updates |
- Feds Plan To Broadcast Government Propaganda To Streaming Platforms
- FBI Deploys Creepy “Sentiment Analysis” Tools To Screen National Guard For Pro-Trump Sympathies
- Trump Blasts Biden’s Tax Hike As “Globalist Betrayal”
- Shipments of Johnson & Johnson vaccine halted
Feds Plan To Broadcast Government Propaganda To Streaming Platforms
Posted: 31 Mar 2021 09:00 PM PDT NextGov recently reported that the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) wants to have the ability to interrupt streaming platforms like YouTube, Hulu, Netflix, Spotify and Pandora so they can broadcast “government safety alerts.” |
FBI Deploys Creepy “Sentiment Analysis” Tools To Screen National Guard For Pro-Trump Sympathies
Posted: 31 Mar 2021 09:00 PM PDT A recent Revolver News investigative piece coined the term “Counter-American Intelligence” to describe the systematic counter-intelligence operation to cleanse the entire national security state of any thought-criminal MAGA employees who may not agree with the Globalist American Empire’s agenda. |
Trump Blasts Biden’s Tax Hike As “Globalist Betrayal”
Posted: 31 Mar 2021 09:00 PM PDT After Joe Biden proposed a huge tax hike to pay for a $2-3 trillion spending spree, President Trump blasted it as a “globalist betrayal” and a “cruel and heartless attack on the American dream.” |
Shipments of Johnson & Johnson vaccine halted
Posted: 31 Mar 2021 09:00 PM PDT Future shipments of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine have been halted while the Food and Drug Administration investigates after human error at a manufacturing plant ruined 15 million doses, The New York Times reported Wednesday. |
You are subscribed to email updates from BlackListed News. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. |
Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
76.) THE DAILY DOT
April 02, 2021
Welcome to the Friday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect the week online. Today:
- Movie based on an epic Twitter thread is finally coming to theaters
- The merch for ‘White Boy Summer’ is bad
- Lil Nas X sliding into hell becomes a TikTok meme
|
BREAK THE INTERNET
‘Zola’ trailer goes viral—just like the thread it’s based on
A few years ago, Twitter threads were a big part of internet culture. One of the most memorable threads was written by A’Ziah, a.k.a. Zola, who told the tale of her going on a trip to Florida with another woman she recently met while waitressing. The original reason for the trip was to make money dancing at strip clubs, but the two ultimately get caught up in sex trafficking, a murder, and more. The Twitter thread was a natural fit for a film script. And now, Zola is finally arriving in theaters this summer.
This week, A24 released the trailer for the film, which premiered more than a year ago at the Sundance Film Festival, reigniting interest in the original story. Jeremy O. Harris, who co-wrote the screenplay for Zola with director Janicza Bravo, tweeted that the trailer received close to 10 million views across Twitter and Instagram in one day. “What was daunting abt the character of Zola is that as written by @_zolarmoon she’s the only normal person on a journey to hell with fools & criminals. The actress playing her had to perform a rich interior life while also being silent movie funny,” Harris wrote in another tweet, speaking of Taylour Paige, who plays the lead role. The film also stars Riley Keough, Nicholas Braun, and Colman Domingo. In her review of the film, the Daily Dot’s Michelle Jaworski wrote, “Zola is a colorful and high-energy fantasy, and it’s often a visual treat. It fully embraces the mobile and internet roots of its story, using the iPhone home screen font to indicate the passage of time.”
Culture Editor
|
SPONSORED
17 best astrology sites for online birth chart readings
Online birth chart readings or astrological profiles aren’t all that different from the ones you would get in person. Just like the rest of our lives during COVID, this service now happens over video calls. How you want your reading done and the focus of the reading is all up to you. Read on for our tips on how to choose a practitioner, where to go, and more.
MISTAKES
The ‘White Boy Summer’ merch is a joke taken too far
As if the very concept of “White Boy Summer” wasn’t embarrassing enough, there’s now merch to go with it. Despite the scathing response to Chet Hanks’ vision, there were some white boys who got really excited about it, and even asked when Hanks would be supplying them with merch so they could let the whole world know that they’d signed on to his fantasy. Sadly for everyone, Hanks delivered with some of the ugliest and most uninspired designs around.
While some White Boy Summer fans did seem excited about the merch, others found the clothing collection a little uncomfortable. Hanks’ collection includes a hoodie, T-shirt, tank top, shorts, hat, and women’s biker shorts and leggings—all emblazoned with the phrase “White Boy Summer” in a Gothic font. He has also added “Black Queen Summer” merch to his online shop, which is getting criticized following the recent abuse allegations from a Black ex-girlfriend.
By Siobhan Ball
Contributing Writer
|
CULTURAL OBSESSIONS
Lil Nas X sliding into hell becomes a TikTok meme
Lil Nas X has done a fine job riling up the usual suspects with his video for “Montero (Call Me By Your Name).” In the video, which has more than 44 million views, Lil Nas X slides into hell on a stripper pole after briefly ascending into heaven. A snippet of that part was edited to sound like he’s actually whooshing by someone in hell (or heaven). On TikTok, the platform that launched him into the national spotlight, that part has become a meme.
Lil Nas X has been spotlighting some of these memes on his TikTok, as well as addressing the ongoing criticism from conservatives and Christians. He recently posted a clip in which megachurch pastor and former Trump adviser Jentezen Franklin calls him “Lil Nash X” and gets huffy about the “demonic imagery” of his new sneaker.
Senior Writer
|
MEME OF THE WEEK
This scene from Falcon and the Winter Soldier is now a meme template for a certain kind of guy.
|
Questions? Feedback? Contact us at info@dailydot.com.
|
Copyright © 2021 The Daily Dot, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you signed up to get the inside scoop on internet culture from the Daily Dot.
Don’t want to hear from us anymore?
We understand, but it won’t be the same without you!
Click here to unsubscribe
77.) HEADLINE USA
78.) NATURAL NEWS
79.) POLITICHICKS
|
|
|
|
||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|||||
80.) ONE NEWS NOW
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
|
82.) SEAN HANNITY
|
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
|
83.) THE DAILY CALLER
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
84.) AMERICAN CONSEQUENCES
85.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – WAKE UP EDITION
|
Unsubscribe | ThePoliticalInsider.com | About | Contact | Privacy Policy | Terms of UseForward to a Friend The Political Insider, LLC | 1818 Library Street | Reston | VA | 20190
|
86.) THE PATRIOT POST
87.) DECISION DESK HQ
88.) DIGG
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Twitter • Facebook • Tumblr • YouTube Advertise on Digg digg.com • Unsubscribe© 2020 Digg Holdings 18 Shipyard Drive, Hingham, MA 02043 |
89.) THE POLITICAL INSIDER – INSIDER’S EDITION
|
Unsubscribe | ThePoliticalInsider.com | About | Contact | Privacy Policy | Terms of UseForward to a Friend The Political Insider, LLC | 1818 Library Street | Reston | VA | 20190
|
90.) CONSERVATIVE TRIBUNE
|
91.) DC CLOTHESLINE
|
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||
|
|||||
92.) USA TODAY
|
93.) STATE LEGISLATORS’ ARTICLE V CAUCUS
|